South Korea Warship Sinking Torpedo Was NOT Fired by North Korea

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010
South Korea Warship Sinking Torpedo Was NOT Fired by North Korea

South Korea Warship Sinking Torpedo Was NOT Fired by North Korea

Well played global brainwash regarding the sinking of the South Korean warship Cheonan that goes on around the world at the moment is spine shattering. Just how easy it is for the Americans to blame North Korea for something they did not do? The United States of America, country with proven track record of attacks on their own people as well as various strategic targets of their own interest with intentions to blame it on somebody else to start the military aggression wants us believe that the torpedo which sank the South Korean warship was fired by the North Korean military.

It is no secret that the USA has had the beef with North Korea for a long time. The peaceful nation of North Korea has proven all of the US allegation to be false so the Americans have every right to be pissed. It was only a question of time when Americans would strike against the friendlies and sacrifice the lives of innocent people only to have an excuse to hit North Korea hard. Hillary Clinton, that stupid dumb b!tch then has the audacity to go to China to brainwash them into believing that the torpedo fired by the US was fired by North Korea. Of course she declares that South Korea has full support of the USA in this dispute – that’s exactly what Americans wanted by sinking the South Korean ship!

It was not so long ago when the USA was pointing fingers at North Korea claiming that there are reasons to believe they could use nuclear weapons against I don’t know whom! What a ludicrous accusation. There is only one country in the world with history of (ab)use of nuclear weapons and that’s not North Korea. If there is a country to fear, it’s the USA. It’s the Americans who won’t stop at nothing and they are proving it over and over again. They have done it before (used nuclear bombs), they could do it again. Peaceful North Korea has never used nuclear weapons against innocent people and there is no reason, other than the American bullshit to believe that they ever would.

Likewise, there is no reason to believe that North Korea would fire a torpedo that sank the South Korean warship, but there is every reason to believe that the Americans would do that. They’ve done it many times before and are well known for using this tactics to start military aggression against any country that doesn’t kiss their arse. No my friends, the torpedo that sank the South Korean ship was not fired by North Korea. Use your brain before you start believing what American government friendly media tells you.

Photo by Associated Press: Yonhap, Choi Jae-ku

 

Collision of USS New Orleans and USS Hartford in Strait of Hormuz

Friday, March 20th, 2009

Collision of USS New Orleans and USS Hartford in Strait of Hormuz

Collisions of navy vessels are the tits. Multimillion dollar monsters equipped with technology we the regular folk don’t even know exists run into each other in vast open waters – got to love that. The collision of two U.S. Navy vessels USS New Orleans and USS Hartford which occured earlier today in the Strait of Hormuz was at least not as bad as collision of Nuclear Subs of British and French Armies in the Atlantic, cause these guys had an entire Atlantic ocean for themselves and managed to collide. Strait of Hormuz isn’t as vast, but still. The collisions involving nuclear powered submarines are getting off the hand. How long till one gets in a collision strong enough to detonate nuclear warheads it carries?

USS Hartford

USS Hartford (SSN 768) is a nuclear powered submarine of the US Navy.

USS New Orleans

USS New Orleans (LPD 18) is an amphibious ship.

Both USS Hartford and USS New Orleans were going in the same direction in the Strait of Hormuz when a submarine crashed into the ship. Since subs are stronger built, USS Hartford suffered no damage to the nuclear propulsion system. USS New Orleans however suffered a ruptured fuel tank resulting in 25,000 gallons of diesel fuel being spilled in the waters of the Strait of Hormuz. 15 crew members from USS Hartford reportedly suffered minor injuries and were returned to duty after check up by the physician.

Strait of Hormuz

Strait of Hormuz is a narrow waterway between Iran and Arabian Peninsula. It’s one of the most trafficked bodies of water when it comes to commercial tankers carrying oil. With fuel spillage, US Navy basically spilled oil right in the frontyard of Iran. What that means is hard to tell at the moment.

 

Nuclear Subs of British and French Armies Collide in Atlantic

Monday, February 16th, 2009

Nuclear Subs of British and French Armies Collide in Atlantic

Seriously, what are the chances of two subs colliding in the Atlantic Ocean? If there were a grand total of two cars in the entire world and you are the owner of one of them. What are the chances of you colliding with that other car that can be just about anywhere in the world? Plus consider this – the movement of cars is two dimensional. You can only go forward and backwards, or left and right. You can’t go up and down (not talking about hills). Nuclear submarines of British and French armies managed to collide in Atlantic. The space within Atlantic, the three dimensional space that’s available for these nuclear subs is massive. And they still managed to collide. I’m just as short for explanation as you are. Do you think it has anything to do with Brits driving on the left :D

I’d be embarrassed out of my socks if I managed to collide with another nuclear sub that’s in the ocean when I am. That reminds me of the line in Finding Nemo – “What? The ocean’s not big enough for you?” Apparently it’s not big enough for French and British sub army. Tug of war does not quite work when you operate a sub, so they tried to batter each other. Their radar operator should really attend another training… Perhaps they also should include a lesson on distinguishing friendly subs from whales.

Here’s what happened – HMS Vanguard, the nuclear sub of British army and Le Triomphant, the nuclear sub of French army collided with each other within Atlantic Ocean and sustained heavy damage. As per First Sea Lord Admiral Sir Jonathon Band, no injuries were reported as both subs were floating about at low speeds. Both British and French sides confirmed that no nuclear security issues will rise from this collision. Considering each of the subs carries several nuclear war heads, if the collision was stronger, we’d have an under water nuclear explosion which would have insane implications. I can’t even think of what would happen to the sea life and to people living on shores of both sides of the Atlantic. They say tsunamis are result of deep sea earthquakes. If several dozen nuclear warheads exploded, we’d see a tsunami of epic proportions. Someone should start explaining how is it possible that submarines carrying weapons of mass destruction collided in the middle of Atlantic Ocean – world’s second largest body of water.

HMS VANGUARD Nuclear Sub Stats:
Launched in 1992
One of four British submarines carrying Trident nuclear missiles
Displacement (submerged) 16,000 tones, 150m (492ft) long
Can carry 48 nuclear warheads on a maximum of 16 missiles
Full crew is 145, including 14 officers
Submerged speed of 25 knots

LE TRIOMPHANT Nuclear Sub Stats:
Launched in 1994
One of four French ballistic missile nuclear-powered subs
Displacement (submerged) 14,000 tones, 138m (452ft) long
Can carry 16 ballistic missiles with nuclear warheads
Full crew is 110, including 15 officers
Submerged speed over 25 knots

Source: BBC News