Een Italiaanse explosievenexpert heeft zich uitgesproken over de massale ontploffing die volgens hem waarschijnlijk een militair raketmagazijn was, schrijft de Gateway Pundit.
De Italiaan Danilo Coppe sprak met Heshmat Alavi over de aard van de ontploffing in Beiroet.
Coppe gelooft dat de rode pluim een teken is van lithium metaal dat gebruikt wordt als drijfgas in militaire raketten.
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“I don't think there was that amount of ammonium nitrate [2,750 tons] in the port of Beirut, or that there was a fireworks depot. Judging from the videos, it seems more like an explosion of an armament warehouse,” Coppe explains.pic.twitter.com/ugxVrbw627— Heshmat Alavi (@HeshmatAlavi) August 9, 2020
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Coppe believes the images of the Beirut explosion have left several doubts on the initial official explanation of the blast. pic.twitter.com/eGMAGYkJEr— Heshmat Alavi (@HeshmatAlavi) August 9, 2020
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“I don't believe in the ammonium nitrate theory for several reasons. First, the quantity: 2,700 tons would mean that someone built an Olympic size swimming pool and filled it with that substance,” Coppe says. pic.twitter.com/Toi0RgKR7N— Heshmat Alavi (@HeshmatAlavi) August 9, 2020
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“The warehouse was over 100 meters long. It is not impossible that it contained those quantities & some documents seem to prove that the material was there for years… there should have been a catalyst, because otherwise it wouldn't all have exploded together,” Coppe adds. pic.twitter.com/QgpadmFheu— Heshmat Alavi (@HeshmatAlavi) August 9, 2020
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“And then the ammonium nitrate, when it detonates, generates an unmistakable yellow cloud,” Coppe explains.In the Beirut blast, we clearly witnessed a brick orange/dark red cloud. pic.twitter.com/U7rW2Hzc4Z
— Heshmat Alavi (@HeshmatAlavi) August 9, 2020
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“Instead from the videos of the explosion, in addition to the white sphere that is seen to widen, which is air condensation by the sea, you can clearly see a brick orange column tending to dark red, typical of the participation of lithium,” Coppe adds.pic.twitter.com/NkpCd2RKow— Heshmat Alavi (@HeshmatAlavi) August 9, 2020
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Lithium?“… lithium-metal is the propellant for military missiles. I think there were armaments there,” Coppe adds.
From “High power lithium technology for the military”https://t.co/T2jCFwAyCo pic.twitter.com/TlDKCVyg4F
— Heshmat Alavi (@HeshmatAlavi) August 9, 2020
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Coppe: “Between the 1st & 2nd blasts, what appears to be fireworks are seen to crackle. Fireworks don't behave like that. They have some explosives & the rest is cardboard/plastic. Upon explosion, they are preceded by whistles, absent in the videos.”pic.twitter.com/cmpST4K3ei— Heshmat Alavi (@HeshmatAlavi) August 9, 2020
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Coppe: “Ammo makes barrels all the same, like those seen before the great blast. I think there was a 1st blast, which may have started a fire where ammo was stored, which then spread to high explosive contained in rockets or missiles.”pic.twitter.com/4OGej1o1ui— Heshmat Alavi (@HeshmatAlavi) August 9, 2020
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Confirmation of the site being a weapons depot.Al Arabiya: "Initial information: The explosion occurred in a Hezbollah arms store in Beirut Port."https://t.co/9n95otbEVSpic.twitter.com/vADCsjySJP
— Heshmat Alavi (@HeshmatAlavi) August 9, 2020
Veel speculaties dat Israël een kernraket op Beiroet heeft gedropt
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Halifax Explosion, hoe de halve stad werd weggevaagd
https://historianet.nl/oorlog/eerste-wereldoorlog/pas-ontdekt-dagboek-beschrijft-heftig-ongeluk
Dat men gewoon de satellietbeelden bekijkt om te zien welke vliegtuigen er actief waren. Daarmee is alle verdere discussie uitgesloten.