Unsubstantiated video showing a missile causing the massive blast in Beirut, Credit, John.
Beirut bomb may well have been a false flag operation by Iran sponsored Hezbollah. A false flag operation is an attack or other hostile action that obscures the identity of the participants carrying out the action while implicating another group or nation as the perpetrator.
It has long been known by the military experts that Iran sponsored Hezbollah is using the population of Beirut as human shields by hiding their missiles which are used to bomb Israel under schools hospitals and other public places such as the port area which suffered the recent deadly explosion. According to a report by Israel CNN, Hezbollah has an estimated 600 Fateh 110/M600 missiles with a range of up to 300km, while the “D’ Al-Ficar” improved model has a range of up to 700km and these are fired into Israel and launched in public places, making Israel look bad if they retaliate. In September 2018 following PM Netanyahu’s exposure in the UN, the IDF released satellite images of three sites in Beirut that are being used by the Iran-backed Hezbollah terror group to hide underground precision missile production facilities. Full story
As the aftermath of the terrible bomb which has killed an unknown number of people, injured thousands and left 300,000 people homeless subsides, the country's president, Michel Aoun, said the cause of the blast was still unclear and did not rule out the possibility of a hostile act. "The cause has not been determined yet," Aoun said. "There is a possibility of external interference through a rocket or bomb or other act."
Yesterday a video was sent to me showing a rocket hitting the warehouse and causing the massive explosion the video is unsubstantiated and came from the Hal Turner Video Show which you can see the video, sent in by John, Below.
Around 6 seconds into the video a missile is seen hitting the warehouse
Dozens of bags of fireworks were stored in the same hangar as thousands of tonnes of ammonium nitrate at Beirut's port and may have been a decisive factor in igniting the explosive chemical compound that fuelled Tuesday's huge explosion, a former port worker and other sources have told the Guardian. As angry Lebanese plan a major protest in central Beirut on Saturday, scrutiny has focused on how 2,750 tonnes of the dangerous material could have been stored so close to residential neighbourhoods for years - despite repeated warnings of the risk it posed. A former port worker, Yusuf Shehadi, told the Guardian he had been instructed by the Lebanese military to house the chemicals in warehouse 12 at the port despite repeated protests by other government departments. "We complained a lot about this over the years," said Shehadi, who worked at the port until emigrating to Canada in March this year. "Every week, the customs people came and complained and so did the state security officers. The army kept telling them they had no other place to put this.
Everyone wanted to be the boss, and no one wanted to make a real decision." In addition, the hangar housed a number of fireworks, Shehadi said, which customs had confiscated in around 2009-10 and which he said he had personally seen delivered on a forklift. "There were 30-40 nylon bags of fireworks inside warehouse 12," he said. "They were on the left-hand side when you entered the door. I used to complain about this. It wasn't safe. There was also humidity there. This was a disaster waiting to happen. The port workers did not put the chemicals there in the first place. That outrage rests with the government." A second source has confirmed the presence of the fireworks, which was also the subject of media reports in Lebanon on Friday.
The emerging new picture of the circumstances that led to the blast comes as investigators and media organisations continue to try to piece together the cause of the fire and subsequent blast. The claim that fireworks were being stored in the same warehouse as the ammonium nitrate appears to be confirmed by phone footage, apparently filmed by a port worker from the roof of the grain silos that overlooked the seat of the biggest blast - now a 150 metre-wide crater of seawater. In the brief section of footage posted on social media, a long warehouse - running parallel to the grain silo and separated by a road - is visible, with smoke coming out of the windows on its west side and from the roof. Geotagging by the investigative website Bellingcat and the Guardian, and comparison of features, strongly suggests that this warehouse is located at the very centre of the devastating blast -locating the initial fire and subsequent explosions in the same area of warehousing.
As the person on the silo roof films the north end of the warehouse from their vantage point, the smoke thickens and then a dozen or so white flashes can be seen occurring in rapid succession inside, triggering thicker red flames that quickly spread southwards before detonating a major explosion in the building within seconds that causes the person filming to duck for cover. Shehadi said he had spoken to former colleagues at the port who said workers were attempting to fix a gate outside warehouse 12 with an electrical tool ahead of the blast. "This was at 5pm, and after 30 minutes they saw smoke. Firefighters came, and so did state security. Everyone died.
"A video posted to social media depicted firefighters tackling a small blaze in a warehouse that resembled a port building. "It is my belief that this repair work led to this catastrophe," Shehadi said. The Lebanese investigation into the disaster is expected to report to the national cabinet by Sunday. Sixteen people linked to the port including its general-manager have also been placed under house arrest, but figures including the French president, Emmanuel Macron, have called for an independent international probe. The Lebanese Red Cross estimated at least dozens of people could still be buried under debris from the blast, mostly port employees who worked in and around the hangar.
Unknown The Big Wobble http://www.thebigwobble.org/
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