Anonymous ID: 005f06 Nov. 19, 2021, 9:44 a.m. No.15035159   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5249

THE SUM OF ALL FEARS

 

Movie scene: During the testing of the nuclear fingerprint, the back channel RUSSIA advises "We stole it and gave it to Israel"

 

Relates to 9/11 and Thermite residue found.

This article spells it out.

Source documents apparently from 2014 still classified. Required Q clearance.

 

https://www.veteranstodayarchives.com/2014/05/20/too-classified-to-publish-bush-nuclear-piracy-exposed/

 

Too Classified to Publish: Bush Nuclear Piracy Exposed

By

Gordon Duff, Senior Editor -

May 20, 2014

 

Russia Opens Files on Nuclear 9/11 and Israeli Proliferation

 

We have a very solid confirmation on this. Back during the 1980s, Israel showed her inventory of Davy Crockett tactical nuclear warheads to one of our editors, who at the time was a senior NATO intelligence official. These early “micro-nukes” were taken out of US inventory in 1978 and “disappeared.”

 

The fallout would be mainly vaporized concrete cement and iron oxide. This is why after 911 they told everyone on TV that the beta radiation burns that people were getting were due to the caustic cement dust and not due to the radiation effects from the radioactive cement fallout. (Editor’s note: Fully confirmed)

The iron oxide found all over the place was what was left of the steel I beams. This was the so calledNano Thermite that was found everywhere. Fallout was limited to a 1 mile area around down town NYC. See charts. (Editor’s note: Received)

Anonymous ID: 005f06 Nov. 19, 2021, 9:55 a.m. No.15035249   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>15035159

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pantex

 

he Pantex plant was originally constructed as a conventional bomb plant for the United States Army Air Force during the early days of World War II. The Pantex Ordnance Plant was authorized February 24, 1942. Construction was completed on November 15, 1942 and workers from all over the U.S. flocked to Amarillo for jobs.

 

Pantex was abruptly deactivated when the war ended and remained vacant until 1949, when Texas Technological College in Lubbock (now Texas Tech University) purchased the site for $1.[4] Texas Tech used the land for experimental cattle-feeding operations.

 

In 1951, at the request of the Atomic Energy Commission (now the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA)), the Army exercised a recapture clause in the sale contract and reclaimed the main plant and 10,000 acres (40 km2) of surrounding land for use as a nuclear weapons production facility. The Atomic Energy Commission refurbished and expanded the plant at a cost of $25 million. The remaining 6,000 acres (24 km2) of the original site were leased from Texas Tech in 1989.

 

Pantex was operated by Procter & Gamble from 1951 to 1956, Mason & Hanger from 1956 to 2001, and Babcock & Wilcox from 2001 to 2014.[5]

 

In 2010, the plant employed about 3,600 people and had a budget of $600 million.[6