That’s too bad.
L
What’s ‘mysterious’ about an explosion at an ammo plant during a war?....................
I think directed energy weapons are being used. I have zero evidence.
Food processing plants in America catching fire.
Russian Military chemical and ammunition plants catching fire.
Wild fires in Russia.
Unless you capture the beam signature in a satellite image, there would be little evidence, just a fire.
Lots of war related KABOOMS in Pooty land these days.
U.S. weapons working great, as usual.
Thanks to communist policies of spreading people around, there are many Ukrainians in Russia.
It could be one, or some other oppressed person in Russia.
Or just an accident.
Ukraine does not have missiles with that long a reach.
No modern military weapon uses gunpowder (to the best of my knowledge) so if that was all that this plant produced, then it was unlikely to be counter-action. If, on the other hand, it was sloppy reporting, then it becomes a possibility.
Modern weapons use what is generically called cordite which is a nitrocellulose-based (guncotton derivative) that was originally known as ‘smokeless powder’ for the amazing difference to original gunpowder. With the exception of period weapons and idiot LEFTists, gunpowder was generally phased out of weapon use in the late 1800s.
Pushing for maximum production can result in accidents.
“Somehow the dial on the heat treat oven went to 11.” //sarc
I wonder if that is the Tulla plant that has stocked so many Americans with cheap steel cased ammo.
Once is an accident, twice is a coincidence, three times is enemy action. We’re way beyond 3 by now.
‘Mysterious’ has become the new ‘Unexpectedly’.
Another mysterious explosion? Seems like the same thing happened to the ship Moskva. Just a run of bad luck I guess.
I would think they would be wanting to take out the hyper sonic missile production plant next.
More ‘mysterious’ fires in the Rodina.
Is this damage, you know, PERM-ament?