Categories
Selected Articles

Helping SE Texas tornado victims: Where to donate and volunteer

Neighbors across Brazoria, Chambers, Galveston, Montgomery and Waller counties are cleaning up after a deadly tornado outbreak on Saturday. If you would like to help our storm victims recover, we’re tracking ways you can make the biggest impact. SE Texas tornado victim assistance: Where to get food, shelter and other services American Red Cross Gul…
Categories
Selected Articles

Video: Mild feel before rain, snow to start 2025

Matt Hoenig has a look at the forecast for New Year’s Eve plans.
Categories
Selected Articles

New details on how a Russian “Pantsir” shot down the AZAL plane

The investigation into the crash of an AZAL aircraft on the Baku–Grozny route has revealed new details about the tragedy, according to the Telegram channel VChK-OGPU. Findings indicate that two missiles fired from a Pantsir-S1 air defense system directly struck the aircraft. The primary cause of the incident is attributed to chaos and malfunctions in electronic warfare (EW) systems, which “blinded” both civilian aviation and the air defense systems themselves.

At the time of the tragedy, multiple air defense systems were stationed in Grozny, including two Pantsir units, an S-300 system recently deployed from Syria, and a Buk missile system. The missiles were fired by one of the Pantsir crews located in the Visaitovsky District (formerly Staropromyslovsky). This system had been deployed following drone attacks on the Akhmat special forces building. According to the investigation, the crew launched two missiles: the first at 08:13:30 and the second 10 seconds later. Both exploded in the air, with the first detonating at 08:13:50 and the second at 08:14:30. The second explosion is believed to have struck the aircraft.

Investigators interrogated all three members of the Pantsir crew—the commander, operator, and driver. The commander claimed that the target did not appear as a civilian aircraft on the radar screen. He stated that powerful EW systems were active, jamming not only civilian but also military equipment. This prevented the air defense system from correctly identifying the aircraft, which was classified as an unidentified target.

When asked why the target was not recognized as a passenger aircraft, the commander admitted that its altitude and speed could indeed indicate a civilian plane. However, he stressed that he acted on orders received from a commander in Rostov identified as Borisov.

The situation was further complicated by miscommunication between air defense crews. It was revealed that another Pantsir crew identified the target as a civilian aircraft and refrained from firing. However, due to the EW systems, they were unable to warn the second crew, which subsequently launched two missiles. The investigation has yet to determine who activated the EW systems that disrupted both civilian and military communications.

The Telegram channel VChK-OGPU reports that the military is attempting to promote a narrative that the missiles were fired at a drone but missed and self-destructed near the AZAL aircraft. Investigators, however, insist that debris and the nature of the damage indicate that the missiles deliberately targeted the aircraft.

Confirmation of this theory comes from revised event timings. New data shows that the strike on the aircraft occurred around 08:14, rather than the previously estimated 08:16.

This conclusion was reached after a detailed analysis of an audio recording of conversations between the dispatcher and the flight crew. In the transcript, a crucial moment was marked as “inaudible” (allegedly to omit a link between the missile explosions and the aircraft strike). However, the original audio clearly captures the phrase, “a bird hit me.” Two minutes later, the crew repeated the message more distinctly.

New data indicates that at 08:14, ground services recorded the aircraft 16 kilometers from the airport, still over the Naursky District.

Testimonies from the Pantsir crew commander revealed that they were not provided with a schedule of civilian flights. The commander contacted Rostov twice via stationary communication lines before launching the missiles.

According to the shift commander servicing the Pantsir, the target was “visually unavailable due to dense fog.” However, the commander of a second Pantsir system stationed at the airport observed the aircraft and, confirming it as a civilian flight, refrained from firing.

This fact emerged from background recordings in the control room. The recordings capture the second Pantsir commander informing the dispatcher via radio that the aircraft was in sight.

When investigators asked why the first commander did not contact the second system’s commander, he responded that stationary communication was “out of order” and mobile phones were “inoperative due to EW interference.”

Source

Categories
Selected Articles

Rainy end to 2024; very cold to start 2025

Rain showers could mix with some snow on New Year’s Eve near the countdown to 2025.
Categories
Selected Articles

RT @igorsushko: December 31st 1999 – President Boris Yeltsin resigns and hands over the country to Putin without holding elections. Putin w…

Categories
Selected Articles

RT @dw_russian: Россия наносит массированный ракетный удар по Украине. Мониторинговые каналы пишут о запущенных россиянами крылатых и балли…

Categories
Selected Articles

Kim Jong-un threatens Washington and announces his “toughest strategy” against the United States

According to Pyongyang, the United States is the “most reactionary” country in the world. At a meeting of the ruling Workers’ Party held from December 23 to 27, Kim Jong-un “clarified” the strategy for implementing “the toughest anti-US countermeasure, to be launched aggressively”, reported the official KCNA news agency. The North Korean leader referred, among other things, to his sworn enemy, South Korea, which he described as “an…
Categories
Selected Articles

RT @AzeriTimes: Starting January 1st 2025, Azerbaijan will limit the duration of visa-free stays for Russian citizens. Azerbaijani Foreign…

Categories
Selected Articles

RT @intellbooks: Beyond States and Spies. The Security Intelligence Services of the Private Sector – new book out now #intellbooks @Edinbur…

Categories
Selected Articles

Meet the rich retired boomers who are now ultra-frugal because they are scared of going broke—even after savings for decades

It’s not just Gen Z who can’t afford the cost of living right now. Even boomers who have retired with at least six figures in savings are feeling the pinch.