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[News] Major explosion in Beirut



Easy 10

Brain dead MUG SHEEP
Jul 5, 2003
62,424
Location Location
Agree with all of that. On last night's episode I found the relationship of almost mutual respect between Saddam (after he was captured) and the US soldier guarding him during his trial strangely compelling.

Had to be a Texan, didn't it. Yee-haw to the murderous dictator, boy.

The ISIS foot-soldier who was still all-in for stoning a woman to death for being out and about without a burqa. And the guy who escaped a mass grave shooting by ISIS. Every episode had a story that just left me slack-jawed. The mainstream news just does not come close to conveying the reality and the complexities like programmes like this can.
 










vegster

Sanity Clause
May 5, 2008
28,273
Out of interest why do you disbelieve it ? I’m finding the BBC coverage a bit strange. They are reporting it as an accident in a fireworks factory but seem a little disappointed . Currently asking passers by if it reminds them of past explosions.

I'm no expert but it really is a massive explosion after a fire and lots of smaller explosions. I was always led to believe that munitions and the raw materials to make them, are usually stored in small compartmentalised lots so that if there is a problem you don't get a massive single explosion. This seems too large to be any sort of anti-regime car or lorry bomb but more like the impact of a specialised bomb in the form of a Bunker buster that triggers multiple explosives on the ground instantly.

"Fireworks" being detonated is a pretty obviously lame excuse given that Syria has had nothing to celebrate for the last 10 years or so. If you are fighting a civil war its pretty nailed on that the regime won't be diverting their manufacturing capacity towards building a stockpile of Roman Candles and Jumping Jacks.
 




dsr-burnley

Well-known member
Aug 15, 2014
2,625
I'm no expert but it really is a massive explosion after a fire and lots of smaller explosions. I was always led to believe that munitions and the raw materials to make them, are usually stored in small compartmentalised lots so that if there is a problem you don't get a massive single explosion. This seems too large to be any sort of anti-regime car or lorry bomb but more like the impact of a specialised bomb in the form of a Bunker buster that triggers multiple explosives on the ground instantly.

"Fireworks" being detonated is a pretty obviously lame excuse given that Syria has had nothing to celebrate for the last 10 years or so. If you are fighting a civil war its pretty nailed on that the regime won't be diverting their manufacturing capacity towards building a stockpile of Roman Candles and Jumping Jacks.
Beirut is in Lebanon
 




vegster

Sanity Clause
May 5, 2008
28,273






WATFORD zero

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 10, 2003
27,776
Jesus, that is horrendous.

As a side note, if you've not yet watched Once Upon a Time In Iraq, you really should. 5-parter an hour a piece on BBC iPlayer, an in-depth study of the invasion of Iraq from start to finish and the aftermath, from the viewpoint of journalists, photographers, victims, soldiers, a commanding officer and many more. People who were there on the ground, and footage you just don't see on the news. Some of the stuff from Mosul and Fallujah...well. And the interview with a captured ISIS grunt...bloody hell.

Essential viewing.

I think, whatever happened, as is always the case, the vast majority of fatalities/injuries will be entirely innocent

The trouble is, the more you watch, the more you realise how little you know. Excellent series, but I'm always trying to remind myself of who is making it and what their interests are. (As I say, Excellent series, but everyone has an angle). I do believe I could study this for the next 10 years and only be scratching the surface :thumbsup:
 














Neville's Breakfast

Well-known member
May 1, 2016
13,450
Oxton, Birkenhead
I'm no expert but it really is a massive explosion after a fire and lots of smaller explosions. I was always led to believe that munitions and the raw materials to make them, are usually stored in small compartmentalised lots so that if there is a problem you don't get a massive single explosion. This seems too large to be any sort of anti-regime car or lorry bomb but more like the impact of a specialised bomb in the form of a Bunker buster that triggers multiple explosives on the ground instantly.

"Fireworks" being detonated is a pretty obviously lame excuse given that Syria has had nothing to celebrate for the last 10 years or so. If you are fighting a civil war its pretty nailed on that the regime won't be diverting their manufacturing capacity towards building a stockpile of Roman Candles and Jumping Jacks.

I seem to remember a large explosion in a fireworks factory up north here a few years ago. A massive explosion and fatalities only low because it was at night and on an industrial estate.
 




Gabbafella

Well-known member
Aug 22, 2012
4,907
There seems to have been a significant fire burning there prior to the blast, I’m preying that a mass evacuation ensued before the explosion.

Roads were still open and very busy prior to the large explosion. The link to Twitter via the BBC website shows the explosion from multiple angles, the shockwave looked catastrophic for several blocks at least. People reporting shattered windows in Cyprus!
I hope you're right and that a mass evacuation was already well underway though.
 


SeagullinExile

Well-known member
Sep 10, 2010
6,192
London
Looks like the port area, might be the Israelis taking out an arms shipment?

Or Israel murdering innocent civilians....again.
 




tip top

Kandidate
Jun 27, 2007
1,883
dunno I'm lost
That's my annual fireworks extravaganza in the back garden ****ed then if the kids see that :rolleyes:

In all seriousness, hopefully not as bad as it looks but that does look horrendous.
 




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