Quote:October 24, 2025 / Joseph P. Farrell
Regular readers of this site who have been here for a few years will recall that I blogged some years ago about all those explosions that seemed to be afflicting munitions and chemical plants around the world, particularly in Russia, as a few of its munitions factories exploded. There were also explosions at Iranian ammunition dumps, an explosions in German and British ammunition factories, and explosions in Chinese and French chemical plants in Tianjing and Rouen.
At the time I was blogging about these events, I was arguing that one could not rule out two possibilities: (1) that the events were not accidental, but deliberate sabotage as the result of covert action, or (2) as the result of the covert deployment of some sophisticated technology or weaponry. In particular, the crater signature of the Tianjin chemical plant explosion intrigued me, because the crater did not look wide and shallow, but rather narrow and deep, as if it had been formed by a deep penetrator bomb, or perhaps even a "rod-of-God" kinetic device deployed from space. This opinion was not based on anything other than what photographs were available at the time. (For a list or my blogs on the prior explosions, search for "munitions plant explosions" on this website's search engine. The most useful article summarizing the pattern is here:
FIRST TIANJIN, THEN SIBERIA, THEN IRAQ, THEN ROUEN, FRANCE, AND NOW
When news came out about the explosion of the munitions plant in Tennessee recently, covert action was again my first thought, but at the time there was not much information to go on, until S.D. sent along the following article, and it's worth pondering:
More Than An Accident? Kyle Bass Sounds Alarm On U.S. Military Explosives Supply Chain After Tennessee Plant Blast
What should catch one's attention here is the assertion of Kyle Bass - made without any corroboration - that the plant provided explosives for about 60% of the Department of Defense's various weapons systems:
Quote:The Accurate Energetics Systems explosion in Tennessee demands urgent, independent scrutiny. With China moving aggressively toward Taiwan and historical precedents of sabotaging munitions facilities, we cannot dismiss the possibility this was more than an accident. AES provides over 60% of the Department of War’s high-explosives systems, losing it for years is a strategic shock. Every indicator and warning in the system is flashing red.
After a commenter remarked on this concentration, Bass modified his comment:
Quote:Across 60% of the platforms…not 60% outright. It’s not quite worded properly.
Even with the correction, one is left with the impression that serious damage to the long-term strategic supply chain for American military forces has been dramatically effected, and the timing of the event, as noted by Bass himself, is suspicious, with the recent Chinese pressures on Taiwan. One might also note that the explosion occurred in an even more suggestive temporal context, namely, the announcement of the Trump administration that Mr. Putin and Mr. Trump would hold a summit meeting hosted by Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban in Budapest, to deal with the Ukrainian issue. At a time when the Ukraine seems to be in a nearly hysterical panic for more weapons from the west, damage to the munitions infrastructure needed to supply them weakens the negotiating strength of Mr. Trump. In any case, the article itself reaches a similar conclusion regarding this event as I reached years ago with other similar events:
Quote:And circling back to Bass' warning about potential sabotage in Tennessee - given China's ongoing hybrid warfare campaign against the U.S. - nothing can be ruled out. As an old Chinese saying goes, it's "death by a thousand cuts." That's the best way to explain the CCP's hybrid warfare against the U.S.
Placed in the context of my earlier blogs about similar events, however, this recent event could be viewed as part of a much larger picture, one of a covert hot war taking place, with the earlier explosions at Russian, Chinese, British, German, Iranian, and French facilities as the manifestations of that war. If the earlier pattern of those events - Russian and Chinese explosions followed by French, British, and German "incidents" - then we may reasonably assume that there will be some retaliation for this event against whomever the American investigators determine was behind it, and rest assured, if Kyle Bass can think of it, the Department of Defense's investigators already have, and are pursuing it. They will not make any announcements, however. But if plants in China or Russia suddenly explode in a few weeks or months, we may reasonably assume that it might not be another unfortunate accident.
"It is hard to imagine a more stupid or more dangerous way of making decisions than by putting those decisions in the hands of people who pay no price for being wrong." – Thomas Sowell
        


