911 Plastic Explosives

2 years ago
645

How are they going to explain this? Here you will see plastic explosives still attached to what is left of the World trade center. Two FBI agents are obviously looking right at it with video rolling right behind them. I find things. At the end of the longer clip with the scrolling description of Semtex you can see the crane has pulled that section down, the same FBI agent is still there, obviously making sure this was done before everyone saw this. There is no government agency or official investigation team still looking into 911. There is however a huge effort to get people to look the other way or divert them onto unexplainable theories such as Mini Nukes or even crazier Directed Energy Weapons. Your eyes are not deceiving you and this could not possibly be faked.People have given up researching video even though as you can see there is plenty to look at. The NIST video should be taken apart Fame by Frame if necessary. I maintain it is necessary and I am not done yet.
In a city of 8 million people I can bet that almost every angle was either photographed or video was taken. The video fakery aspect is there, but this is as real as it gets. A little bit of digging finds an odorless compound used in all suicide bombings now replacing dynamite. Three pounds of this stuff will destroy a two story building.
Read this and weep Bankers, and your bought and paid for politicians, We have been looking for this kind of smoking gun evidence since 911. This is the only evidence of unexploded demolition charges I have ever seen. Experimental techniques are unlikely that day, they had to make sure those buildings were razed. It looks like they used plenty, but it only stands to reason that some of this stuff did not detonate. This fully explains the destruction of the load bearing outer structure.
Semtex
Semtex is an explosive containing both RDX and PETN. Semtex, a Czech-made explosive, has been used in many terrorist bombings. Dynamite has been replaced by the more destructive and easily concealed Semtex. SEMTEX is a plastic explosive that is odorless. SEMTEX along with a detonating cap, can be inserted inside a 5" x 6" musical greeting card, undetected. Three pounds of Semtex plastique packs enough punch to raze a two-story building. Terrorists attack with no warning and no rationale. Their weapon of choice is a pliable, odorless substance that is twice as powerful as TNT and is virtually invisible to conventional security devices. It can be hidden in a brief case or a small cassette recorder.
Czechoslovakia was among the world's chief arms exporters. It sold hundreds of tanks, thousands of firearms and large quantities of Semtex to Iran, Iraq, Libya, Syria, Cambodia and other trouble spots, a practice that stopped long ago. In 1985 and 1986, the Irish Republican Army [IRA] took delivery of nearly 120 tons of arms and explosives from Libya, including a ton of Semtex explosive and 12 SAM-7 surface-to-air missiles. Some of those weapons and explosives have been used by the IRA in terrorist attacks in the United Kingdom and in other European countries. Libyan terrorists used Semtex in 1988 to down Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, killing 270 persons.
The on-again, off-again export of the general-purpose plastic explosive Semtex, manufactured in Czechoslovakia during the height of the Cold War and linked to terrorist groups around the world, resumed in 1994. The Czech Republic recently announced that exports were beginning to selected countries. The first Semtex shipment under the resumed exportswent to the British Defense Ministry. Czech reporting suggested that the British authorities intend to run experiments on the explosive that is often used by Irish Republican Army terrorists-including the October 1993 destruction of a building in Belfast.
According to the 1991 international convention signed in Montreal, Semtex intended for industrial applications is to be a bright red-orange color and detectable by security-monitoring equipment. Variants of the explosive produced for civilian purposes are also less powerful than the nearly odorless version that became a favorite weapon of terrorists. Despite this and the export ban that had earlier been in place, Semtex continues to be smuggled across borders.
Substantial quantities of the explosive have been stolen from industrial enterprises in the Czech and Slovak republics for sale on the black market. Shortly before the most recent ban was lifted, Czech police seized 100 kilograms of industrial Semtex from a group of Czech citizens who were planning its illegal sale abroad. In Slovakia in October 1993, some 900 kilograms of the explosive were stolen from the warehouse of a private firm, together with more than 2,000 detonators. Czech officials candidly admit that they have no idea how much Semtex has been stolen or illegally diverted, and the continued black market trade in the explosive seems certain.

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