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FriedButter

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British nuclear sub missile launch fails as Trident misfires and ‘plops’ into sea just yards away – with Defence Secretary Shapps on board​

A TRIDENT missile dramatically misfired and crashed into the ocean yards from the British nuclear submarine that launched it, The Sun can reveal.

The second failed launch in a row – after a misfire in 2016 – happened while Defence Secretary Grant Shapps was on board HMS Vanguard to witness the test.

HMS Vanguard was under the surface, hovering at launch depth, but was not hit by the 44ft missile as it plunged back into the Atlantic.

Immediately, a frantic probe began to find out what went wrong and a search ordered to recover the top-secret missile technology from the seabed at Port Canaveral, Florida.

It is the second failed test since 2016, when a Trident fired from HMS Vengeance veered off course and self-destructed.

But, despite the setback, officials insist they are confident that the misfire was “event specific”.

Crucially, it is understood that had the firing taken place on a real patrol mission rather than under test conditions it would have been successful.

No further details are being made public about what went wrong on the grounds of “national security”.

Did Downing Street hide Trident missile test failure just weeks before MPs voted?
In a statement issued to The Sun, the Ministry of Defence said: “HMS Vanguard and her crew have been proven fully capable of operating the UK’s Continuous At-Sea Deterrent, passing all tests during a recent demonstration and shakedown operation (DASO) - a routine test to confirm that the submarine can return to service following deep maintenance work.

“The test has reaffirmed the effectiveness of the UK’s nuclear deterrent, in which we have absolute confidence. During the test an anomaly occurred.

As a matter of national security, we cannot provide further information on this, however we are confident that the anomaly was event specific, and therefore there are no implications for the reliability of the wider Trident missile systems and stockpile.

“The UK’s nuclear deterrent remains safe, secure and effective.”
The Ministry of Defence confirmed an “anomaly occurred” during the January 30 exercise off Florida, but the nuclear deterrent remains “effective".

The crew on the nuclear sub perfectly completed their doomsday drill, and the Trident 2 missile was propelled into the air by compressed gas in the launch tube.

But its first stage boosters did not ignite and the 58-ton missile – fitted with dummy warheads – splashed into the ocean and sank.

A source said: “It left the submarine but it just went plop, right next to them.”

Ministers are expected to update MPs today in the Commons on the January 30 incident at the US’s secure Navy Port site. First Sea Lord Admiral Sir Ben Key was also onboard the sub at the time.

Officials stress Trident remains one of the most reliable weapons systems in the world, having successfully completed more than 190 tests involving the UK and US.

The UK has fired 12 Trident 2 missiles since the weapons entered service with the Royal Navy in 1994. But the two most recent ones failed.

In June 2016 a Trident 2 blasted out of HMS Vengeance and its rocket boosters successfully ignited. But moments later it veered off course, reportedly towards the US, and automatically self-destructed.

Later, Theresa May’s government was accused of covering up the failed launch as parliament was due to vote on renewing the UK’s nuclear deterrent.

MPs backed a plan overwhelmingly to spend £40billion on “upgrading the nuclear deterrent”.

It means the ageing fleet of Vanguard subs are due to be replaced with Dreadnought-class successors in the 2030s.

The Trident fired from HMS Vanguard was due to fly 3,700 miles from off the coast of Florida to an impact point in the mid-Atlantic between Braziland West Africa.

Its intended route was revealed in warning to ships and aircraft from National Geo Spatial Intelligence Agency.

The target was 1,000 miles closer than that of the failed 2016 launch and less than half the Trident 2 missile’s reported range of 7,500 miles.

Trident 2 missiles are designed to blast to the edge of space, reaching speeds of 13,600mph, before re-entering the earth’s atmosphere with a devastating payload of up to 12 nuclear warheads.

They first entered service with the US navy 34 years ago and four years later with the Royal Navy.

Yet the missile’s makers Lockheed Martin insist Trident 2s remain “the most advanced ballistic missiles in the world”.

It said they have been successfully test-fired a “record” 191 times since 1989, most recently in September when the USS Louisiana, an Ohio-class nuclear-powered sub, conducted a demonstration and shakedown operation in the Pacific.

British launches are rarer because each missile costs upwards of £17million.

Sounds like they should investigate those hot teapots.
 

FriedButter

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Israel’s GDP contracts nearly 20% in fourth quarter amid Gaza war​

Israel’s gross domestic product shrank nearly 20% in the fourth quarter of 2023, according to official figures.

The contraction was significantly larger than expected, as analysts predicted a contraction of around 10%. It reflects the toll of the country’s war against Hamas in Gaza, now entering its fifth month.

The economic data out Monday “pointed primarily to a contraction in private sector consumption and a deep contraction in investment, especially in real estate,” analysts at Goldman Sachs wrote in a research note.

“The deep GDP contraction occurred despite a strong surge in public sector consumption as well as a positive net trade contribution, with the decline in imports outpacing the decline in exports.”

Official figures showed a 26.9% quarter-on-quarter annualized drop in private consumption, and fixed investment plummeting nearly 68% as residential construction ground to a halt amid a shortage of both Israel workers due to military mobilization and Palestinian workers as the latter group has been mostly barred from entering Israel since Oct. 7.

Before then, more than 150,000 Palestinian workers from the occupied West Bank entered Israel daily for work in a range of sectors, predominantly in construction and agriculture.


Israel’s GDP contraction “was much worse than had been expected and highlights the extent of the hit from the Hamas attacks and the war in Gaza,” Liam Peach, senior emerging markets economist at London-based Capital Economics, said in an analysis note.


“While a recovery looks set to take hold in Q1, GDP growth over 2024 as a whole now looks likely to post one of its weakest rates on record.”

Israel’s high-tech economy is particularly affected by the fact that it has mobilized 300,000 of its men and women as military reservists to deploy in both Gaza and on its northern border with Hezbollah in Lebanon.

The mobilization was triggered by the terror attack of Oct. 7 led by Palestinian militant group Hamas that killed about 1,200 people in Israel. Israel’s subsequent offensive against the Gaza strip and relentless bombing campaign has killed more than 28,000 people in the blockaded territory, according to Gaza’s Hamas-run health ministry.
 

_killuminati_

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This is a fundamental reason why it is increasingly looking like god himself is on China’s side when things keep going China’s way. But this isn’t Devine intervention, it’s just the fruits of China’s earlier labours and investments. Which is actually better than divine intervention because China can keep repeating it.
Off topic.
An Islamic scholar wrote of this a century ago..
God always favors those whose works, with relation to the world, are more developmental than destructive, even if they are evil inside and/or deny God. If they create more destruction than development, God replaces them with somebody who is less destructive / more developing.

This piece was written to describe the rise and fall of European global colonialism.
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..whom Hamas drew inspiration from, as well as the Iranian revolution.

In this religious perspective, China's (current) rise can be seen as divine intervention, even if the country rejects religion.
 

Heliox

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Sounds like they should investigate those hot teapots.

From the Sun -
"Crucially, it is understood that had the firing taken place on a real patrol mission rather than under test conditions it would have been successful."

Lots of talk of proximity fuse and warheads not designed to detonate unless certain components installed which apparently were not due to this being exercise. So on.

From the Indian LFX ...

No points for guessing where they learnt their cope from. :rolleyes:
 

_killuminati_

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The west seems to really have a lot of doublethink these days. Guess 1984 was a reflection of themselves.

You know how they try to say both sides are bad when you call them out on hypocrisy? They can't actually do that and doublethink is a result of it.
Best way to understand the West is to listen to anything they say officially and multiply it with a big -1 .
 

_killuminati_

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That country seems to have an unusually high number of perverts. Perhaps this is due to the fact that a certain procedure performed on the male babies of that country drastically reduces the sensitivity of the affected body part and leads to sexual deviancy during adolescence and adulthood. Unsurprisingly, in the USA, where the majority of men were subjected to the same procedure at birth due to the influence of said country, pedophilia and other sexual disorders are unusually common...
Military rape is a big thing in USA. Roughly the same numbers: 35 - 50% of women are [reported] raped by their colleagues.

Another big thing is infidelity. Some years ago, I passed by an outdoor event in Virginia Beach called 'Military Spouses'. I asked a few groups of enlisted men and women (and spouses) about how common is infidelity in the military, expecting them to say "15-20% ... not that common ... don't ask about it, etc". To my surprise, they openly answered like it's an accepted routine like brushing your teeth in the morning, indicating numbers upward of 90%, etc., not very bothered by its prevalence.
 
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