The whole ship explosion story is weird. Accident, Neptune missile, it sank immediately, it sailed under its own power and then sank, it was being towed when it sank. Everyone got a different story but there is not one single video or piece of evidence. Not even from the Pentagon with all their spy satellites and all.
Smells to me of a cover up. But why?
Nearest thing which sounds right to me is a comment I read on another site. Special forces from a NATO country infiltrated into Ukraine attacked the ship with a missile from shore. Russia knows this and knows which country it was but does not want to say so in public as it would start a hot war, so they concocted the "unfortunate magazine accident." Russia is known for not reacting and lashing out, they wait until they have an opportunity to get even. Maybe we will see a NATO ship also sunk before too long.
More plausible that it was sunk by a mine cut adrift by a storm a few weeks ago. Moskva was fully kitted out for AA defense but not protected enough against submerged threats.
The whole ship explosion story is weird. Accident, Neptune missile, it sank immediately, it sailed under its own power and then sank, it was being towed when it sank. Everyone got a different story but there is not one single video or piece of evidence. Not even from the Pentagon with all their spy satellites and all.
Smells to me of a cover up. But why?
Nearest thing which sounds right to me is a comment I read on another site. Special forces from a NATO country infiltrated into Ukraine attacked the ship with a missile from shore. Russia knows this and knows which country it was but does not want to say so in public as it would start a hot war, so they concocted the "unfortunate magazine accident." Russia is known for not reacting and lashing out, they wait until they have an opportunity to get even. Maybe we will see a NATO ship also sunk before too long.
More plausible that it was sunk by a mine cut adrift by a storm a few weeks ago. Moskva was fully kitted out for AA defense but not protected enough against submerged threats.