The Exploding Pagers
-
wrote on 18 Sept 2024, 12:32 last edited by
And if it was Luxembourg, then they planned this and began implementing it well before current hostilities. And the turnaround had to be incredibly fast. Hezbollah switched from cell phones only a few months ago.
-
She also spent time wandering around photographing embassies. Folks, we have a Mossad spy in our midst.
wrote on 18 Sept 2024, 12:44 last edited by@bachophile said in The Exploding Pagers:
She also spent time wandering around photographing embassies. Folks, we have a Mossad spy in our midst.
Allegedly the pager message sent right before it exploded displayed "555"
-
@bachophile said in The Exploding Pagers:
She also spent time wandering around photographing embassies. Folks, we have a Mossad spy in our midst.
Allegedly the pager message sent right before it exploded displayed "555"
wrote on 18 Sept 2024, 12:47 last edited by@89th said in The Exploding Pagers:
Allegedly the pager message sent right before it exploded displayed "555"
Somewhere I read that the message was 5318008 (but you had to turn it upside down).
-
wrote on 18 Sept 2024, 13:36 last edited by
The exploding pagers that wounded thousands of Hezbollah fighters in Lebanon Tuesday were reportedly detonated by a message impersonating the leaders of the recognized terrorist group.
Hezbollah militants all across Lebanon and parts of Syria received a message that appeared to be sent by the group’s leadership to their new pagers at 3:30 p.m. But in reality, the fake message was the trigger that set off explosives hidden in the devices, officials told the New York Times.
The message triggered the batteries inside the pagers to overheat and ignite the explosives, sources told Sky News Arabia.
Mossad allegedly intercepted a shipment of the Taiwanese-made beepers before it reached Lebanon and planted 1 to 2 ounces of pentaerythritol tetranitrate, a highly explosive material, next to the battery, along with a remote trigger switch, the Times and Sky News Arabia reported.
The devices were brand new, but it’s unclear when they arrived in Lebanon or how long they had been in use.
-
wrote on 18 Sept 2024, 14:13 last edited by
Very early reports. But right now it seems more unexplained explosions in Beirut.
-
wrote on 18 Sept 2024, 14:16 last edited by
I’m hearing walkie talkies. But it’s still very unconfirmed.
-
wrote on 18 Sept 2024, 14:18 last edited by
Walkie Talkies are how they did Oct 7 as I recall.
-
wrote on 18 Sept 2024, 14:29 last edited by
-
I’m hearing walkie talkies. But it’s still very unconfirmed.
wrote on 18 Sept 2024, 14:39 last edited by@bachophile said in The Exploding Pagers:
I’m hearing walkie talkies. But it’s still very unconfirmed.
Interesting, I wonder if it was more interactive, requiring the user to press the send button before exploding? If so, this will be far more lethal. If not, it’s quite possible many devices were not in effective range.
-
wrote on 18 Sept 2024, 14:42 last edited by
-
wrote on 18 Sept 2024, 14:43 last edited by
Brilliant.
-
wrote on 18 Sept 2024, 14:47 last edited by
Of course, the walk is talkies could carry a heavier charge than a pager.
“Muhammed, why are these walkie talkies so heavy?”
“Is good! They are built solidly! They will hold up during the great intifada!”
I would hate to be the Hezbollah procurement guy, right now.
-
wrote on 18 Sept 2024, 14:48 last edited by
Apple is known to put deadweight in their products because people are known to associate weight with quality.
-
wrote on 18 Sept 2024, 14:52 last edited by
This should lead to some pretty good Achmed the Dead Terrorist material
-
wrote on 18 Sept 2024, 14:55 last edited by
So they say now, the luxembourgers understood that hezbollah would switch immediately to an alternate channel of communication and so the next echelon was targeted.
-
Of course, the walk is talkies could carry a heavier charge than a pager.
“Muhammed, why are these walkie talkies so heavy?”
“Is good! They are built solidly! They will hold up during the great intifada!”
I would hate to be the Hezbollah procurement guy, right now.
wrote on 18 Sept 2024, 14:56 last edited by@LuFins-Dad and maybe the hezbollah procurement guy is currently drinking a martini on Tel Aviv beach promenade?
-
So they say now, the luxembourgers understood that hezbollah would switch immediately to an alternate channel of communication and so the next echelon was targeted.
wrote on 18 Sept 2024, 15:01 last edited by@bachophile said in The Exploding Pagers:
So they say now, the luxembourgers understood that hezbollah would switch immediately to an alternate channel of communication and so the next echelon was targeted.
Wait till you see what they did to the semaphore flags..:
-
wrote on 18 Sept 2024, 15:07 last edited by
-
@89th said in The Exploding Pagers:
Allegedly the pager message sent right before it exploded displayed "555"
Somewhere I read that the message was 5318008 (but you had to turn it upside down).
wrote on 18 Sept 2024, 15:24 last edited by@George-K said in The Exploding Pagers:
@89th said in The Exploding Pagers:
Allegedly the pager message sent right before it exploded displayed "555"
Somewhere I read that the message was 5318008 (but you had to turn it upside down).
Both splendid posts.
-
wrote on 18 Sept 2024, 17:20 last edited by
@bachophile @89th Just like Israel, I can neither confirm nor deny anything. LOL