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U.S., Germany, or China?… Someone Secretly Destroyed Russian NUCLEAR Reactors in THE MEDITERRANEAN
The manifest said:
• two cranes
• 129 empty shipping containers
• and a pair of manhole covers.
That was the official cargo aboard the Russian vessel Ursa Major when it departed Ust-Luga in December 2024.
But Russia does not deploy armed military escorts equipped with missile systems and naval guns to protect cranes and utility covers.
And when the ship exploded and sank off the coast of Spain…
the story stopped looking like a maritime accident.
This video breaks down one of the most disturbing covert-operation mysteries of the past decade:
the allegation that Russia was secretly transporting nuclear submarine reactor components to North Korea — and that someone decided the shipment could not be allowed to arrive.
In this analysis:
• The true background of the Ursa Major explained
• Why the vessel was previously known as Sparta III
• Russia’s Syrian “shadow fleet” logistics operations analyzed
• The unusual military escort accompanying the ship
• Why the escort profile immediately raised intelligence concerns
• The Aleksandr Otrakovsky and Ivan Gren capabilities explained
• Why heavily armed naval escorts made no sense for the declared cargo
• Satellite imagery from Ust-Luga analyzed
• The mysterious white objects loaded before departure
• Why analysts believe they matched nuclear reactor pressure vessel profiles
• The alleged VM-4SG compact submarine reactor connection
• Why the manifest may have been a complete deception operation
• The significance of Vladivostok as a possible cover destination
• The suspected North Korea transfer route explained
• Why cranes may have been included as unloading equipment
• The full timeline of the voyage reconstructed
• NATO surveillance of the vessel through the English Channel explained
• Portuguese and Spanish naval tracking operations analyzed
• The distress call off the Spanish coast
• Three explosions on the starboard side explained
• Why the vessel was initially assessed as stable
• The mysterious exclusion zone ordered by the Ivan Gren
• The red flares fired before the final sinking
• The four seismic events detected by Spain’s National Seismic Network
• Why analysts compared them to underwater detonations
• Captain Igor Anisimov’s testimony explained
• The reported 50cm hull breach and why it matters
• Why inward-bent metal suggests external penetration
• The Barracuda supercavitating torpedo theory analyzed
• How supercavitation technology works
• Why the damage pattern resembles kinetic penetration
• Germany’s Barracuda weapons program explained
• Why the weapon officially “does not exist” operationally
• Alternative theories involving limpet mines or underwater sabotage
• The intelligence implications of either scenario
• Whether Russia may have scuttled its own ship
• Why the cargo may have been too sensitive to recover publicly
• The significance of the WC-135R “nuke sniffer” flights
• Why the United States sent nuclear-detection aircraft twice
• The isotopic detection capabilities of the WC-135R explained
• Why continued monitoring suggests unresolved intelligence concerns
• The role of the Russian vessel Yantar analyzed
• Why the Yantar is considered a dual-use seabed operations platform
• The four additional explosions after the Yantar departed
• Whether Russia attempted to destroy or recover the reactor components
• The Russia–North Korea military exchange relationship explained
• North Korean troop deployments to Ukraine analyzed
• Kim Jong-un’s nuclear submarine ambitions revisited
• Why nuclear propulsion changes submarine strategy entirely
• The significance of compact reactor transfers
• Whether Russia has attempted another shipment since
• The unresolved intelligence questions still surrounding the wreck
This is not simply a shipwreck story.
It is:
• a covert proliferation story
• an intelligence war
• a maritime sabotage mystery
• and potentially one of the most important interdictions of nuclear technology in recent history
The manifest said cranes.
But somewhere at the bottom of the Mediterranean…
two governments, several intelligence agencies, and at least one nuclear-monitoring aircraft still appear deeply interested in what was actually aboard the Ursa Major when it disappeared beneath the sea.
#Russia #NorthKorea #UrsaMajor #NuclearSubmarine #Geopolitics #Military #Intelligence #WorldNews #Mediterranean #NATO #Ukraine #Submarine #BreakingNews #Defense #GlobalPolitics
Видео U.S., Germany, or China?… Someone Secretly Destroyed Russian NUCLEAR Reactors in THE MEDITERRANEAN канала Project Night Studio
• two cranes
• 129 empty shipping containers
• and a pair of manhole covers.
That was the official cargo aboard the Russian vessel Ursa Major when it departed Ust-Luga in December 2024.
But Russia does not deploy armed military escorts equipped with missile systems and naval guns to protect cranes and utility covers.
And when the ship exploded and sank off the coast of Spain…
the story stopped looking like a maritime accident.
This video breaks down one of the most disturbing covert-operation mysteries of the past decade:
the allegation that Russia was secretly transporting nuclear submarine reactor components to North Korea — and that someone decided the shipment could not be allowed to arrive.
In this analysis:
• The true background of the Ursa Major explained
• Why the vessel was previously known as Sparta III
• Russia’s Syrian “shadow fleet” logistics operations analyzed
• The unusual military escort accompanying the ship
• Why the escort profile immediately raised intelligence concerns
• The Aleksandr Otrakovsky and Ivan Gren capabilities explained
• Why heavily armed naval escorts made no sense for the declared cargo
• Satellite imagery from Ust-Luga analyzed
• The mysterious white objects loaded before departure
• Why analysts believe they matched nuclear reactor pressure vessel profiles
• The alleged VM-4SG compact submarine reactor connection
• Why the manifest may have been a complete deception operation
• The significance of Vladivostok as a possible cover destination
• The suspected North Korea transfer route explained
• Why cranes may have been included as unloading equipment
• The full timeline of the voyage reconstructed
• NATO surveillance of the vessel through the English Channel explained
• Portuguese and Spanish naval tracking operations analyzed
• The distress call off the Spanish coast
• Three explosions on the starboard side explained
• Why the vessel was initially assessed as stable
• The mysterious exclusion zone ordered by the Ivan Gren
• The red flares fired before the final sinking
• The four seismic events detected by Spain’s National Seismic Network
• Why analysts compared them to underwater detonations
• Captain Igor Anisimov’s testimony explained
• The reported 50cm hull breach and why it matters
• Why inward-bent metal suggests external penetration
• The Barracuda supercavitating torpedo theory analyzed
• How supercavitation technology works
• Why the damage pattern resembles kinetic penetration
• Germany’s Barracuda weapons program explained
• Why the weapon officially “does not exist” operationally
• Alternative theories involving limpet mines or underwater sabotage
• The intelligence implications of either scenario
• Whether Russia may have scuttled its own ship
• Why the cargo may have been too sensitive to recover publicly
• The significance of the WC-135R “nuke sniffer” flights
• Why the United States sent nuclear-detection aircraft twice
• The isotopic detection capabilities of the WC-135R explained
• Why continued monitoring suggests unresolved intelligence concerns
• The role of the Russian vessel Yantar analyzed
• Why the Yantar is considered a dual-use seabed operations platform
• The four additional explosions after the Yantar departed
• Whether Russia attempted to destroy or recover the reactor components
• The Russia–North Korea military exchange relationship explained
• North Korean troop deployments to Ukraine analyzed
• Kim Jong-un’s nuclear submarine ambitions revisited
• Why nuclear propulsion changes submarine strategy entirely
• The significance of compact reactor transfers
• Whether Russia has attempted another shipment since
• The unresolved intelligence questions still surrounding the wreck
This is not simply a shipwreck story.
It is:
• a covert proliferation story
• an intelligence war
• a maritime sabotage mystery
• and potentially one of the most important interdictions of nuclear technology in recent history
The manifest said cranes.
But somewhere at the bottom of the Mediterranean…
two governments, several intelligence agencies, and at least one nuclear-monitoring aircraft still appear deeply interested in what was actually aboard the Ursa Major when it disappeared beneath the sea.
#Russia #NorthKorea #UrsaMajor #NuclearSubmarine #Geopolitics #Military #Intelligence #WorldNews #Mediterranean #NATO #Ukraine #Submarine #BreakingNews #Defense #GlobalPolitics
Видео U.S., Germany, or China?… Someone Secretly Destroyed Russian NUCLEAR Reactors in THE MEDITERRANEAN канала Project Night Studio
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15 мая 2026 г. 22:33:01
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