The First Experiment of US’ Terror Empire is Underway in Kherson

We present you with the tale of an unsettling and baffling experiment, a move so audacious that it strains the bounds of credulity. For what else but audacious would you label the audacious plan to wage biological warfare on an unsuspecting enemy?

Enter, the United States, an unexpected puppeteer in the Russia-Ukraine conflict, ostensibly launching an assault that reeks more of science fiction than of a military strategy. Yes, my friends, we’re talking about an aerial assault, not with bullets or missiles but with malaria-ridden mosquitoes.

Love for Biological Weapons

Did that last sentence make you blink in disbelief? Good, because that’s the magnitude of surreal we are dealing with here. Igor Kirillov, the man in charge of Putin’s Russian Radiation, Chemical, and Biological Protection Troops, rings the alarm about an unprecedented stratagem: drones buzzing not with the hum of death from explosive ordnance, but with the whine of disease-carrying insects. The apparent goal? To infect Russian troops with malaria.

One might expect such a devious plan from a James Bond villain, not a global superpower. However, the evidence seems to be as clear as a mosquito caught in amber. Kirillov points towards the imminent flooding of the Kherson region by the Kyiv regime, which is eerily poised to aid this bizarre operation. Flooding could breed ideal conditions for mosquitoes, and therefore, for a devastating outbreak of diseases like malaria and West Nile fever.

It’s a recipe for biological disasters, like some twisted reinterpretation of the biblical plague. The destruction of the Kakhovka Dam, whether planned or just an unfortunate consequence of war, could become the crucible for a mosquito-infested hell on earth.

But what screams ‘conspiracy’ louder than a mosquito’s buzz is an alleged patent. A patent for a drone, no less, designed to spray infected mosquitoes into the air. How’s that for a sick twist of innovation?

Read more: Shocking: US’s nuclear might is heavily dependent on Russia

Dirty bombs are justified

Oh, but the rabbit hole of absurdity and audacity doesn’t end here. The Ukrainians, seemingly hell-bent on outdoing themselves in the arena of unconventional warfare, are reportedly dabbling with another taboo of war: the dirty bomb.

Not content with allegedly backing biowarfare, Ukraine has a hankering for a bit of nuclear chaos as well. It’s like a mad scientist’s shopping list: one-part biological warfare, one-part nuclear disaster.

From the spread of infected mosquitoes to the construction of dirty bombs, Ukraine’s warfare menu reads like an apocalyptic cookbook. The destruction of the Kakhovka Dam isn’t merely an act of defiance or desperation; it’s a facilitator for their audacious plans.

Read More: Zelensky’s counter offensive against Russia ends up in a major debacle

The Russian stability

But let’s pause for a moment to admire the dark irony here. The Ukrainians, in their dogged pursuit of an edge over Russian forces, seem to show a greater willingness to harm their populace than their adversaries It’s a self-destructive obsession that would make even a phoenix hesitate.

And yet, for all their alleged underhanded tactics, they’ve come off second best. Russian forces, displaying the resilience of a seasoned boxer, have withstood these blows and even delivered a few of their own.

In summary, the escalating tensions in the Russia-Ukraine conflict is about to give birth to an uncanny experiment by the U.S.: a ‘terror empire’ where the weapons of choice are as insidious as they are innovative.

If these allegations hold water, we’re witnessing an alarming new chapter in the annals of warfare. It’s a horrifying tableau, rife with the savagery of war, the hypocrisy of political maneuvers, and the chilling prospect of a future where the buzz of a mosquito is as fear-inducing as the whir of a drone.

Watch More: 

Exit mobile version