The initial 'false flag' nuclear attack is first discovered by an air traffic controller in Erzurum, Turkey. However, even in the 1990s, ATC already mainly used secondary surveillance radar (SSR). In contrast to primary radar, SSR does not pick up reflections of the actual radio signal its transmitter sends out. Rather, it triggers responses from transponders in the aircraft. A nuclear missile does not have a transponder and cannot be picked up by SSR. There are primary radar backup systems but they don't have the power to pick up a nuclear missile at over 200 miles as shown. By the time a ballistic missile came across the ATC primary radar site, it would already be too high in space to be picked up.
Scritto da il
05/03/2025 alle ore 07:59