Let’s Talk About Remote-Controlled Gun Turrets And The Killing Of Iran’s Top Nuclear Scientist
The scenario sounds like something straight out of a Hollywood blockbuster, but lightweight remote-controlled gun turrets do indeed exist.
The scenario sounds like something straight out of a Hollywood blockbuster, but lightweight remote-controlled gun turrets do indeed exist.
Assassins killed Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, who was involved in Iranian nuclear weapons work stretching back decades, in a city near Tehran.
The tactic has become widespread on battlefields overseas and now appears to be proliferating to organized crime.
For the second time this week, the secretive AGM-114R9X Hellfire missile has punched a hole through a car’s roof and sliced its target to death. Both attacks had identical impacts on the vehicles targeted and both occurred in northwestern Syria.
The U.S. government has been grossly late to act on the threat posed by small drones and there’s a swarm on the horizon that is far more menacing.
The young female suspect was wearing a patterned skirt, white shirt with “LOL” embossed across it, and pink leggings.
The business suit-clad killer was supposedly screaming about Aleppo.