Poseidon does exist and it’s scary as hell – it could actually end a continent.
Amidst the rising tension over Ukraine, President Vladimir Putin has said that he does not want a war in Europe, instead, he demands the issue of Kyiv’s relationship with NATO is resolved in its entirety immediately.
Putin said, “We need to resolve this question now … [and] we hope very much our concern will be heard by our partners and taken seriously, [And] As for the war in Europe … about whether we want it or not? Of course not. That is why we put forward proposals for a negotiation process, the result of which should be an agreement on ensuring equal security for everyone, including our country,”
Well, that was a relief until Business Insider has confirmed that Russia’s 100-megaton underwater nuclear doomsday device a.k.a ‘Poseidon’ can end the entire humanity.
“While all nuclear weapons can kill thousands in the blink of an eye and leave radiation poisoning the environment for years to come, Russia’s new doomsday device, called ‘Poseidon,’ takes steps to maximize this effect.”
The author of ‘Atomic Audit,’ Stephen Schwartz have said that if the Americans will fire one of its Minutemen III nuclear weapons, Poseidon can detonate the air above the target. The fireball from the nuke does not need to touch the ground sending only radiation from the bomb itself.
“The new bomb is said to use a warhead much stronger, perhaps the largest one ever detonated. And designed to have direct contact with water and the ocean floor, it could kick up a radioactive tsunami that potentially spread radioactivity over a deadly swath hundreds of miles and land and sea making uninhabitable for decades.” Business Insider added.
Malcolm Davis, a senior analyst at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute has confirmed that Russian President Vladimir Putin made it clear that he seeks the collapse of NATO, “If NATO doesn’t come to the aid of a member state, it’s pretty much finished as a defense alliance.”
In other words, the risk of war in Ukraine is so dangerous.
Sources: WND, Business Insider