FBI raids home of Washington Post reporter
Digest more
Rumors of a sonic weapon involved in the U.S. capture of Maduro are circulating online. Here's what science and available intelligence says.
At one point, they launched something; I don’t know how to describe it,” he said. “It was like a very intense sound wave. Suddenly I felt like my head was exploding from the inside.”
The US used a powerful mystery weapon that brought Venezuelan soldiers to their knees, “bleeding through the nose” and vomiting blood during the daring raid to capture dictator Nicolas Maduro, according to a witness account posted Saturday on X by the White House press secretary.
The ensuing chaos resulted in hundreds of Venezuelan soldiers allegedly being incapacitated, bleeding, or vomiting due to a suspected sonic weapon. The attack reportedly resulted in around 100 Venezuelan casualties.
Days after the United States captured Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in a shocking military operation, an eyewitness recalled how American forces were using a ‘mystery weapon’
There is no credible evidence that US forces used any unknown device against Venezuelan personnel during the operation to capture President Nicolás Maduro, experts and official sources say.
In a major disclosure, Semaphore reveals that The Washington Post and The New York Times withheld information about a secret US raid to capture Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro. The report contrasts this silence with the criticism Indian media faced during 'Operation Zindur'.
WASHINGTON – The Afghan man accused of shooting two National Guard soldiers blocks from the White House last week served with CIA-backed "zero units" in Afghanistan, paramilitary groups that carried out secret raids against suspected terrorists and U.S ...
The US military unleashed a stunning overnight show of force to capture the Venezuelan strongman, deploying more than 150 aircrafts, elite ground troops and overwhelming airpower.