The British "Daily Mail" **February 15**, the US Intelligence Agency said that Putin plans to launch a nuclear bomb in space, which is a major "hidden danger" for the United States.
Mike. Turner, chairman of the U.S. Congressional Intelligence Committee and a Republican congressman, has already proposed to the White House yesterday to declassify all the information on the attack.
The U.S. intelligence agency says Putin intends to launch a nuclear bomb into space.
Two ** said that Moscow wants to launch a nuclear bomb into space, perhaps to destroy the satellite. One said, "It's worrying and sensitive. It was, he said, "a big deal."
White House spokesman Mike Johnson told the Capitol on Wednesday that together we will work on this issue as we do with anything that involves privacy. While there has been no positive response to the response, some members of Congress have said the issue is serious and does not pose a warning to the public.
Russia's Space Telescope 2543 launched a new target into space in 2020 and conducted a "non-destructive test" on it. In 2021, Russia tested a "spy" satellite abandoned in 1982 that was dropped into space in 1982 and blown apart. Russia has also used its most lethal hypersonic missile, which can accelerate in space and hit multiple land targets, to deter the West.
In 2021, Russia tested a "spy" satellite abandoned in 1982 that was dropped into space in 1982 and blown apart.
On an underground launch pad in Orenburg, Russia, there is a **Angard-type missile with a nuclear warhead said to have 27 times the speed of sound. At 20,000 kilometers per hour and equipped with a hypersonic glider, the rocket can break away from Earth's atmosphere and hit any target around the globe in less than 30 minutes, Moscow said.
There are reports that U.S. lawmakers and U.S. allies will not be able to engage in public discussion or any cooperation on the threat until the document is released. Turner said that today, the Standing Committee on Special Intelligence of the U.S. House of Representatives will give all members of Congress a full understanding of the serious problems facing the United States. "I ask Biden to declassify all of the information about the attack so that Congress, Congress and our allies can open a debate on this issue to resolve it," he said. ”
Biden, United States**.
U.S. Defense Adviser Jake Sullivan said Wednesday that he was "surprised" that Turner had publicly mentioned threats related to "erratic military forces" abroad. He told the White House that the warning message would be held in the U.S. Congress on Thursday. Jim. Haines insisted that the "panic" was unnecessary, but he refused to provide more information.
The news comes as the U.S. Congress is debating a bill on Section 702 of the Foreign Information Surveillance Act, which would make the FBI a controversial "spy tool." The bill, which allows the U.S. Federal Intelligence Service to conduct targeted searches for foreign nationals, says the measure is essential to curb terrorism.
Republican Congressman Mike. Turner, chairman of the U.S. Congressional Intelligence Committee, yesterday asked the White House to declassify all of the information on the intimidation.
The draft, released earlier this week, contains two bills passed last year by the U.S. Congressional Intelligence and Law Council. However, some Republican lawmakers disagreed with the plan, saying that more changes were needed and that a search order should be prescribed.
Bob good said Tuesday that existing legislation authorizes the United States** to collect your personal information. But Turner objected to applying for authorization, arguing that doing so would increase pressure on the intelligence community. In an interview with the British newspaper Daily Mail, Turner said: "We neither ask nor ask for permission to access legitimate terrorist material. ”