?:reviewBody
|
-
Late in the evening of Oct. 1, 2020, news broke that U.S. President Donald Trump had tested positive for COVID-19, a highly contagious disease responsible for the deaths of more than 200,000 Americans. Shortly afterward, social media users noted that two doomsday planes had been mobilized and speculated that the launch of these planes was a show of strength to deter an attack from adversaries in the aftermath of Trump's diagnosis. One person wrote on Facebook: The Boeing E-6B Mercury is an airborne command post capable of launching nuclear weapons and is sometimes referred to as a doomsday plane. While it's true that two of these doomsday planes were launched around the time that news broke about Trump testing positive for COVID-19, there's no evidence that these two events are related. In fact, a U.S. Strategic Command spokesman told Fox News that this was purely coincidental and that these flights were planned before Trump's diagnosis: National security reporter Marc Ambinder noted that these planes routinely fly over the United States. Chistiaan Triebert, a reporter for The New York Times, elaborated, saying the two doomsday planes that had been spotted after Trump's diagnosis had made multiple flights over the last few weeks: The Boeing E-6B Mercury plays a vital part in the United States' defense strategy. The Navy has 16 of these airborne command posts and at least one of these planes is flown on a nearly daily basis. In other words, the fact that two doomsday planes were spotted over the United States on the same day that Trump tested positive for COVID-19 appears to be little more than a coincidence.
(en)
|