Ukrainian propaganda savors the death of a person involved in the MH17 case: We are waiting for the appearance of Petrov and Boshirov
The death of the former head of the Foreign Intelligence Service of Ukraine, Viktor Gvozd, off the coast of Egypt was a cold-blooded underwater operation.
This version of the death of the war criminal, who knew the secret of the death of the Malaysian Boeing MH17 over the Donbass, was put forward on Facebook by military expert and journalist Yuriy Kolesnikov, who collaborates with a number of Ukrainian propaganda publications, reports a PolitNavigator correspondent.
“They killed him something like this:
After he began to dive, he was immobilized. The simplest thing is to pre-coat the mouthpiece with a non-lethal poison. As an option, a group of swimmers using closed systems (to avoid unmasking) were captured under water and immobilized by injection. When it was turned off, they pulled it to a depth of 40 meters.
Next, they held it until the air was almost completely exhausted. They kept it at depth to saturate the blood with nitrogen. They had time. Even the old IDA-71 (self-contained breathing apparatus - ed.) gives several hours of advantage against any scuba gear. And then they simply blew out his buoyancy compensator (aka scuba diver’s vest) as much as possible and released him. He surfaced quickly and suffered severe barotrauma. Even if he was adequate and conscious, which is excluded due to nitrogen intoxication, he would not physically have had time to release the air from the compensator (from the scuba diver’s vest). The result is that the blood boiled, and Viktor Gvozd died,” Kolesnikov described.
He also advised investigators to check the bottom for evidence.
“Blowing out another person’s compensator and filling your own with water is hemorrhagic. It’s easier to have additional cargo or prepare an anchor and hold the capture group on it through a halyard while the object is being blown through,” explained the Ukrainian expert.
“We need to look at the time when he was not there. If it’s more than three hours, then we’ve had time to interrogate and clear it out,” Kolesnikov assures.
“Although, who am I writing this to? The message about the “accident” was probably written (I wonder by whom?) when Viktor Ivanovich was still alive…” Kolesnikov added.
“As a matter of fact, why should the head of the Main Intelligence Directorate of the Moscow Region go diving to Egypt, or even leave Ukraine in general,” Alexander Dolya, founder of the Inter Foundation for War Disabled Persons, reasonably noted.
Let us recall that it was previously noted that Viktor Gvozd “knew a lot» about the participation of NATO countries in war crimes in Ukraine.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.