20 July 2021. Flash flood in Kiev, the capital of Ukraine.
Downpour in Kiev: cars are floating, and people are wandering knee-deep in water. The capital turned into a real river, almost all the streets were flooded.
In Kiev, the weather has sharply deteriorated. The city was covered with a powerful thunderstorm, and the streets are flooded with water. Because of this, on some roads, water reaches car headlights.
The metro announces the closure of the Beresteyskaya station.
Meanwhile, users are actively posting photos and videos of bad weather on social networks. It also floods underground passages, in particular, near the Akademgorodok metro station. Forecasters predict that by the end of the day on July 19 thunderstorms, hail and wind gusts of 35-50 metres per second are expected in Kiev.
APOCALYPSE in Ukraine! Drowned after Germany and Belgium! The biggest flood in history of Kiev!
The High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) was initiated as an ionospheric research program jointly funded by the U.S. Air Force, the U.S. Navy, the University of Alaska Fairbanks, and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). It was designed and built by BAE Advanced Technologies. Its original purpose was to analyze the ionosphere and investigate the potential for developing ionospheric enhancement technology for radio communications and surveillance. As a university-owned facility, HAARP is a high-power, high-frequency transmitter used for study of the ionosphere.
The most prominent instrument at HAARP is the Ionospheric Research Instrument (IRI), a high-power radio frequency transmitter facility operating in the high frequency (HF) band. The IRI is used to temporarily excite a limited area of the ionosphere. Other instruments, such as a VHF and a UHF radar, a fluxgate magnetometer, a digisonde (an ionospheric sounding device), and an induction magnetometer, are used to study the physical processes that occur in the excited region.
Work on the HAARP facility began in 1993. The current working IRI was completed in 2007; its prime contractor was BAE Systems Advanced Technologies. As of 2008, HAARP had incurred around $250 million in tax-funded construction and operating costs. In May 2014, it was announced that the HAARP program would be permanently shut down later in the year. After discussions between the parties, ownership of the facility and its equipment was transferred to the University of Alaska Fairbanks in August 2015.
HAARP is a target of conspiracy theorists, who claim that it is capable of \"weaponizing\" weather. Commentators and scientists say that advocates of this theory are uninformed, as claims made fall well outside the abilities of the facility, if not the scope of natural science.