The DIU debunked the fake of the Russian special services about Ukrainian "red mercury" in Syria

DIU refutes fake about Ukrainian "red mercury" in Syria
One of the capsules has the inscription: “PU.9424 U”, the other one has “HG25 P307 9.99 U92”.
So, this time, in addition to the fictional “plutonium” [Pu — plutonium], the Muscovites are reviving the old Soviet fable about the so-called “red mercury” [Hg — mercury], a substance that does not exist in nature.
“Red mercury” is a Soviet intelligence invention that was used in a large-scale disinformation campaign in the Middle East in the 1980s and 1990s. The “red mercury” legend, created in Moscow and directed against foreign intelligence, claimed that this modification of the chemical element could become a material for making a “terrible” bomb.
The hacks from Lubyanka claim that they purchased the container they brought from "corrupt officials of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine" for "immediate sale."
Also, along with fake "elements" for making a "nuclear bomb," the Russians in Syria are offering ten capsules with supposedly "unknown toxic gases" — in fact, these are reagents for an old chemical reconnaissance device that agents of the aggressor state have already tried to sell earlier as part of an information operation against Ukraine.
Nothing new or original — Russian special services operate according to the patterns of their predecessors from the 20th century. So the old mythology about "red mercury" indicates an aggravation of the genre crisis among the Kremlin's special services. We see how Russia helplessly "gets out of its pants", sowing conspiracy theories in order to discredit Ukraine, destabilize the situation in the Middle East, in particular in Syria, where the criminal regime of Putin's friend — Bashar Assad — has fallen.

Andriy Yusov
Representative of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine
Ukraine is taking all measures, including through the military intelligence line, to destroy these next hybrid plans of Russia, the GUR noted.
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