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Several Afghan people residing near the MOAB explosion voiced their appreciation for the drop, saying the black-clad militants tortured their community.
The United States military did drop a A GBU-43/B MOAB on ISIS targets in Afghanistan in April 2017. This video, however, does not show that explosion. The video is from at least 2015, when it was ...
The factors driving Moab's housing shortages are complex, but all seem to swirl around the tourist explosion in the red-rock town. Some blame the scarcity of long-term rentals on Airbnb hosts, who ...
A "Mother of All Bombs" or MOAB weapon sits in a hangar. DoD Photo On April 13, the US military dropped the most powerful non-nuclear bomb in its arsenal on an ISIS stronghold in Afghanistan.
On Thursday, the United States made international headlines by dropping one the most powerful non-nuclear bomb it's ever used on an alleged ISIS hideout in Afghanistan ― a GBU-43/B, or MOAB ...
An icon in the shape of a lightning bolt. Impact Link An explosion at a port in Beirut brought destruction to the Lebanese capital Tuesday, damaging buildings, killing more than 100 people, and ...
Its explosion is equivalent to 11 tons of TNT and the blast radius is a mile wide. The MOAB's acronym and power has led to it being given the nickname the ‘Mother Of All Bombs’.
This outhouse outside of Moab, Utah, near Arches National Park may be the most scenic in America. ... NorCal fireworks explosion leads to widespread Fourth of July cancellations. 5.
MOAB, Utah – A 10-inch natural gas pipeline exploded north of Moab on Thursday, damaging a roadway and sending up a mushroom-shaped cloud. Nearby workers escaped serious injury. KUTV reporter… ...
The explosion left behind a crater 300-400 feet wide and 62 feet deep. People 300 miles away heard it. It also shattered all the medieval stained-glass windows of Worms cathedral, 9 miles away.
A Moab man was arrested after allegedly making months of threats against city leaders and local businesses, and the discovery of multiple weapons and drugs in his house, police say.
WEST JORDAN — A West Jordan man and a man from Arizona are accused of duping a woman into investing $265,000 into a subdivision in Moab that she later found out doesn't exist.