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TN munitions plant explosion. Accident or not?

Posted on 10/16/25 at 4:33 pm
Posted by Night Vision
Member since Feb 2018
19491 posts
Posted on 10/16/25 at 4:33 pm
ZeroHedge

The massive blast that rocked a Tennessee explosives plant last week that killed 16 people has caught the attention of Kyle Bass, founder and chief investment officer of Hayman Capital Management, who warned about potential sabotage by foreign adversaries. Investigators are still trying to determine what sparked the explosion.

"The Accurate Energetics Systems explosion in Tennessee demands urgent, independent scrutiny. With China moving aggressively toward Taiwan and historical precedents of sabotaging munitions facilities, we cannot dismiss the possibility this was more than an accident," Bass wrote on X.

He continued, "AES provides over 60% of the Department of War's high-explosives systems, losing it for years is a strategic shock. Every indicator and warning in the system is flashing red."

AES' explosives are used in a wide range of conventional munitions and related weaponry primarily as the explosive fill, booster/initiator, or engineered charge. It's publicly known that the U.S. Army and Navy have awarded AES military contracts for bulk explosives, landmines, breaching charges, etc.

A sizeable concentration of America's energetic-materials production supply chain appears to be linked to AES.

Even worse, Anduril Industries founder Palmer Luckey warned last Friday, "It's the broader economy and maybe some other defense companies, if you can believe it, there's lots of us defense companies that haven't been sanctioned by China and therefore they haven't had the foresight to go and build it."

...
Posted by TFH
Member since Apr 2016
3474 posts
Posted on 10/16/25 at 4:35 pm to
Possible.

Honestly it pisses me off that so many eggs are put in one basket. Spread that shite around so one loss doesn’t wipe the whole fricking supply
Posted by 3down10
Member since Sep 2014
38278 posts
Posted on 10/16/25 at 4:35 pm to
Is there even anything that could be considered evidence left?

I'm surprised this one place with such a low employee count was responsible for so much.
This post was edited on 10/16/25 at 4:36 pm
Posted by W2NOMO
Member since Jul 2025
1691 posts
Posted on 10/16/25 at 4:37 pm to
quote:

caught the attention of Kyle Bass
that’s a lot of speculation as a result of catching his attention.
Posted by TFH
Member since Apr 2016
3474 posts
Posted on 10/16/25 at 4:38 pm to
quote:

Is there even anything that could be considered evidence left?

Not likely. Unless there’s a robust detonator that survived, maybe some wires. I worked the explosion in West, TX and there wasn’t shite left of that place.
Posted by goatmilker
Castle Anthrax
Member since Feb 2009
74460 posts
Posted on 10/16/25 at 4:40 pm to
Im just the opposite. Put these on protected government land. Not bunched up but protective measures would be better and concentrated. One plant surrounded by forrest and private public land is harder to protect.
Posted by TFH
Member since Apr 2016
3474 posts
Posted on 10/16/25 at 4:50 pm to
quote:

Im just the opposite. Put these on protected government land. Not bunched up but protective measures would be better and concentrated. One plant surrounded by forrest and private public land is harder to protect.

I mean different companies. In different regions.
Posted by 21blackjack
Member since Oct 2025
1099 posts
Posted on 10/16/25 at 4:57 pm to
This sounds more grounded than a conspiracy theory.
Posted by TFH
Member since Apr 2016
3474 posts
Posted on 10/16/25 at 4:58 pm to
quote:

grounded

Hmm, very well could have been a bad ground. A little static makes all kinds of things go boom.
Posted by goatmilker
Castle Anthrax
Member since Feb 2009
74460 posts
Posted on 10/16/25 at 5:00 pm to
If it’s a critical product for military manufacturing it’s time to up security how ever it’s done.
Posted by TFH
Member since Apr 2016
3474 posts
Posted on 10/16/25 at 5:01 pm to
quote:

If it’s a critical product for military

Damn right. I don’t want to be having this same discussion about HIMARS in South Arkansas
Posted by USAFTiger42
Baton Rouge
Member since Dec 2016
3706 posts
Posted on 10/16/25 at 5:19 pm to
It's a good point to ensure this was an accident due to the importance but I'm surprised this plant isn't better protected
Posted by Floating Change Up
Member since Dec 2013
12886 posts
Posted on 10/16/25 at 5:24 pm to
quote:

Accident or not?


No accident.

No sabotage.

Not intentional.


Simply put, incompetence.


When the munitions depot exploded in Minden about 15 years ago, some people called it accidental. Others insisted sabotage.

But really, it was from people half-arse following mandated safety protocols and government inspectors believe words from the employees instead of performing critical inspections.

Not accidental, and not intentional.

Simple incompetence.
Posted by ItTakesAThief
Scottsdale, Arizona
Member since Dec 2009
10342 posts
Posted on 10/16/25 at 5:35 pm to
That operation looked like it was run out of a modular home and very old metal building.

I am sure they provided high explosives but I don’t think it was the lynch pin of our defense explosive industry.

If it was, we are I’m more trouble than I thought.
This post was edited on 10/16/25 at 5:37 pm
Posted by Longhorn Actual
Member since Dec 2023
2905 posts
Posted on 10/16/25 at 6:08 pm to
quote:

I am sure they provided high explosives but I don’t think it was the lynch pin of our defense explosive industry.



The lynch pin is Holsten, also in TN. They produce 100% of the US' and 90% of our global allies' RDX.

All in one spot, using a 70 year old batch process.

It's a problem.
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