Pulsing the Sky: Radar Rings and the Engineered Haboob Over Phoenix - Alaska Sky Watcher

1 month ago
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On Monday, Phoenix, Arizona was hit with a towering haboob — a dust storm so massive it rolled across the valley, blotting out the sun, blinding drivers, knocking out power to more than 15,000 people, and grounding flights at one of the nation’s busiest airports. Heavy rains and strong winds followed, even ripping part of the roof off a terminal at Phoenix Sky Harbor International.
The mainstream explanation is simple: a thunderstorm downdraft hit the ground and kicked up a wall of dust. But when you dig into the radar data, another story begins to emerge.
The Radar Rings Nobody Wants to Talk About
We can see storm’s radar signature, and just like countless other events I’ve tracked, the same pulsing concentric rings appeared. These rings expand outward in waves across the atmosphere — always timed to moments of violent weather ignition.
Mainstream meteorology dismisses them as “radar artifacts” or “glitches.” But ask yourself: why do they always appear right when destructive weather kicks in? Why do they form perfect circles, pulsing outward like ripples from a stone dropped in water?
These aren’t random static errors — they’re patterns.
How the Pulses Drive Pressure
Think about what it takes to make a haboob:
A sudden burst of air pressure slamming into the desert floor
High-velocity winds strong enough to scoop up dirt and dust
A sharp temperature and density differential in the atmosphere
Radar pulses — especially when tied to phased-array systems, ionospheric heaters, or microwave bursts — can inject exactly that: instant, localized pressure shifts. By ionizing or heating pockets of the atmosphere, they can generate downdrafts, alter wind shear, and trigger cascading convection.
The result?
A haboob on demand.
It’s no coincidence that these storms increasingly come paired with electrical chaos:
Power outages
Lightning bursts
Roof damage from sudden wind shear
Travel shutdowns
When the atmosphere is being pulsed and overcharged, these outcomes are the natural byproducts. Dust walls, torrential rains, explosive winds — all of it follows the energy being pushed into the system.
What happened in Phoenix isn’t just desert weather. It’s part of a technogenic sky war being waged overhead:
Radar rings show the fingerprints of electromagnetic manipulation.
Dust walls provide cover for what’s happening in the air.
Power outages and grounded flights are the collateral effects.
Every time I capture these pulses on radar, the same question remains: are these “glitches”… or are they the signatures of a system that can engineer storms, pressure waves, and even haboobs on command?
Because from where I’m standing, it looks less like weather — and more like warfare in the atmosphere.
Stay Aware, Be Prepared and Until Next Time Keep Looking Up 👀

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