ALBAWABA - Israel targeted the "Icom V82" walkie-talkie devices on Wednesday, as part of a new phase of attack targeting wireless devices. It is known that the battery of this device is large enough ...
A Japanese manufacturer that supplies the U.S. military also supplied walkie-talkies reportedly used in Wednesday's mass attack in Lebanon. The company, ICOM, has supplied millions of dollars worth of ...
Japan’s Icom Inc., whose brand appears on walkie-talkies that exploded in Lebanon, said it halted production a decade ago of the model allegedly used in the attacks and is still investigating the ...
Japanese radio equipment maker Icom said it no longer produces or sells two-way radio devices which reportedly exploded in Lebanon. The company Thursday said it had produced and sold the IC-V82 ...
Walkie-talkies exploded across Lebanon on Wednesday. The new attack came just one day after thousands of beepers exploded on Tuesday as part of a coordinated attack thought to be orchestrated by ...
Icom exported its IC-V82 two-way radio to regions including the Middle East until October 2014, when it stopped making and selling the devices, the Osaka-based company said in a statement Thursday. It ...
Among the many outstanding questions is how explosive materials were planted in the devices. If the Icom walkie-talkies were first manufactured a decade ago, it’s possible they were modified well ...
A vendor shows walkie-talkie devices without batteries at an electronic store in Sidon BEIRUT (Reuters) -The batteries of the walkie-talkies used by Lebanese armed group Hezbollah that blew up this ...
Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter. The Hizbollah walkie-talkies that detonated across Lebanon are likely to have been among tens of thousands of ...
The Japanese maker of the brand of walkie-talkies linked to explosions targeting the Hezbollah armed group that killed 20 people in Lebanon and injured hundreds of others said it could not have made ...
TOKYO — The Japanese manufacturer of the two-way radios reportedly detonated in a second round of explosions targeting the militant group Hezbollah in Lebanon said Thursday that it was investigating ...
Japanese radio equipment maker Icom said it no longer produces or sells two-way radio devices which reportedly exploded in Lebanon. The company Thursday said it had produced and sold the IC-V82 ...