Contrary to what we're all supposed to believe, since Hiroshima and Nagasaki (which were fake) there have been many, many dozens of tactical nuclear strikes (which were all too real).
There was just another tactical nuclear strike using two weapons on unknown targets. The video is not dated but the news broke today. I have never seen this particular strike before and I have seen video of quite a number of them, so I'm going on the assumption it's new and would have been taken the night of February 15-16
The video was originally posted to TikTok but I don't have the link. Here's the link to a slightly downrezzed version on YT (which you should consider saving): WTF, IS THIS REAL?!?!?
I can assure you it is real. In fact, you can see the towering mushroom cloud of the preceding strike. No one seems to know where this was, but someone on the video speaks a word which is said to be Russian.
These are without doubt nuclear detonations, if you have never seen one on a battlefield. Look how it completely lights up the sky and the landscape for several seconds, and very dark night falls thereafter. It's very hard to tell, but I would eyeball the yield at 10-15 kT.
All of this is being very heavily suppressed.
UPDATE 2/17: I've located one writeup of this event on alt-media: Nuclear war but not in Ukraine
Bruce Cathee wrote a few books on the earth grid and he hypothesized nukes can only be ignited on a certain point of the grid at only a certain point in time. Then he says when and where the French we’re going to do their next nuke tests.
I've heard this hypothesis. I do think there's an earth grid and there may even be some relation to nuclear weapons, but from all the tactical strikes I've seen they can use them anywhere they wish, in very precise locations down to a few meters. That doesn't rule out Cathee's hypothesis, but it means that there is not much apparent practical locational limitation from it.
There could still be some limitation as to timing, but all the targets I've seen have been fixed so we can;t tell the difference there. But short of an aircraft carrier, anything worth blowing up with a nuke probably doesn't move much. Since the Russians have deployed nuclear-tipped anti-ship cruise missiles since at least 1983 (see the P-700 Granit), unless they're lying about this one little aspect of it I suspect there's no practical limitation as to time either.
All in all, I personally found no anomalies that would compel me to research Cathee's hypothesis further.