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‘Filipino Monkey' may be behind radio threats, ship drivers sayNews Pay & Benefits Flashpoints Education & Transition Pentagon & Congress Off Duty Veterans Military Honor Subscribe Now ...
A threatening radio message to U.S. warships which seemed to come from Iranian vessels swarming U.S. ships in the Persian Gulf might have come from a third party known as the “Filipino Monkey… ...
On today's show, we talked with David Brown of the Navy Times about the Jan. 6 incident in the Strait of Hormuz, when U.S. ships off the coast of Iran were approached by several small Iranian ...
Did you know that the term “Filipino Monkey” has become an internationally known name? The reason I’m asking this question and why we’re writing this piece is due to a CNN report I heard ...
A VHF radio scoundrel dubbed "The Filipino Monkey" might have been the source of a grim warning to a U.S. navy warship during last week's confrontation with Iran in the Strait of Hormuz. U.S ...
Tracking down the Filipino Monkey would require the use of some electronic warfare aircraft, and the cooperation of police in the Arab states bordering the Persian Gulf. That should be no problem as ...
The Filipino Monkey talks for hours and provokes ships in sometimes a vulgar exchange. He makes threatening remarks hoping to provoke seafarers, but few respond.
The transmission, according to Navy Times, could have come from a “locally famous heckler known among ship drivers as the ‘Filipino Monkey.'” ...
Bishop David said the analogy was a good reminder for Filipino voters as the election nears. “The money offered by corrupt politicians is no different than a few pieces of candy inside a coconut. Grab ...
A VHF radio scoundrel dubbed "The Filipino Monkey" might have been the source of a grim warning to a U.S. navy warship during last week's confrontation with Iran in the Strait of Hormuz. U.S ...
The Filipino Monkey phenomenon was particularly troublesome during the "Tanker War" of the 1980s, when commercial vessels in the Persian Gulf became targets of hostile fire.
A VHF radio scoundrel dubbed "The Filipino Monkey" might have been the source of a grim warning to a U.S. navy warship during last week's confrontation with Iran in the Strait of Hormuz. U.S ...