Special Forces Rescue Military and Civilian J6ers from Deep State Prison

7 months ago
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United States Special Forces on April 7 raided a Deep State prison in the Aleutian Islands and freed 27 patriotic political prisoners whose only crime was peacefully visiting the Capitol on January 6, 2021, sources in General Eric M. Smith’s office told Real Raw News.

As reported last week, GITMO detainee Matthew Graves, a D.C. district attorney, tended to talk in his sleep, pejoratively slandering President Trump and espousing vitriol toward the MAGA coalition. His nocturnal ramblings included the words “Rura Penthe,” a Klingon penal asteroid, and “Adak,” an Aleutian Island and former military base 1,200 miles from Anchorage. Graves had also said the name “Matthew Bradford,” a Marine Corps captain who disappeared shortly after visiting the Capitol on J6.

Admiral Crandall found meaning in Graves’ hateful twaddle. He suspected that Graves had unknowingly disclosed the name and location of a covert Deep State jail housing J6ers the feds had captured and imprisoned without due process, unlawfully depriving them of liberty, property, and, perhaps, life. He shared his suspicions about Adak Island with the White Hat council.

The former Adak Navy Air Facility (NAF) sits in the center of the Aleutian chain. It was built in 1942 as a forward base to attack then-Japanese-held islands in the Pacific and repurposed in the 1950s as escalating tensions between the U.S. and the Soviet Union plunged much of the world into a Cold War. NAF’s peak activity occurred in the early 80s when 6,000 military personnel and civilian contractors lived on the isolated 79,200-acre base, which occupied three-fifths of Adak Island. In early 1991, as the global tensions de-escalated and the Cold War wound down, the Defense Department’s reduction of forces initiative led to the systematic reassignment of the base’s occupants. The DOD formally shuttered NAF on March 31, 1997, and the once sparsely populated tundra became depopulated again, its only remaining inhabitants 45 hermetic natives and rotating Department of Environmental Conservation survey teams.

Though devoid of a significant population, the fogged-in island has a controlled airport managed by the State of Alaska Department of Transportation. Alaska Airlines flies 737s, mostly cargo and DEC employees, into Adak Airport twice weekly.

General Smith, our source said, pulled strings to have a U.S. surveillance satellite point its high-resolution optics at the airfield and crumbling base replete with prefabricated houses in various stages of decay and earthen bunkers made of steel and stone. The base even had a McDonald’s, its golden arches split in half; Big Macs no longer served. The satellite’s brief orbit over Adak imaged only three bodies standing next to a grass-covered ferrocement bunker. No airplanes were on the runway.

“Three guards were hardly a Deep State army, but the general felt there could’ve been more, including the hostages, in buildings the satellite didn’t penetrate,” our source said.

Our source said the images crystallized in Gen. Smith an urgency to rescue the hostages and hold their jailors accountable.

“If they’ve been moved, someone there will know where they are now,” the general told the White Hat Council.

He coordinated the rescue op with his allies at 1st Special Forces Command. They ruled out a sea-based operation because sending a ship from GITMO to the Bearing Sea would take too long and be too conspicuous. They saw one workable option: landing a plane, neutralizing the opposition, and flying the prisoners to safety—a risky endeavor since only a thousand feet of open ground lay between the runway and NAF’s dilapidated infrastructure,

Their plan seemed simple on paper. A 6,000-foot parachute jump. Secure the airfield and terminate any federal presence. Rescue the hostages. Meanwhile, the plane would loiter above the island until Special Forces requested extraction, when the plane would land to recover all friendlies.

The general said he would arrange the transportation—a C-17 Globemaster would meet the Special Forces team at Elmendorf AFB in Anchorage on April 7.

“One council member opposed, and I’m not at liberty to say who, the plan, but the general said ‘this is a briefing. I am not seeking consent’ and shut him down. The mission was a go,” our source said.

The 1,200-mile flight from Anchorage to Adak Island was uneventful, he added.

Special Forces leaped from the C-17 at 2:00 am into dark skies filled with light drizzle. Upon landing safely, with all team members accounted for, they stowed their chutes and armed themselves before marching to the deserted airport, save for a scattering of civilian vehicles and a dull yellow school bus, its rearview mirrors cracked and tires almost deflated. The tower, too, was unoccupied and black as pitch.

Snipers provided overwatch from the tower while a half dozen soldiers formed a defensive perimeter at either side of the runway, eyes peeled for vehicle and foot traffic. The remaining soldiers humped east in the frigid air toward rows and columns of Cold War bunkers and two-story barracks with gable roofs. A single sentry wearing a black tactical suit betrayed his presence by puffing a cigarette. They spotted the flaring tip, red as a warning light, before the rifle hanging off his shoulder. The man spoke aloud to himself, saying, “I hate this shit.”

“You’re going to hate this even more,” said the Special Forces soldier who ambushed him from behind and started sawing into his neck with a garrote.

He gave the choking man an ultimatum: reveal the disposition of enemy forces and J6er’s whereabouts or die. The man, who had DHS credentials, spluttered that five feds, three currently asleep, were guarding 27 “domestic terrorists.” He told Special Forces he didn’t want to be on Adak Island and that the DHS had forced the assignment on him. Doubting the fed’s sincerity, Special Forces grilled him twice more, but the federal goon stuck to his story. He pointed out the buildings in which the guards were sleeping and the bunkers that housed the hostages.

Satisfied, Special Forces sawed deeper into his neck until he died.

One fed was snoring loudly enough to wake the dead when a soldier placed one hand over his mouth and plunged a knife into his chest with the other. Another had his pants around his ankles and was taking an early morning piddle as two bullets hit the back of his head. And yet another had been deep in slumber before his rude awakening; a soldier was pressing a pillow against his face and starving his brain of oxygen.

The final guard had been patrolling the open ground between three bunkers but stopped moving when a sniper’s bullet hit his forehead. He was still breathing as a soldier tore a keyring from his belt loop.

Special Forces unlocked and pulled open the steel doors.

Inside were 11 civilian males ages 21 to 73, each confined to makeshift cells someone had constructed inside the bunker. The second bunker held four civilian women, one of whom told her rescuers that the guards had raped her repeatedly. The last bunker held Captain Matthew Bradford and 11 other male service members the Deep State had scooped up during its manhunt for J6 “insurrectionists.”

Special Forces radioed the C-17 to land at once.

The plane dove beneath the clouds and swooped in for a landing. Hostages too sick or injured to walk were carried by stretcher onto the plane.

“The unfortunate souls went through hell,” our source said. “I’m not getting into their individual conditions right now but they’re all alive and in our protective custody.”

Asked what Special Forces would have done had there been more hostages than the plane could carry, our source said, “Then they would’ve held the position until the C-17 got them to Anchorage, refueled, and came back.”

As an aside, in a follow-up call this morning, we asked our source to either confirm or deny rumors suggesting the Real Donald Trump is “under the mountain” while a body double sits moodily in court.

“Two Trumps? That’s the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard. What are you, stupid? President Trump is a courageous leader. He doesn’t scurry away from enemies like a frightened animal. He charges them! He doesn’t hide behind doubles and clones like a cowardly Obama or Biden.”

By Michael Baxter -April 22, 2024

https://realrawnews.com/2024/04/special-forces-rescue-military-and-civilian-j6ers-from-deep-state-prison/

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