Just a theory. Did they quietly tell us who was behind the June 2018 incident? So I decided to look into a certain Middle East country naval assets… remember, this country also attacked the USS LIBERTY and killed 34 sailors in 1967…
In the Q drops, we were given several that linked to the June 2018 “helicopter search light” attack off Whidbey Island, WA. There was also a drop that had a USN SSBN which I had a tough time locating for this
See u/#q2350
Who had launch authority?. Diesel-electric boats are exceptionally quiet…. Saving Israel last?
Bare with me. This is just a theory. To this date, there has been no confirmed answer of how that missile “magically” appeared in the Puget Sound region that morning.
I think this all tied back to the Russel Sub and when the airplane was stolen. The news told us this was a helicopter taking off. No we have a pic of the Russel sub launching AA at AF1. If I member correctly the sub was decommissioned years ago then sold to the Clowns.
Can you produce that photo of this sub firing? There are many theories on how it was launched as well: a cargo freighter transiting to/from Seattle/Tacoma ports, a rogue/foreign sub which snuck down the San Juan de Fuca Straight and sat just off shore of NAS Whidbey Island at 0430 and quickly slipped back out to sea. The straight goes deep (600+ FSW) rapidly or.. it was a K-Club cargo container on a tractor-trailer with an escape route (<90 minutes) into Canada. The Russel Sampson sub is not very plausible IF one believes the hi-jacked airplane, flown by a Russel Sampson theory. Reason? The waters around Ketron Island are very shallow and not deep enough for a SSN to hide as many believe. The airplane did take out a server which the Deep State players were using XBOX gaming system to communicate….
https://www.kitsapsun.com/story/news/local/navy/2023/01/31/naval-base-kitsap-bangor-completes-seawolf-class-submarines-olympic-pier/69741948007/
We have a base that seems to not be listening?
Oh.. I know about this base. I used to be employed by the Navy and was employed out there. I challenged the Public Affairs Officer and got crickets in response. Had him dead to rights. He. Couldn’t give a reply. They knew they were lying… 🤥
It was fired by either a US sub or an international sub. Heck, could one have been bundled into the hold of a maritime cargo hauler? Im with you as to why this incident hasn't come to the forefront of the news, yet for some reason Q makes a big issue out of it. Was AF1 in the area at that time.?
AF1 was the target, but it was a decoy. This was when POTUS flew to Singapore and he met secretly with NK KJ Un, only the real AF1 flew over Europe. They knew of the plan and quietly changed course at last minute.
Umm, no. Diesel-electric boats are notoriously loud machines. Modern day sonar equipped U.S. ships can pick them up hundreds of km away, subs and surface ships alike. And we have a SOSUS net in Puget Sound to help defend it.
That missile firing Q posted back then was from.a U.S. sub that wasn't detected, or wasn't reported by U.S. Naval Intelligence monitoring the SOSUS net. There's only one class of ship in the world that has that capability, the U.S. Ohio Class SSBN. Fully nuclear powered, runs on steam, not diesel power, so there's no diesel knock coming from the engines. Incredibly hard to detect by sonar. So hard, in fact, that the only verified fool-proof method of detection is using low-orbit satellites capable of detecting magnetic shifts in the Earth below the surface. These ships are so fucking quiet that they routinely go right past every other class of ship, regardless of the nation it belongs to, without detection. Our own fast attack and the Seawolf class hunter/killer subs have a very hard time detecting a U.S. Navy SSBN.
That SOSUS net is so powerful, it routinely detects bottom dwelling critters hundreds of km away, yet has an incredibly hard time detecting our SSBNs until the C.O. decides to announce their presence before entering Puget Sound. One of the more fun missions of our routine training for Puget Sound based ships is to try to locate a SSBN before it announces their presence. Most of the time, almost 95% of the time, actually, the SSBNs are able to achieve complete surprise.
When I was stationed aboard NIMITZ in the late 90s, we would train against our subs, and the vast majority of the time we lost. They'd pull up next to us and surface, announcing the end of the training evolution which meant we were "dead." Our C.O., X.O., CMC, and Senior Command team would then host theirs in our banquet room down in the CPOs mess. I was a junior Sailor at the time on TAD orders to the Chief's Mess and would volunteer for those C.O.'s Meals because they tipped us very well. We'd be standing against the wall, waiting to refill glasses, serve food, etc and got to listen in on some of the debriefings. It was eye opening and very sobering learning just how powerful our Navy really is.