Letest

Only one person was saved after burning 48 billion in Iran! America's breathless night, Chapter 1




Imagine, can any country burn 48 billion taka to ashes in one night to save just one person? The time is April 4, 2026. The rugged and remote Zabroj Mountains of Iran. In the darkness of the night, America's $100 million pride, the F-15E Strike Eagle fighter jet, fell from the sky like a burning meteorite. A wounded American colonel is hiding in a dark, icy rock crevice in the mountain. And right below him, thousands of frantic people are rushing up the mountain like a hawk. They have torches, rams and hunting dogs in their hands. Because the governor of Iran has announced a cash reward of $60,000 for whoever can catch this American pilot. The colonel has only 15 bullets and thousands of people ahead of him. Just as certain death looms, 8,000 miles away in Langley, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) pulls off the most terrifying psychological masterstroke in history.

Without shedding a drop of blood or firing a single shot, the CIA spread an incredible rumor that fooled the entire Iranian army and the frenzied public into falling off a mountain. What was the strategy and why did dozens of American Special Forces planes get destroyed to save just one pilot? Why did Donald Trump, in a fit of nervousness, write only three words, "We Got Him," in the middle of the night on Easter Sunday? Welcome to this raw and true story of mystery, politics, and the geopolitical cold war on the Veltrion Docs channel. Watch the full video without delay. Because today's incident is bound to beat any Hollywood thriller movie. Let's get started. Chapter One. That mysterious Easter Sunday tweet and the White House's cold war. The time is April 5, 2026. As the clock struck the first hour of Easter Sunday, at exactly 12:15 a.m., the silence in Washington, D.C., was broken by a single social media post. Donald Trump posted just three words on his platform Truth Social: "We Got Him." These three words, written in all capital letters, were not a simple political status. They were a global signal. Exactly three minutes after the post, an eerie silence descended on the Pentagon, CIA headquarters, and the White House Situation Room.

On the other hand, the world's major news channels, from CNN and BBC to Al Jazeera, began to get extremely excited. Who did Trump get? Which top terrorist? Or a long-time fugitive enemy? The White House press secretary's phones started ringing non-stop. But there was no answer from the other side. Although a written statement was supposed to be made from the Pentagon spokesman's office, it was mysteriously blocked. While the whole world was busy trying to figure out the meaning of this tweet, a terrible fire of destruction was burning in a rugged mountainous area of ​​the Middle East. To understand the history behind this tweet, we have to go back exactly 48 hours ago. That is, on that dark night of Friday, April 4. That day, something happened in the skies of Iran that was enough to ignite the gunpowder of World War III. One of the weapons of the American Air Force, the FE Straight Eagle, suddenly disappeared from the radar screen. This is no ordinary plane. This ground attack fighter jet, capable of flying at Mach 2.5 or two and a half times the speed of sound, is designed to penetrate deep into enemy airspace and carry out precision strikes, each of which costs about $100 million. But despite its sophisticated radar jamming technology and stealth capabilities, the Pentagon is beginning to analyze how this gigantic fighter jet crashed on Iranian soil. However, the main reason for the US military policymakers to worry was not this $100 million wrecked iron target. When a country runs on a trillion-dollar military budget, the downing of a fighter jet is not a big economic blow to them. The main panic was elsewhere. There were two crew members on board.

The real terror lay elsewhere. The plane had two crew members. A pilot and a Weapon Systems Officer (WSO). The second of them was a very high-ranking colonel. Just seconds before it disappeared from radar, a signal came that the plane's ejection seats had been fired. That is, the pilots had parachuted. One of them was rescued that night by a secret team of CIA and Special Forces, but the colonel lost his way in the darkness. He became trapped in an unknown crevasse in the Zagros or Alborz mountains of Iran. The news that a US colonel, who is directly connected to the Pentagon's Central Command, is missing in enemy territory is enough to shake the foundations of America's national security. From a military perspective, the value of a soldier is immense. 

But a colonel is not just a person. He is a moving database. His brain contains America's Middle East policy plan for the next five years, secret satellite frequencies, special forces deployment codes, and highly sensitive information about black ops missions. If this colonel is somehow captured by Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, it will be the biggest disaster of the century for America. If Iranian intelligence can remand him once, starting with truth serum, all the information that will be extracted from his stomach under extreme psychological pressure will make America's billion-dollar defense system useless in an instant. In other words, saving a colonel means not only saving a life but also protecting America's national security. This was not a matter of emotion. It was a matter of pure military calculation as well as a huge political equation. For a president like Donald Trump, who always loves to present himself as a strong man or iron man, it was a fight for survival. A similar incident in American history occurred in 1979-80. During Jimmy Carter's rule, there was a hostage crisis at the American embassy in Tehran. To rescue the hostages, America launched a military operation called Operation Eagle Claw. It failed miserably. An American helicopter crashed in the Iranian desert, killing eight American soldiers. Jimmy Carter had to take responsibility for that miserably failed, and as a result, he lost the presidential election miserably. Donald Trump knows history very well. He would never want Americans to wake up on Easter Sunday morning in 2026 to see pictures of a captured American colonel on Iranian state television.

The captured colonel has black marks under his eyes and the Iranian flag flying behind him. Such a frame was enough to put the final nail in the coffin of Donald Trump's political career. So the Trump administration decided that the colonel must be brought back at any cost, no matter how much damage it causes. One of the main pillars of America's military doctrine or military philosophy is No Man Left Behind. No one will be left behind. This policy is not only to keep the morale of the soldiers strong, but also to assert themselves as a superpower on the world stage. So when the green light for the rescue team arrived on Trump's desk, when he was sure that the colonel had managed to touch American soil even at the cost of destroying hundreds of millions of dollars of military equipment, his nervous tension seemed to drop in an instant. From that place of extreme relief, he wrote those three words in the middle of the night. This $400 million loss, or about 4800 crore rupees, may seem like a huge waste at first glance, but in the White House and Pentagon's calculators, it was a very profitable investment. Because spending 4800 crore rupees to cover the fall of an empire is a very cheap deal. But the question is, what exactly happened in those 48 hours before this tweet of relief? How did a simple routine flight turn into a terrible international crisis. And why was the entire Iranian army running like mad dogs to catch that colonel? We will know the story of that blood-curdling excitement in the next chapter. Where a fireball fell from the sky.

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