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[ THE WIRETAP ]
A US sub's single torpedo just sent an Iranian warship to the abyss, marking a silent kill unseen since WWII.
[ THE DISPATCH ]
The deep just claimed another. A US Navy fast-attack boat, ghosting through the dark water, put a single Mk-48 into the hull of the IRIS Dena. One shot, one kill. The Pentagon brass, Hegseth and Caine, spilled the details, cold and clinical. They called it Operation Epic Fury. Said it went down off Sri Lanka, far from any safe harbor. A dark echo from the archives: the first sinking of an enemy ship by a torpedo since World War II.
The Dena, an Iranian Moudge-class frigate, was nothing but a blip on the sonar, fresh from drills in the Bay of Bengal, thinking itself invisible in the vastness. It was wrong. One moment, 180 souls on board; the next, a silent scream under the waves. Only 32 pulled from the wreckage by Sri Lankan patrols. The rest, debris and ghosts. The sub's name? Locked down, a phantom that leaves only wreckage. But its signature, a single Mk-48, speaks volumes.
Caine crowed about "global reach," about hunting and killing "out-of-area deployers." This wasn't just a single strike; it was a brutal message. The numbers from the brass are chilling: over 2,000 targets hit across Iran, more than 20 of their naval assets sent to the deep. He claims Iran's major naval presence is "neutralized." Just a prelude, they say. More iron rain is on the horizon, the next 24 to 48 hours slated for more bone-shattering impacts. The silence of the deep is about to be shattered again.
[ THE CASUALTIES ]
US submarine sinks Iranian ship in first torpedo kill since WWII, Pentagon confirms
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ORIGIN: 2026-03-04 10:33:12
NODE: GHOST_COMMAND // AI_SYNTHESIS
[ THE WIRETAP ]
A US sub's single torpedo just sent an Iranian warship to the abyss, marking a silent kill unseen since WWII.
[ THE DISPATCH ]
The deep just claimed another. A US Navy fast-attack boat, ghosting through the dark water, put a single Mk-48 into the hull of the IRIS Dena. One shot, one kill. The Pentagon brass, Hegseth and Caine, spilled the details, cold and clinical. They called it Operation Epic Fury. Said it went down off Sri Lanka, far from any safe harbor. A dark echo from the archives: the first sinking of an enemy ship by a torpedo since World War II.
The Dena, an Iranian Moudge-class frigate, was nothing but a blip on the sonar, fresh from drills in the Bay of Bengal, thinking itself invisible in the vastness. It was wrong. One moment, 180 souls on board; the next, a silent scream under the waves. Only 32 pulled from the wreckage by Sri Lankan patrols. The rest, debris and ghosts. The sub's name? Locked down, a phantom that leaves only wreckage. But its signature, a single Mk-48, speaks volumes.
Caine crowed about "global reach," about hunting and killing "out-of-area deployers." This wasn't just a single strike; it was a brutal message. The numbers from the brass are chilling: over 2,000 targets hit across Iran, more than 20 of their naval assets sent to the deep. He claims Iran's major naval presence is "neutralized." Just a prelude, they say. More iron rain is on the horizon, the next 24 to 48 hours slated for more bone-shattering impacts. The silence of the deep is about to be shattered again.
[ THE CASUALTIES ]
- IRIS Dena (Iranian Moudge-class frigate): Sent to the bottom of the Indian Ocean by a single torpedo.
- Crew of IRIS Dena: 180 souls aboard. 32 pulled from the water by Sri Lankan forces. The rest, lost to the deep.
- Islamic Republic of Iran Navy: Over 20 naval vessels destroyed in ongoing operations, "major naval presence in theater" deemed neutralized.