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No Safe Haven, the Raid

Jay

Dokkaebi
GA Member
Oct 3, 2018
3,847
The briefing room sat beneath the flight operations building, buried behind two security doors and a maze of concrete corridors. There were no windows. The only light came from a projector mounted to the ceiling.

A satellite image of northern Iraq filled the screen.Operators from the 25th "Akbaba" Special Operations Unit sat scattered around the long table. Some leaned back with crossed arms. Others studied folders laid open in front of them. Nobody was speaking.

Colonel Serkan Uysal, commander of the squadron, stood near the back wall with his arms folded. Beside him sat the troop chiefs and team leaders who would ultimately decide how many men were sent into the mountains.

The projector clicked. A new image appeared.

A grainy overhead photograph.

A cluster of stone buildings sat along a narrow valley road. The terrain around it rose sharply into barren ridgelines and jagged rock formations. A red circle appeared several hundred meters beyond the village.

"This is the target area," said the woman standing beside the screen. She wore civilian clothes. Her dark blazer with no rank insignia or military patches meant she was another spook. Just a small identification badge clipped to her belt saying she belonged to the National Intelligence Organization.

Case Officer Ezgi Şenler advanced the slide.

The image zoomed in. A rocky slope. Sparse vegetation.

Several dark openings in the hillside.

"Begining this year the PKK has begun a series of wide-spread bombing campaigns that have left dozens of civilians dead and over a hundred security forces killed or injured.” She began with. “The organization has been working to break up this elaborate supply chain. We’ve succeeded in penetrating the main supply chain that transports active ingredients from the port here in Basra to a staging point in Mosul before it is produced in a dozen factories across Northern Iraq masquerading as commercial sites.” She paused looking around to make sure the operators were paying attention.

“In the course of our investigations we uncovered parses of intel that indicate the PKK’s bomb-making operations are being led by a foreign operative. He is believed to possess advanced knowledge of improvised explosive devices, electronic initiation systems, command-wire detonators, remote-trigger mechanisms, and anti-handling devices. That experience has already had significant outcomes in the lethality of the PKK’s explosive capabilities.” She then pulled up pictures of dozens of bombings that included a leveled facial structure of a police station, the remnants of an army outpost barracks, and massive craters from roadside bombs. “Codename Tessaphon is the PKK operative we’ve been chasing.”.

“We’ve located an individual we believe based on human and signal intelligence sources that is Tessaphon and we believe that he is currently in this cave system.”

Master Sergeant Çağlar Ertuğrul’s hand raised up as he asked a question. “Do you have a source on the ground?” He asked.

Ezgi shook her head. “No”

“So how do you know they are in the cave system? Because the truth is we’ve seen this kind of op before and it wasn’t the case.”

“We’ve located the courier that communicates for Tessaphon and the rest of the Cell’s leadership. From there we’ve located the units and our air assets have been scrapping signal communications that show the cave’s active use. A low-level courier was seen carrying a specially requested package by our field operatives that confirmed Tessaphon is in that cave system.”

She looked around seeing that the team-leader was not satisfied but did not have anything else to add. “The Cave complex approximately four kilometers northeast of the village," she said.

Several operators exchanged glances."Three days ago, a SIGINT platform intercepted encrypted communications between Christopher and senior PKK leadership. We could not decrypt the entire conversation."

Another line appeared.

"But we confirmed Tessaphon’s voiceprint. One of our own confirmed it. The same communications indicate preparations are underway for what appears to be a major transfer of material. They want to disperse their active ingredients to shield them from our ongoing air campaign."

"What material?" one operator asked.

"We don't know." Ezgi said.

"Explosives?" He then asked.

"We don't know." Ezgi responded.

"Personnel?" He then asked.

"We don't know." Ezgi responded again.

“So what the hell do we know asid from the fact some guy is in the fucking cave?”

Ezgi didn't blink. “Nothing.” She clicked forward again. A map filled the screen showing eight different exit and entry points in the cave system. We have HUMINT reporting from two independent sources placing Tessaphon inside this cave system."

Çağlar stepped forward again. “What kind of assets?"

"Two unrelated assets embedded in this portion of the network."

"How reliable are they?" Çağlar asked.

"Historically reliable." Ezgi said.

"Historically reliable isn't the same as verified." Master Sergeant Emre Üçtepe said.

"No." Ezgi said in agreement. The room remained quiet. The answer wasn't reassuring.

A cave network meant blind corners. Dead spaces. Multiple entrances. Unknown exits. Natural choke points. Perfect terrain for ambushes. The next slide appeared. It was almost empty. Just the main cave entrance photographed from several hundred meters away.

"No internal imagery." Emre asked.

There was a pause. “We don’t have any floor plans, tunnel mapping, nor know the size of the cave network.”

Nobody liked hearing that.

Çağlar now stepped up from behind in front of Ezgi. “So we do not know how many fighters are present, we do not know whether the cave system contains explosive traps, and you want us to conduct a capture operation inside an unmapped cave complex belonging to a PKK bomb-maker."

The room grew quieter. One of the assault team leaders laughed softly.Not because it was funny. Because everybody knew the answer.

Colonel Uysal finally spoke. “I am sorry ma’am. We don't know the internal layout. We don't know whether there are secondary exits." The Colonel looked around the room. Several operators were already studying the imagery. Calculating. Finding problems. "You're sending us in blind."

Ezgi looked at him. "No." She pointed to the image.

"We've spent eleven months building this target package."

The slide changed. The screen filled with evidence they had been collecting. Intercepts, photographs, movement patterns, meetings, and surveillance footage. .

"We're not blind." She looked directly at the Colonel. "We're out of time."

“The network is planning to retaliate for the air campaign and our field officers are reporting an increase in communications. What I know is that there is increased courier and material transfers. With the airstrike in Mosul killing at least three high-ranking PKK leaders Tessaphon is spooked. He will relocate.”

Emre stepped forward again. "Based on what?"

"We don't know."

Emre rolled his eyes. "You've said that six times."

"Because six times is the honest answer." Ezgi said honestly, folding her arms.

"We don't know what he's building, where he's going, or what he is targeting.” She pointed at the screen. "And right now. All I know. All I can say with certainty is that we know where he sleeps."

Nobody spoke but then the chief exhaled slowly."If your assessment is wrong, we're walking into a cave full of explosives with no map and no intelligence."

"If my assessment is wrong," Ezgi replied, "you'll come home empty-handed. You have the K9s and bomb detectors. If it becomes too hot you will be able to extract.” She paused. “If my assessment is right, and we wait, we may never find him again until it is too late."

For several seconds nobody said anything. Only the hum of the projector filled the room. Then Colonel Uysal looked toward his team leaders.

The operators who would actually enter the mountain.

"Questions?"

Nobody said anything.

Serkan nodded. “Let’s hit the Pit then.” All the operators of the 25th departed the room as Ezgi and Serkan remained.

Serkan turned to her. “I don’t like this.”

Ezgi nodded. “Truth is Colonel I’d rather have dropped a 2,000 pound bomb right down the center shaft that’d liquidate everything inside.” She then paused. “But someone is helping these cockroaches to kill our children. We have to know who and why. Once we figure that out we can neutralize the threat.”

Serkan nodded in defeat as he understood the stacks of this mission. “Yes ma’am. We’ll get it done.” He said walking away to oversee his men training in the pit.
 

Jay

Dokkaebi
GA Member
Oct 3, 2018
3,847
images


The T-129s split at the valley mouth, one banking hard east over the tree line, the other pulling into a wide orbit above the slope. Their job was the exits. They had the coordinates.

Three Blackhawks came in low behind them, running dark. No navigation lights. The rotor noise spread across the rock faces and broke apart in the wind before it could be placed. At seven hundred meters the third Blackhawk broke from the formation and dropped toward the eastern slope. Third squad went out the side doors already running, their rifles in hand, boots hitting scrub a second before the aircraft gained height again. Twelve men spreading into a line, angling up toward the ridgeline and the two secondary exits marked on the thermal overlay.

Four minutes.

They pushed.

The two remaining Blackhawks held a hundred meters above the cave entrance, a natural shelf cut into the rock face and improved over years with poured concrete at the arch and sandbags stacked behind it. The lower shelf was the main entrance. Wide enough for two men to crouch through.

Alptug went down the rope first.

Eight meters in four seconds. He hit the ledge in a crouch and moved left. Gurkan landed behind him. Then Sansal, Kartal, Demirhan, Yaser, Cemal, Hakan. First squad, eight men, pressed against the rock on both sides of the arch before the Blackhawk had shifted to its holding position.

The second aircraft came in over the eastern shelf and held its hover. Second squad on the ropes. Waiting. There were no lights inside. The generator had gone quiet.

Alptug looked at Gurkan. Gurkan checked the corner of the corridor. He nodded his head. There was a door.

Hakan moved past the others without a word and crouched at the entrance threshold, his rifle slung back, a small mirror on a telescoping rod already in his hand. He extended it around the base of the arch and angled it toward the underside of the concrete, checking the lip. Then the left side of the frame. Then the right.

He pulled the mirror back and ran two fingers slowly along the bottom edge of the arch where concrete met rock. Feeling for wire. For any resistance. He worked left to right without rushing.

Nothing on the frame. He pressed his palm flat to the threshold stone and shifted his weight forward onto it, a few kilograms, testing. It held. He shifted more. Still nothing.

He looked at the ground inside the entrance, the first two meters of corridor visible through the arch. His light swept low across the concrete. No seam. No pressure plate, or none he could see from here. He reached in with the mirror and checked the back of the arch from the inside. Checked both sides of the corridor walls at knee height, where a command wire might run.

He pulled his arm back. He looked at Alptug and held up an open hand. Then he tapped his own eye.

Alptug nodded. Hakan stood, stepped to one side, and the stack moved up.

NE3S4FWKV5GMVE6HKIGMWX3U5M.jpg


They went in. The corridor ran ten meters and bent left. Timber shoring on both walls, a wire strung along the ceiling with dead bulbs at intervals. Their NVGs painted the rock green and flat and cast no shadows.

Alptug held up his fist. The stack stopped. He listened. Boots on concrete. Something heavy dragged. A voice that cut off mid-word. He moved around the bend.

Two men in the corridor, facing away, moving fast toward the entrance. The near one carried an AK slung across his chest and a bag over one shoulder. He was looking back at something when Alptug came around the corner and he never finished turning. Alptug fired twice. The man's knees buckled and he went down sideways into the shoring.

The second man got his rifle up and fired once, high. Gurkan put three rounds into his chest and he dropped straight back.

Sansal stepped over the first body without looking at it. From deeper in the cave, a sustained burst. Then another from a different direction, offset, its source impossible to place in the echo. Then a third. Then two seconds of silence.

Then a great deal of noise. Alptug's radio crackled. Third squad lead. "Secondary exits are hot. Multiple runners. We're engaging."

"How many." Someone shot out over the radio.

"Six. Still counting."

Through the rock, muted and rhythmic, the sound of the T-129s working the slope. Alptug moved forward. Behind him, second squad was already on the main entrance rope.

He didn't wait for them. The corridor opened after thirty meters into a rough natural chamber improved with concrete flooring and more timber. Sleeping platforms on both sides, rolled mats on them, all abandoned. A gas lantern still burning on a crate in the corner, its light eating into the NVG feed and washing the far wall white.

Demirhan shot it. Four men were dead on the chamber floor, caught in the open. Three had weapons. One still had a phone in his hand. All four had been shot multiple times, some from behind. They had been moving toward the secondary exits when third squad's engagement on the slope pushed them back inside.

They had run out of directions as they watched the men who made it out slump and fall over the cliff. The bullets ricocheted off the wall and pushed the PKK fighters back iside.

Alptug counted his men. First squad, eight. Second squad was coming through the entrance corridor now, Evren at the front. Behind them, the four-man elements that had roped in on the eastern shelf.

Twenty-four men in the chamber. "Six teams," he said. "Go go go." They began splitting as they split.

The left corridor was the longest. It ran north and turned twice before it split at a junction where someone had spray-painted an arrow on the rock and then painted it out again, leaving a ghost. Alptug, Gurkan, Sansal, Cemal. They moved fast, rifles up, checking every doorway.

Gunfire behind them. Two of the right-side teams were in contact. Hard to say more than that.

The corridor narrowed. They went single file, Cemal moving to point. He stopped at a doorway and stacked.

Inside a man behind an overturned crate, firing blind around its edge with a pistol. He fired four times and hit nothing. Cemal went through the doorway low and right. Gurkan came in behind him and went left. The man fired twice more. Gurkan put two rounds through the crate and one through the man's shoulder and he dropped the pistol. Sansal zip-tied his wrists, his ankles, left him face down, and they moved on.

Two more rooms. A storage area, crates of ammunition with their lids pried off, contents half gone. A communications room with a satellite transceiver and a laptop still running, its screen showing a mapping application, battery low. Alptug flagged it over the radio and kept moving. Someone else would deal with it.

The smell reached them before the room did. Chemical and organic and underneath it something sharper. Solvent. The combination that meant you moved carefully and didn't drag your boots.

The room was large. Metal workbenches running the length of both walls. Rolls of det cord in green and orange, crimping tools, two soldering irons still plugged into a power strip, a heat gun. Along the far wall, wooden crates with Cyrillic stenciling, not all of them sealed. A plastic bin of ball bearings on the near bench. A set of digital scales with powder residue on the tray.

Two vest frames hanging from hooks on the wall. The outer fabric already stitched. The pockets sewn in. Three of the benches had work in progress. Whoever had been here had left in the middle of it.

Alptug stood in the doorway for three seconds. He did not touch anything. He looked at Gurkan.

army-NDT-army.webp


Gurkan already had his camera up. They documented it in under two minutes. Every bench, every item, every crate. Alptug called the location marker to command. Then they left the room the way they had entered and continued north.

At the end of the main corridor, behind a steel door left open. Inside: a folding table with a laminate surface, two chairs, a whiteboard covered in Kurmanji with some Arabic mixed in and dates underlined in red marker.

On the table, six maps, weighted at their corners with spent casings.

Alptug looked at them without touching them. He called Sansal up. Sansal leaned over the table and was quiet for a moment. He moved his eyes across each map in turn.

"The Habur crossing," he said. "Silopi." He moved to the next. "Izmir." Then: "Ankara." He straightened slightly. "Istanbul. Taksim and Kadıköy, both circled." He looked at the last one. He didn't speak for a moment.

"What is it," Alptug said.

Sansal straightened up. "Ataturk." He didn't say anything else.

Alptug looked at it. The airport at the center. Three approach corridors circled in red, one in black. A grid running along the perimeter fence with numbers at each marker. Cargo terminal. Fuel depot. And in the corner, printed in small type, the runway designation.

He photographed everything. Then he rolled the Ataturk map carefully and slid it into a document tube. He looked at Gurkan. Gurkan tilted his head toward the sound of gunfire as other teams engaged militants throughout the cave.

Green-beret-cave-clearing.jpg


Emir, Atasoy, Yaser, Demirhan. They had come down the right branch forty minutes ago when the teams split, and the radio from this direction had gone quiet for the last eight minutes. The passage turned twice. At the end of it, a door unlike the others. Metal, set into the rock itself, its hinges thick. This had been installed.

Light came from under it with what looked like a flame. Atasoy put his hand on the handle. He looked back at Evren.

Emir looked at Yaser. Yaser checked his rifle and nodded. From somewhere behind them, deep in the cave, two hundred meters back, off a branch they had not yet cleared, the gunfire started again. Close. Sustained. Two weapons, then a third. Not fading.

Emir heard shouting in the background. It was English. Emir looked back down the corridor. Then he looked at the door. Without a word and crouched at the entrance threshold, his rifle slung back, a small mirror on a telescoping rod already in his hand. He extended it around the base of the arch and angled it toward the underside of the concrete, checking the lip. Then the left side of the frame. Then the right.

He pulled the mirror back and ran two fingers slowly along the bottom edge of the arch where concrete met rock. Feeling for wire. For any resistance. He worked left to right without rushing. Nothing on the frame. He pressed his palm flat to the threshold stone and shifted his weight forward onto it, a few kilograms, testing. It held. He shifted more. Still nothing.

He looked at the ground inside the entrance, the first two meters of corridor visible through the arch. His light swept low across the concrete. No seam. No pressure plate, or none he could see from here. He reached in with the mirror and checked the back of the arch from the inside. Checked both sides of the corridor walls at knee height, where a command wire might run. Nothing.

He turned his camera up and saw a man in BDU fatigues giving orders to other militants. There were about half a dozen inside burning files and maps. He turned aorund to Yaser and gave him the signal to breach.
 

Jay

Dokkaebi
GA Member
Oct 3, 2018
3,847
PKK-Kandil-1024x689.jpg


The packing had started at half past midnight. Tessaphon stood at the far end of the room and watched the men work. Maps came down from the wall in sequence, rolled and tied with cord. The files followed: the ledgers, the manifests, the three operational laptops each wrapped in cloth and placed in foam-lined cases. A man in the corner had been detailed to strip the satellite transceiver and was at it with a screwdriver.

The decision to move had been made four days ago, after what had happened in Mosul. The days went by and the airstrikes continued on the northern supply line. It had become clear that staying in the mountains was simply a decision to be found eventually. Syria offered the kind of administrative ambiguity that his resources could navigate. They had contacts in Deir ez-Zor. A facility already partly prepared. The operation did not require him to be here. It required him to be alive.

"The chemical stores," he said. Malik relayed it in Kurdish. A response came back.

"He says the cases are too heavy for the eastern passage."

"Leave them but bring detonators come." He crossed to the table. The Ataturk map was still there, weighted at its corners, the last thing remaining. He looked at it for a moment. Then he folded it himself, precisely, along its original creases, and put it inside his jacket.

He was at the doorway reviewing the load when he heard it. Distant. One burst, a pause, then several single shots in quick succession. Then nothing.

He did not move. He listened. The man at the transceiver had stopped working. Malik was looking at the ceiling.

A second burst. Closer than the first. "How many men on the upper level," Tessaphon said.

Malik asked. "Twenty eight."

hese sounds were coming from within the rock, from the northern section of the tunnel. He had heard this distinction before, a long time ago, in a context he did not dwell on.

He turned to Kahya, the ranking commander. "Take the rest of the men to the northern junction. Find out what it is. Send someone back."

Kahya spoke and four men picked up their rifles and went. Tessaphon looked at what remained on the table. The ledgers. Three folders of communications, some in Greek, some in Kurdish, two in a cipher he had devised himself. The donor records, which were the most dangerous of all.

"Burn them," he said.

Malik found the metal barrel in the corner and began feeding paper into it, touching a lighter to the first pages and waiting for the flame to take hold. The others brought what remained on the shelves. Tessaphon watched the first folder curl and go black.

From the northern tunnel, the gunfire had become sustained. No longer isolated bursts but a continuous exchange moving through the rock in waves, its direction impossible to read clearly. One of the men looked at him. He gave nothing back.

From outside the cave entirely, further away and above them, he heard the sound of helicopters and gunfire erupting all around the cave. The sound echoing throughout the system.

The burning was going slowly. Malik fed pages in faster. The smoke was beginning to collect at the ceiling.

One of Kahya's men came back through the door. He spoke rapidly. Malik listened and turned.

"The northern junction is lost. He says there are soldiers in the main corridor."

"How many."

The man spoke again. Malik relayed "He said he doesn't know."

Outside, closer now, someone shouting, outside the rock, and then the shout ending. The exits were covered.

Tessaphon took the folded map from his jacket and held it over the barrel. He watched the corner catch.

He looked around the room. The files still burning, half gone. The transceiver partially dismantled on the desk. Two laptops still in their cases, not yet destroyed. He looked at the door.

The gunfire in the corridor was very close now. One exchange, then silence, then boots on concrete, deliberate and unhurried, moving toward him.

He had time to understand that they were not going to run. He set his hands flat on the table and looked at the door.

The charge hit the frame with a sound that he felt in his back teeth before he heard it, a sharp concussive crack that took the door off one hinge and drove it inward. He had begun to turn toward the sound when the flashbang came through the gap.

The world went white. All of it, at once, flat and total, with a pressure behind it that he felt in his chest and behind his eyes, and then the sound swallowed everything else, and there was nothing after it but the white.


Atasoy had the charge on the door frame in eleven seconds. The others were stacked behind him. Evren at the front, Emir two steps back, Yaser at the rear watching the corridor. The door was metal, set into the rock, and the light under it was warm and unsteady. Fire. At least one person tending it.

Atasoy stepped back.

Evren held up three fingers. Counted down with them.

The charge cracked the door off one hinge and drove it inward, and Evren was pulling the pin on the first flashbang before the echo had finished. He threw it low through the gap and turned his face into his shoulder. Emir was a half-second behind her. Atasoy had the third.

Three overlapping detonations. The frame lit up white, then white again, then white. Each one swallowing the last.

They went in. The room arrived in the NVG feed in flat green. Evren went left. Atasoy right. Emir straight through the center. Yaser held the threshold.

The room was larger than the approach suggested. High ceiling, rough rock, a folding table along the far wall, a metal barrel near the center with paper burning in it, filing cases stacked by the far corner. The candle on the shelf near the door had been knocked sideways by the blast and was burning at an angle, wax pooling onto the rock.

Five men. All of them standing. None of them seeing.

The two nearest the door had their hands pressed to their ears and their mouths open in sounds they couldn't hear themselves making. One had his eyes shut. The other's were open and pointed at nothing. The nearest one's rifle was hanging loose from its sling, swinging slightly, still moving from when he'd flinched.

Evren shot him twice in the chest. He went back into the wall and sat down slowly and then lay sideways. The second man was reaching for his rifle with both hands, fingers working around the grip without finding it. Atasoy put one round into him and he sat down where he stood.

The third man had been further from the bangs. He had gotten behind the burning barrel and was bringing his weapon up, almost there, the muzzle rising. Emir shot him once in the throat. He folded forward over the barrel rim, one arm going in.

The fourth came out of the back corner with a pistol already up. He fired three times. All three rounds went into the floor between himself and Yaser, a line of sparks on the concrete. Yaser stepped through the doorway and shot him once and he went down and stayed there.

The fifth was pressed against the far wall with his hands flat against the rock, not moving, a young man with blood from a split lip where he had fallen against something. He had no weapon visible.

Four seconds. Possibly five.

"Two," Evren said. He was already moving to the table. Two men standing.

One near the barrel: short, middle-aged, still shaking, both palms against his ears. His eyes were clearing. He blinked at the room, at the bodies, at the smoke from the barrel and the smoke from the door and the four shapes moving through all of it.

The other was at the table.

Taller. A jacket, collar turned up. His hands had been flat on the table surface and they were still there, pressed down, as if he needed the contact. He was breathing in long, controlled pulls through his nose, working through something, and his eyes were open and beginning to focus. There was a document tube lying on the table beside his right hand.

The right hand moved. It moved off the table and toward the inside of his jacket. Slow and deliberate. The hand of a man who could not yet hear and was only partly seeing and was still trying anyway.

"Hand," Evren screamed out. "Stop." The hand kept moving.

Emir fired once.

The round went through the palm and the hand snapped away from the jacket and the man made a sound and grabbed his wrist with his left hand and bent over it. Atasoy covered the distance in two strides and took him by the collar and drove him sideways off the table, and Emir came in from the other side. They brought him down together, face down, hard on the concrete. Atasoy got his knee into the small of his back and pulled the good arm up. The man did not resist. He was making a low, compressed sound into the floor.

Yaser moved to the man by the barrel. "Turn around," he said. "Hands where I can see them. Turn around."

The man turned. He was still shaking and his eyes were red from the bangs. His hands came up slowly.

Then the right one dropped. It dropped toward his waistband quickly, and Yaser fired once. The man went sideways into the barrel and took it with him, the barrel going over, burning paper spreading across the concrete in a loose, rolling scatter.

Emir crossed the room in three steps and stamped on the nearest page. He crouched and beat the others against the floor until they were out, then picked up what hadn't caught and stacked them on the table.

Behind him, Atasoy had the zip ties on. The man on the floor didn't move as they went on. He made a sound when the tie went around the damaged hand. Atasoy cinched it and stood.

Evren was at the table, separating what remained. Three folders that hadn't reached the barrel. A laptop in a case near the corner, undamaged. The document tube. He went through each one, stacking the intact material and setting aside what had been partially burned.

The young man against the far wall had not moved during any of it. His hands were still flat on the rock. Yaser looked at him.

"On your knees," Yaser said. "Now."

He went down.

Evren set the last folder on the table. He looked at the man on the floor, at the tie around his right hand, at the dark pooling under the palm. Yasar began applying medical treatment to the hand. Ripping open a packet and dumping the hemostatic powder on this hand before wrapping it in gauze.

Evran and Emir began looking at the computer. The man was still logged in. Emir pulled out a thump drive. Over the intercom Atasoy confirmed "Constantine. Constantine. Constantine. We have Tessaphon." Letting the other teams know they had the package.

Sansal came back to the group, his duffle bag now heavier with the files he'd found. "These might be useful," he said, glancing at files. Emir ran up from the bottom part of the tunnel. "Someone tell the spook that we have a treasure trove in here." He said as the other operators began grabbing whatever documents and laptops they could find.

Çağlar glanced at the documents, his brow furrowing. He stood still for a moment, processing everything.
"Take what we can carry. Secure it all.” The team quickly began securing their findings. Ali slid the books into a larger satchel while Mikael packed the photographs into a folder. Recep and Khalid worked together, making sure the maps and plans were carefully folded and secured. Esenboga stood at the door, his rifle at the ready, keeping watch as the others worked.

Evran was still working on the computer. His fingers brushed the edge of his vest for another encrypted USB drive as the first one was filled up. The faint glow from a single bulb flickers inside, casting long shadows on the walls.


"Base clear. Zero tangos. I'm on the terminal." Kai kept watch, his rifle at the ready. "Check the corners. This place smells like a trap." Adam approached a steel desk in the corner, opening a case. He plugged the encrypted USB into another terminal they had found and waited, fingers poised over the keyboard. muttering to himself as the system boots up. "Come on, come on…”

Adam's fingers tapped faster now as the system hummed to life, revealing encrypted files. "Got it. Files transferring."In another room, Evran pulled a small laptop from his pack and began scanning the area. He accessed the nearest computer, breaking into the files. A series of encrypted messages flashed across the screen.

"Look at this," Evran muttered, flipping through the data. "This is various donations the group is receiving. It is two freaking billion dollars. ” He said, looking at what was at least a few hundred thousand dollars.

Kartal, who had been scanning the room for hidden compartments, raised his hand, signaling he’d found something. He pushed a bookshelf away from the floor, revealing a hole behind it with a small metal case. He pulled it out, opening it slowly. Inside, there were photographs, carefully stashed away, more documents, but this time with even more details about some events in Kashmir and India


"What the hell are these pictures." Adam said, his voice rough. Just then Çağlar stepped in and gripped the edge of the table while he looked over the contents. His eyes narrowed as he processed the information. "This is personal documents. It might be Tessaphon's personal background. Get everything from this terminal downloaded and handed over to the Organization."

Adam took a deep breath, hearing what was said down below, surveying the scene. "Copy. I'll Pack it up. We’ve got what we need."


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They brought Tessaphon out through the eastern passage. The hood went on before he cleared the cave. Two of the operators had him by the arms and moved him fast over uneven ground, and he had to trust his feet to surfaces he couldn't see. He stumbled once. They pulled him upright without slowing.

The air outside was cold in a way the cave had not been. Mountain wind, open slope, the smell of scrub and diesel and something burned further up the ridge. From somewhere above and to the left, the sound of a helicopter with its rotors already at speed.

Someone gripped his shoulder and turned him toward it. The ground changed underfoot. Rock to compacted dirt to something flatter, a temporary surface laid down for the landing zone. He counted steps without meaning to. Forty-three before they stopped.

They got him into the helicopter with a hand on his head to keep him below the rotor, another on his belt, and then he was seated against the left wall of the cabin with his knees up and his bound wrists catching on something behind him that he couldn't adjust for. He did not speak. No one spoke to him.

The rotors changed pitch and the ground fell away. Yasar sat across the cabin with his rifle across his knees and watched the hooded figure against the opposite wall. The man's breathing was controlled. His back was straight. The right hand, wrapped at the wrist with a field dressing, was held as still as the tie would allow.

The mountains below them were grey in the predawn and the sky above them was beginning to separate from the ridgelines, a dark blue pulling away from a darker black. The T-129s had already broken off. The radio traffic had gone quiet.

Atasoy leaned toward him. He didn't say anything. He looked at the hooded figure for a moment and then looked out the door at the mountains below.

Alptug looked at his watch. Twenty-two minutes since the breach. He calculated what he had and hadn't done and then stopped calculating. The hooded figure did not move as he stayed silent throughout the flight. They were over the plain when the light properly arrived.

Not sunrise yet, but the grey before it, flat and even, washing the colour out of everything beneath them. The lights of Diyarbakır came up first as a spread of amber against the dark, and then the city resolved around them, and then the airbase, its perimeter lights and its runways and the larger darker shapes of the hangars set back from the flight line.

The helicopter didn't go to the main apron.

It banked south and came in over a section of the base that sat behind a secondary perimeter fence, no markings on the buildings, no vehicles visible from the air except for two black saloons parked nose-in against the smaller of two hangars. The landing pad here was unmarked concrete. The rotor wash flattened the dry grass at its edges. They touched down.

The hangar was cold and smelled of old fuel and concrete dust and something underneath both of those things that was harder to name. Fluorescent work lights on stands had been placed at intervals, casting a flat white light that reached the walls but not the ceiling. The space was large enough for two aircraft and was empty of both. In the center, a metal chair on bare concrete. Beside it, a folding table with nothing on it yet.

Alptug and Atasoy walked Tessaphon to the chair and sat him down. His wrists were cut and re-secured to the arms before he could do anything with his hands. The dressing on the right wrist was checked and tightened. He made no sound.

Three men and a woman were waiting near the far wall. They had been there when the helicopter landed, which meant they had been there longer. Two were in civilian clothes, no insignia, no rank. The third wore a jacket with a government agency tag clipped to the breast pocket, turned face-in. He had a phone in his hand and was finishing a call as the team brought the prisoner across the floor. The woman simply waited off by the distance.

She looked at Tessaphon in the chair, at the wrapped hand, at the hood still on. She then looked at Çağlar.

"Any material from the site," she said.

Çağlar nodded. The second and third helicopter brought tweleve duffle bags filled with different component pieces, invoices, manifests, ship logs, financial data, weapon transfers, a list of targets, supply and munitions depots and a lot more.

Ezgi looked at the table and couldn't help bu smile. She looked at Çağlar and worded thank you. Çağlar was just happy that his men were alive and gave her a simple nod. "We'll take everything and drop it off inside the hangar," Çağlar said, "We didn't take any other fighters alive. But the intelligence is a treasure trove."

Ezgi turned to the three men behind him and said something in a low voice and two of them crossed to the table and began grabbing the duffle bags to take with them. The other pulled a second chair from along the wall and set it down facing the prisoner. He sat in it and looked at the hood and did not speak yet.

Near the hangar wall, Çağlar team stood with their gear still on. No one had told them to leave and no one had told them to stay. The operation was done. What came next was not their job.

Çağlar walked over to Ezgi and handed her a USB. "This looks like his personal information. I think it might be helpful." Ezgi took it and walked slowly to the chair and stood in front her colleague. She reached out and took the hood off.

Tessaphon blinked. The light hit him and he looked at the floor first, then at the ceiling, orienting himself. His face gave nothing. He looked at the woman sitting across from him, at the other man standing behind. Then at the operators. He saw the Turkish flags and almost gave a sigh of relief. It wasn't the Company. He looked at the operators against the wall, still armed, still in their gear, the dirt of the mountain still on their boots.

He looked at the wrapped hand in his lap.

Then he looked back at the woman in the chair. The MIT man leaned forward and set her elbows on her knees. "Good morning," she said in English.
 

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