US Army Rangers RAID Iranian Secret Luxury BUNKER — IRGC Commander SEIZED in 90 Mins (Fictional) – News

US Army Rangers RAID Iranian Secret Luxury BUNKER ...

US Army Rangers RAID Iranian Secret Luxury BUNKER — IRGC Commander SEIZED in 90 Mins (Fictional)

Western Iran, 48 km east of Kieran Shaw, 2:40 in the morning.

88 US Army Rangers from the 75th Ranger Regiment were moving toward an underground IRGC luxury command bunker hidden inside a private mountain estate.

Inside the compound, 312 Iranian forces guarded Major General Farad Vazeri, 14 encrypted servers, and six steel vaults filled with cash and records.

The Rangers had 90 minutes to take the bunker and pull the commander out.

The bunker sat under a walled estate built for senior IRGC meetings and private retreats.

On the surface, it looked like a private compound with guest villas, a motorpool, and a marble reception hall.

Under that cover sat a hardened command center cut four levels into rock.

Iranian forces believed the place could survive air attack, electronic attack, bomb, and a ground raid long enough for reinforcements from Kershaw to arrive.

The estate was protected by three fence lines, 24 cameras, eight thermal towers, six guard posts, four DHSK heavy machine guns, two ZU 23-2 anti-aircraft guns, and 18 pickup trucks loaded with Iranian forces.

The bunker entrance had two steel blast doors, internal choke points, and a backup diesel power room.

Iranian forces believed distance, terrain, and concrete would keep the commander safe.

US Army Rangers split into four elements before the assault.

Alpha element had 24 rangers and the main breach mission on the upper gate and reception hall.

Bravo element had 22 rangers and moved for the vehicle yard, guard towers, and outer roadblock positions.

Charlie Element had 26 rangers and carried the deep assault mission into the bunker with C4 shape charges, DT cord, and thermite.

You know, Delta Element had 16 Rangers, two sniper teams, one signals team, and the prisoner extraction package.

Delta would block escape routes, cut communications, and secure the commander once Charlie reached him.

At 247, the assault began.

Alpha moved from the west slope.

Bravo came in from the south access road.

Charlie crossed a dry irrigation ditch and rushed the service entrance on the east wall.

Delta stayed on the ridge and began jamming estate radios.

In 40 seconds, three cameras went dark, two towers lost feed, and the first Iranian sentry dropped before he could fire his AK74.

Iranian forces reacted fast, but not together.

One guard post opened with a PKM machine gun.

Another post fired green tracers toward the wrong slope.

A third team ran toward the marble hall instead of the bunker stairwell.

Alpha solved the first problem at once.

You know, a Ranger gunner put 14 rounds from an M249 SAW through the sandbag slit.

The PKM stopped.

Two breachers ran forward, placed a linear charge on the west gate, and blew it inward.

Alpha entered the courtyard in 11 seconds.

Bravo hit the motorpool.

At the same time, a Ranger with an MK18C QBR shot the padlock off the fuel cage.

Another Ranger tossed two flash grenades into the truck bay.

Three Iranian drivers stumbled out and were taken down.

Then a DSHK opened from the roof of the maintenance shed.

Bravo went flat.

A Carl Gustaf M3 recoilless rifle fired one round through the parapet.

The DSHK position collapsed.

Bravo pushed 40 m deeper and cut the south road with an M24 OB machine gun and Claymore mines.

At 251, Charlie reached the service door.

It was chained from inside.

A breacher fixed date cord to the hinges and fired it.

The door broke loose.

Charlie entered a kitchen corridor and met nine Iranian forces at 12 m.

The hall filled with rifle fire.

MK18CQBR carbines flashed.

An Iranian soldier rolled an RPG7 into position near a freezer room.

A Ranger shot him through the shoulder before he could fire.

Charlie stepped over the launcher and kept moving toward the bunker elevator.

Delta now took control of the high ground fight.

The two sniper teams carried MK11 Mod Zero rifles and scoped the east terrace, he helipad and north exit road.

In 70 seconds, Delta dropped four runners trying to reach a radio mast.

The signals team cut the estate microwave link and blocked three local channels.

Iranian forces inside the compound could still shout and use hand signals, but they could not build a full picture.

Red lights flashed in the lower levels.

Blast shutters sealed six interior doors.

Iranian forces in the reception hall tried to form a firing line around the central stairwell.

Alpha beat them to it.

A Ranger fired an AT4 into the base of a marble column where eight Iranian forces had stacked ammo crates for cover.

The shot tore open the position.

Alpha rushed through smoke and broken stone.

Two Rangers were hit by AK74 fire near the stair rail.

Both were dragged behind the front desk and treated in 20 seconds.

At 255, Bravo faced the estate reserve force.

24 Iranian forces came out from the guest villa side in three pickup trucks.

One truck carried a Zaryu 232 crew trying to turn the gun toward the courtyard.

Bravo did not wait.

A Javelin missile struck the lead truck at 90 m.

The second truck swerved into a fountain wall.

In the third tried to reverse and hit a garden barrier.

Bravo gunners with M4A1 SOPmod 2 carbines and the M24 OB cut down the dismounted force before it could reach the main fight.

Inside, Charlie found the elevator locked on the bottom level.

The keypad had been smashed by bunker staff.

Charlie shifted at once.

A breacher stacked C4 on the service stair blast door.

The charge blew.

The team went down one flight, then another.

Iranian forces fired up through the staircase with AK74 rifles and a PKM.

Charlie dropped to the landing.

A Ranger rolled one grenade through the bars.

The blast shook the stairwell.

Charlie surged down and cleared two levels in less than 3 minutes.

Iranian forces were now split into four disconnected fights.

28 held the reception level.

46 tried to retake the motorpool.

Wards 32 guarded the lower bunker halls.

The rest were scattered across towers, villas, and the north road.

Delta kept the roads blind.

Bravo kept trucks from moving.

Alpha kept the stairwell open for Charlie.

At 259, Alpha met the heaviest fire so far.

12 Iranian forces had braced office desks and filing safes across the main stair landing.

A PKM fired from behind the barricade.

Alpha hit the lights, used white lamps, and changed angle.

One Ranger launched a 40mm round through the gap above the safe stack.

The blast stunned the defenders.

Alpha rushed left and right at once.

Short bursts followed.

When it ended, nine Iranian forces were down, two were wounded, and one was captured trying to crawl into a records room.

Bravo then faced a harder problem on the south wall.

The four Iranian forces reached the backup generator shed and tried to cut power to the jammers by switching the estate to buried lines.

A Bravo fire team moved along the wall under DSK fire from the north tower.

The gun chewed stone above them.

A ranger with an MK48 Mod Zero machine gun set up behind a burn pickup and hammered the tower with 7-second bursts.

The DSK ducked.

Two rangers dashed to the shed, placed thermite on the switchbox, and burned the controls out.

The estate stayed blind.

At 303, Charlie reached level three of the bunker and ran into the inner guard unit.

These 18 Iranian forces wore body armor and held the corridor to the command suite.

Charlie fired, moved, and pressed on.

One Iranian soldier launched an RPG7 from a side office.

The rocket hit the ceiling edge and blew back into the room.

Charlie used that second.

Um, a Ranger with an M4A1 Soap Mod 2 crossed the doorway and dropped three defenders.

Another Ranger fired six rounds from an M249 saw down the corridor.

Charlie gained 14 m and locked the fight against the final bend.

Delta saw the next threat before anyone below could call it.

Six vehicles were coming from the west road 5 minutes earlier than planned by US Army estimates.

They carried 36 Iranian reinforcements from a nearby security post.

Delta leader marked the convoy with infrared.

Seconds later, two AGM14 Hellfire missiles from an overhead US aircraft hit the first and fourth vehicles.

The last two vehicles stopped.

Surviving Iranian forces ran for a ditch.

Delta sniper teams cut down seven.

The rest stayed pinned for the next five minutes and never reached the estate.

At 3007, Alpha and Charlie linked at the lower stair junction.

You know, Alpha sent eight Rangers down to help the bunker push.

Charlie sent four Rangers back up to hold the landing.

Iranian forces on level two tried one last counterattack with shields taken from a security locker.

It failed fast.

Alpha fired into their legs.

Charlie hit the wall beside them with a shaped charge.

The blast threw the shields aside.

The corridor opened again.

The command suite door stood at the end of a 22 m hall.

Two steel leaves, one camera above, one magnetic lock.

Two Iranian forces firing from knee height.

Charlie hugged the walls.

A ranger slid a mirror under the smoke.

Another ranger fixed a shaped charge on the hinge line.

The blast bent the left door just enough.

Charlie pumped rounds through the gap.

Then a second charge broke the lock.

US Army Rangers crashed into the suite.

At 311 in the fight for the commander lasted 43 seconds.

Major General Vizeri was in a reinforced meeting room behind bullet glass with 11 bodyguards.

Four bodyguards fired AK74 rifles through side ports.

One tried to drag the commander toward a rear escape shaft.

Charlie broke the room from both sides.

Thermite burned the lock on the rear hatch.

Two Rangers entered there.

Three more came through the front after a flash charge blew the glass frame loose.

Eight bodyguards were killed, two were wounded, one surrendered.

Vazeri was dragged out alive, hooded, searched, and zip tied in 19 seconds.

The bunker still had one threat left.

A signals officer on level four tried to trigger a full data wipe across the 14 servers.

Charlie moved at once.

A ranger kicked the office door, took fire, and dropped back.

Another ranger rolled a flash grenade in.

But then the team entered hard.

The officer was shot before he reached the last switch.

Two technicians were captured.

The server room was secured.

Four Rangers ripped drives free while another team laid thermite on backup terminals and on six satellite uplink cases.

At 3:15, Bravo reported movement at the helellipad.

Nine Iranian forces were trying to launch a light helicopter from a camouflaged shed.

Bravo crossed open ground under rifle fire from a villa balcony.

One Ranger fell wounded in the leg.

A Carl Gustaf M3 round smashed the helicopter nose before the rotor reached full speed.

Fuel spilled across the pad.

Bravo then hit the shed with two more rockets.

The helicopter, three fuel drums, and the launcher cart burned out in less than 1 minute.

Alpha was now clearing the last surface resistance.

Six Iranian forces held the north tower with a PKM and crates of ammo.

A fire team moved through the orchard wall, climbed a drainage cut, and came up on the blind side of the tower.

One ranger placed C4 on the base door.

The charge blew.

Alpha stormed the stairs and killed four defenders.

Two more surrendered on the roof.

The PKM 19 magazines and six radio batteries were thrown down and collected.

At 3:19, the objective was in US Army hands.

Major General Vazeri was secured.

The 14 servers were bagged.

Four ledger books, nine encrypted phones, six vault keys, and $38 million in cash were seized from the command suite and adjoining safe room.

Charlie destroyed the bunker communications rack with thermite.

Alpha marked the power room.

Bravo planted charges on 12 vehicles, two ZU23-2 guns, and the fuel dump.

You know, Delta prepared the extraction lane on the west slope.

Iranian forces still fought in fragments.

15 defenders trapped in the east villa tried to break toward the bunker entrance.

Bravo stopped them with the M24 OB and controlled fire from three Ranger pairs.

Seven went down, four were wounded, four threw their rifles away and surrendered.

On the north road, 19 more Iranian forces from the delayed reinforcement group tried to push through the burning convoy.

Delta sniper teams and awaiting machine gun team broke that move in under two minutes.

At 3:24, the withdrawal began.

Charlie came out first with the prisoner and server cases.

Alpha followed with six wounded Rangers on litters and two captured bunker staff.

Bravo pulled last after firing the demolition sequence.

As the Rangers crossed the west terraces, near 18 charges detonated across the estate.

The fuel dump erupted.

The motorpool burned.

The south tower folded.

Flames rolled through the reception hall.

Seconds later, the bunker lost power, then its ventilation fans, then its internal lights.

Iranian reinforcements reached the outer ridge at 331.

They were too late.

The road into the estate was blocked by wrecked vehicles and secondary fires.

Delta covered the rear with MK11 Mod Zero rifles while Alpha and Charlie moved the prisoner downhill.

A K74 fire came from the east wall.

Bravo answered with the MK48 Mod Zero and silenced it.

By 337, all 88 US Army Rangers were off the objective and moving toward extraction.

The raid lasted 50 minutes from first breach to final withdrawal.

US Army Rangers lost three killed and nine wounded.

Iranian forces lost 79 killed, 58 wounded, and 67 captured.

You know, the Rangers seized 14 servers, nine encrypted phones, four ledger books, six vault keys, and $38 million in cash.

They destroyed 12 vehicles worth $4.8 $8 million.

Two ZU23-2 guns worth $700,000.

One helicopter worth $6.4 million.

The motor pool and fuel site worth $9.6 million, and bunker systems and luxury interiors worth $31 million.

Iran believed the mountain estate could hide a commander, protect his records, and hold long enough for rescue.

Instead, 88 US Army Rangers cut the compound apart, took the man at the center, and left the bunker burning behind them.

Iranian forces had rock, steel, numbers, towers, guns, and time.

What they did not have was 88 US Army Rangers willing to enter the mountain, seize the target, and leave with the mission complete.

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