I wonder if the SEALs even saw who struck first or only the aftermath.
That kind of silence can feel more terrifying than the fight itself.
The stronghold must have turned from chaos to confusion in seconds.
What looked like certain defeat became an invisible rescue.
I imagine the SEALs questioned whether it was luck or planning.
Sometimes the absence of sound tells the loudest story.
Could the enemy have realized what was happening before it was over?
That shift must have felt like shadows moving faster than sight.
The rescue likely became one of those stories whispered, not shouted.
It shows how power can be felt without ever being seen.