That us navy ship rescue looked too perfect—almost scripted.
Nah, this is exactly how special ops train for years. Nothing scripted.
Pirates didn’t stand a chance once drones marked them.
Still, 500 dead in under an hour? Feels exaggerated.
Not really. The base had fuel, ammo—secondary explosions did the work.
Honestly, one us navy ship causing that much chaos shows real dominance.
Or overkill. Some say America flexed too hard.
Flexing is the point. Deterrence only works when it’s overwhelming.
Those SEALs fast-roping were insane. Best part of the video.
I liked the Super Hornets strafing the freighter more—pure action.
Funny how pirates thought ropes and RPGs could beat a us navy ship.
Overconfidence killed them.
Was the pirate base even a legit target? Looked like a village to me.
It was a fortress, not a village. Huge difference.
Some viewers think drones make battles unfair.
War isn’t about fair—it’s about winning. Ask any us navy ship crew.
The hidden alarm button was genius. That captain saved everyone.
Yeah, but the ten sailors who died deserve more credit too.
I wonder if any pirates surrendered willingly.
Doesn’t matter—zip-ties or coffins, same ending.
The us navy ship doctrine is clear: never let hostages be moved to shore.
And it worked perfectly here.
Imagine if another country tried this operation. Would they succeed?
Doubt it. Only the U.S. has this kind of rapid strike power.
Some say piracy will come back anyway.
Maybe, but not against a us navy ship. They’ll think twice.
“Operation Thundernet” sounds like a video game mission.
Real life is scarier than games though.
The pirate base exploding was both terrifying and satisfying.
At the end of the day, one us navy ship changed the entire region in 90 minutes.