Anonymous ID: 43039b March 6, 2018, 12:02 p.m. No.569999   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>0052

http:// www.newsweek.com/remains-world-war-ii-pilot-found-831639

 

"After an underwater excavation, the U.S. military has found the remains of at least one serviceman killed over 70 years ago, after his plane was shot down as he flew over the Pacific Ocean."

 

I was thinking about those staircase BOOM BOOMS last night, and it occurred to me that Q was referring to either taking out underwater sub bases or CIA/ISIS underground bunkers in Syria. Could the above find have been "accidental" by SEALS swimming into a sub base to, oh, I don't know, plant explosives or some such?

Anonymous ID: 43039b March 6, 2018, 12:08 p.m. No.570052   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>0149

>>569999

http:// www.newsweek.com/putin-corruption-crackdown-pre-election-show-830704

 

I'm searching Newsweek's website because of Q's"Big news week?" reference.

 

"It was just before dawn in early February when heavily armed officers from Russia’s FSB security service raided a luxurious mansion in Dagestan, a volatile republic in the southern part of the country.

The mansion belonged to Abdusamad Gamidov, the Kremlin-installed leader of the republic. As the officers searched his palatial residence, they discovered a startling display of wealth, especially for one of Russia’s poorest regions. There were designer watches, rare furs, a stuffed tiger and even a gold-plated handgun with the first three letters of the Dagestani leader’s surname carved into its ornate handle.Keep Up With This Story And More By Subscribing NowRussian authorities rounded up Gamidov, two of his deputies and other senior officials and put them on planes to Moscow, where they were charged with embezzling state funds. (All maintained their innocence.)Their arrests were part of a high-profile crackdown on allegedly corrupt officials. In December, Russian authorities imprisoned Alexei Ulyukayev, the economy minister, for eight years on charges of soliciting a $2 million bribe from Igor Sechin, the powerful head of Russia’s Rosneft oil company. The first serving government minister to be arrested in Russia since 1953, Ulyukayev alleged he was the victim of a 'cruel and horrific setup.'

 

Months later, in February, Russian courts jailed two regional governors, Nikita Belykh and Alexander Khoroshavin, on bribery charges. The authorities alleged Khoroshavin had around $1.7 million at his home in illicit cash, as well as piles of expensive designer jewelry, including a diamond-crusted pen worth over $600,000. REN TV, a pro-Kremlin channel, said the sentences proved that there were no untouchables in the government’s fight against corruption. (Both men denied the accusations.)"