WG Radtke

5.4K posts

WG Radtke

WG Radtke

@WgRadtke

Retired CBP DHS Officer- CBP Counterterrorism and CBP National Security Teams - 13 1/2 years- US/Mexico Border -24 Years-1997-2022- INS-CBP OFO-DHS.

Katılım Haziran 2020
198 Takip Edilen108 Takipçiler
WG Radtke
WG Radtke@WgRadtke·
Office of Public Affairs | Iraqi National Arrested and Charged with Providing Material Support to Iranian-Backed Terrorist Organizations and Directing Attacks Targeting U.S. Citizens and Interests | United States Department of Justice share.google/7CR9p8SCvQBHqM…
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WG Radtke
WG Radtke@WgRadtke·
US officials suspect Iranian hackers behind breaches of fuel monitoring systems at gas stations across states: Report | Today News share.google/lIMkygKLQGbwoL…
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Sarah Adams
Sarah Adams@sarahadams·
@WgRadtke Completely different Abu Hafs, the one you are thinking about is free now from custody and is still alive, he’s very quiet though and says he’s no longer engaging with AQ, I’d take that claim with a grain of salt
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Sarah Adams
Sarah Adams@sarahadams·
Who did the U.S. kill in Nigeria overnight? U.S. forces, in partnership with the Armed Forces of Nigeria, killed Abu Bakr ibn Muhammad ibn ‘Ali al-Mainuki, the head of ISIS’s Maktab al-Furqan. Maktab al-Furqan is the ISIS office that oversees ISIS operational activities across West Africa and the Sahel, including the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) in Nigeria and the Islamic State Sahel Province (ISSP), which operates across Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, Chad, and Cameroon, as well as networks in Tunisia, Algeria, and Libya. Its core responsibilities include the distribution of funds, reportedly reallocating up to 50 percent of revenue from larger provinces to sustain smaller affiliates, the management of financial channels such as bank accounts and cryptocurrencies, and oversight of operational support and training. The office plays a central role in sustaining ISIS’s financial architecture across Africa. While overall funding levels have declined in recent years due to internal weaknesses within ISWAP, Maktab al-Furqan remains critical to enabling operations across the Sahel. Back to Abu Bakr. He was a Nigerian national born in 1982 in Borno State. Active within ISIS networks since at least 2018, he is assessed to have been a key figure in coordinating financial and operational activity across the region and continued to support ISIS-linked operations throughout West Africa. Did the U.S. kill the #2 of ISIS? No. It depends on how you define the #2 of ISIS. If you view it as the deputy to the Emir of ISIS, Abu Hafs al-Hashimi al-Qurashi, then the #2 is Abu Saleh al-Obaidi, who is currently in Syria with Abu Hafs. If you view the #2 as the head of ISIS’s Senior Shura, then it is Sheikh Abdul Qadir Mumin, who is currently based in Puntland, Somalia. Did the U.S. kill the head of global operations for ISIS? No. The head of ISIS global operations is Hasan Ali Mujwal Hussein. He was appointed on May 17, 2025, following the death of Abdallah Makki Muslih al-Rifai, aka Abu Khadija al-Iraqi. His deputy for global operations is Abu Ja’afar al-Shalahi. These are the two terrorists currently leading ISIS external plotting efforts against the U.S. homeland.
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WG Radtke
WG Radtke@WgRadtke·
@TheUfoJoe @TheDylanBorland I have watched Dylan's interviews on Weaponized and consider him to be credible, Matthew too, thank you for your service to our country Dylan..your story was one of the most impacting and relevant I've heard concerning this topic..
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Joe Murgia
Joe Murgia@TheUfoJoe·
First off, full disclosure: I consider @TheDylanBorland a close friend, which makes me biased towards him. But I will always speak my mind, and he can confirm that. 🙂 He and I don't agree on everything, and that includes hockey talk. 🏒 Second: Astral has turned into a complete and utter jackass. Unless your brain has stopped working, it's clear Dylan is telling you that he DID say this to the ICIG, but will only confirm it if Congress and/or the Executive Branch grant amnesty to whistleblowers. No reason to risk prison time. And no, he couldn't say it in an open hearing to Congress without having to face possible repercussions. What part of that do you not understand? Get your head out of your ass and stop trying to be controversial or prove that you're a healthy skeptic, just to get noticed. It's a bad look. This isn't a game and this isn't a UFO-conference gimmick. Congress knows what they need to do. And to be crystal clear: Dylan is one of my favorite people on this planet and he deserves better. I wish I could help him get back to a normal life where he doesn't have to look over his shoulder 24/7. And that goes for @SunOfAbramelin, @Traveler03Truth, David Grusch, and every other whistleblower. They deserve our unwavering support. And I really hope we can get to the bottom of what happened to Dylan at the VA, which looks to me like some MKUltra-type bullshit. Watch his multi-part interview on "Weaponized."
Astral🛸@The_Astral_

So let me get this straight… Dylan Borland allegedly knows the name of a hidden UFO program called “Rubik’s Cube,” but instead of revealing it to Congress under oath during his testimony, it gets teased at a UFO conference through Corbell so protections can maybe eventually be leveraged to tell Congress later? At some point the UFO topic has to move beyond breadcrumbs, conference reveals, and media teases and into actual oversight, evidence, and documented investigation.

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WG Radtke
WG Radtke@WgRadtke·
@geomydid @lesternare FBI began looking at UAP since at least July 30, 1947 per the book of Dr Bruce Maccabee " UFO FBI Connection" on page 9, first published in the year 2000
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eastofmitch
eastofmitch@geomydid·
@lesternare If the FBI believes them to be a threat (i.e. probability of foreign surveillance), then they are just doing their job under the same umbrella they always have but with a UAP hat on. Given UAP is so broad, that should not be surprising.
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Lester Nare
Lester Nare@lesternare·
People keep discussing UAP as though the entire subject exists only in podcasts and internet culture. Meanwhile, the FBI appears in recently released 2025-era UAP files and members of Congress are reportedly receiving classified briefings on the issue. The FBI investigates threats, counterintelligence concerns, and potential criminal activity. That doesn’t tell us what the phenomenon is. But it does tell us the U.S. government is treating at least parts of it as operationally real.
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WG Radtke
WG Radtke@WgRadtke·
@TheUfoJoe No, Lue and Franc MIlburn were just on Nancy Grace's podcast talking about this person and Amy Eskridge among the other scientist cases, the reported death for Childress was a combination of Covid and a heart attack although reportedly an autopsy was never done
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WG Radtke
WG Radtke@WgRadtke·
@sarahadams al Qaeda and Taliban have run of Afghanistan again with multiple training camps ..even the United Nations has reported on this, I would say the majority of Americans are ignorant and naive on this issue to our probable peril, again..
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WG Radtke
WG Radtke@WgRadtke·
@sarahadams Probably half the country has forgotten about 09/11 or do not care..look at the conduct of half of Congress..
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Sarah Adams
Sarah Adams@sarahadams·
America Cannot Become the World’s Terrorist Holding Cell We need to stop bringing terrorists to the United States. We already have enough within our borders that no one is prioritizing removing, without importing even more of the very people who want to destroy us. If we are unwilling to eliminate these individuals on the battlefield, then the priority should be securing agreements with their countries of origin to prosecute and imprison them there. If their home country refuses, then we should broker agreements with other willing partners in third countries. What we should not be doing is turning the United States into a permanent detention system for foreign terrorists. We already lived through this failure with Guantanamo Bay. Hundreds of terrorists passed through the facility, and many are now free and have returned to plotting against us. Decades later, the United States is still paying financially, politically, and strategically for policies that lacked long-term vision. It is not America’s responsibility to function as a welfare prison state for foreign jihadists. Take Ahmed Abu Khatallah, the Libyan framed as the “Mastermind” for our Benghazi attacks. Guess what, the two actual masterminds are now dead because they got warheads on their foreheads. But we are still paying to board useless Khatallah, had he been turned over to eastern authorities in Libya, he may well have faced the death penalty by now. Instead, the United States chose to absorb the burden indefinitely, spending years housing and prosecuting a man that was merely a scapegoat so our government could pretend they were hunting down our attackers. The same pattern continues today. ISKP operative Mohammad Sharifullah was rendered to the U.S. last year, with the government thinking they could fool you into believing he was the mastermind (ohh wait...also the bomber, which is completely illogical) at Abby Gate. Yet the real architects behind Abbey Gate, Sanaullah Ghafari and Sirajuddin Haqqani, remain untouched, laughing at how we fell for their misinformation regarding Sharifullah. Rather than doing the difficult work required to target senior terrorist leadership, the government handed the public a lower-level ISKP figure and called it a win. And now we are stuck with the burden of him. Americans deserve honesty, not press-operation substitutes for actual counterterrorism success. Then there is Zubair al-Bakoush, who was brought from Libya in 2025 to the United States despite being operationally irrelevant for over a decade after suffering a stroke. He required assistance down the stairs of the aircraft and was immediately transferred onto a stretcher. Yet somehow, this was still presented as a major counterterrorism success story worthy of U.S. resources and long-term incarceration costs when we could have just dropped him off at a prison in Benghazi. We need a better system, and we need it quickly. If the goal is a safer American homeland, then policy should focus on removing foreign terrorists from our soil not transporting them into it. There are limited exceptions. If a detainee is on the verge of release and temporary holding is necessary while a long-term arrangement is secured, that is understandable. But those cases should remain temporary and rare, not normalized. Today, we brought Mohammad Baqer Saad Dawood Al-Saadi, a senior member of Kata’ib Hezballah here, yes, big win, bad guy. Yet at the same time, 5,700 ISIS detainees were transferred earlier this year from Syria into Iraqi prison systems. If Iraq can hold 5,700 ISIS fighters including some of the worst of the worst, why is this individual different?? Why must American taxpayers absorb decades of incarceration costs, legal battles, medical expenses, security requirements, and endless appeals; all while the prisoner receives conditions far better than those available in the region where he comes from? Why not lock him away in Iraq? And history shows exactly where this all leads. It is now 2026, and Khalid Sheikh Mohammad, the 9/11 Mastermind caught in March 2003, still has not gone to trial. More than two decades later, justice remains delayed, the process remains tangled in litigation, and even the death penalty may never materialize, as we have an entire legal system full of individuals never impacted by an actual terrorist who are sympathetic to them when KSM would behead you in a heartbeat without a second thought. That is not a model of strength. America needs a counterterrorism policy rooted in deterrence, accountability, and realism. We cannot continue repeating the same mistakes while expecting different outcomes. We must remove ALL terrorists from U.S. soil, stop letting them in, and stop bringing them here!
Sarah Adams tweet media
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WG Radtke
WG Radtke@WgRadtke·
@TheUfoJoe Good question, there have been allegations over the decades that this incident was a hoax, unless he saw data when he worked for the US Government that proved it is legitimate, I understand the Lonnie Zamora Socorro incident has been in question also by some UAP researchers
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UAP Sentinel
UAP Sentinel@UAPSentinel·
Just the fact that he suggests this as a possibility, from a naval aviators recollection of the incident shows that he shouldn’t be trusted skeptic. Naval aviators are some of the best in the world on visual aircraft identification, and the fact that they had radar and sensor data from their newly upgraded systems just cements in his testimony. Yeah the average Joe(no pun intended brother) will never probably see that but he just needs to stay his lane and make another Tony Hawk video game something he’s good at.
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Joe Murgia
Joe Murgia@TheUfoJoe·
A reminder that Mick suggested Fravor and friends may have seen a seagull in 2004 and not a Tic-Tac shaped object that was hovering over the water, darting around like a ping pong ball 🏓, and took off like a bat out of hell 🦇👹. Not the Meatloaf album and song, which I love.
Joe Murgia@TheUfoJoe

1 #ufotwitter @MickWest 2023: "I never said the Tic-Tac was a seagull." Mick West 2019: "I hate to bring it up, but there would have been seagulls there. If you're looking down and if there's a very, very large bird, or something, circling around, for a moment, you could actually see a seagull. It's a possibility. I know people mock the possibility but we're talking about what Fravor saw." Watch the entire clip. 👇🏼 #ufotwitter #uaptwitter #ufos #uap #seagulls #JonathanLivingstonWest

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