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There is growing speculation that the United States is gearing up to deploy troops to Iran after kicking off a barrage of missile attacks targeting the country at the end of February. Most Americans don’t have access to military intel concerning those plans, but one dancer says she has reason to believe that’s the case after benefitting from an influx of business at the clubs where she does her thing.
On August 2, 1990, the Gulf War officially commenced when Iraq invaded Kuwait. It took less than a week for the United States to get involved in the conflict after coming to the defense of the latter with Operation Desert Shield, but one unlikely man had a feeling something was amiss on the eve of the invasion: the owner of dozens of Domino’s franchises in the Washington, D.C. area who said one of his stores delivered 21 pizzas to the CIA headquarters in Langley, Virgnia right before it went down.
That wasn’t the first (or last) time a big order coincided with a notable operation involving America’s military, and that revelation spawned the concept of the so-called “Pentagon pizza index,” a phenomenon linked to the belief that a large order for a notable headquarters in or around the nation’s capital is a sign of pending bombshell news.
However, that may not be the only way to keep tabs on big military developments, as evidenced by the claims of one woman in a line of work that led to her crossing paths with American soldiers she says are letting loose as they prepare to deploy.
A dancer who works near military bases noted there’s been a rise in the number of troops who are blowing money on the verge of a potential deployment
It’s been around a month since the United States and Israel launched strikes against Iran to spark what some people would argue is a “conflict” but what most objective observers would argue ostensibly qualifies as a war.
That label would be increasingly difficult to dispute if America put boots on the ground in the country, which has not been the case so far. There has been an increased presence of troops in the region, and while The Washington Post published a report that claims the Pentagon is preparing for ground operations, no military officials have publicly confirmed that an offensive is imminent.
That brings us to a dancer known as “Charm Daze,” who is employed at the kind of club where dollar bills are used for more than paying for drinks.
That establishment is located next to “several military bases” in San Diego, and on Sunday, she posted a video where she noted people in her line of work may have inadvertently become a source of intel concerning troop movement due to the flood of soldiers “spending all of their money” as they gear up to deploy.
San Diego is home to the largest Navy base on the West Coast as well as Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, which is best known for being the home of the training program featured in Top Gun but also boasts more than 10,000 active-duty members of that branch.
The 26-year-old dancer didn’t specify where the troops in question were deploying, and she stressed she was simply making an observation and was not trying to “spread disinformation.”
It would also be a leap to assume their movement is directly linked to an impending ground operation in Iran, but the fact that entertainers working near military bases can provide this type of insight into matters of national security is a very amusing development.