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It is not just about a lost cargo or a missing vessel, but about a brutal test for those who risk their lives within missions that rarely occupy headlines until everything goes terribly wrong and the silence is broken.

Families will demand names, times, decisions, and responsibilities; analysts will demand technical data; citizens will demand transparency; and the United States’ adversaries will watch every move, every delay, and every contradiction as if they too were part of the board.
Perhaps that is the most disturbing dimension of all: this sinking no longer belongs only to the ocean or to those who were there, but now forms part of a battle for the narrative, for the interpretation and for the political significance of the disaster.
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