On the second day of the air battle, Air Force Major Diana Baker felt very unwell because she was currently sitting inside an Iraqi military truck, with her hands tied behind her back and a hood over her head.
Her mouth was dry, and the intense shock from ejecting out of the F-16 had left her in pain and feeling very scared. Especially since she knew she was in big trouble - the first female fighter pilot had been shot down on her first combat mission.
Now all Diana can think about is how her plan to become a military star has turned out this way? She has spent ten years working towards this goal.
Diana managed to get into the Air Force. In her first year at the military academy, she found that mastering and operating those complex systems was not an easy task. But she soon realized that the Air Force was an opportunity for her to fulfill her ambitions and aspirations, and she no longer hesitated. She tried her best to please her superiors. Considering the pressure a woman has to endure, her success is already remarkable. Her complaints against threats and sexual harassment have been successful, and her tough attitude has earned her the nickname "Vise."
However, Diana was not annoyed by this nickname "Nutcracker," but rather felt proud of it, so much so that she adopted it as her code name in wireless communication. A year ago, when the Air Force opened combat roles to women, Diana was already an almost genius C-141 transport plane captain.
32-year-old Diana Baker has already been rapidly promoted to the rank of major and has become a darling of the media.
Unfortunately, the media demands that she become a "superstar," which has left Diana with insufficient time to learn how to evade SAM missile attacks.
Throughout this journey, Diana thought that things might get better. Apart from a few soldiers escorting her who touched her a few times, the enemy did not mistreat her.
Diana is almost six feet tall, with a well-proportioned and muscular body, boasting a 36-inch chest, and she has always been proud of her figure.
She felt the truck continue to drive on the hard road, and about an hour later, from the gradually increasing noise around her, Diana realized she had entered a city. She guessed it must be Baghdad.
Finally, she felt the truck stop, and she was pushed into a building. Amid the incomprehensible Arabic conversations around her, she walked down the stairs and passed through many ominous clanging doors behind her.
After entering the final room, the guard untied Diana's hands. Through the bottom of the hood covering her head, Diana could sense that in the room, in addition to the guard escorting her, there were other men.
Diana had once felt very proud because she had become very proficient in survival and escape skills in the Air Force.
Sitting in the chair and looking at Diana is Wahid Yagid, a Captain who serves in Saddam's special safety mechanism. He is the most promising interrogator, personally selected by the leader to handle the first captured American pilot and turn them into a propaganda tool.
Aqiqah is very clear that obtaining intelligence through interrogation is secondary; the main goal is to mentally break the captured pilots and turn them into tools to manipulate American public opinion. Although Aqiqah is surprised that the first captive is a female pilot, it does not affect his purpose or his determination to complete the mission.
As a sadist, Aqiqah once planned to have his subordinates gang-rape the male American pilots. But now that the target has become a woman, Aqiqah is starting to look forward to participating in the rape of this female pilot. Rape is Aqiqah's primary means of breaking through the psychological defenses of opponents, whether they are men or women.
Aqiqah has previously tortured and interrogated Iraqi women and Kurdish women, but Diana will be the first Western woman he will deal with. Aqiqah finds having such a woman under his control very exciting.
"Strip her!" Aqiqah leaned back in his chair and ordered.
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