Extra Drop #003 - TACTICAL REPORT – OPERATION COMANDO
Field evaluation of targets derived from detainee Var’s interrogation in sectors Voltare and Rago.
File: 782-PRAE
To: Marshall Jaseb Chevalier
Classification: Internal Confidential | COMPNOR Eyes Only
From: Sergeant Kae Venn (Shadow Commando – Tactical Unit QRF-B)
Subject: Post-Action Report – Voltare and Rago Sectors
Operation Summary
Pursuant to the official directive issued by Your Excellency, and following the preliminary technical triage of detainee Nellis Var, our unit conducted a targeted tactical operation across designated logistical sites in the Voltare and Rago sectors.
The decision to proceed was based on a preliminary list of individuals and infrastructure nodes referenced during Var’s interrogation — presented as potential low-visibility conduits for legacy system breaches and unauthorized logistical overlays.
Given Var’s prior service in orbital encryption and maintenance networks, and considering his apparent willingness to cooperate, these contacts were deemed plausible but unverified. As such, the operation was classified under a Conditional Execution Protocol, with QRF-B deployed to validate and disrupt any latent threats embedded in compromised sectors.
Outcome
The operation targeted specific logistical nodes and individuals mentioned during the interrogation of Nellis Var. These names were flagged during his technical debrief, presented as routine civilian contacts with anomalous access to legacy systems — particularly those tied to outdated orbital protocols in Voltare and Rago.
Although the intelligence seemed technically plausible, the mission encountered severe setbacks:
Voltare:
Contact 1 – “T.A.” (Administrative Technician,
Voltare): Flagged for prior interactions with encrypted dispatch registries. However, upon arrival, the station was found empty. Imperial records indicate a transfer request was approved days before the operation, suggesting possible foreknowledge.
Contact 2 – “C.N.” (Civil Terminal Operator, Voltare):
Reported by Nellis as a relay point for corrupted access logs. The target site had been set on fire less than 12 hours before the raid.
➤ Total data loss. No survivors recovered.
Rago:
Contact 3 – “R.V.” (Droid Supervisor, Rago):
Identified in correlation with restricted droid maintenance logs. Located at his residence. All documents were in order, and no digital inconsistencies were found.
➤ Recommended: passive surveillance.
Operational Conclusion:
Compromised mission.
No arrests
made.
No critical materials
secured.
Potential preemptive leak cannot be ruled out.
Unit Remarks:
Although the technical plausibility of the targets was valid, the generic and poorly contextualized nature of the names provided severely limited the tactical success of the mission.
➤ A review of command activation protocols is advised when dealing with unilateral information from unverified sources.
Follow-up Actions:
Requesting authorization to archive this operation under Conditional Execution – No Outcome.
Suggesting reclassification of this incident for future ISB review.
Signed:
Lt. Kae Venn
QRF-B "Shadow Edge"
Op Code: 782-PRAE
GM Commentary
This is a direct follow-up to Drop 002, where the alleged cooperation of Nellis Var triggered a tactical operation under COMPNOR jurisdiction.
📂 Revisit Drop 002 – Interrogation of Nellis Var
Drop#002 – Structural Breach
he white, sterile corridor was unmistakable from any other Imperial facility. Yet it was so mundane and unidentifiable from the outside. The ISB detention site on Myomar. You would search for days, weeks, or even months, and you would probably still not find it — just like those who ended up in it.
🧪 Every report is a fragment of the Empire — and of what might yet crumble.
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