00:00We still don't know the identity of the U.S. airman known as Dude44Bravo, the focus of a
00:05daring recent rescue deep inside Iran, but we do know more about the crazy high-tech tool used to
00:10find him. The CIA calls this gadget the Ghost Murmur, and if that doesn't pique your interest,
00:16just wait till I tell you the rest. This was the first time it was used in the field. The
00:21Ghost
00:21Murmur uses cutting-edge sensors to detect the electromagnetic fingerprint of a human heartbeat
00:26even miles away, just like sharks. How jazzy is that? A source briefed on the tech told the Post,
00:34quote, it's like hearing a voice in a stadium, except the stadium is a thousand square miles
00:39of desert. In the right conditions, if your heart is beating, we will find you. The technology was
00:44reportedly developed by Lockheed Martin's Skunk Works division, a very secretive arm of the company
00:49that does just this kind of thing. You know, whoever named the Ghost Murmur should really take
00:53a crack at rebranding Skunk Works. Anyway, this is just the beginning for the Ghost Murmur. It's
00:59been successfully tested on Blackhawk helicopters and is lined up for future potential use on F-35
01:05fighter jets, according to one of the Post's sources. The missing and wounded weapons systems
01:09officer was hiding in a mountain crevice after his F-15 was shot down late last week, surviving two
01:14days in desolate terrain as Iranian troops scoured the area. The barren landscape that he was in made it
01:20the perfect setting for the use of this ghost murmur tech. Now, likely referencing this fancy
01:25new tool, President Trump, without getting into the details, said the CIA spotted the missing airmen
01:31from 40 miles away. The CIA was very responsible for finding this little speck. It's like they used
01:38an expression on one of the shows the general was talking about. It's like finding a needle in a
01:42haystack finding this pilot. And the CIA was unbelievable.
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