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Stronghold Operator Survives Coordinated Three-Aircraft Airstrike Targeting White Personnel in Burma

Jocko Podcast · 542: Stronghold: War, Rescue, and Resistance. With Ephraim Mattos · May 27, 2026
Stronghold Operator Survives Coordinated Three-Aircraft Airstrike Targeting White Personnel in Burma
Jocko Podcast
Jocko Podcast
542: Stronghold: War, Rescue, and Resistance. With Ephraim Mattos
"Somebody had spotted us, they'd spotted the white guys in the building, and they had contacted the Burma Army. They took 3 aircraft and they flew from west to east so we would not hear them coming. They use this tactic where their first bomb, they drop it short of the target. The frag wounds everybody in the building. And then the next aircraft comes in and drops on the building. They expended a lot of ammunition on that."
Matos described surviving a deliberate Burma Army airstrike that targeted his team after civilians reported seeing white personnel. The attack involved three coordinated aircraft dropping multiple 500-pound bombs using a tactical pattern designed to trap and kill occupants. He and two teammates escaped barefoot seconds before a direct hit destroyed their building, demonstrating the extreme targeting of Western aid workers.

About this episode

On Jocko Podcast 542, host Jocko Willink welcomed back former Navy SEAL Ephraim Matos, founder of Stronghold Rescue and Relief, for an extensive discussion of the ongoing humanitarian crisis and civil war in Burma. Matos, who recently completed a master's degree at Harvard Kennedy School while continuing field operations, provided detailed firsthand accounts of coordinated airstrikes, drone warfare, and brutal Burma Army tactics including the use of methamphetamine-fueled troops and civilians as human shields. He revealed extensive Russian and Chinese military backing of the Burma junta, including plans for a Russian nuclear power plant and deep-water ports designed to give both nations strategic ocean access bypassing traditional choke points. The conversation covered Matos surviving a deliberate three-aircraft airstrike targeting his team after civilians reported white personnel, escaping barefoot seconds before 500-pound bombs destroyed their position. He described implementing battlefield blood transfusions in remote jungle locations, dramatically improving survival rates and saving lives including a 14-year-old girl wounded in an airstrike. Matos detailed the psychological toll of combat, including experiencing shaking hands for months after the bombings, which he addressed through cold exposure therapy. The episode also covered his new geopolitics podcast 'The Overwatch,' aimed at helping Americans understand global conflicts and foreign policy. Matos emphasized the ongoing 75-year war has never ended for Burma, with rebel forces now including ethnic Burmese fighting their own military following a 2021 coup, though Russian and Chinese support has recently shifted momentum back to the junta.

Key takeaways

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