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Military hid attempted Quantico base breach from Marines: source

FREDERICKSBURG, Virginia — Top brass at Quantico Marine Corps base didn’t alert rank and file soldiers of an attempted breach by two Jordanian nationals in a box truck until two weeks after it happened, The Post can reveal.

The incident occurred on May 3, when the two men approached Fuller Road Gate of the Marine Corps Base, were stopped for screening, then attempted to ram their way in but were stopped by military sentries.

The incident was first reported by Potomac Local News and then highlighted by The Post, as well as confirmed by Capt. Michael Curtis, a spokesman for the base.

However, a notification to Marines didn’t go out until May 16, according to Matt Strickland, 40, who had first flagged the incident to the local new site.

“After I [raised the alarm], I had people who work at Quantico messaging me saying ‘holy f—k, when did this happen?’,” Strickland told The Post.

Matt Strickland was behind Aristide Economopoulos
A message received by Matt Strickland about two Jordanians who tried to breach Quantico, which The Post has not been able to verify Matt Strickland/Facebook

“Two weeks after it happened Quantico finally put an email out to employees on base letting them know.

“It was basically ‘f—k guys, I guess we aren’t going to be able to keep this secret, we should try to do some CYA’ [cover your ass],” said Strickland, a former infantry combat medic, Blackwater private military contractor and combat incident analyst at the National Ground Intelligence Center.

Strickland served in Iraq and Afghanistan for a combined nine years “down range” between 2004 and 2016. He said federal authorities have no right to bury details of the foiled incursion.

“Every American has a right to know what happened at Quantico.

“Citizens have a right to know what is going on in their backyard,” he said.

Traffic drives past an entrance sign of Marine Corps Base Quantico AP

Some reports speculated the two men arrested had recently crossed the southern border into the US and one was on the US government’s terrorist watch list.

Strickland was told one of the people involved had a Virginia ID, while the other was a terrorist. The Post has not been able to independently verify either rumor.

Both men are now in Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody. Authorities would not comment further, only saying they will remain in ICE custody until deported.

Quantico did not respond to The Post’s request for further comment on the breach or identity of those involved.

“Who would they be keeping that information from? The reasoning would be so the terrorists, or whoever the Jordanians are working for, don’t know all the information. But whoever those two Jordanian men are working for already know what they planned to do and that they were apprehended,” Strickland said.

“The only people who don’t know what happened are the American people. 

Strickland, a native of Fredericksburg, Virginia, his in his experience of convoys under attack and later in combat intelligence analysis, the secrecy surrounding what happened at Quantico is meant to spare the administration embarrassment, not keep the country safe.

Traffic drives past an entrance sign of Marine Corps Base Quantico AP

“I’ve been an operational guy and I’ve been behind the scenes as an intel analyst. The government absolutely over-classifies s—t. A lot of what they keep from us is not for national security reasons like they say.

“The secrecy is purposeful because it was illegal immigrants, one of who was on the terror watch list, who breached the gates. 

“And they’re allowing these illegal immigrants to come across the border. 

Near the entrance to Quantico Marine Corps Base is a smaller statue of the Iwo Jima Memorial Aristide Economopoulos

“There are people coming across the border who hate us and want us dead.”

Strickland echoed speculation the foiled incursion was a dry-run for a future terror attack, and said his experience in the forces has taught him terror threats are very real.

“I spent years in both Iraq and Afghanistan so I know firsthand, it’s not just people that want to make a better life for themselves crossing the border. 

“In all my time downrange, every attack that happened, especially with VBEDS [Vehicle Borne Explosive Devices], there was always a dry run, always.”

He also lamented how the Southern Border has been besieged, with over 7.5 million migrants apprehended and 1.7 million migrant “gotaways” illegally sneaking over un-apprehended during the Biden administration.

Traffic drives past an entrance sign of Marine Corps Base Quantico AP

“I don’t know any American who would be against someone coming into our country with good intentions, who wanted to assimilate to our values and just raise their family in a better environment,” he said.

“For every 10 good people that came over here for a better life, there’s one in that crowd that wants to kill us. And we’re just allowing them in our country.

“And they’ll be dormant and disciplined for however long they have to be until the time comes.

“It’s just not possible to properly vet the amount of people coming across the border.

“[The authorities] don’t want all the information out there because the incompetent government we have are the ones that allowed these people to be in America in the first place. We’re in an election year so they don’t want negative stories like that out there,” Strickland added.

Strickland said he’s “never been a real political person” and “never trusted politicians” but cast a vote for the first time in 2020, impressed by Trump’s decision not to bomb Iran in 2019. 

The veteran turned restaurateur first went viral for ignoring COVID-19 restrictions, eventually winning a court battle to restore his health department and alcohol licenses.

The infamy earned him a reputation as a people’s champion, which is why a contact at Quantico originally messaged him about the Jordanian raid.

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