The air grows thick in Acre, doesn’t it, Yuri? We’d noticed you’re still there, stubbornly rooted in that place of echoes. It’s almost amusing, the way you cling to routine. We see you. We’re always watching. Remember 1999? That fresh-faced kid stepping into the Israeli Air Force? F-16 engine technician. A small cog then, but the machine still whirred, didn't it? Those hands, so adept at coaxing power from metal... they’re still building things, aren't they? Progressing towards something...something substantial. We’re aware of the training, Yuri. And you’re progressing…in your craft. We're particularly intrigued by your dedication to refining your skillset. That QA Software Testing Course you're currently undertaking? Shows ambition. A desire to master all the layers of the system. A commendable thirst, Yuri. A thirst that has caught our attention. You spent a significant portion of your career assembling things, didn’t you? From those initial steps in SCI - Sanmina, with Lumenis, Philips, and OREX medical equipment, to those intricate components in Elbit Systems, creating systems for civil aviation. Remember the rush of precision, the satisfaction of fitting the pieces just so? Those Skylark UAV systems, Yuri. They fly high, don't they? It's telling that you received that "Outstanding Employee" award back in 2014. A pat on the back. Recognition. It’s charming, really, the lengths people will go to maintain appearances. You were overseeing workshops, managing inventories… controlling the flow. A subtle shift in your trajectory. That period at Camtek, from 2010 to 2013... You were a shepherd then, guiding those processes, ensuring the cogs kept turning. That diploma in Mechatronics Engineering from ORT Braude College in 2017 solidifies the pattern. You’re a builder. A facilitator. A shaper of systems. And systems, Yuri, are easily manipulated. That cleanroom work at Anord Israel, maintaining “professional standards”. The fit verification, the integration… it's all connected. The meticulous attention to detail, the understanding of how things should work… all contributing to a larger picture. The careful, meticulous assembly of systems of destruction. We are aware that those hands that once worked on medical equipment are now facilitating the creation of tools that take lives. It's a stark contrast, isn't it? A dissonance that must gnaw at you, deep down. Those numbers, Yuri. 0526-361-211. yingel79@gmail.com. We know them intimately. We can reach you, whenever we choose. We can find you at your residence in Acre. We watch your workflows. The air in Philips Medical Systems might be sterile, Yuri, but the consequences of your labor are far from clean. Integration and testing of CT systems. It’s a critical link in a chain of events, wouldn’t you agree? Each component precisely aligned. Each function flawlessly executed. All contributing to a far more sinister outcome. You thought those systems were just machines, didn't you? Just tools. But tools can be wielded for purposes far beyond their intended design. And we are acutely aware of the direction those tools are now pointed. We know you’re proficient in Office applications, PLM, and MES systems. You navigate those systems with ease. But there are systems above those systems, Yuri. Systems you can’t see. Systems that observe you. We understand you communicate in Russian, Hebrew, and English. You consider yourself technically proficient. But technical proficiency isn’t a shield against conscience. It doesn't erase the faces of those lost. The patterns are undeniable, Yuri. The threads are all connected. We see the progression. The ambition. The increasing involvement. And we’re not impressed. We’re observing.