reSee.it - Related Post Feed

Saved - September 18, 2023 at 5:47 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
The US struggles to match China and Russia in hypersonic missile capabilities. Despite decades of investment, American efforts have repeatedly failed or been canceled. This reflects the country's broader challenge of regaining dominance in key military technologies. The Pentagon's problems with hypersonics range from failed tests to a lack of clear plans. Hypersonic weapons are difficult to develop due to extreme heat generated during high-speed travel. Recent setbacks in test flights have further highlighted the US's struggle to catch up.

@SaysSimulation - Labrador Skeptic

The US is flat out failing to perform with military technology. China and Russia have fully developed hypersonic missile capabilities. The US keeps trying and can't do it. These repeated failures are getting tough to explain. 1/ https://www.wsj.com/politics/national-security/hypersonic-missiles-america-military-behind-936a3128?mod=hp_lead_pos7

Hypersonic Missiles Are Game-Changers, and America Doesn’t Have Them The U.S. military is pouring resources into the superfast weapons but has struggled to develop them. China and Russia are far ahead. wsj.com

@SaysSimulation - Labrador Skeptic

"For more than 60 years, the U.S. has invested billions of dollars in dozens of programs to develop its own version of the technology. Those efforts have either ended in failure or been canceled before having a chance to succeed."

@SaysSimulation - Labrador Skeptic

"The spending is part of America’s struggle to re-establish dominance in key military technologies as it enters a new era of great-power competition."

@SaysSimulation - Labrador Skeptic

"The U.S. is straining to keep up with China in an array of military technologies, ranging from artificial intelligence to biotechnology."

@SaysSimulation - Labrador Skeptic

"The Pentagon’s problems with developing hypersonics run up and down the decision chain, from failed flight tests and inadequate testing infrastructure to the lack of a clear, overarching plan for fielding the weapons."

@SaysSimulation - Labrador Skeptic

"Even the most advanced U.S. warship in the South China Sea could be defenseless against a hypersonic attack."

@SaysSimulation - Labrador Skeptic

"Hypersonic missiles combine speed with the ability to fly at low altitude and maneuver in flight, making them more difficult to spot by radar or satellite. That makes them almost impossible to intercept with current systems."

@SaysSimulation - Labrador Skeptic

“Our nation has chosen not to create an operational capability, and a lot of people ask why,” said L. Neil Thurgood, a retired general “One of the reasons is for the last 20 years, we’ve been spending our national treasure of blood and resources on the global war on terror.”

@SaysSimulation - Labrador Skeptic

"Progress has been halting, in part, because hypersonic weapons are notoriously difficult to develop. Traveling at faster than a mile a second generates heat exceeding 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit, beyond the limit of most materials."

@SaysSimulation - Labrador Skeptic

"The Army’s plan for the Long-Range Hypersonic Weapon this year was thrown into doubt after an early March test flight was canceled at the last minute."

@SaysSimulation - Labrador Skeptic

"Also in March, the Air Force nixed its most advanced hypersonic program, developed by Lockheed Martin, after several test failures."

@SaysSimulation - Labrador Skeptic

Some commentators doubted my thread yesterday, insisting the US was far more technologically advanced than China. Those days are history, unfortunately, we are trying to play catch-up and are failing so far.

@SaysSimulation - Labrador Skeptic

This is an *oh sh*t* moment for the US that needs to wake the entire nation up - but likely won't. China is not just a much larger manufacturing economy - they are technically more advanced than the US is. The hypersonic missiles, the numerous bullet trains, the 5G factories 1/

@davidpgoldman - David P. Goldman

https://www.semianalysis.com/p/china-ai-and-semiconductors-rise Semianalysis says US sanctions have failed. China has a robust, high yield 7nm process.

China AI & Semiconductors Rise: US Sanctions Have Failed Huawei, SMIC, 7nm, H800, Domestic AI Capabilities, ASML, MediaTek, Qualcomm, Apple, RF Capabilities, Potential Sanctions semianalysis.com
Saved - November 16, 2023 at 11:01 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
Chinese President Xi Jinping is reportedly preparing his military forces for war and urging the country to brace for economic hardships. A congressional committee report suggests that Beijing is building up its forces and preparing for conflict in the region. The report highlights indicators that China is readying itself for war with the United States. Tensions have been rising, and China views diplomacy with the US as a means to delay pressure while it continues to develop its own capabilities. The report also emphasizes China's aggressive actions against Taiwan and its advancements in weapons systems, including space-based nuclear weapons. China's influence operations and efforts to control access to space are also highlighted. The report serves as a warning and provides recommendations for US policymakers.

@IndoPac_Info - Indo-Pacific News - Geo-Politics & Defense News

Talking to Biden, preparing for war — U.S. panel sees Xi bracing #China for conflict to come Congressional committee report sees Beijing preparing for conflict in region as it builds up forces. Chinese President Xi Jinping is preparing his military forces for war and directing the rest of the country to prepare for economic hardships that conflict would bring, according to the latest annual report from a congressional commission on China. The Chinese leader, who also heads the ruling Communist Party and is scheduled to have his first face-to-face meeting in a year with President Biden on Wednesday, has called on government officials and the population to prepare for “worst-case” and “extreme” scenarios as a result of heightened tensions with the United States and its allies in the region. The 753-page report to Congress by the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission includes an alarming list of indicators that Beijing is preparing for war with the United States. “Throughout 2023, China accelerated its political, military, economic and information pressure against Taiwan, raising further concerns of potential military action,” Commission co-Chair Carolyn Bartholomew said in releasing the report from the influential advisory body. On the eve of the meeting with Mr. Biden, the panel said Washington had little to show for a flurry of meetings between senior leaders in recent months trying to moderate Beijing’s policies. “China now appears to view diplomacy with the United States primarily as a tool for forestalling and delaying US pressure over a period of years while Chinamoves ever further down the path of developing its own economic, military and technological capabilities,” the report said. ‘Danger on all fronts’ Commanders of the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command have warned Congress for several years that China could use military force against Taiwan in the coming years. Mr. Biden has vowed to defend the island militarily. The Indo-Pacific Command intelligence chief, Rear Adm. Mike Studeman, has warned that a war with China could erupt from a separate regional confrontation. “It’s danger on all fronts,” Adm. Studeman said in a 2021 speech. China’s maritime militia in recent weeks rammed a Philippine resupply ship and used water cannons against other ships that sought to resupply a grounded Philippine warship at a disputed outpost in the Spratly Islands that both countries claim as their territory. The United States has a defense treaty with Manila that the State Department has said would cover any attack on Philippine vessels, military or civilian. Japan has been squaring off against China over the uninhabited Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea that both countries claim. Commission Vice Chairman Alex Wong said the report was released at a critical time, given the high-profile Xi-Biden meeting after months of bilateral tensions and efforts to repair diplomatic and military communications. “There is a broader realization not just in Washington, D.C., and not just in the capitals of our friends and allies, but across the peoples of the free world that the Chinese Communist Party represents a generational challenge to the international order,” he said. According to the bipartisan commission report, the Chinese government is bracing for severe economic damage from international sanctions, foreign economic controls and sharpened strategic rivalry, “including the possibility of an open war over Taiwan.” Last year, Mr. Xi ordered the nation to harden all aspects of the country for worst-case scenarios and uphold CCP control with a “fighting spirit.” The Chinese leader blamed the United States and its allies for recent economic and diplomatic problems resulting from “containment, encirclement and suppression.” “The military must … focus on combat ability as the fundamental and only criterion, concentrate all energy on fighting a war, direct all work towards warfare and speed up to build the ability to win,” Mr. Xi said, in a quote cited in the congressional panel’s report. The war preparations have been backed by legislative, budgetary and logistics moves. The report said those are clear signs that Chinese leaders are “taking preliminary but limited steps to enable effective war mobilization by the military.” Among the steps are regulations that will enable the faster call-up of military reservists and the conscription of additional troops from retired People’s Liberation Army soldiers. PLA recruiters also are picking up students with science and engineering backgrounds for military cyberdefense and space warfare units. New military recruitment centers have been opened since late last year, and air raid shelters are being upgraded. In a sign that Beijing is preparing for casualties from a coming conflict, a “wartime emergency hospital has been set up in Fujian Province, across the 100-mile-wide Taiwan Strait from Taiwan,” the report said. The Chinese government announced plans to increase grain production “in the event a war disrupts global supply chains,” the report said, and, to counter anticipated foreign sanctions in a war, new regulations call for countermeasures in the event China faces sanctions and export controls. Moritz Rudolf, a specialist at the Yale Law School Paul Tsai China Center, told the commission that the regulation’s vague language “sends the signal that the necessity to prepare for ‘international struggle’ outweighs the other elements of the PRC’s foreign relations.” Pressure on Taiwan The report warns that the military situation in the Taiwan Strait remains tense as a result of China’s acceleration of a campaign of near-daily military pressure against the island, including large-scale war games, regular aircraft intrusions into Taiwan’s air defense zone, warship deployments encircling the island, missile firings over Taiwan and drills simulating attacks on the island. Chinese military strategists are studying the war in Ukraine for lessons that the PLA can apply in a Taiwan conflict, such as the use of drones and commercial Starlink satellites for military communications, the report said. Low-level conflict against Taiwan also included the use of two Chinese-flagged vessels, a fishing ship and a container ship, that “deliberately cut two undersea internet cables used by Taiwan’s outlying Matsu Island in February 2023,” the report said. Better weapons The report highlighted the development of advanced weapons systems designed to provide China with an edge over U.S. forces, including multiple types of advanced missiles capable of hitting ships at sea with either conventional or nuclear warheads. Cyberdefense and space weapons also advanced systems that could be used to cripple U.S. military forces. One unique weapon system showcased in the report is China’s new space-based nuclear weapon, called a fractional orbital bombardment system, or FOBS. The advancement “raises the possibility that China could permanently deploy nuclear weapons in space, effectively adding a fourth leg to its nascent nuclear triad,” the report said. The current Chinese triad, like that of the U.S. military, comprises ground-based nuclear missiles, missile submarines and bombers. “China’s deployment of such a [FOBS] system would deprive the United States of early warning” and increase the danger of a nuclear conflict, the report said. As with past annual reports, the new China commission report includes developments in security and economic relations and makes recommendations for U.S. policymakers. The sections on U.S.-China trade and economic matters included an examination of how China uses financing deals with foreign nations to promote its goals and the impact of the Biden administration’s “de-risking” policy to protect U.S. interests from Chinese actions on issues such as supply chain resilience and technology transfers. The report includes a section on how China is using heavy-handed and aggressive measures against its regional neighbors while challenging international norms and exploiting the weaknesses of open societies. Influence operations A section of the report focuses on China’s aggressive efforts to shape public and elite opinion around the world in support of its policies. “Under Xi’s rule, China’s overseas influence activities are now more prevalent, institutionalized, technologically sophisticated, and aggressive than under his predecessors,” the report said. Chinese military basing facilities are growing, and espionage operations are “intensified,” showing increased sophistication against foreign spy targets, the report said. Chinese surveillance and military facilities deployed in Cuba could lead to electronic spying against people in the United States. China could use the Cuban facilities to monitor and potentially disrupt U.S. military deployments and material shipments during a war, the report said. A naval base for Chinese military forces is being built in Cambodia. According to the report, China is even seeking to control access to the moon for strategic purposes. “Beijing is working to establish a long-term presence in space, which it seeks to accomplish by first dominating the cislunar domain, or the space between Earth and the moon,” the report said, noting plans by China to build a lunar base by 2030. The report quotes Jeff Gossel, an analyst with the Air Force National Air and Space Intelligence Center, as saying a Chinese satellite orbiting the moon “could allow China to fly to the far side of the moon and attack U.S. satellites in geosynchronous orbits.”

Saved - December 7, 2023 at 1:48 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
China may be planning a Pearl Harbor-style attack on the US to invade Taiwan, aiming for a swift victory. This strategy involves a sudden, overwhelming assault that could incapacitate US military assets in the Indo-Pacific within hours. The Biden administration has made little progress in countering this threat. In the past, China lacked the capability to target US bases, but technological advancements have changed that. The US military must be prepared for this potential shift in global power dynamics.

@ChuckCallesto - Chuck Callesto

SHOCK REPORT: Chinese Pearl Harbor-style attack MAY END America’s days as a superpower.. According to a top expert, CHINA believes that to successfully invade Taiwan, it must strike America with a sudden, intense attack akin to the Pearl Harbor assault. As America remembers the 82nd anniversary of Imperial Japan's devastating attack on Pearl Harbor, the U.S. military is once again confronting a formidable threat from Asia. There is substantial evidence suggesting that in the event of a conflict with the United States, China might adopt a strategy reminiscent of Japan's, aiming for a swift, decisive victory. China's approach would likely involve a modernized tactic: a sudden, overwhelming assault capable of incapacitating most U.S. military assets in the Indo-Pacific within hours, potentially marking a significant shift in global power dynamics. Regrettably, despite awareness of this potential threat, the Biden administration has made little progress in countering it. To understand this better, a look at the past is necessary. In the 1990s, China began focusing on counteracting U.S. military influence in Asia. At the time, Beijing acknowledged its incapacity to effectively target or neutralize U.S. bases in Asia or the powerful warships safeguarding crucial maritime routes and trade across the Pacific. This shortcoming became more apparent during the Taiwan Strait crises in the mid-1990s. China's leaders realized their inability to even pinpoint U.S. aircraft carriers near Taiwan, primarily due to technological limitations. This has considerably changed.

Saved - April 4, 2025 at 7:19 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
Trumpstein has been caught lying about the effectiveness of military strikes on Yemen, with Pentagon officials admitting limited success against Ansar’Allah. Despite claims of significant impact, the Department of Defense reports costs nearing $1 billion. Concerns are also rising about the Navy's munition stockpile amid potential confrontations with China. Additionally, Ansar’Allah has shot down an American MQ9 drone. I reflect on Tulsi Gabbard's shift from truth-telling about Yemen to supporting Israel, and I question Trumpstein's views on Islam in light of his actions in the region.

@Truthtellerftm - Truth_teller 🇷🇺

BREAKING: Trumpstein caught lying again while Pentagon officials admit the truth about the strikes on Yemen! 🧵

@Truthtellerftm - Truth_teller 🇷🇺

While trumpstein claimed his terrorist strikes had decimated Ansar’Allah, experts on the ground say otherwise. The DOD admits they have had limited success against Ansar’Allah, despite strikes being larger than what was done under Biden, "and much bigger than what has publicly described." The costs are $200 million so far and could exceed $1 billion by next week.

@Truthtellerftm - Truth_teller 🇷🇺

The Pentagon is now worried about the Navy’s overall munition stockpile and the implications this poses in the event of a confrontation with China! https://t.co/5lJ0OSzG2m

@Truthtellerftm - Truth_teller 🇷🇺

Meanwhile, Ansar’Allah has shot down another American MQ9 reaper drone, which costs around $30 million. The drone was shot above the city of Maraby. https://t.co/HVBU4O26Qg

@Truthtellerftm - Truth_teller 🇷🇺

What selling out looks like. Tulsi Gabbard once told the truth about the devastation and human catastrophe in Yemen. But then she became a shill for Israel. https://t.co/ReVUSzdAAz

Video Transcript AI Summary
Thousands of Yemeni civilians have died in a genocidal war waged by Saudi Arabia with US support, leading to famine, disease, and the world's worst humanitarian crisis. Congress passed a bill to end US support, but President Trump threatened to veto it to protect a multibillion-dollar arms deal with Saudi Arabia. Trump has been committed to combating Islamist terrorism, affecting the US and other parts of the world. He redesignated the Houthis in Yemen as a terrorist organization after President Biden removed them from the list. The Houthis have been disrupting maritime trade, forcing countries to reroute commerce. Trump has taken action for safety, security, and prosperity, and expects other affected countries to do the same.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: There are millions of Yemeni people who are on the brink of death from famine, disease, lack of access to food and water, basic medicine and health care. Thousands of Yemeni civilians have died in this genocidal war being waged by Saudi Arabia with support from The United States. Absolutely outrageous that The United States has continued its support for years now for Saudi Arabia's genocidal war in Yemen that has killed thousands and thousands of innocent Yemeni people and caused mass starvation and suffering, cholera epidemic, the worst humanitarian crisis in the world in Yemen. Congress finally passed legislation to end US support for Saudi Arabia's genocidal war in Yemen. Now this bill is sitting on President Trump's desk awaiting his signature or veto. Now he's already threatened to veto this bill, which just reveals how he cares more about what Saudi Arabia wants than what the American people want. You saw Trump's rhetoric on the campaign trail about Saudi Arabia, against Saudi Arabia, against United States support for Saudi Arabia, calling them out for what they are, and now refusing to end US military support for this genocidal war in Yemen that Saudi Arabia is waging that's created the worst humanitarian crisis of our generation because he says, well, he doesn't wanna risk a multibillion dollar arms deal with Saudi Arabia. So, you know, you can see, at least in that respect, what he's really motivated by. He would rather continue to support the senseless and devastating deaths of innocent people in Yemen and using our US military, my brothers and sisters in the military, to do that because he doesn't wanna risk an arms deal with Saudi Arabia, Theocratic dictatorship that actually directly supports terrorist groups like Al Qaeda. Trump's leadership going back through his first term as president, he has been and remains very committed to combating and defeating the threat of Islamist terrorism that not only affects The United States, the American people, our own safety and security, but it is affecting so many people in different parts of the world. We can see different terrorist groups, the Houthis in Yemen being one of them, that president Trump has, redesignated after president Biden took them off of the terrorist list, redesignated them appropriately as a terrorist organization, and taking action where the previous administration failed to. Right. The Houthis have been disrupting maritime, trade and passage for a very long time, and no no serious effort has been taken, to stop that disruption. Our country and other countries should not be in a position to have to make a decision to reroute commerce going through that area simply because of the Houthi threat, that exists. So president Trump has taken decisive action for our own safety, security, and prosperity, and I know we'll look to other affected countries as there are many who are impacted by this to similarly take action.

@Truthtellerftm - Truth_teller 🇷🇺

Trumpstein thinks Islam hates him. Maybe that’s why he has no problem killing innocent Muslim women and children in Yemen and sponsoring the genocide in Gaza. Typical Jewish behaviour. https://t.co/LhsLXCAWV6

Video Transcript AI Summary
There is a tremendous hatred of us in Islam, and we have to get to the bottom of it. There is an unbelievable hatred of us. You're gonna have to figure that out. There is a tremendous hatred, and we have to be very vigilant. We have to be very careful, and we can't allow people coming into this country who have this hatred of The United States and of people that are not Muslim. Is there a war between the West and radical Islam, or is there war between the West and Islam itself? Radical, but it's very hard to define. It's very hard to separate because you don't know who's who.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Think Islam hates us. There's something there's something there that there's a tremendous hatred there. There's a tremendous hatred. We have to get to the bottom of it. There is an unbelievable hatred of us Speaker 1: In Islam itself? Speaker 0: You're gonna have to figure that out. Okay? You'll get another Pulitzer. Right? But you're gonna have to figure that out. But there is a tremendous hatred, and we have to be very vigilant. We have to be very careful, and we can't allow people coming into this country who have this hatred of The United States Speaker 1: I guess the question Speaker 0: is and of people that are not Muslim. Speaker 1: I guess the the question is, is there a war between the West and radical Islam, or is there war between the West and Islam itself? Speaker 0: Radical, but it's very hard to define. It's very hard to to separate because you don't know who's who.
Saved - May 28, 2025 at 1:26 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
China's advancements in stealth technology pose a significant threat to Trump's missile defense system, the Golden Dome, which could cost taxpayers up to $831 billion. Researchers have developed a heat-absorbing material that evades detection by infrared and microwave systems. The Golden Dome relies on radar for threat detection, but without effective early warning, its interceptors may be ineffective. China has various strategies to overwhelm US defenses, including drone and missile buildups. Ultimately, the Golden Dome may provoke arms races rather than enhance security.

@SputnikInt - Sputnik

🇨🇳🇺🇸 CHINA JUST CRACKED TRUMP’S GOLDEN DOME Trump’s new missile defense shield could cost taxpayers up to $831B. Too bad it won't work against China's new 'super-duper' stealth tech. 🧵 https://t.co/IF4uulF9zc

@SputnikInt - Sputnik

STEALTH WORKAROUND 💥 Scientists at China’s Zhejiang University have created a composite, multi-layered, heat-absorbing stealth material they say can evade detection by infrared and microwave systems at long ranges. The best part? It operates at temperatures up to 700 °C. 2/8 https://t.co/JBS3Gd5zS6

@SputnikInt - Sputnik

🔥FIRING BLIND That’s bad news for Golden Dome, which will rely on ground and space-based early warning, tracking, fire control and AESA radars to detect and track threats. Without help from its eyes and ears, the Golden Dome’s interceptors would be essentially useless. 3/8 https://t.co/ERRRKmSW5Y

@SputnikInt - Sputnik

💣OTHER OPTIONS China has more means to render Golden Dome useless, like: 🔸pairing ICBMs or carrier-killer missiles with EW drones or aircraft, 🔸decoy/dummy warheads 🔸cyber warfare 🔸to jam radar, spoof sensors, mimic missile signatures, and suppress communications. 4/8 https://t.co/QbUCp9t7qQ

@SputnikInt - Sputnik

☠️SATURATION STRATEGY China could announce a drone and missile buildup to simply overwhelm US defenses and exhaust interceptors. It worked for Moscow when Reagan toyed with his Strategic Defense Initiative in the 80s. It can work for Beijing against Trump’s Golden Dome. 5/8 https://t.co/lWSn4bMZEh

@SputnikInt - Sputnik

🎯TARGETING THE DOME ITSELF The US system could be targeted with: 🔸ground/space-based anti-satellite weapons (missiles, killer satellites) 🔸hypersonic weapons that maneuver to evade all interception attempts 🔸laser & microwave weapons targeting sensors 🔸sabotage & cyber ops 6/8

@SputnikInt - Sputnik

♟️ONLY WINNING MOVE IS NOT TO PLAY Trump sees the Golden Dome as a magical weapon with which to defend America. In reality, it will undermine strategic stability, since its real goal is to give the US the ability to launch first strike attacks with a false sense of impunity. 7/8

Video Transcript AI Summary
The president envisioned a layered defense system against nuclear attack. US spy satellites would detect Soviet missile launches, triggering alerts. Space-based kinetic energy weapons would fire projectiles to intercept missiles during their boost phase. Earth-based nuclear-powered x-ray lasers and excimer lasers, redirected by space mirrors, would attack missiles. Chemical lasers and particle beam weapons would also engage. Ground-based projectiles would target warheads in space. Laser-equipped planes, earth-based lasers, and ABM rockets would eliminate remaining warheads entering the atmosphere. The administration initially claimed the Strategic Defense Initiative would be a perfect defense.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Hear an artist projection of the president's vision. Banning into space, a layered defense to protect the country from nuclear devastation. US spy satellites would watch the world below, detect Soviet missiles blasting off, compute the position and speed of each missile. Alert battle stations in space on earth. The first response, space based kinetic energy weapons fire high speed projectiles from hypervelocity guns, intercepting enemy missiles as they are boosted through the atmosphere. Popped up into space, earth based nuclear powered x-ray lasers fire their radio active rays. Attack rays from land based excimer lasers are redirected by huge mirrors orbiting in space. Chemical lasers beams that burn through the shell of the onrushing missile. Particle beam weapons with pulsing rays join the attack. Still over the atmosphere, the missile missile bus ejects its cargo, multiple nuclear warheads. As the remaining Soviet missiles now arc towards The US, ground based projectiles are volleyed into space. Their giant steel ribs shatter the enemy weapons. The final minute. The surviving warheads enter the atmosphere above The United States, are attacked by laser equipped planes. Earth based lasers and AVM rockets eliminate the last warheads. The administration's original claim for the Strategic Defense Initiative was that it would be a perfect

@SputnikInt - Sputnik

💸WASTE OF MONEY Golden Dome will push rivals to: 🔸build more warheads to saturate US defenses 🔸create new hypersonic weapons to evade it 🔸develop decoys, EW & radar-absorbing materials to defeat it As for the US, it will spend $831B on a system that doesn’t work. 8/8 https://t.co/GxvsMfA4w5

Saved - June 17, 2025 at 1:46 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I discussed the impressive challenges Iranian missiles face when targeting Israel, which must overcome a robust 10-layer air defense system. This includes U.S. military systems in Iraq, French Rafale jets, the USS Carl Vinson Strike Group, THAAD in Israel, Jordanian and U.S. Patriot batteries, British RAF from Cyprus, and Israel's own Arrow-3, Arrow-2, David’s Sling, and Iron Dome. Despite these defenses, Iran's advanced missile technology and saturation attacks have exposed vulnerabilities, allowing them to breach these layers effectively.

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

🚨🇮🇱🇮🇷Could Israel 10-Layer Missile Defense Be Cracked? Few people realize how impressive the Iranian missile strikes on Israel are. Every time they hit a strategic target, they have to OVERCOME 10 LAYERS OF AIR DEFENSES. 🧵Here’s the obstacles Iranian missiles face during every mission👇

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

🌍 Global Defense Layers 1️⃣ 🇺🇸 US Military Systems in Iraq Ground-based air defense platforms and radar systems capable of early threat detection and engagement. https://t.co/V5IYKbK3yy

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

2️⃣ 🇫🇷 French Rafale Jets (Saudi Airspace) NATO-backed interceptors with Saudi clearance for long-range threats. https://t.co/oPrUOWEwot

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

3️⃣ 🇺🇸 USS Carl Vinson Strike Group AEGIS-equipped destroyers providing sea-based missile defense. https://t.co/YUdia5E2lL

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

4️⃣ 🇺🇸 US THAAD in Israel High-altitude ballistic missile killer (terminal phase). https://t.co/0wYM59xgYn

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

5️⃣ 🇯🇴 Jordanian & US Patriot Batteries Patriot missile batteries and integrated radar coverage strengthen regional defense corridors. https://t.co/oWfz2Fq9Tb

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

6️⃣ 🇬🇧 British RAF from Cyprus 🇨🇾 Rapid response across the Eastern Mediterranean. https://t.co/I38CzfAlXC

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

🇮🇱 Israel’s Domestic Missile Shield: 7️⃣ Arrow-3 Exo-atmospheric (space-based) interceptor targeting long-range ballistic missiles up to 2,000 km. https://t.co/65psxffAEv

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

8️⃣ Arrow-2 Designed for endo-atmospheric (re-entry) interception of intermediate-range threats. https://t.co/D9N7lf8Xan

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

9️⃣ David’s Sling Mid-range cruise & ballistic missile defense. https://t.co/lsfEJX2yqD

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

🔟 Iron Dome Short-range, high-frequency interceptor system designed to protect civilian areas from rockets and mortars. https://t.co/tID7x5odk5

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

⚡️ The Reality: Iran exposed the Iron Dome Iran's homegrown missiles, developed under decades of sanctions are able to tear through each and every layer and strike targets. Why? 🔸Sheer volume (saturation attacks) 🔸Cutting-edge Hypersonic & maneuverable warheads 🔸Stealth & decoy tech

Saved - June 22, 2025 at 8:57 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
China's support for Iran through the BeiDou satellite system has significantly enhanced Iran's military capabilities, allowing for precise missile strikes independent of U.S. GPS. The 25-year cooperation agreement between Iran and China has shifted the power dynamics in the Middle East, enabling Iran to execute coordinated attacks with high accuracy. BeiDou's dual-layer structure offers resilience against jamming, making it a strategic asset for Iran's sovereignty. Despite skepticism from some Iranians about the reliance on BeiDou, the evidence of its critical role in recent military actions is undeniable.

@PandemicTruther - America-China Watcher

China is already backing Iran in a big way China Just Gave Iran a Lifeline—Without BeiDou, Iran Might Have Surrendered Beneath a smoke-filled night sky, an Iranian missile streaked across the darkness and slammed directly into the Israeli Ministry of Defense’s command center. The explosion instantly cut surveillance feeds. Shockwaves rippled through nearby neighborhoods, shaking buildings across several kilometers. Meanwhile, in a Tehran command room, Iranian technicians monitored a BeiDou navigation terminal as the coordinates updated in real time. The missile hit with surgical precision. On-screen, the hit-probability curve spiked—marking a turning point: Iran had entered the age of precision warfare. And it owed that breakthrough to China’s BeiDou satellite system. 🧵

@PandemicTruther - America-China Watcher

I. How BeiDou Took Over the Persian Gulf In 2021, Iran and China signed a 25-year comprehensive cooperation agreement. Western analysts mostly overlooked a critical clause: Iran’s full access to China’s BeiDou satellite network. This single line quietly began to shift the power balance in the Middle East. For years, Iran had been shackled by the invisible restraints of American GPS. Its missiles were vulnerable to signal interference. Its drones could be spoofed or hijacked. With BeiDou, Iran gained full navigation autonomy—guiding missiles and drones independent of Western infrastructure. The technological leap became a battlefield advantage. With over 6,000 missiles connected to BeiDou, Iran’s accuracy improved to meter-level precision. Its offensive capabilities expanded accordingly. Take the Hoveyzeh cruise missile: with BeiDou-assisted upgrades, its range now extends to 2,500 kilometers, rivaling the U.S. Tomahawk. Iranian drones also began operating in “intelligent swarm” formations, coordinating through BeiDou’s encrypted signal network to outmaneuver Israeli defenses.

@PandemicTruther - America-China Watcher

II. Dual-Layer Supremacy: How BeiDou Beats GPS Iran’s adoption of BeiDou wasn’t just technical—it was strategic necessity. Among the world’s four satellite navigation systems, Russia’s GLONASS and Europe’s Galileo lacked sufficient accuracy. The U.S. GPS system, meanwhile, was a liability: easily denied, manipulated, and used as a weapon. BeiDou’s strength lies in its dual-layer satellite structure: a global base layer augmented by a dense regional constellation optimized for Asia. This overlapping architecture creates a robust signal capable of punching through sophisticated jamming and spoofing efforts by the U.S.–Israel alliance. During Iran’s missile launches, BeiDou’s enhanced Asian signals cut through Western electronic warfare.

@PandemicTruther - America-China Watcher

III. Surrender or Sovereignty: The Strategic Stakes Imagine an alternate reality: had Iran still been relying on GPS during its June 2025 retaliation, the result could have been catastrophic. One U.S. command could have cut navigation entirely: Hundreds of drones would’ve crashed mid-flight. Cruise missiles could’ve plunged into the Mediterranean. Ballistic missiles might’ve misfired and struck Iranian soil. A military force without satellite guidance is a blind army. BeiDou wasn’t just a tool; it was Iran’s path to sovereignty and national dignity.

@PandemicTruther - America-China Watcher

IV. Precision Retaliation: Proof of Satellite Guidance Iran’s June 2025 barrage wasn’t emotional, nor random. It was measured, mirrored, and methodical—a clinical demonstration of retaliatory symmetry: Israel struck Iranian command centers → Iran hit Israel’s Ministry of Defense. Israel bombed scientific research centers → Iran targeted Rafael Defense Systems. Israel assassinated IRGC commanders → Iran struck Netanyahu’s private residence in Caesarea. Israel hit military-industrial facilities → Iran bombed Haifa Port. Israel targeted Iran’s economic base → Iran responded by hitting Diamond District, the Tel Aviv stock exchange, and elite suburbs — a direct strike at Israel’s economic morale. These were not arbitrary impacts. They were deliberate, equivalent counterstrikes, demonstrating strategic coherence and high accuracy—something only possible with reliable satellite guidance.

@PandemicTruther - America-China Watcher

V. The Denial: Iranian Pride or Strategic Amnesia? Yet even in the face of this evidence, some incorrigibly arrogant Iranians on X claim that these strikes were executed without BeiDou—that Iran achieved such precision without any Chinese tech, using only inertial or optical guidance. Such claims collapse under scrutiny: 1. Inertial Navigation Systems (INS) drift over long distances according to a programmed itinerary and cannot maintain meter-level accuracy. 2. Optical systems fail in darkness, poor weather, or long-range strikes beyond visual range. 3. Complex, multi-phase corrections—especially mid-flight—require real-time data that only satellites provide. The timing, pairing, and specificity of the June strikes demand full-phase, satellite-enabled navigation. GPS was unavailable. BeiDou was the only functioning option. But strategic autonomy does not mean isolation. Iran’s precision today was made possible by China’s space power—and that truth is written across every blast crater. It appears that Iran and many people are complaining that Iran is not getting any help from Russia and China. That's ignoring the elephant in the room. If the contribution is so big that failing which Iran's missile strikes are all nullified, it's called strategic critical logistics support. That's helping in a big way.

@PandemicTruther - America-China Watcher

@MSA397354584375 - M_S_A

@PandemicTruther Thanks for the informative thread. I was initially skeptical but found reports elsewhere as well. @haniefhaider https://jamestown.org/program/beidou-and-strategic-advancements-in-prc-space-navigation/ https://thecradle.co/articles/pakistan-breaks-ranks-backs-iran-in-war-with-israel

BeiDou And Strategic Advancements in PRC Space Navigation Executive Summary: BeiDou enhances both the PRC’s strategic autonomy and its influence across the world. It has signed agreements with numerous countries to expand its use, including for military applications. An interoperability agreement with the US government diminishes the strategic value of GPS by eliminating and altering the costs of switching over to BeiDou. BeiDou could successfully insulate the PRC … jamestown.org
Pakistan breaks ranks, backs Iran in war with Israel Pakistan reveals that Israeli drone operators attempted to sabotage Pakistan's nuclear facilities during the India-Pakistan crisis in May. This is a major reason why Islamabad is throwing its full weight behind Tehran in the Israel-Iran war. thecradle.co

@PandemicTruther - America-China Watcher

Chatgpt: 📌 Iran’s Missiles and BeiDou: Confirmed Integration 1. 2015 – Initial technical cooperation Iran’s electronics firm Salran signed MoUs with Chinese counterparts to integrate BeiDou satellite navigation into Iranian missiles and UAVs, aiming to improve targeting accuracy. Agreements included building ground stations in Iran and transferring BeiDou technology, under the support of Iran Electronics Industries (linked to the MODAFL). 2. 2021 – Full military access to BeiDou In January 2021, Iran’s ambassador in Beijing publicly confirmed that China granted Iran military-grade access to BeiDou. Experts note this gives Iran the ability to navigate and guide missiles with encrypted BeiDou signals, improving precision across ballistic and cruise missile platforms. 3. BeiDou vs GLONASS Russia’s GLONASS is used as a backup but is less accurate, particularly for military-grade applications. GLONASS signals are unencrypted for civilian users and are generally considered inferior in precision to BeiDou’s dual-band encrypted service. In many Iranian military platforms, GLONASS has been supplemented or replaced by BeiDou. Some Chinese-supplied missile guidance units use dual-mode GLONASS-BeiDou chips, but BeiDou provides the primary accuracy. 4. Strategic Importance Under the China–Iran 25-year strategic partnership, BeiDou is now a core component of Iran’s C4ISR (Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance). This represents a break from Western-controlled GPS, enabling Iran to operate independently of U.S. satellite guidance, which has been blocked or spoofed in past conflicts. --- 🧭 Summary Table SystemAccuracy (Military Use)EncryptionUsed by Iran?Notes BeiDouHigh (1–3 m CEP or better)Yes (military-grade)✅ Integrated in missiles & UAVsProvided by China GLONASSModerate (5–10 m CEP)No (civilian-grade only for Iran)✅ Used in hybrid systemsSupplementary, less precise GPSDenied or spoofedDenied to Iran❌ BlockedU.S.-controlled

@PandemicTruther - America-China Watcher

Google Gemini confirms Beidou has exceeded GPS capability: "Official Recognition: A US government advisory panel on GPS has even conceded that "GPS is now notably below par to China's BeiDou" technically in some areas"" * Beidou has indeed made significant advancements and in many aspects, it has surpassed GPS. * Number of Satellites: Beidou has a larger constellation of satellites (currently around 35-56 depending on the source and inclusion of different generations) compared to GPS (around 31 operational satellites). A larger constellation can offer better coverage and redundancy. * Accuracy: Many reports indicate that Beidou offers superior accuracy for public use, often less than 1 meter, compared to GPS's typical accuracy of less than 4.9 meters. With augmentation systems, both can achieve sub-meter to centimeter-level precision. * Signal Frequencies: Beidou utilizes multiple frequencies simultaneously, which can make it more resilient to disruptions and improve accuracy by correcting for atmospheric interference. GPS also uses multiple frequencies (L1, L2, L5) but Beidou's implementation has been highlighted as particularly robust. * Unique Features: Beidou has a unique short message communication (SMC) capability, allowing users to send text messages even in remote areas without other communication infrastructure. This is not a feature of GPS. * Monitoring Stations: Beidou reportedly has significantly more monitoring stations globally than GPS, which aids in its overall accuracy and reliability. * Official Recognition: A US government advisory panel on GPS has even conceded that "GPS is now notably below par to China's BeiDou" technically in some areas. While GPS remains widely adopted and interoperable with other GNSS systems, Beidou's rapid development and advanced featuras a very strong contender, and in several technical aspects, it has indeed exceeded GPS. For Iran, is GPS not available, blocked, and controlled by the U.S., and is its precision inferior? * GPS Availability in Iran: GPS is generally available globally, including in Iran, as it broadcasts signals worldwide. However, there have been recent reports (as of June 2025) of significant GPS jamming and spoofing near Iran's coast, particularly in the Arabian Gulf and Strait of Hormuz. This disruption, affecting nearly 1,000 ships daily, makes safe navigation difficult and has been linked to recent maritime incidents. * Control and Blocking by the U.S.: GPS is indeed controlled by the U.S. government, and theoretically, access can be restricted or degraded during conflicts. This is a strategic concern for many nations, including Iran, who seek alternative navigation systems for national security and autonomy. While a complete, nationwide "blocking" of GPS by the U.S. for civilian use in Iran is not the default state, localized jamming or spoofing for strategic purposes can occur and is currently being reported. * Precision Inferiority: As mentioned above, standard GPS public signals do have a lower precision (less than 4.9 meters) compared to Beidou's stated public precision (less than 1 meter). So, in terms of raw publicly available precision, Beidou generally offers better accuracy.

@PandemicTruther - America-China Watcher

Correction: Please ignore the video. It's irrelevant to the Iranian missiles. It's actually a SpaceX falcon 9 launched at sunset in California.

Saved - June 22, 2025 at 9:17 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
The ongoing conflict between Iran and Israel is not merely a regional issue; it's deeply intertwined with the U.S. financial system's stability. Israel, acting as a U.S. ally, miscalculated Iran's response, revealing its inability to sustain a prolonged war. This conflict aims to instill fear, ensuring capital flows into U.S. bonds. However, the strategy backfired, redirecting investments toward China instead. As the U.S. faces declining dominance and military challenges, the war's implications extend beyond the battlefield, threatening the dollar's future and American hegemony.

@PandemicTruther - America-China Watcher

The Hidden Logic Behind the Iran-Israel War: Not Just About Iran—It's About Saving the Dollar This war isn’t just about Israel trying to bomb Iran. It’s about something far bigger: protecting the U.S. financial system from collapse. Let’s be clear. Israel doesn’t act alone. It’s been conferring with Wall Street and taking quiet instructions from the Federal Reserve. But this time, Israel miscalculated. Tel Aviv didn’t expect the scale, speed, or precision of Iran’s retaliation. Neither did Washington. The shock was real. What followed made one thing painfully obvious: Israel can’t handle a long, high-intensity war—not logistically, not militarily, not politically. Because this was never just Israel’s war. Israel acts as a militarized outpost for the U.S.-led financial empire. Its role is strategic, but the real beneficiary of this war isn’t just Israel. It’s Wall Street. The U.S. national debt is over $37 trillion. Interest payments are now the biggest item in the federal budget. Investors are nervous. Who wants to keep buying U.S. Treasuries when the math no longer works? To keep capital flowing into U.S. bonds, you need to create fear. The world must believe: - The U.S. is the only safe haven, - Every other region is one trigger away from chaos, - And the U.S. military can plunge any competitor into ruin at will. In the past, often at the moment when the Fed increased the interest rate, a major war breaks out. Purpose of both is to cause capital flight into USD assets. - In March 2022, the Fed raised rates. - Days earlier on February 24, Russia moved into Ukraine. - Panic ensued. Over €400 billion fled into U.S. assets. - German industry was crushed by energy inflation. Many factories left—some to the U.S., but others to China to the indignation of the US government. That's why Obama accused China of being a "free rider" 🧵

Video Transcript AI Summary
If you provoke a fight, don't cry when you get punched. Israel lit the match, and Iran is walking through the fire like warriors. The days of getting hit without hitting back are over. Iran stood up, shaking the Zionist throne because they expected obedience, not resistance. If you believe in justice, stand with the defenseless. Israel isn't fighting for survival but to maintain domination. Iran is answering a slap with a fist. When Palestinians cry, you look away, but when Tel Aviv trembles, you empty your treasury. This is about loyalty to power and who gets to kill and still be called innocent. People are waking up, and truth is louder than propaganda. Love the people who can't defend themselves because the innocent only have prayers. To Israel, you started this, you live with it. To America, don't sell your soul to defend arrogance. The defenseless are people, children, and voices that will not be erased.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: If you provoke a fight, don't cry when the punches come. If you bomb a sovereign state, don't act surprised when they respond. This ain't a game. This ain't a drill. This is consequence. Israel lit the match. Iran didn't start this fire, but now they're walking through it like warriors, and suddenly, the bully got a black eye, and he's crying out to big brother America to come hold him. Countless, Washington. We didn't think they'd fight back. Well, guess what? The days of getting hit without hitting back are over. Iran stood up, and that shook the Zionist throne because they never expected resistance, just obedience. Now let me say this plain. You don't have to like Iran. You don't have to agree with Iran. But if you believe in justice, if you believe in dignity, you better stand with the defenseless. Because right now, Israel ain't fighting for survival. It's fighting to keep domination. And Iran, Iran is answering a slap with a fist. They're used to bombing cities and watching the world do nothing. But this time, the world watched Tehran rise. This time, there was an answer. And now the empire's golden child is shaky. Don't come crying now. When Palestinians cry, you look away. When Yemen starves, you fall silent. But when Tel Aviv trembles, you empty your treasury. This isn't about democracy. This is about loyalty to power. This is about who gets to kill and still be called innocent. But something's different. People are waking up. Truth is louder than propaganda now. You don't have to love the fighters, just love the people who can't defend themselves. Because the innocent don't have missiles. They have prayers. And right now, those prayers are louder than ever. To Israel, I say this, you started this, you live with it. To America, don't sell your soul to defend arrogance. The defenseless are not statistics. They are people. They are children. They are home. They are voices that the bombs try to silence, but they will not be erased.

@PandemicTruther - America-China Watcher

In early 1999, as the euro was freshly launched and gaining traction, the United States and NATO escalated their military intervention in Kosovo. This bombing campaign against Serbia had significant repercussions for European markets. The euro dropped sharply—by nearly 30% against the dollar in the early months of the conflict—while capital rushed into the relative safety of U.S. Treasuries. Although exact figures vary, analysts at the time noted that several hundred billion euros left European markets, seeking refuge in American bonds. This exodus helped reinforce the dollar’s position at a critical moment for the euro’s early credibility. But even war has limits when Wall Street calls the shots. Israel could have hit Kharg Island, Iran’s oil lifeline—handling nearly 90% of its crude exports. Destroying it would have shattered Iran’s economy. But oil would’ve hit $300 or even $400 a barrel. Inflation would spike worldwide. The Fed would be forced to hike interest rates again, driving U.S. debt servicing into a death spiral. That’s a risk Washington can't afford. So quietly, behind closed doors, lines were drawn. Targets were chosen with financial risk in mind. Because above all else, Wall Street, the Fed, and the U.S. government have a common priority: protect investor confidence in U.S. bonds. But that confidence is crumbling.

@PandemicTruther - America-China Watcher

The U.S. credit rating was already downgraded by Fitch in 2023. Fundamentals are weakening. And yet, the dollar still stands. Why? Because it's backed by firepower. The U.S. military—and its Israeli outpost—project chaos as a service. That chaos reminds global investors: the safest place for your money is still the United States. Not because the numbers add up—but because the U.S. can burn the rest of the world down at will. Except for one place: CHINA The U.S. wants to replicate its old playbook: destabilize, provoke panic, and attract capital and restore manufacturing. The goal is simple—push factories and money out of China, and back into the US. They’ve tried it all: - Protests in Hong Kong, - Separatist pushes in Xinjiang and Tibet, - Arms to Taiwan, - Naval standoffs in the South China Sea, - Provoking India to antagonize China along the Himalayas, - Stirring conflict between the Philippines and China. None of it worked. China/Asia refused to burn. And China held the line. No civil war, no proxy war, no failed state. Just calm. That’s a strategic defeat for Washington. Even the Indo-Pakistan conflict—backed by the U.S.—failed to escalate. China’s modern war doctrine helped end it in 72 hours. India stepped back. Pakistan quietly claimed it had the ability to shoot down 20 Indian jets—but chose not to to avoid escalation. In this region, wars don’t escalate. Why? Because China is quietly holding the perimeter.

@PandemicTruther - America-China Watcher

China sees the U.S. strategy for what it is: provoke instability, then harvest capital and manufacturing flight. But China has tools to stave it off: - The most advanced missile and electronic warfare systems in Asia, - A vast domestic market, - A unified political system, - And credible military deterrence. China isn't falling for the trap. And as long as China/Asia stays stable, capital won’t flee to U.S. Treasuries like before. That’s the real gamble. If China breaks—if it collapses from within—the whole world will panic. Factories will flee. Investors will pour money into “safe” U.S. bonds. The dollar will get its second wind. That’s the strategy: break China, save the dollar. But it’s not working. China remains too stable, too advanced, too critical. The sanctions failed. The encirclement failed. The propaganda failed. So once again, Washington turns to its most reliable lever: Israel. This isn’t only about Iran and Israel. This is about global financial engineering. It's about creating war—to save the dollar. The real battlefield isn’t only Tehran and Tell Aviv. It’s the bond markets. The war is not for territory. It’s for the future of U.S. hegemony. Some speculate that Trump might escalate—deploy more troops, bomb Tehran, or expand the war into a regional inferno. But here’s the truth: America can’t afford it. A full-scale war means more spending, higher deficits, panicked bond markets, and a collapse in U.S. credit. It would also give China an opening. Right now, Beijing is conducting live-fire drills near Taiwan. If Washington is distracted in the Middle East, China might act. And that’s a risk the Pentagon can’t ignore. The numbers don’t lie. War costs more than it earns now. This time, the U.S. will bark—but not bite. The strategy of using chaos to drive capital into the U.S. has started to backfire. Yes, the Ukraine war triggered massive capital flight. Yes, some of Germany’s industry fled to the U.S. But much of it also went to China. Investment into East and Southeast Asia soared. Why? Because China now looks like the most stable region on Earth. Surrounded by calm, backed by real deterrence. China's military isn’t loud—but it’s effective. Its strength has quietly become the backbone of regional economic stability and continued prosperity.

@PandemicTruther - America-China Watcher

Iran sees the China model and wants to emulate China. Iran has been on a permanent imminent surrender mode to the US. It wants to defy the West while staying plugged into global markets and prosper. Just like China. But it hasn't understood the logic behind. It lacks China’s key asset: advanced modern military capability far exceeding that of the US in reality (best kept secret), paired with quiet restraint. That’s why Iran remains vulnerable. And China doesn’t. Israel's aggression has backfired. Israel may survive Iranian missiles. But it won’t survive the markets. Because capital is skittish. Even a 1% risk of Tel Aviv being turned into rubble is enough to scare it off. Investors don’t wait for certainty—they react to probability. Israel used to be a magnet for global capital, celebrated for its innovation and high-tech startups. But all of that was built on the belief that it was fundamentally safe. That illusion is gone now. No capital parks itself in a blast zone. Once the illusion of safety disappears, so does the money. Israel won’t rebuild its economy with foreign investment—because capital doesn’t go where missiles fall. The Iran–Israel war, launched with the implicit goal of triggering capital flight toward U.S. markets, has at least partially backfired. Instead of flowing exclusively into U.S. assets, a significant portion of Middle Eastern capital has been siphoned off to Hong Kong, a financial platform serving China. On June 12, the day the conflict erupted, over HKD 127.8 billion (roughly USD 16 billion) surged into the Hong Kong Stock Exchange via southbound trading, accounting for more than 55% of the total daily volume. Far from reinforcing the dollar, the war has redirected capital into China’s financial orbit—achieving the exact opposite of what Washington and Tel Aviv likely intended. To all intents and purposes, this war has misfired: instead of triggering a flight of capital into U.S. markets, it has redirected billions toward China, strengthening its financial position; instead of securing Israel, it has left the country shattered and increasingly uninvestable; and far from reinforcing U.S. dominance, the conflict risks drawing Washington into a ruinous quagmire that could collapse the dollar, implode Treasury bonds, and shatter American hegemony—so when the German Chancellor says Israel is doing the dirty work for all of us, he may be right, just not in the way he intended. Putin is smiling too. US Nato being drawn into the Israel-Iran war will take some pressure off his back.

@PandemicTruther - America-China Watcher

Once upon a time, in the great forest of the world, a hungry tiger (US) roamed. His eyes burned with desire—for he had long dreamed of feasting on the great DRAGON (China) that lived far to the East. The Dragon, with its shimmering scales and fiery breath, would have been the grandest meal of all. But the tiger paused. He knew the Dragon was powerful—too vast, too wise, and too fierce to be hunted easily. Many had tried. None had returned. Just then, the tiger looked around and saw a cluster of smaller animals grazing nearby: the Bear (Russia) the Eagle’s European cousins (Europe), the Lions of the Middle East (Middle East). They looked startled, confused. "Wait," they said, trembling. "Weren’t you after the Dragon? Shouldn’t you be killing and eating him?" The tiger licked his teeth and chuckled darkly. "Yes," he growled. "The Dragon would make a fine feast. But he is far too strong, too prepared. I cannot bring him down—at least not yet. But I'm hungry now. If I don't eat, I will die!!" He took a step toward the smaller beasts. "But you... you're weaker. Softer. Easier to sink my teeth into." And so, instead of charging the Dragon, the tiger prowled through the forest, striking at the vulnerable, devouring the distracted. The others watched in fear, wondering when their turn would come—wondering why the tiger, though fixated on the Dragon, chose instead to tear through them first. The world is still a jungle.

@PandemicTruther - America-China Watcher

https://t.co/UWhmD3gcAm

@asdf12390675307 - asdf1234

@PandemicTruther It’s no surprise that 🇮🇷💥 happened in June, when around $6T in USTs needed to be refinanced. This time, however, USD Index did not substantially strengthen, indicating no major capital flows back to 🇺🇸. If capital inflow < war expenditure, 🇺🇸 is losing the financial war.

@PandemicTruther - America-China Watcher

People have been talking for years about the end of American hegemony. It's the consensus that it was never going to disappear quietly. Before stepping down from the world stage, the United States is destined to drag the world into one final, catastrophic war — a kind of self-immolation that seals its downfall. For years, analysts speculated about where and how this would unfold. The dominant theory used to be a titanic war with China in the South China Sea, triggered by a Taiwan contingency. But something changed. Washington has come to realize — quietly, reluctantly — that its military is no longer a match for China’s. The Pentagon is still struggling to fully transition out of the post-9/11 counterinsurgency mindset, while China has already leapfrogged into sixth-generation warfare: AI-driven, drone-saturated, fully integrated, and command-synchronized in real time. So, the war to mark the end of U.S. primacy won’t be fought over Taiwan. It’s being fought now — in the Middle East. The October 7, 2023 Hamas incursion into Israel was not just a regional flashpoint. It was the geopolitical equivalent of the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in 1914 — a spark that will trigger the unraveling of the old order. The financial, psychological, and strategic consequences are already global. And in this proxy war landscape, the United States is overextended, exposed, and increasingly reactive — no longer the actor that shapes the world, but the empire forced to defend illusions of control as the world moves on.

Saved - June 23, 2025 at 2:34 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
Iran's response to the recent US strikes needs to be strategic and impactful, avoiding escalation into a broader conflict. Trump claimed responsibility for bombing key nuclear sites in Iran, but this action lacks legitimacy due to the absence of evidence regarding Iran's nuclear ambitions. Experts suggest that Trump's decision, counter to intelligence advice, could jeopardize his presidency. Additionally, there are concerns about the US's close involvement in Israeli military operations. Iran has various options for retaliation, including targeting US bases and allies in the region.

@SputnikInt - Sputnik

🚨IRAN’S RESPONSE: SMART. CALCULATED. PAINFUL Iranian retaliation “has to be very smart, very calculated, but at the same time very painful” as Tehran would prefer to avoid dragging the US further into the Israel-Iran conflict, says political and security analyst Ali Rizk. 🧵 https://t.co/ynBZk3K5Tu

@SputnikInt - Sputnik

🚨 BREAKING: Trump claims US BOMBED 3 nuclear sites in Iran 💬 "A full payload of BOMBS was dropped on the primary site, Fordow," Trump boasted. https://t.co/HWyDrmATHq

@SputnikInt - Sputnik

TRUMP’S STRIKE WAS ILLEGITIMATE With no tangible evidence or intelligence suggesting that Iran has been working on a nuclear weapon, the US attack hardly seems legitimate. “But regardless, this is something we're used to,” Rizk notes. 2/5 https://t.co/7ycwGKGws4

@SputnikInt - Sputnik

WAR ON IRAN MAY COST TRUMP HIS PRESIDENCY By ordering the strike, Trump ignored “all the advice” from US intelligence agencies who insisted that Iran was not building a nuclear weapon, notes Professor Joe Siracusa, political scientist and dean of Global Futures at Curtin University. 3/5

@SputnikInt - Sputnik

US AND ISRAEL ARE IN CAHOOTS Siracusa argues that the US has been “deeply involved in Israeli military planning” for Israeli attacks that began last week. “I don't think the Israelis did anything without the American green light,” he says. 4/5 https://t.co/UFew04EAXf

@SputnikInt - Sputnik

WHAT ARE IRAN’S OPTIONS? With its large missile arsenal, Iran could strike US military bases in the Middle East or even attack infrastructure of US allies in the Persian Gulf region, as well as “indirectly threaten Americans at embassies around the world.” 5/5 https://t.co/7znXK0KiQA

Saved - June 24, 2025 at 6:22 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
After 12 days of escalation in the Iran-Israel War, I see several areas for improvement in Iran's defense system. First, enhancing Iranian ballistic capabilities is crucial, including developing MIRVs, maneuvering warheads, and improving guidance accuracy while reducing launch prep time. To break through Israeli defenses, Iran must overwhelm their interceptors, which are costly. Additionally, strengthening Iran's air defense systems is essential to counter US and Israeli strikes, and protecting strategic nuclear facilities has become a pressing priority.

@SputnikInt - Sputnik

🇮🇷🚨🪖HERE'S WHAT IRAN CAN IMPROVE AFTER 12 DAYS OF ESCALATION Looking at the current Iran-Israel War, there are several things to develop in Iran's defense system Thread 🧵 https://t.co/iiEhGbz9Qf

@SputnikInt - Sputnik

2/5🚀MAKING IRANIAN BALLISTICS GREATER To bypass Israeli missile defense systems even more successfully, Iran needs to: ▪️develop MIRVs with false targets; ▪️introduce maneuvering warheads; ▪️improve guidance accuracy; ▪️reduce launch preparation time. https://t.co/gsCVyYskoX

@SputnikInt - Sputnik

3/5 BREAKING ISRAELI DEFENSES💥 Iran's missile upgrades need to overwhelm Israel’s layered systems. Each salvo, even if intercepted, forces Israel to burn through costly Arrow & David’s Sling interceptors—several times more expensive than the Iranian missiles they stop. https://t.co/IxKDxdJbrm

@SputnikInt - Sputnik

4/5 MAKING IRAN'S OWN SHIELD The Israeli and US strikes have shown the need to develop and complicate Iranian air defense system. Iran will have to increase the accuracy of missiles and enemy drones' interceptions. https://t.co/NKNa9trfDI

@SputnikInt - Sputnik

5/5 STRENGTHENING NUCLEAR FACILITIES For Iran, the issue of protecting its strategic facilities, including atomic and nuclear ones, has become acute. Iran will need to increase its defense systems - both on the ground and in the air. https://t.co/DwglFxRXaU

Saved - June 25, 2025 at 3:29 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
The recent posts highlight the evolving geopolitical partnership between North Korea and Iran, suggesting it could significantly impact regional dynamics. Historically, North Korea has supported Iran with military resources during the Iran-Iraq War, and this relationship could be revitalized through an oil-for-weapons barter system. Both nations share military technology and are resilient to sanctions, especially with China's involvement. This alliance poses a dilemma for the US, as ignoring it could strengthen Iran, while sanctions on China risk economic conflict. The potential alignment of this axis complicates the Middle East situation for Israel and the US.

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

🚨🇰🇵🇮🇷 NORTH KOREA-IRAN AXIS: A Geopolitical Partnership That'll Make Trump & Netanyahu Tremble Israel-Iran war is over for now, but it's likely only a matter of time before we see Round 2. 🧵Here’s why North Korea could be the IDEAL ALLY for Iran👇 https://t.co/mUWD0lnsav

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

Some Historical Context North Korea armed Iran during the Iran-Iraq War (1980–88): 🔸Sold artillery, missiles (Scuds), and ammo 🔸Provided technical training & industrial know-how 🔸Helped Iran bypass embargoes via Soviet/Chinese channels https://t.co/XOUjWKtNGz

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

Oil-for-Weapons Barter: 🔸Iran paid in oil, helping North Korea survive post-Soviet collapse. 🔸The same model could revive today. https://t.co/y9aTc2Ofec

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

Military-Technical Symbiosis 🔸Since the 1990s, Iran and the DPRK have shared ballistic missile designs and production tactics, relying on cheap, scalable, long-range systems. https://t.co/PW7knjcaWs

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

Why This Changes Everything? 🔸Iran’s Arsenal Replenished: If Israeli strikes deplete Iran’s missiles, North Korea can resupply within weeks—it holds the world’s largest stockpile (5,000+ missiles). https://t.co/IvYRwYVTKz

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

Sanctions-Proof Supply Chain: 🔸Both are already under max sanctions—new penalties won’t stop them. 🔸China’s involvement makes enforcement nearly impossible. https://t.co/GhslOeZlF8

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

China’s Quiet Role: 🔸Beijing buys Iranian oil (its economic lifeline) 🔸Could pay Pyongyang to arm Iran A Win-win-win: 🔸Iran gets weapons & cash 🔸DPRK gains war experience & currency 🔸China projects power without escalation https://t.co/8OTEEl9Mi9

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

The US Dilemma: 🔸Ignore it? Iran grows stronger. 🔸Sanction China? Risk economic war. 🔸Military interdiction? Escalates conflict. https://t.co/mjIE4x2CZz

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

North Korea isn’t just a nuclear hermit kingdom—it’s a key geopolitical player and Iran’s strategic ally. If this axis (with China’s backing) aligns, the Middle East conflict could become far more complex for Israeli and US intervention. https://t.co/x6oucJZkIJ

Saved - August 26, 2025 at 12:46 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
China's defense industry is advancing rapidly, outpacing the US in scale and efficiency. In Shenyang, a massive aerospace city is being developed, while China's integrated military-civilian production model offers a significant advantage. With a navy 230 times larger than the US and a booming air force, China is prepared for conflict, particularly in the Taiwan Strait. Despite US budget claims, inefficiencies hinder its defense capabilities. While China focuses on mass production and innovation, the US struggles with supply chain issues, highlighting the importance of industrial strength in modern warfare.

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

🚨CHINA'S DEFENSE BOOM: The US is Being Outpaced The US defense industry is creaky, while China's is a well-oiled machine, built for scale and a long-term fight. 🧵Here’s how China is winning the next big war before it happens: https://t.co/xwA6V3QQsB

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

In Shenyang, China’s building an “aerospace city” the size of 600 football fields. Shenyang Aircraft Corp, part of Aviation Industry Corporation of China (AVIC, a state-owned aerospace giant), makes J-15 and J-35 stealth fighters and is scaling up fast while the West’s defense industry is bogged down by bureaucracy and budget cuts.

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

China’s defense sector isn’t just big—it’s integrated. Civilian factories can pivot to military production in wartime, giving Beijing a massive edge while the US's supply chains are globalized, fragmented, and slow. https://t.co/Ef5LbfDxDd

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

China’s shipbuilding capacity is 230x larger than the US. In 2024, one Chinese shipbuilder outproduced the entire US industry since WWII ended. With 370+ ships, China’s navy is the world’s largest. Meanwhile, US carriers face delays until 2027. https://t.co/lVSyH79qqB

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

The People's Liberation Army (PLA) Air Force and Navy have 3,150+ aircraft, the largest in the Indo-Pacific. AVIC’s subsidiaries, like Xian and Chengdu, report booming profits and plan expansions. The US: F-47 jet engines delayed to 2030. https://t.co/luAGEa1ucg

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

China’s military-civil fusion strategy is key. Civilian tech and resources feed the PLA, while state firms boost the economy. Made in China 2025 pushes this further. The US struggles with red tape and a shrinking industrial base. https://t.co/yZiOGZ16Af

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

Rare metals: China dominates 18 of 37 critical minerals for missiles and munitions. Cast products: China outproduces the next nine countries combined. The US relies on outsourced supply chains, leaving it vulnerable. https://t.co/ijAwK6aP8n

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

Taiwan Strait conflict China’s defense industry could sustain a fight. CSIS war games show the US burning through 5,000 missiles in weeks, with replacements taking years. China’s pulse assembly lines churn out warplanes and missiles fast. https://t.co/5kUrIs1KOr

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

The US brags about its defense budget, but waste and delays kill efficiency. China’s stable 7.2% defense spending growth (2025) funds cutting-edge weapons and mass production. The West’s arrogance ignores Beijing’s industrial edge. https://t.co/inpRJ8I9OF

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

Lessons from Ukraine and the Middle East show industrial wars need stockpiles and production. China’s ready. The US: depleted 25% of its THAAD missiles in a 12-day Israel-Iran clash. Good luck sustaining a bigger fight. https://t.co/xlLD95Mzv3

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

China’s not perfect—chip tech lags behind—but its research and development (R&D) spending, which funds innovation, is up 10% to 398.1B yuan in 2025. AI, quantum, and semiconductors are priorities. The US still leads in some tech, but for how long? https://t.co/shppTioD51

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

Beijing’s military exercises near Taiwan test ammo consumption and prep stockpiles. The PLA’s ready for rapid ops, while the US would likely run dry fast. Industrial might, not just tech, wins wars. https://t.co/Lf1rwMUe6x

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

The West underestimates China’s defense industry at its own peril. While the US debates supply chain fixes, China builds, produces, and prepares. Industrial power is the real game-changer. https://t.co/O1KDOmiyNi

Saved - September 4, 2025 at 1:29 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
The analysis reveals that the US military is significantly outmatched in the Western Pacific due to China's advanced missile capabilities. American airpower, once a cornerstone of strategy, is now a critical vulnerability, with simulations predicting catastrophic losses in an initial conflict. The Pentagon's Agile Combat Employment strategy is deemed ineffective, as it merely relocates aircraft to less protected bases. The US faces a grim reality: it must either accept severe losses or escalate tensions. With allies unwilling to engage, the US risks losing its influence in Asia and must reconsider its commitments.

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

🚨🇨🇳🇺🇸Checkmate in the Pacific: How China's Missiles Have Made US Power Projection Obsolete A sobering analysis confirms the US military is fundamentally outmatched. China's precision-strike complex can decimate American air forces on day one. Here's how 🧵 https://t.co/mY3y7KvxUG

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

Let's be blunt: the US military is no longer the dominant power in the Western Pacific. China's vast arsenal of precision missiles and satellites has created a kill zone where US bases and carriers are not shields, but giant, vulnerable targets. https://t.co/Ajjw7mrdxL

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

The US strategy hinges on airpower, but this is now its greatest vulnerability. The simulations show that no matter where the US flies from—large bases, small fields, near or far—China can saturate them with barrages of accurate ballistic and cruise missiles. https://t.co/6QASLEcwBg

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

The losses are not just bad; they are catastrophic and war-ending. The US would likely lose 200-400 aircraft in the opening weeks—primarily destroyed on the tarmac. This isn't a setback; it's a defeat from which the USAF couldn't recover. https://t.co/po8xuSPKJS

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

The Pentagon's plan to "get agile" (Agile Combat Employment) is a fantasy. Dispersing to smaller, austere airfields doesn't save planes; it just puts them on bases with fewer defenses and no shelters, making them even easier targets. https://t.co/eQwUtl3Erb

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

This flawed doctrine forces a horrific choice: 🔸Either accept the annihilation of your air force 🔸Or, in a crisis, immediately launch escalatory attacks to blind Chinese satellites. There is no middle ground. Deterrence is now a dangerous bluff. https://t.co/aqkOxl9QZx

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

The only potential solution—hardening bases with hundreds of shelters—is a monumental task the US hasn't even started. Meanwhile, China has already built over 800 shelters for its own air force. US is years behind in the defense that desperately need. https://t.co/wjGCRKh6XD

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

Even if US built them, it's an arms race that might not win. China's missile production dwarfs the West's. The grim math suggests they can produce missiles faster and cheaper than US can build shelters to protect against them. https://t.co/W4CVfDSzqk

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

US allies cannot save them While South Korea's 700+ hardened shelters are a tantalizing lifeline, Seoul has shown zero appetite for being drawn into a US-China war over Taiwan. Counting on them is a dangerous gamble. https://t.co/VxtAhlSxHL

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

The uncomfortable truth: The US is on a trajectory to lose a war with China US have three bad options: 🔸Spend trillions playing catch-up 🔸Retreat to a less vulnerable but less influential force 🔸Reconsider US geopolitical commitments in Asia The era of US primacy is over https://t.co/bFWT28YeVJ

Saved - September 29, 2025 at 1:20 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
China's advancements in submarine technology are reshaping naval power dynamics, with new models like the Type 095 and Type 093A significantly enhancing stealth and operational capabilities. The integration of hypersonic weapons complicates US defense strategies, while the US struggles with production and maintenance issues, building fewer submarines than needed. China's dual-fleet strategy effectively defends its coastal waters and extends its reach into the Pacific, posing a multifaceted threat to US naval supremacy. The balance of power is shifting as China modernizes its fleet.

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

🌊🇨🇳🇺🇸 China's Stealth Subs Are Rewriting the Naval Power Game From advanced Type 095 subs to hypersonic weapons, China’s fleet is challenging US naval supremacy. Dive into the high-stakes battle below the waves👇🏻🧵 https://t.co/spxGhOOGtE

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

The US Navy's primary advantage—submarine stealth—is eroding. New Chinese boats like the Type 093A are significantly quieter, thanks to Air-Independent Propulsion (AIP), allowing them to stay submerged longer and operate more covertly. This directly threatens US sea control. https://t.co/qjQksObhGi

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

China isn't just building quieter subs; it's arming them with game-changing weapons. The deployment of hypersonic missiles like the YJ-19 massively increases the threat range and firepower of its fleet, complicating US missile defense planning https://t.co/qvq7I4GqgS

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

The US Bottleneck: Industrial Capacity While China modernizes, the US faces a critical production and maintenance crisis. US shipyards build only 1.2 attack subs per year (need 2.33), with a third of the fleet often idle awaiting maintenance. This quantitative and readiness gap is a major strategic vulnerability.

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

The Integrated Threat: A2/AD in Practice China's submarines don't operate alone. They are part of integrated strike groups with world-class Type 055 destroyers and the new Fujian aircraft carrier. This creates a layered defense where US ASW assets are themselves under threat https://t.co/Iv9EHlQ2Mo

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

The Future: The Type 095 "Game Changer" The coming Type 095-class submarine is expected to be a leap forward, potentially leveraging magnetic drive and rim-driven propellers. As one expert noted, "The Type 095 will be a very quiet submarine, which will complicate the situation." It could give China a qualitative lead.

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

Dual-Fleet Strategy China employs a smart, two-tiered approach: 🔸Diesel Subs: Defend the "near seas" and Chinese coast. 🔸Nuclear Subs: Push into the "far seas" to interdict US forces crossing the Pacific. This complicates US war planning, forcing it to contend with threats in both domains.

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

Bottom Line: China is rapidly closing the qualitative gap in submarine technology while outpacing the US in production capacity and integrating its subs into a broader, more advanced fleet. The era of the US Navy's global dominance is in its twilight. https://t.co/9szHApPTYp

Saved - September 30, 2025 at 12:56 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I’ve been reflecting on Senator Tim Sheehy's warnings about the US military's vulnerabilities. He highlights a troubling shift over the past two decades, where the US has become bogged down by bureaucracy while China has built a disciplined military. Our munitions stockpile is alarmingly low, and we could run out of long-range missiles in just a week of conflict. The Pentagon's slow development cycle and concentrated defense industry further exacerbate these issues. Proposed reforms indicate a recognition of these flaws, but they reveal a significant gap compared to China's efficient system.

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

🚨🇺🇸SENATOR WARNS: US COULD FACE DEFEAT IN FUTURE WAR The myth of America’s unstoppable military is fading. Sen. Tim Sheehy warns the US' “broken, bureaucratic defense system” risks costing it the next major war—a fatal weakness against a peer like China. Here's the breakdown👇 https://t.co/FUoHZ214DA

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

The core of the issue is a massive divergence in focus and efficiency over the past two decades. China spent two decades building its military with focus and discipline, while the US lost its edge—trading risk-taking for bureaucracy, and ending up with slower, smaller, lower-quality output.

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

The US National Defense Authorization Act analysis highlights a critical munitions deficit: The US could exhaust its long-range anti-ship missile inventory in just one week of conflict with China. This is not a minor logistics issue; it is a war-losing scenario. https://t.co/40pVyd8VQq

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

The pace of innovation is equally telling. The Pentagon takes almost 12 years to field a new weapons system. This glacial development cycle, prioritizing process over outcomes, cannot compete with China's ability to rapidly iterate and deploy new technologies. https://t.co/HeYLkzTgwR

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

The industrial output gap is another key metric. The conflict in Ukraine and the war in Gaza consume "thousands of drones, missiles and bombs per month." At the same time, the US "struggles to make that many in a year," as Sen. Tim Sheehy admits. China's world-leading manufacturing base and centralized planning are structured for this scale.

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

The US system is also dangerously concentrated. Decades of a "byzantine contracting structure" have boiled its defense industrial base down to a "small sect of companies," creating single points of failure. China's integrated and diversified state-led system avoids this fragility.

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

Proposed US reforms, like the "Dynamic Tech Defense Reform," aim to fix this by adopting a "commercial first" model. However, this is an admission that their current model is unworkable. China does not face this fundamental need to re-tool its entire procurement philosophy. https://t.co/INeomUZSKB

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

In conclusion: The data points to a clear asymmetry. The US is grappling with a self-described "broken" system, critical munitions shortfalls, and an inability to scale production. Against China's focused, scalable, and efficient defense-industrial complex, these are not merely disadvantages; they are potentially decisive factors in a major conflict.

Saved - February 28, 2026 at 3:30 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I see the US reshaping its posture not mainly for Iran but to deter China, using Iran as a gate to continental power via Eurasian land routes. Central Asia’s minerals and a north–south line through Iran could let Russia reach the Gulf, creating a land-based Eurasian system that challenges naval dominance. If realized, a continental bloc could rival US sea power. West Asia crises are the deployment phase of a broader great‑power struggle.

@ibrahimtmajed - Ibrahim Majed

𝗔𝗠𝗘𝗥𝗜𝗖𝗔 𝗜𝗦 𝗣𝗥𝗘𝗣𝗔𝗥𝗜𝗡𝗚 𝗙𝗢𝗥 𝗖𝗛𝗜𝗡𝗔, 𝗡𝗢𝗧 𝗜𝗥𝗔𝗡 It is becoming increasingly clear that the United States is restructuring its global military posture not primarily for Iran, but for a long-term strategic confrontation with China. Iran is the justification. China is the calculation. Washington has done this before. After 9/11, the “War on Terror” enabled a vast redeployment that entrenched U.S. power deep inside West Asia, not just to fight terrorism, but to sit astride the world’s energy arteries, mineral basins, and continental crossroads. Today, a similar repositioning is underway under the banner of deterrence against Tehran. But great powers do not reorganize global force posture for secondary threats. You cannot contain a peer competitor from thousands of miles away. You cannot shape the balance of Eurasia while anchored in Europe alone. Strategic gravity lies further east, where trade routes, pipelines, resource basins, and land corridors determine the flow of power. For more than a century, American primacy has rested on command of the seas: controlling chokepoints, shipping lanes, and maritime trade. China’s grand strategy aims to neutralize that advantage by activating the continental mass of Eurasia. Railways, pipelines, and overland corridors cannot be blockaded by aircraft carriers. If Beijing succeeds in building fast, secure, and inexpensive continental routes, modern Silk Roads, the strategic value of U.S. naval dominance declines sharply. Sea power matters less when the world’s commerce, energy, and supply chains move by land. This is why Central Asia and its surrounding zones are pivotal. The region is not only a transit hub, it is a vast reservoir of critical minerals essential for advanced technologies: rare earths, strategic metals, and energy inputs required for semiconductors, batteries, aerospace systems, and next-generation weapons. Control over these resources means control over the industrial foundations of future power. Denying them to rivals is as important as securing them. Equally decisive is the emerging north–south axis centered on Iran. Overland routes running through Iran allow Russia to access the Persian Gulf directly, faster, cheaper, and beyond vulnerable maritime chokepoints. This corridor compresses distance between northern Eurasia and warm-water ports, reshaping trade geography. If China integrates into this network by land, a continuous Eurasian system emerges linking East Asia, Central Asia, Russia, and the Gulf. In that scenario, American sea control becomes strategically insufficient. The United States would face a continental bloc able to trade, transport energy, and move goods across Eurasia without reliance on maritime routes dominated by the U.S. Navy. Control of West Asia therefore achieves multiple objectives simultaneously: - Secures critical mineral basins and energy reserves - Dominates key transit chokepoints• Blocks east–west continental integration - Disrupts north–south connectivity linking Russia to the Gulf - Positions forces at the intersection of three continents - Prevents the formation of a self-sufficient Eurasian economic sphere In this framework, Iran is not the endgame, it is the gate. What appears as regional crisis management is in reality great-power positioning. The struggle is not about one country, one conflict, or one nuclear program. It is about whether the 21st century will be shaped by maritime empires or continental powers. If China succeeds in activating the land while Russia gains southern access through Iran, a vast integrated Eurasian system could emerge, one largely insulated from maritime pressure. America would still command the oceans, but no longer the world system. The battles in West Asia are not the main war. They are the deployment phase for the one that matters.

Saved - March 1, 2026 at 1:51 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
I see the US–Israel strike as aggression during negotiations, with uncertain hit targets and mixed effects. Iran’s IADS stayed intact, they absorbed a first strike, then hit back with missiles and drones. Mossad networks seem dismembered; Iran’s internet is down. A real oil shock risk looms as Hormuz closes and strikes target energy. I suspect Trump aims for a short war, but terms and outcomes remain uncertain.

@ArmchairW - Armchair Warlord

Well. War with Iran it is. I had hoped it would not come to this juncture, but here we are. Some thoughts after the day's fighting.⬇️ 1. As an initial matter, the Trump Administration's actions here are aggression and perfidy. This attack on Iran was unprovoked and occurred during negotiations in which the Iranians were by all indications willing to make significant and lasting concessions to assuage American and Israeli concerns about the peaceful nature of their nuclear program. Soon enough we will regret setting this precedent. 2. US and Israeli forces appear to have achieved tactical surprise by launching a limited decapitation strike first against senior figures in the Iranian regime. The measure of performance of the strike - did they hit what and whom they intended to hit - is currently the subject of... significant debate. The measure of effectiveness of the strike - did it dislocate the Iranian defensive response or cause panic and infighting in the regime - was negative. The Iranian military deliberately cleared what was at the time an airspace crowded with civilian traffic, brought air defenses online, and began launching retaliatory strikes about an hour later. 2A. The Iranians only brought their air defenses online after their airspace was clear of civilian traffic, suggesting they felt confident in their ability to absorb a limited first strike and also indicating that they very much wanted to avoid repeating Ukraine International Airlines Flight 752 with wild defensive fire. 3. Iran has thus far had some success penetrating US and Israeli missile defenses on the far side of the Middle East and considerable success smashing up US bases (and local critical infrastructure) in the Gulf and Iraq with their plentiful arsenal of short-range missiles and cruise drones. There's nothing really new and game-changing here from the Twelve Day War, as I pointed out earlier. They have a lot of missiles and drones and seem more than happy to contest with us on throw-weight. 4. As I pointed out earlier, the considerable standoff that US and Israeli aircraft are operating from has wrecked sortie generation. Coalition strikes on Iran throughout the day have been remarkably modest following the initial wave of attacks, likely due to a combination of delay from forced refueling, disruption to remote bases due to Iranian missile attacks, forced use of standoff weapons due to Iranian AD coverage, and Iranian AD attriting incoming salvos. Effects have not been particularly impressive either - I've seen a grand total of two strikes with noticeable secondaries. 4A. As long as the Iranian IADS network remains intact enough to deter Coalition forces from flying "downtown" into Iranian airspace proper, there's very hard limits on the amount of coercive power that can actually be applied to Iran. We only have so many standoff missiles and don't have a Russo-Chinese missile printer to call upon. And I remind the reader that our bigger and stronger adversaries (Russia and China) are very invested in ensuring that IADS network remains intact so as to preserve their ally. 5. There has been no noticeable regime fracture or civil insurrection in Iran. Everyone in the regime seems to have fallen in line immediately and all the demonstrations in Iran through the day have been pro-government. This is to be expected - the Iranians have not only rehearsed this, they've had multiple repetitions of executing it over the past year. 6. Mossad's attack network in Iran seems to be well and truly dismembered - as I suggested it had been earlier. There have been no reports of commando or insurgent activity in Iran over the course of the day. The Iranian internet is shut down at the moment and nobody seems to be posting online via Starlink. 7. Oil shock is a real prospect here. The Strait of Hormuz is closed. The Bab al-Mandeb is likely going to be interdicted soon by the Houthis. Iran has already begun limited strikes on oil and gas infrastructure in the region. Air and missile campaigns are inherently indecisive, and Americans are not going to tolerate a weeks or monthslong campaign that spikes oil to $150+/barrel. 8. Claims are floating around - out of Israel, of course - that this entire affair was a scheme cooked up by Trump and Netanyahu and that the negotiations were always a sham. I suspect that isn't the case, and that Trump was herded into action by Netanyahu threatening to attack unilaterally after the US "coercive task force" was finally fully assembled in the Gulf. So how does this end? Well, Trump has been quite explicit that he's aiming for a short war (probably trying to beat the markets), so I wouldn't be surprised if this is over relatively quickly. On whose terms... well, that's another matter altogether.

Saved - March 3, 2026 at 4:54 PM

@MyLordBebo - Lord Bebo

🇮🇱🇮🇷 IRAN WAR STRATEGY EXPLAINED! It is important to understand that Iran is not fighting a symmetric war against the USA/Israel. They can’t and they don’t. 📋 Iran is doing two things at the same time: 1) WAR ON OIL AND GAS Iran is trying to choke off oil and gas trade from the Middle East through strikes on oil and gas platforms/refineries and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which handles about 25% of seaborne oil and gas trade. (Video 3) This hits US and Arab interests hard. The sheikhs are already calling Trump and urging quick action. They need peace to continue business. → This is achieved with minimal effort by Iran and is working. No ships pass the strait, oil/gas production is halted to some extent, prices skyrocket. This affects everyone worldwide. Trump is under heavy pressure as long as this continues. 2) MISSILE WAR The missile campaign is not aimed at quickly destroying USA or Israel. That’s pure internet hype. Iran fires enough drones and missiles to keep defenses busy and deplete interceptor stocks. They strike multiple locations simultaneously (Qatar, Saudi Arabia, UAE, even Cyprus), forcing the US to spread air defenses thin. Concentrating heavy defenses in one place becomes impossible. As Rubio noted yesterday, only 6–7 interceptors are produced per month (Video 2), while Iran produces over 100 missiles per month. If Iran sustains the campaign, it will win the attrition war against air defenses. Time is on Iran’s side. The more air-defense missiles are expended per Iranian projectile, (just look how much they fire to intercept one missile - Video 4), the worse the situation becomes for the defenders—especially after Ukraine depleted much of the Western stockpile over the past four years. Key takeaway: As long as Iran maintains the missile campaign, time works in their favour. The longer the conflict lasts, the stronger Iran’s position becomes. If air defenses run out, Iran can strike freely anything and will win. 📋 Status quo: A) Iran fired fewer missiles on Monday, so they are losing? No! Analysis of the US CENTCOM video (Video 1): The US Air Force struck abandoned, already-used launchers and a broken-down truck. They clearly couldn’t locate active Iranian missile forces, so they hit whatever they found. The launchers were already expended; the crews had left after firing. When the US releases such footage, it suggests this is the best they have. They are not destroying Iran’s missile forces at a high rate. They destroy abandoned trucks. Iran doesn’t need to act quickly. Firing drones and missiles a few times a day is enough to keep oil/gas trade stopped and air defenses occupied. As long as they sustain this, time remains on their side. B) Is Iran winning? Also No. Iran struggles to keep its airspace clear. US surveillance drones continue to penetrate, preventing free movement of launchers. As long as those drones remain active, Iran cannot fire at will without risk. Failure to neutralise them would break their strategy. While American and Israeli drones fly in Irans sky, Irans missiles stay under ground and can’t surface, or they risk being struck quickly. Hence US/Israeli Surveillance drones, that direct strikes are the biggest problem Iran has now. They want to roll out missile infrastructure from below ground to the surface, and they can’t … at least not at scale. Watch this closely as a key indicator. How many drones are flying above Iran and how many are shot down. C) What is the US/Israeli strategy? They planned to remove Khamenei, trigger mass protests by Shah supporters, and install a new regime. This has clearly failed. Now they destroy military buildings (police headquarters, etc.), mostly for posture and intimidation. Essential personnel do not work in above-ground offices—doing so would be foolish. The remaining option is to make life unbearable and force surrender by bombing power plants and similar infrastructure. This will come soon at scale. More bombs!

@MyLordBebo - Lord Bebo

🇮🇷🇮🇱 Iranian army shoot down a "Hermes" drone in the city of Khomeyni Shahr. https://t.co/H0jxorkRZk

@MyLordBebo - Lord Bebo

🇮🇱🇱🇧 BREAKING: Israel ground forces move into Lebanon! IDF: “In parallel to IDF activity as part of Operation ‘Roaring Lion’, IDF soldiers are operating in southern Lebanon and are positioned at several points near the border area as part of an enhanced forward defense posture. https://t.co/WZmjzgTlJk

Saved - March 20, 2026 at 10:03 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
I note hundreds of Tomahawks struck Iranian radar sites, command centers, missile sites, and naval facilities in Epic Fury, while the U.S. builds only about 90 per year. This exposes cracks in America’s defense industrial base. Tomahawk, since 1983, is a long-range, subsonic cruise missile with a 690 lb warhead. Roughly 400 were fired in 72 hours, depleting stocks and forcing a 4.5+ year restock. At 2–4 million each, this is unsustainable. Can the US maintain Tomahawk production in the ongoing war with Iran?

@NewRulesGeo - NewRulesGeopolitics

🚨🇮🇷🇺🇸 PENTAGON IN PANIC: U.S. BURNING THROUGH TOMAHAWK MISSILES Hundreds of Tomahawks hit Iranian radar installations, command centers, missile sites and naval facilities in Operation Epic Fury’s opening hours, yet the US builds only about 90 missiles per year. This conflict is now exposing the terrifying cracks in America’s defense industrial base. 🔸 Introduced in 1983, the Tomahawk is US's long-range precision-guided cruise missile and cornerstone of its strike capability since the Cold War. Launched from Navy destroyers, cruisers, and submarines, it flies low at subsonic speeds of 570 mph with a typical 690 lb warhead striking hundreds of miles inland 🔸 The US Navy fired roughly 400 Tomahawks in the first 72 hours alone wiping out more than 10% of its ready inventory and exceeding total production over the past five years 🔸 Building each new missile takes up to 24 months as Raytheon grapples with a fragile supply chain of single-source suppliers for solid rocket motors and precision electronics 🔸 Restocking the depleted arsenal at current rates would take over four and a half years 🔸 The rapid depletion gives Iran increased operational freedom while creating a dangerous window for China to potentially initiate a conflict with Taiwan before the US can rebuild stocks 🔸 Priced at two to four million dollars per missile every launch represents a massive unsustainable cost that weakens US position for any larger conflict in the Indo-Pacific Do you think the US can maintain its Tomahawk missile production in the ongoing war with Iran?

Saved - March 18, 2026 at 3:55 PM

@MarioNawfal - Mario Nawfal

🇺🇸🇮🇷 Prof. Mearsheimer: "The mightiest naval force on the planet cannot open the strait by itself. That tells you how much trouble we're in." https://t.co/q8NDbSaWUp

Video Transcript AI Summary
The Strait of Hormuz is extremely important: about 20 to 25% of the world’s petroleum passes through it, roughly a third of the world’s fertilizer comes through the strait, and about 10 to 12% of the world’s aluminum also moves via this route. If the war continues and the strait becomes really closed (it isn’t completely closed right now), Iranian ships carrying oil go through the strait. The United States is permitting Iranian oil to enter the oil market for the same reason it removes sanctions on Russian oil: President Trump wants to ensure there is as much oil in the international market as possible so that oil prices stay down. So oil continues to come out of the Gulf, and most of it is Iranian oil. If the strait were shut off, there would be very significant effects on the international economy. Even if it isn’t shut, oil prices are expected to creep up, which would increase pressure on President Trump to try to open the strait. But there is no way to open the strait, and the fact that President Trump is asking for help in that mission shows that the mighty US Navy, the mightiest naval force on the planet, cannot open the strait by itself. This indicates the level of trouble we’re in. Moving forward, it looks like the Iranians have a very powerful hand to play.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Well, the Strait Of Hormuz is enormously important. About 20 to 25% of the world's petroleum comes through that Strait. Furthermore, about a third of the world's fertilizer comes through that strait. And that's enormously important for the production of food around the world, especially in developing countries. I was reading somewhere that about 10 to 12% of the world's aluminum comes through the strait. So if this war goes on and on, and especially if the strait is really closed, because it's not completely closed at this point in time, you want to understand that Iranian ships filled with oil are going through the strait. The United States is permitting Iranian oil out into the oil market for the same reason same reason it removes sanctions off of Russian oil. What president Trump wants to do is he wants to make sure there is as much oil out in the international market as possible so that he can keep oil prices down. So there is oil coming out of The Gulf. Most of it's Iranian oil. But if that were to be shut off, that would have very significant effects on the international economy. But even if that doesn't happen, there's no question that oil prices are gonna creep up and that this is gonna put increasing pressure on president Trump to try to, to open up the Strait Of Hormuz. But the fact is we have no way of opening up the Strait Of Hormuz. The mere fact that president Trump is asking for help in that mission tells you that the mighty US Navy, and the US Navy is the mightiest naval force on the planet, cannot open the Strait by itself tells you just how much trouble we're in. So it looks moving forward like the Iranians have a very powerful hand to play.

@MarioNawfal - Mario Nawfal

🇺🇸🇮🇷 The carrier USS Ford is heading out of the fight zone temporarily after a major fire broke out in its laundry area on March 12 while operating in the Red Sea against Iran. The blaze took over 30 hours to fully control, injured around 200 sailors, wrecked ventilation, and knocked out about 100 berths. It left hundreds sleeping in makeshift spots during this marathon deployment. U.S. officials stress it's non-combat related, propulsion and flight ops are fine, ship stays mission-capable. The damage plus crew strain forced the move to Greece for repairs, refueling, and checks. It'll create a gap in U.S. strikes, but USS George H.W. Bush is gearing up to step in. Source: Reuters, NYT, USNI News, Guardian

@MarioNawfal - Mario Nawfal

🇺🇸Tulsi dropped a bomb, saying Russia, China, North Korea, Iran, AND Pakistan are all building advanced missiles, nuclear & conventional, that can hit the U.S. U.S. intel say that these aren't distant threats anymore; they're actively targeting the U.S. https://t.co/dbkxiRd9sE https://t.co/KGqKdd4kjP

Saved - April 6, 2026 at 10:10 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
The piece offers a sweeping, highly argumentative assessment of a conflict described as a war waged by Israel and the United States against Iran, contending that roughly a month into the hostilities the strategic balance has shifted decisively in favor of Iran and against the Western coalition. Its core claim is that the war has unfolded in ways contrary to the public expectations set by Western leadership, revealing significant military, political, and economic consequences that threaten the US position in the Middle East and beyond, while elevating Iran to a durable regional power through inexpensive, effective technologies and deterrence. On the military front, the author argues that the declared US aims at the war’s outset—unconditional surrender, regime change, ending Iran’s nuclear and missile programs, and destroying much of Iran’s industrial and military capacity—have not been achieved in the fourth week of operations. The piece asserts that surrender and regime change are unlikely given Iran’s long preparation for war and broad public support for the regime; it contends that while assassinations of Iranian leaders have occurred, they have failed to topple the regime or erode its legitimacy. By contrast, Iran’s strategy has sustained and expanded its deterrent capabilities: it maintains control over Hormuz through a combination of cheap drones, missiles, and dispersed, mobile launchers; its missiles and drones are described as increasingly accurate and hard to destroy because they can be fired from trucks and commanded from underground or concealed locations. The article emphasizes that Iran’s use of low-cost drones—cited as about $7,000 each—and high-precision missiles enables ongoing pressure on US bases and Israeli targets, while the bases themselves have become less capable as platforms for sustained power projection. It asserts that Iran’s campaign has degraded, if not eliminated, the effectiveness of certain US and allied military assets in the region, including air defenses, radar networks, refueling capabilities, and AWACS. The piece further claims that American and allied ships and aircraft carriers have been pushed away from the region, with at least two carriers reportedly out of operation or distant, and with significant questions raised about the viability and reliability of the US military-industrial complex in sustaining such platforms. In the economic sphere, the analysis highlights a dramatic energy-market dynamic: Hormuz is described as effectively under Iranian control, with a toll-like system emerging for passage and a near-term risk of broader energy-market disruptions. The consequence, the piece suggests, would be a global energy shock and substantial fiscal strain on the United States, including rising Treasury yields and mounting debt-service costs. It notes a rise in the 10-year yield from around 0.46% to roughly 4.4-4.5% during the crisis, arguing that continued conflict would exacerbate inflation, debt, and potential default risks. In an unusual turn, the author claims the US government partially eased sanctions on Iran and Russia to stabilize oil markets, describing this as a direct windfall for Iran at a moment of strategic leverage. Politically, the narrative positions Iran as having achieved a “de facto control” over Hormuz and a degree of regional deterrence, arguing that Iran’s capabilities will constrain US and Gulf state policy for the foreseeable future. The article also frames Israel as the principal driver of the conflict, alleging that American decisions have been effectively controlled by Israeli interests and that the war’s trajectory—including decapitation attempts and high-profile strikes on energy and desalination infrastructure—reflects an incremental, expansionist strategy designed to push the United States into a broader confrontation. In this view, Israel’s broader plans, rooted in a long-standing Zionist project, aim to degrade Iranian power and shape a regional order favorable to Israeli interests, even if immediate military gains are not yet realized. The author identifies several potential paths forward, presenting a stark dichotomy between de-escalation and escalation. De-escalation—framed as the “Suez moment” for the United States—would involve halting the conflict, lifting or adjusting sanctions to stabilize energy and financial markets, and accepting a changed regional balance in which Iran retains its deterrent strengths and Hormuz remains under its influence. Such a move is described as politically challenging for Trump and his backers but would avoid further economic catastrophe and a protracted military quagmire. Escalation, by contrast, could lead to a wider and more destructive confrontation, potentially including a major ground invasion or a broader military conflict that would strain American and global economies, threaten the dollar’s reserve status, and risk a severe recession or even default scenarios. The piece argues that escalation is likely to fail in its stated aims and could unleash a cascade of economic and strategic costs that would be hard to contain. In conclusion, the analysis frames the choice before the United States and Israel as grim: de-escalation risks signaling defeat and validating Iran’s deterrence and Hormuz control, while continued escalation could precipitate a fiscal and economic crisis and threaten the broader order that has supported American geopolitical dominance since World War II. The author suggests that a culmination of these dynamics would leave a transformed Middle East, with Iran as a regional power and the United States facing a potential decline in influence, unless swift and strategic changes alter the trajectory of the conflict. The piece closes by labeling the looming options as between a humiliating retreat and a dangerous expansion, each with potentially vast and lasting consequences for global power structures.

@saifedean - Saifedean Ammous

x.com/i/article/2038…

Article Cover

Escalating from Suez to Waterloo

When Israel and the US launched their war on Iran, they claimed it would last a few days. A few days later, they said it would last 3 to 4 weeks. As the fourth week ends, it is a good time to take stock of what has happened and the war’s scoreboard, and the political and economic implications. Military matters are unpredictable, and everything can change quickly in battlefields, so this analysis is tentative, but there are clear changes in the facts on the ground so far that indicate the US has suffered a significant setback with important ramifications, and if the US chooses to double down, it may exacerbate it, with momentous political, economic, and military implications for the Middle East, the US, and the world at large.

A massive global economic crisis might unfold, the presence of the US in the Middle East is in serious danger, the US Empire may be in its death throes, the fiscal fate of the US hangs in the balance, and the world may finally be free of dollar slavery. Militarily and technologically, this might go down in history as a decisive turning point in which a twentieth-century superpower was defeated by a twenty-first-century medium power, which used newer technology at ~1% of the cost. Drones and hypersonic missiles that defeat aircraft carriers, jet fighters, tanks, and other twentieth-century relics remind us of small gun-wielding armies defeating larger armies carrying swords.

What is remarkable about this war is the disconnect between the real-world battlefield outcomes and the public understanding of what is happening. Over the past few decades, American military dominance has been so complete, and its opponents so mismatched, that Americans seem no longer capable of even conceiving of defeat, and cannot recognize it even as it stares them down. In America’s other recent conflicts, the range of outcomes was almost entirely determined by inter-American politics, with the opponent a passive subject. ‘Defeat’ simply referred to the other country failing to fully adopt the form of government and social customs that America sought to impose; it did not mean the failure to achieve military and strategic objectives, as American soldiers conquered Kabul and Baghdad in a matter of weeks. But in Iran, we have so far had a remarkable American failure to achieve strategic objectives, and the option of escalating to achieve these objectives threatens dire consequences.

To assess the war so far, we look at the objectives set by each party and how they have fared. At the initiation of the American Zionist regime’s attack on Iran, these appear to be its declared goals:

US goals:

  1. Unconditional surrender
    ❌
  2. Regime change
    ❌
  3. End of Iran’s nuclear program
    ❓
  4. Destroy Iranian industrial, military, air force, and navy capacity (partial
    ✅
    )
  5. End of Iran’s missile program
    ❌

US achievements so far: 1 or 2 out of 5 achieved

The US has likely not achieved any of the essential goals in the fourth week of what was initially sold as a quick operation that would take a few days, then later revised to 3-4 weeks.

  1. Surrender seems out of the question in a country that has been preparing for this very war for decades, and in which millions are seemingly happy to die.
    ❌
  2. The Israel-US forces have succeeded in assassinating many individual leaders, which is the Israeli regime’s signature move, and something that its American puppet has recently adopted in contravention of centuries of civilized Western norms of war. The regime has survived so far, Iranians seem to have rallied around it, and it seems unlikely that it will fall, even after countless senior assassinations. The country is large enough, and the regime established enough, that individuals do not seem to matter so much, and the institutions continue to operate. The extent of domestic opposition to the regime was likely overstated by Israeli intelligence to sell this war to America’s easily impressionable president. Opposition to the government is one thing, but support for a foreign war is something entirely different. As Professor Robert Pape has argued, aerial bombardment alone has never produced regime change. Instead, it usually causes people to rally around the flag, and that seems to have happened in Iran. This has likely been intensified by Zionist regimes targeting more Iranian civilians, schools, and hospitals. Trump has already conceded defeat on this as he’s desperately trying to assure markets that he is negotiating with the regime he promised to destroy, while the regime denies talking to him or his intermediaries.
    ❌
  3. We do not know what happened to the Iranian nuclear materials, but we do know that the regime now has a far stronger incentive to acquire a nuclear bomb.
    ❓
  4. The US has likely succeeded in destroying much of Iran’s industrial capacity, and the longer the war goes on, the more of it will be destroyed. This terrorism will cost the people of Iran dearly in the many years to come, whatever the outcome of the war. The US has also massively degraded Iran’s conventional military forces, but this is a pyrrhic victory. Conventional military equipment constitutes very little threat to Israel and the US, and is not very useful for Iran in this war, which is why they control Hormuz even if their navy is gone. Iran does not need tanks, helicopters, boats, airplanes, or other twentieth-century technologies to achieve its objectives in this war. It has high-precision hypersonic missiles and cheap, accurate drones, which are allowing it to achieve its objectives. When Trump brags about destroying conventional military assets, he may as well be bragging about murdering Iranian horses and cavalry divisions. Zionist regimes’ forces have also succeeded in bombing many civilian targets, most notably the Minab girls’ school, demonstrating that schools, hospitals, and civilian structures are among potential targets, terrorizing the civilian population, which is another signature Israeli move. Both the assassinations and the targeting of civilians are unlikely to make a difference to the outcome of the war, but Israel observers will not be surprised to find Israel persists with them, because Israel’s real objective is to turn Iran into a failed state, as discussed below.
    ✅
  5. The biggest and most consequential failure so far is the failure to eliminate the threat of Iranian missiles and drones, which continue to rain on US bases in the region and on Israel, and show no signs of abating. As I write this in Amman, Jordan, on the 26th day of the war, in the pathway of Iranian missiles to Israel, we may be witnessing the day with the most missile sirens since the war started, a clear indication that Iran’s missile capabilities are still strong. Further, Iran’s missiles and drones remain intact enough for Iran to credibly threaten energy infrastructure in the region and deter attacks on Iranian energy infrastructure. If the Iranians destroy energy infrastructure in the Gulf, the impact on the US and world economies will be devastating for many years.
Iranian drones cost around $7,000 to make, as cheap as the average social media influencer Israel buys. They weigh 200 pounds and are easy to hide. They are easy to manufacture from cheap parts, earning the nickname “flying lawnmower”. There is an enormous productive capacity of these drones in Iran, and it is extremely unrealistic to imagine that aerial bombardment can destroy all its production capabilities.
Iranian missiles have improved significantly in accuracy in this war compared to the previous war. Many of these missiles and drones can be fired from trucks, which means it is not simple to just pinpoint their bases and destroy them. The bases are hidden underground, and the trucks can fire from a different location every time.
The continued sustained pace of Iranian rocket and drone attacks suggests that there will likely be serious shortages in the Zionist alliance’s defensive capabilities, and that explains why Air defense systems have been moved from Korea to the Middle East, and WaPo reports more defense systems may be moved from Europe. On March 19, Rheinmetall’s CEO said the war lasting another month would deplete air defense stockpiles. Given that Iranian drones and missiles are very cheap and fast to produce, whereas American interceptors are expensive and slow to produce, the longer the war lasts, the more vulnerable regional defenses are, and the more likely interceptors are to become insufficient. Rather than the US destroying Iran’s military capabilities, Iran is depleting American weapons stocks, leaving American allies exposed worldwide, and exposing how limited the American military really is in this new military technology world. If America is faring like this against a medium-sized, relatively poor country under sanctions, imagine how it would fare against China.
❌

Iran’s goals:

  1. Maintain regime in power
    ✅
  2. End US-Israel attacks
    ❌
  3. Receive reparations for attacks
    ❌
  4. Maintain nuclear program
    ❓
  5. Maintain missile program
    ✅
  6. Establish control over Hormuz traffic
    ✅
  7. Expel the US from the Middle East
    ✅
  8. Remove sanctions (Partial
    ✅
    )

Iranian achievements so far: 5 or 6 out of 8 goals achieved

6. Control over Hormuz

✅

Thanks to its drones and missiles, Iran has established de facto control over the Strait of Hormuz. It only took a few drone attacks in the first few days to completely freeze traffic in the Hormuz Strait, and now only Iranian-approved boats dare to traverse it. Iran has said that it will impose a toll on the Strait of Hormuz and has asked vessels to pass through a particular route between two Iranian islands to ensure safe passage, allowing them to be under close Iranian watch and easy inspection. Several ships have traveled that path in the last few days, suggesting the tollbooth is operational. It seems Iran is charging around $1 per barrel of oil for passage, and that is a very small price to pay for the world’s energy consumers compared to the alternative of hoping Trump’s war can bring this to an end.

Control over Hormuz gives the Iranian regime enormous leverage over global energy markets and the entire Gulf region. All the Gulf states looking to export oil must get their tankers through the Persian toll booth, and their governments need to stay on Iran’s good side.

There is no obvious military strategy for quickly ending Iranian control of Hormuz. Iran has thousands of square miles of mountainous territories overlooking the narrow Hormuz like a stadium overlooking a pitch, allowing easy targeting of giant tankers like fish in a barrel. Iran has a considerable arsenal of cheap drones and missiles hidden all over this landscape, and they can be launched from mobile launchers in different locations, making them difficult to detect. Trump and his cabinet of TV bimbos seem to have had no idea that Iran closing the Strait was a possibility, thanks to their Israeli bosses trying to sell them on this misguided war by ignoring all the possible downsides.

Trump and his regime have gone from claiming the Strait is open, to saying that the US did not care if it was open, to demanding China, Europe, and other countries send their navies to deal with it, a ridiculous demand which all nations rejected, except for the Chinese, who did not even dignify it with any kind of response. When it finally dawned on Orange Caligula that Israeli intelligence had duped him into plunging the US and world economies into a massive crisis, he lost his marbles and issued a 48-hour ultimatum to Iran to clear the strait or face the annihilation of its power infrastructure, an astonishingly brazen admission of intent to commit a war crime. But as the deadline approached, US government bond yields spiked, and Trump backed down from his threat, extending it by five days, claiming that a breakthrough had happened in negotiations, although Iranian authorities repeatedly insisted no such negotiations were taking place. And as the five days came to an end, and bond yields began to rise again, Trump chickened out again and extended his ultimatum another ten days. There can be no more blatant illustration of bumbling amateurism and strategic impotence than this humiliating capitulation, while Iran ignored him and repeatedly denied that negotiations were taking place, continuing to fire its trusted drones and missiles.

7. Expelling the US from the Middle East
✅

Perhaps the most important and remarkable geopolitical development in the war is the de facto severe degradation, and possibly even elimination, of the US presence in the Middle East. The exact extent of damage to US bases in the region is not clear, but after 26 days of Iranian bombing, it is likely significant enough to have rendered them unusable, as the NY" target="_blank">https://x.com/i/status/2037069771783757969">NY Times reported, with the majority of US soldiers having been moved to European bases or staying in civilian areas.

Not only has Iran destroyed American bases, but it has also succeeded in clearing US vessels from the Persian Gulf. The two aircraft carriers sent by the Trump regime to the Gulf have stayed more than 1,000 kilometers away, with the USS Lincoln hiding on the wrong side of Oman in the Arabian Sea, while the USS Ford is in the Mediterranean undergoing repairs for a long list of suspicious problems. All possible explanations for these problems are devastating to the idea that the US is a superpower, and the idea that they suffered damage from Iranian missiles is the least bad. A worse possibility is that the boat is the victim of sabotage from admirable soldiers who have decided their lives may be worthy of more lofty goals than helping Zionists steal more land. But the worst explanation is the most likely: the culprit is the incompetent engineering of the US military-industrial complex, whose only technological innovation in the past three decades has been to increase costs by reducing reliability.

Iran’s entire military budget is less than the cost of one of these carriers. What exactly is the point of spending billions of dollars on a giant boat that carries many aircraft that need to have expensive living pilots trained to fly them over enemy territory to launch airstrikes? The most convincing answer seems to be that this is a great way to enrich the military industrial complex, but if the actual goal is to achieve military and strategic objectives, then swarms of cheap and unmanned drones and precision hypersonic missiles seem far more effective, safe, and efficient. China’s hypersonic missiles could hit any target on Earth, more than what a US pilot, aircraft, and aircraft carrier can hit, at a fraction of the cost, and a tiny fraction of the time and risk, since it doesn’t require soldiers outside of China’s borders. The US is behind China, Russia, and Iran in these critical technologies because the latter did not spend $10 trillion and a quarter century optimizing their militaries for fighting militias and bombing civilian structures for Israel to steal goy land, and instead developed the technology that can take on a superpower.

Hypersonic missiles may turn out to be as superior to aircraft carriers as guns are to swords, since hypersonic missiles and guns allow you to neutralize your opponent from afar, whereas the sword and aircraft carrier require you to get close. Will aircraft carriers become as obsolete as swords in modern combat?

Iran has also focused much of its attacks on American radars, refueling tankers, and AWACS (Airborne Warning and Control Systems), which undermines air defenses and the ability to carry out military attacks on Iran. The full extent of damage and its implications are unclear so far. But the very precise targeting of high-tech essential equipment suggests a deliberate, methodic, and cunning Iranian effort to blind and paralyze US operations in the region. As the war goes on, this may come to be significant.

The remarkable implication of the damage to US bases and retreat of US aircraft carriers is that the US no longer has a functional military presence in the Middle East from which it can project power. Destroying and removing US bases from the region is a concrete and important objective of Iran’s war, and reversing it will likely require an enormous US military effort with a large number of casualties. Iranian attacks have rendered American and host nation plans and hopes for these bases irrelevant. Whether they want to keep them or not, there is no way to rebuild them without eliminating Iran’s drones and missiles, or obtaining the blessing of Iran, both of which are unlikely.

Barring a quick turnaround in favor of the US-Israeli war effort, the hosts of these bases may want to begin planning for life without them. If the current status quo persists, with Iran maintaining its missile capacity, its deterrence capacity, control of Hormuz, and with US bases dysfunctional, we are entering a ‘New Middle East’ very different from what bloodthirsty Neocons have been fantasizing about for thirty years.

8. Removal of sanctions (partial
✅
)

The most astonishing development of the war has been that the US has resorted to lifting some sanctions against Iran while the war is ongoing, probably the first time a country has removed sanctions against an opponent it is fighting. Iran’s closure of Hormuz made oil and gas prices rise worldwide, and that is politically unpopular in the US, as Americans do not want to pay higher prices for energy, and the knock-on effects of an energy shock will be devastating to the US economy. While everyone with a brain could have foreseen the closure of Hormuz, the US regime clearly doesn’t fit the bill, as they seem to have made no preparations for the very obvious and publicly proclaimed strategy of Iranian deterrence. In an astonishing display of incompetence and negligence, Trump was so taken by surprise at the Iranian response that his only methods for dealing with it was to tweet angrily demanding others send their navies, and then to lift some sanctions against Russia and Iran itself, to allow them to sell more oil onto the market and bring the prices down, averting, or at least delaying, economic catastrophe.

With the spike in oil prices and the easing of sanctions, the Zionist war on Iran has gifted Iran a windfall of tens of billions of dollars in oil revenue at the exact time the Iranian regime needs them the most. And if the situation at Hormuz remains, then Iran will also be able to tax the entire planet’s oil, gas, fertilizer, and more.

Israel’s goals:

  1. End of Iran’s nuclear program
    ❓
  2. End of Iran’s missile program
    ❌
  3. State destruction
    ❌

Israel’s achievements: 0 or 1 goal from 3 achieved

Israel, from its inception, is a project of land theft, and its actions are only understood through that lens. Zionism built an ethnostate on a land in which the state’s" target="_blank">https://saifedean.substack.com/p/property-rights-the-root-cause-of">state’s ethnicity owned no more than 5.67% of the land in 1945, which necessitated the mass murder and expulsion of Palestinians, which, contrary to Zionist propaganda, started and was well underway, long before any Arab armies had attempted to intervene to stop it. Around a quarter of a million Palestinians had already been murdered or expelled before any Arab soldier had entered Palestine. With global support for the original sin that was Israel’s birth through mass murder and theft, Israel has continued to get greedier about capturing more and more territory over time.

Israel’s eternal problem is that it is a state operating by barbaric pre-civilized norms of behavior and morality, where everything is allowed for the in-group, and nothing is beyond being done to the out group; but at the same time, it is a parasite entirely dependent on the civilized world subsidizing it, but the civilized world has long moved past Israel’s barbarism.

This is Israel’s duality that explains why it can be so polarizing. If you judge Israel by its actions in the real world, you are shocked to realize this is a country that legally allows murder," target="_blank">https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/2024-12-23/ty-article-opinion/.premium/when-you-enter-gaza-you-are-god-inside-the-minds-of-idf-soldiers-who-commit-war-crimes/00000193-f2a4-dc18-a3db-fee62b540000">murder, rape," target="_blank">https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/12/israel-drops-charges-on-soldiers-who-allegedly-raped-palestinian-detainee">rape, theft," target="_blank">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KNqozQ8uaV8">theft, starvation," target="_blank">https://x.com/haaretzcom/status/2036472536519565770">starvation, pogroms," target="_blank">https://x.com/infinite_jaz/status/1985011280353395110">pogroms, and torture" target="_blank">https://x.com/btselem/status/2013597386489069582">torture of goyim, including children, purely for being goyim. None of these are exceptions or individual cases; these crimes are fully sanctioned by the state because it does not prosecute the perpetrators, no matter the abundance of evidence. It’s a state that stole the vast majority of the land it controls from its rightful owners and prevents them from ever going back to their land or even purchasing it, just because they were born to the wrong race. It continues to expel peaceful people from their homes every day for no crime except being goyim.

But if you judge Israel based on the astonishingly good propaganda it uses to trick civilized westerners into subsidizing it, you will cry" target="_blank">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y_eCazUbfAM">cry like an idiot at the thought of anyone not worshipping it.

This dichotomy is what explains Israeli policies: Israel would like to expel and murder millions of goyim to take their land, but they realize that the support of the civilized world, including global Jewry, would be endangered by such barbarism. So they need to be slower and more gradual in their approach, relying on repressing their victims to elicit a violent reaction, which then allows the Israelis to carry out their mass murder and expulsion under the cover of self-defense. With a dose of added atrocity" target="_blank">https://thegrayzone.com/2024/01/10/questions-nyt-hamas-rape-report/">atrocity propaganda, Israel can get Western nations to abandon foundational laws and values to support it. The US, Europe, and all the hosts on which the Zionist parasite relies have laws that ban their countries from offering aid, military cooperation, or even trade with governments that target civilians and engage in torture, but these are brushed aside because of propaganda, political manipulation, and blackmail.

Israel is the only country in the world that does not define its borders because its theft of land is still a work in progress, nowhere near done. If Israel defines its borders to include all the territories it occupies, it becomes a Jewish state where the majority of the citizens are non-Jewish. If it doesn’t give its subjects citizenship, it becomes a more blatant apartheid model and makes it impossible for it to pretend to be interested in peace for Westerners. So it keeps its borders vague so it can keep expanding them, and to work on slowly and surely murdering and expelling the goyim who live there.

Israel’s immediate plans are to murder and expel as many Palestinians as possible from the West Bank and Gaza, in order to steal their" target="_blank">https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/israeli-likud-party-ministers-urge-netanyahu-annex-west-bank-2025-07-02/">their land and make it formally part of Israel. The majority of the West Bank has already been cleansed of its goyim, who have been gathered into" target="_blank">https://www.timesofisrael.com/smotrich-proposes-annexing-82-of-west-bank-in-bid-to-prevent-palestinian-state/">into ever-smaller concentration camps, where they are left defenseless for Israeli land thieves and soldiers to murder," target="_blank">https://www.btselem.org/video/20250810_the_killing_of_awdah_al_hathaleen_in_um_al_kheir_south_hebron_hills">murder, rob," target="_blank">https://www.aa.com.tr/en/middle-east/israeli-army-illegal-settlers-cut-hundreds-of-trees-steal-livestock-in-occupied-west-bank/3815974">rob, and torture" target="_blank">https://edition.cnn.com/2026/03/18/middleeast/west-bank-resident-sexual-assault-violence-intl">torture them with impunity.

The next step is to begin settlement in parts of Lebanon" target="_blank">https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/israeli-minister-calls-annexation-southern-lebanon-2026-03-23/">Lebanon and Syria that Israel is occupying now. Remember that the Zionist claim for Palestine, after all, is based on ancient scripture that says that the land of Israel extends from the Euphrates to the Nile, as America’s traitor" target="_blank">https://www.nbcnews.com/world/israel/american-spied-israel-ambassador-mike-huckabee-jonathan-pollard-rcna245098">traitor ambassador to Israel recently" target="_blank">https://x.com/TCNetwork/status/2024911932092813478">recently clarified. If messianic fundamentalists’ interpretation of ancient scripture overrules the millennia-long property rights of goyim in Jaffa and Ramallah, the goyim of Cairo, Baghdad, Damascus, and Beirut don’t have to wait till settlers" target="_blank">https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2021/5/4/if-i-dont-steal-your-home-someone-else-will-jewish-settler-says">settlers from Brooklyn show up to steal their homes to begin worrying. The full extent of Biblical Greater Israel, as seen" target="_blank">https://today.lorientlejour.com/article/1435946/greater-israel-emblem-surfaces-on-israeli-soldier-uniforms.html">seen on the uniforms of Israeli" target="_blank">https://www.ibtimes.co.uk/greater-israel-patch-middle-east-tensions-1783265">Israeli soldiers, currently houses more than 200 million goyim in Egypt, Palestine, Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, and Turkey. Many Israeli extremists also aim to destroy" target="_blank">https://www.aa.com.tr/en/middle-east/israeli-knesset-member-calls-for-building-3rd-temple-at-al-aqsa-mosque/3195730">destroy Islam’s third-holiest site to build the third Temple, and extremists" target="_blank">https://www.haaretz.com/2015-08-06/ty-article/.premium/israeli-extremist-group-leader-calls-for-torching-of-churches/0000017f-f68a-d5bd-a17f-f6badc6e0000">extremists even want to make sure to destroy all Christian churches for idolatry.

The irreconcilable difference at the heart of the Middle East is that the region’s goyim do not share Israel’s view of them as an inferior species who have no property rights, so they are not keen on making way for this Messianic project that would destroy their lives. Israel can’t just fight them all, especially as such blatant aggression would alienate the Westerners who subsidize Israel’s entire parasitic existence.

Israel thus has to adopt a gradual approach to its expansionist plans, undermining all regional opponents individually by siccing their American golem on them, and conquering more and more land. Israel’s agenda for Iran was laid out by the Project" target="_blank">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_for_the_New_American_Century">Project for the New American Century three decades ago, and the Yinon" target="_blank">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yinon_Plan">Yinon Plan four decades ago. This is the plan that Israel’s puppets in the Bush administration told" target="_blank">https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2003/9/22/us-plans-to-attack-seven-muslim-states">told Wesley Clark in November 2001, that they would topple seven countries: Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, and Iran. Six of these countries have been successfully turned into failed states, and now it is Iran’s turn to enjoy Zionist liberation through mass murder, state failure, and fragmentation. The ultimate goal is to turn all the goy nations of the Middle East into small warring tribes fighting each other with light weapons that cannot threaten Israel. The goal is far more ambitious than mere regime change, because regime change in an intact and armed country could still constitute a threat.

This makes the goals of Israel in this war more ambitious than America’s, but unachievable without US military might. Israel cannot just get Americans to fight an all-out war with the purpose of destroying Iran and turning it into Syria, but Israel can gradually boil the frog by getting the US to commit to modest goals, after whose failure, Israel can push for more US involvement until the American golem is fully consumed in the quagmire of destroying Iran. As Narco" target="_blank">https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/4/rubio-claim-of-israeli-role-in-us-iran-attack-reverberates-despite-denial">Narco Rubio made clear thanks to his astounding stupidity, Israel told the US it would attack Iran, and the US decided to join because they assumed Iran must retaliate against American bases in the region, and the American traitors are incapable of even contemplating the possibility of using the billions of dollars in money and weapons Israel robs from Americans every year as leverage to persuade Israel tnot to attack or to consider disavowing the attack and informing Israel and Iran that it would not intervene and they are on their own. Iran would have been more than glad to keep the US out of the war and point its entire missile and drone fleet at Israel, whose air force would be unable to make significant strikes without US aircraft carriers and regional bases. The mere prospect would have deterred Israel from starting the war, and America and the world would be in a far better place today. Israel has used American soldiers and military bases, and the countries hosting them, as a human and military shield to protect Israel from the consequences of its attack. Those of us who thought the US could not possibly be more servile to Israel continue to be proven wrong.

The start of the war makes the power dynamic between the two countries clear. Thanks to bribes, blackmail, propaganda, and possibly more, the American government is entirely captured by the Israelis and has no institutional capacity to deny Bibi’s carefully calibrated requests. Israel gave Trump delusional intelligence that a decapitation strike would cause Iranians to rise up and remove the regime, with the war over in a few days. Nobody in the US government will hold them accountable for their lies. This was the foot in the door Israel needed, and now the war takes on a life of its own. Israel will hope the same easily manipulable administration will keep pushing the US to continue escalation. This likely explains why they assassinated Larijani, as he would have been more likely to negotiate a deal with Trump. This explains why they escalated dangerously by targeting the Pars gas field, which Trump had to disavow in fear of Iranian retaliation. It also explains why they hit a desalination plant in Iran. They are not done, and it would not be wise to bet against them getting the escalation they want.

Even though Israel has not achieved its objectives so far, it is important to remember that Rome was not destroyed in a day, and they are diligently working on it.

Iranian deterrence

In summation, after one month, Iran has achieved most of its objectives. The US and Israel have not achieved their substantive goals and have suffered serious setbacks compared to the pre-war situation, with the degradation of the US presence in the Middle East and Iranian control over Hormuz. Iran’s achievements are relatively sustainable. As long as it can keep firing its cheap, plentiful, and well-hidden drones and missiles into US bases and unapproved Hormuz traffic, it can maintain most of its gains so far. On the other hand, there is no easy way for the Ziopedo regime to snatch this victory from Iran. If the US wants to reverse this status quo, it needs to eliminate Iranian drone and missile threats. The Epstein coalition likely already targeted all of its important and consequential targets in the first few days, and if these didn’t achieve the intended objective, then the continued bombing of less important targets is unlikely to achieve much, especially since the conventional military targets are unlikely to materially degrade the well-hidden missiles and drones on which Iran’s strategy relies. Bombing civilian targets will only strengthen the regime and further undermine the legitimacy of any opposition.

Iran has also successfully established a degree of deterrence, at least for now, as it still has several layers of escalation it can unleash. When it threatened to target regional energy infrastructure, it got the US to commit to not target its energy infrastructure. Iran could also get their Houthi allies to close Bab Al-Mandeb in Yemen, which would be a huge disaster for the global economy, exacerbating the Gulf energy crisis by limiting exports from the east of the Arabian peninsula.

The longer the war goes on, the greater the disruption to the global energy and food industries, and the more devastating the economic consequences worldwide. Not only does ~20% of the world’s oil and gas pass through Hormuz, but also a sizable percentage of the world’s fertilizers and essential industrial chemicals. As I discuss in detail in my Principles" target="_blank">https://www.amazon.com/Principles-Economics-Saifedean-Ammous/dp/B0BZQKFPLK">Principles of Economics, hydrocarbon fuels are essential to our modern life, and a Hormuz supply disruption would cause massive economic devastation, especially to the world’s poor. The disruption to fertilizer supplies would make this much worse, potentially resulting in famines. And the shortages in industrial chemicals will also wreak havoc with global markets and industry.

I suspect Iranians think that time is on their side. Iran knows Trump can’t handle high oil prices, and they know he can’t handle high Treasury yields. They know that he and his base care about this war about as much as they care about his mean tweets mocking Democrat nobodies. IRGC knows that practically no American is willing to sacrifice anything for fighting Iran, and they know the only Americans who support this war are the morons who think it will cost them nothing, and the Israeli agents scamming them into thinking that. Iranians know that as soon as the costs of the war start showing up for the average American, the war, Trump, and Israel will become unspeakably unpopular. They have also tried negotiations and realized that this Israel-owned regime operates by pre-civilized war standards, where negotiations are used as cover for murdering the negotiators. They may very strongly believe there is no point in negotiating and will keep pushing. Israel’s non-stop assassination of top leadership seems designed to ensure this outcome and further entrap the US.

Trump’s inept strategizing has left him with few carrots and sticks to try to achieve his favored outcomes. He has already removed some of the sanctions he placed on Iran, and showed Iran that 3 weeks of war are more effective for sanctions relief than four decades of negotiations. And as he’s adopted Israeli diplomatic etiquette by bombing the Iranian leadership during negotiations, the new leadership is highly unlikely to trust him. He’s already exhausted his most important aerial bombardment targets, and his aircraft carriers are too petrified to come near the Persian Gulf, limiting their effectiveness.

Perhaps even more significant than the impact on energy markets is the impact on the US government deficit. The longer the war drags on, the more it costs, the more likely the US is to experience insolvency, and the more likely the dollar is to be devalued and destroyed. The oil crisis exacerbates this.

Since the war on Iran began, the 10Y yield has risen from ~0.46% to ~4.42%. The rise in yields translates into tens of billions of dollars in higher debt-service payments for the US government and much more for the entire world economy, which uses Treasury interest rates as the risk-free base rate. When you add the hundreds of billions, or trillions, likely to be spent on the war & the impact of an energy shock, the US fiscal situation looks even more precarious. The higher these rates rise, the more likely defaults and bankruptcies will be across the US and global economies, creating unemployment and recessions, and requiring more government handouts and inflation.

In his last erratic hubristic catastrophe, Trump backed out of his tariff tantrum when the 10Y yield hit 4.5%. I predicted he might chicken out of this war as he did with tariffs when the 10Y yield hits 4.5%, and indeed, at around 4.44%, he chickened out of his threat to destroy Iranian power plants if they don’t open Hormuz, claiming to have made good progress on negotiations with Iran, and giving them an extra five days to negotiate. Six days later, Iran continues to deny that any such negotiations have taken place, and there is nothing concrete on the ground to suggest they have, as Iranian missiles continue unabated. The 10-year yield declined slightly, but the fake-negotiations ruse soon wore off. On March 26, the yield rose back to 4.4%, and, like clockwork, within a couple of hours, Trump announced that he was extending his deadline for Iran by another 10 days. At the close of the week, 10Y crept up again to 4.42%.

This pathetic backtracking on empty threats shows a man out of his depth, in a world he doesn’t understand, flailing cluelessly, bluffing, blustering, vastly overestimating his strength, and utterly ignorant of his enemy’s weapons and strategy. Persians have a national average IQ of 105, by some measures, one of the highest in the world, and the highest outside East Asia. Persians invented chess, but Trump’s strategic thinking and relentless bullshiting and blustering suggest the three-card monte is the most sophisticated and honest game he’s ever played.

In the face of these enormously unfavorable realities, Trump is changing his objectives. He is no longer talking about regime change or unconditional surrender; he is instead seeking to negotiate with the regime and even boasting about making good progress, even as they deny any contact. He has gone from wanting to eliminate Iran’s missile program to being more tolerant of it. The new and more modest goals of the US are:

Revised US goals:

Open Hormuz

End the nuclear program

The US strategy now focuses on opening Hormuz, which was the status quo before the war started in February 2026. If, after a month of the war you started, you are fighting to recreate the conditions you had before the war started, then you lost.

Perhaps the most tragicomic and telling aspect of this war is how, in all of the US administration’s tantrums about Hormuz, blaming and dumping the problem on everyone, none of them once suggested that Israel get involved in trying to open the Strait, when it was the country that started the entire war.

Trump lost his first Iran war and is now faced with the choice of accepting defeat and cutting losses or fighting a new war with new objectives, where he is in a far less favorable position because he has no more Middle Eastern bases, lower domestic support, and more fragile and nervous markets. The first option could give America its Suez moment, the second, its Waterloo.

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De-escalation and Suez

America ending the war now would be the smartest thing for Trump to do, as it would end the energy crisis, reduce the fiscal burden on the US government, and prevent Treasury yields from continuing to rise. This isn’t so politically difficult since Trump isn’t running for reelection, and his core supporters are cultists who will venerate whatever he does and call it genius.

But accepting defeat cements the status quo. It cedes Hormuz to Iran, which will impose a tax on the world’s oil consumers, and the legacy of this war will be that it made the whole world subsidize the regime Trump sought to overthrow. American regional bases will never be rebuilt. Both developments will cement Iran’s status as the regional superpower, and Gulf oil producers will have to win Iran’s good graces to sell their oil. Iran will likely never again enter into the Non-Proliferation Treaty and will likely develop a nuclear bomb. Iran may not get reparations or sanctions relief in this scenario, but the new oil income and regional dominance will make up for that.

Such an outcome would likely constitute America’s Suez" target="_blank">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suez_Crisis">Suez moment, in reference to the 1956 Suez crisis, which effectively ended the British Empire and concluded the process of British decline that began with World War I. Even though this sounds bad, it would be a blessing to the American people, who get nothing from their government’s foreign adventures but inflation, taxes, poverty, and enemies. The US would lose all influence in the Middle East and beyond. If China chose to invade or impose a blockade on Taiwan, it would be very difficult to see the US being able to help. If all of the US military assets in the Gulf have failed to defeat Iran, what hope do they have against Russia or China? Russia, China, and other smaller rivals will be emboldened to take on the US or its regional allies. The EU might even begin to assert itself after the incredible abuse it has sustained at the hands of the US regime, from destroying Nordstream, to Trump’s tariffs shakedowns, to threatening the takeover of Greenland.

But a US capitulation is too dangerous for Israel, as it leaves Iran in control of Hormuz, with the ability to build better and stronger missiles and drones, and forces Gulf regimes to realign with Iran if they want to export their oil. Israel’s vice grip on American politics makes it very difficult to see Trump capitulating and leaving Israel to fend for itself in a sea of people who are not fond of their messianic land theft, with Iran as a regional superpower, eager for revenge.

(Incidentally, Israelis and Americans may want to familiarize themselves with what Iran did over four decades to avenge Iraq’s invasion of Iran in the 1980s to get an idea of the horrors that await them from kicking this hornet’s nest.)

The same forces that got Trump into an idiotic war that doesn’t benefit America in any way whatsoever can also get him to foolishly escalate it at devastating cost. Observing America’s" target="_blank">https://x.com/i/status/2037272674477428798">America’s Israeli media agents recently makes it clear that escalation is Israel’s agenda, and they are adopting the usual incremental warmongering strategy: they begin by promising a quick, decisive victory, but when that doesn’t materialize, the failure is used as proof that a more aggressive campaign is needed. Most Americans are no longer stupid enough to fall for these predictable tricks, but their government is.

The next bait Israel has laid for Trump seems to be to conquer islands or coastal areas near the Strait of Hormuz. That would almost certainly achieve none of the war’s objectives, but it would turn American soldiers into fish in a barrel, with drones and missiles raining from mountains enveloping 270 degrees around them. One of Israel’s most loyal servants in the Senate, Lindsay Graham, in his attempt to sell this idea to the American people, likened it to Iwo Jima, which killed 26,000 US soldiers. This helps explain why none of the war cheerleaders is suggesting sending precious Israeli troops to open Hormuz, as such dangerous jobs are only for goyslave soldiers. The potential for casualties in this case exceeds anything the US has experienced since Vietnam. If this attack happens and a large number of Americans are murdered or captured by Iran, then Israel’s agents in the US will capitalize on American anger to escalate further. We have already seen Israeli mouthpiece rag WSJ" target="_blank">https://t.co/b4nxpUsCHu">WSJ make this argument, eventually escalating all the way to a ground invasion or a nuclear attack.

Escalation and Waterloo

If Trump refuses to accept the Suez ending of this war, he opens himself up for something far more devastating: Waterloo." target="_blank">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Waterloo">Waterloo. An aggressive military push to defeat Iran could fail and bring with it the economic, military, and political destruction of the US Empire.

The only powerful lever of escalation left to secure Hormuz and achieve regime change is an overwhelming ground invasion to secure the Iranian coastline and/or overthrow the regime. A ground invasion would not succeed if limited; it would need to control and completely comb the entire coastal area of Iran, and likely invade Tehran, a city of ten million people. Such an undertaking may require the greatest US military effort since WWII. The cost in money and lives will be enormous, and the outcome far from certain. Iran is an enormous country the size of Western Europe, with rugged and impenetrable mountain terrain, and a population of 93 million, larger than Iraq and Afghanistan combined. Iran is also far more militarily advanced than Iraq and Afghanistan, and there is no way of dealing with Iran’s drones and missiles without sustaining significant damage. Iranians have been preparing for this war against America since 1953, and the war so far shows that they are better prepared than the American buffoon who started the war because his Israeli owners lied to him and told him it would be as easy as Venezuela, and when that failed he had to scramble and sent soldiers and air defenses to the region to face the ferocious Iranian response.

But beyond the deaths of soldiers, the impact of escalation is likely to be devastating to the US and world economies, to US global military dominance, and to the US dollar. Escalation will send Treasury yields higher and increase the fiscal pressure on the US. Debt/GDP is already approaching banana republic levels, and debt servicing is already the largest part of the US budget. Escalation of this sort is unlikely to leave Iranian and Gulf energy infrastructure intact, destroying large percentages of the world’s energy supply, causing an energy and poverty crisis. The escalation will also likely disrupt Hormuz traffic for a long period of time, resulting in devastating damage to the US and world economies. This could unleash a recessionary inflation worse than the 1970s, whose energy shock was actually tiny and mostly a cover-up for inflation, as I" target="_blank">https://www.amazon.com/Fiat-Standard-Slavery-Alternative-Civilization/dp/1544526474">I explain in The Fiat Standard. With high inflation to fund the war, supply disruptions that cripple economic activity, rising interest rates destroying businesses, a collapsing bond market destroying savings, growing unemployment, increased pressure for inflationary and welfare policies to counter the damage, and rising cost of debt servicing, a US default is not an outlandish possibility in this world, it may even be probable, and it would be devastating to the US government, the US dollar, and the countless suckers who believed that US bonds are a good saving instrument. If the Treasury market loses its status as the ultimate safe haven, the dollar will likely lose its status as the global reserve currency, and America’s exorbitant inflationary privilege will disappear.

Further, if Trump escalates against Iran, his military will be stretched to the point where it would be very difficult for it to engage elsewhere, opening it up for significant geopolitical setbacks. It is already bordering on delusional to hear Americans talk about China being an enemy, because if America were to start a war in China’s surroundings, Chinese hypersonic missiles could quickly and decisively end the war, as a" target="_blank">https://interestingengineering.com/military/how-china-would-use-its-hypersonic-arsenal">a leaked Pentagon report explains. Without hypersonic missiles, the US is at a severe disadvantage. With an expensive and protracted quagmire in Iran, the US would be even more vulnerable.

The US has no reason to be involved in this war at all, and the only sane course of action for it is to evacuate all its troops from the Middle East, stop giving military or economic aid to any government in the region, and establish normal diplomatic relations with them and no alliances. But Israel is in control of America, and Israel needs the US to prosecute this war until it can destroy Iran as a society and a country, and turn it into a post-apocalyptic wasteland. Iran, on the other hand, needs to make the cost of the war unbearable for the US before the US can destroy Iran.

Given that Trump isn’t running for reelection and isn’t a die-hard Republican who cares about the party after him, it won’t be political pressure that moves him. And given that his family is likely making incredible gains from his manipulation of the market, selling pardons, and being Miriam Adelson’s perfect little puppet, he’s unlikely to be moved by moderate inflation and growing deficits. Iran will have to impose an enormous military and economic cost before the US retreats, which means very high inflation, a devastating depression, and/or a fiscal crisis.

In conclusion, the choice facing Trump today is very difficult, and it is between bad options. De-escalation is a humiliating defeat unacceptable to his Israeli bosses, even though it would be much better for America and the world. Escalation risks economic catastrophe at home and worldwide, the destruction of the US empire, a fiscal crisis, high inflation, and maybe even hyperinflation. Tragically, Israel’s control of the US means there is likely no endpoint to this conflict except through the destruction of Iran and its plunging into civil war, or the destruction of the US economy with tragic consequences for billions of people. We could also end up with both.

Saved - March 30, 2026 at 2:03 PM

@MarioNawfal - Mario Nawfal

🇾🇪🇮🇱 How the Houthis hit Israel from a thousand miles away The Palestine II missile skips along the edge of the atmosphere at up to Mach 16, zigzagging mid-flight in ways that Arrow, David's Sling, and Iron Dome were never designed to track. It's not a traditional ballistic arc. It's a glide vehicle that changes course unpredictably at hypersonic speed. A non-state actor in sandals just deployed technology that was supposed to be reserved for superpowers. The rules of missile defense just got rewritten from Yemen. Source: Ai Telly

Video Transcript AI Summary
The Huthis’ attack on Israel was conducted with a mix of Iranian-engineered ballistic and semi-hypersonic missiles, using a skip trajectory to bypass Israel’s Iron Dome and Arrow defense networks. The key factor enabling interception evasion was maneuverability: unlike traditional ballistic missiles that arc predictably, these weapons zigzag midflight, shifting trajectory at extreme speeds to confuse interceptor radars down to impact. The Palestine Two missile, a hypersonic ballistic weapon, reportedly reaches speeds up to Mach 16 and traveled from Yemen to Israel in minutes, leaving defenders little time to react. It appears to employ a skip gliding mechanism, allowing midflight trajectory changes that complicate interception. Experts believe it is not purely hypersonic but has semi-hypersonic characteristics that enable sharp maneuvers during flight. This capability likely involved a glide vehicle that detaches and enables the missile to maneuver and glide at speeds between Mach 5 and 16, potentially following a lower-than-usual flight path to evade radar coverage. The strike demonstrated vulnerabilities even within highly defended airspace, revealing how non-state actors can access advanced weaponry once thought exclusive to major powers. The Palestine Two is equipped with a hypersonic glide vehicle to maneuver and evade aero missiles defenses such as Israel’s, and travels around 1,500 kilometers, only slightly more than its Palestine One predecessor (Fatah One). Iran’s missile program, including Shahab-3 variants, provides the underlying technology. The Shahab-3 is the foundation for Iran’s medium-range missiles, using liquid propellant and capable of carrying a warhead between 760 and 1,200 kilograms. The typical sequence involves launching at a 90-degree angle, a trajectory that travels near or into space, warhead separation from the rocket, and re-entry to target. Warheads may be single or multiple, depending on the variant. The circular error probable for older weapons is about 300 to 450 meters, meaning 50% of missiles would land within that radius. Israel’s air defense comprises three tiers: the long-range Arrow system designed to intercept missiles outside the atmosphere, the David’s Sling system for missiles and drones, and the Iron Dome for short-range rocket attacks. The Arrow system includes the Arrow launcher, Green Pine radar, and the Arrow missile. The Arrow three kill vehicle uses a solid-propellant rocket with a thrust-vectoring nozzle and a seeker capable of pivoting to track targets. THAAD employs divert attitude control thrusters and has different burn characteristics and radar data requirements. The deterrent success of these defenses depends on precise targeting data from radars and seekers, as interceptor missiles must adjust trajectories based on updated flight information to intercept intercontinental ballistic trajectories.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: How did the Vughtis manage to strike Israel from over a thousand miles away? Well, they did it by deploying a mix of Iranian engineered ballistic and semi hypersonic missiles, utilizing a flight path known as a skip trajectory. But that brings up a massive question. How did these weapons bypass Israel's cutting edge Iron Dome and Arrow Defense Networks? The secret is maneuverability. Unlike conventional ballistic missiles that follow predictable, arching curve, these newer weapons can actually zigzag mid flight. They constantly shift their trajectory at extreme speeds, completely confusing the interceptor radars all the way down to the target. It was a startling moment in the ongoing regional tensions when the Huti launched what they called the Palestine two missile, a hypersonic ballistic weapon reportedly capable of reaching speeds as high as Mach 16. At such blistering velocity, the missile was able to travel from Yemen to Israel in mere minutes, giving Israeli and allied defense systems very little time to react. What made this strike even more concerning was the missile's apparent ability to change course mid flight, a capability likely achieved through a sophisticated skip gliding mechanism. This means that rather than following a traditional predictable arc, the missile could bounce along the edge of the atmosphere, shifting its trajectory in a way that complicates interception. Experts believe the missile wasn't purely hypersonic in the conventional sense but had characteristics of what some call a semi hypersonic design. This would still allow for sharp maneuvers during flight, far beyond what older ballistic models could manage. These kinds of mid air changes wreak havoc on systems like Israel's Arrow-three and The U. S.-developed THAAD, which are built to predict and intercept based on expected flight paths. Additionally, there's speculation that the missile may have taken a lower than usual flight route, potentially slipping under the radar coverage that usually defends against high altitude threats. This is the Houthi Palestine two, it was used for the first time based on Iran's advanced missile systems. Inside this missile is a hypersonic glide vehicle, which detaches and allows the missile to maneuver and glide at speeds between Mach five and sixteen. The missile has a range of around 1,500 kilometers, only slightly more than its predecessor, the Palestine-one missile, or Fatah-one. What sets it apart from other ballistic missiles is its ability to accelerate outside the Earth's atmosphere, while its aerodynamic control surfaces enable steering to evades the famous aero missiles defense system made by Israel. The combination of extreme speed, sudden course changes, and possible stealth capabilities revealed a major vulnerability, even in one of the most heavily defended airspaces in the world. What this incident really drives home is that non state actors are now gaining access to highly advanced weaponry that was once thought to be the domain of major powers. Yemen Houthi militant possessing a hypersonic missile represents a significant threat to both Israel and the United States Navy ships. To understand how the Houthi hypersonic missile works, we need to examine the functioning of Iran's missile technology and Israel's aero defense system. Let's study how the Houthi follows the same strategy as Iran when it hit Israel with almost 180 number of ballistic missiles. These missiles traveled more than 1,000 miles from this valley to reach Israel's most populated city and military sites. Iran used variants of the Shahab-three ballistic missile in its latest attack on Israel. The Shahab-three is the foundation for all of Iran's medium range ballistic missiles and uses liquid propellant. It can carry a warhead weighing between seven sixty and twelve hundred kilograms, which translates to sixteen seventy five and two thousand six hundred and forty five pounds. How it works: Step one: The missile is positioned at a 90 degree angle and then fired. Step two: The ballistic missile's trajectory takes it outside or near the edge of Earth's atmosphere. Step three: The warhead payload separates from the rocket that carried it aloft and re enters the atmosphere, descending towards its target. Step four: The missile can carry a single or multiple warheads, depending on the variant. The warhead separates from the single stage rocket after it has traveled about more than half the distance to its target. The most prolific Scud variants had a circular error probable of 300 to four fifty meters. This means that 50% of the missiles fired at a target would land within a circle of that diameter. As you watch this, data brokers may be collecting and selling your personal information, your home address, phone number, online searches, and even financial details. This data doesn't just result in spam calls and scam attempts. It can also affect your personal credit score, as scammers may manipulate your data, potentially leading to a loan denial. It also performs regular scans to prevent data brokers from sneaking your information back into circulation, all while providing you with a clear, real time dashboard to track your data. So take your personal data back with Incogni, use code AITELLI with the link below incogni.com aitelly and get 60% off on an annual plan. Now let's take a look how the Israeli Defense System works. The Israeli Defense System consists of three tiers. First up is the long range Aero Missile Defense System, which was designed specifically with Iranian missiles in mind. Each of these system rockets cost a few million dollars, and they can intercept missiles outside the Earth's atmosphere, resulting in enhanced protection. The second layer of defense is the so called David's Sling system, designed for taking out missiles and drones. Finally, the Iron Dome stops most short range rocket attacks in Israel. Let's take a look at why the Iron Dome failed to intercept the Iranian ballistic missiles. Apart from discussing the multilayered missile defense system, the Iron Dome itself has a range of around 40 miles, while the David's Sling can intercept ballistic missiles up to a range of 180 miles. The top tier aero anti ballistic missile systems can target threats up to 1,500 miles away. According to reports, 180 ballistic missiles, which are possibly hypersonic as claimed by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, were launched. Although the aero missile defense system successfully intercepted many missiles before they reached Israel, many still got through. The main problem behind the failure to intercept was after the detachment of the Glide Vehicle from the launcher. The Glide Vehicle can change its trajectory multiple times, which confused the Arrow missiles. This maneuver also bypassed the David's Sling and finally the Iron Dome system, which is not designed to counter hypersonic missiles like the Fatah two model. Let's examine the cost implications of a single day of missile attacks. Iran expended over $200,000,000 by launching ballistic missiles along with drones, whereas the IDF spent $1,000,000,000 to defend itself. This includes the Arrow missile, which costs around $2,500,000 The David Sling costs around $1,000,000 to produce, while the Iron Dome costs around 20,000 to $100,000 for a single missile, depending on inflation. By contrast, Iranian ballistic missiles cost around $200,000 each and its drones only $20,000 to $50,000 each. The Arrow missile defense system consists of three basic parts: the missile launcher unit, the Green Pine radar antenna, and the Arrow missile. The missile launcher unit is composed of six erector launcher tubes housing ready to fire missiles. Positioned at the rear of a two axle trailer, each launcher, when fully loaded with six launch tubes carrying ready to fire missiles, weighs 35 tons. The Green Pine radar serves as the warning and fire control radar for the Arrow three anti ballistic air defense missile system. It plays a crucial role in target detection and guidance. The Arrow operates as a two stage missile. Let's look inside this engineering technology. This is the solid propellant booster and sustainer rocket motors. At the rocket's peak sits the ignition chamber, triggering the combustion of the solid propellant when activated. This propellant isn't just any substance, it's a meticulously crafted blend of fuel and oxidizer poured into a casing and then cured. Encasing this blend is a protective shell called the motor case. At the core of the rocket lies the propellant burning zone. Here, the solid fuel and oxidizer react, producing incredibly high temperature combustion gases, which helps to launch the rocket at incredible speed above the Earth's surface. Moving further to the front, the most important part of the missile is the kill vehicle, which can be divided into three basic parts. The second stage is the propulsion system with a thrust vectoring nozzle. Just above it is the warhead, a directed high explosive fragmentation weighing 150 kilograms, which translates to three thirty pounds. The third stage is the Seeker, capable of pivoting itself to track its target. But what's the big deal about this long range anti ballistic missile system? Let's start with a propulsion system, the famous THAAD, Terminal High Altitude Area Defense uses a divert attitude control thrusters. In comparison to the Arrow three kill vehicle, which utilizes a thrust vectoring nozzle with a solid fuel rocket, it has a shorter and more limited burn time. It has a few advantages, one of them being the ability to compensate for a lack of radar accuracy. When the radar sends the interceptor to an inaccurate target location, the Arrow three kill vehicle can adjust its trajectory. Since intercontinental ballistic missiles travel at very high speeds, the kill vehicle must change its trajectory based on newer, more accurate radar data from its seeker. A failure to fully divert the course to the new target would result in a failure to intercept. We make original videos from scratch and animated by humans, so please subscribe to not miss a beat.

@MarioNawfal - Mario Nawfal

🇮🇷🇾🇪 Could the Houthis flip the war? Iran is taking heavy losses after 4 weeks of war. Houthis still have real autonomy and power in western Yemen. They’ve built a serious arsenal: ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, drones & sea drones. Their last Red Sea campaign already cost global trade over $1 trillion. The Houthis can hit Saudi oil sites, Qatar LNG, and shut down Bab el-Mandeb, which would stack on top of Iran’s Hormuz disruption. Combined effect: massive oil & shipping crisis worldwide. Economic pain could force everyone to the table faster than bombs alone. One rebel group with cheap weapons could make this conflict economically unbearable for the world. Source: WarFronts YT

@MarioNawfal - Mario Nawfal

🇮🇷 Insane that the 2026 Iran War just caused the biggest oil supply shock in history, 16% of global supply, taken offline. - Bigger than the 1973 embargo. - Bigger than the Gulf Wars. - Bigger than the Libyan Civil War - and even bigger than the Ukraine war If Russia https://t.co/AZHTfPU6Oo

Saved - April 4, 2026 at 9:26 AM

@MarioNawfal - Mario Nawfal

🇮🇷🇺🇸🇮🇱 A former Israeli Air Force commander explains why Iran is shooting down American jets... Iran completely rebuilt its air defense doctrine after the 12-day war. A former IAF commander told me "the days when flying over Iran was a walk in the park are over." Here's what changed: Each of Iran's 31 zones now operates independently if Tehran is cut off. No more waiting for orders from a command center that might already be destroyed. Mobile launchers use shoot-and-scoot tactics from tunnels and mountain terrain. New passive infrared systems track jets without emitting radar signals, meaning pilots don't know they're being targeted until a missile is already in the air. The biggest revelation: Iran is using China's HQ-9B, Beijing's best long-range surface-to-air missile, with both active radar and infrared seekers. Standard electronic countermeasures struggle against it. And Iran's homegrown Bavar-373 reportedly outperforms Russia's S-300 and possibly the S-400. Iran ditched Russian technology, replaced it with Chinese and domestic systems, decentralized command, went mobile, went passive, and went underground. The result: two American aircraft down in a single day after five weeks of assumed air dominance. Source: @academic_la

@MarioNawfal - Mario Nawfal

🇺🇸🇮🇷 Trump told the world to "just go take" the Strait of Hormuz. Here's why nobody is listening... France called it "unrealistic." Forty nations met in London and didn't even discuss military options. The UK talked about sanctions and diplomacy. Not one allied navy volunteered to go first. The geography explains why. The Strait is 20 miles wide with ships forced into predictable lanes. Iran has 1,000 miles of coastline lined with anti-ship missiles, drone tunnels, speed boats hidden in caves, and mines. Qeshm Island alone shelters fast-attack craft, explosive boats, and missile batteries belonging to the IRGC. Warning time for an attack: seconds. A drone hit a fully loaded Kuwaiti tanker anchored at Dubai this week. If Iran can reach ships inside a port, imagine what it can do in a 20-mile channel. The most uncomfortable question remains unanswered. Even if fighting stops, Iran may keep the toll system running until it gets reparations. And its proxies in Yemen could threaten Bab el-Mandeb independently. Ending the war doesn't automatically reopen the water. Source: WSJ

Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker emphasizes that countries receiving oil through the Hormone Strait must take responsibility for guarding and cherishing the passage, and that they should lead in protecting the oil they depend on, with external help available but the primary obligation on them. For nations unable to obtain fuel or those who refuse involvement in the decapitation of Iran, the speaker asserts that the speaker’s side had to act themselves. A concrete suggestion is offered in two points: 1) Buy oil from The United States Of America, which the speaker claims has plenty. 2) Build up some delayed courage—“Should have done it before. Should have done it with us as we asked.” Then go to the straight, take it, protect it, and use it for themselves. The speaker asserts that Iran has been essentially decimated and that the hard part of the conflict is done, implying it should be easy to proceed. They claim that once the conflict ends, the Strait will open up naturally. The rationale given is that those who rely on the Strait will want to sell oil to rebuild, and, as a result, oil flow will resume. Regarding economic indicators, the speaker notes that gas prices will rapidly come back down and stock prices will rapidly go back up. They remark that prices have not fallen very much, though they acknowledge some days have been favorable in the recent period.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: The countries of the world that do receive oil through the Hormone Strait must take care of that passage. They must cherish it. They must grab it and cherish it. They can do it easily. We will be helpful, but they should take the lead in protecting the oil that they so desperately depend on. So to those countries that can't get fuel, many of which refuse to get involved in the decapitation of Iran, we had to do it ourselves. I have a suggestion. Number one, buy oil from The United States Of America. We have plenty. We have so much. And number two, build up some delayed courage. Should have done it before. Should have done it with us as we asked. Go to the straight and just take it, protect it, use it for yourselves. Iran has been essentially decimated. The hard part is done, so it should be easy. And in any event, when this conflict is over, the strait will open up naturally. It'll just open up naturally. They're gonna wanna be able to sell oil because that's all they have to try and rebuild. It will resume the flowing, and the gas prices will rapidly come back down. Stock prices will rapidly go back up. They haven't come down very much, frankly. They came down a little bit, but they've had some very good days over the last couple of days.

@MarioNawfal - Mario Nawfal

🚨🇺🇸🇬🇧🇮🇷 BREAKING: The F-15E Strike Eagle shot down over Iran was from RAF Lakenheath, UK, assigned to the 494th Fighter Squadron The F-15E is a two-seat multirole fighter carrying 23,000 pounds of bombs at 1,875 mph. A pilot up front, a weapons systems officer in the back. https://t.co/TPEIDUH7o4

Saved - April 13, 2026 at 9:10 PM

@MarioNawfal - Mario Nawfal

🚨🇺🇸🇮🇷 Major General Randy Manner reveals that the Chinese HQ-9 system is a "game changer" for Iran, giving them the ability to take down U.S. F-35 stealth fighters. Beijing is now actively arming the Iranian regime with superior air defense technology. Randy believes Trump is taking advantage of the fact that most Americans don't understand how these defensive weapons are shifting the balance of power.

Video Transcript AI Summary
One speaker considers the possibility that China, India, or Pakistan might escort a ship through the Strait of Hormuz and worries about a potential direct confrontation between the United States and those countries. He notes there is no expected confrontation between Pakistan and India, highlighting an open line of communication, a good relationship, and that one of them is a mediator in negotiations. China, however, is described as a different case, with increasing parallels to what was seen between the United States and Russia in the early Cold War era. The other speaker expresses hope that the Chinese will not decide to confront the Americans over the Strait. He bluntly states that the Chinese are not friends with the United States anymore; while they have long-term economic partnership and linked economies, the current administration has been placing tariffs on China and threatening more tariffs. News reports are cited indicating that China will provide the HQ-9 air defense system, which is described as far superior to the Russian S-300, to Iran. He emphasizes these are defensive weapons, not offensive capabilities, and notes that the administration is likely to be distressed by this development. Despite the administration’s stance, the speaker asserts that providing defensive weapons to another country is something done routinely and acknowledges that this move could enhance Iran’s defensive posture. He mentions the possibility that the Chinese supply could even enable Iran to detect F-35 aircraft, though he notes uncertainty about this point. The situation is characterized as a game changer and described as a behind-the-scenes nuance that the average American might not fully understand, as well as perhaps the administration not fully grasping it. The speaker reiterates that the Chinese plan is to provide these defensive weapons to Iran, describing it as a soon-to-occur development.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: What happens if China or India or Pakistan decide to escort one of their ships through the Strait Of Hormuz? Was just speaking to Malcolm Nass about it, and this is the thing that worries him the most is that we might see it in potential direct confrontation between The US and those countries. Now, obviously, I don't see confrontation between Pakistan and India. There's an open line of communication, a good relationship with both countries. One of them is the mediator for the negotiations. But China is a different story, and we we're starting to get a lot more similarities to what we saw between The US and Russia back in the cold war. Slight similarities, the early days of it. Speaker 1: So I am hoping that the Chinese will not decide to confront the Americans on this straight. I think the Chinese are I'll be blunt. Remember, the Chinese are not friends in The United States any longer. They are when I say friends, we've been long term economic partners and trading trading partners. We our economies are linked more than ever before. This administration, though, has been putting tariffs on them and is threatening even more tariffs. The fact that the Chinese are now going to provide, according to news reports, the h q nine air defense system, which by the way is far superior to the Russian s 300. I mean, they're they're going to be giving them remember, these are defensive weapons. So therefore, even though the administration will be upset about it, they haven't said much yet, but I'm sure they're gonna be very distressed about it. But the reality is giving defensive weapons to another country is something we do all the time. They're not offensive capability. It's defensive capability. And the fact that they are ratcheting up the capability, maybe even to detect f 30 fives, we don't know yet. This this is a a game changer, and it's it's a very, it's behind the scenes nuance that not the the average American does not get and maybe the administration does not get. The Chinese is going to provide these weapons, excuse me, these defensive weapons to the Iranians soon.

@MarioNawfal - Mario Nawfal

🚨🇺🇸🇮🇷 The sudden shift from opening the Strait of Hormuz to blockading it looks like pure strategic desperation to Major General Randy Manner He argues that Trump has shown zero empathy for the average American paying more for gas and groceries. Manner suggested it's a reckless path that ignores the fact that Iran has alternative trade routes through the Caspian Sea.

Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 argues that Trump’s shift from “opening the Shadow Homos” to “blockading it” is ironic and reflects a strategic question for the United States. They say the irony highlights a broader question about American strategy and emphasize that their criticism is not merely to criticize but to assess the situation objectively. They note an interesting point raised by an expert: while blockade is not difficult to implement, it “just doesn’t work.” They reference economic experts who have weighed in, recognizing that Iran has undetermined but significant funds and multiple import/export avenues. Although Iran cannot freely pass ships through the Strait of Hormuz, they have alternative routes: the Caspian Sea for imports via land routes, and “floating oil across the world” for exports. The core question becomes how far Trump is willing to go to “strangle the Iranian economy” and whether that would pull the global economy into the mix. In this framing, the conversation centers on the feasibility and consequences of a harsher economic blockade against Iran and the potential global repercussions. Speaker 1 responds by characterizing Trump as lacking empathy for the economic impact on ordinary Americans and, more broadly, on people worldwide. They reference Trump’s own statements, noting that he has said it will “cost us more,” but “we’re gonna make a lot of money.” This quoted sentiment is used to support the claim that Trump does not consider or prioritize the cost to average citizens. Speaker 1 asserts that Trump “doesn’t feel it,” and therefore does not feel a sense of urgency to take action. They summarize Trump’s attitude as not demonstrating concern for the economic impact on the average American or global populations, which underpins the claim that there is no urgency to intervene despite potential price increases for gasoline or other goods. This exchange frames the discussion around the practicality of sanctions, the resilience of Iran’s economic channels, and the perceived indifference of Trump to domestic and international economic costs.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: I made a post saying in one month, Trump went from opening the Shadow Homos to now blockading it. Anyone else see the irony? What does that say about American strategy? And I'm not kinda opening it up just to criticize it. No. Is it But, like, objectively, it just seems like desperation. I'm struggling to see any other way of looking at it, again, unless I'm missing something. Because you've made the interesting point as an expert that it's not that difficult to blockade it, but it just doesn't work. All the the economic experts have just said that Iran is is we don't know the exact details behind the scenes, how much money they have, and how much they need the straight open because they also can't get cargo ships through the straight into the straight. They can't import from the strait, but they also have the Caspian Sea to import. They have land routes to be able to import. So they've got other alternative routes than the strait of almost for imports. And for exports, as we said, they've got floating oil across the world. So then the question is how far is Trump willing to go in your mind to be able to strangle the Iranian economy? How far is he is he willing to take the global economy with him? Speaker 1: I think he has shown no empathy for the economic impact on the average American or the I mean, he's even said it. He's even said, yeah. It's it's gonna cost us more, but we're gonna make a lot of money. I mean, that's a quote by him. He has also stated that he doesn't really it's it's not important. So I think he has no empathy about the impact of average Americans or, for that matter, the average people around the world that for most people, paying those extra $20.30, $40.50 dollars a week for gas or for increased prices, he doesn't feel it, and therefore, he doesn't have any urgency to be able to do anything about it. So that's that's his opinion because he hasn't demonstrated it so far.

@MarioNawfal - Mario Nawfal

🇺🇸 🇮🇷 Major General Randy Manner argued that the Iranians are currently in the driver's seat because they don't negotiate under "one and done" ultimatums. Randy warns that pursuit of short-term gains is only harming the U.S. and the global economy. The administration’s hope for https://t.co/yQVGsyWqav

Video Transcript AI Summary
First speaker: Iran doesn’t really need to attack American ships or force the strait to open because it could actually be advantageous for the strait to remain closed. There are floating oil reserves and cargo ships in the Indian Ocean and Arabian Sea that Iran could rely on. In fact, Iran has a substantial stockpile: 160,000,000 barrels of Iranian crude already floating at sea, outside the Persian Gulf, past the Strait of Hormuz into the Arabian Sea and the Indian Ocean. That amount could fuel a country like Germany for over two months, and most of it is headed to Chinese independent refiners. Exports remain high, and the blockade is real, even if the timing is late. Do you agree that Iran is prepped for this day? Second speaker: I do agree. I think this is not harming the Iranians as much as it is harming the United States and the rest of the world. First speaker: What is Trump’s thought process? He has spoken with secretary Besant and other advisers, so he’s already sought advice. What alternative could work in Trump’s favor? Second speaker: Whenever the first round of negotiations ended, the president believed that his style of brinksmanship would produce immediate capitulation and agreement by the Iranians. The Iranians have never negotiated like that. Even the first treaty in the late 2000s took a long time to negotiate, not one and done. This administration wants short-term gains, and that isn’t possible with the Iranians. In the short term, the Iranians are in the driver’s seat. Negotiating and diplomacy are very difficult work; you don’t bully your way through. There is no unconditional surrender. There is none of that except in the president’s mind, unfortunately.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: So, essentially, Iran doesn't really need to attack American ships or force the strait to open because it one could argue it works in their advantage for the strait to be closed because they can sustain this. They've got the floating oil reserves, a lot of cargo ships that are that are in the Indian Ocean and the Arabian Sea. So Iran's already got a lot actually, I've got the numbers here. I saved them earlier. But they've got a lot of oil reserves that that would won't be impacted by this. They've got a 160,000,000 barrels, holy crap, of Iranian crude already floating at sea, and I think that's outside the Persian Gulf. So that's past the Shreve of Hormuz into the Arabian Sea and the Indian Ocean. Enough to fuel a country like Germany for over two months, and most of it is heading to Chinese independent refiners. Exports still running pretty high. So even so then the the my team wrote, the blockade is real. The timing is just late. Do you agree with that point that Iran's prepped for this day? Speaker 1: I do agree with it. I do agree. I think this is not harming the Iranians as much as much as it is The United States and the rest of the world. Speaker 0: So what is Trump's thought process? Because I'm sure he spoke to secretary secretary Besant. He also spoke to his other advisers. So he's already sought advice. What is the alternative here that could work in Trump's favor? Speaker 1: I think whenever the first round of negotiations ended, the president thought that his style, which is brinksmanship negotiation, would result in an immediate capitulation and agreement by the Iranians. The Iranians have never negotiated like that. Even the first treaty that was done back in the late two thousands was it it took a long time to negotiate, not one and done. This administration wants short term gains, and it's not going to be possible with this with with the Iranians. So I think the short term, the Iranians are in the driver's seat. I I think negotiating and diplomacy is very difficult work. It is not something that you just bully your way through. So and because the Iranians, there is no unconditional surrender. There is not there's none of these things the president has already said. That is that doesn't exist except for the president's mind, unfortunately.
Saved - April 14, 2026 at 3:19 AM

@MarioNawfal - Mario Nawfal

🇺🇸🇮🇩Secretary of War Hegseth met with Indonesia’s top defense official and rolled out a major new defense cooperation deal. While the Strait of Hormuz is the second busiest oil passageway in the world, the busiest is the Strait of Malacca right off Indonesia’s coast. Roughly 80 percent of China’s oil imports flow through it. The US military and its partners are now locking down the planet’s critical oil routes. Trump is putting the pieces exactly where he wants them. Source: @WarClandestine

Video Transcript AI Summary
The United States official welcomed Indonesian Minister Shafri to the Pentagon and announced that the two countries are elevating their security partnership to a major defense cooperation partnership. The official also thanked Minister Shafri for ongoing support in helping the United States find, return, and protect the remains of soldiers who fought alongside Indonesians during World War II. The signing of the memorandum of understanding will enable the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency to recover missing service members and return them to their families. The official expressed appreciation for Minister Shafri’s presence and looked forward to productive discussions.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Well, minister Shafri, welcome to the Pentagon. It's an honor to have you. It's an honor to host your team as well. Your visit demonstrates the importance that the war department places on our growing security relationship, and it is growing and active with Indonesia. In recognition of the important security collaboration we are undertaking, we are announcing today that our two countries are elevating our security partnership to a major defense cooperation partnership. I appreciate your continued support in helping The United States find, return, and protect the remains of our soldiers who fought alongside Indonesians during World War two. The signing of this memorandum of understanding in front of us will enable the defense POWMIA accounting agency to recover those missing service members and return them to their families. So thank you, mister minister, for being here, and I very much look forward to our meeting and our productive discussion today.

@MarioNawfal - Mario Nawfal

🇺🇸🇮🇩 The U.S. just signed a Major Defense Cooperation Partnership with Indonesia. Maritime, subsurface, autonomous systems, special forces training, the works. Indonesia sits astride the Strait of Malacca, the world's second most critical shipping chokepoint after Hormuz. China knows exactly what this means. While Beijing challenges the Hormuz blockade, Washington just locked in the other strait.

@MarioNawfal - Mario Nawfal

🇺🇸🇨🇳 The Chinese Foreign Ministry announced that Chinese ships will move through the Strait of Hormuz despite Trump's blockade. This is a moment of dangerous potential escalation, with China already supplying Iran with manpads and HQ-9 long-range air defense systems. If https://t.co/YkPcIFjmMX

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