first post for nuke on Iran within a month
the dissunited ssnakkkess of crackkkmerikkka lost
the sstate of pissrakkkell lost
the antiimperialist izlamic repvblic of iran vvon
>>2732868It’s probably not true but I giggle imagining the bull is MEK affiliated
>>2732872Best I can do is a 2 out of 5. The second and third one, specifically.
did they ever resolve the shit situation on the aircraft carrier?
>>2732872I was never taught cursive in school, I can’t read this
>>2732870two ships confirmed hit by Reuters
>>2732876They can't just rebuild the entire sewage system.
>>2732874Ngl but the she puts the "hot" in "hotwife"
Too bad she is a traitor.
Otherwise,
>mmmmmph. >>2732760> has been posting all day about how Israel has possibly used a covert tactical nuke on Iran. I am retarded and don't know anything about this stuff, is there anyone here who is more knowledgeable that could verify the credibility of this person or claim?A simple rule is every time a retard claims some large explosion is a tactical nuke. It's not. It never is. Hope that helps. It would be detected by radiation devices that are planted all over the Earth and then it would be announced that a nuclear weapon was used which would get whoever used it into a lot of trouble which is why they're never used.
>>2732889>which would get whoever used it into a lot of troublewhat if israel did it, and then said that they didn't do it? What then?
>The Gulf stops exporting fertilizer right at the start of growing season
Farmers all over the planet are prolly hanging the noose rn. Expect to see food prices explode in a year
>>2732891You remember “micro loans” they were giving out in India and Bangladesh in the 90s and mid 2000s that led directly to farmer suicides in those countries? Those are probably coming for farmers everywhere
>>2732890Then I guess they get away with it since their state dictates reality.
>>2732888>revolutionary sailors>get served surf and turf (steak and lobster) before extended assignments>don't wanna, because they might get shot atI will need to see a full on mutiny, before I consider them to be anything other than cowards.
Global airline industry crashing, after just one week of war on Iran (5:59)
>Inside China Business - Mar 11, 2026
>The cost of jet fuel is skyrocketing, and the prices paid to refineries to process crude into fuel is higher than the cost of oil itself.
>Tens of thousands of flights across the Middle East have been canceled, and air traffic re-routed to avoid Persian Gulf airspace.
>Air travel to the Middle East is highly profitable to airlines, because of the revenue mix from upper-income tourists and business travel.
>Western airlines were already at a competitive disadvantage to carriers in East Asia, because of the Russia problem: Asian airlines overfly Russia, saving operations costs and time, while carriers in the US, Canada, and Europe take far longer routes around Russian airspace.
>>2732897Isn't this not as bad as the prices were from like Feb-May 2022?
>>2732890They also did not have an involvement in the Vela incident but this time israelis would not really be in a position to even pretend
>>2732898They should sail to DC and do something funny.
>>2732904By the way, Imperial Russian sailors were conscripts, too.
>>2732911lol
come the fuck on. will anybody believe that shit?
>>2732908Ain't nothing gonna break my stride
Nobody gonna slow me down
Oh no
I got to keep on moving
Ain't nothing gonna break-a my stride
I'm running
And I won't touch ground
Oh no
I got to keep on moving
>>2732911If the state of Israel said it, it must be true.
>>2732890I just mean it would be a PR nightmare because the world is really sensitive about nuclear weapons.
For reference:
The Davy Crockett has a yield of 10 to 20 tons of TNT
The MOAB(Mother of All Bombs) has a yield of 11 tons of TNT
There is no reason to use tactical nukes when alternatives that no one cares about exists. You use a nuke and then you become the second country on Earth to ever nuke people.
>>2732921>it would be a PR nightmare agreed, and it probably wouldn't get a decisive victory anyway.
But the mechanism of deceit still remains, and if they aren't using nukes, what are they using?
0 protests from USA-Israel pigs btw
>>2732925But this board told me protesting is liberal nonsense and doesn’t work, so which is it?
>>2732911If that's true then they can just show their country freely to prove it
>>2732889My bad, you guys convinced me I was just having a retard moment
>Hit Dubai again
>>2732943>>2732946Are these even Iranian strikes, or from failed interceptions?
>>2732901They're equally as high as they were back then and similarly I expect them to go down just as they did back then.
>BREAKING: IRGC announces “now that the Idea of Dubai has been killed in its physical manifestation, it is up to each and every one of you around the world to search inside yourself for the internal Dubai, the spiritual Dubai. Locate this Dubai, and destroy it forever.”
Destroy your inner Dubai anons
Iran War: Iran Seeks Decolonization of Gulf Region; IEA Proposes Emergency Release of Reserves; Nuclear Strike Risk Assessment; Iran Escalates Strikes
<Posted on March 11, 2026 by Yves Smith
>In some recent talks on the Iran War, Larry Wilkerson has stressed the importance of Clausewitz, specifically in understanding the nature of the conflict. Even though many Iran-sympathetic commentators, such as Alastair Crooke, were early to stress that Iran wants the US military presence swept form the region, even that formulation does not seem to be an adequate characterization of Iran’s aims. If we take a fresh presentation on Glenn Diesen;s channel by Professor Sayed Mohammed Marandi on Iran’s objectives and requirement as accurate (recall that Marandi is a commentator, not an official spokesperson), they amount to decolonization of the Gulf region. Iran is not merely seeking an end to the US military presence. It is also seeking an end to the Gulf states economic support of what Russia has called the Collective West, via its demand for reparations.
>Perhaps scholars of wars can correct me, but I cannot think of a case where reparations were paid other than when an enemy was completely subjugated, either via conquest or surrender. That is not a conceivable outcome with respect to the United States. But given Iran having demonstrated that it controls any hope of economic survival of the oil and gas income dependent Gulf monarchies via its control of traffic through the Strait of Hormuz and its ability to destroy energy and port infrastructure, it has the realistic prospect of breaking them.
>Syrian-Palestinian journalist Laith Marouf has argued that wars of decolonization typically take six years.1 Even if you mark the start of this war as the Hamas raid of October 7, 2023, which Israel blamed on Iran when Iran in fact was very upset with Hamas throwing a spanner in its long-term efforts in the region, it would seem that there is an impossibly long time before resolution. With the prospect of wide-ranging, multi-fronted, lasting and severe damage to the global economy, it would seem that there would be at least an interim major reset well before then. But given that Iran has requirements that the US, Israel, and the West will now find impossible to swallow, how much damage will countries and citizens around the world have to endure before painful concessions are made to Iran?
>However, Alexander Mercouris in his Tuesday presentation expressed doubts as to how much of these reserves could be released to deal with a price shock. Starting at 4:00:
>Eurointelligence also made the point that when talking about the strategic reserves of the G7, there are differences between the various the various G7 states. In some cases, such as France, the entire strategic reserve is held nationally by the French government. In other countries, and Eurointelligence didn’t name them, but in other countries, it is a mix with some of the reserves held by the government, but other reserves held by industry and by private companies and they might be less willing to release any part of their reserves. And anyway, the Euro Intelligence article made the further point that there are anyway legal limits to how much oil can be released from the strategic reserves in all of the G7 countries. There is apparently a legal obligation to retain at least 90 days of oil.
>90 days of usage of oil in the reserves to cover major emergencies such as a war, a natural disaster, things of that kind.
>And that the fact that the price of oil has reached a certain level is not in accordance with these laws the enough in itself or sufficient cause in itself to deplete these reserves beyond a certain level.
>Given what we have seen with bureaucratic rule-bending and breaking during the financial crisis and in Europe over the Ukraine war, these strictures are sure to be ignored as the crisis deepens. But to Mercouris’ point, we might not be there yet.
>Larry Johnson provided an in-depth treatment of the loss of oil supply, not just in terms of energy needs but also the impact on fertilizer supplies. He also has an important discussion of which countries are most exposed to these three vulnerabilities. Since there has been a fair bit of coverage on the risk of petroleum and gas shortfalls in various parts of the world, we’ll cite his sections on less-well-covered topic, fertilizer and combined risks from these three key needs. From his Choke Point: The Global Economic Consequences of The Persian Gulf Shutdown:
>Let’s look at the three commodity categories most exposed …crude oil and refined petroleum products, liquefied natural gas (LNG), and urea, the nitrogen fertiliser upon which modern agriculture depends…
>Of the three commodity shocks, the disruption of urea exports from the Persian Gulf may be the least immediately visible — but could prove the most enduring in its consequences……artificial fertiliser now sustains approximately half of the world’s population…
>''Crop yield decline. Without adequate nitrogen fertiliser, yields of staple crops — wheat, rice, maize, soy — would fall dramatically within one to two growing seasons. The effect would not be uniform: wealthy agricultural nations with domestic fertiliser capacity or large stockpiles (the United States, Canada, parts of Europe) would be more insulated. The developing world, particularly sub-Saharan Africa and South and Southeast Asia, would face acute shortages.
>Food price inflation. Global food prices, already elevated by conflict-related supply disruptions in recent years, would surge further. The Food and Agriculture Organisation’s food price index would likely break historical records…
>''Geopolitical instability. Historical evidence linking sharp food price spikes to political instability is robust. The Arab Spring of 2011 coincided with a period of record food prices. A global urea shortage and its downstream consequences for food security would heighten the risk of civil unrest, state fragility, and humanitarian crisis across numerous countries.
>Johnson’s analysis has the US as much less vulnerable than the rest of the world. However, he focused on the biggest overall risks. We live in a world of tightly integrated supply chains. As we pointed out in a post last week, petroleum provides critical inputs for other major industries. Hoisted from an important article by Craig Tindale:
>Note that Tindale cited semiconductor supply chains, refining and industrial chemicals and mining and metals extraction as early to suffer body blows.
>On a much cheerier note, Alon Mizrahi, who prides himself as an expert reader of the psychopathy in Israel, argues that Israel will not launch a nuclear strike on Iran. His talks tend to be very discursive but he does provide a transcript.
>The core observations from his new talk are that US and Israel interest in the war are more visibly diverging, and that Israel still is maniacally committed because it wildly overestimates US power and willingness and ability to fund reconstruction. But he argues despite the fervor, Isrealis are not suicidal and recognize that Iran would retain enough conventional strike power even after an Israel nuclear attack to completely destroy Israel infrastructure. Key parts:
>Already we are seeing, and this goes back to my separation angle, already we are seeing that the U.S. and Israel are not fully aligned…. The American angle on this is to remove this Ayatollah regime, as they call it, from power and let the Iranians rebuild their country. But this is not the Israeli agenda. Israel doesn’t care about who controls Iran. Israel wants to destroy Iran for sadistic pleasure, to satisfy its supremacy complex, and so on, and so on, and so on. But this is not the American calculation….
>Israel doesn’t care. Israel doesn’t care about tomorrow. And Israel has this feeling that whatever happens, the U.S. will always protect it. That whatever the U.S. has, it’s going to give it to Israel first. …Israel has this strange confidence that things are going to be this way forever. And they have no consideration for destroying the global economy. They think that even if the global economy is destroyed, the U.S. is going to bail them out and save them. The U.S. and other international mechanisms that they have a lot of influence on, they are going to save Israel and bail out Israel. So they are not bothered by this kind of an apocalypse or an Armageddon scenario. Whereas the U.S., even in its current state, is not interested in this kind of an outcome…
>Iran is going to work methodically to break Israel. This is not a symbolic inflicting of pain. This is something that goes way beyond this. Way beyond this. But this is it for now….
>And if Israel, so I’ve covered the U.S. part of it, but if Israel decides to use atomic weapons, it’s going to create the same global impact as the U.S. doing the same thing. But the difference would be that Israel, this small, extremely sensitive and globally hated country, has now made it legitimate for any country that so desires to nuke Israel…
>So for the US, using atomic weapons creates a risk scenario that is too much to bear and doesn’t make sense relative to the danger that Iran poses or the reward of getting rid of Iran. But for Israel, which doesn’t have this kind of considerations at all, using atomic weapons invites the kind of reaction that is most, by all likelihood, is going to finish Israel. Because maybe Iran will develop it itself. Maybe they will get one from Pakistan or from Russia. Or maybe North Korea is going to get crazy and decide that they have to get rid of Israel, because Israel is using atomic weapons. And this is not the 1940s.
>There are several countries with atomic weapons, and each one of them is like 50 to 100 times bigger than Israel, with a much bigger strategic depth. And their ability to cope with a scenario like this, which is crazy and apocalyptic, And Armageddon Lake is much better. Israel is toast in an instant.
>So for Israel, this is too much of an existential risk…Using nukes against Iran doesn’t guarantee the end of Iran or the end of the war. because much of Iran’s strategic capability is nuclear resistant. It won’t be destroyed because someone dropped adropped a nuclear bomb on Tehran or Isfahan or five cities and killed five million Iranians. It may only guarantee that Iran will itself apply the same logic and launch everything that it has, thousands of ballistic missiles, and hundreds of thousands of drones potentially, and cruise missiles, and everything that it has, not only at Israel, but its entire neighboring area, and cause another layer of destruction, that no one would be able to, maybe not survive, but survive normally. Because firing a thousand ballistic missiles at Israel guarantees the country is finished. Finished. Because this kind of barrage, if it’s directed at population centers, At Tel Aviv, five, three or four Israeli big cities. This ends Israel. This ends Israel..
>But Iran doesn’t want to be seen as the one actively ending Israel, because in this scenario, it might invite Israel to use the atomic option. So short of bringing Israel to this point, Iran is going to do everything to bring down Israel and Zionism.
>Given the US’ fondness for bombing fishing boat and claiming they were operated by drug-carrying nacro-terrorists, how sure can be be over what exactly the US shot, even assuming these images are current and from the Persian Gulf?
>From Reuters om US Navy tells shipping industry Hormuz escorts not possible for now:
>The U.S. Navy has refused near-daily requests from the shipping industry for military escorts through the Strait of Hormuz since the start of the war on Iran, saying the risk of attacks is too high for now…
>The Navy’s assessments spell continued disruption to Middle East oil exports and reflect a divergence from President Donald Trump’s statements that the U.S. is prepared to provide naval escorts whenever needed to restart regular shipments along the key waterway…
>A senior official with Iran’s Revolutionary Guards has said the strait is closed and Iran will fire on any ship trying to pass, Iranian media reported last week. Several ships have already been hit.
>From The Hill in Pentagon burned through $5.6B in munitions in first 2 days of Iran war:
>The Pentagon churned through about $5.6 billion worth of munitions during the first two days of the U.S. war with Iran, a congressional source familiar with the matter told The Hill Monday night.
>From Axios in Central banks have an oil price problem:
>The big picture: The geopolitical strains unleashed by the U.S. and Israeli attacks on Iran 11 days ago point to an ongoing reset … with downstream effects for global inflation, interest rates and more.
>Markets are pricing in a relatively temporary surge in energy prices, but they are just the latest in a series of supply shocks …
>I was remiss in not including this post on Glenn Greenwald’s site, yesterday, by Core Crystal, Iran War Supporters Invent a New and Absurd Justification: It Is All About China. A key part of its argument:
>At the very least, if China were really the motive, one would have expected the Trump administration to offer this theory — “this is the chance to counter America’s greatest geopolitical rival” — as a major justification to the American people. One would think they would be particularly motivated to do so, given the consensus of polling data showing that public support for this war is far weaker than for any American war in decades.
>Reader bob pointed out that the Strait of Hormuz monitoring sites are giving stuff-up readings, perhaps due to GPS jamming or spoofing:https://www.marinetraffic.com/en/ais/details/ships/shipid:459236/mmsi:538009584/imo:9561382/vessel:IMPERIOUS
>Does anyone know why they are reporting as way over speed? What would cause that? What sort of spoofing would lead to ships being reported at speeds of 100 knots?
>Finally, some cheekiness:
>Iran has asked its Gulf neighbors for the coordinates of Israeli and US shelters for strikes. TopWar
>See you tomorrow!https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2026/03/iran-war-iran-seeks-decolonization-of-gulf-region-iea-proposes-emergency-release-of-reserves-nuclear-strike-risk-assessment-iran-escalates-strikes.html >>2732956IRGC double dares the scum on the internet to post about that fucking chocolate again.
>>2732957Ngl it's hard to feel sympathy for any of these countries.
>>2732870Wish I had the skills to put British Sea Power's song of the same name over these videos. Would really fit the vibe of this week
>>2732914What did oman do tho
>>2732928There was a DSA protest at my local town
>>2732969Let the fats use the resources
Thinking about it, back in 1945 with the nuking of Japan, did the yanks even have a third bomb to drop? It probably would have bankrupted them. Maybe the japs could have held out?
>>2732956Iran just launched another TRVE NUKE
‘Iran’s president hints at return to negotiations’
Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian had phone calls with Russian and Pakistani leaders yesterday and today, and he hinted that Iran may be ready to return to negotiations.
But that’s under three conditions: Iran’s sovereign rights; reparations for the destruction caused in the country; and guarantees that such an aggression is not repeated.
Iran is waiting for a response from the other side, but they have said many times that they have no trust in them.
Hezbollah announces another attack on Israel
The Lebanese group says that it attacked the town of Shtula in northern Israel.
It said that the attacks were in response to Israel’s strikes on Lebanon, especially those on the southern suburbs of Beirut.
Israel earlier unleashed a heavy wave of strikes on the Lebanese capital, which our correspondents say rivaled any since the escalation of hostilities on March 2.
NO MORE OIL: Iran Teaches Trump a Lesson in Geopolitics (21:19)
>Richard Medhurst - 2 hours ago
>UN Journalist Richard Medhurst reports on Iran's closure of the Strait of Hormuz and how it impacts global energy supply.
> So the Iranians, their mission to the United Nations in New York, they just came out and and put out this the statement saying that the straight of Humus is not closed, which is kind of like I the way I read that was was that obviously it is closed and you're kind of just, you know, it's tongue and cheek. You're kind of trying to throw the uh US Israeli way of messaging, which is a very diplomatic way of saying lying, back in in their faces, right? Right. You're gaslighting them basically. Um because it very much is closed. It very much is closed. As a matter of fact, oil in the last hours, like you know, right now as we're going live, has surged past $100 a barrel[…]
>>2732968i'll try to some time. Post all related fire kino for the compilation.
>>2732969salalah port is used by mutts
>>2732976FUCK OFF CUCKTIN
At this rate, Iran will reach out and touch Djibouti.
>>2732979>>2732972Fucken legends. Thanks anons
>>2732986>Iran’s sovereign rights; reparations for the destruction caused in the country; and guarantees that such an aggression is not repeated.I mean, it's a good deal for Iran.
>>2732989Djibouti is a beautiful african WOMAN
>>2732983Oh, legitimate target i guess
>>2732901yeah but we released 440 million barrels from SPR today, it was 180 million barrels in 2022 lol, i assume that must be barely holding prices back for at least a month or two
Don't knock on map games, guys. "Pay reps" has got to be the most tilting demand you can make.
>>2732976>Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian had phone calls with Russian and Pakistani leaders yesterday and today, and he hinted that Iran may be ready to return to negotiations.>But that’s under three conditions: Iran’s sovereign rights; reparations for the destruction caused in the country; and guarantees that such an aggression is not repeated.Never going to get any of that except the sovereign rights which they already have. It just struck me how stupid it was for them to engage in bilateral negotiations with the US in the first place. They should've demanded these be trilateral or whatever negotiations with binding arbitration from the UNSC or whatever.
>>2733008But that not even be their fault either. Not like Cucktin and China would probably even help them out like that.
>>2732956there a source for this besides xitter?
Tick tock tick tock.
The UAE also convinced the US to prioritise them over other gulfies, which why they got the South Korean Patriot battery, so the rest must be just as bad if not worse.
https://xcancel.com/clary_co/status/2031828330274496747>>2733008Pezeshkian should commit seppuku on live TV for his cowardly failures. He's irrelevant, holder of an office that's now a paper position. The US strikes may not have been the end of Iran, but they are the end of Pezeshkian. The Rubicon has been crossed and he still wants to negotiate a red line. This ballless eunuch is almost as bad as the comedian that rules Ukraine.
>>2733008>>2733010They should enter a security agreement with the DPRK.
Choke Point: The Global Economic Consequences of The Persian Gulf Shutdown
<10 March 2026 by Larry C. Johnson 254 Comments
>The Persian Gulf is the most consequential body of water in the global economy. Its narrow exit — the Strait of Hormuz, just 33 kilometres wide at its narrowest point — acts as a valve through which flows an extraordinary share of the world’s energy and agricultural inputs. A sustained closure of that valve by Iran will trigger an economic shock with few historical precedents.
>Let’s look at the three commodity categories most exposed to such a disruption: crude oil and refined petroleum products, liquefied natural gas (LNG), and urea, the nitrogen fertiliser upon which modern agriculture depends. Together, these three flows underpin not just energy markets but global food security, industrial production, and the fiscal stability of dozens of nations.
>Roughly 20–21 million barrels of oil pass through the Strait of Hormuz every day, representing approximately 20% of global petroleum liquids consumption and around 30% of seaborne crude trade. The Gulf states bordering this corridor — Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Iraq, Iran, and Qatar — collectively hold the majority of the world’s proven oil reserves and a dominant share of global LNG export capacity.
>There is no adequate alternative. The East-West Pipeline across Saudi Arabia (Petroline) can carry around 5 million barrels per day, and the Habshan-Fujairah pipeline in the UAE adds limited bypass capacity. But these routes are insufficient to compensate for a full shutdown, and are themselves vulnerable to sabotage. For the first time in history the oil has stopped flowing.
>The abrupt closure of Persian Gulf oil exports will constitute the largest supply shock in the history of petroleum markets — larger in absolute terms than the 1973 Arab oil embargo or the Iranian Revolution of 1979, both of which removed far smaller volumes, if Iran maintains the blockade for a month or longer. The International Energy Agency estimates that OECD strategic reserves could theoretically cushion a disruption for several months, but the psychological and speculative impact on oil prices would be immediate and severe.A>nalysts and historical precedent suggest that oil prices could spike to anywhere between $150 and $250 per barrel — or potentially higher if markets judged the disruption likely to be prolonged. At such prices, the consequences would radiate rapidly through the global economy:
>Fuel costs and consumer prices. Petrol, diesel, aviation fuel, and heating oil prices have all surged. In major consuming economies — the United States, Europe, China, Japan, India — consumer price inflation will accelerate sharply with a prolonged disruption. Households will face dramatically higher energy bills and transport costs within weeks.
>Industrial contraction. Energy-intensive manufacturing sectors — petrochemicals, cement, steel, aluminium, glass — will face crippling input cost increases. Many would reduce output or shut down. Supply chains across the global economy would seize as freight costs soared.
>Aviation and shipping. Aviation fuel costs would make large swaths of commercial aviation economically unviable. Shipping freight rates, already elevated by fuel costs, would compound broader supply chain disruption.
>Recession risk. Every major oil price shock since the 1970s has been followed by a global economic recession. A shock of this magnitude would almost certainly do the same. The IMF and World Bank have historically estimated that a $10 per barrel sustained rise in oil prices reduces global GDP growth by around 0.2–0.5 percentage points; a shock ten or twenty times larger would be categorically different in nature.
>Here are the most vulnerable countries to this shock:
>Japan… South Korea… India… Taiwan… Sub-Saharan Africa Particularly Kenya, Ethiopia, Tanzania…
>LNG: The Gas Markets Upended
>Qatar is by some measures the world’s largest single exporter of liquefied natural gas, accounting for roughly 20–22% of global LNG trade. Together with the UAE and other Gulf producers, the Persian Gulf region represents a pillar of the global gas supply architecture. The disruption of this supply arrives into a global gas market already structurally tighter following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the reconfiguration of European energy supply.
>Japan is also the world’s largest or second-largest LNG importer, sourcing a dominant share from Qatar and other Gulf producers. LNG powers roughly a third of Japan’s electricity generation following its post-Fukushima nuclear drawdown. A loss of Gulf LNG would immediately threaten grid stability, with cascading effects across manufacturing, services, and residential supply. Japan has limited LNG storage capacity and no pipeline gas import option. The combined loss of Gulf oil and Gulf LNG would place Japan under extraordinary simultaneous pressure on two of its three primary energy sources.
>South Korea is consistently among the top three LNG importers globally, with Qatar one of its largest suppliers. Gas fires a substantial share of South Korea’s power generation. Like Japan, it has no pipeline import option and limited domestic gas production, making seaborne LNG the only supply mechanism. Power shortages would ripple through its semiconductor fabs and shipyards — both globally critical industries.
>European Union — Particularly Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium, and France
>China has surpassed Japan as the world’s largest LNG importer in recent years. It sources a significant share of its LNG from Qatar and other Gulf exporters. However, China has a partial mitigant unavailable to most others: significant pipeline gas imports from Russia and Central Asia, which could be ramped up to partly offset Gulf LNG losses. This makes China more resilient than Japan or South Korea, but still substantially exposed, particularly for provinces distant from pipeline infrastructure where LNG-fired power dominates.Pakistan
>Pakistan has become deeply reliant on LNG imports to fuel its power sector following the depletion of domestic gas reserves…
>Urea: The Overlooked Catastrophe Of the three commodity shocks, the disruption of urea exports from the Persian Gulf may be the least immediately visible — but could prove the most enduring in its consequences. Urea is the world’s most widely used nitrogen fertiliser. It is synthesised from natural gas via the Haber-Bosch process, and the Gulf states — particularly Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the UAE, and Oman — are among the world’s largest producers and exporters, collectively accounting for a significant share of global urea trade.
>The dependency of modern agriculture on synthetic nitrogen fertiliser is difficult to overstate. It is estimated that roughly half of the nitrogen in the human body today passed through the Haber-Bosch process at some point — meaning that artificial fertiliser now sustains approximately half of the world’s population. A collapse in urea supply would threaten crop yields on a global scale.
>Crop yield decline… Food price inflation…Geopolitical instability…
>India is the world’s largest urea importer by volume…Brazil is among the world’s top urea importers…Australia is one of the world’s most import-dependent nations for urea…Sub-Saharan African nations with significant smallholder agricultural sectors are acutely exposed to urea supply disruption…Southeast Asian rice-producing nations — Vietnam, Thailand, and the Philippines — rely heavily on imported urea to sustain their paddy yields.
>Japan is uniquely exposed on all three fronts: it is the world’s most Gulf-dependent major oil importer, one of the world’s largest LNG importers with no pipeline alternative, and a significant importer of Gulf urea for its rice and vegetable agriculture.
>India faces critical exposure on oil and urea, and significant exposure on LNG. What makes India’s situation particularly alarming is scale: with 1.4 billion people, a fuel subsidy system that creates enormous fiscal pressure when prices rise, minimal strategic reserves…
>Pakistan faces severe exposure on oil and LNG, and significant exposure on urea. Critically, Pakistan begins any crisis from a position of chronic fiscal and foreign exchange weakness…
>South Korea and Taiwan…face extreme oil and LNG exposure, and their economies are globally systemically important in ways that extend their vulnerability internationally
>Which Countries Are Most Insulated? Not all nations face equal exposure. Several are significantly better positioned to withstand a Gulf shutdown, either because they produce their own energy, have diversified supply, or hold large strategic reserves.
>The US has achieved near-energy-independence through its shale oil and gas revolution. It is a net oil exporter and the world’s largest LNG exporter. It produces large quantities of domestic urea. A Gulf shutdown would raise global prices and affect US consumers, but the supply shock would not directly threaten US energy security. The US is best placed of all major economies.
>Canada is a major oil sands and pipeline gas producer, self-sufficient in energy and a significant fertiliser exporter. Russia produces large volumes of oil, gas, and urea, and will likely benefit economically from a Gulf shutdown through higher global prices for its exports. Its energy self-sufficiency is near-total.Norway. A major oil and gas producer with minimal Gulf dependency. Norway would benefit from higher global energy prices. Brazil (energy). Brazil’s deep-water oil production makes it largely self-sufficient in crude oil. Its LNG exposure is limited. Its vulnerability is concentrated in urea, where it is critically dependent.
>The 1973 oil embargo — which removed roughly 4 million barrels per day from global markets — caused a fourfold increase in oil prices and contributed to severe recessions across the industrialised world. The current potential disruption would be five times larger in volume terms. The 1979 Iranian Revolution removed approximately 4–5 million barrels per day temporarily; the Iran-Iraq War’s tanker attacks in the 1980s rattled markets without fully closing the Strait. No historical episode provides a true precedent for a complete, sustained Gulf shutdown.
>Strategic petroleum reserves maintained by IEA member nations — totalling around 1.2–1.5 billion barrels — could theoretically replace several months of lost Gulf supply if fully released. In practice, coordinated release at the required scale has never been attempted, and the logistical, political, and market-calming challenges would be formidable. Strategic gas and fertiliser reserves are far more limited and will be exhausted much faster.Conclusion
>The Persian Gulf is not merely an important trade route — it is a structural dependency baked into the global economy over seven decades. The simultaneous disruption of oil, LNG, and urea flows from the region constitute a polycrisis of exceptional severity: an energy shock, an industrial shock, and a food security crisis arriving together, reinforcing one another, and challenging the capacity of governments, international institutions, and markets to respond.
>Decades of optimisation around cost efficiency — concentrating energy production, fertiliser manufacture, and shipping in the most economical locations — has created a system that is efficient in stable conditions but catastrophically fragile under stress. If Iran is able to sustain the closure of the Strait of Hormuz for a month or more, it will enjoy significant leverage in negotiations to end the blockade.https://sonar21.com/choke-point-the-global-economic-consequences-of-the-persian-gulf-shutdown/>>2732891>>2732957 >>2733013The "spiritual Dubai" quote you're replying to is a joke from xitter but on IRIB they really did say "kill the idea of Dubai" lol
>>2733017What unlimited unconditional support for genocide and the Pissrael to a mf
>>2733008Why are you seething? Hormuz will remain closed, Israel will remain under fire, and those fucking comprador Sunni monarchies become less and less stable.
>>2733020Lol wut? Seething? The sheer projection. Look I'm talking about from their perspective. From my perspective Israel getting bombed is awesome, but from their perspective, they didn't want to enter into this war, they don't want to be in this war.
Has anyone seen any solid analysis on the current state of the Zionist entity's economy, and its long-term outlook? Surely it isn't a good look for investors that these retards basically crashed the entire world economy and might create a famine here and there
>>2733008USraeli guarantees obviously mean nothing so I don't know why he would ask for that. They need to get lifting of sanctions.
>>2733007stop posting old footage retard
>>2733025Not completely. If they succeed in establishing deterrence in this war in some way (most likely via Hormuz blockade, but overwhelming the AD of the Israelis is also another but unlikely angle), then the whole war would be better for them in the long-term.
>>2733030That one is new. Check
>>2732463 >>2733030post your archive of sourced and dated footage then
>>2733028>USraeli guarantees obviously mean nothing so I don't know why he would ask for that. Yeah which is why they need some kind of agreement involving China and Russia that would guaruntee the US can't just abandon the deal like last time. I forgot Russia and China were involved in the JCPOA, lot of good that did. China won't sanction the US or do anything for America just pissing on deals they're involved in.
Everyone is in the JCPOA still except America and Iran lol.
>>2733032Might be that Israel and the US won't want to be deterred to avoid setting a precedent, they'd go scorched earth, escalate while Iran ruins the global economy and other actors enter the play…
>>2733047They're not that retarded.
At least, I hope so >>2732957>has now made it legitimate for any country that so desires to nuke Israel…too bad there's zero candidates able to do that
>>2733046lol someone pls post the its over compilation
>>2733017This shows that this was some 4D chess move against china was stupid even if true. Looks like the U.S fucked over their own vassals in Asia for more than china
>>2733053Certified sizzlegang
Here’s what happened today
US President Donald Trump has claimed that the US military “knocked out” Iran’s leadership “twice”, without giving further details, and destroyed the Iranian navy.
Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said Tehran remains committed to regional peace but insists the war can only end if its “legitimate rights” are recognised.
A spokesman for Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) said major attacks against US military bases in the Middle East would continue.
The UN Security Council has voted in favour of a resolution sponsored by the Gulf Cooperation Council demanding that Iran stop its attacks against Gulf nations.
Israel continues to launch powerful air strikes on Beirut and across Lebanon, as over 800,000 people are displaced by the conflict.
Kuwait, Qatar and Saudi Arabia said they intercepted incoming projectiles.
The International Energy Agency (IEA) has released strategic oil reserves in an attempt to counter soaring global energy prices.
>>2733017>Here are the most vulnerable countries to this shock:>Japan… South Korea… India… Taiwan… Sub-Saharan Africa Particularly Kenya, Ethiopia, Tanzania…But leftypol will tell you that this will hurt the American economy worst of all for some reason, I guess because "they deserve it."
>>2733062Well, it will since it affects the treats Amerikkkans will get too
>>2733062Some thirdies might die yes, but it's a sacrifice the western maoists are willing to make
>>2733062Euros will also suffer due to an LNG rather than oil shortage.
War On Iran: Bank Attacks – Mine Fakes – Price Manipulation – More THAAD To Destroy
<Moon of Alabama - March 11, 2026
>Last night Israel and U.S. fighter jets destroyed Bank Sepah’s data center in Tehran. Bank Sepah does the salaries payment for Iran’s military personal. https://www.forbes.com/sites/conormurray/2026/03/11/bank-stocks-slide-after-iran-threatens-to-target-us-israeli-financial-institutions/
>Following the strike Iran announced that it would target U.S. and Israeli banks in the region. Citibank and HSBC instructed staff in Dubai and other Gulf countries to evacuate their offices.
>This is another step in the retreat of the U.S. from the Middle East.
>While the Strait of Hormuz remains closed for most tankers, Iran’s export of crude oil, mainly to China, has increased:
>Since the war began, around 15 ships have crossed the strait with most being dark-fleet vessels moving Iranian oil to China and India, according to Lloyds List Intelligence. Many are small Chinese tankers that make their presence and origin known to the Revolutionary Guard through loudspeakers and shortwave radio.
>The U.S. has claimed, without evidence, that Iran has started to lay mines in the Strait of Hormuz. I do regard that as fake-news and unlikely to happen. Mines are a last resort as they do not discriminate between a ship’s nationality. They would also hit Iranian and Chinese tankers.
>The U.S bombed some 16 random boats along the Iranian cost of Hormuz claiming that they were used to lay mines. But any boat with a $50 metal rack in rear, a mine technician and a map can be used to lay mines. (The mine technician and map are optional). Iran also has land based MLRS rocket launchers which can be used to remotely mine the Strait.
>Mines can not be removed while a war is ongoing. Minesweepers are not armed and unprotected against attacks. In perfect timing the last four U.S. minesweepers stationed in the Gulf for the last 35 years and built for that purpose just arrived in Texas to be dismantled. They were replaced by three Little Crappy Ships (LCS) with mine sweeping equipment. LCS have never been tested in that role.
>Iran has many other means beyond mines, like missiles or fast boats, to prevent ships it does not want to pass from using the Strait.
>The U.S. Navy knows this. That is why it has rejected all requests to escort ships through the Strait.
>The U.S. and its allies are doing their best to temporarily (archived) hold down crude prices by manipulating future markets and by releasing reserves. But it is impossible to do so for other products:
>Jet fuel has doubled or even trebled from its previous level of around $90 a barrel – a move that dwarfs what has happened to crude.
>The UN Trade and Development department has a good overview about the consequences of the closure of Hormuz Strait.
>It blocks 39% of global seaborne crude trade, some 25% of seaborne LPG/LNG trade, 20% of refined products and 13% of chemicals including fertilizer.
>Usually 67% of global Urea supplies, a major fertilizer, is coming from the Persian Gulf. Without fertilizers food prices will go up, especially in poor countries, with major social consequences following a few months later.
>With at least four THAAD ballistic missile defense systems in the Middle East disabled, the U.S. is scrambling to find replacements. It is now dismantling THAAD and Patriot system it had stationed in South Korea.
>When the U.S. deployed those in 2016/17 the Chinese were miffed. They used economic screws to punish South Korea: tourism was stopped, K-Pop was banned, a South Korean chain store in China was shut down. Now, suddenly, the U.S. needs those systems for its own purpose and South Korea is left on its own. It is another country that learns the real value, i.e. none, of U.S. promises to protect it.
>A Patriot system from South Korea is now being set up in Turkey to defend a U.S. early warning radar station from attacks by Iran. It is unknown yet where the THAAD system will go. But as Iran was able to destroy at least four of that kind it is unlikely to survive any exposure.
>The U.S. and Israel can not win against Iran. They have not verbalized (archived) any consistent war aim. Their real aim may thus well be to dismantle its state of Iran and to collapse it into ethnic balkanization:
>Ultimately, almost two weeks into the war, the fundamental problem is unchanged: not only did the US and Israel start an illegal and criminal war that has already brought much death and destruction to Iran and to the wider Middle Eastern region — but it looks like they did so with the idea that causing widespread death and destruction would in itself deliver results, or even worse with death and destruction as a strategic goal in itself.https://www.moonofalabama.org/2026/03/war-on-iran-bank-attacks-mine-fakes-price-manipulation-more-thaad-to-destroy.html >>2732973they were already going to lose and on the verge of surrendering
amerikkka never actually needed to nuke japan, they just did it because they love killing people
>>2733067That's right. It was me. ME! I DID IT ALL!
>>2732973The nuke was a flex, not necessary for winning the war
>>2733020nta.
remember when I told you yesterday about the bahranian planes leaving the airport?
hit.
>>2733078Oh, so the US
did occupy it. Yeah, I'd skedaddle, too.
[SCOOP] Tehran offers Kurds concessions, Kurdish leaders have not answered
Sources speaking to The Amargi said Iranian Kurdish parties have been in contact with the U.S. about possible cooperation, even as Washington’s plans remain unclear. Iran, the sources said, is also trying to keep the Kurds out of the war by offering post-war concessions, but Kurdish leaders have not yet responded.
While waves of air and missile strikes continue to hit Iran’s military infrastructure, the growing intensity of operations in the western parts of the country – especially Kurdistan – has increased speculation that a new front could open in this conflict.
Based on information received by The Amargi, a significant part of the military and security infrastructure in Kurdistan has either been completely destroyed or seriously damaged as a result of these attacks.
Two officers of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) in Kurdistan told The Amargi that the recent strikes against Iranian military bases and infrastructure have been heavy and, in some cases, disrupted the combat organization of affected units, because forces now have limited facilities for reorganization and rest. However, these two officers based in Sanandaj (Sine) and Kermanshah stressed that Iranian military forces still maintain considerable capability. Despite damage to infrastructure, human losses have been limited, and their ability to maintain ground control remains significant.
By March 7, the Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) reported that the death toll had exceeded 1,205 people, including at least 194 children. In Israel, so far, 14 people have been killed and around 1,200 injured.
Will the Kurds Become a New Front in the War?
Washington is sending the Kurds mixed signals, leaving them uncertain as the White House, Secretary of Defense, and Department of State make contradicting statements:
On March 3, Axios reported that President Trump called Iraqi Kurdish leaders Masoud Barzani and Bafel Talabani, as the U.S.-Israel campaign against Iran escalated.
A few days later, on March 6, Trump said it would be “wonderful” and he’d be “all for it” if Kurdish forces crossed from Iraqi Kurdistan into Iran. But on March 8, Trump pulled back, saying, “We’re not looking to the Kurds going in,” and warned that he didn’t want Kurds to be harmed and killed.
To move on with any plans, the Kurds are seeking guarantees before big promises.
Adding to the volatile situation, Turkish officials also got involved in the media frenzy, as Turkey’s foreign minister, Hakan Fidan, said that U.S. Foreing Secretary Marco Rubio reassured Ankara that Washington has “no intention” of arming Iranian Kurds.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has also kept U.S. plans deliberately vague, declining to publicly say who the United States would coordinate with.
For the Kurds, it feels like the old story: high stakes, loud signals, and still no guarantees. To move on with any plans, the Kurds are seeking guarantees before making big promises.
Some news outlets have reported that weapons were transferred to Kurdish regions in recent months and that thousands of Kurdish volunteers have been prepared for possible operations. The Guardian, quoting U.S. officials, wrote that Washington might provide air support if Kurdish forces cross the Iranian border.
In response, Tehran issued warnings regarding any Kurdish movement: The secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council said that Iranian armed forces have warned Kurdish parties that if they enter the war, “they will be dealt with.”
Others within the Iranian government, such as Ali Larijani, reacted by referring to U.S. policy toward Kurds in Syria, saying “Kurds are wise people and they know the American mercantile mentality and [they know that] they have no loyalty.”
The Kurdish parties – despite declaring readiness to enter the conflict – have so far taken no concrete action.
The Iranian government has also suggested that if they do not support the US-Israeli attacks, Tehran may be willing to negotiate and offer concessions after the war.
Baba Sheikh Hosseini, secretary-general of the Khabat Party, said that Kurdish forces are ready to act if the central government weakens. However, a member of the PJAK’s leadership council believes that “Without control of the skies, a Kurdish operation would be a massacre.”
The Amargi has learned that Kurdish parties have not yet decided to enter the military campaign because there are no clear guarantees from the United States regarding protection and defense of Kurdish forces and Kurdish cities against Iranian missile and ground attacks.
At the same time, according to The Amargi’s sources, the Iranian government has reportedly warned these parties but also suggested that if they do not support the US-Israeli attacks, Tehran may be willing to negotiate and offer concessions after the war. The coalition of Iranian Kurdish parties has not yet responded to these proposals.
Armed Forces of Iranian Kurdish Parties
Iranian Kurdish armed parties gradually withdrew from inside Iran in the first years after the 1979 revolution, following military operations by the newly established Islamic Republic against Kurdish regions. Most of them settled in Iraq, especially in the Kurdistan Region.
Although their military activity declined after the Iran-Iraq war, these parties kept their armed structures and at times clashed with Iranian forces during later decades. Some of their fighters also participated in the war against ISIS in Iraq and Syria alongside Kurdistan Region peshmerga forces and helped defend areas such as Sinjar.
Today, a significant part of these forces are organized under a coalition called the Alliance of Political Forces of Iranian Kurdistan. The coalition was formed on February 22, 2026.
The coalition is working on establishing a joint military command and mechanisms for political and diplomatic coordination among member parties.
Estimates of the number of fighters vary, but many sources put the total between 5,000 and 10,000 fighters, mostly based in border areas of the Kurdistan Region of Iraq.
Among them, the Party for a Free Life in Kurdistan (PJAK), which has ideological links to the now-dissolved Kurdistan Worker’s Party (PKK), has the largest and most organized armed force. It is estimated that the party has around 3,000 fighters and a network of supporters and local forces inside Kurdish regions of Iran. Over the years, reports have indicated that parts of the border area between the Kurdistan Region and Iran – near Kalar toward areas close to the Turkish border – have at times been under the influence or control of its forces.
The Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran (PDKI), the oldest Kurdish political party in Iran, also has a significant social base among Kurds. According to some estimates, it has about 1,200 armed fighters, while also having the ability to mobilize more supporters inside Iran.
Other parties in the coalition – including the Kurdistan Freedom Party (PAK), Komala of Kurdistan Toilers, Komala of Iranian Kurdistan, and the Khabat Organization – have smaller armed units but can each mobilize several hundred fighters. Most of these forces are organized as peshmerga units, guerrilla formations trained for asymmetric warfare, and mountain operations. Many of their fighters have experience in clashes with Iranian forces, and some also fought against ISIS in Iraq and Syria.
>>2733079>Pepe Escobarpepeslop and ritterslop need to be banned
Literally every country would rather risk famine than stop being pals with Pissrael lmao
>>2733017>>Japan… South Korea… India… Taiwan… Sub-Saharan Africa Particularly Kenya, Ethiopia, Tanzania…but I was told yesterday that China was being choked by this US master plan.
>>2733084I think expelling American ambassadors is the bigger issue.
>>2732973>Thinking about it, back in 1945 with the nuking of Japan, did the yanks even have a third bomb to drop?Yeah they did have a third bomb. It is the bomb of meme fame named "demoncore."
>It probably would have bankrupted them. Maybe the japs could have held out?The nukes were just a fancy show. The US bombed the entire country of Japan to the ground with conventional bombs and incendiaries. I was watching this interview with one of the pilots talking about how the firestorms were so huge they would see wooden doors go flying past their airplane in the middle of the sky.
Picrel isn't Hiroshima or Nagasaki.
>>2733067yes the western maoists… in washington… controlling wall street and the cia
<Somaliland will allow Israel to gather intelligence and conduct operations against Yemeni group, sources tell Bloomberg
>Israel is exploring building a base in Somalia's breakaway region of Somaliland from which it can target Yemen’s Houthis, according to a Bloomberg report on Wednesday. In December, Israel became the first country to recognise Somaliland as a sovereign state. Somaliland will allow Israel to gather intelligence on and conduct operations against the Houthis, two Somaliland officials speaking on condition of anonymity told Bloomberg. Israel has laid the groundwork for a possible base in the region: in June, a group of Israeli security officials visited the Somaliland coastline, people familiar with the matter said. There they surveyed the beaches, in search of a potential site for a base or installation to fight the Houthi movement, which is officially known as Ansar Allah. The site would be around 260km from Yemen, across the Gulf of Aden. Israel also rented rooms fitted with blast-proof windows on the top floor of a hotel in Hargeisa, people familiar with the matter said, as it scouted a location for an embassy. “In terms of security, we will have a strategic relationship and that encompasses a lot of things,” Khadar Hussein Abdi, Somaliland’s minister of the presidency, told Bloomberg. “We haven’t discussed with them if it becomes a military base, but definitely there will be an analysis at some point.” Shortly after Israeli recognition of the breakaway region was confirmed on 26 December, Somaliland officials travelled to Israel to deepen security ties, sources told Bloomberg.
>The Houthi movement, a close ally of Iran, has yet to weigh in since the US and Israel attacked Iran over a week ago. Iran has retaliated to the war by attacking Israel as well as targets in countries all over the region. Why Yemen’s Houthis are hesitating to join Iran war, for now Read More »During Israel’s war on Gaza, the Houthis launched missile and drone strikes on international shipping in the Red Sea as well as on Israel, in an act of solidarity with Palestinians.An Israeli general told Bloomberg that a special intelligence unit was set up on the Houthis, who the general said had hundreds of rockets that could reach Israel. While Israel had been discussing Somaliland recognition for years, the deal was sealed in December because of Israeli intelligence officers viewing the Houthis as one of Israel’s greatest threats, regional diplomats and a senior Israeli military official told Bloomberg. As a result of the Red Sea attacks, maritime traffic via the Gulf of Aden dropped 70 percent in two years. As for the attacks on Israel, strikes in September 2025 briefly halted traffic at Ramon Airport in southern Israel, while another broke Israeli air defences and struck a hotel in the resort city of Eilat.
>Somaliland has been part of the unified Somali Republic since 1960, but declared its independence in 1991 and established a de facto state. Although it has had unofficial diplomatic relations with several countries, its sovereignty had not been recognised by any permanent UN member state until Israel did so in December. In August, Ted Cruz, the Republican senator from Texas, wrote to President Donald Trump urging him to formally recognise Somaliland. Former Somaliland president demands agreement with Israel be made public Read More » Cruz said Hargeisa was seeking to strengthen ties with Israel and had voiced support for the Abraham Accords. One of the locations under consideration for an Israeli base or installation is an area of high terrain about 100km west of the port city of Berbera, sources told Bloomberg. The city is where the UAE, a close ally of Somaliland, has a military airstrip and a harbour run by its logistics company DP World. MEE reported in October that Somaliland's Berbera port was part of a network of bases along the Gulf of Aden built by the UAE. The Somaliland government accepted an Emirati bid in 2017 to establish a military base in Berbera. Satellite imagery shows the naval base in Berbera has been transformed from a stalled project into a near-completed facility, with advanced infrastructure including a modern military port, a deep-water dock and an airstrip with hangars and support facilities. The runway at Berbera is 4km long, allowing it to receive heavy transport aircraft and fighter jets. In January, Somalia cut all commercial and security ties with the UAE, citing DP World’s ports in Berbera and Bosaso, the latter of which is in Puntland, another semi-autonomous region of Somalia. The administrations in Somaliland and Puntland both rejected Somalia’s announcement.
>>2733088>>2732973And they were prepared to make more quickly too.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Third_Shot
>Lieutenant General Leslie Groves expected to have another "Fat Man" atomic bomb ready for use on 19 August, with two to three more in September and a further three in October;[3] On 10 August, he sent a memorandum to General George C. Marshall: "the next bomb … should be ready for delivery on the first suitable weather after 17 or 18 August." The memo today contains hand-written comment written by Marshall: "It is not to be released over Japan without express authority from the President."[3] At the cabinet meeting that morning, United States President Harry S. Truman discussed these actions. United States Secretary of Defense James Forrestal paraphrased Truman as saying "there will be no further dropping of the atomic bomb," while former Vice President and Secretary of Commerce Henry A. Wallace recorded in his diary that: "Truman said he had given orders to stop atomic bombing. He said the thought of wiping out another 100,000 people was too horrific. He didn't like the idea of killing, as he said, 'all those kids.'"[4] The previous order that the target cities were to be attacked with atomic bombs "as made ready" was thus modified.[5] There was already discussion in the War Department about conserving the bombs in production for Operation Downfall, and Marshall that the remaining cities on the target list be spared attack with atomic bombs. These cities, the presumed targets for a third bomb, were Kokura, Niigata and Yokohama. >>2733091I'm sorry to inform you that is a shoop. That's the vid where he showed off the Declaration of Independance he had hung up in the oval office.
>>2733095translating article : israel is planning 9/11 2
>>2733095Based hasbara. That would require modifying one of the Kilo-class subs to launch drones. Or just have one of those fictional ships, where containers are actually rocket launchers in disguise.
>>2733086Rumor has it that Beijing won't even tap into commercial crude oil reserves. Sinopec's some enterprises still have to continue de-loading and halting production. Toluene exports are prohibited, and next month Sinopec will cut production by 20%. For example, currently de-loading are Sinopec Wuhan, Fuling Refinery, Chengdu Petrochemical, Fude, Sanjiang, Far East United, Zhejiang Petrochemical, China National Chemical Engineering, and China National Chemical Quanzhou, totaling around 5 million tons. Calculated at an average de-loading of 20%, that's a monthly reduction of over 80,000 tons.
China has the world’s largest coal-to-oil tech and production capacity. Its drawback is it’s expensive and only makes sense if oil is at about $90 per barrel which is where it’s currently at. And China has a huge amount of coal.
>>2733086>>2733054it doesnt have to be 4d chess or even a conscious plan to be necessitated by imperialist logic of late stage capitalism experiencing a declining rate of profit. its not even a decision an individual makes. capital is an impersonal force "nice" capitalists get replaced. foreign policy is determined by the state as an organ for class rule, a forum for the balancing of competing interests between different capital owners. no chess necessary the empire is a headless ghoul animated by profit alone
>>2733053And I know it's over – still I cling
I don't know where else I can go
It's over and over and over and over
Over and over
>>2733104>zog made me do thisaverage amerikkkan pigdog
Pepe Escobar: Iran Has Served the US an Eviction Notice
>The new Supreme Leader of Iran, Mojtaba Khamenei, 57, chosen by the Assembly of Experts, so far has not spoken a single word in public.>The IRGC is speaking for him. From the start, Mojtaba was the preferred candidate to succeed Ayatollah Khamenei, the man who planned in meticulous detail how to break the Empire’s back.>The IRGC is now showing to the whole planet, especially the Global South,
>These are only some of the most prominent conditions for a possible ceasefire – assuming Tehran will ever trust the United States to comply:>1.Removal of all sanctions against Iran and release of all of Iran’s frozen assets.>2.Recognition of Iran’s right to enrich uranium on its own soil.>3.Full compensation for the damages caused by the imposed war.>4.Extradition of Iranian 5th columnists abroad, and the end of orchestrated media campaigns against Tehran.>5.No attacks on Hezbollah in Lebanon or Ansarallah in Yemen.>6.The dismantling of all US military bases in West Asia.>Let that slowly sink in. Here we have Iran telling the self-described, hyperbolic most powerful military in the history of the world to essentially surrender.>Now compound it with IRGC Aerospace Force Commander.
>Majid Mousavi announcing that, “after neutralizing US air defense layers in the region, Iran is transitioning to a new missile doctrine. From now on, no missiles carrying warheads lighter than 1 ton will be used. Waves of missile attacks will be more frequent and more widespread.”>That is already translating, in practice, as the IRGC launching more Kheibar Shekan solid-fuel medium-range ballistic missiles, as it happened earlier this week on Tel Aviv and on the US Fifth Fleet in Bahrain.>The code for this first operation, significantly, was “Labbayk ya Khamenei”. That means “At Your Service, O Khamenei”. Read it as the first Iranian operation explicitly dedicated to the new Supreme Leader[…]https://sputnikglobe.com/20260310/pepe-escobar-iran-has-served-the-us-an-eviction-notice-1123802375.html so did the capitalists realize they cant recover the economy purely with vibes yet? prices are going back up
>>2733082Mossad/CIA glowies first.
>>2733095it doesn't matter. does iran have the capability? the answer is yes
>>2733110i heard boomers were saying things like they were worried that if too many troops in iran then china or the cartels might invade the US from north or south. this progapanda is for people like that.
>>2733112He was injured lightly in opening attacks, iirc.
>>2733106What happened to that anon that said Irans launch capabilities were degraded and there was a 90% interception rate?
>>2733110Pretty funny they’re thinking of doing a false flag after starting the war instead of before it. Trump is making G.W look like genius
>>2733124he got carpet bombed by hezbollah
>>2733124IDF is currently distracted and Langley is too busy spamming cuck porn on /pol/
>>2733095Let's say they do manage to launch a few and destroy some military hardware somewhere in California and/or kill some people. I just don't see it meaningfully shifting the balance in their favor unless they can repeatedly do that. Also it would increase burger support for the war. And anything the FBI says is untrustworthy bullshit.
>>2733027the PMC media and academia are avoiding the topic, but the israeli economy is in the shitter. they're mostly sponsored by the US, the tech and arms are a diplomatic matter, but their civilian economy is very much cooked: tourism is dead, can't sell cosmetics or pharmaceuticals, and crops are rotting on the vine because they can't be reliably shipped and do not sell if they arrive.
>>2733095Amerifats are just retarded enough (4th grade reading level) to believe this
>>2733076buddy the US literally has zero public transport. Americans will go bankrupt within a few weeks trying to afford gas regardless of how much profit oil companies are making.
>>2733124It's still true. Iran's ballistic missile capabilities won't last until the end of the month.
>>2733027Shir Hever has written on the israeli economy for many years. his Phd was on privatisation and the military in the 2000s and he works with Electronic Intifada.
>>2733143how many more months will we be saying "Iran won't last until the end of the month"
>>2733143>three more weeksThat's still pretty bad.
>>2733147it's Two Weeks surely
>>2733143>zios hate mamdani<felix hates mandani>zios insist isntreal stronk and invincible<felix insists isntreal stonk and invincibleHmmmmm
>felix says everyone on the left is complicit because they do nothing and spend money on treats<felix does nothing and spends money on treats >>2733152>i thinkMans those gorilli0ns to palantir are well spent
>>2733152Oh they’re for sure prepping for a false flag. Again really stupid to do it a week after starting the unprovoked war. If they do an operation northword it’s going to backfire massively.
>>2733152you think or you know? he talks like an annoying teenager
>iran about to learn why my elementary had lead in the paint
>iran about to learn why my dad never loved me
>>2733157He neither thinks nor knows but follows the dao
>>2733152>>2733156If they really plan to do a falseflag in California it might actually trigger American balkanization because no one is falling for this shit.
>>2733162
Didnt israel ask for ceasefire?
Hows the weather in ashkelon?
>>2733158>iran about to learn why my elementary had lead in the paintLol, my elementary school literally had to have our pergola closed down for awhile after they realized it was painted with lead paint. That's where we ate our lunch and shit. I remember we used to chip that paint off for fun.
>>2733166Yeah aparently your supposed feel proud we have 1000 , 100 million dolar airplanes, because it defends our freedom everyone of them costs as much as a whole ass school but forget about that just look at the planes and feel proud
>>2733145>>2733158um sweaty i was told on this site that american workers actually benefit from their govt. spending trillions on wars und wunderwaffen instead of schools and hospitals
Iran about to learn why a 16 year old motorist in north dakota died after she got accidient and the nearest hospital was one hour away because of rural hospital closures
Iran about to learn a father of 4 was killed by a levy collapse
Iran about why a helicopter crashed into an airplane and killed 60 people in washington dc after faa staffing was low because ATC wasnt getting paid
the strait is so important because half the world's oil goes through it right? as well as other imports
>>2733152so feds are planning to bomb americans until they fall in line
>>2733173I think the culture is changing we will see less glorifciation of the military soon
>>273317620%
You're thinking of South China Sea.
>>2733180hold this man down and feed him his own testicles
>>2733178I DO NOT CARE ABOUT NOVA!
MY NAME!
>>2733181this country is still retarded and you're in a marxist echo chamber. i watched local news the other day interview normies about iran and gas prices and they were like standing at the pump "well if we gotta pay a little more to stop the terrorists then so be it". democuck state btw.
>>2733186Maybe so but the news is filtered the news isnt as likely to retransmit something critical especially if its zionist occupied news like barry weiSS's nbc
>>2733151Israel isn't invincible, Hezbollah is beating them quite badly right now, but Cuckran doesn't have enough missiles to win this war. Iran has to extract a toll from the US and Israel or they will just disengage and leave behind a shattered Iran that's not capable of rebuilding, then start the war again in a year or so when they have replenished their stocks of interceptors.
>>2733186Well, they're gonna regret it the longer this goes on like they did with all their war attempts
This TOR guy who thinks everyone must use guerrilla warfare (even when it's not even applicable) is so fucking annoying.
Iran's Revolutionary Guard announces joint operation with the resistance in Lebanon:
The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in Iran announced in its statement No. 33 the implementation of the 40th wave of Operation “True Promise 4”, in conjunction with the Islamic Resistance in Lebanon.
In detail, the statement explained that the operation targeted more than 50 sites in the occupied territories, stressing that the strikes imposed a new field reality on the Israeli enemy.
<Targeting Israeli and American military bases
The statement added that "the operation was carried out over 5 hours under the blessed symbol, O Commander of the Faithful, peace be upon him," using a combination of "Qadr, Emad, Kheirbashkan and Fatah" missiles by the Revolutionary Guard, along with intensive drone and missile attacks by Hezbollah.
The statement also reported that the strikes targeted Israeli military bases from the north of the occupied territories (Haifa) to its center, Tel Aviv, and its south, Beersheba.
He added that during this large-scale attack, the American bases of “Al-Azraq” and “Al-Kharj” in the region were also subjected to effective missile strikes by the Revolutionary Guard.
<Israeli media: "Residents" are in a state of constant alert
For its part, the Israeli media reported that the past 24 hours witnessed a significant increase in missile launches from Iran towards "Israel," with escalating losses among soldiers, adding that "the population" is in a constant state of alert and is forced to hide in shelters.
Israeli media had previously reported that sirens continued to sound across Israel for hours, amid reports of explosions in the central and northern regions.
<Islamic resistance targets Israeli settlements with dozens of rockets
Meanwhile, the Islamic Resistance in Lebanon announced the launch of "Operation Eaten Straw ," confirming that it targeted with dozens of missiles the settlements that had been previously warned to evacuate within a 5-kilometer zone of the Lebanese-Palestinian border.
The resistance added that, as part of the “Eaten Straw” operations, and within the framework of the warning it directed to the settlements of “Kiryat Shmona” and “Nahariya”, they were targeted with rocket barrages, in addition to targeting the “Misgav” base and the “Yudefat” military industries company northeast of the occupied city of Haifa with dozens of rockets.
It also indicated that its fighters targeted the “Ami’ad” base north of Lake Tiberias and the “Shamshon” base west of Lake Tiberias with salvos of qualitative missiles, in addition to the headquarters of the Northern Command in the Israeli occupation army (Dado base) and the “Ein Zeitim” base north of occupied Safed with salvos of qualitative missiles.
<More than 100 missiles in minutes from Lebanon
Israeli Channel 12 reported that more than 100 rockets were launched from Lebanon towards the north within minutes, bringing the total to 200 within 3 hours.
Earlier on Wednesday, Iran’s Revolutionary Guard announced the launch of the 39th wave of Operation “True Promise 4” in the name and memory of Iran’s martyrs, and in particular the martyr Amir Mousavi, against American targets in the region.
He pointed out that the American bases in the Gulf were destroyed by the “Qadr” multi-warhead, “Khorramshahr” multi-warhead, and “Emad” missiles.
>>2733195did no one ever tell him that his dancing looks like he's giving two handjobs?
>>2733199He knows. He’s recreating his afternoon delights with Big Bill Clinton
>>2733189but that's the thing: the IRGC isn't disengaging, they slowed down after the initial barrage, but the initial barrage eliminated the missile defense radars. they've maintained a steady rate of fire that is unrelenting compared to the immediately exhausted missile defense stockpiles and pivoting equipment from taiwan, SEA, and eastern europe is only going to deepen the shortage. in the meantime Iran has operational superiority hitting any target they can identify without reproachment.
>>2733195>>2733199>did no one ever tell him that his dancing looks like he's giving two handjobs?We love it when the president does his jerking two dudes off dance! Don’t we folks?
>>2733181Remember this gem from Brian Williams in his first term?
>While anchoring live coverage, Williams drew criticism for describing the Pentagon's footage of the missile launches as "beautiful" three times in 30 seconds. He famously quoted Leonard Cohen, saying, "I am tempted to quote the great Leonard Cohen: 'I am guided by the beauty of our weapons'".He wasn't the only liberal that started falling over themselves to praise Trump for that strike right after they were just calling him Satan incarnate.
>On April 7, 2017, Zakaria stated on New Day, "I think Donald Trump became president of the United States last night". He argued that by enforcing international norms against chemical weapons, Trump had adopted the traditional rhetoric and role expected of an American president.I hate the Beltway demons so much.
>>2732888did you made this video
>vast majority of Americans are willing and enthusiastic collaborators
Do you pay income tax?
I haven’t had a job in 5 years
>>2733205Trump could do a pinochet style massacre of 1000s of american citizens including chuck schumer him slef and the dnc would still suck him off aslong he kills people in the middle east the next day
>>2733208Based how do you do it?
>>2733209Damn and they left the comments section open too. They usually disable that on all government stuff.
>>2733215A rare not falling for it again award.
>>2733095alright anons who wants to bet on another 9/11 false flag to justify a ground invasion of Iran
>bonus round: will Americans fall for it this time >>2733218For these guys it was never a consideration, too much to loose.
>>2733219Maybe i just dont want to beleive it but who would fall for like 20 senile magats?
>>2733211Pretty much Ray from trailer park boys but without getting caught
>>2733221yeah encouraging China to enter the conflict on Iran's side is a great idea anon
>>2733225I think of neet maxxing but i want to be a hermit also maybe still do something like grow plants
>>2732890China, Russia, maybe India, maybe Japan, have the satellites and other means to detect nuclear detonations by detecting wavelengths of light and radiation patterns emitted from nuclear weapons in the atmosphere. Same with seismographs.
The U.S. also has these but we can expect them to lie about it. There's precedent for it in the Vela incident, which was likely a joint nuclear test between Israel and South Africa due south of madagascar in the open ocean, it was initially reported by a U.S. Vela nuclear detection satellite but the government vehemently denied it and claimed the satellite was giving false readings and would be decommissioned.
Iraq’s economy under pressure as attacks intensify
It seems that Iraq is turning into a secondary battlefield in the broader regional conflict between Israel, the US and Iran.
The two oil tankers that were targeted were loaded with crude oil from Umm Qasr port in southern Iraq, in Basra Province. And soon after they left the port, they were hit by an explosive-laden boat in Iraqi territorial waters.
Iraqi officials say it’s an Iranian explosive-laden boat. This reminds us of the threats that Iran has been issuing, saying it will target any oil ship that tries to cross the Strait of Hormuz.
Now, 38 of the crew members have been rescued, and one has been confirmed dead. But there is no word about the number of missing crew members from both ships.
Iraqi officials say these attacks on Iraq have a huge impact on the economy.
Oil production has fallen sharply since the conflict began, from 3,300,000 barrels a day to less than one million barrels a day. Iraq relies on oil revenues for more than 90 percent of its budget, so these attacks will have a big impact on the country’s already strained finances.
Drone sparks ‘minor fire’ at Dubai residential building
The Dubai Media Office says emergency workers have controlled a “minor fire” that broke out at a residential building after a drone fell on the structure.
The office said the building was located in the vicinity of the Dubai Creek Harbur.
No injuries have been reported, it added.
One killed in attack on oil tankers at Iraqi port
A spokesman for Iraq’s army says one crew member was killed and 38 others were rescued after the attack on two foreign oil tankers in its port of al-Faw.
“Two oil tankers were subjected to a cowardly act of sabotage,” Lieutenant General Saad Maan said, according to the Iraq News Agency (INA). He said “the attack took place within Iraqi territorial waters” and said the assault “constitutes a violation of Iraqi sovereignty”.
“Iraq reserves the right to take legal action,” he added.
Iraq says Iranian boats behind attack on oil tankers: Report
An Iraqi security official has told the Reuters news agency that initial investigations suggest Iranian explosive-laden boats were behind the attacks on oil tankers in Iraqi waters.
The attacks have caused both vessels to catch fire and prompted a swift emergency response.
>>2733227That is what happens if you bomb schoolgirls and hospitals. No matter how repressive your government actually is, at least it doesn't target young girls and medical workers like the Great Satan. Honestly hard to imagine anything more evil than that.
>>2733226the tankers and oil aren't owned by China, they'd have to reason to get involved
>>2733228I wish leftists were better at building communes or offgrid communities. I want to join one but they're usually nazis or some weird stoner cult.
>>2733234They'd have no reason to get involved over the US attacking their access to oil?
All China would have to do is send destroyer escorts to the strait to protect the Iranian tankers headed to China and the US would be cucked.
>>2733223personally I think we've reached a stage in history where enough people are connected through the internet and there's a sizeable enough minority of cynical schizos who would recognize the false flag as an obvious false flag that a narrative of it being a false flag would proliferate that would catch on with people who are maybe less knowledgeable of these things and willing to believe a false flag terrorist attack is possible but also generally distrustful of the current administration if not the US as a whole that it would gain enough momentum for there to be a similar split in opinion like we've already seen with the war and US politics a whole. MAGA is going to fall in line no matter what the narrative is, even if it was an extremely obvious false flag, but I think unlike 9/11 there's simply no way for the US to manufacture national unity like they did to justify the invasion of Iraq.
whether or not they're actually stupid and desperate enough to do another 9/11 right now is another story though. not sure how likely that is to actually happen but I'm sure it's an option they're leaving on the table given that they're already trying to ease Americans into the idea that it might happen.
>>2733230Go to the newest comments, also bet at least 90% of those are bots.
>>2733213cnn cannot be trusted. they reported that iran mined the strait of hormuz.
>>2733230Your right its over…. people are chudding on yourube comments
>>2733239>>2733223I mean a lot of Americans thought 9/11 was a false flag. The 9/11 truther movement had some big names and lasted well into the 2010s.
>>2733245I got sent to principals office in high-school for saying 911 was fake
>>2733245difference is that back then the legacy media still had more ability to control monolithic narratives and delegitimized all those people as crackpots. you've gotta keep in mind that the current conditions where it's become basically ubiquitous for everyone to be extremely online wasn't really a thing until 2020 when the covid lockdowns happened, and while the state has managed to adapt itself in some respects to propagandize people within these conditions, it's much more difficult to control who people talk to, what they talk about, and how it proliferates between different social circles extremely rapidly.
I don't think truth matters at all in public discourse dominated by the culture war. If the revelations jibe poorly with the culture war environment, they are not found useful by the parts, and dropped into irrelevance. It's all PR. Put money in one side, get public opinion on the other. Good/bad/schizo, is all good as long as it's controlled.
>>2733250
Your right i surrender its over people chudded on youtube comments
>>2733252I liked the lego one. its so much better than other attempts at doing propaganda by russia, china, where they get schizos like haz or some chinlets and interview them
>>2733250
You're like the conservative how posts a crowd of Venezuelans celebrating in miami and insist that whole country wants Machado to be president thats the level of drivel you are on
>>2733261I thought it was pakistan and india having a spat.
>>2733267The idea that we all should support middle Easternerd because they are western is easily refuted by posted a mizharhi jew
The gaurdians of western civilization (if it even exists)
Are 12 millions slav arabs, and eithiopians pretending to be the same ethnic group
>>2733269Typo
The idea that we should all support israel
they really thought they could just vibe away reality with the oil markets huh
>>2733272North towers, south towers or the 7th towers that housed all the IRS investigation into the Hammer Fund of Papa Bush?
>>2733271bottom line of the graph
starts at $80, an unthinkable price a couple weeks ago
>>2733277I know this is a shitpost but this war was going to happen no matter who was in power. these plans have been in the works for decades and we are coming up on a now or never moment for the US empire to wage wars of aggression to subjugate every one of its ascendant rivals, otherwise it collapses and the United States will have to undergo profound changes.
>>2733281Oh yeah bro its funny how much they hammred in the idea that we NEEDED to vote blue or else it was fascism for us but if it was so dire why didnt cuckden step aside? His ego wouldnt allow it
And now we see the brandonification of trump
>>2733271should I still go long on some meme like ixc or nah
I was gonna do it on monday but I got lazy lel
>>2733277No I don't. If it was kamala or trump, war was inevitable. With trump at least you have in-your-face evil. The democrats will do the same shit but run a more effective propaganda campaign.
So no.
Now have some clussy you old man.
>>2733284True at least trump doesnt how to do anything
The iraq war was perfectly operation machine compared to this
>>2732872sorry chud but the abrahamism will stop (iran should be saved for last due to mostly based behavior)
>>2733291Bwahahha its really them.
>>2733284>>2733288i dont think it was inevitable but i firmly believe that joe biden was the guy who opened the door for it wide open by abetting the gaza genocide
>>2733288True but next time im in trump country i should stick some miss me yet brandon stickers to troll
>>2733290iirc the creator of the pic himself said he made it to troll his chud discord friend and he believed cool robot was the based read and all other reads are for fags
not even a third worldist but the average amerigolem is something else
>>2733297Oooh that's a great idea. Even better than making I did that Trump stickers
>>2733221he isn't cut for long, arduous conflict, from what we know from the epstein leaks is that the guy is a genuine fucking pussy who hurts children because they can't fight back. his entire term has been punching down allies, and the venezuelan coup was a total exception.
>>2733300Or since my car doesnt work anymore
(Rest in peace beautiful angel) and i cant swing by maga country on a whim but i can wait until i see a temporarily embarrassed epstine islander and post it on his gas cap with a picture of gas prices
>>2733302>>2733302The real indicator for imperial over moment will be when delcy tells him to fuck off and he does
If and when i will truly be joever
>>2733288I just realized something really retarded.
I look like a male version of the clown girl.:/
>>2733298biden has consistently been a staunch zionist throughout his career
>>2733307>spoilerthats hot
can you be my girlfriend?
>>2733310I'm not ghey.
My romantic loyalty is only to the IRGC
>>2733308 (me)
i mean that it's not just a sundowning moment and the deep state being in control. unconditional support for israel has been biden's policy since forever.
>>2733311obama is a retard who shat on his own legacy for not backing bernie lol
>>2733311No we would have a color revolution in iran like in libya. And timber sycamore. And maidan and yeah,… everything else.
Thanks Barry O.
>>2733310Thanks for the compliment btw.
>>2733302>his entire term has been punching down allies, and the venezuelan coup was a total exception.leftychuds won't like this one but the CIA was balls deep in vzla, maduro was a de facto ally and was doing everything the ameriKKKan empire wanted of him already
his abduction is the USA once again punching down their own allies because zion don wanted to appear to his maga audience and in the history books as le strong leader
>>2733317every single head of state in latam that isn't in, like, cuba is a defacto US ally lol
>>2733295Phenomenally based
Thanks lad
>>2733315>obama is a retard who shat on his own legacy for not backing bernie lolI was already done with him for the Syria shit but still, compared to Biden and Trump? LMAO. Goddamn.
>>2733316>No we would have a color revolution in iran like in libya. And timber sycamore. And maidan and yeah,… everything else.Maybe, maybe not. I was unfortunately still retarded enough to not get it when he did Libya, but Syria was definitely a final straw for me. I remember seeing him for the first time putting on his serious "Commander in Chief" persona doing all the same Bush talk and it was like he was completely different person. I mean you can just say I'm being naive, but it seem like he had a few shreds of decency and then they just hit them with the mind control gun or something. It felt like I was just seeing a walking automaton piloted by the MIC.
Actually I guess I was immediately let down by how he didn't prosecute anyone from the Bush admin and he cracked down on the OWS and did the bailout and all that, but advancing the War on Terror was truly the bridge too far for me. I guess we could always be like "well McCain would be worse."
>>2733326israelis are such fucking dweebs lmao
>>2733331thats just because he's black
Bahrain warns residents to stay indoors
Bahrain’s Ministry of Interior has urged citizens and residents of Hidd, Arad, Qalali and Samaheej to “remain in their homes, close windows and ventilation openings” due to the fire in Muharraq Governorate.
The ministry said the measure was a “precaution against potential effects of smoke” from the fire.
As we reported earlier, Bahrain said it was responding to an Iranian attack on fuel tanks in its Muharraq Governorate.
UAE responding to Iranian missiles, drones
The Emirati Ministry of Defence says there has been a new wave of Iranian missiles and drone attacks on the country.
It said about two hours ago that its air defences were responding to incoming missile and drone threats from Iran and that the sounds heard in the country are the result of interceptions.
The statement came shortly after authorities in Dubai reported containing a fire at a residential building that was struck by a drone.
Iraqi group claims wave of attacks on US bases
Saraya Awliya al-Dam says it has carried out seven attacks across Iraq targeting US military bases.
>>2733252well this is sure fucking worth not being able to afford a computer upgrade anymore
>>2733336Lmao do the Chinese really call rockets "chilli peppers" or is it just a mistranslation?
>>2733338Personal computing is fucked. I'm watching Steve (who is not suicidal) from GamersNexus become a Maoist in real time.
>>2733343i suspect he was on his way for a while judging by how well he speaks chinese already
Lebanon: With missiles and drones, the resistance targets the "Beit Lid" base and the "Yara" barracks.
The Islamic Resistance in Lebanon announced early Thursday that it had carried out a series of operations targeting Israeli military sites inside occupied Palestine and gatherings of occupation army soldiers on the Lebanese-Palestinian border.
The Islamic Resistance said it targeted the "Yara" barracks with a swarm of attack drones.
Likewise, the “Beit Lid” base, a military base containing training camps for the Nahal Brigade and the Paratroopers Brigade, was also targeted with a barrage of high-quality missiles.
In addition, the Meron air operations control and management base, in northern occupied Palestine, was hit by a squadron of attack drones, resulting in damage to one of the radars at the base.
The resistance also targeted the Glilot base, which is the headquarters of Military Intelligence Unit 8200, located 110 km from the Lebanese-Palestinian border, in the suburbs of Tel Aviv, with a barrage of high-quality missiles.
As part of the warning issued by the resistance to the Nahariya settlement, it was targeted twice by a swarm of attack drones.
Likewise, the resistance targeted a gathering of Israeli occupation “army” forces at the newly established Markaba site with artillery shells.
The Islamic Resistance in Lebanon had previously announced the launch of a series of “Eaten Straw” operations , and launched hundreds of rockets towards settlements in northern occupied Palestine, to a depth of 5 kilometers, which had been given a prior warning.
>>2733349Might need to open a gofundme page because I am already close to absolute poverty lmao
>>2733352If you're American you should only care about the gasoline & food prices.
>>2733358I'm not American
This is shaping up to be such a self-own by Trump.
>>2732868Prince of Persia: Revenge of the Cuckold
>>2732986The last days have demonstrated that he could have attacked Polish military installations that keep Ukraine going and Nato-cucks would have done shit.
>>2733350The fine people at the 8200 may have some problem tonight. Hopefully that will translate in less glowie floods on this board and possibly on the internet as a whole at least for a few hours. I was just thinking about our friend "Bilal", the self-proclaimed "Sunni Marxist" that in my opinion had a strange kind of glow about him…
>>2732868>>2733361The boyfriend looks like Matthew McConaughey with sunglasses.
oil is going to drop again tomorrow when the fat retard shorts it again using your tax money
>>2733365i saw someone non-ironically post this on xitter and when someone replied "it should be just about 14k trucks per tanker" he was like :0
>>2733365There probably are people in the US government who would think this is a viable solution.
>>2733369Yeah the president and secretary of war
>>2733367>oil is going to drop again tomorrow when the fat retard shorts it again using your tax moneythe fake judeochristian's god willing
I missed my chance to buy the dip earlier this week but next time I won't
>>2733374>war for amerikkkas continued legitimacy >retard in chief is focused on grifting for his fellow pedo investorsIts never been so over
To bad bakto isnt around to make a compilation of it
https://www.aljazeera.com/opinions/2025/9/3/us-and-eu-sanctions-have-killed-38-million-people-since-1970US and EU sanctions have killed 38 million people since 1970
>During the 1970s, there were, on average, about 15 countries under Western unilateral sanctions in any given year. In many cases, these sanctions sought to strangle access to finance and international trade, destabilise industries, and inflame crises to provoke state collapse.
>Since then, the US and Europe have dramatically increased their use of sanctions. During the 1990s and 2000s, an average of 30 countries were under Western unilateral sanctions in any given year. And now, as of the 2020s, it is more than 60 – a strikingly high proportion of the countries of the Global South.
>Sanctions often have a huge human toll. Scholars have demonstrated this in several well-known cases, such as the US sanctions against Iraq in the 1990s that led to widespread malnutrition, lack of clean water, and shortages of medicine and electricity. More recently, US economic warfare against Venezuela has resulted in a severe economic crisis, with one study estimating that sanctions caused 40,000 excess deaths in just one year, from 2017 to 2018. >>2733379So if saddamn is looking on from the after life what is he saying?
>>2733363Same, I built a computer late 2024 because I was worried about the tariffs. My timing was mostly right, but my reasoning was dead wrong.
>>2733383It means oil is again over 100 a barrel.
Do a barrel roll.
NAUUUUUU!!!!
>>2733385Its okay trump is playing 19d chess
>>2733363i bought a 3090 with 24gb vram when i heard about the RAM shit, and i knew people would scramble for older GPUs with lots of vram
>>2733393i only play cyberpunk and mod fat tits and ass but i might look into kling i guess
>>2733363DDR5 is a meme anyway. If your MoBo/processor combo doesn't need it you should have go for DDR4. The performance gain is so negligible. Especially on AMD.
>>2733393>jeffery's warholy soul
>>2733393>play with jeffraylol
>>2733395Maybe? I dunno. I only research this stuff when I'm looking to built a new computer then I completely forget everything. I'm on intel and I think it's overclocked XMP whatever. I think I should've gone for less gigs and faster RAM probably. 64gb is really overkill for most things. I really only use the full capacity leaving a million tabs open in firefox and loading a billion mods at once for Cities Skylines 2.
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