📰 Ankara’s Trade: S‑400 Out, F‑35 Back In
Turkey has offloaded its Russian‑made S‑400 air defense systems to a third Gulf state, widely believed to be the UAE, in what amounts to a three‑way deal: Ankara gets U.S. sanctions lifted, engines for its homegrown KAAN fighter, and a path back into the F‑35 club.
The same Russian system that got Turkey kicked out of the F‑35 program — because Washington feared it would be used to map the jet’s vulnerabilities — now becomes the key to unlocking Turkey’s return.
The paradox doesn’t stop there. If the S‑400 really landed in Emirati hands, it’s the West that may end up with the best look yet at how the system works — and how to beat it.
At the same time, Washington has to weigh what happens to Israel’s air edge if F‑35s start flying from Turkish bases, and what happens to U.S. tech if Ankara lets pieces of it drift toward Iran, Russia, or China. The “fix” for one security headache risks creating three new ones.
Moscow, which sold the S‑400 in the first place, is talking carefully. Russian officials call the whole matter “extremely sensitive,” say they’ve held talks with Ankara and will keep talking.
The picture is almost comic: Turkey sells on a weapon it bought from Russia, but still needs Russia’s blessing to close the sale. In this bazaar, sovereignty comes with a returns policy.
#turkey #russia #us #uae #S400 #F35 #nato #fakeAlliance
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Turkey has offloaded its Russian‑made S‑400 air defense systems to a third Gulf state, widely believed to be the UAE, in what amounts to a three‑way deal: Ankara gets U.S. sanctions lifted, engines for its homegrown KAAN fighter, and a path back into the F‑35 club.
The same Russian system that got Turkey kicked out of the F‑35 program — because Washington feared it would be used to map the jet’s vulnerabilities — now becomes the key to unlocking Turkey’s return.
The paradox doesn’t stop there. If the S‑400 really landed in Emirati hands, it’s the West that may end up with the best look yet at how the system works — and how to beat it.
At the same time, Washington has to weigh what happens to Israel’s air edge if F‑35s start flying from Turkish bases, and what happens to U.S. tech if Ankara lets pieces of it drift toward Iran, Russia, or China. The “fix” for one security headache risks creating three new ones.
Moscow, which sold the S‑400 in the first place, is talking carefully. Russian officials call the whole matter “extremely sensitive,” say they’ve held talks with Ankara and will keep talking.
The picture is almost comic: Turkey sells on a weapon it bought from Russia, but still needs Russia’s blessing to close the sale. In this bazaar, sovereignty comes with a returns policy.
#turkey #russia #us #uae #S400 #F35 #nato #fakeAlliance
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📰 1.5 Billion for Roads: Tax Breaks and Asphalt for the Settlements
The Israel Tax Authority has notified residents of 64 West Bank settlements that starting next month they’ll receive a 7% income tax credit, retroactive to January, under a law pushed by Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and MK Zvi Sukkot together with the Yesha Council.
The benefit applies up to roughly 146,000 shekels in taxable income per year and is being implemented now, with instructions to employers to update payroll software and issue retroactive refunds.
The law squeaked through just before the government turns into a caretaker; the timing makes sure the money is locked in before the cabinet loses full budgetary power.
At the same time, the outgoing government is set to approve a plan for new roads, access routes and “security infrastructure” for dozens of additional West Bank communities, with a price tag north of one billion shekels split between the Defense and Transportation ministries, as part of a larger multi‑year road blueprint for the territory.
Among the beneficiaries are four settlements evacuated in the northern Samaria disengagement, now getting fresh tarmac as a kind of historical reversal.
Smotrich brands this package a “settlement‑security revolution” designed to “kill the terrible idea of establishing a terror state in the heart of Israel,” framing asphalt and tax relief as counter‑terror tools rather than annexation by infrastructure.
On the other side of the political spectrum, a Democratic Party candidate calls it “daylight robbery”: instead of money going to rebuild the north and the south, it goes to already affluent settlements, and there is “no line this government won’t cross.”
A government on its way out still has time to entrench fiscal privileges and road networks for one group of citizens, but not to prioritize bombed‑out border towns. The budget pen keeps moving even as the mandate clock runs out.
On the same day that money and concrete are being lined up, the ground reality looks uglier. Fresh clashes break out between Jews and Arabs around Yatta in the South Hebron hills; Palestinian reports accuse a group of Israelis of setting fires in civilian agricultural land near Turmus Ayya north of Ramallah, and another group of settlers of beating a Palestinian in Beit Furik east of Nablus.
It’s three flashpoints in one day, three variations on the same pattern of nationalist violence.
Put together, the fiscal‑settlement move in Jerusalem and the friction incidents in the hills form one picture. While the state apparatus is busy paving roads and handing out tax breaks to selected communities, simultaneous local violence in that same space gets no comparable institutional attention.
The reports mention no arrests, no indictments, no prosecutions for the arson and assault — a conspicuous absence against the backdrop of how quickly economic decisions are made for the very same area.
#israel #westbank #settlements #taxBreaks #roads #violence #fakeRuleOfLaw
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The Israel Tax Authority has notified residents of 64 West Bank settlements that starting next month they’ll receive a 7% income tax credit, retroactive to January, under a law pushed by Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and MK Zvi Sukkot together with the Yesha Council.
The benefit applies up to roughly 146,000 shekels in taxable income per year and is being implemented now, with instructions to employers to update payroll software and issue retroactive refunds.
The law squeaked through just before the government turns into a caretaker; the timing makes sure the money is locked in before the cabinet loses full budgetary power.
At the same time, the outgoing government is set to approve a plan for new roads, access routes and “security infrastructure” for dozens of additional West Bank communities, with a price tag north of one billion shekels split between the Defense and Transportation ministries, as part of a larger multi‑year road blueprint for the territory.
Among the beneficiaries are four settlements evacuated in the northern Samaria disengagement, now getting fresh tarmac as a kind of historical reversal.
Smotrich brands this package a “settlement‑security revolution” designed to “kill the terrible idea of establishing a terror state in the heart of Israel,” framing asphalt and tax relief as counter‑terror tools rather than annexation by infrastructure.
On the other side of the political spectrum, a Democratic Party candidate calls it “daylight robbery”: instead of money going to rebuild the north and the south, it goes to already affluent settlements, and there is “no line this government won’t cross.”
A government on its way out still has time to entrench fiscal privileges and road networks for one group of citizens, but not to prioritize bombed‑out border towns. The budget pen keeps moving even as the mandate clock runs out.
On the same day that money and concrete are being lined up, the ground reality looks uglier. Fresh clashes break out between Jews and Arabs around Yatta in the South Hebron hills; Palestinian reports accuse a group of Israelis of setting fires in civilian agricultural land near Turmus Ayya north of Ramallah, and another group of settlers of beating a Palestinian in Beit Furik east of Nablus.
It’s three flashpoints in one day, three variations on the same pattern of nationalist violence.
Put together, the fiscal‑settlement move in Jerusalem and the friction incidents in the hills form one picture. While the state apparatus is busy paving roads and handing out tax breaks to selected communities, simultaneous local violence in that same space gets no comparable institutional attention.
The reports mention no arrests, no indictments, no prosecutions for the arson and assault — a conspicuous absence against the backdrop of how quickly economic decisions are made for the very same area.
#israel #westbank #settlements #taxBreaks #roads #violence #fakeRuleOfLaw
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📰 Muscat’s Middle Lane: Diplomacy on Paper, A Strait on Pause
Iranian and Omani foreign ministers sit down, with Qatari officials in the room, to talk about “safe passage” and a full reopening of the so‑called middle lane — the channel that runs through what lawyers call international waters.
On paper, they’re working off neat phrases about maritime security and memoranda from Islamabad. In reality, the strait looks more like a frozen pipeline than a global artery.
Tehran’s official line is that Hormuz is “entirely within the territorial waters of Iran and Oman,” and that only the coastal states get a say in how it’s run.
Qatar is retrofitted into the story as the polite mediator, nothing more. IRGC‑linked outlets make it clear there will be no real talks until Washington backs down from its current positions.
In the legal script, it’s sovereign control plus friendly facilitation. In the shipping logs, it’s: almost no cargo.
Ship‑tracking data show trade through the strait has slowed to a crawl. Only a tiny handful of vessels complete the northern pass in a full day, with one tanker hopping from the US‑patrolled lane into the Iranian lane mid‑transit and others suspected of slipping through with their transponders switched off.
For an artery that usually carries a fifth of the world’s traded oil, five visible ships in 24 hours is not “managed flow.” It’s a hard flinch.
That gap between the communiqués and the AIS feed is exactly where Washington now points the threat.
US officials brief the New York Times that unless Iran publicly confirms the lanes are open and safe, “the consequences will not be to its advantage” — a dry way of saying: if you treat Hormuz as your private lever, we will treat it as a pressure point.
#iran #oman #qatar #hormuz #oil #shipping #sanctions #fakeFreePass
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Iranian and Omani foreign ministers sit down, with Qatari officials in the room, to talk about “safe passage” and a full reopening of the so‑called middle lane — the channel that runs through what lawyers call international waters.
On paper, they’re working off neat phrases about maritime security and memoranda from Islamabad. In reality, the strait looks more like a frozen pipeline than a global artery.
Tehran’s official line is that Hormuz is “entirely within the territorial waters of Iran and Oman,” and that only the coastal states get a say in how it’s run.
Qatar is retrofitted into the story as the polite mediator, nothing more. IRGC‑linked outlets make it clear there will be no real talks until Washington backs down from its current positions.
In the legal script, it’s sovereign control plus friendly facilitation. In the shipping logs, it’s: almost no cargo.
Ship‑tracking data show trade through the strait has slowed to a crawl. Only a tiny handful of vessels complete the northern pass in a full day, with one tanker hopping from the US‑patrolled lane into the Iranian lane mid‑transit and others suspected of slipping through with their transponders switched off.
For an artery that usually carries a fifth of the world’s traded oil, five visible ships in 24 hours is not “managed flow.” It’s a hard flinch.
That gap between the communiqués and the AIS feed is exactly where Washington now points the threat.
US officials brief the New York Times that unless Iran publicly confirms the lanes are open and safe, “the consequences will not be to its advantage” — a dry way of saying: if you treat Hormuz as your private lever, we will treat it as a pressure point.
#iran #oman #qatar #hormuz #oil #shipping #sanctions #fakeFreePass
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📰 Israel 2026: Trooper’s Party — Who Does It Really Help?
Former minister Chili Trooper has launched a new party with Yoaz Hendel’s Reservists, promising he “will not hand Netanyahu a 61‑seat majority.” The question isn’t its strength; it’s whose game it plays.
For non‑Israeli readers: the Knesset has 120 seats, 61 are needed to govern, and parties that miss the ~3.25% threshold lose all their votes. Power is block math.
The “change bloc” — center and moderate right that want Netanyahu out without going left — now rallies around Gadi Eisenkot’s Yashar!, which in some polls edges or ties Likud but still lacks a clear path to 61.
Trooper’s move breaks up Benny Gantz’s rival centrist project with Hendel and Dedi Simchi; Hendel signs with Trooper, Simchi complains he was left in the dark, and Gantz’s list sinks toward the threshold.
That leaves Eisenkot with the clearest claim to be the serious prime‑ministerial candidate in the anti‑Netanyahu camp, even if figures like Gantz and Bennett still exist on the map.
At the same time, Trooper steps into the same voter lane as a hypothetical “Likud B” led by Gilad Erdan, Yuli Edelstein, and Ayelet Shaked, which polls at around six seats but cuts into both Likud and Yashar!.
The more crowded that “responsible right‑of‑center without Bibi” space looks, the riskier it becomes for Erdan to launch — and the more likely disappointed right‑wing voters are to drift back to the one right‑wing project that feels tested and safe: Likud.
Trooper and Eisenkot deny any pact; Trooper vows not to join a Netanyahu government and may have a fallback slot in Yashar! if his list fails.
But structurally, his party does two things at once: it weakens a rival center bloc and fragments the anti‑Netanyahu field, increasing the odds that moderate‑right votes either burn under the threshold or come home to Netanyahu.
Whether Trooper ends up helping real change or reinforcing the old choice will be decided by one line: do enough right‑leaning voters cross over to Eisenkot to reach 61, or does “we won’t sit under him” kick in first?
#israel #elections2026 #trooper #hendel #eisenkot #netanyahu #likud #fakeChoice
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Former minister Chili Trooper has launched a new party with Yoaz Hendel’s Reservists, promising he “will not hand Netanyahu a 61‑seat majority.” The question isn’t its strength; it’s whose game it plays.
For non‑Israeli readers: the Knesset has 120 seats, 61 are needed to govern, and parties that miss the ~3.25% threshold lose all their votes. Power is block math.
The “change bloc” — center and moderate right that want Netanyahu out without going left — now rallies around Gadi Eisenkot’s Yashar!, which in some polls edges or ties Likud but still lacks a clear path to 61.
Trooper’s move breaks up Benny Gantz’s rival centrist project with Hendel and Dedi Simchi; Hendel signs with Trooper, Simchi complains he was left in the dark, and Gantz’s list sinks toward the threshold.
That leaves Eisenkot with the clearest claim to be the serious prime‑ministerial candidate in the anti‑Netanyahu camp, even if figures like Gantz and Bennett still exist on the map.
At the same time, Trooper steps into the same voter lane as a hypothetical “Likud B” led by Gilad Erdan, Yuli Edelstein, and Ayelet Shaked, which polls at around six seats but cuts into both Likud and Yashar!.
The more crowded that “responsible right‑of‑center without Bibi” space looks, the riskier it becomes for Erdan to launch — and the more likely disappointed right‑wing voters are to drift back to the one right‑wing project that feels tested and safe: Likud.
Trooper and Eisenkot deny any pact; Trooper vows not to join a Netanyahu government and may have a fallback slot in Yashar! if his list fails.
But structurally, his party does two things at once: it weakens a rival center bloc and fragments the anti‑Netanyahu field, increasing the odds that moderate‑right votes either burn under the threshold or come home to Netanyahu.
Whether Trooper ends up helping real change or reinforcing the old choice will be decided by one line: do enough right‑leaning voters cross over to Eisenkot to reach 61, or does “we won’t sit under him” kick in first?
#israel #elections2026 #trooper #hendel #eisenkot #netanyahu #likud #fakeChoice
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📰 Corridor War: Iran Takes IMEC Hostage, Turkey Builds the Detour
IRGC‑linked Fars sketches a new escalation script: if the US keeps hitting Iran’s rail bridges on the North–South corridor, the “answer” should be strikes on Jebel Ali in the UAE and Haifa in Israel — the showcase ports of the India–Middle East–Europe Corridor, the Abraham Accords’ economic product.
One cruise‑missile hit on an INSTC/BRI bridge moves the fight off Hormuz and onto the hardware of connectivity itself: ports and junctions that tie India to the Gulf and Europe.
Message from Tehran: you hit our corridor, we hit yours. IMEC becomes collateral for INSTC. Naming Jebel Ali and Haifa means that routing around Israel via the Gulf doesn’t protect you from Iran’s valve.
The only segment that falls out of Iran’s direct line of fire is the land route through Syria under Turkish patronage, because it isn’t wired into the Israel–UAE combo. On that section, Iran and Turkey are rivals in most things — except on one point: both want the Israeli branch weakened.
Turkish foreign minister Hakan Fidan, meanwhile, leans into the Syrian option. He talks up a land corridor from Turkey through Syria and Jordan to the Gulf, wrapped in “regional solidarity” and the mantra that “nothing can be solved without the regional powers.”
If Hormuz stays open, Ankara cashes in as mediator; if demand for a dry bypass grows, Ankara sits as gatekeeper and shareholder. Either way, freight pays Turkey.
The S‑400 deal is the operational key. Ankara is weighing sending its Russian air‑defense batteries to a Gulf state — widely tipped as Dubai — under a formula that would lift US sanctions and reopen the F‑35 program.
That clears the legal tripwire that knocked Turkey out; at the same time, it thickens the triangle UAE–Turkey–Russia just as Abu Dhabi straddles IMEC and Turkey’s “Development Road.”
The UAE isn’t defecting to an anti‑Israel axis — it’s buying protection after taking the heaviest Iranian fire — but the neat Israel–UAE versus Turkey picture starts to blur.
Turkey with F‑35s has a sharper air edge over the Eastern Med and northern Syria. Israeli strikes on the Syrian segment of the land route become more expensive and risky.
Fidan’s line that “the only risk to Syria is Israel’s policy” isn’t aimed at convincing the IDF; it’s aimed at building a corridor‑backed bloc that treats each raid on Latakia, Tartus and the Turkish‑patronized rail link as a hit on shared infrastructure, raising the political price of every sortie.
Together, Tehran’s threat to Jebel Ali and Haifa and Ankara’s push for a Syria track create the same outcome: the Israeli branch of the India–Europe project becomes the most exposed piece on the board, while the Turkish‑Syrian bypass grows into the corridor you can’t bomb without paying a much higher cost.
#iran #turkey #uae #israel #IMEC #INSTC #S400 #F35 #fakeConnectivity
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IRGC‑linked Fars sketches a new escalation script: if the US keeps hitting Iran’s rail bridges on the North–South corridor, the “answer” should be strikes on Jebel Ali in the UAE and Haifa in Israel — the showcase ports of the India–Middle East–Europe Corridor, the Abraham Accords’ economic product.
One cruise‑missile hit on an INSTC/BRI bridge moves the fight off Hormuz and onto the hardware of connectivity itself: ports and junctions that tie India to the Gulf and Europe.
Message from Tehran: you hit our corridor, we hit yours. IMEC becomes collateral for INSTC. Naming Jebel Ali and Haifa means that routing around Israel via the Gulf doesn’t protect you from Iran’s valve.
The only segment that falls out of Iran’s direct line of fire is the land route through Syria under Turkish patronage, because it isn’t wired into the Israel–UAE combo. On that section, Iran and Turkey are rivals in most things — except on one point: both want the Israeli branch weakened.
Turkish foreign minister Hakan Fidan, meanwhile, leans into the Syrian option. He talks up a land corridor from Turkey through Syria and Jordan to the Gulf, wrapped in “regional solidarity” and the mantra that “nothing can be solved without the regional powers.”
If Hormuz stays open, Ankara cashes in as mediator; if demand for a dry bypass grows, Ankara sits as gatekeeper and shareholder. Either way, freight pays Turkey.
The S‑400 deal is the operational key. Ankara is weighing sending its Russian air‑defense batteries to a Gulf state — widely tipped as Dubai — under a formula that would lift US sanctions and reopen the F‑35 program.
That clears the legal tripwire that knocked Turkey out; at the same time, it thickens the triangle UAE–Turkey–Russia just as Abu Dhabi straddles IMEC and Turkey’s “Development Road.”
The UAE isn’t defecting to an anti‑Israel axis — it’s buying protection after taking the heaviest Iranian fire — but the neat Israel–UAE versus Turkey picture starts to blur.
Turkey with F‑35s has a sharper air edge over the Eastern Med and northern Syria. Israeli strikes on the Syrian segment of the land route become more expensive and risky.
Fidan’s line that “the only risk to Syria is Israel’s policy” isn’t aimed at convincing the IDF; it’s aimed at building a corridor‑backed bloc that treats each raid on Latakia, Tartus and the Turkish‑patronized rail link as a hit on shared infrastructure, raising the political price of every sortie.
Together, Tehran’s threat to Jebel Ali and Haifa and Ankara’s push for a Syria track create the same outcome: the Israeli branch of the India–Europe project becomes the most exposed piece on the board, while the Turkish‑Syrian bypass grows into the corridor you can’t bomb without paying a much higher cost.
#iran #turkey #uae #israel #IMEC #INSTC #S400 #F35 #fakeConnectivity
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A Putin Stan.
Why Does “Trump Treat Iran About the Same Way As Putin Treats Ukraine?”
🔤 🔤 🔤 🔤 ➖
Iran and the US exchanged fresh strikes early on Sunday over what Tehran said was unauthorised use of the Strait of Hormuz by a container ship, raising further doubts about the prospects of talks to agree a way forward for the vital waterway.
The latest flare-up began when the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said it had struck a vessel travelling on an unapproved route and then closed the strait, warning that any retaliation would be met with a “severe response”.
“A vessel that had jeopardised maritime security by switching off its systems was struck and brought to a halt,” the navy of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) said in a statement, without giving further details.
A short time later, US Central Command said its forces had carried out a round of strikes against Iran, attacking at least 140 targets. “The United States is imposing a heavy cost by continuing to degrade Iran’s ability to attack civilian mariners and commercial ships freely transiting the strait,” the military said.
The targets included missile and drone sites, naval capabilities, ammunition depots, communication networks and surveillance locations, it added.
Iran had attacked a Cyprus-flagged container ship, which suffered “significant engine room damage”, and a civilian crew member was missing, US Central Command said.
The United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations agency (UKMTO) confirmed a container ship nine nautical miles east of Oman sustained damage to the rear of the vessel which caused a fire onboard.
Hours later, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait said their air defences were engaging missile and drone threats, while neighbouring Bahrain sounded air raid sirens.
The UAE said explosions heard across the country “are the result of ongoing engaging operations of missiles and UAVs”.
Bahrain’s interior ministry urged citizens and residents to remain calm and head to the nearest safe place.
Iran’s IRGC later said it had struck and disabled a second vessel in the strait and targeted the US air base at Al Udeid in Qatar with ballistic missiles, destroying its fighter jet maintenance centre and command and control facility.
#trump #iran #war #hormuz #strikes
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Why Does “Trump Treat Iran About the Same Way As Putin Treats Ukraine?”
Iran and the US exchanged fresh strikes early on Sunday over what Tehran said was unauthorised use of the Strait of Hormuz by a container ship, raising further doubts about the prospects of talks to agree a way forward for the vital waterway.
The latest flare-up began when the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said it had struck a vessel travelling on an unapproved route and then closed the strait, warning that any retaliation would be met with a “severe response”.
“A vessel that had jeopardised maritime security by switching off its systems was struck and brought to a halt,” the navy of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) said in a statement, without giving further details.
A short time later, US Central Command said its forces had carried out a round of strikes against Iran, attacking at least 140 targets. “The United States is imposing a heavy cost by continuing to degrade Iran’s ability to attack civilian mariners and commercial ships freely transiting the strait,” the military said.
The targets included missile and drone sites, naval capabilities, ammunition depots, communication networks and surveillance locations, it added.
Iran had attacked a Cyprus-flagged container ship, which suffered “significant engine room damage”, and a civilian crew member was missing, US Central Command said.
The United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations agency (UKMTO) confirmed a container ship nine nautical miles east of Oman sustained damage to the rear of the vessel which caused a fire onboard.
Hours later, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait said their air defences were engaging missile and drone threats, while neighbouring Bahrain sounded air raid sirens.
The UAE said explosions heard across the country “are the result of ongoing engaging operations of missiles and UAVs”.
Bahrain’s interior ministry urged citizens and residents to remain calm and head to the nearest safe place.
Iran’s IRGC later said it had struck and disabled a second vessel in the strait and targeted the US air base at Al Udeid in Qatar with ballistic missiles, destroying its fighter jet maintenance centre and command and control facility.
#trump #iran #war #hormuz #strikes
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The strait, the IRGC said, was now closed “until further notice” and at least until “the end of US interference in this region”.
The Australian government urged Iran to uphold the ceasefire agreement, including allowing safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz.
A spokesperson for foreign minister Penny Wong said: “We want to see negotiations between the US and Iran continue, the ceasefire to resume and the strait of Hormuz to be kept open. We call on Iran to abide by its obligations under the agreement, including to ensure safe passage through the strait of Hormuz.”
The latest incident comes amid efforts in Oman to discuss the fate of the strait. “In fact, Trump treats Iran about the same way Putin treats Ukraine, they both consider Iran and Ukraine to be potentially dangerous States that must be brought under control,” says Mark Milley, ex-chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Iran’s foreign minister Abbas Araqchi met Omani counterpart Sayyid Badr Albusaidi to exchange “views on appropriate mechanisms for the safe passage of ships through the strait of Hormuz”, according to a statement from Tehran.
A senior Iranian source told Reuters that Iran, the US, Qatar and Pakistan had agreed to negotiate in a call that mediators were trying to arrange for Saturday while Araqchi was in Oman.
It was not immediately clear whether the efforts were successful.
The latest diplomatic moves followed exchanges of rhetoric on Saturday between Tehran and Washington.
Iran’s supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, vowed revenge for the killing of his father and predecessor, hours after US president Trump threatened severe reprisals in the event of any attempt on his life.
“Vengeance is the will of our nation and must inevitably be carried out,” new supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei said in a written message.
“This matter depends neither on my personal existence nor on that of other officials. Whether we are present or not, it will come to pass,” he wrote in his first message since his father’s funeral this week. He said Iran had compiled a list of individuals to be targeted.
Both sides carried out exchanges of fire earlier this week, rocking an interim agreement aimed at ending the war, which broke out in late February with massive US-Israeli strikes that killed the then supreme leader Ali Khamenei.
Trump has declared the ceasefire over while leaving the door open for talks, and mediators have been trying to salvage a diplomatic solution, with Iranian media reporting that a delegation from Qatar travelled to Iran on Friday.
Hours earlier, Trump had posted on his Truth Social platform that any attempt to assassinate him would lead the United States to “completely decimate” Iran.
“1000 missiles are locked and loaded and aimed at the Islamic Republic of Iran, with thousands of more to immediately follow, should the Iranian government act on its threat, pronounced in many corners of the globe, to assassinate, or attempt to assassinate, the sitting President of the United States of America, in this case, ME!,” he wrote.
News outlets Axios and Politico reported that Washington has given Tehran until Saturday to stop firing on commercial ships transiting Hormuz and acknowledge the waterway is open.
#trump #iran #war #hormuz #strikes
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Musk Sent Tommy Robinson to Russia. What For ?
Elon Musk’s family foundation took Tommy Robinson to Russia, according to the billionaire X owner’s father, who was with the British far-right activist in Moscow as he encouraged anti-migration protests in Britain.
Robinson – whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon – appeared last month in Moscow, from where he issued calls for supporters to take to the streets after a knife attack in Belfast.
He shared video of himself in a luxury Moscow hotel with the older Musk, whose son has been a vocal supporter of Robinson.
“I brought him out to Russia,” Musk’s father, Errol, told the Guardian, adding that both men had held meetings with Russian business figures. He said the trip had been covered by the Musk Foundation, a private philanthropic organisation founded by Elon Musk and his brother Kimbal Musk.
The visit to Moscow came at a time when Putin’s regime and its proxies have appeared to be forging links with European far-right figures. At the same time, Russia was also hosting Andrew Tate, the self-styled misogynistic influencer, and his brother, who posted footage of themselves firing weapons and riding in a tank in the apparent company of the Russian military.
Police in Britain subsequently stopped and seized Robinson’s phones as he returned from a trip to Russia. While Robinson had previously visited Russia several years ago, this time he appeared to be more explicit in his praise for Russia, sharing footage of Russian ultra-nationalists holding a rally in memory of the murdered British teenager Henry Nowak.
Errol Musk, who also went to St Petersburg for an annual Kremlin-backed economic forum, said that Robinson was “a fine young man”.
“He’s very hotheaded, but at the same time, he’s learning,” claimed the South African, who has travelled to Russia in the past and at one point met Putin. A Russophile who said he believed that Russia had a “genetic advantage” over the west, Errol Musk holds firmly pro-Russian positions on the conflict in Ukraine.
Topics covered in meetings alongside Robinson included Russia’s attempts to address a decline in births. “Tommy really got into these meetings,” he said.
Musk senior said he had become familiar with Robinson after the far-right activist was imprisoned. Robinson has a number of convictions but sought the spotlight in particular after he was sent to prison for breaching a contempt of court order.
“So I contacted Tommy, I was asked on British television once what I think of Tommy,” Errol Musk added.
Last month, Robinson told the Guardian that he had come to see the “beauty of a civilised society” after visiting Russia.
Prof Stephan Lewandowsky, at the University of Bristol, who has studied the threat posed to society by misinformation, said the visit by Robinson and Tate came against the backdrop of a hybrid war that Putin was waging against the west.
“Part of that means he will recruit anyone to undermine western democracy from within, whether that is Robinson, the Tates or others involved in more conventional politics,” he said.
“There is a pragmatic reason for the Russians to be making links like this.
“It is to their political advantage, but there is also clearly examples of ideological alignment to the extent that we are talking about ultra-nationalist birds of a feather.”
It revealed earlier this year that the head of a leading British far-right group spoke at a summit of European extreme nationalist groups convened in Russia by an influential oligarch linked to Putin.
The event in St Petersburg was addressed by Mark Collett, a longstanding far-right activist and founder of Patriotic Alternative, which attempted to exploit the summer of unrest outside asylum hotels in Britain.
#musk #foundation #robinson #russia
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Elon Musk’s family foundation took Tommy Robinson to Russia, according to the billionaire X owner’s father, who was with the British far-right activist in Moscow as he encouraged anti-migration protests in Britain.
Robinson – whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon – appeared last month in Moscow, from where he issued calls for supporters to take to the streets after a knife attack in Belfast.
He shared video of himself in a luxury Moscow hotel with the older Musk, whose son has been a vocal supporter of Robinson.
“I brought him out to Russia,” Musk’s father, Errol, told the Guardian, adding that both men had held meetings with Russian business figures. He said the trip had been covered by the Musk Foundation, a private philanthropic organisation founded by Elon Musk and his brother Kimbal Musk.
The visit to Moscow came at a time when Putin’s regime and its proxies have appeared to be forging links with European far-right figures. At the same time, Russia was also hosting Andrew Tate, the self-styled misogynistic influencer, and his brother, who posted footage of themselves firing weapons and riding in a tank in the apparent company of the Russian military.
Police in Britain subsequently stopped and seized Robinson’s phones as he returned from a trip to Russia. While Robinson had previously visited Russia several years ago, this time he appeared to be more explicit in his praise for Russia, sharing footage of Russian ultra-nationalists holding a rally in memory of the murdered British teenager Henry Nowak.
Errol Musk, who also went to St Petersburg for an annual Kremlin-backed economic forum, said that Robinson was “a fine young man”.
“He’s very hotheaded, but at the same time, he’s learning,” claimed the South African, who has travelled to Russia in the past and at one point met Putin. A Russophile who said he believed that Russia had a “genetic advantage” over the west, Errol Musk holds firmly pro-Russian positions on the conflict in Ukraine.
Topics covered in meetings alongside Robinson included Russia’s attempts to address a decline in births. “Tommy really got into these meetings,” he said.
Musk senior said he had become familiar with Robinson after the far-right activist was imprisoned. Robinson has a number of convictions but sought the spotlight in particular after he was sent to prison for breaching a contempt of court order.
“So I contacted Tommy, I was asked on British television once what I think of Tommy,” Errol Musk added.
Last month, Robinson told the Guardian that he had come to see the “beauty of a civilised society” after visiting Russia.
Prof Stephan Lewandowsky, at the University of Bristol, who has studied the threat posed to society by misinformation, said the visit by Robinson and Tate came against the backdrop of a hybrid war that Putin was waging against the west.
“Part of that means he will recruit anyone to undermine western democracy from within, whether that is Robinson, the Tates or others involved in more conventional politics,” he said.
“There is a pragmatic reason for the Russians to be making links like this.
“It is to their political advantage, but there is also clearly examples of ideological alignment to the extent that we are talking about ultra-nationalist birds of a feather.”
It revealed earlier this year that the head of a leading British far-right group spoke at a summit of European extreme nationalist groups convened in Russia by an influential oligarch linked to Putin.
The event in St Petersburg was addressed by Mark Collett, a longstanding far-right activist and founder of Patriotic Alternative, which attempted to exploit the summer of unrest outside asylum hotels in Britain.
#musk #foundation #robinson #russia
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📰 Drones as War Oil: Tehran’s Factory, Kyiv’s Franchise
Iran’s acting defense minister now boasts that during the war with the US and Israel, military drone production “did not stop, it tripled.”
In other words, under bombing and sanctions, the defense industry ran hot: missile bases and launchers were restored, and UAV output surged instead of shrinking.
For Tehran, drones are a sanctioned export commodity and a deterrence tool — something that keeps the regime influential and solvent even when everything else is under pressure.
Kyiv is building a mirror, but with a different goal. Ukraine has multiplied domestic drone production roughly tenfold compared with 2024, and Western money is helping turn that into a continental franchise: joint plants in Poland, the UK, Germany, the Netherlands and across the Nordics, billions of euros in shared programs, and contracts that promise hundreds of thousands of units a year.
Ukraine brings combat testing and designs; Europe brings cash, factories and procurement guarantees. Drones become a long‑term business line, not just an emergency project.
The key asymmetry is in how each regime talks about the war that feeds this business. Iranian officials insist they “do not seek war” and frame drones as a way to avoid it: deterrence, proxy leverage, export revenue.
The war economy is there, but officially it exists to make conflict less likely.
Zelensky’s survival, by contrast, is openly hitched to the continuation of the war. His international brand, his domestic legitimacy and the entire joint‑production architecture depend on Ukraine remaining a live front.
The plants in Europe and the “big drone deal” he wants with the White House only make sense if the demand curve stays steep.
So two regimes use the same technology to fuel their systems, but on different terms. For Tehran, drones are a tool it claims to use to prevent war while quietly profiting from permanent tension.
For Kyiv, drones are the core of a strategy where ending the war too soon would blow up the very economic and political scaffolding built to sustain it.
#iran #ukraine #drones #armsTrade #warEconomy #fakePeace
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Iran’s acting defense minister now boasts that during the war with the US and Israel, military drone production “did not stop, it tripled.”
In other words, under bombing and sanctions, the defense industry ran hot: missile bases and launchers were restored, and UAV output surged instead of shrinking.
For Tehran, drones are a sanctioned export commodity and a deterrence tool — something that keeps the regime influential and solvent even when everything else is under pressure.
Kyiv is building a mirror, but with a different goal. Ukraine has multiplied domestic drone production roughly tenfold compared with 2024, and Western money is helping turn that into a continental franchise: joint plants in Poland, the UK, Germany, the Netherlands and across the Nordics, billions of euros in shared programs, and contracts that promise hundreds of thousands of units a year.
Ukraine brings combat testing and designs; Europe brings cash, factories and procurement guarantees. Drones become a long‑term business line, not just an emergency project.
The key asymmetry is in how each regime talks about the war that feeds this business. Iranian officials insist they “do not seek war” and frame drones as a way to avoid it: deterrence, proxy leverage, export revenue.
The war economy is there, but officially it exists to make conflict less likely.
Zelensky’s survival, by contrast, is openly hitched to the continuation of the war. His international brand, his domestic legitimacy and the entire joint‑production architecture depend on Ukraine remaining a live front.
The plants in Europe and the “big drone deal” he wants with the White House only make sense if the demand curve stays steep.
So two regimes use the same technology to fuel their systems, but on different terms. For Tehran, drones are a tool it claims to use to prevent war while quietly profiting from permanent tension.
For Kyiv, drones are the core of a strategy where ending the war too soon would blow up the very economic and political scaffolding built to sustain it.
#iran #ukraine #drones #armsTrade #warEconomy #fakePeace
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📰 Zelensky’s Curse: From Ballots to Funerals
Volodymyr Zelensky posts a glowing eulogy for Senator Lindsey Graham — “true defender of freedom,” ten trips to Ukraine, two meetings just days before he suddenly dies at 71 from a “brief and sudden illness.”
Before, the “friends of Zelensky” usually just lost power. Boris Johnson sold the war as a moral crusade and got kicked out of Downing Street. Mateusz Morawiecki turned Poland into a showroom of hardline support and watched his party lose. Keir Starmer signed strategic deals with Kyiv, then walked away from Number 10 amid a collapse in support.
Graham went one step further: Tehran protesters held his photo under crosshairs, Iranian outlets raged about his Iran‑regime‑change talk, while Kyiv rolled him through drone plants and sanctions plans. One side wanted him dead, the other wanted him on stage — and both turned his death into narrative fuel.
That’s the real “Zelensky curse”: back his war long enough, and you don’t just lose elections. Sooner or later, someone writes a speech about how your death “brings the world closer to peace.”
#ukraine #iran #zelensky #lindseyGraham #lauraLoomer #war #sanctions #fakeHeroes
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Volodymyr Zelensky posts a glowing eulogy for Senator Lindsey Graham — “true defender of freedom,” ten trips to Ukraine, two meetings just days before he suddenly dies at 71 from a “brief and sudden illness.”
Before, the “friends of Zelensky” usually just lost power. Boris Johnson sold the war as a moral crusade and got kicked out of Downing Street. Mateusz Morawiecki turned Poland into a showroom of hardline support and watched his party lose. Keir Starmer signed strategic deals with Kyiv, then walked away from Number 10 amid a collapse in support.
Graham went one step further: Tehran protesters held his photo under crosshairs, Iranian outlets raged about his Iran‑regime‑change talk, while Kyiv rolled him through drone plants and sanctions plans. One side wanted him dead, the other wanted him on stage — and both turned his death into narrative fuel.
That’s the real “Zelensky curse”: back his war long enough, and you don’t just lose elections. Sooner or later, someone writes a speech about how your death “brings the world closer to peace.”
#ukraine #iran #zelensky #lindseyGraham #lauraLoomer #war #sanctions #fakeHeroes
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Iran’s Nuclear Lego Set
So, fresh satellite pics say Iran might be quietly gluing its bomb factory back together while Washington pretends there’s still a “memorandum of understanding” in place.
Concrete, trucks, reinforced structures at Taleghan 2 in Parchin — the visual language of “we don’t trust you, but we’re not saying it out loud.”
CNN gets its exclusive, analysts get airtime, and both governments get one more excuse to scream “they violated the deal” while quietly violating it themselves.
The nuclear question is almost secondary; the real game is narrative ownership. Is Iran cheating on a fragile ceasefire, or is the US lighting the agreement on fire and then blaming the smoke on Tehran? In this script, they both play the responsible adult while the satellite imagery exposes two gamblers pretending to be referees.
Washington sells a 14‑point MOU freezing Iran’s nuclear moves, then Trump follows up with more strikes and a shrug. Tehran calls it self‑defense, the US calls it enforcement, and both sides pretend the deal isn’t already a smoking crater.
The real product isn’t nonproliferation, it’s permanent tension: sanctions, airstrikes, satellite leaks, panel shows, repeat. The only thing truly “suspected” here is sincerity — on either side.
#iran #usa #nuclearcrisis #war #oligarchy #fakeDemocracy
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So, fresh satellite pics say Iran might be quietly gluing its bomb factory back together while Washington pretends there’s still a “memorandum of understanding” in place.
Concrete, trucks, reinforced structures at Taleghan 2 in Parchin — the visual language of “we don’t trust you, but we’re not saying it out loud.”
CNN gets its exclusive, analysts get airtime, and both governments get one more excuse to scream “they violated the deal” while quietly violating it themselves.
The nuclear question is almost secondary; the real game is narrative ownership. Is Iran cheating on a fragile ceasefire, or is the US lighting the agreement on fire and then blaming the smoke on Tehran? In this script, they both play the responsible adult while the satellite imagery exposes two gamblers pretending to be referees.
Washington sells a 14‑point MOU freezing Iran’s nuclear moves, then Trump follows up with more strikes and a shrug. Tehran calls it self‑defense, the US calls it enforcement, and both sides pretend the deal isn’t already a smoking crater.
The real product isn’t nonproliferation, it’s permanent tension: sanctions, airstrikes, satellite leaks, panel shows, repeat. The only thing truly “suspected” here is sincerity — on either side.
#iran #usa #nuclearcrisis #war #oligarchy #fakeDemocracy
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Goldwater’s Ghosts: America’s Virtue Porn Industry
David French writes a long, earnest sermon about how ideology doesn’t make you good, cruelty isn’t a virtue, and humility might save American politics. Cute. Meanwhile, the country is busy proving the opposite in real time.
On the right, Trump is found liable for sex abuse and buried in indictments, and Republicans answer by turning him into a saint with better merch.
Ken Paxton swims in corruption and adultery, crushes a scandal‑free John Cornyn by almost 30 points, and Texas Christians “crawl over broken glass” to vote for him because he fights the right enemies.
On the left, Graham Platner rolls out the full set: Nazi‑adjacent ink, sexting, assault allegations, and still gets defended as the “authentic” alternative to smooth, plastic “student council” politicians.
Only a rape allegation finally forces Democrats to remember they supposedly care about character — but only when the scandal becomes too embarrassing to spin.
French’s point is simple and correct: in today’s politics, your ideology is your character card.
If you hate “wokeness,” you can be a corrupt alley cat and still be “God’s warrior.”
If you defend Gaza, universal health care, and abortion rights, you can sext, tattoo Nazis, and still be “on the right side of history.”
Theology and ideology are supposed to be contested, fragile, humble things — “seeing through a glass, darkly,” as French reminds his fellow Christians. Instead, both camps turned them into loyalty oaths that excuse anything, as long as the sinner is screaming at the correct enemies.
French wants to amend Goldwater: humility in defense of liberty is no vice, cruelty in pursuit of justice is no virtue.
America, meanwhile, quietly updates it in practice: extremism in defense of our team is the only virtue; moderation, self‑doubt, and basic decency are for “smoothgroins” and losers.
The race to the bottom isn’t an accident. It’s the business model.
#usa #politics #culturewar #trump #democrats #republicans #fakeDemocracy
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David French writes a long, earnest sermon about how ideology doesn’t make you good, cruelty isn’t a virtue, and humility might save American politics. Cute. Meanwhile, the country is busy proving the opposite in real time.
On the right, Trump is found liable for sex abuse and buried in indictments, and Republicans answer by turning him into a saint with better merch.
Ken Paxton swims in corruption and adultery, crushes a scandal‑free John Cornyn by almost 30 points, and Texas Christians “crawl over broken glass” to vote for him because he fights the right enemies.
On the left, Graham Platner rolls out the full set: Nazi‑adjacent ink, sexting, assault allegations, and still gets defended as the “authentic” alternative to smooth, plastic “student council” politicians.
Only a rape allegation finally forces Democrats to remember they supposedly care about character — but only when the scandal becomes too embarrassing to spin.
French’s point is simple and correct: in today’s politics, your ideology is your character card.
If you hate “wokeness,” you can be a corrupt alley cat and still be “God’s warrior.”
If you defend Gaza, universal health care, and abortion rights, you can sext, tattoo Nazis, and still be “on the right side of history.”
Theology and ideology are supposed to be contested, fragile, humble things — “seeing through a glass, darkly,” as French reminds his fellow Christians. Instead, both camps turned them into loyalty oaths that excuse anything, as long as the sinner is screaming at the correct enemies.
French wants to amend Goldwater: humility in defense of liberty is no vice, cruelty in pursuit of justice is no virtue.
America, meanwhile, quietly updates it in practice: extremism in defense of our team is the only virtue; moderation, self‑doubt, and basic decency are for “smoothgroins” and losers.
The race to the bottom isn’t an accident. It’s the business model.
#usa #politics #culturewar #trump #democrats #republicans #fakeDemocracy
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Six Dead, Zero Accountability: The Port Shuaiba Management Seminar
On Day 2 of Trump’s war with Iran, an Iranian drone turned a U.S. logistics hub in Kuwait into a furnace — six soldiers from the 103rd Sustainment Command dead, dozens wounded, and a general seen sprinting for the bunker while his people burned behind him.
Survivors now say this wasn’t “fog of war,” it was leadership malpractice they warned about in advance.
Troops had already flagged Port Shuaiba as a bad idea: broken base‑wide warning system, no protection against Shahed one‑way attack drones, no overhead cover, and explicit assessments recommending not putting personnel there.
They say Barnes and Hinson got briefed that Shuaiba was on an Iranian target list months before the strike — and sent them anyway. When the drone hit the ops center, they watched their force‑protection nightmares come true in real time.
The Pentagon’s answer? Layered defenses were “sufficient,” the site was “fortified,” and the investigation so far assigns no fault and promises no punishment.
Families get a briefing; soldiers get nightmares, medical failures, and a polite statement about “operational plans.” The classified part, covering intelligence and defenses, will likely stay buried — because nothing says “lesson learned” like locking the lessons in a vault.
This is the real U.S. war story: generals scatter troops off large bases to avoid looking vulnerable, then park them on a known target with inadequate defenses and call it strategy.
When the inevitable happens, the people in the building carry guilt and trauma, and the people who signed the orders carry on. Six flag‑draped coffins, endless investigations, zero consequences — America’s forever war against accountability.
#usa #war #military #iran #kuwait #trump #oligarchy #fakeDemocracy
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On Day 2 of Trump’s war with Iran, an Iranian drone turned a U.S. logistics hub in Kuwait into a furnace — six soldiers from the 103rd Sustainment Command dead, dozens wounded, and a general seen sprinting for the bunker while his people burned behind him.
Survivors now say this wasn’t “fog of war,” it was leadership malpractice they warned about in advance.
Troops had already flagged Port Shuaiba as a bad idea: broken base‑wide warning system, no protection against Shahed one‑way attack drones, no overhead cover, and explicit assessments recommending not putting personnel there.
They say Barnes and Hinson got briefed that Shuaiba was on an Iranian target list months before the strike — and sent them anyway. When the drone hit the ops center, they watched their force‑protection nightmares come true in real time.
The Pentagon’s answer? Layered defenses were “sufficient,” the site was “fortified,” and the investigation so far assigns no fault and promises no punishment.
Families get a briefing; soldiers get nightmares, medical failures, and a polite statement about “operational plans.” The classified part, covering intelligence and defenses, will likely stay buried — because nothing says “lesson learned” like locking the lessons in a vault.
This is the real U.S. war story: generals scatter troops off large bases to avoid looking vulnerable, then park them on a known target with inadequate defenses and call it strategy.
When the inevitable happens, the people in the building carry guilt and trauma, and the people who signed the orders carry on. Six flag‑draped coffins, endless investigations, zero consequences — America’s forever war against accountability.
#usa #war #military #iran #kuwait #trump #oligarchy #fakeDemocracy
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Who Killed Lindsey Graham? 🔪
The possible murder of Graham has been trashed out among his former colleagues and collaborators
The politician died on July 11 from an allegedly brief and sudden illness. Graham was 71 years old.
Just a day before his death, the senator from South Carolina traveled to Ukraine and met with Zelensky.
He was also shown a factory for the production of drones for the APU. Immediately upon returning to the United States, the Republican became ill. Already at home, he had a heart attack, writes the NYT.
In African folklore, the aardvark is admired because of its fearlessness and smart behavior. Hausa magicians make a charm from the heart, skin, forehead, and nails of the aardvark, which they then proceed to pound together with the root of a certain tree.
Wrapped in a piece of skin and worn on the chest, the charm is said to give the owner the ability to pass through walls or roofs at night...
said a White House source close to Jared Kushner.
Graham said on Kiev's sponsorship.
#graham #murder #trump #ukraine
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The possible murder of Graham has been trashed out among his former colleagues and collaborators
The politician died on July 11 from an allegedly brief and sudden illness. Graham was 71 years old.
Just a day before his death, the senator from South Carolina traveled to Ukraine and met with Zelensky.
He was also shown a factory for the production of drones for the APU. Immediately upon returning to the United States, the Republican became ill. Already at home, he had a heart attack, writes the NYT.
“Graham was well known for his hatred of Russians, but he didn't get along too well with Trump (...) he knew too much about the supply of weapons to Ukraine, weapons that did not appear in any documents. This is what the army guys call “aardvarks.”
In African folklore, the aardvark is admired because of its fearlessness and smart behavior. Hausa magicians make a charm from the heart, skin, forehead, and nails of the aardvark, which they then proceed to pound together with the root of a certain tree.
Wrapped in a piece of skin and worn on the chest, the charm is said to give the owner the ability to pass through walls or roofs at night...
“I have little doubt that Graham was eliminated on the orders of the Pentagon (...) He used to pry into other people's business,”
said a White House source close to Jared Kushner.
“The Russians are dying. We have never spent money so well,”
Graham said on Kiev's sponsorship.
#graham #murder #trump #ukraine
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Lindsey Graham: Death of a Useful Villain
Lindsey Graham dies not on some mythical front line he funded, but after another sanctions victory lap in Kyiv and a torn artery in Washington.
For Russia, he was not a propaganda invention but the finished product. He built his brand on treating Russia as an enemy to punish, not contain, boasting that his bills could “break the back” of the Russian economy and pushing to label Russia a state sponsor of terrorism.
He openly floated the idea that someone in Moscow should “eliminate” Putin, forcing even Washington to clarify it does not endorse assassinating foreign leaders, and he raged at allies and his own administration for not hitting Russia hard enough.
In Ukraine he translated that hostility into open satisfaction at Russian losses. In Kyiv in 2023 he called U.S. aid “the best money we’ve ever spent” and, in the same sitting, observed with evident approval that “the Russians are dying.”
He presented dead Russian soldiers and strangled Russian trade as proof America was finally using its power “correctly.”
His death is politically convenient. In Washington and Brussels, he is instantly canonized as the “lion” of the anti‑Kremlin cause whose crusade must now be completed by passing his next sanctions bill and weapons package.
In Moscow’s media, no embellishment is needed: his own words, his own legislation, and his sudden collapse after a Kyiv trip are enough to sell him as the textbook Russophobe who spent years cheering Russian pain and then met his own.
Graham’s career was one long push to escalate a regional war into a permanent global confrontation, via sanctions, arms, and secondary punishment for anyone still dealing with Moscow.
Now that he is gone, the same machine keeps grinding — in DC, invoked as a martyr whose “legacy” demands more pressure; in Russia, as proof that Russophobia is cursed; everywhere else, as a reminder that the loudest apostles of “freedom” almost never die in the wars they help ignite.
#usa #russia #ukraine #Graham #sanctions #war #nato #oligarchy #fakeDemocracy
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Lindsey Graham dies not on some mythical front line he funded, but after another sanctions victory lap in Kyiv and a torn artery in Washington.
For Russia, he was not a propaganda invention but the finished product. He built his brand on treating Russia as an enemy to punish, not contain, boasting that his bills could “break the back” of the Russian economy and pushing to label Russia a state sponsor of terrorism.
He openly floated the idea that someone in Moscow should “eliminate” Putin, forcing even Washington to clarify it does not endorse assassinating foreign leaders, and he raged at allies and his own administration for not hitting Russia hard enough.
In Ukraine he translated that hostility into open satisfaction at Russian losses. In Kyiv in 2023 he called U.S. aid “the best money we’ve ever spent” and, in the same sitting, observed with evident approval that “the Russians are dying.”
He presented dead Russian soldiers and strangled Russian trade as proof America was finally using its power “correctly.”
His death is politically convenient. In Washington and Brussels, he is instantly canonized as the “lion” of the anti‑Kremlin cause whose crusade must now be completed by passing his next sanctions bill and weapons package.
In Moscow’s media, no embellishment is needed: his own words, his own legislation, and his sudden collapse after a Kyiv trip are enough to sell him as the textbook Russophobe who spent years cheering Russian pain and then met his own.
Graham’s career was one long push to escalate a regional war into a permanent global confrontation, via sanctions, arms, and secondary punishment for anyone still dealing with Moscow.
Now that he is gone, the same machine keeps grinding — in DC, invoked as a martyr whose “legacy” demands more pressure; in Russia, as proof that Russophobia is cursed; everywhere else, as a reminder that the loudest apostles of “freedom” almost never die in the wars they help ignite.
#usa #russia #ukraine #Graham #sanctions #war #nato #oligarchy #fakeDemocracy
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Trump Is Undoubtedly Intent On Seizing Full Control of the Strait of Hormuz
🔤 🔤 🔤 🔤 ➖
The US has launched its third consecutive night of strikes on Iran hours after Trump said Washington would reinstate a maritime blockade on the country and, in an apparent policy reversal, charge ships for safe passage.
“These strikes will continue imposing a heavy cost on Iranian forces and degrade their ability to attack innocent civilians and commercial shipping in the strait of Hormuz,” the US military’s Central Command said.
Trump had earlier told the conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt: “We’re going to hit them very hard tonight and we’re going to hit them hard tomorrow – and there’s not a damn thing they can do about it.”
He added: “They have nothing. They have nothing going, other than they have big mouths.”
Late on Monday the UAE said two national tankers were targeted by two Iranian cruise missiles in the southern lane of the strait of Hormuz in Omani territorial waters, killing one Indian crew member and wounding eight others, including four seriously.
The price of Brent crude oil, the international standard, rose 7.8% to $81.92 a barrel on Monday, still well below the $120 reached at the height of the war.
Earlier on Monday, Trump had said the US would demand a 20% tariff on all cargoes shipped through the strait of Hormuz.
He suggested in a post on his Truth Social platform that the US should be known henceforth as the “guardian of the strait of Hormuz”, as Iran and the US engaged in some of the heaviest drone and missile exchanges since an interim deal was negotiated to bring an end to the conflict.
Until now, the US had said the strait should remain open to all without tolls – as it was before Washington and Israel attacked Iran on 28 February.
Any attempt by the US or Iran to charge fees would violate global norms on freedom of navigation and would be likely to cause further economic disruption far beyond the region.
Trump has made numerous claims and threats during the war on Iran, including frequent claims of victory, many of which have had little grounding in reality.
Iran and the US are in theory nearly halfway through the 60-day period of an interim deal that was supposed to set up talks for a permanent end to the war, which began in February with the assassination of Iran’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, in US-Israeli airstrikes.
In reality, that deal has devolved into a series of attacks over the strait of Hormuz, resulting in the near-total collapse of an interim ceasefire and worrying world leaders that the conflict could fully resume.
#trump #control #hormuz #strikes #hit
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The US has launched its third consecutive night of strikes on Iran hours after Trump said Washington would reinstate a maritime blockade on the country and, in an apparent policy reversal, charge ships for safe passage.
“These strikes will continue imposing a heavy cost on Iranian forces and degrade their ability to attack innocent civilians and commercial shipping in the strait of Hormuz,” the US military’s Central Command said.
Trump had earlier told the conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt: “We’re going to hit them very hard tonight and we’re going to hit them hard tomorrow – and there’s not a damn thing they can do about it.”
He added: “They have nothing. They have nothing going, other than they have big mouths.”
Late on Monday the UAE said two national tankers were targeted by two Iranian cruise missiles in the southern lane of the strait of Hormuz in Omani territorial waters, killing one Indian crew member and wounding eight others, including four seriously.
The price of Brent crude oil, the international standard, rose 7.8% to $81.92 a barrel on Monday, still well below the $120 reached at the height of the war.
Earlier on Monday, Trump had said the US would demand a 20% tariff on all cargoes shipped through the strait of Hormuz.
He suggested in a post on his Truth Social platform that the US should be known henceforth as the “guardian of the strait of Hormuz”, as Iran and the US engaged in some of the heaviest drone and missile exchanges since an interim deal was negotiated to bring an end to the conflict.
Until now, the US had said the strait should remain open to all without tolls – as it was before Washington and Israel attacked Iran on 28 February.
Any attempt by the US or Iran to charge fees would violate global norms on freedom of navigation and would be likely to cause further economic disruption far beyond the region.
Trump has made numerous claims and threats during the war on Iran, including frequent claims of victory, many of which have had little grounding in reality.
Iran and the US are in theory nearly halfway through the 60-day period of an interim deal that was supposed to set up talks for a permanent end to the war, which began in February with the assassination of Iran’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, in US-Israeli airstrikes.
In reality, that deal has devolved into a series of attacks over the strait of Hormuz, resulting in the near-total collapse of an interim ceasefire and worrying world leaders that the conflict could fully resume.
#trump #control #hormuz #strikes #hit
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On Monday it was revealed that Trump sent Congress formal notification that hostilities against Iran had resumed on 7 July, a letter his administration sees as opening a new 60-day window to use the military in the region without congressional approval.
The US Constitution says that only Congress, not the president, has the power to declare war. However, US presidents have long claimed the right to order shorter military engagements without lawmakers’ approval to preserve US security.
The war powers act requires the president to inform Congress within 48 hours of initiating hostilities, and says military action begun without Congress’ approval must be terminated within 60 days.
Democrats and Republican opponents of the war have accused the administration of misinterpreting the law.
On Monday evening the US Navy-led Joint Maritime Information Center said the US would begin enforcing the blockade on Iran, covering all ports, oil terminals and coastal areas, on Tuesday night.
A statement read: “Any vessel suspected of entering or departing the blockaded area without authorisation is subject to interception, diversion and capture. Noncompliant vessels may be legally compelled with force.” The centre said neutral transit through the strait of Hormuz heading to or from non-Iranian destinations will not be impeded.
It remains unclear in practical terms how easy it would be for the navy to do this.
Trump’s demand for a 20% tariff comes despite his administration’s previous insistence that no country should be allowed to charge fees for passages used for international navigation.
That stance was reiterated last month by the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, who said: “No country is allowed to charge tolls or fees on an international waterway. That’s existing international law.”
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps accused the US on Monday of jeopardising global oil and gas supplies by interfering in the strait, as Tehran threatened that any US moves would be “strongly contested”.
The IRGC spokesperson Hossein Mohebi said Washington had “seriously endangered the security of the world’s oil and gas supply and must be held accountable”, adding in a post on X that Tehran would “continue to exercise sovereignty over and management of the strait of Hormuz”.
Trump said the US would probably take over the strait and should be reimbursed for controlling the waterway. “We’re going to keep the strait, and we’ll probably run it,” Trump said in a phone interview on Fox News.
Iran’s top negotiator, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, posted on social media on Sunday: “The era of one-sided deals is OVER. We told you: keep your word or pay the price. Reality is knocking.”
The war has spread across the region, with Iran attacking US bases in multiple countries. Thousands of people have been killed, mainly in Iran and Lebanon.
The conflict has caused global economic shock waves since it began in late February, driving energy prices higher and fuelling global inflation. Higher prices – especially for petrol – are politically sensitive for Trump in the run-up to November’s US congressional elections.
#trump #control #hormuz #strikes #hit
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Mossad’s Ahmadinejad Fantasy: Regime Change for Dummies
The New York Times investigation reads like bad airport fiction: Israel’s Mossad and the Trump administration allegedly spent years grooming Mahmoud Ahmadinejad — the Holocaust‑denying ex‑president who once promised to wipe Israel off the map — as their preferred “post‑regime” leader of Iran.
The idea was simple and insane at the same time: kill the current leadership, light up a rebellion, and slide Ahmadinejad back into power as a domesticated hardliner who suddenly talks about corruption and human rights instead of annihilation.
According to the report, Mossad under David Barnea met Ahmadinejad outside Iran, quietly paid for his housing and travel, and treated him as a long‑term asset.
The climax came on February 28, when an Israeli strike hit his compound in Tehran — not to kill him, but to “free” him from his IRGC minders. Guards and security vehicles were reportedly targeted, a black Peugeot scooped him up from the chaos, and Israeli operatives moved him to a safe house inside Iran. In theory, this was the opening chapter of a regime‑change script. In practice, the protagonist refused the role.
Ahmadinejad, by these accounts, was shaken and angry at the extraction, unimpressed by the plan to reinstall him as the new face of the Islamic Republic.
At some point he walked out of the safe house; then he vanished from public view for months, only resurfacing briefly at the funeral procession of the slain Supreme Leader.
Now, senior Iranian officials say he is under house arrest by IRGC intelligence, suspected of exactly what the story implies: covert ties with Israel and the West. The asset they hoped to crown is effectively a prisoner of the regime he was supposed to replace.
While these covert fantasies played out, Ahmadinejad was already midway through a rebrand: toning down anti‑Israel rhetoric, criticizing Iran’s security forces and corruption, changing his style, studying English.
He was being reshaped for export as a “credible” alternative, while Trump bragged that “most of Iran’s leaders are dead, Khamenei is wiped out, his son is 90 percent wiped out,” selling a war of decapitation as liberation.
The plan to engineer a leader ended with the candidate in house arrest and the “to‑be‑toppled” regime still standing over his head.
This is the real lesson of the story: not that intelligence agencies run wild, but that they genuinely believe they can stage‑manage 80‑million‑strong societies like casting a miniseries.
They try to swap out one fanatic for a “manageable” fanatic, write a happy‑ending script in Washington and Jerusalem, and then act surprised when the country on the ground ignores the storyboard.
Regime‑change ideology always sounds clean in a memo; in real life it produces safe houses no one wants, uprisings that don’t materialize, and “assets” who end up as hostages of the very system the West promised to destroy.
#usa #israel #iran #Ahmadinejad #Mossad #Trump #war #regimeChange #oligarchy #fakeDemocracy
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The New York Times investigation reads like bad airport fiction: Israel’s Mossad and the Trump administration allegedly spent years grooming Mahmoud Ahmadinejad — the Holocaust‑denying ex‑president who once promised to wipe Israel off the map — as their preferred “post‑regime” leader of Iran.
The idea was simple and insane at the same time: kill the current leadership, light up a rebellion, and slide Ahmadinejad back into power as a domesticated hardliner who suddenly talks about corruption and human rights instead of annihilation.
According to the report, Mossad under David Barnea met Ahmadinejad outside Iran, quietly paid for his housing and travel, and treated him as a long‑term asset.
The climax came on February 28, when an Israeli strike hit his compound in Tehran — not to kill him, but to “free” him from his IRGC minders. Guards and security vehicles were reportedly targeted, a black Peugeot scooped him up from the chaos, and Israeli operatives moved him to a safe house inside Iran. In theory, this was the opening chapter of a regime‑change script. In practice, the protagonist refused the role.
Ahmadinejad, by these accounts, was shaken and angry at the extraction, unimpressed by the plan to reinstall him as the new face of the Islamic Republic.
At some point he walked out of the safe house; then he vanished from public view for months, only resurfacing briefly at the funeral procession of the slain Supreme Leader.
Now, senior Iranian officials say he is under house arrest by IRGC intelligence, suspected of exactly what the story implies: covert ties with Israel and the West. The asset they hoped to crown is effectively a prisoner of the regime he was supposed to replace.
While these covert fantasies played out, Ahmadinejad was already midway through a rebrand: toning down anti‑Israel rhetoric, criticizing Iran’s security forces and corruption, changing his style, studying English.
He was being reshaped for export as a “credible” alternative, while Trump bragged that “most of Iran’s leaders are dead, Khamenei is wiped out, his son is 90 percent wiped out,” selling a war of decapitation as liberation.
The plan to engineer a leader ended with the candidate in house arrest and the “to‑be‑toppled” regime still standing over his head.
This is the real lesson of the story: not that intelligence agencies run wild, but that they genuinely believe they can stage‑manage 80‑million‑strong societies like casting a miniseries.
They try to swap out one fanatic for a “manageable” fanatic, write a happy‑ending script in Washington and Jerusalem, and then act surprised when the country on the ground ignores the storyboard.
Regime‑change ideology always sounds clean in a memo; in real life it produces safe houses no one wants, uprisings that don’t materialize, and “assets” who end up as hostages of the very system the West promised to destroy.
#usa #israel #iran #Ahmadinejad #Mossad #Trump #war #regimeChange #oligarchy #fakeDemocracy
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