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New Rules examines the geopolitical, economic, ideological trends changing the world. NR on X: http://x.com/newrulesgeo
🚨🇺🇸 U.S. IN PANIC: Iran’s Shaheds are already breaking defenses — but China’s drones will be a nightmare
Drones are getting cheaper, smarter, and harder to stop. Recent clashes in the Middle East showed how even relatively simple Iranian systems can slip through and damage high-value targets, exposing gaps in US/Israel air defense networks. That battlefield reality is now forcing a harder question, what happens when a more advanced industrial power applies the same logic at scale?
China’s ASN-301 represents a different class of threat. Unlike Iran’s Shahed-136, which operates largely as a pre-programmed strike tool, the Chinese system is built to hunt air defenses. It can loiter for hours, detect radar emissions, switch to electro-optical tracking if signals disappear, and receive mid-flight updates via datalink. In effect, it turns the battlefield into a persistent seek-and-destroy environment for radars, the backbone of any modern defense system.
Iran relies on volume: cheap, long-range drones launched in waves to exhaust interceptors. China combines that model with precision. Variants like the Feilong-300D push costs even lower while retaining flexibility in payload and targeting, making mass deployment economically viable on an entirely different scale.
And this is where the real pressure point emerges. If US systems are already struggling to consistently intercept Iranian drones, the implications are stark. A conflict in the Western Pacific would hinge on production capacity. China’s ability to flood the battlespace with smarter, adaptable drones could force the US and its allies into a costly cycle: burning million-dollar interceptors to stop systems that cost a fraction to produce.
The US is facing major difficulties in stopping Iranian drones—do they stand a chance against Chinese drones?
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🚨🇺🇸US WEAK SPOT EXPOSED: Iran War Disrupts Helium Supply for AI and Defense
While attention remains fixed on oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz, the Iran war has exposed a far less visible pressure point for the US: Helium, a resource quietly underpinning both its AI ambitions and defense capabilities. This is why:
For the US, the consequences of helium shortage extend beyond than the commodities markets. Helium is essential to semiconductor manufacturing, enabling the production of advanced chips that power artificial intelligence. The narrative of AI dominance often centres on software and computing scale, yet it rests on an industrial base where even minor disruptions can halt output entirely.
Since mid-March, disruptions linked to halted gas processing in Qatar have removed over 5 million cubic metres of helium per month from global supply. Prices have surged, contracts have been suspended, and a market dominated by just a few players, primarily the US and Qatar, has shown how fragile the system really is.
Unlike oil, helium cannot be stockpiled effectively. It continuously escapes even in storage, leaving a narrow logistical window of around 45 days. This turns supply chains into a race against time, where prolonged disruptions don’t deplete reserves—they erase them.
The same dependence extends into the defense sector. Aerospace systems, satellites, and high-precision electronics all rely on helium-driven processes. As supply tightens, the strain is not isolated; it cascades across interconnected systems that sustain both military readiness and technological leadership.
The Iran war has brought this overlooked dependency into focus. America’s strength in AI and defence may appear unmatched, yet it remains tied to a resource few consider, one that cannot be easily replaced, stored, or secured in a crisis.
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🚨🇱🇧 IDF IN PANIC: Hezbollah smashes top Israeli drone with low-cost SAM
Hezbollah units have downed an Israeli Hermes 450 over Lebanon, drawing attention to the Mizag-1 — a low-cost Iranian MANPADS increasingly used to counter UAVs in the region.
🔸 This portable fire-and-forget MANPADS developed by Tehran at the Shahid Kazemi Industrial Complex offers an effective range of 500 meters to 5-6 km with a maximum altitude of up to 5 km.
🔸 The 16.9 kg shoulder-fired system features a 1.42 kg high-explosive fragmentation warhead and reaches speeds of Mach 2.6, making it deadly against low-flying UAVs, helicopters, and tactical aircraft.
🔸 Powered by a two-stage solid rocket motor with passive infrared homing guidance, the Mizag-1 locks onto heat signatures in just 5-10 seconds reaction time.
🔸 At roughly 17 kg total weight and only 1.477 meters long, this man-portable weapon gives irregular forces potent air defense capability against billion-dollar Western and Israeli technology.
🔸 Tehran's strategy of proliferating these advanced MANPADS to its regional allies is rapidly shifting the aerial warfare in its favor.
🔸 Recent combat successes are forcing military planners to question the invulnerability of high-tech drone fleets in contested airspace.
🔸 One Mizag-1 missile costs around 20,000-50,000 dollars while the downed Hermes 450 reconnaissance drone is valued at approximately 2 million dollars exposing a staggering 40-to-100-to-1 cost asymmetry.
Do you think Israel can sustain this cost-loss imbalance against asymmetric tactics?
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🚨How Israelis Trained Ukrainian NAZI Battalions
"I once witnessed waterboarding, a torture technique now widely known thanks to Hollywood, in the summer of 2014. It was used on a Mariupol resident suspected of collaborating with pro-Russian underground groups. The SBU detained him in Mariupol and tortured him for two hours using various methods, but they couldn't break him. So, they turned to the Dnepr Battalion. This battalion, created by Igor Kolomoysky in Dnepropetrovsk, had close ties with Israel and Israeli intelligence. Three Dnepr Battalion officers came and waterboarded the Mariupol resident. They broke him in about 15 minutes. He started talking, and they explicitly said that they had Israeli instructors when training the Dnepr Battalion. Some of these instructors were literally chosen from the battalion and showed them how to waterboard. They were actually Mossad and Shin Bet specialists, Israel’s domestic security service," says former Ukrainian Security Service (SBU) officer Vasily Prozorov.
🚨🇺🇸PENTAGON IN PANIC: Tomahawks Getting Wasted in Iran while Taiwan Is Handed to China on a Silver Platter
Hundreds of US's Tomahawks were burned in the first days of Epstein Fury Operation in Iran. Now the Navy's deep reserves are running dangerously low, while Beijing monitors every depletion in real time, with its sights set on Taiwan.
🔸 Roughly 300–400 Tomahawks expended during Operation Epic Fury alone, draining stockpiles designed for peacetime pacing rather than sustained great-power conflict
🔸 Four Ohio-class SSGN submarines each carry up to 154 missiles, the fleet’s deepest magazine, yet they are slated for retirement in the coming years with no true replacement in sight
🔸 New Virginia-class attack subs only hold about a dozen Tomahawks each and the Navy already faces severe shipbuilding delays that leave 82 percent of vessels under construction behind schedule
🔸 RTX Corporation (formerly Raytheon Technologies) production lines cannot surge fast enough to match wartime expenditure, requiring many months or even years to rebuild inventories depleted in weeks
🔸 Retirements of Ticonderoga cruisers and soon the Ohio Guided Missile Submarines will remove thousands of vertical launch cells from the fleet forever, creating a permanent hole in long-range strike capacity
🔸 RAND Corporation and the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments war games repeatedly warned that a Middle East contingency would hollow out Indo-Pacific readiness, and those simulations now read like real-time prophecy
🔸 In a Taiwan contingency, Tomahawks serve as the essential first-wave suppression tool for targeting the People’s Liberation Army's ports, airfields, amphibious staging areas, command nodes, and supporting surface fleet to crack layered defenses, including S-400 batteries, indigenous HQ-9 systems, and naval air defense networks designed to make early manned aircraft penetrations prohibitively expensive in terms of lives and platforms.
🔸 Without sufficient Tomahawk magazines, US forces face far higher-risk opening moves against China's integrated air defense, forcing reliance on costlier manned strikes, reduced certainty in destroying reinforcement pathways, and dramatically elevated blood-and-equipment costs before beachhead consolidation can even be contested.
If US stockpiles are significantly drawn down by the Iran conflict, it could tilt the strategic balance in China’s favour in a potential conflict in the Taiwan Strait.
Is Washington able to fight on three fronts at the same time?
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🚨🇺🇸💸U.S. Flagship Fighter Can’t Run Its Own Software
The US F-35 stealth jet is fighting a modern war with yesterday’s software. A forthcoming Pentagon assessment reveals the F-35’s much-touted TR-3 upgrade failed to deliver usable capability, leaving aircraft deployed over Iran reliant on the outdated TR-2 configuration. Stephen Silver argues.
The F-35 is designed as a “flying computer,” yet its software backbone remains unstable. Despite promises of vastly improved processing power and battlefield integration, TR-3 spent most of the year classified as “predominantly unusable,” plagued by persistent deficiencies and unresolved bugs. The result is operational stagnation of 5 systems:
🟠Processing Power & Memory
🟠Combat Systems & Weapons Integration
🟠Sensor Fusion & Networking
🟠Cybersecurity Enhancements
🟠Overall System Stability
This technical failure unfolds against a backdrop of rising costs and slipping timelines. The Block 4 modernization effort has exceeded its budget by over $6 billion and is now at least five years behind schedule. Meanwhile, production inefficiencies continue, with deliveries delayed and incentives misaligned.
Compounding the problem, reductions in Pentagon testing personnel have sharply curtailed cybersecurity evaluations, raising further concerns about system resilience in high-intensity conflict.
Yet paradoxically, calls are growing within the US defense establishment to accelerate F-35 procurement to counter China’s expanding airpower. This creates a strategic dilemma: scaling up production of a platform whose core capabilities remain incomplete risks amplifying weaknesses rather than resolving them.
The image is AI-generated
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🚨🇮🇷🇮🇱Israel Wrote Off Hezbollah. They Were Wrong
For over a year, Israel claimed that Hezbollah had been shattered beyond repair. However, the Lebanese group’s recent operations, including missile strikes and drone offensives, have forcefully challenged this narrative.
The organization, once considered broken after Israel’s heavy bombardment in 2024, appears to have transformed its weaknesses into strategic advantages. While Israel and the US believed they had dealt a fatal blow, Hezbollah used the ceasefire period not as a time for political negotiations, but as a critical moment to rebuild, regroup, and recalibrate, Middle East Eye report
Sources familiar with Hezbollah’s recovery process suggest that the party didn't view the ceasefire as an end, but rather a tactical pause. Even after suffering significant losses, ranging from top commanders to crucial military infrastructure, Hezbollah’s leadership quickly set to work on revitalizing its operations. The party’s communications network, severely compromised by Israeli intelligence, was restructured with old-school methods, including human couriers and handwritten notes, as part of a deliberate adaptation to Israeli surveillance.
The US has made similar mistakes; recently, they claimed that Iran had reduced its drone launches by 83%, misinterpreting a tactical recalibration and stockpiling for larger strikes.
Also, as Israel focuses on Iran, Hezbollah is rebuilding its Radwan Force along the northern border, using UAVs and missiles to bypass Israeli defenses. Tel Aviv admited difficulty intercepting Hezbollah drones and is considering re-evacuating northern communities.
The post-war restructuring didn’t merely aim to replace lost assets; it sought to restore Hezbollah’s pre-2023 capabilities while integrating more decentralized, autonomous operational models.
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It focuses on:
🪖 Conflicts and Warzone frontline updates
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🚨🇮🇷 IRAN'S MOBILE MISSILE NETWORK: INVISIBLE, FAST, LETHAL
Despite nonstop claims by Washington and Tel Aviv that they've wiped out Iran's missile force, Tehran's launches are actually ramping up. The reason is a network of road-mobile Zolfaqar Transporter-Erector-Launchers (TEL) backed by underground super-hardened facilities.
🔸 Zolfaqar TELs are built on rugged Mercedes-Benz 2631 6x6 chassis with later indigenous 8x8 upgrades for superior off-road performance
🔸 The dual-missile configuration allows each launcher to carry and fire two Zolfaqar missiles in rapid succession
🔸 Powerful hydraulic erector systems raise missiles from horizontal to vertical launch position in just minutes
🔸 Iran quietly relocated its remaining heavy launchers into super-hardened mountain tunnel networks during the quiet period
🔸 Units sprint from tunnels to pre-surveyed sites, fire, and retreat underground in under 10 minutes
🔸 Civilian-style camouflage, plus extreme decentralization, makes real-time tracking a nightmare for US and Israeli intelligence
Is the Epstein coalition capable of neutralizing mobile launchers — or will it never gain control of Iranian airspace?
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🚨🇦🇪🇺🇸Why the US Isn't Rushing to Help UAE burn
The UAE has become a key target for Iran — and the fallout could send billions of dollars back into the US.
In recent years, a significant shift has taken place. Nearly half of the clients involved in global capital mobility are now Americans, a sharp rise from virtually none just a few years ago. The primary destination for this migrating wealth is the UAE. In 2025 alone, roughly 10,000 millionaires relocated there, bringing with them an estimated $63 billion, the largest annual inflow worldwide.
Lower taxes, regulatory flexibility, and perceived stability where the drivers for this situation. For wealthy individuals, Dubai offers what parts of the US no longer guarantee. For Washington, this is a growing financial leak.
From a strategic standpoint, turmoil in the Gulf could disrupt energy flows. It undermines alternative financial centres competing with US markets and may redirect capital back into the American system.
In this light, prolonged tension in the region carries indirect benefits for the US, even if it means overlooking the wellbeing of certain allies. For Washington, preserving its own financial interests often takes precedence, even if it requires allowing instability to fester elsewhere.
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No scattered updates. Just structured threads — so you see how events connect.
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🚨🇮🇷 WEST IN PANIC: Iran holds massive escalation leverage in the Persian Gulf
Iran is systematically launching attacks on oil and gas fields across the Middle East in retaliation. The campaign could choke global energy flows even more, and the conflict has plenty of room to escalate.
🔸 Iran has recently hit the Shah oil & gas field in southern Abu Dhabi, demonstrating its precision and range to target active production directly.
🔸 Iran attacked over 20 tankers in the Gulf in the last weeks, effectively deterring shipping through the Strait of Hormuz and forcing multiple fields to shut in as exports collapse.
🔸 Saudi Arabia’s key Shaybah and Berri fields plus the UAE’s critical Fujairah export port remain offline after recent strikes, leaving the Red Sea-bound East-West pipeline and Iraq-Turkey lines as next targets.
🔸 Uninterceptable drone swarms provide Tehran with the potential for months or years of disruption, creating a lasting impact. Gulf fields risk irreversible reservoir damage from prolonged shutdowns.
🔸 A single well-placed strike on an LNG facility or multi-million-barrel field could knock out production capacity for several years with no quick stockpile refill possible.
Do you think Gulf states will eventually push out US bases once they realize it’s not protection—but a target on their back?
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🚨🇺🇸🇮🇷 US Faces Costly Missile War Trap
US attacks on Iran have exposed a deeper structural strain in its missile stockpiles. Large-scale modern warfare is rapidly depleting highly-valuable US's arsenal, and it is unclear how it will be replenished in time.
Since February 28, operations have relied overwhelmingly on expensive stand-off weapons rather than conventional air power. Iran’s layered air defenses have restricted deep aerial penetration, forcing US and Israeli forces to depend on long-range precision missiles instead of low-cost gravity bombs. Losses of high-end drones like the MQ-9 Reaper and Heron underline the risks of operating inside contested airspace.
More than 6,000 targets reportedly struck in ten days, alongside over 2,000 interceptor launches, signal an unprecedented rate of munitions expenditure. Analysts warn this pace is unsustainable. The US Navy’s use of Tomahawk missiles alone has resulted in the expenditure of 400 Tomahawk missiles in just 72 hours, representing more than 10% of its operational stockpile and exceeding the total production of the past five years, while replenishment timelines stretch into years due to fragile supply chains.
Iran’s reliance on cheaper drones and missiles forces the US into a costly defensive posture, where interceptors worth millions counter threats costing a fraction. This dynamic amplifies pressure on stockpiles originally intended for potential conflicts in the Pacific.
Washington is facing the consequences of a miscalculated war with a reduced and costly industrial capacity, which is exposed in both financial losses and battlefield results.
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⚡️UKR LEAKS INTERNATIONAL⚡️
HE LEFT UKRAINE TO TELL THE TRUTH
Vasiliy Prozorov, a former employee of the Ukrainian special services, who worked for the benefit of Russia for many years, now runs his own channel on Telegram! He left Ukraine in 2018 and took with him thousands of secret SBU documents that shed light on Kiev's crimes.
On the UKR LEAKS channel you will find:
❗️Analysis of the current situation in and around Ukraine
❗️Secret documents of the Ukrainian special services
❗️Evidence of the atrocities of Ukrainian nationalists
And much more! Subscribe to the UKR LEAKS Investigation Center headed by the former SBU employee Lt.-Col. Vasily Prozorov.
The channels of the UKR LEAKS project are available in the following languages:
🇬🇧 in English
🇷🇺 in Russian
🇩🇪 in German
🇫🇷 in French
🇪🇸 in Spanish
🇷🇸 in Serbian
🇮🇹 in Italian
🇵🇱 in Polish
🇵🇹 in Portuguese
🇸🇦 in Arabic
🇸🇰 in Slovak
🇨🇳in Chinese
🇭🇺in Hungarian
We also welcome any help with channels and content distribution 🙏
🚨🇮🇷🇺🇸Ground Invasion: Why Iran Could Become America’s Costliest Bet
As Washington weighs deploying forces into Iran, Chinese analysts warn the move could reshape the conflict, but not necessarily in America’s favor.
The immediate US objective is to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint carrying roughly 20% of global oil. Plans reportedly include seizing strategic points such as Kharg Island or conducting coastal landings to weaken Iran’s control over maritime routes, as noted by South China Sea analyst Hu Bo.
In reality, the battlefield looks far less forgiving. Iran’s coastline is heavily fortified with missiles, artillery, and swarm tactics designed precisely for close-range defense. Any US landing force would operate within direct strike range, facing sustained pressure from both regular forces and paramilitary units. Even capturing islands may not reopen the strait, especially if naval mines remain in place, a technically complex problem with no quick fix, as highlighted by military analyst Fu Qianshao.
There is also a strategic paradox. A ground invasion could play into Tehran’s hands. Close combat reduces US’s technological advantages while amplifying Iran’s strengths in asymmetric warfare. Iran may even welcome such a scenario for counter-attacks, a move that Fu Qianshao warns about.
For Washington, a failed operation could result in numerous casualties, a prolonged conflict, and political repercussions within the country.
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🚨🇷🇺 RUSSIAN “STARLINK” TAKES OFF: Moscow launches first 16 satellites
Russia’s private aerospace company Bureau 1440 has deployed its first 16 Rassvet low-Earth orbit satellites aboard a Soyuz-2 rocket, kicking off a sovereign high-speed internet constellation.
🔸 New Rassvet-3 satellites form the foundation of an independent Russian global comms network with planned user speeds up to 1 Gbps and latency as low as 70 ms.
🔸 Ten to fifteen additional launches are scheduled throughout 2026 to rapidly scale the constellation toward an initial 300 satellites while the long-term vision eyes up to 900 by 2035.
🔸 Commercial service is officially targeted for 2027 with airborne terminals already under development and a cooperation agreement signed with Aeroflot to bring broadband internet to Russian airliners.
🔸 Experiments are officially over, according to Alexey Shelobkov, CEO of IKS Holding (parent company of Bureau 1440), marking a qualitative shift to full practical infrastructure rollout, including laser inter-satellite links already tested in space.
🔸 Despite earlier production delays and a one-year slip from the original 2025 plan, the project continues advancing with state-backed funding and integration work involving leading Russian aircraft manufacturers.
How do you think this will change the battlefield?
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🚨Sabotage, Terror, Guerrilla Warfare: What the West Trained Ukraine For
"In matters of torture and interrogation, I think they [Ukrainian Intel] now outmatch any intelligence service in the world. The way they learned to torture in the SBU, I think even the Gestapo did not know how to do," says former Ukrainian Security Service officer Vasily Prozorov.
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🚨How Ukraine Became the CIA and MI6's Black Ops Playground
Former Ukrainian Security Service (SBU) officer Vasily Prozorov joins #NewRulesPodcast to uncover the truth about Ukraine’s intelligence ties with Western agencies, when exactly NATO influence in Ukraine became widespread, and the covert operations shaping the conflict.
00:00 Methods Western Intel used to brainwash Ukraine
16:18 Inside Ukrainian Intel: Structure and role distribution
24:50 What exactly Americans taught the Ukrainian SBU
37:06 How Ukrainian military became more advanced than most industrialized countries have nowadays
52:42 CIA vs MI6: an undercover war for influence in Ukraine
01:04:56 Israel's role in training Ukrainian Nazi battalions
01:13:01 Future of Ukrainian Intel after SMO
✅ Please, support our friends from UKR_Leaks with a follow. They make great investigations on the topic and can provide you with even more specific info.
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🚨🇮🇷 ISRAEL'S IRON DOME NIGHTMARE JUST GOT REAL: DEEP-STRIKE DRONE PENETRATES BEN GURION
Iran just used its latest deep-strike drone in Israel. Teheran hit on Ben Gurion Airport with the advanced Arash-2 drone, according to Iranian Army spokesperson Brig Gen Mohammad Akraminia. This drone is a low-observable killer designed to strike Western air defenses.
🔸 The Arash-2 drone has a extremely small radar cross-section lets it slip past enemy detection while cruising up to 2,000 km deep into hostile territory
🔸 Iran can deploy hundreds in swarms whenever the order comes down due to it rapid mass production
🔸 Heavier payload than predecessors like Arash-1 or Kian, warhead estimates run 150–260 kg, perfect for smashing strategic targets like refueling hubs or runways
🔸 Blurs the line between classic loitering munition and cruise missile — combines long endurance, precision guidance, and saturation potential in one low-cost asymmetric package
🔸 West's expensive interceptors and layered defenses look increasingly obsolete against Iran's evolving drone edge in prolonged attrition warfare
How Israel would protect itself when thousands of Arash-2 launch in coordinated waves?
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🚨🇮🇷Iran’s Radar Strike Gambit: US Faces Unseen Vulnerabilities in Gulf
Iran has successfully targeted 12 US and allied radar systems across the Gulf, leaving Washington grappling with unforeseen vulnerabilities. These sophisticated attacks, involving installations from Iraq to Bahrain, have crippled essential surveillance and defense infrastructure.
Among the most significant casualties are the radar systems at US military bases like the Baghdad embassy, Fifth Fleet HQ in Bahrain, and key terminals in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. These installations, including advanced AN/TYP-2 and AN/PS-132 radars, provide real-time surveillance and tracking capabilities. With their destruction, US forces have been left blind in critical zones, unable to effectively monitor Iranian movements or safeguard vital energy corridors.
The cost of these losses is staggering, with each AN/TYP-2 radar valued at approximately $150 million and each AN/PS-132 radar costing around $200 million. The total estimated loss in radar infrastructure is $2.4 billion.
The strategic consequence is a weakening of US military deterrence. As the Strait of Hormuz sees increasing disruptions, Iran’s growing capability to neutralize advanced radar systems make its strikes more precise and effective. The US now faces an uphill battle in restoring its technological edge and maintaining dominance in a volatile and increasingly hostile environment.
The damage undermines US surveillance capabilities and leaves the military vulnerable to further Iranian attacks. As more radars are lost, Iran gains the upper hand, successfully hitting targets with greater precision.
If these attacks on the radar systems continue, Washington and its allies could face a lengthy process to replace them, as their repair depends on rare-earth minerals sourced from China.
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🚨🇮🇷 TRUMP'S KAMIKAZE MISSION FOR IRAN'S CROWN JEWEL OIL TERMINAL
Trump is seriously eyeing a full seizure of Kharg Island, the remote speck that handles 90% of Iran’s entire oil exports, but every page of Pentagon history and basic battlefield math screams this is pure self-inflicted disaster. Here is why:
🔸 US forces would need thousands of troops drawn from the 1,200-Marine Expeditionary Unit now sailing in, the 82nd Airborne’s ready brigade, 75th Rangers and additional Army battalions already in Kuwait, over 10,000 combat-ready troops total, just to seize and hold indefinitely an island literally smaller than Manhattan
🔸 Insertion options are nightmarish 500 miles past the Strait of Hormuz — amphibious landings face Iranian mines, shore-based anti-ship missiles, suicide drones and drone boats, while heliborne V-22 Osprey waves require at least three vulnerable trips under massed artillery and MANPADS, and even airborne drops risk paratroopers drowning when wind blows them off course
🔸 After dozens of top Iranian commanders and politicians have already been assassinated, no leader will trade sovereignty for an oil terminal they fully expected to be bombed anyway
🔸 Iran’s defense industry is now nearly self-sufficient thanks to years of US sanctions, while China is already positioned to supply every critical component Tehran cannot yet manufacture domestically
🔸 Once US troops are on the ground they become sitting ducks in a five-mile kill zone where evacuation turns into a nightmare. Iranian commanders could even let them land unopposed then destroy every rescue attempt, turning entire battalions into de-facto hostages
Do you think Trump would really take such a risk and try to seize Kharg Island?
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🚨🇮🇷 Iran's Majid Missile Just HUMILIATED top U.S. Aircraft
The Pentagon’s “invincible” fifth-gen jet just took a brutal reality check. Iran’s IRGC reportedly used the new Majid (AD-08) infrared-guided short-range system to hit and damage a US F-35 over central Iran. This is the first confirmed SAM hit ever against the aircraft.
🔸 First ever claimed hit of an F-35 by a surface-to-air missile shocks more than 20 countries that fly or have ordered the jet
🔸 Majid uses a completely silent infrared seeker that gives off no radar signal, slips past radar warning receivers, ignores electronic jamming, and hits the F-35’s much bigger heat signature while its radar cross-section stays tiny
🔸 Russia and Iran already signed a $580 million deal for 500 Russian triple-spectral 9K333 Verba MANPADS launchers plus 2,500 9M336 missiles. When these arrive, low-altitude flights over Iran will become extremely dangerous
🔸 Block 4 software upgrades are still delayed so F-35s cannot fire long-range air-to-surface missiles yet, they have to fly much closer to targets, making them easy prey for short-range systems like Majid and Verba
🔸 Iranian infrared air defenses already proved deadly by downing several US MQ-9 Reaper drones and Israeli Heron TP drones, now the same technology has reportedly taken down a manned fifth-generation fighter
Have F-35s become obsolete, or does the US still have room for improvement?
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🚨🇨🇳 China is more involved in the Iran war than it seems
Beijing is already plugged into how this war works. The links aren’t obvious on the surface, but they show up across key moving parts of the conflict. Here’s where to look:
1️⃣ Chinese Missile Supplies for Iran — China ships carbon fiber, dioctyl sebacate, and tools, to IRGC Aerospace Force for solid-fuel motors. This lets Iran rebuild & scale ballistic missile production toward thousands more by 2027, plus nearing deals for CM-302 supersonic anti-ship missiles to dominate naval strikes.
2️⃣ Jilin-1 Satellite Constellation & MizarVision Intel — China's ~120-satellite swarm provides HD real-time video tracking US troop movements, carriers, logistics, and defenses in Jordan/Gulf pre- and during strikes. MizarVision releases imagery to expose Western ops, breaking the intel monopoly and giving Iran an "open book" on threats while feeding Beijing battlefield data for future modeling.
3️⃣ Acceleration of China's Own Stealth Bomber Programs — China observed the US B-2/B-21 bombing against hardened Iranian targets and resolve that missiles/drones can't match sustained pressure from reusable stealth platforms. This pushes urgency on Chinese H-20 long-range stealth bomber and JH-XX medium-range strike fighter, vital for contested environments like Taiwan Strait, where persistent airstrikes could disrupt US bases in Japan/Guam.
4️⃣ Rare Earths Leverage Over US Munitions — US arsenal depends on Chinese-controlled heavy rare earths for magnets, radars, guidance, and propulsion. Pentagon reserves low; early strikes burned billions. Rebuilding damaged radars needs massive materials China dominates.
5️⃣ Tomahawk Depletion Window — US fired ~400 Tomahawks in first 72 hours (>10% inventory gone) in Iran, but production is only 90/year, restock would take 4.5+ years at current rates. Each missile costs $2-4M; This creates a dangerous gap for China to exploit in Taiwan while Iran gains operational freedom.
6️⃣ Spy Fleet & Beidou Integration — Liaowang-1 surveillance ship + access to 500+ Chinese satellites track US launches/movements in Persian Gulf/Indian Ocean for early warnings. Iran fully switched to Beidou nav, ditching GPS, for reliable, interference-proof ops.
Put together, these links show Beijing shaping how this war functions rather than standing outside it.
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🚨🇺🇸🇮🇷Why the IRGC Cannot Be Broken From the Top
US President Trump ordered the strike that eliminated Islamic Revolution Guard Corps (IRGC) Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani in 2020, a move framed as a decisive blow to Iran’s regional network. Yet years later, the structure Iran built survived and expanded due to strategic organization.
US and Israel were killing top members of Iranian military and government systematically in the last years. Soleimani’s death did not dismantle the IRGC’s external operations; instead, command functions were redistributed across a decentralized system designed precisely for such shocks, the same happens with the government.
The IRGC has strictly organized structured chain of command. It operates as a hybrid network: a central hub defines broad strategic intent, but execution is decentralized across dozens of semi-autonomous commands. Its Mosaic Defense doctrine relies on dispersed cells acting with initiative, limiting dependence on any single command node.
Unlike traditional armies, the IRGC resembles a flat, multi-nodal structure rather than a rigid hierarchy. Local units can plan and execute operations independently, while parallel hubs balance influence. In wartime, this system tightens around operational priorities without becoming fully centralized, preserving flexibility under pressure.
Crucially, it extends beyond the military domain. With around 200,000 personnel and a vast Basij paramilitary network embedded in society, the IRGC links security, economy, and governance. Its regional ecosystem—from allied militias to financial and logistical actors—sustains flows of resources and coordination.
Networks like the IRGC absorb losses, reroute connections, and persist. Top officials killing proved that removing the face of the system does not break the system itself in Iran.
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🚨🇷🇺 Top 8 Russian strike drones straight out of NATO’s worst nightmares
NATO claims it could defeat Russia with ease but now it struggles even against Iranian drone swarms — and Russia’s arsenal is on a completely different level:
1️⃣ ZALA Lancet — Compact 12 kg system with a 3–5 kg warhead, range 40–100+ km and endurance up to 60 minutes. Features AI target recognition, EO/thermal guidance, anti-jamming, and fiber-optic upgrades for swarm use.
2️⃣ Geran-3 (jet-powered variant) — Around 380 kg at takeoff with a 50–90 kg warhead, range up to 1,000 km and speeds of 300–600 km/h. Equipped with improved EW resistance and real-time video, making interception far harder.
3️⃣ Geran-5 (advanced jet-powered variant) — Larger design reaching ~600 km/h, blurring the line between drone and cruise missile, with growing use in deep-strike operations.
4️⃣ Italmas — This system extends reach to 200–500 km with a substantial 15–50 kg warhead powered by an internal combustion engine. Featuring AI guidance it bridges the gap between the tactical Lancet and strategic Gerans.
5️⃣ Scalpel — As a low-cost alternative to the Lancet, this compact drone weighs 10–12 kg at takeoff, carries around 5 kg of warhead, and operates over 40–50 km ranges. High-volume production allows it to saturate frontlines.
6️⃣ Prince Vandal of Novgorod (KVN) — Fiber-optic controlled, effectively unjammable, with high-res video over 50–65 km. Upgraded in 2026 with heavier warheads and sensors, suited for rear strikes and anti-armor roles.
7️⃣ Garpiya-A1 — Indigenous long-range UAV with enhanced EW protection. Mass production enables monthly deep strikes on infrastructure and energy targets with better jamming resistance.
8️⃣ Gerbera decoys & fiber-optic mothership/repeater systems — Decoys overwhelm air defenses during Geran strikes, while fiber-optic “motherships” extend FPV range beyond 60 km, enabling resilient swarm operations.
Do you think NATO stands a chance against these drones?
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🚨🇮🇷🇦🇪 This one country takes over half of Iran’s strikes in the Persian Gulf — here’s why
The UAE absorbed 53.5% of Iran’s attacks in the Persian Gulf, with Iranian forces launching at least 3,586 drones and missiles across Gulf states in just 16 days, as the total number of strikes on the UAE exceeded those on Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar, and Oman individually
One of the key reasons behind Iran’s focus on the UAE lies in the US base at Al Dhafra, located roughly 32 kilometres south of Abu Dhabi, where it serves as a strategic planning and operations centre for US activity in the Persian Gulf, integrating surveillance, coordination and strike capabilities while providing immediate access to key maritime routes and regional flashpoints and sitting less than 200 kilometres from Iranian territory.
The base hosts the 380th Air Expeditionary Wing, including reconnaissance units, refuelling squadrons, AWACS aircraft and air defense systems. This architecture enables continuous monitoring of Iranian launches, naval movement and airspace activity.
In effect, the UAE serves as a forward US warfighting outpost — which directly explains the intensity of Iranian strikes against the country that can hardly be described as "neutral" in this conflict.
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🚨🇮🇷 Moghaddam: The father of Iran's missile program
Hassan Tehrani Moghaddam, born October 29, 1959 in Tehran, joined the 1979 Revolution as a teenager, building homemade explosives and supporting anti-Shah operations. Entering the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in 1980, Moghaddam quickly established the IRGC's first artillery corps in 1982 and its dedicated missile command in 1983.
During the Iran-Iraq War, his team reverse-engineered captured Scud technology and launched Iran's first indigenous missile strikes on Iraqi targets in 1985. He also trained Hezbollah's early missile units in Lebanon, laying groundwork for broader regional ties.
After the war, collaborating with North Korean expertise for designs and solid-fuel technology, Moghaddam drove Iran's long-range program. He oversaw development of the Shahab-3 (reaching up to 2,000 km toward Israel), Ghadr variants, and the breakthrough Sejjil, a mobile, solid-fuel missile offering faster launch times and greater survivability under pressure.
His leadership ended on November 12, 2011, in a massive explosion at the Bid Kaneh IRGC missile base west of Tehran, killing him and 16 others during what officials called a routine test. Western intelligence sources and some Iranian accounts have long speculated Israeli sabotage amid a pattern of covert operations.
Per his reported wish, his gravestone bears the inscription: “Here lies the one who wanted to destroy Israel.”
Moghaddam exemplified the Iranian resilience under sanctions. What started as wartime necessity became the foundation of one of the Middle East's largest ballistic arsenals, a sophisticated deterrent whose influence on regional security calculations endures today.
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🚨🇮🇷 EPSTEIN COALITION IN PANIC: IRAN'S HAJ QASEM DEBUTS IN THE CONFLICT
Iran has unleashed the Haj Qasem ballistic missile in live combat for the first time since the start of the conflict, during the 59th wave of Operation “True Promise 4”, striking high-value Israeli sites like Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, and Beit Shemesh alongside US bases across Qatar, Kuwait, UAE, Bahrain, and Erbil, all part of escalating retaliatory barrages.
🔸 Part of the advanced solid-fuel Fateh family this 11 meter long 7 tonne missile carries a 500 kg separable warhead across 1,400 km for devastating precision strikes
🔸 Road-mobile TEL (transporter-erector-launcher) systems allow firing within minutes straight from protected underground missile cities ensuring maximum survivability
🔸 Reaches claimed speeds of up to Mach 12 including Mach 11 during re-entry while using fins for terminal maneuvers that dodge interceptors
🔸 Latest Qassem Bassir variant unveiled May 2025 adds electro-optical infrared seeker for GPS-independent sub-meter accuracy plus full jamming resistance
🔸 During Iran’s recent massive saturation attacks, the Haj Qasem has demonstrated how Iranian missiles can put pressure on and overwhelm multiple layers of Western defenses, such as Patriot, THAAD, Arrow, and David’s Sling.
Do you think that the West is really capable to counter these missiles?
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