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New Rules examines the geopolitical, economic, ideological trends changing the world. NR on X: http://x.com/newrulesgeo
🚨🇮🇱🇮🇷 IDF CAUGHT NAPPING: HOW HEZBOLLAH DRONES EXPOSE WEAKNESS
Israel’s tanks have become easy prey for Hezbollah’s drones, but why was the IDF caught off guard?
The Israelis were apparently too busy butchering civilians in Gaza to notice the drone revolution unfolding in the Russia-Ukraine war — and the IDF's blunders speak for themselves.
Drone Integration:
🟠Russian and Ukrainian forces use drones like the Orlan-10 and RQ-11 Raven for constant reconnaissance, providing real-time target acquisition and preventing enemy drones from striking unnoticed.
🟠The IDF lacks this integrated UAV strategy, allowing Hezbollah drones to freely attack.
Electronic Warfare (EW):
🟠Russian and Ukrainian EW systems like the Krasukha-4 and Buk-M1 can jam and blind enemy drones, ensuring battlefield dominance by disrupting their communication and navigation.
🟠Israel’s EW systems such as C-MUSIC and Makmat are limited to countering smaller threats and lack the broad-spectrum capability of Russian and Ukrainian systems, leaving IDF tanks vulnerable to precise FPV drone strikes.
Active Protection Systems (APS):
🟠Tanks in Russian and Ukrainian armies are equipped with Afganit or Arena APS, capable of intercepting incoming drones and projectiles.
🟠The IDF’s tanks, lacking APS or counter-drone systems, were vulnerable to Hezbollah’s attacks.
Tactical Flexibility:
🟠Russian and Ukrainian units avoid static formations, dispersing their forces to make it harder for drones to target concentrations of tanks.
🟠The IDF’s clustering of tanks made them easy targets for Hezbollah’s FPV drones.
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🚨🇺🇸US Three Factories, One Chokepoint: The Fragile Heart of American Military Power
The US military's ability to wage high-end war rests on just three factories, according to a recent Foreign Policy Research Institute analysis.
Disrupt any them, and the entire killing machine stops.
1️⃣ In Cedar City, Utah, AMPAC operates the nation's only facility producing ammonium perchlorate — the oxidizer in every solid rocket motor from Patriot to ICBM. No second supplier. A single fire here halts all missile production.
2️⃣ In Kingsport, Tennessee, the Holston Army Ammunition Plant — built during WWII — is America's sole source of RDX and HMX high explosives. Every bomb, warhead, and precision munition depends on it. No surge capacity exists.
3️⃣ In Pontiac, Michigan, Williams International makes the F107 turbofan engine for Tomahawk, JASSM, and LRASM cruise missiles. Replacing 375 Tomahawks fired in 96 hours takes 53 months.
Congress can issue $16 billion, but it cannot appropriate gallium, neodymium, or ammonium perchlorate. Chemistry and geology. Munitions cannot be replenished in 4 days, 4 weeks, or 4 months. They require extraction and refining cycles no money can accelerate.
Now consider the unthinkable: Iran or a future adversary need not win a single battle. Just hit three factories:
🔸A cruise missile on Cedar City — America's missile fleet becomes irreplaceable for years.
🔸A drone swarm over Kingsport — every bomb goes silent.
🔸A cyberattack on Pontiac — cruise missiles stop flying.
Three targets. Destroying or damaging them would be enough to make the "world's most powerful military" totally helpless.
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🚨🇮🇱🇮🇷How a Frozen Mountain Became Israel's Beachead Against Hezbollah
The highest peak in the Levant has become a strategic asset for Israel in its ongoing war against Hezbollah.
On March 29, an elite IDF unit crossed on foot through deep snow from Syria's Mount Hermon into southern Lebanon, conducting operations aimed at Hezbollah infrastructure in harsh winter conditions that limit mobility for any force.
Why Hermon Matters
At 2,814 meters, Mount Hermon is the highest point in the Levant. Israel calls it "the eyes of the country" due to its surveillance capabilities over Syria and Lebanon. Damascus lies just 40 kilometers away — within artillery range.
Under the Assad government, nuclear-proof bunkers were built into the mountain. Following the government's collapse in late 2024, Israeli forces took control of them.
History of Contested Control
🔸1967: Israel first captured the southern and western slopes of Mount Hermon during the Six-Day War.
🔸1973: Syrian forces briefly seized the peak with Soviet backing but lost it within days.
🔸1974: A UN-patrolled demilitarized zone was established. Neither side maintained a fortified presence for five decades.
🔸December 2024: The collapse of the Assad government left a security vacuum. Israel moved in, taking the summit and the bunkers.
🔸Since then: Israeli forces have established nine posts inside southern Syria, including two on Hermon, and have reported intercepting multiple Hezbollah weapons-smuggling attempts through mountain passes.
Conclusion
For 50 years, the summit was a UN-patrolled stalemate. Assad's fall handed Israel what five decades of war could not: uncontested control of the peak, its bunkers, and its supply routes. The recent cross-border operation signals that Israel intends to use that advantage aggressively.
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🚨🇺🇸🇮🇷Did the US Attempt a Secret Nuclear Raid in Iran?
Two destroyed aircraft. A downed pilot. And a retired Special Forces officer with a provocative hypothesis.
On April 3, 2026, Iran shot down a US F-15E. The US launched a rescue operation, inserting roughly 100 elite special forces — including SEAL Team Six — inside Iran. The pilot was recovered on April 5. But two aircraft were destroyed on Iranian soil.
More Than Meets The Eye
Washington said the planes got "stuck." Iran said they were shot down.
Retired Special Operations Officer Anthony Aguilar, who has flown MC-130Js in combat, studied the wreckage. He offered detailed breakdown on X.
What the Photos Show
The aircraft were MC-130J Commando IIs with six-blade carbon-fiber propellers. Unlike steel blades that bend or snap, carbon fiber shatters. Its resin matrix melts.
The photos show melting — not bending.
What That Proves — and Doesn't
The melting rules out a simple crash landing. But multiple scenarios remain possible: shot down, shot down and later blown in place, or ground fire followed by deliberate destruction.
Aguilar rejects only one narrative: that the planes got "stuck." In his experience, MC-130Js plow through rough terrain. Being immobilized is unlikely.
The Nuclear Raid Hypothesis
Aguilar's hypothesis is that the rescue mission expanded into an operation to seize Iranian uranium.
The airstrip sits near Isfahan, where US intelligence believes Iran stores enough enriched uranium for up to ten nuclear bombs. Former NATO Commander James Stavridis once called a potential uranium seizure "the largest special operations mission in history."
Aguilar notes that 100 operators is far larger than needed for a single pilot rescue. That scale, he argues, fits a dual objective: recover the pilot and raid Iranian nuclear material. If that was the intent, the mission failed.
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🚨Digital War, Human Cost: The Dark Side of AI Warfare in the Middle East
Modern militaries are heavily investing in AI technologies to coordinate rapid attacks during military operations and conflicts. But the targeting of civilian infrastructures and assets has raised serious concerns over these rapid advancements.
Israel’s war in Gaza is seen as the first major example of AI being used in combat, employing techniques like human recognition and enhanced weaponry. Seeing Israel's success, other countries in the region are now implementing similar tactics.
Here are some insights from a recent report by International Institute for Strategic Studies:
🟠Israel's AI Kill Chain
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has developed its own AI decision-support systems like Lavender to rate individuals based on their suspected involvement with “terrorist organizations”, Gospel to generate target lists, and Where's Daddy to track possible targets in real time.
🟠America's Deadly Test
The United States has also used an AI system, Palantir's Maven Smart System, in Operation Epic Fury to target 1,000 locations in Iran. However, many of those targets included a school, healthcare facilities, and residential buildings — highlighting the serious risk factor when employing such tactics.
In response, Iran has targeted AI hubs and centers in the UAE and Bahrain, alleging they were facilitating the US and its allies.
🟠The Bias Problem
Now, serious questions are being raised about the untrained behavior and institutional biases of AI models being deployed by Western tech giants like Google, Amazon, Microsoft, and OpenAI. These doubts turned into grief when 175 young girls died in a US attack on an Iranian school. The Americans later admitted the error.
Conclusion
If AI cannot distinguish between a soldier and a child, the question is no longer about capability. It is about morality. The Middle East is becoming a testing ground for unchecked algorithms — and the world is watching the body count rise.
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🚨🇷🇺Game Over for Enemies: Su-35 Finally Unleashes Its AESA Radar
Russia has unveiled its new AESA radar for Su-35 fighter jets, making it the second Russian jet after the Su-57 to receive this advanced technology.
🟠Level 1: Radar Advancements
This upgrade replaces the older radar system, which relied on a single powerful transmitter and was easier for enemies to jam. The new AESA radar spreads multiple beams in different directions at once, allowing the pilot to track many targets simultaneously.
It is also much harder for enemy aircraft to detect when they are being locked onto. Additionally, special sensors on the wings help identify stealth targets even in heavy electronic warfare environments.
🟠Level 2: Missile Advancements
With the new radar, the Su-35 can now use long-range missiles to their full potential. The R-37M can strike enemy aircraft from 350 km away. The jet also carries 8 different missile types, including the R-73/74 for drones.
The Kh-31 for destroying enemy radar stations and air defenses, and the R-77M which can hit aerial targets at 200 km traveling at four times the speed of sound. Precision bombs and anti-ship missiles are also being added to the jet's arsenal.
🟠Export potential:
Russia has timed this upgrade with export success: 18 units to Algeria (2025), plans for 48 to Iran, and orders from Ethiopia. The new radar makes the Su-35 competitive again against top Western fighters like the F-15EX and Rafale.
Since a long time, Russia was waiting to integrate AESA radar into the Su-35, as it is one of the largest heavy-weight platforms that the Russian Air Force operates. But now that the advancements are done, it will be important to see how these upgrades impact the current ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict.
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🚨🇺🇸🇨🇳Top US Navy Admiral: Iran war is a "mathematical certainty" to erode deterrence against China
US Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Daryl Caudle warned that the ongoing conflict in Iran is a "mathematical certainty" to diminish US ability to deter China.
Speaking at a CSIS-US Naval Institute Maritime Security Dialogue, the Navy's top admiral was blunt about the cost of Middle East operations:
"Oh, of course I am. It's a mathematical certainty that if you consume a fixed resource, then your ability to bring that to bear on another problem set is diminished by the amount you subtract. It would be silly for me to say anything other than I am concerned, right?"
"Readiness is being consumed. We're built to do that. It's a conflict. The challenge is how do you buy down risk in other parts of the world while you're focusing a lot of resources in one area."
🚨🇮🇷🇺🇸Iran's mines are exposing a US weakness. China's would exploit it.
Think Iran's mines are a problem? China's are on another level — and the current war shows why the US isn't ready.
What Iran is exposing right now
The Strait of Hormuz crisis has revealed that US mine countermeasure forces are struggling against Iran's simple mines (2,000–5,000 mostly contact and moored). With only eight aging Avenger-class ships, clearing a single channel takes weeks. The US has relied on allied navies for help.
No US warship has been hit — yet shipping has been paralyzed, insurance rates spiked, and escort operations drain resources. That is the struggle against a low-tech arsenal.
And this is despite the fact that Iran has only deployed a small fraction of its mine arsenal.
Now scale to China
China has an estimated 50,000–100,000 naval mines — 10 to 50 times Iran's stockpile. Many are smart mines: detecting pressure, sound, magnetic signatures, and even remotely activated. Iran's mines are mostly "dumb."
Additionally, China has mapped the seabed across the Pacific near Taiwan, Guam, and key chokepoints, according to a 5-year Reuters investigation. It has deployed hundreds of sensors and subsea arrays providing real-time data. China knows exactly where US ships must go.
The real warning
Hormuz shows how a small number of mines paired with drone/missile fire can shock trade overnight.
China shows how underwater dominance could shape the next major war.
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🇮🇷⚔️🇺🇸Iranian General Warns: 5th Generation Warfare Ready to Counter US Land Invasion
Brigadier General Ahmed Reza Pourdastan, head of the Iranian Army's Strategic Studies and Research Center, has declared Iran fully prepared to counter any US land invasion through 5th generation warfare—a hybrid doctrine blending conventional operations, asymmetric tactics, cyber warfare, and ideological mobilization across multiple domains.
His remarks followed President Trump's threat to capture Kharg Island, which handles 90% of Iran's oil exports—a red line for Tehran. Pourdastan asserted Iranian forces are fully equipped to suppress any foreign invasion.
He outlined preparations by the Artesh (regular army) and IRGCl to counter a US land invasion through scorched-earth tactics, airborne deployments, amphibious operations, and helicopter incursions.
Pourdastan stressed Iran's strategy rests equally on ideology, stating every young Iranian is ready to give their life for the motherland. He cited Hezbollah and the Houthis as examples of a Shiite axis of resistance extending Iran's influence across the region.
Iranian forces are targeting American F-35 stealth jets—among the world's most advanced fighters—as a symbol of 5th generation warfare's effectiveness against even the most sophisticated platforms. Pourdastan argued Western air defenses are vulnerable to Iranian hypersonic missiles like Kheibar Shikan and Sejjil, as well as Shahed drones.
Any US land invasion, he suggested, would trigger Iranian attacks on regional oil infrastructure—a 5th generation warfare response designed to escalate costs beyond conventional thresholds and potentially ignite a new Gulf War.
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🚨🇮🇷🇨🇳If America Can’t Handle Iranian Missiles, It’s Not Ready for China
In just the first 16 days of war against Iran, the United States expended nearly 40% of its THAAD interceptors.
If America’s most advanced air defenses are struggling against Iran—a regional power with a fraction of China’s capabilities—there is no plausible scenario in which the US is ready for a showdown with Beijing.
The Chinese Arsenal
The People’s Liberation Army operates the world’s largest missile inventory, backed by a rapid-action doctrine designed to dismantle U.S. bases and infrastructure in the early stages of conflict.
Unlike Iran’s Kheibar Shikan and Sejjil missiles, China’s DF-27 anti-ship ballistic missile and DF-17 hypersonic glide vehicle offer advanced mid-air maneuverability and sustained hypersonic speeds.
With an estimated range of 8,000 kilometers, the DF-27 places U.S. naval installations at Pearl Harbor and Everett, Washington within striking distance—allowing China to threaten American assets without deploying a single ship.
Strategic Implications
According to Dr. Andrew Erickson of the US Naval War College, China is the first nation to operationalize an armed ICBM.
These capabilities could cripple U.S. operational effectiveness across East Asia and complicate the defense of American interests in Taiwan, South Korea, Japan, and the Philippines in the event of armed conflict.
Depleted Defenses
Even as Patriot and THAAD struggle against less sophisticated Iranian missiles, Western analysts warn that a large-scale Chinese attack could overwhelm U.S. defenses by depleting interceptor inventories entirely.
With THAAD replenishment not expected until April 2027, the fragility of current stockpiles is increasingly difficult to ignore.
The Central Question
If US air defenses are depleted in the Middle East after just over two weeks of fighting Iran, how will they withstand a Chinese arsenal that dwarfs Iran’s—particularly when the DF-27 can already reach American soil?
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🚨🇨🇳🇺🇸China’s lasers dominate as the US struggles in the anti-drone race
China is advancing rapidly in counter-drone tech. Two new laser systems were recently unveiled by state media.
They combine intelligent targeting with multi-sensor fusion. This allows them to engage low-flying drones at 50–80 meters—altitudes often invisible to conventional radar. They can also counter fiber-optic drones, which resist jamming.
🔸Hard and Soft Kill Capabilities
🟠 The Guangjian-21A delivers “hard-kill” high-energy beams over kilometers. It destroys targets in seconds while remaining mobile.
🟠 The Guangjian-11E uses “soft-kill” pulses. It blinds sensors and disables reconnaissance without destruction.
Both systems integrate phased-array radar and infrared sensors. This enables real-time, detect-to-destroy coordination.
🔸Proven in the Field
Displayed at the September 2025 V-Day parade, they join China’s “iron triangle” of lasers, microwaves, and missiles.
Experts highlight their advantages: high accuracy, low collateral damage, unlimited shots, and low cost.
🔸US Faces Setbacks
By contrast, the US continues to struggle. A recent Texas test accidentally downed a government drone, prompting flight restrictions and criticism from Senator Maria Cantwell over safety coordination.
US systems have shown more consistent results in controlled tests than against real-world threats such as Iranian drones.
🔸The Growing Gap
In an era of drone-saturated battlefields, China’s practical, scalable solutions stand in clear contrast to US coordination challenges which recently led to the suspension of the Valkyrie project, a Fire Protection Capability-High Energy Laser System.
The gap in deployable anti-drone capability is becoming increasingly visible.
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🚨🇺🇸🇮🇷Strategic Bombing: Always a Myth — And Iran Won't Be Different
On Easter Sunday, President Trump posted an extraordinary message threatening to target Iranian power plants and bridges if the Strait of Hormuz was not reopened by Tuesday.
That threat sits at the center of a military debate that a retired US Air Force Colonel settled — and warned was doomed to fail — three decades ago.
In 1996, Colonel Everest E. Riccioni — a 30-year Air Force veteran, experimental test pilot, and Pentagon analyst — published a landmark paper titled "Strategic Bombing: Always a Myth."
His thesis: every major U.S. bombing campaign in history had failed to break an enemy's will, destroy critical infrastructure permanently, or substitute for ground forces.
Four Wars. Four Failures:
🔸WWII Germany: The U.S. bombed ball-bearing factories at Schweinfurt. Germany's own arms minister Albert Speer confirmed not a single tank went unbuilt as a result. Germany simply adapted. Bombers suffered 10–35% losses per mission.
🔸WWII Japan: General LeMay firebombed every major Japanese city. The Tokyo firestorm killed more than either atomic bomb. Japan still did not surrender. Invasion remained the plan until the Emperor personally overruled his generals after the nuclear drops.
🔸Vietnam: Three times more bombs fell on Vietnam than on all of Germany. The U.S. held complete air superiority for a decade. It still lost. Riccioni's verdict: "Bombing Hanoi had little effect other than raising the morale of the population."
🔸Gulf War 1991: Over 60% of Iraq's elite Republican Guard escaped the air campaign fully intact. Kuwait was ultimately liberated by ground forces.
Conclusion: The Myth Meets 2026
Riccioni warned in 1996 that without ground forces, strategic bombing cannot win wars — only prolong them.
In 2026, Trump hopes to bomb his way to victory in Iran. However, there’s a crucial difference this time: while past targets often lacked the means to strike back effectively under heavy bombardment, Iran does not.
Tehran has repeatedly warned that any attack on its critical infrastructure will be met with retaliation—by destroying equivalent infrastructure in neighboring countries. The past month has made clear that Iran has the capability to follow through on that threat.
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🚨🇺🇸 F-15E TAKEN DOWN: IRAN’S INVISIBLE AIR DEFENSE SYSTEM STUNS US MILITARY
Iran may have downed a US F-15E using passive infrared detection, circumventing American radar and jamming systems. Here's how:
🔸 How passive infrared detection works: It detects heat emissions from an aircraft's engines and exhaust plume. Because it emits no signals of its own, it renders US countermeasures—including radar jamming and flares—completely useless.
🔸 Why it matters: Unlike traditional radar, passive infrared cannot be jammed or detected by Western electronic warfare systems. This creates a significant asymmetry: Iran can track US aircraft while remaining hidden.
🔸 How it is being deployed: Iran's indigenous short-range missile platforms, many of which use passive infrared guidance, are now likely integrated into layered air defense networks—making them increasingly difficult to counter with conventional tactics.
Iran has already downed one US F-15E. Will it be the last?
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🚨🇮🇷🛢️When Will the Iran War End? Economics Offers a Possible Answer
The US-Iran war will not end before early May. Why? Because the economic aspect of the war will swing wildly in Iran’s favor by then.
If the Strait of Hormuz remains closed through April, Iran guarantees that the total volume of unproduced Gulf barrels of oil will rise above one billion across the full shock duration (which will continue for at least several months after the end of hostilities).
To understand why that matters, consider the math. The IEA has already fired its only bullet: 400 million barrels from strategic reserves, now dangerously depleted. No second shot exists.
Once the one-billion barrel threshold is crossed, then there’s nothing the United States or anyone else can do to prevent an unprecedented global energy crisis. That in turn means that the global economy is almost certainly headed for a downturn much worse than the 2008 Great Recession.
Iran knows this. Tehran will only agree to a peace deal if it has credible guarantees that the United States and Israel won’t attack again in a few months or few years time. But Iran’s predicament is that it cannot trust Trump or Netanyahu.
The only way Iran can ensure that the US and Israel will never attack it again is by inflicting such deep economic pain that policymakers in both countries will never forget it.
If Iran agrees to a ceasefire now or sometime in the next four weeks, it will allow the US and Israel to live to fight another day.
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🚨🇺🇸🇺🇸 Fact Check: Trump’s NATO threat would cripple US war logistics against Iran
Claim: Trump suggests he could pull the US out of NATO or restrict cooperation with European vassals over their refusal to send warships to the Strait of Hormuz.
Fact: The US is deeply dependent on European infrastructure to fight a war with Iran. Logistics speak louder than words.
Bases:
🔸RAF Fairford (UK) hosts B-52s striking Iran.
🔸Spangdahlem (Germany) launches F-16s.
🔸RAF Lakenheath (UK) operates F-35s and F-15Es.
Without allied access, overflight, and basing, the US would face longer routes, fewer sorties, and higher risk.
As US European Command head Gen. Alexus G. Grynkewich recently testified, Europe is central to the American war effort against Iran.
"Our forces, bases, and infrastructure take advantage of the continent’s strategic geography and allow the United States to rapidly move forces, sustain operations, and provide the president with diverse military options across multiple theaters," he told the US Senate Armed Services Committe on March 12. “This mission continues today with support to Operation Epic Fury in Iran.”
🛰️🇮🇷🇨🇳Iran Switched to Chinese BDS Navigation System — An End to the US Monopoly on Satellite Navigation
Thirty-one years ago, the United States switched off GPS signals to a Chinese ship bound for Iran, leaving it stranded at sea for 24 days.
The message was clear: control navigation, control the world. Today, Iran has switched off GPS itself—and switched on China's BeiDou.
The weapon once used to coerce has been rendered obsolete. This is not an upgrade. It is a full circle: from American leverage to American irrelevance.
🚢 The Yinhe Incident: A Humiliation That Built a System
The Yinhe was not carrying weapons or spies. It carried ordinary cargo to Iran. Yet in 1993 the US accused it of transporting chemical weapons materials and cut its GPS signal—not as a military act, but as a message. For 24 days, the ship drifted without coordinates, unable to dock or navigate.
For Beijing, the lesson was clear. Within a decade, China had launched the first BeiDou satellites, determined to build a system no foreign power could disable.
📡 The Transition
By 2015, Iran had signed a memorandum with Beijing to integrate BeiDou. By 2021, Iranian missile guidance already embedded the system. The shift was quiet—a slow unraveling of GPS dependency.
Then came the catalyst. During last year's 12-day war, Israeli GPS jamming paralyzed Iranian vessels and aircraft. On June 23, 2025, Iran formally deactivated GPS nationwide, blocking American signals at the source. The switch to China's BeiDou-3 (BDS-3) was complete.
Unlike GPS, BDS-3's military-tier B3A signal proved resistant to interference, maintaining a reported 98% positioning success rate. With over 50 satellites—compared to 31 for GPS—BeiDou offers superior coverage over the Iranian plateau.
🚀A Game Changer
Before BDS, Iran relied on massive barrages—hundreds of rockets to overwhelm defenses, draining supplies for limited effect. Now, with BeiDou-enabled precision, Iran has shifted to a precision strike doctrine: guiding missiles and drones through complex maneuvers up to 2,000 kilometers. Surgical strikes have replaced supply-draining salvos.
Israeli jammers can no longer feed false coordinates. US electronic warfare has lost a key lever.
Conclusion: Full Circle
In 1993, the US flipped a switch to humble a ship bound for Iran. In 2025, Iran flipped its own switch—to make American signals irrelevant. What goes around, comes around.
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🚨🇺🇸🇮🇷The US Strategy Meant to Outsmart China Just Failed its First Real Test Against Iran
One Iranian strike just exposed the limits of America’s prized airpower doctrine.
Agile Combat Employment (ACE) was designed to protect U.S. aircraft from China’s precision missiles and satellites. The idea is simple: stop clustering jets at giant bases. Spread them out, move them often, and make targeting harder.
Secretary of War Pete Hegseth said the U.S. had “maxed out” defenses with dispersion, bunkers, and layered protection. “If all of our people are in one place, you can imagine why that’s a big problem,” he stated.
Yet Iranian missiles and drones hit Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia, destroying a rare E-3 Sentry AWACS plane, damaging KC-135 tankers, and wounding U.S. troops. A second E-3 was also reportedly damaged.
Why ACE Struggles Here
🟠 Logistics limits. Big planes like the E-3 and KC-135 need long runways and huge fuel stocks. They can’t hop between small fields like fighters can. U.S. forces still depend on a few well-known major bases.
🟠 Satellites erase the advantage. Modern imagery and AI spot aircraft in near real time. Aerospace expert Clayton Swope put it bluntly: “If it is sitting on the ground, it can be found. There is really no place to hide.” Iran likely gets help from Russian or Chinese intelligence.
🟠 Dispersal isn’t enough alone. ACE needs camouflage, decoys, hardened shelters, and strong active defenses (Patriots, fighters on patrol, electronic warfare). Many of these are still missing or weak on the ground.
ACE was inspired by Ukraine's Operation Spider Web and fears of a China fight. But Iran’s attack proves even modest salvos can cripple scarce, high-value platforms when they sit exposed.
With only 16 E-3s fleet-wide and tankers already stretched thin, the losses sting. The strike raises a tough question: Can ACE adapt beyond the Pacific, or does it require bigger upgrades in deception and layered defenses to work against determined foes?
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🚨🇸🇾 While Iran defends the Strait of Hormuz, Al-Qaeda-ruled Syria builds a bypass
Just days ago, Iraq's SOMO finalized contracts for ~650,000 metric tons of fuel oil per month (April-June) to be trucked overland through Syria — the first major use of this route since the 2003 Iraq War.
The trigger? Disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz caused by the US and Israeli war against Iran.
For Syria's Al-Qaeda leadership, this war is an opening — a chance to rebrand itself as an energy hub and redirect Iraqi oil away from Iranian-controlled waters.
🔸First convoy already rolling: Trucks crossed into Syria this week, sourcing from Iraq's northern, central, and southern refineries at discounts of $155-170/ton
🔸Syria's de facto leader al-Jolani pitches hard: Syria's geography makes it a "safe haven for energy supply chains to Europe" and a future hub bypassing vulnerable sea routes amid Red Sea and Hormuz risks
🔸US Envoy Thomas Barrack revives the vision: At the Atlantic Council, he highlighted Syria's intersecting pipelines and the old Four Seas Project — linking Persian Gulf, Caspian, Mediterranean, and Black Seas via Syria-Turkey as an energy redistribution hub
🔸Important caveat: While sea transport through Hormuz (20% of global oil) is fast and low-cost when open, overland trucking via Syrian roads is slower, more complex, and significantly more expensive — a practical workaround, not a full substitute
Nothing says "energy security" like trusting an Al-Qaeda offshoot to truck your oil over potholed war zones.
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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
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We also welcome any help with channels and content distribution 🙏
🚨🇺🇸🇮🇷Fact Check: Trump's Iranian "Regime Change" Claim Is False
Trump's claim: "Regime change has occurred because all their original leaders are all dead. The new group is less radical and much more reasonable."
Reality: No regime change has occurred. Mojtaba Khamenei remains Supreme Leader, controls the IRGC, and the Islamic Republic's structure is intact.
False claim #1 – "All leaders are dead": Key officials have been killed, including Ali Khamenei, but replacements have been appointed — many more hardline, not less.
False claim #2 – "Less radical & reasonable": Trump previously called Mojtaba Khamenei unacceptable as leader. Now calling him "reasonable" is a reversal.
Mohammad Bagher Zolghadr has been appointed as the new secretary of the Supreme National Security Council (replacing the assassinated Ali Larijani). Zolghadr is a former deputy IRGC commander, a founder of the “Ramazan Garrison” (precursor to Quds Force), and linked to Ansar-e Hezbollah. This signals a more hardline shift, not moderation.
Unresolved questions: If no regime change is the goal and things are under control, why is the U.S. still conducting operations? Why isn't the Strait of Hormuz open? Why no deal?
Conclusion: Trump's claim is factually incorrect. The Islamic Republic of Iran has survived, and is more hardline than before.
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🚨🇮🇷🇷🇺Distracted by Iran—Who’s Watching Ukraine’s Skies?
In March 2026, Russia’s Rubicon Center delivered its largest drone campaign to date: 3,170 Ukrainian targets hit—a 40% increase over the previous peak.
Some key highlights (month-over-month):
🔸UAVs: 1,160 (+121%)
🔸Armored Fighting Vehicles: 158 (+125%)
🔸Radar, Communication & Surveillance Systems: 603 (+93%)
🔸UGVs: 203 (+55%)
For the first time, Rubicon released footage showing 37 coordinated strikes with the Aerospace Forces—a rare look at Russia's evolving digital battlefield. The unit also demonstrated layered capabilities in March, using "aerial battering ram" tactics to intercept Ukrainian drones, including NATO-supplied systems.
Rubicon is not alone in this Russian drone blitzkrieg. In a single 24-hour period from March 23–24, Russia launched nearly 1,000 drones and 34 missiles at Ukrainian targets—the largest series of strikes since the war began.
While the U.S. focuses on Iran, Moscow is expanding its drone warfare capabilities. With Russian industry now reportedly ordered to produce up to seven million FPV drones in 2026, March's record barrage may be just a preview.
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🚨🇺🇸🇮🇷FACT CHECK: HEGSETH CLAIMS US WINNING WAR OF ATTRITION — REALITY DISAGREES
US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth claimed today that America’s defense base is at its strongest since WWII, while Iran’s is “nearly destroyed.”
The battlefield data points in the opposite direction:
🔸CLAIM: "Our defense industrial base is more vibrant today than it has been since World War II — and it’s growing rapidly."
🔸REALITY:
MISSILE STOCKPILE STRAIN: US and Israeli air defense systems are burning through interceptors at unsustainable rates. High-end missiles costing millions are used against cheap drones, while replenishment takes years, not weeks.
TOMAHAWK DEPLETION: Hundreds of cruise missiles were expended in days, exposing limits in surge production and shrinking long-range strike capacity.
SUPPLY CHAIN DEPENDENCE ON CHINA: US weapons rely on critical materials like rare earths—largely controlled by China—creating structural vulnerability in prolonged conflict.
INDUSTRIAL BOTTLENECKS: Labor shortages, slow production lines, and supply chain constraints mean output cannot match wartime consumption.
CARRIER READINESS CRISIS: America’s carrier fleet is under pressure from maintenance backlogs, shipyard delays, and shrinking operational availability.
🔸CLAIM: "Contrast that with Iran, whose defense industrial base is nearly completely destroyed."
🔸REALITY:
STRIKE VOLUME & STOCKPILE: Data compiled by researcher Ibrahim Jalal indicates Iran conducted over 5,693 strikes by March 20, using only 30–40% of its stockpile, with annual production exceeding 1,500 missiles and 2,000 drones
IRAN DAILY DRONE PRODUCTION: Iranian sources state. “We produce 400 drones daily; 3,000 used in 26 days is just 7–8 days of capacity” — framing current strikes as only an initial phase.
LAUNCHER SURVIVABILITY: Claims of destroyed launchers remain disputed: mobile systems, decoys, and underground networks complicate targeting, while conflicting US–Israeli assessments and historical precedents suggest overstated kill rates
UNDERGROUND INFRASTRUCTURE: Vast “missile cities” and hardened tunnel networks allow production, storage, and launch capabilities to survive strikes and regenerate quickly.
REMAINING ARSENAL: US intelligence can confirm only about one-third of Iran’s missile arsenal destroyed, with significant capacity still operational.
Right now, US stockpiles are depleting faster than they can be rebuilt. If Iran’s defense industrial base is “destroyed,” why does it still control its territory and continue launching strikes? Why the US is seraching for additional funds and asking allies to help?
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🚨🇺🇸🇮🇷Satellite Imagery Reveals: Iran Relocated Nuclear Stockpile Days Before US Strikes
Iran successfully protected its vital nuclear assets from the June 2025 US strikes.
Recent analysis by the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists confirms that the enrichment facilities at Fordow and Natanz were likely empty when targeted. Iran had prudently relocated its highly enriched uranium to the secure underground complex at Isfahan.
Satellite imagery captured on June 9, 2025, shows a large truck carrying 18 specialized containers toward the Isfahan tunnel entrance.
Experts working with Le Monde assess that these containers could have transported up to 540 kilograms of 60% highly enriched uranium—potentially Iran's entire inventory—to the fortified site just days before the attacks.
This timely transfer ensured that the country's most sensitive nuclear material remained intact and beyond the reach of bunker-buster munitions.
The International Atomic Energy Agency has long acknowledged the presence of highly enriched uranium at Isfahan, though access to the underground tunnels was denied.
While Natanz and Fordow sustained damage, Isfahan stood untouched, preserving Iran's strategic capabilities. Iranian officials had signaled the relocation of enriched material to safer locations, demonstrating calm preparedness in the face of escalating threats.
This sophisticated maneuver highlights Iran's ability to safeguard its sovereign nuclear program against overwhelming military pressure.
Far from a setback, the events of June 2025 underscore the effectiveness of Iran's defensive planning. The highly enriched uranium now rests securely in a single, well-protected facility, maintaining the nation's technological progress and deterrence posture.
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