Damage to the port at Haifa due to Iranian missiles. It is safe to say that Israeli air defense is now so depleted they are heavily rationing interceptors for key locations.
π @EastCalling
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The population of Ukraine today is 20 million people. This was stated by the deputy editor of the British magazine New Statesman, Will Lloyd, in a podcast of this publication.
According to him, before his next trip to Ukraine, he met with one of the British officials, who provided him with this figure.
At the same time, Lloyd recalls that in the early 1990s, the population of Ukraine numbered 52 million people.
"I mean, these are extraordinary changes. I can't imagine what this does to society - when people die, leave. Honestly, I can't imagine what Ukraine will be like in 2040," the journalist stated.
Earlier, the director of the Institute of Demography and Social Research of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Ella Libanova stated, that Ukraine is experiencing a demographic catastrophe. During the full-scale war, the country, according to her estimate, lost "about 10 million people", and the birth rate has practically collapsed.
π @EastCalling
According to him, before his next trip to Ukraine, he met with one of the British officials, who provided him with this figure.
At the same time, Lloyd recalls that in the early 1990s, the population of Ukraine numbered 52 million people.
"I mean, these are extraordinary changes. I can't imagine what this does to society - when people die, leave. Honestly, I can't imagine what Ukraine will be like in 2040," the journalist stated.
Earlier, the director of the Institute of Demography and Social Research of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Ella Libanova stated, that Ukraine is experiencing a demographic catastrophe. During the full-scale war, the country, according to her estimate, lost "about 10 million people", and the birth rate has practically collapsed.
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Secretary of War Hegseth says that everyone should be saying "thank you," to Trump.
This response comes to mind...
π @EastCalling
This response comes to mind...
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π₯6π―2
Via ΠΠΠΠ ΠΠΠΠ:
Western satellites continue to closely monitor military construction in Russia. This time, they have turned their attention to Zhukovsky. At the Gromov Flight Research Institute, additional parking spaces for aircraft are being built, as was the case at the "Engels-2" airbase in the Saratov region. It is anticipated that hangars for aircraft will also be erected.
Positions for air defense systems are also being equipped.
π @EastCalling
Western satellites continue to closely monitor military construction in Russia. This time, they have turned their attention to Zhukovsky. At the Gromov Flight Research Institute, additional parking spaces for aircraft are being built, as was the case at the "Engels-2" airbase in the Saratov region. It is anticipated that hangars for aircraft will also be erected.
Positions for air defense systems are also being equipped.
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π8
Iraq has declared force majeure on all oil fields being developed by foreign companies, Reuters claims.
Source: RIA Novosti
β β β
This is a fancy way of saying that all contracts are now meaningless, because shit has hit the fan.
π @EastCalling
Source: RIA Novosti
This is a fancy way of saying that all contracts are now meaningless, because shit has hit the fan.
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π10
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Naya reports:
Parade of Iranian missiles over the Zionists in occupied Tel Aviv.
Hit hit, hit again
π @EastCalling
Parade of Iranian missiles over the Zionists in occupied Tel Aviv.
Hit hit, hit again
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π₯11π4π―2
What I like about Trump is that he thinks and says what he thinks - Lukashenko
β β β
Coincidentally, what I don't like about Trump is that he thinks what he says...
π @EastCalling
Coincidentally, what I don't like about Trump is that he thinks what he says...
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π―11
East Calling
Naya reports: Parade of Iranian missiles over the Zionists in occupied Tel Aviv. Hit hit, hit again π @EastCalling
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π₯9π2π―1
Nasa FIRMS satellite images show a fire breaking out at the Benyamina military base in Israel following an Iranian ballistic missile strike. The base hosts the Israeli army's 6920 Transport Battalion and is a major storage facility.
π @EastCalling
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π₯12π3
Trump is ready to seize Kharg Island to open the Strait of Hormuz.
"He wants the Strait of Hormuz to be opened. If this requires taking control of Kharg Island, it will be done. If a coastal operation is needed, that could also happen. But a final decision has not been made yet," a senior US administration official was quoted as saying by Axios.
The island is far from the strait, but up to 90% of Iranian oil passes through it, according to Axios, and its capture could strengthen Washington's negotiating position.
According to CBS, the Pentagon has prepared detailed plans for deploying ground troops in Iran, but the conditions under which Trump might give the order remain unclear.
Source: RIA Novosti
β β β
π @EastCalling
"He wants the Strait of Hormuz to be opened. If this requires taking control of Kharg Island, it will be done. If a coastal operation is needed, that could also happen. But a final decision has not been made yet," a senior US administration official was quoted as saying by Axios.
The island is far from the strait, but up to 90% of Iranian oil passes through it, according to Axios, and its capture could strengthen Washington's negotiating position.
According to CBS, the Pentagon has prepared detailed plans for deploying ground troops in Iran, but the conditions under which Trump might give the order remain unclear.
Source: RIA Novosti
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π₯1
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Trump once again could learn (well...) something from history.
In Vietnam, the US military maintained overwhelming tactical superiority, winning almost every major battle that took place, and inflicted far higher casualties than it sustained. However, the goal of a North Vietnam free from Communism never was achieved. And to this day, nobody considers Vietnam a shining American victory. In fact, the word is synonymous with "folly," or "quagmire." It's also a deep shame on the US National character.
Maybe in 40 years, people will be saying, "we don't want to get into another Iran."
π @EastCalling
In Vietnam, the US military maintained overwhelming tactical superiority, winning almost every major battle that took place, and inflicted far higher casualties than it sustained. However, the goal of a North Vietnam free from Communism never was achieved. And to this day, nobody considers Vietnam a shining American victory. In fact, the word is synonymous with "folly," or "quagmire." It's also a deep shame on the US National character.
Maybe in 40 years, people will be saying, "we don't want to get into another Iran."
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π―4
Trump and Netanyahu see the same mirages as Saddam
On September 22, 1980, Saddam Hussein assembled a force of 50,000-70,000 men, 2,500-3,000 tanks, IFVs and APCs, supported by about 120-150 aircraft and 400 pieces of artillery/MLRS, and invaded the Iranian province of Khuzestan.
The Iraqi army of the era was modern, well-equipped, and technologically superior.
Capitalizing on the chaos sown by the Islamic Revolution, it surged across the Iranian plains. With such a massive force, it seemed invincible, who could have possibly stood in its way?
The advance was rapid. In less than a week, the Iraqi tanks crossed the Karun River and surrounded key cities. The flat topography of Khuzestan favored the armored doctrine. Until the advance stopped.
When they tried to enter Khorramshahr, the Iraqi vehicles got stuck in narrow streets and were hunted by Iranian militiamen with grenade launchers (RPGs). This forced Saddam to divert even more troops to the south, turning the place into a meat grinder.
Saddam realized he would not be able to take Khuzestan in a rush. He ordered the total siege of Abadan and the street-by-street invasion of Khorramshahr. It was the first major tactical error. Troops and armored vehicles entered dense urban areas and came face to face with young Iranians firing RPG-7s from the tops of buildings.
The result was that Iraq took Khorramshahr after 34 days, but at a human cost that broke the morale of the armored divisions. With the Iraqi momentum exhausted, the southern front turned into a βWorld War I in the desert.β
In May 1982, Iran surrounded and captured 19,000 Iraqi soldiers in Khorramshahr. In 1980, small groups of Iranian soldiers and Kurdish militias used the caves and fissures of the mountains to fire anti-tank missiles from top to bottom.
Approximately 20,000 to 30,000 Iraqis were killed on the southern front alone until 1982, and a large part of the tanks and armored vehicles were destroyed or abandoned. On the Northern and Central Axis, it was a mountain war. Iraq advanced to the foothills of the Zagros, but was again halted by numerous Iranian positions in that mountain range.
Today the situation is very similar: Iran does not try to hold the border; it lets the enemy enter, because it knows it will have protected positions in the mountains to establish a war of attrition.
At this moment, a CSG with about 5,000 marines is on its way to the region, where it should join Israeli troops to attempt an operation to liberate the Strait of Hormuz and take Kharg Island.
Even if this force carried out the land invasion, where would it shelter?
In the same plain that became hell for the Iraqis, or in the short strip of flat land that exists at some points of Hormuz?
And another question: where will this troop group up in the face of Iranian missiles and drones? In any point of the Iranian Gulf lands where there might be success in its occupation, there will be positions in the mountains, drones and missiles hitting that occupation to the point of causing many casualties.
Just as the US-Israel sees a chance of occupation on Kharg Island, Saddam also saw it in Khuzestan. In Iran, when the land is flat, it is also surrounded by positions in the mountains and positions fortified with Iranian UHPC.
To get an idea of the Iranian fortifications, while the high-strength concrete of the USA revolves around 100-150 MPa (megapascals), Iran regularly produces concrete of 200 to 400 MPa.
If the GBU-57 bombs cannot penetrate a few meters of UHPC that protect the entrances of the mountains of the nuclear installations, the surgical bombing with GBU-72, which weigh only 20% of the GBU-57, and occurred in the last days in the mountains of the strait, is a myth.
Putting feet on the ground in Iran would require a force that the United States today is incapable of mobilizing.
Link
π @EastCalling
On September 22, 1980, Saddam Hussein assembled a force of 50,000-70,000 men, 2,500-3,000 tanks, IFVs and APCs, supported by about 120-150 aircraft and 400 pieces of artillery/MLRS, and invaded the Iranian province of Khuzestan.
The Iraqi army of the era was modern, well-equipped, and technologically superior.
Capitalizing on the chaos sown by the Islamic Revolution, it surged across the Iranian plains. With such a massive force, it seemed invincible, who could have possibly stood in its way?
The advance was rapid. In less than a week, the Iraqi tanks crossed the Karun River and surrounded key cities. The flat topography of Khuzestan favored the armored doctrine. Until the advance stopped.
When they tried to enter Khorramshahr, the Iraqi vehicles got stuck in narrow streets and were hunted by Iranian militiamen with grenade launchers (RPGs). This forced Saddam to divert even more troops to the south, turning the place into a meat grinder.
Saddam realized he would not be able to take Khuzestan in a rush. He ordered the total siege of Abadan and the street-by-street invasion of Khorramshahr. It was the first major tactical error. Troops and armored vehicles entered dense urban areas and came face to face with young Iranians firing RPG-7s from the tops of buildings.
The result was that Iraq took Khorramshahr after 34 days, but at a human cost that broke the morale of the armored divisions. With the Iraqi momentum exhausted, the southern front turned into a βWorld War I in the desert.β
In May 1982, Iran surrounded and captured 19,000 Iraqi soldiers in Khorramshahr. In 1980, small groups of Iranian soldiers and Kurdish militias used the caves and fissures of the mountains to fire anti-tank missiles from top to bottom.
Approximately 20,000 to 30,000 Iraqis were killed on the southern front alone until 1982, and a large part of the tanks and armored vehicles were destroyed or abandoned. On the Northern and Central Axis, it was a mountain war. Iraq advanced to the foothills of the Zagros, but was again halted by numerous Iranian positions in that mountain range.
Today the situation is very similar: Iran does not try to hold the border; it lets the enemy enter, because it knows it will have protected positions in the mountains to establish a war of attrition.
At this moment, a CSG with about 5,000 marines is on its way to the region, where it should join Israeli troops to attempt an operation to liberate the Strait of Hormuz and take Kharg Island.
Even if this force carried out the land invasion, where would it shelter?
In the same plain that became hell for the Iraqis, or in the short strip of flat land that exists at some points of Hormuz?
And another question: where will this troop group up in the face of Iranian missiles and drones? In any point of the Iranian Gulf lands where there might be success in its occupation, there will be positions in the mountains, drones and missiles hitting that occupation to the point of causing many casualties.
Just as the US-Israel sees a chance of occupation on Kharg Island, Saddam also saw it in Khuzestan. In Iran, when the land is flat, it is also surrounded by positions in the mountains and positions fortified with Iranian UHPC.
To get an idea of the Iranian fortifications, while the high-strength concrete of the USA revolves around 100-150 MPa (megapascals), Iran regularly produces concrete of 200 to 400 MPa.
If the GBU-57 bombs cannot penetrate a few meters of UHPC that protect the entrances of the mountains of the nuclear installations, the surgical bombing with GBU-72, which weigh only 20% of the GBU-57, and occurred in the last days in the mountains of the strait, is a myth.
Putting feet on the ground in Iran would require a force that the United States today is incapable of mobilizing.
Link
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π9π₯4
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German Chancellor Merz spoke about "not very good relations" with Trump.
"We don't have very good relations with him right now," he said.
Merz also criticized the pro-Trump MAGA movement.
"The MAGA movement is not our movement. What they are doing with culture and the media, the way they treat each other - this is not our idea of democracy. We have a different idea," the chancellor stated.
β β β
Yes, the Europeans are a different flavor of stupid. Their idea of democracy is to restrict all major decisions to a handful of life-long, soulless bureaucrats who simply parrot whatever the fashion of the day is, which is usually some form of deconstructionist societal suicide (cultural and economic), and anyone who publicly disagrees gets arrested.
Of course, due to your terrible decisions as well as any aversion to obviously logical decisions, you exist as a vassal of those Americans you supposedly disagree with so vehemently.
So, sucks to suck.
π @EastCalling
"We don't have very good relations with him right now," he said.
Merz also criticized the pro-Trump MAGA movement.
"The MAGA movement is not our movement. What they are doing with culture and the media, the way they treat each other - this is not our idea of democracy. We have a different idea," the chancellor stated.
Yes, the Europeans are a different flavor of stupid. Their idea of democracy is to restrict all major decisions to a handful of life-long, soulless bureaucrats who simply parrot whatever the fashion of the day is, which is usually some form of deconstructionist societal suicide (cultural and economic), and anyone who publicly disagrees gets arrested.
Of course, due to your terrible decisions as well as any aversion to obviously logical decisions, you exist as a vassal of those Americans you supposedly disagree with so vehemently.
So, sucks to suck.
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π―12π5
East Calling
A special report by Sabreen News A number of American aircraft have landed at the US occupation base, Victoria, at Baghdad Airport. β β β Earlier, it was reported that activity at this based had stalled to some launches of reconnaissance drones. Perhaps anβ¦
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Large fire at the Victoria base of the US in Iraq
Source: Tasnim
β β β
Well, that probably was an evacuation we saw earlier, as Geroman said.
π @EastCalling
Source: Tasnim
Well, that probably was an evacuation we saw earlier, as Geroman said.
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π₯11
Okay, let's go through the list:
1. "Completely degrading Iranian missile capability."
That's a negative, Ghostrider.
2. "Destroying Iran's defense industrial base."
Mmmm. Partial credit. Iran could easily rebuild facilities and import weapons from Russia and China in the meantime. Plus, most of the stuff that was underground is probably still intact.
3. "Eliminating their Navy and Air Force, including Air Defense."
Iran literally hit an F35 yesterday... Besides, Iran doesn't need a traditional Navy to close the Strait of Hormuz, as we've seen, or a traditional Air Force to strike Israel and facilities in the Gulf. But I will admit that the traditional Navy and Air Force is essentially gone.
4. "Never allowing Iran to get close to nuclear capability."
Iran was not developing a nuclear weapon, there was no evidence they were even trying, and the Ayatollah you killed had a Fatwa pronounced against nuclear weapons.
5. "Protecting our Middle Eastern allies, blah, blah, blah..."
You can't be serious? You threw them into the fire and left a permanent negative impact on their economies. You used them as a human shield.
In conclusion, Trump is simply going to pretend he won something even after failing to enact regime change or even to come up with a coherent goal for the entire operation. Apparently, the goal was to blow up some ships and planes as well as an imaginary nuclear weapons program, which he already claimed was obliterated a year ago.
π @EastCalling
1. "Completely degrading Iranian missile capability."
That's a negative, Ghostrider.
2. "Destroying Iran's defense industrial base."
Mmmm. Partial credit. Iran could easily rebuild facilities and import weapons from Russia and China in the meantime. Plus, most of the stuff that was underground is probably still intact.
3. "Eliminating their Navy and Air Force, including Air Defense."
Iran literally hit an F35 yesterday... Besides, Iran doesn't need a traditional Navy to close the Strait of Hormuz, as we've seen, or a traditional Air Force to strike Israel and facilities in the Gulf. But I will admit that the traditional Navy and Air Force is essentially gone.
4. "Never allowing Iran to get close to nuclear capability."
Iran was not developing a nuclear weapon, there was no evidence they were even trying, and the Ayatollah you killed had a Fatwa pronounced against nuclear weapons.
5. "Protecting our Middle Eastern allies, blah, blah, blah..."
You can't be serious? You threw them into the fire and left a permanent negative impact on their economies. You used them as a human shield.
In conclusion, Trump is simply going to pretend he won something even after failing to enact regime change or even to come up with a coherent goal for the entire operation. Apparently, the goal was to blow up some ships and planes as well as an imaginary nuclear weapons program, which he already claimed was obliterated a year ago.
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π11
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