𓂆 Princess
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Journalist | Activist
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تصعيد واسع نفذته قوات الاحتلال والمستوطنون في الضفة الغربية والقدس خلال فبراير 2026،
بحسب تقرير مركز معلومات فلسطين “معطى”
Identifying with the Israeli tragedy: Taiwan, China's biggest enemy, donated half a million shekels to the city of Beit Shemesh following the damage caused by the missile strike a few days ago.

Taiwan also donated a considerable amount of money to ZAKA during the war.
Hackers Exploit Israel Camera Vulnerabilities to Surveil

Multiple hacking groups have been targeting internet-connected surveillance cameras across Israel and other Middle Eastern countries since the war began on February 28.

The countries targeted in these digital intrusions—Israel, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, the UAE, Cyprus, and Lebanon—are the same ones that have witnessed significant missile activity linked to hackers as part of an ongoing operation targeting Israel.

Compromised servers contained live CCTV feeds from Jerusalem, allowing the groups to surveil Tel Aviv, Haifa, and Jerusalem.

This recent camera targeting by several hackers serves as an early indicator of potential follow-on

The exploited vulnerabilities include:

· An improper authentication vulnerability in Hikvision IP camera firmware (CVE-2017-7921)
· A command injection vulnerability in the Hikvision web server component (CVE-2021-36260)
· An OS command injection vulnerability in the Hikvision Intercom Broadcasting System (CVE-2023-6895)
· An unauthenticated remote code execution vulnerability in the Hikvision Integrated Security Management Platform (CVE-2025-34067)
· An authentication bypass vulnerability in multiple Dahua products (CVE-2021-33044)

@TheGhostITM
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Forwarded from 𓂆 Palestine
The Persistence of Western Hypocrisy: Lies, Power, and the Colonial Mindset

In the modern world, the legacy of colonialism still shapes global politics, media narratives, and the moral compass of powerful nations. Many Western states, while preaching democracy and truth, continue to twist facts and rewrite history to maintain influence — not through direct conquest anymore, but through propaganda, selective reporting, and cultural dominance.

From political leaders who contradict themselves daily to media outlets that quietly bury inconvenient truths, the West has mastered the art of narrative control. Lies are sanitized through sophisticated language, turning deceit into “strategic communication.” When a Western politician changes his story, it’s framed as “clarifying a position.” But when an African, Arab, or Asian leader does the same, it’s branded as corruption or incompetence.

These double standards reveal more than mere bias — they expose the old colonial mindset, reborn in modern diplomacy and media. Leaders like Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu have made demonstrably false claims with little consequence. Instead of accountability, they receive airtime, applause, and analysis that often normalizes their falsehoods. This selective morality keeps the global power structure intact: Western lies are debated; others’ lies are punished.

Meanwhile, journalists and commentators in Western media seldom challenge their own government’s contradictions with the same rigor they apply abroad. This silence sustains Western moral authority while eroding global trust. It’s not just about who lies — it’s about who is *allowed* to lie and still be believed.

In the end, the twisting of truth is not a cultural phenomenon — it’s a political tool. Until global media and diplomacy confront this imbalance, we will keep living in a world where truth bends in one direction: toward power.
Forwarded from أشباح 𓂆
Forwarded from 𓂆 Palestine
Soar Atlas has obtained new very high-resolution satellite imagery of the Fujairah Oil Industry Zone in the UAE from 5 March.

The images show two oil tanks engulfed in flames, with workers spraying water to cool nearby tanks, while another tank appears to have already been destroyed.
عاجل| القناة 12 العبرية:
إصابة نجل وزير المالية الإسرائيلي "بتسلئيل سموتريتش" بجروح طفيفة خلال نشاط عسكري عند الحدود اللبنانية.
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Mexican university students hold a memorial at the National Autonomous University of Mexico to honor Iranian schoolgirls killed in the U.S.-Israeli bombing of Shajareh Tayyebeh Primary School in Minab, Iran.
Iran just struck Microsoft data centers in the Gulf. Microsoft — whose Azure platform runs the operational backbone of NATO, the US Department of Defense, and every major Western financial institution that has expanded into the Gulf over the last five years.

This is categorically different from the AWS strikes earlier in the war.

Microsoft Azure is not simply a commercial cloud product. It is a defense-grade infrastructure platform operating under FedRAMP High and DoD Impact Level 5 and 6 authorizations, the highest security classifications available to a commercial provider. Azure GovCloud runs classified US government workloads. Azure for Operators runs 5G military communications infrastructure. The Gulf Azure availability zones, built under billions of dollars of sovereign cloud commitments to UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar, sit at the intersection of commercial enterprise and military-adjacent operations in a way no other cloud platform does. When Iran fires missiles at Microsoft data centers in the Gulf, it is not attacking a commercial storage facility. It is attacking the digital connective tissue between American defense architecture and Gulf sovereign AI ambitions.

The mechanism Iran is applying across every domain of this war is now operating at the infrastructure layer of the global digital economy. Hormuz for maritime insurance. BAPCO and Ras Tanura for oil infrastructure insurance. Manama hotels for corporate presence insurance. AWS for basic cloud insurability. Microsoft for the tier of cloud infrastructure that carries defense-adjacent and government workloads. Each successive target has moved one layer deeper into the critical infrastructure stack.

Microsoft has not yet confirmed the extent of damage or the impact on service continuity. That silence is itself data. When AWS facilities were struck earlier in the war, the company posted status updates within hours. The Microsoft situation is being handled with a different communication posture, which is consistent with facilities that carry sovereign and defense-adjacent contractual obligations that restrict what can be publicly disclosed about operational status.

The Gulf was supposed to be the proving ground for the sovereign AI thesis. Every major hyperscaler made the bet simultaneously: Gulf governments want their data onshore, under their own regulatory frameworks, close to their own populations, contributing to their own AI capability development. Microsoft, Google, AWS, Oracle, all committed multi-billion dollar buildouts to that thesis in the last three years. The thesis assumed physical security. The thesis assumed the Gulf was a stable operating environment for long-term digital infrastructure. That assumption was always geopolitically contingent. It is now empirically falsified.

Every CTO and every procurement officer running a sovereign cloud negotiation anywhere in the world is looking at the Microsoft strike footage right now and running the same calculation: if the Gulf is a ballistic missile target range, where does the sovereign AI buildout go instead?

The American-aligned economic order made about the Gulf as a safe jurisdiction for permanent infrastructure.

The missiles hitting Microsoft data centers today are not attacking cloud storage. They are attacking the confidence interval on a decade of digital infrastructure investment.

@TheGhostITM
Forwarded from 𓂆 Palestine
The CEO of one of the world’s largest logistics companies told Swiss broadcaster SRF on March 5 that Dubai has approximately ten days of fresh food left. That sentence has not appeared on a single major English-language front page. It should be the headline.

Stefan Paul, CEO of Kuehne and Nagel, was not speaking hyperbolically. He was reading his company’s supply chain data. Dubai and the broader Gulf import between 80 and 90 percent of their food. Approximately 70 percent of GCC foodstuffs transit the Strait of Hormuz. The strait has been closed to commercial traffic since February 28. Global air cargo capacity serving the Middle East fell 22 percent between February 28 and March 3, according to Aevean data published through Reuters. Jebel Ali, the port that serves 50 million people across the Gulf and serves as the regional hub through which the vast majority of Dubai’s perishable imports flow, was struck and suspended operations, with partial resumption beginning March 5.

Ten days of fresh produce is what you have when the ship lanes close, the air routes collapse, and the port is hit simultaneously.

Fresh produce is not canned goods. It is not strategic reserves. It is the strawberries, the tomatoes, the lettuce, the mangoes, the herbs, and the dairy that make a modern city function as a modern city. These products have days of shelf life, not weeks or months. They cannot be rerouted around the Cape of Good Hope because the Cape of Good Hope adds four to six weeks to a transit and a strawberry does not survive four to six weeks in a container. When the routes close, the perishable category depletes in real time with no backstop.

Dubai is one of the wealthiest cities on earth. It has the fiscal capacity, the sovereign wealth, and the logistical relationships to acquire food from anywhere. The problem is not money. The problem is physics. You cannot teleport produce from Spain or Kenya or India onto Dubai supermarket shelves when the air cargo lanes are 22 percent contracted and the port is still recovering from Iranian strikes. The money is willing. The infrastructure is not available.

The ten-day figure is a fresh produce specific estimate, not a total food supply figure. Dubai has substantial dry goods, frozen stocks, and strategic grain reserves maintained by the UAE government. The population is not facing famine. What it is facing is the moment when the visible symbol of a globalized, prosperous, interconnected city, a fully stocked supermarket, begins to thin. That thinning is a political event as much as a logistical one. The UAE government has absorbed 1,072 Iranian drones, suspended 70 percent of regional flights, watched its data centers targeted, and seen its Fujairah bypass route threatened. Empty produce aisles in Dubai Spinneys is the point where the population that has so far watched the war with alarm rather than hunger begins to feel it directly.

The war’s civilian transmission mechanism has arrived. Not through inflation statistics that take months to compile. Through the absence of tomatoes.

Iran has now demonstrated it can reach the molecular composition of the food supply of its adversaries’ allied cities within ten days of opening hostilities. That is an entirely new category of coercive leverage. It does not require a weapon capable of hitting a supermarket. It only requires the ability to close the routes that the supermarket depends on.

The bypass route for oil was Fujairah. The bypass route for food was air cargo. Both are now compromised. There is no third route.
Forwarded from 𓂆 Palestine
Journalist Hussein Hijazi was killed in an Israeli occupation airstrike in southern Lebanon. The Israeli occupation continued its attack on Lebanon, targeting civilian gatherings and residential buildings.

The Israeli attack so far led to the deaths of more than 123 Lebanese, including children, in addition to more than 600 people wounded and widespread displacement across Lebanese villages.
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CCTV footage documents the moment of a US-Israeli strike near a school in Qazvin, Iran, killing a student.
Forwarded from 𓂆 Palestine
Dispatch from the Frontlines: Why No War Declaration?

By
#OpIsraelTeam War Correspondent, Embedded with U.S. Forces Near the Strait of Hormuz – March 7, 2026

Explosions light up the Iranian horizon as American jets scream overhead, striking missile sites in what President Trump calls "preemptive defense." Yet Congress remains silent—no vote, no declaration of war. Why? It's deliberate. A formal war needs congressional approval under the Constitution, a hurdle presidents dodge for flexibility.

From Korea to today's Iran ops, the U.S. fights without saying "war." Last time? World War II, with six declarations against Axis powers. Korea was a UN "police action." Vietnam? Gulf of Tonkin Resolution. Afghanistan and Iraq got AUMFs—broad green lights for "necessary force" minus the war label.

Declaring war binds you. Geneva Conventions and Hague rules kick in hard: no bombing hospitals, schools, universities, civilian airports, or power grids. POWs get protections; treaties activate. Miss a rule? War crimes trials loom at The Hague. Without declaration, ops are "counterterrorism" or "self-defense." Bomb what you must—blame "collateral damage." Drones hit Tehran suburbs unchallenged by international courts. UN Charter? Ignore it; veto power shields you.

Legal Loopholes in Action

Presidents love this gray zone. Article II lets them as commander-in-chief repel "sudden attacks." AUMFs stretch forever—2001's still justifies 20 countries' ops. Congress? They complain but pass vague authorizations easier than "war," dodging voter backlash. No draft, no war bonds—just endless "kinetic operations." Start anytime, stop on a dime. Trump tweets "mission accomplished," pulls out.

Era: 1950s, Conflict: Korea, Tool Used: UN Mandate, Rules Skipped: Full War Laws
Era: 1960s-70s, Conflict: Vietnam, Tool Used: Tonkin Res., Rules Skipped: POW Treaties
Era: 2000s, Conflict: Afghanistan/Iraq, Tool Used: AUMFs, Rules Skipped: Civilian Site Bans
Era: 2020s, Conflict: Iran Strikes, Tool Used: Self-Defense, Rules Skipped: UN Oversight

Dangers of the Real Thing

Formal war means POW exchanges, neutral inspections, no indefinite detentions like Guantanamo. Economies mobilize; allies commit. Iran could invoke mutual defense pacts, escalating to Russia or China. Domestically, War Powers Resolution clocks 60 days—then Congress must fund or fold.bPresidents evade: label it "not war," keep flying.

Critics scream "imperial presidency," but it works. Vietnam's 58,000 dead? Blamed on hawks. Today's strikes? "Surgical." No Geneva handcuffs mean total operational freedom—hit electricity, sow chaos, claim victory.

As F-35s return, pilots debrief: "No ROE headaches." Without war's rules, America dictates terms. Congress could reclaim power tomorrow, but history says nah. This shadow war rolls on—efficient, deniable, ruthless.

The U.S. has never formally declared war on Korea, Vietnam, Afghanistan, or Iran. Its last declarations of war were during World War II.

“From Korea to Iran, America has never declared war—its last formal declarations came in World War II. In this era of shadow conflicts, true power lies not in Congress’s voice, but in the silence of undeclared battles: flexible, ruthless, and endless.”
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A massive rally in Diyarbakır, Turkey to demand an immediate end to the US-Israeli war against Iran.
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Iranian mourners grieve a young child killed amid US-Israeli bombardment of Iran, as civilian casualties, including many children, continue to mount during the war in Iran.
On International Women's Day: Approximately 20,000 cases of arrests among Palestinian women since 1967.
“My wife is the love of my life and … has held no formal position on my campaign”

NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani defended his wife, Rama Duwaji, amid criticism of her liking pro-Palestine Instagram posts after resistance group Hamas's cross-border blitz into Israel on October 7, 2023
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BREAKING | Israel conducts massive demolition operations targeting residential buildings in Khan Yunis, southern Gaza.
Activists march in a large demonstration in Malaga against the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran, Palestine, and Lebanon, calling for the expulsion of U.S. military bases from Spain and withdrawal from NATO, today.