Forwarded from ᴛʜᴇ ɢʜᴏꜱᴛ ɪɴ ᴛʜᴇ ᴍᴀᴄʜɪɴᴇ
Israel is banning footage of war from social media. Israel’s extreme censorship hides reality of disastrous war.
@TheGhostITM
@TheGhostITM
Forwarded from ᴛʜᴇ ɢʜᴏꜱᴛ ɪɴ ᴛʜᴇ ᴍᴀᴄʜɪɴᴇ
Lawyer Ghadir Dandash martyred in last night’s Israeli occupation airstrike on Aramoun, Lebanon.
@TheGhostITM
@TheGhostITM
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Australian riot police use force to intimidate and disperse pro-Palestine protesters in Melbourne.
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⚡️Iranians march in support of their government while airstrikes take place
Forwarded from ᴛʜᴇ ɢʜᴏꜱᴛ ɪɴ ᴛʜᴇ ᴍᴀᴄʜɪɴᴇ
Lebanese photographer Mohammed Shehab and his daughter were killed in yesterday’s Israeli attack on Aramoun, in the Aley District of the Mount Lebanon Governorate, south of Beirut. His wife, Natalie Kamal al-Din, is in critical condition.
@TheGhostITM
@TheGhostITM
Forwarded from ᴛʜᴇ ɢʜᴏꜱᴛ ɪɴ ᴛʜᴇ ᴍᴀᴄʜɪɴᴇ
Director of the Faculty of Sciences at the Lebanese University, Dr. Hussein Bazzi, who was martyred as a result of the Israeli targeting of the Faculty of Sciences building in Hadath.
@TheGhostITM
@TheGhostITM
Forwarded from ᴛʜᴇ ɢʜᴏꜱᴛ ɪɴ ᴛʜᴇ ᴍᴀᴄʜɪɴᴇ
International media outlets, including NBC News, have reported on a cyberattack carried out by the Handala group against U.S.-based medical technology company Stryker.
The attackers gained access to Microsoft Intune, a platform used by organizations to manage and secure corporate devices. After compromising the system, the hackers triggered the platform’s remote wipe capability, resetting a large number of employee mobile devices to factory settings.
The incident disrupted internal communications across the company and significantly impacted day‑to‑day operations.
The attackers appear to have abused Intune’s legitimate device management features—particularly the remote wipe function—to erase data from affected devices and force system resets.
@TheGhostITM
The attackers gained access to Microsoft Intune, a platform used by organizations to manage and secure corporate devices. After compromising the system, the hackers triggered the platform’s remote wipe capability, resetting a large number of employee mobile devices to factory settings.
The incident disrupted internal communications across the company and significantly impacted day‑to‑day operations.
The attackers appear to have abused Intune’s legitimate device management features—particularly the remote wipe function—to erase data from affected devices and force system resets.
@TheGhostITM
The Gaza Health Ministry reported that one Palestinian was killed and nine others injured in the past 24 hours, in breach of the ceasefire that began on October 11, 2025.
Since the start of the ceasefire, Israeli occupation forces killed 651 Palestinians and wounded 1,741, while 756 bodies were recovered from the rubble. The total death toll from Israel’s war on Gaza Strip since October 7, 2023 has also reached 72,136, with 171,839 wounded.
Since the start of the ceasefire, Israeli occupation forces killed 651 Palestinians and wounded 1,741, while 756 bodies were recovered from the rubble. The total death toll from Israel’s war on Gaza Strip since October 7, 2023 has also reached 72,136, with 171,839 wounded.
Forwarded from إعلام المقاومة الفلسطينية
"فلسطين حرة، القدس لنا"..
طفلة إيرانية ترفع لافتة خلال مسيرات "يوم القدس العالمي" في إيران.
طفلة إيرانية ترفع لافتة خلال مسيرات "يوم القدس العالمي" في إيران.
🥰1
Forwarded from ᴛʜᴇ ɢʜᴏꜱᴛ ɪɴ ᴛʜᴇ ᴍᴀᴄʜɪɴᴇ
Media is too big
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Forwarded from 𓂆 Palestine
Motaz Malhees, star of “The Voice of Hind Rajab,” announces that he cannot enter the US for the Oscars this Sunday due to his Palestinian citizenship.
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US soldiers refuse to answer a question: “America first or Israel first? And are you willing to die for Israel?”
عاصفة رملية تضرب خيام النازحين في قطاع غزة، وتزيد من معاناة الأهالي في المخيمات ومراكز الإيواء.
Forwarded from 𓂆 Palestine
By #OpIsraelTeam War Correspondent
Western policymakers and media elites continue to misread both the IRGC and the deeper fabric of Iranian society, and that miscalculation makes fantasies of regime‑change by invasion extraordinarily dangerous. When you convince yourself that nearly every Iranian is just a hostage of “the mullahs,” you stop seeing a complex society with its own nationalism, networks of power, and lived memories of war and intervention, and instead see a caricature that you think can be bombed into submission.
"So when you start to believe your own delusions, when you start to imply that every single Iranian is a prisoner of a dictatorship of the mullahs..."
From Washington to European capitals, this narrative is recycled in think‑tank panels, Pentagon briefings, White House briefings, and cable news talking points, until decision‑makers start believing their own propaganda. You hear the same chorus on U.S. outlets like Fox and CNN and in Europe on the BBC and France 24, and in Germany on channels like Deutsche Welle, all building a story in which air power plus “liberating” ground troops will somehow trigger a spontaneous uprising against the IRGC and the clerical establishment. Politicians such as Benjamin Netanyahu then sell the idea that once Western troops cross the border, Iranians will welcome them and overthrow the system for them.
That is where delusion turns lethal. Iran is not Iraq in 2003, not Libya in 2011, and not war‑torn Syria; it is a large, battle‑hardened state with a dense security architecture and a population that has already paid an enormous price in the Iran‑Iraq war and decades of sanctions. An invasion force would not be facing a collapsed army and fragmented militias, but a state that has spent years preparing specifically to make any foreign ground presence bleed. The result would not be a neat regime‑change operation but waves of American and European soldiers coming home in body bags, and a region spiraling even further out of control.
"When ground troops enter, you are going to end up in an utter catastrophe—your American troops [will suffer]."
If the West really wants to reenact some self‑imagined crusade, then sending ground troops into Persia would be the most brutal reality check possible. On the ground, they would confront not the media caricature of a hollow regime ready to fall at the first push, but a layered defensive system, a mobilized society, and a political culture shaped by resistance to outside domination. People do not have to love every aspect of their government to close ranks when a foreign army arrives; history shows they often do the opposite of what distant strategists in Washington, London, or Brussels predict.
This gap between Western rhetoric and reality was captured starkly in a recent NBC News interview with Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi. Asked directly whether he feared a U.S. ground invasion, he did not sound like a man expecting his government to collapse; instead, he answered calmly: “No, we are waiting for them… we are confident that we can confront them, and that would be a big disaster for them.”
#OpIsraelTeam
Western policymakers and media elites continue to misread both the IRGC and the deeper fabric of Iranian society, and that miscalculation makes fantasies of regime‑change by invasion extraordinarily dangerous. When you convince yourself that nearly every Iranian is just a hostage of “the mullahs,” you stop seeing a complex society with its own nationalism, networks of power, and lived memories of war and intervention, and instead see a caricature that you think can be bombed into submission.
"So when you start to believe your own delusions, when you start to imply that every single Iranian is a prisoner of a dictatorship of the mullahs..."
From Washington to European capitals, this narrative is recycled in think‑tank panels, Pentagon briefings, White House briefings, and cable news talking points, until decision‑makers start believing their own propaganda. You hear the same chorus on U.S. outlets like Fox and CNN and in Europe on the BBC and France 24, and in Germany on channels like Deutsche Welle, all building a story in which air power plus “liberating” ground troops will somehow trigger a spontaneous uprising against the IRGC and the clerical establishment. Politicians such as Benjamin Netanyahu then sell the idea that once Western troops cross the border, Iranians will welcome them and overthrow the system for them.
That is where delusion turns lethal. Iran is not Iraq in 2003, not Libya in 2011, and not war‑torn Syria; it is a large, battle‑hardened state with a dense security architecture and a population that has already paid an enormous price in the Iran‑Iraq war and decades of sanctions. An invasion force would not be facing a collapsed army and fragmented militias, but a state that has spent years preparing specifically to make any foreign ground presence bleed. The result would not be a neat regime‑change operation but waves of American and European soldiers coming home in body bags, and a region spiraling even further out of control.
"When ground troops enter, you are going to end up in an utter catastrophe—your American troops [will suffer]."
If the West really wants to reenact some self‑imagined crusade, then sending ground troops into Persia would be the most brutal reality check possible. On the ground, they would confront not the media caricature of a hollow regime ready to fall at the first push, but a layered defensive system, a mobilized society, and a political culture shaped by resistance to outside domination. People do not have to love every aspect of their government to close ranks when a foreign army arrives; history shows they often do the opposite of what distant strategists in Washington, London, or Brussels predict.
This gap between Western rhetoric and reality was captured starkly in a recent NBC News interview with Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi. Asked directly whether he feared a U.S. ground invasion, he did not sound like a man expecting his government to collapse; instead, he answered calmly: “No, we are waiting for them… we are confident that we can confront them, and that would be a big disaster for them.”
#OpIsraelTeam