𓂆 Princess
2.27K subscribers
6.29K photos
4.01K videos
151 links
Journalist | Activist
Download Telegram
طوفان بشري في مدينة الأهواز الإيرانية في يوم القدس العالمي.
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.
"فلسطين حرة، القدس لنا"..

طفلة إيرانية ترفع لافتة خلال مسيرات "يوم القدس العالمي" في إيران.
🥰1
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.
Chinese XinhuaNet:

China Red Cross to provide $200,000 for Iranian victims of elementary school attack, foreign ministry says.
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
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
Lulu Awad was heading to the central square in Gaza City to buy clothes for Eid Al-Fitr, excited like any child dreaming of a new outfit. But a bullet from Israeli occupation soldiers turned her joy into pain, critically injuring her.

Via: Osama Al-Kahlout
The Israeli regime's Cyber Defense Organization has issued an urgent warning asking settlers and Israeli institutions to disconnect internet-connected security cameras or restrict access to them.

@TheGhostITM
UAE Oil Firm Hit by Major Cyber Breach

Sharjah National Oil Corporation (SNOC), a key Emirati energy player, has fallen victim to a significant cyber intrusion by hacktivists.

@TheGhostITM
Hacktivist attacks surge in Middle East amid escalating tensions.

Western firms like Proofpoint & Check Point report spike in hacktivist ops—groups monitoring targets & hoarding intel for max impact. Regional cyber frontlines heating up fast.

@TheGhostITM
Hacker group “Handala ”has leaked personal data of 50 senior Israeli Navy officers, including names, photos, ranks, home addresses, and phone numbers.

@TheGhostITM
2
Cyberwarfare: The Silent Battlefield

By
#TheGhostITM

Modern conflict rarely begins with missiles. It begins with data.

Long before the first shot is fired, networks are scanned, satellites repositioned, malware quietly deployed, and digital footprints analyzed. The battlefield of the 21st century extends far beyond land, sea, and air. It exists in fiber‑optic cables, server farms, satellite constellations, and the billions of connected devices people carry every day.

Cyberwarfare is not always visible, but it shapes modern conflicts in ways traditional warfare never could.

The Intelligence Layer Above Earth

Spy satellites remain one of the most powerful intelligence tools in modern warfare. Orbiting hundreds of kilometers above Earth, advanced imaging satellites capture high‑resolution photos capable of identifying military vehicles, aircraft movements, missile installations, and supply convoys.

Modern systems go far beyond simple photography. They include:

- Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR), which can see through clouds and operate at night.
- Infrared imaging that detects heat signatures from engines, generators, or recently moved equipment.
- Persistent surveillance satellites that repeatedly scan the same areas to track changes over time.

For military planners, this means a base can never truly disappear. Even camouflage, underground facilities, or dispersed units can leave detectable patterns.

Signal Interception (SIGINT): Listening to the Invisible

Signals intelligence—commonly known as SIGINT—is one of the oldest yet most powerful intelligence methods.

Every modern military unit emits signals: radios, encrypted communications, satellite links, radar systems, GPS transmissions, and even routine mobile phone activity. Advanced interception platforms can capture and analyze these signals to reveal valuable information such as:

- Unit locations and movement patterns
- Command structures
- Operational timing
- Logistics coordination

Modern interception systems can analyze massive volumes of wireless traffic. Even encrypted communications can still reveal metadata—who communicated, when, and how frequently. In intelligence work, metadata alone can expose operational structures.

Small Drones, Massive Impact

Drones have transformed reconnaissance.

What once required large military aircraft can now be done with devices small enough to fit in a backpack. Commercial off‑the‑shelf drones can capture high‑definition video, map terrain, and track vehicle movements with minimal cost.

More advanced micro‑drones push this even further. Some are designed to:

- Enter buildings through windows or ventilation openings
- Operate quietly for close surveillance
- Follow individuals or vehicles without detection

In dense urban environments, these small drones can become the eyes of modern intelligence operations.

Malware: The Digital Spy

Perhaps the most powerful espionage tool is not in the sky or on the ground—it is inside networks.

Malware allows attackers to infiltrate phones, laptops, industrial systems, and government infrastructure. Once inside, these tools can quietly collect:

- Documents
- Emails
- Contact lists
- System logs
- Geolocation data

Sophisticated malware campaigns can remain undetected for months or even years. In some cases, attackers gain access to entire administrative networks, allowing them to observe internal decision‑making in real time.

This type of digital espionage has become a defining feature of modern conflict.

Artificial Intelligence: The Sleepless Analyst

Modern intelligence operations generate overwhelming volumes of data—satellite imagery, intercepted signals, social media posts, financial records, and network activity logs.

Artificial intelligence now plays a crucial role in analyzing this information.

Machine learning systems can:
- Detect unusual movement patterns in satellite imagery
- Identify connections between individuals across social networks
- Predict potential military deployments based on logistics patterns
- Flag suspicious financial transactions linked to covert operations

Unlike human analysts, these systems never sleep. They continuously scan enormous datasets searching for anomalies.

The Rise of Hackers and Hacktivists

Cyberwarfare is no longer limited to governments.

Independent hackers, hacktivist collectives, and lone‑wolf operators increasingly play a role in digital conflicts. These actors operate outside traditional military structures and often act based on ideology, political beliefs, or human rights concerns.

Their activities can include:

- Website defacements
- Data leaks and doxxing campaigns
- Distributed denial‑of‑service (DDoS) attacks
- Exposing internal documents
- Breaching poorly secured networks

While many operations are symbolic, others can disrupt critical services or expose sensitive information.

Hacktivism has become a form of digital protest, where individuals use cyber tools to challenge governments, corporations, or institutions they believe are violating ethical or humanitarian principles.

The Lone‑Wolf Threat

Another growing element of cyber conflict is the lone‑wolf actor.

Unlike organized hacker groups, these individuals often operate alone. Some are highly skilled security researchers who cross ethical boundaries, while others are self‑taught programmers experimenting with publicly available tools.

A single motivated individual can now launch attacks that previously required large teams.

Access to open‑source hacking frameworks, leaked exploit kits, and AI‑assisted coding tools has dramatically lowered the barrier to entry.

This means cyber incidents can originate from almost anywhere—without warning.

When War Moves Beyond the Battlefield

In modern conflicts, the line between civilian infrastructure and military targets has become increasingly blurred.

Financial systems, shipping networks, energy infrastructure, telecommunications providers, and media platforms all operate within the digital ecosystem. Disrupting any of these systems can create ripple effects across entire economies.

Cyber operations can influence:

- global financial markets
- transportation and logistics
- communication networks
- public perception and information flows

In other words, modern warfare now extends into everyday life.

The New Reality

Borders still exist on maps, but in cyberspace they mean very little.

A compromised smartphone, a vulnerable server, or an exposed cloud database can become an intelligence gateway. A simple mobile application, an IoT device, or even a misconfigured router can reveal valuable operational data.

The silent battlefield is everywhere—inside networks, across satellites, and within the digital footprints people leave behind every day.

And unlike traditional war, it never truly stops.


@TheGhostITM
Happy to see my cyber articles shared & adapted! 🙏🏼 If reposting your versions. a simple name mention would mean a lot. Helps independent researchers continue. Thank you!

#Cybersecurity @TheGhostITM
Mourners perform funeral prayers for slain Palestinian father Kamel Ayash, his pregnant wife, and their child, who were killed this morning in a deadly Israeli airstrike on the Al-Sawarha area in the central Gaza Strip.