🇹🇷 | Americans and Israelis are also reaching towards Turkey despite Turkey’s regular worship and mega support in the formation of Greater Israel. After opening cards against Turkey in Cyprus and in Syria, the third is ready, and this is Hatay, the wanted. The map displayed behind treacherous Tom Barrack depicts Hatay province as being outside the internationally recognized borders of the Republic of Türkiye, which seems clear in the attempt to form a new Kurdish micro-nation—they want to occupy Hatay.
Historically, Hatay was part of the French Mandate of Syria after World War I. It briefly became the semi-autonomous Hatay State in 1938 and was controversially incorporated into Turkey in 1939 after a referendum. The region is ethnically diverse, home to Turks, Arabs, and Alawites, making it both strategically and politically sensitive.
Erdogan is now stuck inside his own family dynamics, even as his son‑in‑law, Hakan and others maneuver for succession. Erdogan has already brought enough blot on the Turkish nation, and more is coming. No one is safe. Prepare yourselves.
Will you come with a muffler, poetic speeches, and lofty claims, only to retreat back into your home when the storm arrives? The time for words is over—action and awareness are what remain. Boomerang is returning!
🔹@enemywatch
Historically, Hatay was part of the French Mandate of Syria after World War I. It briefly became the semi-autonomous Hatay State in 1938 and was controversially incorporated into Turkey in 1939 after a referendum. The region is ethnically diverse, home to Turks, Arabs, and Alawites, making it both strategically and politically sensitive.
Erdogan is now stuck inside his own family dynamics, even as his son‑in‑law, Hakan and others maneuver for succession. Erdogan has already brought enough blot on the Turkish nation, and more is coming. No one is safe. Prepare yourselves.
Will you come with a muffler, poetic speeches, and lofty claims, only to retreat back into your home when the storm arrives? The time for words is over—action and awareness are what remain. Boomerang is returning!
🔹@enemywatch
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🇸🇦 | Artillery shelling by the Saudi regime targets the Al-Sheikh area in the Monabeh border district of Yemen.
🔹@enemywatch
🔹@enemywatch
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🏴☠️ | Two major developments:
1. The people of Suwayda, under the influence of pro-Israel factions and traitors, are set to take to the streets tomorrow to “show solidarity with the Kurds.” A statement reads:
“After the dangerous escalation where the Sheikh Maqsoud and Ashrafieh neighborhoods were besieged and civilians’ homes were targeted with artillery fire, we call on you to stand in solidarity with our Kurdish brothers.”
This clearly indicates a coordinated operation to manipulate public sentiment.
2. Zionist forces are reportedly signaling additional attacks on Yemen, potentially through Saudi or UAE involvement, indicating a widening of aggression.
🔹@enemywatch
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1. The people of Suwayda, under the influence of pro-Israel factions and traitors, are set to take to the streets tomorrow to “show solidarity with the Kurds.” A statement reads:
“After the dangerous escalation where the Sheikh Maqsoud and Ashrafieh neighborhoods were besieged and civilians’ homes were targeted with artillery fire, we call on you to stand in solidarity with our Kurdish brothers.”
This clearly indicates a coordinated operation to manipulate public sentiment.
2. Zionist forces are reportedly signaling additional attacks on Yemen, potentially through Saudi or UAE involvement, indicating a widening of aggression.
🔹@enemywatch
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Forwarded from NEW WORLD ORDYR 313 (0 EIE)
🇾🇪 Yemeni Ministry of Health: 319 martyrs and 1357 injured, including children and women, as a result of the American, British, and Zionist aggression since the beginning of Yemeni support for Gaza
🟡 @NEWWORLDORDYR
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Members, if you're looking for truly insightful international news, you might love @geopolitics_prime.
They don’t just repost the same headlines: their analyses go deeper, connecting historical dots and facts you won’t find elsewhere. One of the few channels worth following (besides ours).
Note: The exchanges are being conducted for followers, to increase immunity against shadow banning, even if we do not share the same ideological stances.
They don’t just repost the same headlines: their analyses go deeper, connecting historical dots and facts you won’t find elsewhere. One of the few channels worth following (besides ours).
Note: The exchanges are being conducted for followers, to increase immunity against shadow banning, even if we do not share the same ideological stances.
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Enemy Watch — Official
🇵🇸 | West Bank Under Assault: Israeli occupation forces have launched widespread incursions across multiple areas of the occupied West Bank: • Tulkarm: Forces stormed the surroundings of Shweika Roundabout and the city center, raiding homes in the southern…
🇵🇸 | West Bank Under Assault:
Occupation forces have launched a large-scale campaign across multiple cities and towns in the occupied West Bank tonight.
• Stormed Bal’a (east and north of Tulkarm)
• Stormed Nablus from the Beit Furik and Awarta checkpoints
• Invaded Balata Camp and Kafr Qalil (east of Nablus)
• Raided Anabta (east of Tulkarm) and Qabatiya (south of Jenin)
• Entered Kufur Ruman neighborhood (east of Tulkarm)
• Stormed Idhna (west of Hebron), Yatta (south of Hebron), and Halhul (north of Hebron)
• Hebron Mayor Tayseer Abu Snina arrested after his home was raided
• Sheikh Thaer Najjar detained from Bal’a (east of Tulkarm)
• Bethlehem invaded, with occupation forces raiding homes inside Al-Dheisheh Camp
• Asira al-Shamaliya (north of Nablus) stormed
• Arrest campaign launched in Kafr Qalil (southeast of Nablus)
🔹@enemywatch
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Occupation forces have launched a large-scale campaign across multiple cities and towns in the occupied West Bank tonight.
• Stormed Bal’a (east and north of Tulkarm)
• Stormed Nablus from the Beit Furik and Awarta checkpoints
• Invaded Balata Camp and Kafr Qalil (east of Nablus)
• Raided Anabta (east of Tulkarm) and Qabatiya (south of Jenin)
• Entered Kufur Ruman neighborhood (east of Tulkarm)
• Stormed Idhna (west of Hebron), Yatta (south of Hebron), and Halhul (north of Hebron)
• Hebron Mayor Tayseer Abu Snina arrested after his home was raided
• Sheikh Thaer Najjar detained from Bal’a (east of Tulkarm)
• Bethlehem invaded, with occupation forces raiding homes inside Al-Dheisheh Camp
• Asira al-Shamaliya (north of Nablus) stormed
• Arrest campaign launched in Kafr Qalil (southeast of Nablus)
🔹@enemywatch
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🇱🇧 | IOF Attacks on Lebanon:
• The Israeli enemy detonated an uninhabited house this morning near the Randa area, on the outskirts of Aita al-Shaab.
• Heavy machine-gun fire from a newly established Israeli position targeted Markaba town.
• Gunfire was also reported from the Ruweisat al-Alam site toward the outskirts of Kfarchouba.
• Illumination flares were launched multiple times between Meiss al-Jabal and Houla towns.
• Occupation forces opened fire again from the Ruweisat al-Alam position toward Kfarchouba in southern Lebanon.
• Another flare was dropped over the Hura area, between Kfarkela and Deir Mimas.
• An Israeli drone strike targeted the Asira area in Baalbek, marking an expansion of strikes deep into Lebanese territory.
🔹@enemywatch
+
• The Israeli enemy detonated an uninhabited house this morning near the Randa area, on the outskirts of Aita al-Shaab.
• Heavy machine-gun fire from a newly established Israeli position targeted Markaba town.
• Gunfire was also reported from the Ruweisat al-Alam site toward the outskirts of Kfarchouba.
• Illumination flares were launched multiple times between Meiss al-Jabal and Houla towns.
• Occupation forces opened fire again from the Ruweisat al-Alam position toward Kfarchouba in southern Lebanon.
• Another flare was dropped over the Hura area, between Kfarkela and Deir Mimas.
• An Israeli drone strike targeted the Asira area in Baalbek, marking an expansion of strikes deep into Lebanese territory.
🔹@enemywatch
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✅ | The United States and Israel are clearly working to provoke a major sectarian escalation, using the pretext of “regional security” and “freedom of navigation” to mask their deeper aim: fracturing the resistance axis and pushing the region into a Sunni–Shia confrontation that diverts attention from Gaza and the crumbling Israeli position.
The reports that Washington is preparing to intercept Iranian oil tankers in the Persian Gulf and Sea of Oman with assistance from the UAE and Bahrain are part of the same “maximum pressure” doctrine revived under Trump’s influence. This is not just economic warfare; it’s a deliberate provocation designed to trigger a military flashpoint near the Strait of Hormuz.
Iran’s deployment of anti-ship missiles on Abu Musa and the Tunb islands is a defensive posture, not aggression; a message that any interference with its maritime sovereignty will ignite a confrontation that dwarfs the Houthis’ Red Sea blockade.
Meanwhile, the Iranian Foreign Ministry’s firm rejection of the EU–GCC joint statement and the UAE’s false claims over the islands reflects a growing understanding in Tehran:
Western powers are once again using Gulf monarchies as instruments to stir regional instability.
Their playbook is clear —
• Pressure Iran economically and militarily,
• Inflame sectarian divisions,
• Shift Arab attention away from Palestine and toward Iran,
• And secure Israeli interests by destabilizing any united front in the region.
In short, this is not about the islands or oil ; it’s about manufacturing a new front to weaken both Iran and the resistance movements stretching from Yemen to Lebanon.
🔹@enemywatch
+
The reports that Washington is preparing to intercept Iranian oil tankers in the Persian Gulf and Sea of Oman with assistance from the UAE and Bahrain are part of the same “maximum pressure” doctrine revived under Trump’s influence. This is not just economic warfare; it’s a deliberate provocation designed to trigger a military flashpoint near the Strait of Hormuz.
Iran’s deployment of anti-ship missiles on Abu Musa and the Tunb islands is a defensive posture, not aggression; a message that any interference with its maritime sovereignty will ignite a confrontation that dwarfs the Houthis’ Red Sea blockade.
Meanwhile, the Iranian Foreign Ministry’s firm rejection of the EU–GCC joint statement and the UAE’s false claims over the islands reflects a growing understanding in Tehran:
Western powers are once again using Gulf monarchies as instruments to stir regional instability.
Their playbook is clear —
• Pressure Iran economically and militarily,
• Inflame sectarian divisions,
• Shift Arab attention away from Palestine and toward Iran,
• And secure Israeli interests by destabilizing any united front in the region.
In short, this is not about the islands or oil ; it’s about manufacturing a new front to weaken both Iran and the resistance movements stretching from Yemen to Lebanon.
🔹@enemywatch
+
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Enemy Watch — Official
✅ | The United States and Israel are clearly working to provoke a major sectarian escalation, using the pretext of “regional security” and “freedom of navigation” to mask their deeper aim: fracturing the resistance axis and pushing the region into a Sunni–Shia…
🇮🇷 | Iranian Majlis Speaker Mohammad Bagher Qaalibaf condemned the recent joint statement issued by the foreign ministers of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) and the European Union (EU), calling it “interventionist and based on false claims.”
He firmly rejected the “baseless allegations” concerning Iran’s sovereignty over the three islands — Greater Tunb, Lesser Tunb, and Abu Musa — stressing that these territories are an inseparable and eternal part of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
🔹@enemywatch
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He firmly rejected the “baseless allegations” concerning Iran’s sovereignty over the three islands — Greater Tunb, Lesser Tunb, and Abu Musa — stressing that these territories are an inseparable and eternal part of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
🔹@enemywatch
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🇮🇷 | Why are the Three Iranian Islands — Greater Tunb, Lesser Tunb, and Abu Musa: Important? (1/2):
—Greater Tunb:
The island of Greater Tunb lies south of Qeshm Island, between Bandar Lengeh and Ras al-Khaimah. It is located between 55°16′ and 55°19′ east longitude and 26°15′ and 26°19′ north latitude. The island is less than 50 km from Bandar Lengeh, while its distance from Ras al-Khaimah is about 70 km. At its closest point, Greater Tunb is 31 km south of Qeshm Island, placing it in the northern half of the Persian Gulf’s midline.
The island is roughly circular, with an estimated area of about 12 square kilometers. It is largely sandy, dry, and barren, with few sources of vegetation or water. In the northern part, there are low hills, the highest of which reaches 53 meters.
Greater Tunb has also been known by names such as Tomb Gup, Tunb Mar, and Talmar. The common belief is that Tomb or Tunb is a Persian (Dari) or Tangestani word meaning “hill” or “mound.” Accordingly, the island’s name is pronounced Tunb or Tumbo in the local dialect. The southern part of the island is flat and forms the best anchorage point, where some desert plants grow and are used to feed local livestock.
The island has no drinking water, which is supplied from Qeshm Island. In the past, there were a few semi-saline wells in the southern part, but they have all dried up today.
On the northern coast, there stands a lighthouse built in 1953 (1332 AH). Interestingly, despite all attempts at distortion, a simple check in Arabic dictionaries shows that the word “Tunb” does not exist in Arabic; it is purely Persian and Iranian in origin, used in this region since the Achaemenid era.
—Lesser Tunb Island:
The island of Lesser Tunb lies south of Bandar Lengeh and west of Greater Tunb. It is located between 55°08′ and 55°10′ east longitude and 26°14′ and 26°15′ north latitude. Like Greater Tunb, it is positioned in the northern section of the Persian Gulf’s median line. The distance between Lesser Tunb and Greater Tunb is about 12 kilometers, while it lies 50 kilometers from Bandar Lengeh and approximately 92 kilometers from the Ras al-Khaimah coast.
The island covers an area of around 2 square kilometers, which explains its name, Lesser Tunb. It has an almost triangular shape, with a width ranging from 1,100 to 1,500 meters. In the northwestern part, there is a dark rocky hill, the highest point of which rises 35 meters above sea level. The island’s coastlines are steep, and its climate is hot and humid. Lesser Tunb is uninhabited and has no freshwater sources. Only a few drought- and salt-resistant plants grow there. The only living creatures found on the island are birds and snakes, which is why it is also called “Tomb-e-Mār” (Snake Island).
Regarding the island’s climate and the Iranian ownership of the Tunb islands, it is worth citing the travel notes of James Morier, who visited Iran via the Persian Gulf in the early 19th century:
“On the 20th of February, we approached two islands called Greater and Lesser Tunb. These two islands bear Persian names and belong to the land of Iran. They are barren, uninhabited lands…”
It is important to note that, in Iran’s administrative divisions, the Tunb and Abu Musa islands were officially part of Bandar Lengeh before they were occupied by Britain. Iranian governors of Bandar Lengeh regularly appointed representatives to manage the affairs of these islands. Even during the British occupation, which lasted until 1971, the islands continued to be listed as Iranian territory in all administrative records and maps.
🔹@enemywatch
+
—Greater Tunb:
The island of Greater Tunb lies south of Qeshm Island, between Bandar Lengeh and Ras al-Khaimah. It is located between 55°16′ and 55°19′ east longitude and 26°15′ and 26°19′ north latitude. The island is less than 50 km from Bandar Lengeh, while its distance from Ras al-Khaimah is about 70 km. At its closest point, Greater Tunb is 31 km south of Qeshm Island, placing it in the northern half of the Persian Gulf’s midline.
The island is roughly circular, with an estimated area of about 12 square kilometers. It is largely sandy, dry, and barren, with few sources of vegetation or water. In the northern part, there are low hills, the highest of which reaches 53 meters.
Greater Tunb has also been known by names such as Tomb Gup, Tunb Mar, and Talmar. The common belief is that Tomb or Tunb is a Persian (Dari) or Tangestani word meaning “hill” or “mound.” Accordingly, the island’s name is pronounced Tunb or Tumbo in the local dialect. The southern part of the island is flat and forms the best anchorage point, where some desert plants grow and are used to feed local livestock.
The island has no drinking water, which is supplied from Qeshm Island. In the past, there were a few semi-saline wells in the southern part, but they have all dried up today.
On the northern coast, there stands a lighthouse built in 1953 (1332 AH). Interestingly, despite all attempts at distortion, a simple check in Arabic dictionaries shows that the word “Tunb” does not exist in Arabic; it is purely Persian and Iranian in origin, used in this region since the Achaemenid era.
—Lesser Tunb Island:
The island of Lesser Tunb lies south of Bandar Lengeh and west of Greater Tunb. It is located between 55°08′ and 55°10′ east longitude and 26°14′ and 26°15′ north latitude. Like Greater Tunb, it is positioned in the northern section of the Persian Gulf’s median line. The distance between Lesser Tunb and Greater Tunb is about 12 kilometers, while it lies 50 kilometers from Bandar Lengeh and approximately 92 kilometers from the Ras al-Khaimah coast.
The island covers an area of around 2 square kilometers, which explains its name, Lesser Tunb. It has an almost triangular shape, with a width ranging from 1,100 to 1,500 meters. In the northwestern part, there is a dark rocky hill, the highest point of which rises 35 meters above sea level. The island’s coastlines are steep, and its climate is hot and humid. Lesser Tunb is uninhabited and has no freshwater sources. Only a few drought- and salt-resistant plants grow there. The only living creatures found on the island are birds and snakes, which is why it is also called “Tomb-e-Mār” (Snake Island).
Regarding the island’s climate and the Iranian ownership of the Tunb islands, it is worth citing the travel notes of James Morier, who visited Iran via the Persian Gulf in the early 19th century:
“On the 20th of February, we approached two islands called Greater and Lesser Tunb. These two islands bear Persian names and belong to the land of Iran. They are barren, uninhabited lands…”
It is important to note that, in Iran’s administrative divisions, the Tunb and Abu Musa islands were officially part of Bandar Lengeh before they were occupied by Britain. Iranian governors of Bandar Lengeh regularly appointed representatives to manage the affairs of these islands. Even during the British occupation, which lasted until 1971, the islands continued to be listed as Iranian territory in all administrative records and maps.
🔹@enemywatch
+
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(2/2):
In all official documents and maps prior to 1971 — the year these islands were returned to Iran — they were depicted as extensions of the Iranian mainland. After their restoration to Iran in 1971, the islands were incorporated into the province of Hormozgan, where they remain to this day as an integral part of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
—Abu Musa Island
Abu Musa is the southernmost and largest of the three Iranian islands, covering about 21 square kilometers and located approximately 225 kilometers from Bandar Abbas. Compared to Greater Tunb and Lesser Tunb, it has a larger population and, besides military personnel, some local families also reside on the island.
The island has facilities such as schools, a clinic, mosques, and shops, offering a relatively higher standard of living and welfare services compared to the other two islands.
The Strategic Importance of the Three Islands
The significance of the three islands cannot be understood separately from the overall strategic importance of the Persian Gulf. In fact, the islands’ position and relevance can only be comprehended within the broader geopolitical and geographical framework of the Gulf itself. Many of the geopolitical features that define the Persian Gulf also apply to these islands. Therefore, before analyzing the unique status of the three islands, it is essential to briefly review the extraordinary strategic importance of the Persian Gulf.
The Persian Gulf connects three continents — Europe, Africa, and Asia — with the lands of Iran, India, and China lying beyond it. Historically, this waterway was valued primarily for its trade and communication routes, but following the discovery of oil and gas, its importance took on entirely new dimensions. After World War II, and especially with the emergence of the bipolar world order, the Gulf gained even greater significance — particularly from the perspective of the rival superpower that viewed it as a key strategic zone.
The central factor behind the Persian Gulf’s global importance is its vast reserves of oil and natural gas. Approximately 65% of the world’s known oil reserves and about 30% of global natural gas reserves are located in this region — much of it beneath the seabed rather than on land. Because of these massive energy deposits, the Gulf is often called the “world’s oil reservoir.” Consequently, it plays a decisive role in the global economy, especially for industrialized nations, whose industries and economies are heavily dependent on energy — most of all, oil.
Another dimension of the Gulf’s importance lies in its role as a major market for military goods and equipment. The Gulf states, with a combined population of over 100 million and enormous oil revenues, form one of the world’s largest markets for arms and advanced technology.
The Strait of Hormuz has often been discussed as a focal point of the Gulf’s importance — and rightly so, for it is the key to this semi-enclosed sea. The Portuguese admiral and explorer Afonso de Albuquerque once said that whoever controls the three straits of Bab al-Mandab, Hormuz, and Malacca, controls the world. Indeed, the Strait of Hormuz is the main and essential passageway connecting the oil-rich Gulf states to the rest of the world. Virtually all Gulf countries depend on it for both oil exports and imports of essential goods.
For Iran, too, the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz hold immense national importance. Although before the discovery of oil in southern Iran in the early 20th century, Iranian governments paid limited attention to the Gulf, the situation changed dramatically afterward. With the expansion of oil exports and the country’s increasing dependence on petroleum revenue, this region came to occupy a central place in Iran’s political and economic life.
In terms of military capability and population, too, Iran surpasses the other Gulf states — accounting for about 60% of the region’s total population and serving as its principal regional power.
🔹@enemywatch
(2/2):
In all official documents and maps prior to 1971 — the year these islands were returned to Iran — they were depicted as extensions of the Iranian mainland. After their restoration to Iran in 1971, the islands were incorporated into the province of Hormozgan, where they remain to this day as an integral part of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
—Abu Musa Island
Abu Musa is the southernmost and largest of the three Iranian islands, covering about 21 square kilometers and located approximately 225 kilometers from Bandar Abbas. Compared to Greater Tunb and Lesser Tunb, it has a larger population and, besides military personnel, some local families also reside on the island.
The island has facilities such as schools, a clinic, mosques, and shops, offering a relatively higher standard of living and welfare services compared to the other two islands.
The Strategic Importance of the Three Islands
The significance of the three islands cannot be understood separately from the overall strategic importance of the Persian Gulf. In fact, the islands’ position and relevance can only be comprehended within the broader geopolitical and geographical framework of the Gulf itself. Many of the geopolitical features that define the Persian Gulf also apply to these islands. Therefore, before analyzing the unique status of the three islands, it is essential to briefly review the extraordinary strategic importance of the Persian Gulf.
The Persian Gulf connects three continents — Europe, Africa, and Asia — with the lands of Iran, India, and China lying beyond it. Historically, this waterway was valued primarily for its trade and communication routes, but following the discovery of oil and gas, its importance took on entirely new dimensions. After World War II, and especially with the emergence of the bipolar world order, the Gulf gained even greater significance — particularly from the perspective of the rival superpower that viewed it as a key strategic zone.
The central factor behind the Persian Gulf’s global importance is its vast reserves of oil and natural gas. Approximately 65% of the world’s known oil reserves and about 30% of global natural gas reserves are located in this region — much of it beneath the seabed rather than on land. Because of these massive energy deposits, the Gulf is often called the “world’s oil reservoir.” Consequently, it plays a decisive role in the global economy, especially for industrialized nations, whose industries and economies are heavily dependent on energy — most of all, oil.
Another dimension of the Gulf’s importance lies in its role as a major market for military goods and equipment. The Gulf states, with a combined population of over 100 million and enormous oil revenues, form one of the world’s largest markets for arms and advanced technology.
The Strait of Hormuz has often been discussed as a focal point of the Gulf’s importance — and rightly so, for it is the key to this semi-enclosed sea. The Portuguese admiral and explorer Afonso de Albuquerque once said that whoever controls the three straits of Bab al-Mandab, Hormuz, and Malacca, controls the world. Indeed, the Strait of Hormuz is the main and essential passageway connecting the oil-rich Gulf states to the rest of the world. Virtually all Gulf countries depend on it for both oil exports and imports of essential goods.
For Iran, too, the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz hold immense national importance. Although before the discovery of oil in southern Iran in the early 20th century, Iranian governments paid limited attention to the Gulf, the situation changed dramatically afterward. With the expansion of oil exports and the country’s increasing dependence on petroleum revenue, this region came to occupy a central place in Iran’s political and economic life.
In terms of military capability and population, too, Iran surpasses the other Gulf states — accounting for about 60% of the region’s total population and serving as its principal regional power.
🔹@enemywatch
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❎ | Americans want HTS and Turkey to fight the SDF for their own purposes. A major dogfight is imminent, and it will strike, cripple, and further weaken Turkey, while the wildcard will open the door to ISIS 2.0 against them all, Turkey is not safe!
🔹@enemywatch
🔹@enemywatch
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