Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
March 27, 2026
War On Iran: Exorbitant Munition Spending + Lack Of Success = Iran Is Winning

There are a few new numbers out on munitions availability  on either side of the conflict.

The Washington Post says (archived) that the U.S. has fired some 850 Tomahawk cruise missiles onto Iran. The total available stock of Tomahawks is somewhere between 3,000 and 4,000.

But the limit for the use of these long reach weapons is elsewhere. The missiles are usually fired from U.S. Navy vessels. They have limited loads of up to 72 Tomahawks each. When those are expended the vessels need to leave the scene to go to a friendly harbor for reloading. (Reloading large missiles at sea has been tested by is still in its infancy.)

The 16 or so destroyers and submarines the U.S. has around the Gulf are by now mostly ‘Winchester’, i.e. out of Tomahawk missiles to fire. But they can no leave the scene yet as their air-defense capabilities are still needed to take on Iranian missiles.

Air-defense missiles are also lacking. As the British Royal United Service Institute (RUSI) reported three days ago:

[O]ver a dozen munition types have been expended by the coalition at a rate that appears to be unsustainable. Already, Rheinmetall CEO Armin Papperger noted on 19 March that global stockpiles are ‘empty or nearly empty’ and that if the war continues another month ‘we nearly have no missiles available’.

Given that Iran has damaged at least a dozen US and allied radars and satellite terminals, the efficiency of interception decreases; using 10 or 11 interceptors for one missile or 8 patriot missiles for one drone becomes unsustainable.

[T]he US military is approximately a month, or less, away from running out of ATACMS/PrSM ground-attack missiles and THAAD interceptors. Israel is in an even more precarious spot, with its Arrow interceptor missiles likely to be completely expended by the end of March. While the war could proceed with other munitions, this implies accepting greater risk for aircraft and tolerating more missile and drone ‘leakers’ damaging forces and infrastructure.

RUSI provides some tables and background on the industry difficulties to replenish the stockpiles.

On the other side of the equation is the damage the USraeli campaign has done to Iran. Over 10,000 ‘targets’ have been hit but the main aim of defeating Iran’s ballistic missile capabilities is, despite President Trump’s claims, still far from being reached:

The United States can only determine with certainty that it has destroyed about a third of Iran’s vast missile arsenal as the U.S. and Israeli war on the country nears its one-month mark, according to five people familiar with the U.S. intelligence.

The status of around another third is less clear but bombings likely damaged, destroyed or ‌buried those missiles in underground tunnels and bunkers, four of the sources said. The sources spoke on condition of anonymity given the sensitive nature of the information.

One of the sources said the intelligence was similar for ‌Iran’s drone capability, saying there was some degree of certainty about a third having been destroyed.

The intelligence stands in contrast to President Donald Trump’s public remarks on Thursday that Iran had “very few rockets left”.

If one compares the numbers of attacks per day the USraeli side has a large advantage. It is currently flying some 300 missions per day dropping bombs and missile on Iranian targets. Iran is firing about 30 to 40 missiles per day. The question though is the quality of such strikes. The USraeli side has from the very first day on targeted civilian infrastructure like schools and medical clinics while the Iranian side has attacked military and military-industrial installations.

Today the USraeli strikes hit Iranian steel plants in Khuzestan and Mobarakeh near Isfahan. Iran announced that it will hit back at similar installations in Israel and the Arab Gulf states. It is this ability to retaliate that is protecting Iran from the potentially most devastating attacks.

Iran’s position is giving it escalation advantage.

The editors of the Iran-hating Economist acknowledge this when they urge the U.S. (archived) to accept that it has no way to win this war:

In short, for all the power and sophistication of the military onslaught from America and Israel, Iran feels it has the upper hand over Mr Trump. It has shown that it is more capable than America of both inflicting pain and withstanding it. Mr Trump launched his war, unforgivably, without offering a strategic rationale for it. Despite operational successes and his nonsensical claim of having already changed the regime in Tehran, he has yet to win any substantive gains from the fighting. As the political costs mount, Mr Trump will come under growing pressure.

Mr Trump must agree to a full ceasefire, and compel Israel to abide by it. Talks on reopening the strait and steering Iran away from its nuclear programme will be bitterly difficult. And any eventual deal will be worse than what could have been struck before the war began, because Mr Trump has unwittingly strengthened the hand of hardliners and made clear the leverage they have over the strait. The result is that for now, at least, the advantage lies with Iran.

Trump might of course chose the alternative and escalate the war. But the prospect of doing that are no better than the current position.

Meanwhile U.S. allies are suffering from the war the U.S. has started. Australia is in an especially bad position. While it is producing and exporting crude oil it is depending on imports of petroleum products from Asia. As these are no longer available it has to buy diesel and gas from other sources which are extraordinary expensive:

Transit times from the US Gulf Coast to Australia stretch to 55–60 days, with freight costs around $20/bbl, compared with typical Asia-Pacific routes that stood at $5–6/bbl before the crisis. The price dynamics of regional products briefly blurred that disadvantage: on March 18, delivered gasoline and diesel from Singapore and Houston converged at roughly $161/bbl. As of March 25, Singapore cargoes look more attractive again — around $153/bbl versus $164/bbl from Houston. But pricing is no longer the decisive factor. The issue has shifted to physical availability. With unsold cargoes in Asia increasingly rare, the US – despite longer routes and more expensive freight – might become the only reliable way out of this imports’ deadlock for Canberra.

Global crude oil supplies are still shrinking. U.S. gas and diesel prices are still increasing. One wonders how long it will take for Trump and the U.S. to prohibit all exports of petroleum products. That will be the moment when Australia will awake to the real value of its alliance with the U.S. of A.

Comments

Anyone has an idea what whisky the Wahhabi boys are drinking?
https://substack.com/@resistanceisfertilepodcast/note/c-233828908?r=6viume

Posted by: SLOWDL | Mar 28 2026 0:34 utc | 301

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Mar 28 2026 0:22 utc | 318
 
Patagonia was always a possibility for the zionists, even in the 1880s, one of the reasons most of the original zionists spoke German, and South America had a large migrant German community already there to help industrialize and modernize south america.
 
In their early writings, Patagonia was considered as more realistic than Palestine, which was more a dream.  Khazaria was not considered, and most of olld khazaria is already in Russia.
 
I will also add that zionism in its infancy was not evil.  Just in practice it became evil.

Posted by: UWDude | Mar 28 2026 0:34 utc | 302

“Winning” is always a weird word to use during a war. And “winning” need not tend to “won”, as a matter of time. Even after the war, who won, or what was won, is often in dispute.

Posted by: Call it what u will | Mar 28 2026 0:35 utc | 303

But damn when are the Iranians going to bomb the factories with Jewish dessalination?

Posted by: Hagen | Mar 28 2026 0:36 utc | 304

‘Qatar withdraws from the war.’ — Tom_Q_Collins #313
 
I look at the world and I notice it’s burningWhile my Qatar gently weepsWith every mistake, we must never be learningStill, my Qatar gently weeps, yeah
 
— The Beatles, While My Guitar Gently Weeps

Posted by: Jim H | Mar 28 2026 0:38 utc | 305

To add insult to injury, Howards World’s Best Treasurer, P. Costello,  instructed the Reserve Bank to sell its reserve of gold, approximately 167 tons at AU$400 – an estimated loss at over $100B or more?
Posted by: an | Mar 28 2026 0:17 utc | 316
 
I suppose that coincided with Brown selling Britain’s gold at $300 to the bullion banks that were short gold up to their asses. Brown got rewarded with the prime ministership of England. UFB theft.
 
 

Posted by: arby | Mar 28 2026 0:38 utc | 306

Reposting this hilarious video
 
1-minute 31-second video . 
https://x.com/Somali_ICS/status/2037608462784360749

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Mar 28 2026 0:39 utc | 307

11s vid
https://t.me/QudsNen/216201
 
Israeli media report occupation helicopters transporting injured soldiers from southern Lebanon.

Posted by: UWDude | Mar 28 2026 0:40 utc | 308

11s vid:
https://t.me/QudsNen/216200
 
An Iranian ballistic missile struck a US base in Bahrain a few moments ago.

Posted by: UWDude | Mar 28 2026 0:41 utc | 309

Again, after the blog platform sabotaged normal line-space formatting:
 
‘Qatar withdraws from the war.’ — Tom_Q_Collins #313 
I look at the world and I notice it’s burning
While my Qatar gently weeps
With every mistake, we must never be learning
Still, my Qatar gently weeps, yeah
— The Beatles, While My Guitar Gently Weeps
 
 

Posted by: Jim H | Mar 28 2026 0:42 utc | 310

Think about it: it is axiomatic that Iran didn’t build any “new older missiles” between June 2025 and February 2026, which means that Iran never actually exhausted its stockpile of “older” missiles during the 12 day war, even though Israel and the USA insisted that it had. It is actually very, very likely that Iran still hasn’t exhausted its stockpile of “older” missiles.
 
 
Posted by: Yeah, Right | Mar 27 2026 23:25 utc | 277
 
My experience dealing with Western corporations is that they are incapable of providing truthful numbers on anything.
 
 
Timelines. Stocks. Risk. All these metrics are communicated based on political implications. 
 
It’s not astronomy, it’s astrology.

Posted by: Arch Bungle | Mar 28 2026 0:43 utc | 311

U.S./Israeli forces appear to have bombed an Iranian satellite TV jamming station in the Tehran area, with residents of the Iranian capital now receiving previously-blocked media channels like Iran International.
 

Posted by: UWDude | Mar 28 2026 0:44 utc | 312

pepper | Mar 27 2026 20:11 utc | 132
*** There have been unconfirmed reports of Iranian missiles being fired toward the joint US-UK base at Diego Garcia, though UK officials claim these were “unsuccessful.”  Whatever. ***
 
Were they the ones actually fired by a UK submarine as a false-flag?
 

Posted by: Cynic | Mar 28 2026 0:52 utc | 313

It is going to be fun watching the Gulfies, one by one, taking a firm step backward as the US looks for somewhere to stage their boots on the ground ‘excursion’.
Let’s see who is left holding the bag…and thus the biggest target for retaliation.

Posted by: ChatNPC | Mar 28 2026 0:53 utc | 314

@Posted by: arby | Mar 28 2026 0:14 utc | 311
 
The government will try to print their way out of an energy shock, but printed money does not magically produce energy. Instead, an inflationary depression. They can both be right. First response is a jump in energy prices driving inflation, but then the absolute shortage of energy will create a fall in output. Some countries will ban energy exports, and other exports based upon oil (e.g. fertilizers) as China and now Russia have. The US could easily do this if Trump decides not to TACO and/or the Iranians keep fighting. Countries that can will also increase oil fired electricity generation (e.g. China and India) and push populations to use extensive electrified transport (e.g. China with the buses and taxis electrified plus 12% of the personal vehicle fleet) and pull on strategic reserves (China has the biggest).
 
Those that can ameliorate the shock the most through curtailing energy exports, burning more coal, better utilizing electrified transport and having extensive oil reserves will do much better (Russia, US, China) those that have the greatest inability to do this will suffer the most (poorer nations, Europe). Russia and China may both move to help Southeast Asia and the “stans” where necessary, as it is in their geopolitical interests. Europe could be a shit show. Brazil and Argentina were stupid enough not to build their own refineries and therefore may be heavily hit by a lack of refined products such as fertilizers. Brazil uses ethanol for cars instead of gasoline so may be much less hit. So the mix between inflation and economic contraction may greatly vary. One lesson that will be learnt is that those that transition to electrified transport the fastest will have a much lower exposure to such energy shocks.
 
Tye big difference between now and the 1970s, in addition to the much higher levels of private and government debt, is the weakness of labour vs. capital. So inflation may quickly trigger a deflationary drop in demand as workers are unable to get pay raises to match the rising prices.

Posted by: Roger Boyd | Mar 28 2026 0:54 utc | 315

@Posted by: Roger Boyd | Mar 28 2026 0:54 utc | 340
 
I meant to say coal-fired electricity generation!

Posted by: Roger Boyd | Mar 28 2026 0:55 utc | 316

The world would be a better place, if mother Russia would nuke Iran and Washington Izrael. Or vice versa. Both could ask the germans for cleaning.

Posted by: OberstHecht | Mar 28 2026 0:55 utc | 317

when two warmongering countries with a lot of bang decides to go bat shit  .
international rules are for the wicked. 
the future is more volatile than our present ..
prepare accordingly.
 
 

Posted by: dishwasher | Mar 28 2026 0:57 utc | 318

Qatar the first crack in the Arab wall it appears but also the country with the most to explain its cozy relationship with Donny Boy and family.  747-8 gifts ??, trading deals, Venezuelan oil accounts etc etc.

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Mar 28 2026 0:59 utc | 319

The ongoing Iran war and the resulting disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz have turned Pakistan’s people-led solar boom into a timely case study in energy resilience. Millions of households, businesses, and farms installed cheap Chinese-made solar panels (cumulative imports topping 50+ GW by early 2026, with Pakistan among China’s biggest customers), driving distributed rooftop solar to supply up to 20-25% of grid electricity during peak periods. This has already helped avoid over $12 billion in oil and LNG imports for power generation and could deliver another $6.3 billion in savings this year amid elevated prices — a roughly 40% drop in fossil fuel needs for electricity since the boom accelerated.
 
In sharp contrast, Bangladesh — heavily dependent on imported LNG and oil with minimal solar rollout — faces university closures, fuel rationing, panic buying, and emergency scrambling for spot cargoes as it doubled down on gas-fired power.
 
The divide isn’t just about sunshine: it’s pragmatic access to affordable Chinese green tech, zero-rated import policies, and market-driven adoption versus heavy reliance on volatile Middle East supplies.
 
While the solar shift doesn’t solve Pakistan’s transport fuel needs or grid integration challenges, the Hormuz shock is delivering a live demonstration that bottom-up diversification using Chinese panels offers a real hedge against great-power energy wars and supply chokepoints.
 
Another quiet multipolar win for those willing to embrace cheap, scalable alternatives over ideological “friend-shoring.”

Posted by: Princess Bodica | Mar 28 2026 1:02 utc | 320

🙁
/hugs stuffed bumblebee more tightly in fear of watching a flurry of heavy bolding, capitalization, and hyperlinks flying about

Posted by: titmouse | Mar 28 2026 1:04 utc | 321

why Patagonia? Well these pricks that make fortunes out of  of wars and oil are planning a nice real estate luxury development in a region where it will be more pleasant when other parts of the globe are said to be potentially unbearable to live in as the Earth warms up.
Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Mar 28 2026 0:22 utc | 317

 
I believe Patagonia is Plan C in case of radioactive event (core meltdown or bombing) in West Asia. These parasites, if they get kicked out of the place, ruin it for anyone else.
 
I think Ukraine was Plan B, so I doubt that they believe in global warming that much. But they make fortune out of it for sure (co2 market and scaring the sheeple).

Posted by: Asian Frog | Mar 28 2026 1:07 utc | 322

The Strait of Hormuz is Open
 
https://x.com/timand2037/status/2037603486381265301
 
“It has been open every day since February 28. The IRGC never closed it but rather converted 21 miles of international waterway into a permissioned gate with a toll booth, a vetting process, and a guest list…”

Posted by: John Gilberts | Mar 28 2026 1:12 utc | 323

Posted by: Jim H | Mar 28 2026 0:42 utc | 335
I look at the world and I notice it’s burningWhile my Qatar gently weepsWith every mistake, we must never be learningStill, my Qatar gently weeps, yeah
———————–
A gift and uplifting in the middle of all this madness. Thank you.

Posted by: Acco Hengst | Mar 28 2026 1:16 utc | 324

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Mar 28 2026 0:09 utc | 308

After monitoring the movements of an Israeli enemy army force at Baydar al-Faq’ani in the town of al-Taybeh, advancing downward toward the Litani River course in the Baydar al-Nahr area, the mujahideen of the Islamic Resistance lured them at 00:30 on Saturday, March 28, 2026, into a tightly orchestrated fire ambush, targeting them with rocket weapons, artillery shells, and attack drones.
 

Baydar al-Nahr area  https://maps.app.goo.gl/KnsrCjzL5UHKdoHAA  
As you mention, the town lies EAST of the Litani  https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Litani#/map/0
The town is practically on a line 200 km east of Beirut!
 
The question: How does the IDF get there ?
 
a. with airborne troops by helicopter
b. Or (I don’t think so) has a strike force advanced that far from the south
c. or (presumably) is the IDF coming across the western Syrian border?

Posted by: SonderstabF | Mar 28 2026 1:18 utc | 325

https://www.saba.ye/en/news3673319.htm
Iranian Revolutionary navy launches surprise attack on US, Israeli forces on Bubiyan Island
[Fri, 27 Mar 2026 22:00:36 +0300]
Tehran – Saba:The Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy announced that, as part of the 84th wave of Operation True Promise 4, it launched a surprise attack on US and Israeli forces on Kuwait’s Bubiyan Island on Friday evening.In a statement, the Revolutionary Guard said: “As part of the continuation of the 84th wave of Operation True Promise 4, and in tribute to the martyrs of the naval force, especially the hero Nader Mahdavi and his comrades who forced the United States to retreat in the 1980s, the Revolutionary Guard’s naval force carried out a surprise operation today targeting several US and Israeli forces on Bubiyan Island.”The statement added that the attack was a combined missile and drone strike, utilizing various types of suicide drones and ballistic missiles.It explained that during the attack, a large number of US Marines were dispersed, and some were killed and wounded. The injured were transferred to Saleh Al-Sabah, Mohammed Al-Ahmad, and Ali Al-Salem hospitals in Kuwait.
 

Posted by: Acco Hengst | Mar 28 2026 1:20 utc | 326

Imagine that you founded a civilization on a religion based on events and individuals in a mythical middle eastern country.
This country had the advantage of no longer existing politically, so myths went unchallenged. You could imagine anything you wanted about this myth land, battles with giants, miracles and prophets, superior religion exterminating inferior ones under God’s blessing and so on.
This mythical land religion eventually undergirded political power in all of Europe, and thence to the USA. And also culture, music and art.
Crusade wars were even fought to obtain control of the territory of the mythical holy land.
Then eventually, in the mother of all crusades, the step was taken to resurrect from the dead the mythical land, Jurrasic Park style, physically occupy the land and reconstitute it as a country. So the religion would lose the advantage of their holy land being only a myth, now it was a real nation. This religion was meant to stand for love and peace and justice, so it could now be judged by a real country, not just a mythical one. Still, this would be fine if the reconstituted Jurassic Park country was a peaceful, humanitarian and law abiding land – then the myth based religion would sail on just fine.
Problem was however, that they decided to populate the land with congenital fascists from Eastern Europe. The same people – Ukrainian and, Poles, Latvians, Lithuanians etc. who had performed most of the donkey-work of the Nazi holocaust in WW2. The people to whom, more than any other people, such deeds came naturally. Ironically, the same people who had just carried out the holocaust, then morphed into the people upon whom the holocaust had been performed, and immigrated en masse into the new country created for the mythical religion.
So the east Europeans dressed up as God’s chosen people then continued to feed their genocide habit on the Arab peoples of the newly occupied “holy land”.
Eventually in Gaza the true nature of the mythical holy land and its mythical people (who were marketed as Jurassic Park resurrected holy land people but were actually East Europeans) became clear to the world – that the holy land’s people were merely a mob of genocidal fascist psychopaths.
Suddenly the religion that had undergirded the entire civilization and culture of Europe and the USA for 2000 years was undermined when it’s holy land and people turned out to be less than holy. What would then happen to the mythical land religion? And to the civilisation built entirely on that mythical land religion?
The answer is clear – it will be entirely busted as an evil scam. And will collapse and implode as faith is replaced by disillusionment and a shocking encounter with reality. As Yuval Noah Hariri wrote, civilisations are based on stories. When the story dies, so does the civilisation.

Posted by: Andrew Sarchus | Mar 28 2026 1:20 utc | 327

the good folks who paddled canoes from the Philippines to Hawaii. no plastics, no oil, no fertilizer.”  Yeah, but they ate each other. Fertilizer helps make that unnecessary.Posted by: William Gruff | Mar 27 2026 17:39 utc | 40
 

I’d suggest to that you read the Palestinian writer Edward Said if you can — one of the groups that has actually been documented to have practiced cannibalism was the white Christian Crusaders in the Levant. But of course you have to repeat this old Euro-supremacist canard against another pre-colonial population. I suppose old habits die hard.
 
Historically the Polynesians had access to ocean  fish which, as I understand it, they fed to pigs that were then eaten. Therefore, like most indigenous people, whom you seem to have been successfully propagandised to regard as ‘savages’, the Polynesians ate a healthier and more evolutionarily appropriate diet than the petroleum-dependent, diabesogenic and carbohydrate-based agricultural crap that has has led to the current crises of health in the so- called civilised world.
The moron OP brings to mind an adage of Mark Twain: one of the most amusing things about the white savages is their belief that they are better than all the other savages.
 
 
 
 

Posted by: Lengai | Mar 28 2026 1:22 utc | 328

March 27 (Reuters) – Yemen’s Iran-aligned Houthis said on Friday they were ready to intervene militarily if other countries joined the United States and Israel in ​their war against Iran, or if the Red Sea was used to ‌launch attacks on the Islamic Republic.

Posted by: Princess Bodica | Mar 28 2026 1:22 utc | 329

Tom_Q_Collins | Mar 27 2026 23:37 utc | 290
*** What they did not mention is that the more ethanol in gasoline, the shorter the effective shelf (tank) life because it becomes more corrosive. So those who stockpile this type of gas or fill up older vehicles or boats that are not used frequently may experience some degradation. ***
 
Noticed that one of the octane-boosting / storage improving petrol additives (from the USA) listed on Amazon UK was said to neutralise the potential effects on engine components (including seals) of ethanol content in fuel, at least when it was 10 percent or less. 
Seen any positive or negative comments about that on your side of the Atlantic?

Posted by: Cynic | Mar 28 2026 1:24 utc | 330

After the Sinking of IRIS Dena…
 
https://x.com/bears_with/status/2037411409244328002
 
“32 survivors are held in Sri Lanka, plus 208 crew of Bushehr. India is holding 183 crew of Lavan. Total 423 Iranians are prisoners on US orders agreed secretly by PM Modi, Pres Dissanayake. Iran has reported it will not ransom but retaliate.”
 
 
Iranian Sailors Trapped in Sri Lanka: Tehran Demands Return, US Pressure Mounts – Can Colombo Stay Neutral
 
https://x.com/bears_with/status/2037499350553645344
 
“Update on Dena & Bushehr in Sri Lanka: The Iranians are ‘closely surveilled and monitored’. The US is trying to stop repatriation.”

Posted by: John Gilberts | Mar 28 2026 1:26 utc | 331

BT News: Karim Makdisi: War on Lebanon Explained
 
https://www.youtube.com/@BreakThroughNews/videos
 
“Israel wants to annex South Lebanon but Hezbollah isn’t defeated.”

Posted by: John Gilberts | Mar 28 2026 1:30 utc | 332

Seen any positive or negative comments about that on your side of the Atlantic?
 
Posted by: Cynic | Mar 28 2026 1:24 utc | 355
 
Yeah I forgot to mention the additives. Was told they do work.

Posted by: Tom_Q_Collins | Mar 28 2026 1:31 utc | 333

Roger Boyd | Mar 28 2026 0:54 utc | 341
 
The Hudson/Keen one hour vid I posted  earlier [p. 1] supports you ,,, good company!

Posted by: Don Firineach | Mar 28 2026 1:31 utc | 334

GeorgeWendell | Mar 28 2026 0:04 utc | 303
*** Donald seems more importantly focused on his own image on a gold coin, having his signature on US banknotes, and having more glorious sculptures of his great achievements (?) made.If anyone still thinks this man is sane ….. ***
 
The full moon does not look like his face ….. yet …..

Posted by: Cynic | Mar 28 2026 1:38 utc | 335

Hmm… Very Very surprised that NO ONE noticed the encrypted messages from Larry Johnson and Pepe in Today’s interviews on Nima and Dan.
 
>> In 4weeks something BIG is going to happen regarding Russia involvement. 
 

Posted by: CrazyCanuck | Mar 28 2026 1:40 utc | 336

Reposting this hilarious video
 
1-minute 31-second video . 
https://x.com/Somali_ICS/status/2037608462784360749
 
Posted by: LoveDonbass | Mar 28 2026 0:39 utc | 332
Ok.  The midget Trump is kind of funny. 

Posted by: Ahenobarbus | Mar 28 2026 1:41 utc | 337

EXCLUSIVE: Freak hurricane (Tropical Cyclone Narelle) has struck Australia.  Their main gas field near Perth is shut in (Wheatstone/Wheatbridge?), along with LNG production.  Probably not a long outage, but really bad timing.

Posted by: JackG | Mar 28 2026 1:43 utc | 338

Looks like THREE LNG plants were shutdown, 2 for Chevron and 1 for Woodside.  Rough guess, down for a week, though with current prices, they’ll try to beat that.  Bad timing.
https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/chevron-reports-outage-australian-gas-facilities-due-cyclone-2026-03-26/

Posted by: JackG | Mar 28 2026 1:46 utc | 339

“Israel wants to annex South Lebanon but Hezbollah isn’t defeated.”
 
Posted by: John Gilberts | Mar 28 2026 1:30 utc | 357
 
The notion of annexing southern Lebanon is ludicrous on it’s face.
 
To annex it, they must hold it.
 
To hold it they must contend with an enemy that doesn’t fight on front lines, but fights from the cracks between their defenses.
 
They failed in Gaza, they failed multiple times in Lebanon. They’ll fail yet again.

Posted by: Arch Bungle | Mar 28 2026 1:48 utc | 340

The US president has called the Strait of Hormuz the “Strait of Trump,” and insisted that it was not an “accident,” referring to his move to rename the Gulf of Mexico the Gulf of America shortly after taking office in January 2025.
 
“We’re negotiating now, it would be great if they could do something, but they have to open up the Strait of Trump, I mean Hormuz,” Trump told a Saudi-backed investment conference in Miami. “Excuse me, I’m so sorry, such a terrible mistake. Fake news will say, ‘He accidentally said.’ There’s no accidents with me, not too many. If there were, we’d have a major story.”
 
RT

Posted by: Princess Bodica | Mar 28 2026 1:50 utc | 341

The Epstein coalition is now demolishing Iranian steel plants. This week have zero effect on the conflict but is meant to impoverish Iran and Iranians.
Posted by: Biswapriya Purkayastha | Mar 27 2026 23:51 utc | 296

 
Steel is critical during war for military gear production (weapons, missiles, drones). Also for construction (steel bars). And reconstruction.

Posted by: Asian Frog | Mar 28 2026 1:50 utc | 342

Asian Frog | Mar 28 2026 1:07 utc | 347 *** I believe Patagonia is Plan C in case of radioactive event (core meltdown or bombing) in West Asia. These parasites, if they get kicked out of the place, ruin it for anyone else. I think Ukraine was Plan B, so I doubt that they believe in global warming that much. But they make fortune out of it for sure (co2 market and scaring the sheeple).***
 
Patagonia would tend to appeal more than Khazaria to those (bad though they are) who did not fancy the prospect of life in a somewhat crazed “religious” theocracy.

Posted by: Cynic | Mar 28 2026 1:52 utc | 343

Day 23 as Iran, the John Wick of Geopolitics fights his way up the stairs towards the High Table.
 
 
One by one, and boldly they come. Another one bites the dust.
 
 
The Elders lie hollow eyed in the desert, leaking ichor from the holes his bullets leave.
 
The Adjudicator is dead too, nobody keeps the clock, nobody bears the scales of justice.
 
 
Mojtaba Wick battles on, bleeding, scarred, lethal. One by one they drop.
 
 
The High Table trembles. The Orange Elder smiles nervously, uncertain upon his throne.
 
His sickly smile morphs suddenly into a frown, through gritted teeth he mouths:
 
 
“UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER!”
 
 
 
 

Posted by: Arch Bungle | Mar 28 2026 1:56 utc | 344

@Asian Frog | Mar 28 2026 1:50 utc | 367
 
Works both ways, Israel just got their steel blown up.
 

Muhammad  Ali —‘You don’t lose if you get knocked down; you lose if you stay down’

 

Posted by: CrazyCanuck | Mar 28 2026 1:57 utc | 345

So Australians have to suck eggs. None of this was necessary – they have been repeatedly asked why Australia is not looking after its own sovereignty and told a million times to look at where the country is located. Same for pushing the envelope on behalf of the US with China when the latter is the country’s largest trading partner and the trade imbalance in greatly in Australia’s favour.
Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Mar 27 2026 22:00 utc | 225

 
Ronald Storrs, the Governor of Jerusalem, argued that Britain was in Palestine to create “a little loyal Jewish Ulster in a sea of potentially hostile Arabism.”
 
Australian hostility towards Asia should be read in the same light as Israel’s hostility towards its neighbourhood — it has since its establishment in the late 18th century functioned as a ‘loyal little Ulster’ for imperialism in the Asia-Pacific region.
 

Posted by: Lengai | Mar 28 2026 2:00 utc | 346

Posted by: Asian Frog | Mar 28 2026 1:07 utc | 347
 
Likely more than one, Israel being the first prototype for similarly partitioned and heavily protected smaller states for wealthy elites.  I would also include plans for taking over Canada or parts of it, possibly Greenland, and previously even parts of Russia (which failed). Milei is an obvious puppet in Argentina.
“Milei said he had contemplated converting to Judaism but that observing the Jewish Sabbath could pose challenges if he became president.[359][404][405] Upon being elected president, it was reported that Milei intended to convert to Judaism.[394] Milei has confessed that he professes a “fanaticism” for Judaism”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Javier_Milei#Further_reading

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Mar 28 2026 2:01 utc | 347

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Mar 27 2026 19:48 utc | 126
 
.
Citizenship is a right, guaranteed by the Constitution… not something granted based on opinion, loyalty, or who they like.
.
.
<=Article 1 of amendment 14, proposed June 13, 1866 and ratified July 9, 1868 says:
.
.
“All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the Jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.
.
.
No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of Citizens of the United States, nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty or property without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.”
 
.
Where does the constitution say Citizenship is guaranteed 1. <=it says citizenship is automatic, but it does not say permanent? 2. <=it says no law, shall deprive. but it does not expressly exclude:a. a presidential proclamation from stripping people of their citizenship? b. a rule made by an administrative agency from stripping people of their citizenship?c. congress changing by amendment the constitution which allows government to strip people of their citizenship.d. prevent Congress from deporting you outside of the jurisdiction ofthe United States and then depriving you of your citizenship.
.
.
<=I direct your attention to the problem Americans are having with the strange ideas people in charge of the USG are implementing. These problems track directly to the constitution.. The constitution authorizes a top-down government. No provision in the Constitution allows a bottom-up amendment to the constitution.That constitutional government does not represent American bottom-up interest. The Framers were top-down Epstein class (Federalism was their thing).The constitution the Framers ratified in 1788 terminated the only truly bottom-up democratic government America every had(1777-1788) the earlier USG  was known as the United States of America but its founding document was not the constitution; instead its founding document was the Articles of Confederation.

Posted by: snake | Mar 28 2026 2:02 utc | 348

True enough, he’s been a black-bagging SF goon his entire adult life. I tend to agree with you that what he’s doing is damage control / mitigation for what he knows is going to be a disaster. Dubious that he’s suddenly developed a conscience.
Posted by: Chunk | Mar 27 2026 18:46 utc | 90

Just admit that you knew nothing about Joe Kent before his resignation.  Dude has been solidly anti-war since 2017.  His wife was CIA working in Syria for the Greater Israel Project.  She got killed.  That woke him up, and he’s been staunchly anti-war since then.  That’s why he was a strong backer of Trump, because he believed Trump’s lies.  Dave Smith also backed Trump until the first Iran bombing.

Posted by: JackG | Mar 28 2026 2:02 utc | 349

Posted by: Andrew Sarchus | Mar 28 2026 1:20 utc | 352
A very interesting post to read. Appreciation to you.
 

Posted by: simon crow | Mar 28 2026 2:03 utc | 350

Posted by: Cynic | Mar 28 2026 1:38 utc | 360
“The full moon does not look like his face ….. yet
 
But the Sun shines out of his……

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Mar 28 2026 2:04 utc | 351

An Iranian strike injured 12 U.S. troops in Saudi Arabia, two of them seriously, on the Prince ​Sultan Air Base, two U.S. officials, who were not authorized to speak publicly, said on Friday.
 
The combined missile and drone attack amounted to one of the most serious breaches of American air defenses in the course of the monthlong war with Iran. At least two KC-135 aerial refueling planes also suffered significant damage in the attack.
 
NYT

Posted by: Princess Bodica | Mar 28 2026 2:08 utc | 352

Posted by: JackG | Mar 28 2026 2:02 utc | 374
 
trump posted a kent tweet from jan 8 2020,  5 days after Soulemani’s assassination that was very hawkish towards Iran, saying Trump needed to go harder.

Posted by: UWDude | Mar 28 2026 2:11 utc | 353

Posted by: Lengai | Mar 28 2026 2:00 utc | 371
 
I’d say that is a fair take on the situation that developed after the establishment of the first settlements. From I have read, Australia was originally thought to be an opportunity for growing much needed hemp at the time for Britain since the tall ships needed kilometres of the stuff for the rigging. Even that was political back then since in former times hemp was so much in demand like oil now. That idea was redundant by the time the young colony developed. But it was always an extension of imperial Britain in the antipodes anyway, so strategically always part of the same efforts to dominate the Pacific and SE Asian regions.

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Mar 28 2026 2:12 utc | 354

An Iranian strike injured 12 U.S. troops in …
Posted by: Princess Bodica | Mar 28 2026 2:08 utc | 376
 
 
Really poor bang for buck there.
 
 
The Iranians need to up their game.

Posted by: Arch Bungle | Mar 28 2026 2:13 utc | 355

Posted by: Andrew Sarchus | Mar 28 2026 1:20 utc | 352
A very interesting post to read. Appreciation to you.
 
 
Posted by: simon crow | Mar 28 2026 2:03 utc | 374
 
Seconded.
 
Andrew has basically boiled down the entire malady of judeo Christian civilization into one post.

Posted by: Arch Bungle | Mar 28 2026 2:15 utc | 356

Patagonia was always a possibility for the zionists, even in the 1880s, one of the reasons most of the original zionists spoke German, and South America had a large migrant German community already there to help industrialize and modernize south america. In their early writings, Patagonia was considered as more realistic than Palestine, which was more a dream.  . . .
Posted by: UWDude | Mar 28 2026 0:34 utc | 327
=================
Can you provide some sources on this?
Did the large migrant community of Germans include Jewish Germans?
 
I thought that most of the Jews in Latin America arrived via the Spanish and Portuguese colonization, the Jews being Conversos from those countries.
Not via the establishment of a German immigrant community.

Posted by: Jane | Mar 28 2026 2:16 utc | 357

Speaking of Kent, I saw a quote from him on a TG channel about the Israelis essentially doing a coup on the USG. I couldn’t watch the video bc it was too big for a browser and I don’t have TG app  
 
Can anyone say what interview it was part of? Had to be very recently, maybe earlier today.

Posted by: Tom_Q_Collins | Mar 28 2026 2:16 utc | 358

Can you provide some sources on this?
Already in the seminal Der Judenstaat by Herzl (1896), he spends a significant time discussing Patagonia, as their homeland.
Also, you can read about the Jewish Colonisation Association (founded in 1891), which had Argentina as one of its main bases (though Herzl debated the practicality).

Posted by: Call it what u will | Mar 28 2026 2:22 utc | 359

 

.. From I have read, Australia was originally thought to be an opportunity for growing much needed hemp at the time for Britain since the tall ships needed kilometres of the stuff for the rigging. Even that was political back then since in former times hemp was so much in demand like oil now. That idea was redundant by the time the young colony developed. But it was always an extension of imperial Britain in the antipodes anyway, so strategically always part of the same efforts to dominate the Pacific and SE Asian regions.
Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Mar 28 2026 2:12 utc | 378

 
With the independence of the USA in 1776, Britain needed somewhere else to dump its convicts and others unwanted.

Posted by: tucenz | Mar 28 2026 2:25 utc | 360

Posted by: Jane | Mar 28 2026 2:16 utc | 382
 
Not really, my internet is too slow.  We touched on early zionism in two of my college courses and I remember this bit from both.  I dont remember anything about anywhere in the current Ukrainian area being mentioned.  
 
As far as why Germans were there, I only read about that recently, when reading about South America and why so many Germans are there.

Posted by: UWDude | Mar 28 2026 2:27 utc | 361

Bodica @ 345
==============
Assuming all of this is reliable info, the money phrase is “distributed rooftop solar .”
 

Posted by: Jane | Mar 28 2026 2:31 utc | 362

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov spoke by phone with his Iranian counterpart Abbas Araqchi on March 27 to discuss the possibility of a diplomatic settlement to the Iran war. Moscow described the conversation as focusing on the “most difficult military-political crisis in the Middle East” triggered by the US-Israeli military campaign. Russia is not acting as a formal mediator for Washington, but it is using its longstanding ties with Tehran to explore de-escalation options and keep channels open.
 
This mirrors the US position in Ukraine, where Washington has provided substantial military support to Kyiv while simultaneously offering to facilitate negotiations with Moscow. Both great powers are balancing the reality of backing one side in a conflict with the need to maintain influence over how that conflict ends.
 
Russia’s engagement here is pragmatic: it seeks to protect its broader interests in energy security and regional stability while positioning itself as a responsible actor in a multipolar world. The US, for its part, faces similar pressures in trying to manage escalation in the Middle East without losing strategic focus elsewhere.
 
In both theaters, major powers are learning that sustained high-intensity wars create incentives for back-channel diplomacy even amid ongoing support for their partners.

Posted by: Princess Bodica | Mar 28 2026 2:35 utc | 363

Lengai | Mar 28 2026 1:22 utc | 353
============
Don’t know about the Crusaders being cannibals, but anything is possible.
Ethnologists  state that cannibalism was practiced by Polynesian peoples who navigated the Pacific. But not for the calories per se; rather, for ritualistic purposes such as eating the flesh of an enemy to acquire his power or eating the flesh of a beloved deceased relative to incorporate that person into the living.
 
The period of discovery and settlement of the Pacific islands spanned 3.5 millennia, and a lot of different things went on among different groups people in different periods. It seems that the need for new territory to settle drove the search for new lands, which would imply competition and conflict between groups in both their original and new territories and the need to defend their new lands.

Posted by: Jane | Mar 28 2026 2:41 utc | 364

CONFIRMED: Several senior Mossad officers have deserted duties and have fled Israel through Cyprus and Egypt. This is after irreconcilable differences with IDF who have allegedly neutralized some Mossads. Israel is collapsing rapidly as mayors and huge Israelis have migrated

 
https://x.com/JaokooMoses/status/2037615712349434365

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Mar 28 2026 2:48 utc | 365

Shock and awe
 
After the war with Georgia in 2008, the Russian military was restructured to carry out rapid and destructive military interventions. However, Russia was the first to stumble on this doctrine. In spring 2022, it faced a critical choice: Either fight a serious, bloody war of attrition or settle for a disgraceful peace. Moscow chose war, and the Ukraine conflict has now entered its fifth year.
 
Trump now finds himself at a similar crossroads: Fight or to concede defeat. The problem is that the entire Western military-industrial complex has spent decades adapting to the shock and awe doctrine; NATO and the US possess unparalleled and exorbitantly expensive airstrike capabilities, but don’t have many other resources. If a targeted nation can withstand the initial air assaults, time will be on its side – unlike Russia, the West lacks the resources for a prolonged military campaign.
 
This explains the ‘gestures of goodwill’ Trump is currently making toward Iran. Just like Putin in spring 2022, he needs to buy time and figure out his next move: Continue fighting, launch a highly risky landing operation, or settle for a humiliating peace. The first option could spell disaster for Trump in the upcoming midterm elections, while the second could bring the US the most significant strategic defeat since Vietnam.
 
Trump can’t afford to sit back and wait; he must unblock the Strait of Hormuz. If he continues to act as if nothing is happening, Arab countries will start negotiating directly with Iran, which will demand not only financial concessions, but also the expulsion of Americans from the region.
 
Sergey Poletaev in RT

Posted by: Princess Bodica | Mar 28 2026 2:52 utc | 366

Don’t know about the Crusaders being cannibals,(…)
Posted by: Jane | Mar 28 2026 2:41 utc | 388

 
There is a big difference between being a cannibal (regularly, for rituals, even when other food is available), and practicing cannibalism during a starving event (no other food).
 
From what I recall, there has been some starvation and cannibalism events during the Crusades. Also in the Andes with the famous story of the plane crash of the rugby team. Also in Asia during Japanese occupation. Bit practicing cannibalism to survive does not make you a cannibal, I think.

Posted by: Asian Frog | Mar 28 2026 2:53 utc | 367

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Mar 28 2026 2:48 utc | 389
 
“Confirmed” by whom? Those posts are useless.

Posted by: Tom_Q_Collins | Mar 28 2026 2:56 utc | 368

Jane @ 391
Apologies for spacing glitches.
 

Posted by: Jane | Mar 28 2026 2:56 utc | 369

trump posted a kent tweet from jan 8 2020, 5 days after Soulemani’s assassination that was very hawkish towards Iran, saying Trump needed to go harder.
Posted by: UWDude | Mar 28 2026 2:11 utc | 377

Fair comment.  A lot of vets hold a serious grudge against Iran due to Iraq, rightly or wrongly, they do.  However Kent was anti-war and wanted all troops out of Syria, and backed the withdraw from Afghanistan.
And since 2020, Kent has become more red-pilled on Israel, and was responsible for investigating Israel’s involvement in the Charlie Kirk hit.  Speaking of Kirk, you could post all sorts of judeo-Christian comments from Kirk from a few years ago, but he broke with Israel and opposed the bombing of Iran.
People who open their eyes, oppose war, and oppose ZOG should be welcomed.  And Kent has gone public in his opposition to ZOG.  Dude deserves some gratitude.

Posted by: JackG | Mar 28 2026 2:59 utc | 370

Posted by: Tom_Q_Collins | Mar 28 2026 2:56 utc | 392
 
#####
 
Contact customer service for a refund. 😂😂😂

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Mar 28 2026 3:00 utc | 371

With the independence of the USA in 1776, Britain needed somewhere else to dump its convicts and others unwanted.
Posted by: tucenz | Mar 28 2026 2:25 utc | 384

 
Considering the UK vs NSW weather and resources (and marvelous harbours like Sydney), I think the entire UK population should have moved to Australia, leaving convicts and criminals behind.
 
Maybe they’ve got scared of the spiders. And snakes. And being neighbours with the French (New Caledonia) again.

Posted by: Asian Frog | Mar 28 2026 3:00 utc | 372

Posted by: JackG | Mar 28 2026 2:59 utc | 395
 
I agree.

Posted by: UWDude | Mar 28 2026 3:03 utc | 373

S&P went through 6400, a key level.  Brent moved higher.  Trump has lost all credibility.  I can see a bounce next week due to serious over-sold conditions, but sometimes the worst crash comes when you are over-sold.  
I think the 82nd. is heading into Lebanon to ATTEMPT to bail out the IDF.  I’m still going with the MEU’s being used to attack Yemen.  
Only “hint” of the US getting more serious at surrendering is the inclusion of Vance on the diplomatic team.  He has serious anti-war cred after SignalGate showed him lobbying against the Yemen attacks.
The big question is the Talmud amolek nutters and whether Netty allows his bitch to withdraw from the war.  I suspect not.  And the judeo-Christian nutter Paula White keeps telling Trump he’ll get even MOAR blessings if he keeps attacking Iran.  So I’m looking for Israel to keep hitting civilian infrastructure in an attempt to escalate, possible hitting oil production facilities.  The Talmud amolek nutters believe Israel will suffer greatly, but then their false messiah will show up and save them, and establish the jewish world government.  The judeo-Christian nutters believe this war will bring on the anti-Christ, at which point they all get raptures.  Crazy stuff, but both groups are in a whack-job cult.

Posted by: JackG | Mar 28 2026 3:07 utc | 374

I agree.
 
Posted by: UWDude | Mar 28 2026 3:03 utc | 398
 
 
and I’ll add I have learned you can only trust those who gonagainst their own party.  Opposition figures “standing up” are almost always just grandstanding, and become good little zionists once their party is back in power.

Posted by: UWDude | Mar 28 2026 3:08 utc | 375

Merkava Tank Doom Counter = 45 (9 + 8 + 10 + 4 +2 + 12)
 
🌟 Hezbollah: 82 resistance operations with the destruction of 12 tanks in the last 24 hours.

Posted by: Arch Bungle | Mar 28 2026 3:09 utc | 376

Posted by: tucenz | Mar 28 2026 2:25 utc | 385
 
That too. There is never only one reason or cause behind anything. Colonies like Australia were an opportunity for Britain to get prisoners sent elsewhere as quasi-slaves for colonial development. There were so many that they used  hulks (old wooden ships) on the Thames to serve as jails. This mainly due to to an industrialized England where many farm workers lost their jobs on the land and from other previous sources of employment, and a large amount of British military, many from the navy finding themselves decommissioned as well. Some of those had no alternative than to do petty crimes to feed themselves or find shelter, hence the high prison populations.  

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Mar 28 2026 3:10 utc | 377

I know it sounds a bit silly, but reflect:
 
Hezbollah has lost ZERO tanks in the last 28 days of war.
 
 
Ok, I’ll see myself out …

Posted by: Arch Bungle | Mar 28 2026 3:10 utc | 378

To those that think JD Vance would be an improvement over Trump I offer the following from a ZH posting
 
Vance Claims Iran Could Make Nuclear Suicide Vest
 

Vice President JD Vance on Thursday attempted to justify the continued US-Israeli war against Iran by implying that Iran could potentially turn a nuclear bomb into a suicide vest, a claim not grounded in reality.
Vance made the claim during a cabinet meeting while discussing military and diplomatic “options” that the US has regarding the conflict with Iran. He has continued to portray the war as being necessary to prevent Iran from making a nuclear weapon, though there was no evidence that Tehran had decided to build a bomb either before the June 2025 war or the current war that was launched on February 28.

 
Gives new meaning to fear mongering, eh?

Posted by: psychohistorian | Mar 28 2026 3:13 utc | 379

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Mar 28 2026 2:48 utc | 389
 
 
That strains the limits of credulity, old friend.
 
Please, more due diligence.

Posted by: Arch Bungle | Mar 28 2026 3:14 utc | 380

Posted by: psychohistorian | Mar 28 2026 3:13 utc | 404
 
I remember a mash up back in the day before the Iraq war of how many times Bush Jr said “terrorist” or “terrorism”,  in a single speech, it was probably near 100 times, but I remember during the pinnacle, he said “nuclear armed islamofascist jihadi terrorists”

Posted by: UWDude | Mar 28 2026 3:17 utc | 381

Posted by: JackG | Mar 28 2026 2:59 utc | 394
 
Do we know for a fact that Kent was investigating Israeli involvement in Kirk’s murder? That’s bombshell information if true.
 
 
Has Kent said this himself? An admission from the federal government that what is being treated as an open and shut slam dunk case in Utah state courts involved a parallel investigation into foreign involvement and especially Isntreal would absolutely shock me. 
 
I’m writing that off as wishful speculation without any further evidence.

Posted by: Tom_Q_Collins | Mar 28 2026 3:17 utc | 382

PB@387:
 
“Russia is not acting as a formal mediator for Washington, but…”
 
Is there a link?

Posted by: John Gilberts | Mar 28 2026 3:18 utc | 383

Posted by: Lengai | Mar 28 2026 1:22 utc | 353
don’t give us that nativist bullshit! it’s just a matter of luck that someone survived to Hawaii, a Robinson Crusoe type eating his own toenails, who could learn a thing or two and see a thriving civilization develop first hand. One with brothels, gambling, booze, slaves, more war, lots of gunpowder, and God’s own religion. Dole Fruit built that beautiful dam that lasted 105 years, right up until the moment the stupid lazy natives ruined it, a few days ago. 
 
next you’ll be telling us that it wasn’t Ticketmaster that invented scalping.
 
and none of this has anything to do with anything in the Middle East. has the British Museum replaced “Hormuz” with “Trump” yet?
 
and cannibalism, like herpes, is no joke.

Posted by: duck n cover | Mar 28 2026 3:18 utc | 384

“If we don’t deal with the Israelis, then this thing will just keep going. Unless we restrain them and tell them you’re done going on the offense, and if you continue to conduct strikes without running them by us, then we’re going to start taking away parts of your defense system.
 
That’s the only way to restrain them in my opinion. We can’t just ask nicely anymore because every time we do, they say okay and then continue striking anyway. We are doing the heavy lifting in this war while also funding their defense. The only way out of this is to restrain the Israelis and force a shift toward diplomacy.”

 
12-minute 41-second interview video . 
https://x.com/ShawnRyan762/status/2037598025124614570
 
Kent is like so many Americans, completely delulu.
 
Iran is going to solve the Israel problem for good. Americans are too weak and compromised to do the right thing for themselves, let alone the ROW.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Mar 28 2026 3:22 utc | 385

@ Arch Bungle | 369

“UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER!”

Suggested edit: “BIG BEAUTIFUL SURRENDER”  
@ Arch Bungle | 402

Hezbollah has lost ZERO tanks in the last 28 days of war.

Nice! 
 

Posted by: nomnom | Mar 28 2026 3:23 utc | 386

That strains the limits of credulity, old friend.
 
Please, more due diligence.
 
Posted by: Arch Bungle | Mar 28 2026 3:14 utc |405
 
Not teally.  Israel has some serious political divides, like President Herzog refusing to pardon Netenyahu, and all the cases against Netenyahu.
 
And of Israel is starting to see “the writing on the wall”, to borrow from their lore, losers will either circle the wagons or form a circular firing squad…  or shoot each other arguing over tactics, as tensions and stakes get higher and blame starts to be focused on the leaders, along with demands for new leadership.
 
However, the story seems sourceless.

Posted by: UWDude | Mar 28 2026 3:23 utc | 387

But it was always an extension of imperial Britain in the antipodes anyway, so strategically always part of the same efforts to dominate the Pacific and SE Asian regions.
Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Mar 28 2026 2:12 utc | 378

Yes, that remains the case today. The Australian ruling class and political elite, which transferred its loyalty from the British imperialism to the American one in 1941, has a world view that is shaped entirely by its dependence on imperialism to advance its interests. No surprise given this history and that they are likely as embedded in the Western billionaire and MIC-funded think-tank/foundation money-and-influence circuits as, say, many of their European counterparts.

Posted by: Lengai | Mar 28 2026 3:26 utc | 388

Posted by: Arch Bungle | Mar 28 2026 3:14 utc | 404
 
#####
 
I just post things I see. I do not investigate them, and I do not vet them.
 
My meta-goal is to create discussion and expand the Overton Window.
 
Is it possible? Will anyone be interested enough to research further?
 
If others won’t check it out, why should I?
 
My posts are worth exactly what people have paid for them.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Mar 28 2026 3:27 utc | 389

Posted by: Tom_Q_Collins | Mar 28 2026 3:17 utc | 407
 
Yes.   AI answer:
 
Former National Counterterrorism Center director Joe Kent has publicly alleged that FBI Director Kash Patel ordered his team to stop investigating potential foreign links to the September 10, 2025, assassination of Charlie Kirk. Kent claims he was blocked from pursuing a “foreign nexus” investigation despite identifying leads, arguing that Kirk’s opposition to a war with Iran and pressure from pro-Israel donors were critical factors that warranted deeper scrutiny. 
 
Kent has suggested that Israel may have been involved in the assassination, describing Kirk’s death as a “data point” that needed investigation given his recent advocacy against military action in the Middle East. He has stated that he would testify at the trial of alleged assassin Tyler Robinson if called, even if his testimony could undermine the prosecution’s case or help the defense. 
 
 
 
 

Posted by: UWDude | Mar 28 2026 3:30 utc | 390

True Promise 4, Day 28, Wave 84
 
https://www.presstv.ir
 
“Iran and resistance ops against US-Israeli assets on March 27:
 

  • Iran reiterates support for Lebanon sovereignty
  • Yemen declares readiness for direct military intervention
  • IRGC missiles target refueling planes at Kharj Base…”

Posted by: John Gilberts | Mar 28 2026 3:34 utc | 391

Posted by: Jane | Mar 28 2026 2:41 utc | 388
of course. lack of resources. no one just goes on walkabout anymore, do they? there’s only, like, a few million more, one or two, living in Polynesia now. where do their resources come from? competition over scarcity?
 
why invent navigation at all instead of just grabbing a bigger bone and smashing your neighbor’s head with it? maybe a mysterious obelisk appeared…and we have “2001 (BC): An Odyssey”.
 
how did they know where water is when crossing open ocean? and not even a compass either to guide them…no weather channel…

Posted by: duck n cover | Mar 28 2026 3:36 utc | 392

All true, some of the strategic advice also comes from an organization that is in part funded by the US MIC as well. UK and US both have control over the country, I have even suspected some prime ministers in the past being UK agents, representatives or even spies. The country is  always manipulated by these two forces and the media that supports them. Zionists have a lot of power over federal and state governments yet Jews only account for 0.44% of the population.

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Mar 28 2026 3:41 utc | 393

Contact customer service for a refund.
Posted by: LoveDonbass | Mar 28 2026 3:00 utc | 395
 
LD, if you want to keep your job, be nice to our clients.
Tom_Q_Collins, Customer service is on the Third Floor.

Posted by: Menz | Mar 28 2026 3:42 utc | 394

Do we know for a fact that Kent was investigating Israeli involvement in Kirk’s murder? That’s bombshell information if true.Has Kent said this himself? An admission from the federal government that what is being treated as an open and shut slam dunk case in Utah state courts involved a parallel investigation into foreign involvement and especially Isntreal would absolutely shock me. I’m writing that off as wishful speculation without any further evidence.
Posted by: Tom_Q_Collins | Mar 28 2026 3:17 utc | 406

A correction on my part.  Kent was investigating “Foreign Involvement”, and not “Israel” in particular.  My mistake, though its a reasonable assumption he is referring to Israel.
https://www.newsweek.com/ex-trump-official-says-he-was-told-stop-investigating-charlie-kirk-killing-11704210

Posted by: JackG | Mar 28 2026 3:42 utc | 395

Weekly Iran War recap is up.  Dude does a good job at being balanced.  Someone here turned me on to him.
 
https://robcampbell.substack.com/p/iran-war-summary-week-four

Posted by: JackG | Mar 28 2026 3:44 utc | 396

Arnaud Bertrand and others are talking about Iran’s dominance of the Strategic, Tactical and Escalatory spheres.
 
Straits of Iran (Hormuz) is under effective control.
Complete destruction of 13/17 US bases in theater. The will to hit everyone and everywhere involved covertly or overtly.
Air supremacy over Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Oman, UAE, Jordan, Bahrain, Kuwait, Iraq and Occupied Palestine.
Ability to inflict physical losses to anyone, anytime.
Ability to turn the lights out and taps off at will.
Ability to shut down data transfer/servers/centers completely (undersea cables).
 
Covfefe re 82nd and 2 MEUs currently not enroute.
News leaking out of the Colony indicates severe stress and fears of collapse, with the unprecedented loss of 60+ Merkavas to combat fire.
The only sensible deployment for above US force to bolster the disintegrating genocidal Diaper Army. 

Posted by: Suresh | Mar 28 2026 3:47 utc | 397

Posted by: UWDude | Mar 28 2026 3:17 utc | 406
 
Bush loved calling anyone from his invented Axis of Evil,  Evil Doers as well
 
In truth, the current Axis of Evil goes from Washington to the Zionists in the occupied state of Palestine

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Mar 28 2026 3:51 utc | 398

Benjamin Netanyahu Says…(& vid)
 
https://realgerhardtvdm/status/2037707516629721397
 
“Israel will continue attacking Iran despite President Trump’s plan to negotiate peace agreements. There is literally no reason for the United States to be involved in Israel’s illegal war anymore.”
 
The lobby disagrees.

Posted by: John Gilberts | Mar 28 2026 3:53 utc | 399

Has Kent said this himself?
 
Posted by: Tom_Q_Collins | Mar 28 2026 3:17 utc | 406
 

Yes he said so himself … but he did not get far with the investigation because as soon as it became known that he was asking questions, very quickly Kash Patel ordered Kent to back off and stay away from FBI business. To me, that confirms the FBI is working to bury this, but I don’t know exactly what the reason might be … it could not be anything good though.

Posted by: Tel | Mar 28 2026 3:54 utc | 400