Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
April 1, 2026
War On Iran: The Best Choice Is To Retreat – More Likely Though Is Escalation

U.S. President Donald Trump will give a live speech tonight at 9:00pm ET.

He might announce that:

  1. the U.S. will retreat from the War on Iran he had launched or
  2. that U.S. troops have started to invade Iranian territory.

No. 1 seems unlikely as AIPAC, hawkish Republicans and Zionist Democrats are all against a U.S. retreat.
No. 2 seems irrational as any invasion of Iranian territory is destined to end in defeat.

The U.S. has deployed additional A-10 ground fighter airplanes to the Gulf. Deploying these points to a ground operation, probably to seize some islands.

Meanwhile the severity of the global energy crisis the war has caused is starting to get recognize.

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard of the Telgraph is warning (archived) of the even bigger oil shock we need to expect if things escalate from here:

The world has lost over a tenth of its daily oil supply, along with critical volumes of jet fuel, diesel and refined petroleum products. Now prepare for loss of the next tenth, hitting just as all the short-term fixes are exhausted.

The pro-Iranian Houthis in Yemen have finally joined the Gulf war, opening a second front in the Red Sea and endangering a further 6pc of global oil supply.

David Fyfe, the chief economist at Argus Media, says prices will reach traumatic levels if the Red Sea now comes under fire and remains closed for weeks.

“You can pick any arbitrary number – $200[/bbl], or anything you want – the risk is that we’ll see huge demand destruction, inflation going through the roof and global growth shuddering to a halt. It is a horrible thought,” says Fyfe, who used to run the oil division at the International Energy Agency.

Every corner of the globe will be hit by Apr 20 or thereabouts. Regional prices will converge via arbitrage and there will then be a planetary oil crisis with very few places left to hide.

The horror this means for us average people – including mass starvation in the global South – seems hard to imagine but will soon become real.

There is pressure on Trump to “do something” about this. The best he could do to lower the consequences of an energy crisis is to retreat from the Middle East.

But to give up control over a major sea lane, one through which much of the blood of the global economy is flowing,  means to give up on the U.S. status as a super power and global hegemon. It would be a huge step, a necessary one in the long term, but one that is likely to only be taken after years of war and, like in Vietnam, a deeply punishing defeat.

Comments

Posted by: ChatNPC | Apr 1 2026 19:37 utc | 200
Aah, another escapekey entry. I’m starting to wonder if james is the author 😮
This could take a while.

Posted by: ChatNPC | Apr 1 2026 19:39 utc | 201

jesus but i find reading moa without ld so much easier… and it generates a different crowd here too… 

Posted by: james | Apr 1 2026 19:39 utc | 202

@ ChatNPC | Apr 1 2026 19:39 utc | 205
 
lol… no… it is much too tedious for me and not my style!! cheers..

Posted by: james | Apr 1 2026 19:40 utc | 203

Perhaps the planning of the Iran war was that it should occur after having extended much of Russias resources vs Ukraine.
Posted by: jared | Apr 1 2026 19:14 utc | 182
Syria, Venezuela, Cuba, Iran. Many such cases.

Posted by: catdog | Apr 1 2026 19:41 utc | 204

https://www.thetimes.com/world/middle-east/israel-iran/article/insider-trading-iran-war-trump-administration-news-7nn3tplqw
 
The Biden Crime Family could only dream of Trump Corruption Syndicate level death and depression profiteering.

Posted by: Tom_Q_Collins | Apr 1 2026 19:41 utc | 205

Posted by: psychohistorian | Apr 1 2026 19:37 utc | 201
I think he means well, but he always seems to blow both feet off.
He could do with chilling out and expanding his mind a bit.

Posted by: ChatNPC | Apr 1 2026 19:42 utc | 206

jesus but i find reading moa without ld so much easier… and it generates a different crowd here too… 
Posted by: james | Apr 1 2026 19:39 utc | 205
if pb was gone too it would be heaven.

Posted by: catdog | Apr 1 2026 19:42 utc | 207

Posted by: LightYearsFromHome | Apr 1 2026 19:35 utc | 197
 
‘Running out’ is so far a relative term. Larry Johnston (I think) published figures a few days ago. Most US missile types are reduced to half or more of what they were a year or so ago, and replenishment rates are possibly, at most, one fifth of present reserves. Some types such as Tomahawks are slightly better, and others such as Patriot are worse. Additionally, Patriots are so ineffective that instead of the usual two per counter attach, three, four and even five are being fired – to no effect. This is well documented from the Iraq war, the Ansar Allah attacks on Saudi Arabia and video from recent Iranian attacks on Israel.
 
You seem to be another victim of US ‘exceptionalism’.

Posted by: Jams O’Donnell | Apr 1 2026 19:43 utc | 208

@ catdog | Apr 1 2026 19:42 utc | 211
 
they have even calmed down relative to before – which is also a blessing.. 

Posted by: james | Apr 1 2026 19:43 utc | 209

Posted by: james | Apr 1 2026 19:39 utc | 205
A lot of good stuff got swamped in the posting deluge.

Posted by: ChatNPC | Apr 1 2026 19:44 utc | 210

if pb was gone too it would be heaven.
 
Posted by: catdog | Apr 1 2026 19:42 utc | 210
 
Not that everybody isn’t devising ways to meet their maker with pb

Posted by: Princess Bodica | Apr 1 2026 19:44 utc | 211

WASHINGTON – The United States will be “out of Iran pretty quickly” and could return for “spot hits” if needed, President Donald Trump told Reuters on Wednesday, hours before he was scheduled to ​make a primetime address to the nation about the war.

Posted by: Princess Bodica | Apr 1 2026 19:46 utc | 212

Posted by: Princess Bodica | Apr 1 2026 19:44 utc | 214
Next time respond only in limericks.

Posted by: fnord | Apr 1 2026 19:47 utc | 213

Posted by: Simon | Apr 1 2026 19:45 utc | 215
 
Awful. No love for Ayatollah and Holy War in China. Who could have guessed?

Posted by: Princess Bodica | Apr 1 2026 19:48 utc | 214

OK: Let us take a glance at the GeoPolitical and GeoEconomic Maps
 
# The N-S trade route from Russian Federation through Islamic Republic of Iran to Indian Ocean
 
# The N-SW trade route from People’s Republic of China through Islamic Republic of Iran to Indian Ocean – key part of Belt&Road
 
# The US hegemon strategy of taking control of global hydrocarbons and key trade choke points by force if necessary.
 
# The secondary focus of the Zionist entity on eliminating all local regional threats and destroying them if necessary as in Syria – many overlaps between the big and little hegemons but the big hegemon calls the shots – NOT the little hegemon albeit being very influential on the big one.
 
# Control of IRI hydrocarbons gives US hegemon further control of Global Energy – key strategy of hegemon to maintain its hegemony + Plus Control of Strait of Hormuz cuts both trade routes above seriously weakening RF influence as well as major blow to key PRC energy source and the ‘primary geopolitical strategy’ [McKinder etc.] of damaging the rise of PRC. This would also copper-fasten hegemon control of West Asia as well as removing the perceived existential threat to the Zionist entity – allowing this genocidal entity to continue with its Greater Zionist plan on increasing its size as well as becoming a regional military hegemon with the support of US hegemon.
 
# Thus far, the hegemon is flailing and failing. IRI still stands but is taking savage punishment.
 
# Consequences: [1] RF, PRC,IRI still in control of McKinder [2] Global depression, and famines, locked-in even if hegemon retreats now to lick its wounds and prepare for the next effort – [3] Combined with RF attrition on NATO and disrespect shown to NATO ‘allies’ on this unprovoked war, then NATO would appear to be in terminal decline – as well as Europe [minus RF] becoming geopolitically irrelevant and a heck of a lot poorer which will lead to a period of political chaos in coming years. [4] The petrodollar, and hegemon economy plus its debt, in deep trouble.
 
# I could go on – but you get my drift. This is all on the declining Hegemon.
 
# @IRI – RESPECT!

Posted by: Don Firineach | Apr 1 2026 19:50 utc | 215

Posted by: Simon | Apr 1 2026 19:45 utc | 215
 
What makes you think that John Helmer ‘s analysis is a true one?
And what makes you think that China, uniquely in the world, always means exactly what it says on the surface, and is allergic to subterfuge?

Posted by: Jams O’Donnell | Apr 1 2026 19:51 utc | 216

In camouflage for what China is doing against Iran, it has just announced its support “to strengthen the primacy of the UN.”
 
Posted by: Simon | Apr 1 2026 19:45 utc | 215
What China is doing to Iran?  That’s what you think is important to focus on at the moment, little Zio nobody?  
Poof!  Be gone.  

Posted by: Ahenobarbus | Apr 1 2026 19:52 utc | 217

Suresh,  Am I one of those Chad’s?

Posted by: Chad McDougal | Apr 1 2026 19:53 utc | 218

jesus but i find reading moa without ld so much easier… Posted by: james | Apr 1 2026 19:39 utc | 205
 
Agree. Regardless of content excessive posters are dirtbags. 

Posted by: waynorinorway | Apr 1 2026 19:55 utc | 219

@ james | Apr 1 2026 19:39 utc | 203 aboutNima/Wilkerson…yes
 
From waynorinorway above about LD gone
Agree. Regardless of content excessive posters are dirtbags. 
 
 
I read the Iran message and have sent the link to those that may read it…thanks
 
Onward, into the breech!

Posted by: psychohistorian | Apr 1 2026 19:59 utc | 220

@ Simon | Apr 1 2026 19:45 utc | 216
 
simon, you’d have more legitimacy as a poster at moa if you actually read others posts and saw that this had been linked a few times, beginning @ 22 on this thread… but do continue.. you seem to work well as a distraction at moa.. 

Posted by: james | Apr 1 2026 19:59 utc | 221

The United States will be “out of Iran pretty quickly” and could return for “spot hits” if needed, President Donald Trump told Reuters on Wednesday, hours before he was scheduled to ​make a primetime address to the nation about the war.
Posted by: Princess Bodica | Apr 1 2026 19:46 utc | 216
 
So with any deal, the US reserves the right to make “spot hits”.  How generous of the Americans.  Only fools or vassals will make deals with the USA from now on.

Posted by: EoinW | Apr 1 2026 20:00 utc | 222

James, karlof1.
 
Helmer was always anti Putin since before the SMO. 
 
He constantly pushed the oligarchs angle and economic “liberalism”.
 
Now, he merely makes accusations that are factually incorrect. 
 
I have chuck both Helmer and Doctorow as being “got” bin. But I think in hindsight,  Helmer was always batting for the other team. 

Posted by: Suresh | Apr 1 2026 20:00 utc | 223

Posted by: fnord | Apr 1 2026 19:47 utc | 217
 
There was a young princess who Trolled
Her posts were exceedingly bold
But her lies were so poor
That we showed her the door
And now she’s out in the cold

Posted by: Jams O’Donnell | Apr 1 2026 20:01 utc | 224

Prof Jiangs Lecture, Key points:
 

English Translation:Core Thesis of the LectureFinancial collapses (such as 1929 or 2008) do not occur randomly or as a result of natural “boom-bust cycles” of capitalism.They are deliberately orchestrated by powerful actors (“Game Masters”) behind the scenes in order to generate profit and shift power.The official explanation (over-optimism, “flew too high” → gravity) is an illusion designed to conceal the real culprits.The “Game Masters” and the Structure of the WorldBehind the scenes, transnational financial actors (Bank of England since 1694, City of London, Wall Street, BIS, IMF, World Bank, etc.) control the global economy.They use multilateral organizations (UN, WTO) as well as media, education, and culture to present the system as “fair and transparent.”Opposing forces (nationalism, religion, social democracy) are neutralized through intelligence agencies, “crime,” science, secret societies, and elite families.Historical Origin: Glorious Revolution 1688 (fusion of British and Dutch interests) → Bank of England 1694 → a system of privatized gains and socialized losses.Current Thesis: Impending Collapse of the US EconomyAmerica is facing serious problems: an aging elite, too much money in the system (Quantitative Easing → speculation), and military weakness.Transnational capital now wants to shift the center of gravity to Israel (the “Greater Israel” project: wars → destruction → reconstruction → control over trade and resources in the Middle East/Africa).To achieve this, the US economy must first collapse (for example, through the bursting of the private equity/private credit bubble and/or the AI bubble).Bubbles do not burst automatically — they are allowed to burst when it is profitable for the elite (selling high + buying up cheap assets afterward).Trump and parts of the US elite are consciously willing to accept the painful “detox” (removing the “parasite” of transnational capital) in order to achieve long-term “America First” — even if it leads to short-term chaos and possibly civil war-like conditions.Conclusion of the LectureThe next major crisis (likely triggered by the current Middle East conflict / Iran) serves to shift capital from the United States to Israel. Everything is orchestrated by a small elite that views wars and collapses as a profitable business.

I am not convinced.

Posted by: Johann Siegfried von Oberndorf | Apr 1 2026 20:02 utc | 225

Are A10s carrier based?
Posted by: Tom_Q_Collins | Apr 1 2026 18:42 utc | 151
————————————————————————
No tailhook, no landing gear designed for the hard landing impact and likely not enough thrust for catapult launch nor a bridle for the catapult.
It also takes a lot of training for pilots to get carrier qualified with night landings in bad weather on top of that. 

Posted by: Acco Hengst | Apr 1 2026 20:02 utc | 226

@ Suresh | Apr 1 2026 20:00 utc | 229
 
i am not so sure of that which is why i continue to have an open door policy on following helmer.. thanks for your input! 

Posted by: james | Apr 1 2026 20:03 utc | 227

Posted by: Simon | Apr 1 2026 19:54 utc | 223
 
Correction:
“He lives in Russia, he does not know what is happening.”
It takes more than living in Russia to know what is happening. Helmer has a pronounced anti-Putin bias, and does not have access to Kremlin thinking.

Posted by: Jams O’Donnell | Apr 1 2026 20:04 utc | 228

James, karlof1.Helmer was always anti Putin since before the SMO.  He constantly pushed the oligarchs angle and economic “liberalism”.  Now, he merely makes accusations that are factually incorrect. I have chucked both Helmer and Doctorow as being “got” bin. But I think in hindsight,  Helmer was always batting for the other team. 
Posted by: Suresh | Apr 1 2026 20:00 utc | 228
—————————————————————————–
Same here.

Posted by: Acco Hengst | Apr 1 2026 20:05 utc | 229

@165 scc

“Zakharova: Any initiatives on navigation in the Strait of #Hormuz must be based on consensus among littoral states.Transferring control to third parties or creating supranational mechanisms without the consent of ALL Gulf states will not contribute to de-escalation.” Spudski

UN convention is based on rights of passage through restricted (territorial waters meet) waterways. Two faced interpretation there from Russia again, as with other. US that has not signed convention iirc.

What is with Russia, adherent to UN yet mandating extra-UN resolutions via non existant arbitration. I don’t like the Russian approach, it seems dishonest, projects a concensus solution that does not exist over an international one that exists but for a few renegade.

It could be said however, that Iran has a legitimate right to impose a blockade on nations that have attacked it.

@173 Chat

…because they did not want to, never enforced repatriation or return to last safe country.

You can see the direction this is going, what ‘lesser part’ UK, EU and others are being given as participation. All the rest, unhelpful UK, US leaving NATO etc. is not credible.

Going ad-hom on UK, european countries, EU, is not helpful, because they have a respectable military naval capacity, but more importantly because negotiation of their participation deserves scrutiny given it places the lot one step away from openly joining hostilities, which in future might include with countries currently sitting on sidelines.

Posted by: Ornot | Apr 1 2026 20:05 utc | 230

@ Cynic | Apr 1 2026 19:15 utc | 183
The anglosaxons have always wanted themselves to dominate finance by pitting everybody else against their own bankers. 
What ought that indicate for the rival countries? Should they do precisely what the anglosaxons want them to so the anglosaxon plans work out or should they try something else?
 

Posted by: petergrfstrm | Apr 1 2026 20:05 utc | 231

I am an American and want to meld the brains and passion of Col. Wilkerson with Scott Ritter……Scott does not have the global private finance perspective that Col Wilkerson does and talks about intelligently.America needs constitutional patriots like them to dig ourselves out of the top/bottom world we live in, IMO
Posted by: psychohistorian | Apr 1 2026 19:37 utc | 201
 
Nice sentiments but I have a more practical, though much more painful, solution to save the USA
 
Americans need to get off their fat asses, grab their guns and use them.  Not go to the mall and randomly shoot people (in the case of trannies, going to a religious school to murder children) instead they need to go out and hunt down every member of the Democratic and Republican parties.
 
Such is the clean up America needs.  If it can’t be done, then, for the sake of the rest of the world, break up the USA.

Posted by: EoinW | Apr 1 2026 20:06 utc | 232

@ ChatNPC | Apr 1 2026 18:43 utc | 152 
 
 AIUI the cargo must be purchased in Yuan, the toll must be paid in Rial.

>cheers. { and that seems a good plan}
 

Posted by: psychohistorian | Apr 1 2026 18:48 utc | 157
Rial is open to that the Yuan is not

I’m going to go all “Trust the Plan” and think/ hope/ pray Iran has already gamed thus out, and is one step ahead??
 
… And I would discount Bessent as a reliable source.
I would reckon the U$ did not see that move coming.
> They thought Iran would be “Irun’d away” by now.

Posted by: Melaleuca | Apr 1 2026 20:07 utc | 233

Helmer Helmer Helmer.
 
Havent we had the Helmer conversation a good 2 dozen times now?
I thought it was revealed he’s no longer in Russia?
And he certainly has no backroom connection to the corridors of the Kremlin.
 

Posted by: Melaleuca | Apr 1 2026 20:12 utc | 234

Posted by: too scents | Apr 1 2026 19:24 utc | 190
 
Another issue I consistently broach with my liberal media “journalist” friends: When will you press the government about actual casualties? 
 
 
Answer: Never

Posted by: Tom_Q_Collins | Apr 1 2026 20:12 utc | 235

Posted by: Simon | Apr 1 2026 20:04 utc | 234
“Helmer for sure knows better then the people who live outside Russia who post here.Helmer has also connections in Russia.”
 
Any evidence for this statement of faith?
 

Posted by: Jams O’Donnell | Apr 1 2026 20:15 utc | 236

John Helmer about the awful and dirty Chinese game against Iran.
 
Posted by: Simon | Apr 1 2026 19:45 utc | 215
 

He finishes up with this …
 

This means that two of the foundation states of BRICS have defaulted on the collective security the organization has promised.

 
When was that promise made? I thought BRICS was a trade organisation. Hopefully Helmer knows that most Chinese public diplomatic statements are simply boilerplate and are not intended to convey any important information.

Posted by: Tel | Apr 1 2026 20:16 utc | 237

Jams O’Donnell @ 211
 

You seem to be another victim of US ‘exceptionalism’.

 
Indeed, I must be. It’s not about what they are using up, it’s about what they had to begin with, the fact that they are so reckless with AD and missiles, and everything else for that matter, starting four long years ago in the SMO, tells me they had a lot more than indicated. Arsenal sizes and army sizes are top secret at all times but especially in war, the USA and the EU were never real democracies, any claims to congressional and citizen review, or inherent systemic transparency is just as unreal.
 
Of course in the West procurement is through contracts with private companies, a capable researcher might be able to glean facts from those but I doubt the Pentagon is dumb enough not to fake procurement quantities in contracts, and not just to steal trillions but to not let enemies onto their actual capabilities – the first order of business for militaries for millennia.
 
That said, I am open to the idea that not 15%, not 30%, not 50% nor 75% but 95% of procurement contracts over the last 80 have been fraudulent and stolen and that the arsenal of democracy is as shallow of the democracy. But, that’s my only calculus, I stand that all the military stats doled out everywhere, by USA, NATO, UKR, Russia, Iran, China are all BS.
 

Posted by: LightYearsFromHome | Apr 1 2026 20:18 utc | 238

Posted by: BlindSpot | Apr 1 2026 18:59 utc | 166
An excellent nod to Jonathan Swift.
Cheers, chum…
🥃🥃🥃

Posted by: Melaleuca | Apr 1 2026 20:18 utc | 239

@Simon | Apr 1 2026 19:45 utc | 215
John Helmer and Gilbert Doctorow are both influenced by the anglosaxon opinionmakers.I dont question their honest intention but if the empire wants you to dislike Putin he is probably doing something right.

Posted by: petergrfstrm | Apr 1 2026 20:24 utc | 240

On April 1, 2026, the armed forces spokesman of the Iran-backed Yemeni Houthi Ansar Allah Movement, Brig.-Gen. Yahya Saree, shared on his Telegram channel a statement in Arabic and English claiming responsibility for “a volley of ballistic missiles aimed at sensitive targets belonging to the Israeli enemy in southern occupied Palestine.”
 
The statement said that the attack was carried out “jointly with our mujahideen brothers in Iran and Hizbullah in Lebanon.”
 
The statement also threatened that Houthi forces will escalate their operations “if the enemy escalates its aggression, crimes, and attacks against Lebanon, Iran, Iraq, and Palestine.” 
 
MEMRI

Posted by: Princess Bodica | Apr 1 2026 20:25 utc | 241

Posted by: james | Apr 1 2026 19:39 utc | 205
🎸🥁
yep. 
 

Posted by: Melaleuca | Apr 1 2026 20:26 utc | 242

https://substack.com/home/post/p-191874830
Posted by: Merv Ritchie | Apr 1 2026 16:16 utc | 35
==================
 
I read the whole thing. The arguments and evidence certainly look convincing.
I hope other more knowledgeable commenters will read it and comment.

Posted by: Jane | Apr 1 2026 20:29 utc | 243

Posted by: LightYearsFromHome | Apr 1 2026 20:18 utc | 244
 
Try extrapolating.
Almost all US armaments systems for the last 40 odd years have been characterised by: over-specification, complication, inflated costing, over-inflated reputation, lack of operational ‘toughness’, slow and extended production times, and so on. Additionally, just-in-time production and the unwillingness of manufacturers to produce in anticipation of demand, and large cuts in programs by the government because of lack of affordability has meant that stocks of all armaments are way down from what they were a decade or so ago.
 
Why would missiles be any different?

Posted by: Jams O’Donnell | Apr 1 2026 20:29 utc | 244

Helmer is the nephew of Zelman Cowen.

Posted by: pepe | Apr 1 2026 20:30 utc | 245

I think its time we had GRU like analysis and updates – (TG Sucks) 
Recap: US invasion of Iraq in 2003.  This is a reincarnation of what was in March of 2003. – May bring back fond memories. 
 

In connection with these developments the GRU and General Staff departments responsible for the Persian Gulf region will go to a 24-hour mode of operation. All [Russian] electronic reconnaissance brigades and divisions, intelligence agencies based in regions neighboring the conflict zone, sea- and space-based technical reconnaissance assets will be put on full combat alert.
 
The GOU GSh report provided an analysis of the Iraqi army’s defensive capabilities and possible scenarios of the war.
 
The first phase of the operation will consist of a strategic air operation which, according to the US command, will last between 8 and 10 days. The goal of this operation will be complete suppression of Iraqi air defenses, disruption of command and control structures, destruction of main command and communication centers, disruption of the main Iraqi forces, destruction of the military infrastructure and defense industry facilities.
 
The first wave of the attack will consist of between 200-250 Tomahawk cruise missiles followed in 30-50 minutes by an aircraft strike. The initial air attack will last up to six hours. It will consist of around 2000 combat flights and the launch of around 400 cruise missiles. During the next five days it is planned to deliver at least two major air strikes per day with a gradual shift toward sustain air operations against newly discovered targets.
 
After the first phase of the operation is complete the US command plans to spend two more days for additional reconnaissance and destruction of any new or remaining targets. After this the available air assets will switched entirely to support the ground forces. The total time for the operation against Iraq is estimated by the US military planners to run between 15 and 21 days.
 

Posted by: CrazyCanuck | Apr 1 2026 20:31 utc | 246

Earlier in the thread the topic of Tehran’s control of Hormuz was discussed by Maria Zakharova during her Weekly Briefing today. Here’s the full unofficial English translation of that Q&A:
 

Question: On March 29 in Islamabad, the four countries discussed the creation of a consortium to manage oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz, including the introduction of a toll passage through the natural strait. Such an initiative was recently put forward by the Iranian authorities. How does Moscow assess the transfer of control over the international strait to states that have no access to it? Can this become a precedent for changing the rules for the passage of natural straits around the world?
 
Maria Zakharova: Any initiatives regarding the regime of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz should be implemented on the basis of consensus among the littoral states and taking into account their interests. The transfer of control over the strategic artery to third countries or the creation of supranational governance structures without the consent of all the Gulf states without exception would hardly contribute to détente in the region.
 
Moreover, such actions would be contrary to the norms of international maritime law. Let me remind you that the width of the Strait of Hormuz at its narrowest point is 20 nautical miles. This means that it cannot be passed without entering the territorial seas of Iran or Oman, which are subject to the sovereignty of these states. We are not aware of any legal structures that will make it possible to transfer the waters that are part of its territorial sea under the control of other states without the explicit consent of Iran.
 
The passage of ships through the Strait of Hormuz is currently controlled by Tehran. This is an objective reality that, no matter how much they would like to, even the United States cannot challenge, despite all the military power it has accumulated in the Middle East and the Indian Ocean. Therefore, it is hardly worth seriously discussing the feasibility of such initiatives without taking into account Iran’s position and its direct participation.
 
The extreme vulnerability of the merchant fleet does not allow us to expect that this situation will change dramatically in the foreseeable future. This is impossible without a long-term normalization of the situation around Iran, which, acting in a constructive manner, agrees on the passage of ships from countries not participating in the conflict.

 
There was another Q&A related to the conflict that IMO also merits being provided in full so barflies are properly informed:
 

Question: Where, in Moscow’s opinion, are the practical “red lines” for Russia in the event of further escalation around Iran – in the context of a threat to allies or destabilisation of the region?
 
Maria Zakharova: It seems to me that it is impossible to simplify the current situation in the Middle East, in the Persian Gulf. This is not about playing with colored pencils. This is about an unprecedented escalation, about not only a dangerous turn, but also about playing with fire, which threatens to grow into a full-scale fire throughout the Middle East and spread further, throughout the planet. Do you understand what I am talking about? This is not about the use of figurative expressions, but about a comprehensive assessment of the situation.
 
A new Middle East crisis, caused, as we have repeatedly emphasized, by the unprovoked aggression of the US-Israeli tandem against Iran, has been going on for more than a month. Although we remember how it was said that it was literally for a couple of days, then for just a couple of weeks. Then we heard that everything would be completed by the end of March. Now April has already begun. And we see how, unfortunately, the situation is not improving, but worsening.
 
As the conflict drags on, the feeling of absolute permissiveness and impunity that gripped its instigators in the first days gradually gives way to confusion, sometimes turning into a contradiction with the attitudes with which they began this conflict. The once stable and prosperous region of the Persian Gulf is sinking deeper and deeper into the abyss of chaos and uncertainty, destabilization.
 
It is absolutely obvious to us that the main threat to Russia’s key partners in the region, and we certainly include our Iranian friends with whom we are building a strategic dialogue, comes from those who are trying to replace international law with a rules-based order, which is in fact the law of the strongest.
 
The question is not that we are saying that this is theoretically wrong. This is a specific situation that shows in practice our analytical and theoretical calculations. It doesn’t work, it doesn’t lead to improvement. This leads to its deterioration. And not just to some kind of deterioration, but to a tragic one.
 
For the region, the consequences can be catastrophic and, in general, unpredictable. Transport corridors and energy infrastructure, on the stability of which the well-being of not only the region, but also the entire world economy depends, are under attack. The most socially vulnerable states, for which the stability of energy and food prices is critically important, are at risk. What is most “interesting” is that now these most socially vulnerable states include the EU countries, which previously called themselves “blooming gardens”, “well-being”, almost “paradise gardens”.
 
We do not believe in the controllability of the escalation (this is a chimera), as well as in a military solution to the Iranian issue. The only possible way of settlement is diplomatic. Call it what you want: political and diplomatic, negotiation and diplomatic, various. But it is in this channel that the way out of the current crisis (provoked by certain forces) really lies.
 
There is no doubt that sooner or later everyone will understand this. The main thing is that it is not too late.

 
As usual, the official English translation will become available here in 48-72 hours. And as usual, there were many other items covered that deserve knowing about.
  

Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 1 2026 20:32 utc | 247

President of Iran Masoud Pezeshkian open letter to American people.  To contrast with 47’s utterances in some five hours hence….
https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/04/01/766191/pezeshkian-letter-American-people
 

Posted by: Dave | Apr 1 2026 20:32 utc | 248

NemesisCalling | Apr 1 2026 18:42 utc | 150
*** Christians DO NOT view suffering as an intrinsic evil. We actually view it as that which leads to our betterment. And so we desire the empire’s fall so it can do some much-needed soul-searching in these very destitute times.***
 
A view held in general, or specific to Roman Catholics?
 
Top people seem to avoid suffering. How altruistic of them to leave their share unused, so that the poor can be even better bettered via suffering some extra.
 
As an atheist, I see zero good in suffering.  Whichever religious people (of any religion) think it is a “good” thing should monopolise suffering entirely for themselves. 
And I do not in the least bit mind enemies suffering — the more the better.
 

Posted by: Cynic | Apr 1 2026 20:33 utc | 249

The planetary systemic effects of a major energy crisis such as the shutdown of the Persian Gulf were obvious to anyone interested in the topic of peak oil alongside the neocon global war strategy after the 911 atrocity and carpet bombing of Afghanistan followed by the supreme crime of aggression against Iraq in 2003. At the time, the US war machine had plans to subjugate West Asian ‘adversaries’ culminating in the destruction of the Iranian state, thus winning for the US empire what Truman’s executive knew as the ‘greatest strategic prize in history’, being Persian Gulf oil supply. Control the Gulf and you control the world … Who Dares Wins! And all that neocolonial militaristic Western actual-fascist guff. 
Poppy Bush famously thought they ‘went too early’, and it was also clear the US would probably need tactical battlefield nukes to do the job properly, gloves off non-Queensbury rules Vernichtungskrieg style. At these points I just ask myself “What would Hitler do?” and the post-WW2 answer is invariably – pull the pin, go for broke and risk a world defining catastrophe that could end human civilisation. 
Conventional as in on-shore and near-shore lighter crudes (e.g., Texas panhandle vs deep sea, tar sands etc) or what was ‘cheap oil’ peaked in 2005. C+C (+ condensates) peaked 2008-9, and the following decade saw 90% of the meagre crude oil growth concentrated in US shale oil (exceptionally expensive and energy intensive with very poor EROEI which is why RoW didn’t follow the yanks) while OPEC+ plateaued. Since 2018 crude oil has plateaued globally and is currently ~4% down on 2018 production with ultralight NGL+biofuels the major growth factor in ‘all liquids’ production.
From this perspective, ‘peak oil’ was prefigured in the peak of many smaller national fields such as the Australian Bass Strait oil around the year 2000. The peak itself begins 2005, and extends through the various grades and production methods of crude oil through the next 1.5 decades where it finally plateaus/declines in 2018. If the current crude oil plateau is indeed the beginning of the global decline in crude oil extraction, it cannot be replaced by NGL etc. I’ve been watching this play out since 911 which is a quarter of a century. That’s a long time for a human lifespan but a blink of the eye for petroleum geology. I think given it’s been 8 years now since the 2018 peak, that crude oil has most probably peaked globally and we are now on the uneven bumpy plateau downturn which all models indicated would be exponentially steeper YoY as we go into the 2030s.
Or as Poppy Bush might have said, now’s the time to go for broke! And as the éminence grise of the neocons, Dick Perle proclaimed over 2 decades ago now:
“If we just let our vision of the world go forth, and we embrace it entirely, and we don’t try to piece together clever diplomacy but just wage a total war, our children will sing great songs about us years from now.” 

Posted by: Zeug Gezeugt | Apr 1 2026 20:41 utc | 250

Looks like some person (with AI)  did a deep dive analysis – seems like a decent read.
 

https://southfront.press/leaping-into-the-lions-den-the-deadly-risks-of-a-us-ground-invasion-of-iran/

 

Posted by: CrazyCanuck | Apr 1 2026 20:44 utc | 251

https://www.wsj.com/livecoverage/iran-war-news-trump?mod=WSJ_home_mediumtopper_pos_1
Trump is expected to tout the military operation as “meeting or exceeding all of its benchmarks,” and he will reiterate a two-to-three-week timeline for ending the war, according to a White House official. The Journal will live stream his comments.
‘Mission Accomplished’ TOFU – TACO
 

Posted by: Acco Hengst | Apr 1 2026 20:47 utc | 252

Those A-10s are going to get eaten up by Iranian air defenses. US reactionaries have a particular fondness for the A-10 because of its mythos, especially that around its design. “Wow, they built a plane around a gun!” Who gives a shit? These things saw their most successful use against the Taliban, and remind me, who won that war? 
 
There’s some analysis floating around out there that says Iranian AD has been completely destroyed. This is obviously not true because the Iranians continue to shoot down US drones. We have no clue what Iranian MANPADS stockpiles look like, and that’s what will really fuck up the A-10s during a ground invasion.

Posted by: fnord | Apr 1 2026 20:49 utc | 253

@karlof1 | Apr 1 2026 20:32 utc | 253

Maria Zakharova: Any initiatives regarding the regime of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz should be implemented on the basis of consensus among the littoral states and taking into account their interests.

I think this position should be understood also taking into account the Baltic Sea where Øresund between Denmark and Sweden is the equivalent of Hormuz. Russia is a littoral state in the Baltic Sea.

Posted by: Norwegian | Apr 1 2026 20:51 utc | 254

Oh, perhaps you guys have encountered the wonderful new censorship by algorithm across the interest.  You may get an instant message demanding that you cancel or edit a message to the point that you can’t even form intelligible sentences – that actually lack any name calling or profanity at all.  
So, maybe we end up with a “nice” society…..that somehow accepts every kind of injustice in the name of being polite.  That Declaration of Independence was so utterly rude. Can’t we tone it down?   
Solutions?  Massive use of astericks.  You’re a f******* Idio*….  Maybe spelling wrong or even backwards.  Or using the phrase, “rhymes with…..”. 

Posted by: Eighthman | Apr 1 2026 20:52 utc | 255

psychohistorian | Apr 1 2026 18:38 utc | 149
 
From what I found, final legislation on the Hormuz System awaits completion, thus the amount of payment and how that’s to be consummated remains unknown and won’t until the Majlis finally passes the legislation. 

Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 1 2026 20:52 utc | 256

Jane @ 249 re: Merv Ritchie’s earlier comment. 
 
If this is true, I think the author is onto something. 
 

 What was notably untouched in both strikes: the adjacent Haifa Port, acquired by Adani for $1.15 billion and positioned as a key node on a Europe-to-Gulf trade corridor. The facility already scheduled for demolition absorbed the damage. The recently acquired strategic asset did not.

 
Did Iran somehow miraculously spare the new property? 

Posted by: Tom_Q_Collins | Apr 1 2026 20:53 utc | 257

petergrfstrm | Apr 1 2026 20:05 utc | 237
*** @ Cynic | Apr 1 2026 19:15 utc | 183The anglosaxons have always wanted themselves to dominate finance by pitting everybody else against their own bankers. What ought that indicate for the rival countries? Should they do precisely what the anglosaxons want them to so the anglosaxon plans work out or should they try something else? ***
 
???? Anglosaxon bankers did not feature at all in post 183.
 
But since I’ve long been opposed to debt-finance / compound interest and perpetual-debt economics and finance/banking,  yes I certainly do think other countries should try something else instead.
For the USSR to have run short of money at any point — “couldn’t afford” as some people claimed — was, if true, a really ridiculous situation indicative of a flawed and basically capitalist system.
Later on, Gadaffi of Libya was murdered because he intended to offer Africa an alternative.
 
 

Posted by: Cynic | Apr 1 2026 20:58 utc | 258

Posted by: Eighthman | Apr 1 2026 20:52 utc | 261
Human creativity vs AI Censorship 
 
I bet humans can win this

Posted by: KillerDoll | Apr 1 2026 20:59 utc | 259

As an atheist, I see zero good in suffering. Whichever religious people (of any religion) think it is a “good” thing should monopolise suffering entirely for themselves. 
And I do not in the least bit mind enemies suffering — the more the better.
 
 
Posted by: Cynic | Apr 1 2026 20:33 utc | 255
You’re not a great atheist then.  Suffering is born of conflict (not merely kinetic conflict).  If there is any engine of development consumate atheists recognize it would be conflict through time.  Constructive suffering is a critical part of human, social and historical development.  

Posted by: Ahenobarbus | Apr 1 2026 21:00 utc | 260

James @ 199
Thanks for the link. I shared it with close friends – 
 
As far my crystal ball eyes let me see – There will be very peaceful speech tonight, because war can always be started again, after the festivities to commemorate the 250 years of USA. This head of state here will not want to be the one to start an invasion of Iran on the Good Friday, or on Easter Day – this would be not good for the Christians to stomach, not good for his PR, not good for US around the world… 
 
And it will be good for the Wall Street – but not so good for Israel in the long run, but good in short run, to kind of stabilize and lick the wounds. 
 
But the last word is with Iran – 
 
 
 

Posted by: fanto | Apr 1 2026 21:03 utc | 261

Did Iran somehow miraculously spare the new property? 
Posted by: Tom_Q_Collins | Apr 1 2026 20:53 utc | 263

Counter question – will the investors want to proceed with the new development if there is a risk of missiles raining down on it in the future?
Qatar’s Energy minister was complaining a few days ago about $20bn of damage to their LNG plant only recently completed at a cost of $26bn.
Not a good ROI…

Posted by: ChatNPC | Apr 1 2026 21:04 utc | 262

@Simon | Apr 1 2026 19:45 utc | 215
John Helmer and Gilbert Doctorow are both influenced by the anglosaxon opinionmakers.I dont question their honest intention but if the empire wants you to dislike Putin he is probably doing something right.
 
Posted by: petergrfstrm | Apr 1 2026 20:24 utc | 246
Beyond Putin, that’s a highly useful hueteristic.  If Zio Imperialism hates you, you’re typically doing the right thing.  

Posted by: Ahenobarbus | Apr 1 2026 21:04 utc | 263

Why Does the China-Pakistan Statement Not Serve Iran’s Interests?
 
In the ceasefire statement issued by China and Pakistan, aside from distorting the name of the Persian Gulf, they have paid no attention to Iran’s interests, the necessity of identifying the aggressor, the importance of paying compensation by that aggressor, or addressing the root causes of the aforementioned war.
 
There is no trace in this statement of condemning the crimes of the United States and Israel against the Iranian people or the assassination of senior Iranian officials. Instead, it merely resorts to vague generalities. While Iran only targets non‑civilian objectives, the statement is worded in such a way as to suggest that Iran—like the proxy militias, the US, and Israel—commits crimes against civilians.
 
Due to pressure from the Arab and Israeli lobbies, China and Pakistan have centered their statement solely on Arab perspectives. Driven by narrow economic interests, they have sought to deprive Iran of its leverage—particularly its management of the Strait of Hormuz. This is certainly unacceptable for Iran, because it would mean a return to the old order, the trampling of Iran’s rights, and renewed aggression and mischief by the southern Persian Gulf sheikhdoms, the United States, and Israel—aimed at undermining Iran’s independence, stability, and territorial integrity.
 
By issuing this statement—which was most likely prepared without Tehran’s knowledge or consultation—China and Pakistan have shown that they are not reliable partners for Tehran and that they lack any understanding of the new realities of the international system.
 
It appears that China is unable to grasp the fact that Iran has been dragged into this war as a result of US efforts to block Beijing’s access to Middle Eastern energy resources. Such Chinese stances ultimately harm Beijing itself. On one hand, they erode Tehran’s trust in China; on the other, they encourage the United States to intensify pressure on Iran in order to weaken China. In effect, by issuing this statement, Trump has gained confidence in China’s inaction and its misreading of such critical developments, allowing him to maneuver more precisely against Iran—and perhaps even emboldening him to move forward with a ground invasion of Iran.
 
The Chinese still struggle to grasp even the basic realities of the international system and its evolving dynamics. As for the Pakistani government, its stance is clear: it is effectively obstructing Iran, aligning with the United States, and through its repeated strikes on Afghanistan, creating conditions conducive to anti‑Iran activities there.
 
In any case, Iran must make it clear that this statement does not serve its interests and is unacceptable from the perspective of the Islamic Republic.
 
Dr. Ehsan Movahedian

Posted by: Framarz | Apr 1 2026 21:06 utc | 264

One thing people haven’t considered US/NATO military personal under the guise > taking civilian flights to reach UAE, Qatar, SA.  Alot of military planes are already using civlian airports for logistics.  They aren’t running away, but building up slowly, behind the genocidal schedule.
 
International law forbids hitting them, unless they have a dual-military purpose.  Most civilian airports share with the military.  Many examples abound in the US.

Posted by: CrazyCanuck | Apr 1 2026 21:06 utc | 265

Posted by: ChatNPC | Apr 1 2026 18:43 utc | 152
 
I remind you again that there is no factual basis for the claim that Iran requires oil on tankers to be paid for in yuan in order to be allowed to transit the Strait of Hormuz.
 
This is merely speculation by commentators, some of them well-known.
 
I also reiterate that there is no way for Iran to impose this condition on the three parties involved: the buyer, the seller, and China.
 
Finally, I remind you that the claim that China is seeking to promote a “petroyuan” is fanciful and false.
There is just no reason for that.

Posted by: Sebgo | Apr 1 2026 21:06 utc | 266

 Norwegian | Apr 1 2026 20:51 utc | 260
 
Yes, I agree with your take. What also must be considered is the utter demolition of International Law, which includes the Law of the Seas. From Iran’s POV, all nations that are now illegitimate to use Lavrov’s term for those no longer obeying International Law must meet Iran’s approval to pass through Hormuz, which might also include a toll payment similar to other controlled waterways. IMO, once the Outlaw US Empire and its Zionist proxy are removed from the region, West Asian nations need to arrange a grand security agreement that covers Hormuz transit amongst many other issues. And when that happens, Iran’s Majlis can void the legislation it’s now considering. Currently, there’s no arguing with the situation and those ships from enemy–illegitimate–nations are stuck. IMO, the Grand Idiot Trump telling MbS to kiss his ass was a galactic faux pas.   

Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 1 2026 21:07 utc | 267

Sabby Sabs gets better and better.
 
https://youtu.be/QMd1jBhbIdI 
 
If non-Americans want a glimpse of how Americans think about the the Iran war, she has you covered.  She also goes through some of the atrocities that the US has committed against Iran over the years.  A truly awesome presentation.

Posted by: Woke American | Apr 1 2026 21:09 utc | 268

These sounds a bit loco.

BREAKING; TRUMP Orders High-Risk Commando Plan to Seize Iran’s Isfahan Nuclear Stockpile Deep Inside Enemy Territory
The U.S. military has drawn up a plan to seize nearly 1,000 pounds of highly enriched uranium in Iran after President Trump requested such a proposal, according to WaPo.
🔺 The proposal, recently briefed to Trump, would involve deploying excavation equipment and building a runway in Iran for cargo planes to fly the radioactive material out.
➡️ The plan carries significant operational risks as a highly sensitive special operations mission.

 
https://x.com/Globalsurv/status/2039428232890450375

Posted by: unimperator | Apr 1 2026 21:09 utc | 269

Posted by: Cable Guy | Apr 1 2026 16:25 utc | 46

1- American citizens deserve to be held responsible for the crime their nation has committed
2- American citizens need to reduce their consumption to save the biosphere
3- Reducing consumption may cause psychic trauma for Americans (deserved), but less consumption will also improve health and quality of environment, i.e., less obesity, cleaner air. 

Posted by: Keme | Apr 1 2026 21:10 utc | 270

Please, can we stop saying and repeating nonsense?
 
No, there is no petroyuan, and there will be no petroyuan.
This obsession with reducing everything and everyone to the USA, its history, and its economic and military practices is becoming tiresome.
 
The petrodollar is a two-part system. The first part is the sale of Middle Eastern oil in dollars, and the second is the recycling of those dollars into US Treasury bonds.
 
This is the system that the desperate US found to save its country from bankruptcy after abandoning the gold standard and the subsequent fall of the dollar.
 
This revived the demand for dollars, supporting its value, and allowed for almost unlimited borrowing.
 
China is not desperate, and it is not chasing after debt. It also does not have a problem with disaffection for its currency.
 
It is the factory of the world which is also becoming the bank of the world.
 
China have no need for petroyuan, because it can buy oil in dollar or in yuan, and it doesn’t need anyone to buy its bonds to avoid bankruptcy.

Posted by: Sebgo | Apr 1 2026 21:11 utc | 271

The goal of war has become neutralizing the consequences of war. The most foolish war in history.

 
https://t.me/kriyaassess/63478

Posted by: Framarz | Apr 1 2026 21:12 utc | 272

@unimperator | Apr 1 2026 21:09 utc | 275
 
I think Mahood OD – had a story on this > How many commando’s does it take to lift and run off with 1,000 pounds of weight, while holding guns during a conflict? 
 
Not to mention the type of protective suits they would need for the operation.  Defies LOGIC ! 
 

Posted by: CrazyCanuck | Apr 1 2026 21:13 utc | 273

Neocons and Zionists always double down. We’re fucked. 

Posted by: Marcos E | Apr 1 2026 21:14 utc | 274

@karlof1 | Apr 1 2026 21:07 utc | 273
 
Agreed with everything you said. There are many aspects to the current situation. 

IMO, once the Outlaw US Empire and its Zionist proxy are removed from the region, West Asian nations need to arrange a grand security agreement that covers Hormuz transit amongst many other issues.

Indeed, this is very important. 
 

Posted by: Norwegian | Apr 1 2026 21:15 utc | 275

@unimperator | Apr 1 2026 21:09 utc | 275
 
If true that is utter madness and will end in disaster.

Posted by: Norwegian | Apr 1 2026 21:16 utc | 276

Posted by: Sebgo | Apr 1 2026 21:06 utc | 272
I’m not going to disagree, I’m just going by what has been reported.
And yes, as I said above, China gets a vote.
The Iranians do have an enforcement mechanism involving explosives.
Some tankers are passing, but not all.
The toll law has only been formulated for now, and needs approval from the Majlis.
Of those tankers that have passed, somebody, somewhere knows how it was paid for, time will tell as to what the reality is.

Posted by: ChatNPC | Apr 1 2026 21:24 utc | 277

Posted by: Dave | Apr 1 2026 20:32 utc | 254 “President of Iran Masoud Pezeshkian open letter to American people.”
Alas, the President of Iran has almost no power over the foreign policy of Iran and none over military policy of Iran.
On the other hand, the idiot running the US….
 
 

Posted by: ed4 | Apr 1 2026 21:25 utc | 278

Sebgo | Apr 1 2026 21:11 utc | 277
 
For the moment, you’re factually correct since the Majlis has yet to finalize its Hormuz control legislation. Yes, China has no use for a Petroyuan in the same manner as the Outlaw US Empire required the Petrodollar, but the use of its currency for hydrocarbon and other commercial purchases will heavily damage the Petrodollar system and weaken the Dollarized international financial system to the point where the Bretton Woods imposition on the world will finally implode. Iran has its eyes on the bullseye of the Empire’s strongest yet simultaneously weakest spot–its reliance on the international financial system that includes the Petrodollar for the maintenance of its global empire and ability to not be harmed by the massive debt it’s amassed. Thus, the economic weapons in this war are more powerful than the missile and bombs being employed.  

Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 1 2026 21:26 utc | 279

Posted by: Sebgo | Apr 1 2026 21:11 utc | 277
 
Thank you.
 
 
As to Trump and his speaches:
 
Pausenclown.

Posted by: umuntu | Apr 1 2026 21:27 utc | 280

The proposal, recently briefed to Trump, would involve deploying excavation equipment and building a runway in Iran for cargo planes to fly the radioactive material out. The plan carries significant operational risks as a highly sensitive special operations mission.

Posted by: unimperator | Apr 1 2026 21:09 utc | 275

I think it technically stops being a commando raid when you have to somehow get excavation equipment on site and build a bloody runway.

Posted by: Chunk | Apr 1 2026 21:27 utc | 281

speeches, sorry .

Posted by: umuntu | Apr 1 2026 21:27 utc | 282

Posted by: CrazyCanuck | Apr 1 2026 21:13 utc | 279
maybe the wrong question. “Top Gun: Maverick” an issue, or “Capricorn One” it, how will any of us in the streets really know the difference?
 
over time yes, but they may be able to pull stunts, esp about “commando raids on WMD facilities”, out of their green-screen filled bums, esp for us folks back home waiting for China to “Red Dawn” us, from Mexico. unless prices skyrocket, speaking for the US…
 
I have no clue how much garbage the US populace can swallow about what’s happening on the other side of the world. no j/k, a new Narcan center just opened a block away. all the cops, making me feel safer.

Posted by: duck n cover | Apr 1 2026 21:28 utc | 283

our children will sing great songs about us years from now.” 

Posted by: Zeug Gezeugt | Apr 1 2026 20:41 utc | 256
 
He meant the Children of Israel.

Posted by: Numbnuts | Apr 1 2026 21:29 utc | 284

Posted by: Norwegian | Apr 1 2026 21:16 utc | 282
 
I have a wonderful, almost new bridge that currently connects Wakanda to Puntland, but it can be easily dismantled.
 
I can sell it to you at an unbeatable price.

Posted by: Sebgo | Apr 1 2026 21:29 utc | 285

Video of burning B-2

America’s $2 billion Swaha.
The B-2 is considered to be the most expensive military aircraft in the world.
Has Iran targeted the American B-2 stealth aircraft this time?

https://x.com/Kathleen_Tyson_/status/2039419690313723988

Posted by: Norwegian | Apr 1 2026 21:29 utc | 286

Posted by: Norwegian | Apr 1 2026 21:16 utc | 282
 
I have a wonderful, almost new bridge that currently connects Wakanda to Puntland, but it can be easily dismantled.
 
I can sell it to you at an unbeatable price.

Posted by: Sebgo | Apr 1 2026 21:29 utc | 287

Sorry for the double posting.

Posted by: Sebgo | Apr 1 2026 21:30 utc | 288

More of this “grand plan” the-west-is-winning oligarch-elite plan executed to perfection stuff here:
 
https://substack.com/@morganc000/note/c-236755469
 

💎 This is a sanitized narrative tailored for people still locked into G7 vs BRICS binaries.
 
Israel isn’t being vassalized. It’s being vaulted.
 
🌴 What’s unfolding is the construction of the global elite’s capital—a high-security, high-tech paradise built through selective demolition and coordinated chaos.
 
📍 Tel Aviv, Haifa, Beit Shemesh, and Ramat Gan are being cleared in exact alignment with redevelopment blueprints
 
🎯 The sites being hit match pre-approved demolition zones marked years ago for smart city infrastructure, private residential towers, surveillance hubs, and fintech corridors
 
🧭 The entire spectacle serves as a controlled reset—camouflaged as victimization, executed as real estate logistics
 
🏛️ The “Axis of Resistance” is being decommissioned because its marketing utility expired.
 
🪷 The proxies—Hamas, Hezbollah, the Houthis—were always intel assets. Controlled boogeymen.
 
🌀 Now, they’re being dissolved to make way for biometric humanitarianism, private security regimes, and unified trade lanes.
 
This is what replaces “resistance.” Not liberation.
 
📍 Iran’s being transitioned—safely, quietly—into a BRICS-compatible node that supports global trade, suppresses internal revolt, and lets Israel build out its “Silicon Crescent”
 
🌅 Israel isn’t denuclearizing. That was never the threat.
 
💠 Israel is being upgraded—fully automated border enforcement, Red Sea corridor control, export-driven precision agriculture, military-tech monopolies, and a population filter system
 
✨ This is Zionism 3.0—where the military-industrial complex merges with “post-crisis aid architecture,” and Tel Aviv becomes the Singapore of Eurasia
 
You’re being sold a quiet apocalypse: not WW3, but a paradise for billionaires rising from the ashes of orchestrated chaos
 
If you still think Israel is being weakened, you haven’t looked at the redevelopment plans, the tech stacks, or the capital influx.
 
They’re definitely not losing.
 
They’re laughing.
 
🏝️ This is the homeland vision fully materialized—not as a spiritual refuge, but as a paradise for billionaires.
 
Everything being denied elsewhere—clean water, security, open space, advanced healthcare, debt-free education, pristine architecture, uninterrupted energy—is being concentrated here.
 
💎 This is the endgame all the foreign aid was always aimed at: a walled oasis for the chosen, built on rubble and paid for by collapse everywhere else.
 
There is no weakness in this model.
 
There is centralization.
 
There is control.
 
And there is a fortress being assembled—quietly, beautifully, and with total intent.

 
Thoughts? 

Posted by: Tom_Q_Collins | Apr 1 2026 21:32 utc | 289

Cynic255
 

A view held in general, or specific to Roman Catholics? As an atheist, I see zero good in suffering.  Whichever religious people (of any religion) think it is a “good” thing should monopolise suffering entirely for themselves. And I do not in the least bit mind enemies suffering — the more the better.

 
As they say, “you have to live it to know it” so suffering is good, makes you compassionate, in a grounded way, unless it makes you bitter in which case best if you stayed unwise to the human condition, in which case you’d be indifferent which might be the worse sin of all. Hope that solves it!
 
I grew up Roman Catholic and now the heart of Catholicism, seems to me everyone just makes it up as the go along, pious or fallen, in the west Catholics just incorporated their religion into the all encompassing post war USA zeitgeist, Santa Claus, Bing Crosby, mass materialism and all. I’m an atheist and hate doctrinaire anything, hate centralized anything, not fond of institutions or authority, so maybe it’s progress, but “do your own thing” seems like hell of a way to run a religion. 
 
And, I don’t agree with your final quoted statement at all, that’s the zionist, USA hegemonic Satanic thinking all around us right now. I can’t give you direction but you have some work to do.
 

Posted by: LightYearsFromHome | Apr 1 2026 21:32 utc | 290

Posted by: Norwegian | Apr 1 2026 21:29 utc | 292
If true, wow.

Posted by: ChatNPC | Apr 1 2026 21:32 utc | 291

Posted by: Chunk | Apr 1 2026 21:27 utc | 287
Excavation equipment?
Some pantygram planners think this 1991.
____
What am I missing?if an old fart on a sofa can see the problem with drones in 2026… ?why are we being fed this milop-slop???

Posted by: Melaleuca | Apr 1 2026 21:32 utc | 292

I cant see the future. However, the last time the US military tested their theory in a war game was the Millennium Challenge 2002
 
The key objectives were:
Test new military strategies and technologies.
Validate the Pentagon’s operational concepts.
Explore critical war-fighting challenges anticipated after 2010.
Structure of the Exercise
Participants: Involved over 13,000 troops.
Scenario: Set in 2007, featuring a fictional regional power referred to as “Red,” often interpreted as Iran.
Combatants: The U.S. forces were designated as “Blue,” while “Red” represented the opposing forces.
 
General Van Riper aka the leader of OPFOR that stimulated the Iranian military destroyed the US Military despite the Wargame was scripted for the US Victory. Many claims of cheating and gaming the system such as lighting speed motorcycle mail carriers and used Meta infor of where the troops will land, putting cruise missiles on tiny speedboats but that’s every wargame 😀 Commisioned Officiers are Always salty about losing anyway.
 
General Kernan aka the referee that ran the wargame and General Riper both claimed in their reports that they didn’t cheat and they didn’t have before hand knowledge of where US troops will land. Rather thr Blue force failed to set up the battlefield and failed to achieve informational superiority that led to a botched naval invasion. Later on, the navy had to rerun it in favor of the Blue Force so that they could win. 
 
The speed of light motorcycle carriers weren’t in the report btw it was alternative messages such as Color Flags, Smoke signals, etc to communicate between OPFOR despite the jamming and broken electronic communications. 
 
The cruise missile and suicide explosive boats were fabricated too as they were none in the reports. Rather, they were equiped with RPG 7 and Heavy machine guns despite the nerf that they couldn’t mine nor area denial the navy in the Persian Gulf. 
 
The AEGIS defense were off sometimes due to a glitch in the system and General Van riper didn’t turn it off. Similar to how the current war went on for 31 days that the preemptive strike Overwhelmed OPFOR Air Defense. Iran and OPFOR both successfully game the Navy Radar system and striked the naval ships. In Gen. Van Riper he had knowledge of US Radar while the Iranian Military is debatable. 
 
In the Millennium Challenge 2002 Victory was rewarded to Iran. While the wargame was controversial but the key information was as long as the Iran doesn’t play by the rules aka Asymmetrical warfare; Iran has a chance of victory.
 
It seems like the US Military had failed to adapt to the changing nature of warfare such as Drones, Decentralized Network of Information and C2, and US inability to set up political and military objectives. Thus, Victory will be in the Iranian favor as they’re fighting for their existence using every means possible and their objective to win is easy, survive.

Posted by: KillerDoll | Apr 1 2026 21:33 utc | 293

@Sebgo | Apr 1 2026 21:29 utc | 293
 
Thank you for the offer. I have sufficient stock of bridges to burn.
 
Yeah, I don’t think it is going to happen, therefore “If true”.

Posted by: Norwegian | Apr 1 2026 21:33 utc | 294

The war is going so bad that the deep state is now staging an alien invasion.
 
https://x.com/ShadowofEzra/status/2039131652744507653

Posted by: unimperator | Apr 1 2026 21:34 utc | 295

@Cynic | Apr 1 2026 20:58 utc | 264
I know anglosaxon bankers werent mentioned but the point I was making was that the anglosaxons having coopted the Jews to be their bankers despite there being nothing to force them to make such a choice. But they wanted it because they knew the Landless Jews would be much easier to control. And it didnt stop with them being controllable. Next move was to make Britains rivals hate them. And that wasnt subtle since they managed to cover it up with great patience. That coverup fooled Germans Jews and Russians against each other and it caused two world wars and a banking system that only benefitted the anglosaxon imperialists. That is the background I depart from when I see Putin critisised for appearing to not be as tough against the Jews as the commenters think would be appropriate.
I am not sure how the Russians think but if it annoys the anglosaxon dominated west it may be a good sign.
 

Posted by: petergrfstrm | Apr 1 2026 21:35 utc | 296

Posted by: unimperator | Apr 1 2026 21:09 utc | 275

Its still “Aprils Fool” Day…🙄😜

Posted by: Nobody | Apr 1 2026 21:35 utc | 297

If I were IRAN – I wouldn’t even announce anything!  just keep hitting them where it hurts.  Israel is number 1. 
 

⚠️🚀🖤🇮🇷🔴 The Iranian IRGC announced it struck the very heart and center of the occupied Palestinian territories with a powerful salvo of heavy, precision-guided Qiyam, Imad, and Qadr missiles.📍According to them, ongoing operations have created a “curtain of fire” stretching from Ramat Gan to Holon, Palmachim, and Bnei Brak.📍The IRGC stated that arsenals never before used will soon be deployed. This includes heavy ballistic missiles and hypersonic weapons.

Posted by: CrazyCanuck | Apr 1 2026 21:38 utc | 298

Posted by: Chunk | Apr 1 2026 21:27 utc | 287

OpSpecs leaked!!

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=8Z8SnXQ8-MA&pp=ygUVSW5kaWFuYSBKb25lcyBBcmsgZGln

Please check your Clearance before watching….

Posted by: Nobody | Apr 1 2026 21:39 utc | 299

Starmer says
said the UK will host an international diplomatic conference this week on ways to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.  
 
Similar to the “coalition of the willing” re Ukraine total fantasy?
 
Will the rump NATO still have to buy USA weaponry at inflated costs, waiting forever for deliveries that might be stolen to suit USA other needs? Note Poland refused to hand over  Patriot and USA has already said it was diverting stuff already paid for under PURL by countries , for its own needs.

Posted by: Jo | Apr 1 2026 21:39 utc | 300