Category Archives: Middle East

Armageddonists in the State Department and the Pentagon. “War of Religion”. President Trump Unleashes Threats against Iran. Endangers the Entire Planet?

Armored warriors in battle halted by a glowing cross of light at center

See the historic interview of Felicity Arbuthnot with Nobel Laureate Dr. Bernard Lown concerning the Armageddonists in the U.S. State Department. Are they still there? Or are they in the Pentagon?

Would the US Administration really endanger the Entire planet?

Cardiologist, Nobel laureate Bernard Lown dies at 99 ...

Here is a story told to me by Dr. Bernard Lown, one of co-founders of International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW) during the Reagan era….

I met Bernard Lown in Paris. We sat in dappled Spring sun, at a pavement breakfast café – fresh squeezed orange, coffee, croissants:

“I came back two days ago and went to talk (at the State Department) of the concerns in Moscow. Afterwards, a senior official – a household name (he declined to divulge) walked me to the exit. As we neared the exit, he put his arm round my shoulders:

‘Don’t worry, Professor Lown, if there is a nuclear war, we will be the first ones to rise up and meet Jesus in the sky.’” Lown, used to the vagaries of the unwell, responded:
 “Tell me, does anyone else in this building feel as you do?”

 Oh yes, many of us do.”   (emphasis added)

The swathe of “household names”, from the Reagan era, are now in the Bush Administration and the American Enterprise Institute. [And in the Trump Adminstration which has renamed its Defense Department]

The world should be very afraid – or should the physicians in white coats move in?

Should the above statement by Bernard Lown be taken seriously?

Felicity Arbuthnot,  October 2007

The Armageddonists are Back? Pete Hegseth at the Pentagon, Trump at the White House

Felicity Arthbuthnot interview with Dr. Bernard Loan in 2007 suggests that’s the Armageddon narrative was already a talking point behind closed doors at the US State Department during the GWB adminstration. .

“The former Fox News host has said that the U.S. was “founded as a Christian nation” and that it “remains a Christian nation in our DNA, if we keep it.” The Washington Post 

“One faith leader invited to preach to servicemembers has said women shouldn’t be allowed to vote.

“On Wednesday, while speaking at a Pentagon Prayer Service, from which Catholics were excluded, Hegseth called for “overwhelming violence of action against those who deserve no mercy,” asking that “wicked souls” be “delivered to the eternal damnation” in the fight against Iran, a Muslim-majority nation.  Some senior military commanders seem to have followed his lead.

The Military Religious Freedom Foundation, a watchdog organization, said it had received more than 200 complaints from service members that military commanders had told troops it was all part of God’s plan that they be deployed to Iran.

Trump Unleashes Threats against Iran. Press Conference. April 6, 2026

Hegseth Says It ‘Takes Money to Kill the Bad Guys’:  A Modest $200 Billion

“Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth plans to request that Congress approve $200 billion to fund the war against Iran, on top of the Pentagon’s roughly $1 trillion budget for the current fiscal year”

Hegseth’s “Holy War” against Iran.  “Secular Warfare” is Out, “War of Religion” Is In 

According to  War Secretary Pete Hegseth,  the U.S.-Israel war with Iran is a Holy War. “A costly war of religion, namely a $200 Billion push in “defense Is it an attempt to trigger a War of Religion, requiring numerous dismissals of commanding officers.”

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Hegseth held a Christian worship service at the Pentagon, where he prayed for “overwhelming violence of action” against Iran and for “every round to find its mark”.

 .

During Easter:Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth “held a Protestant-only Good Friday service at its in-house chapel, with no Catholic Mass scheduled for one of Christianity’s holiest days.In recent developments”

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Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth faces mounting religious and legal scrutiny after praying publicly for ‘overwhelming violence’ in God’s name, prompting Pope Leo XIV to respond with a Palm Sunday address declaring that Jesus ‘rejects war’ and that God refuses the prayers of those who wage it.

Hegseth Fires Army Chief of Staff Randy George

There is chaos within the ranks of the US military including command structures.

Hegseth is ignorant regarding the complex modalities of  modern warfare. He is firing generals and commanding officers at the height of a  war with Iran.

The firing of senior military personnel has created divisions within the structures of military command, i.e. a refusal within the senior ranks of the Armed Forces to undertake an all out war with Iran, which would inevitably lead to countless deaths of American service men and women.

The level of incompetence under the leadership of Hegseth is beyond description.

On April 3, Pete Hegseth dismissed Army Chief of Staff General Randy George, along with two other high-ranking generals, Lieutenant General Sarah Clarkson and Major General Phillip Chambers.

On the same day, General David Hodne, who was set to head the Army Training and Transformation Command in 2025, and Major General William Green Jr., head of the Army Moral Support Command, were also dismissed.

The Atlantic magazine, citing sources close to the White House, reports that Army Secretary Daniel Driscoll may also be dismissed.

Some claims suggest the reason for these dismissals is the commanders’ refusal to follow orders!

Hegseth had previously dismissed more than a dozen high-ranking officers, including Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General CQ Brown, Navy Commander Admiral Lisa Franchetti, Air Force Vice Chairman General James Slife, and Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency Lieutenant General Jeffrey Kruse. 

By Prof Michel Chossudovsky and Felicity Arbuthnot from Global Research. Reposted with permission.

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Ezekiel 22 quoted by IRGC “Burdensome stone”

Ancient hill city storm glowing stone

The latest from Leeland Jones. Transcription done by Jennifer Heath from https://overcominglymedisease.com.

Leeland Jones website: https://leelandjones.com/

Leeland Jones IV video posted on April 6, 2026 transcribed with photos:

{video starts off with an IRGC spokesman speaking}

“Listen carefully to what is in your Torah – Ezekiel,

‘And you son of man will you judge,

will you judge the bloody city?

Then declare to her all her abominations.

And say: Thus says the Lord God – O city that sheds blood in her midst that her time may come,

and that makes idols to defile herself –

you have become guilty by the blood you have shed,

and defiled by the idols you have made.

You have caused your days to draw near and have come to the end of your years.

Therefore I have made you a reproach to the nations and a mockery to all the countries.’

{Leeland speaking}

That’s the spokesman for the IRGC.  And what I believe is this is an Ai generated video, because he’s speaking in Hebrew, but he should speak Farsi.

{I have a message for the illegal occupiers of Palestine.  Listen carefully to what is in your Torah – Ezekiel.}

What he is saying is, I have a message to the Israelis, from the Bible, from the book of Ezekiel.

So this is what he said, “Listen carefully to what is in your Torah – Ezekiel.

‘And you son of man will judge, will you judge the blood city?’ Then declare to her all her abominations. “And thus says the Adonai Elohym, ‘O city that shed blood in her midst, that her time may come and that makes idols to defile herself

– you have become guilty in the blood you have shed and defiled by the idols you have made.  You have caused your days to drawn near and have come to an end to your years.  Therefore, I have made you a reproach to the nations, and a mockery to all the countries.’”

{video of IRGC spokesman speaking}

“Listen carefully to what is in your Torah – Ezekiel.

‘And you son of man will you judge,

will you judge the bloody city?

Then declare to her all her abominations.

And say: Thus says the Lord God – O city that sheds blood in her midst that her time may come,

and that makes idols to defile herself –

you have become guilty by the blood you have shed,

and defiled by the idols you have made.

You have caused your days to draw near and have come to the end of your years.

Therefore I have made you a reproach to the nations and a mockery to all the countries.’

{Leeland Jones speaking}

This is a direct quote of the book of Ezekiel chapter 22.

Ezekiel 22:1-3 Moreover the word of the LORD came unto me, saying, Now, thou son of man, wilt thou judge, wilt thou judge the bloody city?  yea, thou shalt shew her all her abominations.  Then say thou, Thus said the Lord GOD, The city sheddeth blood in the midst of it, that her time may come, and maketh idols.

Ezekiel 22:4 Thou art become guilty in thy blood that thou has shed; and hast defiled thyself in thine idols which thou hast made; and thou hast caused they days to draw near and art come even unto thy years: therefore have I mad thee a reproach unto the heathen, and a mockery to all the countries.

So this prophecy in Ezekiel 22 is a prophecy of the “Burdensome stone” in Zechariah chapter 12.

Zechariah 12:2 (ABP) Behold, I appoint Jerusalem as thresholds for {or burdensome} shaking off all the peoples round about, and in Judea there will be encompassing about against Jerusalem.  3 And it will be in that day I will appoint Jerusalem as a stone being trampled on by all the nations.  Every one trampling her with mocking shall mock, and all the nations of the earth shall be assembled against her.

That’s Zechariah chapter 12.

{video of IRGC spokesman speaking}

“Listen carefully to what is in your Torah – Ezekiel.

‘And you son of man will you judge,

will you judge the bloody city?

Then declare to her all her abominations.

And say: Thus says the Lord God – O city that sheds blood in her midst that her time may come,

and that makes idols to defile herself –

you have become guilty by the blood you have shed,

and defiled by the idols you have made.

You have caused your days to draw near and have come to the end of your years.

Therefore I have made you a reproach to the nations and a mockery to all the countries.’”

C04-5-23 The Burden of Arabia: https://overcominglymedisease.com/the-burden-of-arabia/

C04-5-24 4th king of Persia – Prophecy of Elam: https://overcominglymedisease.com/the-4th-king-of-persia-prophecy-of/

Ezekiel 22 quoted by IRGC “Burdensome stone”: https://overcominglymedisease.com/ezekiel-22-quoted-by-irgc-burdensome-stone/

The US Army Is “Uneasy” with the Trump Regime

Multiple lightning bolts striking in a dark sky over the Pentagon and Potomac River.

By Huseyin Vodinali at Global Research. Reposted with permission.

There is a serious crisis in the US.

The military, or Pentagon as it is more commonly known, has long been uneasy about Trump’s adventurous and reckless policies.

However, the war launched against Iran, and especially the possible ground operation, is causing considerable anxiety among American officers.

Mutiny on Board

The first signs of unrest were seen on the US aircraft carrier USS Gerald Ford.

Trump and his eccentric Secretary of War, Pete Hegseth, who sent the aircraft carrier from Venezuela to the waters off Iran, encountered a typical mutiny on board.

First, the ship’s sewage system was damaged by undershirts and socks thrown into the toilets, and then a fire broke out in the laundry room.

The ship is currently undergoing repairs in Crete.

Even before that, following the brutal shelling of so-called drug boats during the blockade of Venezuela, Admiral Alvin Holsey, head of US military forces in Latin America, resigned.

But the real crisis is unfolding now. US President Trump suffered a terrible defeat when he attacked Iran, following Israel’s lead.

Iran attacked all of the US’s allies in the region, primarily Israel, and rendered US bases unusable.

Hegseth and Armageddon

The erratic actions and statements of Pete Hegseth, the alcoholic and Templar who served as a henchman for the megalomaniac Trump, caused significant problems within the military.

Hegseth, who bears a tattoo of the Templars, the most infamous order of the Crusades, sparked outrage with his racist- and Zionist-distorted religious beliefs.

In an interview on CBS News’ “60 Minutes” program in early March, Hegseth claimed that the US military was fighting fanatics who wanted to create a religious “Armageddon.”

The Military Religious Freedom Foundation (MRFF), an organization working to protect religious freedoms in the US military, announced that they had received numerous complaints from the military.

Michael L. Weinstein, the foundation’s founder and former U.S. Air Force member, said they received more than 200 complaints from within the military.

The complaining soldiers stated that their commanders were spreading propaganda claiming that a war against Iran would “start Armageddon and that Trump would hasten the return of Jesus Christ.”

The Forced Resignation of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

Tensions are rising within the U.S. military leadership, particularly following the dismissal of General Randy George, the Chairman of the Army Joint Chiefs of Staff.

Earthquake in the U.S. military! Allegations of generals being dismissed, promotion crisis at the Pentagon.

According to the New York Times, the reaction among senior officers has intensified significantly following the resignation. Many reacted to the dismissal with anger and disappointment, describing it as another blow to an institution already under considerable pressure.

On April 3, Pete Hegseth dismissed Army Chief of Staff General Randy George, along with two other high-ranking generals, Lieutenant General Sarah Clarkson and Major General Phillip Chambers.

On the same day, General David Hodne, who was set to head the Army Training and Transformation Command in 2025, and Major General William Green Jr., head of the Army Moral Support Command, were also dismissed.

The Atlantic magazine, citing sources close to the White House, reports that Army Secretary Daniel Driscoll may also be dismissed.

Some claims suggest the reason for these dismissals is the commanders’ refusal to follow orders!

Hegseth had previously dismissed more than a dozen high-ranking officers, including Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General CQ Brown, Navy Commander Admiral Lisa Franchetti, Air Force Vice Chairman General James Slife, and Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency Lieutenant General Jeffrey Kruse.

Of course, the Israeli and Zionist-controlled American mainstream media attributes the crisis mostly to personnel changes and broader restructuring plans within the Pentagon.

For example, the Washington Post, owned by Jeff Bezos, talks about a large-scale command system overhaul involving the downgrading of regional commands and a reduction in the number of high-ranking generals.

The Real Cause of the Crisis is Iran

However, the real crisis originates from Iran. According to some sources, since February 28th, the US military and its contractors have suffered a total of 13,000 casualties, including dead and wounded.

The commanders knew that Iran was a tough opponent, and Trump didn’t listen to them.

The US military suffered a major loss of prestige, its bases in the Gulf were destroyed, it failed to protect the Arab Sheikhs, and most importantly, it failed to prevent the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

Aircraft carriers were withdrawn to distant locations, fearing Iranian missiles. They lost numerous fighter jets, most notably the prestigious F-35s and AWACS Sentry, not to mention the drones.

The Tomahawk inventory was quickly and significantly depleted. Most importantly, the Trump regime, under Israel’s command, intends to launch a ground operation.

This would mean a terrible loss of troops.

Furthermore, the problem isn’t just a ground operation that would turn into a major fiasco. It’s the fact that Trump and his Armageddon-minded team are even considering dropping an atomic bomb on Iran.

IranThe 460 kilograms of uranium, a potential nuclear bomb candidate, in the hands of the US, and Iran’s super missile capability, are at a level that could provide a countermeasure.

Will There be a Coup?

Discontent within the US military has even led to rumors of a coup in the country. Trump’s irrational and dictatorial rhetoric, and his radical decisions that are accelerating the decline of the US, have already caused widespread outrage in the country.

Trump, whose name appears in the Epstein documents as a child rapist and even murderer, is accused of using these documents to blackmail Israel into attacking Iran.

Essentially, there are numerous reasons/crimes that warrant Trump’s removal from office, ranging from corruption and perversion to fascism, madness, ignorance, and lying.

Now, his meddling with the military and his attempts to use the Pentagon for his own political purposes are angering the establishment.

A madman like Trump might have been useful to them during these crazy times, but he crossed the line a long time ago.

The closure of the Strait of Hormuz and Iran’s “unexpected” successful resistance in West Asia disrupted the global system.

Americans, disturbed by fascist formations like the ICE militia, complain that a Trump coup is underway in the US.

Some argue that the Trump regime has been hijacked by radical Zionists working in the interests of Israel.

Others say this is a process that began with the assassination of President Kennedy (who was opposed to Israel) in 1963.

There has never been a military coup in the US. Only a fascist coup attempt in 1933 was thwarted.

The US Army, being loyal to the establishment, has never staged a coup. Until now!

In the US, problems are usually solved through covert operations and assassinations.

However, the current situation is very different from the past. We are talking about a collapsing empire, a sinking ship. Trump has made this collapse hypersonic.

There hasn’t been a coup in the US, but there has been a civil war.

Today, the country is more divided than ever before. In other words, the political turmoil in the US could easily trigger developments leading to a military coup. Especially if an army led by lunatics like Hegseth is brought to the brink of a hopeless world war.

Trump, who refuses to leave office through democratic and legal means, could be removed by a military intervention/coup that derives its power from the constitution.

Let’s revise an old joke: “Why have there never been a coup in US history?

Because there was no US embassy there. But now there’s the madness of ‘King’ Trump!” Remember what former US Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley, who had tensions with Trump in his first term, said?

“We do not swear allegiance to a country (Israel), a tribe, or a religion. We do not swear allegiance to a king, a tyrant, or a dictator. We do not swear allegiance to a wannabe dictator (Trump). We swear allegiance to the Constitution and to America, and we are prepared to die to protect it.”

Hüseyin Vodinalı completed master’s degree (MA) in journalism and TV production at the New York Institute of Technology in the USA between 1992-94. During the same period, worked as the New York and United Nations correspondent of Anadolu Agency and TRT. He worked as a diplomacy and defense correspondent on Turkish national TV channels since 1995. Served as the  Chief of Foreign News at TRT, the Turkish State/Public Television. Retired from TRT in 2020. He still regularly publishes geopolitical articles on Veryansıntv.com and Dağarcık Turkiye, news and commentary sites. Author of three boks in Turkish: “Covid 19 – Beyond a Virus”, “NATO as a Mandate Organization” and “Epstein Scandal – Mossad’s Global Blackmail”.

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US Could Soon Run Out of Tomahawk Missiles Amid War with Iran

Soldiers in desert; text: ミサイル不足, MISSILE SHORTAGE, US FORCES - SECTOR 4, CRITICAL LOW.

By Ahmed Adel at Global Research. Reposted with permission.

Since the monthly consumption of Tomahawk missiles greatly exceeds their yearly production, the United States cannot supply weapons to Ukraine, contain China, and wage war against Iran all at once. Additionally, the US cannot boost production of these missiles because manufacturers are reluctant to work harder for lower profit margins.

The US armed forces could run out of their Tomahawk missile supply in roughly three and a half months if they continue using them at the current pace against Iran. Washington planned to spend $11 billion in the first four days of Operation Epic Fury and another $50 billion on additional military needs, but it appears this could exceed the budget.

According to The Washington Post, since the start of the US-Israeli conflict with Iran, the US has launched over 850 missiles. Given this, the remaining arsenal will last just over three months. The target stockpile level is 3,992 missiles.

Since 2019, Washington has maintained its Tomahawk stockpile through regular recertification and upgrades. This extends the service life by about 250 missiles annually. Additionally, a total of 9,240 missiles have been purchased since production began. During the first 72 hours of Operation Epic Fury, the US Navy fired roughly 400 Tomahawks, nearly half a decade’s worth of production.

This has already left launchers empty and sparked discussions on how to implement US policies to deter China. With such a high usage rate, it will be impossible to replenish Tomahawk supplies before a potential crisis in the Indo-Pacific region. The Americans cannot produce more Tomahawks even if they wanted to – it would take years to ramp up production.

The Tomahawk, made in 1983/84, is quite different from the latest one that allegedly struck a school in Minab, Iran. Back then, you could tell by the paint scheme that it was a Tomahawk 5, which contained about a million dollars’ worth of rare minerals, and the missile itself cost between four and five million dollars. So, not only is it expensive, but they also cannot easily obtain those rare minerals.

China has restricted the export of rare minerals because the US military industry uses them. Washington has also supplied weapons containing rare minerals to Taiwan, which means that China, by exporting rare minerals to the US, would be threatening its own security.

For Americans to increase Tomahawk production, they would have to lower the quality to versions 3 or 4. However, only Tomahawk 5 is currently being manufactured, making such a change practically impossible due to various technical constraints.

The US probably will not be able to significantly increase production in the next five years, maybe by no more than 20 to 30 percent, but that is also uncertain. Washington might try outsourcing, so that other companies besides Raytheon begin production. However, that is also problematic because these are private companies.

The American military industry differs from the Russian and Chinese in that it operates via private companies. In China or Russia, the military industry is state-owned, making it relatively easy to increase production. The American military industry is comprised of private companies, and their primary goal is not to boost production or efficiency, but to generate profit.

As a reminder, for fiscal year 2026, the Pentagon plans to procure only 57 new missiles — 15 times less than what was spent in the first days of the war against Iran. Between 2019 and 2024, only 322 missiles were procured. At the same time, Raytheon cannot produce more than 90–100 missiles annually, and each missile takes up to two years to assemble. A contract has been signed to boost production to about 219 missiles per year, but deliveries will continue until January 2029.

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said in March that the US is ramping up the defense industrial base to produce critical munitions faster. 

“We’re reviving our defense industrial base and rebuilding the arsenal of freedom,” Hegseth said, adding that new deals would cut “long lead times on exquisite munitions.”

“We’re going to be refilled faster than anyone imagined,” Hegseth said.

The key question is why the American military industrial complex, despite budgets exceeding billions of dollars, cannot boost production to even 200 missiles annually. The reason is strictly profit. It does not matter how much money the American military industrial complex has available or how much it invests in projects.

Although the Americans have dedicated trillions of dollars to their military budget, when at war and lacking the resources, it counts for very little. Resources are needed to boost production, streamline the process, and improve overall effectiveness. The problem is that even the American companies handling this are not interested in speeding up production, because doing so might mean earning less and working more.

Ahmed Adel is a Cairo-based geopolitics and political economy researcher.

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Hit List: Iran Threatens US and Israeli Corporations

Lightning bolt strikes a glass skyscraper in the Moscow International Business Center at night.

IRGC said companies have supported US and Israeli military operations in Iran.

Guest post by Kurt Nimmo from Global Research. Reposted with permission.

Eighteen corporations operating in Israel and the GCC nations were warned on March 31 they “will come under attack as they have assisted US-Israeli terror operations inside Iran.” The companies are considered “espionage entities,” according to the Iranian military.

PressTV reported:

The IRGC described those companies as espionage entities associated with the warmongering government of the United States, saying their artificial intelligence (AI) and internet communication technology (ICT) services have been the main elements in designing terror operations and tracing assassination targets by the US and Israel inside Iran.

“We advise employees of these institutions to immediately leave their workplaces to protect their lives,” the statement added. “Residents within a one-kilometer radius of these terrorist companies across all countries in the region are also urged to evacuate and move to safe locations.”

Corporations on the target list include:

ExxonMobil

ExxonMobil, the largest successor of John D. Rockefeller’s Standard Oil, is the eighth largest company by revenue in the United States and 13th largest in the world. The company’s market capitalization topped out at $714 billion as of 2026, making it the world’s 16th most valuable company. In addition to crude oil, it produces natural gas and petrochemicals.

ExxonMobil has a long-term commercial presence in Israel. The oil giant has consistently won US Department of Defense contracts to supply JP-8 aviation fuel for F-15/F-16 fighter jets and Apache helicopters. ExxonMobil also supplied EN590 diesel fuel for Merkava tanks, armored personnel carriers, and jeeps used in Gaza.

The corporation does not have an office in Israel, but instead operates through authorized distributors for specialized products, such as the Israeli company Emcol LTD in Ashdod for industrial lubricants. ExxonMobil also operates in Al-Jubail and Yanbu, Saudi Arabia.

Chevron

This American transnational oil and gas corporation, one of the largest corporations in the world, has a market capitalization of more than $410 billion. It is active in over 180 countries.

Chevron Mediterranean Limited, a subsidiary of Chevron Corporation, is a key partner in Israel’s energy sector, and operates the Leviathan and Tamar offshore natural gas fields. On February 28, the Israeli Energy Ministry ordered a temporary shutdown of Leviathan and its production vessels in response to Iranian retaliatory attacks.

The Israel Electric Corporation relies on the supply of Chevron extracted fossil gas to generate electricity for the majority of Israeli households, business, government, and military. The state of Israel collects hundreds of millions of dollars every year in royalties from Chevron extraction projects.

The company is a primary target for the BDS (Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions) movement. “Chevron runs natural gas extraction and pipelines off the shore of Palestine/Israel, making it a major partner in Israeli energy apartheid, the military blockade on Gaza, and the illegal exploitation of Palestinian land and resources,” notes the American Friends Service Committee, a Quaker-founded organization working for peace and social justice.

In addition to a presence in Israel, Chevron has offices in Al Jubail, Saudi Arabia, Mesaieed, Qatar, and Ras Laffan, Qatar.

BlackRock

This multinational investment company is the world’s largest asset manager with a market capitalization of $149 billion. It controlled $12.5 trillion in assets as of 2025.

Blackrock CEO, Larry Fink, is an outspoken defender and supporter of Israeli apartheid. Blackrock has major global asset holdings in Israel and works with Israeli investment firms. According to the United Nations, Blackrock holds shares in companies that supply technology to the IDF.

Activists accuse the corporation of profiting from the “economy of genocide” in Gaza. BlackRock collaborates with Israeli institutions and has been criticized for holding stakes in defense companies supplying Israel (Lockheed Martin, RTX, and Northrop Grumman).

In March, prior to the US-Israeli attack on Iran, reports surfaced alleging that a broker for US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth contacted BlackRock through Morgan Stanley to invest millions in a defense industrials fund.

Blackrock has offices in Tel Aviv, Abu Dhabi, Riyadh, and Kuwait.

General Electric

In 2020, GE ranked among the Fortune 500 as the 33rd largest firm in the United States by gross revenue, and in 2011 ranked as the 14th most profitable company.

GE Aerospace manufactures engines (T700-GE-701C) for Apache and Black Hawk helicopters, as well as engines (F110-GE-129) for F-15 and F-16 fighter jets. Additionally, their technologies are employed in Israeli Navy warships. Who Profits and American Friends Service Committee have documented the involvement of GE Aerospace products in military attacks, most recently in Iran, Gaza, and the West Bank, including the targeting of civilians, civilian infrastructure, and in attacks on homes and refugee camps.

Activists called for divestment over Israel’s use of GE military equipment. Shareholders, citing human rights violations, called for a report on the supply of GE Aerospace products to the IDF. The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) and Jewish Lens have advised shareholders to oppose proposals aimed at companies such as General Electric and General Dynamics, arguing the initiatives are politically motivated attempts to isolate Israel.

General Electric has offices in Haifa, Herzliya, Tirat Hacarmel, and Tel Aviv, as well as in Qatar and the UAE.

JPMorgan

JPMorgan is the largest of the “Big Four” banks in America, and the world’s fifth-largest bank by total assets ($4 trillion as of 2025). It has offices in Jerusalem, Abu Dhabi and Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

The bank has maintained a presence in Israel since the 1960s. It operates a large hub for investment banking, commercial services, and asset management in Tel Aviv. JPMorgan is invested in Israeli technology and supports startups.

JPMorgan offers a range of services in Israel, including investment banking, private banking, wealth management, and, more recently, commercial banking for high-tech companies. Additionally, they provide support for capital raising, liquidity solutions, payment management, and strategic advice for venture capital firms and their portfolio companies. It is also a primary dealer in Israel’s government bond market.

NGOs and UN experts have raised questions about financial dealings between Israel and arms companies, primarily Elbit Systems, and this has resulted in calls for divestment. Analysts from JPMorgan are attracted to Elbit’s strong growth in missiles and munitions.

In Glasgow and other cities, activists have protested against JPMorgan. BankTrack’s research revealed that the bank was among prominent underwriters of Israeli sovereign bonds, often referred to as “war bonds,” which are used to finance military operations in Gaza.

CEO Jamie Dimon condemned “Hamas’ horrific attack on Israel and its people and the resulting war and bloodshed are a terrible tragedy,” while saying nothing of decades of Gaza occupation and blockade, the genocide in Gaza, or the BDS effort. Dimon said during a CNBC interview that banks should expect cyberattacks and terrorist incidents.

Palantir Technologies

Palantir is an American data integration and analytics corporation doing business with the United States government. It offers Mission Critical National Security Systems to Trump’s War Department. The company has come under fire for its involvement in expanding government surveillance through AI and facial recognition tech.

The company is described as having a complex relationship with Israel and provides its military and intelligence services with data analytics and AI software. Peter Thiel, Palantir’s billionaire co-founder, partnered with Israel’s IDF to provide technology for “war-related missions,” namely the Lavender program, responsible for targeting Palestinians. “I defer to Israel,” Thiel said in a Cambridge Union video.

CEO Alex Karp, an outspoken supporter of Israel, expressed pride in Palantir’s contributions to the military occupation of Palestine. He refrained from commenting on the potential use of Palantir’s Project Maven software in targeting and killing Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Palantir has offices in Tel Aviv, the Index Tower in Dubai, and the Andaz Capital Gate Hotel in Abu Dhabi. It currently has a market capitalization of $349.66 billion and annual revenue of $1,542 billion.

Oracle

Larry Ellison, the world’s second wealthiest individual, serves as the CEO of Oracle, a prominent database software and cloud computing company. Oracle has total assets worth $168.4 billion and a market capitalization of $423 billion.

The corporation has substantial operations in Israel and holds contracts with its security state. According to a report by Drop Site News, Ellison personally vetted Marco Rubio for his “loyalty to Israel.” The billionaire hosted a fundraiser for Rubio at his Woodside, California mansion, and was a significant financial supporter of Rubio during his 2016 presidential bid.

In 2021, Oracle’s Israeli CEO, Safra Catz, said unlike Google or Amazon, an Oracle employee who is dissatisfied by the company’s partnership with Israel has no place within the organization.

Ellison has donated millions to the Friends of the IDF and maintains close ties with the Israeli leadership, including Benjamin Netanyahu. The Netanyahu family has vacationed at Ellison’s private island, Lānaʻi, in Hawaii. He declared that supporting the IDF is a privilege. “Since Israel’s founding, we have consistently called upon the courageous men and women of the IDF to defend our homeland,” he said.

Oracle collaborated on confidential projects with Rafael, a defense contractor, and the Israeli Air Force, specifically “Project Menta.” Internal Oracle communications reveal that the classified Project Menta enabled the IAF to execute unspecified military operations.

“Documents suggest this program supports Israeli security operations, combining biometric data, behavioral analysis, and algorithmic targeting. The name Menta—Latin for ‘mind’—hints at its focus: real-time predictive intelligence,” writes Kio Amachree.

Oracle has major offices and a secure underground cloud region in Israel. Its headquarters are located in Petah Tikva, and another office is situated in Be’er Sheva. In Jerusalem, the company operates a secure, multi-story underground cloud data center and has announced plans to establish a second underground data center.

Meta

Meta, formerly Facebook, owns several social media platforms and apps, including Instagram. It is ranked 31st on the Forbes Global 2000 list of the world’s largest public companies. Meta had $201 billion of operating revenue as of 2025 and a market cap of $1.45 trillion.

CEO Mark Zuckerberg has taken down pro-Palestinian content from Facebook, deferring to the requests of the Israeli Cyber Unit 8200. Guy Rosen, Meta Chief Information Security Officer, is linked to Israel’s 8200, while Jordana Cutler, Meta’s public policy director for Israel, worked for Benjamin Netanyahu. Zuckerberg, who is Jewish, has routinely removed Arabic content from the site. Many of the demands for takedowns came from the Israeli government.

Human Rights Watch and other critics accuse Meta of systematically and globally censoring pro-Palestinian content. They point out that terms like “Stop the Genocide” are flagged as spam and accounts are often restricted. Following October 7, 2023, Meta implemented automated filters in West Asia, which critics argue disproportionately impacted Palestinian users.

Meta has an office in Tel Aviv, which was closed down in March due to safety concerns. The company also has a regional headquarters in Dubai Internet City.

Halliburton

The American multinational corporation Halliburton is the world’s second-largest oil service company. The late former Secretary of Defense, Dick Cheney, was Halliburton CEO.

Through its subsidiary, KBR (Kellogg Brown & Root), Halliburton was the largest contractor for the illegal Iraq War. It generated $39.5 billion in revenue from logistics and reconstruction during the war. KBR was awarded a $7 billion contract in 2003 to repair Iraq’s oil infrastructure damaged during the war.

Halliburton has been actively involved in Israel’s offshore oil and gas sector, particularly in collaboration with Energean, an international hydrocarbon exploration and production company. Their work has included Mediterranean drilling expeditions off the coast of Israel. While the Israel-Lebanon maritime dispute primarily affected Halliburton by making its offshore operations in Israel politically sensitive, it didn’t directly hinder their operations.

The corporation has a market capitalization of $32.66 billion and maintains a presence in Kuwait, the UAE, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia.

Lockheed Martin

The defense and aerospace corporation is the top contractor for the United States federal government. 65% of its revenue comes from the Defense Department. In 2020, Lockheed Martin reported earnings of $6.833 billion, with an annual revenue of $65.398 billion. As of 2019, its market capitalization was valued at $109.83 billion.

The corporation shares a close relationship with Israel, supplying advanced aircraft to the Israeli Air Force, including the F-35 Lightning II “Adir” fighter, while F-35Is were used in raids on Gaza. F-35s are also used in strikes on Iran. Lockheed Martin also sold CH-53K King Stallion helicopters, and C-130J Super Hercules tactical transports to Israel. It also provides Israel with Hellfire missiles.

In December, Lockheed Martin and Israel’s Industrial Cooperation Authority (ICA) extended their partnership for an additional four years. The ICA, under the Ministry of Economy and Industry, oversees industrial cooperation agreements with over 200 global leaders in the defense, aviation, energy, electronics, medical equipment, vehicles, and other sectors.

Lockheed Martin operates and maintains an F-35 training facility southeast of Be’er Sheva under a multi-year maintenance contract. The arms manufacturer has an offices in Tel Aviv’s Museum Tower and also in the UAE and Saudi Arabia.

Boeing

This multinational corporation manufactures airplanes, rotorcraft, rockets, satellites, and missiles. Boeing is the fourth-largest defense contractor in the world based on revenue, with a net income of $2 billion and a market capitalization of $156 billion.

The corporation has a longstanding partnership with Israel, supplying attack helicopters, F-15 fighter jets, and munitions, including thousands of Joint Direct Attack Munition (JDAM) kits.

Currently, Boeing is fulfilling major contracts for new F-15EX jets and expediting the delivery of precision-guided bombs to the Israeli Air Force. Notably, F-15 and F-15I aircraft were among the 140 fighter jets that engaged in ground strikes during the 12-Day War against Iran last June. Israel and the United States jointly funded, developed, and produced the Arrow 2 and Arrow 3 missile systems, which the company manufactures.

Human rights organizations have criticized Boeing for using its munitions and aircraft in Gaza. Research by Amnesty International confirms that weapons manufactured by Boeing were used in unlawful Israeli airstrikes that resulted in the deaths of civilians, including children, in Gaza.

Since 1969, Boeing has had a corporate office in Tel Aviv. Additionally, the company has a presence in Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Qatar.

IBM

IBM was an innovator in the personal computer business in the 1980s and later developed the Watson AI program. It has diversified into a number of businesses, including healthcare and enterprise software companies. IBM has total assets of $151 billion and a market cap of $227 billion.

IBM Israel is a prominent research and development hub in the Israeli tech sector. In 2020, IBM secured a 25-year contract worth approximately $1 billion to provide IT services for the Israeli military’s newly established regional logistics centers. Red Hat, a provider of enterprise open-source software, provides the Israel military with cloud computing services used across intelligence, air force, and navy divisions. IBM frequently acquires Israeli startups to bolster its global portfolio.

Since its founding in 1911, IBM has been complicit in human rights abuses perpetrated by governments and oppressive regimes, including supplying technology to Nazi Germany during World War II. Numerous organizations have urged a boycott of IBM due to its longstanding history of supplying infrastructure to the Israeli military and police forces. In 2024, the Norwegian asset manager Storebrand divested from IBM, citing concerns over its biometrics sales and support for human rights abuses.

IBM has offices in Tel Aviv, Petah Tikva, Haifa, and Be’er Sheva. In addition to a presence in Israel, the company is present in Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, and Kuwait.

Tesla and X

In response to allegations of unmoderated antisemitism on Elon Musk’s social media platform X, the billionaire toured the Kfar Aza kibbutzim, allegedly attacked by Hamas, in November 2023. He was accompanied by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Musk attended a meeting with President Isaac Herzog where they discussed addressing “online hate” on social media. Musk expressed support for Israel’s military response to the Palestinian resistance and said there is “no choice” but to destroy Hamas.

Tesla has offices in Netanya, Tel Aviv, and Be’er Sheva, and plans o deliver the UAE’s first Tesla Experience Centre on Yas Island.

Intel

The American multinational semiconductor and technology corporation operates in Israel. It is the country’s largest tech sector employer. Intel operates major centers in Haifa, Petah Tikva, Jerusalem, and a manufacturing site in Kiryat Gat. Intel has invested over $27 billion in Israel over the past five decades. Intel Israel, one of Israel’s manufacturing and R&D sites, represents approximately 3.5% to 5.5% of Israel’s total high-tech exports.

As of 2024, Intel had revenue of $53 billion, and a market capitalization of $221 billion. The multinational technology corporation established an Innovation Center in Dubai, billed as a lab for future technology.

Apple

Apple, the renowned manufacturer of iPhones and Mac computers, maintains its second-largest facility in Israel. Apple’s market capitalization is nearly $4 trillion and it is one of the most profitable corporations in the world. Apple’s net income reached $112 billion, largely attributed to iPhone sales, which constitute over 50% of the company’s revenue.

The company employs over 2,000 people, including hardware and semiconductor engineers, in Herzliya and Haifa following significant acquisitions of Israeli tech firms. These acquisitions include flash memory designer Anobit, 3D sensor firm PrimeSense, and audio AI startup Q.ai.

Apple’s Senior VP of Hardware Technologies, Johny Srouji, is an Israeli based in Haifa. Srouji’s father was a craftsman who produced casting molds to the specifications of the Israeli Ministry of Defense.

In addition to a strong presence in Israel, Apple established a regional hub near the Riyadh airport in Saudi Arabia. It is considering establishing an assembly line and repair work facility along with light manufacturing at the site.

Nvidia

The American technology corporation develops graphics processing units and application programming interfaces. As of 2026, it reported an operating income $130 billion and a market cap over $4 trillion.

Nvidia has confirmed its intention to establish a substantial new research and development campus in Kiryat Tivon, a city in northern Israel. The company has described the country as a strategic “second home.” Israel holds the distinction of being Nvidia’s largest R&D base outside the United States, comprising seven research and development centers. Nvidia employs over 4,500 workers in Israel. Jensen Huang, co-founder and CEO, said during a podcast that his company is “100% in Israel.”

The company has offices in Tel Aviv, Yokneam, Be’er Sheva, Ra’anana, Tel Hai, Israel, and Dubai, UAE. A massive new campus is planned for Kiryat Tivon, outside of Tel Aviv, expected to accommodate over 10,000 workers by 2031.

Cisco

Cisco is an American multinational technology conglomerate corporation. It develops, manufactures, and sells hardware, software, telecommunications equipment and diverse technology services and products. The corporation has an operating income of nearly $12 billion and a market capitalization of $306 billion.

The corporation established a development center in Netanya, Israel, in 1997. In addition, it has acquired Israeli startups, including cloud security company Portshift, and others, such as Lightspin and Armorblox, that specialize in cybersecurity and AI.

Cisco supports “digital Israel,” an initiative designed to advance digitization, including the creation of technological hubs, known as “Klika,”in the Negev and Galilee regions. It has contracts with the Israeli Ministry of Defense for IT support and infrastructure.

“The company’s involvement in activities related to Israel’s occupation comes in violation of international law and contradict its stated commitment to human rights and the UN Global Compact for Corporate Social Responsibility,” notes the Who Profits Research Center.

In addition to Cisco’s head office in Netanya and an office in Caesarea, the corporation has presence in the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain, Jordan, and Kuwait.

Other Corporations on the IRGC Hit List

In addition to the above mentioned, there are a number of other companies doing business in Israel and GCC nations singled out by the IRGC. These include: Dell (computer hardware); Rapyd (an Israeli money service company), Visa (digital commerce); Mastercard (SME Payment systems); Vitol Dubai Limited (global energy and commodities); Trafigura (commodity trading); Spire Solutions (cybersecurity); Bain & Company (management consultancy); and Boston Consulting Group (corporate strategy).

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‘Nuclear winter’ warning: UN diplomat steps down, cites safety concerns

Mohamad Safa, a UN activist, has resigned from his diplomatic role, alleging that the United Nations may be considering nuclear action against Iran amid ongoing Middle Eastern conflicts.

A UN activist, Mohamad Safa, has quit his diplomatic position as he made a big claim against the world body – the United Nations – that it may be planning for the use of nuclear weapons in Iran amid the ongoing war in the middle east. Safa disappointingly said he doesn’t think that people understand the gravity of the situation in the Middle East. Safa, who announced on X, formerly Twitter, that he is giving up his diplomatic career to leak this information, said he suspended his duties so as not to be part of or a witness to this crime against humanity, in an attempt to prevent a nuclear winter before it’s too late.

Safa, in his post, shared a photo of Iran’s Tehran and lashed out at “uneducated, untraveled, never-served, warhawks licking your chops at the thought of bombing it.” Safa said that Tehran is not “some low population desert. There are families, children, family pets. Regular working-class people with dreams. You’re sick to want war.”

Here is a copy of his resignation letter.

This has all been verified by multiple news outlets in the East, but of course the press in the West has been silent. Why? Because the powerful lobby Ambassador Safa is speaking about is Israel and the Luciferians and they don’t want the world to know their plan. Like he said they’re licking their chops at the prospect of nuclear war with Iran. It’s beyond sick and it’s going to happen sooner rather than later! Once the nukes fall on Tehran, they will fall next on Washington DC and other places in America and Israel. Tel Aviv will be wiped off the map.

Prayed up and prepped up, time is very short!

Main Story Link

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HUGE WAR ESCALATIONS as US and Israel take out Power Stations in Iran

Newspaper titled "IRAN-ISRAEL TENSIONS ESCALATE; USA INVOLVED" with blurred tanks and smoke in the background.

And on the economic war front the UAE has just seized $530 BILLION in assets from Iran including $500 billion in crypto assets! This has essentially cut Iran off from the financial world as the UAE was their one big lifeline against Western sanctions. The UAE also revoked all residency permits including the so called “golden permits” that were supposed to allow families to stay 99 years.

This is going to continue to get worse, don’t listen to the nonsense of “de-escalation” or “ceasefires”. The ground war is coming and then the war will expand further into the region as Erdogan from Turkey is saying now. Prayed up and prepped up!

UAE calls for reparations from Iran as ‘political solution for aggression against Gulf states’

From WMDs in Iraq to Iranian Nuclear Vests: How Threat Narratives Shape Wars

The Epstein Axis is set to carry out the most blatant false flag in human history

Dirty Bomb Playbook Video

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The United States of Apathy 2026 and a Formal Agreement with Israel?

Cracked 3D letters spelling "APATHY" above the text "I DON'T CARE" against a cloudy background.

Apparently Joe Biden signed an agreement with Israel in July 2022 that we weren’t told about! Plus who is Professor Jiang really??? Grab a cup of coffee, water or whatever it’s time to dig deep today.

Who is Professor Jiang Article

The Formal US-Israel Agreement Tikkun Olam

The United States of Apathy

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Iran Is Winning the War

iran flag and toy soldiers on map

7,000 Years of Civilization Against 250 Years of Empire

Editor Note: This is an excellent, detailed explanation of why Iran is winning the war and how their history of 7,000 years shows them (the Persians) to be indomitable. We’ve explored the Biblical side earlier today with Leeland Jones’ post and now we have this post to explore the physical and historical side of things. As a history buff this was very enjoyable to read! I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.

By Laala Bechetoula at Global Research. Reposted with permission.

The conqueror need not be stronger than the conquered. He need only be more willing to endure.” — Ibn Khaldun, Muqaddimah, 14th century

“No people has ever been liberated by a war it could not endure.” — Frantz Fanon, The Wretched of the Earth, 1961

“All human beings are members of one frame, since all, at first, from the same essence came. When time afflicts a limb with pain, the other limbs cannot at rest remain. If thou feel not for other’s misery, a human being is no name for thee.” — Sa’adi Shirazi, Bani Adam, 13th century — inscribed on a rug offered by Iran to the United Nations, New York, 2005

Prologue: The Clock that Never Started for Washington

On the morning of February 28, 2026, the United States of America and the State of Israel launched one of the most concentrated aerial campaigns in the history of modern warfare. In twelve hours, nearly 900 strikes rained down on the Islamic Republic of Iran — on its missile sites, its air defenses, its nuclear facilities, its military command centers, and on the compound where its Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei, was assassinated along with members of his family.

Donald Trump predicted it would be over in “two or three days.”

Twenty-four days later, the Strait of Hormuz is still closed. Oil is above one hundred dollars a barrel. The global economy stands at the edge of recession. The International Energy Agency has declared the situation worse than the two oil crises of the 1970s combined. The Islamic Republic of Iran — battered, wounded, its navy decimated, its leaders assassinated, its nuclear installations struck three times — is still governing, still fighting, and still dictating the terms of every international conversation.

On March 22, Trump issued a 48-hour ultimatum in capital letters on Truth Social: reopen the Strait or face the obliteration of Iran’s power plants. Iran responded by threatening to mine the entire Persian Gulf and strike every energy installation in the region. Twelve hours before his own deadline expired, Trump announced that the United States and Iran had held “VERY GOOD AND PRODUCTIVE CONVERSATIONS” and that strikes were postponed for five days.

“No negotiations have been held with the US. Fake news is being used to manipulate the financial and oil markets and escape the quagmire in which the US and Israel are trapped.” — Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, Speaker of Iran’s Parliament, March 23, 2026

“There is no dialogue between Tehran and Washington. We are not the party that started this war.” — Iran’s Foreign Ministry, March 23, 2026

The empire launched its missiles. The civilization endured. And when the empire blinked, the civilization named it for what it was.

This is the story of why.

Part One: The Deepest Asymmetry — 7,000 Years against 250 Years

Before America Was Born, Persia Had Already Given the World Its Rights

To understand why Iran will not collapse under American and Israeli bombardment, one must first understand what Iran is — not in the geopolitical sense measured in GDP and missile inventories, but in the civilizational sense measured in millennia.

The Iranian plateau has been continuously inhabited for approximately 7,000 years. The Elamite civilization arose there around 3200 BCE, contemporaneous with the earliest Mesopotamian city-states. By the 6th century BCE, the Achaemenid Persian Empire under Cyrus the Great had become the largest empire the world had ever seen, stretching from the Aegean Sea to the Indus Valley — encompassing modern Greece, Egypt, Turkey, Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan — governed not by terror but, remarkably for antiquity, by a philosophy of tolerance and pluralism without parallel in the ancient world.

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Elamite reliefs at Eshkaft-e Salman. The picture of a woman with dignity shows the importance of women in the Elamite era.[opinion]

Elamite reliefs at Eshkaft-e Salman. The picture of a woman with dignity shows the importance of women in the Elamite era. [Opinion] (CC BY-SA 2.0)

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In 539 BCE, after conquering Babylon without a battle — the population reportedly opened the gates willingly — Cyrus issued a decree inscribed on a baked clay cylinder in Akkadian cuneiform. That cylinder, now housed in the British Museum in London — preserved in the very civilization that today bombs Tehran — was recognized by the United Nations in 1971 as the world’s first charter of human rights. A replica stands in the lobby of the United Nations headquarters in New York. Its provisions parallel the first four articles of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, adopted in 1948 — more than two and a half millennia after Cyrus had already enacted them.

The Cyrus Cylinder records that the King freed all slaves, declared that all people had the right to choose their own religion, established racial equality, and allowed exiled peoples to return to their homelands — including the 50,000 Jews held in Babylonian captivity, whom he freed at Persian state expense and helped fund the reconstruction of the Temple in Jerusalem. Cyrus is the only non-Jewish figure in the Hebrew Bible to be called Mashiach — the Anointed One.

This is the civilization that the United States of America — founded in 1776, 2,315 years after Cyrus issued his human rights charter — is trying to destroy from the air. This is the civilization that the State of Israel — established in 1948, when the Cyrus Cylinder was already 2,487 years old — claims the right to bomb into submission in the name of its own security.

A civilization with 7,000 years of memory — of invasions survived, of empires absorbed, of conquerors who came and went while Persia endured — does not experience a 24-day aerial campaign the way a 250-year-old nation experiences it. For Iran, this is not existential rupture. It is a chapter. A painful one, but a chapter. For the United States, which has never in its history been bombed on its own soil by a foreign power, which has never had its capital struck, its president killed, its cities reduced to rubble — this kind of war is unimaginable. For Iran, in the darkest sense, it is familiar.

Alexander the Great burned Persepolis in 330 BCE. The Mongols sacked Iran’s cities in the 13th century CE with an annihilating thoroughness estimated to have killed up to three-quarters of the population of some regions. The British engineered a coup in 1953, overthrowing the democratically elected Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh because he had dared to nationalize Iranian oil — a coup documented in detail by the CIA itself and acknowledged formally by the United States government in 2013. Iraq, armed and intelligence-supplied by the United States, invaded Iran in 1980 and fought an eight-year war that killed an estimated half-million Iranians, including through chemical weapons supplied with Western intelligence cooperation.

Iran is still here. Persia has always been still here.

The Intellectual Inheritance That No Bomb Can Touch

The civilization being bombed is the civilization of Avicenna (Ibn Sina, 980–1037 CE), whose Canon of Medicine was the primary medical textbook in European universities for six centuries. It is the civilization of Al-Biruni (973–1048 CE), whose calculation of the Earth’s circumference was accurate to within one percent. Of Khayyam, who produced algebraic solutions to cubic equations while Europe was burning books. Of Hafez and Rumi, whose poetry remains among the most widely read in the world — in Persian, Arabic, English, German, Hindi and dozens of other languages. Rumi’s Masnavi has been translated into more languages than almost any literary work in history outside of religious scripture.

When the bombs fall on Tehran, they fall on the city built by the inheritors of this tradition. That tradition does not die in an airstrike. It is, if anything, summoned by it.

Malek Bennabi — the Algerian philosopher whose thought has most profoundly shaped my own intellectual formation — argued in his concept of colonisabilité that civilizations are not conquered by superior weapons alone. They are conquered when they lose the internal will to remain themselves — when their cultural production collapses, when their intellectual class surrenders to the colonizer’s self-image. No such collapse is visible in Iran. The regime may be contested internally. But the civilization it governs is not.

Part Two: The Human Cost — Voices from under the Bombs

Before the geopolitics, before the cost-exchange ratios and the strategic analysis, there are the people.

According to the NGO Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), by March 17, 2026 — the 17th day of the war — 3,114 people had been killed in Iran by US-Israeli airstrikes, including 1,354 civilians and 1,138 military personnel. UNICEF reported that by March 12, more than 200 children had been killed in Iran alone, with hundreds of thousands displaced and millions unable to attend school. The Iranian Red Crescent reported over 6,668 civilian residential units targeted. A US strike on a girls’ school adjacent to a naval base in Minab killed approximately 170 people on the first day.

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Rescue workers and bystanders at the school after the attack (Mehr News Agency / CC BY 4.0)

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These numbers have faces. These faces have voices. And those voices refuse to be reduced to the binary that Western media imposes on them — either celebrating the bombs or defending the regime. The truth they speak is more complex, more human, and more devastating than any geopolitical narrative.

A Tehran journalist in her late twenties, keeping a diary shared with NPR under conditions of anonymity — publishing her name risks arrest by the IRGC — wrote on the first day of the war, when Khamenei was killed: “People came to the roofs and watched and clapped when they hit a target we know. We chanted a lot last night.” She had been arrested twice at the IRGC base that was now bombed. She celebrated the strike.

But as the war entered its second week, her diary changed register. The bombs were no longer selective. The dead were no longer only those she had reason to hate.

A Xinhua correspondent based in Tehran wrote on March 3: “Missiles fell like falling stars, slicing through the darkness before detonating with a force that made the night flinch. The blasts were so violent that they seemed to split the sky at its seams.” In a taxi afterward, the driver shook his head: “Tehran used to be a peaceful city. Some thought the Americans would bring opportunity. Look at what they’ve brought — nothing but bombs.”

From the Iran-Turkey border, NPR’s Emily Feng reported on refugees crossing on foot. An Iranian man showed journalists oil stains on his jacket — residue from burning oil droplets that fell on Tehran’s neighborhoods when Israel struck fuel depots in early March. His 26-year-old cousin, who had risked his life protesting against the government in January, was among the civilians killed. “When he said that to me,” Feng reported, “he paused, like he almost couldn’t believe what he was saying out loud.”

“If the main power plants are bombed, it’s not going to be just a brief disruption; it could stop the flow of everything from water to gas. It would be foolish to just punish the population like that.” — Tehran resident, Al Jazeera, March 21, 2026

These testimonies share one thing: they refuse simplification. They contain simultaneously opposition to the Islamic Republic and rejection of the bombardment. They are not the testimonies of a broken people. They are the testimonies of a people absorbing an enormous blow and remaining, defiantly, themselves. That is what 7,000 years of civilizational memory looks like from the inside.

Part Three: 50 Years under Siege — The Sanctions that Forged the Weapon

The Most Sanctioned Nation in Modern History

Before a single Tomahawk missile was fired on February 28, 2026, Iran had already been fighting the United States for nearly half a century — not with drones and missiles, but with its sheer capacity to survive.

The first American sanctions were imposed in November 1979. Executive Order 12170, signed by President Carter, froze approximately $8.1 billion in Iranian assets held abroad. That was 46 years ago. Through eight consecutive American administrations — through Republican and Democratic presidencies alike, through periods of Iranian nuclear compliance and non-compliance — the sanctions regime has never fundamentally lifted. It has only expanded.

1979 — First sanctions. $8.1 billion in assets frozen. Trade embargo.

1987 — Reagan bans all Iranian goods and services from the US market.

1995 — Clinton prohibits all US trade with and investment in Iran.

1996 — Congress penalizes foreign firms investing more than $20M/year in Iranian energy.

2006–2010 — Four rounds of UN Security Council sanctions targeting Iran’s nuclear program.

2012 — EU bans Iranian oil exports. SWIFT disconnects all Iranian banks. The rial loses 80% of its value in months.

2018 — Trump withdraws from the JCPOA — which Iran had been complying with, as IAEA-certified. Standard Chartered fined $1.5B; JP Morgan pays $5.3M for 87 violations.

The crowning irony came just days before the war. US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent testified before the Senate Banking Committee in February 2026: “What we have done is created a dollar shortage in the country. It came to a swift and grand culmination in December, when one of the largest banks in Iran went under. The central bank had to print money. The Iranian currency went into free fall. Inflation exploded, and hence we have seen the Iranian people out on the street.” He said this as justification for the coming war. Three days later, his government began bombing the country whose suffering he had just catalogued.

The sanctions did not destroy Iran. They forged it.

The Weapon Born of Embargo

Because Iran could not import spare parts, it learned to manufacture them. Because it could not access Western technology, it reverse-engineered it. The Shahed-136 suicide drone was born directly from the crucible of American sanctions — a product of necessity, of engineering ingenuity applied under conditions of enforced isolation, using Chinese components and reverse-engineering. Its unit cost: $20,000 to $50,000.

The United States spent 50 years trying to economically strangle Iran into military inferiority. It instead forged the weapon that is now draining its own interceptor stockpiles at a rate no factory on earth can replenish in time.

Part Four: The Arithmetic of Empire — Dollars against Drones

Strip away the presidential declarations and the satellite images of burning Tehran, and what this war ultimately comes down to is an equation — the most consequential military-economic equation of the 21st century.

On one side: the American Patriot PAC-3 MSE interceptor missile. Unit cost: approximately $4 million. The THAAD interceptor: $12 to $15 million per shot. The ship-based SM-3: $10 to $28 million. On the other: the Iranian Shahed-136 loitering munition. Unit cost: $20,000 to $50,000. The cost ratio: between 80:1 and 200:1.

Kelly Grieco of the Stimson Center has calculated that for every dollar Iran spends manufacturing a Shahed drone, the UAE spends between $80 and $200 to intercept it. Lockheed Martin produces approximately 600 Patriot interceptors per year. Iran launched more than 2,000 drones in the first week of this conflict alone.

In the first 100 hours of Operation Epic Fury, the United States fired approximately 170 Tomahawk cruise missiles — nearly three times the number the Pentagon had ordered from Raytheon for the entire fiscal year 2026. The Center for Strategic and International Studies estimated the value of interceptors expended in those first 100 hours at approximately $1.7 billion.

“The US, Israel, and Gulf countries are largely relying on US-made systems, which means they are all drawing from the same production lines. You can’t replace those kinds of missiles overnight. It would take years.” — Kelly Grieco, Stimson Center, March 2026

The June 2025 twelve-day war had already consumed an estimated 150 THAAD interceptors and 80 SM-3s — roughly a quarter of the entire US THAAD stockpile — in under two weeks. The Houthi Red Sea campaign the year before had burned through an additional 200 Standard Missile interceptors. By July 2025, Patriot stockpiles had fallen to 25 percent of the volume the Pentagon deemed necessary.

The Heritage Foundation warned in January 2026 that high-end interceptor stockpiles could be exhausted within days of sustained combat. The Wall Street Journal reported that the United States is “racing to destroy Iran’s missile and drone assets before it runs out of interceptors.” That sentence contains the entire strategic situation of this war: the world’s preeminent military power is racing against an economic clock it does not control.

Iran’s entire 2025 defense budget was approximately $23 billion — roughly 2.5 percent of the American defense budget of $900 billion. The Shahed drone was designed specifically to exploit the fatal flaw at the heart of Western high-technology defense: the catastrophic cost ratio between precision interceptors and cheap, mass-producible swarm weapons. This is not improvisation. It is strategy.

Part Five: The Two Chokepoints — Oil and Water

The Strait of Hormuz: Where Geography Becomes a Weapon

At its narrowest, the Strait of Hormuz is 33 kilometers wide. Through this channel passes approximately 20 percent of the world’s total petroleum supply — roughly 21 million barrels of oil and liquefied natural gas per day. More than 25 percent of global LNG trade transits here. Saudi Arabia’s primary oil export route. Iraq’s economic lifeline. Qatar’s gas, which heats European homes.

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Strait of Hormuz (Public Domain)

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Iran has closed it. Not with the naval fleet that American and Israeli strikes have largely destroyed — over fifty Iranian naval vessels now rest on the sea floor. But with mines, drone swarms, ballistic missile threats, and the invisible weapon of risk: no insurance underwriter will currently cover a vessel transiting a strait where Iranian weapons continue to operate.

IEA Director Fatih Birol has been explicit: the situation is “very severe — worse than the two oil crises of the 1970s and the fallout from the Ukraine war put together.” At least 40 energy facilities across nine countries have been severely damaged since February 28. Global oil prices surged from under $60 per barrel in January 2026 to $113 on March 22.

A third of the world’s fertilizer trade also passes through the Strait. Shipping lines have rerouted. Aviation across the Middle East has collapsed. The war sold to the world as a campaign for the “rules-based international order” is systematically destroying the supply chains that order was built to protect.

The rhetorical question worth inscribing at the entrance of every foreign ministry: Who, exactly, is blockading whom?

Water: The Existential Lever Not Yet Fully Pulled

The Gulf states account for roughly 60 percent of global desalination capacity. The dependency figures tell the story of existential vulnerability:

  • Kuwait: 90 percent of drinking water from desalination
  • Bahrain: 90 percent
  • Oman: 86 percent
  • Saudi Arabia: 70 percent
  • UAE: 42 percent

Critically, more than 90 percent of the Gulf’s desalinated water comes from just 56 mega-complexes — geographically fixed, technically complex, energy-intensive facilities in close proximity to Iran. A CIA analysis classified in the 1980s and made public in 2010 already identified this vulnerability explicitly.

On March 7, a drone caused material damage to a desalination plant in Bahrain — the first confirmed strike on Gulf water infrastructure in this conflict. Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi stated: “Attacking Iran’s infrastructure is a dangerous move with grave consequences. The US set this precedent, not Iran.”

“If attacks on desalination plants are the beginning of a military policy and not just mistakes or collateral damage, this is both illegal — a war crime — and a very concerning development, as Gulf countries have only a few weeks of water storage.” — Laurent Lambert, Doha Institute for Graduate Studies

A few weeks of water storage. That is the margin between the current situation and a humanitarian catastrophe of unprecedented scale — 100 million people without regular access to drinking water. That margin is held not by American air defenses or Gulf state diplomacy, but by an Iranian decision not yet taken. The Gulf states that have quietly allowed American operations from their territory know this. That knowledge is its own form of Iranian strategic victory.

Part Six: The Matrix that Does Not Fall

Washington went to war with a theory: kill the leadership, paralyze the command structure, trigger popular uprising, produce regime change in days. Trump predicted “two or three days.” His military launched 900 strikes in 12 hours. Khamenei was killed on day one. Ali Larijani was assassinated on March 17. Dozens of IRGC commanders have been eliminated.

Twenty-four days later, the Islamic Republic is governing.

“It’s not like we finally found the one leader who, once we kill that leader, the whole house of cards comes apart, because it’s not a house of cards. This is more of a matrix — a flexible matrix.” — Robert Pape, University of Chicago

Kill the apex of a matrix, and you eliminate the layer requiring the most real-time communication between senior leadership and mid-levels. The mid-level commanders do not pause. They reorganize laterally, often with greater aggression and less political restraint than before. Pape’s structural diagnosis: “The new politics triggered by the bombing work to the disadvantage of regime change. What you’re getting instead is negative regime change: leaders from the second generation who are more anti-American, more dangerous, more willing to take costs in order to punish America.”

The historical record is not ambiguous. It is overwhelming.

Vietnam (1965–1973): The most bombed country in the history of aerial warfare did not capitulate. The government the US sought to destroy united the country in 1975. It is still there.

Iraq (2003): The regime fell in 21 days. The state destruction produced fifteen years of insurgency, sectarian civil war, the rise of ISIS, and a regional catastrophe still unresolved.

Libya (2011): Seven months of NATO air campaign. Gaddafi killed. The state dissolved into permanent civil war, still ongoing fifteen years later.

Afghanistan: Twenty years. Over $2 trillion. The Taliban returned to power within two weeks of American withdrawal.

In each case: tactical destruction, strategic failure. The assumption that the targeted society was brittle was catastrophically wrong. Every time. Without exception.

Part Seven: Faith as a Strategic Variable

Western strategic analysis has a structural blind spot. It can model military capability, economic leverage, and political will in the terms familiar to liberal democratic systems. What it cannot model — because it has no conceptual vocabulary for it — is the role of faith as a strategic variable.

Shia Islam’s foundational narrative is the Battle of Karbala, fought on October 10, 680 CE. Hussein ibn Ali, grandson of the Prophet, chose death rather than submission to illegitimate power. Surrounded by seventy companions against thousands, knowing death was certain, Hussein did not surrender. He was killed. His head was severed and sent to Damascus.

That day — Ashura — is the most important day in the Shia calendar. Not as a day of defeat. As a day of witness: the theology of the victory of principle over power, of the testimony of the righteous over the triumph of the unjust. In the Shia eschatological framework, every Iranian soldier who dies in this war is a shahid — a martyr and witness whose death carries divine meaning. Every bombed city block is not evidence that God has abandoned Iran. It is evidence, within this framework, that Iran stands on the side of righteousness.

No Patriot battery can intercept that. No THAAD system can neutralize it. No Tomahawk missile can destroy it.

Robert Pape identifies “strategic culture” — a population’s cohesion and tolerance for suffering — as the decisive variable when military force is sufficient to destroy but insufficient to conquer. Iran’s strategic culture of endurance is theologically produced, historically reinforced across seven thousand years, and politically mobilized by every bomb that falls on Tehran. The Shahed drone carries a $35,000 warhead. It also carries, in the consciousness of the millions who watch it launched, the weight of Karbala, the memory of fifty years of embargo, the dignity of civilizational continuity. That is not a weapon the United States knows how to defeat.

Part Eight: Sun Tzu and the Strategic Bankruptcy of Trump and Netanyahu

Image: Qing-era representation of Sun Tzu (Public Domain)

A statue of Sun Tzu

There is a text that every military academy in the world assigns. Written approximately 2,500 years ago in China by a general named Sun Tzu, The Art of War is the most influential strategic treatise in human history. Its central thesis: victory belongs to the one who has thought before striking, not the one who strikes hardest. Every principle it establishes, Trump and Netanyahu have systematically violated.

First Principle

1. “Know your enemy and know yourself; in a hundred battles you will never be defeated.

What did Trump and Netanyahu know about Iran before launching 900 strikes in 12 hours? That its economy was fragile from sanctions. That its population had been in the streets protesting in December 2025. What they did not understand: that a civilization of 7,000 years does not measure its will to resist in GDP or inflation rates. That the ʻasabiyya of which Ibn Khaldun wrote is activated, not destroyed, by foreign bombardment. That the Iranian woman who had been arrested twice for not wearing a hijab, who celebrated the first strikes, would — as her neighborhood was blanketed by burning oil droplets from Israeli strikes on Tehran’s fuel depots — end her March 16 diary entry with: “In the final battle I will burn every single one of these psychopathic murderers” — meaning the regime. But she was writing from a city under foreign attack. The distinction, under bombs, dissolves.

Sun Tzu’s Verdict: They did not know their enemy. They had already lost.

Second Principle

2. “The supreme excellence in war is to break the enemy’s resistance without fighting.

On February 27, 2026 — eighteen hours before the first bomb fell — Oman’s Foreign Minister Badr Al-Busaidi confirmed that a diplomatic breakthrough had been achieved: Iran had agreed to never stockpile enriched uranium, to permit full IAEA verification, and to irreversibly downgrade its existing enriched uranium to the lowest possible level. Peace was, in his words, “within reach.” Negotiations were scheduled to resume March 2. Eighteen hours later, the bombs began to fall. A negotiated solution — Iran denuclearized by agreement, Strait open, markets stabilized, American hegemony preserved without a single casualty — was sacrificed.

Sun Tzu’s Verdict: The victory without combat was available. They chose war. This is the foundational strategic error from which all subsequent failures flow.

Third Principle

3. “He who has not reflected on difficulties will not be able to take advantage of his strengths.

A war without a defined victory condition is a war lost before it is begun. The official record of Trump administration war objectives, in chronological order: Hegseth (Feb. 28) — ending “47 long years of war.” Rubio (Feb. 28, hours later) — pre-emptive defense of US forces. Trump (Mar. 2) — regime change in “two or three days.” Trump (Mar. 9) — “I think the war is very complete, pretty much.” Hegseth (Mar. 11) — “This is only just the beginning.” Trump (Mar. 21) — 48-hour ultimatum. Trump (Mar. 23) — five-day delay for “productive” talks. Tehran (Mar. 23) — “There is no dialogue between Tehran and Washington.” Ten incompatible war aims in twenty-four days.

“Tactics without strategy is the noise before defeat.” — Sun Tzu, The Art of War

Sun Tzu’s Verdict: No definition of victory. No strategy. Campaign lost structurally.

Fourth Principle

4. “Appear strong when you are weak, and weak when you are strong.

Iran practices Sun Tzu. It closes the Strait but maintains deliberate ambiguity about its capacity to keep it closed indefinitely, forcing the adversary to exhaust resources against contingencies that may never materialize. It denies negotiations while allowing regional intermediaries — Pakistan, Turkey, Egypt — to carry messages sufficient for Trump to construct a narrative of “productive conversations” allowing him to retreat without formal capitulation. It strikes near Dimona without destroying the reactor — demonstrating existential capability while withholding its use. Trump, meanwhile, announces his threats in capital letters on a public social media platform. He sets deadlines in specific hours. He retreats from those deadlines before his own stated expiration time. Iranian state television broadcast the verdict without ambiguity: “Trump, fearing Iran’s response, backed down from his 48-hour ultimatum.” Every strategist on earth — in Beijing, Moscow, Pyongyang, Caracas — read that broadcast. Its lesson: American ultimatums can be waited out. In deterrence theory, this is credibility degradation — each capitulation makes the next threat easier to ignore.

Sun Tzu’s Verdict: Iran practices the master’s art. Trump and Netanyahu violate every chapter.

Fifth Principle

5. “In war, the victorious strategist only seeks battle after the victory has been won.

Trump and Netanyahu launched their campaign and then looked for what victory might mean. They have been looking for twenty-four days. They have not found a stable answer. Iran, by contrast, had its victory condition defined before the first American missile fell: survival. Remain standing. Keep the Strait closed. Force economic pain on the global system. Demonstrate that the most powerful military alliance in history cannot achieve its stated objectives against a determined adversary. Let the world draw its own conclusions. Sun Tzu would recognize the Iranian strategy immediately. He would struggle to find the American one.

Sun Tzu’s Verdict: They fought first and looked for victory afterward. Iran had its victory condition on day one.

Sixth Principle — The Paradox of Sanctions

6. “Turn the enemy’s own strength against him.

Forty-six years of American economic warfare designed to prevent Iran from developing military capability directly produced the military capability now bankrupting Western defense budgets. Every sanction that forced Iran to innovate domestically, every technology embargo that compelled reverse-engineering, every financial exclusion that drove self-reliance — collectively forged the asymmetric arsenal that is today draining Raytheon and Lockheed Martin production lines at a rate no factory on earth can replenish in time. The sanctions were intended as a stranglehold. They became a forge. Sun Tzu could not have designed a better trap.

Sun Tzu’s Verdict: The enemy’s weapon was built by his own hand. Fifty years of sanctions forged the drone.

Part Nine: The Third Winner — Beijing’s Silent Harvest

While Washington burns through missile interceptors, carrier group logistics, and political capital in the Persian Gulf, China is quietly consolidating the strategic architecture of the 21st century.

To sustain Operation Epic Fury, the United States has redeployed advanced missile defense systems from the Indo-Pacific to the Middle East — THAAD batteries and naval interceptor platforms whose Pacific positioning most directly threatened Chinese security interests. Melanie Hart of the Atlantic Council’s Global China Hub is precise: “It is impossible to overstate the degree to which those movements are a massive win for Beijing. And if the United States ends up stuck in another Middle Eastern quagmire that cedes the Indo-Pacific to China, the wins will keep coming.”

Russia is the clearest immediate beneficiary: oil above $100 a barrel has replenished Moscow’s war chest and reduced Ukrainian leverage in any future peace negotiation. The war the Trump administration was supposed to prevent — Russia’s slow conquest of Ukraine — is being financed, in part, by the economic disruption of the war the Trump administration chose to start.

China alone entered this crisis with genuine strategic depth: the world’s largest strategic petroleum reserves outside the United States, Belt and Road energy supply chains diversified against Gulf disruption, discounted Iranian oil throughout the conflict, and the patience to dominate Gulf state reconstruction contracts when the shooting stops.

The 2026 Iran war may be remembered as the moment the American Pacific Century began its terminal phase — not in a confrontation over Taiwan, but in a miscalculation over a nuclear facility in the Iranian desert.

Part Ten: The Global South Is Watching

This war is not only about Iran. It is about what Iran’s performance means for every non-Western state calculating its strategic options in a world still structured — for now — by American military primacy.

For seventy years, the fundamental premise underwriting that structure has been: no state that directly confronts American military power can survive the confrontation with its government intact. Vietnam cracked that premise. Afghanistan confirmed it required extended occupation to fail. Iran, in 2026, is demonstrating something new: that a non-Western state can absorb sustained American bombardment, maintain its institutional functions, weaponize the global economy through geography and cheap technology, and force the aggressor into public strategic incoherence — all without nuclear weapons.

The Shahed drone that costs $35,000 and forces a $4 million Patriot intercept is not merely a weapon. It is a political statement: the technological and financial gulf between the imperial center and the periphery is no longer sufficient to guarantee compliance.

The Global South is watching from Caracas, Pyongyang, Harare, and Algiers. What it is watching — in real time, measured in the smoking debris of interceptors that cost $4 million to stop a drone that cost $20,000 — is the demonstration that the age of uncontested American military omnipotence is ending.

Malek Bennabi argued that civilizations are not defeated by superior weapons. They are defeated by the internal exhaustion of their own will to be. The civilization that forgets why it exists is already dying, regardless of its arsenal. Seven thousand years of Persian civilization have not forgotten why they exist. Two hundred and fifty years of American power, increasingly incapable of naming what it is fighting for, may be in the process of that forgetting.

Conclusion: The War that Time Cannot Win

Napoleon invaded Russia in June 1812 with 600,000 soldiers. He reached Moscow in September. The Russians burned their own capital rather than surrender it. The Grande Armée, designed for decisive engagement, had no strategic answer for a people willing to accept unlimited suffering in preference to submission. By December, fewer than 100,000 of those 600,000 men had returned.

The lesson was not about military technology. It was about will, time, and the asymmetry of what each side had to lose.

Twenty-four days of the most sophisticated aerial campaign in the history of warfare. The supreme leader, dead. The secretary of the National Security Council, assassinated. Fifty naval vessels on the ocean floor. Natanz struck three times. At least 1,354 civilians killed, 200 children among them. Billions of dollars of military infrastructure destroyed.

And yet: the Islamic Republic governs. Its drones are flying. The Strait of Hormuz is closed. Oil is above $100. The global economy is hostage. Trump invents negotiations that Iran denies in real time. His ultimatums expire un-executed. His war has no articulated end state. Sun Tzu, reading the record from twenty-five centuries away, would close his treatise and say: this campaign was lost before the first missile was fired.

There is a final fact that history will not overlook. On February 27, 2026 — the day before the bombs began to fall — Oman’s Foreign Minister confirmed that a diplomatic breakthrough was within reach. Iran had agreed to full nuclear transparency. Peace was available. The decision was taken to bomb rather than negotiate.

Sa’adi Shirazi wrote, in 13th-century Persia, the verse that hangs today at the entrance of the United Nations: “All human beings are members of one frame, since all, at first, from the same essence came.” Iran sent that poem to the United Nations. The United States sent it cruise missiles.

The empire has more weapons. Iran has more memory.

Memory, in the long run, wins.

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Laala Bechetoula is an Algerian journalist and writer, author of “The Book of Gaza Hashem: A Testament Written in Olive Wood and Ash”. She is a regular contributor to Global Research.

Sources

Persian Civilization and the Cyrus Cylinder

British Museum, London (permanent collection, Room 52)

UN Human Rights Programme: History of Natural Law & Basic Freedoms

Facing History & Ourselves: From Ancient Persia to a Global Declaration (2024)

Sa’adi Shirazi, Bani Adam (13th c.) — official UN display, New York lobby, 2005

Ancient Origins: The Cyrus Cylinder and the Ancient Proclamation of Human Rights

Iranian Civilian Testimonies

NPR / Ruth Sherlock: Life under bombing in Tehran: The diary of an Iranian writer (March 13, 2026)

NPR / Emily Feng: Fear, defiance, and anger: Iranians describe life under bombardment (March 19, 2026)

NPR: The latest updates on the Iran war after three weeks (March 21, 2026)

Xinhua: Letter from Mideast: Heart on fire — Tehran under bombs (March 3, 2026)

Al Jazeera: Our hearts were shaking: Tehran endures night of heavy bombing (March 10, 2026)

Civilian Casualties

HRANA (Human Rights Activists News Agency): 3,114 deaths by March 17, 2026, incl. 1,354 civilians

UNICEF report of March 12, 2026: 200+ children killed in Iran

Iranian Red Crescent Society: 6,668+ civilian units targeted

Wikipedia: 2026 Iran War (updated March 24, 2026)

Iran Sanctions — Full Historical Record

Wikipedia: International Sanctions Against Iran; United States Sanctions Against Iran

Al Jazeera: Timeline: Sanctions on Iran (2012, updated 2026)

US Library of Congress / Congress.gov: U.S. Sanctions on Iran (CRS Report IF12452)

European Parliament Research Service: EPRS Brief 777928 (2025)

Senate Banking Committee, Scott Bessent testimony, February 2026

Laudati et al., Journal of Applied Econometrics (2023): Identifying the effects of sanctions on the Iranian economy

Military Cost Asymmetry

Northeastern University / Stephen Flynn: US-Israeli war on Iran enters fourth week, costs come into focus (March 23, 2026)

The Dupree Report: Iran’s $20K Drones vs America’s $4M Missiles (March 2026)

Middle East Eye: Iranian drones cost a fraction of air defences (March 2026)

Globe and Mail: The high price of intercepting Iran’s low-cost drones (March 2026)

Kelly Grieco, Stimson Center (multiple citations, March 2026)

Heritage Foundation: stockpile warning, January 2026

Strait of Hormuz and Economic Impact

IEA Director Fatih Birol, statements March 22–23, 2026 (Australia National Press Club)

Al Jazeera: Iran war updates, day 23 (March 22–23, 2026)

Centre for European Reform: War in Iran: Who wins and who loses? (March 2026)

Britannica: 2026 Iran War (updated March 24, 2026)

Desalination Vulnerability

Al Jazeera: How targeting of desalination plants could disrupt water supply (March 8, 2026)

Atlantic Council / Ginger Matchett: Attacks on desalination plants forecast a dark future (March 18, 2026)

CSIS / David Michel: Could Iran Disrupt the Gulf Countries’ Desalinated Water Supplies? (March 2026)

Foreign Policy: U.S. Strike on Qeshm Island Risks Spiral of Retaliation (March 9, 2026)

CNN: Water is even more vital than oil and gas — and it’s at risk (March 11, 2026)

Laurent Lambert, Doha Institute for Graduate Studies

Zane Swanson, CSIS Global Food and Water Security Program

Air Power and Regime Change

Robert Pape, University of Chicago: An air power expert explains why Iran is more powerful now, MS.NOW (March 21, 2026)

Robert Pape: The Escalation Trap (newsletter, 2026)

Atlantic Council: Twenty questions about the Iran war (March 2026)

Washington Institute for Near East Policy: Assessing U.S. Progress in the Iran War (March 2026)

The Ultimatum and Fake Negotiations (March 22–23, 2026)

CBS News live updates: Trump calls off Strait of Hormuz ultimatum (March 23, 2026)

NPR: Trump says the U.S. is in talks with Iran, which Iran denies (March 23, 2026)

Al Jazeera: Iran denies any talks with US after Trump claims productive discussions (March 23, 2026)

ITV News: Trump says Iran wants very much to make deal, as Tehran calls talks fake news (March 23, 2026)

Iran Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, official statement (March 23, 2026)

Hassan Ahmadian, University of Tehran (cited by Al Jazeera, March 23, 2026)

China and Geopolitical Implications

Atlantic Council / Melanie Hart: Twenty questions about the Iran war (March 2026)

Centre for European Reform: War in Iran: Who wins and who loses? (March 2026)

Sun Tzu

Sun Tzu, The Art of War (c. 500 BCE), tr. Lionel Giles (1910); tr. Samuel B. Griffith (Oxford University Press, 1963)

B.H. Liddell Hart, Strategy (1954)

Colin Gray, Modern Strategy (Oxford University Press, 1999)

Philosophical and Intellectual Framework

Ibn Khaldun, Muqaddimah (1377 CE)

Frantz Fanon, The Wretched of the Earth (1961, Présence Africaine; English tr. Grove Press, 1963)

Malek Bennabi, Vocation de l’Islam (1954); Le problème des idées dans le monde musulman (1970); Les conditions de la renaissance (1949)

Sa’adi Shirazi, Bustan / Bani Adam (13th century)

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Trump: Open Hormuz Strait or Face Bombed Power Plants

Naval warships and a helicopter patrolling at sea during a vibrant sunset.

By Kurt Nimmo at Global Research. Reposted with permission.

Donald Trump has posted yet another threat to his TruthSocial.

If Iran does not open the Hormuz Strait in 48 hours, he will target the country’s power plants.

The US has the ability to do this. It did it in Iraq.

Naval warships and a helicopter patrolling at sea during a vibrant sunset.
A fleet of naval vessels and a helicopter are beautifully silhouetted against a vibrant sunset.

But Iran is not Iraq. Saddam Hussein was not able to do much beyond hide in a “spider hole” in the desert after the US invaded. His army was defeated in short order. Iran will not fold. It will fight on in the dark, without water and civilian infrastructure.

On March 21, the spokesman of the Central Headquarters of Hazrat Khatam al-Anbiya warned:

“Following previous warnings, if Iran’s fuel and energy infrastructure is attacked by the enemy, all energy, information technology, and desalination infrastructure belonging to the United States and the regime in the region will be targeted.”

Desalination supplies approximately 90% of Kuwait’s drinking water and around 70% of Saudi Arabia’s. In total, approximately 100 million people in the region depend on desalination for water.

Trump was asked if he had ordered the bombing of desalination plants. He responded by saying

Iranians “are among the most evil people ever on earth, they cut babies’ heads off, they chop women in half, what they did, take a look at October 7th… I know nothing about a desalination plant other than to say if they’re complaining about a desalination plant, we complain about the fact that they shouldn’t be chopping babies’ heads off, okay?”

There is no evidence Iran had anything to do with the October 7.

There is absolutely zero evidence they chopped off the heads of babies.

Trump’s off-the-cuff remark is yet another preposterous and evidence-free allegation, but then that’s Trump. Increasingly, he makes statements that are obviously false and often nonsensical. He knows a large number of MAGA cultists will believe what he says, no matter how grotesque and implausible.

Iran will launch its now largely unstoppable ballistic missiles at Israel’s civilian infrastructure, and it will do the same in Bahrain, Qatar, the UAE, and Kuwait. The entire region will go dark and thirsty if Trump follows through on his threat. Or maybe he will change his mind. I don’t think so. He is surrounded by a Zionist cabal, most importantly his son-in-law, Jared Kushner, and the Israeli Prime Minister and internationally wanted war criminal Benjamin Netanyahu has visited Trump at least four times as of late. He does not possess the ability to break free of pernicious influence.

AIPAC, Miriam Adelson, and Zionist billionaires own Donald Trump. It’s said he is heavily implicated in the Epstein Files. It is said the criminality contained therein is used to control him. I don’t know if that is true. I remember Trump’s antics going back to his days on The Apprentice. He is a fool, a clown, a frat boy millionaire with daddy’s money. I did not pay much attention to him until the day he came down the golden Trump Tower escalator in New York and embraced the discordance of American uniparty politics.

Polls disapprove of Trump’s unconstitutional war, or I should say Israel’s war foisted on Trump through whatever means. He is a malignant narcissist, arrogant and vindictive (spitefully ecstatic Robert Mueller is dead), and easily persuaded and controlled through his requirement for constant adulation, praise, and grifter courtesies. He is naive (or senile) enough to readily adopt the foreign policy recommendations of his advisors, namely his National Security Advisors Marco Rubio (also Secretary of State) and Mike Waltz (fired for conniving with Bibi Netanyahu behind Trump’s back, a cardinal sin in the eye of a narcissist).

It is obvious Trump would like to sail up a ramp and exit this mess the Zionists (Christian and Jewish) have steered him into, despite warnings—specifically from General Dan Caine, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff—such inadvisable folly would be a mega-disaster of a magnitude economically and socially unprecedented. His ego will not allow this. There simply is no way he will back down, admit defeat, and become something he dreads more than almost anything—a loser. According to Bloomberg, Trump’s decision to go to war—minus a congressional declaration—came from his handlers and influencers, including Netanyahu and Rupert Murdoch.

So, here we are. 48 hours, now less. Trump will send his B2 “stealth” (not now, thanks to China tech) bombers to Iran and blast power and desalination plants and other critical infrastructure as well. Iran will send its hypersonic missiles to electrical generation plants and grids across the Persian Gulf and Israel in response—and it will be up the escalation ladder we go, whereto nobody knows. If we leave it to the religious Zionists and the dispensationalist, Scofield Bible reading Christian Zionists, the “end times” and “armageddon” will decide our fate, maybe helped along with a few engineered plagues and nuclear exchanges between Israel and Gog and Magog, or Ya’juj and Ma’juj, the kings of the Unclean Nations, according to the aggadah.

Iran’s latest missile, reportedly with a ton or more warhead, exploded in Dimona, near Israel’s nuclear research center (where it keeps undeclared nukes). The attack is being exploited by Israel to hype up the Iranian threat now that Trump is getting cold feet. Needless to say, this is suspicious, as Israel has imposed strict censorship on video and images of widespread damage in Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, and the northern border settlements now that Hezbollah has chimed in with missiles and rockets of its own.

Oh, and those “unauthorized” drones at Barksdale Air Force Base in Louisiana, home of the Air Force Global Strike Command. The drones are not suicide or explosive, at least so far. It seems they are surveilling the base. Electronic jamming does nothing to take them down. The base is on lockdown.

Kurt Nimmo is a journalist, author, and geopolitical analyst, New Mexico, United States. He is a Research Associate of the Centre for Research on Globalization (CRG). Visit the author’s blog.

Editors note: By now all of you should know that you can’t take Trump at his word, especially if he says hostilities between Iran and the US are over. Actions speak louder than words as we know.

As you can see Israel isn’t constrained by any orders Trump may issue because they could give 2 rips about what happens to the United States and the West. Israel’s main concern is to make things so horrible through war that Armageddon happens and their Messiah will show up. Of course they don’t worship Jesus Christ as Messiah so they’re expecting someone else and that someone else is the Antichrist Donald Trump. May rabbis are on record saying that Trump is the one which is why they keep giving him awards like this one here.

Here’s a video showing you what the Jews say about Trump. Stay ready, prayed up and prepped up! Time is definitely short!

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