Who?So we need to take it on trust from a man known to exaggerate.
Maybe because Israel actively funded ISIS and predecessor organizationsHamas: (I do not consider this organization to be a terrorist organization. But someone say)
![]()
Blowback: How Israel Went From Helping Create Hamas to Bombing It
Hamas wants to destroy Israel, right? But as Mehdi Hasan shows in a new video on blowback, Israeli officials admit they helped start the group.theintercept.com
![]()
How Israel helped prop up Hamas for decades | Analyst News
What is Hamas, and why has Israel deliberately enabled its existence for years?www.analystnews.org
ISIS: (I think the ISIS rarely apologizes. As far as I know, they have never apologized to Iran.)
Israel forgives Daesh for attack following ‘apology’
While Daesh in Syria and Iraq was largely handled by the US and Russia, its presence in J&S, Gaza, and Sinai was removed by Israel, including in joint military campaigns with Egypt.Maybe because Israel actively funded ISIS and predecessor organizations
What they examined was not the speech, but the intelligence itself.
www.armscontrolwonk.com
The 4 Avengers in Bahrain left a month before the war started. There's only 4 left in Japan. Of the 3 LCS in theater, two left the Gulf. So there's a grand total of maybe 1 LCS in theater, capable of mine sweeping.Thinking ahead because this whole misendeavor is probably going to keep on going for the foreseeable future what sort of ability does the USN have to do minesweeping these days? If escorting maritime traffic through the straight, I'd personally be more worried about mines than drones and whatever (hopefully small) number of AShMs they have left.
I know the LCS was supposed to be able to do the minesweeping job but did that capability ever materialize?
Quite frankly the USN *should* have the ability to escort traffic through. Decades of miserable performance at shipbuilding by the Navy and its contractors and the inability to commit and stick to shipbuilding plans on the part of leadership are taking its toll.
We ran convoys from 1939 to 1945 across an entire ocean, facing u-boats attacking in packs, in the worst months losing upwards of 500,000t of shipping a month, while simultaneously sustaining ongoing military campaigns in North Africa, and resupplying Malta in combined operations so complex they took fleets sailing from both ends of the Med at once. Meanwhile the coastal convoys saw daily air and surface attack. The entire logistics support for military campaigns in the Far East, Italy and Southern France flowed by sea, ultimately leading to D-Day and the successful invasion of Northern Europe, while out in the Pacific entire ports were prefabricated and moved thousands of miles to where they were needed.80 -140 ships per day, 365 days a year.
Even with the greatest ships ever build, it wouldn't be sustainable
Xinhua News Agency, Washington, April 7 — On the evening of April 7, U.S. President Trump posted on social media that after a phone call with the Pakistani side, he agreed to suspend bombing and attacks on Iran for two weeks, on the condition that Iran agrees to “fully, immediately, and safely” open the Strait of Hormuz.
At this time, it was less than an hour and a half before the “deadline” set by Trump for Iran.
Israel's Channel 12 TV cited a White House official as saying that Israel also agreed to a ceasefire and to suspend airstrikes on Iran for two weeks. The media also quoted an Israeli official as saying that the ceasefire would take effect after Iran opens the Strait of Hormuz.
Trump said on social media that Pakistani Prime Minister Shahbaz and Army Chief of Staff Munir requested a delay in the U.S. military airstrikes on Iran that evening. Based on his conversation with them and on the premise that Iran agrees to “fully, immediately, and safely” open the Strait of Hormuz, he agreed to a two-week ceasefire, emphasizing that “this will be a two-way ceasefire.”
Trump stated that he made this decision because the U.S. had “achieved and exceeded all military objectives.” In addition, substantive progress has been made toward establishing a “long-term peace” with Iran and achieving a final agreement for peace in the Middle East.
He said the U.S. received a ten-point proposal from Iran and believes the proposal could serve as a viable basis for negotiations. On various issues where there were previously disagreements, the U.S. and Iran have basically reached consensus. The two-week buffer period will help both sides finalize and reach this agreement.
Earlier, Shahbaz posted on social media: “Diplomatic efforts aimed at peacefully ending the current Middle East conflict are advancing steadily and strongly and are expected to achieve tangible results in the near term.” To give space for the diplomatic process, he requested Trump to extend the “deadline” by two weeks and also asked the “brotherly Iranians” to open the Strait of Hormuz for two weeks as a gesture of goodwill. Shahbaz also called on all parties involved in the conflict to observe a two-week ceasefire to allow the diplomatic process to ultimately end the war and maintain long-term peace and stability in the Middle East.
On April 6, U.S. President Trump said that the U.S. military would need only “four hours” to destroy all bridges and power stations in Iran; whether the conflict with Iran would escalate or approach an end depended on Iran's response to the “deadline” set by him at 8 p.m. Eastern Time on April 7. On April 7, Trump posted on social media again, threatening Iran by saying: “Tonight, all of civilization will perish. I do not wish for this to happen, but it may happen.
It seems that Iran will continue to exist.In any case, it's considered good news.Tehran, April 8 (Xinhua) - On the 8th, the Iranian Supreme National Security Council issued a statement, announcing the main contents of ten ceasefire terms submitted to the United States via Pakistan.
These contents include: Controlled passage through the Strait of Hormuz coordinated with Iranian armed forces; the cessation of war against all regional resistance forces; withdrawal of U.S. combat forces from all bases and deployment points in the region; formulation of a Strait of Hormuz security passage agreement to ensure Iran's dominant position; full compensation for Iran's estimated losses; lifting all primary and secondary sanctions, and revocation of relevant resolutions by the International Atomic Energy Agency and the UN Security Council; unfreezing all Iranian overseas assets and properties; and ultimately passing a binding UN Security Council resolution approving all the above terms.
The statement said that the approval of the Security Council resolution will make all these terms binding under international law, 'bringing a significant diplomatic victory to Iran,' and that Pakistan has informed Iran that the U.S. has accepted the above principles as a basis for negotiations.
Most of Iraq is the non-Iranian, Sunni, branch of Islam. So it'd be more likely to have Iraq come into the fight on the US side, just to shoot a bunch of Shia. (Yes, the relationship is that acrimonious.)Iraq is, what--a bit of a client state of Iran?
Any Iraqi incursion possible? Potential Janissaries?
Differences I see between the 2.WW and the current Iranian War would be thatWe ran convoys from 1939 to 1945 across an entire ocean, facing u-boats attacking in packs, in the worst months losing upwards of 500,000t of shipping a month, while simultaneously sustaining ongoing military campaigns in North Africa, and resupplying Malta in combined operations so complex they took fleets sailing from both ends of the Med at once. Meanwhile the coastal convoys saw daily air and surface attack. The entire logistics support for military campaigns in the Far East, Italy and Southern France flowed by sea, ultimately leading to D-Day and the successful invasion of Northern Europe, while out in the Pacific entire ports were prefabricated and moved thousands of miles to where they were needed.
Why question whether it would be sustainable, when the answer is we already handled worse once before?
A 2015 estimate by the CIA World Factbook reported that 64-69% of Iraqis were Shia Muslims and 29–34% were Sunni Muslims.Most of Iraq is the non-Iranian, Sunni, branch of Islam. So it'd be more likely to have Iraq come into the fight on the US side, just to shoot a bunch of Shia. (Yes, the relationship is that acrimonious.)
As a supplement.Iranian Foreign Minister Aragzi issued a statement on the 8th, announcing that the Strait of Hormuz will be safely navigable within two weeks. He did not specify a specific date for the resumption of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz.
Pakistani Prime Minister Shahbaz confirmed that Iran and the United States, as well as their respective allies, have agreed to an immediate ceasefire in all locations, including Lebanon and other regions, effective immediately. He invited the delegations of Iran and the United States to further negotiate in Islamabad on the 10th to reach a final agreement to resolve all disputes.
"The two sides have shown extraordinary wisdom and understanding, and have continued to engage in the cause of peace and stability in a constructive manner," Shahbaz said. We sincerely hope that the 'Islamabad talks' will succeed in achieving sustainable peace, and we look forward to sharing more good news in the coming days!"
According to US media reports, the Trump administration is preparing for possible face-to-face talks between the United States and Iran, and the two sides are currently working on a long-term agreement to end the conflict. Given that the two sides have just announced a ceasefire, the possibility of such talks is becoming more and more likely.
Trump recently claimed that if Iran does not reach an agreement with the United States or open the Strait of Hormuz by 20 o'clock EST on the 7th, the United States will destroy Iran's power plants and bridges. Trump threatened Iran on social media on the 7th: "Tonight, the whole civilization will die." I don't want this to happen, but it could happen. ”
Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps warned that once the United States crosses the "red line", Iran will "no longer restrain" and will attack the infrastructure of the United States and its regional allies. Iran's Tasnim news agency quoted an Iranian military source as saying that Iran has prepared some surprises for Trump's "possible madness", one of which is to target Saudi Aramco, Yanbu oil facilities and the UAE's Fujairah oil pipeline.
Tehran, April 8 (Xinhua) - On the 8th, the Iranian Supreme National Security Council issued a statement, announcing the main contents of ten ceasefire terms submitted to the United States via Pakistan.
These contents include: Controlled passage through the Strait of Hormuz coordinated with Iranian armed forces; the cessation of war against all regional resistance forces; withdrawal of U.S. combat forces from all bases and deployment points in the region; formulation of a Strait of Hormuz security passage agreement to ensure Iran's dominant position; full compensation for Iran's estimated losses; lifting all primary and secondary sanctions, and revocation of relevant resolutions by the International Atomic Energy Agency and the UN Security Council; unfreezing all Iranian overseas assets and properties; and ultimately passing a binding UN Security Council resolution approving all the above terms.
The statement said that the approval of the Security Council resolution will make all these terms binding under international law, 'bringing a significant diplomatic victory to Iran,' and that Pakistan has informed Iran that the U.S. has accepted the above principles as a basis for negotiations.
The same is true for the United States and Israel.Doesn't this simply give Iran a valuable reprieve that allows them to regroup and move around and hide their remaining military assets?
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi also made clear Iran won’t relax any of its leverage even during the two-week ceasefire. “For a period of two weeks, safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz will be possible via coordination with Iran’s Armed Forces and with due consideration of technical limitations,” he wrote on X. Iran’s semi-official Tasnim News Agency, meanwhile, reported that Iran and Oman plan to charge transit fees for ships passing through the strait during the ceasefire.
Trump derided the Supreme National Security Council statement as a fraud and attacked CNN for reporting it.
That isn't going to happen with their history with Sunnis. The Iraq War on Dubya's part was a great gift to them...which they squandered with their own proxy fights.I think no one should be having any illusions about the americans let alone 'israel' respecting any ceasefire or honour any agreement, their track record proves it. If there is any lull in the fighting Iran should go full on for the bomb with the HEU they have. They need their own Samson option
Can't teach an old dog new tricks.attacked CNN for reporting it
I suspect that this 'ceasefire' will be very short-lived indeed.Here we go again...............
If you don't consider the deliberate targeting and killing of 1,400 civilians to be the actions of a terrorist group, then we have a problem.Hamas: (I do not consider this organization to be a terrorist organization. But someone say)
If the insinuation is that they're co-operating, surely they'd want to keep that quiet, which doesn't involve publicising an official apology.Israel forgives Daesh for attack following ‘apology’
A 24 day waiting period before inspecting military sites prevents verification. I mean, you can move office in one afternoon using manual labour.Mike Pompeo was US Secretary of State at the time, testifying to Congress, one month before US withdrawal from JCPOA, with the US President declaring Netanyahu's presentation convinced him to withdraw. Meaningless?
This earlier Haaretz quote:
Transit fees would be a breach of the ceasefire agreement.A day on the brink with Iran ended with a TACO and grave constitutional questions
Regards,
Usually there is a 24-hour period allowed for a ceasefire to be communicated.Gulf countries scramble to intercept missiles hours into U.S.-Iran ceasefire agreement
![]()
Gulf countries scramble to intercept missiles hours into U.S.-Iran ceasefire agreement
Many Middle Eastern countries continued to report incoming ballistic missiles and drones from Iran on Wednesday, within hours after the U.S. and Iran announced a two-week ceasefire.www.cnbc.com
Maybe Iran didn't get the memo
Regards,