mangekyo
Trusted Member
Hold the line Iran... Hold the line!
Interesting read. I was listening to a podcast today. A US service member who had worked at Diego Garcia said the same thing. They can’t sustain the air raids for much longer.
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Hold the line Iran... Hold the line!
Like????Some things are best not talked about !!!
This shit was promised to him 3000 years ago
They can. No doubt.To be fair they can turn it into rubble especially with trump giving out 2000 pound bombs for free they will let Israel do whatever they wish if there is a true mass casualty event in the hundreds in Israel they will do what they always do not even pretend
If ur talking about Israel there is a mass censorship campaign going on over there so don't expect much to comeSo I’m starting to think something got hit no messages of missiles hit open areas or missiles we’re intercepted in the last salvo
You never take into account that Shia-led government in Baghdad asked for them to be transferred to Iraq.
Al-Sudani, for his part, was explicit in stressing that hosting the detainees—despite the risks they pose—was fundamentally a preemptive step to protect Iraq’s national security first and foremost
![]()
Behind the Transfer of ISIS Detainees to Iraq | Alhurra
As northern Syria entered a new phase, the transfer of thousands of Islamic State detainees to Iraqi custody was seen as more than a logistical operation. Analysts said the move reflected shifting …alhurra.com
Everything is a conspiracy theory nowadays.
At this moment? No, not really. Do you understand what kind of damage 10k terrorist fighters with the backing of the US in a treacherous mountain terrain can inflict on a military?
![]()
There's a corridor from Qandil down to Penjwin where thousands of Kurdish terrorists are currently deployed on the Iraqi side of the border.
![]()
Iran's landscape is both a benefit and a drawback. Combat in this area is really tough. They don't have the experience, equipment, or resources needed to engage in a civil war on the peaks of the Zagros Mountains. They will most definitely lose control over certain areas. At least the Iranian forces won't be able to access some parts of the territory for a period of time. However, this is not something extraordinary. Look at Syria. Or Turkey pre-Erdoğan. Question is how much actual support PJAK is going to get from Washington.
*Everything to loseThey can. No doubt.
But don't expect Tel Aviv to go scot free. Interceptors are already starting to run out and you are seeing more videos of Iran missiles making it through. Even if they did run out, those Shahed drones would do quite a bit of damage on them.
It's a long drawn out war now. USA and Israel has more to lose.
View attachment 182743
Destroyed buildings at Bagram Air Base following strikes by Pakistan, seen on satellite imagery captured on Sunday. Credit...Airbus
I am impressed too. But does this also prove those of us who still believed that hezbollah still had military "juice" left in it, right? Many on this thread and forum said hezbollah was finished,but it just beat Israel's azz thoroughly on the first day of a ground confrontation with Israel since the ceasefire was signed and honored unconditionally by hezbollah only.Hezbollah has done a lot better today
hit 5 Merkava tanks, downed a Hermes drone, fired a lot of rockets at Tel Aviv and Haifa
I am impressed
Iranians will bury them aliveYou never take into account that Shia-led government in Baghdad asked for them to be transferred to Iraq.
Al-Sudani, for his part, was explicit in stressing that hosting the detainees—despite the risks they pose—was fundamentally a preemptive step to protect Iraq’s national security first and foremost
![]()
Behind the Transfer of ISIS Detainees to Iraq | Alhurra
As northern Syria entered a new phase, the transfer of thousands of Islamic State detainees to Iraqi custody was seen as more than a logistical operation. Analysts said the move reflected shifting …alhurra.com
Everything is a conspiracy theory nowadays.
At this moment? No, not really. Do you understand what kind of damage 10k terrorist fighters with the backing of the US in a treacherous mountain terrain can inflict on a military?
![]()
There's a corridor from Qandil down to Penjwin where thousands of Kurdish terrorists are currently deployed on the Iraqi side of the border.
![]()
Iran's landscape is both a benefit and a drawback. Combat in this area is really tough. They don't have the experience, equipment, or resources needed to engage in a civil war on the peaks of the Zagros Mountains. They will most definitely lose control over certain areas. At least the Iranian forces won't be able to access some parts of the territory for a period of time. However, this is not something extraordinary. Look at Syria. Or Turkey pre-Erdoğan. Question is how much actual support PJAK is going to get from Washington.
Yeah I know that if the Iranians hit a military site we won’t know about that for months if not years but death are two different things they can’t sweep that under the rug like they did once upon A timeIf ur talking about Israel there is a mass censorship campaign going on over there so don't expect much to come
You never take into account that Shia-led government in Baghdad asked for them to be transferred to Iraq.
Al-Sudani, for his part, was explicit in stressing that hosting the detainees—despite the risks they pose—was fundamentally a preemptive step to protect Iraq’s national security first and foremost
![]()
Behind the Transfer of ISIS Detainees to Iraq | Alhurra
As northern Syria entered a new phase, the transfer of thousands of Islamic State detainees to Iraqi custody was seen as more than a logistical operation. Analysts said the move reflected shifting …alhurra.com
Everything is a conspiracy theory nowadays.
At this moment? No, not really. Do you understand what kind of damage 10k terrorist fighters with the backing of the US in a treacherous mountain terrain can inflict on a military?
![]()
There's a corridor from Qandil down to Penjwin where thousands of Kurdish terrorists are currently deployed on the Iraqi side of the border.
![]()
Iran's landscape is both a benefit and a drawback. Combat in this area is really tough. They don't have the experience, equipment, or resources needed to engage in a civil war on the peaks of the Zagros Mountains. They will most definitely lose control over certain areas. At least the Iranian forces won't be able to access some parts of the territory for a period of time. However, this is not something extraordinary. Look at Syria. Or Turkey pre-Erdoğan. Question is how much actual support PJAK is going to get from Washington.
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