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Iran needs to do alot of purging, the pace is good right now and theyve scored some big purges.
They should just say for every indian and afghan indivdual to get the hell out of the country
Also they are running out of interceptorsAfter the attack, Israeli fire department and other services come to the spot and there's lot of gathering of officials at that location.
So, once direct hit is achieved just like today's attack, Iran can keep firing a single missile to the same spot at the interval of 1 hour. That will create absolute chaos.
Strikes at day time / working hours are actually better.
I may sound mean, but everything is allowed against genocidal maniacs who have slaughtered 50,000 people in Gaza.
Yes a chunk of iran is anti regime but it is mostly due to foreign nationals like Afghans and Indians. Need to ban em all and send em packing.Traitors are bigger enemy of Iran than Israel. They need to do a lot more (obviously along with this). A significant number of Iranians are also anti-regime. They really need to meticulously plan things with the understanding that anyone can be a traitor. This necessitates rigorous scrutiny of every individual and the public display of extremely severe punishments for traitors (better if its inhuman type things), aiming to prevent others from even contemplating such acts.
Iran declined Russia's offer of air defense.
Even joint protection.
I understand that we often don't know our own position, but everyone around us does.
Iran doesn't know its own position.
Guys something is cooking sadly in a negative way-there are enough tell tales recorded in the past whenever Pak generals were invited to the Zionist white racist house.
During his 10-day visit from September 1–10, few American officials had time for him. Following the 9/11 attacks, everybody wanted to see him from the White House staff to the State Department and the Pentagon. On September 12, General Mahmud and Ambassador Maleeha Lodhi had a meeting with members of the National Security Council. There were other meetings with CIA, Pentagon, and State Department officials.
When I asked him about his meeting with the burly Richard Armitage, the former Navy Seal who was then serving as Assistant Secretary of State at the State Department, General Mahmud said he desperately needed Pakistan’s help. I specifically asked him about media reports about Armitage’s threats against Pakistan (in his interview with CBS’ “60 Minutes” program on September 17, 2006, General Pervez Musharraf had said Armitage had threatened to bomb Pakistan “back into the Stone Age”).
General Mahmud rejected such assertions. “Despite his massive bulk and his head cocked up because of his oversized neck, Richard Armitage spoke softly and politely. Reports of his threats against Pakistan are completely untrue.”
Scott Conroy’s report on the CBS website (September 23, 2006) corroborates General Mahmud’s position. “On Friday [September 22, 2006], US President George W. Bush said that he was taken aback when he heard the claim [about Armitage’s threats to Pakistan], while Mr. Armitage denied he had ever threatened the use of military action against Pakistan if it refused to join the US-led war on terror after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks,” Conroy wrote.
According to General Mahmud, American officials were both nervous and confused. They needed help and they turned to Pakistan. The September 12, 2001 phone call from US Secretary of State Colin Powell to Musharraf is well known. As absolute dictator, Musharraf accepted each and every one of the US demands without consulting anyone or asking anything in return. The rest, as they say, is history.
By surrendering to US demands, Musharraf, hitherto shunned by the West, immediately became the most sought after Third-World ruler. Not only American but European leaders also made a beeline to Pakistan seeking its help in what was going to be a devastating war on the Taliban in Afghanistan. Musharraf thought he had hit a jackpot!
An extract from the past interview-
Soon after the Americans launched their war on Afghanistan (October 7, 2001), General Mahmud was relieved of his responsibilities as Director ISI. He resigned from the army and went into retirement. The two generals — Musharraf and Mahmud — were quite close and had worked together for decades. Now they had a falling out over the manner in which Musharraf threw in his lot with the Americans against the Taliban.
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