Iran - Israel/US War: Israel-US declare war on Iran, Iran responds

That guy needs to be beaten down to a pulp with a baseball bat. Just a total bullshit artist.

These baasturdz are all the same.

Remember Biden's comment the day before the US pulled out of Afghanistan........

'Our posture is robust and our military dominant'

Next day mofo pulled out.......:p
 
Ok

Respectfully,it's you that needs to be strong enough to recognize irans achievements, because if you look and read around, you will find them. Iran has made great strides on different technologies, especially medical related ones, and Iran has several each products it makes that not even Israel makes ,classic example is gas turbines. Also Israeli technology is essentially cofunded or /and codeveloped with US,while irans technology development is mostly independent.
If Iran was not a tech power that was about to overtake Israel then US and Israel would've had no good reason to bomb Iranian universities. Wake up.
I am not taking anything away from Iran. Iran is self sufficient in so many things and that is a great achievement in itself. But the foundation of each of that industry, the basic PC, Laptop and IC are all foreign. Without that, without the foundation, even minor achievements would have been impossible. Also, as soon as you come out of Iran, the achievements pale in comparison to scientific, medical and technological achievements of the West, including Israel.

Granted that Israeli achievements in the past would have been zero without absolute support of the West and the US but today there are considerable Israeli achievements which cannot be ignored and some which are absolute ground breaking innovations. Add to that the fact that most tech innovations are from Jews, you get the picture where Jews are, where Iran specifically and Muslims in general are.

Also, what you may conceive as a comparison between Israel and Iran; I am focused more on a comparison between Israel and the larger Muslim World and absolutely do not mean to demean Iran which commands respect at her achievements especially after being cut off from the world.
 
Turkey/Pakistan are the biggest hater :P
Surprised at some countries, Poland, Australia, Germany?

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Who the fcuk are those 3% in Pakistan???

We need to find them and finish them quick 🗡️
 
Who the fcuk are those 3% in Pakistan???

We need to find them and finish them quick 🗡️
Ahmedis, lots of pakistani ahmedis live in Israel and have been given citizenship. So depends on the parameters of this survey, if they asked pakistanis here in pakistan or abroad. Regardless, it is definetly those ppl who have a favourable opinion of them
 
I am not taking anything away from Iran. Iran is self sufficient in so many things and that is a great achievement in itself. But the foundation of each of that industry, the basic PC, Laptop and IC are all foreign. Without that, without the foundation, even minor achievements would have been impossible. Also, as soon as you come out of Iran, the achievements pale in comparison to scientific, medical and technological achievements of the West, including Israel.

Granted that Israeli achievements in the past would have been zero without absolute support of the West and the US but today there are considerable Israeli achievements which cannot be ignored and some which are absolute ground breaking innovations. Add to that the fact that most tech innovations are from Jews, you get the picture where Jews are, where Iran specifically and Muslims in general are.

Also, what you may conceive as a comparison between Israel and Iran; I am focused more on a comparison between Israel and the larger Muslim World and absolutely do not mean to demean Iran which commands respect at her achievements especially after being cut off from the world.
Also, Israel has their own software on their f35's not using USA's. So, let's not kid ourselves, God really blessed them with brains. They are a clever bunch of ppl, no doubt about it.

Edit: They are b@$€£rds though. The largest in the world.
 
the engine recovered matches Shahed, not Lucas

first we said it was a malfunctioning air defence interceptor, now it's a false flag Lucas drone? come on

no one cried when the US and Israel destroyed our airports, why should we give a shit now?
After the strikes on their bases, American drones and fighter jets are also operating at civilian airports such as Ben Gurion, Dubai, Kuwait, etc.
 
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⚡️JUST IN:

The military adviser to Iran's Supreme Leader warns the UAE, Kuwait, and Bahrain:

"The Emir of Qatar and Mohammed bin Salman are on the right path in history

But the UAE, Bahrain, and Kuwait continue to believe that American power will remain as strong as ever

They also supported Saddam's Iraq against Iran

If they continue down this path, we will even go after them once the war is over"

Bahrain will come back to Iran.
UAE will be downed and get back to its original status as a fishermen country
Kuwait will be liquefied then absorbed by Iraq
 
Anyone who lives in the United States and is a citizen and also against these "forever" wars in the Middle East should contact their Congressional representatives/Senators for their state and urge them to not let Israel permanently hijack the US defense industry.

This is by far the most serious attempt to integrate Israeli military within the US defense establishment.

Once this happens, the US aid to Israel will not be needed as Israelis will be "partners" within the US defense establishment. This is a masterstroke by the Zionists to ensure Israel continues to get the best of US military technology without it being delivered to them as military aid (which is under a lot of pressure amongst the American citizenry):

2027 NDAA Provision Seeks Sweeping US-Israel Defense Tech Integration​

Critics warn that Section 224 could deepen both countries' military ties, which may be difficult to reverse.


By Haley Fuller
Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is greeted by President Donald Trump as he arrives at the West Wing of the White House in Washington, Monday, April 7, 2025, in Washington.

A provision tucked into the House Armed Services Committee’s draft version of the Fiscal Year 2027 defense policy bill could move the U.S.-Israel military relationship beyond traditional aid and into a far deeper form of defense-industrial integration.

Section 224 of the drafted National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), the “United States-Israel Defense Technology Cooperation Initiative,” would require the defense secretary to designate an executive agent to coordinate U.S.-Israel defense technology research, development, testing, evaluation, integration and industrial cooperation. It specifically describes the provision as covering bilateral defense technology work, integration and industrial cooperation.

Supporters view the proposal as a way to strengthen cooperation between two longtime security partners while critics argue it would move the relationship beyond traditional military aid and into a far deeper system of defense-industrial integration that would be harder for Congress, taxpayers, and even future administrations, to monitor or unwind. The U.S. and Israel jointly struck Iran on Feb. 28, leading to the ongoing war in the Middle East that has enveloped multiple nations.

Ben Freeman, director of the Democratizing Foreign Policy program at the Quincy Institute, warned in Responsible Statecraft that “Congress quietly moves to integrate US and Israeli militaries," adding that the measure could intertwine the two countries’ military sectors at a level not previously seen in any U.S. allyship.

Freeman told Military.com that the provision reaches across “seemingly every area of defense tech,” including artificial intelligence, quantum technology, autonomous systems, directed energy, cyber and biotechnology. He said the most alarming terms were “network integration” and “data fusion,” since the bill does not clearly define them.
Ben Freeman is director of the Democratizing Foreign Policy program at the Quincy Institute.Credit: Source: Quincy Institute.

The proposal also arrives as senior American and Israeli officials increasingly discuss moving beyond the traditional aid framework. On June 1, U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee wrote on X that a future U.S.-Israel security agreement would move away from direct aid, stating, “New MOU w/ Israel ends aid & will be based on trade.”

The statement echoed previous comments from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other Israeli officials advocating a gradual transition away from direct military assistance and toward joint projects and defense cooperation.

Freeman argues that this shift is not simply a change in accounting. It represents a fundamental change in how the relationship operates.

'Sky is the Limit'

The United States and Israel currently operate under a 10-year memorandum of understandingthat runs from fiscal 2019 through FY 2028 and provides $3.3 billion per year in foreign military financing, plus $500 million per year for missile defense cooperation.

That aid model has long been controversial, but it is at least visible. Congress can debate it, lawmakers can try to condition it, and the public can understand the top-line number.

Freeman argued that Section 224 points toward something different: Moving support out of the foreign-aid framework and into Pentagon procurement, licensing, co-production and research channels.

That shift matches a broader debate described by Steven Simon in a Quincy Institute brief, “The Disappearing Aid Check,” which argues ending traditional grant aid would not necessarily end U.S. support for Israel’s military. Instead, support could move into procurement contracts, joint development programs, sustainment pipelines and industrial-based investments.
Reserve and Guard leaders speak with 25 HASC staff members to outline readiness challenges and legislative priorities, aiming to inform work on the upcoming national defense bill at the Rayburn House Office Building. (DVIDS)

Freeman said that matters because the new model would be harder for ordinary Americans to see or influence. Aid is capped by a memorandum of understanding and publicly appropriated, but procurement and industrial cooperation can expand through numerous contracts, programs and partnerships spread across different parts of the Defense Department.

Under the aid model, he said, a voter who objects to Israeli military actions can call a member of Congress and demand a vote against aid. But under the procurement model, “You have no one to call."

"You basically have to call up the Department of Defense and say, ‘Hello, Pete Hegseth, please stop doing business with Israel,'" he said.

The transparency concern is sharpened by the Pentagon’s own accounting problems. The Defense Department completed its seventh consecutive department-wide financial statement audit in 2024 without receiving a clean opinion, while stating that it aims to achieve an unmodified audit opinion by the end of 2028.


Freeman said that if U.S. support for Israel is spread across contracts, data-sharing arrangements, licensing agreements and joint ventures, “There is no upper bound for the level of cooperation here."

“The sky is the limit," he said. "It would be all but impossible to come up with a full estimate of exactly how much U.S. money is going to Israel.”

Data Fusion and Intelligence Risks

Perhaps the most controversial language in Section 224 involves “network integration” and “data fusion.” The legislation does not clearly define either term. Freeman said that ambiguity is exactly what concerns him.

“I take it as meaning the U.S. military's data could soon be the Israeli military's data,” he said, adding that his concern is rooted in previous disputes over technology-sharing.

In 2020, the U.S. Army acquired two Israeli-made Iron Dome batteries. However, Army officials later concluded that the system could not be fully integrated into the Army's broader air and missile defense architecture.

After providing the equipment, Israel was unwilling to provide source code and technical information necessary for full integration. The Army ultimately decided not to pursue additional Iron Dome purchases.

To Freeman, that history raises an obvious question. If Israel previously resisted sharing critical technical information with the United States, what guarantees exist that future data-sharing arrangements would be fully reciprocal?

The Jobs Trap

Freeman believes the most politically significant aspect of Section 224 may have nothing to do with technology. Instead, he points to jobs.

Section 224 could encourage Israeli-linked defense firms to expand co-production facilities, joint ventures and manufacturing work inside the United States. Once those jobs exist, they become political assets.

Freeman called that possibility “the real Trojan horse” in the proposal. He argued that Israeli firms could replicate the familiar American defense-industry strategy of spreading production across congressional districts, making lawmakers reluctant to oppose programs that support local employment.

AP20062596442146
Former Vice President Mike Pence speaks at the the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) 2020 Conference, Monday, March 2, 2020 in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
The F-35 program offers the clearest example of how that works. Lockheed Martin spread suppliers and jobs across dozens of states, helping create political support that makes the program extraordinarily difficult to cancel.

Freeman compared that dynamic to what could happen if Israeli defense firms build deeper U.S. manufacturing footprints.

“They would put that on top of what is already, arguably, the most powerful special interest in all of U.S. politics,” he said. “It would put the Israel lobby on steroids.”

The issue is not hypothetical. Recent reporting has already identified Israeli-linked defense manufacturing and drone production inside the United States, including facilities connected to companies such as XTEND.

Hard to Unwind

Freeman points to Turkey's removal from the F-35 program as an example of how difficult defense-industrial disentanglement can be.

After Ankara was expelled from the program over its purchase of Russia's S-400 air defense system, the Pentagon spent years shifting production away from Turkish suppliers that had been manufacturing hundreds of F-35 components. The transition required finding and qualifying replacement suppliers, restructuring portions of the supply chain, and absorbing additional costs before Turkey could be fully removed from the program.

That was one program. Section 224 would potentially touch multiple domains at once.

Freeman argued that if Israel later took actions that caused Washington to reconsider the relationship, disentangling the two defense sectors could take years and create real national security costs.


A Dangerous Time to Integrate

Recent Middle East diplomacy shows why deeper integration is risky.

President Donald Trump said Israel and Hezbollah had agreed to reduce hostilities, but Netanyahu said Israel would continue “to operate as planned” in southern Lebanon unless Hezbollah stopped its attacks. Trump reportedly lashed out at Netanyahu, calling him "crazy," according to Axios.

Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attends a ceremony commemorating Israel's Remembrance Day for fallen soldiers, or Yom HaZikaron, at the Military Cemetery on Mount Herzl in Jerusalem, Tuesday April 21, 2026. (Ilia Yefimovich/Pool Photo via AP)
Iran then halted communications with mediators, according to Iranian reports, while Trump said talks were continuing.

To Freeman, the episode proves that U.S. and Israeli interests are not always compatible.

“Netanyahu is proving right now that Israel’s interests are not always America’s interests,” he said. “Trump is trying to negotiate an end to this conflict, and Netanyahu—over and over again—is doing things that violate the ceasefires and make ending the conflict impossible.”

A Shift in Public Opinion

That concern comes as public opinion has shifted sharply on Israel.

Gallup reported in February 2026 that Israelis no longer lead Palestinians in Americans’ sympathies, with independent-leaning voters now sympathizing more with Palestinians than Israelis.


In May 2026, an Institute for Global Affairs poll found that only 16% of Americans want the United States to keep supplying Israel with weapons without new restrictions, while 38% want weapons transfers stopped entirely and 24% want them conditioned on how they are used. Among Republicans, 35% back unrestricted supply, 29% want conditions, and 18% want to halt supply entirely.

On the other hand, some lawmakers have pushed institutional links beyond procurement. In 2024, H.R. 8445 proposed extending certain protections under federal law to U.S. citizens serving in the Israel Defense Forces.

Freeman said he has seen bipartisan concern about Section 224, including interest from figures on the right and left.

His plea to Congress was direct: “The American people don’t want it. Listen to your constituents, not your lobbyists. Strip out Section 224 from the NDAA.”




Congress advances US-Israeli military integration plan​

A provision in the 2027 draft US defence bill could bind the two countries’ weapons industries closer than ever.

By Al Jazeera Staff
Published On 30 May 202630 May 2026
A provision in a bill before the United States Congress could tie the US and Israeli militaries far more closely together, deepening their cooperation on weapons research, production and technology.

The proposal, titled the United States-Israel Defense Technology Cooperation Initiative, appears as Section 224 of the House Armed Services Committee’s version of the fiscal year 2027 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), the annual US defence policy bill.

The measure is still at an early stage. The NDAA is passed by Congress each year to set US military policy and authorise defence programmes and spending levels.

If enacted, the provision could mark a significant change in one of the world’s closest military relationships, shifting the two countries from a partnership centred largely on US military aid towards one in which their defence industries are more deeply intertwined.

Section 224 would require the US defence secretary to appoint an “executive agent”: a single official to coordinate military cooperation between the US and Israel.

That work would cover joint research and development, the shared production of weapons, and the linking of military systems and data.

“What Congress is trying to do now is find different ways of entrenching the relationship so deep in America’s own defence industrial base that it’s impossible to root it out,” Josh Paul, a former US Department of State official and founder of the advocacy group A New Policy, said about the controversial provision.

“A new section of law in the National Defense Authorization Act would give Israel unprecedented access to American technology and would force the United States military to integrate Israeli defence technologies into our own critical military supply chain, giving Israel incredible leverage over America’s own defence priorities,” he added in a video posted on social media on Friday.

The two countries have already built missile defence systems together, such as the Iron Dome.

The bill would extend their joint work into many more areas of modern warfare, from artificial intelligence (AI) to drones and cyber-operations.

The provision comes amid turmoil in the Middle East following joint US-Israeli attacks on Iran earlier this year. In February, US and Israeli forces attacked Iran, triggering five weeks of war; Iran struck back at Israel and at US bases in the Gulf region before a ceasefire took hold in April.

Israel is also facing genocide allegations in a case brought by South Africa at the International Court of Justice, the top court of the United Nations, over its war on Gaza.

Decades of support​

The bill must first clear the House Armed Services Committee, which is due to take it up in early June, and then pass the full House and the Senate.

It was proposed by the committee’s Republican chairman, Mike Rogers, and its most senior Democrat, Adam Smith, giving it support from both main parties, even as opinion polls suggest growing opposition among most Democrats and some Republicans to further military support for Israel.



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‘Americans should reject all foreign influence’


The US has supported Israel’s military for decades.

Since 2008, US law has required Washington to protect Israel’s “qualitative military edge”, keeping its forces stronger and more advanced than those of any rival in the region, on the grounds that a small country must rely on better weapons rather than greater numbers.

Under the current aid deal signed during the administration of former President Barack Obama, Washington provides Israel with about $3.8bn a year in military assistance. The 10-year agreement runs through 2028.

Israel is the largest recipient of US foreign aid since 1948, almost all of it now military and worth more than $300bn when adjusted for inflation.

The nature of that support may now be changing. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said recently that he wants to end Israel’s reliance on US military aid within 10 years, saying his country had “come of age”.

Closer cooperation between the two defence industries, rather than cash, would likely fit that goal.


Thanks for sharing. It is extremely interesting. That means that the zionists cáncer is expanding the host's body.

This is even more bindind than a traditional Defense Pacto/Teatry, because they're sharing crítical technologies and even research science.

Also, and It is just my oppinion, It could end in a World War, because obviously China and Russia are obliged to help their allies to equalize this bizarre parasit relation.
 
Oman's Mina al Fahal terminal has reportedly halted oil loading after an explosion near its single-buoy mooring (SBM) berths

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BREAKING: A secret that everyone knew, has been exposed and unveiled by CNN: Israel established a secret base inside of Azerbaijan

• The secret base includes dozens of Mossad agents, special OP troops, elite heliborne troops, etc.

• The base functioned as both an intelligence base with special hardware and devices & as a drone operations base.

• Israel used Azerbaijan to assassinate Rahman Moghaddam, an IRGC figure within the intelligence division (with drones) — 1 day after the assassination Iran launched drones at Nakhchivan’s airport (which Iran denied responsibility).

• Azerbaijan also hosted secret meetings between ‘Israel’ & Syria

Screenshot 2026-06-05 at 10.14.59.png
 
BREAKING: A secret that everyone knew, has been exposed and unveiled by CNN: Israel established a secret base inside of Azerbaijan

• The secret base includes dozens of Mossad agents, special OP troops, elite heliborne troops, etc.

• The base functioned as both an intelligence base with special hardware and devices & as a drone operations base.

• Israel used Azerbaijan to assassinate Rahman Moghaddam, an IRGC figure within the intelligence division (with drones) — 1 day after the assassination Iran launched drones at Nakhchivan’s airport (which Iran denied responsibility).

• Azerbaijan also hosted secret meetings between ‘Israel’ & Syria

View attachment 200252
If true, Iran should reunify Nakhchivan with the motherland.
 
Turkey/Pakistan are the biggest hater :P
Surprised at some countries, Poland, Australia, Germany?

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So, overall the Germans dislike Israel more than the UK does ?! You couldn't tell from the antics of their goverment.
 
If true, Iran should reunify Nakhchivan with the motherland.
It wouldn't surprise me if Iran has known this for a long while. Which would make this a risk that they've tolerated. Which would obviously be a shockingly poor strategic decision.

Remember when Ahmadinejad could walk around Baghdad with limited security detail in Iraq as a show of force?
 

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