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METO Guido 04-19-2026 09:07 PM


Originally Posted by ShyGuy (Post 4025382)
Correct. Sadly, the cult won’t understand. They fall for it hook, line, sinker.

What’s a cult nowadays, another empty slogan on a tat? Lovely. Iran has no one to blame but Iran. But if we do somehow manage to muck this up, I agree, same applies to us.

Excargodog 04-19-2026 09:12 PM


Originally Posted by ShyGuy (Post 4025379)
I meant his anti Islamic comments.

.

Ever lived in an Islamic theocratic country? Reality is reality, just as Islam is Islam. And it will evolve over time - just as Christianity did.


But if you were serious about Iran, committing war crimes (“bombing the crap” re: bridges and infrastructure) is still illegal.
.

Seriously? Cite the law that makes it illegal. We never ratified the 1977 Additional Protocol 1 to the Geneva Convention.


SoFloFlyer 04-19-2026 09:40 PM


Originally Posted by METO Guido (Post 4025385)
What’s a cult nowadays, another empty slogan on a tat? Lovely. Iran has no one to blame but Iran. But if we do somehow manage to muck this up, I agree, same applies to us.

The left isn’t without imagination. “The cult”? lol Probably too much to drink or something lol

All these experts in foreign affairs and diplomacy.. Can’t believe they waste their life away on flying airplanes. What a shame.. /s

jerryleber 04-20-2026 02:52 AM

United Arab Emirates first Gulf state asking for a US bailout. $$$

https://www.ndtv.com/world-news/us-i...risis-11381572

AAdvocate 04-20-2026 04:57 AM


Originally Posted by Turbosina (Post 4025398)
And this post is not considered an example of partisan politics? Mods, if I wrote the same things about Christianity, would you leave it up?

What are you complaining about? Where is he wrong in his post? Did you get your feelings hurt?

ThumbsUp 04-20-2026 05:00 AM


Originally Posted by Turbosina (Post 4025398)
And this post is not considered an example of partisan politics? Mods, if I wrote the same things about Christianity, would you leave it up?

He did say the same things about Christianity.

FangsF15 04-20-2026 05:05 AM

[mod input] Enough commenting on the religious ideologies. APC is not the place for that.

Excargodog 04-20-2026 07:26 AM


Originally Posted by jerryleber (Post 4025411)
United Arab Emirates first Gulf state asking for a US bailout. $$$

https://www.ndtv.com/world-news/us-i...risis-11381572

https://www.politico.com/news/2026/0...cture-00880064


UAE official: More than 90% of Iran's targets were civilian infrastructure

The minister of state said Iran had hit the United Arab Emirates with over 2,800 missiles and drones since the start of the war.
https://www.politico.com/dims4/defau...rael-68166.jpgFire and plumes of smoke rise after a drone struck a fuel tank near Dubai International Airport in the United Arab Emirates on Monday, March 16. | AP

By JACOB WENDLER04/19/2026 12:24 PM EDT
  • The United Arab Emirates’ minister of state said Sunday the country had been hit with over 2,800 missiles and drones in the first 40 days of the U.S. and Israel’s war with Iran, adding that more than 90% of the targets were civilian infrastructure.
Reem Al Hashimy, the UAE’s minister of state for international cooperation, said during a Sunday morning appearance on ABC’s “This Week” that Iran was seeking to destroy the UAE’s “model of prosperity and tolerance.
“We used our oil wealth to build an economic powerhouse. They used their wealth for nuclear programs that are nefarious, for missiles, drones, proxies, etc.,” she told host Jonathan Karl. “So whereas we tried to become and have become an international, global, responsible player, they are a pariah state. And they wanted to break that model, but they underestimated our resolve.”

The UAE has faced a barrage of attacks from Iran since the U.S. and Israel launched joint attacks on Iran in late February. While the Gulf state — like many of its neighbors — initially opposed the war, it has since shifted its tone as it considers how to avoid the breakout of a larger regional war.

Asked if she agreed with President Donald Trump’s assessment that there had been regime change in Iran, Al Hashimy expressed skepticism that Iran’s leadership had changed meaningfully.

“I know that personalities have changed. You have different characters that are currently in place,” she said “But how has that changed the character of the Revolutionary Guard? That’s yet to see — doesn’t seem very hopeful, though. Right now.”

Trump said Sunday morning that the U.S. would resume peace talks with Iranian officials in Pakistan on Monday after an initial round of negotiations failed to yield meaningful progress. Trump initially told Karl that Vice President JD Vance would not attend the second round of talks, but the White House later walked that back.

The president previously threatened to decimate Iranian civilian infrastructure and eliminate “a whole civilization” if Iran did not agree to open the Strait of Hormuz, sparking sharp recriminations from Democrats and human rights experts. Speaking to Karl on Sunday morning, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Mike Waltz insisted that “all options are on the table.”

Asked if she harbored concerns about Trump’s threats, Al Hashimy said the UAE believes that “maximum pressure” is necessary to move forward, while cautioning against civilian attacks.

“Ultimately, we don’t want to hurt the Iranian people. That’s very important to mention. But at the same time, it’s the Revolutionary Guard that have taken forward a military stance and a posture not against the U.S. and Israel alone, but against the very neighborhood that they operate in through the Gulf states.”


rickair7777 04-20-2026 07:51 AM


Originally Posted by Lowslung (Post 4025233)
I would hardly call Libya and Syria examples of success. Last I checked, both are maybe just a hair’s width above failed states. And before anyone accuses me of partisanship, I agree that the Obama administration shares much of the blame for recent policy failures in the region. Seems party affiliation is meaningless when it comes to unindented consequences in that part of the world.

I wouldn't say they're successful as shining examples of modern nations.

Just that the outcome is successful from our realpolitik perspective... they are no longing creating a regional stability problem relative to our economic interests, and we didn't get too heavy handed in the process. Restraint was exercised, although we did monitor both very carefully and engaged in some lower-intensity activities along the way.

ShyGuy 04-20-2026 08:18 AM


Originally Posted by METO Guido (Post 4025385)
What’s a cult nowadays, another empty slogan on a tat? Lovely. Iran has no one to blame but Iran. But if we do somehow manage to muck this up, I agree, same applies to us.

Iran doesn’t owe you jack. In the same way Russia or China don’t owe you anything either. Wanna know why Russia, Moscow, Putin were never bombed when they started the Ukraine war 3 yrs ago? Simple. They have nukes.


I’d bet Iran goes nuclear inside of 10 yrs and there ain’t a thing you can do about it. Maybe then we can have forced peace much like Pakistan and India have now. I mean, 1998-2026 has been far better for India Pakistan than it was 1947-1998.

I’ve given up on the 2 state solution, the sky fairy arguments over land, etc.

The only thing that holds any power is nukes. And while nuclear proliferation sucks, it’s proven to be the only way to gain respect and not be bombed.

Forced peace is a nuclear armed Iran and nuclear armed Israel. The bombings will stop then. And no, despite what your podcasters and Fox/Newsmax lead you to believe, the Ayotallah and IRG are not interested in losing their power and rule of country and face annihilation by using a nuke first against Israel or us *first*





If you are Iran, the key takeaway from June 2025 and Feb28-present is that you need nukes. Then they’ll be treated like a Russia or China.

rickair7777 04-20-2026 08:36 AM


Originally Posted by ShyGuy (Post 4025496)
Iran doesn’t owe you jack. In the same way Russia or China don’t owe you anything either. Wanna know why Russia, Moscow, Putin were never bombed when they started the Ukraine war 3 yrs ago? Simple. They have nukes.

True.


Originally Posted by ShyGuy (Post 4025496)
If you are Iran, the key takeaway from June 2025 and Feb28-present is that you need nukes. Then they’ll be treated like a Russia or China.

RU, yes. Also DPRK.

PRC gets treated with respect for other reasons, more like the US. Vast economic footprint, and also very difficult to mess with conventionally. They actually don't have that many nukes (yet). They also mostly behave according to international norms, and don't invade people (yet).



Originally Posted by ShyGuy (Post 4025496)
I’d bet Iran goes nuclear inside of 10 yrs and there ain’t a thing you can do about it. Maybe then we can have forced peace much like Pakistan and India have now. I mean, 1998-2026 has been far better for India Pakistan than it was 1947-1998.

This is not true. Unless we chose to just let them do it, and also unfreeze assets and remove sanctions so they can pay for it and import the tech they need.

We have already taken away a lot of their toys and infrastructure, including the relevant industrial base. They do not just snap right back to their pre-war condition the day after.

And even if *we* let them, IL would not... backed into a corner they'd just use nukes to prevent IR from going there.

PK and IN is apples to oranges... they have nukes as *deterrence* because they share a border and are historically prone to conflict. The balance works. IL and IR is not a balance of power thing because neither can invade the other. It's simply an issue because one of them has promised to eradicate the other... MAD only works if both sides plausibly wants nukes only as deterrence, not offensive weapons, and can reasonably be trusted to behave in a certain manner.

METO Guido 04-20-2026 08:37 AM


Originally Posted by ShyGuy (Post 4025496)
Iran doesn’t owe you jack. In the same way Russia or China don’t owe you anything either. Wanna know why Russia, Moscow, Putin were never bombed when they started the Ukraine war 3 yrs ago? Simple. They have nukes.

I’d bet Iran goes nuclear inside of 10 yrs and there ain’t a thing you can do about it. Maybe then we can have forced peace much like Pakistan and India have now. I mean, 1998-2026 has been far better for India Pakistan than it was 1947-1998.

I’ve given up on the 2 state solution, the sky fairy arguments over land, etc.

The only thing that holds any power is nukes. And while nuclear proliferation sucks, it’s proven to be the only way to gain respect and not be bombed.

Forced peace is a nuclear armed Iran and nuclear armed Israel. The bombings will stop then. And no, despite what your podcasters and Fox/Newsmax lead you to believe, the Ayotallah and IRG are not interested in losing their power and rule of country and face annihilation by using a nuke first against Israel or us *first*

If you are Iran, the key takeaway from June 2025 and Feb28-present is that you need nukes. Then they’ll be treated like a Russia or China.

No basic objections to your situation summary. A 10 year Iran superpower capability forecast notwithstanding.

Between 2010 and 2024, Israel allegedly conducted dozens of operations – including targeted assassinations, drone strikes, and cyberattacks – on Iran. The attacks increased in both range and sophistication. Many of the targets were connected to Tehran’s controversial nuclear program, which Israel has long considered an existential threat. In 2022, Israeli drones also reportedly hit two facilities linked to Iran’s increasingly advanced drone program.

Israel was blamed for the killing of five nuclear scientists, including Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, the father of Iran’s nuclear program, between 2010 and 2020. It also reportedly targeted military commanders responsible for operations abroad, including three Revolutionary Guard generals visiting Syria in April 2024. In July 2024, Iran accused Israel of assassinating Ismail Haniyeh, the political chief of Hamas, during his visit to Tehran for the inauguration of President Masoud Pezeshkian. The following is a timeline of attacks on Iran allegedly carried out by Israel since 2010.

ThumbsUp 04-20-2026 08:41 AM


Originally Posted by ShyGuy (Post 4025496)
Iran doesn’t owe you jack. In the same way Russia or China don’t owe you anything either. Wanna know why Russia, Moscow, Putin were never bombed when they started the Ukraine war 3 yrs ago? Simple. They have nukes.


I’d bet Iran goes nuclear inside of 10 yrs and there ain’t a thing you can do about it. Maybe then we can have forced peace much like Pakistan and India have now. I mean, 1998-2026 has been far better for India Pakistan than it was 1947-1998.

I’ve given up on the 2 state solution, the sky fairy arguments over land, etc.

The only thing that holds any power is nukes. And while nuclear proliferation sucks, it’s proven to be the only way to gain respect and not be bombed.

Forced peace is a nuclear armed Iran and nuclear armed Israel. The bombings will stop then. And no, despite what your podcasters and Fox/Newsmax lead you to believe, the Ayotallah and IRG are not interested in losing their power and rule of country and face annihilation by using a nuke first against Israel or us *first*





If you are Iran, the key takeaway from June 2025 and Feb28-present is that you need nukes. Then they’ll be treated like a Russia or China.

See stability–instability paradox and then apply that to a country run by terrorists. That ignores of course the possibility that they would just use the weapons for end of days or whatever other fanatical reason.

Turbosina 04-20-2026 11:53 AM

The mullahs aren't stupid. They didn't get to seize power and spend half a century controlling a vast country of 90 million people by being stupid. They're well aware that any first use of a nuclear weapon would result in their entire country being turned into radioactive dust. Their only interest, like any regime, is holding onto power. Not transporting themselves to the next world.

This is not meant to ignore or minimize their role in supporting terrorist groups across the Middle East. But the assertion that 'Iran will use a nuclear weapon in a first strike' is, I believe, entirely wrong. They're not crazy; they're very determined to hold onto power by any means possible.

And yes, it's possible that genuinely rogue actors could seize control of a future Iranian weapon and use it, but that risk exists across a number of states, Pakistan being the most obvious. Plus, Lord only knows if we've accounted for each and every one of the nuclear devices formerly possessed by the satellite countries of the former USSR. Are we going to bomb Pakistan and force them to give up their nukes, because of the miniscule chance that some AQ sympathizers in the ISI or Pakistani military might somehow gain control of a weapon and lob it across the Kashmir in India's direction?

Given the state of nuclear technology, the only ways to reliably ensure a country doesn't ever develop nuclear weapons, are to 1) invade and occupy it completely, or 2) sign a meaningful treaty with ironclad monitoring procedures that are genuinely enforced.

Option 1 is not something we're prepared to do. I'm not saying we should just stand by and let Iran develop a weapon without hindrance; I thought the cyber attacks on their centrifuges, the Israeli assassinations of Iranian nuclear scientists, and last summer's aerial attacks on their nuclear sites, were justified and measured efforts to slow or halt their progress.

I would have (very reluctantly) supported the current war if our administration had approached it completely differently. First, we should have enlisted the support of our allies, just as the first Bush administration did in the runup to the Iraqi invasion. If I was president and I learned that we really, truly possessed intelligence that convincingly indicated Iran would use any nuclear weapon it developed, I would have done two things in parallel:

1. Attempt to reactivate the prior treaty with Iran, with very strict conditions that Iran permanently cease all enrichment activities, with frequent and pervasive inspections. In return, unfreeze Iranian assets and lift existing sanctions on the Iranian economy.

True, this would strengthen the Iranian regime by increasing their cash flows and giving them more international legitimacy, but if the return on that investment was an Iran without nuclear capabilities, then I'd say it would have definitely been worth it.

2) If those talks were to fail, I'd work to assemble a multinational coalition of force (as was done in 2002), including our allies in Europe and Asia (who are all very dependent on the free flow of energy through the SoH), and the Gulf states (whose prosperity depends on a stable Gulf). That coalition would give Iran a simple choice: either sign the treaty proposed above, or face a complete blockade of Iranian energy exports, and an expansion of coordinated international sanctions on their economy. I also would have gone to Congress to secure war powers in the event that the blockade and sanctions were to fail.

Of course, it's entirely probable that a blockade and additional sanctions would have driven oil and LNG prices to where they are now, and also very possible that Iran would have retaliated by launching strikes on the Gulf countries, as they're now doing. From a practical economic perspective, the difference between my approach and the Trump approach might not actually be very different.

So then what's the difference between my approach and the approach the administration has taken? The difference is that my suggested approach is that of a superpower, of a nation that treats war as a last resort and as an undertaking that requires allies who share your interests and cause.

If we had done that, I believe we'd be seeing our allies standing with us militarily. I believe we'd see wider public approval of efforts to stop Iran's nuclear program. I also believe that concerted international action could bring Iran's economy to its knees and the mullahs to the bargaining table, much more so than our air strikes have done to date. And it would have cost us much, much less from a standpoint of weapons expenditures.

But we didn't do any of that. The admin never bothered with Congressional approval. Nor did they try to build a coalition. They just took the Venezuela approach, assuming Iran would quickly capitulate. We're now seeing the fallacy of that assumption.

To me, the biggest effect of this situation isn't necessarily the increase in oil and energy prices. Those are bad enough for the global economy. The biggest long term effects of this crisis are 1) Iran has figured out that it doesn't need nuclear weapons to bring its enemies to the bargaining table; all it needs are a few drones and speedboats in the Strait, regardless of how large a force we or anyone puts into the Strait.

And 2) our allies are learning that they can't possibly predict what we'll do next. That strategy might keep our enemies guessing, but that's not how you keep allies on your side.

We're willfully and purposefully undoing many of the things that have allowed us to maintain our pre-eminent status over the last 80 years, and have helped keep the world relatively peaceful. And that's something that should give all of us pause.

rickair7777 04-20-2026 12:18 PM


Originally Posted by Turbosina (Post 4025578)
The mullahs aren't stupid. They didn't get to seize power and spend half a century controlling a vast country of 90 million people by being stupid. They're well aware that any first use of a nuclear weapon would result in their entire country being turned into radioactive dust. Their only interest, like any regime, is holding onto power. Not transporting themselves to the next world..

Nice rational logic. Applies well to all of the current nuclear powers.

But little problem... amongst many complexities inherent to how the post revolutionary system evolved, one of the big ones is the (intentional) tension between IRGC and Artesh.

That intramural fun actually led to the regime promising to the IRGC that when they *did* get the bomb, command and control would reside with the IRGC.

So the actual fanatic wing gets the bomb, or at least they've been promised and would expect that. Going back on that promise would be dangerous to the regime (assuming IRGC is still in play).

I tend to suspect that promise was made with the intention of not actually crossing the finish line in the foreseeable future. Rather they intended to keep rattling sabres and looking busy so as to not trigger IL too much, while appeasing their own wingnuts.

So the real danger is this: Left to their own devices, mullahs get coerced by IRGC into sprinting to finish, or replaced by IRGC loons who chose that option. IL finds out, the region gets a lot warmer, and the global economy takes a timeout.

There's some unfortunate ambiguity as to the actual state of the bomb program, what exactly IL knows about it on any given day, and what the regime will assess as the redline. So we have a region of uncertainty where a miscalculation could be made.

Better to just keep their nuke program well short of that ballpark. Unless perhaps there's some major evolution of the regime that minimizes the influence of the system which was intentionally established with fanaticism as a core component.

Again, it's complicated and it's not like the existing nuclear powers who are inherently rational.

METO Guido 04-20-2026 02:52 PM

Smart Mullahs? Whatever. This culture, that culture. Still way too far apart for integration. Found out the hard way in a 20 year disaster called Iraq/Afghanistan. Maybe another 3-5 generations before such a radical bridge can be safely crossed. Of course they want atomic arrows. Israel has them. So here we are. https://youtu.be/Z7Vl7KCi6eo?si=JR0-TDoj6RFNa_T1


ShyGuy 04-20-2026 09:33 PM


Originally Posted by rickair7777 (Post 4025500)
True.



RU, yes. Also DPRK.

PRC gets treated with respect for other reasons, more like the US. Vast economic footprint, and also very difficult to mess with conventionally. They actually don't have that many nukes (yet). They also mostly behave according to international norms, and don't invade people (yet).




This is not true. Unless we chose to just let them do it, and also unfreeze assets and remove sanctions so they can pay for it and import the tech they need.

We have already taken away a lot of their toys and infrastructure, including the relevant industrial base. They do not just snap right back to their pre-war condition the day after.

And even if *we* let them, IL would not... backed into a corner they'd just use nukes to prevent IR from going there.

PK and IN is apples to oranges... they have nukes as *deterrence* because they share a border and are historically prone to conflict. The balance works. IL and IR is not a balance of power thing because neither can invade the other. It's simply an issue because one of them has promised to eradicate the other... MAD only works if both sides plausibly wants nukes only as deterrence, not offensive weapons, and can reasonably be trusted to behave in a certain manner.



Israel has entered Iran in the past on numerous occasions. Launched drones from inside Iran. Assassinated many Iranian scientists.



Iran will announce nuclear power one day. And bombing them isn’t going to stop it. This little distraction “war” has made people entirely delusional.



Iran absolutely wants deterrence. They aren’t stupid enough to launch nukes first. The fact you think Israel would launch first shows you who the true threat is in the Middle East.

FangsF15 04-21-2026 01:57 AM


Originally Posted by ShyGuy (Post 4025770)
Israel has entered Iran in the past on numerous occasions. Launched drones from inside Iran. Assassinated many Iranian scientists.



Iran will announce nuclear power one day. And bombing them isn’t going to stop it. This little distraction “war” has made people entirely delusional.



Iran absolutely wants deterrence. They aren’t stupid enough to launch nukes first. The fact you think Israel would launch first shows you who the true threat is in the Middle East.

Oh, the irony…

ShyGuy 04-21-2026 07:21 AM


Originally Posted by FangsF15 (Post 4025780)
Oh, the irony…

Just based on facts. There’s only one country in the ME that has continued to bomb various neighbors (as in numerous countries) for the past several decades, using their actual military (and not a militant faction), using U.S.-made weapons, tanks, planes, helis, and bombs.





What I find funny is the amount of airline pilots who are completely committed to the cult, and despite voting for no wars, America first, more isolationism, are sitting in the bar on fire with that dog face “this is fine.”


Extenda 04-21-2026 07:45 AM


Originally Posted by ShyGuy (Post 4025859)
Just based on facts. There’s only one country in the ME that has continued to bomb various neighbors (as in numerous countries) for the past several decades, using their actual military (and not a militant faction), using U.S.-made weapons, tanks, planes, helis, and bombs.





What I find funny is the amount of airline pilots who are completely committed to the cult, and despite voting for no wars, America first, more isolationism, are sitting in the bar on fire with that dog face “this is fine.”

I’ve come to the conclusion that American politics has developed a unique attribute over the last 30 years or so. Normal societies judge people, parties and institutions by their actions. Not so here. The “thing” being done is irrelevant, it’s the “who” that’s doing it. We have a political culture where most people will immediately establish the “who” doing it and then conduct mental contortion to determine whether the “thing” is either black and white good/bad based on if it’s the “good who” or the “bad who”.

The reason for this is largely because switching sides or changing your opinion has become weak flip flopping and something to be ashamed of, as opposed to natural learning and character growth. Americans would, quite literally, rather die than admit they were wrong, about pretty much anything.

If you’re not angry that the side whose entire foreign policy campaign centered around “no new wars, the other side will start a war with Iran” shifted entirely to starting a war in Iran, then you’re part of the problem.

Personally I thought it was all bluster and neither side was going to start any wars, but here we are. I was wrong.

Obviously just my humble opinion.

rickair7777 04-21-2026 08:22 AM


Originally Posted by ShyGuy (Post 4025770)
Israel has entered Iran in the past on numerous occasions. Launched drones from inside Iran. Assassinated many Iranian scientists.

So what? Better than just nuking them.


Originally Posted by ShyGuy (Post 4025770)
Iran will announce nuclear power one day. And bombing them isn’t going to stop it. This little distraction “war” has made people entirely delusional.

Nuclear power and nuclear weapons are different animals, it's possible to have nuclear power without any real prospect of developing a bomb. We'd probably even sell or gift them LEU for power plants if that's what they wanted (in exchange for their enriched stockpiles).



Originally Posted by ShyGuy (Post 4025770)
Iran absolutely wants deterrence. They aren’t stupid enough to launch nukes first. The fact you think Israel would launch first shows you who the true threat is in the Middle East.

Sure the rational ones would like deterrence, who wouldn't?

The issue as I said before is that their system is complicated, and they have a strong fanatic wing which they intentionally cultivated for reasons, and now have to live with.

Again it doesn't even matter what you or I think they'd do... it only matters what IL things they *might* do, and whether IL will take a chance on that. The general consensus of those involved in the problem set is that, No at some point IL will not just live with the risk. You and I don't know exactly where that point is, although the IL gov may have actually already told the US gov. That's one (of several) possibilities as to why this thing kicked off.

METO Guido 04-21-2026 08:30 AM


Originally Posted by Extenda (Post 4025868)
I’ve come to the conclusion that American politics has developed a unique attribute over the last 30 years or so. Normal societies judge people, parties and institutions by their actions. Not so here. The “thing” being done is irrelevant, it’s the “who” that’s doing it. We have a political culture where most people will immediately establish the “who” doing it and then conduct mental contortion to determine whether the “thing” is either black and white good/bad based on if it’s the “good who” or the “bad who”.

The reason for this is largely because switching sides or changing your opinion has become weak flip flopping and something to be ashamed of, as opposed to natural learning and character growth. Americans would, quite literally, rather die than admit they were wrong, about pretty much anything.

If you’re not angry that the side whose entire foreign policy campaign centered around “no new wars, the other side will start a war with Iran” shifted entirely to starting a war in Iran, then you’re part of the problem.

Personally I thought it was all bluster and neither side was going to start any wars, but here we are. I was wrong.

Obviously just my humble opinion.

Well presented, solid takes. Dunno. Kennedy/Nixon. Johnson/Goldwater. Nixon/Humphrey/Wallace. Reagan/Carter etc, etc. Casualties & remorse quickly whipped into bitter blame. An ongoing pattern of mixed results getting only more personal as time passes. Meanwhile, outstanding treasury interest eats into a tax pie with bigger bites than ever thought possible. But Epstein, that’s the main thing we’re concerned about?

SoFloFlyer 04-21-2026 09:03 AM


Originally Posted by ShyGuy (Post 4025859)
Just based on facts. There’s only one country in the ME that has continued to bomb various neighbors (as in numerous countries) for the past several decades, using their actual military (and not a militant faction), using U.S.-made weapons, tanks, planes, helis, and bombs.





What I find funny is the amount of airline pilots who are completely committed to the cult, and despite voting for no wars, America first, more isolationism, are sitting in the bar on fire with that dog face “this is fine.”

You’re giving them the benefit of the doubt. Unfortunately, some parts of that region isn’t motivated by money and some aren’t motivated by power. Some of the players in that region would die for their ideology. I don’t think leadership with that kind of mindset should have nukes.

Reports are coming out that the IRGC took over the Iranian government and are calling the shots now. The leader is much more radical than some of the politicians. Which is why Iran started firing on ships despite them saying the straight was open (the moderates in government are no isolated).

Extenda is also right. However, I feel that a lot of Trump’s voters are feeling betrayed by this war (which is the majority of the America since he also won the popular vote). When Biden was in office, it didn’t matter what that administration did, democratic voters sided with him. This is not the same for republican voters. They’re calling their party and their leaders out. If the Democrats weren’t going to win the next election, they sure are now.

Lowslung 04-21-2026 09:13 AM


Originally Posted by rickair7777 (Post 4025889)
So what? Better than just nuking them.



Nuclear power and nuclear weapons are different animals, it's possible to have nuclear power without any real prospect of developing a bomb. We'd probably even sell or gift them LEU for power plants if that's what they wanted (in exchange for their enriched stockpiles).




Sure the rational ones would like deterrence, who wouldn't?

The issue as I said before is that their system is complicated, and they have a strong fanatic wing which they intentionally cultivated for reasons, and now have to live with.

Again it doesn't even matter what you or I think they'd do... it only matters what IL things they *might* do, and whether IL will take a chance on that. The general consensus of those involved in the problem set is that, No at some point IL will not just live with the risk. You and I don't know exactly where that point is, although the IL gov may have actually already told the US gov. That's one (of several) possibilities as to why this thing kicked off.

That’s all true, but I think there are more and more Americans wondering why we’re beholden to Israeli whims. One thing I give credit to previous admins of all stripes for is reining in the Israelis when they get squirrely. I get the distinct impression that Bibi sees the current admin as easier to manipulate than previous ones and is hell bent on making hay while the sun is shining. I’m glad we consider Israel an ally, but their national interests don’t always align with ours. In fact, sometimes they are diametrically opposed. As an American citizen, I’m somewhat dismayed that our current leadership has allowed the country to be led down the primrose Israeli path.

Excargodog 04-21-2026 09:51 AM


Originally Posted by Lowslung (Post 4025913)
That’s all true, but I think there are more and more Americans wondering why we’re beholden to Israeli whims. One thing I give credit to previous admins of all stripes for is reining in the Israelis when they get squirrely. I get the distinct impression that Bibi sees the current admin as easier to manipulate than previous ones and is hell bent on making hay while the sun is shining. I’m glad we consider Israel an ally, but their national interests don’t always align with ours. In fact, sometimes they are diametrically opposed. As an American citizen, I’m somewhat dismayed that our current leadership has allowed the country to be led down the primrose Israeli path.

While I trust Israel to do only what they perceive is THEIR best interests (and still haven’t forgiven them for shooting up the USS Liberty,

https://www.history.com/this-day-in-...ks-uss-liberty

the political idiom “Don’t compare me to the Almighty, compare me to the Alternative” comes to mind. To say they are the finest people in the region can be simultaneously both true and damning them with faint praise.

rickair7777 04-21-2026 09:53 AM


Originally Posted by Lowslung (Post 4025913)
That’s all true, but I think there are more and more Americans wondering why we’re beholden to Israeli whims. One thing I give credit to previous admins of all stripes for is reining in the Israelis when they get squirrely. I get the distinct impression that Bibi sees the current admin as easier to manipulate than previous ones and is hell bent on making hay while the sun is shining. I’m glad we consider Israel an ally, but their national interests don’t always align with ours. In fact, sometimes they are diametrically opposed. As an American citizen, I’m somewhat dismayed that our current leadership has allowed the country to be led down the primrose Israeli path.

Could be, I don't trust them either.

But as long as we're reliant on the global price of oil, and on the global economy which is also reliant on that, we need max stability in the region and IL is an obvious reliable partner in that (they have no one else to turn to).

Maybe someday if we don't need oil as much and/or the GCC steps up enough to counter-balance the bad actors we won't need to be as involved. Or maybe the bad actors evolve into not-so-bad (many have).

ThumbsUp 04-21-2026 10:15 AM


Originally Posted by SoFloFlyer (Post 4025909)
Reports are coming out that the IRGC took over the Iranian government and are calling the shots now. The leader is much more radical than some of the politicians. Which is why Iran started firing on ships despite them saying the straight was open (the moderates in government are no isolated).

The IRGC already had control of the government. The elected bodies control very little. Even the conventional
military is controlled by the Ayottallah.

rickair7777 04-21-2026 11:36 AM


Originally Posted by ThumbsUp (Post 4025939)
The IRGC already had control of the government. The elected bodies control very little. Even the conventional
military is controlled by the Ayottallah.


Yes. The balance of power for most things is various factions and personalities from the top mullahs and IRGC leaders. Many of the elected officials are also affiliated with the power brokers, but elected institutions of themselves are captive to the real bosses.

They gave one moderate president some leash, and he tried to do stuff, but that didn't last and they clamped back down.

word302 04-21-2026 02:10 PM


Originally Posted by ThumbsUp (Post 4026017)
I agree. More bombs needed.

Yeah that should fix things🙄

SoFloFlyer 04-21-2026 02:41 PM

Ceasefire extended until Iran can come with their proposal

METO Guido 04-21-2026 03:15 PM

Still no reason to freak out

checkgear 04-21-2026 03:26 PM


Originally Posted by Bestglide (Post 4026050)
Are you really comparing gas prices rising from a war to stop religious zealots from having nuclear weapons for Biden waging a war on oil closing the key stone pipeline to appease climate zealots?

If you quote him one more time I think he’ll understand what you mean…

ThumbsUp 04-21-2026 03:33 PM


Originally Posted by word302 (Post 4026025)
Yeah that should fix things🙄

It’s really the only solution to Iran. It would be a lot of bombs, though.

METO Guido 04-21-2026 03:35 PM


Originally Posted by ThumbsUp (Post 4026054)
It’s really the only solution to Iran. It would be a lot of bombs, though.

Probably. Serious bombing experience on this end, pretty good at it most of the time. But it does take time. Give it time.


MaxQ 04-21-2026 04:08 PM


Originally Posted by Bestglide (Post 4026050)
Can you imagine if Biden had done this? Just started a random war with Iran and sent gas prices soaring? Russia invaded Ukraine, the U.S. put Russian sanctions, and oil went high in 2022. The MAGA crowd reacted to all that with Biden I did that stickers.




Are you really comparing gas prices rising from a war to stop religious zealots from having nuclear weapons to Biden waging a war on oil closing the key stone pipeline to appease climate zealots?

It has been forgotten that at the beginning of the war, Feb. 28th, preventing Iran from developing a nuclear weapon was not one of stated reasons for attacking Iran.
That reason only was resurected days later.
Initially it was:
1.To kill their leaders.
2. To destroy their military capability.
3. Be a catalyst for a successful uprising of the population.

Then what? There was never anything presented as to "then what do we do?"

The elimination of Iran's ability to make a a nuke only was added a few days later. After "unconditional surrenderr" no longer looked like it was eassy-peasy.

Donkeys following the road first traveled by Croesus.

ShyGuy 04-21-2026 04:12 PM


Originally Posted by MaxQ (Post 4026073)
It has been forgotten that at the beginning of the war, Feb. 28th, preventing Iran from developing a nuclear weapon was not one of stated reasons for attacking Iran.
.

Of course it wasn’t. But notice pilots here quoting just that. 121 pilots literally scared about Iran getting nukes.

METO Guido 04-21-2026 04:15 PM


Originally Posted by ShyGuy (Post 4026074)
Of course it wasn’t. But notice pilots here quoting just that. 121 pilots literally scared about Iran getting nukes.

guilty, getting nuked definitely not in my retirement plan?

Is everybody paying full attention? All in on this one.. No going back. Perception is everything. Spill least cost, collateral enemy plasma now, spare 100x that ghastly reality tomorrow.



Schools, so how’s our story being told nowadays?
https://youtu.be/VzYBm59jpA8?si=I4KAhr8VctOMclCd


ShyGuy 04-21-2026 04:44 PM


Originally Posted by METO Guido (Post 4026075)
guilty, getting nuked definitely not in my retirement plan?

Is everybody paying full attention? All in on this one.. No going back. Perception is everything. Spill least cost, collateral enemy plasma now, spare 100x that ghastly reality tomorrow.



Schools, so how’s our story being told nowadays?
https://youtu.be/VzYBm59jpA8?si=I4KAhr8VctOMclCd



It certainly wasn’t a threat for you or the crowd here prior to Feb 28. And the crowd voted for no more wars and more isolationism, which by definition means they didn’t want a war with Iran.

METO Guido 04-21-2026 05:04 PM


Originally Posted by ShyGuy (Post 4026082)
It certainly wasn’t a threat for you or the crowd here prior to Feb 28. And the crowd voted for no more wars and more isolationism, which by definition means they didn’t want a war with Iran.

These boys do extortion and call it business. No nukes. Yesterday, today or tomorrow.

ThumbsUp 04-21-2026 05:04 PM


Originally Posted by MaxQ (Post 4026073)
It has been forgotten that at the beginning of the war, Feb. 28th, preventing Iran from developing a nuclear weapon was not one of stated reasons for attacking Iran.
That reason only was resurected days later.
Initially it was:
1.To kill their leaders.
2. To destroy their military capability.
3. Be a catalyst for a successful uprising of the population.

Then what? There was never anything presented as to "then what do we do?"

The elimination of Iran's ability to make a a nuke only was added a few days later. After "unconditional surrenderr" no longer looked like it was eassy-peasy.

Donkeys following the road first traveled by Croesus.

Even you, comrade, can see that doing 1,2,3 are just tasks to lead to the same effect.


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