
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡
@shanaka86 • 308,806 subscribers
Author of The Ascent Begins. Independent Analyst. Money, geopolitics, AI, science, and sovereignty. Mapping the collapse and the reconstruction of order.
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BREAKING: JD Vance just confirmed US strikes on Kharg Island from a podium in Budapest standing next to Viktor Orban. Then he pulled out his phone mid-press conference to check an unread text from Steve Witkoff, Trump’s special envoy for Iran negotiations. Then he said the war will end very shortly and the US has tools in its toolkit it has not yet decided to use. Most coverage is treating the Iran signals and the Ukraine signals as two separate stories. They are not. They are one move. Vance credited Trump and Orban as the two leaders who have done the most to end the Ukraine war. He proposed Budapest as the venue for a leaders’ summit. He said Orban has been better than anybody at helping Washington understand what the Ukrainians need and what the Russians need to achieve peace. He accused EU bureaucrats of foreign election interference in Hungary five days before Orban faces voters. Now hold both threads simultaneously. Orban is the only NATO leader with a documented direct channel to Putin. He is also one of the only European leaders publicly aligned with Trump’s transactional diplomacy. The Iran war has structurally removed Gulf energy supply from global markets for what the IEA calls the largest disruption in history. That removal destroys Russia’s primary leverage over Europe, which was energy dependency, because Europe is now scrambling for non-Russian, non-Gulf alternatives and building the infrastructure to never be dependent on either again. The trans-domain move is this: the Iran war makes the Ukraine deal possible. As long as Russia held the European gas card, Putin had no incentive to negotiate. With Hormuz closed and Gulf petrochemical capacity destroyed for years, the entire global energy map is being redrawn. Russia’s gas leverage over Europe is depreciating in real time because Europe is being forced into permanent diversification by the molecule crisis, not by policy choice. The leverage that kept Putin at the table as the strong party is evaporating. Vance is in Budapest because Budapest is the hinge. Orban talks to Putin. Orban talks to Trump. Orban hosts the summit. The Iran war provides the energy shock that restructures European dependency. The Ukraine deal follows because Russia’s negotiating position weakens with every week that the Gulf remains offline and Europe builds alternative supply chains it will never dismantle. The Witkoff text is the tell. Back-channel negotiations with Iran are live. The 8 PM deadline tonight is real. If Iran concedes on Hormuz, the energy crisis partially eases and Russia retains some leverage. If Iran does not concede and the US escalates further, Gulf supply stays offline longer, the molecule crisis deepens, European energy diversification accelerates, and Russia’s position erodes further. Either outcome improves the conditions for a Ukraine deal. Vance did not go to Budapest to boost Orban’s election. He went to Budapest because it is the only capital in Europe where you can simultaneously manage the endgame of two wars using the same energy lever. The Iran war is the forcing function for the Ukraine peace. The molecule crisis is the mechanism. Budapest is the node. Watch what happens at 8 PM tonight. Then watch what happens in Kyiv next month. Full analysis -
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡2,789,998 次观看 • 2 个月前

BREAKING: In the last 24 hours, the 2026 Iran war crossed four thresholds simultaneously. Each one would be the lead story of any other week. Together they form the architecture of an escalation spiral that has no off-ramp visible from any capital on Earth. First. Iran struck Arad and Dimona in southern Israel on Saturday night, injuring approximately 180+ people. These are the towns nearest Israel’s Negev nuclear research centre. Tasnim confirmed the strikes were retaliation for Israel’s attack on the Natanz nuclear facility. Iranian missiles penetrated Israeli air defences and left large craters in residential areas. Prime Minister Netanyahu called it “a very difficult evening in the battle for our future.” The IRGC said it targeted military installations across five cities: Arad, Dimona, Eilat, Beersheba, and Kiryat Gat. Second. Israel continued strikes on Tehran and Isfahan overnight into Sunday. Massive joint US-Israeli air raids hit multiple areas of the capital. CENTCOM confirmed the US has now struck over 8,000 military targets across 23 days of war, including 130 Iranian vessels, which it called “the largest elimination of a navy over a three-week period since World War II.” Iran’s energy minister confirmed on Sunday that “the country’s vital water and electricity infrastructure has suffered heavy damage” from US and Israeli strikes, including “dozens of water transmission and treatment facilities” and “critical water supply networks.” Israel previously struck South Pars, Iran’s portion of the world’s largest gas field. Eighty percent of Iranian electricity comes from natural gas. The attack on South Pars directly threatens power generation for 90 million people. Third. President Trump posted his 48-hour ultimatum Saturday night: reopen the Strait of Hormuz by Monday evening or the US will “hit and obliterate” Iranian power plants “starting with the biggest one first.” Iran’s armed forces responded that the strait would be “completely closed” if power plants are hit. Parliament Speaker Ghalibaf posted on X that all energy and oil infrastructure across the entire region would become “legitimate targets” and be “irreversibly destroyed.” That word “irreversibly” is doing the work of a thousand missiles. It means desalination plants. It means refineries. It means the infrastructure that produces drinking water for the Arabian Peninsula. Fourth. Saudi Arabia expelled Iranian diplomats. Riyadh declared the military attache, his deputy, and three other embassy members persona non grata with 24 hours to leave. This follows ongoing Iranian strikes on Saudi territory. Turkey’s foreign minister warned from Riyadh that Gulf countries may be forced to retaliate. The Gulf states, which have so far absorbed Iranian attacks without entering the war, are running out of room. Now hold all four escalations simultaneously. Iran strikes Israel’s nuclear doorstep. Israel and the US hammer Iranian water and power. Trump sets a 48-hour clock on power plant destruction. Iran promises permanent Hormuz closure and irreversible destruction of regional infrastructure if the clock runs out. Saudi expels Iranian diplomats. The Gulf moves toward belligerency. Brent trades above $113. WTI above $100. Goldman forecasts $110 to $125 for April with tail risk to $150. The IEA has released 400 million barrels of emergency reserves, the largest in history. The 48-hour clock expires Monday evening. Every barrel trapped in the Gulf is a barrel that does not become fertilizer. Every power plant destroyed in Iran is a megawatt that does not synthesise ammonia. Every desalination plant threatened in the Gulf is drinking water for millions. The war is no longer about missiles and territory. It is about molecules: water, nitrogen, helium, crude. The missiles are the mechanism. The molecules are the consequence. And the clock is ticking. Full Deep dive article -
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡2,817,161 次观看 • 2 个月前

BREAKING: Satellite imagery shows an Iranian ballistic missile struck the AN/FPS-132 phased array radar at Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar. If the damage is as severe as the imagery suggests, Iran just destroyed a $1.1 billion piece of equipment that took years to build and cannot be replaced on any timeline relevant to this war. The AN/FPS-132 is not an ordinary radar. It is one of a handful of early warning sensors in the entire US global missile defence architecture. It detects ballistic missile launches at ranges exceeding 5,000 kilometres. It provides the initial tracking data that allows Patriot, THAAD, and Aegis systems to calculate intercept solutions. Without it, every other layer of missile defence in the Gulf theatre is operating with compressed reaction times and degraded situational awareness. Qatar intercepted 101 ballistic missiles during this conflict. Sixty-five missiles and twelve drones were fired at Al Udeid specifically. The base’s layered defences stopped nearly all of them. Two got through. One of them appears to have hit the single most valuable sensor in the entire region. This is the mathematics of asymmetric warfare in a single event. Iran does not need to overwhelm the defence system. It needs one missile to reach one target. The defender has to intercept everything. The attacker has to succeed once. A ballistic missile costs Iran a fraction of what the radar costs. Even at the most generous estimate of Iranian missile production costs, the exchange ratio is hundreds to one in the attacker’s favour. Now connect this to the insurance mechanism. I have written all day that the B-2 and B-52 campaigns are destroying Iran’s conventional military but not its ability to threaten asymmetric targets. This is the proof. The most heavily defended air base in the Middle East, housing CENTCOM’s forward headquarters, protected by Patriot batteries and the most advanced interception systems the US deploys, just lost its primary early warning radar to a single ballistic missile that evaded every layer. If the US military cannot protect a $1.1 billion radar inside its own most fortified base, on what basis does any reinsurer model that a tanker transiting the Strait of Hormuz is protectable by Navy escorts? The DFC insurance backstop announced hours ago promised Navy escorts would secure Gulf shipping. The AN/FPS-132 strike demonstrates that even the most sophisticated US defensive systems cannot guarantee protection against Iranian ballistic missiles in a saturation attack environment. One missile. One radar. $1.1 billion. And a defence architecture that just revealed its fundamental constraint: perfection is required, and perfection is impossible. The escorts cannot guarantee what the base defences could not. The insurance market already knew this. Now the satellite imagery proves it.
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡3,106,957 次观看 • 3 个月前

A bankrupt island nation of 22 million people just taught every great power on Earth a lesson in leverage. Sri Lanka’s President Dissanayake stood before cameras on 6 March and said: “We are neutral but also humanitarian. Sri Lanka is a free and non-aligned nation. We do not favour any country. We treat every human being equally, whether Iranian, American, or Israeli. We jealously guard our non-aligned policy while ensuring that humanitarian values and the saving of lives remain our top priority.” Then he granted free one-month humanitarian visas to all 236 Iranian sailors, the 32 survivors pulled from the wreckage of the IRIS Dena and 204 crew evacuated from the disabled IRIS Bushehr. He described sheltering them as “the most courageous and humanitarian course of action a state can take.” The United States, which sank the Dena using USS Charlotte (SSN-766), a Los Angeles-class nuclear-powered fast-attack submarine firing Mk 48 heavyweight torpedoes 19 to 44 nautical miles off Galle, is pressuring Colombo through a State Department cable to retain the sailors under conditions favourable to American intelligence access. Washington wants the 32 survivors who witnessed classified US submarine engagement tactics. China, which holds Hambantota port under a 99-year lease 90 kilometres from the sinking site, says nothing publicly. The debt speaks for itself. India, which hosted the Dena at its MILAN 2026 exercise weeks before the ship was sunk by India’s closest strategic partner, has not uttered a single word about any of it. Iran is broadcasting the rescue footage across every state media channel. Eighty-seven dead sailors and a neutral nation that refused American demands. And Sri Lanka, sovereign-defaulted in 2022, currently under IMF conditionality, owing billions to Beijing through Belt and Road, dependent on Indian goodwill for regional security, and sitting at the intersection of every great-power pressure line in the Indian Ocean, chose international law. UNCLOS Article 98 required the rescue. Geneva Convention II Article 17 required the internment. Hague Convention XIII prohibited allowing the sailors to re-enter combat. Sri Lanka followed every obligation to the letter. Uruguay did the same during the Falklands. Switzerland did the same throughout World War II. The law is unambiguous. The politics are not. This is the same Sri Lanka that founded the Non-Aligned Movement in 1961. That hosted the fifth NAM summit in 1976. That proposed the Indian Ocean as a Zone of Peace in 1971 and got the UN to adopt it. And that is now pursuing BRICS partner status under India’s 2026 chairmanship, with Prime Minister Amarasuriya calling membership “strategically appealing” on 6 March, the same week her government was sheltering Iranian sailors against American objections. Every major power assumed Sri Lanka would fold. Washington assumed economic leverage would force compliance. Beijing assumed debt would ensure silence. Delhi assumed proximity would guarantee deference. Tehran assumed sympathy would guarantee solidarity. Instead, Colombo followed the law, issued the visas, sheltered the sailors, and told every great power exactly the same thing: we are neutral, we are humanitarian, and we do not take sides. The weakest economy in the Indian Ocean just demonstrated the strongest foreign policy. Full analysis for paid subscribers.
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡2,420,243 次观看 • 3 个月前

BREAKING: The missing American weapons systems officer is alive and out of Iran. Fox News, citing two senior US officials, reports that US special operations forces extracted the downed F-15E crew member after a massive firefight with IRGC and Basij forces in the mountains of southwestern Iran. The Pentagon has not officially confirmed. If the reports hold, the United States just pulled off the first successful combat rescue from inside Iranian territory in American military history. Desert One failed in 1980. Dehdasht did not. The WSO ejected over Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Province on Friday when Iranian air defences shot down his F-15E Strike Eagle, the first manned American aircraft lost to enemy fire since 2003. He spent approximately 24 hours evading capture on the ground while Iranian state television broadcast a bounty for his capture alive, Basij militia flooded the mountains, and armed civilians fired automatic rifles at American rescue helicopters overhead. NBC News verified the footage. The IRGC warned residents to stay away. Tasnim, the semi-official news agency, said Iran would “not announce whether the pilot is in our custody.” Then the operators came. Reports describe a JSOC-led night extraction supported by A-10 Warthog gun runs on IRGC convoys and a telecommunications tower in Dehdasht to suppress the Iranian response. Iranian local officials reported at least four killed and several wounded. Unverified social media reports described “large numbers” of IRGC and Basij casualties transferred from Black Mountain to Dehdasht Hospital. Crowds gathered outside. The US struck Basij convoys advancing on the WSO’s position with close air support while ground teams moved in for the extraction. Fox News reported that the WSO “and the members of the rescue team are all safely out of Iran.” This happened 48 hours after the President told the nation that Iran’s radar was “100 percent annihilated” and that there was “not a thing” Iran could do. Iran shot down the jet. Iran mobilised thousands to hunt the crew. Iran offered a bounty on state television. And America sent its most classified soldiers into the Iranian mountains, fought the IRGC on the ground, and brought their man home. The gap between the political narrative and the operational reality has never been wider or more consequential. The rescue, if confirmed, changes the war’s trajectory in ways that transcend the survival of one airman. It demonstrates that American special operations forces can insert into, fight inside, and extract from Iran. It proves that the IRGC’s ground control in its own provinces is penetrable. It removes the immediate hostage leverage that would have paralysed American decision-making heading into the April 6 deadline. And it shifts the psychological balance: the country that was hunting the pilot is now absorbing the fact that the hunters were outfought by a force that came and left before dawn. But it also confirms what the shootdown already proved. Iran is not finished. A country with “no anti-aircraft equipment” brought down a $100 million fighter. A country whose radar was “annihilated” forced the most expensive rescue operation of the war. A country that was supposed to be “decimated” mobilised fast enough to require A-10 gun runs and a ground battle to recover one man. The WSO is alive because the operators were extraordinary. The operators were needed because the war is not what the President says it is. The man is out. The war is not over. And the 48-hour clock is still running.
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡1,229,994 次观看 • 2 个月前

2 hours. That’s how long the UAE President spent in India on January 19th. Landed. Signed a defense pact. Agreed to $200 billion in trade. Locked in a $3 billion LNG deal. Left. Five days later: UAE scrapped the Islamabad airport deal. Yesterday: UAE President landed in Moscow to meet Putin. Read that sequence again. Delhi for 2 hours → Pakistan deal cancelled → Kremlin summit. India didn’t just get chosen over Pakistan. India became the gateway to the entire non-Western axis. The Gulf is doing exactly what the EU and Canada did this month. Building optionality. And the optionality runs through Delhi. Here’s what nobody in Islamabad or Washington wants to admit: MBZ could have gone to Delhi for a week-long state visit with ceremonies and banquets. Instead he flew in, signed everything that mattered, and flew out. That’s not diplomacy. That’s a transaction. The transaction: India gets Gulf defense alignment. UAE gets a hedge against Saudi-Pakistan-Turkey. Russia gets a channel to the Gulf that bypasses Western sanctions. And Pakistan? Pakistan gets to watch the airport deal evaporate days after the Modi handshake. The humiliation isn’t the cancelled deal. The humiliation is that it only took 2 hours to replace decades of alignment. Read the full mechanism -
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡2,472,594 次观看 • 4 个月前

Dubai intercepted 96 percent of what Iran launched last night. Then it arrested people for filming the 4 percent that got through. The UAE’s air defense network is extraordinary. Patriot PAC-3 for short and medium range. THAAD at Mach 8 for high-altitude ballistic intercepts. Barak-8 for naval and land threats. AI-powered target classification sorting fibre-optic drones from ballistic warheads in milliseconds and assigning the correct interceptor tier before a human operator could identify the track. Since February 28, UAE systems have engaged 314 ballistic missiles and 1,672 drones. The interception rate across the campaign runs between 90 and 96 percent. That is world-class. That is lives saved. That is technology performing under conditions no peacetime simulation could replicate. And then the UAE arrested a 60-year-old British tourist for filming a missile strike and sending the video to his family. He deleted it. They charged him anyway. At least 21 foreigners have been charged under cybercrime laws for possessing, posting, or privately sharing photos and videos of the attacks. Survivors who sent proof-of-life images to their families have been detained. The minimum penalty: two years in prison, fines up to $54,000, and deportation. A country that intercepts 96 percent of incoming warheads is now telling the world that the 4 percent it cannot stop is too dangerous to photograph. The message to every tourist, every expat, every international investor considering Dubai is not “we are safe.” It is “we are safe, and if you document any evidence to the contrary, we will put you in prison.” That message is doing more damage to Dubai’s brand than the missiles. The same week, Reuters reported that the UAE is one of six Gulf states actively pressing Washington not to stop short but to fully neutralise Iran’s military capability. Abdulaziz Sager of the Gulf Research Center confirmed: Iran crossed every red line. The UAE wants the war to end with Iran permanently unable to threaten the strait. That pressure is understandable. Dubai has been struck repeatedly. Fuel tanks at the airport ignited. Flights suspended. Fertiglobe, one of the world’s largest nitrogen producers at 6.6 million tonnes annual capacity, sits on soil that is under persistent bombardment. But here is the strategic irony the UAE has not processed. Every missile that hits Dubai accelerates capital flight. Every arrest of a tourist accelerates it further. And the capital is not fleeing to London or Singapore. It is flowing to the country next door whose giga-projects have not been struck, whose airports have not closed, whose tourists have not been arrested, and whose $1.3 trillion Vision 2030 infrastructure is being built on a timeline that extends well beyond this war. Saudi Arabia signed a Strategic Mutual Defence Agreement with Pakistan in September 2025 that created a military depth Iran respected. Riyadh has absorbed far less direct targeting. NEOM, the Red Sea project, Diriyah Gate, the 2034 World Cup: all untouched. All funded. All under construction. Dubai intercepts the missiles. Dubai arrests the witnesses. Dubai demands the war escalate. And Saudi Arabia collects the capital, the perception of safety, and the long-term positioning that Dubai is burning through with every barrage and every prosecution. The air defenses work. The arrests do not. And the fertiliser trapped behind the permissioned strait at $683 per ton does not care about either. Full analysis:
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡1,449,000 次观看 • 3 个月前

The deadline just compressed from 10 days to 48 hours. And Iran just told you it will not comply. On February 19, Trump said 10 to 15 days. Five days later, the administration gave Iran a 48-hour window for a new nuclear proposal. That is not negotiation. That is a countdown being accelerated by someone who has already made the math work and is compressing the timeline to match the logistics. Iran International confirmed Sunday that Tehran has ruled out an interim deal and is keeping its military on full alert during diplomacy. Foreign Minister Araghchi says he sees "encouraging signals" while simultaneously reaffirming Iran will never accept zero enrichment, the only condition Washington says it will accept. Those two positions do not overlap. There is no Venn diagram. There is an unbridgeable impasse, the exact words Israeli officials used when briefing the Times of Israel. Now hold four things that happened in the same 48-hour window and ask yourself if they are coincidence. First. KAN, Israel's public broadcaster, reports a US-Israeli understanding has been finalized: Washington leads the initial strikes. If Iran retaliates against Israel, Jerusalem has immediate authorization to respond without waiting for American approval. You do not pre-delegate strike authority between two sovereign militaries for a bluff. That is a command-and-control architecture for a multi-front war with pre-authorized escalation ladders. Second. Trump told reporters any action would be "easily won" and promised Iran a "very bad day for Iran and its people" if no deal is reached. He then denied his own team is opposing strikes. When a president publicly denies internal opposition, the opposition is real and he has overruled it. Graham already confirmed the advisers are pleading. Trump is telling you he has heard them and chosen differently. Third. Iran conducted naval drills closing sections of the Strait of Hormuz. Not a statement. Not a threat. Physical vessels conducting physical operations in the 21-mile corridor through which 20 percent of the world's seaborne crude transits daily. Iran is not threatening to close the strait. Iran is practicing closing the strait. Fourth. The US Embassy in Beirut began evacuating personnel. Beirut. Not Baghdad. Not Doha. Beirut. Where Hezbollah, Iran's most capable proxy, sits with an estimated 150,000 rockets pointed at Israel. You evacuate Beirut when you expect the retaliatory chain to activate Lebanon, which means you expect the initial action to be significant enough to trigger the full proxy architecture. Gold hit $5,000. Not because of inflation. Not because of Fed policy. Because the smart money that moves bullion is pricing something the equity market has not yet processed. Bloomberg has modeled $108 oil if the Strait is disrupted. The Atlantic Council just published ten predictions for US strikes, not ten predictions for talks. NBC reports a new attack risks "large-scale retaliation." CSIS is mapping oil disruption scenarios. The Crisis Group, one of the most dovish institutions in international relations, titled their latest analysis "The US and Iran Can Still Avoid a War." Still. That word is doing all the work. Even the doves are framing the baseline as war. The market priced Brent at $71.76 on Friday. That price contains roughly $10 of Iran premium. Ten dollars. For a scenario where the deadline expires before the talks resume, the target has publicly rejected the only acceptable terms, the shooter has pre-delegated retaliatory authority to a nuclear-armed ally, the target's most capable proxy is being evacuated against, and the chokepoint controlling a fifth of global crude supply is being rehearsed for closure. Everyone is watching Geneva on Wednesday. The deadline runs out Tuesday. Iran has already said no. The military architecture is complete. The proxy contingency is activated. The embassy is emptying. The gold is screaming. The stage is not being set. The stage is set. The lights are on. The actors are in position. And the curtain does not wait for the audience to find their seats.
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡1,356,722 次观看 • 3 个月前

JUST IN: A drone just hit a fuel tank at the busiest airport in the Middle East. The Dubai Media Office confirmed it 23 minutes ago. “A drone incident in the vicinity of Dubai International Airport (DXB) affected one of the fuel tanks. Dubai Civil Defence teams are currently working to bring the fire under control. No injuries have been reported so far.” That is the official statement from Dubai Media Office, posted in English and Arabic, with thousands of views in the first half hour. The fuel tank is burning. Civil Defence is on scene. The airport that processed 87 million passengers last year, the global hub that connects 260 destinations across six continents, the physical embodiment of everything Dubai built over three decades, has a fuel tank on fire because a drone that costs less than a business-class seat through Terminal 3 reached the aviation fuel supply that keeps the hub operational. This is the third confirmed drone incident at or near DXB since the war began. On 11 March, two drones struck near the airport, injuring four people. On 1 March, drones hit AWS data centres in the same corridor. Today, the target was not a server farm or a residential tower. It was aviation fuel. The escalation is vertical: from data to shelter to the liquid that makes the airport function. Fuel tanks at international airports are not incidental targets. They are the circulatory system of aviation. DXB operates on jet fuel stored in tank farms adjacent to the runways. A sustained fire in a fuel tank does not merely delay flights. It grounds the refuelling infrastructure that determines whether aircraft depart at all. Civil Defence is containing this fire. The question is not whether this fire is contained. The question is whether the next drone reaches the next tank, and whether the insurance market, the airline route planners, and the 87 million annual passengers calculate that a 94% interception rate over an airport fuel farm is sufficient assurance to book the ticket. The cumulative toll on the UAE since 28 February: 294 ballistic missiles, 15 cruise missiles, over 1,600 drones. Six dead. 141 injured. AWS data centres struck. Creek Harbour and 23 Marina towers burning from debris. The Burj Al Arab facade hit. Jebel Ali Port targeted. Fujairah oil zone fires. The Iranian Hospital closed. Five schools shuttered. Twenty-one people charged for filming. And now a fuel tank at the airport that defines the city burning while Civil Defence teams work to contain what the air defence system intercepted everywhere except here. The $600 million daily regional tourism loss was calculated before a fuel tank at DXB caught fire. The DFM Real Estate Index was down 21.4% before a fuel tank at DXB caught fire. The $20 billion DFC insurance facility had zero confirmed takers before a fuel tank at DXB caught fire. Every metric of economic damage that existed this morning is now being recalculated against a new data point: the airport itself is no longer outside the target set. Dubai built the busiest airport in the Middle East to prove the Gulf was open for business. Iran just proved it is open for drones. The fuel tank is burning. Civil Defence is responding. No injuries reported. And somewhere in the Gulf, a Shahed that cost $20,000 to $35,000 just imposed a repricing event on an aviation hub worth hundreds of billions by reaching the one target that converts a “drone incident” from a security event into an infrastructure crisis: the fuel that keeps the planes flying. Full analysis!
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡1,101,554 次观看 • 3 个月前

AN AMERICAN PATRIOT BATTERY MAY HAVE JUST SHOT DOWN AN AMERICAN F-15 A U.S. F-15E Strike Eagle crashed in Kuwait on March 2 during Operation Epic Fury. The pilot ejected safely with apparent injuries according to Republic World and SSBCrack, which published video of the aviator in the back of a vehicle post-ejection. Iraqi News confirmed the crash occurred in a sparsely inhabited area near the Iraq border. CENTCOM has not released an official statement on the cause. Iran’s state media claimed the Islamic Republic shot the jet down. Iran provided no evidence. NDTV reported footage showing the F-15 spiraling in what appeared to be a friendly fire engagement from a Patriot air defense battery. If that footage is authentic, the United States just shot down its own fourth-generation strike fighter with its own air defense system in the territory of its own ally during a war the United States started. Here is why this is not an anomaly. This is a pattern. On March 23, 2003, during the invasion of Iraq, a U.S. Patriot battery shot down a Royal Air Force Tornado GR4 returning from a mission over Iraq. Flight Lieutenant Kevin Main and Flight Lieutenant Dave Williams were killed. Twelve days later, on April 3, 2003, a Patriot battery engaged and destroyed a U.S. Navy F/A-18C Hornet. Lieutenant Nathan White was killed. Two Patriot fratricide incidents in twelve days. The investigation found the system’s radar misidentified friendly aircraft as incoming tactical ballistic missiles. Twenty-three years later, the same Patriot system is deployed across the same theater, under the same conditions that produce fratricide: saturated airspace, dozens of simultaneous missile tracks, hair-trigger engagement protocols activated by the single largest barrage of Iranian ballistic missiles and drones in history. The UAE alone absorbed 165 ballistic missiles and 541 drones according to Breaking Defense. Kuwait took Iranian strikes that killed three U.S. service members and seriously wounded five more according to CENTCOM. Every Patriot battery in the Gulf is operating in the most target-dense air defense environment since the system was designed. Patriot was built to track and engage ballistic missiles. When the sky is simultaneously filled with ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, one-way attack drones, and friendly strike aircraft returning from Iranian airspace, the IFF (Identification Friend or Foe) discrimination challenge exceeds anything tested in peacetime exercises. This is the first major air-to-air fratricide incident of the Iran war. If confirmed as Patriot engagement, it exposes a vulnerability that cannot be patched in the middle of a conflict. The system that Gulf states purchased for billions to protect against exactly this scenario, a mass Iranian missile and drone barrage, may be unable to distinguish between the incoming threat and the outgoing response. The pilot survived. The next crew may not. And the diplomatic payload is staggering. Kuwait is hosting American forces, absorbing Iranian strikes, burying American service members, and now potentially witnessing American air defense systems destroying American aircraft over Kuwaiti territory. Kuwait did not sign up for this geometry. No ally in history has absorbed fire from both the enemy and the protector simultaneously. Until now.
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡1,111,608 次观看 • 3 个月前

JUST IN: 🇺🇸🇻🇪 Footage of US forces seizing its sixth Venezuelan oil tanker in the Caribbean Sea. But that is not the story. The story is where Trump put the $500 million from the first sale. Not Washington. Qatar. Venezuela owes $170 billion to international creditors. Bondholders. China. ExxonMobil. ConocoPhillips. Everyone. Any US bank account would be seized within hours through litigation. So the administration deposited the proceeds in Doha. A “neutral venue” where money flows freely with American approval and cannot be touched. One Executive Order bypassed 80 years of international debt law. Now it gets surreal. Trump at the White House January 9: “China can buy all the oil they want from us.” “Russia can get all the oil they need from us.” He is selling their ally’s oil back to them. Through accounts they cannot access. In a country that owes them billions they will never collect. Rubio simultaneously demanded Venezuela sever all ties with Beijing and Moscow. The math: 6 tankers seized in 13 days $500 million first sale $2.8 billion initial tranche 303 billion barrels total reserves $170 billion in claims now worthless That 303 billion figure is not propaganda. OPEC 2025 Statistical Bulletin. US Energy Information Administration. Both verified. 17% of all known oil on Earth. Larger than Saudi Arabia. January 3: Capture the president January 14: Sell his country’s oil January 15: Deposit the money where his creditors cannot reach it Twelve days from extraction to revenue capture. No nation has done this since 1945. The template is now operational.
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡1,520,516 次观看 • 5 个月前

BREAKING: Three things happened within hours on March 28 that nobody has connected. First. Iran’s IRGC claimed it destroyed a Ukrainian anti-drone system depot in the UAE. Ukraine’s foreign ministry immediately denied it: “This is a lie. We officially refute this information. The Iranian regime frequently carries out such disinformation campaigns.” Whether the strike occurred or not, the claim itself is the signal. Iran is publicly declaring that Ukrainian drone defence expertise in the Gulf is now a military target. Second. Israel confirmed the killing of Ali Shoeib, a veteran Al-Manar television correspondent in southern Lebanon. The IDF stated he was an operative in the intelligence unit of Hezbollah’s elite Radwan Force who “served as a terrorist under the guise of a journalist” while “consistently working to expose the locations of IDF troops.” He was broadcasting live from southern Lebanon three hours before the strike killed him per Times of Israel and Ynet. Third. Zelensky landed in Qatar and the UAE on the same day, signing defence cooperation agreements offering the same FPV interceptor technology that Iran’s IRGC just publicly threatened to destroy. Connect the three events and the architecture becomes visible. Iran’s proxy war is being dismantled simultaneously on two fronts by two countries that are not formally allied with each other. Israel is eliminating the intelligence layer in Lebanon. Ukraine is building the counter-drone layer across the Gulf. Both are targeting the same Iranian network from different angles. The Radwan Force that Shoeib served coordinates with Iranian Shahed drones in Lebanon. The same Shahed variant is attacking Ras Laffan in Qatar and military infrastructure in the UAE. The same Shahed is being countered by the Ukrainian FPV teams whose depot Iran claims to have destroyed in Dubai. One weapon. One network. Two countries dismantling it from opposite ends without a formal alliance between them. The Radwan Force that Shoeib embedded with is not a standalone militia. It is an IRGC-trained special operations brigade of 2,500 to 5,000 fighters with reconnaissance, intelligence, anti-tank, engineering, and assault subunits per Carnegie and Atlantic Council analyses. IDF strikes have killed over 200 Radwan operatives and multiple commanders in recent weeks per Times of Israel. The intelligence subunit Shoeib served used journalist credentials to map Israeli positions for the same targeting network that feeds Shahed launch coordinates. Shoeib was broadcasting live three hours before the strike. His camera was the weapon. The coordinates embedded in his footage were the payload. Al-Manar was the delivery system. Iran’s proxy architecture does not distinguish between media and military because it was never designed to. The journalist, the drone, the toll booth, the legislation. In this war, the instrument of destruction is always disguised as something else. And now Iran has announced, whether truthfully or as propaganda, that it considers Ukrainian counter-drone depots in the UAE to be legitimate military targets. This means Zelensky’s Gulf tour is not just a diplomatic exercise. It is an operational deployment into a theatre where Iran has publicly identified his teams as combatants. The $2,100 Sting interceptor is no longer an advisory export. It is a weapon Iran has acknowledged as a threat worth striking. The invisible front runs from Jezzine to Dubai. From a journalist’s camera to a drone depot. From Radwan intelligence to FPV interceptors. Two countries. One network. Zero alliance. Maximum convergence. Full analysis -
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡661,776 次观看 • 2 个月前

BREAKING: The IDF gave it a name. Operation Eternal Darkness. Read the name as a capability statement, not a codename. Fifty fighter jets. One hundred and sixty precision-guided munitions. One hundred targets. Ten minutes. Three geographic zones spanning 170 kilometres from Beirut’s southern suburbs to the Beqaa Valley to southern Lebanon. Simultaneous impact. Zero warning to the targets. Defence Minister Katz said it was the largest concentrated blow Hezbollah has suffered since the pager operation in September 2024. The pagers were hardware infiltration. This was something else entirely. In September 2024, Israel compromised Hezbollah’s supply chain, embedded explosives in pagers, and detonated them simultaneously. It required months of physical engineering, covert procurement, and logistical insertion. It killed approximately 40 commanders. Operation Eternal Darkness killed over 200 operatives in a single ten-minute window without touching a single device in advance. The penetration was not physical. It was informational. The IDF confirmed that the operation was planned several weeks in advance and was going to proceed regardless of whether the Iran ceasefire was reached. The timing was driven by what the military described as optimal operational conditions. Translated from military language into plain language: the intelligence picture was complete. Every target’s location was known. Every target’s location was current. And every target’s location was known to be current at the same moment. That simultaneity is the revolution. It is not possible to strike 100 dispersed command nodes across 170 kilometres in ten minutes unless you have real-time positional data on all of them continuously. Not yesterday’s data. Not this morning’s data. Live data, updating faster than any human can relocate, verified across multiple intelligence streams, and fed into a strike package that executes before the first target can warn the second. Israel has built what military doctrine now calls a “data factory”. The system originated in Gaza where Unit 8200’s AI platforms, known internally as Gospel for infrastructure targeting and Lavender for personnel identification, compressed target generation from 50 per year to 100 per day. Haaretz confirmed on March 31 that this data factory is now active in the Lebanon and Iran theatres, creating a single operational picture from satellite imagery, drone feeds, signals intelligence, cellular metadata, and human sources fused through machine learning algorithms that identify patterns faster than any analyst corps on earth. The name Eternal Darkness is not poetic. It is literal. When you strike every command node, every intelligence headquarters, every missile coordination centre, and every elite unit’s operational hub simultaneously, the lights go out across the entire organisation at once. There is no fallback node to activate. There is no secondary command to assume control. There is no communication channel to issue the order to disperse because the communication channel is what revealed the location in the first place. Hezbollah’s options after Eternal Darkness are binary. Go digital and be found. Go analogue and be slow. An organisation that abandons digital communications to survive surveillance becomes an organisation that cannot coordinate distributed operations, which is the definition of a degraded force. The IDF does not need to destroy every fighter. It needs to destroy every connection between fighters. And on April 8, in ten minutes, it demonstrated that it can do exactly that across an entire country. The pagers changed the supply chain. Eternal Darkness changed the definition of command and control. In 2026, your signal is your coordinates. Full analysis -
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡478,485 次观看 • 2 个月前

Warren Buffett sat on CNBC on March 31 and did what he always does before markets break. He said nothing about a crash. He let the numbers speak. $373.3 billion in cash, the largest reserve any corporation has ever held. Thirteen consecutive quarters of net stock selling, the longest streak in Berkshire Hathaway’s history. $187 billion in net sales. And the Buffett Indicator, total US market capitalisation divided by GDP, at roughly 220 percent, exceeding the dot-com peak and any prior reading in the history of the ratio he popularised. In July 1999 at Sun Valley, Buffett told a conference of the world’s wealthiest investors that when the Indicator approaches 200 percent, “you are playing with fire.” The NASDAQ fell 78 percent over the following two years. He did not predict the crash. He described the temperature. The building burned anyway. The Indicator now exceeds 220 percent. And the fire this time is fed by one molecule: methane. The gas that generates 40 percent of US electricity, heats 47 percent of American homes, and feeds half the world through Haber-Bosch. The Hormuz crisis spiked TTF gas 75 percent and Brent crude to $107. Every S&P 500 company whose earnings depend on energy or supply chains is absorbing a war premium the Indicator has not yet priced. The 220 reading was calculated on pre-war earnings. Post-war earnings will be lower. The denominator shrinks. The ratio climbs. Buffett does not predict crashes. He has said it for six decades. “Short-term forecasts are poison.” But he positions for them with discipline no other investor has matched. He bought during the 2008 panic with “Buy American. I Am.” He warned about derivatives as “financial weapons of mass destruction” in 2002, six years before they detonated the global financial system. And on March 31, he flagged Iran’s nuclear programme as a risk to markets, the first time the Oracle of Omaha has connected a Middle Eastern war to his valuation framework in a public interview. The fire extinguisher is $373.3 billion in Treasury bills and cash equivalents. And the building is an S&P 500 where NVIDIA constitutes roughly seven percent of the index, where Oracle’s credit default swaps just exceeded 198 basis points surpassing the 2008 financial crisis peak, where OpenAI closed $122 billion at an $852 billion valuation on the same day the IRGC declared 18 American companies legitimate military targets. The AI trade that lifted the market to 220 percent on the Indicator runs on methane from a chokepoint that is 90 to 97 percent closed, helium from a Qatar facility that will take five years to rebuild, and rare earth minerals processed by the country hosting the peace negotiations. Buffett sees what the market always prices last: the gap between the story and the molecule. The story says AI will change everything. The molecule says the gas that trains the model costs 75 percent more than it did five weeks ago. The story trades at 220 percent of GDP. The molecule trades at $107 per barrel. One of them is wrong. Buffett has $373.3 billion that says he knows which one. The Oracle of Omaha and the Oracle of Hormuz have reached the same conclusion through different instruments. The fire is real. The exits are known. And the man with the extinguisher is not buying.
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡450,157 次观看 • 2 个月前

JUST IN: At dawn on Sunday, the Suezmax tanker OTIS arrived in Tokyo Bay carrying 910,000 barrels of Texas light crude that had loaded in Houston on March 22 and transited the Panama Canal. The cargo was pumped through an undersea pipeline to Cosmo Oil’s Chiba refinery, the same plant that has historically run UAE and Saudi medium-sour crude. It was the first US shipment of crude to Japan since the start of the Iran war on February 28. The volume is approximately half a day of Japan’s domestic consumption, per Cosmo and METI’s own framing. That is the part the headlines are pricing. The headline is the wrong story. The actual story is that Japan, which sourced 94.2 percent of its crude from the Middle East as recently as February, has begun physically reconfiguring a seventy-year energy architecture in fifty-five days. METI confirmed yesterday that barely half of May’s crude requirement has been secured. Refiners, already running at sixty-seven to sixty-eight percent utilization before the crisis, have begun reducing operating rates further because they cannot find enough Middle East-equivalent crude. Japan begins drawing 36.48 million barrels from its Strategic Petroleum Reserve on May 1, valued at three point four billion dollars. It is the second draw since the war began. The OTIS is the photograph of a pivot. The pivot itself is structural. Japanese refineries were built around the API gravity and sulfur profile of Persian Gulf crude. Texas WTI is roughly 40 API and 0.4 percent sulfur. Saudi Arab Light is 33 API and 1.8 percent sulfur. Running light sweet through a hydrotreater configured for medium sour produces the wrong product mix: more naphtha and gasoline, less diesel and jet. Japan’s transport fleet runs on diesel and jet. The yield distortion shows up as inventory drawdowns on the products Japan actually consumes. This is why the refineries are cutting runs. Not because they lack crude. Because they lack the right crude. Three more US tankers are scheduled to deliver to Japan in May. US crude exports to Asia have surged from 1.1 million barrels per day pre-war to a forecast 3.29 million in May. Panama Canal crude transits hit a four-year high in early April. Auction premiums to skip the queue have reached four million dollars per slot. The two largest Japanese investments announced at the March 19 Trump-Takaichi summit were forty billion dollars in GE Vernova small modular reactors and thirty-three billion in natural gas facilities, both on US soil. Japan hit two percent of GDP in defense spending in fiscal 2025, two years early. The FY2026 defense budget is a record 9.04 trillion yen, including stand-off missile capabilities and a SHIELD coastal drone network. Japan, holding 1.239 trillion dollars in US Treasuries, is financing US energy capacity, buying US energy in dollars, accelerating its rearmament under US tech transfer, and recycling those dollars back into Treasury markets that fund the carrier groups enforcing the blockade that closed Hormuz. Three readings of the OTIS arrival. A symbolic shipment that fills less than half a day of demand. Priced. Tactical diversification that ends if Hormuz reopens. Narrow. The first publicly verifiable photograph of the United States repositioning itself from Middle East security guarantor to Indo-Pacific energy supplier inside a sixty-day window, with Japan financing the substitution and Beijing three weeks away. The headlines are pricing the first. Cosmo just refined the third.
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡273,186 次观看 • 1 个月前

When the US glide bomb struck the IRIS Shahid Sayyad Shirazi near Qeshm Island on March 4, the impact triggered an involuntary event that nobody in the coverage has fully examined: the stricken corvette spontaneously launched one of its own anti-ship missiles. The weapon fired itself. Not as a last act of defiance from a crew executing a terminal order. The structural damage from the strike activated the launch sequence without human input. That detail is the most technically significant event in the naval dimension of this war. The Shahid Sayyad Shirazi is the third vessel of the Soleimani-class, the IRGC Navy’s most advanced surface combatant. Pennant FS313-03. Commissioned February 2024. The class was Iran’s answer to the problem of contested littoral warfare in the Persian Gulf and Strait of Hormuz: a wave-piercing catamaran hull approximately 65 to 68 meters in length, composite construction designed to reduce radar cross-section, four indigenous diesel engines producing confirmed speeds of 32 knots with promotional claims reaching 45, and an armament package that makes every other ship in its weight class irrelevant by comparison. Six anti-ship cruise missiles of the Noor, Ghadir, or Nasir class on deck launchers. A vertical launch system carrying between six and sixteen Sayad surface-to-air missiles plus additional cells for Abu-Mahdi long-range cruise missiles. Six 20-millimeter Gatling guns. A helipad for a medium combat helicopter. Capacity to deploy three fast-attack boats simultaneously. On a 600-tonne displacement hull. Iran built this ship specifically for the Hormuz chokepoint. The catamaran design provides speed and stability in the confined, shallow waters of the Gulf that a conventional monohull cannot match. The composite hull reduces the radar signature that adversaries need to acquire targeting solutions. The VLS integration gives a vessel of this size a defensive envelope against air attack that most navies reserve for ships four times the displacement. The speed and fast-boat deployment capacity fit exactly into the IRGC Navy’s doctrine of saturation from multiple simultaneous vectors. A US aircraft dropped a single glide bomb. The ship caught fire. It spontaneously launched a missile. CENTCOM confirmed the strike. Multiple cameras captured the burning hull offshore Qeshm Island with smoke rising through the Strait of Hormuz. The spontaneous missile launch is the detail that defines the engagement. A VLS or deck-launched anti-ship missile under normal conditions requires crew input, targeting data, and deliberate firing authorization. When a strike disrupts the electrical and structural integrity of the vessel sufficiently to trigger an unintended launch, the weapon system designed to protect the ship becomes a hazard launched into the Strait of Hormuz at whatever bearing the launcher happened to be pointing. Every tanker, patrol boat, or allied vessel within the weapon’s acquisition envelope during those seconds faced a missile fired by a ship that no longer had a crew in control of it. No second-order casualties were reported from the spontaneous launch. The missile either failed to acquire a target, impacted water, or flew a trajectory that missed occupied vessels. The outcome was fortunate. The mechanism was not controllable. Iran commissioned this ship fourteen months ago. It was designed to be their most dangerous surface unit in the world’s most contested waterway. It fired its own weapon at the waterway it was built to control before going down.
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡435,260 次观看 • 3 个月前

BREAKING: The US just struck Kharg Island, through which 90 percent of Iran’s crude exports flow, on the same day that bridges and railway lines are being destroyed across the country and the IRGC warned it would deprive American allies of the region’s oil and gas for years. Markets moved crude three percent on the Kharg headlines. They are looking at the wrong variable. Kharg is where oil leaves Iran. Asaluyeh and Mahshahr are where oil becomes molecules. Both have now been destroyed. That distinction matters more than any barrel count, because the world does not run on crude. It runs on what crude becomes after it passes through a steam cracker at 850 degrees: the ethylene that makes your packaging, the propylene that makes your car dashboards, the ammonia that feeds your soil, the methanol that synthesises your pharmaceuticals, and the helium that cools the lithography machines fabricating every advanced chip on earth. The IEA calls this the largest supply shock in the history of the global oil market. They measured barrels. The binding constraint is not barrels. It is molecules. And molecules do not respond to the mechanisms that clear oil shocks. You cannot release strategic reserves of propylene because no country has ever stockpiled it. You cannot substitute US ethane crackers because ethane produces ethylene but not propylene, not aromatics, not butadiene, and that is quantum chemistry, not economics. You cannot wait for a ceasefire because Dow’s CEO said last week that even after the strait reopens, petrochemicals will be last in the transit queue behind oil, gas, and fertiliser, and the heat exchangers required to rebuild the damaged facilities are manufactured by exactly five companies on earth with lead times of 18 to 36 months. What happened today at Kharg compounds the crisis in a way nobody is modelling. The destruction of upstream crude export capacity eliminates the revenue Iran would need to fund petrochemical reconstruction AND eliminates the feedstock that would eventually flow to whatever crackers survive. The war is destroying the input and the output simultaneously. There is no historical precedent for the concurrent annihilation of a nation’s crude export terminal, its petrochemical processing capacity, its steel production base, and its transport infrastructure in the same five-week campaign. The closest analog is IG Farben after 1945, and full restoration of that integrated chemical ecosystem required over a decade. The IRGC’s own threat confirms the duration thesis. They said years, not months. The industry’s own assessment confirms it. C&EN titled their April 3 analysis: “Iran war will debilitate petrochemicals for the rest of 2026,” and that is the most optimistic institutional estimate. QatarEnergy says Ras Laffan repairs take up to five years. The five heat exchanger manufacturers cannot simultaneously rebuild six countries. The biological clock for nitrogen-dependent crops does not wait for diplomatic negotiations. Markets price the conflict in barrels and months. The chemistry prices it in molecules and years. The gap between those two frames is the largest temporal arbitrage in modern financial markets, and it widened today. Full analysis -
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡201,432 次观看 • 2 个月前

JUST IN: Bapco Energies just declared force majeure. Bahrain’s only refinery. 405,000 barrels per day. Eighty-five percent exported. Ninety years old. The sole refining facility for an entire nation. Force majeure means the company is legally unable to fulfil its contractual obligations. Cargoes already paid for will not be delivered. Diesel, jet fuel, and refined petroleum products that buyers across Asia, Africa, and the Middle East were expecting will not arrive. The contracts are suspended. The supply is gone. The attack that triggered the declaration was an Iranian drone and missile strike on the Sitra refinery complex on 9 March. Fire broke out in at least one unit. Bahrain’s National Communication Centre confirmed containment with 32 civilians injured in the broader raids. Bapco stated domestic fuel supplies remain secured. But export operations, which account for 85% of the refinery’s output, are halted. This is not a full physical shutdown. It is something more consequential. It is a legal shutdown. Force majeure converts physical damage into contractual default. Every buyer holding a confirmed cargo from Bapco must now source replacement barrels from an already strained market where Hormuz is commercially closed, QatarEnergy is under its own force majeure, Iraq has cut production 70%, and VLCC charter rates sit at $424,000 per day. The replacement barrels do not exist at pre-war prices. Some do not exist at any price. This is the third force majeure declaration from the Gulf in nine days. QatarEnergy declared force majeure on all LNG exports after Iranian strikes hit Ras Laffan and Mesaieed, removing approximately 20% of global LNG supply. Kuwait’s national oil company announced precautionary production cuts. Now Bahrain’s sole refinery joins the cascade. Each declaration compounds the others. QatarEnergy’s force majeure tightened LNG markets. Bapco’s tightens refined product markets. When the refinery that processes crude into usable fuel goes offline, the disruption moves downstream from the wellhead to the petrol station, the shipping terminal, the airport fuel depot, and the industrial boiler. Crude oil prices capture the headline. Refined product margins capture the damage. Diesel margins were already surging before this declaration. Jet fuel crack spreads were at multi-year highs as 30,000 cancelled flights rerouted through Asian hubs burning additional fuel on longer routes. Bapco’s 405,000 barrels per day of refining capacity going offline removes a meaningful share of Gulf refined product supply at the precise moment global demand for alternative routing fuel is spiking. The IRGC’s 31 autonomous provincial commands did not need to close the Strait to cripple Bahrain’s energy exports. They needed one drone through the air defence screen. One hit on one unit of one refinery. The rest is done by lawyers, force majeure clauses, and a contracts market that cascades default through every buyer in the chain. The Strait was closed by insurance. The refinery was closed by a drone. The exports were closed by a legal clause. Three different mechanisms. One outcome. Supply removed from a market that cannot replace it. Hormuz. Qatar. Now Bahrain. Three force majeures in nine days. The Gulf’s energy architecture is being dismantled one legal declaration at a time. Full analysis here!
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡263,350 次观看 • 3 个月前

BREAKING: Iran’s Foreign Minister just told CBS the war will last “as long as it takes.” The Supreme Leader behind him owns £200 million in London real estate. Abbas Araghchi appeared on Face the Nation on 15th March and delivered the clearest statement of the war: “We never asked for a ceasefire or negotiations. We are ready to defend ourselves as long as it takes until President Trump comes to the point that this is an illegal war, that people are being killed only because Trump wants to have fun.” He rejected talks entirely: “I don’t think talking with the Americans would be on our agenda anymore. Very bitter experience.” He expanded the threat: Iran will attack “any energy infrastructure in the region which belongs to an American company or an American company is a shareholder.” The endurance is not powered by ideology. It is powered by money. And the money has an address. The IRGC’s economic empire, centred on Khatam al-Anbiya Construction Headquarters, controls an estimated 20 to 50% of the Iranian economy through 5,000 subsidiaries, 250,000 workers, and tens of billions in contracts spanning oil, construction, telecommunications, and banking. Fortune reported in March that the IRGC’s foundations control over half the country’s GDP by some estimates. This is not a military with a side business. It is a business with a military attached. The business funds the drones. Every Shahed that hits an AWS data centre, every mine on the Hormuz seabed, every proxy rocket fired by Hezbollah and the Houthis is financed by an economic empire that the IRGC built specifically to survive sanctions and fund operations without state budgets. When Araghchi says “as long as it takes,” he is not describing willpower. He is describing a cash flow. The cash flow has a second address. Bloomberg and the Financial Times report that Mojtaba Khamenei, the wounded Supreme Leader who cannot appear on video, is linked to a property empire of £200 million in London, including mansions on Bishops Avenue and flats in Kensington, plus an estimated €400 million in European hotels in Frankfurt and Mallorca, all channelled through IRGC-linked financier Ali Ansari. The man whose father considered him unfit, who was installed by a military junta, who communicates through a television anchor, maintains a real estate portfolio in the capital of a country that is part of the coalition bombing his. Iran’s demands for ending the war, as outlined by Araghchi and echoed by Rezaei, are: full cessation of hostilities (not a ceasefire, a complete stop), full reparations for all damages, recognition of Iran’s rights, future security guarantees, and complete US military withdrawal from the Persian Gulf. These are not negotiating positions. They are the opening demands of a regime that believes its economic empire can sustain indefinite asymmetric warfare because the empire was built for exactly this scenario. The Khatam al-Anbiya spokesman confirmed the escalation on 11th March: the “enemy left our hands open to targeting economic centres and banks” linked to the US and Israel. The threat extends to oil and gas infrastructure that American companies hold shares in across Saudi Arabia and the UAE. The regime that owns property in London is threatening to burn the energy infrastructure that funds the Gulf economies its Supreme Leader invested in. “As long as it takes” is not a vow. It is a business model. The IRGC built a parallel economy to survive sanctions. It built offshore property to survive regime change. It built the Shahed to survive conventional inferiority. And it installed a wounded figurehead to survive decapitation. Every layer is designed for endurance. The question is not whether Iran means it. The question is whether the $100 billion empire that funds it can survive the 15,000 strikes that are systematically destroying the country it operates in.
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡184,999 次观看 • 3 个月前