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They probably hired a few North Korean consultants on that tunneling bit. The NorKors have been tunneling for about 70 years for roughly the same reason.
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Ukrainian and Israeli sources report that Ukrainian agents in Russia killed Moussa Scharfi Molassar; a Commander of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), Molassari was responsible for the transfer of Iranian Shahid and Mohajir UAVs.
https://www.newsrael.com/posts/z5p31o036jd |
Slap on the back of the wrist.....
https://www.politico.eu/article/fran...aine-iran-air/ France, Germany, UK sanction Iran for supplying missiles to Russia France, Germany and the United Kingdom will sanction Iran for providing missiles to Russia for its war on Ukraine, the three countries announced Tuesday. “This is a further escalation of Iran’s military support to Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine and will see Iranian missiles reaching European soil, increasing the suffering of the Ukrainian people,” Paris, Berlin and London said in a joint statement. “We will be taking immediate steps to cancel bilateral air services agreements with Iran. In addition, we will pursue the designations of significant entities and individuals involved with Iran’s ballistic missile programme and the transfer of ballistic missiles and other weapons to Russia,” the statement added. France, Germany and the U.K. also said they “will also work towards imposing sanctions on Iran Air,” Iran’s flag carrier. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken confirmed during a visit to London on Tuesday that Iran has supplied ballistic missiles to Russia, vowing fresh U.S. sanctions on Tehran. “This development and the growing cooperation between Russia and Iran threatens European security,” Blinken said. The U.S. and EU have already slapped numerous sanctions on Iran over its nuclear program, human rights abuses and support for the Kremlin's invasion of Ukraine. “We call on Iran to immediately cease all support to Russia’s war against Ukraine and halt the development and transfers of its ballistic missiles,” the three European nations said. |
It's a sad reflection on the state of the Russian military that they have to buy missiles from Iran & NOK.................... I can remember when they built their own by the thousands.
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Iran's president is going to visit, so somebody decided to try and blow a few things up at a Coalition base near BIAP.
BAGHDAD (AP) — Iraqi security officials said an explosion targeted a site used by the U.S. military next to Baghdad airport late Tuesday, one day before an expected visit by Iran's president. The expected visit by Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian to Baghdad Wednesday would be his first official trip abroad since taking office. Iraq’s security media cell said in a statement that an explosion was heard at 11 p.m. at the airport, in an area used by advisers to the U.S.-led international coalition. The statement said Iraqi security forces were unable to determine the “type or causes of the explosion, and no party has claimed responsibility for it.” It added that the incident was under investigation and civilian air traffic continued as normal. There was no immediate information on damages or casualties. U.S. officials did not immediately respond to requests for comment. An Iraqi security official at the airport, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly about the matter, said that officials who were at the airport preparing for Pezeshkian’s visit heard “the sound of two strong strikes,” which apparently targeted a logistics support site for the coalition. Over the past 11 months, Iranian-backed Iraqi militias have periodically targeted bases housing U.S. forces in Iraq and have said that the strikes were in retaliation for Washington’s support of Israel in the war in Gaza. One of those militias, Kataib Hezbollah, appeared to be trying to distance itself from Tuesday night’s strike. Jaafar al-Husseini, the group’s spokesperson, said in a statement that the targeting of the airport was “carried out by suspicious hands, and its aim is to disrupt the Iranian president’s visit to Baghdad.” |
Israel has executed a daring special forces raid against an Iranian underground weapons facility in Syria.
During the heavy Israeli airstrikes against Masyaf, helicopters flew in with special forces. They captured 2-4 Iranians, liquidated 3 Syrians, took secret documents and left behind explosives that blew up the facility. The helicopters most likely flew 200 km into Syria from the Mediterranean Sea. https://cimg6.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune....617a68c184.png https://www.axios.com/2024/09/12/israel-syria-raid Israel destroyed reported Iranian underground missile factory in Syria ground raid An elite Israel Defense Forces unit conducted a highly unusual raid in Syria earlier this week and destroyed an underground precision missile factory that Israel and the U.S. claim was built by Iran, according to three sources briefed on the operation. .
Driving the news: Syrian state media and Syria's opposition organization reported heavy airstrikes by the Israeli Air Force on Sunday night local time in several areas of western Syria, including near the city of Masyaf, which is close to the border with Lebanon. .
Zoom in: Two sources said Israel briefed the Biden administration in advance of the sensitive operation and the U.S. didn't oppose it. The White House didn't respond to a request for comment...... |
I wonder if they bought these from an on-line retailer ...
WSJ is the source: Exploding Pagers in Lebanon ... BEIRUT—Pagers carried by thousands of Hezbollah operatives exploded at about the same time Tuesday afternoon, leaving more than 2,700 injured and eight dead in an unprecedented event that struck across Lebanon. The affected pagers were from a new shipment that the group received in recent days, people familiar with the matter said. A Hezbollah official said hundreds of fighters had such devices, speculating that malware may have caused the devices to explode. The official said some people felt the pagers heat up and disposed of them before they burst. It couldn’t immediately be determined what caused the blasts, which were spread out across the country in several areas where Hezbollah has a heavy presence. The Israeli military declined to comment. Hezbollah said a number of pagers carried by its members exploded simultaneously at 3:30 p.m. local time, killing three people and injuring a large number of others. The group said it had launched a wide-ranging investigation into the cause. It cautioned people not to fall for misleading information or rumors. Iranian state television said the country’s ambassador to Lebanon, Mojtaba Amani, was injured by his pager but was conscious and not in danger. Iran is the main supporter of Hezbollah, a U.S.-designated terrorist group that has grown into one of the world’s best-armed nonstate militias. The numbers of casualties were rising too quickly to count through the afternoon. Hezbollah seemed overwhelmed trying to keep up, and hospitals across the country struggled to treat the injured. Downtown Beirut was filled with the sirens of ambulances wailing by. Lebanon’s Internal Security Forces said certain types of wireless communication devices had exploded in various parts of the country, with a heavy concentration in Beirut’s southern suburbs. They called on citizens to clear the roads to facilitate the transportation of the injured to hospitals. Lebanese Health Minister Firas Abiad, appearing on Al Jazeera television, said exploding pagers across the country injured 2,750 people and killed eight, including a child. He said the number of emergency room admissions in southern Lebanon, a Hezbollah stronghold, was extremely high. Wounds included severed fingers, head injuries and large gashes to people’s torsos. He said he didn’t know how and why the explosions happened, adding that many medical staff had got rid of their pagers fearing a second wave of detonations. Michael Horowitz, the head of intelligence at Le Beck International, a security and risk management consulting firm based in the Middle East, said the cause was likely malware that caused the pagers’ batteries to overheat and explode or a charge placed in the devices and detonated remotely. ==snipped the rest for brevity== Rory Jones and Omar Abdel-Baqui contributed to this article. |
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Originally Posted by ORAC
(Post 11736160)
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Must have been looking at the pager at the time of the detonation.
Sources within the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) have confirmed that the Iranian ambassador to Lebanon, Mojtaba Amani, lost his right eye and received significant trauma to his left eye as a result of today’s pager attack against Hezbollah members in Lebanon and Syria. https://cimg3.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune....1f95cd7223.png |
quote
"Michael Horowitz, the head of intelligence at Le Beck International, a security and risk management consulting firm based in the Middle East, said the cause was likely malware that caused the pagers’ batteries to overheat and explode ............or a charge placed in the devices and detonated remotely." If that was just a malware and the next door Li-Ion pack - interesting times coming for commercial air transport. |
FWIW, a news article from earlier today. I think the company was subsequently named...
https://cimg2.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune....f2f5780ca8.jpg |
Analysis from The Atlantic, a center/center left magazine that's been in print since the 1800's.
Title: Israel's Strategic Win Story by Eliot A. Cohen What he does not allude to I will: this is as a lateral escalation toward full spectrum warfare. See also the Stuxnet virus and other Information Age warfare techniques, all related to what was done. Cyberwarfare, as a domain, has been growing in importance and applicability for a few decades. Don't expect that to slow down. From a purely technical view, the rippling blasts of thousands of exploding pagers in the hands of Hezbollah represented an extraordinary piece of sabotage—one of the most remarkable in the history of the dark arts. For Israel—if that’s who was behind the attacks—to have so penetrated the Iranian and Hezbollah supply chain, on such a large scale, and with such violent effect, is simply astonishing. The question, as always, is: To what strategic effect? How will this act of violence, however spectacular, shape the ongoing war between Israel, Hezbollah, and Iran? It might very well lead to the cataclysmic battle that many have warned against, as Hezbollah rains down tens of thousands of rockets on Israeli cities while Israeli armored divisions plunge into Lebanon, causing hundreds of thousands, or even millions, to flee northward. The ensuing destruction and the civilian death toll might be immense. Or it might not. It has long been clear that neither Hezbollah nor Iran are currently spoiling for such an apocalyptic fight—after all, they could have chosen to have it at any time in the last few years. If Hezbollah is battered the way Hamas has been, Iran stands to lose its most effective ally against Israel and by extension the United States. And to seek open war, Hezbollah would have to be willing to sacrifice the population of Lebanese Shi’a from which it has emerged as well as its own cadres of fighters. Both Iran and Hezbollah have to know that Israel now believes itself to be fighting an existential fight, with a different set of rules. Within Israel, it is striking that so many, including on the dovish end of the spectrum, believe that a large war of this kind with Hezbollah is not only inevitable but necessary. Many Israelis view the status quo, with tens of thousands of Israeli civilians displaced from the border zone, that zone itself depopulated, and a constant, lethal rain of missiles from the north as unacceptable. So it is. The war along Israel’s northern border, or at least the phase of war that Hezbollah initiated after October 7, had nothing to do with immediate Israeli behavior, but everything to do with claiming credit for participating, belatedly, in the campaign launched on that day from Gaza. It is part of a strategy, conceived in Tehran but executed from Beirut, of grinding down Israeli morale and the will to fight, with a view to the extirpation of the Jewish state. If a much larger war comes now, that is a risk that Israel’s leaders have decided to take, and they will not encounter a great deal of opposition from their population across the spectrum if they fight it without restraint. In many other ways, however, this is a strategic win for Israel. Set aside the thousands of Hezbollah operatives disabled or killed by these explosions and consider the psychological effect. Hezbollah members will now be unlikely to trust any form of electronics: car keys, cell phones, computers, television sets. Myth and legend, no doubt reinforced by an information-warfare campaign, will magnify Israel’s success in getting inside black boxes no matter how big or how small. An army skittish about any kind of electronics is one that is paralyzed—an individual leader, like Hamas’s Yahya Sinwar, can communicate without a phone, but an entire organization cannot. Iran, already reeling from the assassination of the political head of Hamas in a Revolutionary Guard Corps guest house on the day of the inauguration of the new president, now has much to wonder about as well. How, they must ask themselves, did the Israelis penetrate the supply chain? How did they get access to the pagers? How did they know that this batch was going to Hezbollah? How did they manage to foil whatever security precautions had been taken? From a failure so large, witch hunts will follow—no doubt fed, again, by a solid information-warfare campaign. Organizations looking for spies and saboteurs, particularly after such a disaster, are unlikely to be forgiving or measured, and so a spiral of accusations, torture, and executions will likely ensue. War is an affair of the mind as much as anything else. By showing its extraordinary reach, Israel will breed internal fear and suspicion that can be more paralyzing than fear of an enemy. The Middle East is witnessing a war of coalitions. Israel’s silent partners here include Arab states such as Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, and Jordan. For them, this coup is a confirmation that Israel can be a capable partner. The German word bündnisfähig captures a quality of being worthy to be an ally; in this case, the cloak of mystery and surprise, playing to Israel’s existing reputation for successful skullduggery, makes Israel bündnisfähig indeed. For an Israel that has suffered a grueling year-long war, punctuated by the deaths of soldiers and, even more poignantly, the murder of hostages shortly before they could be liberated, this will be a tremendous morale boost. That, too, is an important benefit of this operation, and one not to be underestimated. There is something of a message here for the United States and other countries, as well. The Israelis have learned the hard way to ask for forgiveness rather than permission, to act on their own when necessary. Ironically, a reputation of that kind increases the leverage of an ally with its superpower patron, giving it greater incentive to take the smaller partner’s concerns into account. Finally, there is a large community which is and must remain in the shadows, that is cheering the Israelis on. In 1984, Hezbollah kidnapped William Francis Buckley, the CIA station chief in Beirut. For 15 months they tortured him, before handing him over to a Palestinian group for execution. A tape of his shattered body and mind found its way to Washington. The CIA has never forgotten that. Other intelligence agencies around the world who work against Hezbollah and against Iran have not either. As professionals, they approve of daring and well-executed attacks against that organization, and the resulting good will is not to be despised either. No one knows where all this may lead. There may be a very large war, or, as after the Shukr and Haniyeh assassinations, Hezbollah and Iran may resort to ineffectual or symbolic responses. Some will no doubt think that this is another reckless Israeli act, or deplore violence as being ineffective, but they are wrong. All indications are that this was a considered act—and extensive yet focused violence, whether we like it or not, can yield results. By this act, among others, the balance of fear has shifted—however much and for however long—in the Middle East. For Israel, a country dwelling in a very hard neighborhood, that is a good thing. |
Originally Posted by konstantin
(Post 11736669)
FWIW, a news article from earlier today. I think the company was subsequently named...
https://cimg2.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune....f2f5780ca8.jpg |
Originally Posted by Lonewolf_50
(Post 11736683)
Analysis from The Atlantic, a center/center left magazine that's been in print since the 1800's.
Title: Israel's Strategic Win Story by Eliot A. Cohen What he does not allude to I will: this is as a lateral escalation toward full spectrum warfare. See also the Stuxnet virus and other Information Age warfare techniques, all related to what was done. Cyberwarfare, as a domain, has been growing in importance and applicability for a few decades. Don't expect that to slow down. As to this article: I deem that Mr. Cohen has sidelined any objectivity and gone full cheerleader. |
We can debate the rights and wrongs, but:
Genius: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/cwyl9048gx8t What next? Exploding carrier pigeons? |
Originally Posted by Gordon Brown
(Post 11736933)
We can debate the rights and wrongs, but:
Genius: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/cwyl9048gx8t What next? Exploding carrier pigeons? 1912-1914 London: Suffragette BombingsThe first terrorist bomb to explode in Ireland in the 20th century was planted not by the IRA, but by the suffragettes. They also invented the letter bomb; designed to maim or kill those with whom they disagreed. Perhaps, in this age of instant communication, ignorance really is bliss. |
Yes, beardy, so have organized crime families and drug cartels.
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Video. Unconfirmed reports of several explosions at a facility operated by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), which specializes in the production of ballistic missiles, near the Iranian capital of Tehran.
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US more troops to Middle East
The US is sending more troops to the Middle East
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ShareThe U.S. is sending additional troops to the Middle East, the Pentagon said Monday. Pentagon press secretary Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder would provide no details on how many additional forces or what they would be tasked to do. The U.S. currently has about 40,000 troops in the region. “Due to the unpredictable nature of ongoing conflict between Hezbollah and Israel and recent explosions throughout Lebanon, including Beirut, the U.S. Embassy urges U.S. citizens to depart Lebanon while commercial options still remain available,” the State Department cautioned Saturday. |
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