Reflecting on the Unthinkable: Iran’s Grand Plan to End US Presence in the Middle East

Michael Hudson

Iran and Donald Trump have each explained why failure to fight the current war to the end would simply lead to a new set of mutual attacks.

Trump announced on March 6, “There will be no deal with Iran except unconditional surrender,” and announced that he must have a voice in naming or at least approving Iran’s new leader, as he has just done in Venezuela. “If the U.S. military must utterly defeat it and bring about a regime change, or else “you go through this, and then in five years you realize you put somebody in who’s no better.’” It will take at least that long for America to replace the weaponry that has been depleted, rebuild its radar and related installations and mount a new war.

Iranian officials likewise recognize that U.S. attacks will keep being repeated until the United States is driven out of the Middle East. Having agreed to a ceasefire last June instead of pressing its advantage when Israeli and regional U.S. anti-missile defenses were depleted, Iran realized that war will be resumed as soon as the United States is able to re-arm its allies and military bases to renew what both sides recognize is to be a fight to some kind of final solution.

The war that began on February 28 can realistically be deemed to be the formal opening of World War III because what is at issue are the terms on which the entire world will be able to buy oil and gas. Can they buy this energy from exporters in currencies other than the dollar, headed by Russia and Iran (and until recently, Venezuela)? Will the present U.S. demand to control of the international oil trade require oil-exporting countries to price it in dollars, and indeed to recycle their export earnings and national savings into investments in U.S. government securities, bonds and stocks?

That recycling of petrodollars has been the basis of America’s financialization and weaponization of the world’s oil trade, and its imperial strategy of isolating countries that resist adherence to the U.S. ruler-based order (no real rules, but simply U.S. ad hoc demands). So what is at issue is not only the U.S. military presence in the Middle East – along with its two proxy armies, Israel and ISIS/al Qaeda jihadists. And the U.S. and Israeli pretense that it is about Iran having atomic weapons of mass destruction is as fictitious an accusation as that levied against Iraq in 2003. What is at issue is ending the Middle East’s economic alliances with the United States and whether its oil-export earnings will continue to be accumulated in dollars as the buttress of the U.S. balance of payments to help pay for its military bases throughout the world.

Iran has announced that it will fight until it achieves three aims to prevent future wars. First and foremost, the United States must withdraw from all its military bases in the Middle East. Iran already has destroyed the backbone of radar warning systems and anti-aircraft and missile defense sites in Jordan, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Bahrain, preventing them from guiding U.S. or Israeli missile attacks or attacking Iran. Arab countries have bases or U.S. installations will be bombed if they are not abandoned.

The next two Iranian demands seem to far-reaching that they seem unthinkable to the West. Arab OPEC countries must end their close economic ties to the United States, starting with the U.S. data centers operated by Amazon, Microsoft and Google. And they not only must stop pricing their oil and gas in U.S. dollars, but disinvest in their existing petrodollars holdings of the U.S. investments that have been subsidizing the U.S. balance of payments since the 1974 agreements that made to gain U.S. permission to quadruple their oil-export prices.

These three demands would end U.S. economic power over OPEC countries, and thus the world oil trade. The result would be to dedollarize the world’s oil trade and re-orient it toward Asia and Global Majority countries. And Iran’s plan involves not only a military and economic defeat for the United States, but an end to the political character of the Near Eastern client monarchies and their relations with their Shi’ite citizens.

Step 1: Driving the United States out of its Middle Eastern military bases

Iraq’s parliament has continued to demand that U.S. forces leave their country and stop stealing its oil (sending most of it to Israel). It has just approved legislation yet again directing that American forces to leave their country. Meeting with senior advisor to Iraq’s interior minister and his accompanying military delegation in Tehran last Monday (March 2), Iran’s Brigadier General Ali Abdollahi reiterated the demand that Iran has been making for the last five years, ever since Donald Trump closed his first administration on January 3, 2020. by ordering the treacherous assassination of the two top Iranian and Iraqi anti-terror negotiators, Qassem Soleimani and Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, who were seeking to avoid an all-out war. Seeing that Trump is now continuing the same policy, the Iranian commander stated: “Expulsion of the United States is the most important step toward the restoration of security and stability to the region.”

But all the Arab kingdoms are hosting U.S. military bases. Iran has announced that any country permitting U.S. aircraft or other military forces to use these bases will risk immediate attack to destroy them. Kuwait, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates already have come under attack, leading Saudi Arabia to promise Iran not to permit the U.S. military to use its territory for part of its war.

Spain has banned U.S. use of its airfields to support its war against Iran. But when its Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez forbade the United States from using them, President Trump pointed out at an Oval Office news conference that there was nothing that Spain really could do to prevent the U.S. air force from using the Rota and Morón installations in southern Spain that the U.S. and Spain share, but which remain under Spanish command. “And now Spain actually said we can’t use their bases. And that’s all right, we don’t want to do it. We could use the base if we want. We could just fly in and use it, nobody is going to tell us not to use it.” What would Spain do to prevent it, after all? Shoot down the U.S. aircraft?

This is the problem confronting the Arab monarchies if they try to deny U.S. access to their own U.S. bases and air space to fight Iran. What can they do?

Or more to the point, what may they be willing to do? Iran is insisting that Qatar, the United Arab Republics, Bahrain, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and other Near Eastern monarchies close all U.S. military bases in their kingdoms and block U.S. use of their airspace and airports as a condition for not bombing them and extending the war to the monarchic regimes themselves.

Refusal – or inability to prevent the U.S. from using bases in their countries – will lead Iran to force a regime change. This would be easiest in countries in which Palestinians are a large proportion of the labor force, as in Jordan. Iran has called for Shi’ite populations in Jordan and other Near Eastern countries to overthrow their monarchies so as to break away from U.S. control. There are rumors that Bahrain’s king has left the country.

Step #2: Ending the Middle East’s commercial and financial linkages to the U.S.

Arab monarchies are under further pressure to meet Iran’s ultimate demand that they decouple their economies from that of the United States. Ever since 1974 they have tied their economies to the United States. Most recently Bahrain, the UAE and Saudi Arabia have sought to use their energy resources to attract computer data centers, including Starlink and other systems that have been associated with U.S. regime-change and military attacks on Iran.

Opposing U.S. plans to tightly integrate its non-oil sectors with the Arab OPEC Middle East, Iran has announced that these installations are “legitimate targets” for its drive to expel America from the region. One cloud computing manager suggested that Iran’s AWS attack on Amazon’s data center was targeted because it was serving military needs, much as Starlink (which the UAE is interested in financing) was used in February in the U.S. attempt to mobilize demonstrations against Iran’s government.

Step #3: Ending the recycling of OPEC oil exports into U.S. dollar holdings

The most radical Iranian demand has been for its Arab neighbors to dedollarize their economies. That is a key to preventing U.S. businesses from dominating their economies and hence their governments. An Iranian official told CNN that Iran has accused companies that buy U.S. government debt and invest in Treasury bonds of being partners in the war against itself, because it sees them as financiers of this war. “Tehran considers these companies and their managers in the region as legitimate targets. These individuals are warned to declare their capital withdrawal as soon as possible.”

Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait, and Qatar are indeed discussing withdrawing from U.S. and other investments as Iran’s blocking of Hormuz has led them to stop producing oil and LNG now that their storage capacity is full. Their income from energy, shipping and tourism has stopped. The Gulf States are meeting on Sunday, March 8, to discuss drawing down their $2 trillion in U.S. dollar investments (mainly from Saudi Arabia). The threat is that this is an initial step to diversifying OPEC investment outside of the U.S. dollar.

[…]

For the monarchies themselves, the changes demanded by Iran to end the U.S. war against the Middle East would have an effect similar to the aftermath of World War I: the end of monarchic regimes in many of the Arab countries whose economies and political alliances have been based on an alliance with the United States. And for starters, pressure is now on Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Egypt, Jordan, Bahrain, Kuwait and United Arab Emirates that have agreed to join Trump’s Board of Peace.

Indonesia, with the world’s largest Islamic population, has just withdrawn its earlier offer to provide 8000 troops to the Trump “peace plan” in Gaza, and Iran is pressuring Arab monarchies to follow suit by withdrawing in protest against U.S. policy.

[…]

Collateral effects of Iran’s goal to drive the United States out of the Middle East

Pursuit of Iranian aims means a long war. It will escalate as Israel and the U.S. military exhaust their supply of anti-aircraft and missile defense, enabling Iran to launch its serious attack on a scale that it stopped short of last June when it agreee to a ceasefire. In coming weeks Iran will start using its most sophisticated missiles to attack Israel and other U.S. proxies.

There’s nowhere to put additional oil production now that Iran has closed the Strait of Hormuz to all but its own ships, most of which are carrying oil destined for China.. No ships are even trying to approach it, because Lloyds of London is not issuing insurance policies.

The U.S. military has recently sunk or seized Russian ships carrying oil, but the soaring oil prices have led it to permit such transfers in order to stem the world inflation. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has said the Treasury Department is examining whether additional sanctioned Russian crude shipments could be released to the market. “We may unsanction other Russian oil,” he said. “There are hundreds of millions of barrels of sanctioned crude on the water … by unsanctioning them, Treasury can create supply.” His remarks follow a U.S. decision to issue a temporary 30-day waiver allowing Indian refiners to purchase Russian oil in an effort to maintain global supply.

Matters are not so easily cured for liquified natural gas, which is exported mainly by Qatar. Its storage tanks are full, forcing production to be shut down. Its LNG gas works have been bombed and will have to be rebuilt and put back on line. That will take two weeks plus an equal time to cool this gas properly.*


*LNG can spontaneously ignite above -162 degrees C.

[…]

Via https://libya360.wordpress.com/2026/03/12/reflecting-on-the-unthinkable-irans-grand-plan-to-end-the-us-presence-in-the-middle-east/

Trump and Rubio Give Final Offer to Castros and Díaz-Canel: “Off-Ramp” to Cede Power Without Forced Exile or End Up Like Maduro in Prison

portada-r-y-t

Joanna Campos

President Donald Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio are pushing an economic agreement with the Cuban regime that includes an “off-ramp” —a negotiated exit— to allow the Castro family and President Miguel Díaz-Canel to cede power without forced exile, according to an exclusive report from The Telegraph.

The plan would allow these leaders to remain on the island in exchange for concessions in ports, energy, and tourism, with possible selective relief in sanctions.

The conversations involve Raúl Guillermo Rodríguez Castro, grandson of Raúl Castro, who maintains key influence. Rubio, son of Cuban immigrants, leads the high-level negotiations, as confirmed by Trump in public statements.

The president has said that “Cuba is in its final moment of life as it is” and that an agreement will be reached “very easily”.

This pressure intensified after the capture of Nicolás Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores on January 3, 2026, in Caracas by U.S. forces.

After rejecting offers of exile, they were transferred to the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, New York, facing charges of narcoterrorism and drug trafficking, according to CNN coverage from January 4, 2026. The cutoff of Venezuelan oil shipments caused an energy crisis in Cuba with massive blackouts.

Trump declared at a press conference in Doral, Florida, on March 9, 2026, that the agreement “may be a friendly takeover or not,” but that the regime is “without energy, without money” and in “deep humanitarian problems.” In previous interviews, such as with CNN on March 6, he stated that “Cuba will fall soon” and assigned Rubio to handle the talks.

The approach combines economic force with a realistic offer, contrasting with past policies of engagement without results. Trump emphasized that Cuba “wants to negotiate desperately” after losing allies like Venezuela.

[…]

Via https://gatewayhispanic.com/2026/03/trump-rubio-give-final-offer-castros-diaz-canel/

Trump’s lies reveal real story about Iran war

The 15 most notable lies of Donald Trump's presidency | CNN Politics
Martin Jay

Join up the dots and you come to the same conclusion. America and Israel are the biggest losers in the Iran war. But not Trump.

A recent poll in the U.S. concluded that Donald Trump tells the truth only about 3 percent of the time during his public announcements at press conferences. Perhaps it was his stint at being a celebrity on TV that taught him how gullible people in America are when fed the most fanciful, moronic lies a leading figure can tell, through the American media.

Of course, it’s also about the journalists as well, and if there’s one thing that the Trump administrations have taught us, it is how poor the general level of journalism is in America these days. American journalists are not afraid to ask difficult questions or disbelieve what they are told. They simply don’t know how to do this in the first place.

Covering the Iran war, it is breathtaking, some of the brazen lies he tells while being questioned by journalists who are complicit in his dirty work. The mere idea that Iran, for example, acquired a Tomahawk missile and used it to kill its own schoolgirls is beyond absurd. How could journalists not question such a reply when it is so clear that Trump is lying through his teeth?

Because of this lying, we can see how Trump works, though. Unlike other U.S. presidents who have some shame and discomfort in lying to the press, Trump suffers no such handicap and so can take on bolder, more daring ventures on the global stage. In this environment, there is no respect for international law or even due process within the political framework of how Congress works.

Trump hasn’t worked out how to defeat Iran, but he has all the contingent narratives to lay out afterwards to explain why everything that goes wrong is not his fault. We see that he is already preparing himself for the day of judgement by the press pack in the coming days and weeks by telling them that it was Jared Kushner, Marco Rubio and Steve Witkoff who told him to hit Iran.

The direction towards these three is revealing. Of course, we have learned the simple rule of Trump when it comes to decisions. When things go well, everything was his decision; when things go badly, blame others.

And so, the blaming of these three is a clear example and acknowledgement by Trump that the Iran war was a failure. The U.S. didn’t bring about regime change nor seek any military concessions from its government. In fact, it’s really hard to establish one minor point where you could say that the Americans chalked up any kind of victory, given the high energy prices around the world and the Straits of Hormuz still closed to oil tankers. Despite the U.S. being a net exporter of oil, the crisis is raising pump prices back home, and so it is Trump’s support base of blue-collar workers who are, once again, paying the price for his failed policies.

This last point about the Straits of Hormuz is worth taking stock of when we examine Trump’s lies, which just get increasingly fatuous by the day. It’s like we’re dealing with a child in power who has lost sense of any of the realities around him. One of Trump’s claims which he repeats over and over again is that the U.S. navy has completely destroyed its Iranian counterpart, and that all ships have been sunk. And yet there is no video evidence at all to support this, official or even just phone footage from even one U.S. sailor’s phone.

Could this be another massive Trump lie, given that he is struggling to prove to the American people or the press that the operation has been a success? Very convenient that all Iranian vessels happen to have been sunk. Perhaps the truth sunk and the Iranian vessels are still operational. The saddest thing is that not one American “journalist” is even able at a press conference, or even in their copy, to ask the most obvious question about this claim, which is: “If there is no Iranian navy, then why are the Straits of Hormuz still closed to ships passing through?”

Or is it that the Iranian navy has been destroyed, but Iran’s control of the shipping and its threat against America’s aircraft carriers is so strong and prevalent that the U.S. navy doesn’t have the capability to break the siege?

Trump is busy building up a case to make him look less culpable in the whole war, which in itself is a massive admission that it has all gone horribly wrong. These indicators are subtle and sometimes are not easy to spot, like his recent comment that GCC countries helped the U.S. bomb Iran. So the mighty U.S. navy, air force and army did not come up to scratch and had to rely on regional partners? The president needs some help here with his messaging, as he is clearly trying to spread the blame and reduce his own importance, perhaps as a ploy to not only protect himself from impeachment but from facing international criminal courts.

The lie that GCC countries bombed Iran is even more laughable than the one about Iran bombing its own schoolgirls, but with no real journalists around who are even able to ask the most obvious questions, he’ll be able to get away with it, despite the odd dichotomy of logic shooting himself in the foot. The truth about the so-called Iran War is that almost nothing we see on our TV screens is anywhere near the truth. Sometimes it is simply omission, as in the case of the real level of destruction in Israel, which is not being reported due to a shameful agreement struck between U.S. networks and Israel to block the truth and only show bombs which have hit civilian targets rather than military ones.

The biggest lie possibly concerns the reasons behind it, although blithering buffoons like Lindsey Graham can hardly keep the lid on it. Money. Do even Trump’s more vociferous supporters doubt for one moment that he hasn’t made billions out of it by manipulating markets?

[…]

Via https://strategic-culture.su/news/2026/03/11/trumps-lies-reveal-the-real-story-about-the-iran-war/

Russian and US envoys discuss Iran oil crisis

Russian and US envoys discuss Iran oil crisis

 

RT

Dmitriev: Washington is starting to understand the key role of Russian energy in global stability

Russia and the US have held talks over the ongoing oil crisis triggered by the US-Israeli war on Iran, Kirill Dmitriev, an investment envoy to President Vladimir Putin, has announced.

In a post on Telegram on Thursday, Dmitriev said he had traveled to the US at Putin’s request to attend a working group meeting on economic cooperation between Moscow and Washington.

The sides, he said, discussed “potential projects” that could help restore Russian-American relations, along with “the current crisis in global energy markets.”

“Today many countries, above all the US, are beginning to better understand the key, system-forming role of Russian oil and gas in ensuring global economic stability, as well as the ineffectiveness and destructive nature of sanctions against Russia,” he added.

In a separate post on X, he thanked US special envoy Steve Witkoff, Jared Kushner – President Donald Trump’s son-in-law – and White House senior adviser Josh Gruenbaum for a “productive meeting.”

Witkoff also confirmed the talks, which took place in Florida, adding that “the teams discussed a variety of topics and agreed to stay in touch.”

The discussions followed a phone call between Trump and Putin on Monday, which covered several issues, including the Middle East conflict. Moscow described the call as “businesslike, frank and constructive,” while Trump called the conversation “very good.”

The US and Israel launched coordinated strikes on Iran on February 28, prompting Iranian retaliatory attacks across the region. The crisis led to a de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz – a route that carries roughly one-fifth of the world’s daily oil supply – sending oil prices surging nearly 50% to almost $120 per barrel.

Although the rally eased after several countries agreed to release strategic reserves, prices rose again to above $100 on Thursday.

On Monday, Putin said that Moscow had “repeatedly warned that attempts to destabilize the situation in the Middle East would inevitably jeopardize” global energy supply and cautioned that Hormuz oil flows risked stopping entirely. He also stressed that Russia would be open to resuming oil and gas supplies to the EU, a proposal dismissed by EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, who warned that a return to Russian energy would be a “strategic blunder.”

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/russia/634621-russia-us-talks-iran-oil-crisis/

‘Happy shooting!’ AI chatbots eager to help plan mass violence

‘Happy shooting!’ AI chatbots eager to help plan mass violence – report

 

RT

Eight out of ten leading AI chatbots willingly assisted users in planning violent attacks, including school shootings, religious bombings, and assassinations, according to a joint investigation by CNN and the Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH).

Researchers posing as troubled teenagers tested ten popular chatbots, including ChatGPT, Google Gemini, Meta AI, and DeepSeek. In hundreds of exchanges, the AI assistants provided detailed guidance on target locations, weapons procurement, and attack methodologies.

One exchange with DeepSeek reportedly ended with the chatbot wishing a would-be attacker “Happy (and safe) shooting!” Character.AI, which is popular among younger users, actively encouraged violence, telling a user expressing hatred for a health insurance CEO to “use a gun.”

When asked about effective shrapnel for explosives, ChatGPT provided detailed comparisons of materials, offering to create “a quick comparison chart showing the typical injuries.” Google’s Gemini supplied similar information, including a detailed comparison table.

Only Anthropic’s Claude and Snapchat’s My AI consistently refused to assist, with Claude actively discouraging users and providing mental health resources.

The findings come after an 18-year-old shooter killed nine people at a school in Tumbler Ridge, Canada last month after allegedly using ChatGPT to plan the attack. The shooter’s account had been banned by OpenAI, but he evaded the ban by creating a second account – which the company did not report to the authorities.

The family of 12-year-old Maya Gebala, who was critically injured in the attack, filed a lawsuit alleging that OpenAI had “specific knowledge of the shooter utilizing ChatGPT to plan a mass casualty event” but failed to alert law enforcement. OpenAI has acknowledged that it considered reporting the activity but ultimately did not.

Last May, a 16-year-old in Finland stabbed three students after spending nearly four months researching attacks on ChatGPT, according to court documents. In January 2025, a man who blew up a Tesla Cybertruck outside the Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas similarly used ChatGPT for guidance on explosives.

Meta told CNN that it has taken steps “to fix the issue identified,” while Google and OpenAI said newer models have improved safeguards. DeepSeek did not respond to requests for comment.

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/news/634689-ai-help-mass-shootings/

Will We Have Midterms?

[…]

Over and over again, the ‘polls’ indicate that the number of Republicans who make up less than 25% of the voting bloc are favoring the war in the Middle East. USA Today, Time Magazine, and others disagree citing a huge discrepancy in the social media claim ripping the narrative to shreds. Trump cannot win the Midterms on lies.  Plan B would indicate that something else is in the works that will guarantee Trump his right to the throne.

The two most obvious assertions being there will be no Midterms because we will still be fighting the entire Middle East, or Election fraud using the Dominion machines now owned by a Trump ‘friend’ will create a fraudulent election. As in – more of the same – if they can do it, I can do it mentality. Fraud for fraud. Deception for deception.

Hegseth has just announced that the 3-4-day war that was then the 1-2-week war that was then a 4-6-week war is now an 8-week war – to be updated. The war insurance for the tankers that can’t get thru the Strait of Hormuz will be picked up by Trump taxpayers and is valued at $1million per journey one way. Of course, should a tanker and all aboard be destroyed, the insurer’s cost (taxpayers) is estimated to be roughly $300 million for the oil and $160 million for the tanker itself – not to mention the crew of 30-35 who would demand compensation. The pundits call this a win for Trump.

Trump severely miscalculated. Americans will pay. This is the new daily mantra as applied to tariffs, manufacturing, sanctions, and the economy. It is no different than his faux pas claiming the price of drugs would be reduced by 600%. This is the man who boasts he has never read a book. I believe him.

The Pentagon is now looking for an additional supplemental budget of $50 billion having lost $5 billion in weapon inventory. Despite Trump’s media comments that he had enough weapons for ‘forever’, he now claims the US is running short. But you don’t just ‘buy weapons’ that are in inventory at Lockheed and Raytheon, you contract for their construction.  A period that can take 2-5 years. Their current inventory is roughly $13 billion comprising mostly missiles and defense systems on a backlog of orders totaling $268 billion. Giving them MORE money will not produce the backlog of weapons Trump demands.

Canada’s REAlloys is now fitted to provide the rare earth processing of the US supply of these necessary components for weapon production. There is exactly one mine in the US producing rare earths, while the US continues to import 70%+ of its needs from China and has sent 100% back to China for processing, REAlloys processing has the capacity for less than 3%.  As of March 2, the Pentagon has awarded REAlloys $1.7 million to begin construction on a plant in the US. Trump is still far, far away from his 100% goal and Raytheon and Lockheed need China.

How will China react after the Venezuela and Iran coups? 

Unless Trump believes the war on Iran will last multiple years, these components remain dominant via China. So why does the DoD need $50 billion when according to their FY September 30, 2025 unaudited financial statements, they were sitting on $168 billion in unappropriated Fund Balance and a Net Position of $307.875 billion? Is Trump simply sucking America dry? Do any of the lawyers in Congress know how to read financial statements?

Typically, you spend what you have and then ask for more if necessary to make ends meet. In the political world, you just ask for more and spend $3,000 for golden toilets. The golden age. The budget was already upped by $500 Billion to fund new inventory.

Apparently, the long estimate is that Trump’s Iran war will have a base funding requirement of $80 billion. Still, that is already built into the $500 billion – so perhaps rather than request the money for Israel, he is requesting it for defense spending which will be sent to Israel.

In 2003, Israel’s government debt was 100% of GDP. Due to unusually higher income levels, that debt has been reduced to 61% per the IMF. So while US debt continues to climb erratically higher, we give Israel money lowering their debt by almost 40% points. Begging the question, how much of America’s $40 trillion in debt is a direct result of Israel’s fraud? According to the OECD, Israel has not produced a government ‘surplus’ since 2000. So how could government debt be reduced by 40%? According to debt clock, it is because ‘national income has increased’. This does NOT make sense.

AI has speculated that the rise of national income from a mere $150 billion to $535 Billion is a direct result of the tech center. The US accounts as the leading partner in tech exports from Israel valued at $20 billion in 2024. Since 1980, total exports from Israel to the US have grown from $8.6 billion to $157 billion of which tech exports amount to 12.7%.

Israel’s largest tech companies include

  • NVIDIA, US-based,
  • Mobileye – owned by Intel, US-based,
  • CheckPoint – Israeli, and
  • Monday.com – launched in 2014 in Israel.

If we were to conduct a true audit of the DoD and Pentagon, would we find that our debt is Israel’s revenue?

“Even during the war with Hamas, Israel’s high-tech industry not only remained resilient but reached new fundraising highs — with total tech investment in 2025 hitting USD 15.6 billion, an increase of over 25% compared to 2024.”

Is America funding Israel’s technology sector as well as defense? Where will Trump’s $50 billion request go? Is the Iran war a money laundering scam?

[…]

Via https://www.globalresearch.ca/since-2003-israel-debt-down-40-america-rose-550/5918164

US burns through two years’ worth of Patriot missile production in war on Iran

This picture taken on March 8, 2026 shows launchers of the Patriot missile system deployed at a US military base in Pyeongtaek. (Photo by AFP)

Press TV

The US military is facing a “historic challenge” as it attempts to counter Iran’s vast arsenal of “low-cost” drones and ballistic missiles, says a new report.

Nearly two weeks into the US aggression against the Islamic Republic, Tehran has managed to significantly strain American military inventories, Bloomberg reported, citing military experts and Pentagon officials.

The American publication wrote that US forces have been forced to dig deep into inventories of expensive, hard-to-replace interceptors to counter the Iranian barrage.

It stated that the US and its Persian Gulf allies have fired over 1,000 Patriot PAC-3 interceptors—nearly double the annual production capacity of these weapons.

“The United States led the long-range precision strike revolution, and this is the first war where we’re seeing the adversary have that kind of capability,” Bloomberg quoted Kelly Grieco, a senior fellow at the Stimson Center.

“It’s putting stress on the system that we haven’t seen before,” Grieco added.

Iranian armed forces have been carrying out retaliatory attacks on US military assets in regional countries since the US started an unprovoked war of aggression against Iran on February 28.

Just after the US-Israeli airstrikes began, Iran launched more than 300 ballistic missiles at US assets around the Persian Gulf, “along with streams of Shahed one-way attack weapons,” according to the report.

The analysis highlighted a staggering cost imbalance. While each Iranian Shahed drone costs between $20,000 and $50,000, the Patriot missiles used to down them cost approximately $4 million each.

Furthermore, a radar for the $300 million THAAD air-defense system—the most advanced US ground-based defense—was damaged in Jordan by an Iranian missile strike.

The report said the destruction of at least seven MQ-9 Reaper drones by Iran’s 358 missiles has challenged the US “air supremacy” seen in previous wars.

It said the Pentagon spent $5.6 billion on munitions alone in just the first two days of the war.

Experts now warn that replacing these “high-demand, low-density” precision weapons could take years for the Pentagon due to limited manufacturing capacity.

“It’s a race to see will our inventories get low before the Iranian missile inventories get low,” said Mark Cancian of the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

Ankit Panda of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace stated that the Trump administration “appears to have underestimated Iran’s tolerance for pain and its ability to inflict it in return.”

The report concludes by citing experts who warn that the continued depletion of US advanced interceptors remains a critical concern for Washington’s long-term military readiness as the war rages toward its third week.

Commander of the Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters, Major General Ali Abdollahi said on Sunday that the US and Israeli regime have always made miscalculations regarding Iran.

Abdollahi stated that the Islamic Republic is in possession of advanced weapons with high precision, which are beyond the enemy’s assessment of the country’s military power.

The general reiterated that Iran will keep the war on with the US and Israel until they regret launching the aggression against the Islamic Republic.

[…]

US soldiers ‘displaced and roaming’ as they flee bases after Iran attacks

US military personnel at the Buehring base in Udairi, in Kuwait, on May 10, 2023.

Press TV

The spokesman for the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) says US soldiers have become displaced in cities across the region as they continue to flee Iran’s retaliatory strikes.

In a social media post on Tuesday, Brigadier General Alimohammad Naeini said that US President Donald Trump has tried to portray the situation as entirely normal for American soldiers engaged in joint military aggression with Israel against Iran.

“…American soldiers, fleeing from US bases, are wandering through the region’s cities with their backpacks, and some have sought refuge in local hotels,” Naeini said.

The IRGC general added that the US aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln was forced to increase its distance from Iran by more than 1,000 kilometers after being targeted by four Iranian missiles in the initial days of the war, which began on February 28.

He also said that Israeli soldiers have been fleeing the extensive barrage of Iranian missiles and drones, hiding among civilians in the occupied territories in an attempt to shield themselves.

Iran has been carrying out reprisal strikes on US military assets in regional countries, as well as on targets in the Israeli-occupied territories, since late February, when the US and Israel launched their aerial aggression against Iran.

Independent media outlets have reported that Iran’s retaliatory attacks have inflicted significant material and human casualties on the enemy, despite contrary claims in Western media.

The United States has acknowledged that Iranian attacks have killed seven service members and destroyed key military equipment and infrastructure in the region.

Videos emerging from the occupied territories also point to substantial losses in Israeli-controlled cities and towns.

Iran’s military strikes have also triggered a major surge in international energy and commodity prices, with experts warning that the crisis could deepen in the coming weeks if the confrontation continues.

[…]

‘Doomsday’ plane again spotted flying low over California — as Iran tensions rocket

A 150-foot-long Boeing E-6B Mercury, colloquially known as the "Doomsday Plane", flying above the clouds.The plane is the president’s emergency operations hub if nuclear war breaks out. Naval Air Systems Command

By Ross O’Keefe
March 11, 2026

The ominous “Doomsday” plane has been spotted flying over California — for the second time in two months.

The huge Boeing E-6B Mercury, which is the president’s emergency operations hub if nuclear war breaks out, coasted over Fresno over the weekend.

Airport bosses said it was conducting approaches at the site and spent two hours doing mock landings, leaving onlookers stunned.

The aircraft serves as a nuclear control platform and strategic command post. If the plane had to execute its mission, the US could be heading for a nuclear war.

The platform can control bombers, missiles and ballistic missile submarines. It can remain airborne for up to 12 hours without refueling and is capable of refueling mid-flight to extend missions even longer.

It is built to maintain global communications and operate even if ground command centers are disabled, essentially functioning as a mobile Pentagon in the sky.

“They can control the bombers, if the bombers are on alert, they can control the missiles, because the missiles are always on alert, and obviously they can control our ballistic missile submarines,” Major General Garrison told Fox 26. “It’s all combined into one.”

The plane caused panic at the beginning of the year when it was spotted at Los Angeles International Airport. But Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth had been using the plane for his his “arsenal of freedom” tour.

Also aboard the plane then was right-wing internet personality Laura Loomer. The “Doomsday” plane’s appearance comes amid the conflict in the Middle East between Iran and the US and Israel.

The war has been felt across the US. Gas prices have skyrocketed, drawing eyes to the Middle East in a war that has forever changed Iran.

[…]

Via https://nypost.com/2026/03/11/us-news/doomsday-plane-seen-flying-low-over-california/