Iran Threatens to Blow Up Israel’s Nuclear Reactor

Iran threatens to blow up Israel’s nuclear reactor in Dimona

APA

An Iranian military official said that if ‘Israel’ and the United States attempt to overthrow Iran’s government through armed chaos, Tehran would target the Dimona nuclear reactor in southern ‘Israel’, APA reports.

The statement comes amid escalating hostilities between Iran, ‘Israel’, and the United States, with the official framing the warning as a direct response to any attempt to destabilize the Iranian regime.

[…]

Via https://en.apa.az/asia/iran-threatens-to-blow-up-israels-nuclear-reactor-in-dimona-494890

Unprovoked US Aggression on Iran Not Going as Planned

Drago Bosnic

As the unprovoked US aggression on Iran isn’t going as planned (mildly speaking), the mainstream propaganda machine desperately keeps trying to cope with the incompetence of the American military, particularly the failures of the USAF, which is often presented as “invincible”. This is especially true when it comes to the humiliating loss of three F-15E multirole strike fighters. The mainstream propaganda machine first reported that they “crashed due to a malfunction“, then that it was a “Patriot” SAM (surface-to-air missile) system and now it’s supposedly a Kuwaiti F/A-18 fighter jet. The only excuse that hasn’t been used yet is a bird strike (although such propaganda is not unheard of).

Namely, the Wall Street Journal claims that “a catastrophic ‘friendly fire’ incident” involving the Kuwaiti jet fighter resulted in “an accidental shootdown” of three American F-15s. To quote “anonymous US officials and those familiar with initial reports”, a Kuwaiti F/A-18 pilot launched three missiles at the American aircraft, resulting in the loss of all three jets. The incident was supposedly triggered by “an environment of extreme tension” and “a breakdown in battlefield identification”. The report says that shortly before the shootdown, an Iranian drone successfully penetrated Kuwaiti air defenses and struck “a tactical operations center at a commercial port, killing six US troops”.

In the immediate aftermath, Kuwaiti military forces were “on high alert and on edge”, so when their radar systems detected the three American F-15s entering the sector, “the operators, fearing a follow-up Iranian attack, engaged the targets”. And yet, the mainstream propaganda machine still fails to explain how exactly this “catastrophic friendly fire incident” unfolded. A spokesperson for US Central Command (CENTCOM) also declined to provide a detailed account, noting that the incident is currently under investigation. So far, it’s only been confirmed that the Kuwaiti F/A-18 is the primary focus, although officials still haven’t ruled out ground-based air defenses as potential culprits.

“It’s a busy, busy air environment, and in times of stress, tension, crisis, and, certainly in this case, conflict, even more so,” Mark Gunzinger, a retired USAF colonel who flew B-52 strategic bombers, said, adding: “It’s all the more complicated when you have different air defense systems operating on different frequencies that aren’t integrated, and some of those systems are actively trying to counter threats such as drones.”

Interestingly, the WSJ report acknowledges that “the official cause of the crash remains subject to change as investigators piece together the sequence of events”. In other words, the Pentagon is yet to think of the best propaganda narrative to avoid admitting that Russian-made Iranian SAM systems destroyed the three “invincible” American F-15s in mere minutes. Worse yet (for the US), it’s highly likely these air defenses were operated by Russian crews, which adds yet another layer of humiliation. Still, the copium continues, as these “unnamed military officials” point to “this tragedy as a stark illustration of the challenges inherent in modern, multinational air wars”.

They insist that “the airspace is currently a historically murky combination of manned aircraft, cruise missiles and drones” and that “American pilots have been flying continuous sorties alongside an array of 19 different types of aircraft — including tankers, reconnaissance planes, and bombers — all moving at different speeds and altitudes”. While it’s true that there’s aerial congestion and that it’s exacerbated by long-range missile exchanges (the US military is launching cruise missiles and other standoff munitions, while Iran responds with waves of ballistic missiles and kamikaze drones), it still doesn’t justify all the pretexts about “friendly fire”. On the contrary, it makes all this even more embarrassing.

Retired Lieutenant General Dan Karbler, who formerly led the Army’s Space and Missile Defense Command, said that “today’s airspace is significantly more complex than during the Iraq wars of the 1990s and 2000s”, insisting that “fratricide incidents typically result from multiple failures in communication or equipment”. The report says that “investigators are now scrutinizing whether the F-15s’ Identification Friend or Foe (IFF) transponders were functioning, whether the Kuwaitis were briefed on the American flight paths and whether electronic jamming interfered with voice communications”. However, while all this could’ve certainly malfunctioned on one jet, the chances of it happening to all three simultaneously are virtually zero.

It’s expected to see the Pentagon so desperate to wiggle its way out of the PR hit caused by such a defeat. However, it should be noted that the entire narrative about the F-15’s alleged “invincibility” was based on unadulterated lies and attempts to suppress all reports about combat losses. Namely, there’s a 2018 video of a Saudi F-15SA hit by a Houthi R-27T modified into a SAM. Several more aircraft were hit, with at least one more F-15SA destroyed. There were reports that multiple aircraft were scrapped due to severe damage, although the mainstream propaganda machine keeps hiding facts to maintain the F-15’s “invincible streak” narrative alive for as long as possible.

However, the F-15’s performance in previous conflicts makes this virtually impossible. Namely, during the Samurra Air Battle on January 30, 1991, two Iraqi Air Force Russian-made MiG-25PDS shot down two F-15Cs without losses. The Americans never admitted these losses, but they made sure that no wreckage was ever found. Almost a decade before that, a Syrian MiG-21 shot down an Israeli F-15, with the US and Israel once again doing their best to conceal the loss. However, it was recorded by Syrian and Russian sources. The financial aspect of the latest losses is also not negligible. Namely, an older F-15E cost over $30 million in the late 1990s, while the newest F-15EX variants have a price tag of nearly $100 million each.

Worse yet, old F-15Es cannot be replaced, because their production ended in 2001. Thus, the damage caused by this defeat goes far beyond just three airframes. Another question is, will the mainstream propaganda machine now publish “breaking news” about the “Ghost of Kuwait”? It would certainly make more sense than what they tried doing in NATO-occupied Ukraine with the mythical “Ghost of Kiev”. In the meantime, we already see that the Trump administration is engaging in full-blown copium, going from claims that it would defeat Iran in 24 hours to days and weeks. Soon, it could be months, while heavy losses and damage to US occupation forces in the Middle East keep piling up.

[…]

Via https://www.theinteldrop.org/2026/03/05/new-american-copium-ghost-of-kuwait/

Trump and Rubio out of step on reasons for Iran war

Trump and Rubio out of step on reasons for Iran war

RT

US President Donald Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio have offered conflicting justifications for the American war with Iran, as the White House scrambles to contain a growing political firestorm over contradicting narratives about what necessitated the operation against Tehran.

The Pentagon is also reportedly confused about the actual goals of the operation and the viability of waging a prolonged military campaign with limited resources.

What reason did Trump give for launching a war on Iran?

Speaking to reporters in the Oval Office on Tuesday, Trump claimed he ordered US forces to join Israel’s assault because he believed Tehran was about to strike first.

“We were having negotiations with these lunatics, and it was my opinion that they were going to attack first. If we didn’t do it, they were going to attack first,” Trump said, offering no evidence to support the assertion.

He also suggested that he may have “forced Israel’s hand” by deciding to launch what his administration has characterized as a preemptive strike on Iran.

What has Rubio said about the reasons for war with Iran?

Trump’s explanation directly contradicted Rubio’s account from just a day earlier. On Monday, the secretary of state told reporters that Washington launched the attack because it knew Israeli action was imminent and feared Iranian retaliation against American forces.

“We knew that there was going to be an Israeli action; we knew that that would precipitate an attack against American forces, and we knew that if we didn’t preemptively go after them before they launched those attacks, we would suffer higher casualties,” Rubio said.

What’s been the reaction to the contradicting narratives?

The conflicting rationales have ignited fury among Trump’s conservative base, with prominent commentators accusing the administration of misleading the public about being dragged into a war on Israel’s behalf.

Conservative podcaster Matt Walsh blasted Rubio’s admission, stating that

Former Fox News host Megyn Kelly similarly raised doubts about Trump’s decision, stressing that “our government’s job is not to look out for Iran or for Israel. It’s to look out for us. And this feels very much to me like it is clearly Israel’s war.”

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi responded to Rubio’s comments by stating he effectively “admitted what we all knew: US has entered a war of choice on behalf of Israel. There was never any so-called Iranian ‘threat’.” He also condemned Trump for turning “’America First’ into ‘Israel First’ – which always means ‘America Last’.”

What are US officials saying about the end goal of the campaign?

Aside from the contradictory reasons for the start of the unprovoked attack on Iran, questions have also been raised about the US and Israel’s end goals for the operation, with some noting that they currently appear unclear and could result in a dragged-out conflict.

“It’s all over the place right now,” former adviser to the late Senator John McCain, Richard Fontaine, admitted to Bloomberg, warning that “if you don’t know what you’re fighting for, then among other things you don’t know when you’ve attained it – and you don’t know when to stop.”

Democratic Senator Mark Warner, who has received classified briefings on the operation, has recently also called on Trump to go before Congress and explain “what is the real goal” of the campaign. “What is the objective? What is our exit plan?”

Bloomberg noted that even inside the Pentagon “some officials have also questioned the strategy amid growing concerns about depleting already-limited stocks of key munitions and uncertainty about the goals of the operation.”

Trump and Secretary of War Pete Hegseth have insisted that the US has a virtually limitless supply of weapons and ammunition.

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/news/633884-trump-rubio-iran-explanations/

Iran’s economic nuclear option: Destroying Persian Gulf’s energy infrastructure


US-Israel-Iran war | @geopolitics_prime

📌 Oil markets jolted on March 2 after a drone strike shut Saudi Arabia’s largest refinery and Iraqi Kurdistan halted output amid the spiraling conflict.

🤔 How could the crisis escalate from here?

Strait of Hormuz

🔴 Roughly 20 million barrels of oil per day flow through the strait

🔴 Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has effectively closed the waterway

🔴 Hundreds of tankers, including crude and LNG vessels, have dropped anchor in the region

🔴 Saudi Aramco’s East–West Pipeline can divert up to 5 mb/d from the Gulf to Yanbu on the Red Sea, bypassing Hormuz. But:

➡️ Present spare capacity is only about 2.4 mb/d (CSIS)

➡️ Yanbu terminals are within range of Yemen’s Ansar Allah drones and missiles

➡️ UAE can reroute half of its 2 mb/d Gulf exports to Fujairah, bypassing Hormuz, but roughly 1 mb/d would remain stranded

Gulf oil infrastructure under fire

♦️ Saudi Arabia’s Ras Tanura refinery, one of the world’s largest at over 500,000 b/d, has been struck and temporarily shut down

♦️ Kuwait’s Ahmadi refinery sustained damage, but remains operational; two Qatari energy sites have also been hit

♦️ Gulf region (Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq, UAE, Kuwait, Qatar) produces over 20 mb/d, about 25% of global crude output

If attacks on Gulf oil production facilities continue and Hormuz remains blocked, oil prices could skyrocket

How far could prices climb?

📈 Analysts say Brent crude could top $100 per barrel, or even to $120–$130 if Gulf exports are cut

Wide economic impacts

➡️ Higher gasoline and energy costs globally

➡️ Inflation pressures in oil-importing economies

➡️ Strategic petroleum reserve releases by major consuming nations

What would this mean for Trump and Europe?

🟥 Surge to $120/bbl would be a “black swan” for Donald Trump ahead of the midterms, risking a Democrat-controlled Congress if his party loses

🟥 US strategy for 2026 is built on $60/bbl oil; a jump to $120 could force taps into the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR)

🟥 Europe, now reliant on the US, Norway, and Kazakhstan for oil (and to lesser extent on Saudi Arabia and Iraq), could see soaring inflation and slower GDP growth at $120 Brent

🟥 Disrupted Gulf supplies would also deepen Europe’s dependence on US energy

[…]

Via https://t.me/healthimpact/3124

Qatar’s natural gas empire in meltdown amid US-Iran War

US-Israel-Iran war | @geopolitics_prime

Qatar’s state-owned energy giant, QatarEnergy, has halted all LNG production following drone attacks on its facilities. For a tiny monarchy built entirely on gas, this isn’t just a disruption but an existential threat.

The fallout will be severe:

🔴 Global shockwaves: Qatar is a top 3 LNG exporter, flooding the market with over 80 million tons annually—nearly 20% of global supply. A halt of even days risks a full-blown gas crisis.

🔴 Income evaporates: the gas sector fuels 70% of Qatari revenue. With production frozen, the country’s primary income stream is severed, profit is zero.

🔴 A ticking clock: Ras Laffan’s gas storage tanks are built for constant flow, not stagnation. If tankers stop sailing, reserves max out in under a week. Qatar would then be forced to shut down wells at the North Field—a catastrophic move that could cripple production equipment for years. The losses would be staggering in any way.

🔴 Reputation in ruins: for decades, Qatar was the unshakeable supplier, immune to every regional chaos. Now, even a short delay shatters that trust. Asian buyers, once captive, may start looking elsewhere.

[…]

Via https://t.me/healthimpact/3156

US-Israeli Strikes on Iran Could Trigger Global Famine

The timing of the US-Israeli attack on Iran “literally could not be worse” for the fertilizer industry, StoneX Group brokerage VP Josh Linville told Bloomberg, alluding to the imminent start of the Northern Hemisphere’s growing season, and problems shortages of the key farming ingredient could cause.

Here’s what’s at stake if US-Israeli aggression continues:

🌏 1/3+ of the world’s Sulphur and ammonia-based fertilizers pass through the Strait of Hormuz, now blocked amid the Iran strikes’ escalation into a regional war

🌏 ~5% more pass through the Red Sea, including Russian, Belarusian and European fertilizers heading to Asia, and Jordanian, Egyptian and Israeli potash, nitrogen and phosphates shipped to world markets

🌏 Iran, a global top ten producer of urea – a high-nutrient fertilizer variety, and major exporter of anhydrous ammonia (4.5M and 800k tons, respectively) has been forced to halt its own exports.

🌏 Egypt and Jordan, which depend on imported energy to produce their fertilizers, face skyrocketing prices

🌏 If Hormuz and Bab el-Mandeb are out of bounds, what remains of exports will need to be shipped around the Cape of Good Hope, arriving weeks later, while costs surge thanks to hiked shipping costs and market speculation (urea prices have already skyrocketed from $470-$531 in four days, per Trading Economics)

What does less fertilizers mean?

🌏 Lower yields of key staple crops (corn, wheat, rice, etc.), carbohydrates critical to diets in many developing countries, and used heavily to feed animals (livestock, farmed fish)

🌏 Higher food prices

🌏 High logistical costs and the complex chemical nature of different fertilizer varieties makes the commodity a just-in-time (JIT) piece of farming supply chains. ‘Strategic fertilizer reserves’ are rare and expensive

Who’s the most vulnerable?

🇮🇳 India, which imports urea heavily from Gulf nations, and relies on Qatari LNG for domestic plants

🇧🇷 Brazil, which gets as much as 1/3 of its fertilizers from Oman and Qatar

🇹🇷 Turkey, which relies on Iranian fertilizers

🌍 An array of other nations, from South Africa, Ethiopia and Niger to Thailand and Bangladesh

Via https://t.me/geopolitics_prime/65983

Iran’s Fattah 2 hypersonic missile nearly impossible to intercept

Iran’s Fattah 2 missile

Press TV

A report published by a prestigious military website shows that existing air defense systems in the world are practically unable to intercept Iranian-made Fattah 2 missiles.

The report published by Military Watch Magazine on Tuesday said Iran’s Fattah 2 missile, a hypersonic glide vehicle which has been used against Israeli targets for the first time in the ongoing Israeli-US war against Iran, has created a real challenge for the Israeli regime and the US and their much-boasted anti-missile systems.

“Hypersonic glide vehicles can maneuver in both course and pitch, carrying out lateral maneuvers several thousand kilometers above the Armstrong Limit, which combined with their extreme speeds makes them nearly impossible for existing air defense systems to intercept,” it said.

The report cited footage from the Israeli regime indicating that at least three successful Fattah 2 strikes have been launched by Iran against high-value Israeli targets since March 1.

It said that US and Israeli anti-missile systems have already been under strain from strikes by older types of Iranian ballistic missiles, with the number of interceptors remaining highly limited.

The report pointed to a quote from the vice president of the leading Israeli missile system developer Rafael Advanced Defense Systems, Yuval Baseski, in August 2025, highlighting that the regime and its anti-missile systems are unable to intercept hypersonic missiles like Fattah 2.

“Hypersonic missiles open a new era in air defense… Every air defense system today is based on flying faster than the target.

But this principle does not apply to hypersonic missiles. To intercept an object moving at Mach 10, one would need a defense moving at Mach 30, which is impossible in the atmosphere due to friction,” Baseski said.

He suggested that a “zone defense” model, under which multiple interceptors cover defined areas and engage threats as they approach, could be effective against such missiles.

However, the Military Watch report said Israel has yet to show signs of being able to implement this approach, adding that even if financed, it would take several years and likely cost tens of billions of dollars.

“…it is likely that Iran’s Fattah 2 arsenal will continue to be able to penetrate Israeli defenses with impunity,” the report said.

[…]

Via https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/03/04/764952/Iran-s-Fattah-2-hypersonic-missile-nearly-impossible-to-Intercept-Report

CIA planning to arm Kurdish militants to cause unrest in Iran after US failure in war

People protest against the US-Israeli aggression on Iran on March 2, 2026 in New York, New York. (Photo by AFP)

Press TV

The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) intends to arm Kurdish militants in a bid to trigger a civil war in Iran after the United States failed to achieve its goals in the unprovoked war against the Islamic Republic, a report says.

The administration of President Donald Trump has been in active talks with Iranian opposition groups and leaders of Kurdish militia factions in Iraq about providing them with military support, the CNN reported on Tuesday, citing multiple unnamed sources.

Meanwhile, the American president spoke with the head of the so-called Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (KDPI), Mustafa Hijri, the report added.

The US military commenced an unprovoked war of aggression against Iran on Saturday. Israel is also attacking Iran in close coordination with the US.

In retaliation, the naval and aerospace units of the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) has launched massive missile strikes against US military assets in regional countries and on targets in the Israeli-occupied territories since the weekend.

Iran’s escalating strikes have already prompted Washington to close its embassies and urge Americans to flee the region.

Kurdish armed groups have forces operating along the Iraq-Iran border, primarily in the semi-autonomous Kurdistan region of Iraq.

Iran has already warned that it will confront with firm response any move by the militant groups from the territory of neighboring countries.

The IRGC has been striking Kurdish militant groups. It said on Tuesday that it had targeted the militants with dozens of drones.

According to the report, citing two US officials and a third source familiar with the matter, Trump also called Iraqi Kurdish leaders on Sunday to discuss the US military aggression on Iran and how Washington and the militants could work together as the aggression continues.

Citing another US official, the report added that the Kurdish militants could help sow chaos in the region in an attempt to stretch Iran’s military resources thin.

Jen Gavito, a former senior State Department official specializing in West Asia under former President Joe Biden, said that she is concerned about whether the implications of arming the Kurdish militant groups – a historic US regional ally – have been fully considered.

“We are already facing a volatile security situation, on both sides of the border. This has the potential to undermine Iraqi sovereignty and essentially empower armed militias with no accountability and with little understanding of what it may set in motion,” she stressed.

According to another source, the Israeli military has been striking Iranian military and police outposts along the border with Iraq in recent days in an attempt to pave the way for the possible flow of armed Kurdish forces into northwest Iran.

An Israeli source told CNN that such strikes are likely to intensify in the coming days.

The CIA has a long, complex history of working with Iraqi Kurdish factions dating back decades as part of the US war in Iraq, the report said, adding that the agency currently has an outpost in Iraqi Kurdistan located near the border with Iran.

The US also has a consulate in Erbil, the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan, and US and coalition troops are based there as part of the so-called anti-Daesh campaign.

[…]

Israeli ground incursion into Lebanon as front boils over amid wider war

The Israeli military has said its troops “are operating in southern Lebanon” in a new ground incursion as it continues strikes in what it described in a statement as a “forward defence” measure along the border, with another front igniting in the regional war prompted by United States-Israel attacks on Iran.

A Lebanese military source has told Al Jazeera on Tuesday that the army has pulled its troops back from the border area to ensure their safety amid an escalation in Israeli attacks.

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Earlier, Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency said the Lebanese army is evacuating “advanced positions” along the border with Israel, with the Reuters news agency reporting it has withdrawn from at ⁠least seven ⁠forward operating positions along the ‌border, quoting witnesses.

A senior Hezbollah official says the recent Israeli attacks have left the group with “no option but to return to resistance”.

Israel wanted open war, “so let it be an open war”, said Mahmoud Qmati on Tuesday, adding that “the era of patience has ended.”

The moves come as Israel’s Defense Minister Israel Katz said Israel’s army had been instructed “to advance and seize additional controlling areas in Lebanon to prevent firing on Israeli border settlements”, following an earlier deployment of troops to the border.

“We have positioned soldiers on the border area in additional points to defend our civilians, to prevent Hezbollah from attacking them,” military spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Nadav Shoshani said.

Israel’s announcement that its army is pushing further into southern Lebanon should be taken with “caution”, Ali Rizk, a security analyst based in Beirut, has told Al Jazeera.

He added that the statement is not necessarily a “prelude to something major on the ground”.

“We have to remember that when the Israelis resort to these tactics – land confrontations – it costs them very dearly,” Rizk said, adding that that was evident in the 2024 war.

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Israel bombs Beirut again, Hezbollah fires drones

Israel has also bombed Lebanon’s capital Beirut for the second consecutive day as Hezbollah claimed an attack on an airbase in northern Israel.

New Israeli air raids on Tuesday afternoon hit Beirut’s southern suburbs of Dahiyeh, after at least three more attacks in the same area in the morning.

Lebanon’s state news agency said “a new series of intense Israeli air raids” targeted the suburb and caused “extensive damage to buildings”.

The Israeli military also issued forced displacement notices for some 59 areas in Lebanon, including several neighbourhoods in Dahiyeh, traditionally home to more of the Shia population, seen as a support base for Hezbollah.

In a post on the Telegram messaging app, it said it was striking “Hezbollah command centres and weapons storage facilities in Beirut”.

Civilians across Lebanon are continually caught in the crosshairs of Israeli attacks in Lebanon and have suffered thousands of deaths and mass displacement during the yearlong war in 2023-24, and in subsequent near-daily Israeli violations of a ceasefire up until the eruption of this new conflict days ago.

At ⁠least ⁠30,000 displaced people have sought protection in ⁠shelters in Lebanon since hostilities between ⁠Israel and Hezbollah began on Monday, says the UNHCR.

“Many more slept in their cars on ⁠the side of ⁠roads or were still ⁠stuck in traffic jams on the roads,” said UNHCR spokesperson ⁠Babar Baloch.

Al Jazeera’s Heidi Pett, reporting from Beirut, said this resulted in “a wave of displacement … We’ve seen civilians making their way out of there from the second these strikes began.

“This morning, schoolchildren are not heading to schools in Beirut because many of them are closed in order to take in the thousands and thousands of people who have been displaced from the southern suburbs.”

Hezbollah earlier said it had launched an attack on the Ramat David airbase in northern Israel, targeting radar sites and control rooms at the base by deploying “a swarm of drones” at dawn on Tuesday.

The Lebanese group added that it carried out the attack in retaliation against Israel’s strikes in several areas of Lebanon.

On Monday, Israeli strikes on Beirut’s suburbs and southern Lebanon killed at least 52 people and injured 154, according to state-run media. The air raids came after Hezbollah fired a barrage of missiles and drones towards an Israeli military site in the northern city of Haifa for the first time in more than a year.

Aoun confirms Hezbollah military activity ban

Lebanon’s president says the government’s move to immediately ban Hezbollah’s military activity is “final”, declaring there is “no turning back” from the decision.

President Aoun said the cabinet’s ruling obliges Hezbollah to hand over its weapons to the state, underlining that the authority to decide matters of war and peace rests solely with Beirut.

In a statement posted on X, Aoun described Monday’s as a move that would “preserve the right of the Lebanese state alone, and no other, to hold the decision of war and peace”.

The decision followed renewed cross-border tensions after Hezbollah fired rockets towards Israel in response to hundreds of Israeli attacks carried out despite a ceasefire agreed in November 2024 to end the war, which Tel Aviv has repeatedly violated.

The rockets also came in response to the Israeli-US war on Iran.

Hezbollah said the ban was not justified. “We understand the Lebanese government’s impotence in the face of the brutal Zionist enemy, which violates national sovereignty, occupies land, and poses a continuous threat to the country’s security and stability,” the group said, adding that it is the government’s right “to decide on war and peace”.

“However, given this clear weakness and deficiency, we see no justification for Prime Minister Salam and his government to take such aggressive measures against the Lebanese who reject the occupation,” it said on Monday.

[…]

Via https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/3/israel-strikes-lebanons-beirut-again-hezbollah-launches-drones-at-israel

War Department Ad: Personal Effects Specialists Urgently Needed

🇺🇸 BREAKING! The United States has begun urgently hiring personnel at Dover Air Force Base to sort through the personal belongings of fallen soldiers.

🐻 All that for “4 killed soldiers”?

See Does America Come First or Israel with Over 500 US Soldiers Killed on Middle East Airbases

Via https://t.me/CanadianPatriotPress/3185