Trump’s Dispatch of Marine Expeditionary Unit Signals Desperation for Any Symbolic Success

An F-35B Lighting II prepares to take off from the USS Tripoli on Mar. 6, 2026.

Samuel Geddes

US Marines head to the Gulf aboard the USS Tripoli, but as Samuel Geddes argues, it may be more about optics than real military impact.

In mid-week, the 31st US Marine Expeditionary Unit aboard the USS Tripoli was sighted transiting the Straits of Malacca en route to the Gulf. Its crew and detachment, reportedly 2200 to 5000-strong, has been summoned from its station in Japan after President Trump’s dawning realization that the Islamic Republic of Iran would not meekly collapse after he assassinated its leader, Sayyed Ali Khamenei.

Given that he initiated the war by crossing the ultimate red line, Trump’s options for further escalation are vanishing quickly. He is caught between what he knows to be the universal unpopularity of the war among Americans, especially over its disastrous economic consequences, and the knowledge that if he washes his hands of the situation and walks away, Iran will almost certainly continue retaliating and end up in a vastly more powerful position than it had been in before the war.

These equal opposing forces, the need for an off-ramp and the need to demonstrate any kind of tangible success, have shifted the calculus to include US ground operations on Iranian soil. It is in this context that the Marine Corps’ dispatch to the region is widely interpreted.

What would 5000 US Marines, at most, realistically achieve in a ground operation in Iran?

The idea of a large-scale ground invasion of Iran was never seriously on the table to begin with. Besides the fact that the Trump administration has been uncharacteristically consistent that this will not happen, the entire active US military, 1.3 million personnel, would be required, along with at least as many conscripts, for such a thing to even be attempted. Iran is a 1.6 million square kilometer mountain fortress, holding more mountains, deserts, and over 90 million mobilized citizens within. The United States has never occupied or even attempted to occupy a country of this size. It is simply not happening.

With large-scale ground incursions eliminated, the one “boots-on-the-ground” scenario with at least some initial plausibility would be for the US to seize one or more of the Iranian islands in the Gulf, especially the Strait of Hormuz. These islands range from Hormuz and Qeshm in the east, westward to Kharg, where 90 percent of Iran’s oil exports originate.

Upon genuine examination, however, the force currently on its way is woefully insufficient even for this objective by several orders of magnitude. The closest analogue for such an operation, in scale and required manpower, would be the Volcano and Ryukyu islands campaign against Japan in World War II, the bloodiest theatre of the US war in the Pacific. In fact, Qeshm Island is only slightly larger than Okinawa, which required between 250,000 and 540,000 American soldiers to occupy. Success there came only at the cost of 12,500 Americans killed in action and 50,000 wounded. Taking the Island of Iwo Jima alone, famously the most intense engagement of the Pacific, required 110,000 troops and took the lives of 6,800, with 20,000 wounded. Iran’s smaller islands in the Strait, Hormuz, Larak, and Hengam are comparable in size (and presumably the density of their defenses) to the Japanese outer islands but compressed within a single theatre of only a few hundred kilometers across. Anyone seriously proposing such an operation would be looking at the most intensive and costly amphibious campaign since World War II, plausibly seeing US losses equaling those of the entire wars in Korea or Vietnam within a matter of weeks or months. Here too, the enormity of the operation places it far outside the US military’s current capacities. It is certainly outside the means of 5,000 American soldiers, assuming they are not being willfully sent to their deaths.

If the Marines on the USS Tripoli are insufficient to even take and hold a small island, the last remaining possibility is that they are intended to infiltrate Iranian territory to carry out some form of high-stakes, largely symbolic operation that Trump intends to publicize as him “winning” the war and unilaterally ceasing US involvement.

Other than standard acts of sabotage, it has been suggested that the Marines may be tasked with locating and capturing Tehran’s enriched uranium stockpile. Such an objective is almost certainly fanciful. There is no reason to assume the Americans have any idea where it is, or that even 5000 marines would be sufficient to seize it if they did. However, given this administration’s amply demonstrated detachment from reality, its utter lack of shame or respect for international law, Trump’s assertion alone that such a mission was successful, even if it failed or never occurred at all, might be the one “success” that the president could consider sufficient to end his part in this catastrophe. That such a “success” would be illusory and utterly devoid of any strategic value is at this point an entirely secondary consideration.

It may well be that when the expeditionary unit reaches the Strait of Hormuz within the next week, it will simply do nothing – its purpose being pure posturing. Whatever its true role, its size relative to the strength of the Islamic Republic all but guarantees that it will serve a solely symbolic function. Its real mission is to lessen the US president’s humiliation when he ultimately does, in the fashion of a mad Roman emperor, admit defeat to the Iranians.

[…]

Via https://libya360.wordpress.com/2026/03/20/trumps-dispatch-of-marine-expeditionary-unit-signals-desperation-for-any-symbolic-success/

Hormuz disruption exposes hidden strain on US military supply chains

Al Mayadeen

The disruption of maritime traffic through the Strait of Hormuz is beginning to reverberate far beyond energy markets, with new analysis warning that the effects could directly constrain the United States’ ability to sustain and replenish its military operations.

A report by the Modern War Institute, cited by The Guardian, describes the situation as a “paralyzing, real-time problem” for any attempt to expand US defense manufacturing, as well as for repairing equipment damaged in recent Iranian retaliations.

At the center of the concern is sulphur, a largely overlooked commodity that plays a foundational role in industrial production. According to the analysis, seaborne trade in sulphur passing through Hormuz, which accounts for roughly half of global shipments, has been nearly halted. Prices have already surged by around 25 percent since the start of the war, with year-on-year increases reaching 165 percent.

Sulphur’s hidden war role

While sulphur is widely associated with fertilizer production, its strategic importance lies deeper in the industrial chain. It is used to produce sulphuric acid, a critical component in extracting key minerals such as copper and cobalt from lower-grade ores.

These materials are indispensable to modern military systems. From microprocessors and communications hardware to jet engines and drone batteries, copper and cobalt underpin the infrastructure that enables both weapons production and operational capability.

The report argues that these inputs “dictate how fast things can be built and scaled under the pressure of an ongoing war,” warning that the consequences of a sudden disruption in supply have not previously been factored into military planning.

Jahara “Franky” Matisek, a US Air Force lieutenant colonel and nonresident fellow at the US Naval War College, described the situation as a compounding crisis. “It’s a cascading issue,” he told The Guardian, noting that replacement costs for damaged systems could rise sharply. “A knock-on effect of this war is that it may cost double or more than double to replace all these weapons because all the mineral demand is going to go way up.”

He added that supply constraints may go beyond pricing pressures. “Markets are not going to be able to provide the amount of minerals that are needed to replace all these radars that have been destroyed and all these munitions that have to be replaced. It’s a really precarious spot to be in right now.”

The Middle East accounts for roughly a quarter of global sulphur production, much of it generated as a byproduct of oil refining. With shipping routes now disrupted, the supply shock is already feeding into downstream sectors.

Sulphur shock, war strain

Beyond defense, the report notes that reduced sulphur availability could also affect agriculture, as farmers worldwide compete for fertilizer inputs. This raises the possibility of broader food supply pressures, particularly in lower-income countries.

However, the military implications remain the primary concern. The authors estimate that replacing just two major US radar systems destroyed in the early phase of the war would require more than 30,000 kilograms of copper, with additional thousands needed to restore other damaged communications and sensor systems across multiple regional bases.

“The current sulfur shock is becoming a copper problem, and that copper problem risks quickly becoming a readiness and resilience problem,” the report states.

The analysis frames the situation as a “prelogistical crisis”, arguing that conventional planning has largely ignored vulnerabilities in the upstream supply of raw materials. Rather than transportation or distribution bottlenecks, the issue lies in the availability of the inputs required to manufacture critical systems in the first place.

A separate study published in February, also co-authored by Matisek, found that only 6 percent of US defense contractors maintain fully transparent supply chains. The latest report suggests that this lack of visibility is now constraining operational capacity.

Industrial dependence

According to the authors, the US military is increasingly dependent on industrial systems it does not fully control, leaving it exposed to disruptions originating far beyond the battlefield.

What is emerging, they argue, is a structural limitation on combat endurance, where the pace of war is determined not only by strategy or firepower, but by access to the underlying materials needed to sustain it.

[…]

Via https://english.almayadeen.net/news/politics/hormuz-disruption-exposes-hidden-strain-on-us-military-suppl

Iran’s weapons industry still churning out missiles despite war

 

Al Mayadeen

Iran is producing more missiles amid the United States-Israeli war on the country, spokesperson for Iran’s Islamic Revolution Guard Corps (IRGC), Brigadier General Ali Mohammad Naeini, emphasized.

For Iran, ballistic missiles serve as the backbone of its deterrence and retaliatory doctrine, enabling it to offset conventional military asymmetries through highly survivable, mobile, and scalable systems capable of delivering significant damage to adversary assets. One of the main focuses of the aggression on Iran has been its missile program, which the US and “Israel” seek to “obliterate”.

After firing hundreds of ballistic and cruise missiles at US and Israeli targets in the occupied territories, the Gulf, and the wider region, Naeini underlined that there should be “no concern” over Iran’s missile industry or its stockpiles.

The IRGC spokesperson also promised Iran’s adversaries “surprises”, saying that Iran’s retaliation will be more “remarkable and increasingly complex.”

“Our people in the streets want the war to continue until the enemy is fully exhausted,” he said, adding, “The end of this war will come only when the specter of war is lifted from Iran.”

Complete destruction?

A major claim of the Israeli regime and the Pentagon is that their forces have destroyed Iran’s missile industry facilities. In one briefing, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth said that a primary goal of the US aggression is not just to target Iranian missiles but to ensure Iran “has no ability to make more.”

On March 10, Hegseth said that Iran’s ballistic missile production capacity had been “functionally defeated” and “destroyed”, including every company that builds missile components. By mid-March, Hegseth toned his statements down and described the Iranian defense industrial base as “nearing complete destruction.”

Meanwhile, Iran has substantially increased its rate of ballistic missile fire since Wednesday, when the US-Israeli regimes launched an aggression on vital gas infrastructure. Iran met the escalation with retaliation against energy targets in the Gulf and occupied Palestine, forcing US President Donald Trump to publicly deny any involvement in the attack on Iran’s gas fields.

It is worth noting that Iran possesses a broad and diversified arsenal of ballistic missile systems, deliberately varying types and capabilities to sustain a prolonged confrontation against technologically superior, nuclear-armed adversaries. Its inventory includes both liquid-fueled and solid-fuel missiles, offering flexibility in deployment and readiness. These systems are equipped with either unitary high-explosive warheads or submunition payloads designed to penetrate layered air defenses and maximize impact on strategic targets.

A central pillar of Iran’s missile industry is its emphasis on scalable production, cost-efficiency, and operational effectiveness. Despite sustained external pressure, the sector has achieved notable technological advances, with systems such as the Fattah hypersonic-class missiles and the Khorramshahr-4 reflecting progress in propulsion, guidance, and payload delivery. Tehran has also worked to diversify its supply chains while localizing the production of critical components, many of which are manufactured in fortified, deeply buried underground facilities to ensure continuity during wartime.

Gulf states speak out: US and Israel must end illegal war on Iran

While the US and Israel try to pit Gulf Arab states against Iran, Oman is proving their plan is doomed.

Omani foreign minister Badr bin Hamad Albusaidi used Rothschild-owned magazine The Economist to reach the Western elite

👉 He reveals frankly how frustrated Arab states are at US and Israeli destabilization of the region — which has brought destruction.
👉 Does his article contain any criticism of Iran? None — in his view, Iran had no choice.

🌏 The US and Iran were “on the verge of a real deal” when the war started, writes Albusaidi, who led negotiations between the two

🌏 It was a “shock” when the US and Israel “again launched an unlawful military strike against the peace that had briefly appeared really possible”

🌏 Iranian retaliation against US interests in the Gulf was “inevitable” and “probably the only rational option available to the Iranian leadership” in the face of US and Israeli attempts to “terminate” Iranian statehood

🌏 “Arab countries that had placed their trust in US security co-operation now experience that co-operation as an acute vulnerability, threatening their present security and future prosperity”

🌏 This is not a US war – it was “drawn into it” by Israel and there is “no likely scenario” in which both “will get what they want from it”

🌏 “America’s friends have a responsibility to tell the truth,” Albusaidi writes, stressing that the US must get out of the war and make peace with Iran.

Via https://t.me/geopolitics_prime/67012

China more involved in Iran war than it seems

 

Beijing is already plugged into how this war works. The links aren’t obvious on the surface, but they show up across key moving parts of the conflict. Here’s where to look:

1️⃣ Chinese Missile Supplies for Iran (https://t.me/newrulesgeo/1635) — China ships carbon fiber, dioctyl sebacate, and tools, to IRGC Aerospace Force for solid-fuel motors. This lets Iran rebuild & scale ballistic missile production toward thousands more by 2027, plus nearing deals for CM-302 supersonic anti-ship missiles to dominate naval strikes.

2️⃣ Jilin-1 Satellite Constellation & MizarVision Intel (https://t.me/newrulesgeo/1596) — China’s ~120-satellite swarm provides HD real-time video tracking US troop movements, carriers, logistics, and defenses in Jordan/Gulf pre- and during strikes. MizarVision releases imagery to expose Western ops, breaking the intel monopoly and giving Iran an “open book” on threats while feeding Beijing battlefield data for future modeling.

3️⃣ Acceleration of China’s Own Stealth Bomber Programs (https://t.me/newrulesgeo/1599) — China observed the US B-2/B-21 bombing against hardened Iranian targets and resolve that missiles/drones can’t match sustained pressure from reusable stealth platforms. This pushes urgency on Chinese H-20 long-range stealth bomber and JH-XX medium-range strike fighter, vital for contested environments like Taiwan Strait, where persistent airstrikes could disrupt US bases in Japan/Guam.

4️⃣ Rare Earths Leverage Over US Munitions (https://t.me/newrulesgeo/1615) — US arsenal depends on Chinese-controlled heavy rare earths for magnets, radars, guidance, and propulsion. Pentagon reserves low; early strikes burned billions. Rebuilding damaged radars needs massive materials China dominates.

5️⃣ Tomahawk Depletion Window (https://t.me/newrulesgeo/1632)— US fired ~400 Tomahawks in first 72 hours (>10% inventory gone) in Iran, but production is only 90/year, restock would take 4.5+ years at current rates. Each missile costs $2-4M; This creates a dangerous gap for China to exploit in Taiwan while Iran gains operational freedom.

6️⃣ Spy Fleet & Beidou Integration (https://t.me/newrulesgeo/1546)— Liaowang-1 surveillance ship + access to 500+ Chinese satellites track US launches/movements in Persian Gulf/Indian Ocean for early warnings. Iran fully switched to Beidou nav, ditching GPS, for reliable, interference-proof ops.

Put together, these links show Beijing shaping how this war functions rather than standing outside it.

Via https://t.me/geopolitics_prime/67017

Open Letter to PM Challenges COVID Royal Commission Phase Two Findings as Unlawful

Justice Watch Bill of Rights

Justice Watch New Zealand has issued an open letter to Prime Minister Luxon challenging the Royal Commission’s Phase Two findings as unlawful under the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act.

Justice Watch NZ is a public advocacy and legal accountability group. In its third consecutive open letter to the Prime Minister and Government Ministers critiquing the Phase 2 report of the Covid Royal Commission, it argues NZ was rendered unfree and undemocratic such that the legal justification for the suspension of key elements of the Bill of Rights Act (BORA) claimed all along by the government and endorsed by the Commissioners, was rendered moot.


PUBLIC OPEN LETTER

Justice Watch New Zealand Inc.
Public Interest Correspondence

Email: justicewatchnz@protonmail.com

Date: 17 March 2026

Subject: RCI into COVID-19: Lessons Learned Phase 2 — Legal Failure to Apply the Justified Limitations Framework of the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990

Rt Hon Christopher Luxon
Prime Minister of New Zealand

And to:
All Honourable Ministers of the Crown

Dear Prime Minister and Honourable Ministers,

Purpose of this Letter

We write to explain why the Royal Commission’s Phase Two Report: Lessons Learned from Aotearoa New Zealand’s Response to COVID-19 appears to have failed to identify the misuse of the “justified limitations” provisions of the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990. In our view, this arises from a misunderstanding of key aspects of the COVID-19 circumstances and their proper application within the legal framework established by the Act.

The Required Legal Approach

The proper legal approach is to measure the circumstances that occurred during the pandemic against the statutory framework that existed at the time. The law cannot be adjusted retrospectively to accommodate the circumstances that arose. Rather, the circumstances must be examined against the requirements of the law as enacted by Parliament.

The law is prescriptive in this regard. Section 10 of the Legislation Act 2019 provides that “the meaning of legislation must be ascertained from its text and in the light of its purpose and context.” Any analysis of the justified limitations provisions of the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act must therefore begin with a careful examination of the text of the Act and the purpose and context in which those provisions were enacted.

Constitutional Role of the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act

The New Zealand Bill of Rights Act also occupies a particular constitutional role within New Zealand law. It is one of the few statutes enacted primarily to restrain the exercise of public power rather than to regulate the conduct of the public. In that sense, it is legislation enacted for the protection of the people against the misuse of governmental authority. For that reason, the rights affirmed by the Act must be interpreted liberally and applied for the benefit of the people whose freedoms the Act was designed to protect.

The Statutory Test Under Section 5

Section 5 of the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990 is explicit that any limitation on the rights and freedoms affirmed by the Act is permissible only where it can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.

The statutory language is clear that the concept of justification operates within the context of a society that is itself free. Yet during the pandemic New Zealand society was placed under lockdown conditions removing the element of freedom that is required for further justified limitations. In those circumstances the question necessarily arises whether additional limitations imposed while that condition existed could properly be said to meet the statutory requirement of justification under section 5.

Sequence of Rights Limitations

In those circumstances it is necessary to identify the sequence of rights limitations that occurred.

This sequence also raises a further issue of legal reasoning. Where successive limitations on rights derive their force from conditions created by earlier restrictions, the justification analysis risks becoming circular, because the State is effectively relying upon circumstances produced by its own limitations in order to justify additional ones.

The first limitation was the removal of ordinary freedom of movement and association through lockdown orders imposed across New Zealand.

Once those conditions were established, the restoration of ordinary freedoms was then made conditional upon vaccination uptake targets. In practical terms, the return of ordinary civil liberties was tied to vaccination compliance.

The effect of this sequence was that the restoration of ordinary freedoms was made conditional upon vaccination uptake. In substance this created a coercive environment in which individuals were pressured to accept a medical intervention, and it is now evident that some New Zealanders who complied with those conditions were subsequently injured.

Schematic Representation of the Issue

The issue can be illustrated schematically as follows:

Statutory Requirement
New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990 — Section 5
Limitations permitted only where demonstrably justified
IN A FREE AND DEMOCRATIC SOCIETY

Circumstance That Occurred
Nationwide lockdown orders imposed across New Zealand

The practical effect of those orders was the removal or severe restriction of the ordinary civil freedoms that define a free society, including:

  • Freedom of movement — people were required to remain at home and were prohibited from travelling except for limited purposes.
  • Freedom of association — people were prohibited from meeting with others outside their household.
  • Freedom of peaceful assembly — public gatherings were prohibited.
  • Freedom to carry on ordinary work and livelihood — many people were prohibited from attending workplaces or conducting normal economic activity.

In those conditions New Zealand society was operating under lockdown restrictions in which the ordinary freedoms presupposed by section 5 of the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act were substantially removed.

Further Limitation
Restoration of ordinary freedoms made conditional upon vaccination uptake targets.

Practical Effect
Individuals pressured to accept a medical intervention in order to regain ordinary civil liberties.

Observed Outcome
Some individuals who complied with those conditions were subsequently injured.

Issue Identified
The Royal Commission does not appear to analyse this sequence of limitations within the statutory requirement that justification occur in a free and democratic society.

Conclusion

The Phase Two report appears to reach conclusions about justified limitations without properly examining the statutory condition required by section 5 of the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990 — namely, that any limitation must be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.

In our submission, any limitations imposed on the population at a time when New Zealand society was not operating as a free and democratic society — or where individuals were subject to conditions of coercion — were incapable of meeting the statutory threshold for justification under section 5. It follows that such limitations must properly be regarded as unlawful, as they fall outside the limits permitted by law. In that context, the conclusions reached by the Commissioners in the Phase Two report are in error.

Where such unlawful limitations have contributed to outcomes involving serious harm, including injury or death, the question of legal responsibility necessarily arises and cannot properly be set aside.

Yours faithfully,

Andrew Major Justice Watch

Andrew Major
Chairman & Lead Investigator

Justice Watch New Zealand Inc.
(Incorporated Society)

Email: justicewatchnz@protonmail.com
Website: www.justicewatchnz.net

Distribution:
Prime Minister and all Ministers of the Crown

Read the other Justice Watch NZ Letters:

Kash Patel admits under oath FBI Buying Americans’ Data

Kash Patel | Unease at FBI as Kash Patel ousts top officials, move ...

The Federal Bureau of Investigation has started buying location data on Americans, Kash Patel, FBI director, said under oath at the Senate intelligence committee worldwide threats hearing on Wednesday.

Patel’s admission came in response to a question from the senator Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat who is a longtime opponent of the warrantless surveillance of Americans. Wyden told Patel that his predecessor, Christopher Wray, testified in 2023 that the FBI did not at that time purchase location data derived from internet advertising, although he acknowledged that it had done so in the past.

“Is that the case still?” Wyden asked. “And if so, can you commit this morning to not buying Americans’ location data?”

“We do purchase commercially available information that’s consistent with the constitution and the laws under the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, and it has led to some valuable intelligence for us,” Patel responded.

“So you’re saying that the agency will buy Americans’ location data,” Wyden said. “I believe that that’s what you’ve said in kind of intelligence lingo. And I just want to say as we start this debate, doing that without a warrant is an outrageous end run around the fourth amendment. It’s particularly dangerous given the use of artificial intelligence to comb through massive amounts of private information.

“This is exhibit A for why Congress needs to pass our bipartisan, bicameral bill, the Government Surveillance Reform act,” Wyden said, referring to legislation he is working to pass to rein in surveillance.

While law enforcement must get a judge-authorized search warrant to obtain location data directly from telecom companies, government agencies have instead been able to buy such information from private data brokers.

Wyden’s questioning of Patel on this issue was amplified on social media by Warren Davidson, a House Republican who introduced a bill mirroring Wyden’s Senate measure with the Democratic representative Zoe Lofgren.

“This is a clear violation of the fourth amendment and is why I introduced the Government Surveillance Reform act,” Davidson observed, “to close the data broker loophole that allows intelligence agencies to buy Americans’ private data”.

The fourth amendment to the US constitution defines the “right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures” and specifies that “no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized”.

[…]

Via https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/mar/18/kash-patel-fbi-location-data

Israeli settlements will spell ‘end’ for Holy Land Christians

Israeli settlements will spell ‘end’ for Holy Land Christians – ‘America First’

RT

Unabated settler violence, along with Israel’s continued settlement policy, could spell doom for the remaining Christian communities in the Holy Land, Jason Jones, founder of the Vulnerable People Project, has told RT’s America First.

Israel has allegedly approved the demolition of thousands of homes in the West Bank belonging to Christian communities and is encroaching on the territory of some of the oldest Christian populations in the area, particularly around Bethlehem, as well as villages such as Taybeh, Jones claimed.

The settlement of Shtema located at the site of a former Israel military base just east of the town of Bethlehem “will be the end of the Christian community in the Holy Land,” Jones said. “It will be the end of the oldest Christian community in the world,” he added, referring to a settlement legalized by West Jerusalem last year.

The NGO founder, whose organization operates in the West Bank and other territories, warned that local Christian communities are being attacked by settlers. “There is direct physical violence. There is separating the communities,” Jones added.

Neither West Jerusalem nor Washington is willing to act, with the US choosing to be “on the side of the oppressor,” Jones believes. Mike Huckabee, the US ambassador to Israel, is “just ignoring it,” according to Jones. Huckabee, a former Baptist minister, “was not man enough to rise to the occasion and speak truth,” Jones said.

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/news/635415-israel-settlements-end-christians/

Why is FBI investigating former counterterrorism chief who opposes US-Israeli war on Iran?

Joe Kent during his 2022congressional campaign in which Donald Trump endorsed his bid, helping him secure the Republican nomination

RT

Former head of the US National Counterterrorism Center Joe Kent, who resigned this week in protest over the US-Israeli war on Iran, is under FBI investigation, according to Semafor.

A probe into alleged improper sharing of classified information was opened before Kent quit his post and accused the Israeli government of manipulating intelligence to influence President Donald Trump’s decision to launch a bombing campaign aimed at toppling the Iranian government, the outlet’s sources claimed.

The report on Thursday coincided with efforts by Trump administration allies and pro-Israel commentators to portray Kent as a “known leaker” and a suspected anti-Semite.

Did Kent touch a political livewire?

Kent’s resignation letter blamed the consequences of the new Middle East conflict on Israel.

“Early in this administration, high-ranking Israeli officials and influential members of the American media deployed a misinformation campaign that wholly undermined your America First platform and sowed pro-war sentiments to encourage a war with Iran,” he wrote to Trump on Tuesday.

“This echo chamber was used to deceive you into believing that Iran posed an imminent threat to the United States, and that should you strike now, there was a clear path to a swift victory,” he added, suggesting Israel played a significant role in previous regional conflicts, including in Iraq and Syria.

Such accusations are uncommon in mainstream US political discourse, where they can prompt allegations of anti-Americanism and anti-Jewish bigotry – unlike criticisms of the country’s own leadership.

Over the years, Trump’s domestic critics have called him a “Russian puppet,” an insurrectionist, and a convicted felon who must be barred from a second term. Now, left-wing commentator Rachel Maddow claims the president attacked Iran after being corruptly influenced by Arab Gulf monarchies.

What are Kent’s national security credentials?

Kent is a military veteran who served 11 tours, mostly in Iraq, before becoming a CIA paramilitary officer. His first wife, Shannon, served in the US Army’s Intelligence Support Activity unit and was killed in a terrorist attack in Manbij, Syria, in 2019.

He has been a vocal supporter of Trump and his ‘Make America Great Again’ agenda. Before his appointment in the second Trump administration, he publicly opposed a potential US war with Iran, warning that while the US could inflict damage, such a conflict would weaken the country as it confronts China.?

Media reports have described Kent as an ally of Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, who has long opposed US military interventions and previously sold T-shirts with the slogan “No war with Iran.”

The DNI has said it is the president’s prerogative to interpret intelligence as he sees fit. Gabbard was reportedly sidelined within the administration, with her office informally referred to as “Do Not Invite,” according to Bloomberg.

How has Washington responded to Kent’s resignation?

Trump responded to Kent’s resignation by calling him “a nice guy” he did not know well, adding that he was “very weak on security” and that his departure was a positive development.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt rejected Kent’s claim that Iran posed no imminent threat to the US. “This is the same false claim that Democrats and some in the liberal media have been repeating over and over,” she wrote, adding that suggestions Trump acted under outside influence were “both insulting and laughable.”

Conversely, senior US officials, including Secretary of State Marco Rubio, have said the timing of the US-Israeli attack was influenced by pressure from West Jerusalem. Israel reportedly warned it would act with or without US support. The administration has argued that participation allowed it to better protect US troops in the region from retaliation.

Ben Shapiro, a prominent pro-Israel commentator, claimed Kent “has been for a very long time conspiratorially minded in the extreme” and was promoting “bizarrely heterodox views.” He warned that “heretic MAGA” figures were targeting the presidency.

Shapiro also cited claims by far-right influencer Nick Fuentes that Kent had sought his support during a congressional campaign and expressed agreement with his views – an allegation Kent has disputed. Critics call Fuentes an open anti-Semite, so the implication of Shapiro’s message was clear.

Why does Kent’s resignation matter?

Kent said he remains committed to the ‘America First’ approach and urged Trump to make a course correction. His resignation reflects broader disagreements within Trump’s political base, as some people accuse the president of abandoning his campaign promises.

Trump said he is the one who decides what MAGA means and excluded Tucker Carlson from the movement because the talk show host opposes the war with Iran.

Kent had top-level access to classified intelligence that presumably informed the administration’s decisions and is the first senior official to publicly oppose the war with Iran.

The US government has a history of internal dissent over military interventions that often becomes public only through anonymous leaks or memoirs published years after the fact. Former Secretary of State Colin Powell, for example, argued against the 2003 Iraq invasion behind closed doors. But publicly he made the case for it at the United Nations, which he subsequently described as a “painful” episode and a “blot” on his record.

What does Kent believe Washington should do about Iran?

Kent discussed his resignation and views in an interview with Carlson.

“The main issue is how the Israelis are out of control and they are driving this entire war,” he said, adding that Trump has the leverage to make the necessary changes. He argued that US protection of Israel should not be unconditional. America’s message, Kent said, should be: “You are done going on the offense because this is our war. We’re paying for it. We’re bleeding for it. This is not your war.”

“If we don’t address our relationship with the Israelis, even if we come up with a temporary ceasefire, we’ll be right back in this same situation in very short order,” he warned.

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/news/635535-kent-resignation-fbi-investigation/

 

Ukrainian mercenary activity in India ‘very disturbing

Ukrainian mercenary activity in India ‘very disturbing’ – ex-general
RT
New Delhi will not agree to Kiev’s request to release suspects detained by anti-terrorism forces, Shokin Chauhan has told RT India

Recently uncovered Ukrainian mercenary activity in India is “very disturbing,” a former paramilitary general has told RT India.

India’s anti-terrorism organization, the National Investigation Agency (NIA), last week arrested seven people, including six Ukrainians and a US citizen, for allegedly training and supplying weapons to insurgents in Myanmar. It said the men had crossed into India’s eastern neighbor and back through the state of Mizoram, which restricts the entry of non-Indian citizens.

The lack of Myanmar army personnel on the border with Mizoram facilitates significant movement of people, Lt. Gen. Shokin Chauhan, former director general of the Assam Rifles paramilitary force, told RT India.

“The Ukrainian Embassy has asked for their [arrested nationals] release,” he added. “But we are not going to give them up because it’s very, very clear that they entered this part of India illegally.”

Chauhan said the suspects will be charged for violating Indian laws.

He said the region around the India-Myanmar border is a hotbed of insurgent activity against the Myanmar Army.

Those arrested could have been in the region to train insurgents to fight the Myanmar Army, according to Chauhan.

“However, many of these insurgent groups are also helping out insurgent groups that are operating inside India,” he added, calling it “a very disturbing factor.”

The former paramilitary officer said it is not known how the mercenaries entered Mizoram as a special permit was required for foreigners to enter the region.

“The Indo-Myanmar border is 1,643 kilometers long… The lack of a continuous fence… that’s the issue with our northeastern borders,” he said. “A lot of people [are] trying to fish in troubled waters. And I’m not sure which foreign power is involved in it, if there’s a foreign power involved. I’m not sure which insurgent group is involved in it, but we will come to know. And we will have the capability to deal with this very soon.”

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Via https://www.rt.com/india/635520-ukrainian-mercenary-activity-in-india/