The Most Revolutionary Act

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The Most Revolutionary Act

Russia Sends Six Submarines to Strait of Hormuz

Chechen Troops Assembled to Aid Iran if Invaded, as China Reportedly Preps 100,000 Troops

Moscow has officially deployed six submarines, including two nuclear ones, near the Strait of Hormuz for a discreet mission to protect Iranian infrastructure, according to reports. Their primary role is to prevent the United States and Israel from freely entering the strait or approaching the Iranian coast.

This deployment sends a strong political message to the West, signaling that any major escalation against Iran could directly involve Russia. The presence of two nuclear-armed subs also seems to indicate that if Iran is hit with nuclear weapons, another nearby country that attacks, will also be nuked.

Yesterday, Chechen troops were publicly assembled and at that assembly it was announced they would go to Iran to fight the United States and Israel if Iran is invaded.

Late last night, I received a single report from a single source, which I am as yet UNABLE TO CONFIRM, saying China is prepping troops from its People’s Liberation Army, to enter Iran and defend it if the US invades.

[…]

Via https://www.globalresearch.ca/russia-sends-six-submarines-strait-hormuz/5920983

 

 

Pfizer Halts COVID Shot Trial Because They Can’t Find Enough Test Subjects Willing to Take Another Booster Shot

Those seeking their 6th booster are now either dead, disabled or have finally woken up to reality.

Pfizer and BioNTech have halted a large U.S. clinical trial for their updated COVID-19 booster injection because they could not find enough participants willing to take another mRNA shot.

The study, targeting healthy adults aged 50–64, required tens of thousands of participants. Despite this, enrollment failed, confirming that public demand for COVID boosters has completely collapsed.

Those seeking their 6th booster are now either dead, disabled or have finally woken up to reality.

A recent Rasmussen survey found that 56% of Americans believe the COVID-19 vaccines have caused large numbers of deaths.

At the same time, real-world uptake has collapsed—only about 18% of Americans received a booster during the 2025–2026 season.

The era of mass booster compliance is over.

[…]

Via https://www.globalresearch.ca/pfizer-halts-covid-shot-trial/5921033

The Shift: Democratic Party Debate over AIPAC Heats Up

Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker at the World Economic Forum in 2023 (Wikimedia)Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker at the World Economic Forum in 2023 (Wikimedia)

A Democratic National Committee member says she will introduce a resolution rejecting AIPAC spending at this month’s DNC meeting.

“At a time when Democratic voters might really not have felt represented or seen when it came to Gaza or seeing their party support Palestinian rights or stand against military conflict, this could be one step toward bringing those voters back into the party,” the committee member, Allison Minnerly, told The Intercept’s Matt Sledge.

“Given the recent primaries in Illinois, but also what we’ve seen across the country, I think it’s important that we specify that AIPAC as a growing force in our primaries needs to be specifically addressed when we talk about dark money,” she added.

If Minnerly’s name rings a bell, it might be because she introduced Resolution 18 last year. It called for a ceasefire in Gaza, suspension of U.S. military aid to Israel, and recognition of Palestinian statehood. Her effort was ultimately watered down, then unceremoniously dismissed at the DNC’s summer meeting in Minnesota.

“The fight over Resolution 18 was more than a simple vote over a symbolic resolution. The story shows how the Israel lobby is doing all it can to prevent Democratic Party leadership from honoring the overwhelming will of party members. It also is a harbinger of fights to come, as support for Palestine only continues to grow in the party in reaction to Israel’s genocide in Gaza,” wrote Nadia Ahmad at Mondoweiss at the time.

The same is true this time around.

The new resolution is also symbolic, but it gets Democrats on the record regarding a lobbying group that has already become a hot-button issue among presidential hopefuls.

One such example is Illinois Governor JB Pritzker, who is attempting to distance himself from past AIPAC connections based on the direction of the political winds.

“It became an organization that was supporting Donald Trump and people who follow Donald Trump,” Pritzker declared after the group spent heavily in Illinois’s recent primaries. “AIPAC really is not an organization that I think today I would want any part of.”

A spokesperson for the Governor reiterated that Pritzker “withdrew his support” from the group after it “became a pro-Trump organization.”

Pritzker’s statement makes it seem as if AIPAC is a well-intentioned group that has been led astray amid the current political climate. He’s constructed a fantasy, but there’s an obvious reason behind the fabrication. He’s creating a narrative where his past support can be excused. He didn’t change in this story, they did.

You see lawmakers push similar stories when it’s time to lightly criticize an ongoing genocide. The U.S./Israel relationship remains sacrosanct. The whole business has simply been muddied by Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu.

Just days after the Pritzker’s comments, Holly Otterbein and Alex Thompson published an illuminating report in Axios detailing the extent of his pro-Israel connections and they go far beyond AIPAC.

When he was president and head of the Pritzker Family Foundation it gave $82,000 to Friends of the Israel Defense Forces and $1.7 million to the American Israel Education Foundation, the AIPAC-affiliated group that sponsors trips to Israel for lawmakers.

“Pritzker has tried to walk a fine line — breaking with AIPAC over its affiliation with Trump rather than Israeli actions — and focusing most of his criticism on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rather than on the country itself,” notes the Axios piece.

It’s doubtful he can continue to maintain this position without some major pushback from the party’s left flank, of which Minnerly’s resolution is just the latest example.

Hasan Piker and the Democrats

In a truly breathtaking move, a number of Democratic leaders have recently spent their time denouncing Hasan Piker.

The left-wing Twitch streamer is set to hit the campaign trail in support of Senate candidate Abdul El-Sayed, which has led to condemnations from two of his opponents state Sen. Mallory McMorrow and Rep. Haley Stevens. He’s also facing backlash from Michigan Senator Elissa Slotkin.

Piker is consistently criticized because, among other things, he said that October 7th was a “direct consequence” of Israel’s actions and that the United States’s foreign policy led to the 9/11 attacks. He’s been smeared as a antisemite and compared to Holocaust deniers for such statements.

However, most voters have grown skeptical of Israel and many probably agree with Piker’s consistent criticisms of Zionism.

Israel’s reputation is in the toilet among people who consider themselves Democrats, and people who consider themselves Independents. The most recent Gallup poll on the issues shows that a majority of Americans sympathize with Palestinians more than Israelis.

“We have to be serious here about who’s going to be the best general election candidate for U.S. Senate in Michigan to beat Mike Rogers, and someone who’s campaigning with someone like that is not going to win in Michigan,” Hayley Stevens tells Jewish Insider.

What is this assertion based on exactly? If campaigning with (the extremely popular) Piker is a liability for El-Sayed, then surely Stevens’s AIPAC’s connections are a potential messaging problem.

As usual, there are a variety of double standards at work here. Slotkin says that Piker “sounds deeply antisemitic” because he’s criticized Zionists, but the same week she appeared on Bill Maher’s show, a guy who has been making actual bigoted comments for decades.

Establishment Dems obviously want to make example of Piker and quash growing pro-Palestine sentiment among Democratic voters. One of the main groups attacking him has been the centrist think tank Third Way. The group says it want to “reduce far-left influence and infrastructure” within the Democratic party, which shouldn’t be especially daunting since there is none.

Andrew Perez has a good piece at Zeteo summing this up.

“Third Way is targeting Piker as part of a broader effort to keep the Democratic Party under the control of big corporations, the ultra-wealthy, and supporters of Israel, no matter what the party’s base wants,” he writes.

[…]

Via https://mondoweiss.net/2026/04/the-shift-the-democratic-party-battle-over-aipac-heats-up/

Iran Turns US Rescue Operation into Military Debacle

By Ivan Kesic

April 5, 2026

In a stunning display of coordinated defensive warfare, Iranian forces – combining the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC), police commando units, Basij resistance fighters, and regular army elements – destroyed two American C-130 transport planes and two Black Hawk helicopters in southern Isfahan province early on Sunday.

The complex operation transformed a US rescue mission into the most embarrassing American military debacle since the 1980 Tabas desert catastrophe.

The thirty-seventh day of the US-Israeli aggression against the Islamic Republic of Iran did not begin with American triumph as some US officials claimed, but with Iranian fire.

Just after dawn on Sunday, Washington launched what it would later desperately frame as a successful rescue operation for a downed F-15E pilot from the 3 April engagements.

Instead, the mission became a complete operational collapse.

Within hours, the spokesperson for the Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters announced that Iranian joint forces had destroyed two C-130 military transport aircraft and two Black Hawk helicopters in southern Isfahan province.

Images of burning wreckage – geolocated and verified by Press TV – circulated across global platforms, drawing immediate and unavoidable comparisons to Operation Eagle Claw, the failed 1980 American rescue mission that ended with eight US soldiers dead and aircraft abandoned in the Tabas desert in South Khorasan province.

For the Islamic Republic, it was not merely a defensive feat. It was historical revenge, divine justice, and a military-technological declaration that US power holds no sway over Iranian skies, contrary to the claims of US President Donald Trump and his war minister.

Desperate rescue born from earlier defeat

The events of Saturday cannot be understood in isolation. They were the direct consequence of the black day that had struck American air power on April 3, when Iranian integrated air defense networks downed an F-15E Strike Eagle over central Iran, along with an A-10 Thunderbolt II over the Persian Gulf, multiple MQ-9 Reaper drones, Hermes reconnaissance platforms, and cruise missiles.

The F-15E, a twin-seat multirole strike fighter valued at over $90 million, disintegrated upon impact in Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad province in central Iran.

The crew member or members remained missing, despite an initial American extraction bid that cost the aggressors two Black Hawk helicopters damaged by Iranian ground fire on April 3. There is no evidence that the US forces were able to locate the pilot. 

By Saturday, US commanders faced an impossible choice: abandon a missing airman to Iranian custody, or launch a deeper, riskier incursion into sovereign Iranian territory.

They chose the latter. That decision would prove catastrophic.

The Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters later confirmed that the Americans had planned what they called a “deceive and immediate escape mission,” using an abandoned airport in southern Isfahan Province as a covert staging point.

Iranian intelligence, however, had already mapped the operation.

Morning of 5 April: Joint forces spring the trap

According to reports, at approximately 09:20 local time on April 5, American aircraft began entering Iranian airspace to search for the missing pilot.

The formation included two C-130 Hercules transport planes—four-engine turboprop workhorses designed for tactical airlift, paratroop drops, and medical evacuation—alongside two UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters providing close support and personnel extraction.

According to operational summaries released by the IRGC and confirmed by the Law Enforcement Command, the US aircraft attempted to descend toward the pre-identified abandoned airport.

What the Americans did not anticipate was the full integration of Iranian defensive assets: IRGC Aerospace Force radar and missile batteries, police special operations commando units positioned on the ground, Basij resistance fighters familiar with the mountainous terrain, and regular army air defence elements all operating under a single command structure.

The spokesperson for the Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters described the response as “divinely guided and precisely timed.”

As the C-130s approached their landing zone, Iranian police commando units opened heavy fire from multiple directions, immobilizing the first transport aircraft before it could unload its personnel.

Minutes later, IRGC air defence systems locked onto the second C-130 and the two Black Hawks. One by one, the American aircraft were struck.

Two C-130s and two Black Hawks as the toll of defeat

By 10:20 local time, Iranian media began broadcasting the first official confirmations.

The Khatam al-Anbiya spokesperson announced that two Black Hawk helicopters and one C-130 military transport plane had been destroyed, left burning in southern Isfahan.

Subsequent detailed reporting, including images released by local media and verified by geolocation analysis, revealed the full scope: two C-130 aircraft had been hit, not one.

The discrepancy was explained by the dynamics of the engagement; the first C-130 was immobilized by police commando fire and then completely destroyed minutes later, while the second was struck during an attempted escape manoeuvre.

Both Black Hawk helicopters were downed in the vicinity of the abandoned airport, their wreckage scattered across the arid landscape.

At least five American personnel were killed in the operation, according to Iranian military sources. Some unofficial reports have put the death toll even higher.

The IRGC’s Public Relations Department issued a terse but devastating statement.

“The invading enemy aircraft in southern Isfahan, including two Black Hawk helicopters and two C-130 military transport aircraft, were hit and are now burning in the flames of the wrath of the heroic fighters of Islam,” it stated.

For the first time since the aggression began on 28 February, Washington had lost not just strike aircraft but the very platforms designed to retrieve downed pilots, a catastrophic failure of combat search-and-rescue doctrine.

Tabas parallel: History repeats as humiliation deepens

Even before the smoke had cleared over Isfahan, the city known for its picturesque gardens and magnificent monuments, Iranian officials and social media users alike drew an unmistakable historical parallel: the failed American Operation Eagle Claw of April 1980.

That aborted mission, launched during the first year of the Islamic Revolution, had sought to rescue US captives from Tehran but ended in disaster at a remote desert in Tabas.

A sandstorm, equipment failures, and a catastrophic collision between a C-130 transport plane and an RH-53 helicopter had killed eight American servicemen and left the wreckage of multiple aircraft abandoned on Iranian soil.

The United States had suffered not just military defeat but global humiliation at the time.

On 5 April 2026, 46 years later, history repeated itself with even greater Iranian proficiency.

Where the 1980 Tabas operation had failed primarily due to weather and mechanical issues, the 2026 Isfahan defeat was the product of deliberate, coordinated Iranian defensive action.

Iranian forces did not wait for nature to defeat the Americans; they destroyed them directly, using domestically developed weapons, real-time intelligence integration, and the courage of IRGC, police commandos and Basij volunteers.

Images circulating on social media juxtaposed the burning C-130 wreckage of 2026 with black-and-white photographs of the Tabas desert debris field from 1980.

The message was unmistakable: forty-six years after its first humiliation in the Islamic Republic, the United States had learned nothing and lost even more.

Joint nature of victory: Police, IRGC, Basij, and Army

What distinguishes the 5 April operation from previous Iranian defensive successes, including Tabas, is the breadth of its joint character.

The Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters spokesperson explicitly named the participating forces: the IRGC Aerospace Force and Ground Forces, the regular Army, volunteer Basij resistance units, and law enforcement police commandos.

This was not a narrow military engagement but a national defensive mobilization.

The police special units, in particular, played a decisive role in immobilising the first C-130, demonstrating that Iranian law enforcement personnel are fully integrated into the country’s layered air defence architecture.

Local sources also reported that a refuelling aircraft belonging to the intruding US forces was shot down in southern Isfahan Province, targeted by elite police commando units.

The Law Enforcement Command confirmed that precise monitoring of enemy aerial movements, combined with rapid and coordinated responses, had made the operation possible.

For Iranian military planners, the Isfahan victory validated years of investment in joint command, control, communications, and intelligence integration—capabilities that American military assessments had consistently underestimated or dismissed.

American narrative: Desperate spin and visible silence

In the hours following the Isfahan debacle, US President Donald Trump took to social media to claim that a “daring” and “miraculous” rescue operation had successfully extracted the missing F-15E pilot with no American losses.

Iranian officials responded with immediate statements, mocking the US president’s claim.

Speaker of the Iranian Parliament Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf posted an image of the destroyed C-130 wreckage on his X account, writing with sharp sarcasm: “If the United States gets three more victories like this, it will be utterly ruined.”

The IRGC Intelligence Organization highlighted the absence of any photographs or video evidence of the supposedly rescued pilot—a stark contrast to the abundant Iranian imagery of burning American aircraft.

Iranian analysts noted that even if the American narrative were accepted at face value, the cost of the operation had been catastrophic: two C-130 transport planes, two Black Hawk helicopters, and an unknown number of casualties, all for the extraction of a single airman who had been shot down days earlier because American air superiority had already failed.

The Khatam al-Anbiya spokesperson dismissed Trump’s claims as an attempt to “justify the bitter defeat and failure of his weak army by creating ambiguity in public opinion,” adding that the United States had not even reported its full losses in the region for several days.

The contrast between Iranian transparency—releasing geolocated images, detailed operational summaries, and official confirmations—and American evasion could not have been starker.

Technical and strategic implications: The death of CSAR doctrine

The destruction of two C-130 transport aircraft and two Black Hawk helicopters on 5 April carries profound technical and strategic implications that extend far beyond the immediate tactical defeat.

Combat search and rescue, or CSAR, has been a cornerstone of American air power doctrine since the Vietnam War.

The Isfahan operation has demonstrated that Iranian defensive networks can not only shoot down American strike aircraft but also systematically dismantle the very rescue architecture designed to recover them.

The C-130, a four-engine turboprop transport with a maximum takeoff weight exceeding 70,000 kilograms, is not a nimble penetration aircraft; it relies on prior suppression of enemy air defences to operate safely.

Its destruction over southern Isfahan, experts say, proves that the US-Israeli aggression has failed to achieve any meaningful suppression of Iran’s integrated air defence network.

The Black Hawk, a twin-engine utility helicopter equipped with advanced avionics, night-vision capabilities, and defensive countermeasures, was similarly neutralized.

For American military planners, the lesson is devastating: no US aircraft, whether strike fighter or support transport, can consider Iranian airspace survivable.

[…]

Via https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/04/05/766350/from-tabas-isfahan-iran-destroys-two-us-c130s-echoing-eagle-claw-debacle

Planet Labs withholds US Military Loss Imagery on Trump Censorship Request

This sequence of Planet Labs satellite images shows Dubai’s Jebel Ali port before and after an attack.

Press TV

Satellite imaging company Planet Labs says it will indefinitely withhold visuals of American military losses to comply with a censorship request from US President Donald Trump amid the ongoing US-Israeli aggression against Iran.

In an email to customers on Saturday, the US company announced that the Trump administration had asked satellite imagery providers to impose an “indefinite withhold of imagery.”

Planet Labs further said that it would now switch to a “managed distribution of images” deemed not to pose a risk to safety.

The firm, which was founded in 2010 by former NASA scientists, will release imagery on a case-by-case basis for urgent, “mission-critical requirements or in the public interest.”

“These are extraordinary circumstances, and we are doing all we can to balance the needs of all our stakeholders,” the California-based firm said.

The restriction expands upon a 14-day delay on imagery of the Persian Gulf and West Asia region that Planet Labs implemented last month, which extended an initial 96-hour delay.

The firm said the move was meant to “prevent adversaries from using the imagery to attack the US and its allies.”

Planet Labs said it will withhold imagery dating back to March 9 and that it expects the policy to remain in effect until the end of the war.

The US and Israel started a fresh round of military aggression against Iran on February 28, some eight months after they carried out unprovoked attacks on the country.

The US-Israeli aggression led to the martyrdom of the Leader of the Islamic Revolution, Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei, and hundreds of Iranian civilians, including women and children, as well as several senior military commanders.

Iran began to swiftly retaliate against the strikes by launching barrages of missiles and drone attacks on Israeli-occupied territories as well as on US bases and interests in regional countries.

[…]

Via https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/04/05/766357/Planet-Labs-withholds-US-military-loss-imagery-amid-Trump-censorship-request

 

Now everyone is dumping US government bonds

Inside China Business | April 3, 2026

Foreign central banks and institution are selling off their holdings of US Treasury bonds. The war against Iran is driving bondholders to dump US government debt at a record pace, and foreign Treasury holdings at the NY Fed are at the lowest level in nearly fifteen years. The heavy liquidations are driving bond yields in the United States higher, and borrowing costs for government, and American households and businesses, are spiking higher. 

Resources and links:

Foreign Central Banks Cut New York Fed Treasury Holdings To 2012 Lows https://finimize.com/content/foreign-…

China is dumping US treasuries and buying Gold https://www.fxstreet.com/analysis/chi…

Foreign central banks sell US Treasuries amid war in Iran https://ft.pressreader.com/1389/20260…

China’s Years-Long Retreat From US Treasuries Flags Bigger Risks https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articl…

Chinese Bonds Are Appealing as Reserve Assets, Gavekal Says https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articl…

China surpasses $1 trillion trade surplus despite Trump tariffs https://businessreport.co.za/business…

Lesson 3 (above). Balance of Payments — Why Current and Capital Accounts Net Out. https://www.aei.org/carpe-diem/khan-a…

Iran warns of radioactive catastrophe in Gulf region after 4th attack on Bushehr nuclear plant

Iran’s FM says any radioactive fallout from attacks on Bushehr nuclear plant will end life in the region.

Press TV

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi has warned that recurrent attacks targeting the country’s only nuclear power plant as part of the ongoing US-Israeli aggression could lead to a huge radiological catastrophe in the region.

Araghchi said in a Saturday post on his X account that a renewed attack earlier in the day on the Bushehr nuclear power plant, located on the Persian Gulf coast in southwest Iran, could lead to a radioactive fallout endangering life in the entire region.

The foreign minister criticized the silence and inaction of Western governments in condemning the highly dangerous attacks on Iran’s nuclear facilities as he drew a parallel between a similar alleged attack by Russia on a major Ukrainian nuclear power plant in early 2022.

”Remember the Western outrage about hostilities near Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant in Ukraine? … Israel-U.S. have bombed our Bushehr plant four times now. Radioactive fallout will end life in GCC capitals, not Tehran,” he said, making a reference to member states of the (Persian) Gulf Cooperation Council.

Araghchi further criticized US-Israeli attacks on Iran’s civilian and non-military infrastructure, including attacks earlier on Saturday on the country’s petrochemical facilities.

He said such attacks expose the real nature of the US-Israeli aggression on Iran and the fact that it is aimed at weakening Iran’s economic and civilian capabilities as a developing country.

“Attacks on our petrochemicals also convey real objectives,” said the top diplomat.

The comments come as the United States and Israel continue to launch air strikes on Iran’s economic facilities, including on bridges, steel mills and other factories, as part of an aggression that began in late February.

Iran has responded fiercely to the attacks by hitting US-related targets in the Persian Gulf and West Asia region as well as areas in the Israeli-occupied territories.

Iran has also tightened its restrictions on the flow of energy through the Strait of Hormuz, causing international oil prices to hit record highs.

Iranian authorities have indicated the measures will continue until the aggressors are fully punished.

[…]

India Makes First Iranian Oil Purchase in Seven Years

—❗️🇮🇷/🇮🇳 BREAKING: India has made its first purchase of Iranian oil in over 7 years

India cited that it can no longer rely upon oil from Arab states due to the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz.

Via https://t.me/Middle_East_Spectator/30225