Live Conflict Iran-Israel Conflict (2025)

Passenger

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F-35 From USS Abraham Lincoln Shoots Down Iranian Drone

“An F-35C fighter jet from Abraham Lincoln shot down the Iranian drone in self-defense and to protect the aircraft carrier and personnel on board. No American service members were harmed during the incident, and no U.S. equipment was damaged,” U.S. Navy Capt. Tim Hawkins, a spokesperson for U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM), said in a statement to TWZ. “The unmanned aircraft aggressively approached a U.S. Navy aircraft carrier with unclear intent.”

“USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN 72) was transiting the Arabian Sea approximately 500 miles from Iran’s southern coast when an Iranian Shahed-139 drone unnecessarily maneuvered toward the ship,” Hawkins added. “The Iranian drone continued to fly toward the ship despite de-escalatory measures taken by U.S. forces operating in international waters.”

 

IC3M@N FX

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What nonsense, neither China nor Russia could save their friend Maduro in Venezuela.
Nor are either of them willing to help Iran or save it in any way.
They have no global reach in the form of alliances, and more importantly, they are unwilling and unable to build something like NATO. What common ground would they have? The Chinese have zero cultural ties with the other countries around them, and they don't want to build any.
You can't form an alliance with economics, money and infrastructure projects abroad.
China must first solve the problem of its image that it is willing to take risks for another country.

Russia is quite isolated; apart from support from North Korea and Belarus, no one supports it, and it does not support anyone abroad. As soon as the United States intervenes anywhere in the world, you can be sure that Russia and China will withdraw if the country is on the brink.
 

Iskander

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What nonsense, neither China nor Russia could save their friend Maduro in Venezuela.
Nor are either of them willing to help Iran or save it in any way.
They have no global reach in the form of alliances, and more importantly, they are unwilling and unable to build something like NATO. What common ground would they have? The Chinese have zero cultural ties with the other countries around them, and they don't want to build any.
You can't form an alliance with economics, money and infrastructure projects abroad.
China must first solve the problem of its image that it is willing to take risks for another country.

Russia is quite isolated; apart from support from North Korea and Belarus, no one supports it, and it does not support anyone abroad. As soon as the United States intervenes anywhere in the world, you can be sure that Russia and China will withdraw if the country is on the brink.
I don't think Beijing intends to go to war with the US; it doesn't need Russia as an ally.
If China has a trillion-dollar trade surplus with the US and the EU, why would it jeopardize this favorable situation for the sake of Russia and Iran's foreign policy adventures?
The Russian beauty, aging and losing her former beauty, waits in vain for a prince from Beijing.
There's a Chinese proverb: "If you sit patiently by the Yellow River, you'll eventually see your enemy's body washed away by the current."
I think China is adopting a strategic wait-and-see approach.

And all we see in the river is a foolish Maduro, floundering in the waves and crying for help.
Who's next—Putin? Or the Ayatollah?
The world is full of lunatics, opportunists, and fools.
We'll definitely see the rest.
 
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GoatsMilk

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- Broke the gold embargo by selling gold through Turkey - During Rouhani's rule, made a deal with Obama and pulled an operation against Ankara - Asked for help when Raisi's helicopter crashed - The wreckage that couldn't be found in 36 hours was located by a Turkish UAV in 2.5 hours - Said "No one else had a share, we found it ourselves" - Received messages of support from Turkey while being attacked - Had Friday prayer imams curse our operations into Syria - Has been shuttling back and forth to Ankara for weeks trying to mediate so America doesn't strike - Now that the conditions are ripe, wants to meet in Oman out of fear that Turkey will get credit.

Extremely dodgy nation, doesnt surprise me that all their allies have left them for dead.
 

TR_123456

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- Broke the gold embargo by selling gold through Turkey - During Rouhani's rule, made a deal with Obama and pulled an operation against Ankara - Asked for help when Raisi's helicopter crashed - The wreckage that couldn't be found in 36 hours was located by a Turkish UAV in 2.5 hours - Said "No one else had a share, we found it ourselves" - Received messages of support from Turkey while being attacked - Had Friday prayer imams curse our operations into Syria - Has been shuttling back and forth to Ankara for weeks trying to mediate so America doesn't strike - Now that the conditions are ripe, wants to meet in Oman out of fear that Turkey will get credit.

Extremely dodgy nation, doesnt surprise me that all their allies have left them for dead.
Forget all that,think geopolitics.
Maybe then you will figure out why the Iranian regime cant fall.
 

YeşilVatan

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I think Iran has a bad reputation due to their dishonorable conduct in international relations and this is hurting them immensely. Other actors themselves aren't angels, or USA/Israel certainly isn't more trustworthy, but the Iran is in a whole different league when it comes to backstabbing and callousness.

But it's just a minor-ish factor among others that changes the formula. And it probably won't lead to their downfall.
 

TR_123456

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I think Iran has a bad reputation due to their dishonorable conduct in international relations and this is hurting them immensely. Other actors themselves aren't angels, or USA/Israel certainly isn't more trustworthy, but the Iran is in a whole different league when it comes to backstabbing and callousness.

But it's just a minor-ish factor among others that changes the formula. And it probably won't lead to their downfall.
No,look at it from our position.
If Iran falls into the Western/Israeli camp we will be surrounded with possible hostile countries.
Israel will be bolder,the US will have bases there without Trump in charge.
Think about it.
It is best for us to keep the Mullahs ruling Iran.
We know the mullahs and how to deal with them.
 

YeşilVatan

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No,look at it from our position.
If Iran falls into the Western/Israeli camp we will be surrounded with possible hostile countries.
Israel will be bolder,the US will have bases there without Trump in charge.
Think about it.
It is best for us to keep the Mullahs ruling Iran.
We know the mullahs and how to deal with them.
This scenario is built on the premise that Iran falls in a very specific fashion.

But I agree with you in that a Western aligned Iran would be a complete menace.
 

Angry Turk !!!

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No,look at it from our position.
If Iran falls into the Western/Israeli camp we will be surrounded with possible hostile countries.
Israel will be bolder,the US will have bases there without Trump in charge.
Think about it.
It is best for us to keep the Mullahs ruling Iran.
We know the mullahs and how to deal with them.
Just a periodic reminder, Türkiye must have their own nukes.
 

Fuzuli NL

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- Broke the gold embargo by selling gold through Turkey - During Rouhani's rule, made a deal with Obama and pulled an operation against Ankara - Asked for help when Raisi's helicopter crashed - The wreckage that couldn't be found in 36 hours was located by a Turkish UAV in 2.5 hours - Said "No one else had a share, we found it ourselves" - Received messages of support from Turkey while being attacked - Had Friday prayer imams curse our operations into Syria - Has been shuttling back and forth to Ankara for weeks trying to mediate so America doesn't strike - Now that the conditions are ripe, wants to meet in Oman out of fear that Turkey will get credit.

Extremely dodgy nation, doesnt surprise me that all their allies have left them for dead.
They would rather be obliterated than do anything for Türkiye.
Don't forget they sided with Armenians during the Karabag liberation war.
Just recently, President Erdogan had made big efforts to bring them to the negotiating table with their US counterparts, and succeeded.
After both sides agreeing to meet in Istanbul, Iran demanded it changes the venue to Oman, fearing that Türkiye might get the spotlight (Yes, they're that petty).
Now it's fallen apart and their backdoor penetration is imminent.

Seeing the mullah regime gone is something I look forward to, but at the same time, another US/Zio satellite country on our borders is not a promising future.
They want to install the sell-out Shah descendent, who is way too deep up Israel's and US's arses.
 

Iskander

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Excerpts from the book "12 Days of War: Israel vs. Iran"

...Each squadron had its own set of targets, both primary and secondary. Intelligence spent considerable time studying the personalities of those to be eliminated in order to accurately calculate the attack strategy. This included their bedtime, whether they used the restroom or smoked at night, which room they slept in, and other behavioral characteristics. The goal was not only to eliminate the targets but also to avoid harming (or at least minimize) civilians.

...General Ali Hajizadeh, commander of the IRGC Aerospace Force, received information from Hezbollah about an impending Israeli strike. He convened a meeting of his command group in a bunker outside Tehran, which was immediately reported to AMAN, Israeli military intelligence. Some of the aircraft, armed with bunker buster bombs, were diverted there. At a tremendous altitude, the first wave of 140 aircraft approached Iranian airspace. Various measures, radio silence, and electronic warfare allowed this to be accomplished completely undetected by the Iranian air defenses.

Half an hour into the meeting, Hajizadeh concluded that the alarm was false; the radars from which the crews were feeding information into the bunker were clear. The general decided to send everyone home; the information received from the Lebanese was not confirmed.

We don't know for sure how exactly AMAN was monitoring Hajizadeh, whether he had an agent or a bribed officer nearby, or whether the bunker was wiretapped, but Israeli intelligence knew what was happening in the command center, in real time, so to speak.

An intelligence officer reported to the commander of the Israeli Air Force, General Bar, that Hajizadeh was sending his subordinates home, and that everyone would soon be gone. A decision had to be made, and it had to be made quickly.

General Hajizadeh was the man who would have given the order to retaliate in the event of an Israeli attack. He headed the IRGC missile project.

Tomer Bar, the commander of the Israeli Air Force, had barely a couple of minutes.

The success of an operation, arguably the most important in the country's history, was at stake.

The tension in the Air Force command post was so intense it was almost tangible, like an electric field.

"Turn on the IFF transponders," Bar commanded.

140 aircraft simultaneously appeared on Iranian radar screens. Hajizadeh realized the airstrike was coming after all and, along with his subordinates, remained in the bunker, where, fifteen minutes later, he was literally buried.

At approximately 3:30 AM, bombs began exploding in the apartments of other Iranian generals. It took the Israeli Air Force 12 minutes to literally wipe out the entire senior command of the IRGC and the Iranian army.

On the first day of the war, Iran completely lost military control, and for many hours there was simply no one to give the order for a retaliatory strike. Around 10:00 a.m., the Iranians launched a hundred drones, but all were shot down before entering Israeli airspace...

 

Perun

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Excerpts from the book "12 Days of War: Israel vs. Iran"

...Each squadron had its own set of targets, both primary and secondary. Intelligence spent considerable time studying the personalities of those to be eliminated in order to accurately calculate the attack strategy. This included their bedtime, whether they used the restroom or smoked at night, which room they slept in, and other behavioral characteristics. The goal was not only to eliminate the targets but also to avoid harming (or at least minimize) civilians.

...General Ali Hajizadeh, commander of the IRGC Aerospace Force, received information from Hezbollah about an impending Israeli strike. He convened a meeting of his command group in a bunker outside Tehran, which was immediately reported to AMAN, Israeli military intelligence. Some of the aircraft, armed with bunker buster bombs, were diverted there. At a tremendous altitude, the first wave of 140 aircraft approached Iranian airspace. Various measures, radio silence, and electronic warfare allowed this to be accomplished completely undetected by the Iranian air defenses.

Half an hour into the meeting, Hajizadeh concluded that the alarm was false; the radars from which the crews were feeding information into the bunker were clear. The general decided to send everyone home; the information received from the Lebanese was not confirmed.

We don't know for sure how exactly AMAN was monitoring Hajizadeh, whether he had an agent or a bribed officer nearby, or whether the bunker was wiretapped, but Israeli intelligence knew what was happening in the command center, in real time, so to speak.

An intelligence officer reported to the commander of the Israeli Air Force, General Bar, that Hajizadeh was sending his subordinates home, and that everyone would soon be gone. A decision had to be made, and it had to be made quickly.

General Hajizadeh was the man who would have given the order to retaliate in the event of an Israeli attack. He headed the IRGC missile project.

Tomer Bar, the commander of the Israeli Air Force, had barely a couple of minutes.

The success of an operation, arguably the most important in the country's history, was at stake.

The tension in the Air Force command post was so intense it was almost tangible, like an electric field.

"Turn on the IFF transponders," Bar commanded.

140 aircraft simultaneously appeared on Iranian radar screens. Hajizadeh realized the airstrike was coming after all and, along with his subordinates, remained in the bunker, where, fifteen minutes later, he was literally buried.

At approximately 3:30 AM, bombs began exploding in the apartments of other Iranian generals. It took the Israeli Air Force 12 minutes to literally wipe out the entire senior command of the IRGC and the Iranian army.

On the first day of the war, Iran completely lost military control, and for many hours there was simply no one to give the order for a retaliatory strike. Around 10:00 a.m., the Iranians launched a hundred drones, but all were shot down before entering Israeli airspace...

Interesting finde
 

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