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1. There is no legitimate blockade of the Red Sea that is going to happen with 2 American Carrier Groups in the region. Will there be heightened danger for vessels in region? Yes. A full blockade? No. Not to mention, port access through the Mediterranean will not be blocked.I'm not writing this to be an annoying contrarian, but if there was a region wide popular mobilization, I can see Israel being defeated conventionally. We don't know how Israel can actually deal with an actual naval blockade of Red Sea and Mediterranean or Turkish pipelines, let alone a proper ballistic missile barrage followed by a militia zerg rush. Regional actors are too disjointed and divided to do this but if the stars align somehow, Israel can absolutely be beaten on the battlefield, if you don't count the nukes that is.
And just to add, this adding and subtracting aircraft inventory is a little childish. Readiness levels, munitions availability, command capability, political will, military infrastructure, logistics, weather, luck, espionage all play into the result. I believe this joint force composition has a great potential for dealing damage but would fail to ultimately hold back a decentralized but relentless attack by a large opposing force, especially if that attack comes after a relatively effective BM bombardment.
They might not retaliate but I don't think it will be because the president has any say in the general direction of the country. JCPOA will expire in January 2026 and Iranians' whole strategy has been to drag the negotiations until it expires and the snapback mechanism (an automatic mechanism predicted in JCPOA) is not applicable in the security council to bring back the harshest sanctions by all members of 5+1 (regardless of the fact about how that will be actualized now that Russia and China are very unlikely to follow U.S. unlike how they didn't veto and did obey the security council sanctions during Obama years). Because of this, whatever the new president has been saying about the Iran deal and nuclear negotiations, the last more hardline president was saying as well, as that is the general doctrine and it hasn't changed. I think they are just waiting for the current supreme leader to die or be replaced due to illness to declare his fatwa about nuclear weapons null and void and declare themselves a nuclear power without there being any deal in place which can put them in jeopardy of the security council being able to automatically impose multilateral sanctions on them.I doubt that Iran will retaliate in any way if Nasralah is dead... At most you can expect some militias in Iraq, Syria and Houthis launching some missiles towards Israel that won't change anything. What happened to the hundreds of thousands of rockets and missiles that Hezbollah had?
In the last few weeks Israel is absolutely destroying Hezbollah and to me it looks more and more like Iran is ready to sacrifice them to get on better terms with the West. Their new President Pazeshkian hinted how they are ready for a new nuclear deal, how they support Ukraine's territorial integrity etc. Hezbollah are the useful idiots that will be sacrificed like a used napkin.
It seems that there are no two countries in the world that are geographically far apart from each other as Canada and Australia. What is surprising is the coincidence of opinions about the events of our two respected colleagues - @Relic and @SilverMachine - from these countries
It seems that there are no two countries in the world that are geographically far apart from each other as Canada and Australia. What is surprising is the coincidence of opinions about the events of our two respected colleagues - @Relic and @SilverMachine - from these countries
How dare you insult the only resistance to the evil ''West'' and Israel.They should rename it the Axis of Hesitance at this point.
I think he was more aiming at the idea of us being "sneaky big-noses in hiding using false flag logos" or something. Would square with the guy's usual posting.
Also, plenty of people supporting Palestine over here, I'm guessing it's the same in ol' Canada. You know, secular countries with various diasporas, not monoliths and such. How things should be. Individuals with individual takes on stuff, nobody's going to put a bullet in you for not towing the ideological line, a pretty western notion.
Just to give you a persfective here .... It takes us Indonesian 350 years to gain independence . Denied access in basic education and knowledges yet somehow we manage to rise and.growing . If we manage to pull it of out of all these situations and hardship and then thrives .. So , could the palestinian ....Israel's army is more than capable of fighting a ground war backed by foreign Special Forces and overwhelming force from U.S. and British Air Force and Naval assets in the region. No significant quanties of foreign soldiers would have to be at risk for Israel to survive a major regional war. Western Air Force and Naval aviation assets in the region would be completely unstoppable and could completely massacre ground forces of Iran and its regional proxies if they tried to go onto the offensive against Israel. Air supremacy for the IAF, USAF, US NAVY and RAF would be established immediately and those countries have enough medium and long range PGMs to rain hell down on any army at war with Israel.
This is not hyperbole. The following is an estimate of Israeli, American and British 4th and 5th generation strike aircraft and attack helicopters in the region, not counting attack drones.
IAF
F-15: 66
F-16: 175
F-35: 35
AH-64: 48
U.S Air Force
F-22: 12
F-15: 24
F-16: 12
A-10: 12
AH-64: 27
U.S. Navy
F-18: 36
F-35: 10
RAF
Eurofighters: 18
Approximate Total: 485