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@Aaron_SW1

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England, United Kingdom انضم Ekim 2022
32 يتبع23 المتابعون
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A S@Aaron_SW1·
@ostonox Wasn’t shot down and it’s 100million, dumbass
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A S@Aaron_SW1·
@WarMonitors @lebanonbye @theoherrera514 Leadership gone, 120+ navy vessels gone, 1000+ launchers gone, hqs/compounds/commands/production practically gone. Nuclear ability gone. Air superiority over a whole country confirmed. 40,000 strikes - 0% interceptions. Will never be able to hit mainland. Bro has an iq of -50
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War Monitor
War Monitor@WarMonitors·
Anyone telling you the U.S and its allies are winning this war doesn’t have an IQ above 50.
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Global News Intel
Global News Intel@Pol_ScientistNG·
🚨 NARRATIVE: THE NIGHT IRAN REACHED FOR DIEGO GARCIA It didn’t begin with an explosion. It began with a signal — quiet, calculated, and deliberate. Somewhere deep within Iran’s military command structure, a decision was made not just to strike, but to send a message across distance itself. Thousands of kilometers away, in the middle of the Indian Ocean, lies Diego Garcia — a remote, heavily fortified outpost used by the United States and the United Kingdom. For decades, it had been considered far removed from immediate battlefield threats, protected as much by geography as by defense systems. Then came the launch. Two intermediate-range ballistic missiles tore into the sky, aimed not at nearby rivals, but at a base roughly 4,000 kilometers away. It was an attempt that changed the tone of the conflict instantly. This was no longer just a regional confrontation. This was a reach — a stretch of capability — a signal that distance might no longer guarantee safety. As the missiles arced through the upper atmosphere, the world held its breath. Radar systems tracked their trajectory. Defense systems activated. Warships in the region moved into response posture. The moment was no longer about speculation — it was unfolding in real time. But then, reality intervened. One missile failed mid-flight, never completing its journey. The second triggered a defensive response — a U.S. Navy vessel launched an interceptor to neutralize the threat. Whether it was destroyed in the air or simply missed, the outcome was the same: 👉 No impact. No destruction. No successful strike. And yet, despite the failure, something had shifted. This was not a story of damage. It was a story of intent. Iran had not succeeded in hitting its target, but it had demonstrated something equally important: the willingness to attempt a strike at a distance previously thought beyond its operational reach. For analysts, the implications were immediate. If a missile can travel that far — even unsuccessfully — then the map of vulnerability begins to change. Bases once considered safe due to distance must now factor in a new variable: possibility. But capability is not just about range. It is about precision, reliability, and execution. And on that front, the attempt revealed clear limitations. A failed launch. An intercepted or ineffective strike. A target untouched. In the end, the night did not belong to destruction. It belonged to signaling. Iran had reached — but not hit. 📌 BOTTOM LINE ✔ Iran launched missiles toward Diego Garcia ✔ The distance marked a significant escalation in reach ✔ No missiles hit the target ✔ The event was more about demonstration than success What happened over the Indian Ocean was not a victory, nor a collapse. It was something more subtle — a moment where the boundaries of the conflict stretched outward, not through impact, but through intention.
Global News Intel tweet media
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Nawaf Al-Thani نواف بن مبارك آل ثاني
If the Diego Garcia strike report is accurate, then one of the central assumptions about Iran’s missile program has just collapsed. For years, the accepted ceiling was around 2,000 kilometers. A ballistic missile reaching Diego Garcia suggests something in the neighborhood of 4,000 kilometers, which pushes it out of the medium-range category and into the intermediate-range class (IRBM). That is a strategic leap. The real story is not whether the missile was intercepted. It is that Iran may have demonstrated reach far beyond what much of the world believed it possessed. A 4,000-kilometer capability changes the map. Major European capitals begin to enter the conversation. Paris comes into range. London moves much closer to the edge of vulnerability depending on launch point and payload. This would mean the missile threat is no longer confined to the Gulf, Israel, or parts of South Asia. It would mean the radius of deterrence, defense, and fear has expanded dramatically. If confirmed, Diego Garcia was not just a target. It was a message.
Nawaf Al-Thani نواف بن مبارك آل ثاني tweet media
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A S@Aaron_SW1·
@jimNjue_ @CaseyatBat62 It’s night there, so il wait till you have electric again to reply tomorrow
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A S@Aaron_SW1·
@jimNjue_ @CaseyatBat62 120 navy vessels gone, 500+ launchers gone, thousands of hq, compounds, commands & production gone. Air superiority confirmed. Leadership wiped out. 40,000 strikes with 0% interceptions. One damaged F35 which might not even be Iran, means Iran winning war. Cope you deluded sheep
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Jim Njue
Jim Njue@jimNjue_·
Iran used a $10,000 Missile to shoot down a $100 Million F 35 and Americans are not believing it.
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Engin
Engin@stratejikkarar·
@tiberiusfiles Means, "Mossad is planning attacks on tourist areas worldwide."
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Tiberius
Tiberius@tiberiusfiles·
Source:
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A S@Aaron_SW1·
@tiberiusfiles Source, their own news network and a video interview with the general himself from Iran.. idiot
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A S@Aaron_SW1·
@amar_4inc @mr_mayank Turkey, Oman and Saudi, all said they came from Iran. Cyprus confirmed it was from Hezbollah in Lebanon, an Iran proxy. = all came from Iran. Maybe you should start facing the fact they lie every single day
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Amar Singh Chouhan
Amar Singh Chouhan@amar_4inc·
@mr_mayank Narrative collapsing in real time. Accusations loud, evidence silent. Truth doesn’t need propaganda.
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Ankit Mayank
Ankit Mayank@mr_mayank·
Iran denied the attack on Turkey Iran denied the attack on Oman Iran denied the attack on Saudi Arabia Earlier UK confirmed that the drone attack on a British base on March 2nd was NOT LAUNCHED BY IRAN
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A S@Aaron_SW1·
@mr_mayank Turkey, Oman and Saudi, all said they came from Iran. Cyprus confirmed it was from Hezbollah in Lebanon, an Iran proxy. = all came from Iran. Maybe you should start facing the fact they lie every single day
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A S@Aaron_SW1·
@moonyra_ F35b, which isn’t confirmed to of been hit by Iran, that made it back safely. Is 100m not 1 trillion lmao
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Angel eyes
Angel eyes@Retired60320329·
@s_m_marandi Yep they are trying to say 2 Iranians tried to break in a nuclear submarine base in Scotland which is a bit strange because the closest submarine base is in Plymouth
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A S@Aaron_SW1·
@moonyra_ Well don’t say USA lapdogs then. Yous attacked a uk base in Cyprus, so we came over
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Muneera Al-Thani. 🍉
@Aaron_SW1 Do I look like I’m the head of the irgc? Brother they’ve been striking my country for 3 weeks
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A S@Aaron_SW1·
@escapefrommelos It was also a vertical b variant, that has surrendered stealth for beast mode, as in for payload. That had also stopped radio silence and position stealth as had finished its mission. It’s also not even confirmed it was struck. Iran shared a simulator picture
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Melian Refugee
Melian Refugee@escapefrommelos·
>The F-35 was supposed to be unkillable. That was the whole point. >Iran apparently didn’t get the memo. It landed safely. So… They achieved the equivalent of a bird strike. Iran manages to damage a single plane and they act like the US lost the war.
Melian Refugee tweet media
Gandalv@Microinteracti1

The F-35 was supposed to be unkillable. That was the whole point. Lockheed Martin spent thirty years and four hundred billion dollars, the most expensive weapons programme in human history, building an aircraft that the enemy simply could not see. Not on radar. Not on infrared. Not on anything. The F-35 was not just a fighter jet. It was a theological statement. America’s way of saying: we have moved beyond the reach of your missiles, your sensors, and your prayers. Iran apparently didn’t get the memo. Somewhere over Iranian airspace on March 19, 2026, an IRST system, infrared search and track, the kind of sensor your grandmother could probably explain, looked up, found the F-35, and locked on. Not because Iranian engineers are geniuses. Because the F-35, it turns out, is extremely hot. All that engine. All that thrust. All that carefully sculpted stealth geometry, and the bloody thing glows like a kettle. The heat signature data Iran now holds is not just embarrassing. It is a gift that keeps giving. To Moscow. To Beijing. To every procurement ministry on the planet that has been quietly wondering whether to spend the money on systems designed to kill this aircraft. The answer, as of this week, is yes. And here is the bit that should really worry the Pentagon. You can patch software. You can redesign coatings. You cannot reprogramme a pilot’s brain. Every F-35 driver who takes off from here on knows, actually knows, that someone down there might be able to see them. That changes everything about how they fly. Caution replaces aggression. Hesitation replaces instinct. Four hundred billion dollars. And in the end, it was done in by a heat sensor. Tremendous. Gandalv / @Microinteracti1

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A S@Aaron_SW1·
@AMacsiiver @thunderpantsJ @J4m35c4mpb3ll Because it’s more than about money? Doesn’t defeat the fact, Scotland is in fact running on a deficient if compared to own revenue. Why would you want independence, and have to fund military + everything else. If have an economy of less than Romania ?
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James Campbell
James Campbell@J4m35c4mpb3ll·
What utter rubbish Malcolm and you know it. (1) Scotland does NOT have a deficit as it cannot legally (under UK/English constitution) have one. (2) Any deficit that would be asked of Scotland post independence would met with demands for share of UK/English assets. Check mate.
James Campbell tweet media
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A S@Aaron_SW1·
@ammacj @PGourtsoyannis Of course density matters, why there was more cases and spread in dense places. Thats obvious. There’s more cases and people in London, than whole of Scotland
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A.M.MacJ
A.M.MacJ@ammacj·
@Aaron_SW1 @PGourtsoyannis Average density isn’t a factor. There is so much variation within each country. Urban/rural levels are similar in each country. That is much more relevant.
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A.M.MacJ
A.M.MacJ@ammacj·
Covid Inquiry Module 3 report, published today. England Covid death rate 7.1% worse than Scotland. Wales 21.0% worse than Scotland.👇 @PGourtsoyannis
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A S@Aaron_SW1·
@TheFl0orIsLaVa United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Japan, are coming to defend it. Please keep with the times
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A S@Aaron_SW1·
@richimedhurst It’s a compound and where his administration headquarters is also btw, killed during a meeting with top officials. Stop acting like the guy was sitting on his couch watching tv in his living room or some shit
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A S@Aaron_SW1·
@Ravness_ @bigdave @witte_sergei It wasn’t shot down though, it made an emergency landing. Then Iran showed you guys a simulated video and now you think you’ve won the war 😆 soon it will come out, it wasn’t shot at all probably. This is them sinking Lincoln for the 7th time
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