PeacefulPunter

4.7K posts

PeacefulPunter

PeacefulPunter

@point7five

शामिल हुए Mart 2013
301 फ़ॉलोइंग104 फ़ॉलोवर्स
JaguarAnalytics
JaguarAnalytics@JaguarAnalytics·
BREAKING: Pakistan, Egypt and Turkey are pushing Iran for 45-day ceasefire. If this happens, expect two things: — Nasdaq to rally +1000 points — Trump to beg for Nobel Peace Prize axios.com/2026/04/06/ira…
JaguarAnalytics tweet media
English
49
13
120
25.8K
PeacefulPunter
PeacefulPunter@point7five·
@Disinfo_Tracker The market slurps up every time. Pathetic. Iran are not going to agree to a ceasefire, there's no reason to. That kills the leverage they have over stocks/oil/commodities.
English
0
0
0
119
Disinformation Tracker
Disinformation Tracker@Disinfo_Tracker·
Like clockwork, Barak Ravid and Axios put out a story about fake negotiations, planted by the white house, to calm the markets for Monday and give Trump an excuse to back down from his latest threats against Iran. How many times are they going to pull this exact same stunt?
Barak Ravid@BarakRavid

🚨🇺🇸🇮🇷In last-ditch push, the U.S., Iran and a group of regional mediators are discussing the terms for a potential 45-day ceasefire that could lead to a permanent end to the war, according to four U.S., Israeli and regional sources. My story on @axios axios.com/2026/04/06/ira…

English
61
691
2.8K
73.5K
PeacefulPunter
PeacefulPunter@point7five·
@whippobackup @calvinfroedge So why did the pilot run 2 marathons and in hide in some random mountain 2 marathons away from his original landing location all way his ankle was broken. That's incredible and can't wait for the movie. "Lone Marathon Survivor". Lol
English
2
1
29
441
Labubu Enjoyer (Hippopotamus)
@calvinfroedge Wrong. 1) Those aren’t bullet holes, when you BIP stuff things explode and shrapnel goes everywhere. 2) They did the rescue mission prepared for a firefight given 1m people were looking for this guy. 3) They brought multiple planes. 4) Nothing looks “off”
English
6
0
18
5.8K
🏴‍☠️
🏴‍☠️@calvinfroedge·
The autists always win. Simplicus says the burnt out wreckage had nothing to do with an F15 pilot rescue, says the geolocated wreckage is hundreds of kilometers from the F15 crash. The whole thing was a ruse / cover to try to do a Maduro style grab and go op in Isfahan.
🏴‍☠️ tweet media🏴‍☠️ tweet media🏴‍☠️ tweet media🏴‍☠️ tweet media
English
63
452
4.2K
194.5K
PeacefulPunter
PeacefulPunter@point7five·
@JeffJeff135096 @rdd147 Wasn't he critically injured? That's what Trump said in his truth post. Did that happen after he ran the marathon for some still unknown reason.
English
2
0
0
202
Jeff
Jeff@JeffJeff135096·
@rdd147 It takes 6.5 hours for me to walk 25 miles. So with that math ~30-35 hours to reach this destination. If he ran a good chunk or ‘humped’ as the military calls it he probably could easily do this within 27 hours
English
3
0
0
5.1K
Roger
Roger@rdd147·
The rescue of the second pilot gets so much more interesting when you realize he walked 110 miles in a single day to get to his location from crash sight and other pilot.
Roger tweet media
C Schmitz@chrisschmitz

With the Airfield Geolocated by @andynovy , we can now have significant confidence that the area of rescue was in the Kolah Ghazi National Park, South-East of Isfahan, Population 2.2m

English
1.1K
1.6K
8.8K
3.5M
PeacefulPunter
PeacefulPunter@point7five·
@AndreasSteno You might consider it's actually because people just don't like you.
English
0
0
1
50
PeacefulPunter
PeacefulPunter@point7five·
@hashurtag 2 decades? Iran have been defending their lands for centuries. If they were going to fold like Venezeula they would have done so already. I think we'll discover it is Trump looking for off ramps.
English
1
0
0
1.4K
Shahab
Shahab@hashurtag·
The U.S. successfully extracting 3 out of 3 of their pilots behind enemy lines ought to be a wake up call for Iran. They must take the off-ramp and proceed with talks immediately before April 6th deadline. Don’t make the mistake that the Taliban made in their pig-headedness that led to 2 decades of death and destruction.
English
709
177
1.9K
327K
Jim Bianco
Jim Bianco@biancoresearch·
They are making it impossible for Trump to TACO.
English
70
10
340
36K
Jim Bianco
Jim Bianco@biancoresearch·
Update (15 minutes ago): *KUWAIT REPORTS IRAN ATTACK ON POWER, WATER DESALINATION PLANTS *KUWAIT SAYS POWER, WATER DESALINATION PLANTS DAMAGED: AFP *KUWAIT: SIGNIFICANT MATERIAL DAMAGE AT 2 POWER GENERATION UNITS *BAHRAIN INTERIOR MINISTRY: FIRE AT FACILITY AFTER IRAN ATTACK
Jim Bianco@biancoresearch

Iran's answer? (posted 30 minutes ago) *KUWAIT PETROLEUM CORP CONFIRMS HQ HIT BY DRONE STRIKE *KUWAIT PETROLEUM CORP: OIL SECTOR LEADERSHIP ASSESSING DAMAGES *KUWAIT PETROLEUM: CONFIRMS FIRE AT SITE OF DRONE STRIKE *KUWAIT PETROLEUM CORP: TAKING SAFETY MEASURES, SECURING SITE

English
45
128
893
249.1K
PeacefulPunter
PeacefulPunter@point7five·
@nicksortor Do we really believe the media anymore or this administration?
English
0
0
0
7
Nick Sortor
Nick Sortor@nicksortor·
🚨 BREAKING: A US attack on Iran has just kiIIed 50 SENIOR IRANIAN LEADERS, per Fox This comes shortly after a post from President Trump tonight with a video of the strike Why do they keep gathering together?!
English
1.3K
6.8K
37.3K
1.8M
PeacefulPunter
PeacefulPunter@point7five·
@TheShortBear It hasn't yet. Why now? Why not 10 years ago? If things can keep rolling along 10 years ago why not another 10 and then another 10 after that? The bond market has a self correcting mechanism that you fail to consider.
English
0
0
1
102
PeacefulPunter
PeacefulPunter@point7five·
@KobeissiLetter It's all B(l)S. A giant facade when you consider the participation rate has been crashing for at least 12 months now. If the people who stopped looking for work re-entered the job market we'd be at 5.5 to 6% UE. Think about that.
English
0
0
0
627
The Kobeissi Letter
The Kobeissi Letter@KobeissiLetter·
BREAKING: US job growth in February has been revised down from an initially reported -92,000 jobs to a total loss of -133,000 jobs. This marks the biggest monthly US job loss since December 2020.
English
684
5.8K
26.5K
2.8M
PeacefulPunter
PeacefulPunter@point7five·
@biancoresearch …unfortunately the Ukraine war has been almost forgotten about since US attacked Iran. Russia would be loving that and no doubt Zelenskyy is struggling to find ways to steal the focus back towards Ukraines plight. This is one such way.
English
0
0
0
31
PeacefulPunter
PeacefulPunter@point7five·
@biancoresearch Maybe, but it took Ukraine years to master their strategy and tech for that situation. The Russia ships were also like sitting ducks which is very different to drones/missiles being launched, attack boats etc. Sounds like hubris and Zelenskyy fighting for relevance…
English
1
0
0
173
Jim Bianco
Jim Bianco@biancoresearch·
Can he do it? He did it in the Black Sea against Russia. No one else has this track record. x.com/MarioNawfal/st…
Jim Bianco@biancoresearch

I am not a military analyst. I'm a financial analyst focused on macroeconomic risk. That different lens might explain why I see something most military strategists and investors are missing. --- The New Rules of Warfare—And Why We Can't Opt Out For nearly a century, warfare belonged to whoever controlled the biggest defense budget. Aircraft carriers. Stealth bombers. Multibillion-dollar weapons systems. That model is changing in ways many aren't appreciating. Ukraine and Iran are showing the West what 21st-century conflict actually looks like: decentralized, highly iterative, fast-changing, unmanned, and cheap. Neither the US nor Russia—beginning in 2022—appears prepared. We might now have no choice but to show we can fight and win such a war. The Ukraine Approach Faced with a small defense budget, a much smaller population, and a vastly outnumbered army, Ukraine had to get creative. They couldn't match Russia's industrial capacity or spending. So they abandoned that playbook entirely. They developed an entirely new way to fight, highly decentralized, iterative, and most importantly, cheap. They also created Brave1—a completely new way to conduct war. Frontline commanders log into an iPad and bypass central command entirely. They spend digital points to purchase equipment directly from hundreds of (Ukrainian) manufacturers. When they encounter a new threat, they message the manufacturer directly and work with the engineers to find a solution, even if that means they visit to the front. The result is hardware or software upgrades that once took months now take days. Here's the crucial part: hundreds of manufacturers compete fiercely for these dollars by offering the best possible product as fast as possible. This isn't centralized procurement. It's a market. Competition drives innovation at scale. Weapons evolve as the enemy evolves in real time. Units are also awarded points for confirmed kills, uploaded from drone video—a powerfully eloquent way to grade effectiveness. But the real innovation might be how they decentralized manufacturing itself. Instead of building weapons in massive, centralized factories that make perfect targets for Russian bombing, Ukraine distributed production across hundreds of small manufacturers—workshops, machine shops, garages, and yes, kitchens. Each produces components or complete systems. This approach serves two purposes: speed and survival. You can bomb a tank factory. You destroy production for months. You cannot bomb ten thousand kitchens. If one workshop gets hit, ninety-nine others keep producing. The network regenerates faster than Russia can destroy it. This is why the manufacturing process includes actual kitchens—it's not a metaphor. It's a strategy. The Metric That Defines a New Era The result is staggering: at least 70% of battlefield casualties now come from drones. This is the first time in over a century that the primary cause of combat death is neither a bullet nor an artillery shell. Since World War I, industrial warfare meant industrial killing. Ukraine has broken that equation entirely. As a result, Russia is now controlling less territory than at any point since 2022 and going backward. In March, Ukraine made gains while Russia recorded no gains for the first time in two and a half years, and Drone-led offensives recaptured 470 square kilometers while paralyzing 40% of Russian oil exports. Ukraine has lowered the "cost per kill" to less than $1,000 per casualty—a 99.98% reduction from the millions of dollars that were common in the post-9/11 wars. This isn't an incremental improvement. This is a complete inversion of modern military economics. Yet the Western defense establishment is not learning from this. Rheinmetall CEO Armin Papperger mocked Ukraine's entire approach. In The Atlantic, he called Ukrainian manufacturers "housewives with 3D printers," dismissing their work as "playing with Legos." They are not studying this revolution. They are mocking it. And the "housewives with 3D printers" are beating the Russian army! Ukraine Is Now in the Middle East The US Military and Gulf states face an eerily similar problem. Iran's Shahed drones threaten shipping in the Strait of Hormuz—a chokepoint that funnels 21% of global oil. They cannot fend off Iran by firing a $4 million Patriot missiles at $20,000 drones. They need what Ukraine has discovered: a decentralized, rapidly adaptive defense network that doesn't require centralized industrial capacity. That's why Ukraine just signed historic 10-year defense deals with Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the UAE. Over 220 Ukrainian specialists are now on the front lines of the Persian Gulf—exporting not just weapons, but a completely new doctrine of how to fight. The precedent is set. The model works. Everyone is watching. Mosaic On April 1st, Trump threatened to bomb Iran "back to the stone ages" if they don't reopen the Strait within weeks. It's the classic 20th-century playbook: overwhelming offense force, massive bombardment, industrial-scale destruction. The problem? That playbook doesn't work against distributed, cheap, rapid-iteration systems—especially when your enemy is organized under a mosaic structure. Iran's "Mosaic Defense" doctrine is a decentralized command system where authority and capability are distributed across multiple geographic and organizational nodes. Each region operates semi-autonomously with overlapping chains of command and pre-planned contingencies. It's designed so that when you destroy the center, the edges keep fighting. You cannot decapitate a system with no head. You cannot out-bomb your way to victory when your enemy is not centralized; this was the solution for 20th-century industrial warfare. Defense Wins Championships 21st-century asymmetrical threats require defensive shields, not aggressive offenses. Ukraine has built exactly that: rapid-iteration defenses, decentralized manufacturing, commanders empowered to buy solutions in real time and rewarded for success. That same defensive model may hold the key to opening the Strait of Hormuz. Not through massive offense, but through the ability to adapt and defend quickly. Why We're Stuck Whether you viewed this as a war of choice or not, it has now become a war to keep global trade open. And that makes it inescapable. This is precisely why the US cannot declare victory and walk away from the Strait of Hormuz— or TACO. Every adversary on the planet will interpret American withdrawal as confirmation that cheap asymmetric systems work against powerful centralized platforms. And these adversaries might have sent us a message last month. In mid-March 2026, an unauthorized drone swarm penetrated Barksdale Air Force Base in Louisiana, home to the U.S. Air Force's Global Strike Command. The fact that this happened not overseas but in the United States, and that these tests occurred just weeks ago, underscores how close this threat is now. They didn't attack. They announced their presence. Every adversary watching learned that cheap drone networks can reach into the US. The Global Supply Chain Risk If the US abandons the Gulf while Iran holds the Strait contested, markets will price this as validation that cheap systems can hold global trade hostage. The current market disruptions will become permanent. Supply chains will have to pivot from "just-in-time" efficiency back to "just-in-case" redundancy. Inflation returns as safety costs money. Trade routes diversify away from vulnerable chokepoints. The global friction tax becomes permanent. The Unavoidable Truth Once you prove that cheap, asymmetric systems can hold global trade hostage, that knowledge spreads globally and irreversibly. Every adversary learns the same lesson: you don't need a $2 trillion Navy—you need $20 million in drones and the will to use them. Withdrawing while the Strait remains contested would permanently validate this model. Supply chains shift to "just-in-case" redundancy. Insurance costs rise. The friction tax becomes structural—baked into every global transaction for decades. The cost of staying is measured in months. The cost of leaving is measured in decades of economic drag. We cannot leave unfinished business.

English
32
5
86
81.4K
PeacefulPunter
PeacefulPunter@point7five·
@jbulltard1 Probably because even non-Military folk can see it is a suicide mission. It could be a bloodbath.
English
0
0
0
163
PeacefulPunter
PeacefulPunter@point7five·
@TheShortBear Couldn't happen to a nicer country. The arrogance Americans spew when they travel outside of America is truly sickening. I've lost count of the times Americans on holiday just open their big mouths and say we'll just bomb them as a solution. Kind of disgusting really.
English
0
0
1
1.1K
THE SHORT BEAR
THE SHORT BEAR@TheShortBear·
The firing of top military and other officials right now is about putting troops on the ground. My best bet is they wanted this long weekend to do it, hence the immediate firing. Firing a general during a war is the last thing you want for moral, tactically and for optics. Everyone from close advisors to military people are replaced by yes men. Even the new attorney general is being replaced by Trumps ex personal defense attorney. When a top nation values blind loyalty instead of competency you lose all control, credibility and safety. Very troubling. Power keeps on being consolidated.
Clash Report@clashreport

BREAKING: Hegseth has asked U.S. Army Chief of Staff Gen. Randy George to step down and retire immediately. Source: CBS

English
69
268
3.5K
412.9K
PeacefulPunter
PeacefulPunter@point7five·
@PenPizzaReport Isn't this foot traffic? No one is walking from the Pentagon to a pizzeria to get pizzas. They'd order online which isn't foot traffic.
English
1
0
2
876
Pentagon Pizza Report
Pentagon Pizza Report@PenPizzaReport·
Several pizzerias nearby the Pentagon are reporting above average traffic. Extreme Pizza and Wiseguy Pizza are both right across from the Pentagon. As of 1:46pm ET
Pentagon Pizza Report tweet mediaPentagon Pizza Report tweet mediaPentagon Pizza Report tweet mediaPentagon Pizza Report tweet media
English
20
175
819
124.3K
PeacefulPunter
PeacefulPunter@point7five·
@WhiteHouse No, no deal. You don't understand Iranians or their history if you think they will just fold. They won't.
English
0
0
2
6
The White House
The White House@WhiteHouse·
IT IS TIME FOR IRAN TO MAKE A DEAL BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE.
The White House tweet media
English
2.2K
1.7K
8K
236.6K
Mike Bird
Mike Bird@Birdyword·
If someone told you oil prices were up 11% and the S&P 500 was basically flat, what would you immediately think had happened?
Mike Bird tweet mediaMike Bird tweet media
English
452
95
3K
1.3M
PeacefulPunter
PeacefulPunter@point7five·
@MarioNawfal Because he can't. How can he end the war? What just walk away? That can't happen if the US is king and wants to retain the power of the petrodollar. China wins if a toll is setup with tankers paying in Yuan. Russia wins if this continues and oil remains over 100. Disaster.
English
0
0
0
17
Mario Nawfal
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal·
News outlets were reporting Trump will announce that U.S. troops will enter Iran to seize the enriched Uranium Instead all he talks about is wanting to end the war and hoping Iran accepts And yet people still see this speech as an indication Trump doesn’t want to end the war??
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal

I REPEAT: THE WAR IS CLOSE TO ENDING

English
239
40
311
122.7K
PeacefulPunter
PeacefulPunter@point7five·
@KobeissiLetter What are you talking about? The pre-speech talk was of a ground invasion. The closest source to Trump seems to be Mark Levin and he was talking ground invasion, then a special forces team going in.
English
0
0
0
295
The Kobeissi Letter
The Kobeissi Letter@KobeissiLetter·
The next big question tonight: Tons of major news outlets reported the same information ahead of President Trump's address to the nation, sending markets sharply higher. Almost all "insider sources" signaled Trump would be "winding down" the war tonight. What just happened?
English
647
411
6K
696.7K