Ali Humdani
118.8K posts

Ali Humdani
@AliHumdani
love to cross the limits. I am internationalist 😊 #DevotedBiryaniLover😌 https://t.co/do549c912s

🚨🇺🇸🇮🇷 Trump's 48-hour ultimatum had a very specific playbook behind it Three power plants, three bomber types, one objective: plunge Iran into total darkness. The B-2 sneaks in and kills air defenses. The B-1 screams over the mountains at low altitude to hit coastal generators. The B-52 parks safely outside missile range and methodically flattens everything from cooling towers to transformer yards. Take out 7,000+ megawatts of generation capacity and Iran's military command, industrial base, and cities go dark simultaneously. Source: AiTelly on YT


🇺🇸🇮🇷 Trump's team is shopping for Iran's next leader and they just named their favorite Politico reports the White House is quietly evaluating Iran's Parliament Speaker Ghalibaf as a potential post-war partner. One official called him "a hot option." The administration is explicitly modeling this on Venezuela, where they installed a cooperative leader who gave Washington favorable oil terms in exchange for staying in power. The most revealing quote came from an official describing the selection process: "As people rise, we'll do a quick test, and if they're radical, we'll take them out." Yep... that's an American official casually describing assassination as a job interview elimination round. Reza Pahlavi, the exiled crown prince, is officially off the table. Instead they want someone already inside the system who can cut a deal. This confirms exactly what this war was always building toward. Not regime change. Regime adjustment. Keep the structure, swap the driver, secure the oil terms, and call it peace. Whether Ghalibaf, who publicly denies any talks and threatened to target U.S. Treasury bondholders last week, is actually willing to play ball is the literal trillion dollar question. Source: Politico

BREAKING: Saudi Arabia has agreed to allow US forces to use King Fahd Air Base for operations against Iran and is nearing a decision to join the strikes – WSJ
















