Bilal Khan

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Bilal Khan

Bilal Khan

@ABK618

Premium A.I and T.A on South East Asian Benchmark Stock Indices - Nil Satis Nisi Optimum

Karachi, Pakistan Katılım Aralık 2014
297 Takip Edilen649 Takipçiler
MW
MW@muslim_world·
A young Saudi man opened the door for a woman and stepped outside, so that she could exit safely.
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Kylian Mbappe is the GOAT
Kylian Mbappe is the GOAT@Tezzathekchen·
Four Four Two rates Salah as the 5th greatest PL player of all time, Gerrard is at 12th Salah is the only star who is rated higher by fans of other clubs than fans of his own team, all because Liverpool scousers can’t stand the idea of a Muslim being their greatest player😂😂😂
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VintageFootballTV
VintageFootballTV@Vintage77Ball·
All Time BEST TEAM EVER! Does anyone agree with all these players? Or does something have to be replaced?
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Bilal Khan
Bilal Khan@ABK618·
@EvanWritesOnX Wouldn't the Saudis rather work with Pakistan coz we will say "yes" to anything for "brotherly love"
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Evan
Evan@EvanWritesOnX·
Saudi Arabia will be the primary funder of the post-war order. But now with US military retreat, the GCC’s need for a security framework actually creates demand that makes Turkey uniquely positioned to supply. Militarily, it has what the GCC lacks; a large conventional military, a rapidly maturing defense industry, NATO interoperability, and actual expeditionary experience in Syria, Libya, and the Horn. Turkey and Egypt signed a bilateral military agreement in February, and Turkish arms supplier MKE signed a $350m export agreement with Egypt’s Ministry of Defence. That’s the beginning of a supply-chain relationship that makes Egypt operationally dependent on Turkish platforms. To add to this, Turkeys geographically location enables it to control and influence the critical post-war reconstruction corridors; Syrial, the Eastern Mediterranean, the Red Sea axis, and the land bridge between Europe and the Gulf. You can make the argument that Turkey gains the most, even more than KSA in this “war”, because it’s the only actor that simultaneously supplies what the post-war order demands across all three layers; military capability, diplomatic architecture, and defense-industrial supply chains, while carrying NONE of the liabilities (war damage, legitimacy loss, economic fragility) that constrain every other candidate.
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Mir Mohammad Alikhan
Mir Mohammad Alikhan@MirMAKOfficial·
Look at this Zionist pig crying on live TV. Thank you Iran for teaching these heartless bastards a lesson that they will never forget.
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Boxing King Media
Boxing King Media@boxingkingmedia·
🔥 Kell Brook Looking JACKED! Kell Brook says this is the longest period of his career he’s been free from all intoxicants, and it’s clearly showing in his shape. “The Special One” is now targeting a fight with Chris Eubank Jr.. At 39… could Brook have one more big night left? 🥊 @SpecialKBrook @dominicingle @EbanieBridges @IngleGym
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TraderSZ
TraderSZ@trader1sz·
@midascabal He’s been spot on. But I think he’s some intelligence asset
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Midas
Midas@midascabal·
Professor Jiang says “Dubai as a city is now DEAD”.
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Books
Books@Booksey·
If you’re in Dubai look at the top of the Burj Khalifa right now you will see a star shining bright protecting it The Quran says: "We have decorated the nearest sky with lamps, have made them devices to stone the devils, We have prepared for them the punishment of Hell." -67:5
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Evan
Evan@EvanWritesOnX·
The Iran conflict is on the trajectory of ending. Not because anyone surrendered, and not because diplomacy suddenly worked, but because every major player has already extracted what they needed from the war and the cost of continuing now exceeds the return. WTI crude collapsed from $115 per barrel on March 8 to $89 today. That is a $26 drop in three days. No amount of rhetoric, propaganda, or political theater can fake what sells-side traders do with real money, and real money is flowing out of crisis positioning at speed. The price remains firmly below the $110-120 ceiling that I accurately identified as the self-enforcing equilibrium where every major stakeholder's pain threshold converges. That ceiling held exactly as predicted on March 8, rejected immediately, and has not been tested since. The market is telling us this conflict has an expiration date. Gold is not spiking on conflict fear. It is flat today, down slightly, even as oil jumped. The elevated gold price reflects structural de-dollarization and long-term monetary anxiety, not panic about the next 72 hours. If the market genuinely believed this war was about to escalate beyond control, gold and oil would be moving together. They are not. The paradox of this conflict is that it delivered the normalization that years of diplomacy could not. Understanding this requires looking past the destruction and asking what structural problems each player brought into the war and whether those problems have been solved. The US needed Iran's nuclear program degraded and its regional proxy network dismantled, but could not achieve either through the JCPOA framework or sanctions alone. The air campaign has now "destroyed" mosy of Iran's air defenses and its missile stockpile, and the nuclear infrastructure has been significantly damaged. Whether that actually happened or not, is completely beside the point. The optics was achieved. Whether or not the remaining facilities are operationally critical is also beside the point. What matters, is that enough has been destroyed to construct a credible victory narrative for domestic consumption. Iran's pragmatist faction needed the IRGC's autonomous military authority broken, but could not do so from within without triggering a civil crisis. The "war" did it for them. Under the March 7 address publicly revoked the IRGC's fire-at-will authority, issued an unprecedented apology to Gulf neighbors, and asserted civilian command over the armed forces. This was not a response to military pressure. It was a maneuver that used the crisis to accomplish what peacetime politics never could. The IRGC's institutional fury confirmed it was real: if they had the leverage to suppress the address, they would have suppressed it, not complained about it afterward. Israel needed its northern border "secured", Hezbollah neutralized as a military force, and Iran's capacity for regional power projection permanently reduced. Again, try and understand the narrative here. And the optics. Iran's proxy network, the architecture that allowed Tehran to project power without direct confrontation, has been structurally dismantled across Lebanon, Syria, and Gaza simultaneously. The post-conflict order matches the pre-conflict normalization trajectory. Every player emerges with a previously unsolvable problem solved. This is the signature of a war that functioned as a transition mechanism, not an open-ended conflict. The installation of Mojtaba Khamenei as Supreme Leader on March 8 is the clearest evidence that the structural current is flowing toward settlement, not escalation. The sequence is important. Pezeshkian delivered his address on March 7, publicly demonstrating civilian control over the military to an international audience. One day later, Mojtaba was formally announced. He was not struck by Israel or the US despite Israel explicitly declaring him a legitimate target. This was not luck. Trump read Pezeshkian's signal as credible evidence that the incoming Supreme Leader would inherit a pragmatist-constrained Iran rather than an IRGC-empowered hardline state. Defense Secretary Hegseth's language shifted within 24 hours from "unacceptable" to "set the terms of surrender," which is diplomatic shorthand for accepting the other side as a negotiating counterparty. The speed of that shift suggests the decision was pre-loaded. Trump was waiting for a credible signal, received it on March 7, and executed the posture change on March 9. Mojtaba is now positioned to play the role that Ayatollah Khomeini played in 1988 when he accepted the ceasefire with Iraq and called it drinking the poison chalice. Only a Supreme Leader with hardliner and IRGC credentials can accept terms without the deal being domestically delegitimized. The IRGC cannot reject a settlement signed by the leader they pressured the Assembly of Experts to install. The hardliner base cannot call it surrender when their own chosen Supreme Leader calls it sovereign strategy. The deal will be structurally identical regardless of how each side frames it. The framing is what makes it survivable for both domestic audiences. There is likely one more high-profile escalation before the ceasefire, and it will be theatre. The most probable scenario is a US strike on an Iranian nuclear facility, possibly involving special operations forces on the ground, designed to produce a single camera-ready moment that justifies ending the war from a position of total victory. The nuclear program is the stated reason for the conflict. The victory must match the justification. A dramatic strike with visible imagery or seized nuclear material gives the administration the one-sentence claim that every voter can understand: "We destroyed Iran's nuclear program." This is exit, not escalation. The strike targets the photograph, not the strategic outcome, because the strategic outcome has already been achieved through weeks of sustained air operations. The nuclear facility raid is the third-act climax of a story that needs a clean ending. Continuing the war after declaring definitive victory would undermine the victory itself, so the ceasefire follows within days. Oil will spike on the strike. It may push back toward $95 or briefly touch $100. It will not breach the $115 ceiling because the same policy architecture that enforced the ceiling on March 8 remains in place: strategic petroleum reserve releases, G7 coordination, and OPEC+ supply adjustments are all loaded and ready to activate. The spike will be absorbed. The ceasefire announcement will crash it back down. This normalization thesis breaks if Brent crude breaks above $115 and holds there, because that would mean the commodity ceiling has collapsed and markets believe the disruption is genuine and lasting. It breaks if Mojtaba's first institutional acts restore IRGC autonomous authority, because that would mean the pragmatist takeover was temporary deception rather than structural shift. It breaks if the US begins targeting Iranian leadership rather than infrastructure, because that would signal a move from degradation to regime change. And it breaks if no ceasefire framework materializes with evident progress while strike intensity continues to escalate, because that would mean the managed exit window has closed. I have said this before. Every player's dominant strategy now points toward ceasefire because the objectives that justified the conflict have been met and the remaining costs of fighting produce no additional strategic return.
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Eylon Levy
Eylon Levy@EylonALevy·
⚠️ We just got an extreme alert The Iranian regime just fired a missile at us. 50% chance it’s a cluster warhead like this, designed to be INDISCRIMINATE and inflict maximum damage
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Jake Shields
Jake Shields@jakeshieldsajj·
Palestine is the only Sunni Muslim country that isn't controlled by jews Will another Sunni leader take this opportunity to unite and fight the real enemy? If so who do you think it will be?
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The Kobeissi Letter
The Kobeissi Letter@KobeissiLetter·
BREAKING: The US Navy has refused near-daily requests from the shipping industry for military escorts through the Strait of Hormuz, per Reuters. Details include: 1. The US Navy says the risks of attacks is "too high" for now 2. The US Navy has held regular ⁠briefings with shipping and oil industry counterparts 3. During those briefings, the US Navy has said it is unable to provide escorts for the time being 4. Sources say that as of Tuesday's briefing, this risk assessment has not changed The Strait of Hormuz remains largely closed.
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Al Jazeera English
Al Jazeera English@AJEnglish·
BREAKING: Israel's far right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich says shrapnel tore through his son’s liver during an attack near the Lebanese border that wounded eight Israeli soldiers. 🔴 LIVE updates: aje.news/9oln1k
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Noah’s Ark 🚢
Noah’s Ark 🚢@NoahsArk1000·
This is probably how Mossad agents become Muslim commanders in ISIS and Al-Qaida. 😂
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