DimMet

1.2K posts

DimMet

DimMet

@DimiMet

Katılım Ocak 2013
56 Takip Edilen25 Takipçiler
خبرگزاری فارس
خبرگزاری فارس@FarsNews_Agency·
🔴 یک منبع آگاه نظامی: آتش‌سوزی در امارات نتیجه ماجراجویی ارتش آمریکا بود به دنبال انفجار و آتش‌سوزی گسترده در تاسیسات نفتی بندر فُجیره و انتساب آن به نیروهای مسلح جمهوری اسلامی ایران یک مقام آگاه نظامی گفت: جمهوری اسلامی هیچ برنامۀ از پیش طراحی‌شده‌ای برای ۱/۳
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DimMet
DimMet@DimiMet·
@RKelanic First of all: the Strait of Hormuz has been shut down. But IF .. IF any vessels went trough, then only after paying the fees .. in Chinese Yuan😋
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Rosemary Kelanic
Rosemary Kelanic@RKelanic·
It's good news that 2 U.S.-flagged merchant vessels safely exited through Hormuz today. It certainly bolsters the U.S. Navy's case that transiting the strait is less dangerous than it seems. Yet it does not mean other commercial vessels will follow suit. These 2 ships are closely tied to the U.S. military and may not represent a true test of how average merchants will perceive the risk of transiting Hormuz. We don't know yet which U.S. vessels exited today, but we do know that all 5 U.S.-flagged ships trapped in the Persian Gulf participate in U.S. Maritime Security Program or the Tanker Security Program. In fact, at least two of the ships had U.S. Merchant Marine Academy cadets on them, according to reporting from @anna_c_kramer of @NOTUSreports As MSP/TSP participants, the vessels receive a $6 million annual stipend from the U.S. government in exchange for a pledge to remain U.S. flagged and to be available at DoW's request for military logistical support in times of emergency. It remains to be seen whether the roughly 795 trapped ships that aren't on the U.S. government payroll feel safe enough to attempt Hormuz transit. Also let's not forget that it was a major U.S. policy failure -- and a break from past practice -- for 5 U.S. military-adjacent commercial vessels to become trapped in the Persian Gulf by their own government's decision to launch a war without evacuating them first. washingtonpost.com/world/2026/05/…
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DimMet@DimiMet·
@ThePowerAudit It's called Chess. Move away from your opponent's desired next move
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Chris Rollins
Chris Rollins@ThePowerAudit·
Al Jazeera reporting American destroyers are actively operating around the Strait of Hormuz and have crossed into Gulf waters without being attacked. If that is true, the IRGC responded to the US crossing their stated red line not by attacking US ships but by attacking the UAE. Iran threatened that any foreign armed force entering the Strait would be targeted. The US Navy entered. Iran targeted the coalition partner instead. IRGC does claim they have attacked the US ships and the US has denied this. I was also told no US ships would move in by a lot of "experts" yesterday
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DimMet
DimMet@DimiMet·
@WhiteHouse Literally a circus full of clowns 🤡🎪
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The White House
The White House@WhiteHouse·
In a galaxy that demands strength - America stands ready. This is the way. May the 4th be with you.
The White House tweet media
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Trita Parsi
Trita Parsi@tparsi·
Hearing that Iran has started striking the UAE, presumably as a result of Trump's escalation in the Strait of Hormuz
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U.S. Central Command
U.S. Navy guided-missile destroyers are currently operating in the Arabian Gulf after transiting the Strait of Hormuz in support of Project Freedom. American forces are actively assisting efforts to restore transit for commercial shipping. As a first step, 2 U.S.-flagged merchant vessels have successfully transited through the Strait of Hormuz and are safely headed on their journey.
U.S. Central Command tweet media
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DimMet
DimMet@DimiMet·
@BowesChay over the Strait of Hormuz 🤣🤣 200miles away
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Chay Bowes
Chay Bowes@BowesChay·
CENTCOM Commander Adm. Brad Cooper flew an Apache helicopter over the Strait of Hormuz ahead of the US launching Project Freedom.
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DimMet
DimMet@DimiMet·
@dimitrisp997 @chadeganipour @CENTCOM Μαλακιες λες, αλα νταξ. The International Maritime Organization (IMO) mandates AIS carriage for all passenger ships, all cargo ships of 300+ gross tonnage (GT) on international voyages. That's common sense and widely known. Now who is the dumb fuck.
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DimMet@DimiMet·
@CENTCOM ehh..after they paid fees.. in Chinese Yuan 🤣🤣
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Glenn Diesen
Glenn Diesen@Glenn_Diesen·
Two missiles hit a US warship after it ignored Iran's warnings.
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DimMet@DimiMet·
@sammyadjeifi stop takin expired drugs. don't you see I am enjoying it?
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DefenceGeek 🇬🇧
DefenceGeek 🇬🇧@DefenceGeek·
So... - US warships go in to escort the commercial ships out - IRGC (rogue units or the whole force) decide to start shooting - US warships defend themselves and commercial ships, potentially targeting IRGC boats - Iran responds by launching UAVs at easier targets (e.g. ports, airbases again, etc.) - Ceasefire de-facto falls apart - #OperationEpicFury continues...
OSINTtechnical@Osinttechnical

Trump says that the US will begin escorting ships out of the Persian Gulf, evacuating them from a multi-month internment caused by the Iran war. He adds that any interference will be responded to forcefully.

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Glenn Diesen
Glenn Diesen@Glenn_Diesen·
The US will start opening the Strait of Hormuz today. Disaster awaits as the US doubles down of failure.
Glenn Diesen tweet media
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Lindsey Graham
Lindsey Graham@LindseyGrahamSC·
Totally agree with President Trump’s decision to launch Project Freedom, whose purpose is to restore freedom of navigation for the Strait of Hormuz, a vital passageway for the world economy that has been locked down by Iranian terrorism. It is clear to me that Iran is playing games through negotiations as their last offer to end the conflict was absurd. Again, I hope this conflict can end diplomatically, but it is now time to regain freedom of navigation and forcefully respond to Iran if they insist on terrorizing the world. Enough with this terrorist regime’s behavior.
Rapid Response 47@RapidResponse47

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Bundeskanzler Friedrich Merz
The United States is and will remain Germany‘s most important partner in the North Atlantic Alliance. We share a common goal: Iran must not be allowed to acquire nuclear weapons.
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DimMet
DimMet@DimiMet·
@FoxNews Yet another Project added to Epic Fail. This time it WILL work 🤣🤣
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Fox News
Fox News@FoxNews·
BREAKING: President Trump said the United States will begin to help free neutral foreign ships locked up in the Strait of Hormuz. He called the operation "Project Freedom" and said it will begin Monday morning.
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₦₳V𝚜𝚝é𝚟𝚊 🇷🇺 ᴢ
Fars: The proposed Iranian response does not include accepting a halt to enrichment for 15 years or the liberation of the Strait of Hormuz prior to reaching a final agreement.
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Danny (Dennis) Citrinowicz ,داني سيترينوفيتش
After 39 Days of War, Iran Thinks It’s Winning Reading Iran’s latest proposal, one conclusion is hard to avoid: after 39 days of war, Tehran believes it has the upper hand. This is not a document from a regime under pressure or seeking an exit. It is a proposal from a government that sees the war as an opportunity to reshape the strategic landscape in its favor. Iran is not just asking for an end to hostilities, it is demanding guarantees against future attacks, along with compensation and a structured mechanism to secure it, rooted in its leverage over the Strait of Hormuz. That strait, it is worth recalling, was open before the war began. Even more troubling is what the proposal does not prioritize. The nuclear issue, ostensibly a central justification for the conflict, is largely deferred. A comparison between Iran’s current terms and its prewar proposal reveals minimal substantive differences, aside from a willingness to extend the duration of a nuclear freeze. Meanwhile, the most effective tool of pressure on Tehran, the maritime blockade, is expected to be lifted before serious nuclear negotiations even begin. This puts Washington in a bind. If the administration accepts the proposal, it will face an immediate and uncomfortable question: what was the war for? The likely outcome would be a stronger Iranian regime, newly enriched by sanctions relief, and a nuclear framework that closely resembles earlier proposals, essentially a return to the familiar formula of the #JCPOA -constraints in exchange for economic benefits. But rejecting the proposal offers no easy alternative. It raises a different question: can additional military pressure realistically force Iran into a more favorable position? At this stage, the answer appears extremely doubtful. One more point worth noting: has anyone heard recently about meaningful restrictions on Iran’s missile program or its network of proxies? There’s a simple reason for that is there aren’t any. And there likely won’t be, at least not if the United States is seeking a diplomatic resolution. In practice, this means that even under a potential agreement, some of Iran’s most consequential sources of power like its missile capabilities and regional proxy network, would remain largely untouched. That reality only reinforces the broader concern: the possible emerging framework does little to fundamentally alter Iran’s strategic posture. The result is a strategic dilemma with no clear off-ramp. Either the United States moves toward an arrangement that largely reflects Iran’s terms, or it continues escalating in ways that are unlikely to change Tehran’s calculus but are almost certain to deepen global economic instability. Iran’s proposal sends a clear message: it does not intend to concede. The harder question is what Washington intends to do about it. #IranWar
Joumanna Nasr Bercetche@JoumannaTV

NEW: Aljazeera reporting more info around Phase 2 and Phase 3 of Iran’s revised proposal ⬇️ (Phase 1 was centred around the re-opening of the strait) 🚩The 3.67% enrichment limit was…. the JCPOA limit

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