SEASONS
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In an interview with Middle East Eye’s editor-in-chief, David Hearst, former Saudi Shura Council member Ahmed Altuwaijri accused Abu Dhabi of throwing itself “into the arms of Zionism” and acting as “Israel’s Trojan horse in the Arab world.” He claimed this move is aimed at undermining Riyadh and positioning Abu Dhabi as the dominant power in the region.
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@RafikAbdessalem America 🇺🇸 has seen the humiliation of the century
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SEASONS retweetledi

This was never a difficult lesson to discern, only one willfully ignored. The signs were not subtle; they were etched plainly, like an omen too inconvenient to acknowledge. What unfolded was not some masterstroke of strategic brilliance from Washington, but rather a familiar indulgence in hubris, the perennial belief that power, by virtue of its scale, confers understanding.
It does not.
Because if war were a university and make no mistake, it is, then Iran would be that one course whispered about in corridors, spoken of with a mixture of respect and quiet dread. The one even the most decorated strategists approach with caution. Not because it dazzles, but because it endures. Because it does not behave.
You see, the foundational error was almost predictable. The assumption, elegant in theory, disastrous in practice, that by severing the head, the body would collapse. A notion reportedly entertained in circles aligned with Netanyahu, built on the premise that eliminating key pillars of leadership in Tehran, those tethered to the enduring ideological shadow of Khomeini would trigger an internal fracture, a cascading implosion emanating from Tehran.
A seductive theory.
But Iran had already read that book, cover to cover.
And that is why Iran was the toughest class in War School.
They observed the swift unraveling of centralized regimes elsewhere and arrived at a conclusion both simple and devastating: systems that rely on singular nodes of command are systems designed to fail under pressure. So they built something else entirely. Something far less elegant, far more resilient.
A doctrine not of dominance, but of dispersion.
A military architecture that refuses the very premise of decapitation. Authority diffused into a constellation of autonomous units, each with its brain, capable of independent action, each entrusted with intent rather than instruction. A battlefield that does not go silent when leadership is removed, but instead fractures into a thousand persistent echoes, each one continuing the fight with unnerving precision.
This is not chaos. This is design.
It is what makes Iran such an unforgiving study in the discipline of war. You cannot outmaneuver what does not present a single center. You cannot paralyze what has already anticipated paralysis. You cannot end a war when the very structure of your adversary ensures it can continue without permission, without coordination, without pause.
And so, the strategy of targeted elimination, so often effective elsewhere, finds itself strangely impotent here. Because in a decentralized doctrine, removing leadership does not conclude the conflict. On the contrary, it ensures its persistence. It strips away the very mechanisms through which cessation might one day be negotiated.
But even this, as intricate and formidable as it is, was not the decisive miscalculation.
No, the true oversight was far more human.
The people of Iran.
There exists within the human spirit an irreducible sensitivity to injustice. It cannot be negotiated, cannot be engineered away. You may win the argument on paper, dominate the narrative in press briefings, even convince yourself of your moral posture but the moment your actions betray your words, the illusion collapses.
You cannot promise liberation while dismantling a nation’s infrastructure. You cannot speak of freedom while your methods resemble subjugation. The contradiction is not lost on those who must live beneath it.
And when that realization takes hold, something remarkable happens.
They do not rise for you. They resist you.
What was anticipated as internal dissent transforms into collective defiance. What was meant to fracture instead consolidates. The very population you presumed would welcome intervention becomes the quiet backbone of resistance, not out of blind allegiance, but out of a refusal to exchange one form of domination for another.
And this is where Iran’s doctrine reveals its final, most understated brilliance

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@Ishmaelthehost Kenya is better with that cockroach in the middle, well designed
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@KakwenzaRukira Is it fair to say Amen/Amina after mentioning "Nyabingi" in your post
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Pope Leo XIV didn’t name anyone, yet everyone knows exactly who he meant.
#RightSideOfHistory
#StandWithIran
#DefendIran

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@Innocent11000 @KagutaMuseveni @JanetMuseveni @ucu @mkainerugaba @pkamwine @k_owente @KomugishaPeace That 29th April error is too laud
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A blessed Palm Sunday 🙏
H.E. Yoweri Kaguta Museveni @KagutaMuseveni and Maama Janet Kataaha Museveni @JanetMuseveni earlier today 29th April 2026 attended Palm Sunday service at Uganda Christian University (UCU) @ucu, joining their daughter Patience Rwabwogo in worship. A moment of faith, family, and thanksgiving.
#PalmSunday #BlessedSunday #Faith #Uganda #Museveni #JanetMuseveni #TrendingNow #Viral #ForYou #FYP #Christianity #Church #Leadership #Family #Africa #Love
@pkamwine
@MKarekye
@BalaamBarugahar
@DaudiKabanda
@kamukamafredie
@

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@chsandhilaa Pressure is killing Trump anything that gives him relief he welcomes it with double hands, long live @IranArabic_ir #Iran
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Let me ask the tweeps on the street to be the judge of this.😁
Bettie the Nature Lover💚@BettieAmooti
@drkasenene Does this qualify to be a health meal ?
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