James Prime

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James Prime

James Prime

@GungomusPrime

Stand for the truth, for justice, for decency. They will fight you, and gaslight you. Denigrate and ridicule you. But success is yours.

London Katılım Ağustos 2017
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James Prime
James Prime@GungomusPrime·
Let me be clear for all the reprobates beating the #israeli #war drums - Despite my trolling (more to come!), I categorically condemn harming, targeting, kidnapping, etc of *any* civilians An innocent life is an innocent life; regardless colour, race, religion #Gaza_Now
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Morgoth
Morgoth@Morgoth_888·
Glenn always made the point that if the Zionists kept crying wolf over anti Semitism that it would eventually lose it's effect and people would no longer care either way about real anti Semitism.
Glenn Greenwald@ggreenwald

My entire life, the worst thing someone could be accused of was anti-Semitism. Nothing destroyed careers and reputations with greater certainty, speed or force. Now, nobody gives a shit. It's been so cynically weaponized to shield Israel that Zionists have utter trivialized it.

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Middle East Eye
Middle East Eye@MiddleEastEye·
Iranian officials say Israel carried out some of the drone strikes on Gulf energy sites Sources say that some of the attacks, namely on oil refineries, ports and civilian targets, were carried out by Israel to provoke Gulf states into entering war
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James Prime
James Prime@GungomusPrime·
@cpaschyn Have they announced that commercial flights are starting again?
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Christina Paschyn 🇺🇦
Can someone explain how the UAE is able to ensure passenger flight safety? What are the special flights exactly and will fighter jets be accompanying them…or something?
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Aaron Bastani
Aaron Bastani@AaronBastani·
Let’s get this straight. Dubai & Qatar operate as tax havens, where British nationals can go & defund the British state. Okay. But now the rest of us, back in Britain, will pay to protect these same places? It’s like a man fighting to protect a guy shagging his wife.
Steven Swinford@Steven_Swinford

BREAKING Keir Starmer has given the US the green light to mount 'defensive' airstrikes against targets in Iran from Diego Garcia and RAF Fairford Starmer is delineating between the initial, offensive attacks by the US and Israel - which the UK did not support after deciding doing so would be unlawful - and 'defensive' action to stop wave after wave of drone and missile strikes across the Middle East 'Our partners in the Gulf have asked us to do more to defend them. And it’s my duty to protect British lives. 'We have British jets in the air as part of coordinated defensive operations which have already successfully intercepted Iranian strikes. 'But the only way to stop the threat is to destroy the missiles at source – in their storage depots or the launchers which are used to fire the missiles. 'The US has requested permission to use British bases for that specific and limited defensive purpose. 'We have taken the decision to accept this request to prevent Iran firing missiles across the region, killing innocent civilians, putting British lives at risk and hitting countries that have not been involved 'The basis of our decision is the collective self-defence of longstanding friends and allies, and protecting British lives. This is in line with international law and we are publishing a summary of our legal advice'

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Evan
Evan@EvanWritesOnX·
Read this, retweet.
Evan@EvanWritesOnX

This is a war that was agreed upon to avoid a REAL war. Start thinking for yourselves. Just two days ago, Oman's Foreign Minister stood in front of cameras in Washington and said peace was "within reach." Iran had agreed; for the first time, to zero stockpiling of enriched uranium. Technical talks were scheduled for Vienna next week. The Omani FM was giving a thumbs-up in Geneva on Wednesday. By Saturday morning, Tehran was on fire. If you're watching this unfold and thinking the diplomacy failed, you're reading the surface. The diplomacy succeeded. What you're watching now is the invoice. On February 26, Iran and the US concluded their most substantive indirect talks to date. Iran offered to suspend enrichment, dilute its stockpile under IAEA supervision, and join an Arab-Iranian nuclear consortium. Oman's FM described the breakthrough as unprecedented. Ali Shamkhani; senior adviser to Khamenei himself, wrote publicly that an "immediate agreement is within reach" and that Araghchi had "sufficient support and authority for this deal." Forty-eight hours later, the US and Israel launched Operation Shield of Judah. The conventional read is that Trump lost patience, that diplomacy collapsed, that hawks won. That read is wrong. It misses the structural reality; the strikes are the diplomacy. They are the enforcement mechanism for a deal whose terms were already being set in Geneva. Ask yourself a simple question. Why would the US and Israel attack at the exact moment Iran was offering its largest concessions in forty-seven years? Because those concessions need cover. Iran's leadership cannot walk into a deal that dismantles its nuclear leverage, rolls back its missile program, and concedes on regional proxies while looking like it surrendered to American pressure. Khamenei cannot sell capitulation to the IRGC hardliners, the Basij networks, and the ideological apparatus that has sustained the Islamic Republic for nearly five decades. The regime needs an attack to justify the concession. It needs to be able to say: we were struck, we struck back, and then we chose peace from a position of defiance; not weakness. This is not speculation. Look at the Iranian response. Tehran fired missiles at US bases across the Gulf; Bahrain, Qatar, Kuwait, UAE, Jordan. The IRGC issued maximalist statements about "crushing responses" and "relentless operations." The rhetoric is wall-to-wall defiance. But look at what was actually hit. Qatar's defense ministry confirmed all missiles were intercepted. Kuwait intercepted everything at Ali al-Salem. The UAE reported one casualty in Abu Dhabi from debris. Saudi Arabia; notably was not targeted by Iran at all, despite Riyadh being the most significant US partner in the region. Iran struck at every country hosting US assets. It struck at none of the assets that would trigger an uncontrollable escalation. It avoided Saudi oil infrastructure entirely; the one target that would have genuinely destabilized global markets and forced a total war posture from Washington. The Strait of Hormuz remains open. Oil closed Friday at $72.87, barely a 3% move on a day the world was told war had begun. Compare this to what a real Iranian war posture looks like. Iran has the capability to do far worse. It chose not to. What you're seeing is not Iran's war capacity. It's Iran's negotiating choreography. Here's what should tell you everything: the Gulf states denied the US use of their airspace for the strikes on Iran. Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, Kuwait; they all publicly refused. They lobbied Washington for weeks not to attack. MBS personally ruled it out. And then the strikes happened anyway. And then Iran hit their territories. If the Gulf states were genuinely blindsided, you'd expect emergency summits, defensive mobilizations, and a fracture in the US-GCC relationship. Instead, you got carefully worded condemnations, calls for dialogue, and crucially, Saudi Arabia immediately offering to "place all its capabilities at the disposal" of affected states. Riyadh condemned Iran's strikes while simultaneously urging Washington "not to get sucked in further." That is not the language of a shocked ally. That is the language of a state managing a transition it was briefed on. The GCC's posture throughout this crisis has been singular: prevent real war while allowing the theatre to run its course. They denied airspace to signal to Iran that they were not participants in the aggression. They absorbed Iran's retaliatory strikes to give Tehran its face-saving moment. And they immediately pivoted to de-escalation language because the next phase, the deal phase, requires them as brokers, not combatants. Oman was spared entirely. The mediator was left untouched. That is not an accident of targeting. That is a signal that the diplomatic channel remains open. By design. Iran is in the final stages of a structural pivot that has been underway since Qassem Soleimani's assassination in 2020. The proxy architecture; Hezbollah, Hamas, the Houthis, Iraqi PMF, has been systematically degraded. Not by accident, and not purely by external force. The degradation has been permitted. Hezbollah was functionally decapitated in 2024. Hamas's leadership was eliminated. The Houthi file has been separated. Iraqi militias are being absorbed into state structures or sidelined. The "Axis of Resistance" is not collapsing; it is being retired. Pezeshkian's presidency is not a coincidence. He represents the force within the Iranian system that emerged from the recognition that BRICS membership, GCC normalization, and economic survival require shedding the proxy portfolio. Iran's entry into BRICS, the Chinese-brokered Saudi-Iran rapprochement of 2023, and the Omani-mediated nuclear track are all components of the same trajectory: Iran exchanging regional militancy for economic integration. Khamenei approved this trajectory. Shamkhani's public statement; that Araghchi has "sufficient support and authority", is the clearest signal possible that the Supreme Leader has sanctioned the pivot. The hardliner establishment is being managed, not consulted. The IRGC's maximalist rhetoric today is the sound of an institution being given its last public performance before the script changes. The strikes allow this transition to happen without internal collapse. Iran can now frame any deal as a response to aggression rather than a capitulation to pressure. The regime survives. The proxies fade. The nuclear file closes. And Iran enters the regional economic order as a participant rather than a pariah. Netanyahu called the strikes an effort to remove an "existential threat" and projected that the joint operation would "create the conditions for the brave Iranian people to take their fate into their own hands." That is not a military objective. That is a political narrative. Israel's coalition has been on life support for months. The domestic political landscape is fractured. Netanyahu needs a "victory", not a military one, but a narrative one. Strikes on Iran give him the ability to claim he neutralized the nuclear threat, defended the homeland, and stood shoulder-to-shoulder with the US in a historic operation. The actual military impact is secondary. Iran's nuclear program was already "degraded" by the June 2025 12 day war strikes. The sites at Natanz, Fordow, and Isfahan were hit then. Then the media came out saying their nuclear facilities are intact. Today's strikes are a second pass on targets that were already compromised. The marginal military gain is modest. The political gain is enormous. Netanyahu gets his exit narrative. Whether he survives politically or not, he will leave claiming he "saved Israel from Iran's nukes." The real outcome, Israel's gradual integration into a GCC-brokered regional architecture where its freedom of unilateral action is constrained, will be managed by his successors. Both regimes, the Islamic Republic and the current Israeli government, are heading toward structural transitions. The strikes provide both with the domestic cover to make those transitions without admitting what they actually are: concessions. The June 2025 war lasted twelve days. This round will likely be shorter. The military objectives are limited, and the political objectives are already being achieved. A return to negotiations. The Vienna technical talks were scheduled for next week before the strikes. They will resume, possibly in a different format, once the shooting stops. The framework that was being discussed in Geneva does not disappear because missiles were fired. The missiles are part of the framework. GCC-mediated de-escalation. Saudi Arabia and Oman will emerge as the primary diplomatic brokers. Riyadh's immediate offer to support affected states while urging restraint positions it as the indispensable mediator. This is by design. OPEC+ production adjustments. The March 1 OPEC+ meeting was already scheduled to discuss increased output. Gulf producers have been pre-positioning supply to cover any disruption. Saudi Arabia and UAE were already boosting production. The oil market has been prepared for this. The entire point of this exercise, from Iran's perspective, is sanctions relief and economic integration. Once the dust settles and the ceasefire holds, expect a deal framework that includes phased sanctions relief in exchange for permanent nuclear constraints, missile programme limitations, and formalized proxy rollback. Despite Trump's rhetoric about "eliminating threats from the Iranian regime," the actual US posture does not support regime change. There are no ground forces. There is no occupation plan. The force structure is air and sea, designed for strikes, not governance. The objective is behavioral change and a deal, not the collapse of the Islamic Republic. What you're witnessing is not the failure of diplomacy. It's the most resource-efficient way to achieve what diplomacy alone cannot: a simultaneous restructuring of both the Iranian and Israeli strategic postures, managed under the umbrella of a US-GCC brokered regional order. The nuclear standoff that has defined the Middle East for thirty years is being resolved, not through a clean handshake at a summit, but through the controlled application of force that gives every actor the domestic cover they need to make concessions they've already agreed to in principle. Iran gets to shed its proxy liabilities and nuclear isolation under the banner of defiance. Israel gets to claim a historic security victory as its political system resets. The GCC gets the stable, de-militarized, de-nuclearized neighborhood is needs for Vision 2030 and beyond. The US gets a deal it can sell as strength. And the populations of every country involved get the one thing that was never going to be delivered by ideology or militancy: a path to normalization and economic integration. This is a war designed to prevent a real war. It is loud, dramatic, and terrifying on television. It is also bounded, choreographed, structurally purposeful with pre-agreed collateral. The theatre ends when the deal is signed. And the deal was already being written in Geneva.

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Josh Wood
Josh Wood@J_K_Wood·
After this moment, these men will statistically earn more, live longer, nearly halve their substance use, commit far less crime, and have their brains literally rewired for protection. Men need children. Children need fathers. Society needs both.
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₩₳Ɽ ₱₳₮Ⱨ
₩₳Ɽ ₱₳₮Ⱨ@WarPath2pt0·
Turns out I don't have ADHD--i just need everything explained to me via 2000s emo music
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Demis Hassabis
Demis Hassabis@demishassabis·
Thrilled to launch Project Genie, an experimental prototype of the world's most advanced world model. Create entire playable worlds to explore in real-time just from a simple text prompt - kind of mindblowing really! Available to Ultra subs in the US for now - have fun exploring!
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Stop The Bollocks with Mirabel
Stop The Bollocks with Mirabel@MirabelTweets1·
Tommy Robinson isn’t a patriot His rise to fame isn’t organic He’s a US /Israeli asset employed to cause civil unrest & a race war in the UK Watch this by @SangitaMyska , a journalist with principles who was ingloriously sacked by LBC for speaking truth to power Pls share
Sangita Myska@SangitaMyska

📣 I’ve been investigating Tommy Robinson and the foreign billionaires that fund him. Part 1: ‘Robinson and the pro-Israel US Conservatives’ FULL VIDEO on YouTube - youtu.be/9Vqi6nmDPD0?si… Part 2: Robinson and Musk is COMING SOON! Trailer for Pt 1 below 👇🏽 Please share!

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Mukhtar
Mukhtar@I_amMukhtar·
@Nigel_Farage He signed it off.
Mukhtar tweet media
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James Prime
James Prime@GungomusPrime·
@SimonDixonTwitt US has many resources in region, but I get the point - if new bombers are coming in etc, then thats escalatory Just seems to lean against the “pulling back” thesis? Surely after what happening Doha last year, none of the GCC states want to MORE US military, if Iran kicks off?
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Simon Dixon
Simon Dixon@SimonDixonTwitt·
@GungomusPrime The entire region shedding all proxies one by one. “12 Day Theatre” seems likely as US is deploying resources into the region. Either way the outcome will be the same.
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Simon Dixon
Simon Dixon@SimonDixonTwitt·
UAE and Saudi Arabia are playing good cop, bad cop. Saudi Arabia unifies the Turkey–Pakistan defence pact. The UAE unifies with India. The U.S. no longer needs Israel to destabilise the region. Regional powers secure Palestine. The U.S. gradually exits military operations in the Middle East after the next 12-day theatre between Iran, Israel, and the U.S. Enjoy the theatre. We’ve never seen anything like this before.
South Asia Index@SouthAsiaIndex

Just IN: UAE wants to sign a defence pact with India as a retaliation against Saudi defence deal with Pakistan. — Amid heightened tensions between UAE & Saudi Arabia, UAE is paranoid & wants to "take up all options." — UAE believes that Saudi Arabia has "sidelined" it in the Gulf & is trying to rally other Islamic countries against it. — Through its defence pact with India, UAE wants to assets it still has 'allies' in the region and is not "isolated".

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James Prime
James Prime@GungomusPrime·
Orders of magnitude more
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