Henrygprod

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Henrygprod

Henrygprod

@HENRYGPROD

Katılım Eylül 2008
93 Takip Edilen35 Takipçiler
Eric Daugherty
Eric Daugherty@EricLDaugh·
🚨 NOW: President Trump just posted that DNI Tulsi Gabbard declassified DAMNING Deep State files proving Trump's 2019 Ukraine-related impeachment was knowingly FALSE by investigators An attempted COUP! And they HID these files. LEE ZELDIN: "Impeachment was a bullsh*t show trial of epic proportion to try to take out the duly elected President of the United States." Keep exposing the deep state @TulsiGabbard 🔥
Eric Daugherty tweet mediaEric Daugherty tweet media
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Henrygprod
Henrygprod@HENRYGPROD·
@rooteruditorum @prestonstew_ Bad take. Other countries let this get out of hand with inaction. Yet blame the ones who take action to fix a problem. Stop thinking short term pain and think long term value.
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Minerva
Minerva@rooteruditorum·
@prestonstew_ Genuinely insane take. America (and Israel) were already responsible for all of this, and now they will actively be the ones blocking energy supplies to the world
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Preston Stewart
Preston Stewart@prestonstew_·
"Trump is turning Iran’s strategy to leverage the strait completely on its head. He has also utterly embarrassed his critics, who were praising Iran’s brilliance in leveraging control of the strait to deliver Trump a strategic defeat." In a new piece, @marcthiessen walks through how the US blockade could bring about an end to the war with Iran.
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Open Source Intel
Open Source Intel@Osint613·
Tucker Carlson on President Trump: “I’ve always liked the man, I feel sorry for him, as I do for all slaves, he is not free at all…” BBC: “So, is he a slave to Benjamin Netanyahu?” Tucker: “You can summerize it that way and you wouldn’t be totally inaccurate”
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Henrygprod
Henrygprod@HENRYGPROD·
@ronaldlirumo @DD_Geopolitics You’re not very smart. Why would the administration share plans for the future for enemy countries to know. Focus on clean water
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DD Geopolitics
DD Geopolitics@DD_Geopolitics·
🇺🇸🇮🇷 BREAKING! The US Navy will start a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz.
DD Geopolitics tweet media
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Henrygprod
Henrygprod@HENRYGPROD·
@ronaldlirumo @DD_Geopolitics Well you are if you think he saw something a few hours ago and said “let me copy that articles advice” Again this was the plan about a week ago and he looked for an article to show his plans
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Ronald Lirumo
Ronald Lirumo@ronaldlirumo·
@DD_Geopolitics Basically Trump is going to impose a secondary blockade outside of the Strait for all vessels that negotiate and get passage from Iran. He is literally going to ensure that zero oil and gas pass through the strait An idea he got from an opinion piece published just yesterday
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Henrygprod
Henrygprod@HENRYGPROD·
@lokeshwarajones @DD_Geopolitics The U.S. would not be hurt as much as you think. Countries will adapt very soon if that was the case and be forced to buy American. Oh no what would we do without AI? The AI bubble has already burst and we are fine. I’ll just buy more stocks and build up.
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DD Geopolitics
DD Geopolitics@DD_Geopolitics·
🇺🇸 Trump is sharing articles floating a US naval blockade of Iran, the "Venezuela playbook," after talks fail. Here's what that would actually look like. The idea is the US Navy takes control of the Strait of Hormuz and Kharg Island strangling Iran's economy while cutting China and India off from their key oil source simultaneously. The problem: Iran is not Venezuela. 🔸 The strait is only 33km wide at its narrowest point, every ship that enters is within range of Iran's entire coastal arsenal 🔸 Iran's Khalij Fars anti-ship ballistic missiles have a 300km range and are designed specifically to hit moving ships at sea 🔸 Noor and Qader cruise missiles, fired from mobile launchers hidden in coastal caves, cover the entire strait from the Iranian shoreline 🔸 Iran has an estimated 5,000-6,000 naval mines — including influence mines that sit on the seabed and are nearly impossible to detect 🔸 IRGC fast attack swarm boats are designed specifically to overwhelm US destroyers in confined waters, a classified DoD war game found the US lost 16 major warships including a carrier to Iranian swarm tactics 🔸 Iran controls three fortified island outposts (Larak, Qeshm and Abu Musa) sitting directly on the shipping lanes, each with underground bunkers and missile batteries Iran doesn't even need to win a naval battle, FPRI experts note Iran is running an "insurance blockade," it only needs to strike occasionally to make insurance uneconomical for commercial shipping. That alone shuts the strait down. Mine clearance in a contested environment takes a minimum of 4 weeks, and the US has decommissioned most of its dedicated minesweepers in CENTCOM. In 1991 it took 40 ships four months to clear Iraqi minefields in a permissive environment. Meanwhile the USS Gerald R. Ford, cited in the article as leading the blockade, is currently in Split, Croatia being repaired after Iranian strikes. The USS George H.W. Bush is en route as replacement. Trump may be out-blockaded before the blockade even starts.
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Henrygprod
Henrygprod@HENRYGPROD·
@lokeshwarajones @DD_Geopolitics I wasn’t making a point. Bomb Iran oilfields and be done with it. U.S. doesn’t use the Straight of Hormuz and will be just fine longterm
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𓃰 and lo 𓆃
𓃰 and lo 𓆃@lokeshwarajones·
@HENRYGPROD @DD_Geopolitics iran is quite content to let vessels pass after they pay a toll, just like western countries do in other narrow passageways. they closed the strait to western traffic after the US and israel performed a big terrorist attack against them & started a war. your point remains unmade.
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𓃰 and lo 𓆃
𓃰 and lo 𓆃@lokeshwarajones·
@HENRYGPROD @DD_Geopolitics "if we are going to suffer the consequences of our disastrous war of choice everyone else in the world is too, we will make sure of it with a blocade" lol be serious
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Henrygprod
Henrygprod@HENRYGPROD·
@citrinowicz Just blow out Iran oilfields and have other countries buy from US. Short term pain but long term gain
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Danny (Dennis) Citrinowicz ,داني سيترينوفيتش
The U.S. Faces a Strategic Deadlock with Iran The failure of the recent talks in #Islamabadtalks drives from the fact that Iran did not arrive at the negotiating table weakened or desperate. On the contrary, Tehran came with a sense of resilience, and even advantage and behaved accordingly. For weeks, the U.S. policy appears to have been guided by the assumption that sustained kinetic pressure had eroded Iran’s position enough to force meaningful concessions, particularly on uranium enrichment and freedom of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz. But negotiations are not shaped by objective reality alone, they are driven by perception. And Iran’s perception is fundamentally different. From Tehran’s perspective, it has withstood pressure, absorbed blows, and demonstrated its capacity to retaliate across multiple arenas. That is not the mindset of a regime preparing to compromise. This gap between American expectations and Iranian self-perception now lies at the heart of a growing strategic deadlock. The options facing Washington are all "problematic": A. Renewed negotiations may simply reproduce the same dynamics, with Iran unwilling to concede and the U.S. unwilling to settle for less. B. Ending the confrontation without an agreement risks signaling weakness and undermining deterrence. Escalation, meanwhile, carries the most significant risks of all. C. A return to high-intensity conflict is unlikely to produce decisive results. While strikes on Iranian infrastructure, or even more ambitious military moves, could impose real costs on the regime, they would almost certainly trigger a broader response. Iran has both the capability and the willingness to expand the conflict horizontally, targeting U.S. interests, Israel, and regional partners. The result would not be a quick resolution, but a wider war with direct implications for global energy markets and economic stability. In other words, military escalation may satisfy the desire to reassert leverage, but it is unlikely to deliver a strategic breakthrough. This leaves Washington with a difficult but unavoidable conclusion: the burden of recalibrating strategy rests primarily on the United States. That does not mean conceding to Iranian demands. But it does require a more sober assessment of what pressure alone can achieve, and a clearer understanding of the risks embedded in escalation. The alternative is to continue operating under an illusion of leverage, one that recent events have already begun to expose. Complicating matters further are the mounting political and strategic constraints facing Washington. With a high-stakes meeting between President Trump and China’s Xi Jinping on the horizon, a global spotlight event like the Soccer World Cup approaching, and midterm elections looming, the U.S. has limited appetite, and even less time, for a prolonged military campaign. Large-scale options such as a ground invasion would require months to execute and sustain, with no guarantee of decisive results. Even extensive strikes on Iranian infrastructure, while painful, are unlikely to deliver a knockout blow. Instead, they risk entrenching the conflict and inviting retaliation across multiple fronts. Taken together, these constraints underscore a deeper reality: the United States is not just facing a tactical dilemma, but a strategic entanglement, one in which its military options are costly, its diplomatic leverage is limited, and time is increasingly working against it. Meanwhile, Iran remains defiant. The regime shows no indication that it is prepared to yield, certainly not under pressure, and not at this stage. Strategy deadlock. #IranWar
Danny (Dennis) Citrinowicz ,داني سيترينوفيتش@citrinowicz

I hope those advising the U.S. President are making the following points clear: 1. Iran sees itself as having achieved a significant strategic gain. From its perspective, if its terms are not met, there will be no meeting in Islamabad, even at the cost of renewed escalation. 2. Iran is unlikely to reopen the straits without a full ceasefire, which it believes was promised, even under pressure or threats. 3. Tehran has no intention of offering new concessions beyond what has already been discussed with the U.S. It views itself as negotiating from a position of strength, so why concede more? 4. The “Axis of Resistance” operates as an interconnected system. As long as fighting continues in Lebanon, Shiite militias in Iraq and potentially the Houthis, are likely to remain engaged. Iran does not see itself as having been defeated. It did not seek these negotiations, and it is unrealistic to expect concessions at the table if, in its own assessment, it has not conceded on the battlefield.

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OSINTdefender
OSINTdefender@sentdefender·
In the ongoing back and forth between Iranian and U.S. decision-makers over the terms of the ceasefire and future negotiations frameworks, U.S. President Donald J. Trump has claimed that Iran holds no cards in the negotiations, despite Iran actively holding the Strait of Hormuz hostage.
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Faytuks Network
Faytuks Network@FaytuksNetwork·
Israel has refused to allow France to take part in upcoming direct talks with Lebanon in Washington next week, two sources tell The Jerusalem Post.
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Election Wizard
Election Wizard@ElectionWiz·
MTG GOES OFF: “Hold people accountable, for the love of God!” “Gut the deep state.” “Put Anthony Fauci in jail.” “Republicans are liars.” x.com/Holden_Culotta…
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NEXTA
NEXTA@nexta_tv·
Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth provided Donald Trump with false information about the progress of the operation against Iran, The Washington Post reports. According to WP, officials within the U.S. administration fear that the defense secretary’s reports are “overly optimistic” and may mislead both the president and the public.
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Henrygprod
Henrygprod@HENRYGPROD·
@cnni Fix your false headline. You can’t be this retarded.
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CNN International
CNN International@cnni·
President Donald Trump said he’d agreed to a two-week ceasefire with Iran, less than two hours before his 8 p.m. deadline to destroy a “whole civilization.” Trump said the ceasefire agreement was made on the condition that Iran agree to reopen the critical Strait of Hormuz. cnn.it/4sSMTSx
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