Meraj Ali معراج علی

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Meraj Ali معراج علی

Meraj Ali معراج علی

@MerajAly

Proletariat.

India Katılım Ağustos 2014
671 Takip Edilen199 Takipçiler
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Mehdi Hasan
Mehdi Hasan@mehdirhasan·
So Trump, who in January claimed to be coming to rescue the Iranian people, says he is okay now with US forces killing them all. He is bragging about war crimes and mass murder, with little or no limits. How is the world okay with this? How is the American people?
Rachel Scott@rachelvscott

Spoke with President Trump. He told me the conflict should be over in days, not weeks but if no deal is made he’s blowing up the whole country with “very little” off the table. "If happens, it happens. And if it doesn't, we're blowing up the whole country,” he said. I asked if there’s anything off limits. “Very little,” he said.

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Robert Barnes
Robert Barnes@barnes_law·
The west torched the law of the seas to seize ships w/ Russian oil, Venezuelan oil or Iranian oil, so, quite literally, that ship has sailed.
Anton Gerashchenko@Gerashchenko_en

Iran is demanding sovereign control over the Strait of Hormuz. If it succeeds in imposing this logic, it will undermine the very foundation of international maritime law. The Strait of Hormuz is an international strait governed by the regime of transit passage: passage cannot be arbitrarily prevented or made selective. If Iran succeeds, it will open a Pandora's box: other states will also decide they can act the same way. Let's look at other straits that are critically important for the global economy: ◾️ The Straits of Malacca and Singapore are the next most dangerous example. The Strait of Malacca is the world's busiest oil chokepoint, as well as one of the main corridors for common trade; studies estimate that about 20% of global maritime trade passes through the Strait of Malacca, amounting to approximately $2.4-2.5 trillion annually. In theory, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore could all seek to exert tighter control here. If even one of these countries were to impose a system of permits, selective inspections, or political restrictions, global trade would suffer. ◾️ Bab-el-Mandeb is another example of how control over a narrow strait can quickly become a tool of war. In 2023, approximately 9.2 million barrels per day passed through it, but following the escalation, flows dropped to about 4.0-4.2 million barrels per day in 2024-2025. Formally, Yemen, Djibouti, and Eritrea may attempt to strengthen their control here, and effectively, armed non-state actors may also be involved. The threat is clear: whoever controls this chokepoint can sever the maritime link between Europe and Asia via the Red Sea and the Suez Canal. ◾️ The Bosphorus and the Dardanelles are a separate case, as they are already subject to a specific regime under the Montreux Convention, and Türkiye has broader authority over military vessels. But that is precisely why this example is important. In the first half of 2025, approximately 3.7 million barrels per day of oil and petroleum products passed through the Turkish Straits, not counting grain and other Black Sea exports. The danger here lies elsewhere: the existing legal exception could become a justification for new exceptions in other straits. ◾️ The Danish straits are a critical exit route from the Baltic Sea. In the first half of 2025, approximately 4.9 million barrels of oil and petroleum products passed through them daily. Formally, Denmark could impose stricter controls here, and in a broader regional sense, so could the states that control the approaches to the Baltic Sea. If Europe ever adopts a policy of selective access through such a strait, it would mean that even within the Euro-Atlantic space, freedom of navigation is no longer considered absolute. This would be a critical moment for maritime law. ◾️ The Taiwan Strait is perhaps the most dangerous case in the long term. According to CSIS estimates, approximately $2.45 trillion worth of goods passed through it in 2022, accounting for more than one-fifth of global maritime trade. There is only one potential contender for political control here - China. If Beijing manages to impose a system where passage depends not on international rules but on Chinese jurisdiction, it will be a turning point. Then, not only regional security would be at risk, but also the very principle that major trade routes cannot be controlled by a single state through political decision. And since the Taiwan Strait is also linked to the risk of a major war between the US and China, maritime law here directly confronts the risk of global escalation. ◾️ Arctic shipping routes demonstrate that this logic now extends beyond traditional straits. Russia regards the Northern Sea Route as a "historic national transport corridor" and demands compliance with the navigation rules established by Moscow; in 2024, the Northern Sea Route Administration issued 1,312 permits for 975 vessels. Canada, for its part, considers the Northwest Passage to be part of its internal waters, while the United States and other states disagree with this approach. Here, the risk is particularly significant for the future: if Arctic routes begin to be established as a licensed passage under the control of coastal states, this will provide yet another strong argument for those who wish to establish their own control in other areas. So, control over sea lanes is becoming a new weapon. If Iran breaks this barrier in the Strait of Hormuz, other states will also begin competing for control of the seas. The next conflict may arise not only over territory, but over the right to determine who has access to global trade, energy, and naval traffic. This is the real danger: the Strait of Hormuz could lay the groundwork for many future wars.

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Ty Mantooth
Ty Mantooth@MantoothTy·
America has already destroyed maritime law. I understand if your view is that America should rule the world and every other country should be our slaves but why pretend you don’t see the hypocrisy in every thing we do. America just “sanctions” any country it wants and then steals their ships and natural resources. If America didn’t have double standards it’d have no standards at all.
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Ryan Goodman
Ryan Goodman@rgoodlaw·
This isn't legal analysis. It's idiocy: "A White House official added that electric plants are legitimate military targets because destroying them could foment civil unrest, complicating Tehran’s path to a nuclear device" That would be an F on the bar exam 1/
Ryan Goodman tweet media
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Sarayu Pani
Sarayu Pani@sarayupani·
It’s shocking how openly and repeatedly the Western media tells you that they simply don’t consider brown people to be human. Among the first casualties of this war were 160 Iranian schoolchildren, but it takes a lost US pilot to bring a human dimension to the slaughter?
Hamza Yusuf@Hamza_a96

“It brings a human dimension to the war…” says Sky News’ military analyst about a missing American pilot from an F-15 jet. Has Sky News ever raised that same human dimension about the US and Israel’s carpet bombing of Gaza, Lebanon and Iran?

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Sanam Naraghi Anderlini, MBE now on Blue Sky
I hope and believe that Iran will treat the US pilot as a PoW in accordance with international law. That said, pls remember the US torpedoed an unarmed Iranian frigate in international waters and did not rescue the sailors - per international law. They torpedoed it “for fun”. International law including the laws of war came to us through generations of human endeavor and millions of lives lost. It exists for all of us. Respect it. Don’t put up with the hypocrisy of politicians. Journalists please hold them accountable.
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Shubham
Shubham@aShubhamz·
Genghis khan murdered 4 crore people in his lifetime. Even then when he was dying, he called his advisor and asked, “is there any place where I’ll be forgiven for my sins”. And what his advisor replied is still written on his tombstone in golden words. His advisor replied “my lord, far south from here there’s a country named India, if you go there and join BJP, you won’t even realise when they transform your sins into good and you won’t even have to apologise”
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Thara Bhai Narinder
Thara Bhai Narinder@NarinderMudii·
MFs couldn't provide affordable LPG to migrant workers but have arranged free trains for them to travel and vote for BJP in Bengal. Everything these bhdwas do is centred around elections.
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Haroun Rashid
Haroun Rashid@HarounRashid2·
I no longer believe in the 2-state solution. Once this #IranWar‌ is over all the land now comprising Israel, West Bank, Gaza should be one state called Palestine where Arab Christians, Muslims & Jews can live alongside each other. Just as they did before terrorists created Israel
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Assal Rad
Assal Rad@AssalRad·
Israel has no right to “take control” of Lebanese land, but you know that @nytimes.
Assal Rad tweet media
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Iran (I.R.of) Embassy in UK
“International law”? That’s rich. What does it say about US & Israeli regimes military aggression against sovereign states and assassinating their leaders? About the Minab school attack that killed 170 students? Or attacks on civilian infrastructure pharma factories, desalination plants? Funny how “international law” only seems to matter when it fits your narrative. You never hold aggressors accountable, only the victims.
Kaja Kallas@kajakallas

Thank you @YvetteCooperMP for convening a call of over 40 countries on the Strait of Hormuz. This waterway is a global public good. Iran cannot be allowed to charge countries a bounty to let ships pass. International law doesn’t recognise pay-to-pass schemes. Today, we looked at diplomatic, economic, and security measures to restore safe passage, alongside working with the shipping industry. The EU’s Aspides naval mission has already assisted 1,700 ships in the Red Sea and must be scaled up. We cannot afford to lose another critical trade route. We support work by the UN on humanitarian corridors in the Strait to get food and fertilisers out. The EU has tools to track and facilitate transit that could help with that.

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Tim McCullagh
Tim McCullagh@timonther6·
A downed US pilot has attracted more media attention than more than 100 schoolgirls massacred by a US Pilot in Iran. This is the media machine that wants to narrate the truth. Journalism is beat down by paymasters of a certain persuasion of values.
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Caine
Caine@cainal92·
@Persianserene1 I mean it's hard to rebuild nations full of people who would rather fuck each other up over tribal bullshit constantly. Even wealthy nations get tired of pumping money into a cesspit that doesn't want to help itself. I'd probably exclude Iraq though. They're doing alright.
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Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡
BREAKING: April 3 was the worst day for American military aviation since the war began. An F-15E Strike Eagle shot down over Iran. One crew member, the pilot, rescued by American forces. The second, the weapons systems officer, still missing. An A-10 Warthog hit by enemy fire during the rescue mission, the pilot nursing the damaged aircraft out of Iranian airspace and into Kuwait before ejecting. Pilot recovered. Two HH-60W helicopters retrieved the rescued F-15E pilot but the helicopter carrying him was hit by small arms fire, wounding crew members on board. It landed safely. Three types of American aircraft struck in a single operational sequence. The President was asked on NBC whether it affects negotiations. “No, not at all,” he said. “This is war.” It is war. The war that was “nearing completion” two days ago just produced the first confirmed shootdown of a manned American fighter over enemy territory. The air defences Trump said were destroyed brought down a jet from the squadron he personally commended. Israel suspended airstrikes in areas “relevant” to the rescue effort. The Pentagon reported 365 American service members wounded since February 28, a figure that had not previously been disclosed at that scale. And Iran’s Parliament Speaker Ghalibaf posted the sentence that will define this chapter: “After defeating Iran 37 times in a row, this brilliant no-strategy war they started has now been downgraded from regime change to can anyone find our pilots?” Iranian state television broadcast the manhunt live. A local channel in Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Province aired the instruction: “If you capture the enemy pilot or pilots alive and hand them over to the police, you will receive a precious prize.” The channel initially told viewers to shoot on sight. The guidance was revised after a police statement requested the pilots be delivered alive. Tasnim reported nomadic tribesmen and villagers deployed across mountains with personal weapons. The governor called for a “widespread chase.” Tasnim reported that at least one pilot may have been captured following what it described as a failed American rescue attempt. US officials have not confirmed this. The aircraft belongs to the 494th Fighter Squadron at RAF Lakenheath. The red band on the vertical stabilizer was visible in the wreckage. The Aviationist and The War Zone confirmed the markings independently. Iran claimed it was an F-35. It was not. Iran misidentified its own kill. But the kill was real. The ACES II ejection seat was photographed on Iranian soil. The impact crater and burn scar are consistent with a fighter-sized crash into mountainous terrain. This is the squadron that shot down more than 70 Iranian drones defending Israel in April 2024. The Mackay Trophy recipients. The President’s heroes. Two years later the red band is in a crater and the weapons systems officer who sat behind the pilot may be evading capture in the mountains of the country whose drones they destroyed, listening for rotors, hoping the ones approaching are American. The last time Iranian authorities mobilised civilians to seize Americans was 1979. Fifty-two diplomats. Four hundred and forty-four days. It ended a presidency. If the WSO is captured alive, the April 6 power-plant deadline becomes a hostage negotiation. The grand bargain acquires a face and a name. The crowd has been summoned. The American may already be in their hands. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡@shanaka86

BREAKING: Two American aircrew are unaccounted for on Iranian soil tonight. If the IRGC reaches them before the rescue helicopters do, this war just acquired hostages. And the last time Americans were held captive in Iran, it ended a presidency. On April 3, wreckage of an F-15E Strike Eagle was photographed in mountainous terrain in central Iran. The vertical stabilizer carries the red band of the 494th Fighter Squadron, based at RAF Lakenheath, England. The USAF in Europe badge is visible. The Aviationist assessed the images “do not appear to have been altered.” Iran’s misidentification of the jet as an F-35 supports the conclusion that the debris is genuine. The War Zone confirmed the tail markings. The Iranians recovered an ACES II ejection seat from the site. The F-15E carries two crew. Their whereabouts are unknown. Here is why the ejection seat changes everything. You do not fly combat search-and-rescue helicopters 50 kilometres inside enemy territory for dead crew. OSINT footage geolocated over Khuzestan Province on the same day shows an HC-130J refuelling two HH-60W Jolly Green II helicopters near the Dehdez Dam, deep inside Iran. A separate video shows a C-130 deploying defensive flares over the same area. If that footage is authentic, the US military is conducting a rescue operation inside Iran. And you only conduct rescue operations when you believe there is someone alive to rescue. The 494th is not anonymous. In April 2024, this squadron shot down more than 70 Iranian drones in a single night defending Israel. The President called their COs. They received the Mackay Trophy. They flew home to Lakenheath with kill markings painted on their jets. They redeployed to Jordan on January 17, 2026. They have flown combat sorties daily since the war began. And now the red band that carried those kill markings is in a crater in central Iran and the crew may be evading capture in mountains of a country promising “bigger, wider, more damaging” attacks. Fifty-two American diplomats were held in Tehran for 444 days between 1979 and 1981. The hostage crisis consumed the Carter presidency and is widely credited as the decisive factor in his defeat. If two American fighter pilots are captured alive by the IRGC in April 2026, the dynamics of this war invert overnight. The power-plant strikes become impossible without risking the hostages. The April 6 deadline becomes a negotiation for human lives instead of infrastructure. The grand bargain in Beijing acquires two faces and two names. Trump, who has built his presidency on the image of strength, would face the one scenario that strength cannot resolve: Americans behind bars in Tehran while the world watches. CENTCOM denied the April 2 Qeshm Island claim. They have not addressed the April 3 wreckage. The silence is the signal. When Iran’s claims are false, CENTCOM responds within hours. When the wreckage carries the red band of a real squadron and the ejection seat is on the ground and rescue helicopters appear to be flying inside Iran, the silence lasts longer. Because confirmation changes the war. And the war cannot afford to change right now. The wreckage is verified. The crew is missing. The rescue may be underway. And the question that will define the next 72 hours is not whether the power plants survive the weekend but whether two Americans do. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…

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Mohammed Zubair
Mohammed Zubair@zoo_bear·
West Bengal's 2026 electoral rolls are 'public' for the record. But they are published as scanned image PDFs, behind CAPTCHAs, with watermarks obscuring voter names. You can't search them. You can't analyse them. And that's not an accident. @Holytripper altnews.in/bengal-sir-the…
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