
المشرف العام
268 posts




נשיא ארה"ב מוביל בימים אלה להסכם עם איראן מתוך ראיית האינטרסים האמריקאים, ובהם גם האינטרס המשותף עם ישראל - למנוע מאיראן נשק גרעיני - ואנו מצפים שיעמוד על העיקרון הזה ועקרונות נוספים בתחום הטילים ושלוחי הטרור. ביחד הנחתנו על איראן מכות קשות שהסיגו את יכולותיה שנים רבות לאחור. ישראל חייבת לוודא שגם בעתיד תהיה לנו את היכולת לפעול באופן עצמאי כדי למנוע מאיראן נשק גרעיני, ורה"מ בנימין נתניהו ואני הנחינו את צה"ל להיערך בהתאם. ישראל לא תיסוג מאזורי הביטחון בלבנון, בסוריה ובעזה. צה"ל ימשיך להגן על גבולותינו ואזרחינו מתוך כתר החרמון, הרי הלבנון, חבלי ארצנו בשומרון ורוב שטחה של עזה - מול איומי כוחות וארגונים ג'יהאדיסטים, כלקח מרכזי מאירועי ה-7 באוקטובר. צה"ל לא ייסוג ממחנות הטרור בצפון השומרון, המפונים מתושבים, ובמידת הצורך יורחב המהלך למחנות טרור נוספים. תפיסת הביטחון שלנו חדה וברורה: פועלים מול איומים קרובים ורחוקים ושואפים להכרעות ולא לפשרות וויתורים. הרבה מונח על כפות המאזניים בתקופה זו ואנחנו נחושים להמשיך ולהוביל מדיניות ביטחונית תקיפה שתמנע פגיעה בהישגינו הביטחוניים ולא תסכן את יכולתנו להיאבק מול ציר הרשע השיעי בהובלת איראן וציר הרשע הסוני בהובלת האחים המוסלמים. ברצוני להביע הערכה רבה לפיקוד הצה"לי על ההישגים הגדולים ולחיילינו הגיבורים, בסדיר, בקבע ובמילואים, על מלחמת הגבורה למען ביטחון ישראל - ולתושבי הצפון על עמידת הגבורה שנותנת לצה"ל את הכוח להמשיך ולהגן על ביטחונם. אני שולח חיבוק גדול למשפחות השכולות שאיבדו את היקר מכל ומאחל החלמה לכל הפצועים, בגוף ובנפש, שמסרו עצמם למען ההגנה על חיי היהודים וביטחון מדינת ישראל.

How AI is disrupting investment ft.trib.al/X83uYMe | opinion



Many people believe that INSURANCE is the reason that vessels are not navigating the Strait of Hormuz. This is simply not true, and something that @mercoglianos has addressed repeatedly throughout this conflict. But there is a far more challenging hurdle that will need to be overcome: sanctions and terror financing laws. Vessels are able to secure insurance, AND that insurance can cover transit through the Strait of Hormuz. Now is it more expensive than it was pre-conflict? Of course, but we're still talking about rates generally between 1-4%. If that is every journey perpetually? No, that's clearly an issue. But for a single journey to get a hundred million dollar vessel, loaded with hundreds of millions of dollars of cargo, alongside the captain and crew out of a war zone? Easy choice. ... And that's what Greek shipping tycoon Evangelos Marinakis thought as well when he said he would be happy to pay up to $200,000 per vessel to transit the Strait of Hormuz. Now why wouldn't this work? ASSUMING that you paid Iran via the Persian Gulf Strait Authority (PGSA), also known as the Tehran Toll Booth, you would be able to navigate under the assumption that Iran would not launch drones or missiles at your vessel. Is that a guarantee? Of course not, but this eliminates the "morality risk" element that many other people say is the "real" reason why vessels are unable to transit the Strait of Hormuz. Insurance is not an issue. Crew safety, assuming a toll was paid, would not inherently be an issue... So why aren't vessels crossing the Strait of Hormuz in large numbers? Sanctions and Terror Financing laws. As it currently stands, this is the single greatest barrier as to why we are not seeing transit through the Strait of Hormuz, and why we will NOT see transit through the Strait of Hormuz the second an MOU is agreed upon by the United States and Iran. Speaking to @abcnews today, I spoke to this risk, and why it's not just a "US problem": "It really is kind of the single greatest barrier, because there's sanctions across various different countries, the US, UK, Canada, Australia, EU, and also terrorist-financing laws that are significant. You'd have, potentially, the individual who owns the company or who is operating the vessel, they would be personally sanctioned." See the issue here? Many people have suggested, "Well if it REALLY is that great of an emergency, vessels will just pay the toll and risk sanctions". Okay... but WOULD they? Would they PERSONALLY be willing to be sanctioned by the United States, EU, UK, Canada, and Australia? Effectively be personally cut off from the ENTIRE Western world? I don't think so. Okay, okay, okay, Brett. But... what if the sanctions were just... not enforced! The governments just "looked the other way". Enter terror financing laws. With the exception of the United Kingdom, the IRGC is a designated Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO) across the jurisdictions of the US, EU, Canada, and Australia. While carveouts CAN be made for sanctions, although it is unclear whether or not they would be, nor that all jurisdictions would do so simultaneously as would be necessary, terror financing laws are a far greater hurdle to roll back. This is EXACTLY what we saw take place when the United States unsanctioned Iranian oil under General License U in the early days of the Iran War. Roughly 180M barrels became effectively "sanction-free"... But the primary buyer was still overwhelmingly China... and India. Why? Because, while the sanctions were not applicable, purchasing said oil would be in violation of terror financing laws across the US, EU, Canada, and Australia. Providing "payment" or "material support" (meaning no, you can't just "barter") to the IRGC comes with the lovely penalty of PRISON. "Okay, okay, okay, Brett... But what if the governments of the US, UK, EU, Canada, and Australia didn't enforce sanctions AND the governments of the US, EU, Canada, and Australia didn't enforce terror financing laws... simultaneously..." Wonderful question! Viola! Problem solved! ... Nope. Under the terror financing laws of the United States and Canada, private citizens can bring forth lawsuits against those who finance terror organizations. And that's the nail in the coffin. So while vessels may WANT to navigate the Strait of Hormuz. While vessels may be WILLING to make payments to Iran or the IRGC, the laws not just of the US, but also the UK, EU, Canada, and Australia, make this an impossibility due to the ability for these payments to violate not just the sanctions and terror financing laws brought forth by the GOVERNMENT... but because the governments can't stop private CITIZENS from bringing forth terror-financing lawsuits. abc.net.au/news/2026-06-0…









مشهد يتكرر يومًا بعد يوم 6 شهداء بينهم سيدة، وأكثر من 15 إصابة وصلوا إلى مستشفى الشفاء إثر استهداف قرب مبنى الجوازات غربي مدينة غزة








مع التراجعات الكبيرة في أسعار bitcoin:native لا يوجد حديث الآن إلا عن محاولات تفسير انخفاض بيتكوين. في هذا الايف على قناة @AlArabiya_Bn ناقشت عدة أسباب، منها: - التدفقات الخارجة من صناديق الـ ETF مثل صندوق $IBIT من بلاك روك - بيع مايكل سايلور لجزء من حيازاته من بيتكوين لتسديد توزيعات أرباح مستحقة على شركته قريبا - وأخيرا تحريك أحد منصات التداول المنهارة لما يقارب 10,000 بيتكوين، مما أثار مخاوف من زيادة المعروض

Prof. John Mearsheimer : A number of European leaders have basically said we should fight to the last Ukrainian, which I find morally sickening. The Ukrainians are going to lose this war. They should have quit a long time ago for their own good. Ukraine is in a demographic death spiral, and we're encouraging them to throw bodies into the meat grinder when they're going to lose anyway. The British, French, and German leaders are really enthusiastic about continuing the war, but that's because their people are not dying.







