Socialist Sherron ☭

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Socialist Sherron ☭

Socialist Sherron ☭

@SherronP

Proud Socialist - FreePalestine - Keyboard activist for human rights.🌹Socialist are staying calm as the 'Capitalist Empire Implodes'

United States Katılım Kasım 2012
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Branko Marcetic
Branko Marcetic@BMarchetich·
The latest Middle East official to make this claim, after Oman's foreign minister (left) and an influential ex-Qatari PM (right). Suggests this idea - that Israel wants to drag the entire region into a suicidal war that leaves it the local hegemon - is widely but quietly held.
Branko Marcetic tweet mediaBranko Marcetic tweet media
Arnaud Bertrand@RnaudBertrand

This (arabnews.com/node/2642938) is, by any measure, an extraordinary article: Prince Turki Al-Faisal is a son of King Faisal and ran Saudi intelligence (the GID) for over two decades. He is writing that the plan of "the US-Israeli war on Iran" was "to ignite war between us [Saudi Arabia] and Iran," so that Israel could "impose its will on the region and remained the only actor in our surroundings." This further confirms that, contrary to what many have asserted, the notion that the Saudis were quietly backing the war on Iran was a myth (alongside the recent fact the Saudis denied the U.S. access to its bases and airspace: x.com/RnaudBertrand/…). From the horse's mouth they're literally saying it was as much a war on them as it was on Iran! Pretty crazy when you think about it: this is Saudi Arabia saying that their real enemy in this war was the U.S. and Israel. Hard to overstate how significant a rupture this represents. Now of course they could be saying so because, seeing how the war turned out, they're trying to retroactively position themselves on the winning side (at least strategically, by saying they didn't take the bait), or trying to justify domestically why they absorbed hits from Iran without retaliating. And, of course, it's not like they're presenting Iran as some sort of ally here: Prince Turki explicitly calls them a "neighbor" that caused "pains." But still, the end result remains: the Saudi establishment is now committing, on the record and in plain language, to a framing in which, while Iran is a "painful neighbor", the U.S. and Israel represent the deeper strategic threat, having tried to engineer their destruction. If you had any lingering doubt that this war accelerated the collapse of U.S. influence in the region, this should settle it.

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Socialist Sherron ☭ retweetledi
CIX 🦾
CIX 🦾@cixliv·
You guys aren't going to believe this (I had to double check it was real). Unitree has made an actual mecha like Gundam, the GD01.
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Socialist Sherron ☭ retweetledi
Drop Site
Drop Site@DropSiteNews·
🇨🇺 Cuba’s Deputy Foreign Minister: U.S. Cannot Find “Credible Excuse” for Military Aggression Against Cuba Carlos Fernández de Cossío, Cuba’s Deputy Foreign Minister, wrote Monday that Washington and “anti-Cuban politicians” have failed to justify either military action or the ongoing economic blockade against the island. “In spite of a well coordinated and financed effort, the US gov and the anti-Cuban politicians can’t find a credible let alone acceptable excuse for military aggression against Cuba,” he wrote. “It’s even difficult to excuse the brutal energy and economic blockade.” The post comes as Cuba faces an acute energy and economic crisis as a result of the U.S. oil blockade, which Cossío has described as “a war” against the Cuban people. Cuba has categorically rejected certain U.S. conditions for negotiations, including any discussion of regime change or President Díaz-Canel’s position.
Carlos F. de Cossio@CarlosFdeCossio

In spite of a well cvoordinated & financed effort, the US gov & the anticuban politicians can't find a credible let alone acceptable excuse for military agression against Cuba. It's even diificult to excuse the brutal energy & economic blockade.

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Socialist Sherron ☭ retweetledi
RussiaNews 🇷🇺
RussiaNews 🇷🇺@mog_russEN·
🚨⚡️ Kremlin says any European side can help mediate with Russia, stressing the key priority is restoring dialogue.
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MiddleEast Live
MiddleEast Live@MeLive007·
Bella Hadid stands with Palestine. Dop you support her?
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Socialist Sherron ☭ retweetledi
RT
RT@RT_com·
Cost of repairs to Lincoln Memorial reflecting pool SWELLS by $11.3 MN, projected to hit $13.1 MN — NYT Initially, Trump said his chosen (no-bid) contractor would charge only $1.8 MN
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Al Jazeera English
Al Jazeera English@AJEnglish·
Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, has passed legislation creating a special military court to prosecute Palestinians accused of involvement in the October 7, 2023, attacks, and allowing the death penalty, according to Israeli media. 🔴 LIVE updates: aje.news/p6a948
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Socialist Sherron ☭ retweetledi
Drop Site
Drop Site@DropSiteNews·
🎵 Israel won the Eurovision popular vote in 2025 in countries where polls show it is deeply unpopular — and a New York Times analysis of voting data found that only a few hundred people voting repeatedly could have tipped those results, the paper reported Monday in a major investigation. Financial records show Israel spent over $1 million on Eurovision influence campaigns since 2018, including funds explicitly allocated for “vote promotion” from Netanyahu’s hasbara — overseas propaganda — office. In 2025, Netanyahu personally urged fans to vote for Israel’s contestant 20 times. Eurovision’s director told the NYT Israel’s campaign was “disproportionate” but insisted it did not affect results.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ Eurovision’s own lawyers privately concluded the contest could legally exclude Israel. Instead, organizers kept Israel in without ever holding a direct vote. Five countries — Iceland, Ireland, the Netherlands, Spain, and Slovenia — are boycotting this year’s contest in Vienna, which opens Tuesday. Full report ⬇️
Drop Site tweet media
The New York Times@nytimes

Israel’s efforts to influence the vote for the Eurovision Song Contest were broader and started years earlier than previously known, a New York Times investigation found. Here is the inside story of the controversy that almost broke Eurovision. nyti.ms/42ZR43z

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Socialist Sherron ☭ retweetledi
Voice Of Tehran
Voice Of Tehran@Tehran_Reports·
🚨🚨JUST IN: 🇮🇷🇺🇸 Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf warns that Americans will face the consequences if talks continue to stall.
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Al Jazeera English
Al Jazeera English@AJEnglish·
Last passengers from hantavirus-hit ship evacuated; American tests positive aje.news/564off
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Voice Of Tehran
Voice Of Tehran@Tehran_Reports·
🚨BIG NEWS: 🇮🇷 Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi is reportedly strengthening ties with Russia, China, and Pakistan amid rising tensions with the US. Reports claim Moscow is helping with oil trade routes, Beijing is backing drone production cooperation, and Pakistan has quietly expanded military coordination with Tehran while publicly pushing diplomacy.
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Socialist Sherron ☭ retweetledi
Chris Menahan 🇺🇸
Chris Menahan 🇺🇸@infolibnews·
Wow, Bari Weiss's CBS News deceptively cut out the part of this interview where Netanyahu clarified that rather than get "aid" from the US, he wants us to have a so-called "partnership." "I want to draw [the aid] down, and then I want to suggest projects, joint projects for intel, for weapons, for missile defense." What he's describing is taking military tech such as missile defense—which we funded—and then selling it back to us as some sort of "partnership." This isn't just missing from the clip below, it was chopped out of the full show too w/o any clear cuts. Note too, he says he wants to "start now" and not wait for the "next Congress"—that's because he knows the American people don't want to give Israel a dime.
60 Minutes@60Minutes

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tells 60 Minutes he wants Israel to eventually stop relying on U.S. military aid: “It's time that we weaned ourselves from the remaining military support.” 60Minutes.com

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Socialist Sherron ☭ retweetledi
The Resonance
The Resonance@Partisan_12·
Activists storm the public auction selling Palestinian homes to settlers. 🇮🇱Pro-occupation mob responded with slurs, violent threats, and straight-up intimidation. They’re selling stolen land in broad daylight… in the middle of New York City.
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Socialist Sherron ☭ retweetledi
Prof Zenkus
Prof Zenkus@anthonyzenkus·
Illinois Governor JB Pritzker's cousin, Thomas Pritzker, had to resign as CEO of the Hyatt empire due to his close association with Jeffrey Epstein. NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch's cousin and co-owner of the NY Giants, Steve Tisch, also had close ties with Epstein - his name appearing over 400 times in the Epstein files. The Pritzker family is worth about $44 billion. The Tisch family is worth $10 billion. JB Pritzker and Jessica Tisch are both Democrats. Billionaires shouldn't exist, and billionaires with close family ties to Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell should definitely not serve in public office.
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Socialist Sherron ☭ retweetledi
Arnaud Bertrand
Arnaud Bertrand@RnaudBertrand·
What's going on? Are neocons having a come-to-Jesus moment? After Bob Kagan writing an article on how the U.S. is facing "total defeat" in Iran (see x.com/RnaudBertrand/…), you now have Max Boot - the very author of “The Case for American Empire” and one of the most vocal advocates for the Iraq war - publishing a Washington Post interview explaining that China has surpassed the U.S. in most military domains. If anything, Boot’s interview is even more devastating than Kagan's piece, because it's not editorial opinion - he’s interviewing John Culver, a former top CIA analyst (he was national intelligence officer for East Asia) and one of the world’s foremost authorities on the Chinese military which he’s been studying since 1985. This isn't a pundit opining - this is someone who spent decades inside the intelligence community staring at the actual data. So what is Culver saying? 1) In case of war with Taiwan, the U.S. will flee the theater This is undoubtedly the single most stunning revelation in the entire piece. Culver says that - as far as he is aware - the Pentagon’s plan in case of war with Taiwan is… flee! This is the exact quote: "I think some of the thinking in the Pentagon, and it may have evolved since I retired, is that when we think there’s going to be a war, we need to get our high-value naval assets out of the theater, and then we would have to fight our way back in. From where, it’s not clear. Guam is no bastion either." Why? Because, as he explains, any high-value U.S. assets would be sitting ducks in the entire area. China can strike U.S. forces deployed to Japan, Australia, or South Korea “in a way that Iran really can't” and, given that Iran has hit at least 228 targets across U.S. bases in the Middle East - forcing the U.S. to evacuate most of them - that's saying something. Also, U.S. aircraft carriers would need to operate within 1,000 miles of the fight to matter, which - given it’s well within range of Chinese missiles - they won’t. As Culver bluntly puts it: “There's really no safe spaces.” 2) China leads in most military domains - and it's not even close Culver says that “it’s hard to not be hyperbolic” about China’s military capabilities and that, at this stage, “it’s hard to point to an area other than submarines and undersea warfare and say the United States still has an advantage.” In some critical areas, such as advanced munitions - which, when it comes to war, is pretty damn relevant - his assessment is that China leads by “magnitudes.” As a reminder, an order of magnitude means 10x so, by assuming he knows that and meant what he said, “magnitudes” means at least a hundred times more, meaning U.S. capabilities would be less than 1% those of China. At the same time, Culver also says that “whichever side runs out of bullets first is going to lose.” So if China produces “magnitudes greater than our industrial base could produce” - as he puts it - then you don't need a PhD in military strategy to put two and two together… The picture, if anything, is even more damning in shipbuilding capabilities. He reminds that a single shipyard in China - Jiangnan Shipyard, on Changxing Island near Shanghai - “has more capacity than all U.S. shipyards combined.” Put all Chinese shipyards together and China’s broader naval shipbuilding capacity is 232 times larger than that of the United States (and this is from a leaked U.S. Navy briefing slide). Culver helpfully adds that China “deploys enough ships every year to replicate the entire French navy” - which, as a Frenchman, hurts a little, but at least we'll always have the cheese (I hope). 3) Despite this, a war in Taiwan is highly unlikely If your only window into China is Western media coverage, you'd naturally assume all of the above means war over Taiwan is about to break out. After all, if China is so powerful and the U.S. so outmatched, why wouldn't it just take Taiwan and be done with it? Culver’s assessment - and mine, incidentally - is the exact opposite: China’s increasing relative strength vis-a-vis the U.S. makes war less likely, not more. How so? As Culver explains Taiwan is “a crisis Xi Jinping wants to avoid, not an opportunity he wants to seize.” The stronger China gets, the less it needs to fight: why launch a war when you can simply wait for the military balance to become so lopsided that the U.S. quietly drops its security guarantee on its own? Culver himself foresees a future “when Americans might start to say, maybe Taiwan is a war we don’t want to get involved in.” That would almost automatically mean peaceful reunification, which has always been China’s primary objective. This doesn't mean China views the U.S. as harmless. Quite the contrary - Culver says Beijing sees America “as a very militarily aggressive country” that is “declining in power and becoming more violent” as a result. Which he says is one further reason why “war over Taiwan is not something that Xi Jinping is looking for.” China doesn't want to hand a pretext to a dangerously trigger-happy power - all the more when patience alone delivers what it wants. 4) The game is up Last but not least, perhaps the most revealing aspect of the interview is that Culver doesn’t seem to see a way out: this is structural and irreversible. Asked by Boot whether “the Trump administration’s $1.5 trillion defense budget, assuming it’s approved, [would] change the trend lines” (which, as a reminder, would constitute a 50% increase in defense spending), his reply is that “it would probably help to some extent, but I worry that we could be throwing good money after bad.” Not exactly brimming with optimism… Similarly, when asked why the U.S. keeps investing billions in aircraft carriers and even “Trump-class battleships,” his answer is that it's because “the military services have a nostalgia for the things that meet their expectations for how you get promoted.” In other words, wasted money. Same thing for the Pentagon's much-hyped “Hellscape” drone strategy to defend Taiwan. Culver asks the obvious question: “What drones are you talking about launching from where?” He points out that they’d “have to pre-deploy them if not on Taiwan itself then on Luzon or the Japanese southwest islands, all of which can be struck by the Chinese.” He adds that this is “the tyranny of time and distance when you look at war in the Pacific.” The picture that emerges, both from Boot’s Culver interview and Kagan’s article, is remarkably consistent: the U.S. is “checkmate” in the Middle East, would need to entirely flee the Pacific theater before a war even starts, cannot produce enough weapons, cannot keep its supposed “allies” safe, and has no strategy to reverse any of it - nor can one even be produced given the structural nature of the gap. Even a 50% increase in defense spending, Culver says, would be “throwing good money after bad.” That's not my assessment - that's theirs. Two of America's most prominent hawks, in two of its most establishment outlets, in the space of 48 hours, have essentially published the obituary of American military primacy. Yesterday I concluded my post by saying that even the arsonists now smell the smoke. Today I'll say: the arsonists are now writing the fire report.
Arnaud Bertrand tweet media
Arnaud Bertrand@RnaudBertrand

There’s no overstating how extraordinary this Atlantic article is, given the author and the outlet. As a reminder Bob Kagan is: - The co-founder of Project for the New American Century, probably the single most imperialist Think Tank in Washington (which is quite a feat) - A man who spent his entire life advocating for American military interventions, especially in the Middle East, and a vocal advocate of the Iraq war. He started advocating for intervention in Iraq before 9/11, which speaks for itself... - The husband of Victoria Nuland, an extremely hawkish former senior U.S. official (a key architect of U.S. policy in Ukraine, with the consequences we all witness today) - The brother of Frederick Kagan, one of the key architects of the Iraq surge In other words, we ain’t exactly looking at some sort of anti-imperialist peacenik. This is quite literally the guy Dick Cheney called when he needed a pep talk. And the man is writing in The Atlantic, the most reliably pro-war mainstream media outlet in the U.S. (also quite a feat). So when HE writes that the U.S. “suffered a total defeat” in Iran that has no precedent in U.S. history and can “neither be repaired nor ignored,” it’s the functional equivalent of Ronald McDonald telling you the burgers aren’t great: it means the burgers really, really aren't great. Extraordinarily (and somewhat worryingly, for me), his arguments for why this is such a defeat are virtually the same as those I laid out in my article “The First Multipolar War” last month (open.substack.com/pub/arnaudbert…). Here they are 👇 1) Vietnam/Afghanistan were survivable, this isn't He agrees that this war - and the U.S. defeat - is fundamentally different in nature from previous U.S. interventions. Where I wrote that the wars in Vietnam and Afghanistan didn’t change the equation much in terms of power dynamics (“in the grand scheme of things, the giant walked away with little more than a bruised ego”), Kagan writes that “the defeats in Vietnam and Afghanistan were costly but did not do lasting damage to America's overall position in the world.” And when I wrote that “it’s painfully obvious that the Iran war is of a qualitatively different nature” from these, he writes that “defeat in the present confrontation with Iran will be of an entirely different character.” Same point. 2) Iran will never relinquish Hormuz and uses it as selective leverage When I wrote that Iran has turned “freedom of navigation” on its head by establishing “a permission-based regime” through the Strait of Hormuz, Kagan arrives at the same conclusion: “Iran will be able not only to demand tolls for passage, but to limit transit to those nations with which it has good relations.” He also agrees that “Iran has no interest in returning to the status quo ante,” when I myself cited Iran’s parliament speaker Ghalibaf in my article, saying: “The Strait of Hormuz situation won’t return to its pre-war status.” Same point and virtually the same words. 3) Gulf states will have to accommodate Iran He agrees that most Gulf states will have no choice but to accommodate Iran, effectively making Iran into a, if not THE, dominant regional power. Kagan writes “the United States will have proved itself a paper tiger, forcing the Gulf and other Arab states to accommodate Iran.” On my end, I wrote that “the Gulf monarchies will eventually have to choose between two security propositions. One where they stay aligned with a distant superpower that [can’t protect them]. The other proposition being: make peace with the regional power that just proved it can hit [them] whenever it wants.” Which is not much of a choice… 4) Military impossibility to reopen Hormuz Kagan writes that “if the United States with its mighty Navy can't or won't open the strait, no coalition of forces with just a fraction of the Americans' capability will be able to, either.” On my end, in my article I cited Germany’s defense minister Boris Pistorius: “What does Trump expect a handful of European frigates to do that the powerful US Navy cannot?” The exact same argument. 5) Global chain reaction Kagan agrees that this is a global strategic failure that fundamentally changes the U.S.’s position in the world. As he puts it: “America's once-dominant position in the Gulf is just the first of many casualties… America's allies in East Asia and Europe must wonder about American staying power in the event of future conflicts.” You’ll have guessed it, I wrote essentially the same thing: “Think about what it says if you’re Saudi Arabia, quietly watching your American-built defenses fail to protect your own refineries. Or any European country now facing the worst energy shock since 1973, caused not by your enemy but by your ally, and realizing that said ‘ally,’ supposedly in charge of ‘protecting’ you, couldn’t even protect Israel’s most strategic sites - when it’s the country with which it’s joined at the hip. I’m not even speaking about China or Russia who are seeing their worldview being validated on almost every axis simultaneously.” 6) Weapons stocks depleted, credibility shattered Kagan: “just a few weeks of war with a second-rank power have reduced American weapons stocks to perilously low levels, with no quick remedy in sight.” Me: “America’s most advanced weapons systems are much more vulnerable than previously thought - not theoretically, but in actual combat.” Kagan: “America's allies… must wonder about American staying power in the event of future conflicts.” Me: “The U.S. security guarantee has been empirically falsified in real time.” ----------- So, yup, Bob Kagan and I agree on nearly everything. I need a shower 🤢 Reassuringly though, we still differ on a few fundamental aspects. First of all, arguably the most important one, the moral aspect. In typical neocon fashion, his article contains not a word about the human cost of this war - not the 165 schoolgirls, not the devastation inflicted on Iranians during 37 days of bombing, not the toll this war is taking on the entire world through its devastating economic consequences (the economic devastation on ordinary people worldwide is referenced only as a political problem for Trump). For him, this is purely a strategic chess problem, morality and people don’t figure in his mental map. For me, the moral bankruptcy of this war isn't separate from the strategic failure - it is the strategic failure. Much like Gaza can only be a failure because of its sheer abjectness. Secondly, there is not an instant of reflection in the article on how we got there. Which is unsurprising because he personally, alongside his wife, his brother, and every co-signatory of every PNAC letter, spent a generation pushing for exactly this kind of confrontation. The man spend 30 years advocating for military dominance in the Middle East and hostility towards Iran, thereby forging them as an adversary and facilitating this very war that he now says has “checkmated” America. I know introspection has never been the neocon forte but at some point you have to stop setting houses on fire and then writing op-eds about how surprising the smoke is. Last but not least, we differ on what should be done. This is the funniest part of Kagan’s article - showing that the man is decidedly beyond salvation. On one hand he calls this a “checkmate” by Iran, and a U.S. defeat that can “neither be repaired nor ignored,” yet an the other hand his solution for it is… surprise, surprise… a bigger war still! He writes that what’s to be done is “engage in a full-scale ground and naval war to remove the current Iranian regime, and then to occupy Iran until a new government can take hold.” The arsonist's solution to the fire is a bigger fire ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ For my end, this was the conclusion of my previous article: "There is almost a Greek tragedy quality to U.S. actions lately where every move taken to escape one’s fate becomes the mechanism that delivers it. The U.S. went to war to reassert dominance - and proved it could no longer dominate. It demanded allies send warships - and revealed it had no real allies. It waged forty years of maximum pressure to break Iran before this moment came - and instead forged the very adversary now capable of meeting it. It started the war in part to have additional leverage over China - and handed the world the spectacle of begging China for help. The prophecy was multipolarity. Every American action to prevent it reveals it instead." I wouldn’t change a word. The only thing that's changed since I wrote it is that even the arsonists now smell the smoke. Src for the Atlantic article: theatlantic.com/international/…

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Socialist Sherron ☭ retweetledi
Drop Site
Drop Site@DropSiteNews·
Protests erupted Monday outside the Young Israel Senior Services of Midwood in Brooklyn as pro-Palestinian and pro-Israel demonstrators confronted each other over “The Great Israel Real Estate Event,” which promoted property sales in Israel and in settlements built on Palestinian land in the illegally occupied West Bank. A New York Times reporter present at the scene pointed to Nicholas Kristof’s new investigation today into rape and sexual abuse of Palestinian detainees in Israeli custody as evidence of the paper’s credibility in covering the conflict.
Timmy Facciola@TimmyFacciola_

Pro-Palestinians swarmed a New York Times reporter, trying to intimidate him to leave. He scrawled on his notepad: “Did you read Kristof?”

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