Jonathan Jacobs

2.8K posts

Jonathan Jacobs

Jonathan Jacobs

@bbquse

🃏 to the left of me, 🤡 to the right... unapologetically pro🍊and pro 🇮🇱, aspiring 46er 🏔

Katılım Temmuz 2013
1.9K Takip Edilen201 Takipçiler
Jonathan Jacobs
Jonathan Jacobs@bbquse·
@FirstSquawk Are they not embarrassed by this? Thousands of sorties and they are celebrating one minor hit as if it is the turning point?
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First Squawk
First Squawk@FirstSquawk·
Iranian Parliament Speaker Ghalibaf: The F-35 was not just a fighter jet but a statue of the U.S. military's invincibility and arrogance. A theological symbol claimed to be invisible to any eye and superior to any power; but the hand of God is above their hands. This symbol was struck for the first time in the world, yet God cast. And this was the moment of collapse of an order.
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Guy Elster גיא אלסטר
Classic Netanyahu: In Hebrew, he said the war will continue as long as it takes In English, he said that it will end faster than most think
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Jonathan Jacobs
Jonathan Jacobs@bbquse·
Good and balanced post as always. Dan is an important voice to follow. One of the good guys who sees the grey where most see black and white.
Dan Shapiro@DanielBShapiro

For my new followers, who may not have read all I've been writing, let's establish some order about my views: 1. Iran, under the current regime, is a violent, aggressive actor that threatens many neighbors, sponsors terror, calls for Israel's destruction, has much American (and other people's) blood on its hands, and oppresses the Iranian people. The sooner it is gone, the better. 2. I've called for major support for the Iranian people in their struggle for freedom. 3. I favor pressuring the Iranian regime in many ways, and I'm not opposed to using force against the Iranian regime: I supported Operation Midnight Hammer last summer, for example, and can imagine other operations I would support. 4. I am opposed to regime change wars in the Middle East. I've said from the beginning that I don't support Trump launching this war, this way. 5. Israel has its interests, as does any nation. When our interests align, as the often do, we should work together. When they do not, we should pursue our own path. (I also have many criticisms of the policies of the current Israeli government.) We are security partners, which serves our interests, but we can also disagree. Israel's security is an important US interest. But we also have leverage in this relationship, and it is completely legitimate for us to use it. 6. Trump launched this war without clear strategic objectives, adequate assessment of and preparation for the risks, and without any attempt to inform the American people of what we are doing and why, or seek the support of Congress or key allies. It's his decision, and he bears responsibility for it, no one else. 7. The U.S. military has performed brilliantly, at both the military strategic and operational levels. They will always have my support. Commanders have been straight with the American people about the military objectives they have been tasked to pursue. But the strategic objective they need from our political leaders (is it regime change?) remains muddled. 8. The war's early successes in taking out Iranian leaders and degrading many Iranian power projection capabilities provided a window in week 2 for Trump to claim victory and take an off-ramp. Not a perfect end, but achieving the main military objectives before Iran (the weaker party, but one with cards to play), could impose higher costs. He likely missed that opportunity, now that Iran is blocking the Strait of Hormuz. Of course that can't be allowed, but the costs of reversing it -- in blood and treasure, global economic damage, reduced readiness to deal with challenges from China and Russia -- and with minimal allied help, may be very steep. 9. It was predictable that strikes on Iranian energy facilities (by US or Israel) would lead to Iranian strikes on Gulf energy facilities. Even if the intent was to message Iran that their energy industry could be at risk if they don't open the Strait, that's a costly and needless escalation. But it is totally unjustified for Iran to strike Gulf nations who have been non-combatants in this war. 10. I served in the Pentagon, coordinating Middle East policy during wartime. I know how the IDF and CENTCOM work together. An Israeli strike on the South Pars gas field was unwise. But it could not have been carried out without U.S. knowledge, and explicit or implicit approval. 11. There is a narrow window following the Israeli and Iranian strikes, and Trump's Truth Social Post (untrue, but possibly useful in this context), to deescalate away from further strikes on energy industry targets in either direction. That will still leave a very challenging situation to unwind, but would be the best near term development. 12. If you've read this far, have a good night.

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Jonathan Jacobs
Jonathan Jacobs@bbquse·
Can someone explain why the US is allowing Iran to continue exporting oil even as they attempt to close off the Straight of Hormuz to nearly everyone else? Seems like that would be fairly simple to do, so I’m confused.
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Jonathan Jacobs retweetledi
Zoya ★
Zoya ★@RealZoya1·
Deal closed today in Tel Aviv 4 hours after it was destroyed.
Zoya ★ tweet media
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Jonathan Jacobs
Jonathan Jacobs@bbquse·
@AshleyWenskTV Well said. I will always appreciate him. He is Orange through and through. But he just couldn’t get us to where we need to be and it was time to move on.
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Jon Rothstein
Jon Rothstein@JonRothstein·
Sources: Syracuse will part ways with Adrian Autry. Official announcement expected today.
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Jonathan Jacobs retweetledi
The Babylon Bee
The Babylon Bee@TheBabylonBee·
Mamdani Clarifies That His Wife Only Celebrates Terrorism In Her Capacity As A Private Citizen buff.ly/FBGKO2a
The Babylon Bee tweet media
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Jonathan Jacobs
Jonathan Jacobs@bbquse·
@yaakovkatz @netanyahu This should be obvious to all. But just like the polarity taking place all over the world, no one is willing to see anything but black and white.
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Yaakov Katz
Yaakov Katz@yaakovkatz·
It is no secret that Israelis have very strong opinions about Benjamin @netanyahu. Roughly half the country is in the “only Bibi” camp, and roughly half is in the “anyone but Bibi” one. After the last two-and-a-half years – and especially after the last week – no matter what camp one is in, however, there is no denying the historic role Netanyahu has played in helping shape a safer and more secure Israel. I am aware that this sentence makes some people uncomfortable. But it should not, because acknowledging strategic achievement is not the granting of absolution for mistakes and failures. Israel’s problem over the last two-and-a-half years has been the insistence by too many – on both sides – that Netanyahu must be judged per one dimension alone: either as the exclusive source of every disaster or as the sole author of every success. This perspective is wrong. Leadership is not a buffet where one only chooses the dishes one likes. The new security reality we are seeing being created right now would have been hard to imagine back on October 7, when 1,200 people were murdered, and 251 more were kidnapped. It would have been almost impossible to predict that, two-and-a-half years later, the region would look so different and that Israel would be in a stronger strategic position. And Netanyahu deserves credit for this – the strategic changes in the region and the victories over Israel’s enemies that unfolded on his watch. But in the same breath, he is also responsible for the policies that led to October 7. And this is the challenge. October 7 has long been a coin with two sides. Yet, Netanyahu and his followers want to take credit for only one side. They want nothing to do with taking responsibility for the failures. But here is the truth – it is a mixed bag. Netanyahu deserves credit for the good and should be held accountable for the bad. That is leadership, and that is the nuance Israelis will need to hold onto as elections approach. Latest in @Jerusalem_Post. jpost.com/opinion/articl…
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Jonathan Jacobs
Jonathan Jacobs@bbquse·
@ProudSocialist @Cusewaterboy2 Uh, not quite. Iran is allowing journalists in with “minders” and those journalists and Iran also know full well the US/Israel is only bombing military/regime targets.
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Fran Brown (hire/pmj)
Fran Brown (hire/pmj)@CoachFranBurn·
I am being told if Syracuse does in fact hire Brian Hodgson as Head Coach next season there is a high likelihood Adrian Autry will stay on the staff as an assistant coach or associate head coach. That part is not yet specified. Hodgson’s agent says Autry’s recruiting is elite.
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Jonathan Jacobs
Jonathan Jacobs@bbquse·
@liel Not sure if it was successful yet, but this is just too good. 👏
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Benjamin Weingarten
Benjamin Weingarten@bhweingarten·
Imagine for a moment if you will what the world would look like if Kamala Harris had been elected president
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Jonathan Jacobs retweetledi
Eitan Fischberger
Eitan Fischberger@EFischberger·
I know we’re all focused on Iran right now, as we should. But we shouldn’t miss this golden opportunity to point out, once again, that Qatar is not a real partner of the United States when push comes to shove. Listen to Qatari officials and it’s always the same refrain. Al Udeid, Al Udeid, Al Udeid. The airbase, the airbase, the airbase. And yet, as @AmitSegal just noted, “the American base in Doha is packing up and moving to Israel.” Ironic, isn’t it? As America gears up for potentially one of the largest military actions in the region in decades, who and what won’t be helping? Not Al Udeid. Not Qatari intelligence. Not the Qatari Air Force. Not Qatari infantry. Not Qatari anything. Shock of shocks. And one last reminder. Qatar isn’t just unhelpful. It is one of Iran’s chief geopolitical allies. We now see, once again, who Qatar’s real ally is.
Eitan Fischberger tweet media
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