Dejan Steinbuch

29.1K posts

Dejan Steinbuch banner
Dejan Steinbuch

Dejan Steinbuch

@steinbuch

Author // Columnist // frmr Chief Editor of Žurnal // frmr Chief Editor @plusportal // frmr @SIAG Adviser // frmr Adriatic Council VP // RT is not endorsement

European Union Katılım Eylül 2008
614 Takip Edilen10.2K Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
Dejan Steinbuch
Dejan Steinbuch@steinbuch·
Kaj če ena od konkurenčnih strank ne bo priznala rezultata volitev? Kaj pa potem? Sodno spodbijanje rezultata ali zahteva po razveljavitvi volitev zaradi tujega vmešavanja? Ker je tako drastična poteza “nujna zaradi zaščite demokratičnih procesov”. Hmm… plusportal.si/2026/03/20/ali…
Slovenščina
15
1
7
2.8K
Dejan Steinbuch retweetledi
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡
The central command of the entire Iranian armed forces just told the President of the United States: “Hey Trump, you are fired. You are familiar with this sentence. Thank you for your attention to this matter”. A spokesperson for the Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters delivered the line in English on camera. The internet laughed. The clip went viral. And almost nobody noticed what was actually happening in the frame. Khatam al-Anbiya is not a press office. It is the supreme military command of the Iranian armed forces. This is the headquarters whose commander, Major General Ali Abdollahi, declared this week that Iran’s military doctrine has changed from defensive to offensive. This is the body whose spokesman, Colonel Ebrahim Zolfaqari, warned that if Trump strikes Iran’s power plants, all US energy, information technology, and desalination infrastructure in the region will be targeted. This is the entity that threatened to close the Strait of Hormuz permanently. The headquarters issuing jokes in English is the same headquarters issuing the orders that keep the strait closed, the fertilizer stranded, and the helium offline. Now ask the question nobody is asking. Where is his commander-in-chief? Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei has not been seen in 23 days. No video. No audio. No photograph. His statements are read by newsreaders. His inauguration used a cardboard cutout. The Director of National Intelligence told Congress he is very seriously injured. Trump said he does not know if Mojtaba is alive. An Israeli official told Axios: we have no evidence he is actually the one giving orders. Reports place him in a Moscow hospital inside one of Putin’s presidential residences, under Russian medical care, possibly unconscious. The Supreme Leader is invisible. The president is invisible. The foreign minister gives interviews but commands no troops. And Iran’s central military headquarters is on camera, in English, delivering comedy to a global audience. In any normal country, the armed forces central command does not address a foreign head of state with jokes on television. In Iran right now, the military command is the only institution that appears on camera at all. Khatam al-Anbiya is fighting the war, directing the missiles from Yazd, operating the Hormuz blockade, issuing threats against Gulf desalination plants, and now conducting public diplomacy in English with punchlines borrowed from American reality television. This is not defiance. This is a command structure revealing itself. When the civilian leadership disappears and the military starts doing press conferences with punchlines, the audience is not Trump. The audience is the Iranian public, the IRGC rank and file, and every regional actor trying to determine who actually holds power in Tehran. The answer, delivered with a smile and an American catchphrase, is: we do. The strait is 21 miles wide. The Supreme Leader has not been seen for 23 days. And the central military command that closed the strait just went on camera to tell the world it is in charge, using words it borrowed from the man it is fighting. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…
English
24
81
214
34.1K
Dejan Steinbuch retweetledi
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡
BREAKING: The Palestinian Authority just condemned Iran’s attacks on Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states. Read that sentence again. The entity whose cause Iran has invoked for four decades to justify every proxy war, every missile programme, every threat against every Arab neighbour just picked up the phone and told Riyadh it stands with the Kingdom. Palestinian Interior Minister Ziyad Hab al-Reeh called Saudi Interior Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Saud bin Nayef on 21st March and expressed what the Saudi Press Agency recorded as the State of Palestine’s condemnation of the Iranian attacks targeting the Kingdom, the Gulf states, and the region. He affirmed solidarity with all measures taken by Saudi Arabia to preserve its security, sovereignty, and the safety of its territory and citizens. The Palestinian Authority’s official news agency WAFA carried the same statement. Al Arabiya amplified it across the Arab world. This is the most consequential diplomatic signal of this war and it has received almost no coverage. Iran’s entire regional architecture is built on one claim: that Tehran is the defender of the Palestinian cause. That claim justified the creation of Hezbollah. It justified the funding of Hamas. It justified the missile transfers to Islamic Jihad. It justified the Quds Force’s name, which is the Arabic word for Jerusalem. It justified four decades of threatening Gulf Arab states as American puppets who betrayed the Palestinian people. Every proxy, every rocket, every militia was wrapped in the flag of Palestine. The moral legitimacy of Iran’s regional posture rests on the premise that Tehran fights for a people whose own government just condemned Tehran’s war. The Palestinian Authority is not Hamas. That distinction is the fracture this phone call exposes. Hamas receives Iranian funding, weapons, and strategic direction. The PA in Ramallah receives Gulf funding, maintains diplomatic relations with Arab states, and governs the West Bank under a framework that depends on the same Gulf monarchies Iran is currently bombing. When Iran struck Ras Laffan in Qatar, Shah and Habshan gas facilities in the UAE, and refineries in Saudi Arabia, it attacked the economic infrastructure of the states that fund Palestinian governance. The PA did not need to calculate whether to condemn. The calculation was arithmetic: the countries paying Palestinian salaries are the countries Iran is bombing. But the symbolism transcends the funding. Iran cannot claim to fight for Palestine when Palestine says stop bombing our allies. The moral architecture collapses not because of American pressure or Israeli intelligence or military degradation. It collapses because the people at the centre of the narrative rejected the narrator. The flag Iran wrapped around its missiles was taken back by the people whose flag it is. 23 nations signed a statement condemning Iran’s Hormuz closure. Greece fired a Patriot over Saudi Arabia. Britain sent a nuclear submarine. India called Tehran on Nowruz. China is buying 600 kilograms of gold per minute. But none of those signals carry the weight of the Palestinian Authority calling Riyadh and saying: we condemn Iran. Because Iran can survive military degradation. It can survive economic isolation. It can survive a 48-hour ultimatum. It cannot survive the loss of the one cause that made its entire regional project morally intelligible to the populations it claims to serve. The phone call lasted minutes. The damage is permanent. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡ tweet mediaShanaka Anslem Perera ⚡ tweet media
English
121
374
922
110.9K
Dejan Steinbuch
Dejan Steinbuch@steinbuch·
The conflict in the Middle East is getting closer and closer to world war each day.
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡@shanaka86

BREAKING: Greece just shot down two Iranian ballistic missiles over Saudi Arabia. A NATO member that signed no declaration of war against Iran used a Patriot battery operated by Greek soldiers on Saudi soil to intercept missiles targeting the SAMREF oil refinery in Yanbu on the Red Sea coast. Greek Defense Minister Dendias confirmed the engagement. Prime Minister Mitsotakis called it strictly defensive. It is the first time Greek military personnel have fired a weapon in combat since the battery was deployed under a bilateral agreement with Riyadh in November 2021. A European democracy that borders Turkey just entered the Middle East’s largest war to protect a refinery jointly owned by Saudi Aramco and ExxonMobil. The target tells the story. SAMREF is not a military installation. It is a 400,000-barrel-per-day refinery on Saudi Arabia’s western coast, far from the Strait of Hormuz, far from the front lines of Operation Epic Fury. Iran fired ballistic missiles and at least one drone at it. The missiles were intercepted by the Greek Patriot PAC-3. The drone impacted the complex with what Saudi authorities described as minor damage. Iran is no longer limiting its retaliation to Hormuz or the Gulf coast. It is reaching across the Arabian Peninsula to the Red Sea, targeting refineries that supply Europe and Asia through the Suez Canal rather than the strait. The geography of Iranian retaliation just doubled. This happened on March 19, the same day 23 nations signed a joint statement condemning Iran’s Hormuz closure and pledging readiness to ensure safe passage. Greece is not one of the 23 signatories. Greece did not sign the statement. Greece fired the interceptor. The country that pledged nothing on paper did more in three seconds of missile engagement than 23 signatures accomplished in three pages of diplomatic language. Readiness is a word. A Patriot launch is a verb. Trump told the world on March 21 that Europe, Japan, Korea and China will have to get involved in policing the strait. Greece got involved before he asked. It got involved not through a statement or a pledge or a fund but through a missile defence battery that has been sitting in Saudi Arabia for four years waiting for a moment that arrived on March 19 at the speed of an Iranian ballistic warhead. The bilateral agreement that put Greek soldiers in Yanbu was signed for exactly this scenario. The scenario arrived and the agreement held. The implications cascade. A NATO member has now engaged Iranian weapons in combat. Greece frames it as defensive, bilateral, and unrelated to the broader war. But the missile it intercepted was fired by the same IRGC that launched two intermediate-range ballistic missiles at Diego Garcia the following day. The same IRGC that hit Ras Laffan in Qatar. That hit Mina Al-Ahmadi in Kuwait twice. That put a cluster munition through a daycare roof in Rishon Lezion this morning. Greece intercepted missiles from an organisation that is simultaneously attacking six countries. The word defensive becomes complicated when the attacker’s target list includes half the region. Twenty-three nations signed a statement. One nation fired a Patriot. The question nobody is asking yet is which model scales. If Iran continues expanding its target geography from the Gulf to the Red Sea to the Indian Ocean, the 23-nation statement will need to become a 23-nation engagement. Greece did not wait for the statement to tell it what to do. It had a battery, a mandate, and a missile inbound. It fired. The refinery is still standing. The precedent is now set. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…

English
0
0
0
959
Dejan Steinbuch
Dejan Steinbuch@steinbuch·
Če kdaj, potem je zdaj lahko vsem jasno, kakšno tveganje na trgu naftnih derivatov prinaša de facto monopol. Petrol se maščuje vladi, madžarski MOL se obnaša, kot da se ga kriza ne tiče, Shell pa je v Sloveniji itak bolj za okras. Liberalizacija trga asap! 24ur.com/novice/sloveni…
Slovenščina
39
16
74
5.8K
Dejan Steinbuch
Dejan Steinbuch@steinbuch·
Happy New Year — Nowruz Mobarak, نوروز مبارک — to the brave people of #Iran who suffer heavily under their theocratic regime and israeli-american bombing.
Golshan@golshan_fathi

هموطنان دلتنگم، آن‌سوی مرزها… شما در لحظه تحویل سال، تنهاترین پرندگان مهاجر این جهان بودید😔 نه فقط دور از خانه، که دور از صدا، دور از آغوش، دور از حالِ خوبِ شنیدنِ عزیزان هر سال، این بغضِ سنگینِ غربت از لای سیم‌های یک تماس ساده عبور می‌کرد، می‌رسید به صدای مادر، به خنده‌ی پدر، و دل، هرچند شکسته، کمی آرام می‌گرفت… اما امسال، همان نخ نازکِ وصل هم با قطعی اینترنت توسط جمهوری اسلامی بریده شد. و شما ماندید و سکوتی که حتی صدای گریه‌تان را هم پس می‌زد… من امشب، از نیم ساعت مانده به سال نو تا همین لحظه، فقط یک کار کردم… پل شدم. میان دل‌هایی که راهشان را گم کرده بودند. میان صداهایی که پشت دیوارها مانده بودند. میان بغض‌هایی که دیگر طاقت نداشتند… و خدا می‌داند چه شنیدم… هق‌هق‌هایی که نفس را می‌برید، صداهایی که می‌لرزید، مادرهایی که فقط می‌گفتند: صداتو بشنوم کافیه…و فرزندانی که کلماتشان، میان گریه گم می‌شد… قلبم…💔💔💔 برای این‌همه دلتنگی مچاله شد. برای این‌همه نرسیدن.. برای این‌همه نمی‌شود.. بمیرم برای غربتتان… برای سفره‌های هفت‌سینی که بی‌صدا چیده شد، برای لحظه تحویلی که کسی سال نو مبارک را در گوش‌تان نجوا نکرد… امسال، سالِ اشک‌هایی بود که دیده نشدند، و آغوش‌هایی که نرسیدند… اما… باور کن هنوز، همین دل‌هایی که این‌طور برای هم می‌تپند، هنوز خانه را زنده نگه داشته‌اند.. ایران را سرپا نگه داشته‌اند #جنگ #نوروز_۱۴۰۵

0
0
1
696
Dejan Steinbuch
Dejan Steinbuch@steinbuch·
Je tožilstvo (SDT) že začelo s preiskavo sumov kaznivih dejanj, ki jih prinašajo (sicer nezakonito pridobljeni) prisluhi v zadnjih tednih? Ali čakajo na jesenske lokalne volitve? Policija in pravosodje bosta morala uveljaviti pravno državo, sicer bomo ena navadna “failed state”.
Slovenščina
26
2
59
4.5K
Dejan Steinbuch retweetledi
Jason Brodsky
Jason Brodsky@JasonMBrodsky·
The Journal reviewed the contents of one call between a senior #Iran regime police commander and an agent of the Mossad, #Israel’s foreign-intelligence service. “Can you hear me?” a Mossad agent can be heard, speaking in Farsi. “We know everything about you. You are on our blacklist, and we have all the information about you.” “OK,” the commander said in the recording. “I called to warn you in advance that you should stand with your people’s side,” the Mossad agent said. “And if you will not do that, your destiny will be as your leader. Do you hear me?” “Brother, I swear on the Quran, I’m not your enemy,” the commander said. “I’m a dead man already. Just please come help us.” wsj.com/world/middle-e…
English
56
702
2.6K
517.6K
Dejan Steinbuch
Dejan Steinbuch@steinbuch·
Dr. Larijani, de facto leader or Iran after Supreme Leader was killed, is dead. General who studied Western Philosophy and got PhD from Immanuel Kant was the only remaining member of the regime who could negotiate with USA about peace. Now what? #Iran bbc.com/news/articles/…
English
4
0
1
582
Dejan Steinbuch retweetledi
🇨🇭🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿InLucysHead🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇨🇭©
A Group of guys, all turning 40, discussed where they should meet for lunch... Finally, it was agreed that they would meet at Wetherspoons in Uxbridge because the waitresses had big breasts and wore mini-skirts. Ten years later, at age 50, the friends once again discussed where they should meet for lunch. Finally, it was agreed that they would meet at Wetherspoons in Uxbridge because the waitresses were attractive. The food and service were good, and the beer selection was excellent. Ten years later, at age 60, the friends again discussed where they should meet for lunch. Finally, it was agreed that they would meet at Wetherspoons in Uxbridge because there was plenty of parking, they could dine in peace and quiet with no loud music, and it was good value for money. Ten years later, at age 70, the friends discussed where they should meet for lunch. Finally, it was agreed that they would meet at Wetherspoons in Uxbridge because the restaurant was wheelchair accessible and had a toilet for the disabled. Ten years later, at age 80, the friends discussed where they should meet for lunch. Finally, it was agreed that they would meet at Wetherspoons in Uxbridge because they had never been there before.
English
114
305
3.7K
411.3K
Dejan Steinbuch
Dejan Steinbuch@steinbuch·
If all of your stories are so biased and politically onesided as this on Slovenia then I got it: you are indeed not a professional media outlet but just a speaker of populist, nacionalist & far right European political parties. Thanks so much for clarifying that.
Visegrád 24@visegrad24

BREAKING: Major corruption scandal hits Slovenia’s government & its left-wing prime minister Robert Golob just days before the parliamentary election Top members of his party have been recorded on tapes in which they allegedly discuss the corruption schemes of a minister and other close allies of the prime minister. The tapes started leaking a few days ago, one after another and paint a picture a deeply entrenched system of corruption at the very top of Slovenia’s current government. The first recording, which has had its authenticity confirmed by an independent expert, the Secretary General of PM Robert Golob’s party states that Infrastructure Minister Alenka Bratušek siphoned around €2.5 million from the 2nd Railway Track, one of Slovenia’s largest infrastructure projects that meant to remove the logistics bottleneck leading to the Port of Koper. In another recording, one of Slovenia’s most prominent lawyers, Nina Zidar Klemenčič, explains how the construction of a major Intercontinental hotel in Ljubljana secured permits by paying a 10% commission to the son of the mayor, and how “easy” it is to work with a mayor who has run the capital for 20 years, as long as you deliver that percentage. Another recording has a former close associate of Golob from his time at the energy company he founded, GEN-I, describing plans to privatize and take over a multi-billion state energy company in case Golob loses the upcoming election and has to hand over power to the opposition. The recordings also show that key figures remain subordinate to the former president Milan Kučan, who is presented as the one pulling the strings across politics, media, and the economy in Slovenia. Golob and his far-left government have long been accused of having ties to Slovenia’s post-communist elite. The allegation is that the political elites, and particularly the secret services, which were in place when Slovenia was still a part of communist Yugoslavia, managed to keep major influence also over the independent Slovenia when it was forming after 1991. According to critics, the former communist elite and top officials of echelons of the communist secret service managed to take control of large parts of Slovenia’s political systems, judiciary, banking system and media market through a web of corruption and wealth built up during the communist era. The new tape leaks have restarted the debate about just how deeply the corruption in Slovenia really goes. 🇸🇮

English
44
7
55
12.9K
Dejan Steinbuch retweetledi
Joe Kent
Joe Kent@joekent16jan19·
After much reflection, I have decided to resign from my position as Director of the National Counterterrorism Center, effective today. I cannot in good conscience support the ongoing war in Iran. Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation, and it is clear that we started this war due to pressure from Israel and its powerful American lobby. It has been an honor serving under @POTUS and @DNIGabbard and leading the professionals at NCTC. May God bless America.
Joe Kent tweet media
English
73K
220K
848.3K
100.3M
Dejan Steinbuch
Dejan Steinbuch@steinbuch·
Election in a Black Cube, Volitve v črni kocki: Parlamentarne volitve 22. marca bodo naš najpomembnejši družbeni dogodek letos — odločile bodo o usodi vsaj dveh vodilnih slovenskih politikov. @RevijaReporter reporter.si/clanek/sloveni…
Slovenščina
5
3
7
1.6K