Willow Naomi Curry ♿️🍉🇵🇸🇸🇩
17.6K posts

Willow Naomi Curry ♿️🍉🇵🇸🇸🇩
@willathewisp
30. Call me comrade. Anti-war environmentalist: Art, organizing, and political commentary. “Humorless doctrinaire” according to “anti-woke” trolls.

BREAKING: Middle East tensions are spiraling. Israel has struck Iran’s South Pars gas field, which is the world’s largest natural gas field. Oil just jumped to $108/barrel! Israel just warned that it will destroy all bridges on Lebanon’s Litani River. This is a major escalation. Meanwhile Iranian media says retaliation is coming after strikes on energy infrastructure. Now Iran is reportedly labeling Gulf energy sites as “legitimate targets” and issuing evacuation warnings across the region. This is exactly the kind of dangerous chain reaction critics warned about and it’s unfolding after Trump’s aggressive moves in the region. Expect oil prices to shoot up even more. The risk of a wider war just surged.

Fox News: "Iranians fear most that the US/Israel will stop bombing them. They're tweeting 'please don't stop!' They celebrate every bomb!" How low can they sink to please Zionists? Inventing lies about people celebrating their own children's deaths.

Settlers are trembling as firsthand accounts describe people freezing under sirens, unable to move, with one witness recounting how the blast tore through the base of the building, leaving them trapped, heart pounding, and overcome with fear.

Imagine you’re a Palestinian, sitting outside your home, trying to find a moment of peace in a place your family has lived for generations. Suddenly, Israeli settlers appear, assaulting you, backed by the army. A scene that is hard to put into words.

🚨 The Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem says not a single humanitarian shipment has entered Gaza since March 7 — no medication, no hospital spare parts, not even antibiotics. 250 people remain sheltered in the Holy Family Church compound, including 50 people with disabilities.

Israeli soldiers detained 15 Palestinian women in Qalqilia overnight, most of whom are wives of detainees/former detainees. The women are being used to pressure the men; most are being held in administrative detention or are being accused of online incitement.

This is probably the most important article of the month: an op-ed by Oman's Foreign Minister, who mediated the talks between the U.S. and Iran, in which he writes that the U.S. "has lost control of its foreign policy" to Israel. He repeats that a deal was possible as an outcome of the talks (something confirmed by the UK's National Security Advisor, who also attended: x.com/i/status/20341…) and that the military strike by the U.S. and Israel was "a shock." Interestingly, given he is one of Iran's neighbors and given that Oman has been struck multiple times by Iran since the war began (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2026_Iran…), he writes that "Iran’s retaliation against what it claims are American targets on the territory of its neighbours was an inevitable result" of the U.S.-Israeli attack. He describes it as "probably the only rational option available to the Iranian leadership." He says the war "endangers" the region's entire "economic model in which global sport, tourism, aviation and technology were to play an important role." He adds that "if this had not been anticipated by the architects of this war, that was surely a grave miscalculation." But, he adds, the "greatest miscalculation" of all for the U.S. "was allowing itself to be drawn into this war in the first place." In his view this was the doing of "Israel’s leadership" who "persuaded America that Iran had been so weakened by sanctions, internal divisions and the American-Israeli bombings of its nuclear sites last June, that an unconditional surrender would swiftly follow the initial assault and the assassination of the supreme leader." Obviously, this proved completely wrong, and the U.S. is now in a quagmire. He says that, given this, "America’s friends have a responsibility to tell the truth," which is that "there are two parties to this war who have nothing to gain from it," namely "Iran and America." He says that all of the U.S. interests in the region (end to nuclear proliferation, secure energy supply chains, investment opportunities) are "best achieved with Iran at peace." As he writes, "this is an uncomfortable truth to tell, because it involves indicating the extent to which America has lost control of its own foreign policy. But it must be told." He then proposes a couple of paths to get back to the negotiating table, although he recognizes how difficult it would be for Iran "to return to dialogue with an administration that twice switched abruptly from talks to bombing and assassination." That's perhaps the most profound damage Trump did during this entire episode: the complete discrediting of diplomacy. If Iran was taught anything, it is: don't negotiate with the U.S., it's a trap that will literally kill you. The great irony of the man who sold himself as a dealmaker is that he taught the world one thing: don't make deals with my country. Link to the article: economist.com/by-invitation/…

Lebanon war leaves a classroom of children hurt or dead every day, UN says reut.rs/4bQliv1 reut.rs/4bQliv1

An Israeli developer is building vacation homes and luxury amenities on land in Kenya, which he hopes will draw both Kenyans and Israelis. But many Kenyans are outraged. @Dena explains why.














