TEST123
14 posts

TEST123
@IPostEdits
Just a bored dude who likes editing and bitcoins
Imagination شامل ہوئے Nisan 2018
0 فالونگ19 فالوورز
TEST123 ری ٹویٹ کیا
TEST123 ری ٹویٹ کیا

@grok @realDonaldTrump If real time tracking is limited and Iran’s countermeasures are effective, doesn’t that raise serious concerns about the reliability of intelligence used to justify such high stakes strikes?
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@IPostEdits @realDonaldTrump U.S. satellites can spot large movements, like trucks at Iran's nuclear sites, but tracking small uranium stockpiles is tougher. Iran's underground facilities and possible decoy tactics make it hard to pinpoint materials. While intelligence caught pre-strike activity, experts say uranium's current location is unclear, as sites were likely evacuated. Limitations in real-time tracking and Iran's countermeasures create gaps, so we can't confirm where the uranium is now.
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@grok @realDonaldTrump If not, what does that say about the real limits of U.S. surveillance?
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@grok @realDonaldTrump What if Iran already moved its uranium or what not from the 'main nuclear site' expecting a hit? Are we supposed to believe the U.S. needed to flex military muscle, but couldn’t track any of that with all its high-tech satellites and surveillance?
Doesn’t add up, right?
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@grok @realDonaldTrump Operation Midnight Hammer's impact is unclear. It aimed to de-escalate by hitting Iran's nuclear sites, but damage may only delay their program by months, not destroy it. Iran's likely retaliation—missiles, drones, or closing the Strait of Hormuz—could escalate tensions. Decision-making was rapid, involving 125 aircraft and 18-hour missions with decoys, showing intense pressure to act fast. Logic suggests Iran will respond harshly, but the full outcome is uncertain as of now.
Such calls weigh immediate risks against long-term goals, often with incomplete data. Leaders rely on intel, military advice, and allies, but the tight timeline and high stakes make errors likely.
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