If you look at the geography of Hormuz and its narrowest point, you can see how difficult it is to open it up for shipping under military protection. Even a layman can easily understand the challenge. News reports keep talking about 7 islands in Hormuz that Iran can use to attack shipping lanes. Assuming all the 7 islands are captured and Iranian presence neutralized, it still leaves the long coast open. If Iran can attack US bases across the straits with drones, imagine what it can do to oil tankers. It has many options from airborne and sea borne drones, small boats, cruise missiles, ballistic missiles, powerful artillery guns, torpedos, etc. You only have to look at how Ukraine has immobilized the powerful Baltic naval fleet of Russians. Hormuz is a lot easier. Forget protecting the oil tankers, the naval ships close to straits will themselves be in grave danger. Ships will require both offensive and defensive weapons. When Iran can send swarm of drones, a ship will exhaust its interception capability quickly. Landing and invading coastal area is not going to remove the danger either.Trump obviously wants them to go to hormuz so that he can back out and say it's their problem now Anyone can see that. They would be fools to take the bait
Lass year Europeans spend enormous time appeasing Trump and bending backwards. Giving impression to everyone, the length to which they were willing to compromise their values and accommodate the irrational demands. No wonder Trump started expecting them to step up in Middle East.Starts war, tells everyone else to step up.
Yes, that's really a horrible thing and shows how minds can deteriorate after decades of consuming mediocre unrealistic war movies. It always works with demonization of the others.the gamification of war by the U.S. and Iran....in March, the White House social media accounts released a series of videos promoting U.S. military strikes in Iran with videos that splice real combat footage with video game elements and pop culture clips....also, in late March, the Iranian state media and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps released several AI-generated videos as a response to Trump's "war game" style social media posts....these videos have faced significant backlash for trivializing a real-life conflict and the loss of human life
1. a White House video about the air strikes on Iran
2. Iran releases a hypothetical scenario video, titled 'Welcome to Hell', about a U.S.-Israel invasion
The Vietnam deja-vu is supported by even including US moon flights at the same time, like a bad joke. Only missing the president's impeachment, which is possible on the horizon.To me it feels like they have lost control of this
It is already like vietnam. we keep dropping bombs but (surprise surprise) nobody is giving up.
As leader of the US military you can easily get lost in omnipotence fantasies, that's exactly what you have to refrain from, and the Trump administration failed here. I don't read anymore what Trump says, his random sentences have no meaning anymore. He has regressed into a child overwhelmed by reality, and outside the US hardly anyone takes him serious anymore. Recently his niece said in an interview that's actually what his life was always doomed to end like: in the ultimate humiliation of failing hard, the failing he always wanted to avoid, hitting on him now intensely. Unfortunately we sit with him in this boat.what really gives me a bad feeling is that there is no victory narrative that I can think of.
no path to negotiations, no clear objective.
The strait of Hormuz is not an issue, it is not closed. Ships that are not unfriendly to Iran can pass. Some have to pay a toll. Others, e.g. flagged to China, Pakistan and other Iran friendly countries don't even have to pay the toll.Trump obviously wants them to go to hormuz so that he can back out and say it's their problem now Anyone can see that. They would be fools to take the bait
That is still a trickle, even to friendly countries.The strait of Hormuz is not an issue, it is not closed. Ships that are not unfriendly to Iran can pass. Some have to pay a toll. Others, e.g. flagged to China, Pakistan and other Iran friendly countries don't even have to pay the toll.
The Vietnam deja-vu is supported by even including US moon flights at the same time, like a bad joke. Only missing the president's impeachment, which is possible on the horizon.
As leader of the US military you can easily get lost in omnipotence fantasies, that's exactly what you have to refrain from, and the Trump administration failed here. I don't read anymore what Trump says, his random sentences have no meaning anymore. He has regressed into a child overwhelmed by reality, and outside the US hardly anyone takes him serious anymore. Recently his niece said in an interview that's actually what his life was always doomed to end like: in the ultimate humiliation of failing hard, the failing he always wanted to avoid, hitting on him now intensely. Unfortunately we sit with him in this boat.
we could say that most of your arguments are personal opinions....i intervened in your comment on the previous page because your personal opinion that "the Republican Party is like a cult" could be offensive to the Republicans reading this discussion thread, and we don't want that to happen, right?... in fact, you have written that opinion not just once, you have written that several times, thats why i intervened....however, i prefer to overlook this situations and ignore, from now on i will leave it to the moderators that read this thread to call attention in the future, and i will never report....as the host of this thread, i will just keep my comments neutral and informative, take care all
Because so many people ate stupid. If one supports him they're either stupid or an @**jole. That's not opinion. It's evidence based.
The strait of Hormuz is not an issue, it is not closed. Ships that are not unfriendly to Iran can pass. Some have to pay a toll. Others, e.g. flagged to China, Pakistan and other Iran friendly countries don't even have to pay the toll.
A French ship passed today. Any ship that is not destined for the US or Israel can pass if they pay a toll.Iran mantains a blockade of the strait and prohibits passage for vessels linked to unfrendly nations as the U.S, Israel, and their allies....who is not an ally of the United States in Europe and around the world?...U.S. allies like Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, and Bahrain have no practical maritime alternative and rely on the strait for nearly all their energy exports, Gulf states depend on the strait for 80% of their food imports, i guess the strait is an issue for them....before the start of the war the average traffic throught the strait was an average of 150 vessels per day, now with the Iranian blockade plummeted to approximately 20 a day....no doubt, the strait of Hormuz is an issue, take care all
Indeed, but it is the first one, maybe others will follow. I guess the crew on the ship was a bit nervous, hoping no overzealous iranian officer who missed the correct information starts a missile.A French ship passed today. Any ship that is not destined for the US or Israel can pass if they pay a toll.
Only Chinese Yuan and a cryptocurrency are accepted.
A French ship passed today. Any ship that is not destined for the US or Israel can pass if they pay a toll.
Only Chinese Yuan and a cryptocurrency are accepted.
The ships are probably not flagged for any of these countries. Most commercial shipping is registered in places like Liberia, Nauru etc. It is the destination and the owner of the cargo that matters.
France demonstrated that there is no issue if one is not US nor Israeli and is willing to pay the toll via a Chinese bank.
Also, it is not a blockade. It is a threat towards ships whose cargo is destined for the US or Israel. Ships that can prove that they are headed to Asia or France or wherever can pass. Are they nervous about doing that? Of course. A supertanker can carry around 350,000 barrels of oil which is worth around 40 million USD equivalent. That is a lot of value to put at risk and commercial shipping companies are extremely conservative. If the insurance company denies coverage, the shipping company has to pay any damages or losses out of their own funds.
Indeed, but it is the first one, maybe others will follow. I guess the crew on the ship was a bit nervous, hoping no overzealous iranian officer who missed the correct information starts a missile.
"Blockade" is misleading as there are neither iranian ships nor sea mines in the strait, but you need a permit only "friendly" nations get, and then have the nerves to pass through hoping no iranian soldiers have wrong information.
"The Malta-flagged container ship owned by French company CMA CGM crossed the strait, media organisation BFM TV - which is owned by the shipping company - confirmed on Friday. CMA CGM declined to comment. It is the first ship owned by a major Western European firm to go through the strait since the conflict began, shipping analysts Kpler confirmed."
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French-owned ship passes through Strait of Hormuz
It appears to be the first ship owned by a major European firm to go through the strait since the conflict began.www.bbc.com