PedroBatista 1 day ago

Wait, are stargate data centers a real thing? I thought it was a financial/political vehicle to pump the markets and kick the can down the road.

  • ben_w 20 hours ago

    They can be both.

    I'm of the opinion that while e.g. xAI is in a pump game, OpenAI is at least trying to make money. But even if they're not, even if the DCs are as you say "a financial/political vehicle to pump the markets", they can still be physically real things.

    That said, I have no idea how close to complete the Stargate UAE site is.

TurdF3rguson 2 days ago

I wonder what's stranger. That they think Trump will care about OpenAI's datacenter in Abu Dhabi, or that we're getting this news from tomshardware.com

  • bigyabai 2 days ago

    It's not a terrible target. Long-term it puts stress on US/UAE cooperation, and short-term it mirrors the destabilization inside Iran with escalation outside it.

    From the armchair perspective, these sorts of strikes are exactly what I'd imagine that China is advocating for behind closed doors. A few well-placed drone strikes can cause more economic damage than any SAM shootdown or embassy attack could, tactically accelerating the war and strategically entrenching Chinese technology.

  • ivan_gammel 2 days ago

    He may care in the end, because TACO. Looks like this is a pattern of modern war where both sides are testing the escalation levels by attacking the infrastructure. It‘s like MAD, but going up in smaller increments rather than hitting with everything after one or two limited strikes like nuclear. Basically, you hit my power plant, I‘ll hit yours. It‘s the same path Ukraine went on: they initially showed restraint in responses, but now they are matching Russian pressure by choosing the same civilian targets.

    • nubg 2 days ago

      > by choosing the same civilian targets

      not sure what the point of this propaganda is?

      ukraine doesn't shoot rockets at appartments.

      hitting (dual use) energy infrastructure is a completely different level then targeting civilian homes.

      • ivan_gammel 2 days ago

        Nobody except Israel is setting civilian homes as targets for their rockets. Not all energy infrastructure is even remotely „dual use“ (and this label is itself propaganda used to justify strikes on non-military targets).

        • idiotsecant 2 days ago

          All Russian infrastructure of all types would be perfectly safe tomorrow if they just stopped brutally invading their neighbors. Let's be plain and clear here: the Russian moral position lies somewhere 10 miles below the floor of the deepest ocean trench. The moral high road is pretty easy to achieve.

          • ivan_gammel 2 days ago

            I don‘t think „moral high roads“ have any relevance in context of this discussion. If such conversation triggers you, try to breathe and think why first.

            • idiotsecant 1 day ago

              Yes, I find that quite often morality becomes temporarily irrelevant when it's inconvenient for the party acting immorally.

              Nevertheless, this is the one of the vanishingly few conflicts where there is a good guy and a bad guy. Sometimes the universe gives us a break from endless grey areas. This is one of those!

              If you find the idea of an autonomous sovereign state defending it's borders 'triggering' I might suggest some soothing jazz and a warm milk.

              All the best

        • queenkjuul 2 days ago

          US seems to have hit more than a few apartment blocks in Tehran. But you're mostly right

          • ivan_gammel 2 days ago

            This has happened in all ongoing conflicts but in only a few cases it is known to be intentional (Israeli strikes). I don‘t think USA or Iran does target residential blocks, but just like everyone else they may act on bad intelligence or it may be accidental.

            And the reason is not just rules of engagement - such targets simply have negative value for attacker.

      • queenkjuul 2 days ago

        Dual use is nonsense, all power plants and highways are "dual use", hell so are farms, water treatment, dams... It's a term used exclusively to justify war crimes.

    • drivingmenuts 2 days ago

      He won't care unless someone bribes him to care. This is all happening someplace not at one of his golf courses.

      • defrost 2 days ago

        Well, there you have it - the principal investors in $30 billion dollar capital infrastructure projects have been known to bribe a POTUS or two.

        At the very least dangle a shiny gold ball tickling trophy in his eyeline to briefly gain attention.

wewewedxfgdf 2 days ago

Seems pretty easy to me to just stop the war to end this sort of stuff.

But I must be missing something.

  • paulryanrogers 2 days ago

    Trump must save face. Publicly backing down is only possible once there's some kind of out, probably involving Iran loudly compromising.

    • grafmax 2 days ago

      Trump would also have to navigate the loyalty the US state apparatus has to Israel. Iran has made it clear that the ceasefire option is off the table this time round. So I just don’t see the US extricating itself from this quagmire barring some extreme political upheaval.

      But who knows, if you take Trump’s incompetence, plus the possibility of global economic collapse, plus the possibility of global food shortages, we just might see it.

    • paulpauper 2 days ago

      Trump is old and a lame duck. I think he sees not backing down in as his last hope of creating a legacy

      • CamperBob2 2 days ago

        That "lame duck" still owns Congress lock, stock and barrel. Don't underestimate the damage he can still do.

        The only question is which country he's hurting more, the US or Iran.

      • joquarky 2 days ago

        "Lame duck" doesn't apply as cleanly when Congress is complicit.

  • lazyeye 2 days ago

    The view from the couch is such that everything seems pretty easy really.

    • add-sub-mul-div 2 days ago

      I remember someone famously once said that the US presidency was going to be easy.

  • jameskilton 2 days ago

    We are in a really bad situation, of our own making no doubt.

    We actually have no idea who's in charge of Iran (the stated ruler has yet to be seen and probably was severely injured in the same blast that killed Khamenei), but it's a pretty good bet that they are even more extreme and hard-line than before.

    We've shown that Iran has complete and total control over the global economy via energy markets.

    Every other country in the region wants Iran gone. Or to put it in more direct terms, the US kind of needs to "finish the job".

    If we back down now, Iran wins, and that may actually be the worst possible situation to end up in.

    To everyone who voted for Trump ... YOU VOTED FOR THIS. THANKS.

    • jmye 2 days ago

      > To everyone who voted for Trump ... YOU VOTED FOR THIS. THANKS.

      This conflict was obvious and inevitable (and called out by literally anyone with half a brain) and exactly what every single one of them voted for. Don’t ever let them pretend otherwise.

    • throwaway25231 2 days ago

      > To everyone who voted for Trump ... YOU VOTED FOR THIS. THANKS.

      You might have not voted for Trump, but you sure agree with him on that "finish the job". So... thanks?

      > If we back down now, Iran wins...

      How about some radical change and we just let them win and negotiate some better deal for us?

    • gos9 12 hours ago

      I DID VOTE FOR ADVANCING AMERICAN INTERESTS, DIDN’T YOU?

  • luke5441 2 days ago

    Irans leadership does not want to be killed by being bombed every few month. So they need to impose sufficient costs to deter bombing them.

    Idk what you are missing... maybe that people don't want to be killed and try to implement strategies to not get killed?

    • dzhiurgis 2 days ago

      Iran leadership would be honored to die while trying to destroy Israel and save Iran. They don't care about death.

      It's the same fatalistic mentality as in Russia. They don't give a shit. They almost enjoy suffering as it's part of their ethos.

    • _DeadFred_ 1 day ago

      FYI the IRGC is importing more invaders to prop up it's unpopular occupation regime, this time Pakistani militia are now being recruited into Iran to oppress/occupy the Iranian population and act in service of the occupation theocratic government:

      "The roaming of the Islamic Republic's proxies in Iran; entry of "Zainabiyoun" of Pakistan after "Hashd al-Shaabi" of Iraq and "Fatemiyoun" of Afghanistan

      Reports of the presence of forces affiliated with the Zainabiyoun Division of Pakistan have been published in various areas of Sistan and Baluchestan province."

mskogly 2 days ago

Says «Tom’s hardware». Get verification from a trusted source before sharing

  • queenkjuul 2 days ago

    The article has a link to the video direct from the Iranian spokesman, idk what more you need

yanhangyhy 1 day ago

its very smart move...for Iran. really <art of war> thing.

k310 2 days ago

It started as "Weapons of Mass Distraction" from Epstein.

Completely overplayed. Epstein (and fiends) will be the cause of more mass slaughter, starting with a school full of little girls. Of course, little girls.

The world is being run by a gang of narcissistic, sociopathic fiends thanks to all the idiots who fell for their racist, misogynist, nationalist, religious fanaticism.

Buddhist leader Daisaku Ikeda:

To end the human institution of war, to relegate it to history with such barbarous practices as slavery―at one time also considered a natural, inevitable, “part of human nature”―we must establish respect for the inviolable dignity of human life as the core value of our age.

Every war, when viewed from the undistorted perspective of life’s sanctity, is a “civil war” waged by humanity against itself.

stavros 1 day ago

The US really pulled a Russia with this "special military operation".

  • b65e8bee43c2ed0 1 day ago

    both wars are equally unjustified, but the US has lost what, <20 people by now, in over a month? Putin loses >20 people per hour of his war.

    • OwlsParlay 1 day ago

      Trump has avoided a ground invasion up to this point for this exact reason, even trying to take one of outerlying islands would have heavy casualties due to drone warfare. There's speculation that the mess over the weekend was the result of a SOF mission gone wrong.

    • matusp 1 day ago

      Russia is actually gaining people in this war. The occupied territory they intend to keep has a prewar population of 10M.

      • krige 1 day ago

        That would be true if they were keeping the native population there alive. We know they were importing presumably loyal people from deep Russia. What happened to original occupants? You can guess.

      • TiredOfLife 22 hours ago

        The mass graves they are making in occupied territories say otherwise.

    • stavros 1 day ago

      I'd say "I agree, the US should lose more people" but I wouldn't wish casualties on anyone.

      Still, the fact that the US can kill people without any cost because they send drones to do it doesn't sit well with me at all.

      • pjc50 1 day ago

        In fairness, Iran has also been conducting its campaign with missiles and the Shahed drones. The Iran-Israel war has killed a lot of people who are neither Iranian nor Israeli but happen to live in Palestine or Lebanon.

        • stavros 1 day ago

          Yeah I don't really like having to defend Iran, so I don't know what to tell you. Nobody in this is right.

          • cineticdaffodil 1 day ago

            The world os wrong because its sliding back into the rule of the strong from the before times.

    • JumpCrisscross 1 day ago

      > the US has lost what, <20 people by now, in over a month? Putin loses >20 people per hour of his war

      Not sure why you're being downvoted. Russia's economy and military have been flogged by their war in a way America's has not. Moreover, we have midterms this year and a Presidential election in 2. Moscow has no similar 'fuck it' exit option.

      • mikkupikku 1 day ago

        The American people are already getting flogged when they buy fuel and groceries. The longer this war continues the worse it will get. Nonetheless, the American people themselves are mostly safe at home, the precedent for Iran launching any sort of attacks against the American homeland is basically nonexistent. Even sending terror cells, you'd think Iran would be on this for how often their western critics accuse them of funding terrorism, but in America? Crickets. This war is bullshit.

        • JumpCrisscross 1 day ago

          > American people are already getting flogged when they buy fuel and groceries

          No, we're not. It's bad. But it's nothing compared to Russia.

          • mikkupikku 1 day ago

            Not as bad as Russia... damning with faint praise, aren't we?

            • JumpCrisscross 20 hours ago

              > damning with faint praise, aren't we?

              No. I'm calling out bullshit. If someone says Bob is a terrorist, and I say no, Bob is not a terrorist, I'm not damning Bob "with faint praise" by calling out a nonsense comparison.

              There is plenty bad America is doing and threatening in this war. We don't need word games to discuss them adultly.

          • SanjayMehta 16 hours ago

            And you know about Russia how exactly? Ever been there?

        • mikkupikku 1 day ago

          Downvotes from ziofascists are always a great reward. Let's go for some more, do tell me, where have been the Iranian terror cells in America? We know the US funded terror cells in Iran, the president bragged amount arming groups in Iran to overthrow the government. When has Iran done this to America?

          It hasn't happened. The narrative of Iran being a funder of terrorism is essentially bullshit, particularly in relation to America, and no less in relation to Israel (a state founded on acts of terrorism against the British and Palestinians.)

          • SanjayMehta 16 hours ago

            You're trying to educate the wilfully ignorant. I do it too, in the dim hope that maybe, just maybe, one hypocrite will actually look up the reality and get educated.

            It's a fools errand, especially on Hypocrisy News, a politer version of Reddit.

            • AlexeyBelov 12 hours ago

              Maybe you should shop hanging around here then. I'm unsure of exactly why you haven't been banned yet with your comment history.

      • ceejayoz 1 day ago

        Russia’s economy and military have been flogged for years to get to the current point. The US is just on month two.

        The two powers have wildly different militaries and strategies. Comparing body counts is never gonna be a super helpful metric by itself.

        • JumpCrisscross 1 day ago

          > Russia’s economy and military have been flogged for years to get to the current point. The US is just on month two

          Russia's military power has been vastly diminished by its war. If America committed to a ground invasion and then stuck with it through the next President, yes, we'd probably see similar degradation of American martial ability over years.

          > two powers have wildly different militaries and strategies. Comparing body counts is never gonna be a super helpful metric by itself

          Agree. But it does point to the extent to which one system will go to reduce loss of life.

  • cooloo 1 day ago

    Explain when war is justified? Anyone supposed to protect Iranian civilians or it is just no one care about them?

    • mikkupikku 1 day ago

      America is blowing up Iranian civilians and America's president is threatening a genocide.

    • stavros 1 day ago

      How lucky the US is, wherever they go to spread freedom, they find oil.

mikkupikku 1 day ago

Oh no!

...anyway... Seriously bros, this is a war where one side is making wildly inflammatory, specific and credible threats against the civilian infrastructure of the other and this is a response to that, hardly even a response in kind. If they strike these assets it will cause financial burden for rich people, not plunge millions of civilians into darkness as the POTUS is credibly threatening to do.

Iranian attacks on US soil: Fuck all! So why is America fighting Iran? Insane ziofascist cultists picking fights on the other side of the planet to provoke the Apocalypse so they can all be raptured to paradise. (Translation: boomers are getting old and they want to see burning flesh one more time before they die.)

  • graemep 1 day ago

    Iran has threatened to destroy water supplies in the Gulf states, which would kill huge numbers of people.

    • mikkupikku 1 day ago

      After America attacked them, sure, and in any case they aren't even attacking America, so again, why is America involved?

      • 21asdffdsa12 1 day ago

        Because Iran attacks them relentlessly by proxxy? Hoothis, Hezbullah, Hamas, etc. It also wars with the kurds and had some fun in afghanistan?

        Iran is not passive - iran is active, a wannabe us (lets call it micro-satan) - that wants to do what russia did along its borders.

        • mikkupikku 1 day ago

          > Because Iran attacks them relentlessly by proxxy? Hoothis, Hezbullah, Hamas, etc

          Iran doesn't use any of these to attack America. You seem to be confusing Israel for America, a common problem in American politics.

          • 21asdffdsa12 1 day ago

            The us is the peace guarantor for maritime trade in the region. Its the protector of several oil powers. When the hoothi shoot on ships, they hit the us.

          • poisonarena 1 day ago

            The navy anti-drone team on my last 2 ships in the merchant marine would argue differently

          • gryzzly 1 day ago

            Iranian proxies are responsible for well over 1,000 American deaths since 1979, and there were dozens of foiled plots on American soil and hundreds of individual militia attacks in Iraq and Syria, directed by Iran.

            • kdheiwns 1 day ago

              For reference, how many times has the US interfered with Iran's government and how many people in Iran has the US killed since 1979? That's the only way to get a fair view of this discussion. Just wondering if all this happened in a vacuum or, god forbid, Iran maybe has some reason to dislike the US.

              • gryzzly 1 day ago

                this was a reply to people saying "Iran is not attacking the US". It is of course convenient to bend this discussion into a different direction, but this was a reply to blind propaganda that sees only one side as responsible for bad things.

                • kdheiwns 1 day ago

                  Why would Iran attack the US? Did they just randomly decide to hate America in 1979? Or did America do something that triggered that hate?

                  • gambutin 1 hour ago

                    An evil regime requires a constant “evil” enemy to justify its own existence.

              • akdev1l 1 day ago

                “What about…?” Does not make for a good argument.

                • srean 1 day ago

                  When the comment is a response to another that justifies current attacks on Iran because Irani proxies killed US, it matters a big F'ing deal that those were in retaliation of the US historically scuttling Iranian parliamentary democracy and killing 50K Iranians by way of chemical munitions alone through its proxy.

                  • akdev1l 1 day ago

                    No it doesn’t.

                    The post was replying to this:

                    >Iran doesn't use any of these to attack America.

                    This is false, as the post explained.

                    Saying “what about the US attacking Iran?” does not change the above being false. In fact the US attacking Iran does not change the above false either.

                    Even if we accept both things as true:

                    1. Iran has historically attacked the US 2. The US has historically destabilized/attacked Iran

                    It doesn’t change the fact that “Iran does not use any of these (proxy groups) to attack America” is a false statement.

                    Skip me with your emotional arguments because I’ll just think you’re posturing and just trying to advance your agenda :-)

                    • srean 1 day ago

                      There is a difference between "attack" (that has a connotation of being unprovoked and in bad faith) and "retaliation" against acts of drawing first blood.

                      More so if those primary attacks had 50K killed by way of proxies (100K according to more realistic estimates).

                      Sometimes, what one dishes out, comes back. If it does, rest of the world thinks it is only fair. Yes Iran has been retaliating, very weakly, to counterbalance attacks on itself by the US and its proxies.

                      There is not much doubt on who acted in bad faith first.

                      The US hurting its toe by kicking a stone and then complaining that it is the stone that attacked is not a good argument.

                • kdheiwns 1 day ago

                  It's like saying "A home owner shot armed burglar in self defense," then crying "self defense is whataboutism! That home owner needs to face mob justice!" Nah. Those tactics of yours simply do not work anymore. Everyone sees through it. Iran wouldn't be doing any of this if they weren't constantly being bombed and attacked and having their leaders assassinated. The strait was open 2 months ago and had no issues. Two countries decided to ruin that and they deserve to face the consequences.

            • srean 1 day ago

              [To the downvoter, downvoting is not going to change the historical facts]

              It was the US that upended Iranian parliamentary democracy with a military coup, sponsored chemical weapons attacks on Irani population (through its proxy Iraq). This killed some 30k to 50k by way of chemical attacks alone. Credible sources estimate 100K killed by these chemical weapons attacks alone.

              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iraqi_chemical_attacks_against...

              US shot down their passenger jet. US has imposed crippling sanctions that have decimated the economic well being of the country compared to what it could have been.

              Iran Air Flight 655 was an international scheduled passenger flight from Tehran to Dubai via Bandar Abbas that was shot down on 3 July 1988 by two surface-to-air missiles fired by USS Vincennes, a United States Navy warship. The missiles hit the Iran Air aircraft, an Airbus A300, while it was flying its usual route over Iran's territorial waters in the Persian Gulf, shortly after the flight departed its stopover location, Bandar Abbas International Airport. All 290 people on board were killed. No apologies yet.

              Talking about Iranian proxies alone is one-sided if you don't consider what US-Israel proxies have been doing to them. US Israel have inflicted 10 to 100X more Irani deaths than what Iran has done in retaliation.

              You are either ignorant or deliberately underplaying that. Most likely the latter.

              • 21asdffdsa12 1 day ago

                Only westerners can be bad actors or at all in historic events racism of the charts? It takes two to tango and iran is dancing its heart out.. and could have had the most peacefull life, if its religion would not involve destroying all "unbelievers" in the middle east - first and foremost aimed at israel.

                • srean 1 day ago

                  > if its religion would not involve destroying all "unbelievers" in the middle east -

                  That would be ultra orthodox zionists and illegal settlers that has been stealing land for decades now.

                  https://www.primevideo.com/detail/Louis-Theroux-The-Ultra-Zi...

                  An illuminating documentary. Everyone should give it a watch to understand the Zionist belief system.

                  There is very little room to doubt who the bad actor is and was. No matter how many canards you can try and thrust, how many attempts you make to color this as a religious holy war.

                  That the Islamic revolution was and is against Jews is a lie. In any case the Islamic revolution happened because of excesses by the US sponsored Shah who was put in charge after the US dismantled Iran's parliamentary democracy.

                  Even today Tehran hosts Dr. Sapir Hospital and Charity Center, a Jewish charity hospital, the largest charity among the religious minorities in Iran. It is doing well, thank you.

                  Ayatollah Khomeini himself wrote a personal note thanking the hospital for its help after the revolution succeeded.

                  Synagogues in Tehran are doing very well in the Islamic regime, thank you. Except for one that US+Israel bombed recently in Tehran.

                  This is in contrast to Israeli false flags, such as the Lavon affair and Baghdad synagogue bombings by Israel to drive a rift between Jews and the country they were residing in. Israel has a long documented history of bombing synagogues in other countries in false flag operations.

                  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lavon_Affair

                  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1950%E2%80%931951_Baghdad_bomb...

                  In fact Irani Jews have often criticized Israel when Israel has acted against Palestinians. Chief Rabbi of Iran https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yehuda_Gerami has denounced Zionist and Israeli policies.

                  https://www.csmonitor.com/1998/0203/020398.intl.intl.3.html

                  """ It comes as a surprise to many visitors to discover that Iran, a country so hostile to Israel and with a reputation for intolerance, is home to a small but vibrant Jewish community that is an officially recognized religious minority under Iran's 1979 Islamic Constitution.

                  "Khomeini didn't mix up our community with Israel and Zionism - he saw us as Iranians," says Haroun Yashyaei, a film producer and chairman of the Central Jewish Community in Iran. """

                  • 21asdffdsa12 1 day ago

                    Could he say anything else or other? He must sing the dhimi and hostage song for his life depends on it. I know what happens to the ghetto after the friday prayer. Pieces be upon the true believers..

                    • srean 1 day ago

                      Here is some Hebrew bible. So much for stoning and glass houses.

                      https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Deuteronomy%202...

                      "When you march up to attack a city, make its people an offer of peace. If they accept and open their gates, all the people in it shall be subject to forced labor and shall work for you.

                      If they refuse to make peace and they engage you in battle, lay siege to that city. When the Lord your God delivers it into your hand, put to the sword all the men in it. As for the women, the children, the livestock and everything else in the city, you may take these as plunder for yourselves. And you may use the plunder the Lord your God gives you from your enemies. This is how you are to treat all the cities that are at a distance from you and do not belong to the nations nearby.

                      However, in the cities of the nations the Lord your God is giving you as an inheritance, do not leave alive anything that breathes. Completely destroy[a] them—the Hittites, Amorites, Canaanites, Perizzites, Hivites and Jebusites—as the Lord your God has commanded you"

                      Not to mention Israel's acts on Middle Eastern Jewish people

                      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lavon_Affair

                      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1950%E2%80%931951_Baghdad_bomb...

                • Hikikomori 1 day ago

                  It takes two to tango is a weird way to describe western imperialism.

              • _DeadFred_ 1 day ago

                Interesting to see this chemical attack talking point suddenly in the last week. But yet posters here will claim the bad actors are pushing 'zionist' talking points and ignore when an obviously coordinated Iranian talking point is suddenly injected into every thread within a week.

        • vachina 1 day ago

          Still none of your business

          • baq 1 day ago

            Persian gulf is everyone’s business.

        • throwaway25231 1 day ago

          How about USA proxies? Or are proxy wars just reserved for other party?

      • igorramazanov 1 day ago

        My personal opinion is that, it's because with the previous political and cultural trends, West had (maybe still has) actually quite high chances of collapsing and falling in the long term due to its own indecisiveness, lots of words mixed a lack of actions against coordinated and targeted efforts of Russia, Iran, Venezuela, Belarus, Cuba, China, Syria and North Korea.

        I remember national state TV in Russia talking about "we are ready to nuke United States if needed" in 2014 [1].

        So, domestically, government made sure people believe that the West is the mortal enemy and we were are already at some kind of cold war since Crimea annexation, it's just West didn't notice, seems like.

        Then, there were also artifical immigration crisis at EU borders created by Russia and Belarus.

        And many other various hybrid and asymmetrical attacks.

        1. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TA9mVLomYo8

        So, USA recognized the danger and started dismantling the problem piece by piece, to ensure a long term peace and safety of its people. Could it be better organized and coordinated with allies? Probably, yes, but the meaning stays.

        • jurgenburgen 1 day ago

          > So, USA recognized the danger and started dismantling the problem piece by piece, to ensure a long term peace and safety of its people. Could it be better organized and coordinated with allies? Probably, yes, but the meaning stays.

          By becoming part of the problem? Trump threatening to invade Greenland was a wake-up call for Europe. Actively supporting forces that want to tear down democracy in Europe isn’t particularly helpful either.

          If we become like China and Russia then why is our civilization in any way better?

        • graemep 1 day ago

          If the west collapses it will be because of its internal problems. Inefficiency, bad government, inequality.

          I think you are right that the West is complacent about its enemies because it cannot really shake the belief in its superiority that came from winning the cold war and dominating the world in the decades after, I just do not think that is the biggest threat.

        • pjc50 1 day ago

          > Russia, Iran, Venezuela, Belarus, Cuba, China, Syria and North Korea.

          Putting these all in the same list conflates very different situations.

              - Big actual threat with body count: Russia.
              - Russian proxies: Syria (very lethal, but mostly within Syria, not a "threat to the west", complicated by Daesh and AQ)
              - Nasty autocracy but stable cold war: NK
              - Autocracy, but largely minding their own business and with no real capability to threaten: Cuba, Venezuela
              - Major trading partner: China
          

          > USA recognized the danger and started dismantling the problem piece by piece

          Trump era has systematically downplayed the threat from Russia. And let's not forget how many members of Trump campaign staff were jailed due to Russian influence.

          • graemep 1 day ago

            Is Russia really a threat? It has a small economy. Its no threat at all to the US, and could be easily be beaten by the European NATO countries. It has struggled to take on just Ukraine with western backing.

            China has a far bigger economy and far bigger armed forces. It has a history of aggression and has border disputes with multiple countries.

            I strongly suspect that people who downplay the risk from China have not yet internalised the fact that no-white countries are powerful too now.

            • pjc50 1 day ago

              The airliner shootdown? The polonium poisonings? Miscellaneous sabotage attempts in Europe? In addition to, you know, the active war.

              There's a lot of things that China "might" do but hasn't so far translated into significant violence, beyond the low-intensity border dispute in the mountains with India. Do they have power? Yes. Are they making threats? Other than a war of words with Japan, not really. What is this "history of aggression"?

              Between China and the US, only one of those two has made threats to the territorial integrity of Europe.

      • gryzzly 1 day ago

        1979-1981 - Tehran, Iran — 66 Americans held hostage 444 days

        1983 Apr - Beirut, Lebanon — 17 Americans killed (U.S. Embassy bombing)

        1983 Oct - Beirut, Lebanon — 241 U.S. military killed (Marine barracks bombing)

        1984 Mar - Beirut, Lebanon — 1 American killed (CIA chief Buckley kidnapped, later killed)

        1985 Jun - Beirut, Lebanon — 1 American killed (TWA Flight 847 hijacking)

        1989 Jul - Lebanon — 1 American killed (Col. Higgins murdered)

        1995 Apr - Gaza Strip — 1 American killed (car bomb)

        1995 Aug - Jerusalem, Israel — 1 American killed, 100+ wounded (bus bombing)

        1996 Feb - Jerusalem, Israel — 3 Americans killed, 3 wounded (bus bombing)

        1996 Mar - Tel Aviv, Israel — 2 Americans killed (shopping center bombing)

        1996 May - West Bank — 1 American killed, 1 wounded

        1996 Jun - Khobar, Saudi Arabia — 19 Americans killed, ~500 wounded (Khobar Towers)

        1997 Sep - Jerusalem, Israel — 1 American killed, 7 wounded (mall bombing)

        1998 Aug - Nairobi/Dar es Salaam — 12 Americans killed, thousands wounded (embassy bombings)

        2001 Sep - New York/Washington D.C. — Iran facilitated transit of hijackers (2,977 total killed)

        2002 Jan - West Bank — 1 American killed

        2002 Jul - Jerusalem, Israel — 5 Americans killed (Hebrew University bombing)

        2003 Aug - Jerusalem, Israel — 5 Americans killed (bus bombing)

        2003 Oct - Gaza Strip — 3 Americans killed (diplomatic convoy bombing)

        2003-2011 - Iraq — 603 U.S. troops killed (Iranian-backed militia IED/EFP campaign)

        2011 - Washington D.C. — 0 casualties (assassination plot on Saudi ambassador foiled)

        2019 Jun - Strait of Hormuz — 0 casualties (U.S. Global Hawk drone shot down)

        2019 Sep - Saudi Arabia — 0 American casualties (Abqaiq oil facility drone strike)

        2019 Dec - Baghdad, Iraq — 0 casualties (U.S. Embassy stormed)

        2020 Jan - Ain al-Assad, Iraq — 100+ U.S. troops with traumatic brain injuries (ballistic missile strike)

        2021-2022 - Iraq/Syria — ongoing U.S. base attacks by Iranian-backed militias

        2023 Oct-Nov - Iraq/Syria — 60+ attacks in Iraq, 90+ in Syria; scores of U.S. troops wounded

        2024 Jan 28 - Tower 22, Jordan — 3 Americans killed, 34+ wounded (drone strike)

        2024 - Red Sea/Yemen — ongoing Houthi drone/missile attacks on U.S. naval assets

        2024 Nov - United States — 0 casualties (Trump assassination plot foiled)

        • JumpCrisscross 1 day ago

          Would be stronger with a source. Otherwise, it feels on the border of being potential AI slop.

        • srean 1 day ago

          30K to 50K Iranians killed by chemical weapons attacks by US proxy, Iraq. Credible sources estimate 100K killed and 30K-50K is a conservative lowball estimate.

          This is an active unhealed wound in Iran. Families of the dead still grieve those killed in cemeteries and graves that are there in almost all their major cities.

          Iran has every reason to not like the US which has been destabilising and killing and crippling them economically for several decades.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iraqi_chemical_attacks_against...

          Iran Air Flight 655 was an international scheduled passenger flight from Tehran to Dubai via Bandar Abbas that was shot down on 3 July 1988 by two surface-to-air missiles fired by USS Vincennes, a United States Navy warship. The missiles hit the Iran Air aircraft, an Airbus A300, while it was flying its usual route over Iran's territorial waters in the Persian Gulf, shortly after the flight departed its stopover location, Bandar Abbas International Airport. All 290 people on board were killed.

          No apologies have been forthcoming.

        • panja 1 day ago

          Interesting you started in 1979 instead of 1953

        • curt15 1 day ago

          History doesn't start in 1979. One can draw a direct line to those events from 1953.

      • JumpCrisscross 1 day ago

        > they aren't even attacking America

        America never invaded Greenland. Nevertheless, we're facing blowback because we threatened it.

        Iran has been chanting "death to America" for decades. That isn't casus belli. Not by a long shot. But pretending Iran hasn't been playing the part of belligerent for years is rewriting history.

    • ceejayoz 1 day ago

      Wasn’t that in response to Trump posting that he’d hit theirs?

      https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/watch-live-hegseth-and...

      > In a Truth Social post on March 30, Trump warned that the U.S. would obliterate "all of their Electric Generating Plants, Oil Wells and Kharg Island (and possibly all desalinization plants!), which we have purposefully not yet 'touched.'"

      • graemep 1 day ago

        It follows Trumps threats to destroy power plants, but predates the threat you quote. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/mar/22/iran-says-dest...

        AFAIK there is no exemption that says it is OK to commit war crimes if the other side does.

        If attacking power plants and oil production is a war crime, then Russia, Ukraine, and many other countries are guilty of it.

        • embedding-shape 1 day ago

          > AFAIK there is no exemption that says it is OK to commit war crimes if the other side does.

          Of course not, but I still think the expectation that someone doesn't commit war crimes against you disappears relatively quickly when you're openly and proudly admitting you'll open to violating the rules of war and saying international humanitarian law doesn't matter.

        • nkrisc 1 day ago

          That may be so, but remember that Ukraine is fighting for its very survival, and Iran may be as well.

      • JumpCrisscross 1 day ago

        > Wasn’t that in response to Trump posting that he’d hit theirs?

        It's Iran. They haven't been following international law since 1979. That isn't an excuse to commit war crimes against them. But Iran really doesn't have any legs to stand on when it comes to complaining about targeting civilian infrastructure–they and their proxies have been doing this for decades.

        • megous 1 day ago

          Just claiming something doesn't make it true. And also there's the whole scale thing.

          • JumpCrisscross 1 day ago

            > there's the whole scale thing

            Sort of? I don't think that's really how war crimes work. Unless we're objectively in eye-for-an-eye territory, in which case we're not really talking about international law anymore. (To be clear, I think everyone talking about international law in this conflict is posturing. We've been collectively setting new norms for years, and between Russia, China and America, the rules seem to have inched closer to total war.)

            • megous 1 day ago

              It doesn't matter. Killing 34 something children like Hamas did vs 20 000 something children like Israel did in the same conflict.

              Or threatening some water facility in a country with functioning air defense vs threatening entire population of 92 million with complete anihilation ("A whole civilization will die tonight" like Trump just said on behalf of all americans - credible threat from a nuclear superpower with enough nukes to spare), in a country where they can't really defend against this other than spreading the costs on enemy-allied countries.

              There's bad, and there's 100x worse. And yeah, people should focus on stopping the 100x worse first, is my belief.

              • JumpCrisscross 19 hours ago

                > people should focus on stopping the 100x worse first

                That's fair. When I see conflicts like this, I tend to sit back and observe. There are enough conflicts on the planet where both sides are not being bastards, and where the diffences in scale of bastardly doesn't clearly map to differences in capability (versus will).

        • curt15 1 day ago

          >They haven't been following international law since 1979.

          History doesn't start in 1979. Why not go back to 1953? Overthrowing another country's elected government is no more conscionable under international law.

          • JumpCrisscross 1 day ago

            > Why not go back to 1953? Overthrowing another country's elected government is no more conscionable under international law

            Nobody said you can't. I don't think the point is undermined. Neither the U.S. nor Iran have shown any consistent affection for international law.

            • srean 1 day ago

              This "both sides" game does not carry much weight when one side, the US and Britain, made the bad faith move on Iran first.

              Stubbing one's toe and complaining "both sides" - the pebble and me.

              Complaining I am being hit back because I hit first, does not elicit support. Especially, when one is less than forthcoming about who made the move on a sovereign country first. Made a move just because that country had resources you are interested in.

              If you want the resource then buy it. Norway nationalised it's oil, Iran had equal sovereign right to do so.

              You and I agree on many things. This one is not one of them.

            • graemep 1 day ago

              Hardly anyone consistently follows international law.

            • megous 1 day ago

              At least the Iran leaders are not out of control nutjobs, compared to US president, and electorat/cronnies who put him to power and gave him nukes:

              CNN: Trump threatens Iran ahead of deadline: "A whole civilization will die tonight" (speaking about 92 million people)

      • pjc50 1 day ago

        Iran was having a water crisis before all this, to the extent of considering relocating the capital city away from Tehran's current location. Bombing Iranian water infrastructure will kill a lot of civilians, just as similar things happened in the Yemeni civil war (which Iran is a participant in). It's disheartening how much the prospect of mass murder is met with a shrug.

    • SanjayMehta 1 day ago

      And do you blame them? US behaviour in Iraq, Yugoslavia et al has always been to attack power stations and civilian infrastructure first.

      The 47th war criminal in chief Trump and his Secretary of War(crimes) is making threats on TV and social media.

      I would love to see the terrorist regime of Iran collapse but in this scenario, sorry, the US is completely in the wrong.

      • JumpCrisscross 1 day ago

        > do you blame them?

        Blame is a weird word for geopolitics. I think Iran fucked up hitting those targets pre-emptively. Someone at home had to show their hard-liner boss that they were just as hard-line as he is. So they did something macho. The consequences be damned.

        The mirroring of dysfunction on each side of this war is uncanny.

    • srean 1 day ago

      US-Israel struck Iran's desalination plants first.

      Iran's targeting strategy has been a capability restrained tit for tat, for the most part. This is true except for attacks on other gulf states right after US-Israel decapitation strike.

    • megous 1 day ago

      You seem informed. Why did they do so? And what motivated them?

      Sounds like a thing a state would not want to do to their neighbor out of the blue.