Skip to main content

Posts

Follow Me !

When the “AI Czar” Discovers the Obvious: A War Without an Exit

  In Washington’s increasingly surreal theater of war planning, it has apparently fallen to the administration’s AI Czar , , to point out what should have been obvious before the first missile was launched: wars have consequences. Not small ones. Not manageable ones. But the sort that can end civilizations. Sacks recently delivered what might be described as the most unsettling moment of honesty to emerge from the current U.S.–Iran confrontation. His warning was simple: if the conflict continues to escalate, Israel could face a scenario where its conventional defenses—systems like and —are eventually overwhelmed by Iran’s massive missile salvos. At that point, he suggested, the unthinkable could become “logical.” A nuclear weapon. Not as policy. Not as strategy. But as the final act of desperation when the illusion of control collapses. For critics who spent years celebrating the technological miracle of missile defense, this was awkward. After all, the public narrative...
Recent posts

Israel Running Critically Low on Missile Interceptors

  Israel–Iran War Day 15 Report Date: March 13, 2026 1. Israel Warns the U.S. of Interceptor Shortage According to reporting by , Israeli officials privately informed Washington that Israel’s stockpile of ballistic missile interceptors is being rapidly depleted as the war with continues. U.S. officials told Semafor that: Israel’s interceptor inventory is approaching critically low levels . The shortage involves missiles used to intercept Iranian ballistic missile attacks . The United States had already been aware of the risk for months . One U.S. official said: “It’s something we expected and anticipated.” The comment suggests that U.S. defense planners had already predicted that Israel’s defensive systems could face strain in a prolonged war. 2. Israel’s Missile Defense System Under Heavy Strain Israel’s air-defense architecture relies on several layers , including: 1. Iron Dome. Designed to intercept short-range rockets . Mainly used against rockets from ...

Israel's New War of Attrition With Iran and Hezbollah

  What Is the Exit Strategy? (Analysis by Amos Harel — Summary and detailed breakdown) 1. Escalation of the War: U.S. and Israel Expanding the Conflict The article begins by describing a rapid escalation of the conflict between the U.S., Israel, Iran, and Hezbollah . Key developments highlighted: The United States intensified airstrikes on Iranian targets . Washington signaled it could strike Kharg Island , Iran’s main oil export terminal. Israel simultaneously expanded operations against Hezbollah in Lebanon . Israeli leaders also raised the possibility of seizing Lebanese territory to create a new buffer zone. These actions are framed as part of a strategy intended to dramatically shift the regional balance of power . However, Harel stresses that military escalation does not automatically produce strategic victory . 2. The War Is Turning Into a “War of Attrition” Harel argues that the conflict is not a quick decisive war , but increasingly resembles a long war of...

When the Interest Bill Becomes the Real Superpower: The Economy That War Forgot

  At the beginning of 2026, Washington promised Americans an economic boom . Growth would surge . Inflation would fade . Families would prosper . Then came the war with Iran — and suddenly the math started speaking louder than the speeches. Let’s start with the number that rarely appears in campaign rallies: $38 trillion . That is roughly the size of the U.S. national debt today. Debt, of course, comes with interest. With government borrowing costs hovering around 3–3.5 percent , the United States is now paying roughly $1.1–$1.3 trillion every year simply to service that debt. That’s about $3 billion every day . Or roughly $125 million every hour . And here is where the story turns quietly alarming. The annual U.S. defense budget is about $900 billion . Interest payments are already approaching — and could soon exceed the entire Pentagon budget if borrowing continues to rise and interest rates stay elevated. In other words, the United States may soon spend more money pa...

The Strait of Hormuz Crisis: The Disaster Everyone Predicted — and No One Prepared For

  There is something almost poetic about the global oil panic now unfolding around the Strait of Hormuz — poetic in the way a slow-motion train wreck can be poetic. For decades, energy analysts described the strait as the world’s most dangerous choke point. Governments wrote reports about it. Security experts warned about it. Oil executives spoke solemnly about it at conferences. And then… everyone went back to business as usual. Today, as war with Iran has effectively strangled the narrow waterway through which roughly a fifth of the world’s oil normally flows , the global energy system is discovering an uncomfortable truth : the nightmare scenario was never hypothetical. It was simply postponed. Geography, of course, is part of the problem. The Persian Gulf is a cul-de-sac, and the Strait of Hormuz is its only narrow exit. But geography alone does not explain the astonishing lack of preparation. The deeper issue lies in politics, rivalry, and a peculiar habit among powerful ...

War as Cover: How the Netanyahu Government Funds Settlers While the Region Burns

  When governments go to war, they often claim that national survival requires sacrifice. Citizens are asked to tighten their belts, accept cuts, and rally behind the flag . But the recent budget decision by the government of tells a different story — one where war becomes a convenient cover for ideological expansion. As the United States and Israel escalate confrontation with Iran, Israel’s cabinet quietly approved an additional $101 million (316 million shekels) to boost settlement activity in the occupied West Bank. The funds are embedded inside a larger discretionary pool of nearly $1.6 billion in “coalition funds.” While the public debate is dominated by missiles, airstrikes, and regional escalation, the machinery of settlement expansion continues to grind forward. According to the Israeli peace organization , part of this funding includes 50 million shekels specifically allocated to unauthorized settler farms and outposts — many of which have become flashpoints of viol...

When War Loses Its Conscience: Pete Hegseth and the Theology of “Epic Fury”

  There was a time when believed war required a moral compass. In 2005, sitting on Wall Street, he read about an insurgent bombing that killed 18 Iraqi children. He called it “the face of evil.” That moment, he said, pushed him to volunteer for the Iraq War. War, in that telling, was not merely violence — it was a moral duty. A fight against barbarism. Fast forward two decades. Now, as defense secretary under , the same man explains the purpose of the war with Iran in refreshingly blunt language: unleash “death and destruction from the sky all day long.” Apparently somewhere between Samarra and the Pentagon, the moral compass was misplaced — perhaps buried under a stack of defense contracts or lost in the euphoric applause of cable news studios. For decades, American wars were wrapped in the velvet language of ideals: democracy, freedom, liberation. Sometimes those claims were exaggerated, sometimes hypocritical — but they served an important purpose. They reminded soldiers ...

The Night Haifa Trembled: When the Fire Reached Israel’s Energy Heart

Haifa Bay Strategic Area (Port + Petrochemical Complex) What you are seeing Haifa Port – Israel’s largest Mediterranean shipping hub for cargo, energy imports, and naval logistics. Haifa Bay petrochemical zone – a dense industrial complex containing storage tanks, pipelines, and chemical plants. Re towers – the most recognizable industrial structures in northern Israel. Industrial zone map – shows how close refineries, port facilities, and civilian neighborhoods are. The Bazan Group refinery complex sits directly inside Haifa Bay , next to the port and several chemical plants. It is Israel’s largest oil refinery , capable of refining roughly 9.8 million tons of crude oil annually . Because the refinery and port are clustered together, any strike in the area threatens energy supply, shipping, and the civilian population simultaneously . Strategic Map (Simplified) Mediterranean Sea │ ┌───────────────┐ ...

The Danger of Being a Palestinian Citizen of Israel

  There are many ways to measure inequality in a society. Some examine wealth, others examine education, healthcare or employment. But perhaps the most brutal measure is far simpler: who is allowed to live safely, and who is not. Today, for many Palestinians who hold Israeli citizenship , the answer to that question is becoming terrifyingly clear. While global attention has been consumed by the expanding regional conflict — particularly the war between Israel and Iran — a different and quieter violence has been unfolding inside Israel itself. It is not missiles or airstrikes. It is a daily pattern of killings inside Palestinian towns and neighborhoods , a crime wave that has turned ordinary life into a landscape of fear. Since the beginning of the year, a Palestinian citizen of Israel has been killed nearly every day on average. In just two days in February, six people were murdered in separate incidents across the country — a grim reminder that for many families the danger i...

When the Sirens Come First: How the War With Iran Is Exposing the Fragility of Modern Missile Defense

  War has a cruel way of revealing the limits of technology. For decades, Israel cultivated an image of near-impenetrable air defense — an intricate shield of radars, satellites, and interceptors designed to detect treats long before they arrived . But the latest developments in the confrontation with Iran suggest that even the most sophisticated systems have vulnerabilities . Recently, the (IDF) admitted something striking: it can no longer guarantee that civilians will receive advance warnings before missile sirens sound . In some cases, the alerts have come only one or two minutes before impact— sometimes almost simultaneously with the sirens themselves. For a country accustomed to carefully calibrated early-warning systems, this is not a small technical detail. It is a profound signal that the character of the conflict is changing. The Shrinking Window Between Life and Death Israel’s civil defense structure normally works in two stages. A preliminary alert can arrive ...