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[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 72 points 11 hours ago* (last edited 11 hours ago)

https://xcancel.com/bonzerbarry/status/2053431762689069418

Ynet: Protecting themselves with fishing nets, with the help of donations: "There is no answer to FPV drones”.

The forces are using “fishing nets," which H. claims they obtained independently. "The goal of the 'fishing nets' that we use is actually to distance the drone's impact, so that if it hits me - I won't be killed, but 'only' injured," he said. "Instead of the army being able to provide us with them - the NCOs are raising funds to buy us some. They post a link to a story they publish, and ask citizens for money so that we can buy life-saving equipment." "Hezbollah's combat doctrine is to shoot at us once and then send another drone that targets the rescue force.

oh, a double-tap strike? the same shit the IDF has been doing for years (except, you know, the second tap here still being on military forces, and not on civilian paramedics)? yeah, how does it feel to be on the receiving end now, fuckers? hamas-red-triangle

This adds to the concern, especially for those who rush to treat the wounded and may also be harmed." "This is a life threatening situation and we are helpless against it, we are facing open skies," said H., expressing frustration.

of, "expressing frustration", huh rip-bozo

"As fighters, we do not understand how it is possible that the IDF manages to achieve the capabilities of intercepting outside the atmosphere, and in the end, facing explosive drones from Ali Express, the army does not provide a response. The fighters lose limbs in the best case and their lives in the worst case." He also criticized the government's conduct: "It continues to engage in evasion instead of finding solutions for those who show up time and time again."

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[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 66 points 1 day ago

https://xcancel.com/CarolinaLion2/status/2052903137564824048

Today, a MASSIVE explosion and fire erupted at the PBF Energy Refinery in Chalmette, Louisiana. Just more confirmation of Hanke's Schoolboy Theory of History: It's just one damn thing after another.

To make up for the loss supply due to the latest Persian Gulf War refineries and oil infrastructure in the US are being pushed to the breaking point and accidents are rather predictably occurring due to the increased workload.

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[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 33 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

Are sycophants likely to move towards more aggressive campaigns even at the cost of attrition?

I feel like the Iran war is pretty much proof of this - the US may well have crippled their capacity to fight a war against China with all the standoff munitions they expended against Iran in order to achieve... no discernible strategic objective? (they're unlikely to have been able to win a war with China even before this, but they may have at least managed to do some damage - with standoff munition supplies cut down, and with this war having demonstrated what's going to happen to US bases in the Pacific, how many strikes would they even be able to carry out in reality?) There's also attrition of airframes, attrition of ships (the Ford is probably going to be out of commission for quite a while after what they put it through), all kinds of issues that more competent personnel would have pointed out.

The notion that actually destroying Iran's missile capabilities through a bombardment campaign wouldn't be particularly feasible isn't some revolutionary idea (USMC case study that among other things discusses how Iran makes TELs in the underground missile bases) - but the crop of people left after Hegseth might not bother reading such more critical assessments, and if they do, they might not bother raising objections, given many of them are careerists and don't want to jeopardize their potential for a cushy retirement after serving at a high position for long enough.

There's also going to be all kinds of subtler impacts from the loss or silencing of less-visible people, like in logistics. For example, back to WW2 - before Operation Barbarossa, there were German officers pointing out that the Wehrmacht would run into all kinds of logistical issues, who were shut up with "we'll simply win the war before that happens!". That, of course, didn't defeat the entire Soviet Union in a few months, and all the logistics issues they were warned about, and even worse, did happen. Hegseth's whole "warrior ethos" bullshit is pretty much all about completely ignoring the material realities of how war is actually fought in favor of some macho "if we just abuse recruits hard enough in training and make them do enough push-ups we can win against any foe!"

[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 82 points 2 days ago

https://xcancel.com/MatthewPHoh/status/2052443632771228098   https://archive.ph/wHfpM

Huge story from WaPo (gift link) on Iran’s resilience to US blockade:

  • 3-4 months before “severe” pain hits
  • Iran could hold out much longer
  • “radical” nature of new regime means higher pain tolerance vs. old regime
  • Iran likely to ship oil overland in smaller amounts

U.S. official: “you see similar regimes lasting years under sustained embargoes and airpower-only wars.” Trump absolutely cannot run his blockade experiment another 3-4 months while Hormuz remains closed. It would throw the global economy into a deep recession and still might fail. There are no nuclear or ballistic missile concessions from Iran that are worth tanking the global economy and the U.S. economy along with it.

The latest leak from US military and intelligence institutions rebuts the Fox News crowd and shows an American military and intelligence establishment desperate to prevent an American return to war against Iran. In the last two weeks, we’ve seen leaks to NY Times, CNN, NBC News and now WaPo juxtaposing US munitions inventories, especially air defense missiles, against Iranian inventories, and the degree of damage done to the US military by Iran. Now, this report, which includes strengthening the understanding of Iran’s missile and drone dominance, explains how Iran’s economy has greater capacity and endurance than the Trump administration and its proxies state. Most of us understand what WaPo doesn’t say: the US economy, American public, and the US political system don’t share Iran’s capacity or endurance. I have never seen such a deliberate and coordinated effort by CIA, Pentagon and others to keep the US out of war in defiance of their political bosses. Bravo Zulu to those who are doing these leaks and their commanders who are directing them to do so.

really funny that the deep state is reduced to meekly leaking stuff to media and going "won't SOMEBODY stop this disastrous war!". guess they don't have it in them to just dome a guy when he gets out of line anymore

[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 45 points 2 days ago

https://archive.ph/FanY1

China Fighter Jet Giant’s Sales Surge After India-Pakistan Clash

China’s AVIC Chengdu Aircraft Co., maker of the fighter jets that rose to fame in the India-Pakistan conflict last year, posted record profit in 2025 and saw first-quarter sales nearly double.

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Revenue rose 15.8% to 75.4 billion yuan ($11 billion) in 2025, with profit up 6.5% to 3.4 billion yuan. Both are the highest-ever for the Chengdu-based company, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. First-quarter sales rose almost 80% on year. AVIC Chengdu’s single-engine, multi-role J-10 fighters were battle-tested in May last year, when Pakistan claimed to have shot down multiple Indian aircraft, including French-made Rafale jets. One of China’s largest defense companies by market capitalization, AVIC Chengdu attributed 2025’s outperformance to a reorganization of assets that now includes the jetmaking business. Its shares rose roughly 2% in Shenzhen on Wednesday morning, the most in more than two weeks.

The Chinese company’s international profile has risen since Pakistan praised the performance of its J-10s, and of the JF-17 jets which are jointly produced by AVIC Chengdu and Pakistan. The conflict marked one of the first times that high-tech Chinese weapons were tested in real combat. India acknowledged losing aircraft in the fighting, without specifying a number, and said it also destroyed several Pakistani planes, which Islamabad denies. Since then, AVIC Chengdu’s fighter jets have attracted attention from the developing world. Indonesia at one point signaled interest in acquiring the J-10s, while Iraq, Bangladesh and Indonesia have expressed interest in acquiring the JF-17 Thunder.

Growing arms sales is a priority, AVIC Chengdu said in an investor Q&A last week. The company, which also produces the fifth-generation J-20 fighter, in February signed a deal with its home city of Chengdu, in the southwestern province of Sichuan, to expand aerospace production. AVIC Shenyang Aircraft Co., which makes the fifth-generation J-35, last month reported 2025 sales of 44.7 billion yuan. Profit was 3.5 billion yuan, up 3.7% from 2024. AVIC Shenyang, which attributed the higher profit to a rise in sales, is also expanding its manufacturing facilities. A new factory is expected to start mass production this year, according to the government of Liaoning where AVIC Shenyang is based. Both AVIC Chengdu and AVIC Shenyang are sanctioned by the US.

[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 49 points 2 days ago

https://www.wsj.com/livecoverage/iran-hormuz/card/u-s-faced-600-attacks-in-iraq-since-onset-of-iran-war-VVEDe7glQghhthYGclfl (WSJ unfortunately seems resistant to archivers)

U.S. Faced 600 Attacks in Iraq Since Onset of Iran War

U.S. facilities in Iraq have experienced over 600 attacks since the onset of war, according to a senior U.S. official, underscoring how Iran-aligned militias in Iraq have turned the country into a major proxy battleground between Washington and Tehran.

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The U.S. is looking for concrete actions from incoming Iraqi Prime Minister Ali Al-Zaidi to crack down on pro-Iran militias in the country, the senior official said. The escalation of militia attacks on U.S. diplomatic and military compounds in Iraq triggered a significant diplomatic crisis between Washington and Baghdad after the Trump administration accused some members of the Iraqi government of having close links to the militias. The Trump administration last month suspended U.S. dollar shipments to Iraq for oil sales in a bid to pressure Iraq to dismantle pro-Iran militias. Trump previously threatened to cut off all U.S. support to Iraq in January after former Prime Minister Nouri Al-Maliki emerged as the front-runner to return to office. The U.S. accused Maliki of being too close to Iran and Shia-aligned militias during his time as prime minister from 2006 to 2014.

The senior U.S. official said they are looking for swift action from Zaidi once he takes office, including cutting off Iraqi state financial and political support for militias and a clear statement of policy that terrorist militias aren’t a part of the Iraqi state. The attacks on U.S. facilities in Iraq have ebbed after the U.S. and Iran agreed to a temporary cease-fire last month to pave the way for peace talks. Zaidi spoke by phone with U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Wednesday, according to a statement from Zaidi’s office. The pair discussed security cooperation and enhancing the capabilities of the Iraqi armed forces, the statement said.

[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 51 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

obviously shame about all the beautiful nature in North America, but the US empire collapsing itself with a series of easily preventable man-made environmental disasters would be quite funny in a Joker way matt-joker https://archive.ph/vcJU2

Military slow-rolled news of jet fuel leak at base near Washington

Maryland is assessing the damage from the incident, which fits a pattern of slow DoD responses to environmental disasters

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The Pentagon knew that Joint Base Andrews, an Air Force base just 10 miles southeast of Washington D.C., was leaking jet fuel as early as December, when the base’s fuel system failed a leak safety test. But Pentagon officials didn't tell Maryland that the base was leaking jet fuel until late March when someone on base saw oil in a nearby freshwater creek, reports NOTUS. Even after the initial call, the Pentagon withheld information about a second leak until two weeks later. “The base failed to promptly disclose leaks as required by its state oil permit and did not report the full extent of the discharge until April 8, 2026,” said the Maryland Department of the Environment. Altogether, Joint Base Andrews has lost at least 32,000 gallons in jet fuel, with an unknown amount spilling into Piscataway Creek, a tributary of the Potomac River. State officials say that jet fuel is no longer leaking into the creek, though the environmental risks are not yet clear as they do not know the precise location of all the leaked fuel. The incident is among the most significant leaks of jet fuel from a U.S. military base in recent years. It fits into a pattern of slow responses from the Pentagon, which has on several occasions failed to notify the public of environmental issues on bases.

Lawmakers are demanding answers. A letter from Maryland legislators to Air Force Secretary Troy Meink asked for a complete timeline from the Pentagon, expressing concern over the “notable delay between when Joint Base Andrews discovered the fuel leak and when the State of Maryland received full information about the complete spill volume.” The lawmakers also noted that legacy pollution from Joint Base Andrews has already caused contamination of PFAS, a synthetic “forever chemical” linked to weakened immunity and other health risks, in the surrounding area. Joint Base Andrews has not yet provided details about any PFAS cleanup. The episode has drawn comparison to a jet fuel leak at Red Hill Bulk Fuel Facility, a fuel depot precariously located just 100 feet above state-designated drinking water near Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam in Hawaii. In 2021, 19,000 gallons of jet fuel leaked from Red Hill, contaminating the drinking water of 93,000 people. Residents reported a wide range of symptoms, including gastrointestinal and neurological damage. A woman who worked at a local daycare said the babies’ skin was “as red as our flag’s.”

American citizens are literally in way more danger of being killed by their own military than any ridiculous "terrorist" threats invented by the government and media

The Navy maintained that the water at Pearl Harbor-Hickam was safe to drink, despite the strong smell of jet fuel. Nine full days after the leak, they finally shut off the pump. Pentagon Inspector General reports later confirmed that the Navy was publicly insisting that the water was safe despite never “conducting any laboratory analysis to confirm that was the case.” The report also confirmed that several Navy personnel “knew within a short time…that the spill was all or mostly fuel.” A ProPublica investigation estimates the cost of cleaning up military sites with toxic waste at $28 billion. The federal government’s estimate of PFAS contamination cleanup in military communities is $7 billion a year. Even as the Trump administration is proposing a $500 billion increase to the Pentagon budget, it has been delaying and cutting budgets for environmental cleanup at federal sites. The latest episode at Joint Base Andrews serves as a reminder of the Pentagon’s long history of denying environmental contamination, downplaying its effects, and failing to take action to remediate the contamination. The question isn't whether it will happen again; it's who will be downstream when it does.

[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 22 points 2 days ago

more

On one famous previous occasion, the possibility of an unstable president ordering a nuclear strike was blocked by the actions of the Pentagon. In 1974, with Richard Nixon’s presidency on the verge of disintegration over Watergate, the then defense secretary, James Schlesinger – fearing that the president’s fragile mental state might induce him to order a nuclear attack – ordered senior military figures to check any such commands with him. It is hard to see such a restraining role being played by Hegseth, who by common depiction sees his role as catering to Trump’s every wish and has frequently matched his boss’s belligerent rhetoric towards Iran. It adds up to scenario seen with bewilderment by Pentagon veterans seasoned in observing tensions between the civilian and military leadership but conditioned to seeing them resolved amicably. “There was tension between the office of the secretary of defense and the joint chiefs of staff when I served on the joint staff in 2002 and 2003 because of disagreements about Iraq over whether and how we should go to war,” said Carroll. “But it was all very professional and civil. This is just disarray. It’s crazy.”

[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 49 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

https://archive.ph/9srzq

‘This is just disarray’: alarm inside Pentagon after Hegseth staff purges

Insiders portray defense secretary as increasingly isolated after officers with impeccable reputations forced out

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Since Donald Trump’s first term, they have been viewed comfortingly as the “adults in the room,” a last line of defense against the impulsive whims of a president with access to the nuclear codes. Now – after an unprecedented wave of firings that has been compared by some to Stalin’s purges – the Pentagon top brass no longer seem like such a reliable bulwark. Since Trump returned to office in January last year, Pete Hegseth, the rumbustious defense secretary who has made it his mission to remake a military ethos he denounced as “woke”, has fired or forcibly retired 24 generals and senior commanders, with no performance-related reason given. About 60% have been Black or female, an approach seemingly driven by the administration’s proclaimed onslaught against “DEI [diversity, equity and inclusion] hires”. Yet the officers forced out have had impeccable reputations. The most recent victim was Gen Randy George, the army chief of staff, ousted last month reportedly after he refused to obey Hegseth’s instruction to strike four officers – two Black men and two women – from a list of prospective promotions.

The spate of firings began in February last year with the termination of General CQ Brown as chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, a figure that serves as the main interface between the armed forces and the civilian leadership. Brown, who is Black and a distinguished former air force commander, was replaced by Dan Caine, a three-star general who had retired and had to be quickly promoted to earn the fourth military star needed to win Senate confirmation to a position some observers say he lacks the necessary qualifications for. Prominent among the female officers removed was Lisa Franchetti, an admiral who was the first woman to be chief of naval operations and the first to sit on the joint chiefs of staff. Hegseth was unapologetic at a hearing of the Senate armed services committee last week when Jack Reed, a Democrat from Rhode Island, asked him if Trump had instructed him to single out Black and female officers for dismissal. “Of course not,” he replied. More revealing was his follow-up: “Members on this committee and the previous leadership of this department were focused on height, social engineering, race and gender in ways that we think were unhealthy.”

In interviews with the Guardian, insiders have portrayed Hegseth – a former Fox News host known for combative public appearances and an aggressive stance towards journalists – as increasingly isolated within the Pentagon’s sprawling bureaucracy and surrounded by a small coterie of close friends and relatives. Some say he expresses fear and paranoia about Trump firing him from a job for which critics say his background as a former national guard infantry major with combat experience in Iraq and Afghanistan is inadequate qualification. Pentagon staff have been surprised to see him accompanied to official meetings by his wife, Jennifer, a former Fox News producer who frequently sits at the back during such encounters. Hegseth’s other close companions are said to be his brother, Phil, who he has appointed as a senior adviser, along with Tim Parlatore, an attorney who has previously represented Hegseth and Trump, and Ricky Buria, a former marine and Biden administration holdover, to whom he has grown close. Most of the day-to-day work of running a vast department with about 2.1 million military personnel and 770,000 civilian employees worldwide is overseen by Steve Feinberg, the deputy defense secretary, who is a billionaire owner of an investment firm. Hegseth, meanwhile, has focused on issues of personal interest to him.

These include shaking up the Pentagon’s chaplain services – a preoccupation in line with his avowed Christian beliefs, to which he is said to give frequent voice with the invocation that “Christ is king”.

these guys are such cringy fucks catgirl-disgust

Military analysts say Hegseth’s recent firings dovetail with plans spelled out in Project 2025, the radical blueprint drawn up by the rightwing Heritage Foundation that has closely guided Trump’s second-term policies. “It talked about an officer purge and going after the so-called woke officers at the senior level,” said Paul Eaton, a retired army major-general who commanded US forces after the 2003 invasion of Iraq. “They want to create ideologically pure armed forces that will be pliant to the president and his secretary of defense and whose oath will be more to a person than to the constitution.” Eaton likened the removals to Stalin’s far bloodier purge of red army generals before the second world war – which is widely believed to have hampered the Soviet Union’s initial efforts to repel the 1941 invasion by Nazi Germany – warning that it could hinder US military operational capacity in its war effort against Iran. “I believe that the senior leadership of the US military has been substantially damaged,” he said. “You develop a fracture in the cohesion of the people at that level. It is if you haven’t been purged, you wonder if you are next if you say the wrong thing to the man or woman on your left or right that may invoke the wrath of the secretary of defense or the president.” “That’s a really unhealthy environment when you’re afraid to speak your mind, and not just truth to power, but truth in the defense of the armed forces against stupid decisions.”

The military’s willingness to resist Trump seems more crucial than ever in the light of the president’s recent vows to devastate Iran’s civilian infrastructure and his now-notorious warning that a “whole civilization will die” unless Iranian leaders agree to his conditions. Veterans worry about the rank-and-file impact of threats to carry out war crimes or even genocide. They are also concerned about the ability of senior figures – including Caine – to stand against it. “All the retired officers I know are seriously concerned of the long-term effect on the force of senior leaders saying things like no quarter, no mercy (comments that have been made by Hegseth), or [that] we’re going to eliminate a civilization without any remonstration from the senior military officials,” said Kevin Carroll, a former army colonel who has served in the offices of the defense secretary and the joint chiefs of staff. “I think it poses a real long-term risk threat to the ethics and ethos of the force.”

the US military, famed for its ethical approach to war clueless

Misgivings have been voiced about the standing of Caine, who has never held a senior command role and who some believe lacks the authority of previous joint chief chairs to resist Trump’s wilder impulses in the manner of Gen Mark Milley, who told officials to inform him of any suspect military order from the president in the wake of the 6 January 2021 insurrection at the US Capitol. “He has an extremely unusual résumé, I think an unprecedented résumé for chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, and that just has to make Caine feel that his job is always vulnerable when he sees Trump and Hegseth have fired people with excellent résumés like Brown, Franchetti or Randy George,” said Carroll. Eaton said: “I hear he’s a good man, but something happens to you when you vault from a three-star to a four-star general and there is a massive growth requirement. His body language when he does briefings with Hegseth is not that of a man who is thrilled to be there.” “What he says to the president as his senior military adviser behind close doors, I don’t know. But if you have the president of the United States get within two hours or 90 minutes of committing a strategic war crime, going after a civilization neutralization as he was threatening, we definitely have something missing in the civilian-military relationship.”

Restraining Trump seems all the more urgent amid unconfirmed reports that he discussed the possibility of using nuclear weapons against Iran in a recent White House meeting. A source with knowledge of the meeting insisted Trump was just “talking out loud about nukes” and not “demanding a strike”. One senior official from Trump’s first administration proclaimed himself unsurprised, calling the president “enamored with nukes” and saying he had to be talked out of using them against North Korea in 2017, seeing them as the “ultimate expression of his toughness”. Some question whether such powers of persuasion still exist in the present-day Pentagon. “For years, we’ve been told that we don’t have to worry about a crazy president launching a nuclear war, because the military would not carry out any illegal order,” said Joe Cirincione, a veteran national security analyst and nuclear non-proliferation expert, who called for new rules of command over nuclear strikes. “But that’s not real. What we’ve seen in the last year is the military repeatedly carrying out illegal orders. The attacks on the alleged drug boats in the Caribbean and Pacific, the raid to seize [President Nicolás] Maduro in Venezuela, the war on Iran, have all been illegal – yet the military carried them all out.” “People don’t understand the president has sole unfettered authority to launch nuclear weapons whenever he wants, for any reason he wants. It’s a very short chain of command. It turns out that relying on the military to refuse an illegal order from the president is not an adequate barrier. We need something a whole lot stronger.”

cont'd in response

[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 17 points 2 days ago

there's a great Soviet cartoon about this

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[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 59 points 3 days ago

https://xcancel.com/MenchOsint/status/2051895603924246941

⭕️⚡️UKMTO reports a Container ship was hit by a projectile in the Strait of Hormuz. Interestingly, for the first time they didn't disclose the location of the incident. I guess they don't want to embarass CENTCOM & their new "safe route".

The Container ship that attempted a US-backed crossing of the Strait, with AIS transponders switched off, is the French-owned "CMA CGM SAN ANTONIO". UKMTO hid the incident’s location to avoid admitting publicly that the US-recommended route isn’t safe.

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[-] Tervell@hexbear.net 83 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

https://xcancel.com/bonzerbarry/status/2052012380700221627

WAPO: Iran has hit far more U.S. military assets than reported, satellite images show. Iranian airstrikes have damaged or destroyed at least 228 structures or pieces of equipment at U.S. military sites across the Middle East since the war began, hitting hangars, barracks, fuel depots, aircraft and key radar, communications and air defense equipment, according to a Washington Post analysis of satellite imagery. The amount of destruction is far larger than what has been publicly acknowledged by the U.S. government or previously reported.

Experts who reviewed The Post’s analysis said the damage at the sites suggested that the U.S. military had underestimated Iran’s targeting abilities, not adapted sufficiently to modern drone warfare and left some bases under-protected.

classic

“The Iranian attacks were precise. There are no random craters indicating misses,” said Mark Cancian, a senior adviser with the CSIS and a retired Marine Corps colonel, who reviewed the Iranian images at The Post’s request. “The Iranians have deliberately targeted accommodation buildings across multiple sites with the intent to inflict mass casualties,” said William Goodhind, an investigator with the open-access research project Contested Ground who reviewed the imagery. “It is not just equipment, fuel storage and air base infrastructure under fire, but also soft targets, such as gyms, food halls and accommodation.” The Post also found that the attacks hit a satellite communications site at al-Udeid Air Base in Qatar, Patriot missile defense equipment at Riffa and Isa air bases in Bahrain and Ali al-Salem Air Base in Kuwait, a satellite dish at the Naval Support Activity Bahrain — which serves as the headquarters of the U.S. 5th Fleet — a power plant at Camp Buehring in Kuwait and five fuel storage bladder sites across three bases.


https://xcancel.com/realremovedno/status/2052016587037663251

"underestimated targeting abilities"

Brother all it requires is clicking http://maps.google.com/ and checking the coordinates how the fuck could you possibly underestimate it

tito-laugh

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early fighter jets (thelemmy.club)
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Calvinist Trumpism (thelemmy.club)
submitted 6 days ago by Tervell@hexbear.net to c/memes@hexbear.net
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Tervell

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