The Iran War (was Nuclear Program) thread
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This critique I agree with. the language used to describe this "excursion" is abysmal.
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I am not sure why I still shake my head at some of these things.
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This guy keeps churning stuff out. I don’t know if he is reliable but the read is very compelling. This one about Tucker.
@shanaka86
Iran watched Tucker Carlson argue against the war in the Oval Office three times. Then it watched the war arrive anyway.
ABC News & Reuters confirm Carlson met with Trump approximately 3 times in Feb 2026, sessions lasting roughly 90 minutes each, the last around 23 Feb, five days before the strikes. His message was consistent: do not attack Iran. After 28 Feb, he called the operation “disgusting and evil.” Trump responded publicly: “Tucker has lost his way. He’s not MAGA.”
Iranian state TV did not treat Carlson as a dissident. It treated him as evidence. His 2025 interview with President Pezeshkian was broadcast repeatedly on IRIB. His anti-war advocacy was amplified across Iranian state media as proof that America was divided, that the political will for a strike did not exist, and that the domestic opposition Trump faced made military action against Iran unlikely. The IRGC’s info apparatus did not merely observe American debate. It consumed it, rebroadcast it, and built its threat assessment on it.
This is the information warfare misjudgment that may have enabled the decapitation.
Authoritarian regimes make a specific analytical error when reading open democracies: they interpret domestic dissent as strategic hesitation. In closed systems, public opposition to a policy signals weakness at the top. In open systems, public opposition is the noise floor of governance. Tucker Carlson sitting in the Oval Office arguing against war does not mean war will not happen. It means democracy is functioning. The IRGC watched the noise and mistook it for the signal.
Khamenei was at a known location on 28 Feb. 7 top security officials were with him. Twelve family members were present. The strike took 60 seconds. The coordination required months of intelligence preparation that occurred while Tucker was in the Oval Office arguing it should not happen and Iranian state television was broadcasting his arguments as evidence it would not. The regime that amplified the voice of American dissent to reassure itself was destroyed by an operation planned in parallel with the dissent it was amplifying.
On 14 March, Carlson posted a video claiming the CIA accessed his pre-war text messages with Iranian contacts and was preparing a FARA criminal referral. No CIA or DOJ confirmation exists. No referral has been filed. Carlson denies payment or direction from Iranian entities. But the timing has produced a theory, circulating on X, that his documented contacts were monitored and his advocacy inadvertently reinforced the false signal that enabled the decapitation by convincing Tehran that American resolve was weaker than it was.
The theory is unverified. The mechanism it describes is real.
Intelligence services in every major conflict have exploited the gap between what an adversary’s media says and what its military plans. The IRGC consumed open-source American debate, weighted it as strategic intelligence, and reached a threat assessment that was fatally wrong. Carlson did not cause the miscalculation. He is not an agent. He is a journalist who argued his position in the most powerful office on Earth and had it rebroadcast by the state media of a country six days from annihilation. The IRGC chose to believe him. That choice is the misjudgment.
The post-strike IRGC, now a Habib Ring junta operating behind a wounded figurehead whose father considered him unfit, has compensated for the intelligence failure with the only doctrine it has left: $20,000 Shaheds aimed at the data centres that processed the targeting intelligence the misjudgment failed to prevent. The regime that misread American dissent as weakness is now striking the AI infrastructure that turned American intelligence into 1,000 targets in 24 hrs. The information warfare failed. The compute warfare is the fallback. And the $35,000 drone aimed at a Gulf server farm is the final expression of a regime that mistook Tucker Carlson for American foreign policy.
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I am not sure why I still shake my head at some of these things.
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Trump is now trying to extricate himself from this impending debacle through his preferred tool of persuasion, that is to say, extortion. G W Bush at least brought a fig leaf of legitimacy to his war on Iraq through the UNSC and building the so called “Coalition of the Willing” or as Shantinik described it at the time, The Coalition of the Small and Obscure. This moron in the WH instead is relying on extortionist rhetoric to cobble together a “coalition of the coerced” now that he realises he has embarked on a bloody folly and finds himself way in over his empty head.
The money quote:
“We have a thing called Nato,” said Trump, who has often criticised the alliance. “We’ve been very sweet. We didn’t have to help them with Ukraine. Ukraine is thousands of miles away from us . . . But we helped them. Now we’ll see if they help us. Because I’ve long said that we’ll be there for them but they won’t be there for us. And I’m not sure that they’d be there.”
Let’s just all go bang our heads against the wall.
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