What the last ten years have shown :
the left is long infiltrated by several layers of left fakeness
those layers go far deeper than could have been perceived
Your Party CEC members submit a formal complaint after three were suspended, accused of joining a meeting with other socialists. This is both tragedy and farce, reviving painful memories of the Labour Party's anti-left purge. @zarahsultana@jeremycorbyn
https://t.co/DFKjz03uEu
So, Lebanon made a redevelopment plan in 2005.
It marked specific zones — industrial sites, ports, transit corridors, a border crossing.
Now guess where the bombs are landing in 2024–2025?
Exact same locations.
🥷It was never about a bunch of dudes on mopeds with drones.
1.Bombs hit a town.
2.People flee. They can’t go back.
3.Rebuilding takes billions — from foreign donors, the World Bank, big contractors.
4.Whoever controls the money controls the land.
5.The people get paperwork. No one goes home again.
“Hezbollah” is the properly dumb cover story — and it actively aids the displacement of the Lebanese people. It keeps the dogshit media busy while ports, roads, real estate, and billions quietly change hands.
Don’t you find it weird that the US — bound by a security pact with Lebanon — is totally quiet?
The bombs aren’t random. They landed exactly where the master plan said they would.
That’s the point.
@CraigMurrayOrg Logical that the sell-out government faction agreed this as best outcome because the perceived alternative was military invasion with the consequence to Maduro levered from within because he was steadfast against any degree of cave-in? And perhaps 'lured' by power grab chance
@ToryFibs It might get him votes but what will him winning give us?
Meaningful change? Optimism he can blunt a rotten party? End City of London control? End LFI power? Immediate fair housing? Stop digital 1984ism?
No
Just buffer Labour for a few minutes
More false hope, waste of time
The Iranians are a civilization of thousands of years, the have been watching the US's actions on the Middle East since day 1.
Read @EvanWritesOnX post carefully and pay close attention to what is going on right now.
Trump thought Iran = Venezuela, he couldn't be more wrong.
There’s no overstating how extraordinary this Atlantic article is, given the author and the outlet.
As a reminder Bob Kagan is:
- The co-founder of Project for the New American Century, probably the single most imperialist Think Tank in Washington (which is quite a feat)
- A man who spent his entire life advocating for American military interventions, especially in the Middle East, and a vocal advocate of the Iraq war. He started advocating for intervention in Iraq before 9/11, which speaks for itself...
- The husband of Victoria Nuland, an extremely hawkish former senior U.S. official (a key architect of U.S. policy in Ukraine, with the consequences we all witness today)
- The brother of Frederick Kagan, one of the key architects of the Iraq surge
In other words, we ain’t exactly looking at some sort of anti-imperialist peacenik. This is quite literally the guy Dick Cheney called when he needed a pep talk.
And the man is writing in The Atlantic, the most reliably pro-war mainstream media outlet in the U.S. (also quite a feat).
So when HE writes that the U.S. “suffered a total defeat” in Iran that has no precedent in U.S. history and can “neither be repaired nor ignored,” it’s the functional equivalent of Ronald McDonald telling you the burgers aren’t great: it means the burgers really, really aren't great.
Extraordinarily (and somewhat worryingly, for me), his arguments for why this is such a defeat are virtually the same as those I laid out in my article “The First Multipolar War” last month (https://t.co/tbnOpdYqux).
Here they are 👇
1) Vietnam/Afghanistan were survivable, this isn't
He agrees that this war - and the U.S. defeat - is fundamentally different in nature from previous U.S. interventions.
Where I wrote that the wars in Vietnam and Afghanistan didn’t change the equation much in terms of power dynamics (“in the grand scheme of things, the giant walked away with little more than a bruised ego”), Kagan writes that “the defeats in Vietnam and Afghanistan were costly but did not do lasting damage to America's overall position in the world.”
And when I wrote that “it’s painfully obvious that the Iran war is of a qualitatively different nature” from these, he writes that “defeat in the present confrontation with Iran will be of an entirely different character.”
Same point.
2) Iran will never relinquish Hormuz and uses it as selective leverage
When I wrote that Iran has turned “freedom of navigation” on its head by establishing “a permission-based regime” through the Strait of Hormuz, Kagan arrives at the same conclusion: “Iran will be able not only to demand tolls for passage, but to limit transit to those nations with which it has good relations.”
He also agrees that “Iran has no interest in returning to the status quo ante,” when I myself cited Iran’s parliament speaker Ghalibaf in my article, saying: “The Strait of Hormuz situation won’t return to its pre-war status.” Same point and virtually the same words.
3) Gulf states will have to accommodate Iran
He agrees that most Gulf states will have no choice but to accommodate Iran, effectively making Iran into a, if not THE, dominant regional power.
Kagan writes “the United States will have proved itself a paper tiger, forcing the Gulf and other Arab states to accommodate Iran.”
On my end, I wrote that “the Gulf monarchies will eventually have to choose between two security propositions. One where they stay aligned with a distant superpower that [can’t protect them]. The other proposition being: make peace with the regional power that just proved it can hit [them] whenever it wants.” Which is not much of a choice…
4) Military impossibility to reopen Hormuz
Kagan writes that “if the United States with its mighty Navy can't or won't open the strait, no coalition of forces with just a fraction of the Americans' capability will be able to, either.”
On my end, in my article I cited Germany’s defense minister Boris Pistorius: “What does Trump expect a handful of European frigates to do that the powerful US Navy cannot?”
The exact same argument.
5) Global chain reaction
Kagan agrees that this is a global strategic failure that fundamentally changes the U.S.’s position in the world. As he puts it: “America's once-dominant position in the Gulf is just the first of many casualties… America's allies in East Asia and Europe must wonder about American staying power in the event of future conflicts.”
You’ll have guessed it, I wrote essentially the same thing: “Think about what it says if you’re Saudi Arabia, quietly watching your American-built defenses fail to protect your own refineries. Or any European country now facing the worst energy shock since 1973, caused not by your enemy but by your ally, and realizing that said ‘ally,’ supposedly in charge of ‘protecting’ you, couldn’t even protect Israel’s most strategic sites - when it’s the country with which it’s joined at the hip. I’m not even speaking about China or Russia who are seeing their worldview being validated on almost every axis simultaneously.”
6) Weapons stocks depleted, credibility shattered
Kagan: “just a few weeks of war with a second-rank power have reduced American weapons stocks to perilously low levels, with no quick remedy in sight.”
Me: “America’s most advanced weapons systems are much more vulnerable than previously thought - not theoretically, but in actual combat.”
Kagan: “America's allies… must wonder about American staying power in the event of future conflicts.”
Me: “The U.S. security guarantee has been empirically falsified in real time.”
-----------
So, yup, Bob Kagan and I agree on nearly everything. I need a shower 🤢
Reassuringly though, we still differ on a few fundamental aspects.
First of all, arguably the most important one, the moral aspect. In typical neocon fashion, his article contains not a word about the human cost of this war - not the 165 schoolgirls, not the devastation inflicted on Iranians during 37 days of bombing, not the toll this war is taking on the entire world through its devastating economic consequences (the economic devastation on ordinary people worldwide is referenced only as a political problem for Trump). For him, this is purely a strategic chess problem, morality and people don’t figure in his mental map.
For me, the moral bankruptcy of this war isn't separate from the strategic failure - it is the strategic failure. Much like Gaza can only be a failure because of its sheer abjectness.
Secondly, there is not an instant of reflection in the article on how we got there. Which is unsurprising because he personally, alongside his wife, his brother, and every co-signatory of every PNAC letter, spent a generation pushing for exactly this kind of confrontation. The man spend 30 years advocating for military dominance in the Middle East and hostility towards Iran, thereby forging them as an adversary and facilitating this very war that he now says has “checkmated” America.
I know introspection has never been the neocon forte but at some point you have to stop setting houses on fire and then writing op-eds about how surprising the smoke is.
Last but not least, we differ on what should be done. This is the funniest part of Kagan’s article - showing that the man is decidedly beyond salvation. On one hand he calls this a “checkmate” by Iran, and a U.S. defeat that can “neither be repaired nor ignored,” yet an the other hand his solution for it is… surprise, surprise… a bigger war still!
He writes that what’s to be done is “engage in a full-scale ground and naval war to remove the current Iranian regime, and then to occupy Iran until a new government can take hold.”
The arsonist's solution to the fire is a bigger fire ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
For my end, this was the conclusion of my previous article:
"There is almost a Greek tragedy quality to U.S. actions lately where every move taken to escape one’s fate becomes the mechanism that delivers it. The U.S. went to war to reassert dominance - and proved it could no longer dominate. It demanded allies send warships - and revealed it had no real allies. It waged forty years of maximum pressure to break Iran before this moment came - and instead forged the very adversary now capable of meeting it. It started the war in part to have additional leverage over China - and handed the world the spectacle of begging China for help. The prophecy was multipolarity. Every American action to prevent it reveals it instead."
I wouldn’t change a word. The only thing that's changed since I wrote it is that even the arsonists now smell the smoke.
Src for the Atlantic article: https://t.co/ItED9WS9Kn
There is no one on this earth more pathetic, dull witted and feeble than a labour party leftist. Every move they make projects weakness, indecision and cowardice. No one will ever follow these people again and they deserve only oblivion.
@SimoDxonTwitt Bolson has numerous videos over many months on US intentionally becoming regional power by current processes of transnational wealth machinery consolidating itself as transition
Evanwrites too for written detail
@skwawkbox The context to be chewed over is this:
Alongside Corbyn Labour's capitulation to
household economics fake narrative
AS smear and leverage
Brexit pre-election cave-in
And: Your Party failings
That *any in position* left is still a/the final layer of elite protection
@DanielFooksArt See @EvanWritesOnX pinned TPS post (22 Apr 2025 in case changes)
Aligns with Dixon
And Bolson (I know you are wary)
And @MorganC000
Medhurst sussed the energy game
"The United States are clearly establishing a massive global oil blockade against Russia and China."
Great breakdown of what appears to be the US empire's plan to retain planetary hegemony.
Salmond
Ewing
Cherry
MacAskill
MacNeil
Hanvey
Neil
Regan
All 100% commited to Independence. All Senior SNP Politicians at one point.
ALL TOTALLY SHAFTED BY NICOLA STURGEON AND HER CLIQUE.
Do you see the pattern yet? NS 100% never worked for Indy as FM. Infact,she destroyed it!
@revconundrum@StuartLngr@DanielFooksArt My longstanding pinned tweet mentions Sturgeon at Trilateral Commission Conf Nov 2017
Quite telling one would think
Can't now see m to find the detail to show she was there (but can ref Starmer, Gove, Maud) - but 'subsequent missing info' not unusual with TC!
@revconundrum@StuartLngr@DanielFooksArt I think engineered
Hand in hand ruses:
Blairites intentionaly imploded Scottish Labour to thwart Brown replacing Blair
Sturgeon to run SNP to soak up left votes wanting new home and to insincerely fuel up on/waste independence emotion v Westminster
@BowesChay Looks very much like purposefully drawing attention to it by 'a trying not to' narrative
Not just the head on looks at camera after being 'coy'
Also other clues such as in some cases who's pushing it
Which means context is: not why she there but why this particular narrative
@alon_mizrahi@jillgt888 Do you wonder that any of these these narratives
theatre/planned outcome eg Evan/Bolson
Iran can't lose eg Sachs/many others
now showing insight eg Carlson
Are connected to laying the wrong scent
?
And if so, connected to agenda or error