Aware of their existence, but couldn't be bothered to devote the resources to shutting them down.
.. π€
>umm sorry, don't you mean isn't it a war crime to hide military targets behind child human shields???
https://www.reddit.com/r/cybersecurity/comments/1rqopq0/stryker_hit_by_handala_intune_managed_devices/
@hakor Excellent. The current iranian regime must be crushed, and power returned to the people.
Next step, delete the retarted religion of islam, replace with classic, western values, and we all will prosper.
There is a traditional saying.... where the white man rules, there is peace, where the white man is absent, chaos reigns.
Mars.
That sure looks sedimentary to me. But I'm not geologist. I'm just a memelord with my Grade 10.
> Iran is less dependent on desalination
Maybe not desalination per se, but they still have dams, reservoirs, city water works, etc. There are still ways to genocide millions of Iranians. Desalination is a "nuclear option" right now.
> Chinese ships allowed to pass Hornuz
China helps Iran, Iran lets them pass. If Iran won't let them pass then China may stop providing them intelligence.
Escalation happens slowly, it's why in a fist fight you don't immediately reach for the nearest blunt object to try to kill the guy - and why in a war, countries don't immediately go for the button...
βOnce one says 'industrial base,' the logic becomes much more radical than administration officials may realize.
It means attacking the system that produces and reproduces [modern life]: electric power, transport, fuels, machine tools, metallurgy, electronics, repair facilities, and perhaps the broader fiscal and industrial foundations of recovery.
A country that cannot rebuild has, by definition, suffered something much closer to strategic deindustrialization.β