A week into one of the most audacious military operations in history, what is the state of play? Iran is petulantly lashing out, flailing, while Israel is tearing its way through the regime, inflicting 2 to 3 orders of magnitude more damage on Iran than vice versa. 🧵(1/7)
Their attacks are simply depleting their remaining stocks, exposing their launch sites, but doing no damage at all to Israel’s military apparatus. They have killed 22 Israeli civilians, as well as 5 Ukrainians, and done perhaps $50 million worth of property damage.
The cost to them of these attacks, when all is said and done—including the sanctions they forced their people to bear over decades, the R&D, the opportunity cost? Certainly hundreds of billions of dollars. Most of what they built up over 40 years has disappeared in a week. (2/7)
Almost comically, they have sent over 1,000 drones against Israel in the past week, and not a single one has made it through. On their drones, they are zero for a thousand. (3/7)
After the previous Iranian strikes in 2024, it was always inevitable that they would turn their launchers on Israeli cities the next time. Why? To understand why, we need to understand some statistics and the concept of CEP—circular error probable.
This is a map of Iran's impact sites on Nevatim airbase in October 2024. While the calculations are more complex, experts agree that the CEP of the missiles is approximately 800 meters. That is to say, if the IRGC targets a specific static target, half the missiles it sends at that target will fall within a circle of radius 800 meters from that site, and half will fall even further away.
The probability of hitting the actual target, or getting close enough (within about 20 meters) to destroy it with the 500 kg warheads, is extremely low. And so it was: Nevatim base lost a single empty hangar, and its operations weren’t disturbed at all. (4/7)
The Iranians don’t have access to satellite guidance, which Israel blocks anyway, so they are dependent on 1950s technology. Western weaponry can reliably hit a static or even moving target nearly every time. The CEP is almost moot. They only miss when there is a malfunction.
Not so Iran. To destroy an Iranian airbase, a pair of fully loaded F-15s is sufficient. To destroy an Israeli airbase, Iran would have to shoot more missiles than they possess, and even then, they would harm no active aircraft, since Israel has enough warning to scramble their planes into the sky. (5/7)
The Israeli Air Force has clearly largely attrited and suppressed the Iranian missile force in western Iran, forcing it to fire its much rarer and more expensive missiles from further east.
The cost and complexity of missiles increase exponentially with their range: a missile with 2,000 km range is much more precious, rare, and expensive than one with 1,000 km range. They are firing them because they are increasingly out of options. (6/7)
So, Iran's entire operation—for which it is burning up its weapons—is just a terror raid for domestic PR purposes. They might think they are exhausting the Israeli population, but like Sinwar, they greatly misunderstood the resilience and forbearance of the Israeli public. (7/7)
So, the inaccuracy of the Iranian missiles means that they can't hit anything smaller than a town, as the demonstrated to the world in 2024, and so they simply aim at towns. They spent 40 years, and trashed their economy, to recreate WW2 style rockets.
Two of the graphs above are from today's Telegraph article by @COLRICHARDKEMP — for some reason, the tags didn't work.
MEHDI: "Wow! All you had to do to make me like Nazi-apologia fan, & fellow Qatari teet-suckler Tucker, was to stop the IRGC, who promised for 50 years to genocide the Jews, from getting the tools to actually do it! It's almost like a horseshoe!" (1/6)
This is not a coincidence: you can learn a lot about what really matters to someone by what they are willing to compromise on. For example, Netanyahu and Lapid are bitter rivals—but faced with the threat of nuclear annihilation, they come together, because that is the most important issue.
And so too with Mehdi and Tucker: they can also come together around the issue of the nuclear annihilation of Israel. Because that is the true core of their belief systems; everything else is peripheral, secondary. (2/6)
They didn’t realize that their patron in Qatar was just playing a game. Qatar is more threatened by an Iranian nuke than anyone. It isn’t a real country in the traditional sense—it has no real army—and a nuclear Iran would mean the disappearance of the American base that protects it, and the arrival of Shia domination over their Sunni statelet with just 0.5% of the citizenry.
Qatar only wanted Iran to play the bad cop in its great game against Israel, the West, and its Saudi and Emirati rivals. Part of that strategy included Tucker and Mehdi—useful idiots they hired—who genuinely dreamed of a nuclear Iran, not realizing they were merely being used as one of Qatar’s many instruments.
But just as Hamas didn’t realize it was meant to be only a proxy for Iran and went rogue—bringing down the entire Axis of Resistance—the influencers didn’t realize they were just pawns on the chessboard. (3/6)
It's a landscape of broken glass here at the end of my street in Tel Aviv where my friend, the journalist, @ShannaFuld had her apartment trashed by an IRGC missle, as she explains to CNN's Jeremy Diamond. Iran attacks random civilians, Israel eliminates generals.
Some photos from the scene, edited to remove any information about the precise location.
As @ShannaFuld told me, if she hadn't been inside the concrete safe room she wouldn't be alive. If these innacurate terror weapons were fired at the average wood build American city, the devastation would be massive.
Nobody has noticed Netanyahu’s deeply symbolic choice of the name “Rising Lion” for the operation he’s dreamed of for 30 years.
Iran, like Israel, has been a symbolized by a lion for 2,500 years. And now history comes full circle: it was Persia that, after 50 years of Israelite exile, enabled the restoration of Israel in Jerusalem. Now, 2,500 years later, Israel—reborn—repays the favor with perfect symmetry. Persia’s great civilization will be restored, and its occupiers vanquished, after 50 years. Isn’t that beautiful?
So, Sinwar's attack will indeed achieve its stated goal: It will end the occupation... of Iran...
The next domino is the IRGC: Sinwar's folly will end with Reza Pahlavi coronated on his father's throne, returned to the land he was exiled from as a boy, with the Israeli prime minister in attendance. Bookmark this.
What did y’all think "globalize the intifada" meant? Vibes? Papers? Essays? 🧵
It meant this sweet young couple, Yaron Lischinsky and Sarah Milgrim, gunned down at an American Jewish Committee event at the Jewish Museum by radicalized monster Elias Rodriguez, chanting “Free, free Palestine.” (1/20)
We need to know how it came to this—how did Jew-hate become so normalized that the killer can be assured of widespread support from certain quarters? And what future awaits Jews in the West? TL;DR: It's grim. (2/20)
Already, voices blaming Jews and Israel, rather than the killer or the people who radicalized him, are spreading across the internet. Naturally, the people spreading these lies are the ones who incited such actions. (3/20)
There's an easy way to know if someone has taken Qatari money: Have they said nice things about Qatar?
Qatar isn't Italy or Norway. It's just a little patch of sand with a few gaudy towers and 2,000,000 semi-slaves to serve its little theocratic tribal dictatorship with a population smaller than Lexington, Kentucky. So if you "like" Qatar, it's because they pay you.
Feel free to share examples of people saying nice things about Qatar in the comments.
So, if someone goes to Italy, and comes back gushing about how great the food is, they did not necessarily get paid to do this. However, if they have the same reaction to Qatar, they did.
Another example: if someone goes to California and reports that the climate was wonderful, he wasn't necessarily paid to say that. If he does the same in Qatar, he was.