Iran War. . . USA Up 2-0 in the First Period

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
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See above buddy.
He didn’t mention Kuwait, the UAE and Bahrain all reported fresh Iranian missile and drone strikes, several of which targeted oil, power and desalination infrastructure vital to the region, or an oil industry source said Saudi Arabia's huge east-west pipeline to the Red Sea had been hit, and damage was being assessed. The pipeline is the main route by which some oil, at least, has been able to bypass the blockaded strait.🤫
The region is nothing if not hypocritical.
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
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Who attacked whom?
Which time when with what start date, and who specifically are you referring to because it’s such a tangled cluster-fuck.
(YouTube & Strait of Hormuz 'appears to be closed')
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
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Which time when with what start date, and who specifically are you referring to because it’s such a tangled cluster-fuck.
(YouTube & Strait of Hormuz 'appears to be closed')
Iran has never attacked anyone.

Iran has not launched a full-scale conventional ground invasion of another sovereign country in modern history (post-1979 Islamic Revolution), unlike many nations that have initiated large-scale wars of conquest. Its military engagements have primarily been defensive (e.g., responding to Iraq's 1980 invasion during the Iran-Iraq War) or involved indirect support for proxy militias and non-state actors, as well as targeted missile, drone, or terrorist-style strikes.f0274b

Historical Context (Pre-2026)
Iran-Iraq War (1980–1988): Iraq invaded Iran first. Iran later conducted offensives into Iraqi territory but did not initiate the conflict or seek permanent occupation.e22525

Iran has not started major interstate wars as the aggressor in over two centuries in the conventional sense. Claims of "Iran has never attacked anyone" often overlook proxy activities and specific strikes.887e55

Iran has long been accused of supporting proxy groups (e.g., Hezbollah in Lebanon, Houthis in Yemen, various Shiite militias in Iraq and Syria) that have carried out attacks, assassinations, or bombings in or against targets in countries including:
Lebanon (via Hezbollah, including 1983 bombings targeting U.S. and French forces).
Israel (via Hezbollah, Hamas, and direct support).
Saudi Arabia (e.g., 1996 Khobar Towers bombing linked to Iranian-backed groups).
Argentina (1994 AMIA bombing attributed to Iranian/Hezbollah involvement).
United States and its assets abroad (e.g., embassy and barracks bombings in the 1980s; later proxy rocket/drone attacks on U.S. bases in Iraq, Syria, and Jordan).1fec62

These are typically not direct state-on-state attacks by the Iranian military but sponsorship of non-state actors.
2026 Iran War (Ongoing/Recent Escalation)

In early 2026, amid a broader conflict involving U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iranian targets (nuclear sites, leadership, and infrastructure), Iran launched direct retaliatory missile and drone barrages. These targeted Israel and multiple countries hosting U.S. military bases or facilities, hitting energy infrastructure, airports, embassies, and bases. Reports indicate Iran struck or attempted strikes in at least 10–15 countries or territories, with varying degrees of confirmed impact, casualties, and interception rates.8c3782

Directly or primarily targeted countries (based on reported Iranian missile/drone strikes):

Israel: Multiple waves of ballistic missiles and drones targeting cities, airports, and areas near nuclear facilities (e.g., Dimona). Caused injuries and damage.6fe068

Saudi Arabia: Strikes on Riyadh, eastern province energy facilities (e.g., Jubail petrochemical sites), Prince Sultan Air Base (injuring U.S. troops), and oil-related targets.852097

United Arab Emirates (UAE): Attacks on Abu Dhabi, Dubai (airports, hotels, residential areas), Al Dhafra Air Base, and gas complexes.bebc8e

Bahrain: Strikes near U.S. Fifth Fleet headquarters in Manama, residential areas; refinery and infrastructure hits.5615ef

Kuwait: Missile and drone barrages on Kuwait International Airport, Ali Al Salem Air Base, and other sites; reported casualties including soldiers.0b2c80
Qatar: Hits on Al Udeid Air Base and energy facilities.d16480
Oman: Attacks on U.S. bases and other targets.bbf9ed
Jordan: Missile/drone strikes on U.S. installations.fafb13
Iraq: Strikes including on Erbil (airport and U.S. consulate area); proxy militias also active.92e672
Cyprus: Drones struck British RAF bases (Akrotiri and Dhekelia sovereign base areas).a02d4d

Additional or spillover mentions (less consistently confirmed as direct Iranian launches, sometimes debris, overflights, or proxy-related):

Azerbaijan (drones crossing borders, damaging an airport).624dc8
Turkey (impacts or interceptions reported in some accounts).ceb875

Syria and Lebanon (Iranian/Hezbollah actions intertwined with the conflict).
Some reports aggregate these as Iran "attacking" or impacting up to 15 countries when including proxies, U.S. assets, or indirect effects. Many strikes were intercepted by defenses, and Iran framed them as retaliation for attacks on its soil. Casualties varied: dozens reported across Gulf states and Israel, including civilians and military personnel.741cb6

Distinctions
Direct vs. Proxy: Most pre-2026 actions were proxy-based (funding, arming, training groups like Hezbollah or Houthis). 2026 saw more direct Iranian ballistic/drone launches.
Attacks on U.S. personnel/bases: Common pattern via proxies (e.g., in Iraq/Syria/Jordan) or direct in 2026.
Context matters: Many 2026 strikes occurred during active warfare initiated by U.S./Israeli operations against Iran.
This list draws from reported events and should be viewed in the full geopolitical context of retaliation, alliances, and ongoing conflicts. Situations evolve rapidly; for the absolute latest developments, refer to multiple verified news sources. Iran maintains it has not sought aggressive conquest but responds to perceived threats.
 
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Dixie Cup

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I guess more people need to read his book "The Art of the Deal" to understand how Trump negotiates. Apparently, it shows exactly how Trump thinks when negotiating deals & how he's been so successful at it.
 

Ron in Regina

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DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — In a potential boost to Middle East ceasefire efforts, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Thursday that he authorized direct negotiations with Lebanon “as soon as possible” aimed at disarming Iranian-backed Hezbollah militants and establishing relations between the neighbors.

The two countries have technically been at war since Israel was established in 1948, and Netanyahu later stressed that there was no ceasefire between them. In a video statement, the Israeli leader said Israel will keep striking Hezbollah until security is restored in northern Israel.

There was no immediate response from Lebanese authorities. But Israel-Lebanon negotiations were expected to begin next week at the State Department in Washington, according to a person familiar with the plans.
 
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petros

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DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — In a potential boost to Middle East ceasefire efforts, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Thursday that he authorized direct negotiations with Lebanon “as soon as possible” aimed at disarming Iranian-backed Hezbollah militants and establishing relations between the neighbors.

The two countries have technically been at war since Israel was established in 1948, and Netanyahu later stressed that there was no ceasefire between them. In a video statement, the Israeli leader said Israel will keep striking Hezbollah until security is restored in northern Israel.

There was no immediate response from Lebanese authorities. But Israel-Lebanon negotiations were expected to begin next week at the State Department in Washington, according to a person familiar with the plans.
Don't be shocked when Iran takes out Israel's drinking water.

Israeli terrorist attacks...

 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
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US President Donald Trump is already speaking about the war in the past tense. He has declared victory and needs an exit. Not only does he have a state visit from King Charles in the diary for later this month, followed by a summit with China's President Xi Jinping in May, there are midterm elections in November. With America's summer holiday season looming, Trump also needs petrol prices to fall back to where they were before he went to war. Royal visits, summits and elections do not mix well with wars.
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Iran's regime has its own reasons to end the war. It is as defiant as ever, still able to launch missiles and drones, with its social media warriors pouring out AI videos lampooning Donald Trump. But Iran has suffered massive damage. Cities have come to an economic standstill and the regime needs time to regroup and will try to use the talks in Pakistan to strengthen its position.

Creating a more durable ceasefire will require some kind of agreement to at least keep talking about the two sides' contradictory lists of intractable issues.

Trump has a 15-point plan that has not been published but leaked versions make it sound more like a surrender document than a basis for negotiation. Iran's 10-point plan contains a list of demands that America has consistently rejected in the past.

The war that the US and Israel ignited is already reshuffling Middle Eastern geopolitics. As the longer-term consequences of the war reveal themselves, that process will deepen. The US and Israel have done immense damage to Iran's armed forces as well as its military and civilian infrastructure.

However, while the Iranian regime may be battered, it's also intact. Regime change is not happening. Iran can still launch missiles and drones. That means that despite loud claims, the US and Israel have not translated tactical victories into strategic advances & has shown that the closing of the Strait of Hormuz gives it a strategic edge that Donald Trump either dismissed or did not understand when he listened to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's arguments for going to war with Iran.

The ability to stop shipping using one of the world's most important trading arteries is a potent weapon that Iran wants to turn into a long-term strategic gain. Alongside demands for the closure of US bases in the region, for reparations for war damage, a return to the enrichment of uranium and the lifting of sanctions, Iran wants to institutionalise its control of the Strait.

(This while Trump threatened and continues to threaten NATO, potentially leading to the closure of American based in those 31 nations also?)
During the two-week ceasefire already agreed, Iran is insisting that any ship that wants to transit the Strait of Hormuz will need the permission of Iran's armed forces, or it will be attacked and destroyed.

It has charged some of the few vessels that have been allowed through millions of dollars in tolls. If that continues it would be able to raise billions, a prospect that horrifies Gulf Arab states.

To double the challenges for the world economy, the Houthis, Iran's ally in Yemen, showed during the Gaza war that they can use their firepower to block Bab al-Mandab, the narrow strait at the southern end of the Red Sea. The Saudis are pumping oil that would normally be exported through the Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz through a pipeline to their Red Sea ports, where it can be shipped to Asia. That would stop if the Houthis blocked the exit south through Bab al-Mandab.

China is watching closely, so is Russia as Trump once again threatens Nato allies he claims were not there when America needed them.

China pushed the Iranians to agree to a ceasefire and is likely to keep pushing to keep them talking. It relies on Middle Eastern oil – Iran has let its own tankers heading to China through the Strait of Hormuz – but will also be ready to exploit any gaps left by Trump's haphazard foreign policy.

And what about the people of Iran? They are cut off behind an internet blackout, after weeks of airstrikes, death and fear, whatever their views of the regime. On 28 February, Trump and Netanyahu promised the regime's opponents a chance to take back their country. That has been forgotten.