Sunday, June 7, 2026

Moroccan locust swarms sweep eastern Iran, threatening crops and farms


Moroccan locust swarms sweep eastern Iran, threatening crops and farms


A swarm of Moroccan locusts is wreaking havoc upon eastern Iran’s agricultural sector, according to Iranian media reports and footage showing large numbers of the insects descending on affected areas.

When speaking to the semi-official Mehr News Agency, medical officials assured the public that the insects pose no direct health risk. However, Tasnim News Agency reported that the invasion is threatening the “livelihoods of thousands of households.”

The Moroccan locust, also known as Dociostaurus maroccanus, is capable of rapid reproduction. Females can lay between two and four egg pods during their lifetime, with each pod containing an average of 30 eggs.

Primarily feeding on grain crops, date palms, citrus fruits, fruit trees, olives, and figs, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations has described the species as “one of the most serious pests of many cultivated plants.”

In addition to damaging food crops, the insect can consume large quantities of rangeland vegetation, potentially creating feed shortages for livestock.

The sudden proliferation of Moroccan locusts has been attributed to changing weather patterns and drought conditions.

Iran has now entered its sixth consecutive year of water shortages, following years of poor water management. After abandoning the country’s ancient qanat aquifer system, authorities constructed dams in an effort to boost agricultural output. That short-term approach contributed to rivers drying up, a phenomenon that has only worsened as global temperatures rose.

“In the southern province of Sistan and Baluchestan, one of Iran’s poorest regions, farmers are fighting a locust infestation that has seen pest density quadruple compared to last year. In normal times, this would be a manageable agricultural problem. In the current climate, it is something more troubling,” Roger Macmillan, a security analyst and former director for Iran International, told The Jerusalem Post. 

“This is a region where households already depend heavily on subsistence farming and livestock. Experts on the ground are warning that, without rapid intervention, up to half of some local harvests could be lost. For families with no savings buffer, no access to credit, and no meaningful state safety net, it is the difference between eating and not eating.

“The locust threat sits on top of years of drought, chronic under-investment in agriculture, and an import system that sanctions and now conflict have made increasingly unreliable. But it also sits on top of something broader: decades of economic mismanagement, cronyism, and the diversion of national resources toward the regime’s military and ideological priorities rather than the basic infrastructure that might have made communities resilient to exactly this kind of shock.

Iran cannot easily replace what it fails to grow domestically. The currency to buy alternatives on world markets (even if they could) has largely evaporated. The combination of factors, in this region at least, moves the conversation from economic hardship into genuine food security risk.”


Turkey Weighs Major Defense Overhaul as Iran Conflict Reshapes Warfare


Turkey Weighs Major Defense Overhaul as Iran Conflict Reshapes Warfare


As tensions continue to rise across the Middle East, Turkish security circles are calling for a major overhaul of the country’s defense strategy while stepping up efforts to strengthen air defenses, expand military readiness, and protect Ankara’s growing regional ambitions amid rising competition with Israel.

The US–Israeli military campaign against Iran and the ensuing regional war have significantly reshaped regional security dynamics, driving a shift in Turkish threat perceptions and defense priorities, according to a new assessment by Turkey’s National Intelligence Academy (MIA), a state-run research and higher education institution under the country’s National Intelligence Organization (MİT).

MIA’s new report calls on the Turkish government to bolster air and missile defenses, strengthen the protection of critical infrastructure, enhance security for senior officials, and maintain dialogue with Israel despite rising tensions — all intended to address shifting geopolitical dynamics.

As evidence from current conflicts shows, modern warfare is shaped not only by military capabilities, but also by industrial output, artificial intelligence, communications networks, infrastructure resilience, and a state’s capacity to maintain sustained operations under severe pressure.

With such dynamics rapidly transforming the battlefield, MIA’s latest assessment points to the growing vulnerability of centralized military structures, calling for greater use of distributed command-and-control systems, backup networks, and more flexible operational models capable of functioning even under sustained attacks or system disruptions.

Besides conventional battlefield operations, modern conflicts are increasingly focused on the infrastructure that underpins military capability, with energy facilities, communications networks, logistics hubs, radar systems and data centers emerging as primary targets.

According to the report, this means the Turkish government can no longer base defense planning solely on conventional military assets but must instead adopt a comprehensive security doctrine integrating military, cyber, electronic, intelligence, and psychological dimensions.

Among the assessment’s main recommendations are expanding Turkey’s air and missile defense systems, boosting sustainable defense-industrial capacity, strengthening the protection of critical infrastructure, improving resilience to information warfare, and overall readiness for crisis scenarios.

More importantly, the report also emphasizes the need to keep state functions running without interruption during crises, arguing that distributed systems, backup capabilities, and alternative operating models are essential to sustaining operational effectiveness if command structures or critical facilities are attacked.

Addressing mounting geopolitical tensions across the region, MIA’s assessment warns that Israel’s military and strategic approach could create new points of friction with Turkey — particularly in Syria and the eastern Mediterranean — while suggesting that the Jewish state may seek to expand its operational footprint in Syria and Lebanon.

In this shifting regional context, the report argues that Turkey, a NATO ally, is increasingly perceived within Israeli political and military circles as a strategic challenge, raising the prospect of a relationship marked by sustained competition and recurring tensions.

Turkey’s extensive ties with Hamas and other terrorist groups and Islamist movements, including the Muslim Brotherhood, have long concerned officials not only in Israel but also across the Western world.

Since the outbreak of the Gaza war in 2023, however, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erodgan has emerged as one of Israel’s fiercest critics on the global stage, comparing the country to Nazi Germany and even threatening to invade.


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Israel has contained Hamas, but Gaza's real time bomb is about to go off


Israel has contained Hamas, but Gaza's real time bomb is about to go off


Analysis: With Hamas reduced to about 8,000 terrorists and struggling to rebuild its military and governing capabilities, the IDF sees multiple ways to contain the group, but a potentially greater threat is quietly growing beneath the surface in Gaza


I had not been in Gaza in recent months, and what surprised me was what I saw in the area controlled by the IDF. The outpost bustling with activity below us did not resemble any IDF defensive complex I had known in the past, not during the War of Attrition along the Suez Canal and in the Jordan Valley in the 1970s, nor in the security zone in Lebanon during the 1980s and 1990s.

For security reasons, details cannot be provided, but there were no massive bunkers designed to withstand heavy artillery or aerial bombardment. Instead, there were concrete structures that provide solid protection against direct fire and high-trajectory attacks. They are positioned so that troops can reach shelter within seconds and can also be moved relatively quickly if the outpost itself needs to be relocated.

More than anything, the outpost resembled the fortified compounds the Americans built in Iraq and Afghanistan to protect their forces from guerrilla attacks: a base housing a relatively large force with extensive capabilities, whose personnel can shift from routine operations to combat within minutes.

The IDF has established 40 such outposts throughout the Gaza Strip. All are intended to house combined combat teams of varying sizes, made up of armor, infantry and engineering forces. Most are complete, particularly in northern Gaza, while some are still under construction. Each outpost costs about 5 million shekels. The outposts support one another with observation and fire coverage.

The outpost I visited overlooks the ruins, and what remains of the buildings, in the village of Bani Suheila. About 600 to 700 meters south and slightly east of us, atop a high dune, another earthen-walled outpost could be seen, also positioned on terrain commanding observation and fire all the way to the sea.

The outposts are not located directly on the "Yellow Line" but several hundred meters inside territory controlled by the IDF. The goal is to prevent assaults launched directly from areas controlled by Hamas, whether above ground or through tunnels, and to reduce vulnerability to short-range direct fire.

From the observation position, it was easy to see that the "Yellow Line" in this sector runs directly along Salah al-Din Road (the "Tancher" route) in central Gaza. Once, this road connected the northern and southern parts of the Strip from end to end. Today, only scattered stretches of asphalt and broken traffic islands remain, though the route is still clearly visible by day and night. The soldiers stationed there know that anyone crossing that road must be stopped or killed.
In the area, hundreds of meters wide between the two outposts and the "Yellow Line", the IDF is establishing a buffer and security zone. A trench is currently being dug along it to prevent rapid incursions by motorcycles, pickup trucks and other vehicles into IDF-controlled territory and potentially toward communities near the Gaza border.
In addition, the IDF is conducting drilling operations in the area to expose tunnels that existed before Oct. 7 or that Hamas is digging now. The aim is to prevent surprises for forces stationed in the outposts or moving through the area.
Since the Oct. 7 massacre, the IDF has uncovered and destroyed about 450 kilometers (280 miles) of tunnels. Some were blown up and others filled with concrete. Commanders in the field say they are no longer operational along their entire length.

Hamas possesses drones and likely explosive UAVs as well, but for now it lacks the fiber-optic capabilities Hezbollah developed in Lebanon. The IDF currently enjoys near-total drone and UAV superiority over Gaza's skies.
Using high-quality military and Shin Bet intelligence, including both human and technological sources, the IDF is systematically eliminating senior commanders, key military specialists and police officials responsible for maintaining governance.
According to the IDF Spokesperson's Unit, 13 terrorists were killed in airstrikes during the past week alone, including four senior members of Hamas' General Security apparatus in Gaza and a terrorist involved in advancing attacks against forces stationed there. That terrorist infiltrated Israel on Oct. 7 and participated in the abduction of four Israelis from the roadside shelter at Re'im Junction.
Hamas members refuse to disarm and continue trying, at a minimum, to wage a guerrilla campaign. They are still manufacturing explosives, gathering intelligence and sending adults — and especially teenagers, whom the IDF refers to as "shoots" — to test when the IDF detects them, how quickly it responds and by what means.

But Hamas has been severely weakened and in recent days has initiated little beyond intelligence gathering, so as not to provoke a major Israeli response.
Another factor troubling Hamas and undermining its rule is the presence of armed clans whose members and families, numbering in the tens of thousands, live in IDF-controlled areas and continually challenge Hamas authority.
Public support for the terrorist organization appears to be declining. Evidence of this was seen at the funeral of Izz al-Din Haddad, the Gaza City commander who became Hamas' leader in Gaza after the elimination of the movement's senior leadership. Only a few dozen Gazans attended, compared with the tens of thousands who once attended funerals of commanders less senior than he was.


Why Q-Day Will Be the Moment the Cyber Tower of Babel Will Be Built


Why Q-Day Will Be the Moment the Cyber Tower of Babel Will Be Built to Control Us All


Genesis 11 records the first organized human project. Men gathered on the plain of Shinar, agreed on a common language, and decided to build a tower whose top would reach unto heaven and “make us a name, lest we be scattered abroad upon the face of the whole earth.”


The motive was not architecture. The motive was unification under a single authority of their own design. God scattered them by confusing the tongues, and the project collapsed.


The story is treated as ancient fable by most of the Western academy. It reads with uncomfortable accuracy to anyone watching how the global technocratic class is positioning the response to Q-Day.


Q-Day, the moment quantum computing breaks the cryptography that secures modern banking, communication, identity, and infrastructure, has been pitched in the establishment press as a looming security crisis. 


That framing is technically accurate. What is going unsaid is how the response is being assembled. The migration to post-quantum cryptography is being bundled, quietly and across multiple jurisdictions, with digital identity systems, central bank digital currencies, biometric authentication, and AI-driven access control.


The cryptographic rebuild is not merely an algorithm swap. It is a once-in-a-civilization opportunity to redesign who gets to participate in the digital economy and on what terms.


Every time the technocratic class faces a crisis it cannot solve at the local level, the proposed solution is consolidation. The 2008 financial crisis produced unprecedented central bank coordination. The CV era produced cross-border vaccine passports and digital health credentials that lingered long after the alleged emergency ended. The climate framework produced ESG scoring systems that quietly redirect capital flows.


The Q-Day response is shaping up to follow the same script with far greater stakes.


The argument will sound reasonable. The world’s encryption is breaking, the threats are real (and they are), the only viable response is coordinated, standards-based, internationally interoperable migration. 


Whoever designs the new cryptographic standards will, by definition, design the keys, the credentialing systems, the authentication protocols, and the trust authorities that decide whose digital identity is valid.


That is not a small thing. That is the operating system of civilization.


The rails being laid right now reach far beyond mathematics. Central bank digital currencies are being designed on cryptographic foundations that must be quantum-resistant; the same architectures permit programmable money, expiration dates on currency, transaction-by-transaction approval, and complete behavioral monitoring.


The European QUBIP project has already produced what its researchers call the first complete implementation of a sovereign digital identity compatible with post-quantum cryptography, with credentials stored in digital wallets and selective disclosure governed by zero-knowledge mechanisms.


The language sounds liberating. The structure is a permission system.


Biometric authentication, behavioral analysis, and password-less identity verification are being marketed as quantum-resilient alternatives to legacy login systems. None of those features are accidents of cryptographic necessity. They are policy choices being smuggled in under the cover of technical inevitability.


A future where access to one’s bank account, healthcare records, employment verification, and public services depends on a biometric handshake with an AI-monitored identity service is not a fringe scenario. It is the working draft being assembled in Brussels, Beijing, and the Bank for International Settlements.


The Apostle Paul warned the Thessalonian church about exactly this pattern of false reassurance.

For when they shall say, Peace and safety; then sudden destruction cometh upon them, as travail upon a woman with child; and they shall not escape.


The pattern is consistent across history. The pitch is protection. The architecture is control.


The China Template

The People’s Republic of China has already built, at national scale, what the rest of the world’s technocrats are now drafting. A central bank digital currency that monitors every transaction. A social credit infrastructure that ties identity, behavior, and access. A surveillance state integrated with AI-driven facial recognition and predictive policing. And a parallel investment program in quantum computing and quantum communications that positions Beijing to read the rest of the world’s harvested communications when Q-Day arrives.


The National Endowment for Democracy’s analysis of “data-centric authoritarianism” makes the convergence explicit. Quantum, CBDC, and AI are not three separate Chinese projects. They are one architecture, designed to expand globally as Beijing exports its model through Belt and Road digital infrastructure deals, telecommunications equipment, and standards-body lobbying. The West is not building a defense against this model. In several important respects, the West is building the same model with friendlier marketing and a more polished spokesperson


Discernment, Not Panic

Christians are not called to live in fear of the next system. They are called to watch. 

The Lord Jesus told His disciples to know the times, to discern the signs, and to refuse the easy bargain that exchanges freedom for false peace. 


Q-Day, by itself, is a real engineering problem with a real engineering response. The migration to mathematically sound post-quantum algorithms can and should happen. The danger is not the math. The danger is what is being attached to the math while the public is told only the math matters.


The next eighteen to thirty-six months will produce a wave of legislation, international standards, and private-sector contracts that will determine whose identity system, whose digital currency, and whose authentication framework becomes the global default.


That window is when the tower is being built. The plain of Shinar in 2026 does not have bricks and slime for mortar. It has cryptographic primitives, biometric templates, and CBDC ledgers. The motive is the same one Genesis named, to make a name, to consolidate, and to ensure no one is scattered, which is to say, no one is left outside the system.


The faithful response is not paranoia. It is clarity. The Q-Day rebuild is happening. The question is whether American Christians, conservatives, and constitutional voices will pay attention to what is being built on top of it while the headlines argue about quantum bits and decryption timelines.




The Political Hot Potato Heats Up: AI Data Centers- Part 2


The Political Hot Potato Heats Up: AI Data Centers- Part 2
BP


In this follow-up to my previous article “The Political Hot Potato: AI Data Centers,” this hot potato is burning hotter than ever. Around the country, citizens are rising up and defeating AI data center proposals at the local level. According to a recent Gallup poll 70% of Americans oppose the construction of an AI data center in their local area.[1] Big Tech and its supporters, those who receive donations or stand to profit from these projects, are scrambling. 

The race is on. The greedy tech oligarchs are in it to win it and using various strategies, but the citizens of the United States are not going to roll over. We are in the battle for the long haul. Citizens defeat an AI data center proposal in one county and immediately a new data center proposal pops up in the county next door. We are playing whack a mole.

Elon Musk has proposed placing AI data centers in orbit, powered by abundant solar energy to help address terrestrial power constraints and water consumption issues. [2]  [3]Another emerging strategy involves small, modular data center nodes installed on or near homes and in neighborhoods to ease grid strain.[4] The deep state government and tech oligarchs want their surveillance centers installed, and they will do whatever it takes. The battle is multifaceted, playing out at the  city, county, state, and federal levels.

Opposition is so widespread that at the federal level, internal U.S. government documents now label anti-data center movements and criticism of AI as potential “anti-technology extremism” worthy of surveillance. 

This shift comes primarily from federal agencies including the Department of Homeland Security, the FBI, and regional fusion centers that coordinate with state and local law enforcement. More than 1,000 pages of internal reports obtained via FOIA and reviewed by WIRED show this national approach tying growing public backlash into broader domestic terrorism monitoring.

As resistance has spread to hundreds of community groups across 42 states, peaceful actions such as town hall complaints about noise, water usage, and power demands are being flagged in intelligence bulletins. Even non-violent activities like photographing proposed sites or sharing videos online have drawn attention as possible precursors to threats.

Writing this commentary could put me on the list. Critics warn that this broad and vague label risks chilling consequences for ordinary citizens exercising their First Amendment rights, even though actual violence remains extremely rare. [5]


For example, at a city council meeting in Port Washington, Wisconsin, police forcibly removed and arrested Christine Le Jeune and two other women after she continued speaking out against a proposed data center project during public comment.[6]  Similar incidents of residents being escorted or removed by police have occurred in multiple states including New Jersey, Illinois, and Oklahoma during heated town hall discussions. [7]

In short, the more popular and effective grassroots resistance becomes, the more federal surveillance resources are being directed to monitor it. Ironically, they are using the very AI data centers that locals oppose to monitor/surveil and store the resistance data.

According to Larry Ellison of Oracle, the real purpose of these huge AI data centers is mass surveillance of every American. They plan to collect video from millions of cameras, such as police body cams, car dashcams, flock cameras, doorbells, and security cameras, and use AI to watch everything in real time. This creates an Orwellian system where people are constantly watched. Cameras, Cameras Everywhere – See Every Move You Make – Welcome

“Citizens will be on their best behavior, because we’re constantly recording and reporting everything that’s going on,” – Larry Ellison, Executive Chairman and CTO of Oracle. September 2024

“The instrument (the telescreen, it was called) could be dimmed, but there was no way of shutting it off completely. … There was of course no way of knowing whether you were being watched at any given moment.” — George Orwell, 1984

“Always eyes watching you and the voice enveloping you. Asleep or awake, indoors or out of doors, in the bath or in bed—no escape. Nothing was your own except the few cubic centimetres inside your skull.” — George Orwell, 1984