Friday, April 10, 2026

Speculation Surges That Pakistan Talks Are A Delay Tactic Ahead Of Expanded US Action On Iran


Speculation Surges That Pakistan Talks Are A Delay Tactic Ahead Of Expanded US Action On Iran
TYLER DURDEN


President Trump has made clear that American forces will still be "hanging around" the Persian Gulf area with an eye on Iran, while demanding that the Strait of Hormuz be opened to global energy transit once again. 

Trump has vowed to keep troops positioned for a fight "until such time as the REAL AGREEMENT reached is fully complied with." As direct US-Iran talks are set for Islamabad Saturday morning, there's been an avalanche of speculation that the ceasefire could be 'cover' for a greater Pentagon force build-up and bigger impending operation.

Some pundits say that Washington needed more time to get large contingencies of Marines and Airborne units in place, possibly for some kind of risky island campaign towards reopening the strait.

This could be the case, as it's also very evident to all that the demands of each side remain far apart, which means the chances for a breakthrough deal which finally ends the war are distant.

With a two week timeline in place to reach a deal, is this interim period merely for rearming and regrouping of forces on each side?

Clearly, the US wasn't prepared for the fierce, sustained Iranian counter-attack on American regional bases and Gulf allies.

Open-source data of military logistics flights between the US, Europe, and the Mideast region suggests there is indeed an ongoing build-up and posturing of forces happening on the eve of the Pakistan summit.

Still, it's clear that Trump needs an offramp, or else face the kind of endless military quagmire which would likely inevitably lead to the GOP getting decimated in next fall's midterm Congressional elections.

Case in point: More than 70 transport planes landed in the Middle East within 24 hours of the ceasefire taking effect. That scale suggests possible preparation for a ground offensive, solidifying suspicion that Trump is using the truce to regroup:

The so-called "Pakistani" truce proposal is awfully similar to the Minsk agreement trap that ultimately fueled a larger conflict in Ukraine. Just as Ukraine used Minsk to regroup and rearm, Trump is likely to use this "Pakistani" (effectively his own) proposal to do the same.


A bigger longer war, or ground conflict, would also damage the chances of a future Vance presidency.

As for Vance, the Associated Press writes, "But the arrival of Vance for negotiations marks a rare moment of high-level U.S. government engagement with the Iranian government. Since the Islamic Revolution in 1979, the most direct contact had been when President Barack Obama in September 2013 called newly elected Iranian President Hassan Rouhani to discuss Iran’s nuclear program."

A Pentagon build-up in the region might also be Trump's way of signaling powerful leverage for more potential major attacks on Iran to come, in order to gain more from negotiations. As yet, Iran holds the key economic leverage given its de fact Hormuz control.




IDF: More than 1,400 Hezbollah terrorists eliminated and over 4,300 infrastructure sites dismantled


IDF: More than 1,400 Hezbollah terrorists eliminated and over 4,300 infrastructure sites dismantled
i24NEWS



Since the beginning of Operation Roaring Lion, IDF forces operating on the ground, in the air, and at sea, have eliminated more than 1,400 Hezbollah terrorists, the military said on Friday.

IDF troops continue to conduct targeted raids, dismantle Hezbollah terrorist infrastructure, and locate weapons of various kinds. Thus far, soldiers of the 162nd and 36th Divisions have dismantled more than 2,700 terrorist infrastructure sites and located over 250 weapons, including long-range rockets, anti-tank missiles, RPG launchers, firearms, and explosive devices.

Additionally, IDF soldiers of the 91st, 98th, and 146th Divisions have dismantled more than 1,500 terrorist infrastructure sites and located over 1,000 weapons, including firearms, RPGs, explosive devices, and additional military equipment.

The Israeli Air Force continues to support ground forces and, in coordination with troops on the ground, conducts strikes against Hezbollah terrorist targets across southern Lebanon. Over the past day, the Israeli Air Force struck more than 120 terrorist infrastructure sites in order to remove threats to IDF troops

The Prophetic Storm Is Here: Convergence - The System Is Forming


The Prophetic Storm Is Here

Joe Hawkins


Convergence: The System Is Forming

The world is no longer moving in isolated events. It is moving in convergence. What we are witnessing today is not a random collection of crises, but a synchronized alignment of geopolitical conflict, technological advancement, cultural hostility, economic instability, and even cosmic phenomena. These are not disconnected headlines. They are interconnected signals. When viewed through the lens of Scripture, they form a pattern. One that is both sobering and unmistakable. Jesus warned of a time marked by “wars and rumors of wars,” deception, and increasing birth pains. What we are seeing now is not the Tribulation itself, but it is the infrastructure, the conditioning, and the alignment leading directly toward it.

The Convergence Moment

War. Surveillance. Persecution. Economic instability. Celestial signs. Deception.

Each of these developments is significant on its own. But together, they form something far more powerful: convergence.

This is not coincidence. It is alignment.

The systems described in Scripture are not appearing overnight—they are being built piece by piece, layer by layer, crisis by crisis. The world is being conditioned to accept what is coming. The infrastructure is forming. The mindset is shifting. The stage is being set.

This is not the Tribulation—but it is the shadow of it.

This is not a time for fear—it is a time for awareness. A time to stay awake. A time to keep watch. A time to proclaim truth boldly while there is still time.

Because convergence does not slow down. It accelerates.


  1. War: The Israel–Iran Conflict Escalates

At the center of global attention is the rapidly escalating conflict between Israel and Iran. What began as long-standing tension has now erupted into direct military confrontation. In early 2026, the United States and Israel launched coordinated strikes on Iranian military and nuclear-related targets, triggering retaliatory missile and drone attacks across the region. The scale of the conflict has already been described as one of the most significant disruptions in decades, impacting not only the Middle East but the entire global order.

This is not just another regional war. It is a strategic shift. Iran, a key player in end-times prophecy discussions, is now engaged in open conflict with Israel, the focal point of biblical prophecy. While this may not yet be the fulfillment of Ezekiel 38–39, it undeniably sets the stage. Alliances are forming. Lines are being drawn. The volatility of the region is increasing at a pace that mirrors the prophetic warnings of Scripture.

War is no longer confined to borders. It is expanding into cyber warfare, economic warfare, and information warfare. The battlefield is global, and the consequences are far-reaching. This is convergence—where conflict becomes the catalyst for everything else.

  1. Beast System Infrastructure: Surveillance and Digital Control

While bombs fall in the Middle East, a quieter but equally significant development is unfolding: the rapid expansion of surveillance systems and digital control mechanisms. Artificial intelligence is now being used to monitor behavior, analyze data, and make real-time decisions at a scale never before possible. These systems are increasingly integrated into national security frameworks, law enforcement, and even everyday commerce.

The normalization of surveillance is one of the most significant developments of our time. What was once considered intrusive is now accepted as necessary. Security concerns (especially during times of war) are being used to justify expanded monitoring of populations. AI-driven systems are capable of tracking movements, predicting behavior, and flagging individuals based on patterns. The implications are enormous.

Revelation 13 speaks of a system in which buying and selling are controlled, where participation in society is tied to compliance. While we are not there yet, the infrastructure is being built. Digital ID systems, biometric verification, and centralized databases are forming the backbone of what could one day become a fully integrated control system.

The same technologies used today to protect could easily be used tomorrow to control. This is not speculation—it is trajectory.


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Islamabad under lockdown as Pakistan prepares to host Iran-US ceasefire talks


Islamabad under lockdown as Pakistan prepares to host Iran-US ceasefire talks
 Times of Israel is liveblogging Friday


US Vice President JD Vance expresses optimism about the potential for a deal with Iran before boarding a plane for Islamabad, Pakistan where the first round of talks will be held tomorrow.

“We’re looking forward to the negotiation. I think it’s going to be positive. We’ll of course see,” Vance tells reporters.

“If the Iranians are willing to negotiate in good faith, we’re certainly willing to extend the open hand,” says Vance, who is leading the US negotiating team for the first time in talks with Iran. Previous waves of negotiations have been led by US envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner.

“If they’re going to try to play us, then they’re going to find that the negotiating team is not that receptive,” Vance warns.


IDF claims it killed 1,400 Hezbollah operatives since start of Iran war; Lebanon toll at 1,800

IDF says it located and destroyed primed Hezbollah rocket launcher in south Lebanon

Hezbollah chief warns Beirut against giving ‘free concessions’ to Israel ahead of talks next week

Lebanese media shows heavy Israeli strikes in Nabatieh area of southern Lebanon

IDF intercepts Hezbollah rocket barrage fired at Karmiel, northern Israel

Iran-linked ships make up majority of vessels sailing through Strait of Hormuz, shipping data shows

Europe Wants to Keep Children Off Social Media: What’s It Really About?


Europe Wants to Keep Children Off Social Media: What’s It Really About?


Greece has become the latest European country to propose a legal minimum age for social media, with Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis saying children under 15 should be barred from accessing the platforms from January 1, 2027. Austria has announced plans for a ban on under-14s, while France has already tried to impose a “digital majority” for under-15s. Australia has gone furthest in practice, presenting itself as the international model after platforms restricted access to 4.7 million underage accounts. 

The policy language across these countries is remarkably similar. Governments say they are protecting children from addictive products, sleep disruption and psychological harm. The operational reality is more complicated. Australia’s experience suggests that these measures do not produce a clean ban so much as a large-scale age-verification and enforcement system, one that still leaves obvious routes around the rules while expanding the amount of monitoring and identity checking built into ordinary online life.

Greece says it will ban social media for under-15s from the start of 2027 and will push the European Union to adopt a common digital age of majority at 15, supported by mandatory age verification and a unified enforcement framework. 

Reuters reported that the Greek government has linked the proposal to rising concern about addiction, anxiety and sleep problems among children, and cited polling showing that public support for the plan is strong. In political terms, the appeal is obvious. Social media is widely distrusted, children are a sympathetic constituency, and governments can present themselves as intervening against powerful and unpopular technology companies.

The difficulty lies in turning the headlines into reality. 

A ban of this kind can only function if platforms are required to distinguish reliably between those who are old enough and those who are not. Once that becomes the practical focus, the issue is not just whether children should be on Instagram or TikTok, but also becomes a question of who is verifying age, what evidence is being collected, how long that information is retained, and how much new infrastructure is being built to control access to digital spaces. 

Greece may be selling the policy as child protection, but the route to implementation runs directly through verification systems that are likely to extend far beyond one narrow class of users.

Austria is following a similar path. Al Jazeera reported that the Austrian government plans to ban children under 14 from using social media, with junior minister Alexander Proll arguing that the platforms are addictive and harmful to young people. The justification is familiar and, at a broad level, difficult to dispute. These platforms are designed to hold attention, reward compulsion and keep users returning. The weaker point is the assumption that a legal age threshold can be translated smoothly into a workable, proportionate system of enforcement.

As in Greece, the real challenge is not announcing the rule but administering it. If the state intends to stop under-14s from opening accounts, then platforms need stronger forms of age assurance. Stronger age assurance usually means more data collection, more intrusive account checks, greater reliance on third-party verification providers, or the deployment of biometric or behavioural systems to estimate age. 

Those mechanisms may be politically easier to introduce when framed around child protection, but they still represent an expansion of digital oversight. Austria’s proposal therefore deserves to be read not only as a social policy but also as part of a broader shift toward a more tightly gated and more heavily verified internet.


Countries including Britain, Spain, Slovenia, Denmark, Malaysia, Canada and parts of the United States are also considering or debating restrictions of this kind. That reflects a broad and understandable loss of confidence in social media companies, whose products are increasingly regarded as addictive and harmful, especially for children. It also reflects a political environment in which governments are under pressure to be seen responding to a problem that is now widely acknowledged.

Still, the spread of these laws points to a second and less openly discussed development. Every serious effort to keep minors off social media depends on stronger proof-of-age systems. Stronger proof-of-age systems lead almost inevitably to broader identity checks, more platform data collection, and more routine demands that users prove themselves before entering digital spaces. In that sense, the trend is not only about restricting children’s access. It is also about normalising a model of internet governance based on verification and controlled entry. Even when the policy objective is defensible, the infrastructure it requires deserves scrutiny on its own terms.


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