Friday, April 10, 2026

Israel Already Sees The Next War Coming


The World Wants Calm - But Israel Already Sees The Next War Coming
PNW STAFF

There is a dangerous difference between peace and pause -- and Israel knows it.

That is the real story behind the latest ceasefire confusion involving the United States, Iran, and the growing pressure surrounding Israel's military campaign. On paper, the world is once again talking about de-escalation. Diplomats are using familiar words. Negotiators are floating frameworks. Leaders are speaking in the language of restraint. But beneath all of it lies a far more serious truth: Israel is not looking at this moment as the end of a war. It is looking at it as a countdown to the next one.

And that is why Lebanon matters so much.

As new ceasefire terms and contradictory interpretations swirl around Washington, Tehran, and regional intermediaries, one issue is quickly becoming unavoidable: Iran wants Israel stopped in Lebanon. Israel refuses. That disagreement is not a side issue. It may be the single clearest sign that this "ceasefire" is far less stable than many want to admit.

Because if Iran is willing to threaten the entire arrangement over Israeli strikes on Hezbollah, then it tells us something critical: Hezbollah is not a side asset to Iran. It is central to Iran's future war plans.

That is exactly why Israel is moving with such speed and intensity.

In one breathtaking wave of action, Israel reportedly struck more than 100 Hezbollah sites in just 10 minutes. That kind of operation is not only about military capability -- though it certainly demonstrates that. It is also about urgency. It is about a nation acting like it knows the diplomatic clock may soon run out. It is about a military that understands global pressure can close operational windows before strategic goals are finished.

Israel appears to be operating with a hard reality in mind: if the world forces a pause too early, Hezbollah survives to fight another day.

And for Israel, that is no longer acceptable.

For years, much of the international community treated Hezbollah's presence on Israel's northern border as a manageable problem. Rockets were stockpiled. Tunnels were dug. command centers expanded. Precision missile projects advanced. Iranian influence deepened. Yet the expectation was that Israel should simply absorb the threat, deter it, and hope that another full-scale war could be postponed.

That "stability" was always an illusion.

What the world often called restraint, Israel increasingly saw as strategic decay -- a slow normalization of an enemy army sitting on its border under the protection of diplomatic ambiguity and international hesitation.

That is over now.


Israel is not going back to the old arrangement where Hezbollah builds, arms, embeds, threatens, and waits. It is not going back to a border where Iranian-backed terror infrastructure is tolerated as long as it doesn't explode all at once. The old status quo was not peace. It was a loaded gun left on the table.

And after everything that has unfolded in this region, Israel clearly believes that leaving that gun there again would be suicidal.

This is where many outside observers still miss the bigger picture. Hezbollah matters to Iran not just because it is useful in the present, but because it is essential to the future.

Iran has long relied on layers of proxy power to project force beyond its borders. Hezbollah is perhaps the most important of all of them. It is not merely a militia. It is not simply a regional ally. It is a forward operating arm of Iranian strategy -- one that allows Tehran to pressure Israel, threaten escalation, surround its enemies, and maintain a second battlefield without directly exposing itself first.

In plain terms, Hezbollah is one of Iran's insurance policies against Israel

That matters even more now.

If Iran's nuclear ambitions have been significantly disrupted or delayed, then Tehran's need for its proxy network only increases. If Iran cannot move toward its long-term strategic goals as quickly through nuclear leverage, it will need missiles, militias, terror infrastructure, and regional alliances all the more.

That means Hezbollah becomes even more valuable.

This is the part many in the West still seem reluctant to say out loud: if Iran cannot get the bomb when it wants it, it will need its terror network for the next attempt at regional domination. And if that day comes, Hezbollah will not just be a supporting actor. It will likely be one of the lead weapons.

That is why Iran is so desperate to preserve it.

And that is why any attempt to force Israel to stop short in Lebanon carries enormous consequences.

If Israel is pressured into halting its campaign before Hezbollah is meaningfully dismantled, the result will not be peace. It will be regeneration. Hezbollah will regroup. It will rebuild logistics. It will restore command channels. It will replenish positions. It will once again disappear into civilian infrastructure, political complexity, and international excuses -- only to emerge later stronger, more disciplined, and even more dangerous.

That is not a theory. That is the pattern.

This is what makes the current moment so consequential. The world wants calm because calm feels morally clean. Calm sounds responsible. Calm polls well. Calm lowers oil panic and diplomatic stress. Calm allows leaders to tell their people the crisis is under control.

But calm without resolution can be a trap.

And Israel knows it.


Israel is acting like a nation that believes it may have one of its last real opportunities to fundamentally alter the military map on its northern front. It is acting like a country that understands something many outside powers do not: you do not defeat long-term threats by preserving them for future negotiations.

You remove them.

That may sound harsh to foreign ears. It may sound escalatory to Western analysts and deeply uncomfortable to governments eager to avoid a wider regional war. But Israel's calculation is rooted in a brutally simple question: If Hezbollah survives this moment intact enough to rearm, what exactly has been solved?

Nothing meaningful.

Only delayed.

And that is the heart of the problem with so many ceasefire discussions in the Middle East. They are often built around the assumption that time itself is healing. But time is not always healing. Sometimes time is what your enemy uses to reload.

Iran understands that.

Israel understands that too.


And that may be why this moment feels so combustible. The United States may be trying to carve out a diplomatic lane. Gulf states may be calculating what comes next. Iran may be trying to preserve room to negotiate, regroup, and survive. But Israel is staring at something far more immediate and existential: the possibility that the world is once again trying to freeze a conflict before the root danger has been removed.

That is why this is not simply about Lebanon. And it is not just about Hezbollah.

It is about whether the world is willing to admit that Iran's ambitions did not begin and end with uranium.

Iran's regional strategy has always depended on more than one tool. Nuclear leverage is one arm of the threat. Proxy warfare is the other. If one is damaged, the other becomes even more important. And if the international community chooses to protect the proxy arm in the name of "stability," then it may be preserving the very mechanism through which the next war will be launched.

That is what Israel sees.

While others see a pause, Israel sees preparation.

While others see de-escalation, Israel sees unfinished danger.

While the world wants calm, Israel already sees the next war coming.

And after everything it has learned, it is increasingly clear that it has no intention of waiting politely for that war to arrive.

North Korea Says It Just Tested Cluster-Bomb Warheads for Ballistic Missiles and an Electromagnetic Weapon


North Korea Says It Just Tested Cluster-Bomb Warheads for Ballistic Missiles and an Electromagnetic Weapon


In 2026, North Korea launched five large-scale missile tests – and now we learn what new tech they are testing.

Today (9), news has arisen that North Korea has tested ‘a new cluster-bomb warhead’ on a ballistic missile as well as an electromagnetic weapon.

North Korea conducted a series of military tests from April 6-8, including a tactical ballistic missile warhead and an electromagnetic weapon system Pyongyang says that work to upgrade modern weapons is progressing rapidly.

Reuters reported:

“The country’s Academy of Defense Science and the Missile Administration also conducted tests of carbon-fiber bombs and a mobile short-range anti-aircraft missile system, KCNA said.

Kim Jong Sik, a general who oversaw the tests, said the electromagnetic weapon system and carbon-fiber bombs were ‘special ​assets’ for North Korea’s military, KCNA reported.”

“Without specifying the number of ballistic missiles launched – a violation of United Nations sanctions – North Korea said it had tested its mobile short-range anti-aircraft missile system as well as the combat capabilities of its tactical ballistic missile warhead.

One test proved the surface-to-surface tactical ballistic missile called Hwasongpho-11 Ka, which is tipped with ​a cluster-bomb warhead, was able to ‘reduce to ashes any target’ covering an area of up to 7 hectares (17 acres), KCNA said.”

Bloomberg reported:

“[General Kim Jong Sik] said ‘the electromagnetic weapon and carbon fiber bomb are special assets of strategic nature to be combined with and applied to various military means’ in different spheres, according to the KCNA report. This type of weapon typically uses electromagnetic energy rather than explosives to disrupt or damage targets, especially electronics infrastructure.”

For the Second Consecutive Day, North Korea’s ‘Rocket Man’ Kim Jong Un Fires Multiple Short-Range Ballistic Missiles Into the East Sea (VIDEOS)






WHO Tests Pandemic “Strategy Game” Simulating Ebola Outbreak


EXCLUSIVE: WHO Tests Pandemic “Strategy Game” Simulating Ebola Outbreak


In a newly disclosed exercise, WHO unveiled what it calls a pandemic “strategy game” designed to pressure-test how quickly governments can detect, report, and respond to emerging health threats. 

The pitch is harmless: preparedness. The optics are harder to ignore: global authorities rehearsing the mechanics of emergency rule before the next crisis arrives.


The exercise centers on WHO’s “7-1-7” doctrine — detect an outbreak within seven days, notify authorities within one, and mount a response within seven more. On paper, it sounds efficient. In practice, it embeds internationally defined timelines and response structures into national decision-making chains.


WHO explains:

“Achieving these benchmarks requires coordinated action across surveillance, laboratories, emergency operations, risk communication, and leadership. Developed by the Center for Advanced Preparedness and Threat Response Simulation (CAPTRS) in collaboration with 7-1-7 Alliance and WHO’s Emergency Preparedness Department, the game translates the 7-1-7 target into a hands-on experience to test how such coordination plays out under pressure.”

On February 23, 2026, WHO convened insiders to test the game behind closed doors for a “playtest session with staff familiar with the 7-1-7 framework to stress-test the game’s design ahead of broader country-level piloting planned later this year.”


The Chosen Crisis: Ebola In Uganda

The simulation scenario was not mild.

Participants navigated an outbreak of Sudan Ebola virus disease in Uganda — one of the deadliest pathogens on earth.

“The scenario focused on an outbreak of Sudan Ebola virus disease in Uganda, prompting players to grapple with real-world challenges such as delayed case recognition, reporting breakdowns, and operational constraints.”

Delayed case recognition. Reporting breakdowns. Operational constraints.


More.....






Thursday, April 9, 2026

Trump urges Iran to stop charging fees to tankers passing Hormuz Strait


Trump urges Iran to stop charging fees to tankers passing Hormuz Strait

Summary
  • US President Donald Trump said on Thursday there are reports that Iran is charging fees to tankers passing through the Strait of Hormuz, warning that such measures “better not be” happening and must stop immediately.

  • A long message attributed to Iran’s Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei vowed to “not let go” of attackers, seek compensation and “avenge” the dead, warned it would take Hormuz Strait “to a new phase,” and urged Arab neighbors to “stand in the right place” and turn away from Western powers.

  • Iran's leaders are "agreeing to all the things that they have to agree to. Remember, they’ve been conquered. They have no military. If they don’t make a deal, it’s going to be very painful,” Trump told NBC on Thursday.

  • Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, speaker of Iran’s parliament, said Tehran may consider entering negotiations with the United States if Washington stops what he described as repeated violations of commitments, while warning that hostilities could resume otherwise.

  • Iran’s nationwide internet blackout has entered its 41st day, with disruption exceeding 960 hours, according to internet monitoring group NetBlocks.

  • Iran’s nuclear chief said on Thursday that demands by adversaries to limit the country’s uranium enrichment program would fail.

  • No Iraqi oil tanker has passed through the Strait of Hormuz since the ceasefire between Iran and the United States was announced, Iraq’s oil ministry said on Thursday.

  • The Strait of Hormuz has been fully closed, forcing oil tankers to turn back, Iran's state-run Press TV reported on Wednesday.

  • Vice President JD Vance said Tehran’s negotiators thought the US-Iran ceasefire agreed on Tuesday included Lebanon, but Washington had ​in ⁠fact not ‌agreed to ​that.

  • Iran’s parliamentary speaker said several key clauses of Tehran’s proposed framework for negotiations with the United States have already been violated, casting doubt on the basis for talks expected to begin in Pakistan.

    Netanyahu aide says US and Israel in ‘complete agreement’

    Ophir Falk, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s chief foreign policy adviser, said on Thursday Israel and the United States are in “complete agreement” amid ongoing regional tensions.

    Speaking to NBC’s Meet the Press NOW, Falk described a recent strike on Beirut as the largest operation against Hezbollah leadership since 2024.

    Asked about the objective of Israel’s campaign against Iran, he said it remains to “remove the existential threat” posed by the Iranian leadership, including its nuclear and ballistic missile capabilities.


    Bahrain sends UN letter condemning Iran missile and drone attacks

    Bahrain’s mission to the United Nations on Thursday sent a letter to the UN secretary-general and the Security Council condemning what it described as Iranian missile and drone attacks on the kingdom and the region.

    The letter, submitted on behalf of Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Kuwait, said the attacks since February 28 violate international law, the UN Charter and state sovereignty.

    It urged the Security Council to take necessary measures to ensure Iran complies with its obligations and halts what it described as violations, while reaffirming Gulf states’ right to self-defense under Article 51 of the UN Charter.


    UK foreign minister rejects idea of Iran imposing tolls in Strait of Hormuz

    UK Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper said freedom of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz is a “fundamental principle” of international maritime law, rejecting any unilateral move to impose charges on shipping.

    In an interview with Channel 4 aired on Thursday, she said the Strait is part of international shipping routes linking the high seas and argued that no country can “unilaterally go against the law of the sea” by imposing tolls.

    Strait of Hormuz traffic drops to six vessels on Thursday, data shows

    A total of six ships passed through the Strait of Hormuz on Thursday, according to data compiled by the global ship tracking firm MarineTraffic, CBS reported. 

    They included two oil, chemical or liquefied gas tankers, three cargo ships, and one bunkering vessel supplying fuel to other ships.

    The figure compares with five cargo ships on Wednesday, with no oil, chemical or liquefied gas tankers recorded that day. On Tuesday, when a ceasefire was announced, 11 ships transited the strait, including nine tankers.

    MarineTraffic data also showed that since February 28, at least 212 oil, chemical or liquefied gas tankers have crossed the strait, accounting for about 58% of all vessels passing through.

    More....


Trump Blasts Iran Terror Regime for ‘Very Poor Job’ and ‘Dishonorable’ Conduct on Strait of Hormuz Oil Flow


President Trump Blasts Iran Terror Regime for ‘Very Poor Job’ and ‘Dishonorable’ Conduct on Strait of Hormuz Oil Flow – “That Is Not the Agreement We Have!”




The Iranian regime is once again proving why it cannot be trusted.

Despite a delicate ceasefire agreement, Iran is already backsliding, attempting to choke off the world’s oil supply and reportedly shaking down tankers for “tolls” in the Strait of Hormuz.

The Gateway Pundit reported on Wednesday that Fars News Agency, the official propaganda arm directly linked to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), reported that tanker traffic is now “suspended” after Israel continued hammering Hezbollah.

PBS journalist Elizabeth Landers confirmed that President Trump told her directly: Israel’s war against Hezbollah in Lebanon is NOT part of the ceasefire deal.

According to reports from Fox News’ Trey Yingst, the Strait of Hormuz is now effectively a hostage of the Iranian Navy.

Trey Yingst:
State media reports that Iran has halted the passage of oil tankers through the Strait of Hormuz after Israeli attacks on Hezbollah in Lebanon earlier today. We know two vessels were able to go through this passageway, but again, state media is reporting that the Iranians are choking off the strait.

I just got off the phone with a senior Israeli official who was sounding the alarm about this action by the Iranians, saying, “Only just a few hours into this ceasefire, the Iranians are already showing that they are trying to leverage their control over the strait and put pressure on global energy trade.”


The Trump administration initially pushed back on claims that the Strait had been fully shut down.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt dismissed the reports as misleading, arguing that Iran’s public messaging doesn’t match what’s happening behind closed doors. She pointed to increased traffic and private assurances that the Strait remained open.

Forbes reported:


“White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said reports the strait is closed are “a case of what they’re saying publicly is different privately—we have seen an uptick in traffic in the strait today,” she said, adding, “it has been relayed to [Trump] privately” that the strait remains open “and these reports publicly are false.””

But mounting evidence suggests otherwise.

Shipping data and international reports indicate that traffic remains severely restricted, with vessels hesitant, or outright unable, to pass due to Iranian control and threats.

President Trump took to Truth Social on Thursday to put the radical regime on notice:

“There are reports that Iran is charging fees to tankers going through the Hormuz Strait — They better not be and, if they are, they better stop now!”

In a follow-up post, Trump called the regime’s behavior “dishonorable” and warned that the current blockade of energy exports is a direct violation of ongoing negotiations.

“Iran is doing a very poor job, dishonorable some would say, of allowing Oil to go through the Strait of Hormuz. That is not the agreement we have!”

More from New York Post:

Trump posted on his Truth Social late Wednesday that US forces would remain in the region until Tehran made good on its agreement.

“It was agreed, a long time ago, and despite all of the fake rhetoric to the contrary – NO NUCLEAR WEAPONS and, the Strait of Hormuz WILL BE OPEN & SAFE,” the president said.

Around 820 commercial vessels remain trapped in the Gulf, with just five having exited on the first day of the cease-fire Wednesday, according to global ship tracking firm Kpler.

“All U.S. Ships, Aircraft, and Military Personnel, with additional Ammunition, Weaponry, and anything else that is appropriate and necessary for the lethal prosecution and destruction of an already substantially degraded Enemy, will remain in place in, and around, Iran, until such time as the REAL AGREEMENT reached is fully complied with,” Trump warned Iran late Wednesday in his Truth Social post.

“If for any reason it is not, which is highly unlikely, then the ‘shootin’ starts,’ bigger, and better, and stronger than anyone has ever seen before.”