Sunday, March 29, 2026

USS Tripoli Reaches Middle East With More Than 3,500 Troops


USS Tripoli Reaches Middle East With More Than 3,500 Troops


CENTCOM said the Tripoli brings transport aircraft, strike fighters, and amphibious assault capabilities to the region in addition to the Marines aboard.

The USS Boxer, another amphibious assault ship, along with the 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit, has also been ordered to the region from San Diego.

CENTCOM did not disclose more details on where the additional U.S. forces will be positioned, though they are likely to operate within striking distance of Iran, including near key locations such as Kharg Island, a major Iranian oil export terminal off the country’s coast.

In its most recent update on March 25, marking the fourth week of the campaign, CENTCOM said that more than 11,000 targets had been struck since the United States and Israel launched joint operations against Iran on Feb. 28.

On Friday, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the United States could achieve its objectives in Iran without deploying ground troops and expected the operation to conclude within weeks. He described the latest troop movements as precautionary measures intended to prepare for unforeseen contingencies.

Speaking to reporters after a G7 foreign ministers’ meeting in France, Rubio said Washington was meeting its war goals, which he described as destroying Iran’s missile and drone capabilities, the factories that produce those weapons, as well as elements of its navy and air force.

He said the campaign was “going very well” and was expected to conclude in “weeks, not months.”

“We are ahead of schedule on most of them, and we can achieve them without any ground troops,” Rubio said.

At a Cabinet meeting on Thursday, Middle East special envoy Steve Witkoff said Washington had delivered Tehran a 15-point “action list” that the United States hopes could serve as a framework for a possible cease-fire.
The proposal includes restrictions on Iran’s nuclear program, the issue at the center of tensions with the United States and Israel, as well as reopening the Strait of Hormuz, a critical waterway through which a significant share of the world’s oil and gas passes.





The Age Verification Con


The Age Verification Con


IDF says almost done targeting ‘critical’ Iranian military sites as waves of strikes hit Tehran


IDF says almost done targeting ‘critical’ Iranian military sites as waves of strikes hit Tehran



The Israel Defense Forces assessed on Saturday that it would finish targeting nearly all of Iran’s key military industry sites in the coming days, as the war hit its one-month anniversary, and Vice President JD Vance suggested that Washington would soon begin winding down its fight against the Islamic Republic.

The remarks came against the backdrop of heavy airstrikes over Iran, which the IDF said had targeted, among other things, the headquarters of the regime’s Marine Industries Organization, tasked with the production of naval weapons and vessels.

IDF spokesman Effie Defrin said at a press conference on Saturday evening that “within a few days” the military would finish targeting all of the “critical” assets of Iran’s military production industries.

“This means we will destroy most of the military production capabilities, and it will take the regime a long time to restore them,” he said.

Iran’s defense industry is extensive, with numerous military bodies and private companies manufacturing weapon systems — or components — including ballistic missiles, air defenses, naval weapons, cyber capabilities, and even spy satellites.

The Israeli Air Force has so far targeted thousands of assets of Iran’s military industry amid the war, or around 70%, and the IDF assesses that it is now close to having targeted around 90% of the key sites used to develop weapons that threaten Israel.

‘A little while longer’

Like Defrin, Vance suggested in remarks published Saturday that Washington was close to completing the goals it set out for the joint offensive on Iran.

The vice president addressed the war in a conversation with conservative political commentator Benny Johnson on his podcast, “The Benny Show.”

The war, he said, would continue for “A little while longer,” with the goal being to “neuter” the Islamic “for a very, very long time.”

He said the US had “accomplished the vast majority of our military projects,” and claimed that one could even argue the objectives had actually already been met.

“The president’s going to keep at it for a little while longer to ensure that once we leave, we don’t have to do this again for a very, very long time,” Vance said, in a rare acknowledgement that the military gains made by the US will not be permanent.

“This country is threatening us in all these ways. They’re still trying to build a nuclear weapon. We ned to neuter them for a very, very long time, and that’s the purpose,” he added.

Asked by Johnson about the rising gas prices due to the war, Vance acknowledged the issue, but called it a “very temporary reaction to what is going to ultimately be a short-term conflict.”

“We’re not interested in being in Iran a year down the road or two years down the road. We’re taking care of business. We’re going to be out of there soon, and gas prices are going to come back down,” he stressed.

Another blow to Iran’s naval capabilities

As the war entered its second month on Saturday, the IDF said that the Air Force had targeted the headquarters of Iran’s Marine Industries Organization overnight.

It said the MIO headquarters, located in Tehran, were responsible for “research, development, and production of a wide range of naval weaponry, including surface and sub-surface vessels, manned and unmanned equipment, as well as engines and weapons.”

The strike was carried out following intelligence provided by the Naval Intelligence Division, the military said, adding that it “deepens the damage to the Iranian terror regime’s naval capabilities, with a particular impact on its ability to produce advanced maritime weapons.”

The IDF said it also struck other sites used by Iran to develop weapons and air defense systems during the wave of strikes.

It was the latest blow to Iran’s naval operations, after the IDF announced on Thursday that the commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy, Adm. Alireza Tangsiri, had been killed in an airstrike.

Later on Saturday, the IDF said it had completed another “extensive” wave of strikes in Tehran, targeting dozens of Iranian regime infrastructure sites.

It said further details on the targets would be provided at a later point.

More...


Control the Weather, Control the Money…


Control the Weather, Control the Money… 



The weather feels more extreme. The explanations feel thinner. And the more you look, the more questions you find.

At the same time, food prices are rising, energy costs are volatile, global tensions are increasing and yet we’re told everything is “under control.”

Maybe.

But what if the bigger story isn’t about any one issue?

What if it’s about control itself?

The Sky Above Us

Look up.

Most days, I do.

And what I see are long white streaks stretching across the sky. Some say they’re just contrails…normal jet exhaust. Others say they’re something more.

The divide is real.

Years ago, somewhere between 2005 and 2008, I attended a gathering in Hollywood, California that stayed with me. I met G. Edward Griffin, author of “The Creature From Jekyll Island,” an expose of the Federal Reserve system and in the same room was music producer Quincy Jones.

That night, a documentary on atmospheric spraying, what many call “chemtrails,” was shown.

Not as entertainment.

As something serious.

And it left me with a question I’ve never been able to fully answer:

If something is being dispersed into the atmosphere on a large scale… how do the people doing it avoid the consequences themselves?

Same air. Same water. Same planet.

More.....

Saturday, March 28, 2026

US Deploys Another Aircraft Carrier to Middle East


US Deploys Another Aircraft Carrier to Middle East
Sputnik


The USS George H.W. Bush aircraft carrier, accompanied with several guided missile destroyers, will deploy to US Central Command's area of responsibility - the same command overseeing the ongoing military operation against Iran, CBS News reports.
The deployment comes amid recent news of another US aircraft carrier departing the war zone. 
The USS Gerald R. Ford arrived last week at a naval port in Souda Bay, Crete, for repairs after suffering a “fire aboard”. 
This brings the naval forces in the region down to one carrier strike group, led by the USS Abraham Lincoln. The USS George H.W. Bush appears intended to reinforce the military presence in the area.