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On 7/14/25 5:47 PM, Physfitfreak wrote:
Iran is replacing GPS with BeiDou of course :)
A top military commander said they have fully completed the task and
machinery to immediately block Strait of Hormoz. He didn't say
anything about Militia's plans about it.
So even if the Militia refuses (or for some reason disabled) to do so,
military can do it with a single notice.
Again in some other area of Iran authorities are telling people when
they hear large explosions they should not worry, because they are
conducting military and defense training :)
So looks like nobody is indolent anymore in the government and the
defense institutions. Hehe :)
They're getting ready fast.
There's been a dilemma for Iran's policing herself in general for some
time, and this matter is if not the only reason behind enemies'
accessing private information about various commanders and high rank
officials in Iran, then at least it is a major factor in revealing
such vital information along with possible human espionage.
This dilemma is about, on one hand preventing criminals from
performing money laundering and other criminal activities, and on the
other hand leaving too many sensitive information about high rank
people in too few centers of control, thus providing cheap and easy
ways for the enemies to hack them and/or access all that.
And what I've once in a while come across about it is that they're
just whining about it and have not solved this matter. Today somebody
again whined about this.
I'm talking about a span of about 10 years. 10 years back, they didn't
know how to handle this matter, and now after suffering from it in the
war, they still don't know what to do about it..-a That's not
acceptable. That's how Iran's government used to blow decade after
decade in doing nothing but staying in a perpetual state of inaction
about problems. I thought that form of Iran was over.
So no, that form of Iran is not fully over. There are still
authorities who're not doing their jobs. Willingly or unwillingly,
doesn't matter. They have failed to do their jobs, and they are still
in those positions. I'm not sure where exactly the problem is and why
the system cannot repair itself. I can only guess and this is not a
matter in which guesses would mean anything. One must know where the
problem is, otherwise there's something gravely wrong with the system.
My suggestion: Have a team of scientists / experts find what solutions
USA, or Russia, or China, or India, or Israel, or a typical European
country has found for this "dilemma." Then see if you could make
modifications to it to make it work better for Iranians. This, for a
government, shouldn't take more than a few months.
So this simple way out of it could've been tried 10 years back, but it
obviously hasn't been tried. I still see authorities and their men
whining about it.
Get rid of those who did not and could not do it! Fire them. If the
body responsible doesn't even exist, create it and then immediately do
it.
This is my suggestion. The easy solution. The harder one is of course
to create a system of policing all by yourselves from zero up where
such a dilemma would naturally not exist.
But are you the man for it?
A picture finally came out from the ground level, of the American
command and communication RaDome in Ghatar base.
https://i.postimg.cc/SQPz9MLN/toast.jpg
So as you see, it can be said that it is "toast"! But now I doubt it was
a missile that did that. It looks very much like a job that a suicide
drone much weaker than a Shahed 136 does. A "missile" would not leave anything there standing, anything but a deep hole.l;
So I'm now fairly confident a simple rudimentary drone did that.
Something that flew low and made its way to the eye of the RaDome.
Lot's of Iran's older little suicide drones could do this, if upgraded enough to escape detection. E.g., Me'raj-521 carries a 1 kg warhead, and
if that's not enough to do the damage seen in the picture, then why not
a Me'raj-532, which carries 5 to 50 kg of explosives and can travel 450 km.
Yes, the latter, Me'raj-532 is a likely candidate for it. In the picture above, the amount of damage resembles to that which is delivered by a Russian Lancet. But perhaps by something a bit stronger than Lancet
cause the building behind the dome also suffered some damage. I think Me'raj-532 with a 50 kg payload fits that job better.
Not bad. So Iran spent the money for a second hand Toyota Corolla to
destroy a multi-million dollar equipment in that base.
Those patriots also blew multi million dollars each to stop some
probably worst of the worst crap in the form of old missiles that Iran
still had and was looking for excuses to get rid of.
This kind of events should be repeated :)
They are back-breakers to those Sheep who pay millions of dollars for a single patriot missile to the worst thieves in the USA, and still fall
for one cheap smartly designed Iranian drone.