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Re: Log on difficulties... YTownBrownsFan 03/09/26 04:00 AM
I have had the same thing all day long.
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Palus Politicus
Re: Iranian War northlima dawg 03/08/26 10:21 PM
Oil was up 11 a barrel on Friday and just came out for tomorrow. It is up another 14 dollars to 105 a barrel.
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Fan Feedback Forum
Re: Log on difficulties... dawg66 03/08/26 08:51 PM
Originally Posted by Bard Dawg
Have had several days of difficulty signing in. Screen says problem is only visible to administrator. Timed out twice because sign in page didn't load, and failed to take log in info. FYI.

Same here.
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Fan Feedback Forum
Re: Log on difficulties... Bard Dawg 03/08/26 08:48 PM
Have had several days of difficulty signing in. Screen says problem is only visible to administrator. Timed out twice because sign in page didn't load, and failed to take log in info. FYI.
139 19,432 Read More
Palus Politicus
Re: Iranian War FATE 03/08/26 08:40 PM
Hat? Not so much.


[Linked Image from u.cubeupload.com]


#fauxoutragephonies
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Palus Politicus
Re: Iranian War PitDAWG 03/08/26 08:05 PM
Come on man! It's not as if he wore a tan suit to a news conference! Now THAT would be "unpresidential"! Just ask them.
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Palus Politicus
Re: Poltical Jokes Part 5 PitDAWG 03/08/26 08:02 PM
Kristi Noem's full name is Kristi Lynn Arnold Noem. KLAN
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Palus Politicus
Re: Iranian War BADdog 03/08/26 07:50 PM
.Does anyone find it disgusting and disrespectful that trunp wore a baseball cap at the dignified transfer of the 6 dead. I do.
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Palus Politicus
Re: Cuba Is Next On The List According to trump PitDAWG 03/08/26 06:57 PM
Canada provides assistance to the people of Cuba

https://www.canada.ca/en/global-aff...es-assistance-to-the-people-of-cuba.html



Both Canada and Mexico, which at the moment seem to be the most civilized governments in North America, are at least making sure the people of Cuba can eat.

Unless trump starts acting like his buddy Netanyahu and stops food from entering Cuba and starving those people to death. Hopefully it won't come to that. I guess we'll find out soon enough.
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Palus Politicus
Re: Iranian War PitDAWG 03/08/26 05:37 PM
Syria's Kurds Caution Iran's Kurds Against Aligning With US Against Tehran

By Reuters

Iranian Kurdish ​militias based in northern Iraq have consulted with the United States in recent days about whether and how to attack security forces in western Iran, as the United States ‌and Israel pound Iran with air strikes, Reuters ‌has reported.

But Syria's Kurds warned their Iranian counterparts against partnering with Washington.

"I hope that the Kurds of Iran will not ally themselves with America, because they will ⁠abandon them," said ⁠Saad Ali, a 45-year-old resident of the northeastern Syrian Kurdish town of Qamishli.

"Tomorrow, if an agreement ​is made between them (the U.S.) and the Iranians, they will eliminate you. Do not make our mistakes," he told Reuters.

Syrian Kurdish fighters aligned with the U.S. more than a decade ago to fight the Islamic State group, setting up their own semi-autonomous zone in the territory they had seized from the ultraconservative Islamist fighters.

But in January, Syria's new army under ​President Ahmed al-Sharaa captured most of the Kurdish-held areas in a sweeping offensive. Syria's Kurds called on the U.S. to intervene on their ⁠behalf, ⁠and felt betrayed when Washington instead urged ⁠them to merge with Sharaa's ​forces.

'A NEGATIVE EXPERIENCE' WITH THE U.S.

It remains a bitter experience for Syria's Kurds and a lesson they say should be heeded by Iranian ​Kurds.

"In my opinion, the Kurds in Iran ⁠should maintain a firm stance: they will not engage in any wars within Iranian territory without firm, signed guarantees from the United States regarding the future of these Kurdish regions in Iran," said Amjad Kardo, a 26-year-old Syrian Kurd in Qamishli.

"We Kurds here in Syria, in particular, have had a negative experience with the Americans in Syria, and their abandonment of Kurdish resistance movements."

An Iranian Kurdish source said Kurdish leaders did have concerns about being "betrayed" like the Kurdish groups in northern Syria.

The source ⁠said Iranian Kurdish leaders had requested guarantees from the U.S., without saying what they were.

U.S. President Donald Trump told Reuters ⁠on Thursday it would be "wonderful" if Kurdish forces crossed the border from northern Iraq into Iran, but declined to answer a question on whether the U.S. would offer them air support if they did so.

On Saturday, he appeared to switch positions, telling reporters he doesn't want Kurdish fighters going into Iran.

'EXERCISE CAUTION,' SYRIAN KURDS SAY

Ahmed Barakat, head of the Kurdish Progressive Democratic Party in Syria, told Reuters that Iranian Kurdish forces should exercise "extreme caution".

Barakat said the decision was ultimately up to them, but he believed that "accepting the invitation of the United States and being considered the spearhead in confronting or weakening the Iranian regime is not, at present, in the best interest of the Kurds of Iran."

Israel has been holding its own talks with Iranian Kurdish insurgent groups based in the semi-autonomous region of Iraqi Kurdistan for around a year, ⁠Reuters reported last week.

The Kurds are an ethnic group which was left stateless a century ago when the borders of the modern Middle East emerged from the collapsing Ottoman Empire.

Mostly Sunni Muslims, they speak a language related to Farsi and are concentrated in a mountainous region straddling the borders of Armenia, Iraq, Iran, Syria and Turkey.

In Iraq, they inhabit three northern provinces led by their own regional government. But in other countries - ​Iran, Turkey and now Syria - their dreams of an autonomous region or state have remained out of reach.

https://www.usnews.com/news/world/a...-against-aligning-with-us-against-tehran
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Palus Politicus
Re: Iranian War PitDAWG 03/08/26 05:32 PM
Iran is approximately 3.8 times larger in land area than Iraq. Covering about 636,400 square miles. Over 50% of Iran is covered by rugged mountainous regions much like Afghanistan.
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Palus Politicus
Re: Iranian War mgh888 03/08/26 05:25 PM
Originally Posted by northlima dawg
Joint Chief of staff told trump in the week before the strike that he advised against it due to lack of critical munitions and lack of support from allies and also the inherent complexity would result in US Servicemen casualties.

And the Department of National Intelligence noted that no matter how bad it is for Iran, They are not going to let outside people including the US have a say in their leadership.

Let's see just how bad a Sh*t sandwich Trump just made. No war has ever been won simply from aerial bombardment. If the USA wants to influence the regime change then they will need boots on the ground and it will be guerilla warfare in Iran - worth noting Iran = 90 million population and 630,ooo odd sq miles - about 1/6 the size of the USA. Without boots on the ground - all Trump has done is ensure many more 10's thousands of Iranians will die - and that the replacement for the regime they just removed might be as bad or worse.

And the Fanboys go Rah Rah Rah and spew whatever Faux and Bannon and others tell them to spew.
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Palus Politicus
Re: Iranian War PitDAWG 03/08/26 05:07 PM
Trump says he’ll help pick Iran’s leader, predicts regime change in Cuba

https://www.politico.com/news/2026/...cuba-and-impatient-with-ukraine-00814292

Meanwhile Iran just named a new supreme leader. No word on if trump was consulted first. I'm pretty sure he wasn't.
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Palus Politicus
Re: Iranian War northlima dawg 03/08/26 03:54 PM
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Palus Politicus
Re: Iranian War PitDAWG 03/08/26 03:52 PM
Pentagon hits back as Iran's wartime leader makes outlandish claim that US soldiers 'have been taken prisoner' in unhinged rant

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...ump-soldiers-prisoner-dead-Iran-war.html
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Palus Politicus
Re: Iranian War northlima dawg 03/08/26 03:46 PM
Lets see, we gutted USAID last year

pissed off all of our Nato Allies

in 2025, over 1,300 State Department employees, including career diplomats and foreign service officers, were fired or removed. Many including some in the middle east have not been filled or positions that required confirmation even addressed.

Patel gutted FBI counterintelligence team tasked with tracking Iranian threats days before the war.

Joint Chief of staff told trump in the week before the strike that he advised against it due to lack of critical munitions and lack of support from allies and also the inherent complexity would result in US Servicemen casualties.

And the Department of National Intelligence noted that no matter how bad it is for Iran, They are not going to let outside people including the US have a say in their leadership.
120 2,149 Read More
Pure Football Forum
Re: Browns News 6.0 PitDAWG 03/08/26 03:43 PM
When all you have to hang your hat on is "what might happen in the future" that's all you can do.

When the present and past is posted there's no other option to respond with but hope. Because you sure as hell can't defend the present.
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Palus Politicus
Re: Iranian War northlima dawg 03/08/26 03:29 PM
Two ships owned by an Iranian company that the United States has accused of supplying material to Tehran’s ballistic missile program departed a Chinese chemical-storage port this week laden with cargo and headed for Iran, according to a Washington Post analysis of ship-tracking data, satellite imagery and Treasury Department records.



The vessels are part of the Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines (IRISL), a state-owned company under U.S., British and European Union sanctions that has been described by the U.S. State Department as the “preferred shipping line for Iranian proliferators and procurement agents.”

The Shabdis and the Barzin — which can carry up to 6,500 and 14,500 20-foot-long containers, respectively — had docked at the Gaolan port in Zhuhai, a city on China’s southeastern coast. Experts told The Post that Gaolan is a loading port for chemicals including sodium perchlorate, a key precursor for solid rocket fuel that Iran desperately needs for its missile program.

A dozen other IRISL ships have visited the port since the start of the year. But experts said it would be notable for Beijing to allow any vessels to depart in this moment bound for Iran with weapons-related material as they expected China — America’s chief and most powerful strategic rival — to be wary of such an action while the United States and Iran are in direct combat.



“China could have held these vessels at port, imposed an administrative delay, invented a customs hold — any number of bureaucratic tools, but didn’t,” said Isaac Kardon, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, to The Post. “That’s a deliberate policy choice made during an active war in which Beijing publicly calls for restraint.”

Although IRISL operates as a large commercial carrier, Kardon said the circumstances of these shipments strongly suggest the cargo is sodium perchlorate. “Given the track record, the most parsimonious explanation is that they’re loading the same commodity they’ve been shuttling for the past year-plus,” he said.

The Chinese Embassy in Washington did not respond to messages seeking comment.

The Pentagon, the White House and the U.S. Treasury Department also did not respond to requests for comment.


The Barzin arrived Saturday at the Gaolan port. Based on how deep the ship was sitting in the water when it departed Monday, it appeared to have taken on cargo. That data point, which is contained in ship-tracking data and is known as draft, also suggests the Shabdis took on cargo between the time it arrived Wednesday and when it departed Thursday. The maritime intelligence firm Pole Star Defense independently verified The Post’s draft analysis.

“The Gaolan port hosts some of the largest liquid chemical storage terminals in south China,” said Miad Maleki, a former U.S. Treasury official who worked on Iran sanctions efforts and is now a senior adviser at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.

Maleki said that based on the history of transfers of the chemical from the Gaolan port to Iran, the involvement of IRISL, and the movements of the Barzin and Shabdis, his assessment is that the two vessels now in transit are carrying sodium perchlorate.

As of Saturday, the ships were in the South China Sea, according to AIS data, which provides real-time information about vessel position, draft, speed, course and destination, among other details. The data was provided by the global intelligence company Kpler.

The Barzin has dropped anchor off the coast of Malaysia. Its destination remains the port in Bandar Abbas, some 4,000 miles away, where it is expected to arrive next Saturday. The Shabdis is currently sailing, with about 4,500 miles to go, and is expected to arrive at Iran’s Chabahar part on March 16. Both ports are in the Strait of Hormuz and host major Iranian naval bases. Satellite imagery from Monday shows black smoke spewing from multiple sites after Bandar Abbas was struck in the U.S. and Israeli barrages that began last weekend.


© European Union, contains modified Copernicus Sentinel data 2026, processed with Copernicus Browser
Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control announced sanctions last year aimed in part at interrupting Iran’s ballistic missile production, with a focus on stopping the flow of sodium perchlorate and dioctyl sebacate from China to Iran. Sodium perchlorate is used to produce ammonium perchlorate. Ammonium perchlorate and dioctyl sebacate can be used in the solid propellants that power ballistic missiles.

The United States has for years accused China of providing its ally Iran with missile-related technology and materials. Beijing has often denied direct assistance and said the U.S. accusations overstate commercial or dual-use trade. Sodium perchlorate has a narrow range of civilian uses beyond rocket propellants and fireworks.

If the ships that departed Gaolan port this week are carrying sodium perchlorate, that would be a departure from China’s previous approach to balancing its interests in the region, said Grant Rumley, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

“With missiles and drones raining down on gulf states, any show of support like this towards Iran risks souring China’s relations with a number of gulf countries,” he continued. “It’s an uncharacteristically bold strategy.”

The other 12 IRISL-owned ships that have visited Gaolan port since the start of the year all docked at the same terminal as the Barzin and the Shabdis, and draft changes suggest all but one picked up cargo. Several — like the Barzin — are known sodium perchlorate haulers, according to experts and media reports citing intelligence agency assessments and satellite imagery reviews.


The Basht sits at Gaolan port in Zhuahi on Feb. 19 around the same time the Hamouna and the Shabdis are captured in the ocean just outside the port, satellite imagery shows. The Arzin, a fourth ship owned by IRISL, is also captured in imagery just outside the port on Feb. 15.
The Basht sits at Gaolan port in Zhuahi on Feb. 19 around the same time the Hamouna and the Shabdis are captured in the ocean just outside the port, satellite imagery shows. The Arzin, a fourth ship owned by IRISL, is also captured in imagery just outside the port on Feb. 15.
© Planet Labs/Planet Labs
Some of the ships cycled through Gaolan port on a nearly daily cadence during a one-week period in mid-February as U.S. forces amassed near Iran and a second round of nuclear talks ended without a breakthrough.

Draft analysis indicates that many of the vessels unloaded their cargo at Iran’s Shahid Rajaee port, which handles the great majority of the country’s container trade. Last year, after an explosion at the port killed at least 17 people, a Post examination of visuals showed the blast was caused by a chemical fire that began in a shipping container. Experts said the color of smoke indicated that perchlorates were present.

AIS data suggests some of the ships lately have been forced to shift their planned routes due to the U.S.-Israeli strikes.

Three that were en route to Bandar Abbas — the Hamouna, Abyan and Arzin — changed their AIS destination to the “high seas” after the strikes began and on Saturday were near Iranian waters. Another, the Basht, stopped transmitting AIS data Thursday, around 13 miles from Bandar Abbas.

Meanwhile, at least two IRISL-owned ships are on their way to the Gaolan port.

The U.S. and Israel strikes have hammered Iran’s missile storage bunkers and underground depots. “Tehran’s need for propellant precursors just went from urgent to existential,” Kardon told The Post.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/other/ar-AA1XJBrc
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Palus Politicus
Re: Iranian War PitDAWG 03/08/26 03:28 PM
Trump may have called Putin to see if he agreed with our intel community first.

Quote
Trump has previously called him 'incompetent' and a 'lightweight.'

Our foreign policy in a single sentence. He thinks that describes everyone but himself.
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Palus Politicus
Re: Iranian War northlima dawg 03/08/26 03:22 PM
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Palus Politicus
Re: Iranian War northlima dawg 03/08/26 03:19 PM
Leaked spy report warns Trump's Iran war faces disaster
Follow along on Daily Mail's live blog for the latest updates on Iran
By SOPHIE GABLE, US REPORTER

Published: 07:48 EST, 7 March 2026 | Updated: 14:57 EST, 7 March 2026


A leaked classified report by the National Intelligence Council has shed an unfavorable light on Donald Trump's decision to strike Iran, warning that military involvement could be disastrous.

In just one week, tensions have dramatically risen in the region, starting with a joint military operation conducted by the US and Israel against Iran.

The strikes took out Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, as Iran retaliated by targeting US military bases in the Gulf Cooperation Cou

Trump has stood firm on the military attack, but a report completed by the NIC just a week before raised doubts about the US's ability to overthrow the regime.

The NIC is a federal government agency that reports to the Director of National Intelligence. NIC members bridge 18 intelligence agencies with policymakers to provide analytical assessments.

Three people familiar with the findings told the Washington Post that Iran would likely respond to Khamenei's death by following protocols to preserve the regime. Sources said it was 'unlikely' that Iran's opposition would seize control.

Khamenei's successor has yet to be named. Iran's Assembly of Experts and high-ranking members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps have been tasked with naming his replacement.

The ayatollah's son, Mojtaba Khamenei, is rumored to be assuming the role, but Trump has previously called him 'incompetent' and a 'lightweight.'

A classified intelligence report has concluded that it is unlikely the US will initiate regime change. The report was reportedly dated just a week before the military operation began. Pictured above is a suburb of Beirut after Israeli strikes



The Trump administration initially said the strikes were intended to take out Iran's nuclear capabilities, but in recent days has demanded 'unconditional surrender.'

The president has made it clear that he wants a say in Iran's leadership, telling NBC News: 'We want them to have a good leader. We have some people who I think would do a good job.'

Experts told the Washington Post that the NIC report coincides with how the Islamic Republic of Iran operates.


Chilling video leaks out of Iran: Desperate regime floods streets with America-hating mob... as catastrophic rumor emerges about new Ayatollah
article image
Holly Dagres, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, told the publication that bending the knee to Trump would go against 'everything they stand for.'

Suzanne Maloney, an Iran scholar and vice president at the Brookings Institution, agreed with the assessment: 'There’s no other force within Iran that can confront the remaining power that the regime has.'

'Even if they’re not able to project that power very effectively against their neighbors, they can certainly dominate inside the country.'

Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, Iran’s Parliament speaker, defiantly denied that Iranian leadership would cooperate with Trump's demands.

'The fate of dear Iran, which is more precious than life, will be determined solely by the proud Iranian nation, not by [Jeffrey] Epstein’s gang,' he wrote on X.
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Palus Politicus
Re: Iranian War PitDAWG 03/08/26 03:18 PM
Yes, we had their unclear program under control of on a 15 year deal. Trump tore it up and played tough guy. Now look where we are. We should all support that.
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Palus Politicus
Re: Russia Agrees to US Ukraine Security Demands PitDAWG 03/08/26 03:14 PM
I don't try to make a vague comparison to one case where one of our largest global enemies invades a democracy on the door of our NATO allies to us attacking a nation that is of no imminent threat.

It appears you agree with me. Trump only pushes around and bullies the little kids on the playground to make himself look tough.

He would never try to do that to anyone nearly on our own level.

Is that why you think when Putin supplied Ukraine with satellite imagery to help them better locate our troops that trump stayed silent about it?
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Palus Politicus
Re: Russia Agrees to US Ukraine Security Demands northlima dawg 03/08/26 03:12 PM
Kyiv says Russia accepted US plan for Ukraine security guarantees
By Reuters
February 28, 20263:40 PM ESTUpdated February 28, 2026





KYIV, Feb 28 (Reuters) - Russia said at recent talks in Geneva it would accept the U.S. proposal for Ukraine's post-war security guarantees, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy's chief of staff said on Saturday.
"At the last talks, the Russian side said for example that they would accept the security guarantees offered to Ukraine by the United States," said top aide Kyrylo Budanov in an interview aired on Ukrainian television.
The Reuters Iran Briefing newsletter keeps you informed with the latest developments and analysis of the Iran war. Sign up here.
Advertisement · Scroll to continue


U.S. President Donald Trump is urging Moscow and Kyiv to strike an agreement to end Europe's biggest war since 1945, though Zelenskiy has complained that his country is facing more pressure to make concessions.
Ukraine is seeking iron-clad security guarantees which commit the U.S. and its European allies to action if Russia attacks again after a peace deal is reached.
The last round of peace talks, which took place in Geneva last week, did not achieve a breakthrough and was described as difficult by Kyiv and Moscow, although Washington said it saw "meaningful progress."
Budanov also said that at present, Russia had not agreed to a summit between Zelenskiy and Russian President Vladimir Putin, which had been floated earlier as a possibility by U.S. special envoy Steve Witkoff.

https://www.reuters.com/business/ae...-ukraine-security-guarantees-2026-02-28/
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Everything Else...
Re: More Music bonefish 03/08/26 01:45 PM
So, if you think you think you can be a drummer.

think again,




I saw him do this solo. I was maybe 12' away. Absolutely insane.
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