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World News@lemmygrad.ml•Megathread for the US war on Iran | Week 23 of 2026
14·1 day agoExpand article
Illustration released by Hezbollah Military Media depicting Israeli soldiers fleeing from a military vehicle during combat operations.Despite renewed talk in Washington of a ceasefire in Lebanon, the reality facing Israeli occupation forces deployed in southern Lebanon appears markedly different, according to military affairs correspondent Yaniv Kubovich in Haaretz.
Israeli occupation troops operating in the area say there is little sense of any genuine de-escalation. Drones, aerial attacks, rocket fire, and attempts to target soldiers continue to occupy commanders and troops on the ground, despite US President Donald Trump’s assertion that Hezbollah had agreed to halt attacks on Israeli forces. Solely on Tuesday, the occupation forces reportedly faced ten drone-related attack attempts. The only tangible change, soldiers say, has been a reduction in launches toward the occupied territories and the suspension of attacks in Beirut.
Kubovich reports that the Israeli military maintains that the US-backed ceasefire directives do not apply to the areas where ground forces are operating. Field commanders say neither the threat environment nor operational tasks have changed and that fighting continues at nearly the same intensity.
According to the report, the Israeli military has drawn a distinction between areas under Northern Command responsibility—including buffer zones and territories entered during ground operations—and areas overseen directly by the General Staff, including Beirut, major urban centers, and deeper regions of Lebanon. While little has changed in the first category, military attacks in the second were halted following a direct request from Trump.
Senior officers described an unprecedented situation in which authority over the use of force is no longer determined solely by the Israeli occupation government or military leadership but is increasingly influenced by decisions made in the White House. Planned strikes against targets in Beirut and elsewhere in Lebanon—including operations requiring extensive preparation by the air force, intelligence services, and other military branches—were reportedly canceled at the last moment.
The situation has reportedly generated unease within the Zionist entity’s military leadership. Many officers say they have never operated under conditions where battlefield decisions with direct consequences for troops are so immediately affected by a foreign government’s political choices.
For commanders, uncertainty has become a defining feature of the conflict. Commanders prepare large-scale plans, mobilize forces, and ready complex operations without any guarantee of their execution. Some military officers also believe recent public statements by the Zionist Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the defense minister undermined military initiatives. According to those officers, key targets had been awaiting favorable operational conditions, but inflammatory political rhetoric increased international and political pressure, complicating their execution.
Kubovich further reports that military and security officials presented political leaders with multiple escalation scenarios ahead of a proposed expansion of military operations. Some options included strikes deep inside Lebanon and broader campaigns targeting Hezbollah’s centers of influence.
The military reportedly believed such operations could inflict greater damage on Hezbollah but would require substantial resources and lengthy preparations. Ultimately, the plans were not fully approved. The operation that did proceed was more limited than the alternatives proposed and has now also been suspended following the US push for a ceasefire.
According to military and security sources, a widening gap between actual battlefield outcomes and the rhetoric promoted by political leaders and official spokespersons has fueled frustration and eroded public confidence among Israeli settlers.
In this context, Israeli military officials acknowledge that while Hezbollah has suffered significant blows, it has not been defeated. Its command structure remains intact, much of its organizational framework survives, and substantial capabilities have been preserved for the future.
Field commanders have also warned against a return to the institutional culture that prevailed before the October 7 attacks. They argue that conformity with senior leadership is increasing while critical voices are being marginalized. According to officers, the perspectives of commanders on the ground are often ignored, and few within the military are willing to challenge operational decisions.
Israel currently maintains military operations across Lebanon, Syria, and the Gaza Strip. Each front demands significant manpower, intelligence resources, logistical support, and defensive capabilities. Field commanders warn that such a posture is unsustainable without a clear strategic vision. Reserve forces are already under severe strain, while regular units continue to face rapid attrition.
One senior reserve officer summarized the dilemma: “The issue is not how much territory can be occupied. The issue is who will hold it a year from now. If the state does not define a strategy for all fronts, the Israeli military will eventually reach its breaking point.”
Former Israeli Army Chief: Current Situation in Lebanon Is Pointless
The concerns raised by serving officers and security officials are echoed by prominent figures from Israel’s military establishment. As criticism grows over the absence of a clear strategy, former Chief of Staff Dan Halutz has joined a widening chorus of voices questioning the government’s conduct of the war and warning that continued military operations without defined political objectives risk further deepening the Israeli occupation’s strategic predicament.
Halutz said military leaders must establish clear limits and demand solutions from the government.
Speaking to Radio 103FM about developments on the northern front and in southern Lebanon, Halutz delivered a scathing assessment of the government’s conduct.
“They sent our soldiers like sitting ducks into a shooting range. They are exposed. These soldiers are doing everything they can with courage, but they have been given undefined objectives and no clear path to achieving them,” he said.
Halutz also criticized the capture of Beaufort Castle (Qalaat Al-Shaqif), arguing that Netanyahu was seeking “symbolic victories” rather than strategic achievements.
“We seized Beaufort Castle, and Netanyahu was looking for symbols. Suddenly he remembered Begin’s symbolism from 44 years ago and clung to it. The castle means nothing without a comprehensive strategy,” he said, adding that the insistence on maintaining the current situation in Lebanon serves no purpose.
Asked whether military leaders should tell the government that enough is enough, Halutz answered unequivocally in the affirmative. “Of course. They should say, ‘This is enough.’ Let’s stop and consider another solution.'” Halutz expressed little confidence that Netanyahu’s political and diplomatic circle would challenge his decisions.
Source: Agencies (translated and edited by Al-Manar)
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Global News@lemmy.zip•[Opinion] Why Beijing Still Fears the Tiananmen MothersEnglish
82·1 day agoBoring. You listen to that rapist? Why don’t you try to get your family members to call you back man
vyitnoomyr@lemmygrad.mlto
Global News@lemmy.zip•[Opinion] Why Beijing Still Fears the Tiananmen MothersEnglish
95·1 day agoSomeone will probably throw the whole thread at you, but just so you know, the US embassy confirmed there was no massacre. You’re just reading reheated Cold War propaganda
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GenZedong@lemmygrad.ml•This is like the Grinch admitting he is actually quite fond of some of the Whos
11·1 day agoIt’s weird to see all of them double down so much on the “US has no national interest in supporting Israel” thing, as if countries don’t act in ruling class interest, and the US workers haven’t made a deal with their ruling class for a (formerly smoother) ramp up into their asset market
Just totally freezing your understanding of unequal exchange and excluding the works that show the depth of dependency beyond stolen labor time (denial & theft of productive capacity). I wonder if it has anything to do with what they want to say about China
At least it’s a little bit more interesting than the old “lenin said investment was imperialism”
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The Deprogram@lemmygrad.ml•You can tell the petite bourgeoisie think they deserve to live
5·1 day agoThe suburbs are so cool my folks would consider me completely unrecognizable in a hoodie and ask if someone had been looking around to steal. I’d be like guys that was me. That was me coming home. They’d be like no, no
Man it would have been funny if they shot me
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Ask Lemmygrad@lemmygrad.ml•Is there other communist online spaces on the internet besides Lemmygrad?
1·1 day agoTiếng Việt của em thế nào?
I just tried to look up some books for this, and it is an absolute nightmare. “Literature” and workbooks on this subject seem to evaluate/address the patient in an intolerably condescending and frequently misogynistic way. I mean, the one I just read didn’t even use a male example in their prompt and it was all about boyfriends and getting into subcultures. Just kinda bumping in the meantime but that was more frustrating than most research areas, FYI.
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Comradeship // Freechat@lemmygrad.ml•I can't talk to people anymore man.
83·2 days agoThey are delusional but they’re also not saying what they mean. People are often the most delusional about their ability to get away with lies due to a countervailing, widespread irresponsibility known as politeness. It has minimal crossover with actual politeness. I can’t speak more on this here. It’s too dangerous
vyitnoomyr@lemmygrad.mlto
Comradeship // Freechat@lemmygrad.ml•How do yall not let the rage consume you?
1·2 days agoHope it all goes well! China is difficult so make sure to do a lot of research and talk to people who’ve moved there. Hard to get a green card even if you’re married to someone who has citizenship. OTOH it is flat-out impossible to do the reverse (this is tough to watch despite being a characteristically charming video from the channel). China is far more fair than say, first world countries, which look for arrests and stuff rather than only convictions. (Do not ask why I researched that.) I’m sure you’ll take it seriously, but just saying. I chose complete no-brainers. You just buy Russian property and get a visa it’s nuts. VN is roughly more like China 20 years ago in terms of visas.
I was pushing China more on a friend of mine in Eastern Europe but he was super dismissive of his academic opportunities. A real shame. That would be the best route I think, especially considering how their admissions system works!! Just saying if you happen to talk to anyone in like, Hungary, Serbia, Bulgaria, it’s kinda urgent
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Ask Lemmygrad@lemmygrad.ml•Can I use the money in my joint bank account however I want?
1·2 days agoAs in, I don’t think that food kitchens in Chicago are helping Palestinians, or applying the same kind of pressure on the people creating the need for food kitchens.
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World News@lemmygrad.ml•Megathread for the US war on Iran | Week 23 of 2026
17·3 days agoGentle Reminder: The Dark Will Not Protect You 🤗 Not For Long 🙅♂️ They Are COMING ⌛☝️
Expand article
Yedioth Ahronoth indicated that the concerns have been confirmed, and the “Israeli” army is worried about the use of explosive loitering gliders at night.
The Hebrew newspaper added that one of the Givati Reconnaissance fighters who came to visit those wounded in the drone incident that struck the force heading toward Al-Shaqif Castle said: “It is very strange that a drone was able to strike a military force at night. This has never happened before to combat units.”
Yedioth Ahronoth cited “Israeli” security sources as saying, “There is a constantly rising learning curve, and not only in the field of drones. They improve the accuracy of their fire every time anew. Therefore, we try to move as much as possible within the security zone along the Yellow Line, and during maneuvers we avoid remaining in fixed positions.”
“The Israeli army and Hezbollah are engaged in what security sources describe as a ‘learning battle’. According to these sources, Hezbollah studies the army’s methods and improves from time to time.”
The paper pointed out that Israeli soldiers continue arriving at Rambam Hospital in Haifa to visit their wounded comrades, adding that they describe the atmosphere as difficult and frustrating.
Yedioth Ahronoth interviewed a soldier who came to check on his friend wounded by a suicide drone.
“Fifteen killed during what is called a ‘ceasefire,’ while there is no ceasefire at all. Perhaps Hezbollah’s drones now have new thermal cameras, and they can actually see our forces while they are moving,” he said.
Fighters also continue entering treatment rooms to support the families of the wounded, according to the Zionist paper.
Source: Al-Manar English Website
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World News@lemmygrad.ml•Megathread for the US war on Iran | Week 23 of 2026
14·3 days ago
Professor please I am at my fucking limit
Edit: soreu this is barely related to the war I’m going to go back to spamming /all with videos of Hezbollah blowing shit up I’m just overwhelmed by the backlog
[2026-06-02] NYT via Al-Manar – Hezbollah Looks More Capable than It Did When War Began
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An Israeli campaign that started with high hopes has devolved into a kind of impasse, with Hezbollah looking more capable than it did when the war began, The new York Times introduced its article which discusses how Hezbollah Thwarted the Israeli strategy in Lebanon.
NYT indicated that the recent threat made by the Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu and his war minister Israel Katz to bomb Beirut’s Dayieh reflects the fight was falling short.
“And when Israel backed down from that threat a few hours later, the decision pointed up just how much it had been backed into a corner — stuck between domestic pressure to hit Hezbollah hard, and American pressure to constrain its attacks in Lebanon.”
‘Israel’ did not seem to be ready for Hezbollah’s widespread use of explosive “first-person-view” drones, which are controlled with fiber-optic cables that unspool for miles and are unsusceptible to electronic jamming, the article added.
It is now a kind of deadlock in which Hezbollah suddenly looks more capable than it did when the war began and the soldiers of the Israel Defense Forces can look startlingly helpless, according to NYT.
Assaf Orion, a retired Israeli brigadier general who is now a fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said Israel appeared to be forgetting the hard lessons it learned after it invaded Lebanon in 1982 (an invasion that inspired the creation of Hezbollah).
Source: The New York Times
vyitnoomyr@lemmygrad.mlto
Comradeship // Freechat@lemmygrad.ml•How do yall not let the rage consume you?
2·3 days agoWait what I meant you should flee the country together
Those are like the only countries it’s even ethical and feasible to move to.
I guess there is kind of my own brutal logic that I couldn’t remain in America and have a happy relationship with a liberal embedded in there. But that wasn’t my intended message at all. It was seriously just asking, do you think ditching the whole environment together is feasible?
I’m not like super amazed by Russia it’s just not RUINOUS for the next generation there, so you’re not just like, exploiting the population as an asset-laden expat. You’d need to have a career set up and shit. I’m just saying buying a condo or something is unimaginably cheap versus US property market. Which is unstable and based on blood money anyways. Do you get my reasoning? It is a pretty hard break from most people’s priorities so I figured I’d ask before potentially offering one (maybe completely unlikely) solution. Besides not everyone even WANTS a long-term relationship. IDGAF if they do or don’t, I guess I’m glad to see someone else so violently committed to their relationship. That’s dope
I honestly hoped by coming back on the English non-coder/market related internet I could convince someone to do it lol the idea of based internet ppl headed into such a dubious retirement situation makes me kinda get a knot in my stomach. This probably sounds ridiculous 😭 but I have noticed a lot of people’s relatives are hopelessly chuddy & make them unhappy. They could instead be plaintively begging them to fly back across the Pacific before they are 6 feet under 😀
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Military@lemmygrad.ml•Russia Is Building Tomorrow’s War Machine
2·3 days agoNo it’s a blog
I don’t think you have an obligation to expose yourself to ragebait. The govt will literally make these people publicly apologize
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Ask Lemmygrad@lemmygrad.ml•What are your opinions on Lab-cultured meat as an alternative to the Animal slaughtering industry in the future.
2·3 days agoYour lone bad take in this thread 👎
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Comradeship // Freechat@lemmygrad.ml•How do yall not let the rage consume you?
22·3 days agoWhat are her feelings on Viet Nam and Russia assuming this is longterm 🥺
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World News@lemmygrad.ml•Megathread for the US war on Iran | Week 23 of 2026
4·3 days agoThere are really people like that out there, but I doubt they would make their way in here














[2026-06-04] SABA – IRGC: American "Patriot“ Systems’ Error Caused Destruction of Kuwait Airport’s Passenger Terminal
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Tehran:
The spokesperson for the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, Brigadier General Hossein Mohabb, said on Wednesday evening that the destruction of the passenger terminal at Kuwait Airport was the result of an error in American “Patriot” systems.
Brigadier General Mohabb added, in a statement quoted by Fars News Agency: “The investigations we conducted regarding the strike on the Kuwait Airport passenger terminal revealed that the Revolutionary Guard’s Aerospace Force did not launch any missile towards this target, and that the destruction of the Kuwait Airport passenger terminal was caused by an error in the American ‘Patriot’ systems, which fell on this terminal after failing to intercept Iranian missiles.”