Mossad Director Barnea declares the agency's mission unfinished until the Islamic Republic falls, while a new investigation reveals that Iran's cluster missiles overwhelmed Israeli defences in the final days of the 40-day war. Mossad Director David Barnea used the solemnity of Israel's Holocaust Remembrance Day ceremony on Tuesday to deliver an unusually public and forward-looking declaration about Iran. According to The Jerusalem Post, Barnea stated that his agency's mission is not yet complete, adding: "We did not think that our mission would be completed immediately with the fading of the battles, but rather we planned, and [really] we planned to continue, and this will be manifested even after the time of attacks on Tehran." It was the first time the Mossad chief has publicly addressed his role and views regarding the prospect of regime change in Iran. The statement carries particular weight given the controversy that has surrounded the intelligence agency...
NEW PODCAST EPISODE! Chokepoint Zero: How the US Naval Blockade of Hormuz Just Broke the Global Economy
Usually, when a major geopolitical crisis erupts, we expect diplomacy to act like a pressure valve—slowly and safely releasing the tension. But what happens when the plumber shows up and decides to permanently weld the main pipe shut instead? The whole house explodes. That is exactly what we are witnessing right now in the Persian Gulf. Following the sudden and spectacular collapse of the historic US-Iran peace talks in Islamabad, the United States has initiated a staggering geopolitical paradigm shift. In a flash, a total US naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz was announced, fundamentally rewriting the rules of the modern world. This is no longer just a Middle Eastern conflict; it is a full-blown cardiac arrest for the global economy. By sealing off a narrow, 21-mile-wide waterway, the US Navy is suffocating 20% of the world's crude oil supply and effectively landlocking Qatar's massive Liquified Natural Gas exports. But the true hidden catastrophe lies in a heavily overloo...