Russia.houndawg wrote:Who is the world's largest producer of oil?SDHornet wrote:
For the most part yes...until we actually try to drill our own oil then the donks talk a different game.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_co ... production
Russia.houndawg wrote:Who is the world's largest producer of oil?SDHornet wrote:
For the most part yes...until we actually try to drill our own oil then the donks talk a different game.
Wow! Only one of the top 5 producers is in the Middle East. Who'd thunk?SDHornet wrote:Russia.houndawg wrote:
Who is the world's largest producer of oil?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_co ... production
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/ ... r-facilityIsrael appeared to confirm claims that it was behind a cyber-attack on Iran’s main nuclear facility on Sunday, which Tehran’s nuclear energy chief described as an act of terrorism that warranted a response against its perpetrators.
The apparent attack took place hours after officials at the Natanz reactor restarted spinning advanced centrifuges that could speed up the production of enriched uranium, in what had been billed as a pivotal moment in the country’s nuclear programme.
As Iranian authorities scrambled to deal with a large-scale blackout at Natanz, which the country’s Atomic Energy Agency acknowledged had damaged the electricity grid at the site, the Israeli defence chief, Aviv Kochavi, said the country’s “operations in the Middle East are not hidden from the eyes of the enemy”.
https://www.jns.org/natanz-blast-likely ... oublesome/The April 11 explosion that tore through the Iranian nuclear site of Natanz—and which the Islamic Republic has blamed on Israeli sabotage—appeared to have taken around 5,000 centrifuges of the IR-1 type offline, a new report released by the Jewish Institute for the National Security of America (JINSA) has said.
The report assessed that the blast took Iran’s nuclear clock by almost two months, “effectively counteracting Iran’s major expansions of its enrichment capacity since November 2020.”
In subsequent days following the blast, Iran announced its commencement of uranium enrichment to the 60 percent level and the installation of 1,000 new advanced centrifuges.
While those moves are designed to regain leverage and convince the United States to grant Iran sanctions relief, neither of these announcements will, for now, materially accelerate Iran’s ability to sprint for a nuclear weapon, according to the authors of the report Blaise Misztal, vice president for policy, and Jonathan Ruhe, director of foreign policy at JINSA.
That's brilliant.
Iran can strike Jersualem. It can't strike NYC. We're removed from the direct threat. Let the Israelites defend themselves.
That was six years ago.
Oh, so you're not as dumb as you used to be...
..peacefully and patriotically make your voices heard..
JMU Football: 2022 & 2023 Sun Belt East Champions...But you have to go home now. We have to have peace…
..I know how you feel, but go home, and go home in peace.
It's pretty cool (and scary) what we're capable of these days.HI54UNI wrote: ↑Sat Sep 18, 2021 8:39 pm Israel taking care of business again.
REVEALED: How Iran's top nuclear scientist was assassinated by a killer robot machine gun kitted out with AI that allowed sniper 1,000 miles away to fire 15 bullets after disguised spy car had pinpointed his location
Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, 62, dubbed the 'father' of Iran's illegal atomic program, was ambushed November 27 while driving to his home in Absard, near Tehran
New details emerged in a NY Times report, based on interviews with American, Israeli and Iranian officials
Fakhrizadeh is said to have been killed by a Mossad sniper who pulled the trigger from an undisclosed location more than 1,000 miles away via satellite
The gun which fired the fatal shots was positioned in a pickup truck lying in wait
There was also a second disguised spy car positioned three-quarters of a mile earlier along the route in a spot where Fakhrizadeh's car would make a U-turn
Cameras in this vehicle positively identified Fakhrizadeh and his position in the car sending this information back to the remote sniper
AI technology was programmed to compensate for 1.6 second delay between the camera capturing the images and the trigger being pulled
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/articl ... ed-AI.html