War Iran launches dozens of ballistic missiles toward Israel - umerous explosions have been reported in central Israel, and Israeli missile defense systems lit up the sky as they activated to intercept the incoming missiles.

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A memorial for Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah in Tehran. Photo: Hossein Beris/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty

Iran launched around 100 ballistic missiles toward Israel the first wave of an attack on Tuesday, with a second wave now underway, Israeli officials say.

State of play: Numerous explosions have been reported in central Israel, and Israeli missile defense systems lit up the sky as they activated to intercept the incoming missiles.

The big picture: Tehran has been vowing retaliation after a series of recent Israeli assassinations. That retaliation is now be underway.
  • "A short time ago missiles were launched from Iran into the territory of the State of Israel," an IDF spokesperson said. "You are asked to be vigilant and act exactly according to the instructions of the Home Front Command. The IDF is doing and will do everything necessary to protect the citizens of the State of Israel."
  • The Israeli Security Cabinet is convened at the government bunker near Jerusalem, Israeli officials said.
  • There has been no confirmation yet of any casualties inside Israel.
Driving the news: The missile launches came hours after the White House warned that a ballistic missile attack was imminent.
  • "We are actively supporting defensive preparations to defend Israel against this attack. A direct military attack from Iran against Israel will carry severe consequences for Iran," a senior White House official said prior to the attack.
  • The U.S. first warned Israel of the impending attack around noon local time (5am ET), a senior Israeli official said.
  • The use of ballistic missiles makes this a more difficult attack for Israel to defend against than the Iranian drone and missile attack last April — Iran's first-ever direct attack on Israeli territory — which was largely repelled by Israel and its partners, led by the U.S.
  • Ballistic missiles can reach Israel within 12 minutes, while drones and cruise missiles leave more time to defend against.
Driving the news: The warnings of an imminent attack came just hours after Israel escalated its conflict with Hezbollah, the Iran-backed militia, by launching a ground invasion of southern Lebanon.
  • Iran has been promising retaliation against Israel for two months, since the assassination of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran.
  • Iran had yet to respond to that attack, and also rebuffed urging from Hezbollah to launch an attack against Israel within the past two weeks, Axios reported.
  • U.S. and Israeli officials had been concerned that the Israeli ground invasion and the assassination of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah — a longtime ally of Iran's supreme leader — would push Iran to change course and get more directly involved to save the militia it has armed and supported for decades.
  • Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin spoke Tuesday with his Israeli counterpart, Yoav Gallant, shortly before the Iranian attack began.
What they're saying: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu convened security consultations on Tuesday morning and said in a statement: "We are in the midst of a campaign against Iran's axis of evil. We must stand together. We will stand firm together in the challenging days ahead."
  • Ahead of the attack, Israel Defense Forces spokesperson Adm. Daniel Hagari said: "Our air defense systems are fully prepared and air force jets are patrolling the sky. We are at peak readiness in offense and defense together with our partners from the U.S. and are following the developments in Iran together. An Iranian attack on Israel will have consequences."
  • Secretary of State Tony Blinken said at the top of his meeting with the foreign minister of Morocco that the U.S. is closely following the situation in the Middle East and is committed to Israel's security.
  • Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei offered no hint of how Iran would respond to Friday's attack that killed Nasrallah and a senior Iranian general beyond saying the "criminal" Israeli government would "regret its actions."
Flashback: Iran launched a massive drone and missile attack against Israel in April in retaliation for another Israeli airstrike that killed a top Iranian general in Syria.
  • Most of the drones and missiles were intercepted by Israeli, U.S., British, French, Jordanian and Saudi forces outside of Israeli airspace, and there were several injuries in Israel but no fatalities.
This is a breaking news story and will be updated.

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except Israel has the infinite money/infinite supplies cheat code courtesy of US taxpayers so they'll just get more.
The USA doesn't have infinite production. Less than a tenth of Russia's production, who has been supplying Iran. Doesn't matter how much money you have if there's nothing to buy with it because your enemy destroyed it all faster than it could be made.
 
The USA doesn't have infinite production. Less than a tenth of Russia's production, who has been supplying Iran. Doesn't matter how much money you have if there's nothing to buy with it because your enemy destroyed it all faster than it could be made.
You better believe if we get involved, production is going to skyrocket like it did during World War II.
 
You better believe if we get involved, production is going to skyrocket like it did during World War II.
How many years will it take to get into full war economy mode? The US needs to build a shit load of factories to do that since over the last few decades they've shipped all their production over to China to save some money.
 
The USA doesn't have infinite production. Less than a tenth of Russia's production, who has been supplying Iran. Doesn't matter how much money you have if there's nothing to buy with it because your enemy destroyed it all faster than it could be made.
Is this why Russia is buying missiles and drones from Iran and just did a deal a few months ago with North Korea where North Korea got money, oil, natural gas, various bits of Russian military and other technology, things like train locomotives etc., and Russia got 2 million artillery shells + some ballistic missiles? Because Russian production of war materiel is more than 10x America's? Where did you even pull that number from, other than your ass? US is producing like 50,000 155mm shells a month right now (and planning to be over 100,000 a month by the middle of next year). If Russia were producing more than 500,000 a month it wouldn't need to get any from Pyongyang
How many years will it take to get into full war economy mode? The US needs to build a shit load of factories to do that since over the last few decades they've shipped all their production over to China to save some money.
US manufacturing in 2023 contributed $2.9 trillion to GDP

This is larger than the entire GDP of Russia in 2023 :story: by $500 billion to almost $1 trillion dollars depending on what source you're using for Russian 2023 GDP

If US manufacturing were its own country it would be the 7th largest economy in the world

Stop listening to fart-huffers on pol and telegram people
Saying "intact missiles" implies that they were hit, but I'm sure you understood that when you wrote it.
Anyone who knows anything about missiles knows that if a missile gets hit at all, "intact" is not a word going to be used to describe it. Missiles aren't armored or anything like artillery shells are (to survive being shot out of a cannon), any extra weight degrades missile performance which is a big no-no

Anyway what I meant by saying intact was that they were not hit, I don't care what ignorant and stupid meaning you attributed to use of that particular word
 
Is this why Russia is buying missiles and drones from Iran and just did a deal a few months ago with North Korea where North Korea got money, oil, natural gas, various bits of Russian military and other technology, things like train locomotives etc., and Russia got 2 million artillery shells + some ballistic missiles? Because Russian production of war materiel is more than 10x America's? Where did you even pull that number from, other than your ass? US is producing like 50,000 155mm shells a month right now (and planning to be over 100,000 a month by the middle of next year). If Russia were producing more than 500,000 a month it wouldn't need to get any from Pyongyang

US manufacturing in 2023 contributed $2.9 trillion to GDP

This is larger than the entire GDP of Russia in 2023 :story: by $500 billion to almost $1 trillion dollars depending on what source you're using for Russian 2023 GDP

If US manufacturing were its own country it would be the 7th largest economy in the world

Stop listening to fart-huffers on pol and telegram people
GDP is disingenuous for actual production value considering the insane redistribution the last 4 years.
 
You better believe if we get involved, production is going to skyrocket like it did during World War II.
The US had a large amount of idle production capacity in the late 30s when it began building up for the war. Even then it was really going until 43 or so.

There is no real excess capacity just sitting around today waiting to be dusted off, and if there was the time to start rebuilding it was years ago.
 
US manufacturing in 2023 contributed $2.9 trillion to GDP

This is larger than the entire GDP of Russia in 2023 :story: by $500 billion to almost $1 trillion dollars depending on what source you're using for Russian 2023 GDP

If US manufacturing were its own country it would be the 7th largest economy in the world

Stop listening to fart-huffers on pol and telegram people
GDP is a poor measure of material throughput
Edit: Late to respond
 
I don't think a nuclear response is on the table just yet, I think Israel is going to launch airstrikes and missile attacks on Iran and then gauge the Iranian response.
From everything I'm seeing they hit two airbases, blew up possibly hundreds of millions of dollars worth of equipment assuming they landed a critical hit on the aircraft hangars, aircraft that are Israel's long stick in terms of weaponry. It's pretty fucking bad man.
 
Nobody said it was going to be instant or rapid. There's also the possibility of simplification of existing designs to meet the numbers. When going to war, the historical trend is quantity over quality.
That's an attitude towards war that went out of fashion in the west some time after Korea.

NATO doctrine is entirely high-tech wunderwaffen based these days, even if you were able to spin up mass production of 10 dollar hellfires you have no airframes to deliver them with, and no institutional memory of how to fight that sort of war.
 
What is the best way to dodge the draft?
This
View attachment 6476633
US military already court martial troops over pro-life views, posting all lives matter on social media and being pro-Trump. Just shout nigger at the draft office.
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idk. This worked for the Nuge. But YMMV.
View attachment 6476585
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It'll require power leveling, but if you tell them your kiwi farms account info they'll know you are much too autistic to ever be trusted for anything.
And wear a large Sonichu medallion. Then just straight up quote DarkSydePhil and Wings. Lastly brag about your .08 K2D ration in CoD.
 
Don't think this one has been posted yet. Not sure what hit what either

 
US manufacturing in 2023 contributed $2.9 trillion to GDP

This is larger than the entire GDP of Russia in 2023 :story: by $500 billion to almost $1 trillion dollars depending on what source you're using for Russian 2023 GDP

If US manufacturing were its own country it would be the 7th largest economy in the world

Stop listening to fart-huffers on pol and telegram people
We are in the middle of a massive tank production spree with the Booker order right now, along with more variants of the Abrams. Ukraine for better or worse has spooled up production signifagntly.
 
From everything I'm seeing they hit two airbases, blew up possibly hundreds of millions of dollars worth of equipment assuming they landed a critical hit on the aircraft hangars, aircraft that are Israel's long stick in terms of weaponry. It's pretty fucking bad man.
Iranian and Russian sources claims that two airbases have been completely yeeted are going to turn out to be as true, I'm sure of it. Iran's on pace to be claiming 106.7% of missiles precisely hit their targets soon.
 
Here is a footage showing a man killed in the missile strike by a section of a booster rocket.
 
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