Iran launched unsuccessful attack on UK's Diego Garcia

(bbc.com)

119 points | by alephnerd 6 hours ago ago

285 comments

  • cardanome 4 hours ago ago

    Accusing Iran of "lashing out" and being "reckless" by attacking US bases while the US and Israel literally murder school children, bomb hospitals and assassinate state leaders is rich.

    It didn't have to be this way but they decided this to turn into a fight of survival for Iran and destroy any option for a peaceful resolution. Now they are going to pay the price.

    • gizajob 4 hours ago ago

      I can’t be an apologist for what’s going on but the Iranians seemed capable of killing tens of thousands of their own citizens in order to quash an uprising against the regime only weeks before the current events.

      • verzali 40 minutes ago ago

        We should have little sympathy for them, but ill thought out war will do nothing to improve things for those citizens. Far more likely the opposite.

        • leereeves 24 minutes ago ago

          This seems to be a fairly well thought out war that's already killed many Iranian leaders, including:

          Ayatollah Ali Khamenei – Supreme Leader

          Major General Abdolrahim Mousavi – Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces

          Major General Mohammad Pakpour – Commander-in-Chief of the IRGC

          Brigadier General Aziz Nasirzadeh – Minister of Defense

          Mohammad Shirazi – Head of Supreme Leader’s military office

          Ali Larijani – Senior national security chief

          Esmaeil Khatib – Minister of Intelligence

          Gholamreza Rezaian – Iranian police intelligence commander

          Gholamreza Soleimani – Basij paramilitary commander

          Saleh Asadi – Head of military intelligence at Khatam‑al Anbiya

          Hossein Jabal Amelian – IRGC weapons/innovation chief

          Has there been any other war in which one side so quickly killed the leadership of the other side?

      • throwaw12 2 hours ago ago

        > tens of thousands of their own citizens

        Any credible source for this?

        1. Western media is not credible because West treats Iran as enemy

        2. Iranian media is not credible because they obviously want to hide facts when they're negative

        Now my question is, why are you spreading unverifiable information as something credible and building your facts on top of it?

        • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago ago

          > Any credible source for this?

          For tens of thousands? No. That’s the upper end of estimates. For the brutality? Yes. Wikipedia is a good start.

          • throwaw12 an hour ago ago

            Then you can also fairly say they've killed billions of people - that's the upper end of estimates, could be 1, could be 10, but upper estimate is definitely billions.

            Also, please read what I wrote, I meant there is no credible source in this scenario, hence no one should be able to cite anyone's numbers

        • UltraSane an hour ago ago
          • throwaw12 an hour ago ago

            > Iran has executed three men accused of killing police officers during anti-government protests in January,

            As I said, West considers Iran as enemy, used words by BBC reflects this clearly.

            1. "accused of" - we don't know, but lets say they're "accusing" them

            2. if true, then they have killed the "police officers" (seems many?) so what do you expect from Iran?

      • iAMkenough 24 minutes ago ago

        Yeah, but then again the United States has also killed protestors with federal invasions of its cities. As well as slaughtered children with a targeted missle strike on a school.

      • abdelhousni 21 minutes ago ago

        There are only two countries capable of killing civilians by the ten thousands and the world knows them. In fact they're currently bombing Iran and the region, one of them is currently perpetrating a genocide with approval of the day called civilized world. No cameras or international press covering the massacre of Gaza.

        • cmilton 10 minutes ago ago

          This is just completely false. There are multiple countries capable of killing their own by those numbers. All of them are equally disgusting, and should all be held accountable.

      • cardanome 3 hours ago ago

        Thousands, not tens of thousands. Which is bad enough so it seems silly to lie about this but whoever can make up the biggest number seems to favored by the Western narrative.

        And let us not act like the decades of sanction were not designed to do exactly this. Sanctions mean you create as much hardships as possible for the people in hope they topple their government. They nearly never work but here we are.

        > Contrary to popular belief, economic sanctions are ineffective in fulfilling their objectives. Historical observations from Russia to Cuba and Iran reveal that the more sanctions are designed to pressure the ruling class, the harder ordinary citizens are hit. Leaders often perceive sanctions as a means to enhance nationalism, portraying the United States and its allies as hostile. In many instances, such actions have only strengthened their hold on power while stifling dissent internally.

        https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c5yljdgwppzo

        As for the protests, the truth is also that these were not peaceful protests. Mossads agents had been arming people and instructing them to riot. Hundreds of police offers have been murdered and mosques have been burned down. Mossad agents have been instructed to fire at protestors to increase the death toll.

        Yes, there has been valid criticism and unhappiness with the government. But most of these people had been protesting for economic reasons. They didn't want to see their country invaded.

        Today many of the people that had protested in January are joining the mass demonstrations in favor of the Islamic Republic. The war has united the Iranians.

        • rcMgD2BwE72F 3 hours ago ago

          >Mossad agents have been instructed to fire at protestors to increase the death toll.

          Source?

          • cardanome 2 hours ago ago

            > Hundreds of people died when security forces sought to crush the demonstrations, along with dozens of members of the police and Basij militia. Iranian intelligence operatives internally concluded that some of the violence was being encouraged and facilitated by Israeli operatives, according to the sources. “Foreign actors linked to Israeli intelligence services had, over time, established contact—through various social media platforms and under diverse cover identities—with a significant number of Iranian citizens, particularly young people,” the Iranian intelligence official alleged. These Israeli handlers, he said, “encouraged and incentivized the performance of specific tasks through a combination of financial and non-financial rewards, as well as the provision of material support, including small arms and other equipment.”

            > “Foreign actors are arming the protesters in Iran with live firearms, which is the reason for the hundreds of regime personnel killed,” wrote Tamir Morag, the diplomatic correspondent for Israel’s Channel 14, during the uprising. “Everyone is free to guess who is behind it.” Morag and his network are well known for their close ties to Netanyahu.

            https://www.dropsitenews.com/p/iran-ministry-of-intelligence...

            You also find the some information in a Israeli Newspaper:

            > On December 29, what is dubbed the Mossad X/Twitter account in Farsi encouraged Iranians to protest against the Iranian regime, telling them that it is literally physically with them at the demonstrations.

            > “Go out together into the streets. The time has come,” the Mossad wrote. “We are with you,” it added. “Not only from a distance and verbally. We are with you in the field.” [...]

            > Foreign actors had armed Iranians to help them fight against the regime’s forces being used to crack down on and oppress protesters, Channel 14’s Tamir Morag reported Tuesday. Iran’s foreign minister retweeted the report for his own agenda.

            https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/iran-news/article-883524

            See also interview with Prof. Marandi

            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v-tcwcon30M

            He claims the a nurse was burned alive in a clinic by rioters.

            • throwawayheui57 2 hours ago ago

              In a war where Israel and US are literally bombing the hell out of Iran, fewer people have been killed than those two days of massacre.

              All according to the numbers confirmed by Iranian government.

              God, the moral depravity of defending the IRGC and islamic regime is mind boggling. You can still be against Mossad and what they do in Iran while holding the islamic regime accountable for its own atrocities.

            • yorwba an hour ago ago

              Those are not sources for the statement you were asked to back up with a source.

          • geraneum 2 hours ago ago

            The state TV. It’s impossible they lie.

        • UltraSane an hour ago ago

          "Mossads agents had been arming people and instructing them to riot. "

          This feels far too much like Iranian government propaganda to be plausible.

          • flyinglizard an hour ago ago

            There is a name for that, "Israel Derangement Syndrome". No matter what bad thing happens, it is Israel's fault or doing (even if it happens to Israel itself).

      • surgical_fire 35 minutes ago ago

        The Iranian government is bad, and yes, it should be toppled, eventually, by its own people.

        This doesn't change the fact that Iran is the aggressed party in an invasion of an incredibly aggressive US-Israel axis that seem to revel in death.

        You can hate the Iranian murderous regime, and also understand that it is fighting against another evil, murderous regime.

        • leereeves 29 minutes ago ago

          > The Iranian government is bad, and yes, it should be toppled, eventually, by its own people.

          You would prefer to tell people in Iran who oppose the regime to take up arms (which they don't have) and fight IRGC soldiers with better training and more resources?

          Best case, if they did, Iran would end up in a situation like Syria. Would that be an improvement?

          More likely, it would simply be a massacre.

          • surgical_fire 17 minutes ago ago

            What I can tell you is that no matter how much I hate the government of my country, I would hate a lot more the foreign country that is destroying civilian infrastructure and murdering my people.

            Let's not pretend that the US and Israel regimes have the best interest of the Iranian people in mind. They want murder.

            • leereeves 14 minutes ago ago

              I really can't say how this is being received in or out of Iran, but I remember after the initial strikes there was widespread footage of Iranian exiles celebrating, even on anti-Trump media.

              Edit: and even people celebrating in Iran itself, which seems incredibly brave.

              "videos posted on social media showed joy and defiance elsewhere, with people cheering as a statue was toppled in the city of Dehloran in Ilam province, dancing in the streets of Karaj city, near Tehran in Alborz province, and celebrating in the streets of Izeh in Khuzestan province. In the town of Galleh Dar in southern Iran, people knocked down a monument commemorating Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, who founded the Islamic Republic in 1979, a video on social media showed."

              https://www.reuters.com/business/media-telecom/polarised-ira...

              • surgical_fire 7 minutes ago ago

                I bet that in Russia they also have media showing that people in Uraike are celebrating their liberation, etc.

                I am very skeptical of war propaganda. You would do well to be skeptical of it too.

      • typon 3 hours ago ago

        There is zero proof that Iranian government has killed thousands of their own citizens. Please stop spouting Zionist propaganda

        • GordonS 2 hours ago ago

          I really is ridiculous, and somehow the number only gets bigger as the stories are told! Last I saw was "40,000 protestors murdered in just 24 hours!", or something very close to it.

          The US and Israel have been carpet bombing Iran for weeks now, blowing up hospitals, schools, power plants and residential buildings, yet the Iranian death toll is "only" around 1,500 so far. Yet we are to believe that Iran killed 40k of its own people in a day - you would literally be able to see piles of corpses from space!

          Israel has also claimed that they've hacked every traffic camera in Tehran, yet are mysteriously unable to provide any actual evidence of the supposed massacre - meanwhile, Iran released several videos showing foreign agitators distributing weapons, people attacking civilians etc.

          • catgary an hour ago ago

            I think there are 5-7 thousand confirmed deaths by the UN, and medical reports in Iran estimated there could be 20,000+ casualties.

            • orwin 37 minutes ago ago

              7 thousand confirmed death, 9 thousand unconfirmed death. Among that 1200 confirmed death from the regime forces, and 400 to be confirmed bystanders. The nurse burned to death by protesters is among those 400.

            • srean an hour ago ago

              I don't know enough to dispute, but could you link such a report

          • jandrewrogers 2 hours ago ago

            > The US and Israel have been carpet bombing Iran

            No they haven't. The US started phasing out carpet bombing[0] half a century ago. You discredit yourself by making such trivially falsifiable assertions.

            The US and Israel use precision strikes. It is why the ratio of targets per sortie is by far the highest ever recorded in a major conflict.

            [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carpet_bombing

            • TheAlchemist 2 hours ago ago

              While I somewhat agree, you should also look at the results of those precision strikes. Usually, when they kill a senior Iranian officer sleeping in his appartment, they level the building or at lest blow up several adjacent units, probably killing at last 10 innocent people.

              • jandrewrogers an hour ago ago

                That's an inherent limitation of precision strikes. The objective is minimizing the collateral damage required to achieve the objective, not avoiding it entirely. Even the various explosive-free precision-guided munitions the US uses have a non-zero damage radius.

                One can argue whether or not it is a good idea for the bombs to be flying around in the first place, but there is no version of physics that allows anyone to avoid collateral damage as a practical matter.

              • jiggawatts an hour ago ago

                Which is not “carpet bombing”.

                Use words and phrases correctly, or expect an argument.

            • GordonS 2 hours ago ago

              Look at the videos coming out of Iran - civilian infrastructure and residences are clearly being targeted. Some unexploded bombs have been found that lack a JDAM guidance package.

              And regardless of the USA, Israel is most certainly not above carpet bombing civilians.

              • jandrewrogers an hour ago ago

                Again, that's not "carpet bombing". Carpet bombing requires a type of aircraft that Israel doesn't have (though the US does).

                Why would you expect a precision bomb to have a JDAM package? That is not the only type of guidance package. In fact, most of the footage I've seen (largely Israeli) has clearly been laser-guided bombs. They aren't the same thing, and the latter is more precise than JDAM in any case.

                Use of precision-guided bombs in a city is not "carpet bombing".

                • GordonS an hour ago ago

                  Even if their actions might not precisely meet some dictionary definition of "carpet bombing", you know well what I meant - civilians and civilian infrastructure are being deliberately targeted with complete disregard for loss of life and environmental consequences.

                  • idop 44 minutes ago ago

                    You meant to lie, and you did lie, and you continue to lie. Standard TikTok rage where words no longer have meaning, reality must be rejected, and any headline is true even if the article directly negates it or there's no source, so long as it makes Israel look bad.

                    I swear, it's almost as if the anti-Israel mob _wants_ it to be true.

                  • jiggawatts an hour ago ago

                    That’s called war.

                    You’re parroting IRGC propaganda, which is why people are arguing with you.

                    “We are innocent civilians and the Israelis are carpet bombing us”… said by the people that funded October 7th and killed more of their own people than the Israeli bombs did.

                    Iran’s government has been violently belligerent for decades, and continues to this day to bomb its Arab neighbours including hitting their civilians! They don’t get to whine about the morality of civilian versus military deaths.

              • magic_hamster 2 hours ago ago

                You are vilifying an entire country and it's high time we acknowledge this is wrong. Israel does not set out to carpet bomb civilians. If it did, the numbers would have been insane; same goes for the US.

                • GordonS 2 hours ago ago

                  Be serious, look at what has been done to Gaza. Israel absolutely sets out to murder civilians, en-masse.

                  • magic_hamster an hour ago ago

                    Can you show me a verified case where IDF intentionally targeted civilians fully knowing they were going to "murder" them for no reason?

                  • flyinglizard an hour ago ago

                    Gaza was not carpet bombed at all. Gaza was bombed with precision weapons, then bulldozers came in and leveled empty buildings after calling their residents to evacuate. You may not like it, but Israel never used a strategy of carpet bombings, it's neither effective nor efficient.

                • srean an hour ago ago
                • thunky an hour ago ago

                  Holy shit what rock are you living under? Israel is villifying itself just fine.

                  • magic_hamster an hour ago ago

                    I argue that anyone saying this is watching too many TikTok videos and not really familiar with what's going on.

                    Without going into too much detail, my position and line of work means that I have to keep very informed on the middle east and so far I've seen a lot of hatred, and very little factual basis. In fact every single person I personally talked to was very uninformed on these matters which is fine, as long as you accept it and don't form extreme opinions on entire countries.

                    • srean an hour ago ago
                      • magic_hamster 42 minutes ago ago

                        I'd appreciate if you didn't spam the same link all over my comments, once is enough. And as for "forensic architecture", please visit their website and go over who these people are - especially the Palestinians from Ramallah and self proclaimed "activists". This is by no means an unbiased organization.

                        • srean 26 minutes ago ago

                          Then don't go asking for a report in all of your comments on this page where you have, once is enough.

                          Forensic Architecture is one of the most reputed organizations for this line of work.

                          Their reports are read with great deal of respect here on HN and they cover more than this conflict. If they don't count as credible and competent, nothing will satisfy. The moral equivalent of covering one's eyes and ears.

                          So I will appreciate if you stop this sham of yours asking for a citation.

                          While you are at it, do better than ad hominem.

                          For HN audience, the report was discussed on HN here

                          https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47136179

        • idop an hour ago ago

          Please stop spouting Hamas Health Ministry propaganda.

    • einszwei 3 hours ago ago

      Your comment made me realise that while Iran has attacked a dozen countries, they have yet to attack a school or a hospital.

      Not condoning anyone but shows the priority of both sides.

      • idop an hour ago ago

        They obliterated a kindergarten in Israel just this morning, and several others since the start of the war. Last week a missile landed right behind my house, just between a kindergarten and an elementary school, damaging both.

        Literally all Israeli casualties were civilian.

        Your comment made me realize international media doesn't care to even publish this, leading to this incredibly skewed view.

        • einszwei an hour ago ago

          Thanks for correction. I looked up the news and could find reporting that some fragments of a missile did hit kindergarten. Thankfully no kids were there.

          I'd edit my previous comment but I can't.

        • drcongo an hour ago ago

          Doesn't Isreal have a ban on reporting of strikes inside their borders?

          • solatic an hour ago ago

            The ban is on reporting the exact locations (i.e. coordinates) of where missiles land, because it's information that is useful in helping the enemy to calibrate where missiles will land. Reporting on other details is perfectly acceptable.

          • idop an hour ago ago

            No, only specifics like exact locations are not publicized.

      • arbuge 3 hours ago ago

        They did however murder thousands of protesters in their own streets in January, and who knows how much more dissidents over the years.

        This one was just this week: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/iran-execution-teen-wrestler-ja...

        So there's that.

        • wongarsu 2 hours ago ago

          The internal conflict over corruption, water issues and handling of the protesters had a decent chance to cause meaningful changes in government. Starting a war and attacking their civilians put those chances to bed.

          • orwin 35 minutes ago ago

            Exactly. And this also want' just a protest. They were protest in the big cities and uprising from suppressed minoritiesm which explain the death toll among people from the regime.

            Iran might have at best have a self-regime change, at worst split in 3. Now that the war is on, the regime consolidated.

        • w10-1 3 hours ago ago

          Strategically, it makes no sense to corner and threaten people. Murdering their own citizens shows the degree to which they'll go to preserve their power. If anything, that's a reason to slowly bleed them instead of cornering and escalating.

          The evil of your enemy does not excuse your own strategic stupidity or cruelty.

          • zarzavat an hour ago ago

            Arguably the country that has done the most to cement the Iranian regime is the United States with its sanctions. If Iran had been left to develop into a normal Middle Eastern oil-rich country then things might have turned out differently. The more money people have the harder it is to control them.

        • marcosdumay 20 minutes ago ago

          And that gives US people the right to go there and murder a few thousand extra people?

        • alchemism an hour ago ago

          How does that compare with putting hundreds of thousands of people into cages for arbitrary reasons, I wonder. Or depositing them in random countries to be killed because they are e.g. homosexual.

        • pphysch 2 hours ago ago

          Allegedly, according to the same political factions that aggressively bombed Iran just weeks later.

        • bad_haircut72 an hour ago ago

          Considering theyre now doing airstrikes, there was 100% pre-invasion action that included agitating these protests. Like they're literally bombing them now but we think we werent already doing CIA activity there 6 months ago? Im not saying civilians love the government they probably hate it but... its complicated, what if the person rallying and pushing 1000 people was actually a deep cover agent

          Before I get downvoted to hell Im not conding anything or taking any side, just pointing out an obvious deduction

        • GordonS 2 hours ago ago

          You're being disingenuous - the "protestor" was caught on camera literally hacking a policeman to pieces. He murdered a policeman, and will now be executed.

          • geraneum 2 hours ago ago

            Can you back this with linking the said videos and maybe some info on legal proceedings of the fair trial in which this person was convicted? I’m curious.

            • arbuge 2 hours ago ago

              From that article, on CBS News which isn't exactly known for being a fan of this administration:

              "Rights groups said the trio were executed without a fair trial and had given confessions under torture."

      • cardanome 3 hours ago ago

        Well some civilians have been injured when Iran attacked the hotels where US agents were stationed. Mostly due to them being foreign workers and well we all know how Dubai and the Saudis treat foreign workers. They were not allowed evacuate in time.

        Of course it will be hard to completely avoid civilian casualties in the long run, I fear but yeah Iran has been pretty measured. Iran's fight is with the US imperialists and Israel and not the people that live in the region.

        • GordonS 2 hours ago ago

          > some civilians have been injured when Iran attacked the hotels where US agents were stationed

          Surely the US are using civilians as human shields?

          • cardanome 2 hours ago ago

            Yes, they are absolutely using civilians as human shields. Just like Israel has been doing for ages.

            That is why they constantly lie about Hamas using human shields. Every accusation is a confession with these people.

        • thomassmith65 2 hours ago ago

          The mullahs and IRGC are not famous for their compassion or kind-heartedness.

          They are infamous for fulminating against liberals, plotting to kill enemies, torturing and hanging dissidents from cranes, persecuting minorities and women, funding terror cells, and fleecing their citizens to enrich themselves.

          Many of the comments here suffer from a misguided refusal to be impressed by the regime's reputation, as though anyone the American establishment criticises must automatically be righteous.

          • anramon 2 hours ago ago

            >from a misguided refusal to be impressed by the regime's reputation

            You have to thank the actions of the genocidal State of Israel that anything below it is somewhat acceptable. Reaping what they sow themselves.

            • thomassmith65 28 minutes ago ago

              That's not particularly enlightening, to be frank.

              People always ask here why the community flags every post on these issues. Comments like this are why. Hardly anyone on this site knows even basic information on the nations involved.

              If I were in charge of HN, I'd geoblock anyone from commenting on the Middle East who isn't at an IP from the Middle East. I wouldn't be able to comment either, but at least there might be enlightening information in the comments.

              That said, the first page of any reputable history on Iran/Israel relations would go over 1979, when Israel went from friend of Iran to foe, based on Khomeini's interpretation of Islam.

            • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago ago

              > Reaping what they sow

              Israel and Iran somewhat independently came to the conclusion that they’re the regional hegemon, and that protecting that position is worth any cost.

              • breppp an hour ago ago

                I would see this war as the end of a string of wars initiated by Iran through Hamas in October 7.

                This left Israel similar to the USA post 9/11 or Peal Harbor. On a streak to make it never happen again in a very decisive/brutal way. Hegemony wasn't the moving factor for Israel, at least until very late in the war, and due to the same reasons

      • energy123 2 hours ago ago

        They attacked a hospital during the 12 day war. They attacked a school today but it was evacuated due to the early warning system. They attack civilian targets indiscriminately using cluster warheads, in violation of international law.

        • yonixw an hour ago ago

          HN need community notes BAD.

      • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago ago

        > they have yet to attack a school or a hospital

        Most of their ordinance has been intercepted. And a good fraction was unguided enough that it would have hit a school or hospital.

      • throwaway132448 an hour ago ago

        This is obviously made easier when your opposition doesn’t stockpile their weapons in, nor conduct their military operations from, schools and hopsitals.

      • maratc 3 hours ago ago
      • flyinglizard an hour ago ago

        Here's a kindergarten Iran attacked just today: https://www.jns.org/news/israel-news/iranian-cluster-bomb-hi...

        The fact Israel has a very effective defensive system (active and passive) does not mean Iranians avoid civilian targets.

    • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago ago

      > Accusing Iran of "lashing out" and being "reckless"

      I think it’s more that these attacks are counterproductive to Iran’s state goals, which reveals that we’re seeing a hardline faction in Iran use the war as cover for consolidating power.

    • lm28469 7 minutes ago ago

      They're also doing exactly what they said they'd be doing if attacked in such manner.

      People who say Iran is "crazy" or "lashing out" are falling for the most brain dead propaganda

    • netsharc 4 hours ago ago

      Unfortunately it's we who will pay the price, with "we" being the entire world, considering the destruction of a lot of oil production infrastructure will cause a price hike for everything.

      • cardanome 3 hours ago ago

        Well China is still getting Iranian oil no problem.

        We in the West, well we are aiding the US in this war by allowing it to operate from military bases in our countries. We deserve it for looking the other way while Israel has been mass murdering Palestinians for more than two years now.

        At least Spain showed some guts.

        Of course it will also potentially cause suffering in the global south but that is on those that started the war.

        • kortilla 3 hours ago ago

          How is China getting that oil without problem? Something like 90% of it when through Kharg island which is now rubble.

          • cardanome 2 hours ago ago

            The attacks against Kharg Island were relatively limited as even the US wanted to avoid that level of escalation. The war has been painful but Iran could rebuild, if you destroyed Kharg island it would take decades to rebuild the Iranian economy, that would be a complete scorched earth point of no return.

            Maybe there have been further attacks today that I missed but if true that would be an huge escalation.

            My last information was that China has no problem getting oil but that was like two days ago.

      • shepherdjerred 2 hours ago ago

        TBH I am a little more concerned about people dying from the conflict than paying a bit more for gas

        • undersuit an hour ago ago

          What about the people who will die because they cannot afford the higher prices that will come from a disruption in gas supply?

    • UltraSane an hour ago ago

      Iran is actively murdering protesters including a 19 year old.

      https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ce9mzn7k722o

    • dyauspitr an hour ago ago

      You have to be pretty shit to get people to defacto support Iran. As usually Trump has led the US into the gutter.

  • carbocation 4 hours ago ago

    The article kind of downplays the most interesting elements. Not an expert, but to my limited understanding:

    * I think this is the longest-range use of a ballistic missile in anger, possibly ever?

    * This seems to reveal previously-unknown range of Iranian ballistic missiles and, if true, could touch basically all of Europe?

    • ChuckMcM 2 hours ago ago

      I think the article downplays the element that the attack probably achieved its goal which was not to actually hit something at Diego Garcia, but to show that thing 2500 miles from Iran are potentially targetable by Iran. That starts conversations like the one here and in other fora about whether or not Iran would limit themselves to military targets (Russia doesn't as an example) and if not how could Europe and its East Asian allies protect literally everything with their finite supply of defensive units.

      • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago ago

        > to show that thing 2500 miles from Iran are potentially targetable

        Iran has had IRBMs for some time. Demonstration doesn’t hurt. But demonstrating failure doesn’t particularly help either.

        • chasd00 22 minutes ago ago

          The thing is Iran has long promised their max range was 2k Km and so defensive only. This shows that was a lie.

      • big-and-small 2 hours ago ago

        Except it would be very weird goal to achieve because it's only give more reasons to bomb whole country into oblivion and justify deployment of ground troops.

        • Spooky23 2 hours ago ago

          They’re at war. The US and Israel are bombing everything anyway.

          Strategically, Diego Garcia is a forward operating base for irreplaceable B-52 and B-2 bombers. Placing them at risk on the ground seems like a reckless call, more likely the US pulls those resources back to the US.

          I’m not rooting for Iran, but since the US has who they have making the calls, Iran has obvious strategic cards to play - escalation benefits them.

        • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago ago

          There is probably a hardline faction within Iran that still thinks it gains from further bombing and forced isolation.

          • PixyMisa 2 hours ago ago

            Yep. The IRGC runs the country at this point, and they do not have anyone else's best interests in mind.

        • pasquinelli 2 hours ago ago

          maybe they aren't as worried about that as they should be. maybe america isn't as worried about that as it should be.

          but, what are you saying? it would be weird for iran to act in a way that might provoke escalation? you mean in the totally unprovoked war israel/america launched against them?

        • yongjik 2 hours ago ago

          I don't know which country you're from, but in most countries, "our troops may get bombed if we join this war" is a very strong public argument against joining the war.

          Just look at Trump's latest attempt to enlist his "allies" into sending warships to the Strait of Hormuz, and what a resounding success it was.

        • hshdhdhj4444 2 hours ago ago

          Not really. Because no one in Europe wants to bomb Iran into oblivion, if for no other reason but the fact that the Europeans (and Turkey) would face another massive refugee crisis.

          The only people wanting to continue this war are the U.S. and Israel (and maybe Saudi Arabia?) and even Trump is clearly looking for an off ramp.

          This is most likely a way for Iran to tell Europe to do what they can to end this otherwise they will drag Europe into this mess as well.

          • bigfatkitten 2 hours ago ago

            > and maybe Saudi Arabia?

            The war is extremely bad for business for Saudi Arabia and has already cost them enormous amounts of money. It is causing damage to their oil refineries that will take years to repair.

            The only person who gains anything out of this is Netanyahu and his friends. Everyone else loses, including the Israeli people.

            • srean an hour ago ago

              That is so because of Iran's choice of targets. SA might have misjudged that their business assets would be attacked.

              There is some chatter that crown prince supported and approved the assassination of Khamenei and possibly supplies supportive intelligence.

              They haven't been exactly friendly with Iran.

              The odd ball is Qatar. Qatar had been working hard to have friendly relations with Iran. So I was surprised by Iran's attack on Qatari interests.

          • big-and-small 2 hours ago ago

            Europe to do what to stop the war? EU cant even stop war on their own borders. And we seen what Trump buddies think about EU in their leaked Signal chat.

            Also it's not like EU and UK actually have any military capacity to bomb Iran even if they wanted because again everything they do have is going to Ukraine already.

    • bawolff 4 hours ago ago

      > * This seems to reveal previously-unknown range of Iranian ballistic missiles and, if true, could touch basically all of Europe?

      The Wikipedia article has said they had missiles that can range 4300km since 2019 (as in the article was updated in 2019) https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Shahab-5&oldid=91... . If Wikipedia has known about it for 7 years, surely military planners were already aware.

    • jandrewrogers 3 hours ago ago

      US intelligence had assessed that this was possible a long time ago. It was one of the motivations behind the installation of long-range missile defense capabilities in Poland and Czechia in the late 2000s. Obama killed that program to appease Russia.

      Of course, there is a significant gap between Iran possessing the capability, having the temperament to use it, and actually doing so.

    • AnotherGoodName 4 hours ago ago

      > This seems to reveal previously-unknown range of Iranian ballistic missiles and, if true, could touch basically all of Europe

      True but they have also literally launched multiple orbital satellites from iran on iranian rockets. Eg. The Noor 2 spy satellite and before that the Noor 1 series https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noor_2_(satellite)

      These are in orbit to this day. They regularly post images it takes of US military bases. Essentially it’s similar to how sputnik was a demonstration of icbm capability. Iran can launch a first generation ICBM right now. Pointless if they use a conventional payload (too small payload to be cost effective militarily) and a non manoeuvrable warhead (would just be intercepted) and so these aren’t used militarily but essentially everyone acting shocked they can hit 4000km range was not paying attention.

      I think one of the problems we are having right now is that we have leaders who actively believed the downplaying of Irans military capabilities. It’s one thing for the common civilian to think the enemies missiles are made of cardboard and tanks of paper but it’s another when the leader of a nation believes it. Now here we are with a war that’s stalemated and no way out.

      • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago ago

        > we have leaders who actively believed the downplaying of Irans military capabilities

        Iran has done precisely nothing unexpected in the entire course of this war. Closing Hormuz has been mooted since the 70s. And its IRBM stockpile has been known. This is more a case of something between political leaders and possibly the media being ignorant of even open-source intelligence.

        • hirako2000 2 hours ago ago

          I thought the US president said they didn't expect a number of things that happened.

          It also expected a quick intervention, 2 weeks max.

          • chasd00 16 minutes ago ago

            To be fair Trump admins most optimistic timeline was “4-6 weeks maybe longer”. We’re at the end of week 3.

          • JumpCrisscross an hour ago ago

            > the US president…

            The President is a political leader.

      • rayiner 2 hours ago ago

        The downplaying of Iran’s capabilities is a weird kind of racism IMHO. In the modern view, Iranians have been categorized as “brown” so people lump them together with Somalians and Afghans. But Iran is a technologically and politically sophisticated country. In terms of the Civ tech tree, it’s higher than any middle eastern country except Israel.

        • oa335 an hour ago ago

          > The downplaying of Iran’s capabilities is a weird kind of racism IMHO.

          Agreed, but it’s not at all surprising to me. Propaganda means that people will project fictitious motives and capabilities on their opponents, even if they are internally inconsistent (e.g. Iran must be attacked because they will threaten the USA mainland vs Iran’s missiles are very inaccurate and barely hit anything).

        • logicchains 2 hours ago ago

          >Iranians have been categorized as “brown” so people lump them together with Somalians and Afghans.

          Even from a racist perspective that's completely wrong; Iranians are white, the name "Iran" literally means "Land of the Aryans".

          • breppp an hour ago ago

            > Iranians are white, the name "Iran" literally means "Land of the Aryans".

            The Indians were also Aryan according to race theories. I wouldn't put much sense into racism

            • srean an hour ago ago

              Leaving the 'aryan' and 'white' bit aside there are mountains of things that are common between Indians and Iranians -- the system of classical music, musical instruments, mythological characters, food, and of course language.

      • zabzonk 4 hours ago ago

        > a non manoeuvrable warhead (would just be intercepted)

        Intercepted? In the UK, by what? London has no missile defence system that I am aware of.

        • kenhwang 3 hours ago ago

          Probably by the Sea Viper system from a destroyer parked in the Dover Strait. Now, the UK probably doesn't have enough interceptors or destroyers carrying them to be confident they'll be able to stop a proper all out attack, but that seems to be a common problem with every Western country right now with a peacetime military budget in an increasingly unpeaceful time.

        • chatmasta 3 hours ago ago

          A missile would need to fly all the way over Europe before reaching London. It would be noticed, jets would be scrambled and it would be shot. Just like what happened here.

          • delichon 3 hours ago ago

            These were ballistic missiles. They are only vulnerable during the terminal phase, when they are moving at hypersonic speeds. Standard fighter jets aren't going to do it. It would take ground based THAAD, Patriot, or ship based Aegis systems. London might want to budget for that.

          • hirako2000 2 hours ago ago

            They can fly well above any commercial and military aircraft.

      • lostlogin 2 hours ago ago

        > I think one of the problems we are having right now is that we have leaders who actively believed the downplaying of Irans military capabilities.

        Was that the problem?

        The US handling of the situation seems the elephant in the room.

      • alephnerd 4 hours ago ago

        > is that we have leaders who actively believed the downplaying of Irans military capabilities

        We've been hinting about these capabilities for decades [0]. A lot of what is being brought up now is stuff a number of us touched on during the Obama years.

        None of this is really hidden either - it would be brought up in think tanks and even undergrad classes if you attended a target program.

        Civilian leaders have always had a hands-off approach to Defense and NatSec policy - once you show them how close to a polycrisis everything is they quickly defer responsibility. It's actually pretty similar to working in a corporate environment - it's all about managing upwards.

        [0] - https://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/29/world/middleeast/29missil...

        • jopsen 3 hours ago ago

          > it's all about managing upwards

          That might not work with the current administration. Which probably a/the problem.

          • alephnerd 2 hours ago ago

            It still does/is. Most of what I'm seeing with Iran is similar to what was discussed back in the early 2010s.

            There hasn't been significant churn in the NatSec space aside from political appointees, and core policymakers like Doshi, Maestro, Allison, Colby, and even Hill have worked with administrations irrespective of party affiliation.

      • pfannkuchen 3 hours ago ago

        Why does it matter if they have some capabilities to hit whatever targets in Europe or America? They’re not crazy, it would still be suicide for them to do it. It would just give them leverage, which I can’t think of a fair reason to prevent them from having.

    • dragonelite 3 hours ago ago

      It's a message toward the west don't think you're safe further away. Iran is pushing the west out of west Asia. Time will tell what USIS and EU will do to combat this.

      • ignoramous 3 hours ago ago

        > Time will tell what USIS and EU will do to combat this.

        Diplomacy was working fine, per high-ranking diplomats: https://www.economist.com/by-invitation/2026/03/18/americas-...

        • PixyMisa 2 hours ago ago

          Mandy Rice-Davies Applies.

        • rayiner 2 hours ago ago

          “Taxi cab drivers say taxi industry is great, Uber is bad.”

          • ignoramous 2 hours ago ago

            Yes, war is bad. Unless you're from the Complex. No big insight here, Mr. Rayiner.

        • magic_hamster 2 hours ago ago

          Anyone thinking they can talk their way into controlling Iran, a fundamentalist fanatic country with a very loud and visible doctrine literally calling to destroy the west, is delusional. The western "avoid conflict at all cost" approach is extremely detrimental.

          • srean an hour ago ago
          • JasonADrury 2 hours ago ago

            > Iran, a fundamentalist fanatic country

            United States, a fundamentalist fanatic country: https://bsky.app/profile/gregsargent.bsky.social/post/3mhgag...

          • wolvoleo 2 hours ago ago

            I don't think they had any reason to destroy us until trump decided to kick the hornet's nest. In fact they were quite reasonable and agreed to inspections of their nuclear programme which is also something Trump broke before, and now with his petty war.

            I mean they hate Israel way more than us and they never attacked them either (until this war obviously). And regime change was already happening there slowly. They would have become more moderate, the public opinion inside Iran was more and more against them especially since what they did to the protesters.

            This war was unnecessary and only cemented the regime's hold on their people by giving them an external enemy.

            • magic_hamster 2 hours ago ago

              You are just uninformed.

              Iran has sponsored, built and trained organizations all over the middle east so they could destroy Israel: Hamas, the Houthis in Yemen, Hezbollah in Lebanon and groups in Iraq are all proxies propped up by Iran.

              Iran was the first to attack Israel, this happened in 2024 when Israel killed Nasrallah (Hezbollah) and Iran fired hundreds of ballistic missiles directly at Israel.

              Iran hates the US way more than Israel, but Israel is closer so obviously they are directing their efforts according to what's plausible. Iran calls the US and Israel "the big satan" and "little satan" in almost all internal communication. Just a couple of weeks ago the entire Iranian parliament chanted "death to America" and "death to Israel" (you can see the videos online). Iran had US flags laid out on the floor of their facilities so that anyone going by will walk over the US flag.

              Despite being very uncomfortable, the war is probably necessary because as seen by Iran's attack on Diego Garcia, they have way longer range than previously thought, they have a deposit or military grade uranium enough for 10-12 bombs, they were completely dishonest about their nuclear programs, and waiting until Iran had nukes meant you couldn't ever stop them. You'd have another North Korea but ten times worse, as the Iranian regime is truly a fundamentalist insane leadership. Trump may be unhinged but he's right about Iran using nukes if they had them.

          • ignoramous 2 hours ago ago

            > Anyone thinking they can talk their way into controlling Iran, a fundamentalist fanatic country with a very loud and visible doctrine literally calling to destroy the west, is delusional

            Yeah, what's it about peoples of the third world that they're always fanatical, that they're always out to destroy the first world... https://theconversation.com/orientalism-edward-saids-groundb... / https://archive.vn/HoEk5

            • srean an hour ago ago

              If US takes down their democracy and downs their domestic passenger jets, fight a proxy war with chemical weapons through Saddam Hussein that alone kills 20~30 thousand, no country is going to respond to that with flowers in their hair.

              Loved your link, but I doubt it is going to change anyone who thinks Israel and US are doing the god's work here.

            • seanmcdirmid 2 hours ago ago

              Once you simply kill all the leaders, there is no one left to negotiate with.

              Iran is also oddly moderate from the region (beyond the whole death to America thing).

    • madaxe_again 4 hours ago ago

      Iran have boats.

      • derektank 4 hours ago ago

        Obviously they have boats. The question is, do they still have boats which are capable of serving as a launch platform for ballistic missiles? And could those boats meaningfully close the distance between Iran and its adversaries.

        This launch demonstrates that if the answer to both of those questions is still no, they can still place them at threat.

        • zer00eyz 4 hours ago ago

          The question is do they have a launcher that fits in a shipping container...

    • alephnerd 4 hours ago ago

      Yep. Hence why I posted it.

      > previously-unknown

      It was implied by Iran's space program.

      There's a reason most regional powers also invested in a space program as well as a civilian uncles program. The name of the game is dual-use technologies.

      The Biden admin also warned about Iran-NK collaboration on building these kinds of capabilities [0]

      [0] - https://www.janes.com/osint-insights/defence-news/us-officia...

      • arkensaw an hour ago ago

        > civilian uncles program

        I know its just a typo but lol'ed so hard

  • mmmm2 2 hours ago ago

    To me this is like the Doolittle Raid on Tokyo during WWII. The tactical result isn't important, the range of the strike is, and that it happened at all. Japan thought it was immune from air attack on the home islands in 1942, and the raid shocked them.

    Iran is showing the world (especially Europe), that it's more vulnerable than it thinks. Europe has more skin in the game than just the price of oil and nitrogen. Also think about what would happen if Iran is able to recreate something like the Cuban missile crisis now that we've moved a bunch of our military assets to the middle east.

    • ttul 2 hours ago ago

      Strategically, it seems like a dumb move. Right now, Congress is unlikely to approve Trump’s request for $200B to fund the war effort. But if Americans can be convinced that Iran could somehow hit American cities, they would call their members of Congress in a heartbeat and that money would presumably flow without interruption.

      Why time the medium range missiles now? It seems like yet another own-goal for this desperate and poorly coordinated regime.

      • mmmm2 an hour ago ago

        I can't speak for Iran, but it may be a warning against attempting to land troops on Kharg Island. They're showing that they've been "nice" so far, but they have escalation paths America may not have considered. I think most people thought they were limited to short range missile strikes.

      • tuna74 an hour ago ago

        Or the US could just stop bombing Iran? Then there would be no reason for Iran to attack American cities.

        • mmmm2 an hour ago ago

          Yeah, that would be nice. I'm worried this will continue to escalate.

      • vasac 2 hours ago ago

        Americans can be convinced of anything without too much effort so that isn’t really a factor here.

  • spaghetdefects 4 hours ago ago

    Iran repeatedly stated that they will not attack any country's assets if they do not assist the US/Israel. Most European countries have refused to take part, the UK decided to help so this seems like a very easy situation to have avoided.

    • xdennis 3 minutes ago ago

      > Iran repeatedly stated that they will not attack any country's assets if they do not assist the US/Israel.

      They attacked the UK in Cyprus at the start of the war back when the UK refused to allow any of it's bases to be used by the US. Stop spreading propaganda.

    • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago ago

      > Iran repeatedly stated that they will not attack any country's assets if they do not assist the US/Israel

      They’ve been doing this across the region. Some of this looks like individual commanders taking strategic decisions into their own hands. But it’s absolutely false that neutrality has protected anyone in the region.

      • throwaw12 2 hours ago ago

        Iran hasn't attacked Turkmenistan yet, so neutrality has protected them

        • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago ago

          > Iran hasn't attacked Turkmenistan yet

          The fact that we have to pick out a single neighbour they haven’t attacked sort of lands the point.

          • throwaw12 an hour ago ago

            Okay, Afghanistan as well. Afghanistan is obviously not neutral, but they haven't participated in supporting US-Israeli attack on Iran

            How about now?

    • nozzlegear 4 hours ago ago

      From TFA:

      > It is understood the attempted air strike occurred before the UK agreed to let the US use British military bases to hit Iranian sites targeting shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.

      • spaghetdefects 3 hours ago ago
        • nozzlegear 2 hours ago ago

          I don't think the article you linked disagrees with what I've quoted from the BBC, does it? Aircraft being present at the airbase isn't the same as aircraft launching for an attack from the airbase.

          • wongarsu an hour ago ago

            True on technicalities. If it isn't useful to the operation of the bombers in the region, why did it happen? And if it is useful that sounds like a UK base participating in the war

      • GordonS 2 hours ago ago

        Except that Starmer was lying - there have been photos of bombs being loaded onto US bombers going around for at least several days now.

        • nozzlegear 2 hours ago ago

          What photos? And what reason would Starmer have to lie about it?

  • mikeyouse 4 hours ago ago

    Unfortunately this is more interesting than a failed Diego Garcia attack — the late Ayatollah had a self-imposed range limit on the strikes or tests they would carry out. By using IRBMs in this fashion, it’s clear the new regime no longer feels bound by that restriction..

    Which is notable since it’s about the same distance from Southern Iran to Diego Garcia (3,800km) as it is from Northern Iran to London.

    • lm28469 2 minutes ago ago

      > it’s clear the new regime no longer feels bound by that restriction..

      Wait a minute... Are you implying the dude who just got his dad, wife, brother, son and many other relatives killed by their arch enemies is not bending the knee?

      Who could have predicted that?

    • maratc 4 hours ago ago

      They had a religious ruling on the range, and they also had a religious ruling on "not creating an atomic bomb."

      The question of whether the world can assume its security on some religious rulings of some Ayatollas is still standing, as these rulings can apparently be changed or bypassed.

      • tptacek 4 hours ago ago

        This "religious ruling" stuff is less interesting than it sounds. To begin with, while the Islamic Republic of Iran is a totalitarian state, the Twelver Shia hierarchy isn't unified. The supposed ban on nuclear weapons was Khamenei's, and binding only on his followers. But there are several other marja (marjas? marji?), with significant followings even in the security state & IRGC (al-Sistani being a good example).

        More importantly, it's pretty clear that the geopolitical rulings are, well, geopolitical in nature. Iran is a nuclear threshold state; its strategy is to come as close to the breakout line as it can and extract concessions for not crossing it. The supposed nuclear fatwa is just public relations strategy. At the point Iran decided the cost/benefit/risk/reward of crossing the threshold made sense, it would be updated.

        • ttul 2 hours ago ago

          I agree with you, mostly. My read is that Twelver Shi’ism is not a unified hierarchy, and a marja’s fatwa normally binds that marja’s own followers rather than all Shi’a, so your institutional point is broadly right.[1][2] It is too strong, though, to say the anti-nuclear position was simply “invented for PR”: Khamenei did publicly describe it as a real fatwa.[3] At the same time, Iran’s enrichment posture _does_ fit the description of a threshold state, with large stocks of uranium enriched to 60%, so it is fair to say the ruling also had strategic and diplomatic value.[4]

          The parts I would soften are the specific claim about Sistani having a significant following inside the IRGC, which MIGHT be true but is much harder to substantiate publicly (although, maybe you have some behind-the-scenes knowledge?), and the certainty of motive. Still, your last sentence is basically right: these rulings are not _immutable_. After Ali Khamenei’s death, Iran’s foreign minister said (quoting the Reuters article), “fatwas depend on the Islamic jurist issuing them,” and added he was “not yet in a position to judge the jurisprudential or political views of Mojtaba Khamenei…” This reinforces the point that doctrine can shift if the leadership chooses.[5]

          [1] Encyclopaedia Britannica, “Twelver Shi’ah.”

          [2] Al-Islam.org, “Question 49: Difference between hukm and fatwa.” [3] Leader.ir, “Ayatollah Khamenei in the Eid al-Fitr congregational prayers” and “Leader’s remarks on anti-Iran sanctions and Yemen aggressions by Saudi Arabia.”

          [4] Arms Control Association, “The Status of Iran’s Nuclear Program,” and ACA analysis citing the IAEA’s 440.9 kg figure.

          [5] Reuters, “Iran says nuclear doctrine unlikely to change, Hormuz Strait needs new protocol” (March 18, 2026).

        • rayiner 4 hours ago ago

          Your in-depth knowledge of completely random things never ceases to amaze me.

          • tptacek 3 hours ago ago

            I'm Catholic and Twelver Shiism is the closest thing Islam has to Catholicism. It's a really neat system.

        • chimineycricket 3 hours ago ago

          Maraaji' is the pluralized version in Arabic, but nothing wrong with saying marjas. Marji would be most wrong though.

        • thaumasiotes 3 hours ago ago

          > But there are several other marja (marjas? marji?)

          Wikipedia has romanized: [singular] marji'; plural marāji'.

      • cardanome 4 hours ago ago

        Maybe don't murder the religious leader that made the rulings.

        Can anyone blame them for considering developing nuclear weapons for real now? I can't.

        • tonyedgecombe 4 hours ago ago

          I don't know but I can certainly blame them for oppressing and murdering their own citizens.

          • FpUser 3 hours ago ago

            There are lots of countries doing just the same but the West does not give a flying fuck about it. Most of the human rights violations they care about somehow related to countries that happened to have oil.

            And if you tell me that US /Israel are bombing Iran to protect rights of oppressed then I have that wonderful bridge.

          • watwut 3 hours ago ago

            But that has nothing to do with this war. Like, nothing at all. Israel doing genocode in gaza and what seems like ethnical cleansing of lebanon does not have anyyhing with that either. USA threatening Greenland is also not a factor in this war.

            Donald Trump does not care about protesters in Iran. His idea of regime change is "keep the regime and change head for someone who will pay me personally".

            And Hegseth does not care either. He is proving his manhood.

            And Israel have completely different goals, so.

            It is not like Saudi were democrats. They have cut that journalist into pieces. They are violent dictatorship on their own right.

        • breppp 4 hours ago ago

          After being caught developing nuclear weapons for real numerous times, now it is really for real?

          • pepperoni_pizza 4 hours ago ago

            Were they caught by the same people who found WMDs in Iraq by any chance?

            • breppp 4 hours ago ago

              the IAEA, presumably you trust UN agencies?

              in any case, these are the mythical WMDs found in Iraq:

              https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2014/12/03/world/middlee...

              https://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/16/world/cia-is-said-to-have...

              • 1659447091 3 hours ago ago

                From your source:

                > "These weapons were not part of an active arsenal. They were remnants from Iraq’s arms program in the 1980s during the Iran-Iraq war."

                These are not the "WMD" that led to or had any involvement with 2003, it's dishonest to suggest so

                • breppp 3 hours ago ago

                  These were chemical weapons found in Iraq, the reason the new york times was interested in the story was the fact that ISIS has somehow developed chemical weapons using Iraq's existing infrastructure.

                  This means there were active facilities, materials and know how even after the war

      • throwaway27448 4 hours ago ago

        > The question of whether the world can assume its security on some religious rulings of some Ayatollas

        I don't think much of the world has processed that Iran's ostensible lack of nuclear weapons is purely a matter of will and not capability.

    • greesil 4 hours ago ago

      Excellent point. Maybe it's the goal of this attack to demonstrate this capability.

    • rayiner 4 hours ago ago

      > the late Ayatollah had a self-imposed range limit on the strikes or tests they would carry out.

      Can you elaborate on what kind of strikes the Ayatollah was carrying out within the old range limit?

    • jmyeet 4 hours ago ago

      I'd add that it's also a free opportunity to test IRBM targeting at much longer ranges.

      The war of choice is really the US's Teutoburg Forest moment.

    • mytailorisrich 4 hours ago ago

      Iran has always said a lot of things (mostly BS). This is worthless without evidence and I don't think anyone had evidence that their missiles were restricted to 2,000km. Certainly, I don't think anyone took their word for it. In fact this attack proves that there was no such limitation (although it is unclear to me if the missiles fired could actually jave reached Diego Garcia).

      Now this may be a demonstration and veiled threat, on the other hand if Iran was to fire a missile at continental Europe I would hope that the consequence for them would be to be flattened, so...

      • chasd00 3 minutes ago ago

        Idk, I don’t think Europe has the capacity to do anything except launch their nukes. If missiles started falling on London they’d run to the UN and start writing letters. It would take months for NATO to start having planning meetings to figure out how to plan the response. I feel like the only military capability is maybe the SAS and nukes. There’s nothing in between.

      • applfanboysbgon 4 hours ago ago

        You didn't have to take their word for it. It was self-evident from the fact they never did anything like this before, and now they are.

        Notably, the previous guy issued a religious decree against the development of nuclear weapons. Despite American's favorite propaganda tool for manufacturing consent, "but the WMDs", we have no reason to believe that was ever actually being violated. But you'd better believe it will be now if they think they can pull it off.

        • mytailorisrich 4 hours ago ago

          There is a difference between not doing something and being unable to do something. Clearly there were able but only showed it now and their previous claim was BS (again, assuming those missiles did fly "far").

          No-one believes that Iran is not pursuing nuclear weapons, either... or that they wouldn't if they had developed the capability.

        • gambutin 4 hours ago ago

          Ayatollah Khomeini admitted that he had lied about plans to make Iran democratic.

          This practice is known as taqqiya. It’s ok to lie if you’re deceiving the enemy.

          • subscribed a few seconds ago ago

            Did he also released a religious decree stating as much?

            Because otherwise you're comparing apples to mushrooms. Not even themselves kingdom.

        • rayiner 4 hours ago ago

          Do the missiles Iran has been raining down on other countries for decades not count as WMDs?

      • mda 3 hours ago ago

        Like they flattened Afghanistan? It is funny people thinks land war in an huge mountainous country with 90 million people is easy.

        • PepperdineG 3 hours ago ago

          Never get involved in a land war in Asia but only slightly less well-known is never go in against a Sicilian when death is on the line.

          • me_smith 2 hours ago ago

            Inconceivable!

        • mytailorisrich 3 hours ago ago

          I wrote "flatten", not "invade".

          • mda 3 hours ago ago

            flatten with what?

            • drnick1 3 hours ago ago

              Like what is happening now, completely decimating their army, navy, and air force. If that isn't enough, destroy their only source of revenue (oil fields), or go even further and destroy their electrical grid and send the country back to the stone age.

              Finally, if the regime does not surrender after all this, a nuke could still be used.

              • lostlogin 2 hours ago ago

                > destroy their only source of revenue (oil fields)

                That’s the worlds source or revenue.

              • subscribed 9 minutes ago ago

                You don't use nuke on the regime, you use it on the civilians, FFS.

                Genocidal freaks. As if Hiroshima didn't teach you anything.

      • breppp 4 hours ago ago

        > On the other hand if Iran was to fire a missile at continental Europe I would hope that the consequence for them would be to be flattened

        Iran have been attacking uninvolved NATO member Turkey for a while now and nothing happens. The USA is already fully engaged into this war while Europe can hardly deal together with Russia, it is doubtful they'd do anything even if it rained down on their territory

        • GordonS 3 hours ago ago

          It should be noted that Iran has publicly stated that the attacks on Turkey were false-flag attacks launched by Israel.

        • mda 3 hours ago ago

          Attacking as in a couple of rockets heading US bases which were intercepted. Of course nothing would happen, why would Turkey (or other European countries) join this pointless war?

          • breppp 3 hours ago ago

            This is an attack on Turkish territory regardless if there's a US base, and Iranian missiles usually miss the bases anyway.

            Turkey is led by a strongman leader and these are very sensitive to acts of public humiliation. So that's unwise when thinking about any negligible strategic advantage they may gain from these attacks

      • throwaway27448 4 hours ago ago

        What incentive would Iran have to lie? Their entire security model revolves around believable deterrence—apparently far more believable than either Israel or the US understood.

    • nomdep 2 hours ago ago

      London? Why would they attack an almost Muslim country, especially one that's their most fanatical ally?

  • georgeburdell 4 hours ago ago

    The fact that it was unsuccessful does not make it any less worrying. Iran was a regional problem before the war, but this new escalation shows they’re a threat to the entire world. They might have previously had a chance at a Vietnam or perhaps a Korea-style stalemate

    • cardanome 4 hours ago ago

      Iran is fighting for survival, Israel and the US are fighting by choice.

      They attacked Iran not the other way round. US bases, even if also used by UK which aides US it their war, are legitimate targets.

      US imperialism is the greatest threat to the world.

      • anvuong 4 hours ago ago

        The IRGC is fighting for survival, most Iranian want them gone, and Iran will be better as a whole if the IRGC is all dead. Don't try to conflate the government with the country, they don't always align.

        • swat535 3 hours ago ago

          This is simply not true. I'm Iranian and I wish it were but IRGC has more support than you think. There is at least 30-40% of the population who support it and within those, more than half will gladly die for the regime.

          My home country has more than 90M people and 40% of that equates for millions of supporters.

          From the outside, you are only hearing the diaspora talking points, which don't realistically represent Iran. Many of them have grievances with the regime, or have been exiled after the Shah.

          Iran is a complex country and it's hard for outsiders to grasp it, mainly because the censorship happening on both sides.

          I personally think this war was a major mistake, no Iranian is going to cheer for US or Israel after watching their children being killed by them. The west was doing a good job exporting liberal ideas to Iran slowly over the past 3 decades. Some of those were starting to drip into the country, but this war undid all that effort.

          • srean 3 hours ago ago

            If anything, the attack on Iran has increased their support.

            US and Israel don't give two fucks for the people of Iran. If they did they wouldn't have been under such crippling sanctions.

            Irani people want to control their own destiny, not as a vassal of US-Israel backed power.

            Iran's best bet I think is to negotiate with the IRGC to earn reforms. I suspect that if IRGC doesn't feel so threatened they might even get them.

            There's a lot of commentary here along the lines that Iran is now a threat to Europe. Yes the capability might exist but it is not in Iran's interest and have never shown such interest or ambition. India certainly has missiles that can reach parts of Europe, capability does not signal intent.

            US and UK have screwed the relation up by organising coup, scuttling democratic processes, downing domestic passenger jet without apology, setting Saddam Hussein and his chemical weapons at them and the economically ravaging them with sanctions.

            As for nukes, with Israel and undeclared nuclear power right next door, it's a very reasonable ask for any country that wants to control its own destiny. In fact had it had one, the current conflict would not have happened.

          • CamperBob2 2 hours ago ago

            There is at least 30-40% of the population who support it and within those, more than half will gladly die for the regime.

            Sobering, and (speaking as an American) all too familiar here at home.

            Cults suck.

            • thunky an hour ago ago

              Unless you're talking about the US military you're wrong here. MAGA is not willing to sacrifice anything. It's a bully mindset and bullies take, they don't give.

              • CamperBob2 14 minutes ago ago

                MAGA is not willing to sacrifice anything.

                They're willing to sacrifice the rest of us, just like the mullahs. As long as other people are hurting more, MAGA is happy to sacrifice whatever is asked of them.

                It's a literal cult. To understand that, all you have to do is imagine a Biden, an Obama, or a Harris saying and doing the things Trump has said and done in the last 30 days alone. "Some of you may die, and gas prices may go up for a while, but that's a chance I'm willing to take. Oh, also, Imma need 'bout $200 billion, kthx."

        • spaghetdefects 4 hours ago ago

          Most Iranians do not want the IRGC gone, that's US/Israeli propaganda. Thousands of people have been marching in support of the IRGC. Common sense would also tell you that Iranians aren't going to support the people bombing their schools.

          • tuna74 an hour ago ago

            It is impossible to know how may Iranians want the IRGC gone. But bombing schools (and bombings in general) will definitely increase the support for it.

        • Devasta 14 minutes ago ago

          You are absolutely deluded if you think the removal of the IRGC will result in any improvement in the situation of the Iranian people. The US and Israel want to bomb he place into a lawless wasteland, even if a secular democracy was to arise it would make no difference.

        • sofixa 4 hours ago ago

          > Iran will be better as a whole if the IRGC is all dead

          Which is an impossibility. We're talking about a military force of more than a million religiously fervent men that have martyrdom as a core tenet of their religion. They are not going anywhere, and assasinating their leaders and bombing their bases will not make them easier to enforce anything on.

        • cardanome 4 hours ago ago

          Many people that protested against the government in January are now marching in support of the Islamic Republic and demand that the imperialists are punished. Most of them have protested for economic reasons, they don't want to see their country destroyed and their children murdered by bombs.

          Iran is more united than ever because of the imperialist war. That is what you get when you turn state leaders into martyrs.

          • watwut 3 hours ago ago

            That sounds made up. Marches largely stopped after bombings, no one marches for IRGC - not even supporters.

            And there is no way for anyone to know what Iranians actually think now. No one does the polls there now.

            • cardanome 2 hours ago ago

              There is massive video evidence: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5TOcnVe86Vo

              There are massive protests in favor of the Republic every day. You can not deny the evidence.

            • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago ago

              > no one marches for IRGC - not even supporters

              IRGC has a lot of support. We tend to think of educated Iranians from abroad. But they have their share of religious nutters.

      • gambutin 3 hours ago ago

        Iranian kids have been chanting death to Israel and death to USA for 47 years now. They’ve been waiting for this.

        • srean 3 hours ago ago

          Well, if US takes down their democracy and downs their domestic passenger jets, fight a proxy war with chemical weapons through Saddam Hussein that alone kills 20~30 thousand, no country is going to respond to that with flowers in their hair.

          In Iran's defence, in spite of being attacked repeatedly with chemical weapons, not once have they retaliated with chemical weapons. This is in line with their beliefs which was formalized into a fatwa by the late Khamenei against nuclear weapons.

          I would call that taking a pretty principled stand at a time when it would have been very tempting to redefine them.

        • bigfatkitten an hour ago ago

          Funnily enough, they are still a bit salty about the US and UK overthrowing their government in 1953, because that government started asking questions about how much oil the UK was stealing.

      • gizajob 4 hours ago ago

        There’s only so many decades you can say “death to America, death to Israel” and fund proxies against them until they say enough is enough and deal with the baiting once and for all.

        • GordonS 2 hours ago ago

          Maybe we should look at why Iranians chant this?

          And those "proxies" are not "against" America or Israel - they exist solely as resistance groups that counter Israeli aggression, ethic cleansing, land theft etc. You know, like Israel is doing right now in their stated aim of annexing South Lebanon, after displacing over a million people from their homes. Without Israeli aggression and land theft, these resistance groups wouldn't exist.

          • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago ago

            > those "proxies" are not "against" America or Israel - they exist solely as resistance groups that counter Israeli aggression, ethic cleansing, land theft etc.

            They explicitly call for the destruction of Israel.

            • thunky an hour ago ago

              A lot of people think the world would be better off without the violent Israeli regime and their influence.

            • GordonS an hour ago ago

              Why would that be?

          • idop an hour ago ago

            Yeah we should meet them half way

        • cardanome 3 hours ago ago

          Or maybe you could ask yourself why people chant this. Maybe people don't fancy your mass murder of their Palestinian brothers and sisters. Maybe Iran didn't appreciate the US supporting Saddam Hussein to fight a war against Iran where he used chemical weapons against the population.

          The might be a reason the whole region hates Israel and the US. Just saying.

          • AnimalMuppet 2 hours ago ago

            Or maybe you could ask yourself why most of the rest of the region allows the US to have military bases on their soil, and why they are so concerned about protecting themselves against Iran.

            The "whole region" fears Iran more than they hate the US, judged by their behavior.

            • cardanome 2 hours ago ago

              The people in the region cheer when they see Iranian missiles hit US bases.

              It is the Saudis and the other monarchists and oligarchs that have decided to sell out their countries to the US and Israel. They fear their own people more than anything else.

              Iran is the only country in the region who has supported the Palestinians. Everyone else has looked the other way. Iran has not invaded any other country. It is Israel that keep the region in a constant state of war.

    • spaghetdefects 4 hours ago ago

      Iran was attacked. Israel and the US are the threat, Iran is just practicing very common sense self-defense.

    • brabel 4 hours ago ago

      How convenient for Trump that now all Europe now has a pretext to send the help they were asked for.

      • fidotron 4 hours ago ago

        The whole point of that noise is to put NATO + Japanese military in the Straits of Hormuz so that Israel and the US can continue to attack Iran with impunity. Any effort by Iran to shut the Straits in response to further attacks will hit some "innocent" party and drag them into the conflict.

        It's basically bait for WW3, and luckily so far the EU particularly are not biting.

  • NooneAtAll3 4 hours ago ago

    considering that there were already provocations about "unsuccessful attacks on Turkey", I have doubts that this attack was also Iran's

    the "notable distance/unexpectedly high range" quoted everywhere seems like a nice war justification: "see, they do have rockets that can threaten us!"

    • pcrh 2 hours ago ago

      I'm suspicious as well...

      Supposedly this missile was hit during the boost phase over Iran, the evidence is that it was actually targeted at Diego Garcia relies on US reports.

  • lokar 3 hours ago ago

    Question: could this lead to much more expensive war risk insurance for all ships transiting the Arabian Sea and Indian Ocean?

    That’s a lot of traffic

  • penguin_booze 2 hours ago ago

    > see a swift end to the conflict

    I'll tell you a swifter method: rest of the world attack the US efforts and send them home. Then lock up the presidumb [sic] somewhere.

    They stirred the hornets' nest. Now the rest of the world are getting stung, slowly dragging into an all-out war.

    The rest of us could really use a regime change now--and it's not in Iran.

  • drnick1 2 hours ago ago

    What kind of game is Iran playing here? It's as if the regime wanted to get nuked.

  • shishcat 4 hours ago ago

    The .io tld is going through rough times :pensive:

  • IAmGraydon 2 hours ago ago

    As NATO has thus far neglected to get involved, this seems like an incredibly dumb move by Iran. Making Europe feel threatened will not turn things in their favor.

  • 10xDev 4 hours ago ago

    Can we just leave countries alone, like we do with North Korea?

    • AndrewKemendo 3 hours ago ago

      The reason people leave North Korea alone is because they have nuclear weapon(s)

      • extraduder_ire 3 hours ago ago

        Prior to that, they had thousands of artillery pieces pointed at Seoul the presumed backing of China if the Korean war resumed.

      • bigfatkitten 39 minutes ago ago

        And because China won’t allow it.

      • 10xDev 3 hours ago ago

        So we can only reach stalemate once a country has nukes and otherwise have to start blowing up their schools?

        • AndrewKemendo 3 hours ago ago

          According to postwar foreign policy clearly that’s true:

          Look at Libya and Ukraine for your most direct examples - give away your nukes, get invaded. South Africa is an odd example that proves the rule: they simply bend the knee to the west.

          Nuclear deterrents and mutual assured destruction has been the key driver in preventing large scale conflict in the “postwar period.”

          Everyone knows Israel has nukes it’s just a matter of when they can get enough public support to use them

          • cameronh90 2 hours ago ago

            Mutually assured destruction does seem to deter conflict, but even assuming it works, it always seemed like a poor tradeoff to me.

            Significantly reduce the frequency of small to medium-scale conflicts, in exchange for an inevitable, possibly apocalyptic nuclear conflict at some point. Maybe not this year, maybe not for centuries, but one day, someone will press the button.

      • energy123 2 hours ago ago

        The reason people left North Korea alone while they were building nuclear weapons is because they weren't arming 5 terrorist proxies and they didn't have a doomsday countdown clock in their capital city.

        • 10xDev 2 hours ago ago

          True, Kim Jong Un is actually pretty chill, just likes testing some nukes towards Japan as a hobby. Are people genuinely retarded? Or is it the severe Israel bias?

      • PepperdineG 2 hours ago ago

        They also have the GDP equivalent of JetBlue Airways

  • AndrewKemendo 4 hours ago ago

    Diego Garcia is strategically very important to global security according to the US

    Had something actually struck within the ADIZ there would have been massive implications. My guess is they intentionally failed as a warning shot.

    This isn’t a random act and its quite the signal if you know what it means, Iran knows what it did here.

    • noir_lord 4 hours ago ago

      Would the Americans and Isreali’s start bombing mainland Iran and takin out their weapons and oil/gas infrastructure as retaliation?.

      • spaghetdefects 4 hours ago ago

        Americans and Israelis literally started this war by bombing an Iranian girl's school. They've been bombing Iran every day since then.

        • iamtheworstdev 3 hours ago ago

          i believe the parent comment was being sarcastic

      • chronic20001 4 hours ago ago

        > Would the Americans and Isreali’s start bombing mainland Iran and takin out their weapons and oil/gas infrastructure as retaliation?.

        No that’s too easy.

        Give hope to Iran / Islamic world for a few months, then take it away.

    • visuhire 4 hours ago ago

      I was reading that one of the two failed en route, and the other was intercepted. I don't think this was an intentional failure to hit.

      • AndrewKemendo 4 hours ago ago

        Sometimes getting shot down is the goal or at least a test to see what kind of response you’ll get

        • roughly 4 hours ago ago

          Iran did the same before the conflict in response to prior Israeli attacks - the two drone waves they sent that were intercepted were both demonstrations of capability, not actual attacks.

          Unfortunately I’m not sure their current audience is gonna pick up the implied threat.

          • srean 3 hours ago ago

            Iran even has a history of calling in their attacks to ensure no one gets hurt.

            I don't think they did it this time, but they have in the past.

          • picture 3 hours ago ago

            How do you know their intentions?

            It's also a bit unreasonable to launch live munitions that have some 90% probability of being intercepted by a given system on a good day, while intending for "just a warning"

            • roughly an hour ago ago

              > How do you know their intentions?

              Because they declared them loudly.

              When they launched the drone strikes on Israel, they gave Israel and the US warning time so they could be intercepted. The second time, they gave them much less warning time.

              The Iranians have a long history of negotiating loudly via their actions, which anyone who's spent any reasonable amount of time studying Iran knows and has seen in action. They're really not a mystery, they're very transparent, we just don't like what they're saying.

            • AndrewKemendo 3 hours ago ago

              It’s more like if David and Goliath are in a standoff

              David takes a small rock and whips it at a sensitive spot on Goliath’s ankles that most people don’t know about (Diego Garcia)

              David knows Goliath will probably dodge it, and most likely kick it away given it’s importance, but there’s a point being made by shooting: if it hits then that’s a win, but if gets knocked down it’s a warning that they know where they need to hit for it to hurt

    • Rebelgecko 4 hours ago ago

      If you're already at war, why waste resources on warning shots?

      • AndrewKemendo 4 hours ago ago

        Sometimes it’s worth it to test in production

      • CamperBob2 2 hours ago ago

        See also the Doolittle Raid.

    • alephnerd 4 hours ago ago

      > This isn’t a random act and its quite the signal if you know what it means, Iran knows what it did here.

      It also publicizes Iran-NK military cooperation on ballistics development, which the Biden admin warned about [0], as well as Iran-Russia military cooperation (which was obviously much less under-the-radar).

      It also shows the merger of the Ukraine conflict with the West Asia conflict, and was a major reason why Fiona Hill argued we entered an unavoidable polycrisis in 2022 [1].

      [0] - https://www.janes.com/osint-insights/defence-news/us-officia...

      [1] - https://xcancel.com/FrankRGardner/status/2027098560647348410...

      • AndrewKemendo 4 hours ago ago

        Agreed, there’s so much intelligence in this act it’s really astonishing

        • alephnerd an hour ago ago

          Yep. This action wasn't intended for the average HNer or Redditor to pontificate about.

          Those who they wanted to send a message to got the message, and it's a significant message up the escalation chain.

          Additionally, the fact that this is being very publicly disclosed and discussed in British media in a manner that RAF Akhrioti wasn't is also a massive signal.