Russia has received new deadly ballistic missiles from Iran for use in Ukraine and is likely to use them, the US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, announced on Tuesday in London as he prepared to travel with the UK foreign secretary, David Lammy, to Kyiv.

The news, confirmed by the US for the first time and seen as of huge significance to the battlefield balance ahead of Ukraine’s difficult winter, led the US and Europe to impose new sanctions on Iran, so apparently slamming the door on the prospect of a rapprochement between the new reformist Iranian government and the west.

The move may also add to the pressure on the US to end its restrictions on Ukraine using British-supplied Storm Shadow missiles to strike targets deep inside Russia and not just in occupied parts of Ukraine.

MBFC
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  • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Another cost of blindly supporting Israel no matter what.

    Israel causes more drama then they’re worth as an ally, they’re a bully and have acted like it for decades.

    • naeap@sopuli.xyz
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      3 months ago

      I’m really not sure, if I can follow.

      How is Israel (absolutely doing a genocide atm - just to have that said) involved with that? What’s the connection?

      Maybe I missed something just scrolling through?

      • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        I could.copy/paste what I said, but by now I’d hope you scrolled down and saw it by now.

        But I dont know, maybe you stopped here and area till waiting on a reply to scroll down.

        • naeap@sopuli.xyz
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          3 months ago

          Ok, I’ll go search for your other comment

          Edit: I’m still not sure how the US supporting Israel is making Russia attack Ukraine or how that should be connected - obviously, geopolitical everything is somehow connected, but not causal

          Edit 2: I’m absolutely not in favour of US backing Israel (or their fucking imperial capitalism), but do you want to say, that Russia had no other choice or…?
          I do know this sounds foolish, but I’m currently really struggling to make sense of what you want to say

          • BassTurd@lemmy.world
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            3 months ago

            You’re not wrong. It’s a bullshit point that has no merit. US could have nothing to do with Israel, and that would have no bearing on Iran sending missiles to Russia.

            Russia is getting missiles from Iran, because they need them and Iran is supplying them, it’s as simple as that.

    • I’m a bit confused where the line actually is - it seems to be a very low bar - but at least some red lines for the US do seem to exist.

      E.g. https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2023/10/15/biden-israel-occupy-gaza-big-mistake/ (don’t retake Gaza)

      The flip side is that the US being allied with Israel can sometimes be asset - able to push for justice by asking Israel to investigate it’s own forces in https://www.npr.org/2024/09/09/nx-s1-5106819/us-israel-american-woman-shooting-west-bank (though admittedly the “expression of deep regret” as per https://www.theguardian.com/world/article/2024/sep/10/israel-says-highly-likely-its-troops-killed-turkish-american-aysenur-ezgi-eygi sounds a lot like “thoughts and prayers”)

      A slightly more successful version, https://theintercept.com/2024/08/09/israel-prison-sde-teiman-palestinian-abuse-torture/ , where the US asked Israel to investigate, resulting in some arrests…

      That said, I do hope that the US soon follows suit with the UK on this, https://www.theguardian.com/world/article/2024/sep/10/australian-government-backs-uk-decision-to-curb-arms-sales-to-israel

    • RubberDuck@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Nonsense. Take your Hamas talking points elsewhere. Iran would have done this regardless.

      • roboto
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        3 months ago

        Lmao everything is Hamas

      • Mostly agree. At least, the threshold to get Iran to not do this is much, much higher - remember that Iran is trying to get a nuclear program among other things that the US and many other allied countries take an issue with, and it’s likely those would have to get put on the table as well if one were to hypothetically attempt to negotiate with Iran over the subject in the article…

        • RubberDuck@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          Yes, Russia can be a good ally for Iran as they have tech and knowledge they lack. Also just another channel to get stuff they cannot get themselves. The latter goes for both.

      • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        When the US backs Israel no matter what. The countries Israel keeps starting shit with don’t have many other options besides Russia or China

        If America stayed out of it, Israel wouldn’t be as aggressive, and their neighbors wouldn’t have to run to Russia and China.

        Like…

        Has no one explained to you that one of the big factors the West had in creating Israel was to create a volatile area for proxy wars instead of another war in Europe?

        If you don’t know that, hardly anything else is going to make sense …

        • with don’t have many other options besides Russia or China

          *cough cough* North Korea *cough cough*

          Has no one explained to you that one of the big factors the West had in creating Israel was to create a volatile area for proxy wars instead of another war in Europe?

          Citation needed.

          It seems to somewhat contract the info in https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Aliyah - namely that Jewish immigration to what was then Ottoman Palestine started half a century before WWII, and that it was based on a desire for these folks to return to their ancient religious homelands…

          Anyways, if that was indeed the desire, it can’t really have been said to be a smashing success, considering the long list presented here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_conflicts_in_Europe#21st_century (and also look above to say the 1950s - it’s quite a long list of conflicts in Europe post WWII)

        • Snowflake@sh.itjust.works
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          3 months ago

          Like… Those panarab trash countries attacked Israel and lost back in 1947. Let them try again sore losers. Like… We stayed out of it since the 1990s we’ve simply sent aid and medical supplies to gaza. And they wanna invade Israel again on October 7th.

          The West did not create Israel as it is that was mostly all Russia from actions in the 80s, Russian immigrants started the first major settlement where thousands from Yemen and eastern Europe immigrated to in 1882.

          • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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            3 months ago

            Like… Those panarab trash countries attacked Israel and lost back in 1947

            When Israel was founded…

            The weat didn’t magically create that land, it existed and people had lived there for thousands of years …

            The UN said it was now Israel and everyone who wasn’t Jewish had to leave…

            And you want to start the clock immediately after that?!

            How does that make any sense?

            The West did not create Israel

            They did…

            In 1947 the UN voted to partition the region into separate Jewish and Arab states.

            https://www.britannica.com/summary/Israel

            as it is that was mostly all Russia from actions in the 80s, Russian immigrants started the first major settlement where thousands from Yemen and eastern Europe immigrated to in 1882.

            Everyone that moved there prior to the creation of Israel was moving to Palestine…

            Did any of that help you understand?

            • They did…

              In 1947 the UN voted to partition the region into separate Jewish and Arab states.

              The UN includes Russia, China, lots of African countries, …

              We could say that the UN helped to create Israel and call it a day. We could even say it was Western-led, with the UK having the Mandate and all prior to the UN taking it up. But to say that the West made it implies that the other countries who were members of the UN at the time had no involvement or responsibility here, which isn’t accurate.

              Everyone that moved there prior to the creation of Israel was moving to Palestine…

              Well, to the British Mandate of Palestine. Semantics, agreed.

            • Snowflake@sh.itjust.works
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              3 months ago

              That’s not true. No one was moving to “Palestine”. It was a somewhat dead area. As well there was never a country called Palestine. You don’t see it on any maps. From all the development in Israel brought a lot of Arab immigrants to Palestine area as well. There could have been a Palestine but they declined that partition plan and chose to lose a war. They continue to lose wars.

              • That’s not true. No one was moving to “Palestine”. It was a somewhat dead area.

                Perhaps it was but there was some movement. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Aliyah - but I think you alluded to this earlier when you mentioned what Russia and such did back in 1882.

                As well there was never a country called Palestine. You don’t see it on any maps.

                From what I can tell, this is correct. From https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Palestine#Ottoman_period

                the Palestine region within it was divided into the five sanjaks (provincial districts, also called liwa′ in Arabic) of Safad, Nablus, Jerusalem, Lajjun and Gaza.
                In common usage from 1840 onward, “Palestine” was used either to describe … a region that extended in the north–south direction typically from Rafah (south-east of Gaza) to the Litani River (now in Lebanon). The western boundary was the sea, and the eastern boundary was the poorly defined place where the Syrian desert began.

                Countries - or even provinces - usually have well defined borders, so up to Ottoman control it wasn’t a single entity but a poorly defined grouping.

                I guess one could make the case for it after the British Mandate of Palestine, but of course it still wasn’t an independent country when the British were running things.

                From all the development in Israel brought a lot of Arab immigrants to Palestine area as well.

                I don’t know too much about this but it sounds plausible.

                There could have been a Palestine but they declined that partition plan and chose to lose a war. They continue to lose wars.

                Well, Oct 7 really was a major setback. I would admit that Netanyahu seems like the last person to allow for Palestine or a two state solution, like, ever. But he was about to be handed a major setback in gov’t control back in Sept and Oct 2023 which one could kinda see as maybe paving the way for a new gov’t to take control, one more likely to offer a new olive branch to the Palestinians - until Oct 7 happened and everyone agreed to coalition and stand behind Netanyahu.

                • Snowflake@sh.itjust.works
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                  3 months ago

                  Perhaps it was but there was some movement.

                  Right, that movement was not to Palestine however. Those people would have been moving to Egypt, Lebanon, Jordan, Syria because there was no country named Palestine.

                  I don’t know too much about this but it sounds plausible.

                  For it not to be plausible would mean from 1850 to now every woman would had to have 15+ kids and their kids have 5+ kids with 0 mortalities.

                  Well, Oct 7 really was a major setback. I would admit that Netanyahu seems like the last person to allow for Palestine or a two state solution, like, ever…

                  You should look into Hamas/Gaza govt support for a two state solution for context on netanyahu. They do not support and they will not surrender or recognize Israel.

                  As well netanyahu has voiced his vision for a two state solution.

                  It’s a fair take given that time and time again Gaza advances to destroy Israel.

                  • Well, to be fair some folks might have moved in a time when there was a territory that went by the name of the British Mandate of Palestine. Anyways, semantics, mostly agreed.

                    I would agree on the bit regarding Hamas … but I think one shouldn’t conflate all Gazans and their beliefs with just Hamas. Remember that Hamas took power only after overthrowing a unity government that was under the Palestinian Authority (which does still support a two state solution).

                    Regarding Netanyahu, the article from CNN you cite kinda shows the problem. Netanyahu is not in favor of Palestinian sovereignty.

                    In fact, CNN makes it very clear,

                    Netanyahu has never been a full-throated supporter of a two-state solution

                    That said, the security concerns regarding Israel are indeed valid. I’m not sure what the right answer to that would be… perhaps in the beginning we’d need to have peacekeepers? But perhaps we could find a neutral islamic country (who? Perhaps Malaysia?) to fit that role. With fellow followers of Islam keeping the peace and IDF having withdrawn, perhaps then Israel can feel secure while a new Palestine is built?

      • Deceptichum@quokk.au
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        3 months ago

        They likely wouldn’t have, which is why it’s such a big deal now that they are.

        Israel basically forced this to happen due to its illegal attacks on Iran (the bombing and assassinations).

        Take your Zionist talking point elsewhere.