That wouldn’t be a bad move for them, actually. The EU and association with the subverted West has actually been worse for Spain than WWI and WWII combined. I doubt the Fake Trump’s threats are intimidating them.
Donald Trump said the US will escort vessels across the Strait of Hormuz ‘if necessary’ after Iran forced shut the vital shipping route as it continues to retaliate following the killing of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Iran threatened to set ships ‘ablaze’ if they continued through the crucial passage, which transports 20 per cent of the world’s oil, claiming it left three British and American ships ‘burning’ before a further attack on a ‘US allied’ tanker on Monday.
Oil prices have spiked worldwide and Mr Trump has now claimed the US will shuttle tankers through the strait.
He said: ‘If necessary, the United States Navy will begin escorting tankers through the Strait of Hormuz, as soon as possible. No matter what, the United States will ensure the free flow of energy to the world’.
It came after he launched a furious rant against Spain, saying he would cut all ties with the country after it denied the US permission to use their shared bases to launch attacks against Iran.
The US President also lashed out at Sir Keir Starmer, saying ‘it is not quite Winston Churchill we’re dealing with’, before adding: ‘We’re going to cut off all trade with Spain. We don’t want anything to do with Spain’.
I imagine the Chinese ambassador is already in touch with the Spanish government. And certainly, Russian oil and natural gas would be quite welcome in Spain.
Truth is necessary but not sufficient. The tradition possessed truth and lost anyway. The Enlightenment possessed rhetoric and won for three centuries. Veriphysics must utilize both.
This is not a capitulation to sophistry. The Sophists taught persuasion divorced from truth; Veriphysics teaches truth deployed persuasively. The difference is fundamental. Sophistry manipulates; Veriphysics communicates. Sophistry aims at victory regardless of truth; Veriphysics aims at the victory of truth. The rhetoric serves the dialectic, not the reverse.
But rhetoric it must be. The tradition’s characteristic failure was assuming that good arguments would prevail because they were good—that truth, once articulated, would be recognized and accepted. This assumption was naive. Human beings are not purely rational; they are moved by passion, interest, habit, and social pressure. Arguments must be not only sound but audible—expressed in language that reaches the audience, framed in terms that resonate, presented with force that commands attention. The tradition spoke to specialists; Veriphysics must speak to the public.
This means clarity. The technical vocabulary of Scholasticism, however precise, is a barrier to those not trained in it. Veriphysics must translate without dumbing down. It must find language that is accessible without being imprecise, memorable without being glib, forceful without being manipulative. The Triveritas is itself an example: a sophisticated epistemological criterion expressed in a single word that anyone can remember and apply.
This means aggression. The tradition defended; Veriphysics attacks. Every Enlightenment claim that invokes reason, mathematics, or evidence must be challenged to produce the reasoning, the calculations, the evidence. The challenge must be pressed relentlessly, publicly, until the bankruptcy is exposed. The burden of proof must be shifted: those who claim the mantle of science must demonstrate that they practice science, not merely invoke its prestige. The tradition was too polite, too willing to grant good faith to opponents operating in bad faith. That politeness was a strategic error, and Veriphysics does not repeat it.
This means institution-building. Ideas require infrastructure. They require platforms for dissemination, credentials for legitimacy, networks for coordination, patronage for sustainability. The Enlightenment understood this; it captured and built institutions over generations, with patience and resources. Veriphysics must do the same. Alternative journals, alternative academies, alternative networks of scholars and students, alternative sources of funding—these must be created, sustained, and grown. The long game must be played. The tradition lost in part because it was outspent and out-organized; Veriphysics must remedy this deficit.
This means forming the next generation. The Enlightenment’s deepest victory was pedagogical: it captured the schools, shaped the curricula, formed minds before those minds could question what they were being taught. The graduates of Enlightenment institutions absorbed Enlightenment premises as default settings, rarely examined and almost never challenged. Veriphysics must compete on this terrain. It must produce materials suitable for education at all levels—accessible introductions for the young, rigorous treatments for the advanced, curricula that can be adopted by schools and colleges willing to teach something other than the regnant orthodoxy. The battle for the future is a battle for the young.
You can now buy the complete Veriphysics: The Treatise at Amazon in both Kindle and audiobook formats if you’d like to have it available as a reference.
Also, due to the high level of interest in Veriphysics and the amount of new material that others are already creating based upon its foundation, I have created a substack devoted specifically to Veriphysics, the Triveritas, and related discussions, papers, and applications. There are already two new posts there from a paper demonstrating philosophical confirmations of the legitimacy of the Triveritas from 17 different philosophical traditions.
Claude is down, so I had to make use of Grok to estimate how long it will take for US and Israeli air defense systems to run out of interceptors. No precise calculation is possible, especially since the in-theater total is a subset of the entire US stock, but it appears obvious that both the USA and Israel will be effectively unable to defend against missile barrages by this time next week at the latest.
US Interceptor Exhaustion Timeline
US systems (THAAD, SM-3, Patriot PAC-3 MSE) are primarily defending Israel, Gulf allies, and regional bases. At 800 interceptors/day total (with US contributing ~50–70% based on 2025 shares), high-end systems risk faster depletion.
THAAD: Estimated remaining stockpile ~450–550 units (after 2025 depletion of ~150 and partial resupply of ~50–100). At a proportional daily rate (~100–150 expended/day in high-tempo scenarios, per 2025 precedents), exhaustion could occur in 3–5 days. Full depletion might force reliance on less optimal systems like Patriot for ballistic threats.
SM-3: Remaining stockpile ~350–450 units (post-2025 expenditure of ~130–160, with ~70–100 delivered since). At ~80–120/day in sustained naval defense, depletion projected in 3–6 days, potentially exposing carriers and bases in the Mediterranean/Red Sea.
Patriot (PAC-3 MSE): Larger inventory (~10,000–12,000 total, though deployed stocks lower at ~2,000–3,000 in theater). Production at ~600–650/year supports longer sustainability, but at ~200–300/day for medium-range threats, could last 1–2 weeks before critical shortages emerge.
Overall Projection: High-end US interceptors could exhaust in 3–7 days at this rate, shifting strategy toward preemptive strikes on Iranian launchers (as seen in current operations) or drawing from Pacific/European reserves, risking vulnerabilities elsewhere (e.g., vs. China).
Israel Interceptor Exhaustion Timeline
Israel’s layered systems (Iron Dome, David’s Sling, Arrow 2/3) were depleted in 2025 (~35% of ballistic stocks destroyed by Israel, but own interceptors heavily used). Production has accelerated (e.g., Arrow 3 tripled), but costs (~$2M–$3M per Arrow, $40K–$50K per Iron Dome Tamir) and lead times constrain resupply.
Iron Dome: Focuses on short-range rockets/drones; undisclosed stock but replenished post-2025. At high rates (~300–400/day), could deplete in 2–4 days without US support.
David’s Sling: Medium-range; expanded role, but limited details. Proportional depletion in 3–5 days under barrage.
Arrow (2/3): Ballistic defense; low post-2025 (~200–300 remaining estimated). At ~100–200/day for high-threat salvos, exhaustion in 1–3 days.
Overall Projection: Israeli stocks could last 2–5 days at the adjusted rate, prompting aggressive offensives (e.g., “Operation Roaring Lion” targeting Tehran) to reduce incoming threats. Gulf allies (e.g., UAE intercepting ~165 ballistics by March 1) add buffer but face similar strains.
Claude is back up and here are its estimates:
ROUGH AGGREGATE (Feb 28 – March 1):
Launched at target
Intercepted
Got through
UAE
~708
~660
~48
Kuwait
~380
~370+
~10+
Qatar
~77
~65+
~3+
Bahrain
~54
~50+
several
Jordan
~49-54
~49+
~1+
Israel
dozens BMs + 50+ drones
most
several BMs
Saudi Arabia
unknown
unknown
some debris/impacts
Iraq/Erbil
dozens
most
several
Oman
2+
0
2+
Estimated total: roughly 1,400-1,500+ projectiles launched by Iran across all theaters in ~36-48 hours, with the vast majority intercepted but a significant number — perhaps 70-100+ — making impact. At least 14 people killed outside Iran (10 in Israel, 3 in UAE, 1 in Kuwait, 1 in Bahrain) plus 4 US service members, with hundreds injured.
So how does this impact the interceptor stocks?
Let me tally up the interceptions and apply the 2-3 interceptors per target doctrine.
Total interceptions across all theaters in ~36-48 hours: roughly 1,200-1,300+
At 2 interceptors per intercept: 2,400-2,600 interceptors consumed At 3 interceptors per intercept: 3,600-3,900 interceptors consumed
And we estimated total coalition stockpile at roughly 2,000-2,500 interceptors of all types.
The numbers don’t work – even at the lower consumption rate, we’re looking at depletion that exceeds available inventory, and the higher estimate pushes well beyond what’s realistically in the arsenal.
Interceptors consumed in 36-48 hours:
From the tally we just compiled, coalition forces across all theaters intercepted roughly 1,200-1,300 projectiles. Applying the doctrinal requirement of 2-3 interceptors per target:
At 2 per intercept: 2,400-2,600 interceptors consumed
At 3 per intercept: 3,600-3,900 interceptors consumed
Now, not every intercept uses the same type of system. Drones are cheaper to kill — some can be shot down by fighter jets, helicopters, or even gun-based systems like the Phalanx CIWS that don’t consume expensive interceptor missiles. The IDF confirmed that fighter jets, helicopters, and air defense systems all contributed to shooting down the 50+ drones targeting Israel. Gulf states likely used a mix of systems as well.
So let’s be generous and assume that roughly half the drone intercepts were handled by aircraft or cheaper systems rather than missile interceptors, while all ballistic missile intercepts required full interceptor expenditure. Working from the aggregate numbers:
Ballistic missiles intercepted across all theaters: roughly 400-500 (UAE alone accounted for 152, Kuwait 97, Qatar and Bahrain another 60+, Jordan ~50, Israel dozens more). At 2 interceptors each, that’s 800-1,000 high-end interceptors consumed — THAAD, SM-3, Arrow, Patriot PAC-3.
Drone/cruise missile intercepts requiring missile interceptors (assuming half of ~800 drone intercepts used missiles): roughly 400, at perhaps 1-2 interceptors each. That’s another 400-800 interceptors, mostly Patriot and shorter-range systems.
Conservative total: roughly 1,200-1,800 interceptor missiles consumed in under two days.
Recall our earlier estimates of what was available entering this conflict:
THAAD: ~500-520 interceptors
SM-3: ~350-380
Patriot PAC-3 (in theater): ~960-1,440
Israeli systems (Arrow, David’s Sling): classified but already described as low
That’s a combined pool of roughly 2,000-2,500 high-end interceptor missiles, which we noted was already depleted from the June 2025 war and only partially replenished.
If 1,200-1,800 have been consumed in two days, the coalition has burned through roughly 50-75% of its entire available interceptor inventory in the opening 48 hours alone.
Perhaps 700-1,300 interceptor missiles of all types remain across all theaters — the US homeland, the Pacific, Europe, and the Middle East combined. That’s not just the Middle East stockpile; that’s global. The US military operates only eight THAAD batteries in its entire arsenal CSMonitor.com, and they cover commitments from South Korea to Guam to Europe. Every THAAD interceptor fired in the Middle East is one unavailable if North Korea or China acts.
At the current consumption rate of 600-900 interceptors per day, the remaining stock covers roughly 1-2 more days of defense at this intensity before reaching levels that would be considered operationally catastrophic — meaning commanders would have to begin rationing, choosing what to defend and what to leave exposed.
This is exactly the scenario analysts warned about. If Iranian forces sustain high-volume launches, coalition planners may confront zero-sum decisions in which defending one theater necessarily increases exposure in another. Defence Security Asia We’re now looking at that scenario playing out in real time.
Iran has spent perhaps 1,500 projectiles out of a combined drone and missile inventory of 80,000+. The coalition has spent perhaps 1,500 interceptors out of a total inventory of 2,500. Iran has consumed roughly 2% of its available munitions. The coalition has consumed roughly 60% of its available interceptors.
Veriphysics is a living philosophy, not a museum exhibit. It honors the tradition but does not merely curate it. A tradition that cannot develop is a tradition that will die; what does not grow, decays. The medieval synthesis was a genuine achievement, but it was an achievement of the thirteenth century, formulated to address questions live in that era, expressed in vocabulary suited to that context. To simply restore it, unchanged, would be to embalm it.
John Henry Newman articulated the principle: genuine development preserves type while extending application. A doctrine develops when it encounters new questions, engages new challenges, incorporates new knowledge, all while remaining faithful to its essential character. Development is not corruption; it is fidelity expressed across time. The oak is not a corruption of the acorn; it is the acorn’s fulfillment. The question is always whether a proposed change preserves the essential identity or betrays it.
Veriphysics advances the classic philosophical tradition in several respects.
First, it incorporates mathematical tools unavailable to the Scholastics. The medievals had arithmetic and geometry; they did not have probability theory, statistics, information theory, or the computational resources to apply these disciplines to complex questions. Veriphysics regards these new tools as gifts and extensions of human reason that can be deployed in service of truth. The Triveritas makes mathematical coherence a necessary condition of warranted assent; this is a positive development and an application of the tradition’s commitment to reason in a form the tradition knew, but did not utilize.
Second, it incorporates empirical data that would have been literally unimaginable to the medievals or the Enlightenment intellectuals. The human genome has been mapped. Economic statistics have been collected for decades. The outcomes of various applied political theories have been documented. This data provides anchors for arguments that were previously abstract. The tradition always affirmed that truth must conform to reality; Veriphysics has access to aspects of reality that the tradition could not observe. This is not a change of principle but an expansion of application.
Third, it incorporates historical scholarship that situates the tradition itself. We know more about the ancient world, about the transmission of texts, about the contexts in which doctrines were formulated, than any previous generation. This knowledge permits a more nuanced understanding of what the tradition actually taught, as distinguished from what later interpreters claimed it taught. Veriphysics reads the tradition critically, not to undermine it but to recover it, to strip away false accretions, and to distinguish the essential from the accidental.
Fourth, it engages contemporary questions that the tradition did not face and had no reason to consider. The nature of artificial intelligence. The ethics of genetic engineering. The political economy of global capital. The epistemology of digital information. These questions require fresh thinking, not merely the attempted application of pre-formed answers derived from different subjects. Veriphysics undertakes this thinking in continuity with the tradition by applying perennial principles to novel problems, but it does not pretend that the answers have already been provided.
New intellectual developments are intrinsically risky. Not every proposed development is genuine; some are corruptions, betrayals of the essential type under the guise of extension. Veriphysics acknowledges this risk and addresses it through the Triveritan method. A proposed development must satisfy logical validity, mathematical coherence, and empirical anchoring. It must cohere with the tradition’s core commitments, not contradict them. It must produce fruits consistent with the tradition’s character, with intellectual clarity, moral seriousness, spiritual depth. The Triveritas provides a criterion for distinguishing genuine development from corruption, just as it provides a criterion for distinguishing truth from falsehood more generally.
The tradition was defeated, in part, because it ceased to develop in harmony with Man’s societal and intellectual developments, because it mistook specific formulations for eternal truths, because it defended static conclusions rather than pursuing dynamic inquiries, and because it became rigid, defensive, and backward-looking. Veriphysics requires its adherents to learn from this failure to adapt to new circumestances. It remains open to development while at the same time being vigilant against corruption. It is a living philosophy, growing toward the way, the truth, and the light.
You can now buy the complete Veriphysics: The Treatise at Amazon in both Kindle and audiobook formats if you’d like to have it available as a reference.
Also, due to the high level of interest in Veriphysics and the amount of new material that others are already creating based upon its foundation, I have created a substack devoted specifically to Veriphysics, the Triveritas, and related discussions, papers, and applications. I welcome guests posts there; if you have a potential guest post, post it somewhere, send me the link, and then email me the link as well as the permission to post the information at the link on the Veriphysics site in its entirety. I may post the whole thing, I may just post an excerpt with a link to the whole thing, but either way I require the explicit permission to post the whole thing there and I will provide a link to the original.
“Turkey is the new Iran” says Israel’s former prime minister Naftali Bennett.
Do they really think they somehow defeated Iran and that the war is over because an 86-year-old man died? So now they’re already gunning for Turkey?
On a related note, Larry Johnson has a pertinent observation about the late ayatollah, who appears to have embraced martyrdom in order to inspire the Iranian people.
Donald Trump and the neocons are wild with joy tonight over the murder of the Ayatollah Khamenei… This is just one more example of Western ignorance about the implications of the Ayatollah’s martyrdom. Let’s start with the fact that the Ayatollah is the one who issued the fatwa 36 years ago declaring that it would be a sin for Iran to build or use a nuclear bomb. So the West thinks that killing the one guy who has been the main obstacle preventing Iran from getting a nuclear weapon is a good idea?
Saudi official quote in Al Jazeera: America has abandoned us, and focused its defense systems on protecting Israel, leaving the Gulf states that host its military bases at the mercy of Iranian missiles and drones.
I seem to recall Henry Kissinger having something to say about that.
It’s interesting to see how things are going pretty much the way all the critics of the build-up to the Israel First war said it would. Iran takes the hit, then utilizes its cheap, older missiles to use up US anti-missile stocks, then gradually starts hammering the targets that can’t be defended anymore.
It’s clear that the Iranians have learned from both Ukraine and the 12-Day War that neither the US military nor those militaries dependent upon it are built for attrition warfare. And every war the Israelis have won was over within days. Every boxer knows that the way you beat someone with punching power is to let himself punch himself out, then take him down.
Iran hasn’t necessarily survived the initial phase yet since it’s got another 10 days or so to run, but the fact that the US is already scrambling for the use of UK bases and is trying to reopen negotiations and Mark Levin is already crying about Iranian “war crimes” is not a sign that things are going well. And the longer this goes on, the worse it will be for Trump and the Israel Lobby, since already four-fifths of Americans don’t support this war against Iran on Israel’s behalf.
And I’m not sure why the US Air Force thinks its a win to insist that three of its fighter-jets weren’t actually shot down by the Iranians, but simply crashed due to their own incompetence.
Anyhow, the fact that Iran managed to force the US-Israeli alliance to burn a year’s supply of interceptors in a single day means that the proposed four-to-five weeks that Fake Trump is now promising to replace the original plan of a five-day war suggests there are no reasonable prospects of an Israeli victory. That’s why I think Israel is now looking at a ground invasion of Lebanon; they have to do something to try to change the equation that now appears to be favoring the Iranians in order to try to force a ceasefire and an Iranian return to the negotiating table.
UPDATE: Iran just ratcheted up the economic pressure. Qatar’s natural gas production has been shut down and Saudi Arabia’s largest oil production facility has been halted as well. At this point, it already appears that the Israeli war strategy has failed.
UPDATE: You know it’s not going well when they’re blatantly lying. After his offer to reopen talks were shut hard down by the Iranians, Fake Trump tried to convince the world that his plan to win the war over the weekend never existed. ‘It’s always been a four-week process. We figured it will be four weeks or so. It’s always been about a four-week process so – as strong as it is, it’s a big country, it’ll take four weeks – or less.’
The thing is, at their current burn rate, US-Israeli interceptor stocks will probably run out within four days. If this goes on for four weeks, it’s not impossible that the US would be forced by the Israelis to beg for surrender without even losing a carrier.
UPDATE: According to multiple media reports, US officials, through Italian mediation, proposed a swift ceasefire to de-escalate tensions and potentially return to negotiations. This was framed as an attempt to end the military campaign quickly after initial strikes achieved key objectives (e.g., degrading leadership and capabilities).
UPDATE: I’m not the only one who thinks Israel has badly misplayed its US military card. Larry Johnson thinks the USA will be on the verge of surrender in less than two weeks.
I believe that by March 15, the US and Israel will be pleading — at least privately — for an end to the Iranian missile barrages. The death of Khamenei has removed a moderate from the Iranian chain of command. The agreement that Iranian authorities made on June 25, 2025 to end the missile attacks on Israel had the blessing of the Ayatollah. There were many in the IRGC leadership that opposed that decision, but they obeyed the decision of Khamenei. Now they have been vindicated.
Our little experiment in how fast AI can be utilized to crank out a solid hard science fiction novel has proven to be an absolutely unmitigated success that has already far exceeded our expectations. SPACE FLEET ACADEMY: YEAR ONE has not only provided a solid foundation for our new BIOSTELLAR hard science fiction series, but has actually become the #1 bestseller in Military Science Fiction. Which is why we have moved up the schedule, and instead of releasing the first book in the companion series next, we will be releasing the next book in the series in less than four weeks.
Survival of the fittest in space just became a lot more dangerous.
Eleven colonies have gone dark across Federation space. Senior cadets are being deployed to a frontier that devours ships and returns only silence. Constantine Ramsey returns to a Space Fleet Academy transformed by war. He and his fellow second-years are being thrust into leadership roles for which they’re not ready. The new curriculum sets aside theory for brutal new training in surviving first contact with alien predators and making terrible decisions where every choice comes with a body count.
But when their latest training exercise feels too dangerously specific, Constantine begins to suspect the Academy has crossed a line. As rumors about forbidden genetic programs and agency crackdowns intensify, he’s forced to confront a terrifying question: How far will the Federation go to indoctrinate the leaders humanity needs to survive in a harsh and unforgiving universe? And when the Mandate demands the unthinkable of him, will he have the strength to do what he believes to be right?
What this demonstrates is that science fiction is at its best when it is a literature of science-inspired ideas, not a literature of characters, ideologies, or representations. Biostellar is an idea that is the result of combining the latest in hard biological science as exhibited in The Frozen Gene with a) Star Trek and b) the boarding school tradition that realized its peak science fiction depiction in Ender’s Game.
There are, of course, other influences. JDA is heavily influenced by Lois McMaster Bujold’s Barrayar works. I am heavily influenced, in the science fiction context, by Frank Herbert, and, to a lesser extent, Dan Simmons. The combination effectively provides JDA’s lighter approach with gravity and my darker approach with humanism.
Our objective is to release one Biostellar novel every month for at least the next six months. It’s an ambitious one, particularly in light of how it is not even in my top seven priorities for 2026, but I genuinely think we can not only do it, but do it while maintaining a high level of entertainment value to the readers.
The Triad of Truth known as the Triveritas is a powerful tool, but it must be wielded with appropriate humility. Veriphysics does not claim omniscience. It does not promise a God’s-eye view. It does not pretend that sufficient method will dissolve all mystery and render reality fully transparent to human inquiry.
The Apostle Paul’s words provide the governing image: “For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known.” This is not mysticism or obscurantism; it is realism about the human condition. We are finite creatures attempting to know an infinite reality. Our knowledge is genuine, and we truly see what we see, but what we see is limited and partial. The glass is real; we cannot step outside it. The darkness is real; we cannot fully dispel it.
The Enlightenment rejected these intrinsic limitations. It imagined that progress would asymptotically approach complete knowledge, that better methods would gradually eliminate the darkness, that the glass would eventually become perfectly transparent. This fantasy produced the characteristic Enlightenment vices: overconfidence, dogmatism dressed as skepticism, the dismissal of mystery as mere ignorance awaiting resolution. When reality refused to cooperate, when quantum mechanics revealed irreducible indeterminacy, when cosmology discovered that most of the universe is dark, when every attempt to explain consciousness in material terms failed, the Enlightenment had no resources for acknowledging its limits. It could only assume that future science would somehow manage to solve what present science could not, with all its empirical falsifications indefinitely deferred.
Veriphysics begins where the Enlightenment failed: with the acknowledgment that some darkness is permanent, that some limits are structural, that creaturely knowledge is necessarily partial. This acknowledgment is not defeat; it is the precondition of genuine inquiry. The investigator who knows he sees through a glass will attend carefully to the glass, he will study its distortions, compensate for its limitations, and refine his vision within the constraints it imposes. The investigator who imagines he sees directly will not notice his errors until they have produced catastrophe.
The Triveritas operates within these epistemic limits. It does not promise certainty; it offers warranted assent. It does not claim to establish truth absolutely; it distinguishes claims that deserve belief from claims that do not. The distinction is real and important even if neither category achieves the Enlightenment’s fantasy of transparent access to the thing itself. We can know with certainty that Neo-Darwinism is false, being refuted by logic, math, and empirical evidence, without pretending to know, fully or even in meaningful part, what the true historical account of Man’s biological origins were. We can know that the Enlightenment’s foundations are rotten without claiming to have mapped every room in the edifice that will replace it.
This humility is not weakness but strength. The Enlightenment’s overconfidence made it brittle; when the failures accumulated, it had no way to assimilate them except denial. The intellectual humility of Veriphysics makes it resilient; it expects partial knowledge, provisional conclusions, and future revisions. The tradition developed for two millennia precisely because it understood itself as an ongoing inquiry, not a finished system. The Enlightenment failed in less than one-quarter that time because it did not. Veriphysics builds upon the philosophical tradition, adding the mathematical and empirical tools that the tradition did not possess or did not deploy, while retaining the structural humility that kept the tradition open to growth.
Having already dropped 1,200 bombs on Iran, the IDF, along with the US Air Force, is close to achieving air supremacy in Iranian airspace.
In June 2025, it took several days for the air force to achieve such supremacy, which signifies that essentially Iran’s anti-aircraft defenses have been so battered that Israeli aircraft and drones can hover over target areas for extended periods without worrying as much about whether air defenses might target them.
Earlier on Sunday morning, the IDF announced that it had already dropped over 1,200 bombs on Iranian targets since the start of the war, the largest air operation in Israel’s history
On Saturday night, the IDF had said that over 200 aircraft had struck 500 Iranian targets. An IDF video showed two major initial waves of attacks.
The first wave struck what appeared to be dozens of radars and anti-aircraft defenses, especially in the part of Iran closer to Israel and the Tehran area.
During the second wave, the air force struck Iran’s ballistic missile apparatus to attempt to reduce its ability to strike the Israeli home front.
On Sunday morning, the US said it had struck around 900 Iranian targets.
Now, the perception they’re trying to create is that the attacks were so devastating that Iran’s ability to contest the air has already been destroyed. And certainly, the initial US and Israeli reports of the death of the Ayatollah Khamenei and part of his family at the family home turned out to be true.
However, there are some anomalies to note here. First, if Israel had total air supremacy in June 2025, why was it Israel who begged for the ceasefire? Second, why didn’t the Iranians attack the US carrier groups that were attacking them? Third, how were the US and Israeli bombing campaigns able to disrupt or destroy the underground bunkers with the relatively small explosive packages available to the fighter-jets and missiles utilized? Fourth, why are the Iranians attacking luxury hotels in Dubai with drones even as they insist they are attacking military targets?
And fifth, why did Khamenei stay at home, awaiting the inevitable attack, instead of doing what most heads of state do and directing operations from a secure bunker. Sixth, why are there reports that Netanyahu attempted to fly to Cyprus, was denied permission to land, and was forced to fly to Berlin instead? Shouldn’t he be in a command center like the Short Fake Trump?
Which is why I don’t think we should pretend to actually have any idea what’s going on. Never forget that after 30 days of air supremacy and bombing so relentless that they came under attack every 10 hours on the average, an Iraqi division still retained 85 percent of its vehicles in working order. That was a long time ago, and certainly technology has improved, but it’s a fact of military history worth keeping in mind.
Another anomaly: Iran agreed to zero stockpiling. The proclaimed justification for the attacks is obviously false, as per an Omani diplomat:
Iran agreed to zero stockpiling of enriched uranium. Not reduced stockpiling. Zero. They agreed to down-blend existing stockpiles to the lowest possible level. They agreed to convert them into irreversible fuel. They agreed to full IAEA verification with potential US inspector access. They agreed, in the Foreign Minister’s phrase, to “never, ever” possess nuclear material for a bomb. I have worked in diplomacy for seven years. I have never seen a country agree to this many things this quickly. I made a spreadsheet of the concessions. It had fourteen rows. I color-coded it. Green for confirmed. Yellow for pending. By February 21 the spreadsheet was entirely green. I printed it. It is on my desk in Muscat. It is still green.
That phrase took eleven days. “Never, ever.” The Iranians initially offered “not seek to.” The Americans wanted “will not under any circumstances.” We landed on “never, ever” at 2:14 AM on a Tuesday in Muscat. I typed the final version myself. I used Times New Roman because Geneva prefers it. The document was fourteen pages. I was proud of every comma.
Here is what they said, in the order they said it.
February 24: “We have a once-in-a-generation opportunity.” — The Foreign Minister, private briefing to Gulf Cooperation Council ambassadors. I prepared the slide deck. Slide 14 was the implementation timeline. Slide 15 was the signing ceremony logistics. I had reserved the Palais des Nations in Geneva, Room XX. It seats four hundred. We discussed pen brands for the signing. The Iranians preferred Montblanc. The Americans had no preference. I ordered twelve Montblanc Meisterstucks at six hundred and thirty dollars each. They arrive on Tuesday.
February 27, 8:30 AM EST: “The deal is within our reach.” — The Foreign Minister, CBS Face the Nation. He sat across from Margaret Brennan. He said broad political terms could be agreed “tomorrow” with ninety days for technical implementation in Vienna. He said, and I wrote this line for the briefing card he carried in his breast pocket: “If we just allow diplomacy the space it needs.” He praised the American envoys by name. Steve Witkoff. Jared Kushner. He said both had been constructive.
I watched from the Four Seasons Georgetown. The minibar had cashews. I ate the cashews. They were nineteen dollars. The most expensive cashew I have ever eaten. But it was a good morning and we were within our reach.
February 27, 2:00 PM EST: Meeting with Vice President Vance, Washington. The Foreign Minister presented our progress. Zero stockpiling. Full verification. Irreversible conversion. “Never, ever.” The Vice President used the word “encouraging.” His aide took notes on an iPad. The aide did not make eye contact for the last nine minutes of the meeting. I noticed this. Noticing things is the only part of my job that is not water glasses.
February 27, 4:00 PM EST: “Not happy with the pace.” — President Trump, to reporters.
Not happy with the pace.
We had achieved zero stockpiling. Full IAEA verification. Irreversible fuel conversion. Inspector access. And the phrase “never, ever,” which took eleven days and cost me two hundred and twelve trips down a forty-seven-meter hallway.
Every American president since Carter has failed to get Iran to agree to this. Forty-five years.
Not happy with the pace.
Finally, who are the regime’s replacements? Is it possible this is just a larger version of the inside job on Maduro by Iranians beholden to Clown World? If we see a rapid peace deal promptly declared with the new Iranian regime that abandons BRICS and stands with Israel, we’ll have a pretty good idea what actually happened.
The US has suffered 200 casualties in Iranian retaliatory strikes on bases across the Middle East, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has claimed. Backed by the US, Israel launched what was described as a preemptive operation against Iranian military and nuclear-related targets in the early hours of Saturday, claiming the strikes were aimed at neutralizing threats posed by the Islamic Republic in the region.
US President Donald Trump later confirmed that the White House had supported West Jerusalem in conducting the strikes, citing the failure of nuclear diplomacy as a direct trigger for the move.
“As a result of missile strikes on American bases, at least 200 US military personnel were killed and injured,” the Tasnim news agency reported Saturday, citing a statement by the IRGC.
It would appear that the preemptive operation failed, if the response to it was more deadly than Round One eight months ago. It also appears that the Iranian response was a measured one, since attacking the bases and not the ships is an observably less deadly response. I think the report of a hypersonic missile striking the 5-star hotel in Dubai is a warning of sorts, since it could have just as easily targeted a carrier if it actually was a hypersonic.
It does raise some obvious questions about who was staying in that hotel who would merit the attention of what would presumably be one of Iran’s most high-performance missiles.
Of course, everything has to be taken with a grain of salt. The USA isn’t going to report its casualties, and Israel has already claimed to have killed Ali Khamenei and will no doubt be proclaiming that every missile aimed at it was shot down except for one that hit a car and scratched the paint a little while imposing strict military censorship.
UPDATE: The air defenses observably aren’t even keeping out the cheap drones.
UPDATE: Darkstream tonight to discuss the latest developments.
UPDATE: Israeli Air Force conducts its largest-ever attack as over 200 aircraft strike 500 targets in Iran.
UPDATE: Missile impacts reported in central Israel as Iran launches heavy retaliation. Over 200 missiles were launched toward Israel as the joint Israel-US campaign continued to strike targets across the Islamic regime.
UPDATE: Netanyahu and Trump have both said that Khamenei is dead.
Apparently Netanyahu was losing confidence that Trump was going to do his bidding and start the war with Iran like he was told to do, so he’s trying to force the president’s hand:
Israel launched a daylight missile attack on Iran on Saturday morning follows weeks of knife-edge tensions building up between Donald Trump and the Ayatollah.
Israel Katz, the Israeli Defense Minister, announcement that the country is under a state of emergency as thick smoke rose from an explosion in downtown Tehran.
Iranian state media reported explosions going off in their capital city. The apparent strike happened near the offices of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
The IDF launched the surprise ‘preemptive’ attack before warning its own citizens to prepare to take cover if the Iranians fight back, with sirens already being heard across Israel.
Israel’s Defense Force said in a national warning: ‘This is a proactive alert to prepare the public for the possibility of missiles being launched toward the State of Israel.’
It’s not exactly a mystery why Israel has become so hated around the world under the Netanyahu regime. I mean, how many wars can you start, and how many foreign countries can you “preemptively” attack before people figure out that maybe you’re not the victim?
Iran obviously has the right to defend itself. Although it sounds like a pretty small attack, so Iran would do well to avoid taking the obvious bait and refraining from responding until it doesn’t have two carriers and one-third of the US air force parked outside its borders.