Cyberwarfare - the story thats not being covered - IRAN


Olde Hornet

Well-Known Member

Opinion: The next front is already here in war against Iran​



Wars do not end when the bombs stop falling. They evolve.

After 18 days of sustained U.S. and Israeli strikes, Iran’s air force is grounded. Its navy is at the bottom of the Gulf. Its drone stockpiles, once a credible threat, are finite and shrinking. Tehran knows this. So does every intelligence analyst who is watching the situation.

What Iran still has is its cyber capability. And last week, Iran used it.

The attack on Stryker Corporation was not a nuisance. It was a signal. Over 200,000 devices wiped across 79 countries. Fifty terabytes of data exfiltrated. Emergency responders in Maryland cut off from the system they use to transmit patient data to hospitals before a patient ever arrives. That is not a hacker playing games. It is a nation-state conducting warfare, asymmetric war. Iran is good at it.

The group that claimed responsibility, Handala, is a known proxy of Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence and Security. The Iranians have long understood that deniability is a strategic asset. You do not need to sign your name to an attack when everyone already recognizes your fingerprints.

This matters for how we think about what comes next.
 
This what you hear from the American broadcast media:

Trump gives Iran 48-hour ultimatum to reopen Strait of Hormuz or face strikes on power plants​

President Donald Trump issued a 48-hour ultimatum to Iran on Saturday, warning the U.S. would strike its power plants if the Strait of Hormuz is not reopened.

"If Iran doesn’t FULLY OPEN, WITHOUT THREAT, the Strait of Hormuz, within 48 HOURS from this exact point in time, the United States of America will hit and obliterate their various POWER PLANTS, STARTING WITH THE BIGGEST ONE FIRST!" Trump said in a post on Truth Social.

The president's threat represents a notable escalation in rhetoric as tensions surge over the strategically vital waterway.

Traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, a global choke point for oil and gas transport that supplies roughly one-fifth of the world’s crude oil, has been largely limited since early March, shortly after the war with Iran began.


Now the rest of the story that you may not hear on mass broadcast media: IRAN's response - they are not playing! Be afraid, be very afraid - if agent orange does not back down.

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZVlbm0cXa54
 



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