The U.S. and Iran trade missile strikes while neighbors run for cover
The Middle East is currently hosting a giant, terrifying game of ping-pong, except the balls are precision-guided missiles and the paddles are warships. Here is the mess from last night.
The U.S. military decided to skip the diplomatic warnings and went straight for the Tomahawk missiles, launching them from the USS Michael Murphy at Iranian radar and air defense sites. In response, Iran started firing back—but instead of just aiming at American bases, they basically swung at everyone in the neighborhood.
This turned the night into a massive, chaotic air-defense drill for half the region. The Royal Jordanian Air Force had to play goalie, knocking down 20 Iranian missiles mid-air. Over in Kuwait and Bahrain, local militaries were scrambling to intercept hostile drones, resulting in burning debris raining down on residential streets.
It gets worse. The U.S. also targeted a Palau-flagged oil tanker, the M/T Settebello, which was allegedly running Iranian oil in violation of an American blockade. A precision strike on its engine room left three Indian crew members dead, turning a tense geopolitical standoff into a tragic human cost.
Geopolitics has officially devolved into a high-stakes arcade game where bystanders pay the price for the players' high scores.
Source: UPI
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