Israel Declares War After Hamas Attacks. UPDATE: Israel Ends Ceasefire, Begins Bombing Gaza

So Washington offer Hamas leadership a free path to any where they want and protection with $2 billion

To leave Gaza, hand over weapons and say they were defeated they rejected.
Also said, even if we leave they resistance will still be alive.

In so many words they saying resistance is the byproduct of oppression, suppression, torture and many other things.

Hamas agree to hand over 5 hostages for 50 days of ceasefire and continued talks for ending of fighting.(which is what was agreed to months ago)
NetInYahoo adding shit to prolong this, dude trying to buy time.
Israelis are tired of his bullshitting
 
What these dudes gonna kill another 40 thousand people if they don’t lay down there weapons.

Why the Palestinians have to leave Gaza?
No one have answered this question for me yet.




 
What these dudes gonna kill another 40 thousand people if they don’t lay down there weapons.

Why the Palestinians have to leave Gaza?
No one have answered this question for me yet.






Not without escalating the conflict. Bibi's ask is for Palestinians to stop fighting back, volunteer to exile all 1.2M of themselves to other counties, even though neighboring countries are not accepting any mass exodus, and blindly trust Israel to complete the next phase of the Ceasefire that it already broke.
 
Last edited:
@peter.parker1 you those talks we had about Hamas needing to come to an agreement with Israel?
We isreal have creasefire agreement with Lebanon and Palestine.
They’re killing folks each day in both countries soooooo idk
 
@peter.parker1 you those talks we had about Hamas needing to come to an agreement with Israel?
We isreal have creasefire agreement with Lebanon and Palestine.
They’re killing folks each day in both countries soooooo idk

Israel is spiraling out of control Bibi is burning everything he's fighting alphabet boys (Shin Bet), the Supreme Court as a group and members of the Supreme Court individually , IDF officers who didn't want that Gaza-2.0, cuz he still needs an armed conflict to avoid that cell. IDF has no plan inside Gaza other than killing civilians and has to deal with a very high number of soldiers not showing up , Houthis with their missiles are breaking Israeli population morale not to mention those from the southern part who really thought that Eilat port could resume its activity, those from the northern part don't want to leave and return to that border with Lebanon ...

it's over ! it's chaos on almost every given front !
 
Israel is spiraling out of control Bibi is burning everything he's fighting alphabet boys (Shin Bet), the Supreme Court as a group and members of the Supreme Court individually , IDF officers who didn't want that Gaza-2.0, cuz he still needs an armed conflict to avoid that cell. IDF has no plan inside Gaza other than killing civilians and has to deal with a very high number of soldiers not showing up , Houthis with their missiles are breaking Israeli population morale not to mention those from the southern part who really thought that Eilat port could resume its activity, those from the northern part don't want to leave and return to that border with Lebanon ...

it's over ! it's chaos on almost every given front !

They going stupid in Gaza right now

 
They going stupid in Gaza right now



Bibi even managed to fracture the IDF , so now among Israeli military aviation is the branch Bibi can count on at 100% , infantry is another story so not surprised here and we can expect more of that coming from a sore loser !

knowing that it doesn't change shit on the battlefield !
 
Bibi even managed to fracture the IDF , so now among Israeli military aviation is the branch Bibi can count on at 100% , infantry is another story so not surprised here and we can expect more of that coming from a sore loser !

knowing that it doesn't change shit on the battlefield !
Bruh this shit is crazy

They wiping out part of Gaza, they wiping out Syrian military capabilities, they bombing southern Lebanon, I think they shot at Lebanon Army solders, bombing Yemen

And itching to bomb Iran
 
Bruh this shit is crazy

They wiping out part of Gaza, they wiping out Syrian military capabilities, they bombing southern Lebanon, I think they shot at Lebanon Army solders, bombing Yemen

And itching to bomb Iran

they're lost ! that reaction of bombing everyone in the region except those really able to kick their asses (Iran) tells you everything, that defeat against the Hamas has a very very deep impact the country is in a free fall and all that money coming from the US won't save the day !
 
they're lost ! that reaction of bombing everyone in the region except those really able to kick their asses (Iran) tells you everything, that defeat against the Hamas has a very very deep impact the country is in a free fall and all that money coming from the US won't save the day !

I haven’t paid much attention to it, tariffs and Yemen been my main focus

That shit is popping

But have Hamas started full fledge attacks
 

Trump Tariffs Threaten U.S. Weapons Production​

Written by Camilla Jessen
Apr.04 - 2025 12:59 PM CET
Trusted by

Follow us on Google News Follow us on MSN Follow us on X

News
Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Photo: Wikimedia Commons

New trade measures could have major consequences, according to defense officials and industry analysts.


TRENDING NOW
Alexandros Michailidis / Shutterstock.comNATO Chief Defends Trump
Photo: Shutterstock.comDo You Own One of the Worst Used Cars? Expensive Repairs and Constant Issues
The U.S. government’s new import tariffs, introduced by President Donald Trump, could cause major problems for American weapons production, according to a report by Politico.

The tariffs apply to goods from most countries and may raise the cost of military equipment, delay production, and hurt long-standing international partnerships, the report says.

The Pentagon has spent years building a global network of suppliers that now risk being affected by the new trade rules.

Politico spoke with more than a dozen lawmakers, diplomats, government officials, and defense industry experts. Many of them warned that the tariffs could cause U.S. allies to rethink cooperation and look elsewhere for weapons or technology.

“The Pentagon has spent decades building, funding and developing a global network of suppliers and companies that are now facing tariffs,” Politico writes.

“Without defense exemptions, the administration could undo much of that work.”
Also read

Trump "Very Angry" With Putin—Delays Call Over Ukraine War
Some major defense programs may be hit by the tariffs. These include the F-35 fighter jet, which involves 20 countries, and missile defense systems made together with Norway and Israel.

These projects are key to protecting U.S. allies in Europe and Asia, especially as Russia and China continue to upgrade their military power.

The Trump administration hopes to bring more jobs to the U.S. by making more foreign parts locally, but finding enough workers could be a problem.

The defense industry has already had a hard time hiring, as many skilled workers prefer better-paying jobs in the service sector, which often offer more stable work.

Senator Mark Kelly pointed out that many defense parts are built in steps that cross borders multiple times. That means a single part might be taxed several times before it’s finished.

“Prices are going to go up, and the prices that the Department of Defense has to pay are going to go up,” Kelly said. “Our defense budget, if we want to maintain the same type of force, is going to get more expensive.”

 

Trump’s tariffs threaten US weapons production​

The program could make it more difficult for America to produce weapons — and keep allies.
An employee handles weapons shells


An employee handles weapons shells at the Scranton Army Ammunition Plant in Scranton, Pennsylvania on April 16, 2024. President Donald Trump's tariffs could affect U.S. weapons production. | Charly Triballeau/AFP via Getty Images

By Paul McLeary and Joe Gould

04/03/2025 05:59 PM EDT



President Donald Trump’s tariffs aren’t just an economic disruption. They’re a security one.

His program, if implemented as planned, could muddle global supply chains the Pentagon has spent decades creating, make American weapons more expensive, and complicate international efforts to counter China — such as joint ventures to build submarines with the United Kingdom and Australia.

America’s go-it-alone approach, coupled with these wider threats, may lead skeptical partners to look elsewhere for collaboration, according to a dozen diplomats, lawmakers, officials and defense industry analysts. And it will chip away at an industry that equips much of the world — shredding trust and predictability from a global defense relationship that has long benefited Washington and its allies.

“We have requirements and we’re going to do what makes sense for us,” said a diplomat from a NATO country, who like others, was granted anonymity to discuss a sensitive political issue. “We’re really looking at what we need to develop at home.”

Trump bills his tariff plan as a transformative move to equalize trade and return lost revenue to the country. But it runs the risk of destroying his other promises to turn the U.S. into an industrial powerhouse and minimize China’s power.

The White House, in its executive order announcing the tariffs, said the U.S. needs to manufacture parts “without undue reliance on imports for key inputs.”

But that’s much easier to write in a document than to do. The Pentagon has spent decades building, funding, and nurturing a global web of suppliers and companies that now face tariffs. With no carve-outs for defense, the administration could undo much of that work while delaying American-made weapons production for the country and other buyers.

“There’s going to be shortages of supplies, tit-for-tats, and our allies and other partners are going to retaliate,” said Bill Greenwalt, a former Pentagon acquisition official. “Some potentially vital supplies are either going to cost a whole heck of a lot more than what they did or they’re just not going to be available.”

The global tariffs — ranging from 20 percent on imports from the European Union to 10 percent on the U.K. and Australian goods — are also likely to upend defense collaborations long considered successful joint ventures.

Such programs include the F-35 fighter plane, which is flown by 20 nations in a unique partnership designed to give participating countries manufacturing work, along with important rocket and air defense projects with Norway and Israel.

These and other projects are key to defense in Europe and the Indo-Pacific, where allies are racing to stay ahead of an unpredictable Russia and a modernizing China.

The partnerships, crafted over years of meetings and agreements with Washington, are now being called into question.

“We count on the U.S. for the best equipment,” said a European official. “European industrial capacity has greatly improved and we want to be security providers, not just consumers.” This means investing more in European manufacturing to lessen reliance on American parts and supplies for weapons, the person said.

One especially promising Biden-era initiative, which brought Australia, the U.K. and the U.S. together to build nuclear-powered submarines and share technologies, could end if prices for parts get too high.

“There are all these ripple effects,” Greenwalt said. “Contractors can be told to eat the costs and they can try and develop lower cost domestic suppliers, but that would take years. You don’t snap your fingers and the supply network readjusts itself. It takes a lot of time, effort, and a lot of money.”

The Australian and British embassies, White House and Pentagon didn’t respond to requests for comment.

The administration hopes to create more domestic jobs by manufacturing foreign parts for weapons in the U.S. But companies may not have the people to do that work. The defense industry has struggled for years to attract employees due to competition from other manufacturers and the booming service industry, which often pays more and has consistent work.

“There are simply not enough people in the aerospace and defense sector to meet the current need,” Dak Hardwick, vice president of international affairs at the Aerospace Industries Association told a meeting of American and European defense executives on Thursday.

And the complexity of defense production could mean multiple tariffs.

Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.), a senior Senate Armed Services member whose state raked in more than $14.5 billion in DOD contracts last year, noted that the global supply chain is so complicated that some defense products cross borders multiple times as they’re assembled, accumulating more tariffs each time.

“The prices are going to go up, and the prices that DOD has to pay are going to go up,” Kelly said. “Our defense budget, if we want to maintain the same type of force, will get more expensive.”

Business groups are requesting the defense industry receive a strategic carve-out to avoid higher costs for the Pentagon, crucial supply chain disruptions and failures to meet the country’s security commitments.

“Our defense industrial base over decades [was] built on a global supply chain,” said Keith Webster, president of the Chamber of Commerce’s Defense and Aerospace Council. “In this case, the federal government’s the consumer, so its prices will increase.”

Some Republican lawmakers are also pushing for an exemption. “I know that their ultimate goal is to onshore everything,” said Sen. Kevin Cramer, (R-N.D.) a Defense Modernization Caucus co-chair, who is in favor of a carve-out. “But even at that, the onshoring will be more expensive than non-tariff imports.”

The new realities are sinking in for longtime U.S. allies, who are increasingly focused on coming up with ways to increase their own defense production.

“We have to learn from this,” one NATO official said. “Now is the time.”

Filed under: White House, Department Of Defense, Pentagon

 
I haven’t paid much attention to it, tariffs and Yemen been my main focus

That shit is popping

But have Hamas started full fledge attacks

nothing serious so far they leave Egypt and Qatar leading those negotiations but among Al Qassam brigade some just want to resume that ass whooping ! Hamas problem is that they want to show to rest of the population of Gaza that they're doing everything for that ceasefire they're like the Hezbollah in Lebanon !
 
nothing serious so far they leave Egypt and Qatar leading those negotiations but among Al Qassam brigade some just want to resume that ass whooping ! Hamas problem is that they want to show to rest of the population of Gaza that they're doing everything for that ceasefire they're like the Hezbollah in Lebanon !

Right same exact way

“See we’re obeying the ceasefire it’s Bibi and em’ who don’t obey agreements”
 
Back
Top