Iran War Cost Tracker

(iran-cost-ticker.com)

258 points | by TSiege 3 hours ago

43 comments

  • bawolff 3 hours ago
    Wouldn't some of these costs be present either way? Without a war US would still have aircraft carriers, they would just be floating somewhere else.

    On the other side, it seems like this is not tracking interceptor costs (presumably due to it being classified), which have certainly been used extensively and are extremely expensive. For that matter i doubt we have a very clear picture of how much ordinance has been used in general.

    [To be clear, im not doubting war is very expensive]

    • bubblewand 3 hours ago
      A carrier operating at sea on the other side of the world is a ton more expensive than a carrier in port at home. The Ford in particular would probably be in port now if not for these back-to-back expensive adventures, they’ve been deployed for a remarkably long time now.

      (As for whether this reflects only those added costs, I don’t know)

      • lefstathiou 3 hours ago
        Carriers aren't meant to hang out at port at home. The US has protected global sea lanes for 80 years.
        • adriand 2 hours ago
          > The US has protected global sea lanes for 80 years.

          But rather than protect global sea lanes, the US is bombing Iran. That’s not the same thing.

          The idea that the war isn’t costing money for personnel because those people would be doing something anyway makes no sense. They could be doing something else. In fact, they could be doing something that increases the wealth and wellbeing of the world, rather than destroying things. So from that perspective, the cost is far higher than what is shown here.

          Then there’s the loss of innocent lives. It would be unconscionable to put a price tag on the lives of dozens of Iranian girls killed when their school was flattened and to show it on this website, and yet, this is not “free” either.

          • bawolff 2 hours ago
            > But rather than protect global sea lanes, the US is bombing Iran. That’s not the same thing.

            Arguably the primary threat to modern sea lanes is Iran.

            Right now Iran is harrasing traffic. Previously the Houthis, generally considered an Iranian proxy, were harrasing traffic. Its all kind of the same war, this is just the end game.

            • mikepurvis 1 hour ago
              The first gulf war was 1990. The US has been at war with various factions of the Middle East more or less continuously for thirty five years. The current president specifically campaigned on no new foreign wars and repeatedly tried to bully the Nobel committee into awarding him a peace prize before accepting a second hand one from another world leader and a sham one from FIFA of all things.

              What makes anyone think that this latest attack is the "end game" vs just the latest expensive chapter?

              • karmakurtisaani 40 minutes ago
                The only end game here is distraction from the Epstein files and a potential coup to prevent midterm elections. The whole war is just plain stupid.
            • Terr_ 2 hours ago
              If it were that straightforward, right now the US would (A) have a consistent set of demands/goals that include shipping security and (B) a large international coalition of support.

              Neither are true.

              P.S.: Plus, of course, the whole problem where "protecting global sea lanes" typically requires a different approach than "start a war by assassinating the leadership you were negotiating with."

              • bagels 2 hours ago
                JD vance whined that we shouldn't protect middle east shipping lanes because he believes it helps Europe more than the US.
                • IncreasePosts 2 hours ago
                  Don't make me defend JD vance.

                  He said Europe should pay their fair share for protection since 40% of their trade passes through those lanes but only 3% of America's.

                  • tw-20260303-001 1 hour ago
                    Who started the war. Why did you start the war. Dude, go home.
                    • IncreasePosts 1 hour ago
                      You really think the US should stop supporting Ukraine?
                      • mongol 30 minutes ago
                        The US is hardly supporting Ukraine any longer.
                      • tw-20260303-001 31 minutes ago
                        Who's talking about Ukraine here. Have you lost your mind? The comment you replied to talks about Middle East shipping routes.
              • bawolff 1 hour ago
                US messaging has been all over the place, but stop funding proxies has been one of the more consistent parts.

                To be clear, im not saying protecting shipping is the primary reason for this war. I'm just saying if that is what you think usa should be doing, then this war makes sense.

                As far as b) there are a lot of factors. Its not like freedom of navigation is the top concern of every country in the world.

            • RobRivera 2 hours ago
              People should begin quantifying the commercial freight global costs incurred from the Houthi harassment. There is a basic ROI one can do that impacts not just US interests, but global interests.
            • RobotToaster 2 hours ago
              > Right now Iran is harrasing traffic

              gee, I wonder why they're doing that.

              • edm0nd 1 hour ago
                [flagged]
                • nielsbot 1 hour ago
                  "terrorism"

                  who bombed them first and repeatedly? and embargoed and sanctioned them before that? and tore up the nuclear deal? and before that installed the shah so we could get the oil?

                • seattle_spring 1 hour ago
                  "The terrorists hate our freedoms."

                  This seems like a perfect opportunity for a revival of David Cross's standup career.

            • PieTime 1 hour ago
              The end game is when the US backed dictatorships collapse, this is the end of American power, not the beginning.
              • bawolff 1 hour ago
                That seems pretty unlikely at the moment.
            • throwaw12 57 minutes ago
              > Arguably the primary threat to modern sea lanes is Iran.

              Such a strange take. Can you share number of attacks by Iran in the last 10 years in sea lanes, where it was started solely by Iran?

              > Right now Iran is harrasing traffic

              As a response to attacks, Iran AFAIK wasn't harassing anyone in the ocean traffic up until 3 days ago

            • mothballed 2 hours ago
              Houthi harassments was also a byproduct of the Israel-US "self defense" against the Iranian backed hamas attacks. Maybe it is pointless to pontificate whether the the tic-for-tat would have been initiated had the Israel-US coalition had stopped at punishing the Oct. 7 terrorists rather than leveling half of gaza, although I'm not convinced it was an inevitable byproduct.
          • rwyinuse 2 hours ago
            What about tens of thousands of peaceful civilians who have been killed by the Iranian regime during past decades? The alternative to this war is allowing the Iranian government to keep doing that, business as usual.

            In my opinion bombing people responsible for these atrocities increases the well-being of the world. Most Iranians seem to agree.

            • enaaem 1 hour ago
              I don't see how this is going to work without troops on the ground?

              The US had air supremacy, troops on the ground and a friendly regime in Afghanistan and Vietnam, and it did not work. (I am not sure if Iraq was a success, but I am sure that people were super tired of it, and did not want something like that again)

              What is just bombing going to do? They just rebuilt their weapons and you have to bomb them again in 1-2 years?

              The administration has already suggested sending troops as an option. It does not help that they are just making things up as they go.

              • mothballed 1 hour ago
                Trump is at his best point to save face right now. It's now or never, IMO. He killed an entire leadership lineup of Iran. If he pulls out now it is a clear victory for him. If he continues the campaign 2 or 3 more weeks it's tough for me to find another out for him that doesn't involve a lot more risk to the USA.

                Given he did take this clear victory and cash in, in Venezuela, there is some hope he'll do the same in Iran.

            • lejalv 1 hour ago
              Now turn your argument towards Saudi Arabia, or any of the human-rights violating countries that the US supports or has supported recently.

              Your opinion is respectable, but not compatible with any idea of “justice”.

              • khazhoux 28 minutes ago
                The point being that eliminating a murderous tyrant is bad, because there are other murderous tyrants?
            • postflopclarity 1 hour ago
              sometimes there are more than two options between

              "do nothing"

              and the clusterfuck the current administration has embarked on.

              • bawolff 1 hour ago
                Sometimes yes, but is there in this specific case?

                Because from my vantage point it looks like the choice is, status quo or bomb them. Its not like america can double sanction iran, they are already fully economically sanctioned. What is the middle ground here?

                • cgio 42 minutes ago
                  You could relax sanctions in exchange for other priorities. A persistent pain is less effective than an acute one anyway. There’s carrots too in negotiations. But no, we cannot do what a previous president did.
            • hollerith 29 minutes ago
              But what you describe was not the motivation behind the decision by Washington to bomb Iran. The motivations were Tehran's nuclear program and Tehran's support for groups like Hezbollah and generally Tehran's promotion of violence and instability outside Iran in the Middle East.
            • we_have_options 1 hour ago
              wonder what your view is of ICE actions against peaceful protesters in MN?
            • mierz00 1 hour ago
              I’m sure the welfare of the Iranian people is a top priority for Trump.
            • bjourne 1 hour ago
              This justification for bombing Iran is dumb as fuck. In a few days the number of civilians killed by US-Israeli bombings will surpass the number of civilians killed by the regime in decades.
              • irishcoffee 28 minutes ago
                Possibly.

                What is that threshold? I've heard anywhere from 3k to 300k. You can definitively answer this question?

                • bjourne 22 minutes ago
                  Killing more people won't bring dead people back to life! I can't believe I have to spell this out.
          • tick_tock_tick 1 hour ago
            > But rather than protect global sea lanes, the US is bombing Iran. That’s not the same thing.

            With Iran's support of the Houthi I think you'll find they are exactly the same thing.

        • nitwit005 16 minutes ago
          They haven't exactly been sending aircraft carriers after pirates. It's a huge excess of firepower for any traditional threat to shipping.

          The US has liked to portray itself as the world's protector, but often that's just spin. The carriers are big weapons of war, meant for waging war.

        • state_less 2 hours ago
          The strait of hormuz is the opposite of protected right now. Insurance companies aren't willing to cover ships if they enter the strait to pick up a load of oil, so little commercial traffic is occurring.

          The real cost should include the spike in oil prices, the world consumes about 100 million barrels a day, so every $10 increase costs the world a $1 billion a day. We're already up ~$10, and it might continue to rise depending on how things go. You probably should include LNG in there too. If this oil halt is protracted, your stocks and bonds will be dragged down as well.

        • Retric 2 hours ago
          We have surplus carriers specifically to allow them to average a large percentage of their time at home unlike container ships who spend the vast majority of their time in service. Many systems that are both bespoke and complex means lots and lots of maintenance issues.

          Sure the Navy can Airlift in parts etc, but that’s obviously very expensive and less obviously more dangerous.

          • nradov 1 hour ago
            We don't have a surplus of carriers. We have a shortage, at least relative to their current tasking. They're overstretched and behind on maintenance. This is unsustainable so the civilian leadership will have to either cut back on missions or build more.
            • Retric 32 minutes ago
              There’s always an argument for more equipment, but you need to start building them long before they enter service and need to set budgets long before any specific crisis.

              Funding for Nimitz was authorized in 1967 they started construction the next year and it was in service in 2025. The US has a very large and very expensive carrier fleet today because people decided it was worth having X boats a long time ago and they calculated X under the assumption that a significant number would be spending time docked / on the other side of the planet from where the conflict is.

              Obviously, part of that equation was based around warfare and the likelihood of losing some / extending deployments etc, but what we want today has no barring on what we actually built as all those decisions happened a long time ago.

              TLDR; Having more than strictly needed for normal operations = having a surplus when something abnormal occurs.

        • dspillett 1 hour ago
          Exactly: that protection isn't happening right now because those resources are doing something else. The money would be spent anyway, but doing something that is normally considered useful, and that useful thing is not happening to the same capacity as before. Therefore there is an opportunity cost to consider.
          • yberreby 1 hour ago
            The Houthis have been doing a lot of shipping lane disruption, recently. They have sunk several ships.

            Iran's Islamic regime has provided material and monetary support to the Houthis.

            Crippling their capabilities aligns with the goal of protecting global shipping.

        • idontwantthis 3 hours ago
          They aren't all deployed at all times and the Ford is more than overdue to be in Port. The sailors are notably suffering on this deployment and there is a ton of deferred maintenance.
      • bawolff 3 hours ago
        True.

        Honestly i think my main opinion is that we have no idea what the number is, but its probably a large one.

      • RobRivera 2 hours ago
        Carriers routinely engage in war gaming and cruises. They dont port if they are not actively engaged in war.
    • runako 2 hours ago
      > Wouldn't some of these costs be present either way?

      This is a fair way to account for the cost, because the assets were procured and personnel hired years ago for just this purpose.

      Put another way: we would not need this fleet at all if we did not expect to use it in a manner like this. (For example, Spain did not choose to have this capability and so has not borne a cost of maintaining this option for the preceding decades.) Through that lens, the true cost of this war would involve counting back to before this round of hostilities began.

      It's only fair to count _at least_ the "time on task" for all the assets.

    • 1970-01-01 3 hours ago
      Yes, the actual accounting is quite poor and makes bad assumptions. Don't use this info for anything important or serious.
    • eschulz 3 hours ago
      Right, consider the personnel costs that are displayed here. They were already getting paid this past weekend either way (admittedly the military may have had to hire some last minute contractors to help with the operation).
    • stevenwoo 2 hours ago
      There's someone quoted here who estimated UAE by itself cost in fighting off the Shahed drones at $23-28 per $1 spent on Shahed drone at $55000 (they know how many got through and the claimed success rate and the methods they are using to defend UAE) https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/tech-news/shahed-drones-iran-us...
    • blktiger 3 hours ago
      I think that's true, but I like that this site includes a "ESTIMATED MUNITIONS & EQUIPMENT COSTS" section that shows the value of actual, expended munitions which are all one-time costs directly resulting from the war.
      • bawolff 3 hours ago
        Seems like a massive understatement given how much of this war has been shooting down iranian missiles. According to wikipedia, a single patriot missile cost 4 million, and you often have to use multiple to get a succesful shoot down.
        • dexihand 2 hours ago
          This. 220 mil/day is 55 PAC3-MSEs. Iran has fired ~100 ballistic missiles alone per day. Probably spending that on interceptors alone.
    • sva_ 2 hours ago
      Also, the taking the production/purchasing cost of some F15s that were 25 - 35 years old doesn't make a whole lot of sense, or does it?
      • lukan 51 minutes ago
        They still work, if they get shot down, you will have to pay to replace them. (also using them is expensive and causes wear, especially under the stress of real action, where the limits are pushed)
        • sva_ 17 minutes ago
          Yeah my 2004 3-series BMW also still works, but if it broke down, I wouldn't think I lost the price that it originally cost.
    • skeeter2020 1 hour ago
      it's also doesn't take into consideration the revenue opportunities, like USA-branded apparel, FanDuel parlay wagers, and I assume that Epic Fury is a summer Marvel franchise, or Wrestling PPV?
    • butILoveLife 3 hours ago
      Maybe, its opaque how its calculated.

      But you are keeping people on high alert, refueling further away, etc...

    • __alexs 2 hours ago
      Sure but having a bunch of resources for "defence" is very different from having a bunch of resources for "attack" in most people's mind I imagine.
    • kingkawn 3 hours ago
      Yes but right now it’s doing this war. It can’t be anywhere else, so the costs are for this deployment specifically.
      • bawolff 3 hours ago
        I think when people are asking about the cost of a war, they are asking about excess costs. How much extra money would be saved if the war didn't happen.
        • SauntSolaire 2 hours ago
          Yes, it's quite humorous to try and factor in opportunity costs for aircraft carriers, "but we could be bombing someone else!"
          • paulryanrogers 2 hours ago
            Doing actual bombing is more costing than just patrolling relatively peaceful seas, no?
            • deaddodo 50 minutes ago
              Yes, but not at the cost of the construction of an Aircraft Carrier. This is why the military uses "operational costs" (fuel, munitions, activated duty pay, equipment losses, etc) to factor the cost, not the total amount of every dollar ever spent to build+sustain a military force.
    • JohnTHaller 3 hours ago
      Iran probably wouldn't have blown up the $300m radar installation if we hadn't randomly attacked them.
      • 1234letshaveatw 2 hours ago
        [flagged]
        • tw04 2 hours ago
          History really doesn’t say otherwise. Tensions were mostly cooling after the Obama nuclear deal.

          Now the message we’ve told the world is: If you don’t want to eventually be at risk of the US attacking you, you better be nuclear armed.

          • tick_tock_tick 1 hour ago
            Of course they cooled Iran kept enriching uranium and the rest of the world agreed to ignore it.
          • 1234letshaveatw 2 hours ago
            because enriching uranium worked out so well for Iran?
            • D-Coder 2 hours ago
              Because NOT enriching uranium worked so badly for Gaddafi.
            • ripvanwinkle 2 hours ago
              because it worked out for North Korea
              • bawolff 1 hour ago
                Largely because they didn't actually need it. Their conventional artillary pointed at south korea was already (and still is) more of a deterrnt than the nuke is.
              • adventured 1 hour ago
                Nobody was desperate to invade North Korea prior to their acquisition of nukes. It's a horrific war field and combat prospect. Iraq and Afghanistan were each a cakewalk next to going into North Korea (again). North Korea was safe as they were.

                The primary threat to Gaddafi over time was internal, nukes would not have protected him. What was he going to do, nuke his own territory? The same was true for Assad.

                The primary threat to Iran's regime is internal. Nobody is invading Iran. It's a gigantic country with 93 million people. It can't be done and it's universally understood. Trump won't even speculate about it, even he knows it can't be done. What would nukes do to protect Iran's regime? Are they going to nuke their own people? Are they going to nuke Israel and US bases if the US bombs them?

                So let me get this straight: the US bombs Iran, Iran nukes Israel and some US bases, maybe even a regional foe - then Iran gets obliterated.

                That's not what would happen in reality at all. Don't take my word for it, ask Pakistan: the US threatened to bomb them [0] - despite their possession of nukes - after 9/11 if they didn't cooperate. Why would the US do that? Because the US knows that MAD doesn't work like the online armchair crowd thinks it does.

                [0] https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2006/9/22/us-threatened-to-bo...

                • lukan 47 minutes ago
                  "The primary threat to Gaddafi over time was internal, nukes would not have protected him. What was he going to do, nuke his own territory? The same was true for Assad."

                  Have you checked, how many outside interventions both countries had and still have?

                  Labelling this as "internal" is pretty missleading. If both dictators would have had nuclear weapons ready to launch, no foreign bomber would have dared going in against the regime.

                • bayarearefugee 56 minutes ago
                  > That's not what would happen in reality at all. Don't take my word for it, ask Pakistan: the US threatened to bomb them [0] - despite their possession of nukes - after 9/11 if they didn't cooperate. Why would the US do that? Because the US knows that MAD doesn't work like the online armchair crowd thinks it does.

                  That isn't a MAD situation.

                  Pakistan has nukes but they can't launch them on the US.

            • keybored 32 minutes ago
              Giving up their nuclear weapons did not work out well for Ukraine.
            • FrustratedMonky 2 hours ago
              Doesn't mean the direction wasn't correct.

              Take any American, and treat them the way Americans treat others, and they would be forming terrorist cells (gorilla war), building nukes, basically every single thing they could to fight back. To never surrender.

              Remember Red Dawn? That would be an American Response, to what America is doing.

              That is it basically. If shoe was on other foot, Americans would never surrender.

              So, why are we expecting others to give up quietly?

              • adventured 1 hour ago
                > So, why are we expecting others to give up quietly?

                We're not. That's why we're bombing the regime and associated military targets. Iran was never expected to give up quietly.

                • FrustratedMonky 1 hour ago
                  Think you are missing the point.

                  They aren't going to just give up after a few weeks of bombing.

                  Will need boots on the ground versus a resistance/multiple sides of a civil war, and now we have another 20 year war.

                  People don't just shrug and go "all shucks, yuck yuck, guess you got us, i'll roll over"

        • gravisultra 2 hours ago
          History does not say otherwise. The US however has a history of attacking Iran, including murdering 190 people on a civilian flight: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iran_Air_Flight_655
          • lejalv 1 hour ago
            Not sure why this comment is downvoted: the facts are established, as is (among others) the Mosaddegh coup d'état co-organized by the US:

            > On 19 August 1953, Prime Minister of Iran Mohammad Mosaddegh was overthrown in a coup d'état that strengthened the rule of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the shah of Iran. It was instigated by the United Kingdom (MI6), under the name Operation Boot[5][6][7][8] and the United States (CIA), under the name TP-AJAX Project[9] or Operation Ajax. A key motive was to protect British oil interests in Iran after Mosaddegh nationalized the country's oil industry. (...) > In August 2013, the U.S. government formally acknowledged the U.S. (...) was in charge of both the planning and the execution

            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1953_Iranian_coup_d%27%C3%A9ta...

            Or the US backing of Saddam Hussein from 1982 onwards during the Iraq-Iran 8-year war of aggression, with “massive loans, political influence, and intelligence on Iranian deployments gathered by American spy satellites”. During this war, Iraq employed chemical weapons leading to 50.000 - 100.000 Irani deaths.

            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iran%E2%80%93Iraq_War

            This (and other pieces of historical context) help very much understand the Iranian insistence on a ballistic missile program.

          • draygonia 1 hour ago
            *290 people. Mistook an Airbus A300 for an F-14. Maybe it's an easy mistake to make on radar back in the day?
            • jkestner 1 hour ago
              Back in the day, or even now. Kuwait’s US-supplied air defense shot down three US F15s this weekend.
        • throwaw12 2 hours ago
          History doesn't say anything, because there is no precedence Iran attacking the US assets first.
        • __alexs 2 hours ago
          Iran has never carried out an attack against US military infrastructure that wasn't clearly retaliatory.

          Look it up. Every case of Iran attacking US infrastructure has been in direct retaliation to the US blowing up some Iranian stuff.

          Sure Iran has funded tons of proxy attacks by anonymous militias but these are generally not at the same kind of scale.

      • google234123 2 hours ago
        Is there good evidence for this?
        • roysting 1 hour ago
          Yes. Their repeated warnings that Iran would no longer tolerate the kind of back-and-forth blame shifting that think-tank policy papers openly described years ago as a strategy to keep Iran off sides, and that any attack by Israel would be considered an attack by the USA too and that American assets that surrounded Iran would be attacked; since under all the clownish “who? Meeee?”act gaslighting and stupid pathological lies, everyone knows they are one and the same.

          It’s like dealing with psychopathic toddlers who think people aren’t smart enough to know they are lying when they deny killing the family pet even though their hands are covered in blood and you just watched them mid act of slaughtering the family pet.

        • JohnTHaller 39 minutes ago
          It'd been there for decades. And Iran stated that if attacked by the US and Israel they'd retaliate against US targets in addition to Israel.
  • throwaw12 2 hours ago
    This doesn't include generational damage in sentiment:

    * Europe is in trouble because they can't get gas from Russia, Qatar stopped supplying gas

    * Japan is in trouble because Middle East supplies its 75% of oil, which is blocked now

    * Ukraine is in dilemma, because US giving every support to Israel, but not to Ukraine

    * Qatar, Kuwait, UAE, Bahrain is asking questions, if US can't defend us and is moving all defensive missiles to protect Israel, why should we even be ally with them in the future, they're scared even more (except UAE) that people might overthrow those kings if things continue this way

    * Africa understood its better to work with China, than with US

    • roysting 1 hour ago
      That’s just the tip of the iceberg. People here seem to also have no perspective, since it is not in the wheelhouse of most tech people, on the fact that this is all a part of a 40 year strategy (as Netanyahu himself has openly stated) that some refer to as the “the Clean Break Strategy” or the “7 countries in 5 years memo”[1]. It clearly took longer than 5 years, but they definitely tried and even the likes of Hillary “we came, we saw, he died” Clinton was a party of that.

      People always squabble over blue team vs red team, never realizing that the whole game is just a ruse to provide a sense of democratic control to placate the public, and also give the apparatchiks if the regime a sense of autonomy, when in fact they’re just all pulling at the same continuity of agenda like beasts of burden, being whipped and rode by a very small group that hold their reins.

      [1] https://x.com/wikileaks/status/1819709215352438921?lang=en

    • underdeserver 51 minutes ago
      > Qatar, Kuwait, UAE, Bahrain is asking questions, if US can't defend us and is moving all defensive missiles to protect Israel, why should we even be ally with them

      Where are you getting this information? The UAE, for instance, is relying heavily on missile defense - and it's working out for them:

      https://gulfnews.com/uae/uae-intercepts-186-ballistic-missil...

      It's all US technology, too:

      https://www.wired.me/story/inside-the-system-that-intercepte...

    • jklinger410 2 hours ago
      I think citizens in those countries recognize that allowing a repressive regime to exist simply for cheap oil costs is not necessarily a good solution, either.
      • lukan 45 minutes ago
        Because they all live themself in repressive regimes?
        • qingcharles 15 minutes ago
          If you're talking about the Qataris, Kuwaitis and Bahrainis, they generally don't consider themselves[1] repressed, even though it looks that way from say an American perspective. (Women's rights are definitely a huge issue still) Those countries are very quickly becoming enormously Westernized, though. Just don't ask how many women politicians there are.

          [1] only speaking of the natives, immigrants of all flavors have a very different situation

      • throwaw12 1 hour ago
        until your energy bills impact your pocket directly, while you were laid off from your manufacturing plant, because their cost structure is not competitive without cheap Russian oil/gas

        Look at the correlation here starting from 2022: https://cepr.org/voxeu/columns/recent-weakness-german-manufa...

        • roncesvalles 1 hour ago
          This is akin to someone in 1861 saying US cotton plantations, and by extension the entire Southern economy, aren't viable without slavery, so let's allow slavery to run.

          Western liberal civilization has theta decay without occasional violent intervention.

          Imagine if we didn't go all-out against communism.

          • throwaw12 1 hour ago
            By the way, I am not saying we should exploit people, I am just saying majority of people don't care about what they are not seeing face to face or feeling face to face, majority people care about direct impact on their pockets and lifestyle.
            • keybored 26 minutes ago
              People can speak for themselves.
          • throwaw12 1 hour ago
            > ... so let's allow slavery to run.

            Obviously we look at world differently, but I was under impression that slavery wasn't abolished, it just got different form with slightly more rights.

            Late-Capitalism as slave owners, workers as slaves, because their health insurance tied to their work, they can be punished without notice (at will employment), wealth gap is 50-2000x between Lord in feudalism (CEO / rich / ultrarich) and slaves. Lord can rape (Epstein class), avoid taxes, bribe each other, the moment slave does the same, goes to jail for 10 years

            Same nature, different form, more modern form

            • khazhoux 22 minutes ago
              No offense intended, but that is an ignorant take. The law of the land in the U.S. was that one human could literally own another human being (with all the implications of property ownership, including disposing of it and abusing it at your leisure). How such a despicable mindset took hold and was allowed to go on for so long, is beyond modern comprehension.

              You mentioned many other injustices but none of those are "slavery but just different with slightly more rights."

      • kakacik 1 hour ago
        Almost nobody thinks like that, what are we 5 year olds? Especially when most left leaning folks in western world has hard sympathies with hamas which are just left and right hand of the same regime (maybe not US left which is far from left elsewhere).

        Did US population en masse lost sleep during past decades till now and some future due to sweatshops full of kids making their jeans or iphones or Christmas toys for their kids in highly undemocratic regimes?

        • jklinger410 7 minutes ago
          > Especially when most left leaning folks in western world has hard sympathies with hamas

          I'm not going to take your comment seriously due to this wild opinion.

      • megous 1 hour ago
        No, we realize US americans elected gerontoidiot Trump, and we constnantly ask ourselves what the actual fuck after every third act of this senile imbecile. Do you not have young (like at least < 60) people who can still actually think critically, have strategy, hold ideas for more than 30 seconds. Are you impressed by senility? Why do you support someone who attacks european countries frequently just on the basis of whimsy shit like not wanting to go with you into wars of aggression agaisnt third countries, like you attacked Spain most recently? What the actual fuck?

        That people think in terms of good/vs/evil and that US will somehow come out of this as a liked country that did good is beyond me. The constant attempts at painting some morals or grand strategy over the constant random unhinged acts of senile imbecile that gets bootlicked by everyone around him just comes out as insane.

        That's what at least this european thinks of US, yeah. :)

        Unhinged country with unhinged lunatic at the top, all this is. That's what americans should be thinking hard about, not about another new ways to rationalize his insanity and insane criminal acts.

      • mkoubaa 1 hour ago
        "Allowing a repressive regime to exist" is precisely the social contract of every citizen of every country. Haven't you ever heard of taxes?
        • jklinger410 5 minutes ago
          Oppression is a spectrum. I wouldn't compare "taxes" to something like, I don't know, killing gay people and forcing women to cover their bodies and hair.
    • lm28469 42 minutes ago
      > Europe is in trouble because they can't get gas from Russia, Qatar stopped supplying gas

      60% of it comes from the US, a lot from northern Africa too, not much comes from the middle east

      • karmakurtisaani 33 minutes ago
        The price of oil has skyrocketed because of the dumbfuck war. Doesn't matter where the oil comes when it costs too much and causes massive inflation once again.
    • flyinglizard 2 hours ago
      The disruption in gas supply will be very short. Weeks, at most. The gulf states will be very happy to see the Islamic Republic gone, they are living in its shadow for a long time now. Now, Ukraine and Israel need very different kinds of support, and things like US withholding intelligence from Ukraine have nothing to do with Israel.
      • hedora 2 hours ago
        Iran has been bombing production facilities across a bunch of US allies. It's unclear how quickly those will be rebuilt. Also, the US is probably bombing Iranian production, which means countries like China will be looking for additional sources.
      • karmakurtisaani 29 minutes ago
        > The disruption in gas supply will be very short.

        Remember when W declared mission accomplished? That war was so short too.

        > The gulf states will be very happy to see the Islamic Republic gone

        Would they be happy to see a devastating civil war that gives rise to a successor of ISIS or Taleban? Will they happily accept tens of millions of refugees?

        Absolutely nothing good will come from this dumbfuck war. We all will pay the price of it one way or another.

      • throwaw12 2 hours ago
        I wonder why Israel should get any support, do you support killing children and bombing schools?

        Ukraine, I understand, because it was attacked, but Israel, who was oppressing people for so many years with prisons full with Palestinian kids and teenagers long before Oct 7th, I really don't understand.

        Except, for Epstein reasons (blackmail), other than that, there is no reason US should support Israel, in any way

        • dttze 1 hour ago
          [dead]
        • flyinglizard 1 hour ago
          Israel should get support because supporting Israel right to exist, for me, is the right thing, and because its strategic goals and values align with those of the US.
          • throwaw12 1 hour ago
            > supporting Israel right to exist, for me, is the right thing

            1. Does US fight to support only right things?

            2. Is Palestinian right to exist is the right thing as well?

          • readitalready 57 minutes ago
            There is no moral justification for Israel's right to exist. Israel does not have a right to exist. They exist purely as a foreign invasion force originally started by European Jews - who didn't even practice or believe in Judaism - in order to make their own private racist mediterranean resort state by killing the native people and stealing their land.

            What makes you think anyone would want support their existence over the rights of the existing Palestinian people that lived there and are currently fighting to reclaim their homes?

            Religions do not have a right of inheritance. A person can't claim your home when you die because they also happen to be Christian. The only legal inheritance are those with title. And no one from Europe that decided to attack and invade Palestine can show any deed or title to the land they claimed to "own" 2000 years ago when they decided to move to Europe.

            So, no. The state of Israel exists purely as a criminal enterprise of murder and theft. Let's not encourage its continued existence.

            • antonkochubey 40 minutes ago
              I wonder if perhaps something has happened to European Jews in the 1930s that made them look for a place to re-settle
              • throwaw12 30 minutes ago
                > made them look for a place to re-settle

                re-settle is fine, Palestinians and Jews were living together in those areas for thousands of years.

                Massacre, oppression and take over is not, especially when the problem wasn't caused by people living in those areas: Palestinians and Jews.

                If anyone owes a land to European Jews, it is a Germany.

              • keybored 23 minutes ago
                Zionism started long before Nazi Germany.
            • lukan 42 minutes ago
              You do realize most Israelis were born there? Having a right to live where you are born is a pretty fundamental one.
              • throwaw12 21 minutes ago
                > You do realize most Israelis were born there?

                So do Palestinians. It wasn't an empty land, right?

                > Having a right to live where you are born is a pretty fundamental one.

                I don't think West Bank settlers agree with you on this

                • lukan 7 minutes ago
                  "I don't think West Bank settlers agree with you on this"

                  So? Did I said something that makes you think I agree with them on many points? There ain't just 2 extreme sides in this conflict.

              • bdangubic 41 minutes ago
                President Trump would hard disagree with you on that one
                • lukan 32 minutes ago
                  Fortunately he is not undisputed king of america, yet.
                  • readitalready 21 minutes ago
                    lol the Israelis would also disagree, otherwise they would have let the Palestinians live with them instead of literally going village-to-village, and door-to-door to forcibly remove the Palestinian residents or be killed if they didn't.

                    If the state of Israel doesn't believe in native rights, then you shouldn't believe in supporting their native rights either.

                    • lukan 9 minutes ago
                      Thank you, but I choose for myself what rights I support and yes, it is rights on both sides.
                      • readitalready 3 minutes ago
                        No... thank YOU for believing in the right of Palestinians to return to their homes.
          • chmod775 1 hour ago
            > values align with those of the US

            Some values those are. Yikes.

            • flyinglizard 1 hour ago
              More chances than not that you live in a country that benefitted from the American propensity to do the right thing, even at a huge cost to itself. Yes we have a different and more selfish America now, but all said, America still protects the world order that allows this conversation to exist.
              • throwaw12 51 minutes ago
                we don't need good boys, we need good laws where everyone is equal and punished equally for violating the common moral principles, e.g. for being a pedophile
  • joecool1029 3 hours ago
    This seems really low considering one of the early warning radars taken out cost around $1bil on its own.... and it's possible a second one was at least damaged. (one in Qatar the other in Bahrain)
    • nosmokewhereiam 1 hour ago
      NSA (Naval support) Bahrain lost a ground station (maybe two), not a radar.
    • Havoc 31 minutes ago
      Possibly. There are a lot of things around that story that seem very off

      Aside from the obvious bad AI images floating around the one credible looking video shows a shaheed flying into a radome. A Radome in the middle of a bunch of buildings. You don't put radars in between buildings. And if it's a phased array I don't think it would be in a round Radome either.

      They seem to have hit something of value, but don't think it was a 1bn radar

      Everything around this smells like the Iran hilariously oversized F35 misinformation

      https://www.reddit.com/r/AirForce/comments/1ldffvd/its_confi...

    • google234123 2 hours ago
      The only footage I've seen is damage to maybe a satellite receiver. Have you seen proof of the radar damage
      • spaghetdefects 2 hours ago
        [flagged]
        • joecool1029 2 hours ago
          Not helpful, this is an AI generated post.

          We do have actual video of that one radome in Bahrain getting directly struck (from multiple angles). It's possible it was a satellite communication antenna and not a radar.

          But the still images shown with before/after are AI generated. (the surrounding buildings are completely different in the before/after image).

          The radar that is likely to have been damaged is the one in Qatar, here is reporting from an NPR editor using Planet satellite imagery: https://nitter.net/gbrumfiel/status/2028227786750476627

  • roughly 3 hours ago
    Next time someone asks how we're going to pay for, eg, free school lunches, keep this site in mind.
    • BJones12 3 hours ago
      Given 50 million schoolkids in the US and a cost per meal per child of $4, the current number represents 10 meals. At 1 meal a day that would be 2 school weeks, at 2 meals a day that would be 1 school week.
      • roughly 2 hours ago
        We've been at this for 2.5 days, and the president is suggesting this could last a month or more.

        I suspect the long term ROI on free school lunches is going to far exceed that of this war, as well.

        • cvoss 2 hours ago
          The government's job is not to maximize its ROI. For example, (and I make no argument about whether the current situation does this), protecting its citizens is of extreme moral importance, even if it's very very expensive and unlikely to somehow feed back into the economy in a way that recoups the cost long term.
          • roughly 2 hours ago
            Then surely universal health care, strict anti-pollution measures, and worker safety efforts are next on the list, alongside access to healthy food and efforts to reduce the number of miles the average person needs to drive daily.
            • mhb 2 hours ago
              Surely? It's far from clear that the benefits of these initiatives would be net positive.
              • roughly 2 hours ago
                The poster above asserted maximizing ROI wasn't a goal - that, and I quote:

                > protecting its citizens is of extreme moral importance

                Given the number of our citizens that die from, eg, preventable diseases, that seems like a far, far higher moral call than a war against Iran.

          • throwaw12 2 hours ago
            > protecting its citizens is of extreme moral importance

            If you are relating protecting citizens with current situation, NO country dares to attack US citizens in the US soil.

            US, at this time, doesn't need to protect its citizens, especially in the US, from attacks by other nations, 0, none. No threat.

            • karmakurtisaani 24 minutes ago
              On the contrary, by starting this war the government kmjust made terrorist attacks more likely. It's laughably naive to think this dumbfuck war has anything to do with Trump caring about regular Americans.
          • anigbrowl 19 minutes ago
            I suggest that the US is putting its citizens at considerably more risk than they were in last week.
          • sheikhnbake 2 hours ago
            It's less about maximizing ROI and more about proper stewardship of resources taken by or provided to the government.
          • ikrenji 2 hours ago
            excuse me? the government's job is absolutely to maximize its ROI. I'm not paying taxes just for the money to be wasted
            • bdangubic 17 minutes ago
              ^ who is going to tell him…? :)
          • tstrimple 52 minutes ago
            It's all about government efficiency for some folks until the time comes do drop bombs on girls schools. Then there is no need for ROI or smart spending.
        • s1artibartfast 22 minutes ago
          99% of school lunches have zero ROI. Parents can provide them just fine.
        • hedora 2 hours ago
          Everyone except the president is suggesting this will turn into a regional forever war.
          • anigbrowl 13 minutes ago
            He was posting on Truth Social yesterday about how the US has enough materiel to fight forever.

            The United States Munitions Stockpiles have, at the medium and upper medium grade, never been higher or better - As was stated to me today, we have a virtually unlimited supply of these weapons. Wars can be fought "forever," and very successfully, using just these supplies (which are better than other countries finest arms!). At the highest end, we have a good supply, but are not where we want to be. Much additional high grade weaponry is stored for us in outlying countries. Sleepy Joe Biden spent all of his time, and our Country's money, GIVING everything to P.T. Barnum (Zelenskyy!) of Ukraine - Hundreds of Billions of Dollars worth - And, while he gave so much of the super high end away (FREE!), he didn't bother to replace it. Fortunately, I rebuilt the military in my first term, and continue to do so. The United States is stocked, and ready to WIN, BIG!!! Thank you for your attention to this matter. President DONALD J. TRUMP

            Obviously he's full of shit but he's actively trying to balance the idea tht it will be over quickly wit the idea that the US has unlimited warmaking capacity. Neither is true of course.

          • mothballed 2 hours ago
            It already was a regional forever war. The US just decided to partake in the festivities.
          • baxtr 2 hours ago
            The same "everyone" that said Ukraine will be taken in 2 weeks max?

            No one knows how this will end. Anyone claiming to is either lying or stupid or both.

            • karmakurtisaani 21 minutes ago
              This is not a good take. Obviously no one knows, but there very serious and good reasons to believe this will not end easily or well.
            • hedora 1 hour ago
              I'd be curious to know what group thought that Ukraine would be taken in 2 weeks, but also thinks that the Iranian war will be a quagmire.

              Either they have a lot of information I'm missing, are complete idiots, or are being dishonest.

              • baxtr 1 hour ago
                You’re missing my point.

                No one can know at this stage. It’s called fog of war.

                Those who pretend offer easy explanations because people crave easy answers.

                It’s not satisfying to say: "it’s very complex, we can’t know, here are the odds". But that’s the current state of affairs.

      • sheikhnbake 3 hours ago
        2 school weeks of lunches for less than a week of war costs is a pretty good argument for school lunches. Especially as costs of this start to balloon the longer it goes on.
      • throwaw12 2 hours ago
        2 weeks of meal for every school kid in the US!

        Can you imagine the scale of this number?

        3 days of war vs 2 week of meal for every school kid

        Now do the math for Afghan war, probably US could have easily cancelled 70% of loan for every college grad, or could've been built large rail network

        • hedora 2 hours ago
          The Sentinel ICBM project (already at 2x initial budget, and set to balloon further) will be the most expensive project since the interstate freeway system was built.

          https://arstechnica.com/space/2026/02/the-air-forces-new-icb...

          So, an all-city high-speed rail network would certainly be achievable for a small fraction of the total US military budget.

          • ikrenji 2 hours ago
            well yeah. the pentagon wastes 1 trilly per year. a lot of stuff can be paid for with that kind of money.
      • amelius 2 hours ago
        How many subsidized meals would it represent if you only account for the kids that need one?
        • roughly 2 hours ago
          Honestly, a lot of these programs become substantially more expensive when you add the bureaucracy and hoops required by means testing. The economics are easier if you just give kids food and skip sorting out whether they deserve it or not.
      • TFYS 2 hours ago
        Those meals would most likely help a lot of kids become healthy productive members of society. That money would be saved by the families of those kids and used in other parts of the economy. A lot of the cost would therefore be returned. The money spent of this war is producing only destruction.
      • beepbooptheory 2 hours ago
        When would it ever be 2 meals a day?
        • BJones12 2 hours ago
          With a school breakfast program and a school lunch program.
    • marginalia_nu 2 hours ago
      The question is fundamentally poorly formed, and as a consequence, so is the rebuttal. A state can pay for anything, since it doesn't have to be in a budget surplus.

      Household budget analogies emerge any time someone wants to limit spending, or criticize spending, but one of the biggest points of Wealth of Nations (which is the foundation for modern macroeconomics) is that the budget of a state is fundamentally different to that of a household.

      If a household fails to maintain its budget, it's game over. People know this, which is why it's a punchy analogy. But it's also a bad analogy.

      If a state fails to maintain its budget, it can either print more money or raise taxes. Neither is a great long term fiscal policy, but it's not the end of the world either, and budgetary deficit something most states utilize fairly regularly.

      What's missing with the school lunches and present with the Iran War is political will. (I get that is what your point was all along.)

      • collinmcnulty 48 minutes ago
        This is not exactly true on the scale of these interventions. The state can't run out of money but it does run out of the time and talent of its people, the resources of its land, and the patience of its partners. State capacity is a real limit, and where we direct the money is a pretty strong proxy for where we spend these, the true resources of the state. We don't pay for bombs with dollars, we pay for them with schools, roads, and hospitals.
      • s3p 45 minutes ago
        Where do you see a question?
      • ikrenji 2 hours ago
        he was saying the state should be paying the school free lunches, what are you on about
  • hereme888 2 hours ago
    For the prospects of the freedom and subsequent prosperity of the oppressed Iranian people, peace in the Middle East, and safety of the commercial shipping routes, I fully approve my tax dollars to the matter.
    • nitwit005 6 minutes ago
      It's genuinely difficult to see this sort of claim as being an honest statement, given that everyone knows the outcome with Afghanistan and Iraq.
    • lukas099 1 hour ago
      Do you believe that those goals will be achieved? Given the historical track record of these kinds of interventions, I do not.
    • threetonesun 1 hour ago
      OK, I don't. I wonder if we could set up some sort of legislative system that could debate this on our behalf and make a reasonable plan that accounts for our differing viewpoints.
      • hereme888 1 hour ago
        I've found that if two people sit together and are willing to talk long enough, they'll eventually be able to actually hear each other, and usually they are more in agreement than the media-installed reactions and assumptions we have. Only with a few would we vehemently disagree. I'm talking about reasonable people though, like your calm reply.
    • nprz 1 hour ago
      Do you really believe killing 175 children[0] will bring peace and prosperity to the Iranian people?

      [0]https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/01/world/middleeast/girls-sc...

      • hereme888 1 hour ago
        That news piece was officially dismissed after investigation by the IDF and CENTCOM. I would bring to your awareness that you're using an emotional argument with no substance, and it discounts the decades of complex history in the region.
        • anigbrowl 6 minutes ago
          after investigation by the IDF and CENTCOM

          Neither of those can be considered reliable sources. It's possible that it was an Iranian misfire, but it would be a big coincidence that that happened right as we launched an attack on them and an even bigger coincidence that someone just happened to take a picture of it and post it on the internet to immediately exonerate the IDG and Centcom.

        • nprz 37 minutes ago
          The IDF has burned through all credibility during their assault on Gaza. I do not think the US and Israel waging a war on Iran will result in a positive outcome for the Iranian people or the region. The end result will be chaos, misery, and suffering. The latest news is the US attempting to foment some sort or civil war[0]. I sincerely do not understand how anyone could advocate for this.

          [0] https://www.itv.com/news/2026-03-03/united-states-seeking-an...

          • richardfeynman 34 minutes ago
            A falsifiable prediction. Thank you.
            • nprz 26 minutes ago
              175 dead children is already far too much suffering and if you're incapable of understanding that you are operating with a fully broken moral compass.
              • s1artibartfast 17 minutes ago
                I think it is a hard problem to discuss clearly, but it not automatically a deal breaker. What about 175 children vs 30,000 protesters? What about 30,000 protesters a year in perpetuity?
                • richardfeynman 11 minutes ago
                  Exactly, a real moral calculus needs to be made, not a hysterical "But the IRGC said 175 children died." And a real moral calculus involves weighing the value of the deaths caused by removing the IRGC against the deaths caused by the IRGC.

                  My antagonist said I have no moral compass. Of course I care about the death of children. But that doesn't mean I swallow IRGC propaganda wholesale, as they apparently do. The IRGC lies constantly, it has provided no evidence that so many children died, and hasn't brought forth any evidence to indicate the destruction of the school was caused by western munitions as opposed to a failed launch of their own (which we've seen happen.

        • aeve890 1 hour ago
          >investigation by the IDF and CENTCOM

          this has to be bait, right?

    • mekdoonggi 1 hour ago
      Would you still approve if the cost is 20x, the Iranian people are worse off, and the shipping routes and Middle East are dramatically less safe due to drones?

      Because that is a realistic possibility.

      • hereme888 1 hour ago
        No, I would not. But so far I don't see that outcome.
    • carefulfungi 1 hour ago
      Iraq. Afghanistan. Iraq, again. Syria. Libya. Iran. Iran, again. Yeah - this is totally gonna work this time.
      • karmakurtisaani 12 minutes ago
        In theory it could work. In practice you'd at most get a bloody civil war that would give rise to a new form of ISIS. But if you believe what Fox News tells you, it's probably too late to argue about it.
    • leosanchez 1 hour ago
      For Pakistanis as well ?
      • hereme888 1 hour ago
        I'm honestly not informed about what's happening with Pakistan. I know there's a ton of tweets about this, but it's not in my scope at the moment.
    • LAC-Tech 1 hour ago
      That is an unrealistic goal.

      Likely the actual goal, as dictated by Israel and the Jewish Lobby in the US, is to destabilise Iran long term in a sort of Syria situation, so they cannot threaten Israeli hegemony in the region.

      Remember even a non Islamic Iran is still a threat to Israeli power if it remains unified and intact.

      • hereme888 1 hour ago
        I don't agree with your perspective, but I do support Iran no longer being a threat to anyone else in the region, no matter what.
        • don_esteban 1 hour ago
          Do you support Israel no longer being a threat to anyone else in the region, no matter what?
          • hereme888 1 hour ago
            Last I checked Israel was only a threat to terrorists and people with terrorist aligned ideologies. And please don't respond with "that one IDF soldier who did something bad".
            • don_esteban 39 minutes ago
              Last I checked, International Court of Justice and International Criminal Court tend to disagree.

              To say nothing about overuse/abuse of the term 'terrorist' and weasel words 'terrorist aligned ideologies'.

              To say nothing about being randomly in the vicinity of a person Israel might consider terrorist might put you in mortal danger, simply because they do not care about 'collateral damage'.

              To say nothing about being Palestinian child being a 'future terrorist'.

              To say nothing about trying to document what they are doing might put you in mortal danger (just look up the number of journalists killed by Israel).

            • collinmcnulty 47 minutes ago
    • danny_codes 1 hour ago
      Yeah that’s the likely outcome given our track record /s
      • hereme888 1 hour ago
        Venezuela is undergoing tremendous freedom and hope. My fellow Venezuelans and I are super grateful for the well-planned, surgical mission of the US. They can have all the oil they want and help restore our industries in exchange for their financial benefit and partnership, which is the most recent track record.
        • lukas099 1 hour ago
          I think that interventions in the region of interest, the middle east, are more relevant data points than Venezuela.
  • stopbulying 2 hours ago
    United States involvement in regime change: 1952–1953: Iran [BP], 2026: Iran https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_involvement_in_r...

    2025 United States strikes on Iranian nuclear sites https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2025_United_States_strikes_on_...

    2026 Iran massacres https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2026_Iran_massacres

    2026 Iran conflict https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2026_Iran_conflict

  • nphardon 36 minutes ago
    Where does this money go? I see that some is lost value, like in the downed aircraft, but what groups are profiting off this crazy flow?
    • dfxm12 22 minutes ago
      Defense contractors, the oil companies who get to rebuild, private security, etc. You can do a web search for who profited from the Iraq war. It's mostly all the same. This war also has a religious component to it, as a US combat unit commander has said "the Iran war is part of God’s plan and that Pres. Donald Trump was anointed by Jesus to light the signal fire in Iran to cause Armageddon and mark his return to Earth": https://jonathanlarsen.substack.com/p/us-troops-were-told-ir...
  • Stromgren 2 hours ago
    I saw the cost of the three downed planes somewhere else and thought the price was huge. Now I see that it’s comparable to “First Tomahawk salvo”.
  • wnevets 2 hours ago
    But universal healthcare is too expensive.
    • IAmGraydon 2 hours ago
      [flagged]
      • gravisultra 2 hours ago
        This is a valid criticism. Whenever there is a push to improve life for US citizens, we are told that we do not have the funds. Yet, here we see an essentially unlimited budget to fight Israel's war of aggression against Iran, with zero benefit to US citizens. In fact, the costs (financial, moral and human) that we will pay for this excursion will be astronomically high.
        • mhb 2 hours ago
          If budgets are what interest you, maybe consider why Iran spent over $500B developing offensive nuclear weapons. Instead of peaceful pursuits or defenses against its supposed aggressor over 1,000 miles away.
          • gravisultra 1 hour ago
            Budgets using my money interest me. Do you have a source for that $500B claim?
          • krisoft 1 hour ago
            > maybe consider why Iran spent over $500B developing offensive nuclear weapons.

            To protect themselves from the exact scenairo happening right now? The reason why Putin is sleeping peacefully in his bed while Khamenei is dead under rubble is that one has nuclear deterent while the other din't have that protection.

            > supposed aggressor

            I don’t know if there is anything “supposed” about that aggressor given the present situation.

      • danny_codes 1 hour ago
        Reductive tropes?OP is pointing out a serious flaw in US federal spending. Namely our lack of spending on healthcare and our intensive spending on killing people from a distance
      • wnevets 2 hours ago
        > Low effort comments

        Thank you for your very high effort, insightful and valuable comment on this matter.

      • kakacik 1 hour ago
        Your reply is even worse, no facts, no reply just rant and diversion, a proper low effort too.
      • Freedom2 1 hour ago
        Agreed. Considering this attack is also biblically sanctioned, commenters should keep that in mind else they incur the wrath of God.
  • jakeinspace 1 hour ago
    Is this missing interceptors? My understanding is those probably dominate total costs at the moment, especially if you include the costs of allied Gulf State and Israeli interceptors. Thousands have been expended already on ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, and drones. Those range from hundred of thousands to multiple millions per shot.
  • tzahifadida 1 hour ago
    What would have happened if the US dis not get involved in WWII. We would probably not be here... Not everything is short sighted bean counters. Having major cities explode by nuclear devices in the US will surely cost more.
    • Jtsummers 1 hour ago
      Iran has been weeks away from a nuke for decades. What evidence is there that they were any closer this time, or that this war was necessary to delay or block their progress?
      • lukan 36 minutes ago
        I vaguely remember a similar situation last year, where Trump said, Irans nuclear program is now destroyed for years to come.
        • Jtsummers 32 minutes ago
          Yep, the Iran chicken hawks can't keep their stories straight.

          Trump's chicken hawk fanboys:

          - Iran is weeks away from nukes, but our bombing runs last year were so successful they're now years away. But now they're weeks away again, got to attack!

          - We're not the world's police, but Iran killed 30k of their own citizens, we need to help them and be the world's police!

          - The Iranians were going to attack US bases because of an Israeli attack, so to prevent those attacks we attacked first. Thus giving them no reason to bomb our bases. Oh god, they're bombing our bases! The fiends!

      • password54321 1 hour ago
        The war is for Israel, sorry I should say Greater Israel.
    • karmakurtisaani 16 minutes ago
      I'm sorry but this is a braindead take. Trump is exactly a short-sighted .. well not a bean counter since I doubt his ability to count. But short sighted for sure.

      Thinking an Iranian nuke is threatening a US city is probably a Fox news talking point, so dogshit by definition.

    • roncesvalles 1 hour ago
      Exactly. The alternative was to let Iran (while under a suicidal theocratic regime) get nukes? Imagine if Dubai was struck by nukes instead of drones.
      • galleywest200 1 hour ago
        We had a nuclear deal with them, which was ripped up by the same man currently in charge of the US.
      • password54321 1 hour ago
        The alternative was not bombing them in the middle of negotiations.
  • stopbulying 3 hours ago
    Could add: Civilian casualty ratio by party

    (Civilian casualty ratios in recent conflicts and declared wars)

  • Quarrelsome 2 hours ago
    not providing universal healthcare is a choice, as seen directly here. Its distressing to have US politicians make false claims that Europe's universal healthcare being something they "indirectly pay for", because even if Europe spent all their money on defence the US (albeit mostly the GOP) would still resist providing universal healthcare both tooth and nail.
    • danny_codes 1 hour ago
      Universal healthcare is cheaper than our system of healthcare by a factor of 2 (comparing other OECD countries). If we raised taxes and implemented universal healthcare we’d save about $1T a year.

      Cost isn’t the relevant factor, it’s politics. Or more accurately, naked bribery that we, for some insane reason, call “lobbying”.

      • ineedaj0b 1 hour ago
        I've looked into this for work and no way. You must unfactor the European models getting subsidized by the current US model.

        Some very smart people have looked at fixing the system, and there's no golden goose (except ozempic maybe). We'll need pharmacological breakthroughs.

        Also, regrettably - A LOT of medical care is unnecessary but we love grandma.

        • Quarrelsome 1 hour ago
          > You must unfactor the European models getting subsidized by the current US model.

          But they don't. This is clearly a pro-insurer talking point. Europe just negotiates on a state based level so therefore is able to negotiate better prices.

          • Amezarak 36 minutes ago
            Medicare also negotiates on a state based level and represents more people than most European countries.

            Right now the US governments collectively spend more than most European countries per capita on health care. The states and Feds. Totally exclusive of the private market spending. Expanding Medicare/Medicaid may be great for other reasons but does not solve the underlying cost problems in the US.

      • DarmokJalad1701 1 hour ago
        > If we raised taxes and implemented universal healthcare we’d save about $1T a year

        If it saves $1T, then why does it require raising taxes?

        • mekdoonggi 1 hour ago
          Because currently the working population pays what is effectively a tax for health insurance. I pay over $450 a month for a family plan, and that's cheap and subsidized AND I need to pay for copays/deductible/coinsurance.

          So taxes could go up $5k/yr but if I got health insurance, I'm better off.

          The savings would take longer to realize because they come from better contracts, better preventative care, increased screenings etc.

        • Quarrelsome 1 hour ago
          idk maybe those savings are not upfront but are more around productivity improvements and so on.
  • fishingisfun 2 hours ago
    the lives lost though. the children killed.
  • RobRivera 2 hours ago
    Oh boy - defense accounting I LOVE this game.

    Quick quick, give me a quote on the coffee maker on the AWACS.

  • wiseowise 57 minutes ago
    2 billions in 4 days. Have you said thank you once?
  • hybrid_study 3 hours ago
  • jopsen 1 hour ago
    What about reparations? :)

    This is an illegal war of aggressions after all.

    The justifications all remain fanciful. I mean at least Bush bothered to make it appear legitimate.

  • koverda 1 hour ago
    neat! I made (vibecoded) and deployed something very similar yesterday https://iranwarcost.com
  • mcintyre1994 2 hours ago
    Wouldn’t most of these costs have been going for a few weeks, given the build up?
  • t1234s 2 hours ago
    Which contractor is selling the most munitions? LM, Raytheon, etc..
  • cm2012 2 hours ago
    $2b is a rounding error in the USA budget
    • mhb 2 hours ago
      [flagged]
  • ZunarJ5 2 hours ago
    Literally anything but healthcare.
  • goestoo 3 hours ago
    Why are the fonts so small? I have a hard time reading anything.
  • Paul_S 1 hour ago
    Can we subtract the number of dollars that it would cost not to start a war?
    • 13415 18 minutes ago
      We can't. That would require a carefully conducted cost-benefit analysis of potential outcomes including the costs and benefits of not starting it, with estimates for short-term (3 years), ten years, and twenty year outcomes. Such a study doesn't exist publicly and there is no way you can convince me it exists at all other than showing it to me with evidence that it was written before the US attacked Iran. It's also not usual to make such analyses because the costs of a human life lost are calculated very differently in each domain and are hard to assess. For instance, 13.7M per life is assumed in airline safety but that's not a figure the military would use.
  • TSiege 3 hours ago
    Cost is not the first thing I care about in war, but I felt like this is a useful site for tracking the money we're lighting on fire in order to pursue this conflict

    Civilian costs are real, unjustified, and incalculable.

    • keybored 3 hours ago
      That’s good. But it seems that the American anti-war discourse is slanted towards the cost of it. Maybe because the whole political spectrum can relate to “our tax dollars”, while (1) the cost for the military personell might not be a concern for all because it is all-volunteer, and (2) some Americans don’t care what happens to people in other countries.

      Certainly: American progressives can use this to counter the “fiscally conservatives” (for domestic spending) who are also hawkish.

      • hedora 2 hours ago
        Remember: The opinions of people that either didn't vote or voted for Trump are all that really matter this November (unless the Democrats somehow lose voters, but the polls suggest that is unlikely).

        Those are the votes that need to be won over to make any sort of difference during the second half of the Trump administration.

  • 2001zhaozhao 1 hour ago
    > $2.1B

    so $7 per person?

  • butILoveLife 3 hours ago
    We better get a liberal democratic Iran government out of this.

    We better remove and halt nuclear powers for the rest of my life.

    I suppose pick either, and it was successful.

    My personal polymarket says we wont get either. Trump and Israel ruin their reputation. But reputation matters close to 0 in international relations, which is why they don't care.

    • viccis 3 hours ago
      There's next to no chance that whatever comes out of the end of this will be a "liberal democratic Iran government". Obama started a route in that direction with the lowered sanctions and the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action from 2015. Iran having a democratic government doesn't really help the GOP war hawks so of course they trashed it. The same happened with North Korea in the 90s with the Agreed Framework that had some promise before GWB torpedoed it to please his oinking base.

      I also think that nuclear powers mean regional stability. Ukraine gave up its nukes in the 90s and we saw what happened there.

    • avidiax 3 hours ago
      > We better get a liberal democratic Iran government out of this.

      > We better remove and halt nuclear powers for the rest of my life.

      Neither of those things is a guaranteed outcome of this. Depending on who you ask, it's not even a likely outcome.

      The IRGC remains the most powerful group in Iran. Probably a military junta is a more likely outcome, plus or minus a civil war to establish it.

    • roughly 3 hours ago
      Unfortunately, I think "Theocratic Iran with the bomb" is on the "good" side of the distribution of potential outcomes here.
      • mhb 1 hour ago
        You're right. It is unfortunate that you think that.
    • Quarrelsome 2 hours ago
      > We better get a liberal democratic Iran government out of this.

      I doubt it. US intervention seems to have a habit of creating weakened nations for its rivals to benefit from. In Iraq's case: Iran and in Iran's case maybe the Taliban in Afghanistan.

    • spaghetdefects 2 hours ago
      I'd be happy with the permanent removal of US bases from the Middle East.
    • georgeburdell 2 hours ago
      The Middle East does not understand Democracy. It will just be another strong man in power. The diaspora is pushing for a new shah
  • textech 2 hours ago
    The cost doesn't really matter. The US led financial system (which is a glorified Ponzi scheme) is on an unsustainable path. The war in Iran is about resources (force Iran to use US dollars to trade oil, give US more leverage in dealing with China...etc.) and to delay the collapse. You build "digital pyramids" like AI data centers and consolidate power/resources while you still can. Financial cost of the war is largely irrelevant. Whether the outcome will be to your advantage is a different issue but pattern is predictable with historical precedence (Romans...etc.). Unfortunately innocent people pay the price.
  • hk__2 2 hours ago
    *for the US.
  • martythemaniak 3 hours ago
    Why is the US at war?
    • 999900000999 2 hours ago
      America needs to have never-ending perpetual wars to sustain its own economy. If we woke up tomorrow and there was just world peace, and America got rid of its military budget millions of people would probably instantly lose their jobs.

      That's the ultimate reason. They could just as easily declare war against Venus and spend hundreds of billions of dollars sending rocks into space and it would have the same net effect. Actually it would be a bit more positive because to my knowledge nobody's really living on Venus right now.

      • sheikhnbake 2 hours ago
        > America needs to have never-ending perpetual wars to sustain its own economy.

        People don't realize that the Pentagon has strategically, over decades, invested and distributed its supply and manufacturing needs to every single congressional district. Basically ensuring that any representative that votes against the DoD budget will run afoul of constituents employed in some fashion by the military industrial complex.

        • throwway120385 2 hours ago
          The military-industrial complex that Eisenhower, a Republican, warned us about.
    • tarkin2 3 hours ago
      Because, like Venezuala, they were selling their oil to China, which would allow China to attack Taiwan and take the US's supply of advanced semi-conductors for its weapons and military dominance
      • aeve890 1 hour ago
        >which would allow China to attack Taiwan

        anytime now. trust me bro.

    • spaghetdefects 2 hours ago
      Israel attacked Iran and dragged us into the war as per Rubio: https://x.com/Acyn/status/2028573242173366282
      • bitcurious 2 hours ago
        More accurately, Israel was going to attack Iran, and US intelligence stated that Iranian retaliation planning was to target US forces, along with most gulf nations and shipping lanes, so US preempted that retaliation.
        • anigbrowl 1 minute ago
          [delayed]
        • Jtsummers 1 hour ago
          If the retaliation was preempted they wouldn't have retaliated, but they have. What the US actually did was provide justification for the retaliation against US bases in the region by joining in the opening salvo.
        • tw-20260303-001 1 hour ago
          Maybe you haven't noticed but they have not preempted anything.
        • bjourne 1 hour ago
          That's quite a preemptive form of preemption! Was the US intelligence from the same source that stated that Iraq was acquiring "yellowcake" from Niger?
    • csours 3 hours ago
      "Why?" is the hardest of the questions.

      For any particular person, you can tell a story that satisfies "Why?". But for a large number of people, you have to answer "Why?" for one sub-group at a time.

      In other words, there's not a single answer that will answer this in a satisfying way.

      To answer a different question: It appears that the Israeli government and military wanted to bomb Iran again, and the United States executive branch and military decided to help out. This is an incomplete and unsatisfying answer. Sorry.

      • maeln 2 hours ago
        > In other words, there's not a single answer that will answer this in a satisfying way.

        There could be one, but it would be a book-sized answer (and probably a Tolkien one, if not more).

        Every conflict is multi-faceted and happened for a variety of reason, some mattering more than other. Any conflict involving the middle east and you have to go back almost 80-years of history to really provide a satisfying answer. Control of world oil supply, trades with China, opportunistic war to appease local voter pool, diversion from problematic affairs, diplomacy with Israel (which as it own thousand fold reasons for this war), Iran being left weak after losing most of their local allied militia, internal uprising due to a economical crisis caused in part to the removal of the agreement on nuclear and the trade ban that followed ... They all probably play a part.

    • zardo 3 hours ago
      To bring about the second coming of Jesus Christ.
    • dexzod 3 hours ago
      Greater Israel project
    • blktiger 3 hours ago
      • mitthrowaway2 3 hours ago
        Oh wow, I never truly realized it before, but his speech really used to be a lot more coherent across long sentences than it is these days.
        • slg 2 hours ago
          People should be able to separate the man from his politics and look at this apolitically. I don't see how anyone can see the way his speech patterns have changed over the years and not conclude that he has had a sharp cognitive decline. It's baffling that we don't talk about it, especially after we just went through this with Biden and had the whole retrospective about how that was ignored. Now here we are doing the exact same thing again immediately.
          • vjvjvjvjghv 2 hours ago
            Anybody who has observed somebody age over decades knows that there is a huge difference between being 70 and 80. And it’s another big decline when they approach 90.

            The democrats denied this with Biden and now the republicans are denying it with Trump.

            Maybe we should get people that are way beyond normal retirement age out of political Leadership?

            • throwway120385 2 hours ago
              Voters primarily vote for people that look and act like them, and retired people are a massive voting block. Chris Christie saying off-the-cuff that if young people voted in any significant numbers then he would care about what they had to say was a huge money quote. We get geriatrics because people moan about how our vote doesn't matter while not voting.
          • throwway120385 2 hours ago
            See, it's okay if it's the person you voted for and he's doing things you like. But when it's someone you didn't vote for and you don't like what he's doing then the cognitive decline is suddenly a huge problem.
            • 13415 45 minutes ago
              I understand that you're making some political statement about the voters but it has to be pointed out the mental health of a president is a problem or not a problem independently of what the voters think. Sorry for pointing out the obvious, it just seems to me that many people nowadays fall into some kind of polarization trap that hinders their understanding of the world.
    • Quarrelsome 2 hours ago
      because when you give someone the keys to the US military to some people, they lack the imagination to think beyond piracy and raiding.

      The war in its current inception is Hamas levels of planning.

      1. Do a big attack

      2. ????

      3. Profit!

      Depends of if the Iranian state is weak enough to collapse on its own, because I imagine a land assault in Venezuela or Iran would be a horrific mistake due to the terrain.

      • hedora 1 hour ago
        This strike isn't even close to Hamas-levels of planning.

        If anything Hamas got the US to make an unforced mistake in a game of checkers three moves out.

        According to the IDF's analysis of captured Hamas documents, step 2 was:

        "Get Israel to commit so many war crimes that we actually have the moral high ground. Then, regional partners will be forced to support us again, and our recruitment numbers go back up. Do everything we can to ensure the conflict expands across borders to secure future funding and alliances."

        The crazy thing is the IDF knew this and published the report. Only after acknowledging that it was their only losing move did they start committing a bunch of war crimes!

        Hamas' public support, funding and recruitment levels were rapidly approaching zero until the Palestinian genocide started. Now they're part of a regional conflict and arguably still hold the moral high ground, depending on how you tally things up. That was fantasy-land for them before the strikes.

        It's almost like the IDF's funding is contingent on Hamas' continued existence, and, barring that, perpetual regional conflict.

        It's too bad that civilians always lose in these conflicts, and right-wing criminals almost always win.

        • Quarrelsome 1 hour ago
          > This strike isn't even close to Hamas-levels of planning.

          Yes it is, its an attack without any surefire plans for later stages of the war. While they might fluke it, I don't see how just missiling a bunch of targets and murdering a nation's leader really achieves tangible change. Its like a bully taking a swing at someone in class, they can, so they do, but there's no thought about end outcomes. They might get lunch money, or get away with doing it, but they could also get detention, or be suspended or expelled.

          The Hamas plan was something like:

          1. we murder them

          2. they retaliate horrifically

          3. ???

          4. the intifada goes global and lebanon and syria and maybe other arab nations all rise up and attack israel.

          and that remains my issue with the US plan, there isn't one. Either have ground troops ready or militias in place and armed. Don't just start a war for a laugh and if you do; then take it seriously. We're talking about worst case outcomes for hundreds of thousands if not millions and the US is currently just treating with the seriousness of a casual hand of poker.

    • hypeatei 2 hours ago
      Christian Evangelicals, war hawks, and a voter base that fell for the "peace ticket" talk.
    • kraftman 3 hours ago
      Distraction
    • jcgrillo 3 hours ago
      Midterm elections later this year
    • MengerSponge 3 hours ago
      To occupy media cycles? To start the rapture?
    • morkalork 1 hour ago
      I love that this was downvoted and greyed out. Don't think, don't ask questions. Since when was that part of the hacker ethos?
    • rebolek 3 hours ago
      You're asking dangerous questions, comrade.
    • throwaw12 2 hours ago
      because of Epstein tapes and blackmail by Israel
    • gtsop 2 hours ago
      [dead]
    • Drupon 2 hours ago
      [dead]
    • pphysch 2 hours ago
      According to the Secretary of State Marco Rubio yesterday, we are at war because we knew Israel was going to assassinate Iranian leaders and we would be expected to defend them (and our foreign bases) when they go to war, so we might as well go to war right away. 4D chess.
  • jmyeet 3 hours ago
    There are a bunch of videos showing how expensive it is to fire certain weapons eg [1]. Not only are there our direct costs but we're also supplying several allies with munitions and weapon systems and paying for them ourselves.

    Also, yes carrier groups exist anyway, but operating them in a combat zone halfway around the world is way more expensive.

    Operation Epstein Fury [sic] is a giant white elephant and I think more Americans should know how much this is costing as well as why we're doing it, which is simply to support American imperialism with a lie similar to the IRaq WMD lie and that is that Iran is "weeks away" from nuclear weapons, a lie that's been told and propagated since at least 1992 [2].

    President Eisenhower warned of the dangers of the expanding military-industrial complex in his 1961 farewell address [3]. Every bomber, every plane, every missile has an eye-watering cost when you put it int erms of schools, houses or healthcare. The recent ICE budget, for example, could've ended homelessness. Not for the year. Forever.

    Israel begged every president since Reagan to invade Iran. They all declined. Until now. And many suspect we're going to run out of anti-missile munitions long before Iran runs out of ballistic missiles.

    Just remember, every used munition eneds to be replaced. That's a new contract and new profit opportunity. It's why in so many post-WW2 conflicts you'll find American weapons on both sides.

    [1]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i6mWI8Q6IwA

    [2]: https://www.tiktok.com/@therecount/video/7612744750713589023

    [3]: https://www.archives.gov/milestone-documents/president-dwigh...

  • breakingrules3 55 minutes ago
    [dead]
  • tw04 2 hours ago
    [flagged]
  • 4gotunameagain 3 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • bawolff 2 hours ago
      US has tons of interests in the region. This is just as much for america's benefit as it is for Israel's.
      • evklein 2 hours ago
        "Interests." I'd love to know what the price per barrel the U.S. has paid in the last few years when you factor in additional costs incurred due to involvement in Iraq and Syria.
        • bawolff 1 hour ago
          While oil is a major interest its hardly the only one.

          USA is still playing at being world hegemon in competition with china and to a lesser extent russia. Maintaining alliances is a part of that.

          • Jtsummers 1 hour ago
            > USA is still playing at being world hegemon in competition with china and to a lesser extent russia. Maintaining alliances is a part of that.

            The US has been actively disrupting its most critical alliance, NATO, recently. Threatening to invade an allied nation's territory or force them to hand it over to us to prevent an invasion. Now threatening to block trade with NATO nations. The current administration is doing a terrible job of maintaining alliances.

            • bawolff 1 hour ago
              I didn't say they were doing a good job at it.

              I would agree, american foreign policy and especially how it is communicated has been all over the place.

        • hedora 1 hour ago
          We're certainly paying more than it'd cost to just drive EVs.

          Retail fuel prices are already higher than that, even ignoring subsidies, military operations and environmental externalities.

      • spaghetdefects 2 hours ago
        This is not in the US's interest at all. What do we get out of destabilizing the region? This is entirely for Israel.
        • hedora 1 hour ago
          This won't help Israelis.

          It will help multiple industrial military complexes on both sides of the conflict.

      • jsphweid 2 hours ago
        > This is just as much for america's benefit as it is for Israel's.

        Citation needed.

    • Dig1t 2 hours ago
      Almost all of our representatives have been bought by the Israel lobby. We will spend many billions more, and questioning it will continue to cause people to be labeled as antisemitic.

      Israel is seeking a new Memorandum of Understanding now which will guarantee them aid for twice as long as normal (20 years instead of the usual 10).

      https://www.stimson.org/2025/a-20-year-mou-with-israel-is-no...

      The Israel lobby is the most powerful and feared lobby in Washington. As a politician, getting on their bad side means almost certainly losing your next election. Just look at how much money they are putting into trying to replace Thomas Massie.

      Their power and influence has a huge chilling effect on all criticism of Israel, even representatives who represent people who overwhelmingly are against Israel like AOC and Omar, largely remain silent on the genocide and our foreign policy toward them because of this chilling effect.

      I highly recommend the book "The Israel Lobby" by Mearsheimer and Walt. It was published in 2007 and detailed this entire thing almost 2 decades ago.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Israel_Lobby_and_U.S._Fore...

  • rebolek 3 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • lyu07282 2 hours ago
      At this point the media apparatus that shaped all these people's brains in the comments here must've cost more than the wars they simp for.
    • gtsop 2 hours ago
      [dead]
  • tokyobreakfast 3 hours ago
    How much money was set on fire for Ukraine?

    Where does that fall in relation on the righteousness rubric?

    • benrutter 12 minutes ago
      Certainly a lot less per day, but regardless, the two wars have very different aggressors. If the US has an argument that Iran was a real threat, it certainly hasn't tried to make it yet. Conversely, Ukraine had no choice about whether to be in a war.

      It's easy to be cynical around "righteousness" but morality means something. I hope Americans with any kind of influence or vote are introspecting hard right now on what they feel confortable with.

    • Jolter 2 hours ago
      It was not set on fire, it was ”invested” in dead Russian soldiers.
    • wiseowise 53 minutes ago
      Ukraine is fighting for democracy, something that US been preaching for centuries, bozo.
  • benj111 2 hours ago
    I'd rather have a tracker to show how close the Orange One is to his coveted Peace Prize.
    • cdrnsf 1 hour ago
      He stole María Corina Machado‘s and has the much coveted one from FIFA too.
  • FrustratedMonky 3 hours ago
    Wow. That escalated quickly.
  • arduanika 2 hours ago
    It's hard for laypeople to comprehend such large numbers. Could you add a counter that measures it in miles of California high-speed rail? It's got to be over three miles by now at least.
  • rkal23 2 hours ago
    Maybe it will be offset by selling LNG at 50% higher prices to the dumb Europeans. Blowing up Nordstream was the first step, Qatar stopping LNG production the second. Perhaps take Greenland while the EU is completely dependent.
  • mandeepj 2 hours ago
    Orange clown has a strange way of looking at things. He's now saying - He's not starting a war, but rather ending one.
    • mekdoonggi 1 hour ago
      It's not strange, it's perfectly intelligible doublespeak.
    • joshrw 1 hour ago
      Doublespeak
  • coffinbirth 1 hour ago
    Dear Americans, what are the costs of the 165 killed children of the Minab school airstrike[1]?

    [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2026_Minab_school_airstrike

    • ineedaj0b 1 hour ago
      low, if the claims are true iran has 1000ish lbs of 60% uranium.

      we shall see