A reminder that as the US continues to threaten countries around the world, fedposting is to be very much avoided (even with qualifiers like “in Minecraft”) and comments containing it will be removed.

Image depicts Bolivian trade unionists on strike in La Paz, Bolivia.


Long preamble/summary below of recent news events.

summary

The Iran ceasefire is grinding on. After a brief period over the weekend of heightened activity where it seemed that US strikes might be resuming, Trump announced a “Memorandum of Understanding” with Iran, which initially appeared to be an agreement along Iran’s demands.

For those not following along with the diplomatic minutia, Iran’s position for several weeks has been that the nuclear issue must be discussed separately - because, well, last time they started discussing the nuclear issue with the US, they got fucking bombed - and so have proposed a two-stage negotiation where the war is first officially ended with certain preconditions (e.g. the US has to end sanctions and unfreeze assets and presumably withdraw at least some military assets), and then the second stage will begin in which the nuclear issue is handled.

The reason why a deal has still not been signed after all this time is because the US disagrees with doing it this way, and wants the nuclear issue to be handled right away (and obviously also objects with things like Iran retaining control of the Strait). Therefore, Trump’s announcement appeared to be him finally accepting reality, but it quickly became apparent that this was just another market manipulation. I’m definitely in the camp among several other analysts that believes another round of war is going to happen barring some very sudden circumstances (e.g. Trump being forced out of power one way or another, or Iran obtaining a nuke) because the US still seems agreement-incapable. And in Lebanon, consternation for the Zionists against Hezbollah’s attacks continues as the FPV drone threat only continues to increase despite them desperately seeking countermeasures.

As I’ve been perhaps too focussed on Iran lately, here’s a brief roundup of big news events from the last month or so.

  • Orban losing power: Pretty cool, though his replacement being Neoliberal #2980329891 means that big changes seem unlikely.

  • Strikes in Bolivia against that dipshit Paz: Very nice to see, as it appears that Bolivia has among the best widespread on-the-ground popular support for worker-centric policies and politicians in Latin America that makes it so they can genuinely pressure power (already, the Labor Minister has resigned).

  • Situation in the Sahel: “Mysterious” third parties sponsored a big offensive against the AES which they largely repelled with help from Russia. The situation there is still a little tenuous as I understand it with a greater focus by anti-government forces on blockades of cities to cause internal revolts. This tactic is currently broadly failing as armed convoys are getting fuel and food into the cities, but figures like Traore are aware that more needs to be done.

  • Ukraine War: Aside from the usual grinding advance by Russia on the front, there have been back-and-forth missile and drone strikes as Ukraine hit some targets in the outskirts of Moscow with drones and then Russia fired a shitload of missiles, including the iconic Oreshnik, directly at Kiev, as Simplicius and others have covered in greater detail.

I could go on and on with the recent aggressions against Cuba, Modi’s recent victories in India and the AI/chip tech war between China and the US but this preamble has to end at some point due to the character limit.


Last week’s thread is here.
The Imperialism Reading Group is here.

Please check out the RedAtlas!

The bulletins site is here. Currently not used.
The RSS feed is here. Also currently not used.

The Zionist Entity's Genocide of Palestine

If you have evidence of Zionist crimes and atrocities that you wish to preserve, there is a thread here in which to do so.

Sources on the fighting in Palestine against the temporary Zionist entity. In general, CW for footage of battles, explosions, dead people, and so on:

UNRWA reports on the Zionists’ destruction and siege of Gaza and the West Bank.

English-language Palestinian Marxist-Leninist twitter account. Alt here.
English-language twitter account that collates news.
Arab-language twitter account with videos and images of fighting.
English-language (with some Arab retweets) Twitter account based in Lebanon. - Telegram is @IbnRiad.
English-language Palestinian Twitter account which reports on news from the Resistance Axis. - Telegram is @EyesOnSouth.
English-language Twitter account in the same group as the previous two. - Telegram here.

Mirrors of Telegram channels that have been erased by Zionist censorship.

Russia-Ukraine Conflict

Examples of Ukrainian Nazis and fascists
Examples of racism/euro-centrism during the Russia-Ukraine conflict

Sources:

Defense Politics Asia’s youtube channel and their map. Their youtube channel has substantially diminished in quality but the map is still useful.
Moon of Alabama, which tends to have interesting analysis. Avoid the comment section.
Understanding War and the Saker: reactionary sources that have occasional insights on the war.
Alexander Mercouris, who does daily videos on the conflict. While he is a reactionary and surrounds himself with likeminded people, his daily update videos are relatively brainworm-free and good if you don’t want to follow Russian telegram channels to get news. He also co-hosts The Duran, which is more explicitly conservative, racist, sexist, transphobic, anti-communist, etc when guests are invited on, but is just about tolerable when it’s just the two of them if you want a little more analysis.
Simplicius, who publishes on Substack. Like others, his political analysis should be soundly ignored, but his knowledge of weaponry and military strategy is generally quite good.
On the ground: Patrick Lancaster, an independent and very good journalist reporting in the warzone on the separatists’ side.

Unedited videos of Russian/Ukrainian press conferences and speeches.

Pro-Russian Telegram Channels:

Again, CW for anti-LGBT and racist, sexist, etc speech, as well as combat footage.

https://t.me/aleksandr_skif ~ DPR’s former Defense Minister and Colonel in the DPR’s forces. Russian language.
https://t.me/Slavyangrad ~ A few different pro-Russian people gather frequent content for this channel (~100 posts per day), some socialist, but all socially reactionary. If you can only tolerate using one Russian telegram channel, I would recommend this one.
https://t.me/s/levigodman ~ Does daily update posts.
https://t.me/patricklancasternewstoday ~ Patrick Lancaster’s telegram channel.
https://t.me/gonzowarr ~ A big Russian commentator.
https://t.me/rybar ~ One of, if not the, biggest Russian telegram channels focussing on the war out there. Actually quite balanced, maybe even pessimistic about Russia. Produces interesting and useful maps.
https://t.me/epoddubny ~ Russian language.
https://t.me/boris_rozhin ~ Russian language.
https://t.me/mod_russia_en ~ Russian Ministry of Defense. Does daily, if rather bland updates on the number of Ukrainians killed, etc. The figures appear to be approximately accurate; if you want, reduce all numbers by 25% as a ‘propaganda tax’, if you don’t believe them. Does not cover everything, for obvious reasons, and virtually never details Russian losses.
https://t.me/UkraineHumanRightsAbuses ~ Pro-Russian, documents abuses that Ukraine commits.

Pro-Ukraine Telegram Channels:

Almost every Western media outlet.
https://discord.gg/projectowl ~ Pro-Ukrainian OSINT Discord.
https://t.me/ice_inii ~ Alleged Ukrainian account with a rather cynical take on the entire thing.


  • Tervell [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    8 天前

    anti-tunnelists owned by basic laws of physics, start looking into capeshit tech disruption to circumvent it https://archive.ph/j5LSN

    DARPA wants to reinvent the physics of bunker-busting weapons

    • DARPA published a request for information on May 27, 2026, seeking disruptive approaches to penetration mechanics and shock propagation control, with responses due June 26.
    • The program targets fundamental physics of bunker-busting technology, seeking concepts beyond traditional mass-velocity scaling to achieve step-change performance against hardened underground targets.
    more

    The United States just used its most powerful conventional bombs against the deepest underground nuclear facility in the world. Those bombs worked — and they also revealed exactly where current physics ends and the next weapons problem begins. DARPA is now looking for solutions to that problem. The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, the Pentagon’s research arm responsible for developing technologies that define the next generation of American military capability, published a request for information on May 27, seeking what it calls “disruptive approaches” to penetration mechanics and shock propagation control. The document describes a program aimed at moving beyond everything current bunker-busting munitions can do, targeting the fundamental physics of how objects penetrate hardened materials and how explosive shockwaves travel through solid structures. Responses are due June 26, 2026. On June 22, 2025, seven B-2 Spirit stealth bombers delivered 14 GBU-57 Massive Ordnance Penetrator bombs, the largest conventional bomb in the American arsenal at 30,000 pounds, against Iran’s Fordow uranium enrichment facility, buried 80 to 90 meters beneath a mountain near the city of Qom. The GBU-57, which was specifically developed to destroy facilities like Fordow, can penetrate approximately 60 meters of reinforced concrete or rock. Multiple strikes can increase that effective depth. The Fordow strikes, part of Operation Midnight Hammer, were among the most technically demanding precision strike operations in American history, and they revealed the outer edge of what existing penetrator technology can achieve against hardened targets.

    Satellite imagery and open-source intelligence through May 2026 shows that Iran, responding to the strikes, has been excavating new facilities to depths of 80 to 100 meters under hard granite, potentially deeper than Fordow and potentially beyond the reliable reach of existing bunker-busting munitions. The same report notes the program appears intended to house a new generation of centrifuges. The adversary’s countermove to the GBU-57 is simply to dig deeper and use harder rock, and the physics that govern how a 30,000-pound steel penetrator behaves when it hits granite at high velocity have not changed since the bomb was designed. DARPA’s RFI addresses that physics problem directly and at a fundamental level. The document asks for ideas that go beyond what it calls “traditional mass-velocity scaling and empirical design,” the current engineering paradigm in which penetrators are made heavier and faster to dig deeper. Instead, DARPA wants approaches that “deliberately shape, steer, amplify, or suppress stress waves” within materials, that manipulate the material state of what a penetrator is passing through under extreme loading conditions, and that treat the shockwave generated by penetration as a design variable to be engineered rather than a physical consequence to be endured.

    To understand what that means in practical terms, some background on penetration physics is necessary. When a hardened steel penetrator strikes reinforced concrete or rock at high velocity, two things happen simultaneously: the penetrator physically displaces material as it moves forward, and the impact generates a shockwave that radiates outward through the surrounding structure. Current penetrator design optimizes the first process, using geometry, material hardness, and velocity to maximize forward displacement. The shockwave, by contrast, is largely treated as a byproduct, carrying energy away from the penetration channel in ways that current designs do not actively control. What DARPA is describing is a fundamentally different paradigm, one in which the shockwave itself becomes a weapon. If the stress waves generated by penetration could be steered and amplified at a specific depth within the target structure, the effective damage could reach far beyond the physical penetration depth of the weapon body. Alternatively, controlling how failure initiates and propagates within hardened material could allow a smaller, lighter penetrator to achieve damage previously requiring a much larger weapon. The RFI specifically mentions “controlled failure initiation and progression” and “the coupling of structural, material, and geometric effects to achieve step-change performance against complex targets” as areas of explicit interest. The Air Force awarded Applied Research Associates a 24-month contract in 2025 to develop prototype hardware for the Next Generation Penetrator, a program intended to replace the GBU-57 and designed to strike hardened bunkers, tunnels, and deeply buried targets. The Air Force requested $74 million in its fiscal 2026 budget to continue research, ground sub-scale testing, and full-scale static tests for the program. The NGP program and the DARPA RFI are parallel tracks addressing the same operational problem, one focused on near-term hardware development and one on the longer-range science that might make a fundamentally different kind of weapon possible.

    The DARPA document also asks for enabling technologies that could support the underlying research, including “architected or actively tunable materials,” meaning materials whose internal structure can be designed or modified to interact with shockwaves in specific ways, and “advanced diagnostics capable of resolving high-strain-rate phenomena in situ,” meaning measurement tools that can observe what actually happens inside a material in the microseconds during and after a high-velocity impact. Both of these categories reflect a broader problem in penetration research: the events of interest happen so fast, in such extreme conditions, that they are very difficult to measure accurately, and designs have historically been validated by testing rather than by a full physical understanding of the mechanisms involved. Iran is digging deeper, and China has been building hardened underground facilities for military command infrastructure, weapons storage, and missile basing for decades, a program known in defense planning circles as the Underground Great Wall. North Korea’s nuclear program relies heavily on tunneled facilities deliberately placed beyond the reach of current American strike packages. The physics problem DARPA is trying to crack is not abstract, and the countries that motivated the question are still burrowing. What gets built in response to this RFI may determine whether the next generation of American penetrating weapons can keep pace with that.