Foreign Affairs
Related: About this forumWhy Aren't Iran and Its Proxies Attacking the U.S. Homeland? - William Spaniel
More than a month into the Iran War, and the U.S. homeland has remained relatively quiet. Instead, Iran and its proxies have only kept busy in the Middle East and Europe. Today's video explores the potential role of militant groups in the conflict, and what it means for future operations.
0:00 All Quiet on the Militant Front
3:02 Renewed Houthi Threats and Attacks
5:17 Attacks on Europe by a New Group
7:42 Risks in the United States
11:37 Inside Iran's Strategy
13:14 Takeaway Lines
Dan
(5,212 posts)So he can declare his state of emergency to protect and ensure election security.
usonian
(25,553 posts)Let's face it, attacking a country just solidifies its existing government. I've posted that a time or two, and so it goes with Iran. They know it. And they learned from 9/11. Did that take down the U.S. government?
But the country is being run by complete idiots. Predictable ones, and I believe that's the game that's being played (or not played). Just hit the U.S. client states in the area near Iran, and that includes mega data centers and so on.
Just my two cents' worth.
Taking down the U.S. is trivial. Regular and cyber defenses have been decimated by religious racists. A setup for the long-desired crisis that brings martial law.
https://www.democraticunderground.com/100220295160
Iranian hackers are busy right now attacking infrastructure, with leading cyber-defense experts at home watching baseball, having been canned. IMNSHO, having worked with computers for a very long time, "computer security" is a lie and a sick joke. Capitalism demands "throwing software over the divider" very often, and quality, checking and testing all cost precious money. I see at least one zero-day or critical alert a day. Software, ESPECIALLY infrastructure software that runs power plants, water plants, little things like airports and so on, is (IMNSHO) garbage.,
Iran attempting cyberattacks against critical U.S. infrastructure, officials say
https://www.latimes.com/politics/story/2026-04-07/iran-attempting-cyber-attacks-against-u-s-critical-infrastructure-officials-say
FBI labels suspected China hack of law enforcement data 'a major cyber incident'
https://www.latimes.com/politics/story/2026-04-07/iran-attempting-cyber-attacks-against-u-s-critical-infrastructure-officials-say
FBI declares suspected Chinese hack of US surveillance system a major cyber incident
https://www.politico.com/news/2026/04/01/fbi-hack-surveillance-system-major-incident-00854237
The designation suggests the hackers successfully compromised swathes of sensitive data stored directly on FBI systems.

Ask me about software patches.
On second thought, don't.
I'm happily retired from that shooting gallery.