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Zeets2
Today 10:05 am
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JohnnyYou » Yesterday, 7:30 pm » wrote: Forty Seven Ninety Nine a Gallon. 

Iran is complete now after the missed bothched obliteration a year ago.
Thanks for providing such an idiotic opinion, but it's a shame you're unable to understand that eliminating Iran's nuclear capabilities had nothing to do with the actions taken now to destroy their ability to spread their terrorism to the region, since they didn't learn their lesson and immediately attempted to restart their ballistic missile and nuclear programs.  That "wisdom" has now cost Iran their Air Force, Navy, their top tiers of leadership, their communications, their missile launchers, and their radar capabilities, and we've now hit and destroyed their largest missile factory, their desalinization plant that provided them with water, and are hitting their oil refineries and storage facilities.

And you hate that, don't you?      Image  
Image
Flames rise from an oil storage facility south of the capital Tehran as strikes hit the city on Saturday.

Oil refinery in Tehran blanketed by black smoke on day after it was hit by strikes
Iran says that overnight strikes hit four oil storage tankers and a petroleum transfer terminal, killing 4 people. Much of the city of Tehran has been impacted by the smoke billowing from the refineries as US-Israeli aerial bombardment campaign continues. 
 March 8, 2026
War Brings Black Rain to a Parched Iran
Yale Environment 360  March 10, 2026

As US and Israeli forces pummel Iran, oil installations and a desalination plant have come under fire. Experts warn that attacks on key infrastructure threaten the supply of fresh water in a country already coping with a brutal drought. For the first time since the bombing campaign began, Israel has begun targeting oil infrastructure, hitting several storage sites and a refinery near Tehran this weekend, TIME reported. Fires at bombed oil installations sent huge plumes of smoke over the Iranian capital. As black, acidic rain fell on the city, locals complained of sore throats and burning eyes, and some feared the tainted rain would contaminate the water supply. “Most of Tehran’s water comes from dams,” an Iranian activist told The Guardian. “If those become polluted, what happens then?” As rain falls, it mixes with pollution on its way down. In Tehran, rain likely collected pollution issuing from bombed oil sites, including particulates, heavy metals, and the compounds that give rise to acid rain.
 
 
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