Analysis
Iranians prefer 'precise' Israeli strike over US attack as protests resume at universities
Iranians, while "waiting every minute and second" for a US strike against the Islamic Regime, would prefer an Israeli strike due to the precise nature of the Air Force's strikes in June, while there is a perception that US strikes would "bring terrible destruction, like in Iraq and Afghanistan," a local, identified as Ali told KAN Reshet Bet on Sunday.
By Wings of Time 5 days ago in History
Why Attacking Iran Could Be Riskier Than Capturing Maduro
When President Trump said in January that a U.S. “armada” was heading to Iran, he compared it with the kind of force used in the military’s recent lightning operation in Venezuela, saying it was “able to rapidly fulfill its mission, with speed and violence.”
By Wings of Time 5 days ago in History
Iran Could Direct Proxies to Attack U.S. Targets Abroad, Officials Warn
A new billboard in Tehran this month. The uncertainty surrounding possible threats from Iran’s proxy groups further complicates the Trump administration’s war planning. Credit...Arash Khamooshi for The New York Times
By Wings of Time 5 days ago in History
The earliest fossilised vomit in the world with intact remains is found by scientists.
The oldest known vomit from a terrestrial mammal is a lump of fossilised vomit that is around 290 million years old. An early land food chain can be redrawn thanks to 41 bone fragments that freeze a single meal from long before dinosaurs.
By Francis Dami6 days ago in History
The Most Genius "Legal Robbery" In History
Ireland’s small village of Bellewstown still remembers a man who pulled off a $600,000 robbery in broad daylight. The shocking part? He had no gun and wore no mask. After the operation, he walked around freely, and the police couldn’t touch him—because everything he did was technically legal.
By Imran Ali Shah7 days ago in History
Why Russia Never Went Back to Planet Venus
In 1960, when the entire world had its eyes fixed on America’s Apollo missions, something terrifying was happening on our neighboring planet, Venus. The Soviet Union—today’s Russia—was secretly planning what could only be called suicide missions to Venus. After spending billions of dollars and years of effort, they built probes designed to do something unprecedented: land on another planet and capture its images.
By Imran Ali Shah8 days ago in History
A Century of Clues: The History of New York Times Crossword Culture
For many, solving a crossword puzzle is a quiet morning ritual, a mental stretch between coffee sips. Yet the story of the New York Times crossword is far more than a daily pastime—it is a century-long narrative woven into American culture, language, and collective cognition. From its humble beginnings to its digital transformation, the crossword has accumulated devoted solvers, landmark controversies, and an evolving identity that mirrors shifts in how we think, play, and connect.
By CEO A&S Developers8 days ago in History
#Geopolitics#Energy#CentralAsia#Iran#Logistics#GoldenBridge #Turkey#Eurasia
Analysis of the realities on the global political stage at the conclusion of the first quarter of the 21st century indicates that the modern system of international relations stands on the threshold of fundamental reforms and drastic shifts. Specifically, the ongoing armed conflicts driven by the clash of interests of Great Powers (Russia-Ukraine) and the subsequent sanctions have exerted a profound negative impact on the energy map of the Eurasian continent.
By Бахромжон Суванов9 days ago in History
Found in Amazon... 10X Bigger Than Anaconda
In the Cerrejón region of Colombia, a team of scientists and paleontologists was digging deep underground in a coal mine. This coal mine had actually formed from a rainforest that existed nearly 60 million years ago. That is why the researchers were searching for the remains of ancient plants and animals.
By Imran Ali Shah9 days ago in History










