The State Department just authorized evacuation of non-emergency personnel from the U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem as two full carrier strike groups position within striking distance of Iranian territory. But here's the bombshell that should terrify every American: Russia leaked our entire war plan to Tehran.
According to reports from the New York Times and Politico, Russian intelligence delivered a fully developed U.S. strike plan to Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps on February 20th. We're not talking about rumors or summaries—this was the complete package including target matrices, launch platforms, timing sequences, and full campaign architecture.
Every element of surprise that has defined American air superiority since Desert Storm was handed to our enemies in a single transmission. The very advantage our military has relied on for decades? Gone.
The Axis Forms Against America
But Russia didn't stop there. Six weeks earlier, Moscow signed a 500 million euro arms deal with Iran, delivering advanced missiles and Virba man-pad launchers specifically designed to rebuild the air defenses that Trump's Operation Midnight Hammer destroyed last June. One country told Iran exactly what America plans to hit. The same country sold Iran the weapons to defend against it.
Now China has entered the picture. Reuters confirms Beijing is transferring CM-302 supersonic anti-ship missiles to Iran—Mach 3 weapons designed to kill the very Aegis destroyers Trump has positioned in the Persian Gulf. Russia provides the intelligence and air defense. China provides anti-ship missiles and satellite surveillance. Iran gets the strike plan, sky defenses, and fleet-killing capability.
No formal alliance needed. Three powers independently ensuring any American strike costs maximum blood and treasure.
Trump's Cuban Missile Crisis Moment
Vice President J.D. Vance told the Washington Post the administration has "no intention of engaging in a prolonged war with Iran." Note that word: prolonged. Not no war—no prolonged war. Trump himself referenced Soleimani and al-Baghdadi as proof that decisive strikes work, but added "sometimes you have to" use military force.
This is Trump's Cuban Missile Crisis moment. He's staring down a nuclear-capable Iran armed with Russian weapons and American secrets while our enemies orchestrate strategic exhaustion. Every Tomahawk fired at Iranian targets is one absent from a potential Taiwan conflict.
The mainstream media buries this under celebrity gossip while your sons and daughters stand on the edge of the largest Middle East conflict in decades. Trump inherited this crisis, but as he knows: strength prevents war, weakness invites it. Those carrier groups aren't there to start a fight—they're there to end one before it begins.
