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International Humanitarian Law Databases
ihl-databases.icrc.org

...
Article 51 - Protection of the civilian population
...
2. The civilian population as such, as well as individual civilians, shall not be the object of attack. Acts or threats of violence the primary purpose of which is to spread terror among the civilian population are prohibited.
...


US-Iran war, fuel crisis live updates: No sign of 'uptick' in traffic through Strait of Hormuz, despite White House's claims
www.news.com.au

... The White House's claim that there's been an "uptick" in traffic through the Strait of Hormuz since Donald Trump announced his ceasefire with Iran appears to contradict the data. ...

White House Sends Mixed Signals on Strait of Hormuz Closure
www.notus.org

... Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, sent conflicting messages on Wednesday about the Strait of Hormuz, pushing back on reports that Iran had closed the channel while also calling on it to be reopened.

Leavitt didn't directly answer who currently controls the vital shipping route, raising new questions about the status of a ceasefire with Iran.

Leavitt rejected the report by Iranian state media that tanker traffic had been halted in response to Israeli strikes in Lebanon, calling it "false."

"That is completely unacceptable," she told reporters at a White House briefing, adding that "we have seen an uptick of traffic in the strait today." ...


Lighthouse - Sunny Days (1972)
www.youtube.com

Lyrics excerpt ...

genius.com

...
Sittin' stoned alone in my backyard
Askin' myself "Why should I work so hard?"
Sittin' dreamin' 'bout the days to come
Half-undressed, just soakin' up the sun

Sittin' here, I hope I don't get fried
Two years ago, you know, I almost died
And yet, there's nothin' better for your soul
Than lyin' in the sun and listenin' to rock 'n roll

Sunny days
Oh, sunny, sunny, sunny days
Ain't nothin' better in the world, you know
Than lyin' in the sun with your radio

Sunny days
Oh, sunny, sunny, sunny days
Ain't nothin' better in the world, you know
Than lyin' in the sun with your radio

I really think there's nothin' quite so fine
As lettin' the sun rejuvenate your mind
Don't get me wrong, I really dig the moon
But it was four in the afternoon when I wrote this tune

And now the sun's about to fade away
I'm feelin' better than I've felt for days
You know, there's nothin' better for your soul
Than lyin' in the sun and listenin' to rock 'n roll

Sunny days
Oh, sunny, sunny, sunny days
Ain't nothin' better in the world, you know
Than lyin' in the sun with your radio
...




I saw article like this that seemed to be quite more likely ...

Two days in Iran: the small device that helped US forces locate, rescue the downed F-15E navigator
www.ynetnews.com

... US navigator hid for 48 hours in hostile territory, sending encrypted signals through a satellite-linked survival device that allowed rescuers to track him without detection, showcasing advanced combat search and rescue technology deep inside Iran ...

But, what do I know?

@#9

From that article ...

... On February 11, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu arrived at the White House with a clear objective: persuade US President Donald Trump that the time had come to strike Iran. Inside the Situation Room, in a tightly controlled and highly classified setting, Netanyahu delivered a detailed military and intelligence briefing.

Flanked virtually by Israel's top security officials, he laid out a compelling case for immediate action. Iran, he argued, was vulnerable. Its defenses could be dismantled, its leadership targeted, and its regime weakened to the point of collapse.

Trump's response was brief but decisive. "Sounds good to me." That moment set the United States on a path toward war.

Within hours, US intelligence agencies began evaluating the Israeli proposal. Their conclusions were sharply different.

American officials agreed that targeted military strikes could degrade Iran's capabilities. But the broader goal of regime change was dismissed as unrealistic.

CIA Director John Ratcliffe described that aspect of the plan as "farcical." Secretary of State Marco Rubio was even more direct: "In other words, it's --------."

Rubio clarified his position in strategic terms. Limited military objectives were achievable. Regime change was not. "If our goal is regime change or an uprising, we shouldn't do it. But if the goal is to destroy Iran's missile program, that's a goal we can achieve."

The debate within Trump's inner circle revealed deep divisions, not over whether Iran posed a threat, but over how far the United States should go.

Vice President JD Vance emerged as the most consistent voice of caution. He warned that a full-scale war could spiral unpredictably, destabilize the region, and strain American resources. "You know I think this is a bad idea, but if you want to do it, I'll support you."

Rubio, meanwhile, took a pragmatic middle ground, skeptical of diplomacy but cautious about escalation.

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth argued the opposite. In his view, confrontation with Iran was inevitable. If conflict were coming, delaying it would only raise the cost.

Warnings from military and political advisers

Behind the scenes, concerns extended beyond strategy. White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles worried about the broader consequences, economic shocks, rising oil prices, and the risk of another prolonged conflict in the Middle East.

Military leaders raised operational concerns. A war with Iran could deplete US weapons stockpiles and expose vulnerabilities in global supply chains. Securing the Strait of Hormuz, a critical oil transit route, would be a major challenge. Yet these warnings were presented as risks, not red lines. No one directly moved to block the president's decision. ...


*** PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUNCEMENT ***

One of two United States Senators from the State of Delaware is Senator Christopher -----


Senator -----' last name (spelled -----) is the spelling of his last name.

We now return you to your regularly-scheduled program, already in progress ...

How Donald Trump took the US into war with Iran: Inside the White House decision
www.wionews.com

... On February 11, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu arrived at the White House with a clear objective: persuade US President Donald Trump that the time had come to strike Iran. Inside the Situation Room, in a tightly controlled and highly classified setting, Netanyahu delivered a detailed military and intelligence briefing.

Flanked virtually by Israel's top security officials, he laid out a compelling case for immediate action. Iran, he argued, was vulnerable. Its defenses could be dismantled, its leadership targeted, and its regime weakened to the point of collapse.

Trump's response was brief but decisive. "Sounds good to me." That moment set the United States on a path toward war.

Within hours, US intelligence agencies began evaluating the Israeli proposal. Their conclusions were sharply different.

American officials agreed that targeted military strikes could degrade Iran's capabilities. But the broader goal of regime change was dismissed as unrealistic.

CIA Director John Ratcliffe described that aspect of the plan as "farcical." Secretary of State Marco Rubio was even more direct: "In other words, it's --------."

Rubio clarified his position in strategic terms. Limited military objectives were achievable. Regime change was not. "If our goal is regime change or an uprising, we shouldn't do it. But if the goal is to destroy Iran's missile program, that's a goal we can achieve."

The debate within Trump's inner circle revealed deep divisions, not over whether Iran posed a threat, but over how far the United States should go.

Vice President JD Vance emerged as the most consistent voice of caution. He warned that a full-scale war could spiral unpredictably, destabilize the region, and strain American resources. "You know I think this is a bad idea, but if you want to do it, I'll support you."

Rubio, meanwhile, took a pragmatic middle ground, skeptical of diplomacy but cautious about escalation.

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth argued the opposite. In his view, confrontation with Iran was inevitable. If conflict were coming, delaying it would only raise the cost.

Warnings from military and political advisers

Behind the scenes, concerns extended beyond strategy. White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles worried about the broader consequences, economic shocks, rising oil prices, and the risk of another prolonged conflict in the Middle East.

Military leaders raised operational concerns. A war with Iran could deplete US weapons stockpiles and expose vulnerabilities in global supply chains. Securing the Strait of Hormuz, a critical oil transit route, would be a major challenge. Yet these warnings were presented as risks, not red lines. No one directly moved to block the president's decision. ...



More from the article ...

... On Monday afternoon President Donald Trump and CIA Director John Ratcliffe hinted at technology that had helped locate a downed American Air Force officer hiding in a mountain crevice in southern Iran.

By Tuesday, the New York Post reported that the CIA had deployed Ghost Murmur, a device that uses vaguely described "long-range quantum magnetometry" to find signals of human heartbeats, after which artificial intelligence software isolates each heartbeat from the noisy data. An unnamed source told the Post it was like "hearing a voice in a stadium, except the stadium is a thousand square miles of desert." Another line landed like a movie tagline: "In the right conditions, if your heart is beating, we will find you."

It's a terrific story.

It is also, according to scientists who study magnetic fields, almost certainly not true. The rescue was real -- the mission involved multiple aircraft and a survival beacon carried by the airman -- but Ghost Murmur, at least as publicly described, finds no support in decades of peer-reviewed physics, even with the help of AI, experts told me.

Quantum magnetometers are real; they are ultraprecise at, for instance, detecting heart arrhythmias by measuring magnetic fields (via quantum properties) produced by the cardiac muscle.

The problem is that the heart's magnetic field is weak. "At the surface of the chest, where you're about 10 centimeters away from the source, the magnetic field is just barely detectable," says John Wikswo, a professor of biomedical engineering and physics at Vanderbilt University. "Now, [if] instead of going 10 centimeters away -- which is a tenth of a meter -- you go a meter away, the amplitude of the signal has dropped to a thousandth of what it was." The signal becomes dramatically weaker at a kilometer.

Wikswo was the first scientist to measure the magnetic field of an isolated nerve and has been measuring the heart's magnetic field since the mid-1970s. ...


Also this ...

Testing suggests Google's AI Overviews tell millions of lies per hour
arstechnica.com

... Looking up information on Google today means confronting AI Overviews, the Gemini-powered search robot that appears at the top of the results page.

AI Overviews has had a rough time since its 2024 launch, attracting user ire over its scattershot accuracy, but it's getting better and usually provides the right answer. T

hat's a low bar, though. A new analysis from The New York Times attempted to assess the accuracy of AI Overviews, finding it's right 90 percent of the time.

The flip side is that 1 in 10 AI answers is wrong, and for Google, that means hundreds of thousands of lies going out every minute of the day. ...


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