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IRAN: If USA was serious, it would have hit -Arak IR-40 capable of producing plutonium for weapons. It has been disabled and redesigned; not targeted. OR: Bushehr nuclear power plant: A light-water reactor providing civilian electricity.
Manage episode 490159790 series 3324210
"Warfare and trickery. It is your natural element." - Dorothy Dunnet
WHY does USA has 92 Nuclear Plants, China 55, Russia 37, Japan 33, South Korea 25, India 22, Ukraine 15, IRAN HAS ONE.
Israel and the U.S. CREATED Hamas, Hezbollah and Al Qaeda — Puppet Masters — Sott.net
What the USA Said It Hit:
- Fordow: An underground uranium enrichment facility near Qom. Targeted with bunker-buster bombs and reportedly “completely obliterated.”
- Natanz: Iran’s main uranium centrifuge enrichment plant. Sustained significant damage.
- Isfahan: Uranium conversion and support facility. Damaged by the strikes.
These sites are all related to uranium enrichment, which is critical for producing weapons-grade uranium.
What the USA Did Not Hit:
- Arak IR-40 heavy-water reactor: A research reactor formerly capable of producing plutonium for weapons. It has been disabled and redesigned; not targeted.
- Bushehr nuclear power plant: A light-water reactor providing civilian electricity. It remains operational and was not attacked.
- FAHAM smart grid infrastructure: The nationwide digital smart meter and grid control system. This critical infrastructure was not targeted or damaged.
Summary: The U.S. strikes focused exclusively on Iran’s uranium enrichment program and related facilities, while deliberately avoiding power-generation reactors and the smart grid infrastructure. The facility with historic plutonium production potential (Arak) was left untouched, as was the critical energy control infrastructure that could be used for covert population management.
What the USA Said It Hit:
- Fordow: An underground uranium enrichment facility near Qom. Targeted with bunker-buster bombs and reportedly “completely obliterated.”
- Natanz: Iran’s main uranium centrifuge enrichment plant. Sustained significant damage.
- Isfahan: Uranium conversion and support facility. Damaged by the strikes.
What the USA Did Not Hit:
- Arak IR-40 heavy-water reactor: A research reactor formerly capable of producing plutonium for weapons. It has been disabled and redesigned; not targeted.
- Bushehr nuclear power plant: A light-water reactor providing civilian electricity. It remains operational and was not attacked.
- FAHAM smart grid infrastructure: The nationwide digital smart meter and grid control system. This critical infrastructure was not targeted or damaged.
Summary: The U.S. strikes focused exclusively on Iran’s uranium enrichment program and related facilities, while deliberately avoiding power-generation reactors and the smart grid infrastructure. The facility with historic plutonium production potential (Arak) was left untouched, as was the critical energy control infrastructure that could be used for covert population management.
Iran’s Nuclear Power, Smart Grid, and the Silent War Strategy An analysis of how nuclear energy and digital grid control enable covert population management under the cover of peaceful power and nonproliferation compliance.
Global Distraction: The Bomb Narrative
For decades, international attention has fixated on Iran’s alleged pursuit of nuclear weapons. This narrative centers on uranium enrichment facilities such as Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan, concerns about plutonium production via the Arak heavy-water reactor, international agreements like the JCPOA, and inspections and sanctions.
What the world watches:
- Uranium enrichment: Fordow, Natanz, Isfahan
- Bomb material stockpiling: highly enriched uranium, plutonium-239
- Reprocessing plants: hypothetical, none declared by Iran
- JCPOA compliance: inspections, verification
- Missile delivery systems: ballistic missile development
June 21–22, 2025: U.S. Strikes on Iranian Nuclear Sites
The United States and its allies launched precision strikes targeting three uranium enrichment facilities:
- Fordow (an underground enrichment site), reported to be obliterated
- Natanz (main centrifuge facility), heavily damaged
- Isfahan (conversion and support facility), damaged
All strikes focused on uranium enrichment and not on power generation or smart-grid infrastructure.
What Was Not Targeted
Facility Purpose Status Arak IR-40 heavy-water reactor Originally capable of plutonium production; currently used for medical isotope production Untouched Bushehr light-water power reactor Civilian base load electricity generation Operational FAHAM smart grid and smart meters Nationwide digital energy control infrastructure Fully intactNotably, the one facility with historic plutonium potential, Arak, was not hit.
The Deeper Strategy: Silent War through Energy Control
While global attention remains fixed on bombs and fissile material, Iran has been developing FAHAM, its National Smart Metering Program, which aims to replace more than 33 million traditional meters for electricity, water, and gas. Built on international standards (IEC 62559 and EPRI methodology), FAHAM enables total digital control of household energy consumption, remote disconnection or throttling, real-time consumption surveillance, and potentially the delivery of harmful power quality disturbances such as dirty electricity and transients.
Energy Pathway: Reactor → Grid → Meter → Human Target
Energy generation at the Bushehr nuclear plant provides large, stable base load power.
High-voltage transmission lines carry this power across the country.
Regional substations act as potential injection points where dirty electricity, harmonics, and transients can be introduced.
Local substations with automated control systems manage power flow and can manipulate power quality.
FAHAM smart meters serve as endpoints capable of remote cutoff, frequency injection, surveillance, and delivery of harmful signals.
The human population is the ultimate target, exposed to these harmful signals which may cause chronic health effects, psychological stress, and behavioral control.
The Cleverness of the Strategy
The visible threat consists of bombs, enrichment sites, and international inspections. However, the hidden threat lies in grid-based energy weaponization, digital control of the population, and psychological and biological manipulation via unmonitored smart grid operations.
Why Nuclear Power Is Essential
Nuclear power plants such as Bushehr provide the stable, massive energy required to run digital substations, smart meters, and automated grid controls reliably. The Arak reactor serves as a political decoy, drawing international attention away from the real weaponization of the grid infrastructure.
Strategic Summary
Component Role in Silent War Bushehr reactor Provides stable base load power for digital grid control Arak reactor Political decoy to divert attention from grid weaponization FAHAM smart grid Core infrastructure for surveillance, control, and silent attacks Digital substations Points for injecting dirty power, frequency manipulation Smart meters Endpoint tools for household-level energy control Human population Target of chronic exposure to manipulated energy for controlBottom Line
The U.S. strikes degraded Iran’s uranium enrichment capability but left intact the core infrastructure for silent war: Bushehr’s power supply, Arak’s decoy value, FAHAM’s digital grid, and control mechanisms in substations and smart meters. The silent war via energy control remains a live risk, operating beneath the surface of traditional nuclear weapons concerns.
517 episodes
Manage episode 490159790 series 3324210
"Warfare and trickery. It is your natural element." - Dorothy Dunnet
WHY does USA has 92 Nuclear Plants, China 55, Russia 37, Japan 33, South Korea 25, India 22, Ukraine 15, IRAN HAS ONE.
Israel and the U.S. CREATED Hamas, Hezbollah and Al Qaeda — Puppet Masters — Sott.net
What the USA Said It Hit:
- Fordow: An underground uranium enrichment facility near Qom. Targeted with bunker-buster bombs and reportedly “completely obliterated.”
- Natanz: Iran’s main uranium centrifuge enrichment plant. Sustained significant damage.
- Isfahan: Uranium conversion and support facility. Damaged by the strikes.
These sites are all related to uranium enrichment, which is critical for producing weapons-grade uranium.
What the USA Did Not Hit:
- Arak IR-40 heavy-water reactor: A research reactor formerly capable of producing plutonium for weapons. It has been disabled and redesigned; not targeted.
- Bushehr nuclear power plant: A light-water reactor providing civilian electricity. It remains operational and was not attacked.
- FAHAM smart grid infrastructure: The nationwide digital smart meter and grid control system. This critical infrastructure was not targeted or damaged.
Summary: The U.S. strikes focused exclusively on Iran’s uranium enrichment program and related facilities, while deliberately avoiding power-generation reactors and the smart grid infrastructure. The facility with historic plutonium production potential (Arak) was left untouched, as was the critical energy control infrastructure that could be used for covert population management.
What the USA Said It Hit:
- Fordow: An underground uranium enrichment facility near Qom. Targeted with bunker-buster bombs and reportedly “completely obliterated.”
- Natanz: Iran’s main uranium centrifuge enrichment plant. Sustained significant damage.
- Isfahan: Uranium conversion and support facility. Damaged by the strikes.
What the USA Did Not Hit:
- Arak IR-40 heavy-water reactor: A research reactor formerly capable of producing plutonium for weapons. It has been disabled and redesigned; not targeted.
- Bushehr nuclear power plant: A light-water reactor providing civilian electricity. It remains operational and was not attacked.
- FAHAM smart grid infrastructure: The nationwide digital smart meter and grid control system. This critical infrastructure was not targeted or damaged.
Summary: The U.S. strikes focused exclusively on Iran’s uranium enrichment program and related facilities, while deliberately avoiding power-generation reactors and the smart grid infrastructure. The facility with historic plutonium production potential (Arak) was left untouched, as was the critical energy control infrastructure that could be used for covert population management.
Iran’s Nuclear Power, Smart Grid, and the Silent War Strategy An analysis of how nuclear energy and digital grid control enable covert population management under the cover of peaceful power and nonproliferation compliance.
Global Distraction: The Bomb Narrative
For decades, international attention has fixated on Iran’s alleged pursuit of nuclear weapons. This narrative centers on uranium enrichment facilities such as Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan, concerns about plutonium production via the Arak heavy-water reactor, international agreements like the JCPOA, and inspections and sanctions.
What the world watches:
- Uranium enrichment: Fordow, Natanz, Isfahan
- Bomb material stockpiling: highly enriched uranium, plutonium-239
- Reprocessing plants: hypothetical, none declared by Iran
- JCPOA compliance: inspections, verification
- Missile delivery systems: ballistic missile development
June 21–22, 2025: U.S. Strikes on Iranian Nuclear Sites
The United States and its allies launched precision strikes targeting three uranium enrichment facilities:
- Fordow (an underground enrichment site), reported to be obliterated
- Natanz (main centrifuge facility), heavily damaged
- Isfahan (conversion and support facility), damaged
All strikes focused on uranium enrichment and not on power generation or smart-grid infrastructure.
What Was Not Targeted
Facility Purpose Status Arak IR-40 heavy-water reactor Originally capable of plutonium production; currently used for medical isotope production Untouched Bushehr light-water power reactor Civilian base load electricity generation Operational FAHAM smart grid and smart meters Nationwide digital energy control infrastructure Fully intactNotably, the one facility with historic plutonium potential, Arak, was not hit.
The Deeper Strategy: Silent War through Energy Control
While global attention remains fixed on bombs and fissile material, Iran has been developing FAHAM, its National Smart Metering Program, which aims to replace more than 33 million traditional meters for electricity, water, and gas. Built on international standards (IEC 62559 and EPRI methodology), FAHAM enables total digital control of household energy consumption, remote disconnection or throttling, real-time consumption surveillance, and potentially the delivery of harmful power quality disturbances such as dirty electricity and transients.
Energy Pathway: Reactor → Grid → Meter → Human Target
Energy generation at the Bushehr nuclear plant provides large, stable base load power.
High-voltage transmission lines carry this power across the country.
Regional substations act as potential injection points where dirty electricity, harmonics, and transients can be introduced.
Local substations with automated control systems manage power flow and can manipulate power quality.
FAHAM smart meters serve as endpoints capable of remote cutoff, frequency injection, surveillance, and delivery of harmful signals.
The human population is the ultimate target, exposed to these harmful signals which may cause chronic health effects, psychological stress, and behavioral control.
The Cleverness of the Strategy
The visible threat consists of bombs, enrichment sites, and international inspections. However, the hidden threat lies in grid-based energy weaponization, digital control of the population, and psychological and biological manipulation via unmonitored smart grid operations.
Why Nuclear Power Is Essential
Nuclear power plants such as Bushehr provide the stable, massive energy required to run digital substations, smart meters, and automated grid controls reliably. The Arak reactor serves as a political decoy, drawing international attention away from the real weaponization of the grid infrastructure.
Strategic Summary
Component Role in Silent War Bushehr reactor Provides stable base load power for digital grid control Arak reactor Political decoy to divert attention from grid weaponization FAHAM smart grid Core infrastructure for surveillance, control, and silent attacks Digital substations Points for injecting dirty power, frequency manipulation Smart meters Endpoint tools for household-level energy control Human population Target of chronic exposure to manipulated energy for controlBottom Line
The U.S. strikes degraded Iran’s uranium enrichment capability but left intact the core infrastructure for silent war: Bushehr’s power supply, Arak’s decoy value, FAHAM’s digital grid, and control mechanisms in substations and smart meters. The silent war via energy control remains a live risk, operating beneath the surface of traditional nuclear weapons concerns.
517 episodes
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