Probably not assuming the enriched Uranium was in one of the underground facilities. That represents a lot of shielding even if the protective containers were damaged.Without boots on the ground is there anyway to prove that the enrichment program was destroyed?
Would this strike release a lot of radiation?
I used my abacus and confirm your calculation is correctChecked my slide rule...you are correct.
True story, traveling in rural Ukraine, small children man the till in local stores. They use an abacus to calculate your bill and change due, and they are typically quite good at it.I used my abacus and confirm your calculation is correct
Get ready for the rodeo ... first ride will be oil..
Yes, and it also some of the most informative and often amusing thread here.This is the dumbest and most annoying thread on this website, it should be removed.
Since the Chinese get the bulk of their oil from Iran through the straits, I’ve heard 50%. Wouldn’t it be to their advantage to keep it open?Correct, the Strait of Hormuz will be closely watched. Thankfully, the US Navy, along with a few other countries, will keep it open.
Correct, the Strait of Hormuz will be closely watched. Thankfully, the US Navy, along with a few other countries, will keep it open.
Only about 10% of Chinas oil comes from Iran… but that’s still a very significant amount that’s not easily recouped from other countries… it’s about 1.1M barrels a day (China imports just over 11M barrels a day in total)…Since the Chinese get the bulk of their oil from Iran through the straits, I’ve heard 50%. Wouldn’t it be to their advantage to keep it open?
Only about 10% of Chinas oil comes from Iran… but that’s still a very significant amount that’s not easily recouped from other countries… it’s about 1.1M barrels a day (China imports just over 11M barrels a day in total)…
Rough 20% of their oil comes from Russia.. now that Europe is buying less Russian oil, my guess is the Chinese try to leverage the Russians for a 50% increase and make up their gap there… although I don’t know that the Chinese really want to rely on 30% of their need from one strategic partner… that’s risky..
If they do lean on the Russians, that might make for a cold winter in Germany… the Germans have been the most reluctant to cut off Russian oil and gas.. while they’ve finally reduced their imports from Russia a good bit and are now more reliant on US and Saudi oil than before, they still depend on Russia for a piece of their requirements... if the Russians cut them off as opposed to them cutting the Russian off, they’re going to need a plan for replacing the Russian volume…
I love the Navy, but let's not get to carried away.Everyone is focused on our air superiority in terms of B2 bombers, heavy bunker busting ordinance, etc.
This going to get interesting with Hormuz. People forget that our navy is hands down the best in world. Better by a larger margin than the air force, conventional ground troops, etc.
Only about 10% of Chinas oil comes from Iran… but that’s still a very significant amount that’s not easily recouped from other countries… it’s about 1.1M barrels a day (China imports just over 11M barrels a day in total)…
Rough 20% of their oil comes from Russia.. now that Europe is buying less Russian oil, my guess is the Chinese try to leverage the Russians for a 50% increase and make up their gap there… although I don’t know that the Chinese really want to rely on 30% of their need from one strategic partner… that’s risky..
If they do lean on the Russians, that might make for a cold winter in Germany… the Germans have been the most reluctant to cut off Russian oil and gas.. while they’ve finally reduced their imports from Russia a good bit and are now more reliant on US and Saudi oil than before, they still depend on Russia for a piece of their requirements... if the Russians cut them off as opposed to them cutting the Russian off, they’re going to need a plan for replacing the Russian volume…
Since the Chinese get the bulk of their oil from Iran through the straits, I’ve heard 50%. Wouldn’t it be to their advantage to keep it open?
Thanks, I may have heard it wrong. Does 50% of the Iranian oil go to China.
My guess is that the Iranians can only block the straight if we allow them to. Many years ago I was contracting oil through the straight while Iran was trying to block it. Our navy did not allow them to, with rather spectacular results on one Iranian gunboat.I think @Red Leg earlier post is accurate.
Only about 10% of Chinese oil is Iranian, but 45% of their total oil imports come through the straights of hormuz (they're also purchasing oil from various gulf states that ship to them via this route).
So they have a couple of problems right now.. how do they replace that 10% (my understanding is the Israelis hit their ports pretty hard as well as some of the O&G infrastructure.. and Trump is now threatening to knock out their entire O&G infrastructure as well as their power grid (in addition to other things))..
and.. how do they keep the straight of hormuz from getting shut down or inaccessible due to conflict (Irans navy isn't exactly world class.. but they possess a ton of small craft that have historically operated successfully in hormuz.. if they choose to try to engage US naval assets (or anyone else's) its almost a guarantee that we'll shut down the straits to all commercial traffic and engage anything/everything we see as a threat if its not flagged US or a very close ally..
My guess is that the Iranians can only block the straight if we allow them to. Many years ago I was contracting oil through the straight while Iran was trying to block it. Our navy did not allow them to, with rather spectacular results on one Iranian gunboat.
My guess is that the Iranians can only block the straight if we allow them to. Many years ago I was contracting oil through the straight while Iran was trying to block it. Our navy did not allow them to, with rather spectacular results on one Iranian gunboat.