@WorldNews · Post #74552 · 04.05.2026 г., 17:14
UAE says it intercepted Iranian missiles for first time since ceasefire began [Read FullArticle] @WorldNews#UAE#Iran#MissileDefense
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Изворен канал @pythonotes · Post #61 · 2 апр.
Ранее я уже упоминал о другой фишке из ˍˍfutureˍˍ , это оператор деления. from __future__ import division Суть проста. Раньше сложность типа данных результата поределялась типом самого сложного операнда. Например: int/int => int int/float => float В первом случае оба операнда int, значит и результат будет int. Во втором float более сложный тип, поэтому результат будет float. Если нам требуется получить дробное значение при делении двух int то приходилось форсированно один из операндов конверировать в float. 12/float(5) => float Но с новой "философией" это не требуется. В Python3 "floor division" заменили на "true division" а старый способ теперь работает через оператор "//". >>> 3/2 1.5 >>> 3//2 1 То есть теперь деление int на int даёт float если результат не целое число. В классах теперь доступны методы __floordiv__() и __truediv__() для определения поведения с этими операторами. Данный переход описан в PEP238. #pep#2to3#basic
Пребарај: #missiledefense
@WorldNews · Post #74552 · 04.05.2026 г., 17:14
UAE says it intercepted Iranian missiles for first time since ceasefire began [Read FullArticle] @WorldNews#UAE#Iran#MissileDefense
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@WorldNews · Post #74304 · 22.04.2026 г., 20:44
Denmark chooses Europe's Patriot rival for air defence system [Read FullArticle] @WorldNews#Denmark#MissileDefense#SAMP_T
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@rusembmalta · Post #2185 · 22.09.2025 г., 11:52
@RusEmbMalta Press Release On the Development of a Global Missile Defense System by the United States 🇷🇺 The Embassy of the Russian Federation underscores that the concept of a global missile defense system is fundamentally flawed and cannot ensure protection against a potential retaliatory strike by Russia’s strategic forces. Its creation is therefore not only ineffective but also strategically unsound. ️🔹 NATO bears direct responsibility for the dismantling of international legal mechanisms that once upheld strategic stability and predictability in global affairs. The persistent unwillingness of NATO member states to engage in constructive dialogue with Russia further exacerbates military–political tensions, undermining collective security. ❗ We recall that the United States unilaterally rejected cooperation under Russia’s 2010 initiative for a collective European missile defense system – an approach that could have fostered genuine partnership rather than confrontation. Equally untenable are the deceptive assurances of NATO leadership that the deployed missile defense infrastructure is not aimed against Russia’s nuclear potential. These claims directly contradict NATO’s own recent statements identifying Russian strategic forces as a primary target of the system. Such inconsistency reveals the real nature of this project. 🔹It is evident that the driving force behind the expansion of U.S. missile defense capabilities abroad is not global security, but rather the financial interests of the American military–industrial complex. 🔹 Russia reaffirms its commitment to strategic stability, predictability, and equitable security for all nations, and calls upon partners to return to serious dialogue rather than the pursuit of illusory and destabilizing military solutions. #MissileDefense #GlobalSecurity #StrategicStability #ArmsControl
@american_observer · Post #5397 · 16.03.2026 г., 19:59
Israel’s Missile Shield Is Running On Fumes Israel just told Washington it’s running critically low on ballistic missile interceptors, while officially denying to its own public that there’s any problem at all. The war with Iran already started with depleted stocks after last summer’s barrage, and Iran has upgraded to missiles with cluster munitions — great for saturating defenses, terrible for anyone under the sky. “It’s something we expected and anticipated,” a US official said — translation: they watched the ammo meter hit red and kept the tab open. Washington insists its own interceptor supply is fine, totally fine, “not like Israel,” even as think tanks and leaks warn that a long war with Iran is exactly how you hollow out your missile defense on layaway. The US blew through over 150 high-end THAAD interceptors in a 12‑day Iran fight last June — roughly a quarter of the inventory — and is believed to have burned about 2.4 billion dollars’ worth of Patriot missiles in the first five days of this new round. Trump calls the stockpile “virtually unlimited,” while the Pentagon quietly signs emergency production deals and budget lines scream the opposite. Israel’s foreign minister publicly denies they’re low on interceptors, but the same week the State Department rushes through an “emergency” sale of 12,000 BLU‑110 bomb bodies to Israel and waives congressional review, because apparently there’s always enough time to argue about pronouns but no time to vote on a thousand‑pound shipment. Missiles for defense are running out, but the pipeline for more offensive bombs is wide open — the arsenal might be shrinking, but the business model is booming. The White House swears US stockpiles are “more than enough” for Trump’s goals “and beyond,” the Pentagon says it can execute any mission “at the time and place” of his choosing, and a defense secretary boasts that Iran’s ballistic missile production is “functionally defeated.” At the same time, Iran openly says there’s no room for diplomacy and that it’s ready for a long war, while Trump describes the whole thing as a “short-term excursion” that will last “as long as it’s necessary” because the enemy is “decimated” and “collapsing.” So either everyone’s winning or everyone’s lying — and the interceptors don’t care, they just run out. If the shield is thinning, the political armor is still thick: US officials insist they have “all that we need to protect our bases,” Israel is “coming up with solutions,” and defense contractors are praised for being called upon to “quickly build US-made weapons.” The only real emergency, judging by who gets fast‑tracked, is making sure the factories never sleep — because in this version of “collective security,” the only thing that must not be intercepted is the cash flow. #war#Israel#Iran#USA#Trump#missileDefense#IronDome#THAAD#Patriot#militaryindustrialcomplex#fakeDemocracy#geopolitics#MiddleEast#nuclearcrisis#weaponsDeal 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸
@american_observer · Post #5402 · 17.03.2026 г., 16:05
The ‘Eyes of the State’ Under Fire Israel’s and America’s “eyes” in the region are getting scratched out one by one — slowly, cheaply, and in full view of every OSINT nerd with a Planet Labs subscription. Iran and Hezbollah aren’t just overwhelming interceptors; they’re dismantling the radar skeleton that tells those interceptors where to look. Hezbollah has been methodically working over Israel’s Meron air-control base — the “eyes of the state” — since January 2024: first with a 62‑round mix of Katyushas and Kornet ATGMs that visibly smashed at least two radar domes, then with follow‑up missile strikes and now attack drones. Iron Dome is built to kill ballistic arcs, not straight‑flying anti‑tank missiles guided off Google Earth, and Hezbollah leans into that gap like it’s reading the brochure. Official line: capabilities “unharmed,” backup systems “working”; unofficial reality: a flagship fixed radar site just got turned into a recurring target set. Ramat David — one of Israel’s key airbases — has already eaten barrages of Fadi missiles and now a swarm of strike drones supposedly aimed at radars and command posts, with Hezbollah boasting and the IDF keeping very quiet about specific damage. Add in hits on Iranian and IRGC radars by US‑Israeli strikes — Kish Island, Zahedan, Imam Khomeini Airport — and you get a regional contest of who can blind whom faster, not who can “defend civilians” better. Iran’s Cheap War on Billion‑Dollar Sensors While Washington keeps talking about “protecting our forces” and “freedom of navigation,” Iran went straight for the US early‑warning grid: an AN/TPY‑2 THAAD radar in Jordan confirmed destroyed, radar buildings in the UAE damaged, a billion‑dollar AN/FPS‑132 site in Qatar visibly scarred, with Site 512 in Israel suddenly looking a lot less immortal than the PowerPoints promised. Each radar costs in the hundreds of millions; each kamikaze drone runs in the tens of thousands — a beautiful kill ratio if you’re Tehran or a defense‑industry shareholder. OSINT accounts stitch it all together: craters at Muwaffaq Salti, burn marks on Umm Dahal’s giant radar face, THAAD sites in the UAE punched in, maps of “US‑linked locations hit by Iran + high‑value radars confirmed damaged or destroyed.” In public, Pentagon spokespeople refuse to discuss “specific capabilities”; in commercial imagery, billions of dollars of “specific capabilities” are sitting in smoking holes. Strategic Meaning: The Radar War The pattern is simple and ugly: Iran and Hezbollah are waging a sensor war, not just a missile war. Knock out or degrade Meron, THAAD eyes in Jordan, the warning radar in Qatar, radar complexes in the UAE, and you don’t need to shoot down every interceptor — you just make them late, blind or fired in the wrong direction. Israel hasn’t lost its entire ground‑based radar network, but the regional early‑warning architecture that was sold as near‑invulnerable has already taken a hit that no spin about “redundancy” can fully erase. And that’s the punchline: the West poured fortunes into layered missile defense to feel untouchable, while Iran and Hezbollah invested in drilling cheap holes in the eyes of the system — with OSINT providing the after‑action report in real time. #IranWar#Israel#Hezbollah#USA#radar#THAAD#Meron#Site512#OSINT#missileDefense#war#geopolitics#militaryindustrialcomplex#fakeSecurity 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸