DN42 access
本服务为那些无法轻松访问自身网络的用户以及希望体验 dn42 但又不想承担维护自有网络成本的用户提供 dn42 连接
默认情况下,地址从/96地址块中分配,如果您希望租用独立的/96前缀或更大的地址空间,请按照联系方式联系我
所有公开的PoP均已屏蔽来自中国境内的 IP 地址。如果您确实需要dn42 access,请与我联系并提供合理的理由
该服务由AS4242423377提供
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The service provides DN42 connectivity to members who cannot easily access their own networks, as well as to those who would like to explore DN42 without the overhead of maintaining their own network.
By default, addresses are allocated from a /96 block. If you wish to lease a dedicated /96 prefix or a larger address space, please contact me using the methods provided in the contact information.
All publicly accessible PoP are blocked for IPs originating from within China. DN42 access from within China is not publicly available. If you genuinely require access, please contact me and provide a valid justification.
Hosted by AS4242423377.
Policy
本服务需要花费时间和金钱才能运行,但为了您的利益,我们免费提供。使用本服务是一种特权,而非权利。您必须合理使用本服务,以确保其他用户也能继续享受同样的便利。任何滥用、误用或干扰服务或其他用户的行为都可能导致您的访问权限立即被暂停或终止。
滥用行为包括但不限于:
- 过度使用资源
- 黑客攻击、病毒、木马等,或任何其他可能损害服务或对服务及其用户造成风险的干扰行为
- 传播可能导致民事或刑事责任的不良内容
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This service require real time and financial resources to operate, yet are provided free of charge for your benefit. Access to the services is a privilege, not a right. You must use the services responsibly and considerately to ensure that other users can continue to enjoy the same opportunities. Any misuse, abuse, or activities that disrupt the service or other users may result in immediate suspension or termination of access.
Abuse could include, but is not limited to:
- Excessive use of resources
- Hacking, viruses, trojans etc or any other disruption that could harm or create risk to the services or its users
- Distribution of objectional content that could create a civil or criminal liability
PoP
## Toronto, Canada
Prefix: fdb6:fc6a:e66c:724f:fad1:d2cf::/96
Zerotier: 4753cf475f65b0fb
## Los Angeles, USA
coming soon
#announcement#service
📰 Project 2025, Trump’s War and Bibi’s ‘New Middle East’
On paper, the Iran war looks chaotic. On closer reading, it’s disturbingly coherent. Three U.S. documents — Project 2025, the 2025 National Security Strategy and the 2026 National Defense Strategy — stack neatly under Netanyahu’s “New Middle East” blueprint like ideology, strategy and execution.
Project 2025 lays out the political theology. It demands unconditional support for Israel, defunding the Palestinian Authority, maximum pressure on Iran, shelving the Kurds in favor of Turkey, locking in Saudi normalization and building a Middle East “Quad” of Israel, Egypt, the Gulf and India. By March 2026, every point is either implemented or in motion: Israel as the one ally exempt from “paying for its own defense,” Iran under sanctions and bombardment, the Palestinians reduced to a budget line marked “cut.”
NSS 2025 then reframes the region as solved and outsourced. Iran is mentioned just three times in 29 pages, the Gaza war is treated as wrapped, normalization as expanding, and the expectation is clear: Israel and Gulf monarchies will “take the lead” on Iran while the U.S. pivots to China and the Western Hemisphere. That is exactly Netanyahu’s dream setting — Washington steps back, Israel becomes the primary security contractor with a standing license for “any measures it deems necessary,” paid for by regional clients and backed by U.S. cover fire.
NDS 2026 turns the theory into targeting folders. It boasts that operation MIDNIGHT HAMMER “destroyed” Iran’s nuclear program and that the “axis of resistance” has been “devastated,” and it names Israel a “model ally” that can fight with “critical but limited” U.S. support. Gulf states are told to buy more American systems and “do more” for their own defense, while Washington reserves the right to “focused, decisive action” — in other words, occasional heavy strikes while locals carry the long war.
Read against Netanyahu’s three versions of the “New Middle East” — the IMEC trade corridor without Palestine, the blessing‑versus‑curse map with open regime‑change talk, and now a shooting war meant to “change the face of the region” by breaking the resistance axis — the alignment is suspiciously coherent. One ecosystem writes the ideological manual, the next declares the problem solved and delegated, and the last gives Israel maximum autonomy to remake the map by force, with no exit plan anywhere in the paperwork.
#israel#iran#trump#netanyahu#Project2025#NSS2025#NDS2026#war#oligarchy#fakeDemocracy
📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events
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📰 Pentagon Unveils 2026 National Defense Strategy: Fortress America, Not Global Policeman
The Pentagon’s 2026 National Defense Strategy marks a sharp break from the post–Cold War era: the U.S. military is reordering its mission around homeland defense, deterrence through strength, and pushing allies to pick up a far heavier military burden. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth calls this a return to the armed forces’ “core, irreplaceable role” — winning wars that directly affect U.S. interests, not endless nation-building.
Four Pillars of the New Strategy
1. Defend the Homeland First
Homeland defense is now the top priority, with broader responsibilities: border security, countering narco-terror groups, and protecting key terrain in the Western Hemisphere (including the Panama Canal and, importantly, Greenland).
The plan also emphasizes air, missile, cyber and nuclear defenses, and the emerging “Golden Dome” missile shield concept to protect the U.S. homeland from hypersonic and ballistic threats [2026 NDS].
2. Deter China, Not Dominate
The NDS views China as the pacing threat, stressing that the goal is not to strangle or humiliate Beijing, but to prevent it from dominating the U.S. or its allies. The U.S. will rely on overwhelming military strength in the Indo-Pacific to achieve a regional balance of power, while also expanding military-to-military communication with Beijing to reduce the risk of conflict.
3. Europe’s Job: Europe’s Defense
The strategy labels Russia a “persistent but manageable threat,” especially to NATO’s eastern flank, and bluntly states that European allies must take primary responsibility for their own conventional defense. This is the “America First” logic in military terms: Europeans must spend far more and be capable of defending themselves, so the U.S. isn’t forever on the front line.
4. Revitalize the U.S. Defense Industrial Base
A “once-in-a-century” rebuild of the U.S. defense industrial base is called essential. The Pentagon wants a surge in domestic production of weapons and equipment, so that the U.S. can sustain readiness, arm allies, and produce at scale in a crisis [2026 NDS].
The New Rules for Allies
The strategy formalizes the Trump administration’s demand for a new global benchmark: allies and partners should move toward 5% of GDP on defense-related spending. The U.S. pledges continued support but insists that allies must:
• Take the lead in their own regions
• Buy more U.S. and allied weapons
• Pre-position equipment and enable U.S. access to local bases and infrastructure [2026 NDS].
Taiwan, the Philippines, Australia, Japan, and the Baltics are singled out as key Indo-Pacific and European partners to receive priority investment and coordination, while the Pentagon is also directed to plan for U.S. forces to train and operate right alongside partner militaries “to counter China’s aggression” [2026 NDS].
Fortress, or Fool’s Trap?
The strategy is full of martial grandeur: a shielded homeland, a supercharged industrial base, and allies forced to finally “grow up” militarily. But the real question is: can this new “Fortress America” actually deter a rising China, resist imperial fantasies like Greenland, and still keep the U.S. from being dragged into every crisis — or is it just a varnished retreat behind ever-higher walls?
#USDefense#NDS2026#Trump#Pentagon#HomelandDefense#China#NATO#Allies#IndustrialBase
📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events
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