| ▲ | tristanj 9 hours ago | |||||||
Per the link, those were removed prior to Operation Midnight Hammer, which happened in 2025, which nearly a year before last month's operation. I'd interpret that as unrelated. > an article about how the US Military has been lying That's a gross mischaracterization of the submitted article. FTA: "The amount of destruction is far larger than what has been publicly acknowledged by the U.S. government or previously reported." There is no "lying". The US government is not making false statements, they are declining to fully state losses. Every single military on earth does this. The US nor its military is under no obligation fully report combat losses. > I’m not sure taking the word of the US military in the comment section of an article [...] is super convincing So you'd rate an unsourced claim by an anonymous internet commentator as more credible than a statement from the commander of USFK? | ||||||||
| ▲ | mikeyouse 8 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
I’d love to take the word of the military at face value, it’d be extremely comforting to be able to do so — but they have been lying constantly about the war. Not proactively disclosing losses in real time is one thing (though the excuses to avoid doing so fall completely flat in my opinion), but they lied about Minab, lied about the F15 being shot down, lied about the THAAD being struck in the first place (they’d claimed the missiles fire toward Jordan were successfully intercepted), they lied about the Saudi Embassy strike (“minor material damage”), and they continue to lie about the number of casualties. Random commenters à la Bellingcat are far more trustworthy with their specific claims than Hegseth or CENTCOM. And I believe the THAAD was being relocated because The South Korean press had pictures of the radar system being dismantled. It now seems like they decided to only ship the interceptors to the ME, but to pretend like the reporting at the time wasn’t accurate is just silly. | ||||||||
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