is being played in the skies of Atacama and the Andes

The scene took place in the middle of the Cold War, when several British astronomers detected a periodic signal from a radio telescope so strange and precise that they came to name it internally. as “LGM-1”: Little Green Men, “little green men.” For weeks, some scientists even seriously contemplated the possibility that it was an artificial message coming from space… until they discovered that they had just found the first pulsar in history. The new space race passes through South America. The rivalry between the United States and China is no longer played only in Taiwan, the Pacific or the chip industry. I counted the weekend the new york times which is also moving toward some of the clearest skies on the planet, in places like Atacama, the Argentine Andes or Patagonia. What for decades were simple astronomical projects shared between universities has been transformed into a field of strategic competition. Washington suspects that part of Chinese space infrastructure in South America can be used not only to observe deep space, but also to track satellites, support military communications or expand Beijing’s technological capacity in the Western Hemisphere. The consequence is a kind of new Cold War where antennas, radio telescopes and space stations begin to be seen as top-level geopolitical assets. The radio telescope that was frozen. The most obvious case is in the Argentine province of San Juan. Over there remains paralyzed a gigantic Chinese radio telescope that was going to become the largest in South America. Officially, the project had scientific purposes: to study radio waves from space and collaborate with Argentine astronomers. But Washington began to press to Buenos Aires for fear that the system could be used to track US satellites or reinforce Chinese space capabilities. The important detail is that this pressure began under Biden and continued with Trumpshowing that concern is already part of the American strategic consensus. Today, the antenna remains disassembled and part of its components are still blocked in Argentine customs. Atacama and the value of clean skies. The dispute has a lot to do with geography. Chile and Argentina have some of the best skies of the planet for space observation thanks to its altitude, dryness and absence of light pollution. That is why they have been attracting European telescopes for decades, Americans and asians. However, the arrival of Chinese projects changed the political balance around these observatories. In Chile, a Chinese complex of one hundred telescopes in Atacama ended up blocked after strong diplomatic pressure from Washington. Officially, the project would serve to monitor asteroids and cosmic phenomena, but the United States feared that the infrastructure would have much broader strategic applications. The road built to the observatory is still there, although the complex never got up. The fear of “dual use”. The real core of the problem is the “dual use” concept. Many civilian space technologies can be easily adapted to military or intelligence roles. A radio telescope capable of capturing weak signals from distant galaxies can also help monitor satellites or orbital communications. That fear explains why Washington views any Chinese space infrastructure outside Asia with increasing distrust. Beijing holds that its projects are purely scientific and accuses Washington of trying to contain its technological expansion. But for the United States, allowing China to gain strategic positions in Latin America means accept a presence potentially permanent technology in a region historically considered sensitive to American security. The shadow of the Chinese base. Impossible to ignore it. The Chinese space station built in Neuquén in 2015 It remains the great precedent that conditions everything else. The facility operates on land donated free of charge for fifty years and is managed by organizations linked to the Chinese space program. Officially it is a civilian base for space exploration, but in the United States there has always been suspicion of possible military or intelligence uses. That enormous antenna erected in the middle of Patagonia became for many American sectors the symbol of how China was beginning to consolidate a strategic presence in the Western Hemisphere through investments, infrastructure and technological cooperation. Scientists caught up in geopolitics. It is the other leg of the situation. One of the most striking aspects is how this rivalry has ended up directly affecting to scientists and universities. Astronomers accustomed to collaborating internationally suddenly found themselves caught up in debates about national security, espionage, and strategic competition. Some Argentine researchers were even invited by the United States to specific programs on risks associated with civil space infrastructures. For many, the feeling is that space has ceased to be relatively neutral terrain and has become part of the confrontation between powers. Cold War looking at the sky. If you also want, what is happening in South America reflects a much deeper change in the global competition between the United States and China. The rivalry no longer depends only on military bases or aircraft carriers. It is also played in data networks, submarine cables, artificial intelligence, space stations and astronomical observatories. Thus, under the skies of the Atacama or the Andes, a silent battle for technological control and strategic access to space. And precisely therein lies the paradox: because they are telescopes designed to observe the universe that have ended up becoming pieces of a new terrestrial Cold War. Image | x, Casa Rosada (Argentina Presidency of the Nation) In Xataka | The US is doing everything to drown China. China has already achieved that 35% of its chip machines are its own In Xataka | The US’s problem in the AI ​​and humanoid race is not China: it is all of Asia and it is greatly disadvantaged

the largest streaming music service is not working

It’s Tuesday afternoon. You probably just finished the work day and are on your way home. Good time to listen to your favorite music, right? Well, if you are trying to do it with Spotify, we have to tell you no: it is not a matter of your mobile phone or your Internet connection. The largest streaming music platform on the planet is down. She has been my companion Amparo Babiloni who gave the alert. Your app has stopped responding when trying to play music online, while songs included in playlists downloaded for offline listening continue to work. So this drop can be an especially annoying problem if you don’t have a Premium plan or if you haven’t previously downloaded music to your device. 27 SPOTIFY TRICKS – Control all your MUSIC like no one else! Spotify also has a web player, a practical option if you don’t want, or can’t, use its application, available on computers, televisions, consoles and, of course, mobile phones. In our case, when trying to access the service from the browser, we have encountered the message “Error 503 first byte timeout”. For now, Spotify has not offered an official explanation for the crash, although the error message gives you an idea of ​​what may be happening. The warning appears when the server receives the request, but takes too long to return the first response. In other words: it is usually related to temporary saturation, a partial outage, maintenance tasks or an internal server failure. If we look at Downdetectoranother good way to follow in real time what is happening with popular services, we see that the problems with Spotify began around 5:52 p.m. this Tuesday and were growing rapidly. After 6:00 p.m., there were already hundreds of reports from users indicating problems with the service. In development. Images | Spotify + Nano Bana | Screenshot In Xataka | What is Cloudflare, how it works and why a crash or block causes half the Internet to fail

Google and Apple have been wanting to kill SMS for years. So they have signed peace between their messaging apps

Apple and Google have been betting on their own protocols for years RCS messaging. Relevant solutions in territories like the United States, but that do not fully penetrate the rest of the world. Despite this, both companies have closed an important agreement, so that when chatting from an Android to an iPhone the communication is encrypted. The novelty. Google has announced an agreement with Apple to implement end-to-end encryption for RCSensuring that chats between Android and iOS are secure by default. Although both systems had encrypted device-to-device communication (Android to Android and iPhone to iPhone), this security measure did not apply when we communicated with a different operating system. Why is it important. From now on, if you are looking for a safe way to communicate without going through applications like WhatsApp or Telegram, use the native Messages app (have an iPhone or have an Android) is an excellent option. There is no need to download anything, files can be shared, and the information does not pass through the hands of anyone other than Apple or Google. It is not the perfect solution for those looking for absolute anonymity, but it is a great plan to do without giants like Meta. What is RCS?. RCS stands for “Rich Communication Service”. It is a protocol that came to succeed SMS, and allows communication to be carried out in an encrypted and fast way. Being a protocol and not an app, developers need to create them to use RCS. In the case of Google it is the Messages app and, on iOS, too. When you send a message via RCS, it goes through our operator’s server, and from there to a server certified by the GSMA. It allows you to send images and videos of up to 10 MB and, most importantly, it does not require an internet connection to work. SMS vibes. Why it fails. Apple and Google’s efforts with RCS have to do with a phenomenon that has been happening for years in the US: the overwhelming success of the iPhone and iMessage. In the United States, iMessage is used more than WhatsAppsomething unthinkable in our country. Spain is the country of absolute dominance of WhatsApp, with Apple representing just over 10% of the market share and making it impossible for iMessage to be a rival for the Meta app. Why will he still be alive?. Google, despite controlling 70% of the mobile market with Android, needs a direct way for its users to communicate. And that way is RCS. Apple was forced to adopt it due to European pressure and, although it may not be a massive protocol, it is a key alternative to rival services. Be that as it may, good news for those who want alternatives to WhatsApp or Telegram when communicating from one mobile phone to another without the need for a network connection. In Xataka | Meta will pay $1.4 billion to Texas for violating the privacy of its users. Used facial recognition without permission

Reddit was one of the last refuge platforms for Internet users. You just took a step in a worrying direction

The social network Reddit has become the best source of human data on the internet. It is in fact one of the few remaining refuges from that “human network of networks” with which it all began, but this singular and anarchic social network has just taken a disturbing step: wants to force you to install their app when you use it from your mobile. uncomfortable notice. Millions of people use Reddit daily on their mobile, but in recent days they have encountered an uncomfortable message: a notice that forced them to use the Reddit mobile application instead of being able to continue using the browser to enjoy the famous thematic subreddits. There are many those who they have warned of the problem with diverse messages in the forums of the platform. In one of the most popular subredits, r/technology, the message that talks about the topic has nearly 20,000 positive votes and 4,200 comments. What Reddit says. Company spokespersons indicated at Ars Technica that Reddit has launched a test “for a small subset of mobile users that encourages them to download the app after visiting the site. These users are already familiar with Reddit and we have seen that the experience is much better for them on the app.” Personalization = data collection. The platform argues that if users take advantage of the app they can have a tailored news thread and better searches, but criticism has not been slow in coming. The Ars Technica editor who wrote on the subject himself commented how this notice has also reached him—not us, perhaps because we are not in the United States—and this sounds disturbing. And it sounds like that because it is just how apps like TikTok, X or Instagram work, which have managed to polish their content recommendation algorithms so that the user ends up condemned for doomscrolling. And that would point to Reddit’s ambition that we simply do nothing but be on Reddit. The danger of making your users angry. It is ironic that a platform like Reddit, which has always largely depended on the traffic brought to it by Google, decides to break with that way of reaching its forums. Those responsible for the platform seem to be confident that its content is essential enough for its users to convince them to download and use the app. The question is whether this will not cause an exodus of users. A small solution. Apparently is it possible avoid the message if we clean and we empty both the cache and the cookies of the mobile browser that we use to browse Reddit. This temporary patch can help you continue using Reddit directly from the mobile browser you use. Wall Street rules a lot. This apparent degradation or evolution of the service certainly seems to be aimed at maximizing profit. By going public, Reddit has to prove to shareholders that it can generate growing revenue. And if you can lock users into your official app, you can ensure that no one (including AI) can access that valuable content without going through your controls. Image | Brett Jordan In Xataka | Reddit, nude scenes and a forum out of control: this is how a Dane ended up being convicted in a case that sets a precedent

164,000 galaxies and 13.7 billion years of cosmic history available to anyone

The James Webb Space Telescope has made a super-detailed cosmic map, which includes 13.7 billion years of the Universe. No other telescope had been able to reach so far with such precision. Hubble tried, but didn’t achieve that much. What was invisible to him is now shown majestic before our eyes. Further and more precise. This new cosmic map it has been possible thanks to the work of a team of scientists from the University of California, Riverside. They have been in charge of analyzing a catalog known as COSMOS-Web, which includes the most extensive compilation of data from this telescope to date. In a space of sky equivalent to three full moons, they have seen what until now was invisible. James Webb’s superpowers. We know that the Universe is expanding, so the galaxies are moving further away, like painted dots on a balloon that inflates more and more. Since light is a wave, the wave emitted by these galaxies also stretches. That involves longer wavelengths which, in the electromagnetic spectrum, correspond to the infrared. This is known as redshift. The older and more distant a galaxy is, the more of that stretching it will have experienced, so there will be more redshift. Therefore, in order to detect very old galaxies, it is necessary to use instruments capable of detecting these infrared radiations very well. That’s where James Webb comes into play, since he has an instrument called NirCAMwhose specialty is precisely that. Furthermore, thanks to the size of its mirrors, with an area 7 times larger than that of Hubble’s mirrors, much more light can be captured and more precise images obtained. Lifting the cosmic veil. The James Webb also has the ability to look through clouds of gas and dust that normally surround younger stars and planets. It’s something Hubble can’t do either, so many more structures are revealed that were invisible to its predecessor. What Hubble didn’t see. Unlike James Webb, Hubble is specialized in detecting mostly the visible and ultraviolet spectrum of light. For this reason, the oldest structures in the Universe have gone unnoticed. By comparing the James Webb cosmic map with the more precise one made with Hubble, it has been seen that what previously seemed like a single structure is actually many. The sharpness of certain structures that seemed very diffuse has also been increased. In short, the resolution has increased. Distances are better measured and some structures are better distinguished from others. We can all see it. The catalog that has just been created contains 164,000 galaxies and a video that shows the movement they have experienced for 13.7 billion years. It is the furthest journey that has been made in the universe with one of these maps. And the best thing is that all this information is open access. Therefore, anyone can access it. Scientists who wish to do so will be able to study it, in search of data that may have gone unnoticed by researchers at the University of California. In short, teamwork is sought. Just as James Webb works as a team with Hubble and soon he will also do it with Romanscientists on Earth should do the same. Image | Image taken by James Webb that is not part of the map (NASA) In Xataka | We have been studying the planets of TRAPPIST-1 for years with great hope. James Webb just knocked it down

Spain has done well in the hantavirus crisis

What do the WHO, the UN, the European Commission and the European Council have in common? May all of them They have publicly congratulated Spain for the management of the hantavirus crisis. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus He has described her as “the role model”. Tough to the “mission accomplished” of Minister Mónica Garcíait’s not all over yet. However, there are enough facts already accomplished to recognize that in this mess Spain has not only done what had to be done, but has also done it well. An epidemiological bomb. When the Dutch ship MV Hondius set sail from Usuaia on April 1, 2026, it did not know the chaos that was about to be generated in half the world. The figures speak for themselves: 147 people were on board (88 passengers and 59 crew members of 23 different nationalities) and, as the days went by, the outbreak generated three deaths, (at least) 10 confirmed cases and 125 people evacuated thanks to an international operation coordinated from the Tenerife port of Granadilla. That’s where Spain comes in. An ethical success. Does it make sense for us to talk about ‘technical success’ in a context in which everything (absolutely everything) tends towards almost instantaneous politicization? Well, there are three things that allow us to see it like this: The international contrast: we must not forget that Spain assumed leadership of the operation after Cape Verde recognized that it did not have the capacity to carry out the evacuation nor that the Radboudumc university hospital in the Netherlands has had to quarantine 12 health workers for two consecutive biosafety failures. In contrast, Spain has executed the operation perfectly and, as far as we know, everything has gone according to plans and protocols. The social climate. Despite the initial refusal of the Government of the Canary Islands, Clavijo’s unscientific vaudeville and localized (and reasonable) protests by some unions, the operation was finally imposed through International Maritime Law (obligation to provide relief) after the formal request of the WHO. The relative complexity. It is not a minor issue, because organizing 10 special medical flights, coordinating biosafety protocols with 19 different countries and articulating a landing of these characteristics in rough sea conditions is complex. Above all, because everyone was watching and any failure had the potential to become a media circus. Is it all good news? Of course not. Whether we buy the terminology or not, the Canary Islands are right to complain that the Spanish Government has approached the matter with certain ‘colonial’ touches. Although finally, faced with the unfeasible demands of the Cabildo and the Autonomous Government, it was cut short; The truth is that the country’s institutional architecture requires a more respectful approach to competencies (or, failing that, designing a clear exception protocol for public health emergencies). What’s left to do? A lot. After all, there are many days of active surveillance left. The 45 days of incubation of the virus make epidemiological tracking very complex and the positives that have occurred after the evacuation only confirm this point. And beyond all that, a deeper debate remains pending on zoonotic exposure in scientific and tourist trips in endemic areas. We have turned the world into an amusement park and we are not aware of the risks. A few days ago we were talking about how the unlikely combination of an African bird, an American plant and an Asian plant had created a new habitat on the peninsula that was putting Valencian citrus trees in trouble. These “coincidences” occur in thousands every day and are, by their very nature, unpredictable. That is the world we face. For that reason, it is good news that everything has worked reasonably well. Image | Ministry of Health In Xataka | The hantavirus was going to reach Europe sooner or later and, as always, it caught us offside

OpenAI employees who sold their shares

In October of last year, OpenAI closed a secondary share sale which raised its valuation to 500,000 million dollars (Today it is already worth 852,000 million). This allowed employees to sell their shares, becoming multimillionaires even before the IPO. 6.6 billion. It is the total amount of the operation in which more than 600 employees, both current and former employees, benefited. In previous similar operations, OpenAI limited the maximum per person to 10 million, but in this case, due to high demand from investors, they decided to triple it to 30 million. Of all of them, 75 employees reached the maximum number, becoming multimillionaires in one fell swoop. The AI ​​winners. Uncertainty about the future profitability of AI continues to loom large, but that is not affecting workers in the most important AI laboratories. The case of the secondary sale of OpenAI is just one example of how AI engineers have become the biggest winners of this boom. Last summer, Meta offered up to $100 million to competing engineers and NVIDIA paid 900 million by an employee. Tender offers. The usual thing when you started to work in a startup is that you received a low salary and a lot of shares, but you had to wait for the IPO to be able to make cash. This made many employees rich only on paper, but without real liquidity. A tender offer allows employees to get paid much sooner, allowing them to sell stakes to private investors. They count in the Wall Street Journal That this mechanism, which was previously a one-time thing, has become a central piece in Silicon Valley achieves a double effect: in addition to turning employees into millionaires in advance and thus retaining them to stay in the company, it helps to consolidate stratospheric valuations, causing each new operation to set a higher reference price for OpenAI shares. The local impact. The rain of millions had an almost immediate consequence on the real estate market in San Franciscowhich is seeing prices rise even more. In February of this year the rents had increased by 14% compared to the same period in 2025 and the purchase prices of apartments and single-family homes rose by 12 and 23% respectively. At the same time, the sale of homes valued above $5 million has increased by 220%. The AI ​​gap. In the end, the AI ​​boom is not only redefining which companies rule Silicon Valley (and the world), but also who can afford to live there. The combination of exorbitant valuations, tender offers billionaires and a stressed real estate market is turning AI engineers into a new urban aristocracy that, in practice, is redefining what it means to have a “good salary.” The income that a few years ago guaranteed access to the best neighborhoods is no longer enough today. Image | Xataka with Gemini In Xataka | Companies are turning their workers who know how to use AI into “stars”: the new labor gap

If you have half a million euros left over, you can buy it

The Chinese company Unitree Robotics just presented the GD01, a manned robot that combines bipedal locomotion with movement on four limbs. Wow, a mecha that seems straight out of the movies but already has a price and production date. It already exists and can be purchased. According to Unitree, the GD01 is a high-strength alloy machine that weighs about 500 kilos with a pilot on board. To control it, simply place yourself in the cabin that incorporates the torso. Its starting price is 3.9 million yuan (about 538,000 euros at the current exchange rate). The company defines it as the world’s first mass-produced transformable mecha. What it can do. In the video published The company shows the GD01 walking upright on two legs and knocking down a brick wall with one hand. Next, the robot reconfigures its chassis and begins to move supported by four limbs, literally like a Transformers. China and robotics. The GD01 comes at a time when Chinese robotics companies are gaining ground notably compared to its American competitors, driven by lower production costs and greater manufacturing speed. According to consulting firm Omdia, Chinese companies accounted for almost 90% of global sales of humanoid robots in 2025. Unitree alone shipped more than 5,500 units last year, according to share SCMP, compared to the approximately 150 units shipped by each of the large American firms such as Tesla, Figure AI or Agility Robotics. The price gap. Unitree’s humanoid entry robot, the R1it costs around 5,500 euros to change. Its Chinese rival AgiBot has a simplified model for about 12,800 euros. And on the other hand, Elon Musk has estimated that the Tesla Optimus It could cost between $20,000 and $30,000 in the future. The GD01 is a different bet from the rest, especially to provide maneuverability in industrial environments. Unitree is in full expansion. The company already sells its R1 and G1 humanoid robots, as well as the Go2 robot dog, in international markets such as North America, Europe and Japan through AliExpress. Their robots have begun to appear in all kinds of environments and events (in fact we brought one in the last Xataka Awards). In March, Unitree also requested to go public in the Chinese market, with a financing plan of about 4.2 billion yuan, of which 85% would go to research and development. The question that remains in the air. The GD01 is, for now, a demonstration of technological capacity and a declaration of intent. It is also a really eye-catching product, which is precisely what the company is looking for: notoriety. It is certainly achieving it, although it is still up in the air whether its technological capabilities exceed those currently found in the industrial environments for which it is intended. Now, what’s cool is cool. In Xataka | We had already assumed that AI and robots were superior to humans at chess. Now they are also good at ping-pong

TikTok now has an answer for those who don’t want to see ads: check out

Consuming social networks for free and without any type of advertisement is something that has been disappearing for years. Bombarding with advertising to later launch a payment model is something that applications like Instagram learned very well, and now TikTok is beginning to follow in its footsteps. TikTok Ad-Free. TikTok began testing a payment model back in 2023 in the United Statesan idea that did not spread beyond American territory. The company now makes official TikTok Ad-Free in UKopening the ban to expand it to the rest of the regions. How it works. The company has announced that, “in the coming months”, users over 18 years of age will be able to gradually subscribe to the new advertising-free option, TikTok Ad-Free. Those who continue using the free version will see no changes, and will see personalized ads. The price is £3.99 per month, in exchange for not seeing a single ad on TikTok and our data not being used for advertising purposes. It’s something that sounds familiar to us. Instagram Vibes. In 2024, Meta gave his ultimatum: either it was checked out or our information would be used for advertising purposes to show us the relevant advertisements. On Instagram they went a step further, since paying users not only got rid of ads: they got a verification badge and got more “love” from Instagram in terms of the visibility of their own account if they were a content creator. Why is it important. TikTok is in the crosshairs of the European Commissionas you consider your ad library to be non-compliant the Digital Services Law. The social network will have to be especially careful when implementing measures related to ads and data collection, even more so if billing is involved. In the same way, the fact that TikTok has given free rein to its subscription monetization model (although its application is not immediate), closes a circle of services that we use on a daily basis and that, whether we like it or not, force us to checkout if we do not want to see ads. And if not, Tell them to the paid version of WhatsApp. The big question. If you’re wondering when TikTok Ad-Free will arrive in Europe, the answer is that we don’t know yet. What seems inevitable is that this ends up happening, after the test in the United States and its progressive implementation in the United Kingdom. In Xataka | TikTok’s infinite scroll has just entered the EU’s crosshairs: Brussels marks it as “addictive design” and demands change

There is a secret outpost in a desert in Iraq to bomb Tehran

During the Gulf Warseveral Bedouins in western Iraq began to see helicopters and military convoys appear and disappear in remote areas of the desert where there was apparently nothing. Years later it was learned that many of those areas had been used as secret outposts and makeshift runways for Western special operations far from any official map. An outpost in the middle of nowhere. He told it in an exclusive the wall street journal. The war between Israel and Iran has left images of missiles, bombers and attacks thousands of kilometers away, but one of the most surprising stories of the conflict has occurred far from the cameras, in the middle of the Iraqi desert. According to several sources cited by the mediaIsrael secretly set up a forward base inside Iraq to support part of its air campaign against Tehran. Apparently, the place served as a logistics center, a support point for special forces and a rescue platform for downed pilots, all just a few steps away. hundreds of kilometers from Iran and hidden in one of the emptiest and most difficult to control areas of the Middle East. The idea seems straight out of a military espionage movie: a clandestine enclave installed silently inside another country, protected from the air and prepared to intervene in a regional war without official recognition. The strategic importance of Iraq. The detail reveals to what extent the distance was one of the big problems Israeli operatives during the campaign against Iran. Bombing Iranian targets from Israeli territory involves traveling enormous distances, maintaining long flight routes and assuming constant risks for pilots and aircraft. Having an outpost in Iraq changed part of that equation. It allowed rescue teams to be brought closer, special forces to be deployed and an intermediate point from which to react quickly in emergencies. The presence of Israeli air force commandos trained to operate in enemy territory further suggests that the enclave was not simply a makeshift base, but an infrastructure designed to sustain complex operations behind the lines of conflict. The pastor who almost discovered it all. The story took on an even more surreal tone when the base was nearly exposed by something as simple as a local shepherd. According to the published informationa local man alerted Iraqi authorities after observing strange movements and helicopter flights in the desert. The Iraqi Army sent several units to investigate and there began one of the most delicate episodes of the entire operation. The soldiers advanced in Humvees towards the area at dawn and ended up under intense fire supported from the air. In fact, a Iraqi soldier died and others were injured. The extraordinary thing is that for weeks no one understood exactly what had happened there: Iraq denounced an unauthorized foreign operation, some media initially pointed the finger at Washington, and rumors began to circulate about special forces operating clandestinely in the desert. Only later did the possibility begin to emerge that Israel was defending a secret facility directly linked to the war against Iran. Invisible war within another war. Plus: the episode shows the extent to which modern conflicts are full of invisible layers that rarely appear in official statements. While the world’s attention was focused in ballistic missilesdrones and attacks on Iranian facilities, in parallel clandestine operations were carried out in third countries to sustain all this military machinery. I remembered the Journal that the western Iraqi desert had been used for decades these types of activities by American forces, from the wars against Saddam Hussein to operations against the Islamic State. The reason is simple: the region is huge, isolated, and sparsely populated, making it a perfect place to deploy hard-to-detect temporary outposts. The difference is that now the scenario was not a US invasion or an anti-terrorist campaign, but a regional air war in which Israel needed to operate at an enormous distance from its territory. The long shadow of the United States. Although sources assure that Washington knew of the existence of the Israeli base, the United States I would have avoided participating directly in the clashes that occurred around the enclave. Even so, the whole story once again shows the extent to which the US military infrastructure in the Middle East continues to condition any regional conflict. The bases, air corridors, intelligence and experience networks accumulated over decades of operations in Iraq have created an ecosystem that allows for this type of rapid and discreet deployments. In fact, his own rescue of an F-15 American aircraft shot down near Isfahan during the war demonstrates that both countries were operating simultaneously in an extremely complex theater, one where commandos, helicopters and rescue teams could move across several countries while officially many of those operations They didn’t even exist. Image | NARA In Xataka | While everyone was looking at Hormuz, Russia has found a much more important route to supply drones to Iran In Xataka | We sensed that Iran’s attacks on the US had been important. In reality, they were devastating

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