I was sitting in Erbilânorthern Iraqi Kurdistanâtrying to go live with Ibrahim beside me, and for a few minutes the only thing I could think about was the Starlink. The signal kept stuttering, freezing, coming back, dropping again. If youâve ever done live reporting from the Middle East, you know how that goes. But this time it felt different, because the connection problems werenât just âwelcome to the region.â It sounded like Iranâs shutdown was starting to ripple outwardâlike the whole neighborhood was feeling the strain.
And thatâs the mood here right now: strain. Everybody senses weâre close to the edge of something.
The conversation we keep circling back to is Iranâwhatâs likely to happen tonight or tomorrow night, and what the regime is doing to its own people in the meantime. The numbers coming out of Iran are hard to verify, but theyâre also too consistent across too many channels to shrug off. Iâm hearing claims that the regime has killed tens of thousandsâsome reports pushing as high as 80,000 dead. Two weeks ago the number being floated was 20,000. Now people are saying it has multiplied. I canât independently corroborate that figure, and neither can anyone else right now, because the regime has every reason to hide the truth and the internet inside Iran is being choked down. But even if those reports are exaggerated, the direction of the story is unmistakable: the regime is using mass violence to keep control, and itâs doing it at a pace that suggests fear inside the leadership.
When a government starts killing like that, itâs not because it feels secure. Itâs because it doesnât.
At the same time, youâve got this other thing happeningâsomething you can measure without rumors or emotion. You can look at maps, ship movements, aircraft staging, and refueling capacity and see a pattern that doesnât show up unless a real operation is being built.
The U.S. posture around Iran right now is massive. People throw that word around, but I mean it literally: weâre talking about nearly 500 aircraft in a full-spectrum posture, nonstop surveillance on Iranian airspace and defenses, and the kind of tanker support that exists for one reasonâso jets can stay on station, keep flying sorties, and keep coming back. The fuel offload capacity number being discussed is over five million pounds. Thatâs the kind of logistical âtellâ that matters more than speeches, because fuel and tankers are what make sustained air campaigns possible.




