試す 金 - 無料
Pentagon Elaborate ruse made Tehran look wrong way
The Guardian
|June 23, 2025
Late on Friday night, eight US B-2 bombers took off from Whiteman air force base in Missouri and turned westwards towards the Pacific.
Amateur flight trackers plotted their progress on social media as the black flying-wing warplanes joined up mid-air with refuelling tankers and checked in with air traffic controllers once they had reached the open ocean.
The movement of the B-2 bombers towards the US Pacific base on Guam triggered speculation that Donald Trump was arranging his pieces on the board in advance of a decision on whether to join Israel in bombing Iranian nuclear facilities.
On Thursday, Trump had let it be known that he would make that decision over the following two weeks, suggesting a window remained open for some last-ditch diplomatic alternative to war. He angrily denied a Wall Street Journal report that he had already approved a strike plan.
The British, French and German foreign ministers seized the opportunity to meet their Iranian counterpart, Seyed Abbas Araghchi, for talks in Geneva on Friday, but it was to little or no avail. Trump himself was characteristically dismissive of European efforts. "Nah, they didn't help," he told journalists.
We know now that this and the B-2 flights over the Pacific were part of the same elaborate ruse to ensure Iran was off its guard and looking the wrong way, and that the president's two-week diplomatic window was likely to have been part of the same ploy.
The Pentagon described the eight bombers that were spotted flying west as "a decoy, a deception effort" known only to an extremely small number of planners and leaders in Washington and at Central Command headquarters in Tampa, Florida.
As they were tracked across the western states and then the Pacific, another seven B-2s took off from Whiteman base and headed in the opposite direction - eastwards.
These seven planes made no communications with each other or with the ground as they crossed America and flew unnoticed over the Atlantic.
このストーリーは、The Guardian の June 23, 2025 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
The Guardian からのその他のストーリー
The Guardian
Macclesfield’s McLeod dies in car accident
The Macclesfield forward Ethan McLeod has died in a car accident.
1 mins
December 18, 2025
The Guardian
Meta sued over suicide of sextortion victim, 16
The parents of a 16-year-old who took his own life after falling victim to a sextortion gang on Instagram are suing Meta for the alleged wrongful death, in the first UK case of its kind.
3 mins
December 18, 2025
The Guardian
Gambling trap Illicit sites target addicts who are attempting to quit
The Long family are facing up to their second Christmas without their eldest son.
5 mins
December 18, 2025
The Guardian
Arbitration service offers to step in to break deadlock in doctors' strike
The conciliation service Acas has offered to help to try to break the deadlock in the resident doctors' strike in England.
2 mins
December 18, 2025
The Guardian
Par for the course? Why Ryder Cup hero McIlroy may miss Spoty cut once again
It has been a 2025 for the ages for Rory McIlroy. He cemented his legacy by completing a career grand slam with victory at the Masters.
3 mins
December 18, 2025
The Guardian
Leftwinger expelled by Labour to lead UK's largest trade union
The UK's largest trade union, Unison, is on a potential collision course with Labour after it ousted a leader with close links to Keir Starmer in favour of a leftwinger who was expelled from the party three years ago.
1 mins
December 18, 2025
The Guardian
Russia targeting European finance bosses and politicians over assets
Belgian politicians and senior finance executives have been subject to a campaign of intimidation orchestrated by Kremlin intelligence aimed at persuading the country to block the use of €185bn of frozen Russian assets for Ukraine, according to European intelligence agencies. Security officials indicated to the Guardian that there had been deliberate targeting of key figures at Brussels-based Euroclear, the securities depository holding the majority of Russia's frozen assets, and leaders of the country.
3 mins
December 18, 2025
The Guardian
The ‘winter’ crisis that never stops A day in the life of a Midlands hospital
Thirteen ambulances are lined up at the rear of the emergency department of the Royal Stoke university hospital as Dr AnnMarie Morris, the hospital trust's deputy medical director, walks towards the entrance, squinting in the low afternoon sun.
6 mins
December 18, 2025
The Guardian
'It should be better than that' England weigh up complaint after Snicko error spares Carey
England are considering a formal complaint over the Snicko technology being used in this Ashes series after Alex Carey received a lifeline en route to a telling century on the opening day of the third Test.
2 mins
December 18, 2025
The Guardian
Trump trade deals 'built on sand', say senior MPs
Ministers and senior MPs said yesterday the UK's agreements with Donald Trump were \"built on sand\" after the Guardian established that the deal to avoid drug tariffs had no underlying text beyond limited headline terms.
4 mins
December 18, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
