03/09/2026
Way to go Carney chumming up with them!!!!!!
China’s spy ship is sitting comfortably off the coast of Oman right now—watching everything the U.S. does in the Middle East.
The vessel, the Liaowang-1, is reportedly vacuuming up real-time data on U.S. carriers, destroyers, F-35 Lightning II jets, and radar sites—then sending that intelligence straight to Iran.
The U.S. sees it.
The U.S. knows exactly what it’s doing.
But the U.S. can’t touch it.
Why? Because the moment America strikes a Chinese vessel, China enters the war—and the world’s largest navy by number of ships suddenly becomes part of the fight.
Meanwhile Iran is landing suspiciously precise hits: missile defense radars knocked out, including a $300 million THAAD radar at Jordan's Muwaffaq Salti Air Base, multiple AN/TPY-2 radars immobilized, and even precision strikes on the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad.
Blind luck? Unlikely. Chinese satellite company MizarVision has been openly posting imagery of American positions, with similar intelligence reportedly coming through Russian feeds. At the same time, the Liaowang-1 uses its massive radar domes and sensors to track electromagnetic signals and movements across thousands of kilometers—potentially stripping away any element of surprise from U.S. operations.
China doesn’t need to fire a single missile. Just keep the spy ship parked offshore—and every U.S. asset in the region becomes easier to track.
The U.S. may think it’s fighting Iran.
But the real chess game might be against China.