Jason Buttrill
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
But yeah, even if there are delays, then that's worrisome because that's more opportunities.
Why are there delays?
I mean, there's usually in advanced, I can't remember the exact figures, but in a very active attack, like what's happening now where they're hitting so many targets, I can't remember, it's thousands.
I think the last I saw was like 8,000 targets or something like that.
But in that scale, you typically have around 8 to 14 days of being able to keep up that scale of attack.
After that, then you have to... There's supply chain factors that come into it.
So you have to wait for more supply to get there, more arms, all that stuff.
So if they're getting to that point, then yes, there would be some delays.
But I'm not in the logistics planning.
I don't know how long they're looking at this.
They may have way more than that.
But this is going off of years ago experience that I used to have with this.
But yeah, but...
Go ahead.
Go ahead.
I was just going to say that if they're looking at if Iran does have the capability to strike back at if they see that now more civilian targets are open for attack, that gets pretty scary.
Then that limits the president's options after that.
If that does happen, then what else is left beyond some kind of limited ground invasion?
how long before that limited ground invasion goes to a scaled up ground invasion.
These are the things I do not want to see and why I'm starting to get a little bit that, I don't know, that uneasy feeling in the pit of my stomach where I don't like where this is going.