Untouchable: China's Liaowang-1 spy ship is cruising international waters off Oman right now, vacuuming up real-time data on every U.S. carrier, destroyer, F-35, and radar site in the Middle East—and piping it straight to Iran.



The U.S. sees it. The U.S. knows exactly what it's doing. And the U.S. can't lay a finger on it.

Why? Strike a Chinese naval vessel and Beijing enters the war. China boasts the world's largest navy by hull count. One wrong move turns a regional fight into a global one.

Meanwhile Iran racks up hits that look impossible on paper:

- A $300 million THAAD radar at Jordan's Muwaffaq Salti Air Base—wiped out early in the conflict.

- Multiple AN/TPY-2 radars crippled, punching holes in regional missile defense.

- Precision strikes on the U.S. Embassy helipad inside Baghdad's ultra-secure Green Zone.

Blind luck? Hardly. Chinese satellite firm MizarVision openly posts imagery of American positions. Russian feeds supply the same. The Liaowang-1's massive radar domes and sensors track electromagnetic signatures and movements over thousands of kilometers, erasing any element of surprise for U.S. operations.

Iran isn't guessing coordinates. It's getting them fed live from two superpowers while sailing under Beijing's protection.

China doesn't need to fire a shot. Just keep the ship on station, and every American asset becomes a sitting target.

The U.S. is bombing Iran. But it's really playing chess against China—and right now, the board is tilted. Untouchable.
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