Intel's Ronler Acres Plant

Silicon Forest
If the type is too small, Ctrl+ is your friend

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Tehran - Apple TV Series - Season 1 of 4


Tehran — Official Trailer | Apple TV
Apple TV

Israel-Iran conflict up close and personal. Our girl is a computer hacker in the employ of Mossad. By exchanging clothes with a flight attendant, she gets into Iran and the flight attendant gets a flight out. Mossad's goal is to get her into the same room as a secure computer system so she can turn off the power to the anti-aircraft radar that is protecting an Iranian nuclear installation so the Israeli jets can come in and bomb it into smithereens.

Unlike James Bond, the operation does not go smoothly. When the op collapses, our girl has an opportunity to leave (extraction in military parlance), but she refuses. She is determined to fulfill her mission. Her bosses are totally willing to let her go ahead with her hairbrained scheme, not like there is much they can about it, other than sending in a hit team to execute her, which they are totally capable of doing. This is real hot-war espionage shit.

Our girl is talented, but she isn't James Bond. The show basically rocks from one coincidence to another, sometimes in favor of our girl, and sometimes in favor of the Iranian secret police. Numerous people get sacrificed on the altar of operational security.

I am beginning to understand the problem with dictatorships - they are stupid and brutal - but they work in that the people in charge stay in charge.

Early on we have an old man lamenting that they didn't realize how powerful Khomeini had become until it was too late. The way I see it is that the upper class were so impressed with themselves and their great success is that they didn't realize how much resentment was growing in the lower classes. If you are in the upper class, you need to insure that the lower classes are getting what they need, and what they need is:
  1. a share of the benefits that the upper class is creating,
  2. something to do (a job for instance), and
  3. something to believe in (a religion).
Failure to address these three issues is how you get your revolutions.

No comments: