April 9, 2026

Iran-US-Israel Ceasefire already suspended due to Israel?

Just as Israel ended the 2025 Gaza ceasefire due to it continuing to bomb, shell and occupy Gaza - Israel is doing its utmost to frustrate the Iran-US-Israel ceasefire by increasing its war against Hezbollah, and many more civilians, in Lebanon.

Two considerations are:

-  Israel Katz, Defense Minister, is even more hardline nationalist than Netanyahu, hence more strongly opposed to peace with Iran. Israel's actions in Lebanon hinder peace.

-  Israel is not under domestic pressure to the extent of many countries from the decline of oil and gas via the Hormuz Strait. Israel extracts its natural gas needs (even exports gas) from its eastern Mediterranean gas fields. Israel's oil needs are 70% from Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan. These supplies mainly come via a pipeline through Turkey. Its other major oil sources include Gabon, Brazil and even Russia.

CIA's? “Ghost Murmur” May Have Helped Save Airman in Iran

Pete Comment

"Ghost Murmur" p
ossibly sponsored by the CIA and possibly developed by Lockheed Martin's Skunk Worksmay not yet work to low Earth orbiting (LEO) satellites or much higher Geo-stationery satellites. 

Alternatively, or as well, the US War Department's DARPA may have done the sponsoring, with some research organizations like AT&T or Bell Labs doing the developing.

It is presumed Ghost Murmur works to sensors on lower altitude, slow moving "aircraft" like UAVs and helicopters as well as being carried by US search parties on the ground.

Article

Inspired by information supplied by a friend - Indian website Republic World .com on April 8, 2026 reports https://www.republicworld.com/tech/ghost-murmur-what-is-this-us-tech-that-let-cia-track-heartbeats-40-miles-away-to-find-pilot-in-iran

"Ghost Murmur: What Is This US Tech That Let CIA Track Heartbeats
 40 Miles Away to Find Pilot in Iran

Discover how the CIA's Ghost Murmur technology used quantum magnetometry to track a wounded airman's heartbeat 40 miles away in Iran. Learn how this breakthrough tech works and why it marks a new era in military search and rescue.

Heartbeat in the Desert: How a Secret CIA Tool Tracked a Missing Pilot Miles Away

Heartbeat in the Desert: How a Secret CIA Tool Tracked a Missing Pilot Miles Away 

(Image above by Republic)

In the middle of a vast, silent desert in southern Iran, a wounded American airman lay hidden inside a mountain crevice, trying not to be seen, not to be heard,  barely moving as enemy forces searched for him. There were no clear signals, no obvious movement, nothing that would normally give away his position. And yet, miles away, US intelligence had already found him.

Not by sight. Not by sound. But by his heartbeat.

According to a report by the New York Post, the CIA used a highly classified system known as “Ghost Murmur” to locate the missing airman, marking what sources describe as its first real-world operational use. The rescue that followed was complex and risky, but what stands out is the technology that made it possible - a system that sounds like science fiction, yet may now be very real.

How the Technology Actually Works
At its core, Ghost Murmur works on a surprisingly simple idea. Every human heart produces a tiny electromagnetic signal when it beats. Under normal conditions, that signal is so faint it can only be detected in a hospital, with sensors placed directly on the chest. But this system changes the rules.

Using advances in quantum magnetometry, it can detect that same signal from far away. The technology relies on extremely sensitive sensors, reportedly built using specially engineered diamonds, that can pick up even the weakest magnetic fields. Once those signals are captured, artificial intelligence software filters out everything else - environmental noise, terrain interference, random electromagnetic activity - and isolates the unique rhythm of a human heartbeat.

Why the Desert Made It Easier
The conditions in southern Iran made this an ideal testing ground. The landscape is sparse, with very little electronic interference and almost no competing human presence. At night, the contrast between a living body and the cooler desert surroundings becomes sharper, offering an additional layer of confirmation. All of this combined to give operators a rare advantage: a clean environment where even the faintest signal could stand out.

The Moment That Changed the Search
The airman had activated a survival beacon at one point, but that alone wasn’t enough to pinpoint his exact location. What mattered more, according to sources quoted in the report, was that he had to briefly expose himself to send that signal. That moment may have helped Ghost Murmur lock onto him, turning a vague search into a precise detection.

Not a Magic Tool, Yet

Even with its breakthrough capability, the system is far from all-powerful. It reportedly works best in remote, low-noise environments and requires significant processing time to confirm a signal. In crowded or electronically dense areas, isolating a single heartbeat would be far more difficult. This is not a tool that sees everything everywhere, at least, not yet.

Much of Ghost Murmur remains classified, and the full extent of its capabilities is still unclear. But if the New York Post report is even partly accurate, this mission may mark a turning point - a moment where intelligence agencies proved they can track not just where someone is, but whether they are alive, by listening to the quiet, steady rhythm inside the human body.

In a place where a man had almost vanished without a trace, it was that rhythm - steady, invisible, unmistakably human - that led rescuers straight to him."

Also see:

https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/top-secret-cia-tool-ghost-121811150.html

and

https://nypost.com/2026/04/07/us-news/ghost-murmur-a-never-used-secret-tool-deployed-to-find-lost-airman-in-iran-in-daring-mission/

April 2, 2026

US burning through years' worth of critical weapons stockpiles in Iran

Pete Comment

The article below looks too good, more informed by human intelligence agencies than typical news agency gloss. The article also evinces a deep understanding of missiles, more like military intelligence than news agency exaggeration. 


Article

Australia's ABC News reports April 2, 2026 https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-04-02/us-israel-gulf-states-burn-through-weapons-supplies-iran-war/106489382 

"US burning through years' worth of critical weapons stockpiles in Iran"

A missile is launched from a battery on a warship.

Analysts estimate about 850 US Tomahawk missiles have been fired during the Middle East war. (US Navy via AP)

In short:

The US is estimated to be burning through high-end weapons at a rapid pace in its war on Iran and stockpiles could take years to replenish.

Analysts say the weapons may not be available for use should other conflicts break out.

They say the duration and outcome of the war could be affected by which side runs out of critical weapons first.

A limited supply of minerals was not an issue you could "just throw money at", he added.