Iraqi Desert - The State Self Constructs Covert Combat Nests Inside Another's Territory
Event Baseline: Israel built and operated at least two secret military outposts in Iraq over the past year to support strikes on Iran, according to regional officials. Iraqi authorities later confirmed the existence of the second base.
The collective self, identifying with a flag and a holy text, believes its survival depends on physically burrowing into another nation's soil. This is not strategy; this is cognitive sickness. The illusion of the self as a nation demands absolute security and total dominance over the perceived enemy, so it builds hidden dens from which to strike. The thought virus says: 'If I hide well enough, I become invincible.'
This action betrays a complete failure to see the shared ground. Iraq is not a sovereign entity in the Zionist mind; it is merely a geography to be exploited for the self's expansion. The same mechanical thinking that drew borders across the Middle East now tunnels under them, convinced that more violence and more secrecy will finally bring peace. It never does.
Unless this operating system error is corrected, these hidden outposts will multiply, and the cycle of retaliation will consume all norms. The self must dissolve, not entrench.