Tumgik
#Global Anti-Drone Market share
vynzresearchindia · 2 years
Text
Global Anti-Drone Market Size, Share and Demand Forecast to 2030
The Global Anti-Drone Market research report 2022-30 has been released with several updates and analysis of market trends, share, size, demand, growth, challenges, opportunities and pre and post COVID-19 impacts.
Key Highlights of the Global Anti-Drone Market report
The projection period for this global market to grow is 2022-30
The Global Anti-Drone Market size is estimated to reach USD 7.5 billion by 2030.
Anticipated to CAGR to reach the projected revenue will be 29%.
Covid-19 analysis and its impact on the market
Industry ecosystem to competitive landscape’s curial role in growth role
Challenges and opportunities to get boost from recent developments and technology advancement
Request to get the sample copy of the research: https://www.vynzresearch.com/aerospace-and-defense/anti-drone-market/request-sample
Market segment analysis
The Global Anti-Drone Market is segmented into these categories for this analysis: Technology, Platform Type, Application, End Use and Geography. This segmentation allows executives to plan their products and spending based on the expected growth rates of each area: -
By Technology (laser systems, kinetic systems, and electronic systems)
By Platform Type (UAV-based, handheld, and ground-based)
By Application (detection and detection & disruption)
By End Use (military and defense, commercial, and homeland security)
By Region (North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific (APAC), Rest of the World (RoW))
For more insight: https://www.vynzresearch.com/aerospace-and-defense/anti-drone-market
Tumblr media
The Global Anti-Drone Market’s competitive viewpoint
This research is an invaluable resource for investors, shareholders, industry planners, and new and existing businesses trying to broaden their reach in the current Market scenario. While focusing on top companies and their corporate strategies, market presence, operating segmentation, aggressive outlook, geographical expansion, pricing and value structures, the study painstakingly takes into account the market analysis. The major market players are: -
Raytheon Technologies Corporation
Lockheed Martin Corporation
Thales
Leonardo S.p.A.
Saab
Blighter Surveillance Systems Limited
Boeing
Rafael Advanced Defense Systems Ltd.
QinetiQ
DroneShield Ltd
Reason to buy this report
The report is unbiased and it provides the deep insight of global market including competitive and geographical landscape.
The report enlightens the large patterns, causes, and impact factors globally and locally.
Insightful study drills-out the main players of the global market and, their sources of income, share of the market, and the current course of events.
It looks into significant developments such as extensions, agreements, new product launches, and acquisitions on the horizon.
Research the market's potential, preferred position, opportunity, difficulty, restrictions, and hazards on a global and regional level.
Request for your custom requirements: https://www.vynzresearch.com/aerospace-and-defense/anti-drone-market/customize-report
Customized research report
Global market research company VynZ Research provides research, analytics, and consulting services for business plans. We offer clients specialized report services that take into account the main variables influencing the development of the worldwide Market. Feel free to call or drop your requirement to get the get customized research report.
Explore more reports by VynZ Research
Global Residential Energy Storage Market: https://www.vynzresearch.com/energy-power/residential-energy-storage-market
Global Solar Energy Market: https://www.vynzresearch.com/energy-power/solar-energy-market
Global Power Rental Market: https://www.vynzresearch.com/energy-power/power-rental-market
Global Energy Storage System Market: https://www.vynzresearch.com/energy-power/energy-storage-system-market
Global Variable Frequency Drive (VFD) Market: https://www.vynzresearch.com/energy-power/variable-frequency-drive-market
Global Rocket and Missile Market: https://www.vynzresearch.com/aerospace-and-defense/rocket-and-missile-market
Global Fire Control System (FCS) Market: https://www.vynzresearch.com/aerospace-and-defense/fire-control-system-market
Global Mobile Artificial Intelligence Market: https://www.vynzresearch.com/semiconductor-electronics/mobile-artificial-intelligence-market
Global Missile Defense System Market: https://www.vynzresearch.com/aerospace-and-defense/missile-defense-system-market
Global Anti-Drone Market: https://www.vynzresearch.com/aerospace-and-defense/anti-drone-market
Global Photovoltaic Market: https://www.vynzresearch.com/energy-power/photovoltaic-market
0 notes
Global Anti-Drone Market Size & Share
[276 Pages Report] The global anti-drone market size was valued at USD 1.2 billion in 2022 and is projected to reach USD 5.2 billion by 2028; growing at a CAGR of 26.6% during the forecast period. The rising incidence of critical infrastructure security breaches by unauthorized drones and the surging adoption of aerial remote sensing technologies to safeguard critical infrastructure are among the factors driving the growth of the anti-drone industry.
0 notes
lalsingh228-blog · 6 months
Text
Anti- Drone Technology Market Size, Share, Growth, Trends, Analysis 2029
Tumblr media
Global Anti- Drone Technology Market Report from AMA Research highlights deep analysis on market characteristics, sizing, estimates and growth by segmentation, regional breakdowns & country along with competitive landscape, player’s market shares, and strategies that are key in the market. The exploration provides a 360° view and insights, highlighting major outcomes of the industry. These insights help the business decision-makers to formulate better business plans and make informed decisions to improved profitability. In addition, the study helps venture or private players in understanding the companies in more detail to make better informed decisions. Major Players in This Report Include, Dedrone Holdings, Inc. (United States), DroneShield (Australia), Israel Aerospace Industries Ltd. (IAI) (Israel), Liteye Systems, Inc (Israel), Boeing Co (United States), Lockheed Martin Corporation (United States), Northrop Grumman Corporation (United States), Raytheon Company (United States), Saab AB (Sweden), SRC, Inc. (United States), Thales SA (France) Free Sample Report + All Related Graphs & Charts @: https://www.advancemarketanalytics.com/sample-report/168461-global-anti--drone-technology-market Anti-Drones are helpful in countering unwarranted interruption of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV). Anti-drones track, identify, and discover UAVs and so stop illegal activities. The military and defense sectors primarily use these. The presence of many key players within the North American region and dire instances of security breaches contributes towards the numerous market growth during this region throughout the forecast period. Drones with integrated cameras have paved expedient ways for professionals seeking the simplest way for aerial photography. However, the rising adoption of those unmanned aerial vehicles has resulted in growing safety considerations among the government enhanced usage of those unauthorized flying objects for spying through backyards and windows has enhanced the threats to national security worldwide. These aircraft systems carry with them varied sensors that are capable of recording video and audio notwithstanding the time and place. so as to counter them, makers are progressively developing innovative UAV mitigation technologies that prohibit drones from flying in unauthorized airspace. Market Drivers
Detection and Identification of These Drones Have Become Vital Factors for Security Maintenance
Rising Need for Counter-UAV Technologies In Various Commercial Locations, Including Airports, Prisons, Live Events, And Critical Infrastructure
Rising Illicit Activities and Terrorism
Market Trend
Increased the Threats to National Security Worldwide
Artificial Intelligence in Anti-Drone Systems
Opportunities
Increase in The Initiatives by The Government for The Use of Anti-Drone in Military Bases
Increasing Expenditure On R&D by Prime Defence Contractors
Challenges
Increased Usage of These Unauthorized Flying Objects for Spying Through Backyards and Windows
Reduction in Risk of Collateral Damage
Enquire for customization in Report @: https://www.advancemarketanalytics.com/enquiry-before-buy/168461-global-anti--drone-technology-market In this research study, the prime factors that are impelling the growth of the Global Anti- Drone Technology market report have been studied thoroughly in a bid to estimate the overall value and the size of this market by the end of the forecast period. The impact of the driving forces, limitations, challenges, and opportunities has been examined extensively. The key trends that manage the interest of the customers have also been interpreted accurately for the benefit of the readers. The Anti- Drone Technology market study is being classified by Type (Destructive System (Laser System, Missile Effector, Electronic Countermeasure), Non-destructive System), Application (Detection, Detection & Disruption), Platform (Ground-Based (Fixed, Mobile), Handheld, UAV-Based), End-User (Government, Military and Defence, Commercial, Critical Infrastructure, Public Venues, Others) The report concludes with in-depth details on the business operations and financial structure of leading vendors in the Global Anti- Drone Technology market report, Overview of Key trends in the past and present are in reports that are reported to be beneficial for companies looking for venture businesses in this market. Information about the various marketing channels and well-known distributors in this market was also provided here. This study serves as a rich guide for established players and new players in this market. Get Reasonable Discount on This Premium Report @ https://www.advancemarketanalytics.com/request-discount/168461-global-anti--drone-technology-market Extracts from Table of Contents Anti- Drone Technology Market Research Report Chapter 1 Anti- Drone Technology Market Overview Chapter 2 Global Economic Impact on Industry Chapter 3 Global Market Competition by Manufacturers Chapter 4 Global Revenue (Value, Volume*) by Region Chapter 5 Global Supplies (Production), Consumption, Export, Import by Regions Chapter 6 Global Revenue (Value, Volume*), Price* Trend by Type Chapter 7 Global Market Analysis by Application ………………….continued This report also analyzes the regulatory framework of the Global Markets Anti- Drone Technology Market Report to inform stakeholders about the various norms, regulations, this can have an impact. It also collects in-depth information from the detailed primary and secondary research techniques analyzed using the most efficient analysis tools. Based on the statistics gained from this systematic study, market research provides estimates for market participants and readers. Contact US : Craig Francis (PR & Marketing Manager) AMA Research & Media LLP Unit No. 429, Parsonage Road Edison, NJ New Jersey USA – 08837 Phone: +1 201 565 3262, +44 161 818 8166 [email protected]
0 notes
chandupalle · 8 months
Text
[284 Pages Report] The global anti-drone market size was valued at USD 1.2 billion in 2022 and is projected to reach USD 5.2 billion by 2028; it is expected to register a CAGR of 26.6% during the forecast period.
0 notes
theculturedmarxist · 4 months
Text
In his book In the Garden of Beasts: Love, Terror, and an American Family in Hitler’s Berlin, Erik Larson cites a cable sent to the State Department in June 1933 by a U.S. diplomat posted in Germany that provided a far more candid assessment of the Nazi leadership than the one that President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s administration was then conveying to the public. “With few exceptions, the men who are running this Government are of a mentality that you and I cannot understand,” read the cable, which was written five months after Adolf Hitler was appointed chancellor. “Some of them are psychopathic cases and would ordinarily be receiving treatment somewhere.”
I’ve thought about that passage from the cable many times over the past several weeks as I’ve been reading excerpts from a private WhatsApp group chat established last December by Erik Prince, the founder of the military contractor Blackwater and younger brother of Betsy DeVos, the secretary of education during President Donald Trump’s administration, who invited around 650 of his contacts in the United States and around the world to join. Prince, who has a long track record of financing conservative candidates and causes and extensive ties to right-wing regimes around the world, named the group—which currently has around 400 members—“Off Leash,” the same name as the new podcast that he’d launched the month before.
Among the group’s hottest topics:
• The “Biden Regime,” which a consensus of Off Leash participants who weighed in view as an ally of Islamic terrorists and other anti-American forces that needs to be crushed along with them and its partners in the deep state, such as former Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Mark Milley, who “deserves to burn in hell,” Lara Logan shared with the group chat.
• The shortcomings of democracy that invariably resulted from extending the franchise to ordinary citizens, who are easily manipulated by Marxists and populists. “The West is at best a beautiful cemetery,” lamented Sven von Storch, whose aristocratic German family fled the country after World War II to Chile, where their son was raised before returning to the land of his ancestors, where he married the granddaughter of the Third Reich’s last de facto head of state, who was convicted at Nuremberg.
• Israel-Palestine, a problem that Michael Yudelson, Prince’s business partner at Unplugged, which markets an allegedly supersecure smartphone, said should be handled by napalming Hamas’s tunnel network. “I would burn all those bastards, and have everything above ground, everything left of Gaza, collapse into this fiery hell pit and burn!” he wrote.
• The Houthi rebels in Yemen, whom Yoav Goldhorn, who was an Israeli intelligence officer until last year and now works for a Tel Aviv–based security contractor headed by former senior national security veterans, thinks should be “dealt with” as soon as possible to ensure they don’t grow from “an inconvenience to a festering mess [that] will eventually require an entire limb to be amputated.”
• And most of all, Iran, which participants agreed, with a few exceptions, also needed to be wiped out. Saghar Erica Kasraie, a former staffer for Republican Representative Trent Franks when he served on the House Armed Services Committee and whom, according to her LinkedIn profile, she advised on Middle East issues, urged that the Islamic Republic’s clerical leaders be targeted by weaponized drones that “take them out like flys 😎.”
Not all of the group’s members are conspiracy theorists in the mold of Logan, the former CBS correspondent. I know many people who are in roughly the same political ballpark as the average Off Leash participant, including some of the chat group’s members, who are razor-sharp, even if I strongly disagree with a lot of their opinions. I don’t know Prince other than having been in the same room with him on a few occasions, but we have mutual acquaintances who say he’s not a one-dimensional evil mercenary as typically portrayed but brilliant and funny, and over drinks greatly prefers to discuss business and history rather than expound upon the latest developments in right-wing political circles.
Frank Gallagher, a former Marine who once provided security for Henry Kissinger and who worked in a high-level position at Blackwater in Iraq following the 2003 U.S.-led invasion, isn’t a fan of Prince but offered a similar assessment. “We had issues from time to time, but I can’t deny that he’s extraordinarily smart,” he recounted. “When he came to Iraq, he’d cover 10 topics, and he had command over all of them.”
All of which makes Off Leash arguably more concerning, because the group can’t be dismissed as merely a collection of harmless cranks. Many of the participants, though not all household names, are wealthy and politically wired—which makes their incessant whining in the group chat about being crushed under the bootheel of the deep state particularly grating—and they will collectively become wealthier and more influential if Trump wins the November election. That’s especially true of the Americans in the group, but the same holds for the international figures because the global right will become immensely more powerful and emboldened if the former president returns to the White House. That prospect is a source of great hope to Off Leash participants. “Trump, Orban, Milei, it’s happening,” former Blackwater executive John LaDelfa posted to the group during a trip to Argentina on December 4, two days after Prince created it. “Around the Globe, we are the sensible, the rational, the majority. Don’t give in to fear. We will defeat the Marxists.”
His hopes were shared by many other Off Leash participants, among them Horatiu Potra, a Romanian mercenary who has recently been operating in the mineral-rich, conflict-plagued Democratic Republic of Congo. “The globalists want to control the entire planet [and] the only chance to get rid of them is a spark from a great power (the USA),” Potra wrote. “Surely there will be a strong man like Erik who will initiate it, otherwise there is no chance of regaining our freedom. If this spark is started, all countries will follow suit.… We were waiting for the signal, the spark!!”
A December 2023 United Nations report alleged that Potra owns a company that has provided combat support and fighters to Congolese government troops fighting a vicious rebel insurgency. Prince unsuccessfully sought to negotiate a deal with the DRC government to fly 2,500 mercenaries from Colombia, Argentina, and Mexico into the country to fight alongside Potra’s men, the report said.
About three-quarters of the people Prince invited to the group chat are from the U.S. or live here. The largest overseas blocs are from Israel (32 members), the United Arab Emirates (20 members), and the United Kingdom (20). There are smaller contingents, sometimes a single person, from 33 other countries in Africa, Asia, Europe, Latin America, and the Middle East.
Collectively, Off Leash provides an informal virtual gathering place for current and former political officials, national security operatives, activists, journalists, soldiers of fortune, weapons brokers, black bag operators, grifters, convicted criminals, and other elements in the U.S. and global far right. The roster of invitees includes:
• Icons of the MAGA ecosphere such as Tucker Carlson, the most revered figure among group chat participants, with the exception of the Supreme Leader himself; Kimberly Guilfoyle, the longtime fiancée of Donald Trump Jr.; and retired Lieutenant General Michael Flynn, Trump’s convicted-then-pardoned first national security adviser. Flynn has participated, Carlson only minimally, and Guilfoyle not at all.
• Current and former lawmakers and aides, such as Tennessee Congressman Mark Green of the House Freedom Caucus; Vish Burra, who was director of operations for Congressman George Santos; and Stuart Seldowitz, a national security adviser to Barack Obama from 2009 to 2011 who was arrested last November after harassing an Egyptian halal street cart vendor in New York City for two weeks, during which time he called him a “terrorist” and said, “If we killed 4,000 Palestinian kids, it wasn’t enough.”
Prominent figures in the Off Leash crew are well known for their paleoconservative political views, but the private opinions expressed in the group chat are even more extreme and jarring than we normally see voiced publicly. Participants chirpily discussed the desirability of clamping down on democracy to deal with their enemies at home and regime change, bombings, assassinations, and covert action to take care of those abroad. The group’s overall bloodlust periodically proved to be too much for a few more judicious individual members, who in almost any other setting would be considered ultraconservatives but in the context of Off Leash sound like hippie peaceniks‎. One of the dissidents—a National Rifle Association firearms instructor who runs a weapons company—joked that he was worried about an “unsupervised” subgroup of especially enthusiastic military adventurers that formed to discuss topics too “hot” for WhatsApp, saying, “I imagine their ‘to be bombed’ list is over 49 countries and growing.”
Many other Off Leash participants have also stated that they don’t view the group chat as merely a forum to exchange ideas but want it to become a vehicle to put their theories into action. “If we band together … we can damage the other side like no one has ever seen before!” exclaimed Jeff Sloat, who worked with a U.S. Army psyops unit in Central America during the Reagan era.
I don’t want to disclose much about how I learned of the group chat and the nature of its discussions, but I will say that multiple sources in the U.S. and elsewhere shared information, including two journalists who I discovered had learned about Off Leash, which nearly gave me a heart attack for fear I’d lose my scoop. Participants did occasionally express concerns about security, but their worries were mostly centered on the possibility that their conversation was vulnerable to hackers. It apparently never occurred to any of them that their confidentiality might be compromised not by sophisticated cyberwarfare specialists but by old-fashioned leakers, which was virtually inevitable given the group’s size.
Off Leash was still active as of Wednesday, though I expect it won’t be, at least in its current form, for much longer, given that the conversation Wednesday included much discussion about their security being breached, which became evident after I reached out to participants for comment. Fortunately, I obtained details about a large slice of the chat group’s discussions over the past six months. Here’s some of what they discussed.
Solving the Middle East Crisis: Nukes, Napalm, and Other “Extreme Measures”
Off Leash was launched less than two months after Israel commenced its assault on Gaza following Hamas’s deadly October 7 attack on Israel, and that topic has been one of the group chat’s main concerns since it was established by Prince on December 2. Five days later, Omer Laviv, an executive with the Mer Group, a private security company with many former Israeli intelligence officials in its senior ranks, posted a story to the group that ran two days earlier in The Times of London and reported Prince had been seeking to sell the Israel Defense Forces equipment for a plan he’d devised to flood Hamas tunnels with seawater.
“I was involved,” remarked Moti Kahana, the Israeli American businessman who runs GDC, the firm where Off Leash member Stuart Seldowitz previously worked. Kahana pointedly added that at least one part of The Times’ story was false—for example, Prince had offered to donate the equipment, not sell it, he said.
“Why do you expect accuracy from journalists?” retorted Laviv, who during the Trump administration retained 27 U.S. lobbyists and consultants to run a $9.5 million lobbying campaign on behalf of President Joseph Kabila, the corrupt, brutal leader of the Democratic Republic of Congo, who used surveillance equipment supplied by the Mer Group to monitor his regime’s opponents. Among those Laviv involved were Rudy Giuliani, Trump’s former personal lawyer, fixer, and dirt-digger, and Robert Stryk, whose clients have included Saudi Arabia and El Salvador’s state intelligence agency under crypto-fascist President Nayib Bukele.
Yudelson, who also reportedly partnered with Prince in an attempt to buy weapons for resale from Belarus dictator Aleksandr Lukashenko (whom the two men praised for bringing “peace, stability, and prosperity to your country”), predicted the tunnel-flooding proposal would be shot down by the “Israeli left,” a force he labeled the country’s “biggest enemy,” ahead of Hamas and Iran, over concerns about the environmental impact in Gaza. “Who gives a shit about that,” Yudelson posted to the group. “If it was up to me … I would flood them with Napalm! I would burn all those bastards, and have everything above ground, everything left of Gaza, collapse into this fiery hell pit and burn!”
Even that was deemed to be insufficiently hawkish for some Off Leash participants. In a lengthy tirade on February 14, Tzvi Lev, who formerly worked in Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said it was rare to see a people as “twisted” as Palestinians, whose culture “worships death and bloodshed.” The only solution, he wrote, was to “completely uproot the radical Islamic Palestinian nationalism,” which was possible to do based on the historical precedent of Japan, which “went from being nuked twice to one of the world’s strongest economies within two decades.” Dropping nuclear weapons on what’s left of densely populated Gaza, which is roughly the size of Detroit, would be a war crime and kill huge numbers of civilians.
Yoav Goldhorn, the former Israeli intelligence officer, also cited “fucking nukes in Japan” as an appropriate remedy to the Palestinian problem. Sadly, wrote Goldhorn, whose LinkedIn profile says he has “a passion for strategic planning,” there was no one in the Israeli government with “the balls nor vision to go all those extra miles.”
Iran: Off Leash’s Public Enemy No. 1
It was hard to keep track of all the wars, invasions, covert operations, coups, and assassinations Off Leash members favored. One region ripe for a bit of good old-fashioned Western intervention was Africa, which was described as a “pot about to boil over” by Emma Priestley, who posts as “Customer” in the group chat and is the CEO of GoldStone Resources Limited in Jersey, the English Channel island that is one of the world’s most popular offshore secrecy havens. China would have to be taken down a peg as well, particularly as Biden wasn’t going to stop the country “from doing a damn thing,” and indeed he would pave the way for it to do “whatever it is they want to accomplish,” posted Randy Couture, the former UFC heavyweight champion and actor who had the role of arsonist and killer Jason Duclair in the TV series Hawaii Five-0 and starred in the 2011 movie Setup with 50 Cent and Bruce Willis.
But the No. 1 target on Off Leash’s hit list, by orders of magnitude, was Iran. “Follow the source of evil,” wrote Montana Congressman Ryan Zinke, who served as interior secretary under Trump. “Hamas. Hezbollah. Houthis. Iran is the center of gravity.”
“Zinke is right,” agreed Tennessee Congressman Mark Green of the House Freedom Caucus.
Yemen’s Houthi rebels were most immediately in the group’s crosshairs, due to their attempts to halt arms shipments to Israel. Finishing them off would be a cakewalk, but time was of the essence as the Houthis were “relatively limited in strength” at the moment but could become a major problem if swift action wasn’t taken, wrote Yoav Goldhorn, a former Israeli intelligence operative.
To Goldhorn’s way of thinking, the Houthis were best compared to “rot [that] stinks a lot more than the flesh it ate”:
As we’ve seen countless times in the Middle East, if you don’t treat rot it will grow and spread and turn from an inconvenience to a festering mess, and will eventually require an entire limb to be amputated. The Houthi threat has to be dealt with now, while they’re still relatively limited in strength. Otherwise it’ll become a problem too big to handle without extreme measures, or worse yet—remain a problem for future generations to come.
As for moving against Iran itself, the leading cheerleader in the group chat for military action is Kasraie, who worked for Representative Franks of Arizona until 2017, when he resigned amid charges of sexual harassment by two female staffers. “The IRGC is the head of the snake,” Kasraie wrote in one post, referring to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. “It’s time to cut the head of that snake.”
An Iranian American who converted to Christianity after her family moved to the U.S. following the 1979 Islamic Revolution, Kasraie has worked closely with fellow exile Amir Abbas Fakhravar, the co-founder of the Confederation of Iranian Students, which claimed to represent a worldwide pro-Western movement in support of domestic opponents of the Islamic government.
Fakhravar was hailed by the neoconservative think tanks American Enterprise Institute and Foundation for Defense of Democracies—which were leading advocates of the 2003 invasion of Iraq and are currently leading the drumbeat for regime change in Iran—as his country’s 2.0 version of Ahmed Chalabi, the CIA-backed Iraqi exile whom the Bush administration promoted as a beloved figure among citizens of his native land during the run-up to the 2003 invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein. That didn’t pan out as promised when Chalabi 1.0 led a political coalition in parliamentary elections two years after his triumphant return that won less than 1 percent of the total vote.
Now Kasraie, who organizes congressionally hosted “global conferences in Washington for activists to plan the constitutional future of a free, democratic Iran,” according to an online bio, is touting Reza Pahlavi, the shah’s oldest son and crown prince of Iran, as “the only viable opposition leader” and the man the U.S. should install in power after seeing to the formality of dispatching the current government.
“I assure you, the Iranian people want nothing more than to be free from the bloodthirsty mullahs,” Kasraie wrote in the group chat on January 27, and added with equal certainty that younger Iranians were “pro-Israel and pro-America” and that millions in the country felt a deep “sense of nostalgia” for the former royal dynasty. If Reza Pahlavi received strong international support—he would merely be a “mouthpiece” to be handled by a team of “good advisors,” Kasraie stated—the internal opposition “would be much more inclined to rise up and we would see far more defectors.”
For his part, Reza Pahlavi, who hasn’t stepped foot in Iran for 45 years and lives in a lavish estate in the Washington suburbs, said in an interview last year he wasn’t sure he wanted to have an official role in a future government if the current one was overthrown, or even live in the country. This didn’t dampen the ardor of Kasraie, who in one post labeled the mullahs a “cancerous venom that need to be eradicated from … the planet,” with her preferred method to accomplish that being weaponized drones that would “take them out like flys 😎.”
That type of approach was endorsed by others in the group, including Gabriel “Kaz” Kazerooni, a former U.S. intelligence officer, Special Forces veteran, and Blackwater employee in Iraq, who described Iran’s religious leaders as “pedofile [sic] Mullahs” and a “bacteria to humanity” who he hoped would soon “die away.”
“EP [Erik Prince] has the right people in place,” Kazerooni added cryptically, saying it was only a matter of time before the “Mullah Pigs” would be removed from power.
Washington should “take out” the commander of the IRGC’s Quds Force that replaced Maj. Gen. Qassem Soleimani, who was killed in a 2020 operation ordered by President Trump, Lara Logan said. Prince had urged he be targeted for killing four years earlier, when he was informally advising the Trump campaign, in a memo to White House chief strategist Steve Bannon.
Logan proposed the U.S. also assassinate other “key targets” in the Middle East, specifically mentioning “the head of Hamas,” whose name she didn’t mention, but she presumably was talking about Mohammed Deif, who leads the group’s military wing. “That will send a message,” she said.
Nathan Jacobson, a 69-year-old Canadian Israeli businessman who told The New Republic he is a longtime friend of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and fought with the IDF as a young man, had a more ambitious proposal. In order to topple the Islamic regime, he said blithely, “We need to hit” Iran’s nuclear facilities, ports, Qom, where the mullahs reside, IRGC headquarters and bases, and oil industry production facilities, which would shut down the country’s economy for months.
The calls for carnage elicited pushback from two Off Leash members. “The problem is while doing nothing could empower them, bombing might empower them more,” warned Mark Farage, who owns a firearms and ammunition manufacturer in Virginia and made the joke about the “unsupervised” subgroup’s ever-growing list of countries they wanted to be targeted for airstrikes. “I don’t think we have successfully bombed anyone into an ally since WWII.… Maybe we should consider more tools than just a hammer?”
“Huge mistake to attack Iran directly,” concurred Matt Heidt, a Special Forces veteran who deployed to Africa, South America, and Asia, including a 2007 stint in Iraq’s Anbar Province. “We would be inviting 10/7 here.”
Jacobson was infuriated by the criticism of his blueprint for war.
“We don’t want them as an ally,” he said in a comment directed at Farage. “Let them spend their time stoned on qat and screwing their sheep.”
He was even more contemptuous of Heidt’s opinions. “You remind me of the Jews in Germany in the 30’s that thought that by being quiet that the problem would go away,” he sneered. “We have no choice but to hit them hard and then kill these cells if they raise their ugly heads. Why are you taking a coward’s standpoint?”
“So you’re going to waddle your fat ass over there and put some skin in the game or are you content to put others at risk?” retorted Heidt.
“Unlike you, I’ve had skin in that game for years,” said Jacobson, who served in the IDF in the 1970s. “What have you done?”
“Retired SEAL Senior Chief with a Bronze Star with V,” shot back Heidt. Bronze Stars are awarded for heroism in a combat zone, and are not uncommon, but a Bronze Star with V, for Valor, are relatively rare.
Those in Off Leash’s overwhelmingly dominant hard-line faction were having none of the namby-pamby defeatism from Heidt and Farage.
“Bomb the hell out of them,” Kazerooni insisted. “Mess with US and you will eat your Sh_t. We the United States Of America is still the strongest Country in the world.”
More recently, the Off Leash crew has been in a chronic state of agitation over political developments that have led them to further ratchet up their calls for jihad against their worldwide enemies. In mid-April, after Tehran fired missiles into Israel in retaliation for an airstrike in Syria that killed two of its generals in a diplomatic building, Sloat, the psyops specialist, excitedly declared it was “time to disintegrate Iran.” In May, their fury turned to Biden’s brief pause in arms shipments to Israel, though none were surprised by the president’s treachery, as his “Regime is infiltrated by Muslim Brotherhood” (Yudelson) and “compromised … by Iranian regime influencers” (Zinke).
The group finally got good news recently with the helicopter crash that killed Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi, though nerves frayed as they awaited confirmation he was dead. If he’d tragically survived, wondered Tzvi Lev, perhaps it would be possible to dispatch a Special Forces search and rescue unit to “disappear” him before he was found.
The Future of American Democracy: “It’s Trump or Revolution!”
Even more worrying to group chat members than the state of global affairs was that democracy was under attack across the world, especially in the West and most of all in the U.S. They blamed the same barbarians at the gate science fiction writer Robert Heinlein pointed to in To Sail Beyond the Sunset, which was published in 1987, the year before his death. “Democracy often works beautifully at first,” but the day the franchise is extended “to every warm body … marks the beginning of the end of that state,” Heinlein wrote. “For when the plebs discover that they can vote themselves bread and circuses without limit and that the productive members of the body politic cannot stop them, they will do so, until the state bleeds to death, or in its weakened condition … succumbs to an invader—the barbarians enter Rome.” The passage about bread and circuses was posted in its entirety on February 16 by former Virginia Congressman Tom Garrett, who offered it as an explanation for why democratic governance made it impossible to address the problems facing the United States.
“Definitely an issue,” agreed Scott Taylor, another former House member from Virginia, and Republicans were responsible as well. Too many GOP lawmakers campaigned as principled opponents of government spending, Taylor wrote on the list, but were “more concerned about their individual selves then actually advancing conservative policy” and chased federal money for their home districts like common Democrats in hopes of currying favor with their pleb constituents.
Former President Trump’s campaign to return to the White House posed an even graver and more imminent threat to American democracy. It wasn’t Trump, per se, or his efforts to reverse the results of the 2020 presidential election that troubled the group, needless to say. The danger was that following his landslide victory this November, which was a foregone conclusion, the deep state would “steal it again,” just as it had four years ago, Yudelson posted. “I just hope and pray that they will not JFK Trump before the elections, physically, or with some of their other methods.”
Despite such trepidations, Congressman Zinke spoke for the group when he wrote, “There is only one path forward. Elect Trump.”
“It’s Trump or Revolution!” Yudelson chimed in from the chorus.
“You mean Trump AND Revolution,” a right-leaning Canadian businessman shot back. “The Left is too violent to sit back and let Trump win again.”
John Mills, a retired Army colonel who held a cybersecurity post at the Pentagon under Trump, was overcome with emotion when his hero appeared at the Conservative Political Action Conference in February. “Tears streamed down my face,” he wrote to the Off Leash group chat from the event. “DJT and the J6ers are in the house.”
The view that Trump represented a unique hope was shared by group chat members outside of the U.S. “He is the best thing … even in Africa,” offered N.J. Ayuk, a native of Cameroon who currently lives in Johannesburg, where he founded a law firm that assists clients with interests in the oil and gas sector. “Trump all the way 💯”
“I live in darkest west Africa,” posted Emma Priestley of GoldStone Resources Limited. The overall situation was such an irredeemable mess, Trump himself might not be able to “save this shithole of a continent.”
“Completely agree,” replied Ayuk, who once worked as an intern for the late New Jersey Democratic Congressman Donald Payne but was deported in 2007 after pleading guilty to using his boss’s stationery and signature stamp to illegally obtain visas to the U.S. for citizens of his home country. The Biden administration had been “a disaster” for Africa. “They only give us lectures and talk about renewables,” said Ayuk. “These latte liberators are actually the problem.”
That was a minor offense among the long litany of crimes Off Leash participants laid at Biden’s door. “Looks like the globalists are enabling this mass illegal immigration,” Yudelson, citing an article at Zerohedge, wrote in one post. “Surely with tremendous assistance from the Biden Regime.” But Biden was merely a figurehead controlled by “elements that are actually ruling for the Deep State,” he continued. The real problem was that Democrats had been “in cahoots with the Muslim Brotherhood and infiltrated by their proxies and agents, as well as Ayatollah sympathizers” ever since President Bill Clinton’s administration.
With the Democratic Party captured by Islamic terrorists, Marxists, globalists, and other foreign and domestic evildoers, the U.S. was “being destroyed from within,” warned Kasraie, whose fears were shared by many among the Off Leash crew.
“The insurgency within our country today is going to bite us,” said Scott Freeman, the CEO of a Virginia company called International Preparedness Associates, which designs “unique special programs” that help defend U.S. national security, friendly foreign governments, and private-sector interests, according to its website.
Many Off Leash participants were even less restrained. When a chat group participant posted a story that revealed JPMorgan Chase had hired General Mark Milley—whom Trump appointed chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff but clashed with during and after his presidency—as a senior adviser, Lara Logan went off the rails. “Milley is a piece of shit and a traitor and he deserves to burn in hell,” posted Logan, who holds a seat on the board of America’s Future, a conservative nonprofit chaired by Off Leash member and former Lieutenant General Michael Flynn, Trump’s national security adviser for less than a month.
At a February 23 America’s Future event, Logan shared that she’d originally been skeptical of the Pizzagate conspiracy theory, which spread in far-right circles during the 2016 election and proposed that Hillary Clinton and other Democratic Party officials were running a child sex trafficking ring out of the pizzeria Comet Ping Pong. However, after conducting her own independent investigation, Logan told the audience at the event, she’d discovered, “Holy guacamole! This actually is all true.”
What, then, was to be done?
The answer was clear to Freeman, a.k.a. “ScottyF” in the group chat. “Apply all tenets of warfare internally against the many enemies living among us. America is capable of being fully capable again. Do we have the will to levy the toll?”
Jesse Barnett, a retired Navy SEAL specializing in “Active Shooter Prep ... and Crisis Prevention” who ran the Indianapolis-based indoor shooting simulator Poseidon Experience, offered a harsh but necessary recipe. “We need a Nuremberg style clean up of this global cabal,” he proposed. “Only through accountability can we cleanse our spirits.” Once the cleansing was out of the way, security could be maintained by using “technology to identify sociopaths and keep them in their place.”
On the roster of Off Leash participants, there was one—a poster with the handle of “S,” whom it took me weeks to identify—who stood out as a particularly dark character. There were some in the group who expressed more unhinged views and others who more casually called for violence against their enemies; what made S distinctive was his dry, bloodless manner and businesslike espousal of a disciplined worldview that was unmistakably fascist.
“This is no longer politics, this is an open war against freedom and human nature. And wars aren’t won with more balloons and confetti as we know,” S wrote. “It’s no longer a ‘game’ either.… It is time to adapt strategies to reality and stop pretending that we live in a free democracy in the West.”
S was later revealed to be Sven von Storch, born to a German family that left for Chile after World War II, whose wife, Beatrix von Storch, is the granddaughter of Lutz Graf Schwerin von Krosigk, Hitler’s finance minister from 1933, the year he took power, until he killed himself in Berlin in April 1945, as Russian troops closed in on the bunker where he and the dregs of his loyalists were holed up. In his last will and testament, Hitler appointed von Krosigk to serve under Joseph Goebbels, his handpicked successor as chancellor, but since his minister of propaganda committed suicide the day after Hitler, von Krosigk became the Third Reich’s head of state during its final days. “Von Krosigk never wavered in his enthusiasm and labors for the Nazi cause,” prosecutor Alexander Hardy said during his trial at Nuremberg, where he was sentenced to 10 years for financing the concentration camps and other crimes.
Beatrix von Storch is a leader and Bundestag member with Alternative for Germany, arguably the most radical of Europe’s far-right parties, which calls for a crackdown on immigration into the country to protect its “Western Christian culture,” a variant of the “great replacement” theory espoused by white supremacists in the United States. Sven von Storch doesn’t hold elected office, but he’s considered to be a prominent figure in the AfD. An admirer of Steve Bannon, von Storch has close ties to Chile’s pro-Pinochet political bloc; he and his wife met with Jair Bolsonaro, the country’s former president, at the presidential palace in Brazil, and the latter’s powerful son Eduardo gave the couple a bottle of the first family’s brand wine as a gift.
“Law and justice no longer mean anything in the West,” von Storch wrote during the same conversation. “Stupid and naive people may still believe it. And probably not even them anymore.”
It’s not clear how many in the group knew S’s real identity, but he was clearly a pedigreed German fascist who even within the rarefied far-right ecosphere of Off Leash sat at a distinctly extreme end. No one seemed troubled by his views, and indeed von Storch was warmly embraced. “This is getting interesting,” Kazerooni wrote in response to his post. “Love this Group.”
Freeman was one of a number of group chat participants who, like the former psyops specialist Sloat, wanted to look for ways to implement their policy ideas. A group with so much “experience, accomplishments and resources” should look for a few issues we “might be able to influence together,” Freeman proposed. “Not to save the world or the idiots in the USA but rather a core of us or perhaps a broader group of like minds/patriots of some sort. 🤷‍♂️”
Reading the group chat’s conversations would be comical if it wasn’t so pitiful and disturbing in equal measure. Group members clearly regard themselves as natural elites who are more intelligent, virtuous, and honorable than Heinlein’s tired, poor, unwashed plebs.
Yet none of the four current and former members of Congress who are active in the group distinguished themselves as model public servants. In 2018, Zinke resigned as Trump’s secretary of the interior after an Inspector General’s report concluded he was a serial violator of ethics laws. Green withdrew his nomination to be Trump’s army secretary after being criticized, including by GOP John McCain, for past statements he’d made that called for his fellow citizens to “take a stand on the indoctrination of Islam in public schools” and labeled transgender people “evil.” Garrett resigned his House seat in 2018 after it was alleged he and his wife used his congressional staff to run errands, chauffeur their children, and clean up after their dog, though he denied those charges and cited alcoholism as the reason he had stepped down. Four staffers who worked on Taylor’s 2018 reelection campaign were subsequently indicted for election fraud, which he said he knew nothing about, but he lost that race and did again when he ran for his old seat two years later.
Even more farcical was the manner in which group chat members portrayed themselves as rightful guardians of democracy, even as they proposed employing military force against their unarmed domestic political opponents and rounding up members of the “global cabal” for trial at a Nuremberg-style tribunal. It’s blazingly evident that many in the group can’t even define democracy, and those who can don’t like it.
Dallas real estate developer Scott Hall informed the group he was moving his family to the UAE, which is ruled by an authoritarian monarchy, because “freedom is real” there. When President Gustavo Petro, Colombia’s first leftist president, was running for office two years ago, the rural oligarch Sergio Araujo Castro publicly declared that his employees “have the right to vote freely for whoever they want,” but he’d fire any who supported Petro. After protests against the Biden administration’s support for Israel’s assault on Gaza erupted at Stanford in January, Goldhorn wondered how it was legal that students who took part weren’t summarily expelled as they received benefits from the U.S. government, but “[wished] for its destruction,” which he evidently equated with criticism of its policies.
I sent messages seeking comment to Prince and the 29 participants whose comments in the group chat are cited in this story. Prince did not respond. Of the others, only Barnett, Jacobson, and Goldhorn were willing to be interviewed.
Barnett, who once worked for Blackwater, said participants in the group chat “love the country and want good solutions” and that he was not an ideologue and favored “checks and balances, and transparency.” A “centrist who leans libertarian” and Barack Obama voter in 2008, Barnett said the 9/11 attacks seven years earlier were an “inside job 100 percent,” and that they “woke me up” and triggered the political evolution that led to his current “conspiracy observationist perspective.”
Barnett said he was a Trump fan in part because “the establishment hates” the former president, adding that the Russiagate scandal that led to his first impeachment had been cooked up by Democrats as part of a politically motivated attack to drive him from office. (An opinion I share.) When I told Barnett his remarks about the need for a new Nuremberg tribunal sounded like a call for an attack of the same type but against enemies of the group chat, he said he didn’t favor a politically driven kangaroo court but envisioned a scrupulously fair judicial process that “truly enables our country to move forward,” which could be ensured by establishing panels with impartial experts such as journalist Matt Taibbi, psychologist and commentator Jordan Peterson, and others of similarly “high integrity” to help determine who would be prosecuted.
Jacobson also said his remarks in the group chat sounded harsher than he’d intended. Despite having been friendly with Netanyahu for many years, he said the Israeli prime minister and his government were “long past their expiry date,” and he considered the military attack on Gaza to be “a complete failure.” On Iran, Jacobson said he “loved Iranian culture, cuisine, and people” and noted that he’d spent time with Reza Pahlavi last week when the latter was in Toronto, where he lives.
“I hate the mullah’s regime,” Jacobson added, but “I’m not calling to go to war” but to help the domestic opposition bring the regime down by bombing Iranian oil infrastructure and related targets. About a month ago, he’d proposed that during an informal discussion with an unnamed Israeli official, telling his interlocutor that Iran’s missile strikes against Israel were “our opportunity to hit their oil facilities so they can’t make money to finance terrorism.” About Off Leash itself, Jacobson said, “I enjoy the banter of the group, but it’s not a political conspiracy.”
“I have no idea what you’re talking about,” Goldhorn, who told me he knows Prince “very tentatively,” replied when I paraphrased his remarks about dropping nuclear weapons on Gaza and regarding the Houthis. “I didn’t see anyone proposing or discussing such actions in the group, so I can’t really comment on these claims.” When I sent him the relevant excerpts, his memory was refreshed regarding the Houthis, though he said he was “referring to the naval threat mostly,” as the group was seeking to sink merchant ships. “I was not [referring] to the Yemenese [sic] people as a whole, only the military organization.” He continued to insist he’d “never suggested to nuke Gaza, which is a laughably dumb idea,” though I had excerpts of the respective conversations about both topics, which were faithfully recounted earlier, and the quotes from Goldhorn are verbatim.
Off Leash’s participants want a “democracy” where the “plebs” vote the way they want in every election and the government only approves their preferred policies, which would give them the absolute certainty they want that their outsize wealth, privileges, and influence will be protected. That’s not the way democracy works, it’s the way dictatorships do, which no doubt feels comfortable to group chat members who have thrived doing business with corrupt, repressive regimes and leaders, which is the way many met each other and Prince, and how they came to be part of Off Leash in the first place.
To paraphrase the assessment of Nazi officials made by the U.S. diplomat from Erik Larsen’s In the Garden of Beasts, during ordinary times, people who hold such opinions would be receiving treatment somewhere. However, to continue with the analogy, many Off Leash participants currently hold powerful political roles or are intimate allies of those who do.
The key to expanding their influence, in the collective view of the group chat, and not only its American members, is a victory by Trump in the November election. “The freedom of the Western world is decided in the USA,” as von Storch put it. “As long as the USA lets the globalists do whatever they want, we patriots in the rest of the world can only try to maintain and survive our positions.”
Comparing the contemporary United States to Nazi Germany is an admittedly imprecise analogy. Nevertheless, it’s impossible not to be alarmed by the crypto-fascist, off the leash views expressed by Trump’s allies in the group chat about exterminating their foreign and domestic enemies and needing to “find the will to levy the toll.” However imprecise the comparison, as a model political capital, Berlin 1933 is far more compatible with the worldview of Off Leash participants than Washington 2024, and in the event they and like-minded associates gain power in the U.S. or elsewhere, they’ll be pushing backward in that general direction.
4 notes · View notes
globalgrowthinsights · 2 months
Text
Laminated Particle Boards Market Size, Share, Forecast [2032]
Laminated Particle Boards Market provides in-depth analysis of the market state of Laminated Particle Boards manufacturers, including best facts and figures, overview, definition, SWOT analysis, expert opinions, and the most current global developments. The research also calculates market size, price, revenue, cost structure, gross margin, sales, and market share, as well as forecasts and growth rates. The report assists in determining the revenue earned by the selling of this report and technology across different application areas.
Geographically, this report is segmented into several key regions, with sales, revenue, market share and growth Rate of Laminated Particle Boards in these regions till the forecast period
North America
Middle East and Africa
Asia-Pacific
South America
Europe
Key Attentions of Laminated Particle Boards Market Report:
The report offers a comprehensive and broad perspective on the global Laminated Particle Boards Market.
The market statistics represented in different Laminated Particle Boards segments offers complete industry picture.
Market growth drivers, challenges affecting the development of Laminated Particle Boards are analyzed in detail.
The report will help in the analysis of major competitive market scenario, market dynamics of Laminated Particle Boards.
Major stakeholders, key companies Laminated Particle Boards, investment feasibility and new market entrants study is offered.
Development scope of Laminated Particle Boards in each market segment is covered in this report. The macro and micro-economic factors affecting the Laminated Particle Boards Market
Advancement is elaborated in this report. The upstream and downstream components of Laminated Particle Boards and a comprehensive value chain are explained.
Browse More Details On This Report at @https://www.globalgrowthinsights.com/market-reports/laminated-particle-boards-market-100568
 Global Growth Insights
Web: https://www.globalgrowthinsights.com
Our Other Reports:
Global Online MarketMarket Size
Avalanche Airbags MarketMarket Growth
Operating Room Management MarketMarket Analysis
High-Purity Alumina MarketMarket Size
Global Law Enforcement and Military Clothing MarketMarket Share
Global LED Obstruct Lighting MarketMarket Growth
Automatic Chemiluminescence Immunoassay Analyzer MarketMarket
Linear Alkylbenzene Sulfonic Acid MarketMarket Share
Unified Communications as A Service (UCaaS) MarketMarket Growth Rate
3D Models MarketMarket Forecast
Global Freeze Drying MarketMarket Size
Smart Fabrics and Textiles MarketMarket Growth
Zirconia Oxygen Analyzer MarketMarket Analysis
Proteomics MarketMarket Size
Global Social Casino MarketMarket Share
Global Smartwatch MarketMarket Growth
DNA-Encoded Library MarketMarket
Drills MarketMarket Share
Electric Scooter MarketMarket Growth Rate
Agriculture Drones MarketMarket Forecast
Global Transparent and Translucent Concrete MarketMarket Size
Organic Photovoltaics (OPV) MarketMarket Growth
Rolled Annealed Copper Foil MarketMarket Analysis
Anti-Aging Hair Products MarketMarket Size
Global Solid Phase Extraction Apparatus MarketMarket Share
Global Viscose Fiber MarketMarket Growth
Cable Cleats MarketMarket
Gabapentin MarketMarket Share
Offshore Coating MarketMarket Growth Rate
Plastic Bearings MarketMarket Forecast
Global Airport Lounges MarketMarket Size
Postpartum Hemorrhage Treatment Devices MarketMarket Growth
Flower Pots and Planters MarketMarket Analysis
Pharma Contract Manufacturing Organisations (Cmos) for Injectable Drug MarketMarket Size
Global Worsted Yarn MarketMarket Share
Global Angular Velocity Transducers MarketMarket Growth
Engineered Bacterial Cell Protein MarketMarket
Match Boxes MarketMarket Share
Ginseng MarketMarket Growth Rate
Adjustable Intraocular Lens MarketMarket Forecast
0 notes
spookysaladchaos · 3 months
Text
Ashless Gasoline and Diesel Anti-Static Agent, Global Market Size Forecast, Top 16 Companies Rank and Market Share
Ashless Gasoline and Diesel Anti-Static Agent Market Summary
Ashless gasoline and diesel antistatic agent is an additive commonly used to improve the performance of diesel, especially in preventing static accumulation. Polysulfone/polyamine type ashless antistatic agents mainly use the interaction between polar groups and charges contained in molecules to suppress and leak charges, thereby increasing the conductivity of fuel.
Tumblr media
According to the new market research report “Global Ashless Gasoline and Diesel Anti-Static Agent Market Report 2024-2030”, published by QYResearch, the global Ashless Gasoline and Diesel Anti-Static Agent market size is projected to reach USD 1.37 billion by 2030, at a CAGR of 4.1% during the forecast period.
Figure.   Global Ashless Gasoline and Diesel Anti-Static Agent Market Size (US$ Million), 2019-2030
Tumblr media
Figure.   Global Ashless Gasoline and Diesel Anti-Static Agent Top 16 Players Ranking and Market Share (Ranking is based on the revenue of 2023, continually updated)
Tumblr media
According to QYResearch Top Players Research Center, the global key manufacturers of Ashless Gasoline and Diesel Anti-Static Agent include BASF, Valtris Specialty Chemicals, Innospec, GO YEN CHEMICAL INDUSTRIAL, Dorf Ketal, Centro Chino, Beijing Chinayc Energy Technology, MidContinental Chemical, Xi'an Wonder Energy Chemical, Afton Chemical, etc. In 2023, the global top 10 players had a share approximately 48.0% in terms of revenue.
About The Authors
Yunmei Sun---Lead Author
Sun Yunmei has 2 years of industry research experience, focusing on research in the chemical industry chain related fields, including medical grade reagents, high-purity reagents for semiconductors, and chemical laboratory equipment.
About QYResearch
QYResearch founded in California, USA in 2007.It is a leading global market research and consulting company. With over 17 years’ experience and professional research team in various cities over the world QY Research focuses on management consulting, database and seminar services, IPO consulting, industry chain research and customized research to help our clients in providing non-linear revenue model and make them successful. We are globally recognized for our expansive portfolio of services, good corporate citizenship, and our strong commitment to sustainability. Up to now, we have cooperated with more than 60,000 clients across five continents. Let’s work closely with you and build a bold and better future.
QYResearch is a world-renowned large-scale consulting company. The industry covers various high-tech industry chain market segments, spanning the semiconductor industry chain (semiconductor equipment and parts, semiconductor materials, ICs, Foundry, packaging and testing, discrete devices, sensors, optoelectronic devices), photovoltaic industry chain (equipment, cells, modules, auxiliary material brackets, inverters, power station terminals), new energy automobile industry chain (batteries and materials, auto parts, batteries, motors, electronic control, automotive semiconductors, etc.), communication industry chain (communication system equipment, terminal equipment, electronic components, RF front-end, optical modules, 4G/5G/6G, broadband, IoT, digital economy, AI), advanced materials industry Chain (metal materials, polymer materials, ceramic materials, nano materials, etc.), machinery manufacturing industry chain (CNC machine tools, construction machinery, electrical machinery, 3C automation, industrial robots, lasers, industrial control, drones), food, beverages and pharmaceuticals, medical equipment, agriculture, etc.
0 notes
boatarenttahoe · 3 months
Text
Commercial Drones Market 2024 Driving Factors Forecast Research 2032
Commercial Drones Market provides in-depth analysis of the market state of Commercial Drones manufacturers, including best facts and figures, overview, definition, SWOT analysis, expert opinions, and the most current global developments. The research also calculates market size, price, revenue, cost structure, gross margin, sales, and market share, as well as forecasts and growth rates. The report assists in determining the revenue earned by the selling of this report and technology across different application areas.
Geographically, this report is segmented into several key regions, with sales, revenue, market share and growth Rate of Commercial Drones in these regions till the forecast period
North America
Middle East and Africa
Asia-Pacific
South America
Europe
Key Attentions of Commercial Drones Market Report:
The report offers a comprehensive and broad perspective on the global Commercial Drones Market.
The market statistics represented in different Commercial Drones segments offers complete industry picture.
Market growth drivers, challenges affecting the development of Commercial Drones are analyzed in detail.
The report will help in the analysis of major competitive market scenario, market dynamics of Commercial Drones.
Major stakeholders, key companies Commercial Drones, investment feasibility and new market entrants study is offered.
Development scope of Commercial Drones in each market segment is covered in this report. The macro and micro-economic factors affecting the Commercial Drones Market
Advancement is elaborated in this report. The upstream and downstream components of Commercial Drones and a comprehensive value chain are explained.
Browse More Details On This Report at @https://www.globalgrowthinsights.com/market-reports/commercial-drones-market-101452
 Global Growth Insights
Web: https://www.globalgrowthinsights.com
Our Other Reports:
Commercial Drones Market Size
Drug-Eluting Balloon Market Growth Rate
Dermo-Cosmetics Market Analysis
Organic Fruits and Vegetables Market Share
Gas Insulated Switchgear Market Growth
Autonomous Mobile Robot (AMR) Market
Global Medical Device Analytical Testing Outsourcing Market Size
Global Maple Water Market Growth
Enhanced Fire Detection And Suppression Systems Market Forecast
Global Artificial Cornea and Corneal Implant Market Share
Automotive Electric Bus Market Growth Rate
RNAi For Therapeutic Market Size
Commercial Aircraft Landing Gear Market Share
MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging System) Market Analysis
Depaneling Machine Market
Veterinary Hematology Analyzers Market Growth
Global Wireless Gigabit Market Growth
Global Objectives and Key Results (OKR) Software Market Size
Global Software Development Tools Market Share
Consumer Electronics and Home Appliances Market Forecast
Predictive Genetic Testing and Consumer Genomics Market Size
Skinner Blade Market Growth Rate
Real Time Payments Market Analysis
Organic and Natural Tampons Market Share
Transcatheter Pulmonary Valve Market Growth
Intelligent Cash Counter Market
Global Frozen Tissues Samples Market Size
Global Forensic Technology Market Growth
Automotive Ag Glass Market Forecast
Global Anti-Snoring Devices and Snoring Surgery Market Share
API Management Market Growth Rate
Greenhouse, Nursery, And Flowers Market Size
Automotive Carbon Thermoplastic Market Share
Carbon Dioxide Market Analysis
Switch Mode Power Supply Transformers Market
Social and Emotional Learning (SEL) Market Growth
Global Hadoop Market Growth
Global Toilet Bowls Market Size
Global Payment Orchestration Market Share
3D Medical Imaging Equipment Market Size
0 notes
newstfionline · 4 months
Text
Friday, June 7, 2024
Financial instability in the middle class (Bloomberg) Almost two-thirds of Americans considered middle class said they are facing economic hardship and don’t anticipate a change for the rest of their lives, according to a poll commissioned by the National True Cost of Living Coalition. By many traditional measures, the US economy is strong, with robust labor, housing and stock markets, as well as solid gross domestic product growth. But the data don’t capture the financial insecurity of millions of households who worry about their future and are unable to save, according to the group, formed this year by two anti-poverty organizations that seek to come up with cost-of-living tools that help gauge economic well-being. In the large poll of 2,500 adults, 65% of people who earn more than 200% of the federal poverty level—that’s at least $60,000 for a family of four, often considered middle class—said they are struggling financially. A sizable share of higher-income Americans also feel financially insecure. The survey found that a quarter of people making over five times the federal poverty level—an annual income of more than $150,000 for a family of four—worry about paying their bills.
The Age of the Drone Police Is Here (Wired) On a Wednesday afternoon in August, Daniel Posada and his girlfriend were screaming at each other at a bus stop when someone called 911. From a rooftop a mile away, the Chula Vista Police Department started the rotors of a 13-pound drone. The machine lifted into the air with its high-resolution camera rolling. Equipped with thermal imaging capabilities and a powerful zoom lens, it transmitted a live feed of everything it captured to a sworn officer monitoring a screen at the precinct, to the department’s Real-Time Operations Center, and to the cell phone of the responding officer racing to the scene. Posada says the argument wasn’t serious and that it didn’t warrant such a high-tech police response. As police departments look to expand their use of unmanned aerial aircraft, no agency has embraced the technology quite like the CVPD. Police drones crisscross the skies of Chula Vista daily—nearly 20,000 times since 2018—and are often first to appear above the sites of noise complaints, car accidents, overdoses, domestic disputes, and homicides. Your city could be next.
Spare a thought for weather watcher Maureen Sweeney who made the right call for D-Day (AP) Along with the generals and the paratroopers, the pilots and the infantrymen, spare a thought for the young Irish woman who may have played the most important role of all in making the D-Day landings a success. Maureen Sweeney was a postal clerk at Blacksod Point on the northwest coast of Ireland, where one of her duties was to record data that fed into weather forecasts for the British Isles. In early June 1944, Sweeney sent a series of readings that helped persuade Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, the supreme commander of Allied forces in Europe, to delay D-Day and avoid potentially disastrous weather that could have wrecked the landings. She didn’t learn of her role in history for more than 10 years. “It’s something to remember for a lifetime,” Sweeney told her grandson in an interview filmed before she died last December. “It’s the only time they ever noticed our forecasts. The one that counted. And set the world alight.”
Fears about European competitiveness (NYT) Europe’s share of the global economy is shrinking, and fears are deepening that the continent can no longer keep up with the United States and China. “We are too small,” said Enrico Letta, a former Italian prime minister who recently delivered a report on the future of the single market to the European Union. “We are not very ambitious,” Nicolai Tangen, head of Norway’s sovereign wealth fund, the world’s largest, told The Financial Times. “Americans just work harder.” “European businesses need to regain self-confidence,” Europe’s association of chambers of commerce declared. The list of reasons for what has been called the “competitiveness crisis” goes on: The European Union has too many regulations, and its leadership in Brussels has too little power. Financial markets are too fragmented; public and private investments are too low; companies are too small to compete on a global scale.
As Ukraine’s Summer Starts With Blackouts, Worries Over Winter Begin (NYT) Skyscrapers are without electricity up to 12 hours a day. Neighborhoods are filled with the roar of gas generators installed by cafes and restaurants. And at night, streets are plunged into darkness for lack of lighting. That is the new reality in Ukraine, where the approach of summer has offered no respite for the country’s power grid, but has instead brought a return to the kind of energy crisis experienced during its first winter at war, a year and a half ago. In recent months, Russian missile and drone attacks on Ukraine’s power plants and substations have left the country’s energy infrastructure severely hobbled. As a result, the Ukrainian authorities have ordered nationwide rolling blackouts for this week. While power shortages in the summer can leave people uncomfortably hot in dark apartments, they pose a more deadly risk in the winter.
Rahul Gandhi, Long on the Ropes, Looks Set for an Unexpected Comeback (NYT) Just last year, Rahul Gandhi and the once-powerful party he led, the Indian National Congress, seemed to be on the ropes and little threat to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s consolidation of political power. Congress had not been a competitive factor in national elections in years, winning fewer and fewer votes each time Mr. Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party was elected. And Mr. Gandhi himself had been convicted on a slander charge and barred from holding a seat in Parliament. But on Tuesday, Mr. Gandhi and a broad opposition coalition led by his Congress party registered a far stronger showing than expected in India’s elections, setting the stage for an unlikely comeback. “He has finally arrived,” said Rasheed Kidwai, a fellow at the Observer Research Foundation, a think tank in New Delhi. “This time he has improved his vote share by at least 17 million votes, which is very substantial.”
Israel Secretly Targets U.S. Lawmakers With Influence Campaign on Gaza War (NYT) Israel organized and paid for an influence campaign last year targeting U.S. lawmakers and the American public with pro-Israel messaging, as it aimed to foster support for its actions in the war with Gaza, according to officials involved in the effort and documents related to the operation. The covert campaign was commissioned by Israel’s Ministry of Diaspora Affairs, a government body that connects Jews around the world with the State of Israel, four Israeli officials said. The ministry allocated about $2 million to the operation and hired Stoic, a political marketing firm in Tel Aviv, to carry it out, according to the officials and the documents. The campaign began in October and remains active on the platform X. At its peak, it used hundreds of fake accounts that posed as real Americans on X, Facebook and Instagram to post pro-Israel comments. The accounts focused on U.S. lawmakers, with posts urging them to continue funding Israel’s military. ChatGPT, the artificial intelligence-powered chatbot, was used to generate many of the posts. The campaign also created three fake English-language news sites featuring pro-Israel articles. Despite testimony from four different officials and a paper trail verified by the New York Times, Israel’s government denies its involvement.
Mass graves in al-Shifa (BBC) On 1 April, Israeli forces pulled out of Gaza’s vast al-Shifa hospital complex, following a surprise raid described by the Israeli government as “precise and surgical”. In the weeks that followed, Palestinian search teams pored over burnt-out ruins, finding four mass graves. They say several hundred bodies have been found. Working with a journalist in Gaza, Yolande Knell and Rushdi Abu Alouf have heard from many Gazans about their experience coming back to al-Shifa, which they said reeked of death. Israel has said that “over 200 terrorists” were killed in and around the complex, and that there was “not a single civilian casualty” from its raid. However, my colleagues have been given strong testimony that there were Palestinian civilians killed by heavy Israeli bombardment and intense shooting in the surrounding neighbourhood. The UN Security Council, US and European Union have called for an independent investigation into possible war crimes.
Israel used U.S. munitions in deadly strike on U.N. school, experts say (Washington Post) Israeli fighter jets appear to have used U.S.-made munitions in a strike that killed dozens of people inside a U.N. school in the central Gaza Strip on Thursday, according to two weapons experts who examined verified footage from the debris. The nose cones of two GBU-39 small diameter bombs were visible in footage taken by an eyewitness, Emad Abu Shawish, in the aftermath of the strike in the Nuseirat refugee camp. His images were verified by Storyful and independently geolocated by The Washington Post.
A War on the Nile Pushes Sudan Toward the Abyss (NYT) The gold market is a graveyard of rubble and dog-eaten corpses. The state TV station became a torture chamber. The national film archive was blown open in battle, its treasures now yellowing in the sun. Artillery shells soar over the Nile, smashing into hospitals and houses. Residents bury their dead outside their front doors. Others march in formation, joining civilian militias. In a hushed famine ward, starving babies fight for life. Every few days, one of them dies. Khartoum, the capital of Sudan and one of the largest cities in Africa, has been reduced to a charred battleground. A feud between two generals fighting for power has dragged the country into civil war and turned the city into ground zero for one of the world’s worst humanitarian catastrophes. As many as 150,000 people have died since the conflict erupted last year, by American estimates. Another nine million have been forced from their homes, making Sudan home to the largest displacement crisis on earth, the United Nations says. A famine looms that officials warn could kill hundreds of thousands of children in the coming months and, if unchecked, rival the great Ethiopian famine of the 1980s.
Want to Pay Cash? That’ll Cost You Extra (WSJ) When Noa Khamallah recently tried to pay cash for popcorn and soda at Yankee Stadium, his almighty dollars struck out. The stadium’s concession stands no longer take cash. An employee directed him to a kiosk that could convert his greenbacks into plastic. Khamallah, 41 years old, fed $200 into the reverse ATM, which subtracted a $3.50 fee and spat out a debit card with a balance of $196.50. Paying with cash used to be a way to get a discount. These days it can often cost an extra $1 to $6—the sort of transaction fees once limited to swiping a credit card or using an out-of-network ATM. Reverse ATMs like those at Yankee Stadium are now common at cashless venues and restaurants across the country as a way to cater to those who prefer paying in cash. People who want to pay their parking tickets, tolls, taxes or phone bills in cash, meanwhile, often learn that government agencies and businesses have outsourced that option to companies that usually charge a fee.
0 notes
sufferfly1 · 8 months
Text
0 notes
sumitthakur09210 · 9 months
Text
0 notes
chandupalle · 8 months
Text
[284 Pages Report] The global anti-drone market size was valued at USD 1.2 billion in 2022 and is projected to reach USD 5.2 billion by 2028; it is expected to register a CAGR of 26.6% during the forecast period.
0 notes
innerdestinyllama · 9 months
Text
0 notes
globalgrowthinsights · 2 months
Text
iPaaS Market Size, Share, Forecast [2032]
iPaaS Market provides in-depth analysis of the market state of iPaaS manufacturers, including best facts and figures, overview, definition, SWOT analysis, expert opinions, and the most current global developments. The research also calculates market size, price, revenue, cost structure, gross margin, sales, and market share, as well as forecasts and growth rates. The report assists in determining the revenue earned by the selling of this report and technology across different application areas.
Geographically, this report is segmented into several key regions, with sales, revenue, market share and growth Rate of iPaaS in these regions till the forecast period
North America
Middle East and Africa
Asia-Pacific
South America
Europe
Key Attentions of iPaaS Market Report:
The report offers a comprehensive and broad perspective on the global iPaaS Market.
The market statistics represented in different iPaaS segments offers complete industry picture.
Market growth drivers, challenges affecting the development of iPaaS are analyzed in detail.
The report will help in the analysis of major competitive market scenario, market dynamics of iPaaS.
Major stakeholders, key companies iPaaS, investment feasibility and new market entrants study is offered.
Development scope of iPaaS in each market segment is covered in this report. The macro and micro-economic factors affecting the iPaaS Market
Advancement is elaborated in this report. The upstream and downstream components of iPaaS and a comprehensive value chain are explained.
Browse More Details On This Report at @https://www.globalgrowthinsights.com/market-reports/ipaas-market-100579
 Global Growth Insights
Web: https://www.globalgrowthinsights.com
Our Other Reports:
Alkenyl Succinic Anhydride (ASA) MarketMarket Size
Global Nonprofit Software MarketMarket Share
Global Neonatal Infants Enteral Feeding Devices MarketMarket Growth
Dermatology Drug MarketMarket
Intragastric Balloons MarketMarket Share
Grain Combine Harvester MarketMarket Growth Rate
Requirements Management Tools MarketMarket Forecast
Global Vitamin D MarketMarket Size
Super Capacitor MarketMarket Growth
Nanoemulsion MarketMarket Analysis
EV Charging Cables MarketMarket Size
Global Molecular Diagnostics(MDx) MarketMarket Share
Global LPG Vaporizer MarketMarket Growth
Small Satellite MarketMarket
App Store Optimization (ASO) Tools MarketMarket Share
Commercial Aircraft Autopilot System MarketMarket Growth Rate
Gunshot Detection Systems MarketMarket Forecast
Global Drone Sensor MarketMarket Size
Solar Street Lights MarketMarket Growth
Vacuum Insulation Panels MarketMarket Analysis
In-Vehicle Payment Systems MarketMarket Size
Global Artificial Cornea and Corneal Implant MarketMarket Share
Global Lithium-Sulfur Battery MarketMarket Growth
High Voltage Gas Insulated Switchgear (GIS) MarketMarket
Sodium Hydrogen Sulfide (NaHS) MarketMarket Share
Cloud-based Database MarketMarket Growth Rate
Smart Thermostats MarketMarket Forecast
Global Removable Partial Denture MarketMarket Size
Fiber Optic Connectors MarketMarket Growth
1,2,3,4-Butanetetracarboxylic Acid MarketMarket Analysis
GPS Anti-Jamming System MarketMarket Size
Global Fabric Inspection Machines MarketMarket Share
Global Language Learning Games MarketMarket Growth
Laboratory Freezers MarketMarket
Catheter Holder Market Market Share
Low Thermal Expansion Coefficient PI Films MarketMarket Growth Rate
Dinotefuran Preparation MarketMarket Forecast
Global Kegel Exercise Device MarketMarket Size
Silicon MEMS Printhead Market Market Growth
Redundant Power Supply Units Market Market Analysis
0 notes
econmarketresearch · 9 months
Text
0 notes
aviationanddefence · 10 months
Text
Global Combat Drone Market report
Unmanned Combat Aerial Vehicles are another name for combat drones (UCAVs). Unmanned aerial vehicles, or "combative drones," are utilized for a variety of tasks including target acquisition, surveillance, reconnaissance, and carrying aircraft ordnance, including bombs, missiles, and ATGMs, to hard targets during drone assaults. Usually, a human with autonomy controls these drones in real time. Unlike unmanned surveillance and reconnaissance aerial vehicles, UCAVs are utilized for both drone strikes and battlefield information. There won't be a human pilot on board this type of aircraft. The aircraft is smaller and lighter as a result of not requiring a human pilot or any equipment because it is operated by a remote terminal.
Key drivers of the growth of the combat drone market:
The Global combat drone market report is expanding because of the evolving and sophisticated nature of warfare, despite potential obstacles from the quick development of anti-drone technology. The combat drone market will develop as a result of the evolving, technologically enhanced character of warfare. Many countries are concentrating on the development of unmanned combat aerial vehicles (UCAVs) for counter-insurgency and internal warfare. These vehicles are commonly used to monitor border regions, which are contentious, and can improve security at a minimal cost.
The combat drone market is growing as a result of numerous nations and contractors funding R&D projects aimed at deploying a large number of UCAVs to improve their ability to evade anti-aircraft weaponry and engage in combat with adversarial states. The development of long-range spy combat drones increases the potential prospects for the size of the global combat drone industry. The integration of control, computers, surveillance, computer intelligence, and reconnaissance technologies into UCAVs contributes to their long-range attack potential.
Patterns impacting the Battle- Size of the Drone Market:
According to market estimates for combat drones, the fixed-wing category has the largest share and the fastest compound annual growth rate. The development of complicated delta wing and delta wing unmanned combat aerial vehicles (UCAVs) with enhanced combat capabilities and the ability to fly at extreme speeds is mostly to blame for this, as expenditures in the combat drone sector have increased. Investing nations include the US, China, Israel, Russia, India, and Iran in these types of war vehicles. According to current combat drone industry trends, China is introducing new UCAV variants and employing stealth technologies in unmanned systems. China has stated that the Cai Hong 7 UCAN, which is high altitude, is being developed by the China Academy of Aerospace Aerodynamics (CAAA).
Market Forecast and Dynamics for Combat Drones:
An overview of the combat drone market The expansion of Unmanned Combat Aerial Vehicle (UCAV) is being driven by advancements in frameworks and regulations connected to aerial operations, as well as greater usage of UAV in military applications that has led to a spike in UAV use in disaster relief missions.
According to a combat drone market analysis, concerns about drone safety and security as well as a shortage of qualified operators are the main obstacles to the unmanned combat aerial vehicle (UCAV) industry's expansion. Unmanned Combat Aerial Vehicles (UCAVs) have greater prospects thanks to ongoing technological advancements in UCAV, which are coupled with artificial intelligence and machine learning. Applications for unmanned aerial vehicles (UCAVs) include directing artillery fire, detecting fighter jet targets with lasers, surveillance, obtaining electronic intelligence, and assessing damage after a strike.
Analysis of the Combat Drone Market for Recent Advancements:
According to Combat Drone Market sources, the South Korean government has accepted a proposal to start producing reconnaissance and surveillance drones by 2031. The purpose of manufacturing and acquiring these drones is to improve the military capabilities of the nation, particularly on the island bordering the northwest. Boeing chose to transform former Lockheed Martin F-16 jet fighters from the US Air Force into manned and unmanned target drones, with a contract value of USD 49.7 million.
According to Combat Drone Market reports, after delaying the American predator drone deal in favor of the Made in India initiative, the Indian government is now thinking about buying an indigenous long-range unmanned aerial vehicle with strike capabilities that is being developed by a private Indian company in collaboration with an Israeli defense manufacturer.
0 notes