Zeelin Us Iran Forecast
Collect, verify, and forecast war or geopolitical conflict developments using authoritative sources, cross-validation, and scenario-based prediction.
Description
name: war-conflict-intel-and-forecast description: Collect, verify, and forecast war or geopolitical conflict developments using authoritative sources, cross-validation, and scenario-based prediction. version: 1.0.0 metadata: openclaw: emoji: "🛰️"
War / Geopolitical Conflict Intelligence & Forecast Skill
Purpose
Turn a request like:
- “Collect the latest battlefield situation”
- “Use authoritative sources”
- “Give a more precise assessment”
- “Predict what the U.S., Iran, Israel, or other actors may do next”
- “Estimate likely end-state trajectories”
into a stable workflow that is:
- fact-first
- source-ranked
- cross-verified
- explicit about uncertainty
- disciplined in prediction
This skill is for open-source intelligence style synthesis, not classified intelligence, not propaganda, and not fantasy war writing.
Core Rules
1) Separate facts from judgments
Every answer must be split into:
- Confirmed facts
- Assessment / inference
- Forecast
Never present a forecast as if it were already confirmed reality.
2) War information is adversarial by default
In war, every side has incentives to:
- exaggerate success
- hide losses
- shape public opinion
- pressure allies and markets
- trigger psychological effects
Therefore:
- a single belligerent’s statement is not enough
- strong claims require stronger verification
- “destroyed”, “eliminated”, “full control”, “crippled”, “collapsed” should be treated as claims to verify, not instant facts
3) Use concrete dates and time windows
Do not write:
- today
- recently
- just now
Write:
- exact date
- if needed, exact time and timezone
- explicit forecast window such as next 24 hours / next 3–7 days / next 2–6 weeks
4) Precision beats confidence theater
Do not sound certain when evidence is thin. Prefer:
- high probability
- medium probability
- low probability / high impact
- too early to confirm
- single-source claim
- preliminary signal
5) Every forecast needs a trigger and a disconfirming signal
For each prediction, state:
- what evidence supports it
- what new evidence would strengthen it
- what evidence would weaken or overturn it
What to Collect Every Time
For any armed conflict or fast-moving geopolitical crisis, collect at least these five buckets:
A. Battlefield / operational developments
- strikes, missile launches, drone attacks, naval incidents
- target sets
- claimed damage
- defensive interceptions
- territorial / airspace / maritime control changes
- underground or hardened facility status if relevant
B. Military capability changes
- air defense degradation
- missile inventory depletion
- logistics and fuel strain
- command-and-control damage
- reserve mobilization
- naval disruption capability
- survivability of leadership and strategic assets
C. Political and diplomatic signaling
- head of state statements
- defense ministry / military spokesperson statements
- legislative action
- alliance commitments
- mediation or ceasefire signals
- red lines and ultimata
D. Regional and global spillover
- shipping and chokepoints
- oil and gas markets
- refugee / humanitarian indicators
- proxy fronts
- neighboring states’ alert status
- UN / IAEA / international organization warnings
E. Forward indicators
- what would signal escalation
- what would signal negotiated de-escalation
- what would signal a shift in probable end-state
Source Hierarchy
Build the answer from the top of this hierarchy downward.
Tier 1: Core authoritative backbone
Use these first to build the main factual structure.
Reuters
Use for:
- fast and relatively restrained reporting
- official statements
- battlefield + diplomacy + market linkage
- shipping, oil, energy, sanctions, legislative context
AP
Use for:
- live war updates
- casualties and immediate developments
- domestic political reaction
- field-level narrative updates
Official primary sources
Use to confirm what an actor said, not automatically whether the claim is true:
- White House
- U.S. Department of Defense / State Department
- Israeli PM office / defense ministry / IDF
- Iranian foreign ministry / military / official state outlets
- UN, IAEA, UNHCR, ICRC, etc.
Hard-data and system indicators
Use where available:
- shipping traffic data
- oil price reactions
- public market data
- satellite imagery reporting
- port advisories
- aviation / maritime notices
Tier 2: Strong supporting sources
Use to add depth, background, or insider context.
Financial Times / BBC / Wall Street Journal / New York Times
Use for:
- deeper diplomatic context
- insider sourcing
- strategic framing
- policy debates
Rule:
- anonymous sourcing should ideally be checked against another reliable source
Al Jazeera and major regional outlets
Use for:
- regional framing
- Arab-world reactions
- local political atmosphere
Rule:
- do not rely on these alone for decisive battlefield claims
Tier 3: Cautious-use sources
Social media, Telegram, X, viral video
Use only for:
- early leads
- geolocation clues
- timeline hints
Never treat them as settled fact until checked.
If using them, verify:
- date
- location
- whether footage is old
- whether credible journalists or organizations have corroborated it
Analysts / think tanks / military commentators
Use for:
- force structure
- campaign logic
- weapons context
- scenario analysis
Do not let commentary substitute for hard confirmation.
Mandatory Verification Labels
For every major claim, implicitly or explicitly classify it as one of these:
-
Confirmed
at least two reliable sources or one reliable source plus strong corroborating data -
Single-party claim
one side says it; independent confirmation is missing -
High-confidence inference
not formally confirmed, but several indicators point the same way -
Unverified / preliminary
not safe to treat as established
Examples:
- “State X says it destroyed underground missile infrastructure” → single-party claim unless independently supported
- “Tanker traffic through a chokepoint collapsed” → confirmed if supported by Reuters plus traffic data
- “Leadership is considering a ceasefire” → high-confidence inference or unverified unless solidly corroborated
Standard Workflow
Step 1: Establish the situation frame
Before details, answer:
- What phase is the conflict in?
- What are the most important events in the last 48 hours?
- Is the conflict escalating, stabilizing, or fragmenting?
- Are there any real negotiation signals?
- What spillover risks are already visible?
Build this first with Reuters + AP + official primary sources.
Step 2: Build a dated timeline
List at least 5–10 major events with:
- exact date
- what happened
- why it matters
- source confidence level
Format:
- 2026-03-05 — Israel signals a “second phase” focused on underground missile facilities.
Why it matters: target set shifts from visible assets to survivable strategic capacity.
Status: reported by Reuters.
Step 3: Disaggregate actor goals
Always separate what each actor wants.
U.S. usually cares about
- degrading opponent military capability
- protecting forces and allies
- maintaining deterrence credibility
- avoiding politically costly quagmire
- limiting oil-price and market damage
- preserving coalition support
Israel usually cares about
- maximizing long-term reduction of hostile capability
- degrading missile, nuclear, proxy, and command networks
- converting battlefield opportunity into strategic depth
Iran or similar regional state actors often care about
- regime survival
- preserving retaliatory capacity
- raising cost on adversaries
- using missiles, drones, proxies, and chokepoints asymmetrically
- turning a military disadvantage into a political/economic endurance contest
Do not merge these into one “allied side” goal.
Step 4: Identify constraints
Prediction quality depends on knowing not just intent, but limits.
Check:
- munitions stockpiles
- air superiority status
- survivability of underground assets
- shipping chokepoint control
- domestic political support
- legislative constraints
- coalition cohesion
- proxy readiness
- economic pressure
- humanitarian blowback
Step 5: Forecast by time horizon
Never give one undifferentiated prediction blob.
Horizon A: next 24 hours
Look for:
- immediate retaliatory patterns
- strike tempo
- naval incidents
- emergency diplomacy
- casualty shocks that change behavior fast
Horizon B: next 3–7 days
Look for:
- campaign phase shifts
- strikes on harder strategic targets
- proxy front activation
- widening to nearby states
- backchannel mediation
Horizon C: next 2–6 weeks
Look for:
- sustained limited war
- negotiated freeze
- regionalization
- internal instability
- strategic exhaustion
Forecast Template
For each forecast, use this structure:
Conclusion
Example:
- “Over the next 3–7 days, the U.S. and Israel are likely to intensify strikes on hardened and underground missile infrastructure.”
Why this is plausible
List the supporting signals:
- public rhetoric remains escalatory
- evidence of air-access advantage
- campaign messaging indicates a second phase
- strategic logic favors reducing residual retaliatory capability
Constraints
List what could slow or limit this:
- munitions expenditure
- oil price pressure
- domestic political pushback
- escalation risk to shipping or bases
- allied caution
Confirming signals to watch
- more reporting on bunker-busting or underground target sets
- repeated strikes on command-and-control nodes
- expanded evacuation notices
- intensified maritime protection operations
Disconfirming signals
- public move toward talks
- partial restoration of commercial shipping under de-escalation arrangements
- legislative effort constraining operations
- credible third-party mediation producing reciprocal restraint
End-State Forecasting
Do not write one cinematic ending. Use scenario trees.
Scenario 1: Limited-war advantage followed by ceasefire or frozen conflict
Typical signs:
- one side achieves clear conventional military superiority
- the other side is badly degraded but not collapsed
- international pressure builds
- both sides redefine victory politically
Scenario 2: Protracted regionalized conflict
Typical signs:
- multiple proxy fronts remain active
- shipping and energy disruption persist
- strikes continue episodically
- no side can impose a decisive settlement
Scenario 3: Internal regime or command-structure fracture
Typical signs:
- decapitation or severe leadership disruption
- fragmented control
- growing elite splits
- security apparatus inconsistency
- rising uncertainty over strategic asset control
For each scenario:
- assign rough probability
- state why
- state what would move probability up or down
Variables That Most Often Change the Outlook
Military variables
- who owns the airspace
- survivability of underground facilities
- remaining missile inventory
- maritime interdiction capability
- resilience of command networks
Political variables
- leadership rhetoric shifts
- legislative constraints
- coalition discipline
- tolerance for casualties and economic pain
Economic variables
- oil price trajectory
- insurance and shipping disruption
- domestic consumer price impact
- sanctions tightening or leakage
Diplomatic variables
- whether mediators are active
- whether allies begin pressing for de-escalation
- whether international watchdogs issue sharper warnings
- whether a face-saving negotiation channel appears
Output Structure
Use this order:
1. One-sentence bottom line
Example:
- “The conflict has moved into a deeper, more dangerous phase, and the near-term outlook favors continued escalation before any serious public ceasefire opening.”
2. Confirmed facts
Group into:
- recent battlefield developments
- political signaling
- regional/economic spillover
3. Assessment
Explain:
- what phase the conflict is in
- which side currently has initiative
- what each side is trying to achieve
- what the key constraints are
4. Forecast
Split by:
- next 24 hours
- next 3–7 days
- next 2–6 weeks
Within each, separate:
- high probability
- medium probability
- low probability / high impact
5. End-state scenarios
At least three:
- most likely
- plausible alternative
- lower-probability but high-risk
6. Watchlist
Give 3–7 indicators that would change the assessment fastest.
Common Failure Modes
Failure 1: repeating propaganda as fact
Fix:
- attribute clearly
- verify independently
- downgrade confidence where needed
Failure 2: focusing only on kinetic events
Fix:
- always include oil, shipping, politics, diplomacy, and humanitarian spillover
Failure 3: prediction without time horizon
Fix:
- always separate near-term, short-term, and multi-week outlook
Failure 4: overconfidence
Fix:
- use probability bands
- include disconfirming evidence
- show what would change your mind
Failure 5: actor-blending
Fix:
- separate U.S., Israel, Iran, proxies, Gulf states, and other actors where relevant
Final Discipline Checklist
Before delivering, verify:
- Facts and forecasts are clearly separated
- Dates are concrete
- Reuters / AP / primary sources form the backbone
- Major claims are cross-checked
- Single-party claims are labeled as such
- Military, political, economic, and diplomatic dimensions are covered
- Forecasts are time-boxed
- End-state analysis uses scenarios, not one rigid ending
- There is a watchlist of indicators that could change the view
- Language is disciplined, not theatrical
One-line operating principle
Be slower than propaganda, but more accurate than hype.
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