badwetter

joined 5 months ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 hours ago

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What I find ironic, if the EU countries have as many soldier's under arms as Wikipedia states, then they don't need much more manpower. Look at the thread on worldnews where this is discussed. My comments were removed because I stated as much as this article premise. LOL!

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All villages have been destroyed by Ukrainian forces

 

Reprinted from Yves Engler’s website. Find IDF Soldiers has elicited a significant backlash. But there’s been little discussion of the website’s indictment of the legal exceptionalism given to Israel in Canadian political culture. Find IDF Soldiers lists 85 Canadians who have fought in the Israeli military. It has been covered…

 

It doesn’t really pay for a liberal to see through propaganda because you either alienate yourself from all your liberal friends who are wallowing in it, or you sit in crushing silence out of fear of being ostracized. To be true to myself, I’ve opted for the former route, to…

 

A credible European deterrent – one that could prevent, for instance, a rapid Russian incursion in the Baltics – would need a minimum of 1,400 tanks, 2,000 infantry fighting vehicles, and 700 artillery pieces. This is more combat power than currently exists in the combined French, German, Italian, and British land forces.

 

Sudanese military forces recaptured the presidential palace early Friday in the battle-scarred capital, Khartoum, signaling a potential turning point in Sudan’s devastating civil war, now approaching its third year.

Videos and photos showed soldiers standing triumphantly at the entrance of the devastated palace, which overlooks the Nile River, after days of heavy fighting with the Rapid Support Forces, or R.S.F., the powerful paramilitary group that the army has been battling.

“We’re inside!” shouted an unidentified officer as cheering soldiers swarmed around him in one video posted Friday morning. “We’re in the Republican Palace!”

Sudan’s information minister and its military spokesman confirmed that the palace, an emblem of power in Sudan for two centuries, was back in government control. “Today the flag is raised, the palace is back, and the journey continues until victory is complete,” the minister, Khalid Ali al-Aiser, wrote on social media.

Retaking the palace was a major symbolic victory for Sudan’s army, which lost most of Khartoum to the R.S.F. in the early days of the war in April 2023, leaving its forces confined to a handful of embattled bases scattered across the vast city.

It was also a significant boost to the military’s drive to expel the paramilitaries from Khartoum entirely, six months into a giant counteroffensive that has swung the balance of the war toward the military in the eastern half of Sudan.

Days earlier, the R.S.F. leader, Lt. Gen. Mohamed Hamdan, had vowed to stand his ground. “Do not think that we will retreat from the palace,” he said last week in a video address from an undisclosed location.

Note: Areas of control are as of March 19.Source: Thomas van Linge
But the military and allied militias, which have gradually seized most of the northern and eastern parts of the city, pressed hard on their target. Early Thursday, the military launched a blistering ambush on an R.S.F. convoy south of the palace, apparently as R.S.F. troops attempted to flee, video footage showed.

Gunfire and explosions could be heard across the capital for much of Thursday.

On Friday, the victory celebrations were shared by the diverse Sudanese militias that fought alongside the army. They included hard-line Islamists; battle-tested fighters from the western region of Darfur; and some of the civilian revolutionaries who in 2019 helped oust Sudan’s authoritarian leader, President Omar Hassan al-Bashir, who had ruled for three decades.

“God is the greatest. We captured the Republican Palace,” wrote Misbah Abu Zeid, leader of the Bara Ibn Malik Battalion, an Islamist militia that played a frontline role as the battle moved into downtown Khartoum, on social media.

But the takeover came at a cost. A missile thought to be fired by the R.S.F. struck a crew from Sudan’s state television station as they were working outside the palace on Friday morning, killing two journalists and a driver. Two officers from the military’s media wing, including its top official, were also killed in the attack.

Sudan’s war erupted in April 2023 after months of tension between the military chief, Gen. Abdul Fattah al-Burhan, and General Hamdan of the R.S.F. The two men had seized power together in a military coup in 2021, but they could not agree on how to integrate their forces.

The R.S.F. had the upper hand for the first 18 months of the war, backed by external support from foreign sponsors including the United Arab Emirates and Wagner mercenaries from Russia.

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But since the military launched a major counteroffensive in September, its forces have recaptured states in southeastern Sudan and gradually pushed the R.S.F. out of Khartoum.

After taking several strategic bridges on the Nile, the military seized the north and east of the city in recent months, before turning its sights on the presidential palace.

That sprawling compound, on the southern bank of the Blue Nile, has long occupied a central place in Sudan’s history. Established in the early 19th century under Ottoman-Egyptian colonization, the palace has been destroyed and rebuilt several times.

It was the scene of a famous colonial-era episode in 1885, when followers of a revolutionary cleric, Muhammad Ahmad, who was known as the Mahdi,, killed the British ruler of Sudan, Gov. Charles Gordon, on the steps of the palace.

In 2015, Mr. al-Bashir opened a new palace, funded and built by China, next to the colonial-era one. The new palace was also a focus of the tumult that followed the ouster of Mr. al-Bashir in 2019, when jockeying between civilian and military leaders led to the 2021 military coup.

Protected by the Republican Guard, the new palace was reported to have secret tunnels and rooms, and was the focus of most of the raucous celebrations on Friday.

As the R.S.F. fighters have withdrawn from eastern and northern Khartoum since January, the war’s grim toll has become starkly apparent.

ImageA donkey cart loaded with people moves down a dirt road past a battered building and a burned-out car.
Much of Khartoum has been laid to waste in the fight for control of the capital.
Entire districts have become a charred wasteland, as New York Times reporters saw during the past week in the city.

Bullet-pocked vehicles lay scattered across deserted streets. Apartment blocks stood torched or looted, and banks were blown open. White smoke billowed from a giant wheat silo.

In the city center, army snipers trained their rifles through the windows of a deserted luxury apartment block overlooking the Nile. On the far bank, a riverboat slumped on its side. A surveillance drone buzzed overhead.

A lace curtain billowed around Sgt. Maj. Ismail Hassan as he peered through his binoculars at the bombed-out presidential palace, which sat amid a cluster of hollowed-out office blocks.

“They have many snipers deployed in the tall buildings,” Sergeant Major Hassan said. “That’s what makes it so hard.”

The R.S.F.’s best snipers came from Ethiopia, he added, citing military intelligence reports. A document found by The Times at a deserted R.S.F. base in the city, listing recent Ethiopian recruits, supported that idea.

Image
The view from a ruined building to a palace on the opposite banks of a wide river.
The heavily damaged presidential palace before it was taken by the army, as seen from a ruined luxury apartment building across the Blue Nile.
By some estimates, the capital’s prewar population of about eight million has been reduced to two million. In recently recaptured areas, the army has moved residents to temporary camps on the edge of the city, where the army is screening for R.S.F. sympathizers, several residents said.

For those still in the city, there was a palpable sense of relief that the R.S.F. fighters were gone.

“In the days before they left, they demanded money,” said Kamal Juma, 42, as he tapped water from a broken pipe in the street. “If you couldn’t pay, they shot you.”

Mr. Juma mopped the sweat from his brow.

“We can’t take any more of this war,” he said.

Image
A group of people bring buckets to a hole in the ground where water is available.
In eastern Khartoum, civilians dug a hole in the street to collect water from a pipe. By some estimates, the capital’s prewar population of about eight million people has been reduced to two million.
Even if the military manages to drive the R.S.F. from Khartoum, there is little prospect of the war ending soon, analysts say.

What started as a power feud between the two generals has exploded into a much wider conflict fueled by a bewildering array of foreign powers.

In parts of the city, wild bushes sprouted in empty streets, adding to the apocalyptic air. Faded billboards, erected before the war, advertised goods at one-tenth of their current prices — a reflection of war’s crushing economic cost.

But the picture was markedly different in Omdurman, west of the Nile and controlled by the army. There, markets and restaurants were bustling, and even jewelry stores had reopened as residents streamed back.

Even in Omdurman, though, death is never far.

Image
A group of men stand over bodies that are wrapped in plastic bags or cloth.
A Rapid Support Forces rocket attack killed eight men on a quiet street in Omdurman on Monday night.
On Monday night, a volley of R.S.F. rockets landed in a quiet street where six neighbors had gathered under a palm tree to drink coffee after fasting for Ramadan.

After an explosion rocked his house, Moamer Atiyatallah stumbled through the cloud of dust, calling out to his friends under the palm tree, “What happened, guys?”

Nobody answered. All six men — a carpenter, an auto trader and a rickshaw driver, among others — had been killed, as well as two other men who were passing in the streets.

An hour after the strike, wailing women had spilled into the dark street, where stony-faced men picked up scraps of flesh from the ground and gathered them into plastic bags. A distraught young girl ran past.

“Father!” she screamed. “Father!”

Image
a lone man walks on an empty bridge that is littered with debris and the remains of smashed cars.
A destroyed bridge in northern Khartoum. Even if the military manages to drive the R.S.F. from the capital,

 

Yesterday Google bought Israeli cybersecurity company Wiz for $32 billion. The acquisition will mark the single largest transfer of former Israeli spies into an American company. This is because Wiz is run and staffed by dozens of ex Unit 8200 members, the specialist cyber-spying arm of the IDF.

 

Boris Johnson is the former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and the former Mayor of London.SPONSOR. We use Ground News to escape the echo chamber and st...

 

Zelensky had gambled on being able to trade land in Russia for the return of land in Ukraine. That failed.

 

On February 24, 2022, Russia invaded Ukraine with a small force of around 142,000 troops. Not enough to conquer Ukraine, the invading force was sufficient to persuade Ukraine to the negotiating table. Russian President Vladimir Putin has claimed that was the original goal of the military operation: “[t]he troops were…

 

As if two world wars born in Europe were not enough, an increasingly divided Europe is seeking unity through militarization and hyperbolic fear of Russia, writes Uroš Lipušcek. By Uroš Lipušcek in Ljubljana, Slovenia Special to Consortium News The Russians are coming and Europe is prep

[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 days ago (1 children)
 

Max Blumenthal and Aaron Mate discuss the Trump administration's unconstitutional detention of Columbia U student protest leader Mahmoud Khalil and the forces pulling the White House's strings, as Israel lobby freak outs prompt the firing of Trump's top hostage negotiator and withdrawal of a national security appointee. They will also cover the latest on Ukraine ceasefire negotiations, and the fallout from Syria's sectarian bloodshed.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago

@[email protected] As long as everyone stops complaining about boomers! 😉

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 week ago

@el_[email protected] Just like most social media posts occur during workday hours!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago (2 children)

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The Russians are aware, and this won't alter the fact that Ukraine has lost the war and won't be able to re-arm in a pause. Russia has already stated many times previously that they aren't willing to accept a ceasefire — why should they when they're the winning side?

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 week ago

@wise_[email protected]

Yup, that's my point. Keep that stuff in Canadian hands.

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[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 week ago (2 children)

@[email protected]

There's no reason the government of Canada can't do their hosting.

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[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago (5 children)

@wise_[email protected] Self Hosting is a viable option.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 week ago (3 children)

@[email protected] I fear he would privatize health care too.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

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Money would probably be better spent on drone tech—land, sea, subSurface and air. Bigger bang for the buck and the future. Large surface vessels are considerable targets. Tactics have evolved.

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[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 weeks ago

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Yet, he's pro-Palestinian and this post is about them! Surely, you don't support the killing that happened in Gaza and beyond? The mass killing of (mostly) women and children?? WTF, Being Anti-war is now worthy of ostracization? If so, we as a society have gone mad.

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[–] [email protected] 5 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

In this context, he's Pro Palestinian! Does this mean you're pro Israel @[email protected] ?

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