In Fallujah We Had The Green Light to Engage Any Threat #history #veteran #military #marines #militaryhistory #reels
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In Fallujah We Had The Green Light to Engage Any Threat #history #veteran #military #marines #militaryhistory #reels
Soffiano venti di Guerra? Russia Ucraina e la situazione critica nel Medio Oriente, combinati con l'instabilità profonda nell'africa subsahariana, le tensioni sempre maggiori nell' Indopacifico, mettono in luce un quadro con prospettive cupe. Ci davanti scenari estremamente fluidi e instabili. Anche se può sembrare che questi conflitti siano geograficamente distanti, sono direttamente collegati a noi con dinamiche profonde e interconnesse. In questo contesto riconosciamo una matrice comune, ossia uno scontro tra due visioni del mondo fortemente incompatibili.
L'ordine globale è minacciato da un nuovo acronimo, CRINK che racchiude le iniziali dei regimi coinvolti nelle crisi Cina, Russia, Iran, Corea del nord. I 4 costringono la Nato a rafforzare le relazioni con gli stati dell'Indo-Pacifico che condividono gli stessi timori. Australia, Nuova Zelanda, Corea del sud e Giappone hanno preso parte per la 1 volta ad un incontro a Bruxelles. Tuttavia, la Nato non è unita nell'espandere i legami con l'est. La Francia è stata la forza trainante nel bloccare il progetto della Nato per l'istituzione di un nuovo ufficio a Tokio, insistendo sul fatto che l'Organizzazione del Trattato Nord Atlantico si concentri sulla sua regione d'origine.
I Paesi dell'Europa centrale confinanti con la Russia vogliono che la Nato si concentri sul preparare la loro regione ad un'eventuale guerra con Mosca - e che lasci l'Indo-Pacifico agli Stati Uniti. La Cina, intanto, da anni avverte l'Alleanza di non avvicinarsi troppo alle 4 demi razie dell'Indo-Pacifico.
(via Gospel News Advocacy Classic Warn Radio)
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#GospelNews #Advocacy -There is not just a #globalwar of #Christian and #Muslims going on, it has taken in all concerned and ravaged the area’s where it is occurring. In this the last days “#menshearts shall fail them for fear of those things coming on the earth.” Gospel News Advocacy #ClassicWarnRadio brings to the front the #endofdays considering the #Gospel. All it takes is a brief look around to see yourself in the light of the world. Although we can connect through the internet and the world may seem small; the fact is things are changing fast. There is no shortage of trouble, we are in the last days and division will not help, #bloodshed will not help, but those in the Christian community must unite for action. This is the latest Classic Warn Radio features one of our premier shows.
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Honor Roll to those cats from the great global war #honorroll #globalwar #Chicago (at Logan Square, Chicago)
Source : Asian Correspondent GENERAL SANTOS CITY – Two government militiamen were slain Tuesday, February 12, when a group of armed men harassed their outpost and later ambushed a convoy of soldiers bringing down the slain body of a Citizen Armed Force Geographical Unit (CAFGU) member from the remote village of lBong Mal in Kiblawan, Davao del Sur Tuesday, a spokesman of the Philippine Army’s 1002nd Brigade here said. Capt. William Rodriguez identified the slain militiamen as Arnel Remotigue and Reynaldo Templa. Remotigue was slain by sniper fire Tuesday morning that allegedly came from the group of fugitive anti-mining tribal leader Daguil Cafeon, 1002nd Brigade commander Col. Marcos Flores Jr later told a local TV station here. A team of soldiers transporting the dead body of Remotigue headed by Task Force Kitaco (Kiblawan-Tampakan-Columbio) Capt. Joel Wayagwag was also ambushed near Sitio Nabul in the same day resulting into the death of Templa. Col. Flores described the incident unfortunate even as the military is now conducting hot pursuit operations against the perpetrators of the twin killings. The military has warned residents against aiding lawless armed groups in the area. “The incidents are indications of the strong presence of lawless armed groups who may have the access to communities around the area as their safe havens,” Capt. Rodriguez said in a statement sent to the local media here. The fresh violence came just two weeks after Kitari Cafeon was also killed in a military raid also in Kimlawis, a village in Kiblawan, Davao del Sur where the main base camp of Sagittarius Mines Inc. (SMI) is located. Kitari is the younger brother of Daguil Cafeon, a Blaan tribal leader who took up arms to protest alleged encroachment of their ancestral lands by SMI. In October last year, Daguil’s pregnant wife and their two sons were also killed in a military raid. Also last week, residents in the violence-prone village, most of them women and elderly, held a dialogue with the military in General Santos in the presence of Marble Bishop Dinualdo Gutierrez. They complained about the presence of the military in their community and said soldiers have been pointing the muzzles of their firearms against their women and children. The bishop has repeatedly blamed the ongoing activities of SMI for the escalation of violence in quad-boundaries of Tampakan in South Cohabit, Kiblawan in Davao del Sur, Columbio in Sultan Kudarat and Malungon in Sarangani. Col. Flores promised to look into their complaints but insisted that the military are there to protect villagers against lawless armed group, among them the Cafeon brothers. He again aired his appeal for the armed group led by Cafeon to surrender and face the charges filed against them. Cafeon and his band have admitted responsibility in killing of 3 drill contractors of SMI and at least 2 company guards during the last 2 years. Cafeon, who often gives interviews to the local media here through mobile phone, has not issued any statement owning responsibility in the slaying of the two government militiamen.
Source : Times Republican LONDON (AP) — Britain's foreign secretary will say that the U.K. plans to focus on bolstering human rights and the rule of law in foreign countries as part of an effort to improve intelligence-sharing and enhance security relationships in the face of the evolving threat from the al-Qaida terror network. William Hague is to address the need to be "resolute, decisive and principled" in countering overseas terrorism in a speech Thursday at the Royal United Services Institute in London. His remarks come as recent terror attacks in Algeria and militant activity in the Sahel have drawn attention to changes in how al-Qaida members operate. Calling al-Qaida "the greatest threat to the United Kingdom," Hague will note that the nature of the terror group's threat has changed in three ways: it is more geographically diverse, more fragmented and based "even more closely on the exploitation of local and regional issues." "A long term, coordinated international approach is the only way we can defeat terrorism," Hague will say, according to excerpts of his speech released in advance by the Foreign Office. "The bulk of our effort to counter terrorism is now overseas where terrorists train and plan for attacks in the West. We cannot do it without working with other countries." To make that cooperation possible, Hague will say that more must be done to improve respect for human rights and international norms in some countries where intelligence could be shared. He also will detail how Britain must work to ensure that information is gleaned and shared in ways that are consistent with the U.K.'s laws and values. "When we detect a terrorist plot originating in a third country, we want to be in a position to share information to stop that planning, and do it in a way that leads to the arrest, investigation and prosecution of the individuals concerned in accordance with our own legal obligations, and with their human rights respected at every stage," Hague is expected to say. "We need to have a coherent approach that is sustainable for the long term, that upholds our laws and has safeguards, and that works to strengthen the ability of other countries to observe human rights and meet their own obligations. Hague will argue that choosing to disengage with countries lacking the safeguards to share information in such a way could put British citizens at greater risk of a terror attack. Instead, he will propose sharing intelligence "in a carefully controlled way" while developing a more comprehensive approach to respecting human rights. "This is a framework... to ensure that our counter-terrorism work support justice and the rule of law as well as our security, with the goal of creating the long term conditions for better observance of human rights in countries that have a poor record and where the threat from terrorism is strong," Hague will tell the audience at RUSI. The approach for "justice and human rights partnerships" will differ country by country, but focus on states where a threat to U.K. security exists alongside weaknesses in law enforcement, human rights and criminal justice infrastructure. They will include helping overseas security services improve compliance with the law and human rights, working with local authorities to better build cases on evidence rather than confession, supporting prosecutors and judges to ensure they can process terrorism cases through their courts, and working to improve and monitor conditions in detention facilities so that convicted terrorists can be held securely and treated in line with human rights standards