Dr Asefaw Tekeste says War id culture of Tigray and will never lose the war no matter the disadvantage in numbers, technology, diplomatic isolation, and geographic encirclement.
Dr Asefaw Tekeste of midribahri says debreproppor leaving Mekele is simply z beginning of real war and not capitulation.
No wonder Meshrefet is scared to try to enter Mekele, he thinks Debrepropoor will recapture it any day, hopefully on the fay meshrefet comes to Mekele for photo
Dr Asefaw Tekeste says War id culture of Tigray and will never lose the war no matter the disadvantage in numbers, technology, diplomatic isolation, and geographic encirclement.
Dr Asefaw Tekeste says War id culture of Tigray and will never lose the war no matter the disadvantage in numbers, technology, diplomatic isolation, and geographic encirclement.
Re: Dr Asefaw Tekeste of midribahri says debreproppor leaving Mekele is simply z beginning of real war and not capitulat
Really?abel qael wrote: ↑29 Nov 2020, 21:21No wonder Meshrefet is scared to try to enter Mekele, he thinks Debrepropoor will recapture it any day, hopefully on the fay meshrefet comes to Mekele for photo
Dr Asefaw Tekeste says War id culture of Tigray and will never lose the war no matter the disadvantage in numbers, technology, diplomatic isolation, and geographic encirclement.
The empty bravado and the Japanese WWII war veterans sad analogy. Please tell this sad story to your fighters so that they may surrender to the Ethiopian forces and get back their life rather than becoming hopeless fugitives living in the jungles for years to come unaware of what is going on in the real world.
60 years after the war end of the WWWII, two soldiers emerge from the jungle.
Mystery surrounds Japanese men, both in their 80s, who say they have been in hiding since the second world war
According to reports, the Japanese men, who are both in their 80s, said they had been hiding on the island of Mindanao, which is 600 miles from Manila, since before the end of the second world war.
The Kyodo news agency identified them as Yoshio Yamakawa, 87, and Tsuzuki Nakauchi, 85, and said they were former members of a division whose ranks were devastated in fierce battles with US forces towards the end of the war.
The soldiers had remained in the jungle and mountains since then, possibly unaware that the war had ended 60 years ago, and afraid that they would be court-martialed if they showed their faces again. Hiroo Onoda, a Japanese army intelligence officer, caused a sensation when he was persuaded to come out of hiding by a former comrade on the Philippine island of Lubang in 1974.
Mr Onoda, now 83, wept uncontrollably as he agreed to lay down his rifle, unaware that Japanese forces had surrendered 29 years earlier. He returned to Japan the same year, but unable to adapt to life in his home country, emigrated to Brazil in 1975. After coming home now I felt that finally, the war was finished. That's how I felt," veteran soldier said on his coming of the jungle after 60 long years.
In 1972, Shoichi Yokoi was found on the island of Guam and returned to Japan, where he died in 1997. Like Mr Onoda, he had no idea that the war had ended.
The revelation provoked an immediate response in Tokyo.
Justin McCurry in Tokyo and John Aglionby, south-east Asia correspondent
Sat 28 May 2005 00.03 BST