yaballo wrote: ↑18 Feb 2021, 20:22
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yaballo wrote: ↑18 Feb 2021, 20:22
በብልፅግና ሰራዊት እና በኤርትራ ኣራዊት ታዝሎ ወደ ምዕራብ ትግራይ የገባው ሃላ ቀሩ ፎጣ ለባሽ ሰራዊት ከግማሽ ሚሊዮን በላይ ህዝብ ከርስቱና ቤቱ ኣፈናቅለዋል። ወደ ስድሳ ሺ የሚሆኑትን ሱዳን ገብተዋል። ሁኔታው የፈለገውን ያክል ቢከብድ ነገ የተወረው ቦታቸው እንደሚመለስ እርግጠኞች በመሆበ የካቲት 11 በዓላቸው በድምቀት ኣክብረዋል። ... ሞት ለፋሺሽቶች፡ ለሃላ ቀር ተስፋፊ ሴሬኞች፡ ድል ለተገፉ።
yaballo,
Can you kill 2 birds with one stone?
Well, if what you posted is a true story and considering some percentage of Ethiopian is going to be sold to someone anyway, this deal with Turkey for Ethiopia is like killing not just two but, three birds with one stone!
1) Make Turkey a partner
2) Make Egypt pee in her pants
3) eliminate all "ethnic pimps"
With such a deal made in heaven, ብልፅግና ሰራዊት won't need ኤርትራ ሰራዊት anymore; Isaias can sit & watch the "End Game" with Abiy inside Asmara/Addis "situation rooms".
Read the following to get the full magic story of the deadly Istanbul's "drones"; the stories of the "game over" music played from beginning to end.
Cheers!
Turkey’s military campaign beyond its borders is powered by homemade armed drones

A Turkish-made drone flies in the northern Syrian region of Afrin in February 2018. (George Ourfalian/AFP/Getty Images)
Kareem Fahim
November 29, 2020 at 1:36 p.m. PST
ISTANBUL — As Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan wages a widening military campaign for influence from North Africa to the Caucasus, his forces have relied on a potent weapon to gain a battlefield edge while drumming up domestic support for foreign interventions: homemade armed drones.
Their impact has been substantial. The drones played a central role in recent months in shifting Libya’s civil war in favor of the Turkish-backed government based in the capital, Tripoli, and they helped Azerbaijan, an ally of Turkey, prevail over Armenian forces in the fighting over the contested Nagorno-Karabakh region, according to military analysts.
In northern Syria, Turkish drones played a major part this year in a series of devastating attacks on Syrian armored forces that caught some military observers by surprise and helped bring a Syrian government offensive against rebel areas to a halt.
At home, the growing sophistication of the indigenous drones have made them a symbol of Turkish technological innovation and self-sufficiency, boosting national confidence amid a severe economic downturn and friction with some other NATO countries.
But the battlefield successes pose an urgent foreign policy challenge for the incoming Biden administration: what to do about Ankara’s expansionist policies, which have put Turkey in conflict with a range of other U.S. allies, including Greece and the United Arab Emirates.
Iran’s president blames Israel for killing nuclear scientist and vows to respond at the ‘right time’
James Jeffrey, a former U.S. ambassador to Turkey who served until recently as the Trump administration’s special representative for Syria, said Turkey’s foreign forays had “stymied” Russian military ambitions in places like Syria and Libya, and “that’s not a bad thing.” At the same time, he said, “Erdogan scares the hell out of most everyone in the Middle East.” The Turkish leader “is very unpredictable and very ambitious. He is moving into vacuums.”
The rapid growth of Turkey’s drone industry has made it a competitor to long-established producers of unmanned aerial vehicles such as China and Israel. It has also provoked human rights concerns, stirred by reports of civilian casualties and the cross-border use of drones for the targeted killings of suspected militants. At least two foreign companies that supply components used in Turkish drones have announced in recent weeks that they are suspending sales to Turkey, saying their products were intended only for civilian use.
The drones have provoked little controversy at home. They “are seen as a source of national pride and an unmistakable symbol that Turkey is able to take care of its own,” said Ahmet Kasim Han, a professor of international relations at Altinbas University in Istanbul. “I would say that is the extent of the public debate.”