TPLF's Getachew Reda has got a short memory
Posted: 29 Jun 2021, 12:59
This psychopath doesn't even understand what he is talking about. Here an excerpt from an interview he gave to one of the western journalists, who spotted him, allegedly, in a village called Samre recently.
Quote....
Getachew Reda, a leading member of the "Tigray Defense Army", wants to fight until the region in northern Ethiopia becomes independent
Journalist (J): Mr. Getachew, the TDF has launched an offensive against the Eritrean and Ethiopian armed forces. Is it successful?
Getachew Reda (GR) A lot. In the past few days we have wiped out two brigades from the 31st and two brigades from the 11th Ethiopian Division. The soldiers were armed to the teeth and had heavy artillery, howitzers and mortars. We captured more than 2,000 soldiers. Because the ratio between captured and killed soldiers is usually 1: 3, we assume that we killed over 6,000 soldiers.
J: And how many have you lost?
GR: Several dozen. Since the fighting began last November, our 4th Army has only lost 160 people, but killed tens of thousands of Abiy Ahmed's soldiers. The commander of our 4th Army recently told me that even killing becomes tiresome at some point. The numerical superiority of our opponents still exists: We have tens of thousands of fighters, who face 1.1 million Eritrean and Ethiopian soldiers.
J: What do you want actually to achieve militarily?
GR: We will retake Tigray and make sure none of our opponents can attack us again.
J: That sounds ambitious.
GR: We can count on the support of the population and know how to fight. 99 percent of the Ethiopian wars were fought here in Tigray.
J: Civilians have never suffered as much from the fighting as they do today. The TDF is involved in this. Whenever you attack, the other side will take revenge on the population.
GR: Our cat and mouse game marked the first chapter of liberation. We will change these tactics. In the future, we will keep control of the regions that we have captured. And Samre, where we are right now, becomes our center.
J: And your enemy has to swallow it that easy?
GR: Abiy Ahmed's troops hardly worry us. They run away after the first shots.
J: And the Eritreans?
GR: For them this conflict is a struggle for survival. If you lose in Tigray, you will lose at home too. We have to weaken them to such an extent that they no longer pose a threat to us. If your President Isaias Afewerki should also be killed in the process, that is fine with us. And when they leave Tigray, we will follow them.
J: Up to the Eritrean capital Asmara?
GR: If that is necessary to destroy their military capacity, why not? But I believe that the Eritreans want to fight the conflict here.
J: Even if you do succeed in defeating your enemies, Tigray's position will be quite hopeless. Wedged between two hostile powers, with no chance of economic independence.
GR: So we have to make sure not to be cooped up. Even if we have to destroy all of Abiy Ahmed's armed forces to do so. Our people must be able to live in safety here.
J: At some point, however, you will have to speak to Abiy Ahmed and Isaias Afewerki. Such a conflict cannot be resolved only militarily.
GR: The political solution is our self-determination. It could be guaranteed by our independence. Until recently, I was a staunch supporter of the Ethiopian idea, also as a minister in Addis Ababa. But now we are no longer interested in helping to determine the fate of Ethiopia. We care about our own safety.
Quote....
Getachew Reda, a leading member of the "Tigray Defense Army", wants to fight until the region in northern Ethiopia becomes independent
Journalist (J): Mr. Getachew, the TDF has launched an offensive against the Eritrean and Ethiopian armed forces. Is it successful?
Getachew Reda (GR) A lot. In the past few days we have wiped out two brigades from the 31st and two brigades from the 11th Ethiopian Division. The soldiers were armed to the teeth and had heavy artillery, howitzers and mortars. We captured more than 2,000 soldiers. Because the ratio between captured and killed soldiers is usually 1: 3, we assume that we killed over 6,000 soldiers.
J: And how many have you lost?
GR: Several dozen. Since the fighting began last November, our 4th Army has only lost 160 people, but killed tens of thousands of Abiy Ahmed's soldiers. The commander of our 4th Army recently told me that even killing becomes tiresome at some point. The numerical superiority of our opponents still exists: We have tens of thousands of fighters, who face 1.1 million Eritrean and Ethiopian soldiers.
J: What do you want actually to achieve militarily?
GR: We will retake Tigray and make sure none of our opponents can attack us again.
J: That sounds ambitious.
GR: We can count on the support of the population and know how to fight. 99 percent of the Ethiopian wars were fought here in Tigray.
J: Civilians have never suffered as much from the fighting as they do today. The TDF is involved in this. Whenever you attack, the other side will take revenge on the population.
GR: Our cat and mouse game marked the first chapter of liberation. We will change these tactics. In the future, we will keep control of the regions that we have captured. And Samre, where we are right now, becomes our center.
J: And your enemy has to swallow it that easy?
GR: Abiy Ahmed's troops hardly worry us. They run away after the first shots.
J: And the Eritreans?
GR: For them this conflict is a struggle for survival. If you lose in Tigray, you will lose at home too. We have to weaken them to such an extent that they no longer pose a threat to us. If your President Isaias Afewerki should also be killed in the process, that is fine with us. And when they leave Tigray, we will follow them.
J: Up to the Eritrean capital Asmara?
GR: If that is necessary to destroy their military capacity, why not? But I believe that the Eritreans want to fight the conflict here.
J: Even if you do succeed in defeating your enemies, Tigray's position will be quite hopeless. Wedged between two hostile powers, with no chance of economic independence.
GR: So we have to make sure not to be cooped up. Even if we have to destroy all of Abiy Ahmed's armed forces to do so. Our people must be able to live in safety here.
J: At some point, however, you will have to speak to Abiy Ahmed and Isaias Afewerki. Such a conflict cannot be resolved only militarily.
GR: The political solution is our self-determination. It could be guaranteed by our independence. Until recently, I was a staunch supporter of the Ethiopian idea, also as a minister in Addis Ababa. But now we are no longer interested in helping to determine the fate of Ethiopia. We care about our own safety.