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Horus
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American Foolishness In The Horn of Africa

Post by Horus » 24 May 2021, 14:06



Sudan - the weakest link ..

Sudan is trying to get out of the long frozen isolation and she is bowing and kneeling because it is bribed by debt 'forgiveness' and other pressures (through the classic American water carrier-Egypt). In all of this noise and seeming chaos, there is a calm order that we all must focus on.

Politics and war are dynamic, they constantly change.

Why does America use the stick not carrot in this case? Because their model is wrong. Only a failed political strategy resorts to violence and the threat of war.

Here is the deal.

There are the Americans, Chinese, Russians, Indians, Turks, Arabs and African Union in the Ethiopia theater. These are all smart capable connected and objective driven forces that fight to ensure and protect their interest - be it economic, trade, political or strategic. As I often say , politics and war are like a billiard table. When one ball moves, all the other move and change position. It is the same in Ethiopia.

In the battle to control Ethiopian telecom system and at the same time spy on Ethiopia, US has won the day and China has lost a little.

Now America has chosen to direct its relation with Ethiopia, on hostile trajectory and that will initiate a new alignment of forces and dynamics. In physics, we say that nature abhors vacuum. In politics, we say society abhors power vacuum. When America stops aid or trade with Ethiopia, there will be others ready to fill up the vacuum.

Every crisis comes with massive opportunity. And, one should never let a good crisis go wasted. American hostility toward Ethiopia is a God sent opportunity for Ethiopia to examine her cocaine like dependence on America. Ethiopia needs to mature!

This is our opportunity to have all the players compete and fight on the Ethiopia theater - we must have all kinds of relations with all kinds of forces and power centers.

Ethiopia critical problem is not American hostility, that has been the case through our 100 year long relation. Our critical need is the eradication of tribalism, ethnic politics, ethnic constitution and the ethnic killilism.

We need a united country a strong government to withstand pressure and have a place in the above power struggle of nations. Abiy can't stand a chance of winning any game riding on the current ethnic system.

My view is if America continues with its unjust intervention and pressure, Abiy should dissolve the ethnic parliament, suspend the constitution and stabilize the country and protect our independence and sovereignty.

If Sudan continues to be a proxy for anti-Ethiopian forces, Ethiopia must do something strong to remove the Sudanese weakest link.

Last edited by Horus on 24 May 2021, 14:46, edited 3 times in total.

Aba
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Re: American Foolishness In The Horn of Africa

Post by Aba » 24 May 2021, 14:10

Horus,
This should be their next move like Bosnia-Herzegovina


Ethiopians suffer horrific burns in suspected white phosphorus (Chemical) attacks

Weapons experts said images obtained by the Telegraph show injuries consistent with the chemical

By Will Brown, AFRICA CORRESPONDENT, NAIROBI and Lucy Kassa 23 May 2021 • 5:29pm

Civilians in northern Ethiopia have suffered horrific burns consistent with the use of white phosphorus, a potential war crime, the Telegraph can disclose.

Exclusive footage and accounts of witnesses and victims smuggled out of the war in Tigray suggests the Ethiopian and Eritrean armies may have used powerful incendiary weapons in civilian areas.

Leading chemical weapons experts said the footage is consistent with white phosphorus, which is banned from use against human targets under international law. 

The victims include Kisanet Gebremicheal, a 13-year-old girl from the village of Adi’ayqoro in central Tigray who suffered agonising burns when her home came under attack on April 20.

“A heavy weapon hit the house, and fire fell from the roof,” she said on the phone inbetween sobs. “It burned me immediately. It had the smell of gunpowder.”

Footage taken in hospital shortly after Ms Gebremicheal made it to the medical centre shows her dark skin entirely burnt away from her arms, legs, face and hands — all that’s left is a white and red paste of flesh and fat.

'Oh, my heart. What is this?' 

“Oh, my heart. Oh, what the hell is this? Oh mum,” she wails as the nurses wrap her burnt, infected body as gently as they can. But the morphine does not work any more, so even her mother’s soft touch is agony.


Even the gentle touch of Kisanet's mother, Genet Asmelash, leaves her in agonising pain 

White phosphorus is a chemical that catches fire when exposed to air and burns at more than 2,700 degrees Celsius. Like the napalm used in the Vietnam War, it self-oxidises, meaning it is almost impossible to put out once it touches human skin.

The incendiary chemical lies in a legal grey zone. It can be used legally to illuminate the battlefield at night or to provide tactical smoke screens. But its use against people can be classified as a war crime under the United Nations’ Geneva Conventions.

“These horrific injuries look very similar to injuries I’ve seen on casualties in North-east and North-west Syria. It looks like injuries caused by white phosphorus,” said Hamish de Bretton-Gordon, the former commander of the UK’s Joint Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear Regiment.

“White phosphorous has been used in Syria as an incendiary device to set fire to towns and villages and to drive civilians out of areas the Syrian Army wants to capture. It was very effective.

“The UN and other bodies were called to investigate. But nobody would, and nobody condemned its use because it’s very hard to prove it was used with ‘intent’ against people."

"Because of this inaction, I expect every dictator and rogue state believed that they could use these horrifically effective munitions with impunity. And this seems to be the case in Tigray,” adds Mr de Bretton Gordon, author of ‘Chemical Warrior’.


It has been six months since Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed sent troops into the country's northernmost Tigray region  CREDIT: Eduardo Soteras/ AFP via Getty Images 

The images come six months after Ethiopia’s Nobel Peace Prize-winning Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed and Eritrea’s totalitarian dictator Isias Afwerki launched a massive offensive to destroy the powerful ruling party in Tigray, a mountainous part of Ethiopia.

Since November, thousands if not tens of thousands of people have been killed in the conflict, which has pushed large parts of the region into famine. Restricted access for journalists and human rights researchers and periodic communications blackouts make it hard to verify a flood of accounts of war crimes, ethnic cleansing and gang rapes that have emerged from the conflict.

'Everything except my hair was burning'

Genet Asmelash, Kisanet Gebremicheal's mother, says her two daughters were working in the family home on April 20 when the heavy weapon exploded above.

Eritrean troops are known to be blocking food aid from reaching civilians in the area of central Tigray where they live. Ms Asmelash said there was no fighting in the area, and it was daylight when the shell struck.

“There was a bad smell, something that suffocates…something like a poison or a chemical. It was like a cloud, and I could not see the house.”

There was smoke and fire everywhere immediately, she explained, adding that she was too shocked to run back into the house to rescue her daughters.  


Yemane Weldemicheal has horrendous burns on much of his body 

Near the girl’s hospital bed in the Tigrayan regional capital, Mekele, lies another victim: a young man with horrific burns covering his face, hands, arms and legs. Eighteen-year-old Yemane Weldemicheal is from a completely different area, a village named Adi Woluwo in eastern Tigray.

“It was April 9. I was alone sitting in my house, which is made of stone and mud. A heavy weapon landed into the house suddenly.

"It has a suffocating smell. It made a fire inside the house. I was burning immediately. Everything except my hair was burning,” he told the Telegraph.

Mr Weldemicheal says both Eritrean and Ethiopian soldiers were in control of the area when he was hit, and there was no ongoing fighting.

Medical staff say they have seen more child victims and that they suspect many others died of their wounds before they made it through military roadblocks to the regional capital.

“This could easily be the result of a white phosphorus munition. It is possible that high explosive munitions caused some fires. But this seems more like an incendiary weapon like white phosphorus,” said Dan Kaszeta, a chemical and biological specialist at The Royal United Services Institute, a defence think tank.

Ethiopia is a signatory of the Chemical Weapons Convention, which bans the use of weapons like mustard gas, while Eritrea is not. Neither country has signed the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons, which bans using incendiary weapons like white phosphorous on people.

The Telegraph asked the Ethiopian and Eritrean governments for comment. Neither replied.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2021/0 ... hosphorus/

Horus
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Re: American Foolishness In The Horn of Africa

Post by Horus » 24 May 2021, 14:33


Horus
Senior Member+
Posts: 42785
Joined: 19 Oct 2013, 19:34

Re: American Foolishness In The Horn of Africa

Post by Horus » 24 May 2021, 15:42


Horus
Senior Member+
Posts: 42785
Joined: 19 Oct 2013, 19:34

Re: American Foolishness In The Horn of Africa

Post by Horus » 24 Aug 2021, 17:07


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