[HODHODYEMENNEWS.NET] A prominent leader in the terrorist organization al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula ...the latest incarnation of various Qaeda and Qaeda-allied groups, including the now-defunct Aden-Abyan Islamic Army that boomed the USS Cole in 2000...> (AQAP) was killed east of the city of Ma'rib, which is under the control of Islah Party
…the Muslim Brotherhood in Yemen…
mercenaries loyal to the Saudi-led aggression coalition.
According to media sources, Abu Yusuf al-Muhammadi al-Hadrami, a prominent member and a military commander of al-Qaeda in was killed when a cycle of violence packed with explosives went off in the al-Samdah area, located in the al-Wadi district, east of Ma'rib.
The sources suggested that the liquidation of al-Hadrami via a booby-trapped cycle of violence could mark the beginning of a conflict between al-Qaeda leaders, who use several areas controlled by Islah in Ma'rib and some southern regions as training camps for their operatives.
#1
The Spy plane arrived at the heavily fortified southern border hours later and flew a SIGINT mission in US airspace from El Paso, Texas, to the Big Bend Ranch State Park, located in west Texas.
[HODHODYEMENNEWS.NET] The administration of US President Donald Trump ...New York real estate developer, described by Dems as illiterate, racist, misogynistic, and whatever other unpleasant descriptions they can think of, elected by the rest of us as 45th and 47th President of the United States... announced on Saturday a more than $7 billion arms deal to Israeli occupation, including thousands of bombs and missiles.
The Pentagon said the State Department approved the sale of $6.75 billion worth of munitions and guidance equipment and $660 million worth of Hellfire missiles.
The US news website ''Axios'' reported that the deal includes 18,000 aircraft bombs to be delivered starting in 2025 and 3,000 Hellfire missiles to be delivered starting in 2028.
Posted by: Fred ||
02/09/2025 00:00 ||
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[11128 views]
Top|| File under: Govt of Iran Proxies
[HODHODYEMENNEWS.NET] The Paleostinian Ministry of Health in the Gazoo
...Hellhole adjunct to Israel and Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, inhabited by Gazooks. The place was acquired in the wake of the 1967 War and then presented to Paleostinian control in 2006 by Ariel Sharon, who had entered his dotage. It is currently ruled with a rusty iron fist by Hamas with about the living conditions you'd expect. It periodically attacks the Hated Zionist Entity whenever Iran needs a ruckus created or the hard boyz get bored, getting thumped by the IDF in return. The ruling turbans then wave the bloody shirt and holler loudly about oppression and disproportionate response... Strip announced on Saturday the arrival of 26 deaders to the hospitals of the Strip during the past 48 hours, including 22 from under the rubble and four new deaders, with five injuries recorded.
The ministry added 572 deaders to the corpse count after their data was officially approved.
Thus, the corpse count from the Israeli aggression since October 7, 2023, has risen to 48,181, with 111,638 maimed.
The ministry indicated that there are victims under the rubble and on the roads, with the impossibility of recovering them due to the ongoing attacks and the prevention of the entry of necessary equipment, which constitutes a violation of the ceasefire agreement.
Posted by: Fred ||
02/09/2025 00:00 ||
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[11132 views]
Top|| File under: Hamas
#1
Right! hahahahahahahaha!
Posted by: Whiskey Mike ||
02/09/2025 2:42 Comments ||
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#2
When any group allows evil to live among it, operate from its lands to do evil. Do not expect good things has a reward.
Plus, it is NOT aggression to stamp out the evil that attacked 1st. That is called justice.
A woman and eight children were injured when Turkish forces and affiliated SNA factions bombarded a village in #Kobani in northern #Syriahttps://t.co/hx3kiLK051
[HODHODYEMENNEWS.NET] In a blatant violation of ceasefire agreement, the Israeli occupation aircraft carried out on Saturday an Arclight airstrike ...KABOOM!... on the outskirts of the eastern Lebanese mountain range in the 'Al-Shaara' area within the villages of Baalbek district.
Six people were martyred and two others were maimed, in a new Israeli aggression on Leb ...Formerly inhabited by hardy Phoenecian traders, its official language is now Arabic, with the usual unpleasant side effects.... , in an Israeli drone raid on the outskirts of Janta, in the eastern region of Bekaa.
The village of Janta area lies close to the Syrian border and the area was already hit by Israeli strikes on January 31st.
Additionally, Israeli enemy forces carried out an operation involving the earth-shattering kaboom and burning of houses in the town of Adaisseh, South Lebanon.
The skies over the south witnessed intensive flights of Israeli warplanes at medium altitude.
This repeated Israeli aggression against Lebanon raises many questions directed at the international committee overseeing the ceasefire agreement, as well as the guarantor countries, specifically the United States and La Belle France.''
Posted by: Fred ||
02/09/2025 00:00 ||
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[11135 views]
Top|| File under: Hezbollah
[Daily Mail, where America gets its news] ISIS families living in Syria's largest refugee camp have declared the terror group is 'ready to rise again' as guards warned the scourge of Islamic extremism could spread through the Middle East and threaten the West 'in a matter of days'.
Since the jihadist organisation lost its final stronghold in Syria in 2019, tens of thousands of ISIS fighters and their families have been held in prisons and refugee camps in Rojava - the Kurdish-led autonomous region in northeast Syria.
The largest of them - Camp Al-Hol - holds almost 40,000 people, many of whom are extremist families who go tent to tent, abusing refugees and indoctrinating their children.
Now, the instability following the toppling of former Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's regime by Islamist group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) has created fertile ground for a horrifying ISIS resurgence.
Military officials in Rojava told MailOnline that ongoing clashes between Rojava's Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) and Turkish-backed militias may force camp guards to abandon their posts and head to the frontlines.
If this happens, security at the camp could collapse and Islamic State could stage a breakout.
It comes just weeks after the former head of MI6 Sir Alex Younger said the UK and US must commit to locking down Al-Hol and other ISIS detention centres to prevent a prison break in the 'hotbed of radicalisation'.
ISIS inmates at the camp are well aware of the opportunity at hand.
Jihadist sleeper cells have launched several attacks on Kurdish authorities in Rojava and in the rest of Syria in recent weeks, while inmates at Al-Hol have gleefully told camp administrators they will soon be liberated and re-establish their brutal caliphate.
When the SDF and the US-led international coalition crushed ISIS in 2019, the region's authorities were confronted with a tidal wave of captured fighters and their extremist families.
The fighters were hustled into old schools and hospitals transformed into penitentiaries, but the under-resourced administration had no choice but to corral tens of thousands of ISIS women and children into Al-Hol camp.
It has since become a self-policing dystopia where extremist gangs spread their doctrine through intimidation and abuse to raise a new generation under their black flag.
Camp authorities conduct regular raids on the camp as ISIS routinely smuggles in weapons, explosives, communications devices and other contraband.
They have also discovered various dugouts and tunnels created by the inmates to move the weapons, or attempt to break out.
Jihan Hanan, one of the chief administrators of Al-Hol, spoke with MailOnline during a visit to the camp about the threats ISIS families have delivered.
'They tell us: 'Soon, we will be liberated from this camp and you will be inside it',' she said.
'They call us pigs and say they'll round us up. They believe they will get out of the camp and that ISIS will be revived again. The people of this camp are ready... they are ready and waiting for something to happen.'
In the wake of Assad's toppling in December, Sir Alex Younger sounded the alarm about the prospect of ISIS rising again.
'There is a key operational issue for the UK which is going to be driving a lot of our policy which is that the SDF, the Kurdish group, are holding many, many ISIS prisoners and their families who were taken after the end of the caliphate,' the former head of MI6, who is known as 'C', told the BBC.
'The camps represent a hotbed of radicalisation and haven't been sorted out. If the SDF were to go off the job, our security situation here would worsen,' he said, declaring the West must 'make sure at least the eastern part of Syria remains stable'.
Sir Alex's warning is not overblown.
The SDF is stretched thin, fighting the Turkish-backed SNA militia in northwestern Syria while preparing for a potential future clash with HTS.
If the conflict escalates, military chiefs will be forced to pull guards away from the camp to fight on the frontlines.
Siyamend Ali, a spokesperson for Rojava's People's Protection Units (YPG) that lead the SDF, said this would mean ISIS could stage its resurgence almost overnight.
'If you're guarding these camps and you hear that the SNA are going to your city, to murder your family and your people, what are you going to do? Are you going to stay and guard the camp or are you going to leave and protect your family?
'This is the choice we are faced with, and if Turkey, HTS and the international community do not put this war to an end, we will have no choice but to defend ourselves.
'If that happens, ISIS could be back in a matter of days,' he declared.
Jihan and other officials in Rojava are insistent that nations whose people travelled to join ISIS must take responsibility for their citizens now wreaking havoc in Al-Hol - particularly Western countries reluctant to act.
They argue that by abandoning their citizens in Syria and refusing to repatriate them, the governments of these nations are only aiding the terror group to consolidate its influence in the Middle East and prepare for a comeback.
'We want our partners in the international community, who fought with us against ISIS, to not forget the sacrifices our people made. Because the case of Al-Hol is directly connected to the case of ISIS,' Jihan said.
'We call upon all the countries around the world to come and take their citizens. We need logistical and political support from the countries that have citizens here.'
Meanwhile, the SDF, which allied closely with the US to defeat ISIS during Syria's Civil War, is appealing once again for the West to provide more resources to ensure the extremists can be contained.
In the wake of Donald Trump's return to the White House, the SDF are concerned that US troops could pull out of Syria altogether - a move which would undoubtedly embolden ISIS.
'The reason for them (US troops) to stay is still present because Daesh is still strong,' SDF commander Mazloum Abdi said yesterday, using an Arabic acronym to refer to ISIS.
'We hope that the coalition does not withdraw... We ask them to stay.'
Al-Hol is now home to around 40,000 primarily ISIS-linked women and their children, including almost 7,000 highly-radicalised foreigners.
Authorities know these extremists are receiving orders from jihadist cells outside the camp, waiting for the moment to rise up.
'There are ISIS members outside and they can communicate with ISIS members inside. We don't allow (the most extreme section of the camp) to have phones... but somehow they still sneak them in,' Jihan said.
'The situation in Syria has changed. The ISIS members consider the mindset (of HTS) is similar, so they say: 'Come and bring us outside and free us, just how you took over all of Syria.'
'In their logic, they can take over this region (Rojava) and Al-Hol camp as well.'
Only a small enclave within the camp - known as Section 6 - is fully separated from the rest of the facility. This area, containing almost 7,000 people, is where hardcore foreigners who travelled from around the world to join ISIS are kept.
But the Asayish, Rojava's internal security forces, do not have the numbers or resources to conduct proper patrols, so around 33,000 inmates are free to roam around the camp undeterred.
This means there is nothing to prevent ISIS gangs from going tent to tent and terrorising refugees. More than 150 murders have been recorded in the camp since 2019 - an average of more than two per month.
'Before 2019 the camp was open. It had a council, a committee, people were free to come and go, with visiting allowed,' Jihan explained.
'But in 2019 ISIS came and infected the camp, distributed weapons... we had daily murder cases and because of that our security measures changed.
'We didn't close it just because we wanted to make it a prison. You don't do that without reason.'
Posted by: Skidmark ||
02/09/2025 00:00 ||
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[11135 views]
Top|| File under: Islamic State
#1
'There are ISIS members outside and they can communicate with ISIS members inside. We don't allow (the most extreme section of the camp) to have phones... but somehow they still sneak them in,' Jihan said.“
Shocking
Posted by: Super Hose ||
02/09/2025 10:58 Comments ||
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#2
Smuggling smartphones to takfiri crooks?
"Sure, we hide them in hollowed-out chooks
Which we sneakily slide
Into something inside
Which no pious Mohammedan looks."
A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.
Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing
the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.
Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence
over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has
dominated Mexico for six years.
Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No
trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.