Saturday, July 02, 2022

UNLIKELY STORY: The Ukraine Played A Major Part in Making North Korea A Major Threat

Today, we can say with near absolute certainty that, when designing and constructing its intercontinental ballistic missile, the DPRK used RD-250 rocket engines produced at the Ukrainian Yuzhmash machine-building plant in the city of Dnepropetrovsk.

How does a country which is effectively cut off from the rest of the world even achieve this level of technology? You might be surprised, but we must go to Ukraine for answers. . .

1 Jul, 2022 16:21

Nuclear family: How Ukraine helped North Korea develop the world's deadliest weapons

Experts point out the Ukrainian roots of Kim Jong-un's rocket program
Nuclear family: How Ukraine helped North Korea develop the world's deadliest weapons

(Image © AP / KCNA via KNS)

"North Korea’s (DPRK) nuclear missile program remains a major headache for the United States, and much of the wider world.

Its development would not have been possible, however, without Pyongyang’s access to Soviet technology, specifically  nuclear-capable hardware that remained in Ukraine after the collapse of the USSR. This article delves into the unlikely story of the part Ukraine played in making North Korea a major threat to America and its Asian allies. 

The US, South Korea and Japan share a lot of common goals, one of them being the complete de-nuclearization of the Korean Peninsula. US President Joe Biden has once again made this point clear at the 2022 NATO summit in Madrid. Meanwhile, Washington’s allies in Asia have recently found a new reason for concern – on June 14, South Korean Foreign Minister Park Jin announced that North Korea had completed preparations for a new nuclear test.

Prior to that, in March 2022, Supreme Leader Kim Jong-un effectively ended his country's self-imposed 2018 moratorium on testing intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) capable of reaching US soil. Now, both Seoul and Washington are anxiously awaiting news about new test launches.

How does a country which is effectively cut off from the rest of the world even achieve this level of technology? You might be surprised, but we must go to Ukraine for answers.

From the communist land all the way to the land of Juche

Today, we can say with near absolute certainty that, when designing and constructing its intercontinental ballistic missile, the DPRK used RD-250 rocket engines produced at the Ukrainian Yuzhmash machine-building plant in the city of Dnepropetrovsk.

Like most of the still-functioning industrial enterprises in Ukraine, Yuzhmash is part of the Soviet legacy. The plant was built in 1944 with World War II in full swing; later, during the Cold War, its engineers designed and produced the USSR’s most advanced missiles to compete with the US in the arms race.

In the 21st century, Washington once again feels threatened by certain Yuzhmash products – despite the fact that Ukraine, following its 2014 coup, became a satellite of the US, and the plant has since signed contracts with the Americans (to produce rocket stages, engines for these stages, as well as various hardware used in their launch vehicles).

In August 2017, The New York Times, citing Michael Elleman, a missile expert with the lobby group Institute of International Strategic Studies (IISS), reported that the DPRK had most likely used the RD-250 engines to design its own intercontinental ballistic missile.

“It’s likely that these engines came from Ukraine – probably illicitly... The big question is how many they have and whether the Ukrainians are helping them now. I’m very worried,” Elleman said. The experts at the IISS, however, believed that the official authorities in Kiev were not involved in the smuggling operation.

The design bureaus of Yuzhmash, as well as Yuzhnoye Design Office, a similar enterprise in Dnepropetrovsk, were emphatic in their denial of any collaboration with Pyongyang and its nuclear missile program. Secretary of the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine Aleksandr Turchynov even suggested that the accusations were part of an ‘anti-Ukrainian campaign’ carried out by Russian intelligence. He claimed it was Moscow’s way of concealing its own assistance to North Korea.

However, in a 2018 report by the 1718 Sanctions Committee (DPRK), the Ukrainian authorities admitted that, in all likelihood, the engine for North Korea’s ballistic missiles was created using components of the RD-250 engine produced by Yuzhmash. They added that, in their opinion, the deliveries must have been made through Russian territory. Of course, they would say this.

Vasily Kashin, Director of the Center for Comprehensive European and International Studies at the National Research University Higher School of Economics (HSE), told RT that this controversy about North Korea receiving liquid-fuel engines from Yuzhmash remains the only incident officially on record.

“It wasn’t Ukraine sending their engines to North Korea – it was the work of North Korean scientific and technical intelligence in Ukraine that made it all happen. Apparently, the liquid-fuel rocket engines had been acquired there illegally even prior to 2014,” the expert concluded.

Be my guest, or transfer of military technology

At the same time, relations between Kiev and Pyongyang have never been friendly and heartfelt enough to suggest Ukraine’s willingness to provide North Korea with powerful nuclear weapons. However, there is documentary evidence of Ukraine’s corruption-based cooperation with other countries in the nuclear missile field at the turn of the 21st century, which may invite precisely this kind of thinking.

In 1994, Kiev finally discarded the last of its remaining nuclear arsenal, of around 1,000 missiles it had retained after the collapse of the USSR. The plan was to pass half of them on to Russia and to destroy the rest – as part of the US-funded disarmament program.

But in 2005, ex-president of Ukraine Viktor Yushchenko confirmed that the previous administration had sold X-55 cruise missiles capable of carrying a nuclear warhead to Iran and China “through several figureheads,” as he put it. The range of these missiles is 2.5 thousand kilometers, so this scam practically meant an increased threat of nuclear attack for Israel and Japan.

However, it seems that North Korea had other ways of getting what it wanted.

Starting from the 1990s, representatives of North Korea were caught red-handed trying to get hold of Soviet nuclear missile technology on many occasions. Kashin believes Pyongyang has been conducting scientific and technical intelligence in Ukraine for quite a while now.

“According to declassified KGB documents, North Korean scientific and technical intelligence efforts in Ukraine date back to Soviet times. There was a criminal case, for example, involving their agent, a worker of the Arsenal Factory in Kiev, who was caught stealing parts of anti-tank missiles. North Koreans had ample opportunity to get hold of Soviet military technology in the 1990s and early 2000s in Dnepropetrovsk where they were snooping around all the time. And the Ukrainian government was not involved in any of this. There is nothing to confirm that they were selling their technology deliberately, of course. They just took advantage of the gaps in Ukraine’s flawed counter-intelligence system,” Kashin said.

Mikhail Khodarenok, a military analyst and retired colonel, reminded RT about the chaos and anarchy that reigned in post-Soviet Russia and Ukraine, affecting many areas of life in the 1990s.

“Back then, Ukraine saw much of its critically important technology leak out of the country. We can trace Ukrainian influence in both China’s and Iran’s strategic cruise missile arsenals. And it’s not surprising – everyone did their best to survive in those turbulent times. And many things may indeed have been done without the involvement of [the] Ukrainian leadership.”

“But I don’t believe North Koreans were able to steal much. I am inclined to think that, in many cases, it was all based on deals, on mutual agreement. It’s just that the government was not part of it,” Khodarenok concluded.

RT

And 20 years after the Soviet Union collapse, espionage attempts by North Korea continued.

On 12 December 2012, the DPRK became the 10th nation to join the global space club by placing its Kwangmyongsong-3 (or KMS-3) satellite in Earth orbit. It was the same year when a high-profile spy case involving North Korean nationals was investigated in Ukraine.

It resulted in two citizens of North Korea (employees of a trade mission in Belarus) being sentenced to eight years in prison. They were caught trying to buy technical documentation and scientific works containing important R&D results from the staff of the Yuzhnoye Design Office in Ukraine. And they offered to pay a modest fee of $1,000 for every research paper on liquid-fuel engine systems. An unnamed source later informed the Strana.ua web portal that the Koreans had taken a particular interest in the design of the legendary R-36M (or Satan) intercontinental ballistic missile engine. It’s the most powerful missile of its kind.

Hunger and bombs

Another issue that has likely played into the hands of North Korean technology hunters is the ‘brain drain’ phenomenon, with dozens of Soviet engineers fleeing abroad after the Belovezh Accords were signed in 1991, disbanding the USSR.

> The post-Soviet de-industrialization of Ukraine took stable income and career prospects away from dozens of professionals working at the Ukrainian aerospace manufacturer Yuzhmash. So these people were forced to look for other ways to make a living.

Choices were limited. They could either try their luck in the wild post-Soviet labor market (attempting to start a business or becoming a salesperson) or agree to a tempting –albeit questionable in terms of patriotism and legality– offer to help other countries with their nuclear missile programs. 

Many of them found themselves in difficult circumstances –personally and professionally– after the fall of the Soviet Union. It's even believed that some of them went to North Korea, Iran and Pakistan.

Former US Ambassador to Ukraine Carlos Pascual later admitted that the importance of this phenomenon, when top-level specialists lost their jobs, was overlooked. It wasn’t just a matter of their personal turmoil – this was an important factor for the non-proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. 

> The US and EU, however, took some initiatives in the mid-1990s. They funded the Science and Technology Center in Ukraine, an intergovernmental organization that was supposed to make sure that expertise and experience in the area of weapons of mass destruction didn’t leak. 

Executive Director Curtis Bjelajac admitted that there was a point where the center basically gave out money to certain specialists. In the end, millions of dollars were spent on former Soviet engineers and scientists specializing in missile and nuclear technology. The general consensus is that this helped stop the flow of professionals into countries that are toying with dangerous technology. But were there any ‘leaks’?

According to Mikhail Khodarenok, there is an understanding within the community of experts that it was the work of Yuzhmash specialists that helped North Korea develop its missiles.

“You can’t really judge Yuzhmash engineers – everyone tried to survive back then, and those countries paid good money. I think that many went there for work. North Korea would not have made such advances without the expertise in the critical technology.

The Soviet Union also had to borrow – it used Wernher von Braun's research after the war,” Khodarenok said. (Von Braun was a German aerospace engineer and Nazi Party member who later worked in the US — RT).

Creative nuclear weapons

Compared to Western Europe and the US, South Korea has been very reserved in its help to Kiev during this year's crisis, providing mostly moral support and supplying non-lethal military aid. Some are surprised by this reaction. Why doesn’t Seoul do more? Maybe South Korea is concerned with the possibility that the equipment received by Ukraine might someday magically reappear north of the 38th parallel?

Khodarenok thinks that this is unlikely but he finds the theory interesting. He says that the real reason South Korea is not going all in is that “every Russian family owns several things manufactured in South Korea, and the country doesn’t want to lose that market”. However, Seoul may change its stance under pressure from Washington, the expert warns.

Kashin sees the connection between South Korea’s reserved reaction and the North’s nuclear problem, but he finds it elsewhere.

“South Korea knows that if it helps Ukraine, Russia will stop complying with the sanctions against North Korea. Seoul understands that it shouldn’t burn all bridges with Russia, whose military operation in Ukraine was supported by North Korea (one of very few countries). And since Russia’s relations with all developed [sic] countries went south, Moscow might decide to get creative with its North Korea partnership. And nobody wants that – especially not South Korea. Israel, by the way, is guided by the same considerations – it has refused to supply Ukraine with any lethal equipment, because Russia might respond by providing Iran with some unpleasant weapons,” he commented. 

FEATURE
 
 

 

Cyber Security Fundamentals...Offers & Deals from Bleeping Computer ((Prices subject to change))

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An effective firewall is one of your core tools against many online threats, yet IT professionals often need more than a setup manual to get the most from them. This in-depth course on the Palo Alto Networks Cybersecurity Fundamentals (PCCSA) credential will help you not only learn about Palo Alto products but firewalls more generally.

The course was developed in collaboration between iCollege and ITProTV. Both are dedicated to giving IT professionals the self-paced training they need, taught by fellow tech workers. The courses focus on the day-to-day, so you can begin applying what you learn at work immediately.

Although this course is geared towards entry-level IT professionals seeking a Palo Alto Networks Certified Cybersecurity Associate (PCCSA) certification, it's designed to also help more advanced team members pick up useful knowledge. The PCCSA in particular sets the stage for more advanced certifications, including the Palo Alto Networks Certified Network Security Administrator (PCNSA) and Palo Alto Networks Certified Network Security Engineer (PCNSE) exams.

Broken up into 27 lectures across 6.78 hours, the course touches on each aspect of the exam in detail, starting with configuration and maintenance before moving on to foundational skills using the firewall tools. Students will learn how to identify attacks, properly describe them as needed to analysts and others, and what to do when an attack is identified. They'll also look into how systems, networks, and security tools work together to protect all involved, including cloud security approaches. The course is designed to be used as a reference when studying and to brush up as well when needed."

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ZERO-DAY FLAW DISCOVERED AT END OF MAY...Fixed with Microsoft’s Windows update on June 14

Let's continue ---- In conclusion, the gang appears to be growing bigger and more prolific, recruiting talented malware authors to offer their users more “ready to deploy” tools that don’t require experience or coding knowledge. . .Incorporating the Follina-exploiting document reduces the infection friction and increases the rate of successful attacks.

XFiles info-stealing malware adds support for Follina delivery

The XFiles info-stealer malware has added a delivery module that exploits CVE-2022-30190, aka Follina, for dropping the payload on target computers.

The flaw, discovered as a zero-day at the end of May and fixed with Microsoft’s Windows update on June 14, enables the execution of PowerShell commands simply by opening a Word document.

In the case of the XFiles malware, researchers at Cyberint noticed that recent campaigns delivering the malware use Follina to download the payload, execute it, and also create persistence on the target machine.

Exploiting Follina

The malicious document, which most likely reaches the target via spam email, contains an OLE object pointing to an HTML file on an external resource that contains JavaScript code exploiting Follina.

JavaScript code exploiting CVE-2022-30190(Cyberint)

This results in the fetching of a base64-encoded string that contains PowerShell commands to create persistence in the Windows startup directory and execute the malware.

The second-stage module uses the filename “ChimLacUpdate.exe” and includes a hardcoded encrypted shellcode and AES decryption key. It’s decrypted and executed in the same running process via an API call.

The resulting shellcode(Cyberint)

After the infection process has been completed, XFiles begins typical info-stealer malware operations like targeting cookies, passwords, and history stored in web browsers, cryptocurrency wallets, taking screenshots, and looking for Discord and Telegram credentials.

The files are stored locally in newly-created directories and eventually exfiltrated via Telegram, taking advantage of the anonymity in the communications platform.

XFiles expanding

XFiles Reborn operation main page

Cyberint has been following the ‘XFiles Reborn’ operation for a while and notes that the group behind it has expanded by recruiting new members and launching new projects.

One notable recruitment was that of the author of the ‘Whisper Project’, an info-stealer that was quickly gaining traction in the cybercrime underground but was suddenly discontinued when the creator joined XFiles.

One of the new projects launched by the group earlier this year is called the ‘Punisher Miner’, advertised as a highly evasive and stealthy miner supporting Monero, Toncoin, and Ravecoin.

Punisher Miner promotional page

The new mining tool is sold for 500 rubles ($9), which is as much as XFiles charges for one month of renting the info-stealer. . ."

Related Articles:

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Raccoon Stealer is back with a new version to steal your passwords

Eternity malware kit offers stealer, miner, worm, ransomware tools

German automakers targeted in year-long malware campaign

Android malware on the Google Play Store gets 2 million downloads

 

 

>

LIVE NEWS FROM ALJAZEERA

Source:  https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2022/7/2/ukraine-russia-war-live-news

News|Russia-Ukraine war

Ukraine-Russia live news: Ukraine separatists encircle Lysychansk

Andrei Marotchko, a spokesman for the separatist forces, says Lugansk popular militia and Russian forces occupied last strategic heights

Smoke rises from the city of Severodonetsk

Smoke rises from the city of Severodonetsk in the eastern Ukrainian region of Donbas on June [File: Aris Messinis/AFP]
(Al Jazeera)

Ukrainian separatists backed by Russia say they had “completely” encircled the key city of Lysychansk in the eastern Lugansk region.

  • Russian forces have destroyed five Ukrainian army command posts in the Donbas and in the Mykolaiv region with high-precision weapons and also struck three storage sites in the Zaporizhia region, the defence ministry says.
  • The mayor of Ukrainian city Mykolaiv warns residents to stay in shelters as powerful explosions rock the city.
  • Moscow denies targeting civilians in Ukraine with Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov telling reporters that Russian Armed Forces “do not work with civilian targets”.
  • The United States is sending Ukraine two NASAMS surface-to-air missile systems, four additional counter-artillery radars and up to 150,000 rounds of 155mm artillery ammunition as part of its latest weapons packages for Ukraine. 
  • INTERACTIVE_UKRAINE_CONTROL MAP DAY128_July1

    Here are the latest updates:

    Ukraine separatists claim they have encircled Lysychansk

    Ukrainian separatists backed by Russia have said they had “completely” encircled the key city of Lysychansk in the eastern Lugansk region,

    “Today the Lugansk popular militia and Russian forces occupied the last strategic heights, which allows us to confirm that Lysychansk is completely encircled,” Andrei Marotchko, a spokesman for the separatist forces, told the TASS news agency.

    Capturing the city would allow the Russians to push deeper into the wider eastern region of the Donbas, which has become the focus of their offensive since failing to capture Kyiv after launching their military operation in Ukraine in late February.

    Across the Donets river, the Russians captured the neighboring city Severodonetsk last week.

    LIQUID BORDERS: The Visual Culture Wars

    Somewhere in there: The Monster as War Machine, Globalisation, Migration, and the Future of Europe Insiders and Outsiders, Migration and Insecurity Citizenship and Social Inclusion in a Transnational Era, Migrants, Borders and Global Capitalism, and Border Politics From Control to Demolition

     See original image

    Liquid Borders: Migration as Resistance

    Liquid Borders provides a timely and critical analysis of the large-scale migration of people across borders, which has sent shockwaves through the global world order in recent years. In this book, internationally recognized scholars and activists from a variety of fields analyze key issues related to diasporic movements, displacements, exiles, “illegal” migrants, border crossings, deportations, maritime ventures, and the militarization of borders from political, economic, and cultural perspectives. Ambitious in scope, with cases stretching from the Mediterranean to Australia, the US/Mexico border, Venezuela, and deterritorialized sectors in Colombia and Central America, the various contributions are unified around the notion of freedom of movement, and the recognition of the need to think differently about ideas of citizenship and sovereignty around the world. . .

     See original image

    > An exploration of the challenges and rich potential for collaborative film archive and music projects

    FAMLAB IV 2022

    FAMLAB IV is a collaboration between the British Council’s Film + Music programme, the British Film Institute, and Sheffield’s Sensoria festival of film and music. As part of Coventry UK City of Culture 2021, this fourth FAMLAB joins forces to work in partnership with Coventry’s The Tin Music and Arts, and Deliaphonic, an annual celebration of the life and work of Coventry born electronica pioneer, Delia Derbyshire. During the week, composers and artists will take part in a series of workshops composing for archive and screen; there will be public talks from leading artists in the field of film composing, and a public ‘sharing’ event as part of Deliaphonic.

     See original image

    >

    Video for "Liquid Borders" film, sonic explorations
    Oct 3, 2016 · ... public-participatory events, films, installations, and “sound ... liquid borders also marked the ...
    Duration: 24:11
    Posted: Oct 3, 2016

    >

    Visual Culture Wars at the Borders of Contemporary China

    Art, Design, Film, New Media and the Prospects of “Post-West” Contemporaneity

    Über dieses Buch

    This edited collection brings together essays that share in a critical attention to visual culture as a means of representing, contributing to and/or intervening with discursive struggles and territorial conflicts currently taking place at and across the outward-facing and internal borders of the People’s Republic of China. Elucidated by the essays collected here for the first time is a constellation of what might be described as visual culture wars comprising resistances on numerous fronts not only to the growing power and expansiveness of the Chinese state but also the residues of a once pervasively suppressive Western colonialism/imperialism. The present volume addresses visual culture related to struggles and conflicts at the borders of Hong Kong, the South China Sea and Taiwan as well within the PRC with regard the so-called “Great Firewall of China” and differences in discursive outlook between China and the West on the significances of art, technology, gender and sexuality. In doing so, it provides a vital index of twenty-first century China’s diversely conflicted status as a contemporary nation-state and arguably nascent empire. . ."

    READ MORE >> https://www.springerprofessional.de/visual-culture-wars-at-the-borders-of-contemporary-china/19987098

    EVERYTHING OLD IN THE COLD WAR IN NEW AGAIN: NATO's "Evolution Somersault"

    Failures to establish stability by internal interventions in Iraq and Libya (and Afghanistan) are proof of that old strategy today... if it doesn't work why do it all again??

    Madrid summit shows that NATO returned to Cold War-era schemes — Russian diplomat

    According to Alexander Grushko, this U-turn began long before the beginning of Russia’s special military operation in Ukraine, somewhen at the turn of 2012 and 2013, "when NATO passed a principled decision to end its mission in Afghanistan"
    Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander Grushko Russian Foreign Ministry/TASS
    Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander Grushko
    © Russian Foreign Ministry/TASS

    MOSCOW, July 1. /TASS/. The result of the NATO summit in Madrid have demonstrated that the alliance has returned to the Cold War-era military security schemes, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander Grushko said on Friday.

    "I think that the key conclusion we can draw is that in Madrid NATO has completed an evolution somersault in its development after its establishment in 1949 and has returned to its roots, i.e. to the Cold War-era military security schemes," he said at a meeting of the Valdai International al Discussion Club.

    =========================================================================

    On June 16, as part of the business program of the SPIEF-2022, the Valdai Discussion Club held a special session titled Self-sufficiency and cooperation: features of the modern political economy.

    The Valdai Club has emphasised many times in its reports that globalisation, in the form in which it emerged in the 1980s, has ceased to exist. Today we are witnessing two parallel, although in many respects contradictory trends. On the one hand, the destruction of the interconnectedness of the world and the transformation of globalisation, and on the other hand, the need for cooperation even where it is politically impossible to continue it.

    ”The Cold War ended, but it did not end with the signing of a peace treaty with clear and transparent agreements on respecting existing rules or creating new rules and standards. This created the impression that the so-called ‘victors’ in the Cold War had decided to pressure events and reshape the world to suit their own needs and interests.“

    . . .The United States always told its allies: “We have a common enemy, a terrible foe, the centre of evil, and we are defending you, our allies, from this foe, and so we have the right to order you around, force you to sacrifice your political and economic interests and pay your share of the costs for this collective defence, but we will be the ones in charge of it all of course.” In short, we see today attempts in a new and changing world to reproduce the familiar models of global management, and all this so as to guarantee their [the US’] exceptional position and reap political and economic dividends. 

    But these attempts are increasingly divorced from reality and are in contradiction with the world’s diversity. Steps of this kind inevitably create confrontation and countermeasures and have the opposite effect to the hoped-for goals. . ."

    =========================================================================

    According to the Russian diplomat, this U-turn began long before the beginning of Russia’s special military operation in Ukraine, somewhat at the turn of 2012 and 2013, "when NATO passed a principled decision to end its mission in Afghanistan." Notably, the alliance agreed back then that it was not for action in the changed security situation, he added.

    "All of its military interventions, starting from Bosnia, Yugoslavia, Libya, let alone Iraq, although most of the NATO countries also took part, and finally Afghanistan, led to results, to put it mildly, contrary to the expectations. And back then, NATO plunged into a discussion again: if the policy of expansion has largely exhausted its resource, the geopolitical space has been developed, the European Union and NATO have merged to a larger extent in military terms, interventions are void, what else is to be done? And a principle decision was made to move toward giving priority to article 5 of the Washington agreement again and to begin getting prepared to confrontation with a comparable enemy, including a possible high-intensity conflict," Grushko said."

    ========================================================================

    HERE'S THE INTERACTIVE GLOBAL CONFLICT TRACKER
    FROM THE COUNCIL ON FOREIGN RELATIONS
    Farther down is a link that was last updated yesterday January 6, 2020
    This image is from Wednesday, April 13, 2016

    Image result for global conflict tracker animated gif"
    Source: https://sysnica.blogspot.com/2016/04/global-conflict-tracker.html

    Readers might like to note that almost four years later, most of the conflict are ongoing now:
    Explore Conflicts with Critical Impact

     

    Image result for global conflict tracker animated gif"
    Wednesday 13 April 2016
    
    Link to GLOBAL CONFLICT TRACKER
    COUNCIL ON FOREIGN RELATIONS
    Impact on U.S. Interests Scroll down to explore the conflicts:
    Critical
    Significant
    Limited

     

    ========================================================================

    6th Lead Inspector General for Operation Inherent Resolve I Quarterly Report to the United States Congress I April 1, 2021 - June 30, 2021

    Military Combat Operation Inherent Resolve: Operation Inherent Resolve is the U.S. military's operational name for the International military intervention against ISIL, including both a campaign in Iraq and a campaign in Syria, with a closely-related campaign in Libya.  
    Operation Inherent Resolve reached turning point at Ramadi, commander says  | Article | The United States Army
     

    28 June 2017

    Over 8,000 Migrants From Mediterranean Rescued In 48 Hours

    The price of war
    Published on Jun 28, 2017
    Views: 129
    Subscribe to France 24 now:http://f24.my/youtubeEN

    FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7http://f24.my/YTliveEN

    In tonight's edition: over 8,000 migrants have been rescued off the coast of Libya since the start of the week; unrest continues in Morocco's northern Rif region; and political tensions in Democratic Republic of Congo have brought Tout-Puissant Mazembe's football academy to its knees.
    It’s been a busy few days in Libyan waters, with thousands of migrants rescued in 48 hours
    =========================================================================

    "An Empire of Lies" --- Recent examples (last August withdrawal from Afghanistan), elections in Iraq + storming of Libya Parliament

    IRAQ

    LIBYA

    05 July 2019

    Libya’s Civil War is Becoming a Proxy War

    2 Generals who lived and got trained here in the United States - the similarities are striking in both Egypt and Libya are striking. . .
    Published on Jul 4, 2019
    The shooting down of a Turkish drone near Tripoli and the capture of six Turkish sailors by Gen. Haftar's forces reveals the Turkey's and Egypt's involvement on both sides of the civil war. Meanwhile Haftar’s forces are accused of bombing a migration detention center near Tripoli, killing 44 and injuring 130
    Subscribe to our page and support our work at
    https://therealnews.com/donate.

    AFGHANISTAN