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    Блиски исток

    паће

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    Post by паће Wed May 23, 2018 12:52 pm

    bruno sulak wrote:meni rezim u iranu deluje stabilnije od trampovog.

    Па Трамп је само међуфаза у промени режима. Код куће. Следећи има да буде још луђи.


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    Filipenko

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    Post by Filipenko Wed May 23, 2018 12:57 pm

    ....is not the sturdy, stable government that its enablers like to depict. It is a regime that has forfeited its legitimacy, is drowning in corruption, and rests its power on security organs that it fears will prove unreliable in a crunch.


    Šta, kao ovo je Iran, a ne SŠA?
    Anonymous
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    Post by Guest Wed May 23, 2018 1:00 pm

    pa ispod trampa se formira neokon politika uz mestimičnu "dvopartizansku" podršku, koja sluti na "rat svima i svuda". u nekom trenutku tramp će prestati da bude bitan jer se sistem učvrstio nakon "šoka" i ima svoju novu logiku.
    Filipenko

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    Post by Filipenko Wed May 23, 2018 1:13 pm

    Gargantua wrote:pa ispod trampa se formira neokon politika uz mestimičnu "dvopartizansku" podršku, koja sluti na "rat svima i svuda". u nekom trenutku tramp će prestati da bude bitan jer se sistem učvrstio nakon "šoka" i ima svoju novu logiku.


    ...tj. rečima tzv. Pompeja Блиски исток - Page 21 2952840586


    It is a regime that has forfeited its legitimacy, is drowning in corruption, and rests its power on security organs that it fears will prove unreliable in a crunch.
    Nektivni Ugnelj

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    Post by Nektivni Ugnelj Wed May 23, 2018 2:18 pm

    Pompej ili Pompeo?
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    Post by паће Wed May 23, 2018 2:52 pm

    KinderLad wrote:Pompej ili Pompeo?

    Помпеј. Иначе би било Помпеоа :паће:


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    Nektivni Ugnelj

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    Post by Nektivni Ugnelj Wed May 23, 2018 3:25 pm

    Ili "rečima Pompea" Debelo jer  Блиски исток - Page 21 2304934895
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    Post by паће Wed May 23, 2018 3:30 pm

    KinderLad wrote:Ili "rečima Pompea" Debelo jer  Блиски исток - Page 21 2304934895

    Може и тако, али онда да је Италијан и да има нагласак на о, као Ромео.

    Иначе, "речима Помпиоуа" би било најближе домородачком изговору.


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    Post by Nino Quincampoix Wed May 23, 2018 4:18 pm

    KinderLad wrote:Pompej ili Pompeo?

    Блиски исток - Page 21 Fd2999e5afb8f3a945d920109033a642--sailors-calendar
    Anonymous
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    Post by Guest Thu May 24, 2018 1:01 am

    Nektivni Ugnelj

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    Post by Nektivni Ugnelj Thu May 24, 2018 1:11 am

    Meni više nije vest ništa do npr bombardovanja centra Teherana ili tako nečeg...
    Zuper

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    Post by Zuper Thu May 24, 2018 1:24 am

    Ocekivano.
    To je bila cela zamisao haosa koji je Izrael podrzavao u Siriji.
    I danas Izrael podrzava razne islamisticke grupe uz Golansku visoravni kontra SAA.
    Skoro ceo Izrael se snadbeva vodom iz jezera Galilejskog koji se nalazi na ivici Golanske visoravni...
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    Post by Guest Wed Jun 27, 2018 1:31 pm

    Јанош Винету

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    Post by Јанош Винету Thu Jul 05, 2018 6:05 pm

    Miki wrote:Tačno se oseća kad ko ima momentum, evo gledam Ben Šapiro i taj jevrejski gang, kako su se uskopištili po tviteru, žale se da MSM ne pokriva priču dovoljno.
    Блиски исток - Page 21 Watch%20ben%20shapiro%20absolutely%20destroy%20the%20toilet%20at%20buffalo%20wild%20wings%20with%20his%20spicy%20diarrhoea%20for%20israel
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    Post by паће Sun Jul 08, 2018 6:56 pm

    Кад радиш што не треба, ил' га ради како треба ил' немој никако. Некад су кривотворитељи докумената морали да пазе на мастило и папир... данас, на фонтове.

    It all hinged on a document that the Sharif family had produced in an attempt to distance the prime minister from questions about who owned four properties in an upscale part of London.
    The document was purported to be written in February 2006 but court-appointed investigators concluded that it was forged, noting that it used the Calibri font, a Microsoft licensed typeface that was not commercially available at the time.


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    Post by Guest Fri Jul 20, 2018 9:02 pm



    Erős Pista

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    Post by Erős Pista Sat Jul 21, 2018 2:49 am

    Zlo. Njima su otkazale sve kocnice.


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    Post by disident Sun Jul 22, 2018 2:49 am

    https://www.facebook.com/trtworld/videos/2169273533342791/


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    Post by Летећи Полип Sun Jul 22, 2018 2:56 am

    Te zalivske smradije treba popaliti.


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    Post by Guest Fri Aug 10, 2018 12:09 am

    Saudi Arabia is facing an international outcry after at least 29 children were among dozens of civilians killed by a US-backed Saudi-led coalition airstrike that hit a bus in Yemen’s Houthi rebel-held north.

    The attack was the latest coalition bombing raid to hit civilians– previous airstrikes have hit markets, schools and hospitals. Humanitarian workers on the ground said it must shake the world’s conscience about atrocities committed continuing during Yemen’sdeadlocked three-year war.

    Save the Children, quoting its staff on the ground, said that at the time of the attack the children were on a bus heading back to school from a picnic when the driver stopped to get a drink at the market in Dahyan, in Sa’ada governorate.

    The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), one of the few humanitarian institutions helping civilians in war-torn Yemen, said its team at an ICRC-supported hospital in Sa’ada had received the bodies of 29 children, all under 15 years old. It also received 48 wounded people, including 30 children, it said.

    “Under international humanitarian law, civilians must be protected during conflict,” the ICRC tweeted.

    The Houthis’ Al-Masirah TV, quoting the rebel health ministry, reported that 50 people were killed and 77 wounded, “mostly children”, though it was not possible to verify that toll. Al-Masirah broadcast unverified footage of dead and bloodied children, many still carrying their blue Unicef rucksacks, being transferred to a hospital.

    In a statement carried by the official Saudi press agency, the Saudi-led coalition called the strike a “legitimate military action” targeting elements responsible for a Houthi missile attack on the Saudi city of Jizan on Wednesday. “[The airstrikes] conformed to international and humanitarian laws,” the statement said. It accused the Iran-aligned Houthis of using children as human shields.

    The coalition, also backed by the UAE, launched a military intervention in Yemen in 2015 aimed at countering the advances of the Houthi rebels, who are viewed by Riyadh as Iranian proxies, and reinstating the ousted president, Abd Rabbu Mansour Hadi.

    The International Rescue Committee said it was appalled by Thursday’s incident and called for an inquiry.

    The IRC’s Yemen country director, Frank McManus, said: “Today should be the day the world wakes up to the atrocities going on in Yemen … a bus full of school children cannot be viewed as mere collateral damage. Even wars have rules, but rules without consequences mean nothing. If there is any chance of innocent lives, especially those of children, being lost in an attack, that attack should not take place.”

    Unicef’s regional director in the Middle East and North Africa, Geert Cappelaere, asked: “Does the world really need more innocent children’s lives to stop the cruel war on children in Yemen?”

    In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert called for the coalition to investigate the incident.

    “We are certainly concerned about the reports that there was an attack that resulted in the deaths of civilians,” she said. “We call on the Saudi-led coalition to conduct a thorough and transparent investigation into the incident.”
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    Post by boomer crook Fri Aug 10, 2018 12:13 am

    pratite ovo ludilo? MbS brzo i ludo...

    Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Picks a Very Strange Fight with Canada

    Блиски исток - Page 21 Wright-robin

    By Robin Wright
    August 8, 2018

    Блиски исток - Page 21 Wright-SaudiArabia

    Mohammed bin Salman is daring to confront Western nations, including countries that are important to Saudi security and economic development.
    Photograph by Aurelien Morissard / IP3 / Getty
    By social-media standards these days, a tweet sent last Thursday by Canada’s Foreign Minister, Chrystia Freeland, was hardly surprising—or a deviation from what other Western governments have said for years about Saudi Arabia’s egregious human-rights record. Her tweet addressed the case of siblings—Samar Badawi, a women’s-rights activist honored by the Obama Administration as a “woman of courage,” and her brother, Raif, a blogger who has been imprisoned since 2012, after chastising the Saudi monarchy for things like banning Valentine’s Day. Freeland tweeted, “Very alarmed to learn that Samar Badawi, Raif Badawi’s sister, has been imprisoned in Saudi Arabia. Canada stands together with the Badawi family in this difficult time, and we continue to strongly call for the release of both Raif and Samar Badawi.” The Canadian Foreign Ministry followed up with a tweet that called for the release of “all peaceful #humanrights activists” held by the Gulf monarchy. The Canadian Embassy in Riyadh then tweeted the message in Arabic.
    The desert kingdom erupted in fury. Over the weekend, it expelled the Canadian Ambassador, recalled its own envoy, froze all new trade and investment, suspended flights by the state airline to Toronto, and ordered thousands of Saudi students to leave Canada and get their education in other countries. Its Foreign Ministry counter-tweeted, “The Canadian position is an overt and blatant interference in the internal affairs of the Kingdom of #SaudiArabia and is in contravention of the most basic international norms and all the charters governing relations between States.” Further, it issued a warning: “Any further step from the Canadian side in that direction will be considered as acknowledgment of our right to interfere in the Canadian domestic affairs.”
    Canada stood its ground. “Let me be very clear, Canada will always stand up for human rights in Canada and around the world,” Freeland said, in Vancouver, on Monday.
    The flap underscores the volatility—and potentially even the fragility—of the Saudi government under Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the youthful and increasingly autocratic leader, who has been enthusiastically embraced by President Trump and has been consolidating power since his surprise appointment, a year ago. At thirty-two, he is one of the youngest leaders in the Middle East. His ailing father, King Salman, has the final word, but bin Salman rules political, economic, military, and diplomatic affairs day to day. M.B.S., as he’s widely known, has been increasingly intolerant of criticism at home and—now—from major foreign powers, according to Bruce Riedel, a former C.I.A., Pentagon, and National Security Council staffer who is now at the Brookings Institution. “He is very thin-skinned,” Riedel told me.
    President Trump’s support, and a personal connection to Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, may have caused M.B.S. to feel that he has impunity to do as he pleases on the global stage. Trump’s first stop on his inaugural foreign trip as President was in Saudi Arabia, a visit orchestrated—with much fanfare—by the crown prince. Unlike the government in Canada, the Trump Administration has shied away from invoking human-rights issues with the Saudis, despite a graphic State Department report, released in April, detailing the sweeping scope of violations in the kingdom. The section on Saudi Arabia in the State Department’s 2017 Human Rights Report runs long—more than fifty pages. It cites the most significant abuses as torture; arbitrary arrest; unlawful killings; execution without requisite due process; restrictions on freedom of expression, religion, and peaceful assembly; trafficking in persons; violence and discrimination against women; criminalization of same-sex sexual activity; and the inability of its people to choose a government through free and fair elections.
    Jamal Khashoggi, a former Saudi editor, now in exile in Washington, said that the crown prince has already become more authoritarian than any of the previous six kings who have ruled since 1953, when Ibn Saud, the founder of modern Saudi Arabia, died. “Today, he is in charge of Saudi Arabia. He thinks everyone should treat him as such,” Khashoggi told me.
    During the past year, M.B.S. has run an intensive charm offensive in the United States and Europe—courting political leaders, tech titans, celebrities, society names, and academics. At the same time, the crown prince is behind the most aggressive foreign policy since Ibn Saud conquered rival tribes on the Arabian Peninsula to create the current kingdom. The gambits in international affairs by M.B.S., who is the first member of the royal family’s third generation to be chosen as heir, have been widely criticized.
    “The Canadian campaign is the latest in a series of disastrous foreign-policy initiatives from M.B.S.,” Riedel told me. In 2015, in the role of Saudi Defense Minister, the crown prince launched a costly military intervention in Yemen, in turn producing the worst humanitarian crisis in the world. Twenty-two million Yemenis—eighty per cent of the population—now depend on humanitarian aid for daily survival. Sixteen million people lack access to fresh water. Eight million are believed to be on the brink of starvation. Yemen is also suffering the largest outbreak of cholera in recent history—more than a million cases.

    Video From The New Yorker


    The Immigrants Deported to Death and Violence


    In 2017, M.B.S. masterminded the air, sea, and land blockade of Qatar, a small neighboring sheikdom, which the crown prince reportedly wanted to invade. A few months later, M.B.S. summoned Lebanon’s Prime Minister, Saad Hariri, and pressured him to resign—on Saudi television.
    “They are all hasty and uncalculated decisions,” Khashoggi told me. “The crown prince is a poor decision-maker with a track record of incompetence,” Riedel said.
    M.B.S. is also daring to confront Western nations, including countries important to Saudi security and economic development. In 2015, the year his ailing father ascended the throne, Saudi Arabia recalled its Ambassador to Sweden—also in a dispute about the case of the human-rights activist Raif Badawi. The young blogger had been sentenced to ten years in prison, a thousand lashes, and a fine of more than a quarter million dollars for mocking the kingdom’s rigid social restrictions on his Saudi Liberal Network Web site. Saudi officials charged the father of three with undermining national security. The lashes were supposed to be spread out—fifty per week for twenty weeks—though they were suspended after the first round. Sweden’s Foreign Minister, Margot Wallström, called the sentence “medieval” and suggested that the Royal House of Saud was a dictatorship.
    Tensions deepened with Germany, too, in November, after Sigmar Gabriel, then the Foreign Minister, criticized “adventurism” in the Middle East in remarks that the kingdom took as a reference to its intervention in Yemen and as a suggestion that the Lebanese Prime Minister was being held in Saudi Arabia against his will. In January, Germany suspended arms exports to the Saudis, citing the war in Yemen. In May, M.B.S. decreed that no more government contracts were to be awarded to German companies, Der Spiegel reported.
    The same impulsive anger triggered the response to the initial Canadian tweet—and translation into Arabic—of the Foreign Minister’s message, Khashoggi said. “It is the pattern of behavior that has been dictating Saudi foreign policy since M.B.S. came to power,” he said. “It was taken as an offense on M.B.S.’s own turf. He saw it as an insult to his ability to control the Saudi masses.”
    M.B.S.’s motive may also be part of a strategy to challenge nations that advocate a U.N.-led inquiry into Saudi abuses in Yemen, including air strikes that killed civilians. “Timing of Saudi crown prince’s lashing out at Canada for protesting his repression suggests his real aim is to dissuade governments next month from continuing the UN investigation of Saudi-led war crimes in Yemen,” Ken Roth, the executive director of Human Rights Watch, tweeted, on Tuesday. “Time to redouble support for the UN probe.” The U.N. General Assembly, attended by dozens of heads of state, opens next month in New York.
    The crown prince’s actions belie the image he is trying to create. He has grandiose plans for diversifying the kingdom economically, beyond the oil industry, but since last fall the government has arrested dozens of leading business figures. He has talked about “moderate Islam” even as some moderate clerics have been detained. And, as he opened the way, this month, for women to be allowed to drive, his government arrested several women’s-rights activists, including the lawyer Samar Badawi. She has challenged cultural restrictions, including rules that require women to get a male guardian’s permission to get advanced education, a job, or a passport to travel abroad.
    Unlike Trump, Canadian leaders have consistently supported the Badawi family. In 2013, a year after Raif Badawi’s arrest, Prime Minister Stephen Harper, of the Conservative Party, granted Badawi’s wife and children political asylum in Canada. This summer, under Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, of the Liberal Party, Canada granted them citizenship. After Canada called for the release Saudi Arabia’s peaceful activists, Marie-Pier Baril, a spokesperson for the Foreign Ministry, vowed, “Our government will never hesitate to promote these values.”


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    And Will's father stood up, stuffed his pipe with tobacco, rummaged his pockets for matches, brought out a battered harmonica, a penknife, a cigarette lighter that wouldn't work, and a memo pad he had always meant to write some great thoughts down on but never got around to, and lined up these weapons for a pygmy war that could be lost before it even started
    Filipenko

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    Post by Filipenko Fri Aug 10, 2018 8:51 am

    “We call on the Saudi-led coalition to conduct a thorough and transparent investigation into the incident.”


    Pa jebem vam mamu da vam jebem li vam mamu jebem da jebem mamu li vam jebem da vam jebem, govna pogana
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    Post by Erős Pista Fri Aug 24, 2018 4:30 am

    Without the older brother he worshipped, Netanyahu seems to have been lost in the wilderness of the American 1960s. At Cheltenham High, he was known as Ben, not Bibi. He played on the soccer team and was a member of the chess society but mostly kept to himself. He had little in common with liberal Jewish classmates fired up by the civil rights movement. A reader of Ayn Rand, he was preoccupied with the evils of communism, not the evils of racism.
    https://www.lrb.co.uk/v40/n16/adam-shatz/the-sea-is-the-same-sea


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    Post by Летећи Полип Fri Aug 24, 2018 8:44 pm

    Saudijci pobili hrpu dece, opet.


    http://www.nspm.rs/hronika/jemen-u-vazdusnim-napadima-saudijske-koalicije-ubijeno-30-ljudi-medju-njima-22-dece.html


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    Post by Filipenko Sat Aug 25, 2018 8:54 am

    Dakle, uvažili su zabrinutost koju je Angela Merkel izjavila povodom "aktivnosti Irana u Jemenu" i pobili 8 odraslih ovaj put, da ne bude da su samo deca.

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