(05-12-2023, 11:28 AM)Tee tiong huat Wrote: [ -> ]Israel's military has ordered the evacuation of a fifth of the main city in southern Gaza, as it expands its ground offensive against Hamas. A map showed six northern and central areas of Khan Younis where an estimated 167,000 people needed to leave.
Witnesses also reported seeing tanks to the east, and a doctor said a local hospital was overwhelmed by casualties. In Gaza City, an unconfirmed report says 50 people were killed when Israeli air strikes hit two schools.
Reuters news agency has said that the strikes are still to be independently verified and that the Hamas-run health ministry could not be reached for comment. The Israeli army said it was looking into the report.
Many of Gaza's 2.3 million residents are sheltering in the south after being previously ordered to leave the north.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-67614711
Israel has assembled a system of large pumps it could use to flood Hamas’s vast network of tunnels under Gaza Strip with seawater, a tactic that could destroy their tunnels & drive fighters from their underground refuge but also threaten Gaza’s water supply, U.S. officials said.
The Israel Defense Forces finished assembling large seawater pumps roughly one mile north of the Al-Shati refugee camp around the middle of last month. Each of at least five pumps can draw water from the Mediterranean Sea and move thousands of cubic meters of water per hour into the tunnels, flooding them within weeks.
IDF says in a joint operations carried with Shin Bet, reservists of 551st Brigade and Shayetet 13 commandos raided the Hamas general security headquarters in Jabaliya, and found weapons, various equipment and intelligence. As Air Force continued to carry out strikes on Gaza, with IDF saying that yesterday it struck group of elite Hamas Nukhba operatives during joint operation with the Paratroopers Brigade. Troops also found cache of rockets, according to IDF with Navy also carried out dozens of strikes along Gaza coast, aiding ground forces, the IDF adds.
(03-12-2023, 10:35 PM)Tee tiong huat Wrote: [ -> ]As reported by Iran Observer on November 28, 2023, Iran released footage showcasing the monitoring of the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower aircraft carrier by unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) as it transited the Strait of Hormuz. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) issued a specific warning to the United States, focusing on advising against the takeoff of any aircraft on board the carrier during its passage through the strategic strait.
This Iranian action is reported to have violated safety precautions outlined in a daily Notice to Airmen (NOTAM), directing both manned and unmanned aircraft to maintain a distance greater than 10 nautical miles from the aircraft carrier to ensure the safety of military and civilian aviation.
This incident occurred amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, as well as attacks against US coalition forces in Iraq and Syria attributed to Iranian-backed proxy groups.
This drone encounter follows previous instances where US naval ships intercepted and neutralized missiles fired from Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen. USS Carney (DDG-64) recently shot down a Houthi missile over the Red Sea, marking the second such incident involving the ship. Additionally, USS Thomas Hudner (DDG-116) of the Gerald R. Ford Carrier Strike Group has intercepted Houthi drones in the Red Sea on multiple occasions, with incidents reported on November 22 and November 15, 2023.
https://navyrecognition.com/index.php/na...e_vignette
https://navyrecognition.com/index.php/na...e_vignette
US threatens ‘appropriate responses’ after Iran-backed assault on commercial ships. While the attacks were carried out by
Houthis, the United States has “every reason to believe” they were “fully enabled by Iran.”
Following attacks, U.S. warship operating nearby responded to distress calls from commercial ships, shooting down three aerial drones over the course of the day, U.S. Central Command said in a release.
Defense Dept officials said they did not believe militants were targeting U.S. warship — the Arleigh Burke-class destroyer USS Carney — the string of attacks on the commercial vessels “represent a direct threat to international commerce and maritime security,” The language is an explicit threat to Iran that U.S. may retaliate to attacks is latest in recent weeks.
While Iran-backed militants keen to attacked U.S. troops in Iraq and Syria at least 74 times since Oct. 17. Separately on Sunday U.S. military conducted strike in northern Iraq, killing multiple Iran-backed fighters, according to U.S. official, who was granted anonymity to speak ahead of an announcement.
The US airforces, fighters were observed and on air launching missiles rocket attacking, likely in killing a few Iraq and Syria multiple Iran-backed fighters, the U.S. hit the targets before they could launch any weapons.
https://www.politico.com/news/2023/12/03...s-00129819
US President Joe Biden said on Tuesday (Dec 5) that Hamas had repeatedly raped women and mutilated their bodies during its Oct 7 assault on southern Israel, citing survivors and witnesses of the attacks. Speaking at a political fundraiser in Boston, Biden said accounts of "unimaginable cruelty" had been shared over past few weeks.
https://www.channelnewsasia.com/world/bi...lt-3967921
US military official confirms ‘self-defense strike’ in Iraq in which 5 said killed. A “self-defense strike” was carried out in northern Iraq against a drone launch site, US military official says, after an air strike killed five pro-Iranian paramilitary operatives there. “lt took place “in vicinity of Kirkuk” targeted “an imminent threat,” he adds.
(05-12-2023, 09:47 PM)Tee tiong huat Wrote: [ -> ]The Three H are asking, all is back by Iran: 1st is Hamas to go (1st to ask for it), 2nd is Houthis also is asking for it...?. and 3rd is or last one is Hezbollah...they are smarter. 
Dec. 3: Shin Bet chief says Israel to take out Hamas leaders ‘in
Lebanon,
Turkey,
Qatar’
IDF begins ground op in southern Gaza * Gallant meets freed hostage, vows to bring her son home * Missiles fired at Israel from Gaza,
Lebanon * 2 more IDF soldiers killed in battle
https://www.timesofisrael.com/liveblog-d...st_popular&utm_source=website&utm_medium=article_end&utm_content=3
Israel-Hamas war: Hamas’s Gaza leader is‘hiding underground’, IDF says Yahya Sinwar, a top Hamas leader is hiding underground. Netanyahu announced forces ‘encircling’ his house.
It’s only a matter of time before we get him,” the Israeli prime minister said on Wednesday. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said Sinwar, who Israeli officials have described as the architect of the 7 October attacks, is hiding underground. A senior Netanyahu adviser described the operation as a “symbolic victory”.
Israeli and Hamas are fighting house-to-house battles along the length of the Gaza Strip. As the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) have been fighting their way through badly bomb-damaged urban areas in northern and southern Gaza, Hamas has increasingly relied on improvised bombs to inflict casualties and slow down the assault. The focal points of the fighting over the past two days have been the Jabalia refugee camp and the Shuja’iyya district in northern Gaza, and Khan Younis and Bani Suheila in the south.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2...ounis-news
(04-11-2023, 08:26 AM)Huliwang Wrote: [ -> ]Teeth, IF O! IF....
So what will happen if Hamas or Iran somehow sink one of the US carrier currently in the Mediterranean? 
Navy created its Independence-class ships out of desperation as an interim measure to ensure its sailors & pilots were better equipped to fight in remainder of World War II. Like in WW2..
President Franklin D. Roosevelt recognized the importance of expanding America’s naval air power. Several militaries began toying with the concept of launching aircraft from ships in the early 20th century. Notably, the British converted merchant ships into carriers during the First World War. The U.S. followed suit and made its first attempt to convert the large Jupiter vessel into the Navy’s first-ever aircraft carrier. Although the USS Langley was slow and had limited hangar capacity, she represented future possibilities for America’s naval air power.
With tensions ramping up across globe, U.S. called a naval disarmament conference in 1921, resulting Washington Treaty sharply curtailed sea-based construction of its signere major Allies of WWI that agreed to use this treaty for preventative war measures include British Empire, U.S., France, Italy, and Japan. By the next decade, however, both Japan and Italy renounced the treaty, and implementing naval arms limitations became increasingly difficult for the other signatories.
Prior to the outbreak of the Second World War, then-president Roosevelt proposed to expedite the U.S. Navy’s capabilities. At the time, a former Assistant Secretary of the Navy asserted that no new and enhanced aircraft carriers were expected to enter service until 1944 at the earliest. In fact, the vessels ordered under the Two-Ocean Navy Act of 1940 included large numbers of new carriers, however, the pace for their development was stinted by the service’s additional need for battleships. With this in mind, Roosevelt called for converting some of the Navy’s existing cruisers into these floating airports.
After the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor in 1941, the need for additional carriers became prioritized. Although officials understood that quickly converting existing boats into carriers would deem them less capable than desired, the need for these types of vessels was pressing.
https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/u...ake-207750
(07-12-2023, 11:12 PM)Tee tiong huat Wrote: [ -> ]Navy created its Independence-class ships out of desperation as an interim measure to ensure its sailors & pilots were better equipped to fight in remainder of World War II. Like in WW2..
President Franklin D. Roosevelt recognized the importance of expanding America’s naval air power. Several militaries began toying with the concept of launching aircraft from ships in the early 20th century. Notably, the British converted merchant ships into carriers during the First World War. The U.S. followed suit and made its first attempt to convert the large Jupiter vessel into the Navy’s first-ever aircraft carrier. Although the USS Langley was slow and had limited hangar capacity, she represented future possibilities for America’s naval air power.
With tensions ramping up across globe, U.S. called a naval disarmament conference in 1921, resulting Washington Treaty sharply curtailed sea-based construction of its signere major Allies of WWI that agreed to use this treaty for preventative war measures include British Empire, U.S., France, Italy, and Japan. By the next decade, however, both Japan and Italy renounced the treaty, and implementing naval arms limitations became increasingly difficult for the other signatories.
Prior to the outbreak of the Second World War, then-president Roosevelt proposed to expedite the U.S. Navy’s capabilities. At the time, a former Assistant Secretary of the Navy asserted that no new and enhanced aircraft carriers were expected to enter service until 1944 at the earliest. In fact, the vessels ordered under the Two-Ocean Navy Act of 1940 included large numbers of new carriers, however, the pace for their development was stinted by the service’s additional need for battleships. With this in mind, Roosevelt called for converting some of the Navy’s existing cruisers into these floating airports.
After the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor in 1941, the need for additional carriers became prioritized. Although officials understood that quickly converting existing boats into carriers would deem them less capable than desired, the need for these types of vessels was pressing.
https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/u...ake-207750
A total of nine cruisers were converted into carriers in the Independence-class. Like the Navy previously feared, the new ships possessed several key shortcomings. The aviation facilities aboard these vessels were tiny and their smaller flight decks made it very challenging for pilots to land aircraft upon.
Nonetheless, these carriers entered service alongside the first of the Navy’s Essex-class carriers in 1943. The Independence (CV/CVL-22) was the first to serve the Navy as a small aircraft carrier, followed by Princeton (CV/CVL-23), Belleau Wood (CV/CVL-24), Cowpens (CV/CVL-25), Monterey (CV/CVL-26), Langley (CV/CVL-27), Cabot (CVL-28), Bataan (CVL-29) and San Jacinto (CVL-30).
F4U-4 Corsair fighters over Hungnam to support evacuation efforts of the American and South Korean troops being shipped to the southern Pusan perimeter. Following this evacuation effort, the carrier launched fighters to pursue reconnaissance and close air support missions.
The USS Cabot also underwent wartime modernizations in the 1950s to retain an edge over competitors. In 1967, the carrier became the Spanish Navy’s aircraft carrier where it would serve for more than two decades.
The re-emergence of USS Independence-class ships during the Korean War was short-lived, and by the early 1970s, all but the USS Cabot were decommissioned. Since the quick conversion of the interim Independence class, the U.S. Navy has all but perfected its carrier capabilities and functions.
Today, the Navy’s Ford-class and Nimitz-class ships are considered by many to represent the best aircraft carriers across the globe.
https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/u...ake-207750
The Russian air force’s main helicopter base, in Chaplynka 25 miles south of the Dnipro, soon would be well within range of Ukrainian drones and rocket-launchers. To protect the rotorcraft, the Russians scattered them to smaller, hidden bases farther from the front.
Ukrainians are finding, and striking, those bases. with shortage of deep-strike weapons could curtail the raids damage a handful of well-aimed missiles can inflict on flimsy helicopters is startling, shortly after receiving a batch of around 20 old M39 rockets from U.S. Army stocks back in the fall, Ukrainian army fired several of the two-ton,
100-mile-range rockets @Russian helicopter bases in
Berdyansk and Luhansk, destroying or badly damaging nearly two dozen helicopters.
Each M39 scatters a thousand grenade-size bomblets, any one of which can disable a delicate rotorcraft. To mitigate risk in south, the Russian air force rehomed some its Chaplynka-based helicopters in
Strilkove, a resort town on the
Arabat Spit near
Crimea, a hundred miles from Dnipro front line.
Analysis group Frontelligence Insight scrutinized satellite imagery & found evidence of perhaps 20 helicopters operating from fenced-in pad inside the beach resort. “The evacuation & relocation of
Chaplynka air base ... exemplifies Russian necessity to establish new concealed locations due to concerns about potential targeting,” Frontelligence Insight noted...
https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidaxe/20...e0eb4e2606
(05-12-2023, 09:47 PM)Tee tiong huat Wrote: [ -> ]The Three H are asking, all is back by Iran: 1st is Hamas to go (1st to ask for it), 2nd is Houthis also is asking for it...?. and 3rd is or last one is Hezbollah...they are smarter. 
Gaza flooding coming soon...
https://youtu.be/cob3fctCbgs?si=bV4oGHwYdl0M5b11
(09-12-2023, 04:04 PM)Tee tiong huat Wrote: [ -> ]Gaza flooding coming soon...
https://youtu.be/cob3fctCbgs?si=bV4oGHwYdl0M5b11
According to The Wall Street Journal(WSJ), the Israeli Defence Forces finished assembling at least five pumps just north of the Al-Shati refugee camp last month that could each "move thousands of cubic metres of water per hour" from the Mediterranean Sea into the tunnels. And images released by the IDF yesterday "appear to show scores of Israeli soldiers setting up a series of black pipes" on Gaza's beaches, the Daily Mail reported.
French ship downs two drones amid warning from Huthi rebels. French frigate shot down two drones in Red Sea that were heading towards it from the coast of Yemen. Sunday interception and destruction of these two identified threats were carried out late on Sat/Sunday by frigate operates in the Red Sea, interceptions happened at 2030GMT and 2230GMT, were 110km (68 miles) from the Yemeni coast.
Agence France-Presse reports Yemen’s Iran-backed Huthi rebels threatened on Saturday to attack any vessels heading to Israeli ports unless food and medicine were allowed into the besieged Gaza Strip, latest warning comes amid heightened tensions in Red Sea and surrounding waters following a series of maritime attacks by Huthi rebels since the start of the Israel-Gaza war on 7 October.
Huthis said they “will stop all passage ships heading to Zionist” if humanitarian aid is not allowed into Hamas-ruled Gaza, they have recently attacked ships & claim have direct links to Israel, but their latest threat expands the scope of their targets.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2...-situation
(15-10-2023, 02:25 PM)cityhantam Wrote: [ -> ]Total = 11
But most are queuing up for major service and maintenance.
Battleship USS Texas will remain in drydock for restoration until early 2024 – at least. The day,
USS Texas a
100 year old U.S.
battleship with alongside British cruiser Glasgow, were positioned
12,000 yards offshore in Omaha Western fire support lane to support Allied troops landing in
Normandy, the Texas fired 255
14-inch shells during the bombardment. After war, in 1948 WW2, Texas was decommissioned after more than three decades of service.
https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/u...ack-207794
The Jap bigest battleship,
Yamato,
greatest battleship in the world (72,000 tons, with nine 18.1-inch [460-millimetre] guns), which was sent out on a suicidal mission with only enough fuel for the single outward voyage and without sufficient air cover. The Japanese hoped the
Which Japanese battleship was bigger than Yamato? Is Musashi -- To claim that Musashi was the most powerful battleship ever built would court needless controversy, but she was by most accounts the largest (very marginally larger than her sister, HIJMS Yamato).Yamato might finish off the…17 Oct 2023. But
Which Japanese battleship was bigger than Yamato?
Musashi...To claim that Musashi was the most powerful battleship ever built would court needless controversy, but she was by most accounts the largest (very marginally larger than her sister, HIJMS Yamato).
(10-12-2023, 09:24 PM)Tee tiong huat Wrote: [ -> ]The Jap bigest battleship, Yamato, greatest battleship in the world (72,000 tons, with nine 18.1-inch [460-millimetre] guns), which was sent out on a suicidal mission with only enough fuel for the single outward voyage and without sufficient air cover. The Japanese hoped the
Which Japanese battleship was bigger than Yamato? Is Musashi -- To claim that Musashi was the most powerful battleship ever built would court needless controversy, but she was by most accounts the largest (very marginally larger than her sister, HIJMS Yamato).Yamato might finish off the…17 Oct 2023. But
Which Japanese battleship was bigger than Yamato?
Musashi...To claim that Musashi was the most powerful battleship ever built would court needless controversy, but she was by most accounts the largest (very marginally larger than her sister, HIJMS Yamato).
FLASHPOINTS on the HIJMS Musashi has an important lesson to teach us on military obsolescence. The Musashi’s sister ship, the Yamato, nearing completion in 1941.
Credit: to Microsoft, appears now to have found wreck of HIJMS Musashi. To claim Musashi was most powerful battleship ever built would court needless controversy, but was most accounts the largest (very marginally larger than her sister,
HIJMS Yamato), sinking of
HIJMS Musashi in October 1944 made depressingly clear what many observers had suspected since 1941, and even as early as 1920s: sufficient numbers of committed carrier aircraft could sink a battleship, even when battleship carried a heavy anti-aircraft armament and could maneuver at speed. But a more careful look at story offers some insights into how we understand the relationship between military innovation and “
obsolescence.”
In one telling, sinking of Musashi was the final answer to the challenge that Billy Mitchell made to the utility of warships in the early 1920s. American level bombers sank the hulk German
battleship Ostfriesland in July 1921, leading airpower advocates to claim that battleship, and really all naval vessels become “
obsolete.” Taranto and Pearl Harbor, where carrier aircraft sank battleships at anchor, were part of this story, but an even more important milestone was the sinking of HMS Repulse and HMS Prince of Wales, under steam, by Japanese aircraft on December 10, 1941.
(01-12-2023, 03:30 PM)Tee tiong huat Wrote: [ -> ]Houthis another fool who want to follow and howlao (SHOW OFF) to US ... Big Grin
The helicopter-borne Houthi attack on an Israel-linked ship in the Red Sea highlights the danger now lurking in one of the world’s key shipping routes as Israel-Hamas war rages, as well as the rebels’ tactics mirroring those of its chief sponsor, Iran
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world...50971.html
Israel ready to act against Houthi rebels if international community fails to, national security adviser says. Israel is prepared to act against efforts by Houthi rebels in Yemen to disrupt shipping in the Red Sea if the international community fails to do so, Israeli National Security Adviser Tzachi Hanegbi said Saturday.
Israel is giving the world some time to organize in order to prevent this but if there isn’t to be a global arrangement, because it is a global issue, we will act in order to remove this naval siege,” Hanegbi said.
The Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen are a Shia political and military organization that have been fighting a civil war against a Saudi Arabia-backed coalition since 2014.
https://www.cnn.com/2023/12/09/middleeas...index.html
(26-11-2023, 09:01 PM)Tee tiong huat Wrote: [ -> ]More Video from IDF releases CCTV and more video on Hamas Tunnels warfare for Israelis to War on....

https://youtu.be/rn9FdAsKITg?si=a9Xu_j8vmyTQsntp
few weeks ago, KAN reported that Sinwar and the commander of Hamas's al-Qassam Brigades, Mohammed Deif, were believed to be hiding in Khan Yunis in southern Gaza and report came as IDF continued its operations through out the Gaza Strip, intensifying strikes in Khan Yunis and other areas of southern Gaza.
https://www.jpost.com/breaking-news/article-777371
(05-12-2023, 04:23 PM)Tee tiong huat Wrote: [ -> ]US threatens ‘appropriate responses, as Iran-backed assault on commercial ships attacks by Houthis, the U.S. has “every reason to believe” they were “fully enabled by Iran.”
Following attacks, U.S. warship operating nearby responded to distress calls from commercial ships, shooting down three aerial drones over course of the day, U.S.
Defense Dept officials said they did not believe militants were targeting U.S. warship — Arleigh Burke-class destroyer USS Carney, the attacks on commercial vessels represent a direct threat to international and maritime security, the language may see U.S. retaliate to attacks in latest weeks.
Iran-backed militants keen to attacked U.S. troops in Iraq and Syria at least 74 times since Oct. 17. Separately on Sunday U.S. military conducted strike in northern Iraq, killing multiple Iran-backed fighters. U.S. who was granted anonymity to speak ahead of an announcement.
The US airforces, fighters were observed and on air launching missiles rocket attacking, likely in killing a few Iraq and Syria multiple Iran-backed fighters, the U.S. hit the targets before they could launch any weapons.
https://www.politico.com/news/2023/12/03...s-00129819
On Saturday, Houthis said they would target all ships heading to Israel, regardless of their nationality, and warned international shipping companies against dealing with Israeli. STRINDA had loaded vegetable oil and biofuels inMalaysia and was headed for Venice, Italy.
Houthis rules much of Yemen attacks to show support for Palestinians and has vowed to continue till Israel stops its offensive on Gaza Strip - more than 1,000 miles from Houthi seat of power in Sanaa. As U.S. AC-130 gunship already airborne on region spotted militants launch aforementioned close-range ballistic missiles, U.S. AC-130 gunship want on action. The Gunship crew tracked attackers vehicle & struck back, killing several of them, officials said.
They are one of several groups back by Iran-aligned "Axis of Resistance" that have been taking aim at Israeli and US targets.
https://www.channelnewsasia.com/world/ye...er-3982146
Here’s what we know: Monday’s strike on a Norwegian tanker was militia’s latest flex on the fringes of Israel-Hamas war.
Once a scrappy tribal group no more.
Now Houthis hold what analysts say, are many more missiles and can attacks ship, Yemen’s Houthis gain regional clout. higher aspirations.
AND Higher Aspirations is .ove...
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2023/12/12/...a-war-news
Israel-Gaza war live: divisions between US and Israel emerge as UN overwhelmingly votes for ceasefire. Joe Biden tells Israel its ‘indiscriminate’ bombing of civilians is hurting international support
Meanwhile. The UN refugee chief has said he foresees further displacement in the Middle East due to the conflict in Gaza the events occurred in Israel and Gaza since
7 October are outside mandate of UNHCR,” “Tragically, however, we foresee more civilian deaths and suffering and further displacement threatens the region.”
In its latest update, UN agency for Palestine, UNRWA, stated “almost 1.9 million people in Gaza, or nearly 85% of population, are estimated to be internally displaced, including people who have been displaced multiple times”.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2...-palestine
(05-12-2023, 03:50 PM)Tee tiong huat Wrote: [ -> ]Israel has assembled a system of large pumps it could use to flood Hamas’s vast network of tunnels under Gaza Strip with seawater, a tactic that could destroy their tunnels & drive fighters from their underground refuge but also threaten Gaza’s water supply, U.S. officials said.
The Israel Defense Forces finished assembling large seawater pumps roughly one mile north of the Al-Shati refugee camp around the middle of last month. Each of at least five pumps can draw water from the Mediterranean Sea and move thousands of cubic meters of water per hour into the tunnels, flooding them within weeks.
Israel-Gaza live updates: Israeli commander among 10 killed overnight, IDF says
Nine troops died in a single incident, an ambush in northern Gaza, IDF said.
Latest headlines:
IDF commander among 10 killed overnight, IDF says. As Israel pumping seawater into some Gaza tunnels
Biden says Netanyahu needs to 'strengthen' and 'change' the Israeli govt. He said to meet with family members of American hostages.
In Gaza Strip, at least 18,400 people have been killed and more than 50,000 others have been wounded by Israeli forces since Oct-7, according to figures released by Gaza Hamas-run Ministry of Health and Hamas terrorism media news.
https://abcnews.go.com/International/liv...=105538785
(05-12-2023, 03:50 PM)Tee tiong huat Wrote: [ -> ]Israel has assembled a system of large pumps it could use to flood Hamas’s vast network of tunnels under Gaza Strip with seawater, a tactic that could destroy their tunnels & drive fighters from their underground refuge but also threaten Gaza’s water supply, U.S. officials said.
Israel Defense Forces finished assembling large seawater pumps roughly one mile north of Al-Shati refugee camp middle of last month. Each at least five pumps can draw water from Mediterranean Sea & thousands of cubic meters of water per hour into the tunnels, flooding them within weeks.
Israel Begins Pumping Seawater Into Hamas’s Tunnels, one of several techniques aimed at destroying network underground Hamas’s terrorists operations by pumping into Hamas’s vast build complex of tunnels in Gaza.
The operations to flood the tunnels with water from Mediterranean is to win an early stage, is one of several techniques Israel is using to try to clear and destroy the tunnels and not to kill terrorist,
as 10 service members is ambush overnight, including a high-ranking officer, and nine troops died in a single ambush incident.
(05-12-2023, 04:42 PM)Tee tiong huat Wrote: [ -> ]Tehran's collapsed nuclear deal with world powers who provides Houthis with a negotiation lever?? in much the same way Hamas' taking of some 240 hostages in their Oct. 7 attack on Israel did. (huat arhh, Houthis another fool who want to follow N they wanted to back Iran to fight US...fight arhh. howlao (SHOW OFF) to US)
Now Saudi media says Israel confirmed strike on Yemen. Al-Hadath says Thursday strike targets missile, UAV storage in Sana'a, Houthis deny report explosion in capital caused by old bombs left from previous fighting? threaten increased attacks on Israeli targets.
Will, a American AC-130 gunship already airborne on region spotted a group of militants launch on aforementioned close-range ballistic missiles, the U.S. AC-130 gunship want on to action. The Gunship crew tracked attackers their vehicle & struck back, killing several of them, according to U.S. officials.
https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/us-gunsh...=105070277
Huat Arhh...To Houthis another fool who want to follow N howlao (SHOW OFF), they wanted to back Iran. This time Israel is showing (Iran) Houthis. They deny report explosion in capital is caused by old bombs left fm previous fighting?
The shortest distance (air line) between Yemen and Jerusalem is 1,365.77 mi (2,198.00 km).
Houthis say they hit Norwegian tanker
Group says STRINDA was carrying crude to Israel...Owner says ship was headed to Italy with biofuel feedstock...DUBAI/OSLO Dec 12 (Reuters) - Yemen's Houthis said on Tuesday they hit a Norwegian commercial tanker with a missile in their latest protest against Israel's bombardment of Gaza, underlining the risks of a conflict that has shaken the Middle East.
The Iran-aligned group attacked the tanker, the STRINDA, because it was delivering crude oil to an Israeli terminal and after its crew ignored all warnings, Houthi military spokesperson Yehia Sarea said in a statement.