Pentagon admits 2023 airstrike killed civilian, not al Qaeda leader Welcome to The Hill’s Defense & NatSec newsletter {beacon} Defense &National Security Defense &National Security The Big Story A year later, Pentagon admits ... 05/2/2024 - 1:07 pm | View Link
Explosion kills six south Yemen rebel troops in suspected al-Qaeda attack Naqib, a spokesman for the Southern Armed Forces, said the explosion targeted a military vehicle in the Modiyah district of southern Abyan province. 04/30/2024 - 2:34 am | View Link
Suspected al-Qaida explosion kills 6 troops loyal to secessionist group in Yemen An explosive device detonated and killed six troops loyal to a United Arab Emirates-backed secessionist group Monday in southern Yemen, a military spokesman said ... 04/29/2024 - 9:13 am | View Link
'We are Arabs and our blood is one': Yemeni fishermen face threat of Houthi attack These men are on the opposite side of Yemen's civil war to the Houthis militants - but the Houthi ... of Yemen's Navy himself - Admiral Abdullah al Nakhai. He takes us out on one of the two ... 04/10/2024 - 12:47 am | View Link
Yemeni troops kill 18 militants Yemeni troops have made advances in an offensive against al Qaeda-linked militants near Zinjibar, killing 18 insurgents. The defence ministry said yesterday that the militants were pushed back on ... 04/20/2012 - 1:00 pm | View Link
Israel’s military has begun moving civilians out of Rafah, a possible prelude to a long-expected attack on the Gazan city.
The Israel Defense Forces “will act with extreme force against terrorist organizations in your areas of residence,” a spokesman said on X on Monday morning. He urged residents of eastern Rafah to go north to an “expanded humanitarian area” near Khan Younis, another city in Gaza.
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The move comes after cease-fire talks between Hamas and Israel in Cairo over the weekend seemingly stalled, the main sticking point being the Iran-backed militant group’s insistence that any truce is permanent.
Philippine journalist Maria Ressa, a 2021 Nobel Peace Prize recipient who has been recognized as one of TIME’s 2018 Persons of the Year as well as one of the most influential women of the century for her fight for press freedoms and against misinformation, was selected in March to deliver the principal address at Harvard University’s commencement on May 23.
Video footage of a student making racist gestures, seemingly imitating a monkey, toward a Black woman who was part of a scheduled pro-Palestinian protest at the University of Mississippi, colloquially known as Ole Miss, went viral last week, and on Sunday a fraternity announced that it had removed one member from its chapter at the school over the incident.
The Phi Delta Theta General Headquarters said in a statement that it was aware of the widely shared Ole Miss video and that “the racist actions in the video were those of an individual and are antithetical to the values of Phi Delta Theta and the Mississippi Alpha chapter.
Jack Dorsey has left the board of social networking service Bluesky, which he helped fund and popularize a year ago in the wake of regret over the sale of Twitter to Elon Musk.
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The Twitter co-founder took to the Musk-owned platform, now rebranded X, to tout his new philanthropic grants to open internet protocols, which he described as “freedom technology.” He also added X to that class of tech, elaborating only to say that corporations can build upon open protocols too.
Dorsey whittled down the list of people he follows on X to just three: Musk, Edward Snowden and Stella Assange, wife of the imprisoned WikiLeaks publisher.
'Timing is not good' for H5N1 pandemic - flu scientist RNZShould We Be Worried About Bird Flu? The New YorkerThere's no question H5N1 bird flu has 'pandemic potential.' How likely is that worst-case scenario? CBC News