5⃣ stories you need to know: North Korea fired 23 missiles including one that landed off South Korea’s coast, Florida school shooter Nikolas Cruz to be sentenced to life in prison, Russia to resume its participation in a deal to free up grain exports from Ukraine, and more pic.twitter.com/nsmmeRkVgw
— Reuters (@Reuters) November 2, 2022
- North Korea fired missiles in the direction of South Korea
— DW News (@dwnews) November 2, 2022
- Benjamin Netanyahu poised for victory in Israel elections
- Brazil's Jair Bolsonaro makes first address since election defeat
Today's top stories in 1 minute: pic.twitter.com/beLl1IS1YX
BREAKING: The Federal Reserve raised its benchmark interest rate by three-quarters of a point for a fourth straight time but hinted that it could soon reduce the size of its rate hikes. https://t.co/19NupyYD3C
— The Associated Press (@AP) November 2, 2022
Civilians attacked a United Nations peacekeeping convoy in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, injuring two people as they accused the U.N. mission of failing to protect them from worsening militia violence https://t.co/MuTiFIRPYi pic.twitter.com/FMgUkJV77d
— Reuters (@Reuters) November 2, 2022
πͺπΉ πΏπ¦ In South Africa, Ethiopia and Tigray signed a ceasefire agreement. The event was held under the auspices of the African Union pic.twitter.com/qpWmYmDnKq
— AZ π°πππ (@AZgeopolitics) November 2, 2022
The peace deal came hours after Ethiopia claimed his forces were close to "winning" the conflict. https://t.co/oCfS2lQB4M
— DW News (@dwnews) November 2, 2022
WATCH: Helicopter footage shows a massive crowd assembled at the Brazilian military command (PalΓ‘cio Duque de Caxias) in Rio de Janeiro. Protestors claim the presidential election was rigged and ask the military to intervene.pic.twitter.com/kTfAe4O49K
— Election Wizard πΊπΈ (@ElectionWiz) November 2, 2022
Former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was set to return to power in one of the most right-wing coalitions in Israel's history, causing jitters among Palestinians and Arab neighbors who fear it could ratchet up tensions across the Middle East https://t.co/YGVUHmM2Ld pic.twitter.com/PdeQ31I5HO
— Reuters (@Reuters) November 2, 2022
There is strong US opposition to the Tigray agreement. The Tigray guerillas were a large investment for the intel agencies and they were supposed to, at the very least, force a change of government in Addis Ababa. I don't expect that deal to stick.
ReplyDelete6:49 finds the CIA behind every rock. Checks under his bed at night for the CIA. Wakes up every morning in a puddle.
ReplyDeleteI'm sure they just sit around doing nothing all year.
ReplyDeleteSnide comment without a lick of knowledge on the subject. No surprises on this blog.