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Nick movie: Sky High Time: July 29, 2005 Netflix / Amazon / HBO: N/A Duration of the movie: 100 M Trailer:
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Tyson Fury beat former UFC champion Francis Ngannou on points in Riyadh in October Tyson Fury's undisputed heavyweight title fight against Oleksandr Usyk has been postponed after the Briton sustained a "freak" cut in training. Fury, 35, was cut in sparring at his training camp in Saudi Arabia on Friday in preparation for the bout on 17 February in Riyadh. The injury above Fury's right eye needed "urgent medical attention" and "significant stitching". In a statement,, external the Briton said he was "absolutely devastated". Fury is the WBC champion with Ukraine's Usyk, 37, holding the WBA, WBO and IBF belts. If the fight does take place at a later date, the winner will be crowned the first undisputed heavyweight champion in the four-belt era. Fury said he had been preparing to face Usyk "for so long" and was in "superb condition". "I feel bad for everyone involved in this huge event and I will work diligently towards the rescheduled date once the eye is healed," he added. In a later Instagram post he wrote: "Can't help getting injured in sparring but what I can say was Usyk was in trouble. I am in fantastic shape. I will reschedule soon as I can. 2024 a massive year for team GK." Promoters Queensberry Promotions said once doctors have assessed the cut they will have a "better idea of the recovery period needed". An official statement confirming the fight had been postponed included an image of Fury's cut The fight was originally scheduled for 23 December but Fury's controversial decision win over former UFC fighter Francis Ngannou in October scuppered those plans. Morecambe-born Fury has won 34 fights with one draw since turning professional in 2008. He had previously faced criticism for failing to reach terms with Usyk after a proposed bout at London's Wembley Stadium in April fell through. Saudi Arabia has ploughed millions of dollars into staging huge sporting events, with critics saying the unprecedented spending is being used to enhance the oil-producing kingdom's international reputation and deflect from its human rights record and environmental impact. However, in a recent interview with the BBC, Saudi Arabia's sports minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Turki Al Faisal said claims of 'sportswashing' were "very shallow", insisting the investment is boosting the country's economy, opening it up to tourism and inspiring people to be more active. Analysis - Is this just a bump in the road for Fury v Usyk? Kal Sajad, BBC Sport With just over two weeks to go, the majority of the media already had their flights and hotels booked for this bout. This is boxing - injuries and cuts are always a danger and both teams will be keen on rescheduling the fight, perhaps for the summer. But what does that mean for the heavyweight landscape? There are reports Tyson Fury could be replaced by Croatian Filip Hrgovic, the mandatory challenger for Oleksandr Usyk's IBF belt. Then we have Anthony Joshua v Francis Ngannou in Riyadh on 8 March. Saudi organisers wanted the winner of that fight to challenge for the undisputed title. Perhaps this is just a little bump in the road, but bureaucracy and politics have stopped big fights from happening in recent years - fans have become used to disappointment and will be greatly pessimistic about seeing Fury v Usyk. This news has sent shockwaves through the sport; an almighty blow to the hopes of millions of fans who were so desperate to find out who is the best heavyweight on the planet. Link
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The pigeon’s ordeal began in May when it was captured near a port in Mumbai with two rings tied to its legs, carrying words that looked like Chinese. The suspect pigeon is released at a veterinary hospital in Mumbai on Tuesday. Indian police cleared a suspected Chinese spy pigeon after eight months’ detention and released it into the wild Tuesday, news agency Press Trust of India reported. The pigeon’s ordeal began in May when it was captured near a port in Mumbai with two rings tied to its legs, carrying words that looked like Chinese. Police suspected it was involved in espionage and took it in, later sending it to Mumbai’s Bai Sakarbai Dinshaw Petit Hospital for Animals. Eventually, it turned out the pigeon was an open-water racing bird from Taiwan that had escaped and made its way to India. With police permission, the bird was transferred to the Bombay Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, whose doctors set it free on Tuesday. Mumbai police could not be reached for comment. It is not the first time a bird has come under police suspicion in India. In 2020, police in Indian-controlled Kashmir released a pigeon belonging to a Pakistani fisherman after a probe found that the bird, which had flown across the heavily militarized border between the nuclear-armed nations, was not a spy. In 2016, another pigeon was taken into custody after it was found with a note that threatened Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Link
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Just 1,906 examples of the supermini will be built, and expected to retail at around £35k Lancia is back and ready to reinvent itself with its first electric car: the fourth generation of its Ypsilon supermini. It will be officially presented in just under two weeks in Milan, and this first limited-edition variant will be, er, limited to 1,906 examples (nodding back to the Italian marque’s founding year). It’s rumoured to share the same underpinnings as the Vauxhall Corsa Electric and Peugeot e-208. That likely means a 51kWh battery pack resulting in a claimed 250-mile range and an unexciting but brisk 8.2-second walk to 60. Top speed is also capped at 93mph, so don’t expect to match Delta Integrales at the lights. But owners of this ‘Cassina’ limited edition will reap the rewards of an interior created by said Italian furniture designer, known for its use of high-class fabrics. That means velvet seats and a tray between the centre console and multiscreen dashboard. It’s a clean, clutter-free look with plenty of refined materials throughout. The exterior is a little more of a handful, though. Out front, you’ve got a curved daylight running bar beneath the Lancia logo. Squashed hexagonal headlamps then sit along the wider mid-section and bridge toward a small front splitter. It’s what your mother would call ‘dashing’ to not cause upset. A few swooping lines across the flanks then bring your attention to the funky alloys which merge both black and silver Y-spokes. You’ll also spot glossy black wheel arches to match the darker window trim and rear spoiler. There's a spherical taillight and outgrown mid-section spoiler combination at the back, too; a wonderful bit of styling which appears to tribute the Stratos. Pricing for the Ypsilon limited-edition Cassina will be revealed on 14 February, where initial customers can also place their deposits. And what better way to profess your love on Valentine’s Day than to order a car whose name they’ll struggle to pronounce? We expect it to sit around the mid-£30k bracket, making it a fair bit costlier than the similar-sized Fiat 500e. An interesting duel is set to commence, then, but will the all-new Ypsilon manage to disrupt the Fiat's mojo and truly kickstart Lancia's renaissance? We won't have to wait long to find out. Link
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Judge Tanya Chutkan called off the March 4 trial date, saying she will set a new date after Trump's immunity appeal is resolved. Former President Donald Trump has argued that he's immune from prosecution related to attempts to overturn the 2020 election. WASHINGTON — Former President Donald Trump's federal election interference trial in Washington, D.C., will no longer begin on March 4, Judge Tanya Chutkan wrote in a court order released Friday. It is unclear when exactly the trial will now start, but the case has been on pause for nearly two months, since Dec. 7, which would mean the soonest the trial could start would likely be May. In a previous order, Chutkan indicated that a total of seven months was adequate time for Trump to prepare for trial, not including the time the case has been on pause. Chutkan's ruling comes as the D.C. Circuit Court has not yet decided on whether the former president is immune from prosecution. A panel of federal appeals court judges heard oral arguments on Jan. 9, and the case is on an expedited schedule. "The court will set a new schedule if and when the mandate is returned," said the court order from Chutkan. There were previous hints that the March 4 start date would not go ahead as scheduled. Chutkan was set to oversee trial proceedings in a separate case on April 2, according to court schedules, which could have overlapped with Trump's case if March 4 had still been the start date. As recently as Thursday, D.C.'s court calendar also did not list Chutkan as overseeing a case on March 4. A lawyer for Trump did not immediately respond to NBC News' request for comment. A spokesman for the special counsel declined to comment. The original March 4 trial start date put the high-profile case amid the Republican primary, just one day before voters in 16 states cast their ballots on Super Tuesday. One of Trump's lawyers, D. John Sauer, has argued before the D.C. Circuit Court that a president can be prosecuted for private conduct, but he says that Trump has immunity from prosecution because of the Constitution's separation of powers principle. Sauer has said that when Trump questioned the 2020 election results and pushed for Congress to block certification, he was acting in an official capacity as president. The president has embraced the argument in social media posts. "A president of the United States must have full immunity, without which it would be impossible for him/her to properly function,” Trump said in a post to Truth Social in January. The elimination of the March 4 start date increases the chances that Trump's New York case involving allegations of hush money payments to adult film star Stormy Daniels will be the former president's next trial. That case is currently set to start on March 25. This is a developing story. Please check back for updates. Link
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More than 800 serving officials in the US and Europe have signed a statement warning that their own governments' policies on the Israel-Gaza war could amount to "grave violations of international law". The "transatlantic statement", a copy of which was passed to the BBC, says their administrations risk being complicit in "one of the worst human catastrophes of this century" but that their expert advice has been sidelined. It is the latest sign of significant levels of dissent within the governments of some of Israel's key Western allies. One signatory to the statement, a US government official with more than 25 years' national security experience, told the BBC of the "continued dismissal" of their concerns. "The voices of those who understand the region and the dynamics were not listened to," said the official. "What's really different here is we're not failing to prevent something, we're actively complicit. That is fundamentally different from any other situation I can recall," added the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity. The statement is signed by civil servants from the US, the EU and 11 European countries including the UK, France and Germany. It says Israel has shown "no boundaries" in its military operations in Gaza, "which has resulted in tens of thousands of preventable civilian deaths; and… the deliberate blocking of aid… putting thousands of civilians at risk of starvation and slow death." "There is a plausible risk that our governments' policies are contributing to grave violations of international law, war crimes and even ethnic cleansing or genocide," it said. The identities of those who signed or endorsed the statement have not been made public and the BBC has not seen a list of names, but understands that nearly half are officials who each have at least a decade of experience in government. One retired US ambassador told the BBC that the coordination by dissenting civil servants in multiple governments was unprecedented. "It's unique in my experience watching foreign policy in the last 40 years," said Robert Ford, a former American ambassador to Algeria and Syria. He likened it to concerns within the US administration in 2003 over faulty intelligence leading up to the invasion of Iraq, but said this time many officials with reservations did not want to remain silent. "[Then there were] people who knew better, who knew that intelligence was being cherry-picked, who knew that there wasn't a plan for the day after, but nobody said anything publicly. And that turned out to be a serious problem," he said. "The problems with the Gaza war are so serious and the implications are so serious that they feel compelled to go public," he said. The officials argue the current nature of their governments' military, political or diplomatic support for Israel "without real conditions or accountability" not only risks further Palestinian deaths, but also endangers the lives of hostages held by Hamas, as well as Israel's own security and regional stability. "Israel's military operations have disregarded all important counterterrorism expertise gained since 9/11… the [military] operation has not contributed to Israel's goal of defeating Hamas and has instead strengthened the appeal of Hamas, Hezbollah and other negative actors". The officials say they have expressed their professional concerns internally but have been "overruled by political and ideological considerations". One senior British official who has endorsed the statement told the BBC of "growing disquiet" among civil servants. The official referred to the fallout from last week's preliminary ruling by the UN's International Court of Justice in a case brought by South Africa which required Israel to do all it can to prevent acts of genocide. "The dismissal of South Africa's case as 'unhelpful' by our Foreign Secretary puts [the international rules-based] order in peril." "We have heard ministers dismiss allegations against the Israeli Government seemingly without having received proper and well-evidenced legal advice. Our current approach does not appear to be in the best interests of the UK, the region or the global order," said the official who also spoke on condition of anonymity. In response to the statement, the UK Foreign Office said it wanted to see an end to the fighting in Gaza as soon as possible. "As the Foreign Secretary says, Israel has committed to act within international humanitarian law and has the ability to do so, but we are also deeply concerned about the impact on the civilian po[CENSORED]tion in Gaza," said a spokesperson. The European Union Commission said it was "looking into" the statement. The US State Department has been approached for comment. The statement suggests that while Israel's military operation has caused unprecedented destruction of lives and property in Gaza, there appears to be no workable strategy to effectively remove Hamas as a threat, nor for a political solution to ensure Israel's security in the longer term. It calls for the US and European governments to "stop asserting to the public that there is a strategic and defensible rationale behind the Israeli operation". Israeli officials have consistently rejected such criticism. In response to the new statement, the Israeli embassy in London said it was bound by international law. It added: "Israel continues to act against a genocidal terrorist organisation which commits war crimes as well as crimes against humanity." Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has claimed that only full military pressure on Hamas will secure the further release of hostages, while the army says it has destroyed significant underground infrastructure used by the group, including command centres, weapons sites and facilities for holding hostages. On Saturday, the Israeli military said: "Throughout [the city of] Khan Yunis, we have eliminated over 2,000 terrorists above and below ground." Israel has repeatedly rejected claims it deliberately targets civilians, accusing Hamas of hiding in and around civilian infrastructure. Since the start of the war, more than 26,750 Palestinians have been killed and at least 65,000 injured, according to health officials in the Gaza Strip, which has been governed by Hamas and blockaded by Israel and Egypt since 2007. Israeli officials say that 9,000 of those killed were Hamas militants but have not provided evidence for the figure. More than 1,200 people were killed in Israel during the Hamas attacks of October 7th, and a further 100 died of their injuries according to Israeli officials. More than 250 people were taken as hostages into Gaza. The US administration has repeatedly said that "far too many Palestinians have been killed" in Gaza, and that Israel has the right to ensure October 7th "can never happen again". Link
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★ GAME ★ - Who's posting next ?
El Máster Edwin replied to The GodFather's topic in ♔ NEWLIFEZM COFFEE TIME ♔
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Accepted! Contact me via dm or discord T/C.
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Nick movie: Encanto Time: November 3, 2021 Netflix / Amazon / HBO: N/A Duration of the movie: 102 M Trailer:
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Messi left Barcelona for Paris St-Germain and now plays for Inter Miami The napkin on which 13-year-old Lionel Messi's first Barcelona contract was signed is to be auctioned - with a starting price of £300,000. The napkin, signed in December 2000, carries a commitment from then Barca director Carles Rexach to sign Messi. It was also signed by Josep Minguella, a transfer advisor to the Spanish club, and agent Horacio Gaggioli, who recommended the Argentine. Messi joined Barca a month later and went on to be their record goalscorer. He made his debut aged 16 and scored 672 goals in 778 games for the Catalan club. Now 36, Messi won 10 La Liga and four Champions League titles at Barcelona before leaving for Paris St-Germain in 2021. The napkin was signed at a meeting arranged by Rexach, who invited Messi's father Jorge to lunch after concerns from the Messi family about a lack of response from Barcelona following the teenager's initial trial. Written in blue ink, the agreement on the napkin reads: "In Barcelona, on 14 December 2000 and the presence of Messrs Minguella and Horacio, Carles Rexach, FC Barcelona's sporting director, hereby agrees, under his responsibility and regardless of any dissenting opinions, to sign the player Lionel Messi, provided that we keep to the amounts agreed upon." The napkin will go under the hammer via British auction house Bonhams in March. Head of fine books and manuscripts at Bonhams Ian Ehling said: "This is one of the most thrilling items I have ever handled. "Yes, it's a paper napkin, but it's the famous napkin that was at the inception of Lionel Messi's career. "It changed the life of Messi, the future of FC Barcelona, and was instrumental in giving some of the most glorious moments of football to billions of fans around the globe." Link
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The Grant County Sheriff’s Office posted photos and videos on Facebook of camels walking on the highway and later standing along its shoulder and its median with zebras and law enforcement officers. MARION, Ind. — A truck hauling zebras and camels for a series of weekend circus performances caught fire early Saturday on a northeastern Indiana highway, prompting a police rescue of the animals, which roamed along the freeway, some munching on grass. The tractor-trailer caught fire about 2 a.m. along Interstate 69 in Grant County and a state trooper, a Grant County Sheriff’s deputy and a third person rescued the five zebras, four camels and a miniature horse by leading them off the smoked-filled trailer, said Sgt. Steven Glass with Indiana State Police. Both officers were treated at a hospital for smoke inhalation and later released, but none the animals were injured, he said. The truck driver, a 57-year-old Sarasota, Florida, man, was not injured. All northbound lanes of I-69 were closed until about 6:30 a.m. once the area was cleaned up and the animals were taken away by another truck. The Grant County Sheriff’s Office posted photos and videos on Facebook of camels walking on the highway and later standing along its shoulder and its median with zebras and law enforcement officers. The posting included the message, “No harm to our furry friends.” One video shows some of the zebras munching on grass in a surreal scene several miles east of the city of Marion, located about 60 miles northeast of Indianapolis. “It’s not something we see every day,” said Deputy Brent Ressett with the Grant County Sheriff’s Office. The truck was bringing the animals from Florida to Fort Wayne for four weekend circus performances in the northeastern Indiana city benefitting the Mizpah Shrine Circus, said Steve Trump, its circus director. He said the performances are annual fundraisers for the Mizpah Shrine Circus to help pay for the upkeep of the Shrine Center in Fort Wayne to “allow us to use our other fundraisers for what we’re known best for, taking care of kids.” Trump said the truck’s crew stopped the vehicle along the highway to check a problem with the vehicle and discovered a fire that quickly spread, threatening the animals in its trailer until they were rescued. The fire destroyed the truck and a second truck was sent from Fort Wayne to pick up the animals from the highway and bring them to Fort Wayne’s Memorial Coliseum to await their roles in the weekend’s family-friendly circus performances, he said. “I was thrilled that things worked out that way,” Trump said. Link
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Polestar confirms full pricing and spec details on the fastest car it’s ever made Polestar has revealed prices for its new 4 SUV-coupe, giving you another chance to get acquainted with its unique selling point. The first production car in the UK to be sold without a rear window will start from £59,990. That price gets you – what’s that? Oh, the window thing. Polestar’s all about design-first, and as such reckons the removal of a transparent rear viewing pane “enables a new kind of immersive rear occupant experience”. Don’t worry, you’ll still be able to see out the back: the rear view mirror is instead a high-definition screen taking image data from a roof mounted camera. Tired of seeing that BigGermanCar tailgating you? You can apparently ‘deactivate’ this feed to instead stare at your rear passengers. Though, they’ll probably be laid back in a pair of electrically reclining seats, surrounded by a fair bit of room staring at the secondary media and climate control screen mounted between the front seats to care. Anyhoo, the specs. The entry-level £59,990 car is a Polestar 4 long range single motor, with a 100kWh (94kWh usable) battery powering one rear motor to the tune of 268bhp (200kW). That car promises up to 379 miles from one charge, is able to crack the 0-62mph sprint in 7.1s and can fast-charge from 10-80 per cent in half an hour using a 200kW DC charger. The other spec coming to the UK is the Polestar 4 long range dual motor, which in a surprising turn, offers a long range with two electric motors. There’s one on the front, one on the back, for a punchy total of 536bhp (400kW). This car manages 0-62mph in just 3.8s, which is frankly, terrifying speed. Range for the dual motor is quoted at up to 360 miles from the same 100kWh battery, and both cars top out at 124mph. Both weigh in between 2.2 and 2.3-tonnes, get 526 litres of boot space (1,536 litres with the seats folded), sit on the ‘Sustainable Experience Architecture’ chassis, and feature 20in standard wheels or 21/22in optional rims. Same brakes, too – 364mm/350mm ventilated discs front and back, or the option of even bigger Brembos. The single motor car only gets passive dampers, while the dual motor – as you’d expect – is treated to semi-active dampers. There’s a tonne of assistance and safety tech as you’d also expect from a Volvo-group car, Android OS powering the infotainment, built-in Google Assistant and maps, a massive Harman Kardon stereo and the promise of over-the-air updates. It's now officially on sale, and Polestar plans on building the thing later this year, with the first deliveries expected around August. “Polestar’s innovative interpretation of an SUV coupe offers great interior space and a stunning appearance,” said Polestar boss Thomas Ingenlath. Head this way for more on why Polestar decided on building a car without a rear window… Link
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Susie Wiles made the pitch Tuesday at a private gathering of the American Opportunity Alliance, a group of Republican megadonors. Former President Donald Trump greets supporters after a campaign rally on Jan. 22 in Laconia, N.H. A top adviser to Donald Trump’s 2024 presidential campaign has a message for some of the wealthiest Republican donors in the country: Don’t take the former president’s divisive rhetoric too seriously. Susie Wiles made the pitch Tuesday at a private gathering of the American Opportunity Alliance, a group of Republican megadonors led by Elliot Investment Management founder Paul Singer. Speaking at the luxurious Four Seasons hotel in Palm Beach, Florida, Wiles encouraged the powerful donors to essentially ignore Trump’s more offensive remarks and focus instead on the fact that the former president is in pole position in the Republican primary for president, according to people familiar with her remarks. Wiles conceded to the donors that Trump is going to say things people don’t like. But she countered that he is poised to lock down his party’s nomination and that he is the GOP’s best hope to defeat President Joe Biden, according to a person familiar with her remarks. Wiles’ effort to draw new donors into Trump’s fold came just days after the former president threatened people who donate to his rival, former U.N. ambassador Nikki Haley, saying in a Jan. 24 post on Truth Social that they "will be permanently barred from the MAGA camp. We don’t want them, and will not accept them." Some of these same Haley donors were in the room Tuesday as Wiles made her pitch, according to the person, who was granted anonymity to describe the private meeting. Wiles’ message to donors, to just ignore Trump’s hyperbolic rhetoric, is reminiscent of the spin from White House staff while Trump was president. As the single most powerful person in the world at the time, Trump’s social media posts frequently moved financial markets, for better and for worse. Trump’s aides would frequently emphasize that his tweets did not represent the administration’s official policies. “They are not policy,” White House national security official Sebastian Gorka memorably claimed in 2017, when asked about Trump’s tweets. In Palm Beach on Tuesday, Wiles’ pitch appeared to work, at least on some of the participants. After Wiles’ remarks, aides to some of the American Opportunity Alliance members were overheard asking Wiles for her contact information, in case their bosses wanted to donate to Trump, the sources said. Neither Wiles nor a Trump campaign spokesperson responded to CNBC’s requests for comment before publication. Likewise, a representative for Singer did not immediately respond to an inquiry from CNBC. Trump currently leads Haley in her home state of South Carolina by around 30 percentage points, according to a Real Clear Politics polling average. The state will hold its Republican primary on Feb. 24. Haley campaign manager Betsy Ankney also made a pitch to the Singer-backed donor group Tuesday, according to NBC News. While Ankney spoke to the Florida donors, Haley, a former South Carolina governor, was attending a slew of fundraising events in New York City. A spokeswoman for the Haley campaign said the events this week in New York raised over $1.5 million. This may sound like a lot of money, but in presidential politics, it appears to be a drop in the bucket. Consider that the same day Wiles was speaking in Palm Beach, Biden, the GOP candidate’s likely opponent in November, was also raising campaign cash in Florida. At a single cocktail party, Biden raised over $6 million for his re-election campaign and its allies. Link
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The White House has blamed an Iran-backed militia for a deadly drone strike on an American base in Jordan, as the US considers how to hit back. National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said US intelligence believed the Islamic Resistance in Iraq was responsible for Sunday's attack. President Joe Biden has said without elaborating that he has already decided what the US response will be. The strike killed three US soldiers and injured at least 40 other US troops. The "attribution that our intelligence community is comfortable with is that this was done by the umbrella group", said Mr Kirby in a daily press briefing on Wednesday. He was referring to the Islamic Resistance in Iraq, which has already claimed responsibility for the strike. The national security spokesman repeated that the US response would be "in a time and in a manner of our choosing, on our schedule". "Just because you haven't seen anything in the last 48 hours, it doesn't mean that you're not going to see anything," he said. "The first thing you see won't be the last thing," he added. Mr Biden has said he does not want a wider conflict in the Middle East, which has already been destabilised by the Israel Gaza war that erupted in October. Iran has denied any role in the drone attack. At an event on Wednesday, Revolutionary Guard commander Major General Hossein Salami, who advises Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said that Tehran hears the "threats coming from American officials". "No threat will be left unanswered," he added. His remarks came a day after Amir Saeid Iravani, Iran's ambassador to the UN, told Iranian journalists in New York that Tehran would "decisively respond" to any attack on the country, according to the state-run IRNA news agency. While Washington weighs its response, Kataib Hezbollah, part of the Islamic Resistance in Iraq, said on Tuesday it had suspended operations against US forces to avoid causing "embarrassment" to the Iraqi government. Three American soldiers who were based at Fort Moore, in the US state of Georgia, died in the drone strike in north-eastern Jordan. At least 41 National Guard members were injured, US officials confirmed on Wednesday. The injured soldiers are from units based in Arizona, California, Kentucky and New York. Twenty-seven were able to return to duty while 14 others continue to be medically evaluated, the US National Guard Bureau said. Link
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★Nickname: Glacier ★CSBD username: @Glacier ★Rank: Administrator ★Please make sure to read the rules and make sure to respect them ( Admin Rules ) ( Player Rules ) (A Guide for New Admins) ★ Don't forget to create your (Banlist) and (Registration) ★Enter groups Required:https://csblackdevil.com/forums/forum/19058-~●-social-groups-●~
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accepted [Accepted] Report Admin [NINJAAAA]
El Máster Edwin replied to Glacier's topic in Accepted Report
Accepted! be careful when using your commands T/C.