World
Images of civilian victims in Ukraine spur some foreign volunteers to fight.
LVIV, Ukraine — Luis, a Mexican Military veteran, noticed a photograph of a wounded pregnant lady being carried out of a Ukrainian maternity hospital after a Russian airstrike and was reminded of his sister.
Will, a Marine veteran from North Carolina, was shaken by a video exhibiting a Russian tank firing a number of rounds right into a automotive with an older Ukrainian couple inside. Martin, a farmer who had defused explosives within the German Military, was angered by every week of tv footage documenting Russia’s invasion.
They have been amongst a number of international army volunteers ready on Friday at a hostel Lviv, in western Ukraine, the place the Ukrainian authorities had put them up earlier than coaching. After the Russian invasion in February, Ukraine introduced it was making a international legion, inviting non-Ukrainians with army expertise to come back and be part of the struggle.
Not one of the small group of volunteers interviewed by The New York Occasions had acquired a response after they contacted the Ukrainian embassies of their residence nations, however they determined to make the journey anyway. Lots of the foreigners mentioned they’d been impressed by what they noticed on social media and TV.
The international volunteers requested to be recognized by solely their first names due to issues they could possibly be prosecuted upon returning residence for preventing for a international military. A U.S. regulation relationship to the 18th century bans residents from preventing nations not at struggle with the US, however it’s hardly ever enforced.
Ukraine’s international minister, Dmytro Kuleba, has mentioned greater than 20,000 folks from 52 nations have volunteered to struggle, a quantity that would not be verified. A Russian missile assault two weeks in the past on a coaching base getting used for international volunteers close to Liviv killed at the least 35 army personnel and civilians, in line with Ukrainian officers. Russia mentioned it killed 180 international army volunteers. Neither determine could possibly be independently confirmed.
The volunteers ready within the hostel Friday have been undeterred.
Luis, 29, mentioned he served with the Mexican Military preventing drug cartels a decade in the past, however till final week, he was an occasions photographer in Chihuahua Metropolis, Mexico, photographing largely weddings. Then, scrolling via Reddit, he discovered an Related Press picture exhibiting an unidentified pregnant lady on a stretcher, being carried out by rescue staff after a Russian strike towards a maternity hospital in Mariupol. Russian officers mentioned Ukrainian forces had been utilizing the hospital as a base and mentioned the photographs have been faux.
“I noticed the face of my sister in that lady,” Luis mentioned. “I do not need kids but, however I imagined how the infant’s father felt, how the girl and her household felt.”
He had by no means met a Ukrainian earlier than flying to Europe. However when he learn the girl and her child had died, he determined to shut his studio, promote his cameras and e book the 4 flights to get to Poland, from the place he drove throughout the border to Ukraine.
He instructed his dad and mom, his 25-year-old sister and his girlfriend of 4 years that he was occurring trip. “They’d by no means perceive,” he mentioned. “I don’t know easy methods to begin that dialog.”
Will was working as a truck driver and postal employee when he noticed the picture of the tank taking pictures a civilian automobile. Within the video, which was disseminated by Ukrainian information media and appeared to have been taken by safety cameras on the road, a civilian automotive with a sticker within the again indicating an occupant with a incapacity stops in need of an intersection earlier than a tank shoots it. The motive force and a passenger have been killed.
“These have been civilians,” mentioned Will, 33. “They have been simply going about their day you realize? It’s mindless. It’s brutality on an entire different degree,” he mentioned. He couldn’t stay on the sidelines, he added, as a result of as a former Marine, “I’ve coaching, I’ve capabilities.”
One other volunteer, Martin, 35, a farmer from Germany, mentioned that tv footage of a struggle on European soil satisfied him to come back to Ukraine.
“I’ve the military expertise and I wish to defend Europe,” he mentioned, earlier than heading out within the rain to comply with a Ukrainian official taking them to a coaching base.
World
Botswana swears in Duma Boko as new president
Boko, 54, inaugurated just nine days after his party beat the Botswana Democratic Party, which governed for six decades.
Botswana has sworn in Duma Boko as the country’s new president after his landslide election victory kicked out the Botswana Democratic Party (BDP), which had been in power for nearly 60 years.
On Friday, Boko, 54, took the oath in front of several thousand people in the national stadium just nine days after his Umbrella for Democratic Change (UDC) crushed the BDP at the ballot box.
“For nearly three score years, our democracy remained unbroken, unproven and untested. On the 30th of October this year, together, we tested this democracy,” Boko said in a speech.
“It is with pride, and perhaps even a tinge of relief, that I can proudly say we have passed this test with flying colours,” he said to cheers from the crowd.
“Together, we usher in a new political dawn.”
Last week, Boko’s left-leaning UDC won 36 seats in parliament compared with just four for the conservative BDP, in a stunning reversal for the party that had governed diamond-rich Botswana since its independence from the United Kingdom in 1966.
Former President Mokgweetsi Masisi, who conceded defeat two days after the vote as his party’s colossal defeat became clear, was in the audience alongside leaders of other regional countries including Namibia, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
Although the crowd booed Masisi, the new president praised his predecessor’s “statesmanship”.
“Please give him some love,” Boko told the stadium.
“Botswana has set the example of a true democracy at work for the whole world to see and emulate. For that singular act, the former president will remain inscribed prominently in our hearts.”
Young voters made up about a third of the more than one million people registered to vote in the arid and sparsely populated country.
Botswana, often held up as one of Africa’s greatest success stories, ranks among the wealthiest and most stable democracies on the continent. But a global downturn in demand for mined diamonds, which account for more than 80 percent of Southern African exports, has taken a toll on the economy.
Many voters said they wanted change after nearly six decades of BDP rule, with the main concerns being unemployment, the disparity between rich and poor and the economy, which has been hit by plummeting diamond sales, the mainstay of Botswana’s revenues.
Masisi’s government was also accused of mismanagement, nepotism and corruption.
Boko has said a priority for his government will be to stabilise relations with partners in the diamond industry, while diversifying the economy away from its dependence on the international diamond market.
World
‘Nosferatu’ First Reactions Call Robert Eggers’ Remake ‘Devilish’ and ‘Classically Haunting’: It ‘Goes Harder Than Any Other Horror Film This Year’
One of cinema’s most iconic vampires is out of the coffin again. Robert Eggers‘ “Nosferatu” finally debuted to film press, and first reactions are calling the horror drama a “knockout” with impeccable below-the-line craft.
A reimagining of F. W. Murnau’s 1922 silent German Expressionist film, “Nosferatu” stars Lily-Rose Depp as a young woman who becomes the object of desire for the terrifying vampire Count Orlok (Bill Skarsgård). Eggers’ supporting cast includes Nicholas Hoult, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Emma Corrin, Ralph Ineson, Simon McBurney and Willem Dafoe. The director penned the script for “Nosferatu” himself.
Variety senior awards editor Clayton Davis called the film “gorgeous and horrifically brilliant,” saying Depp is “haunting” and Skarsgård is “menacing.”
Indiewire chief film critic David Ehrlich highlighted all the sweaty “writhing” in the movie, perhaps a superlative amount. And he meant it as a compliment.
Variety senior artisans editor Jazz Tangcay flipped for the movie, saying Eggers has delivered “a perfect remake.”
Gregory Ellwood of The Playlist had awards on the mind after the screening, saying the movie is a “major below-the-line player.” Interestingly, he asserted the opinion that Depp has a shot at a nomination in the supporting actress race — a distinguishing from a lead role that’s notable given Depp’s high billing.
Los Angeles Film Critics Association member and Variety contributor Courtney Howard said “if you’re not afraid of rats before seeing this movie, you will be now,” along with the note that it “goes harder than any other horror film this year.”
Gizmodo and io9 reporter Germain Lussier gave the caveat that the film is “not my favorite Eggers,” but still deemed the feature a “knockout” with “a hint of devilish humor.”
Eggers has long been an outspoken fan of Murnau’s film and remaking it was a passion project for the filmmaker, whose directorial efforts so far include “The Witch,” “The Lighthouse” and “The Northman.”
“It was an indie horror in its day, a bit rough around the edges yet it’s one of the greatest and most haunting films ever made,” Robert Eggers once told Shudder about “Nosferatu.” “The newly restored color tinted versions are really impressive, but I still prefer the poor black-and-white versions made from scraps of 16mm prints. Those grimy versions have an uncanny mystery to them and helped build the myth of Max Shreck being a real vampire.”
“Nosferatu” opens in theaters Dec. 25 from Focus Features.
World
What does President-elect Trump’s win mean for US amid war between Israel, Hamas?
JERUSALEM — President-elect Donald Trump’s victory Wednesday morning will likely lead to a new U.S. Middle East policy that will have a dramatic effect on Israel’s war against Iran-backed terrorist movements Hamas and Hezbollah, according to experts.
Fox News Digital reached out to leading U.S. and Israeli experts on the Middle East for their insights on the meaning of a second Trump term on the unfolding instability and wars in the region. The Iranian regime has aggressively backed Hamas and Hezbollah in their wars against the Jewish state for more than a year. Tehran has also launched two aerial drone and missile attacks on the Jewish state in 2024.
U.S.-Israel Mideast expert Caroline Glick, who served as an adviser to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, told Fox News Digital, “Trump’s policy of respecting the prerogatives of Israel’s democratically elected government will enable Prime Minister Netanyahu and his ministers to pursue their strategy of victory over Iran and its proxies to its successful conclusion. Israel does not seek direct U.S. involvement in the war. Rather, it hopes that the U.S. will provide it with diplomatic and other support to enable it to achieve victory against foes common to the U.S. and Israel.”
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Glick added, “The Trump doctrine of minimizing U.S. involvement in the Middle East is predicated on supporting America’s allies, first and foremost Israel, in their bid to defeat their enemies, who are also America’s enemies. Trump support for an Israeli victory will enable the president to preside over a post-war period of calm and unprecedented peace, which is only possible after an Israeli victory.”
The Biden administration has faced criticism for its crackdown on Israel’s prosecution of the war against Hamas after the jihadi movement slaughtered nearly 1,200 people on Oct. 7, 2023, including more than 40 Americans. Biden reportedly withheld vital armaments at one point while Israel engaged in its existential war.
Glick has been a sharp critic of the Biden-Harris administration and said that “Iran continues to pursue nuclear weapons and to wage a seven-front war against Israel. The U.S. has protected Hamas’s regime in Gaza and Hezbollah’s control over Lebanon.”
Retired Israeli Brig. Gen. Amir Avivi, founder of the Israel Defense and Security Forum, told Fox News Digital that “President Trump’s win presents a huge opportunity for the Middle East to dismantle the Shiite axis [the Islamic Republic of Iran and Hezbollah in Lebanon] and restore security to the Middle East by signing peace agreements and creating a Western-Israel-Sunni alliance that will extend all the way to Indonesia, Malaysia, Pakistan and Oman.”
He added that peace and prosperity in the Middle East “requires dealing with the dangers of a nuclear Iran. Israel’s expectation is to see the U.S. leading a coalition that will deal militarily with the nuclear sites of Iran and possibly even bring down the regime and dismantle the Shiite axis that is endangering all the moderate states in the Middle East.”
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Avivi said Israel has set the stage by destroying Hamas and is on the verge of destroying Hezbollah.
David Wurmser, a former senior adviser for nonproliferation and Middle East strategy for former Vice President Dick Cheney, told Fox News Digital, “The election of Trump will have a significant impact on Middle East policy. Iran and its proxies will feel profoundly threatened, but they will not give up. They cannot; it is a matter of regime survival for Iran.”
“Any Israeli hope harbored by some in Israel that now the United States will pick up the ball and join Israel in fighting this war, especially Iran itself, is a false hope,” Wurmser said. “Trump will let Israel do what it needs to do and protect it without reservation or restraint to do that, but it will not do it for Israel.”
“Another area in which there will be considerable American input will be the formation of the Middle East peace structure that expands the Abraham Accords without pressing the Saudi or others to deal with the Palestinian issue,” he said.
Trump’s signature first-term Middle East accomplishment was the Abraham Accords that established diplomatic relations between Israel and the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Morocco and Sudan. Mideast experts said that had Trump not lost to Biden in the 2020 election, he could have secured a grand diplomatic recognition agreement between Saudi Arabia and the Jewish state.
BIDEN-HARRIS ADMIN TREATMENT OF UKRAINE, ISRAEL WARS ‘DIFFERS SUBSTANTIALLY,’ EXPERTS SAY
According to Wurmser, “The incoming administration will represent a paradigm shift where a strong Israel and a weak, besieged and retreating Iran will advance a regional alliance that challenges Iran and China and abandons the two-state Palestinian obsession of the Washington establishment as the guiding principle of policy.”
The Islamist government of Turkey’s strongman, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, will also likely meet resistance from Trump. Erdoğan, who supports the U.S.-designated terrorist entity Hamas, in July threatened to invade Israel to protect Palestinians. Erdoğan also provides material support for Hamas terrorists who live in Turkey.
Efrat Aviv, a professor in the Department of General History at Bar-Ilan University in Israel and a leading expert on Turkey, told Fox News Digital that “Trump’s pro-Israel stance clashes with Erdoğan’s support for Hamas, which Turkey sees as freedom fighters. Turkey’s alleged involvement in facilitating Hamas’s activities, including granting them passports and aiding money laundering, complicates relations further.”
“Turkey found relief in Trump’s presidency, in contrast to Biden, who had criticized Erdoğan’s democratic backslide, notably excluding Turkey from the 2021 Summit for Democracy,” Aviv added. “Under Trump, American pastor Andrew Brunson was released from Turkish custody. However, despite Trump’s generally favorable stance, tensions persist. Trump imposed sanctions on Turkey five times during his tenure, and key issues, such as U.S. support for Kurdish groups and Turkey’s purchase of the Russian S-400 missile defense system, remain divisive.”
“Whether this marks the beginning of a new chapter or if tensions continue to overshadow their personal friendship remains to be seen,” noted Aviv.
There are skeptics who view Trump as shifting to a policy that will strong-arm Israel into a possible premature end to the war to root out Hamas terrorists from the Gaza Strip and eradicate Hezbollah terrorists and facilities on its northern border.
Joel Rubin, a former deputy assistant secretary of state who served in the Obama administration, told Fox News Digital, “It’s an open question as to how a Trump 2.0 will operate in the Middle East. Unlike Trump 1.0, he has a much more isolationist VP in JD Vance, and he also at the same time told Netanyahu to finish up the war in Gaza. And while he has expressed an interest in a deal with Iran over its nuclear program, he has a history of taking aggressive actions against it, and his communications were targeted by the regime during his campaign, which may fuel distrust and suspicion.”
“But the fundamentals of his wanting to focus on domestic issues are what will likely drive his policy in the early days, while he works to avoid international entanglements,” Rubin added. “My bet is that if the Middle East flares into creating headaches for him, particularly through increasing wars, he will work to stamp them out while not having a very ambitious agenda towards resolving longstanding challenges between Israel and the Palestinians.”
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