US, IRANIAN MILITIAS TRADE BLOWS IN SYRIA

US, IRANIAN MILITIAS TRADE BLOWS IN SYRIA

US warplanes pummeled a facility in Syria used by Iranian-sponsored militias last Wednesday, after two suicide drones targeted American and Syrian rebel forces at the Al-Tanf base in southern Syria on August 15. Iranian-linked militias responded with rocket fire which wounded 3 US service members.

Special Report: Unpegging the Petrodollar

Special Report: Unpegging the Petrodollar

For a half-century, the petrodollar has undergirded the global economy and secured the US Dollar's place as the world's reserve currency, but cracks are beginning to show in the foundation as seismic geopolitical shifts continue in Asia.

TALIBAN GAINING IN AFGHANISTAN AS US WITHDRAWS

TALIBAN GAINING IN AFGHANISTAN AS US WITHDRAWS

The Taliban have retaken 5 districts in Afghanistan’s eastern Nuristan province over the last 48 hours, just one of several indicators of a major Taliban surge against the UN-recognized Afghan government, as NATO forces continue to withdraw.

SPECIAL REPORT: DEALINGS WITH IRAN

SPECIAL REPORT: DEALINGS WITH IRAN

The tension surrounding Iranian nuclear ambitions and regional control is mounting in the Middle East. The Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, also know as the Iran Deal or JCPOA, is being held up as a model for future dealings with Iran, but was the Iran Deal a triumph of diplomacy, or did it fuel greater instability in the region?

US STRIKES IRAQI MILITIAS IN SYRIA

US STRIKES IRAQI MILITIAS IN SYRIA

The Pentagon confirmed airstrikes against Iranian-backed Shiite militias along the Syrian-Iraqi border on Thursday evening, after the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) announced that those responsible for last week’s rocket attack against the US base near Erbil, Iraq had been identified.

BAGHDAD ON EDGE AFTER GREEN ZONE ATTACK

BAGHDAD ON EDGE AFTER GREEN ZONE ATTACK

Iraqi troops were deployed to several key thoroughfares in Baghdad’s downtown district on Friday evening after Iranian-sponsored militia Asaib Ahl al-Haq (AAH) threatened Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Khadimi for cracking down on the rogue militia in the wake of it’s attack on the US embassy last Sunday.

TRUMP ANNOUNCES ISRAEL-SUDAN PEACE DEAL

President Donald Trump speaks about a Sudan-Israel peace agreement in the Oval Office on October 23, 2020, in Washington, DC. He announced that Sudan will start to normalize ties with Israel. (Credit: Win McNamee, Getty Images)

US President Donald Trump announced a formalized peace accord between the State of Israel and the African nation of Sudan on Friday morning. The president published a copy of the joint statement on his Twitter account, the third such deal brokered by the Trump Administration between the Jewish State and a Muslim-majority Arab nation in less than three months, following the Gulf nations of UAE and Bahrain. The announcement of Sudan’s inclusion in the Abraham Accords has been highly anticipated for months, as the leadership of both nations have repeatedly signaled their interest. Trump also teased the probability of five other Arab nations joining the accord, naming Saudi Arabia. Many experts have also suggested that Morocco, Kuwait, Oman and Lebanon have unannounced talks underway with Israel.

The joint statement announced the end of “belligerence” between the two nations and the onset of diplomatic relations, outlining several priorities for economic and security cooperation, beginning with agriculture. Sudan is one of the poorest Arab nations in the world, and has been recently hard-hit in the capital of Khartoum by an unusually-high level of flooding over the banks of the Nile River. Egypt and Sudan have also been locked in an ongoing dispute with Ethiopia over the latter nation’s plans for the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, which could potentially be used to restrict the flow of the Nile River to the downstream nations, making agriculture a top initiative.

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Israeli-Sudanese peace is especially significant, considering the legacy of Anti-Zionism (and many would say Anti-Semitism) in Sudan’s recent history. It was in the Sudanese capital of Khartoum that the Arab League members met in the wake of the Six-Day War with Israel in 1967, adopting the so-called “Three No’s” of the Khartoum Resolution: “No peace with Israel, no recognition of Israel, no negotiations with it.” Sudan’s previous strongman, Omar al-Bashir, was outspoken in his hatred for Israel, and cooperated with the radical Iranian regime against the Jewish State in the region. Bashir also provided safe haven to Osama Bin-Laden and al-Qaeda in the 1990’s, during which time the infamous terrorist organization bombed the American embassies in the nearby African nations of Kenya and Tanzania, killing more than 200 people. Bashir then initiated a campaign of genocide and ethnic cleansing in the non-Arab region of Darfur during a conflict with separatists there, leading to the indictment of Bashir and many leaders in his regime in the International Criminal Court (ICC). Today, from the same city in which the Khartoum Resolution was passed 53 years earlier, the leader of Sudan’s transitional government joined President Trump for a conference call with Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu and reversed the “three no’s” into “three yes’s.”

Despite Sudan’s achievement, it is still reeling from decades of corruption, graft and civil war which became the impetus for a popular uprising in 2018. The mostly-peaceful protest movement, considered to be another wave of the Arab Spring, led to the ouster of Omar al-Bashir from power and the establishment of a caretaker government, led by Lieutenant General Abdel Fattah Abdelrahman Burhan. The new government has worked hard bring Sudan out of the shadow of Omar al-Bashir, formalizing a peace agreement with rebel groups, agreeing to compensate the families of the 1998 embassy bombings, and now forging a new path of peace with an old enemy.

We are thankful for today’s announcement of another new peace initiative between Israel and its Arab neighbors. Although we know that very difficult times are ahead for the Jewish State and the region, we recognize the ultimate, divinely-ordained destiny for the Middle East will be one of peace between the descendants of Isaac and Ishmael, and we celebrate the Abraham Accords as a foretaste of that age. We would encourage our global family to continue to pray for the success of these ongoing peace talks, and for new doors to open for Good News as a result.

Maranatha.

IRANIAN-LINKED MILITIA ATTACKS KURDISH HQ IN BAGHDAD

IRANIAN-LINKED MILITIA ATTACKS KURDISH HQ IN BAGHDAD

Rioters displaying the flags of Iranian-sponsored PMU militias stormed the headquarters of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (PDK) in Baghdad on Saturday. After setting the building on fire, a crowd gathered on the street outside to burn the flag of Kurdistan.