View online | Unsubscribe (one-click).
For inquiries/unsubscribe issues, Contact Us














?
Learn more about Jeeng

?
Learn more about Jeeng

?
Learn more about Jeeng

?
Learn more about Jeeng
?
?
Learn more about Jeeng


Want to accelerate software development at your company? See how we can help.
Want to accelerate software development at your company? See how we can help.

Hamas tunnels under Gaza will be a key battlefield for Israel - The Economist   

STUDENTS OF urban warfare divide the battlefield into four planes. One is the sky above cities, increasingly thick with drones. Next are the buildings that extend upwards, offering vantage points and hiding places. A third is the streetscape: the lattice of roads, alleys and paths that form a city’s peacetime arteries. It is the fourth—the tunnels lying beneath—that will present the greatest challenge to the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) when they begin their invasion of the Gaza Strip in the coming days.

The first smuggling tunnels in the area were built by Bedouin clans on both sides of the Egypt-Gaza border after 1981, when Israel and Egypt demarcated the border. The first known tunnel attack from the strip occurred in 1989. But it was in 2001 that Hamas, the militant group that would later take over the territory, after Israel withdrew in 2005, began construction of a remarkable subterranean network. Its initial aim was to smuggle in material and arms from Egypt. But the tunnels had manifold other uses.

Commanders could hide in them and use them to communicate without relying on Gaza’s phone network, tapped by Israel. They provided hiding places for weapons and ammunition. Hamas could use them for ambushes during Israeli ground wars in Gaza. And they allowed cross-border raids into Israel for attacks and abductions—such as the kidnapping of Corporal Gilad Shalit in 2006, a raid that later helped Hamas secure the release of more than 1,000 Palestinian prisoners. Hizbullah, the Lebanese militant group, built similar tunnels on the Israel-Lebanon border, though most were destroyed in 2018-19.

Continued here



?
Learn more about Jeeng

?
Learn more about Jeeng

?
Learn more about Jeeng

?
Learn more about Jeeng
?
?
Learn more about Jeeng



Don't like ads? Go ad-free with TradeBriefs Premium




Want to accelerate software development at your company? See how we can help.
Want to accelerate software development at your company? See how we can help.



?
Learn more about Jeeng

?
Learn more about Jeeng

?
Learn more about Jeeng

?
Learn more about Jeeng
?
?
Learn more about Jeeng


The Shock and Aftershocks of “The Waste Land” - The New Yorker   

May is the merriest month, and there are few more cheering journeys than a train ride into the green wilds of Sussex, in southern England. And no destination is more peaceable than Charleston, the secluded house, wreathed with gardens, that found fame as a rural HQ of the Bloomsbury Group. Now a place of pilgrimage, it continues to summon writers and artists, with audiences to match. Here it was, for a festival in May, that the culture-hungry came. Drifting in their dozens past fruit trees and congregations of flowers, they entered a large tent, where the trappings of Bloomsbury-scented comfort were on sale: straw hats, cushions, padded Alice bands, and vials of Sussex Rose Aromatic Water for the soothing of high or fevered brows. We took our seats for the arrival, on a raised dais, of Benedict Cumberbatch. He it was whom the pilgrims had travelled to see, and this is what he had to say:

April is the cruellest month, breedingLilacs out of the dead land, mixingMemory and desire, stirringDull roots with spring rain.

There was more, and worse. "White bodies naked on the low damp ground/And bones cast in a little low dry garret." And this: "Dead mountain mouth of carious teeth that cannot spit." And again: "In this decayed hole among the mountains/In the faint moonlight, the grass is singing/Over the tumbled graves." What had we done, in the sun-warmed paradise of Charleston, to deserve all these mountains, bones, and teeth? So much death, on a day that promised such life!

Continued here



?
Learn more about Jeeng

?
Learn more about Jeeng

?
Learn more about Jeeng

?
Learn more about Jeeng
?
?
Learn more about Jeeng


The Business Case for Supporting the Arts - Inc.com   

Paul Rabil, Co-Founder of the Premier Lacrosse League, to Publish 'The Way of the Champion'

Every arts organization in the country, large and small, without regard, to location, is suffering in the post-pandemic era from a lengthy assortment of ailments that in fairness are largely out of their control. With the possible exception of certain mega-churches, which are more political and marketing organizations than religious institutions, you could say the same thing about most churches, synagogues and other community-based organizations. While the COVID declines were abrupt and radical, the recoveries and returns to anything like pre-pandemic levels have been slow and far from sufficient for most of these entities to make ends meet. The world is still very much watching and waiting to fully re-engage.

The common list of constraints and concerns includes: the lapsing, expirations, and general disappearance of government arts and venue assistance programs; significant increases in operating and staffing costs as well as employee retention issues; cutbacks in donor support, media in-kind promotional partnerships and corporate sponsorships; and, of course, dramatic declines in attendance and participation, which have shrunk new memberships and renewals, and overall audiences. Museums and venues that are generally more spacious than theatres are doing incrementally better but a major staple--school group visits--hasn't seemed to have returned.

Continued here




?
Learn more about Jeeng

?
Learn more about Jeeng

?
Learn more about Jeeng

?
Learn more about Jeeng
?
?
Learn more about Jeeng


You are receiving this mailer as a TradeBriefs subscriber.
We fight fake/biased news through human curation & independent editorials.
Your support of ads like these makes it possible. Alternatively, get TradeBriefs Premium (ad-free) for only $2/month
If you still wish to unsubscribe, you can unsubscribe from all our emails here
Our address is 309 Town Center 1, Andheri Kurla Road, Andheri East, Mumbai 400059 - 93544947