Analysis
Jewish News Syndicate: Turkey has become ‘the central nerve center for Hamas abroad’
A Hamas terror cell in Nablus that received instructions and funding from the organization’s overseas headquarters in Turkey was dismantled by Israeli security forces in recent weeks in what observers say is part of a broader pattern of Turkey serving as a permissive hub for Hamas’s terror operations. According to a joint statement by the Israel Police and the Israel Security Agency (Shin Bet) issued on March 25, “a terror cell from Nablus was thwarted, which acted under the guidance and funding of Hamas headquarters in Turkey to carry out shooting and explosive device attacks.” The statement added that “an M-16 rifle and tens of thousands of dollars in cash were handed over during the investigation.”
Washington Institute for Near East Policy: Lebanon-Syria Border Talks Can Restrain Hezbollah and Boost Security
By encouraging the new Saudi-mediated talks with Damascus, Washington and its partners can help secure Beirut’s sovereignty, contain Hezbollah smuggling, and stabilize Lebanon’s other border with Israel.
United States
NBC News: National Security Agency chief and deputy director dismissed
The director and the No. 2 official at the National Security Agency were ousted from their positions Thursday, according to a defense official and three sources with knowledge of the matter. It was not immediately clear why Air Force Gen. Timothy Haugh and his deputy were dismissed, the sources said. Haugh was both the head of U.S. Cyber Command and the director of the National Security Agency, a role he had served in since February 2024. Deputy NSA Director Wendy Noble was the agency’s senior civilian leader. Earlier Thursday, NBC News reported that Trump fired at least three National Security Council officials this week after far-right activist Laura Loomer met with him and expressed dissatisfaction with some officials on his national security team.
Reuters: 'Free Le Pen!' Trump, Musk and Vance voice support for French far-right leader
U.S. President Donald Trump, his Vice President JD Vance and billionaire backer Elon Musk have all voiced their support to French far-right leader Marine Le Pen after she was found guilty of embezzlement and barred from running in France's 2027 presidential election. Trump, who often labelled his own legal woes as a leftist witch-hunt, drew parallels with Le Pen, the leader of the far-right National Rally (RN) party, who was widely seen as a plausible presidential winner.
Daily Mail: Democrat star splits from party as he releases brutal campaign video blasting 'lefty extremists'
Eric Adams made a shock decision to quit the Democrat Primary and run for re-election as mayor of New York City as an independent candidate, while decrying extremist politics of the left. Adams was once seen as a future leader in the party, declaring himself 'the Biden of Brooklyn' when he won four years ago but he has since drifted from the rudderless Democrats, furious with his recent deal-making with Donald Trump on commonsense immigration law. In a video announcement, Adams - who was rumored to even be considering a 2024 White House run - affirmed his commitment to common sense governing, blasting extremist politics.
KSL: Police probe sign in southern Utah from white supremacist group
A sign belonging to a white supremacist group was allegedly found hanging on an overpass in Washington near Exit 13 of Interstate 15 recently. The Washington Police Department told St. George News that no other signs depicting this group's activity had been previously found in the area. The sign found recently promotes the organization Patriot Front, which reportedly has a growing presence throughout Utah for several years, with members hanging signs at other locations along I-15 and holding rallies at other cities. The group has alleged connections to the 2017 Unite the Right Rally of Charlottesville, Virginia, which led to violence and one person being killed at that time.
Jewish Telegraphic Agency: ADL upgrades 19 colleges’ antisemitism ‘grades,’ as some enact new policies
The letter grades that the Anti-Defamation League has issued to campuses on their response to antisemitism are showing signs of growing influence: The group announced today that several schools have adopted new policies to improve their grades in the month since this year’s report was released. The ADL also said it upped grades for 19 of the 135 schools it assessed this year, including Northwestern University, Johns Hopkins University, Stanford University and the University of Southern California. Eleven of those schools implemented new policies in the last month, while the other eight made the Jewish anti-bigotry group aware of existing policies that had not factored into the initial grades.
Fox News: Trump admin halting more than $500M in federal funding to Brown University over antisemitism response: report
More than half a billion dollars in federal funding to Brown University is being halted by the Trump administration over the Ivy League's response to antisemitism since Hamas' 2023 attack in Israel. A White House official said nearly $510 million awarded to the university through federal contracts and grants is on the line, The Associated Press reported, adding that the official spoke on condition of anonymity.
Fox News: Trump admin sets terms for Harvard to address antisemitism to avoid losing billions in taxpayer dollars
The Trump administration has set new preconditions for Harvard to combat antisemitism in exchange for access to federal funding. In a letter addressed to Harvard President Alan Garber, senior administration officials claimed Harvard had "fundamentally failed to protect American students and faculty from antisemitic violence and harassment" in violation of the Civil Rights Act.
WISN ABC 12: Milwaukee CEO pleads with Trump to free parents from Taliban prison
In a video Jonathan Reynolds posted online and shared with WISN 12 News, Jonathan Reynolds says “Mr. President, my name is Jonathan Reynolds and I'm the son of Peter and Barbie Reynolds. They've been held in a prison in Afghanistan by the Taliban without charges for the last eight weeks.”
Jonathan Reynolds is the CEO of Milwaukee-based Titus Talent Strategies. His British parents have been in Afghanistan training teachers for 18 years but were detained by the Taliban there two months ago and are now being held in Kabul.
Canada
CBC: How people get drawn into extremist groups and some of the work being done in Canada to support people who leave
Ideologically motivated, violent extremist groups, use different kinds of hate to recruit followers and inspire violence. A report dated May 2024 released under the access to information law by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) says Extremist groups are also tapping into current events to build support. Alex Guye reached Brad Galloway to talk about this. He is the coordinator at the Centre On Hate, Bias & Extremism at Ontario Tech University.
Republic: Another Hateful Act In Canada, Sri Krishna Brundavana Temple Vandalised in Greater Toronto
In yet another hateful act, Sri Krishna Brundavana Temple was vandalised by unknown men in Canada’s Greater Toronto Area. Calling temple vandalism an act of mischief, Canadian officials including the Halton Regional Police Service informed that the crime was being investigated. The incident took place on Sunday midnight in Georgetown but was reported on Friday.
Nicaragua
Reuters: Nicaraguan officials committed 'systematic repression,' UN says
The United Nations on Thursday named 54 officials from Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega's government who it said are responsible for serious human rights violations and crimes, in what was described as a "tightly coordinated system of repression." The officials cited include military officers and members of the ruling party.
France
Reuters: In Toulon, Le Pen's legal fightback leaves many French voters cold
Yvon Castel says he has voted for the far-right National Rally for years, but is less than impressed by the tactics its leader Marine Le Pen has chosen to try to fight her way out of a legal judgement barring her way to 2027 elections. "She's not above the law," the 72-year old said - an ominous message for Le Pen and her political prospects that was echoed by others in the sun-baked, immigrant-rich port city of Toulon where the far-right has traditionally prospered.
Germany
WELT: Berlin plans to expel foreign Israel-haters
Berlin wants to expel four foreign supporters of the anti-Israel protest scene from Germany. This was first reported by "The Intercept". According to the report, two Irishmen, one Pole and one American are involved. When asked by WELT, the Berlin State Office for Immigration (LEA) confirmed that the expulsion was in connection with "incidents at the Free University of Berlin on October 17, 2024". Further details are not possible for data protection reasons. On the date in question, masked individuals stormed the presidential building of Freie Universität (FU) Berlin. According to an answer to a minor question from the CDU parliamentary group in the Berlin state parliament, university employees were "threatened both physically and psychologically" by the intruders. "Anyone who questions Israel's right to exist or glorifies anti-Semitic violence is crossing a red line," Berlin's Governing Mayor Kai Wegner (CDU) told WELT. "The ordered loss of freedom of movement for the anti-Semitic offenders is therefore correct and necessary. The Berlin Senate's stance is clear." According to Wegner, the state's authorities will continue to take consistent action against all forms of anti-Semitic incitement.
Deutsche Welle: Far-right AfD rises in the polls
Less than two months ago, the center-right bloc of Christian Democratic Union and Christian Social Union (CDU/CSU) won Germany's general election with almost 29% of the vote. The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party came in second with almost 21%. Already there is a new trend, according to the latest Deutschlandtrend survey conducted for German broadcaster ARD. Pollster infratest dimap surveyed a representative sample of 1,334 eligible German voters from March 31 to April 2. The CDU/CSU slumped to 26%, their lowest level since October 2022, while the AfD reached a new high of 24%. The center-left Social Democratic Party (SPD) which is currently seeking to form a government with the CDU/CSU remains at 16%, which was their worst result ever in a general election.
TVP World: German neo-Nazi terror group trained in Poland and Czech Republic
A radical far-right group in Germany, accused of planning to establish a Nazi state following the collapse of the government, practiced live-ammunition firing in Poland and the Czech Republic, news outlets have reported after holding an investigation. Eight members of the group, called the Saxon Separatists, were arrested in November and charged with terrorist offenses. The group’s suspected ringleader, 23-year-old Jörg S., was apprehended in Poland by the country’s Internal Security Agency.
Deutsche Welle: Germany to deport pro-Palestinian protesters
German immigration authorities have ordered four foreigners involved in pro-Palestinian protests to be deported. They are accused of indirectly supporting Hamas, which is designated as a terrorist organization in Germany.
Spain
Ynet: ‘They walk our streets’: Hezbollah instills fear in Spanish Jews as gov’t fails to confront terror cells
Spanish police arrested three individuals in Barcelona on April 1 for allegedly manufacturing exploding drones on behalf of Hezbollah, the Lebanon-based group designated as a terrorist organization by both the United States and the European Union. The arrests took place in the Eixample district—an upscale area of central Barcelona located just blocks from the city’s main synagogue and Jewish school. Authorities believe the drones were intended for use in conflict zones, possibly against Israeli or Jewish targets. The case has sparked alarm among Jewish leaders and security experts, who say it reveals how terrorist organizations are embedding themselves in the heart of European cities.
United Kingdom
The Times: Islamist control of a high-security prison must be tackled
The surreal state of affairs in HMP Frankland in Co Durham, one of the highest security jails in the UK, will further alarm those who have long warned about the dangers of Islamist extremism entrenching itself in UK prisons. In the past, the most dangerously influential Islamist prisoners, deemed at a high risk of radicalising others, were supposed to be isolated within terrorist separation centres, a facility available in three UK prisons of which Frankland is one.
Russia
The Straits Times: Russian Jehovah's Witness jailed for managing extremist 'cells'
A Jehovah's Witness in the Russian city of Chelyabinsk was sentenced to six years in prison on Thursday for organising the activities of an extremist group, the local interior ministry said. Maxim Khamatshin, 28, is one of 850 Jehovah's Witnesses to be prosecuted in Russia in the eight years since it was banned. During that time, according to the faith group, 588 members were added to a federal register of extremists and terrorists and 460 had spent time in prison.
Israel
New York Times: Israeli Military Orders New Evacuation of Gaza City Neighborhoods
The Israeli military has called on residents to evacuate several neighborhoods in Gaza City, the latest in a series of orders that have forced Palestinians to flee as Israel again escalates its offensive against Hamas in the war-battered Gaza Strip. The new evacuation order late Thursday came not long after the Palestinian health authorities said dozens of people, including children, were killed in Israeli strikes on a school turned shelter in Gaza City. Israel said it was looking into the episode.
Times of Israel: IDF widens ground operation in northern Gaza, kills senior Hamas official in Lebanon
The Israel Defense Forces said Friday that it had expanded its ground operations in the northern Gaza Strip, with troops pushing into Gaza City’s eastern Shejaiya neighborhood. According to the military, the operations are aimed at expanding Israel’s buffer zone along the Gaza border. The IDF said that so far, troops have killed several terror operatives and destroyed infrastructure, including a Hamas command center. IDF spokesman Brig. Gen. Effie Defrin said Thursday that the military has begun a “new stage” in the operation designed to return the hostages and destroy “Hamas’s military and governing capabilities.” Meanwhile, a senior Hamas commander was killed in an Israeli airstrike in the coastal Lebanese city of Sidon overnight, the military announced. Hassan Farhat had headed Hamas’s forces in the western sector of Lebanon, according to the IDF. The Israeli airstrike had hit an apartment building in Sidon.
Times of Israel: UN set to reappoint rapporteur with history of antisemitism, anti-Israel vitriol
The United Nations Human Rights Council is scheduled on Friday to reappoint an investigator into Israel with a history of antisemitism and vitriol against the Jewish state, amid fierce pushback from the US and other opponents. Francesca Albanese, the UN special rapporteur for the occupied Palestinian territories, has been condemned by Jewish groups, Israel, the US, Canada, France, Germany and others. Lawmakers in the US, France, the UK and the Netherlands, and leading US Jewish groups have come out against her reappointment.
CBS News: Israeli strike on Gaza school allegedly kills 31 Palestinians, many kids, but IDF says it hit Hamas
Israeli airstrikes killed at least 100 Palestinians across the Gaza Strip on Thursday, including 31 or more who were sheltering at a school, according to medics in the Hamas-ruled enclave, in a stepped-up offensive that Israel's military says is intended to pressure Hamas to free hostages and eventually expel the militant group. The bodies of 14 children and five women were recovered from the school in the Tuffah neighborhood of Gaza City, and the death toll could rise because some of the 70 wounded sustained critical injuries, said Health Ministry spokesman Zaher al-Wahidi. The Civil Defense rescue agency in Gaza said Friday that at least 31 people were killed in the strike on the school, with around 100 others injured. More than 30 other Gaza residents were killed in strikes on homes in the nearby neighborhood of Shijaiyah, al-Wahidi said, citing records at Ahli Hospital. The Israeli military said it struck a "Hamas command and control center" in the Gaza City area, and that it took steps to lessen harm to civilians. Israel gave the same reason — striking Hamas militants in a "command and control center" — for attacking a United Nations building used as a shelter a day earlier, killing at least 17 people.
Jewish News Syndicate: IDF kills 5 Hamas terrorists, including Oct. 7 perpetrator
Israel killed four Hamas terrorists in a precision strike on one of the group’s command and control centers in Jabalia, north of Gaza City, and another Hamas commander in Lebanon, all on Thursday, the military said. The terrorist eliminated in Lebanon on Thursday night was Hassan Farhat, whom the IDF Spokesperson’s Unit said has served as the commander of Hamas’s western arena in that country. “Farhat led numerous terrorist actions … and was responsible for launching the rockets into Safed that killed Sergeant Amar Sara Banjo and injured several other soldiers on Feb. 14, 2024,” the IDF said on Friday.
Jewish News Syndicate: Freed Israeli hostage recalls hunger as Hamas captors ate
An Israeli who was freed in February after more than a year of captivity in Gaza told dozens of foreign ambassadors in Vienna on Friday about his ordeal in the hands of Hamas terrorists amid starvation and extreme thirst. “There were days when we received only a single pita. We begged our captors, even offering them massages. We pleaded for every crumb and collected each one,” Tal Shoham said in his speech at the United Nations offices in Vienna. Meanwhile, his captors “always had abundant food, including fresh vegetables and fruits.”
Jordan
Jerusalem Post: Dressed as Hamas, Jordanians protest in solidarity with Gaza
Jordanian citizens, some dressed as Hamas terrorists, gathered to protest against the war against Hamas on Friday in Amman, Reuters images revealed. Some signs held at the protest read in Arabic, “Enough killing…Enough silence and inaction. The occupation continues its massacre with American support.”
Lebanon
Reuters: Israel kills a Hamas commander in Lebanon, further testing ceasefire
Israel killed a commander of the Palestinian militant group Hamas in an airstrike on southern Lebanon on Friday, further testing a ceasefire that halted last year's war between Israel and Lebanese militant group Hezbollah. The Israeli military said the targeted militant, Hassan Farhat, was behind a rocket attack on the city of Safed last year that killed and wounded several Israeli soldiers. It vowed to act against Hamas fighters "wherever they operate".
Syria
Fox News: In warning to Turkey, Israel hits strategic targets in Syria amid rising tensions
Israel launched a wave of airstrikes on Syrian military airfields this week, in what officials confirmed to Fox News Digital was "intended to send a clear message to Turkey not to interfere with Israeli aerial operations in Syrian airspace." The escalation marks a turning point in Jerusalem’s stance toward Ankara, as Turkey attempts to expand its military presence in Syria amid regional instability.
The New Arab: Syria: Suspected key perpetrator of Tadamon massacre arrested in Homs
A man suspected to be a key perpetrator of the infamous Tadamon massacre in Damascus has been arrested in the central Syrian city of Homs. Syria's Al-Ikhbariya channel reported that internal security forces had detained Kamel Mohammed Sharif Abbas in the early hours of Friday morning. He is accused of committing serious crimes against civilians during the years of the war, including playing a central role in the Tadamon massacre. There was widespread outrage in Syria and around the world after video footage was leaked documenting the field executions in Tadamon of hundreds of unarmed civilians by members of the ousted Assad regime's forces.
Washington Post: Kurdish fighters leave northern city in Syria as part of deal with central government
Scores of U.S.-backed Kurdish fighters left two neighborhoods in Syria’s northern city of Aleppo Friday as part of a deal with the central government in Damascus, which is expanding its authority in the country. The fighters left the predominantly Kurdish northern neighborhoods of Sheikh Maksoud and Achrafieh, which had been under the control of Kurdish fighters in Aleppo over the past decade. The deal is a boost to an agreement reached last month between Syria’s interim government and the Kurdish-led authority that controls the country’s northeast. The deal could eventually lead to the merger of the main U.S.-backed force in Syria into the Syrian army.
United Arab Emirates
Times of Israel: Jewish children in UAE targeted by antisemitism amid Gaza war, say parents
In the United Arab Emirates, where Jewish life has thrived since the 2020 US-brokered Abraham accords, Jewish children are now finding themselves on the front line when it comes to antisemitism as the Israel-Hamas war rages on in Gaza. Jewish parents in the UAE have spoken to The Times of Israel anonymously in the interest of protecting their children. They relate that their children face cursing and verbal abuse in school, and even more serious incidents — including being threatened with plastic knives in the local neighborhood and being posed the question, “Israel or Palestine?”
Iran
The Telegraph: Iran abandons Houthis under relentless US bombardment
Iran has ordered military personnel to leave Yemen, abandoning its Houthi allies as the US escalates an air strike campaign against the rebel group. A senior Iranian official said the move aimed to avoid direct confrontation with the US if an Iranian soldier was killed. The official said Iran was also scaling back its strategy of supporting a network of regional proxies to focus on the direct threats from the US instead. Tehran’s primary concern, the source said, was “Trump and how to deal with him”. “Every meeting is dominated by discussions about him, and none of the regional groups we previously supported are being discussed,” the source said. There have been near-daily attacks on the Houthis from the US since group chat messages from senior Trump officials discussing the strikes were leaked to the media last month.
Turkey
Reuters: Exclusive: Turkey wants no confrontation with Israel in Syria, foreign minister says
Turkey wants no confrontation with Israel in Syria, but repeated Israeli strikes on military facilities there are eroding the new government's ability to deter threats from enemies, including Islamic State, Turkey's foreign minister told Reuters on Friday. In an interview on the sidelines of a NATO foreign ministers' meeting in Brussels, Hakan Fidan said Israel's actions were fuelling regional instability by targeting Syria, where the government of President Ahmed al-Sharaa is a close ally of Turkey.
Washington Post: Amid airstrikes, interests of Turkey and Israel clash in Syria
Israeli strikes in Syria over the past two days have opened a new flash point in the Middle East as Israel increasingly appears to take aim at Turkish interests in Syria. Israel struck several targets on Wednesday night, including military bases in Hama and Homs in western central Syria, the Israel Defense Forces said. Turkey, a NATO member state and key ally of Syrian interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa, has shown an interest in a military footprint in Syria.
Afghanistan
Amu: Women say Taliban’s morality police have intensified interrogations
A number of women say they are being subjected to increased street interrogations and social pressure by Taliban morality enforcers, who have intensified their public presence during the Eid holidays. Several women told Amu that Taliban enforcers from the Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice have stopped them in public spaces, questioned them, and, in some cases, treated them in demeaning or intimidating ways. “Restrictions have become overwhelming,” said Fatima, a pseudonym used for safety. “I went out to shop for Eid and was stopped by one of their officers. He spoke to us rudely. I’ve spent most of my life in the kitchen, but I’m educated. Thousands of women like me are suffering.”
Iran International: Iranian Foreign Ministry South Asia Director Meets Taliban FM In Kabul
Hafiz Zia Ahmad, a spokesperson for the Taliban’s Foreign Ministry, announced on Thursday that Mohammad Reza Bahrami, Iran’s Director General for South Asia, met Taliban Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi in Kabul. The talks covered “recent developments, water issues, and the situation of Afghan migrants” in Iran, according to Zia Ahmad, who described Bahrami as an advisor to Iran’s Foreign Minister. Iran’s IRNA news agency reported in February that Abbas Araghchi had appointed Bahrami, a former two-term ambassador to Afghanistan, to this role.
Amu: Taliban weapons control strained by internal rivalries as arms reach militant groups, report finds
More than three years after the Taliban’s return to power in Afghanistan, weapons left behind by NATO and former Afghan forces continue to circulate in illicit markets, fueling regional instability and exposing growing tensions within their leadership, according to a new report from the Geneva-based Small Arms Survey. The study, based on fieldwork between 2022 and 2024 across Afghanistan and Pakistan’s tribal belt, found that M4 and M16 rifles, along with other NATO-pattern arms, remain widely available in informal markets. Prices for these weapons have surged significantly in provinces such as Nangarhar and Kunar — M4s rose by 13 percent and M16s by 38 percent — a trend analysts say reflects increased demand and tighter Taliban control on distribution.
Iran
Wall Street Journal: U.S. to Press Iran for Direct Nuclear Talks
The U.S. is pressing to hold direct nuclear talks with Iran, U.S. officials say, as the Trump administration seeks an ambitious goal: dismantling Tehran’s nuclear program. If Iran agreed to engage, the talks would be the first sustained direct negotiations between the two countries since President Trump withdrew from the previous nuclear agreement in 2018.
Kurdistan 24: U.S. Set to Strike Iran: Trump’s Countdown to War Begins
s the world fixates on Donald Trump’s aggressive trade war, a far graver confrontation looms on the horizon. According to senior Israeli political, military, and diplomatic sources, the United States and Israel are preparing to launch an airstrike against Iran’s nuclear sites—an operation that could reshape the Middle East and beyond.
Yemen
Times of Israel: Report: Iran pulling forces out of Yemen amid intensive US airstrikes on Houthis
Iran has reportedly ordered its military personnel to leave Yemen and is pulling back its support for the Houthis amid extensive US airstrikes on the rebel group. The British Telegraph newspaper on Thursday cited a “senior Iranian official” saying that Tehran is scaling back its support of its regional proxies to focus on the direct threats emanating from the US administration. “Every meeting is dominated by discussions about [US President Donald Trump],” the official was quoted as saying.
New York Times: U.S. Strikes in Yemen Burning Through Munitions With Limited Success
President Trump said this week that Iranian-backed Houthi militants in Yemen have been “decimated by the relentless strikes” that he ordered beginning on March 15. But that’s not what Pentagon and military officials are privately telling Congress and allied countries. In closed briefings in recent days, Pentagon officials have acknowledged that there has been only limited success in destroying the Houthis’ vast, largely underground arsenal of missiles, drones and launchers, according to congressional aides and allies. The officials briefed on confidential damage assessments say the bombing is consistently heavier than strikes conducted by the Biden administration, and much bigger than what the Defense Department has publicly described.
Pakistan
Times of India: Militants make March deadliest month in a decade
More than 100 deadly attacks in Pakistan by Islamist militants and separatist rebels made March the deadliest month over a decade with 335 people killed, a think tank reported Thursday. Of the deaths, 228 were caused by militant groups, according to a report by the Pakistan Institute for Conflict and Security Studies (PICSS) think tank.
Africa
Agenzia Nova: Sahel: Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso announce joint counter-terrorism force
The governments of Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso have agreed to form a joint armed force to fight terrorist groups in the region, within the framework of the Alliance of Sahel Countries (AES) they established. "We have achieved promising results in the fight against terrorist groups in our three countries. Our main objective now is to form a united Sahel confederal force to face the terrorist threat," said the Malian Foreign Minister Abdoulaye Diop from Moscow, where he was on an official visit together with his counterparts from the other two African countries. Diop said that defense, security, diplomacy and development will be the main pillars of the proposed confederation, stressing that the alliance considers Russia a “strategic partner” in these efforts. For his part, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov expressed Moscow’s willingness to contribute to the formation of this joint military force uniting Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso. “Russian experts are ready to help design a plan to equip the Axis forces with specific weapons,” Lavrov said.
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