Here’s Why The US Government’s Military Intervention in the Suez is a Risky Move With Consequences…, by Chris MacIntosh

The Houthis are exposing glaring U.S. weaknesses. From Chris MacIntosh at internationalman.com:

Suez Canal

The Suez Canal, a crucial waterway for global trade, has become the stage for a risky geopolitical move as the US and Britain intervene militarily in Yemen. Goat herders in sandals need to know their place, after all. Afghanistan is already a distant memory. A memory no neocon wishes to acknowledge. Humiliation only comes with acknowledgement. Failure to acknowledge, therefore, is simply preferable.

Already, the outcome is far from triumphant, as a US ship is sunk in the process. Only days in and the glaring fragility of the globalists’ military interventions are increasingly difficult to ignore. International relations will automatically take on a different timbre.

The Red Sea

When I first began writing this piece on the goings on in the Red Sea I found myself waking to find more incredible things taking place. Cascading from one crisis to yet another.

You will by now know that the Houthis in Yemen began threatening and then bombing any container ships supplying Israel. Their position being that they’ll stop when the genocide in Gaza ends. Notably Chinese and Russian ships have free passage. The US, under Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin, then attempted to form a “coalition” serving Israel called ‘Guardians of Prosperity’ (do these guys watch too many Hollywood movies or what?) but was met with limited success. Despite visits to 39 countries, the initiative includes Britain, France, Canada, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Spain, the Seychelles and Bahrain — none of which you’ll notice have coastlines on the Red Sea.

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2 responses to “Here’s Why The US Government’s Military Intervention in the Suez is a Risky Move With Consequences…, by Chris MacIntosh

  1. Carriers? Better build some escort vessels and make convoys WWII style.

    Oh wait, I shouldn’t help out the sodomite sewer pipe abomination.

    Hecho en China boats would come pre-sabotaged anyway.

    Suez was where waive the rules perfidious Albion ran aground.

    Fun fact-Captain Walker was a WWII U-Boat hunting ace.

  2. Colonel Kilgore Trout's avatar Colonel Kilgore Trout

    This just in from The Desert Fox:

    Sweat saves blood, blood saves lives, but brains saves both.

    Don’t fight a battle if you don’t gain anything by winning.

    Men are basically smart or dumb and lazy or ambitious. The dumb and ambitious ones are dangerous and I get rid of them. The dumb and lazy ones I give mundane duties. The smart ambitious ones I put on my staff. The smart and lazy ones I make my commanders.

    A risk is a chance you take; if it fails you can recover. A gamble is a chance taken; if it fails, recovery is impossible.

    Erwin Rommel, Deutsches Afrika Korps

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