Germany is readying itself for a potential attack on NATO by Russian forces in 2025, according to leaked plans published by German newspaper Bild.
The secret documents from the German Ministry of Defense detail a step-by-step projection that sees Russia escalating the Ukraine conflict into an all-out European war over the next year and a half. The documents predict that Russia will take Ukraine and then launch cyber attacks and foment violence in Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania.
This violence, the documents claim, would then be used by Putin as a pretense to amass troops in Belarus and Western Russia, before moving more troops and missiles to Kaliningrad, a Russian enclave that lies between Poland and Lithuania. Russian military buildup in the region would then force NATO to engage in a similar troop buildup, which would be portrayed in Russia as proof of an impending attack and used by Putin as casus belli.
“[C]onsidering different scenarios, even if they are extremely unlikely, is part of everyday military business, especially in training,” a German defense official, who refused to comment on the specific doomsday scenario, told Bild.
The secret plans were leaked just days after British PM Rishi Sunak announced a new security agreement with Ukraine and pledged more than $3 billion in additional aid to the country, and also follow a warning by the Swedish civil defense minister that his country could soon find itself in a war.
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Germany is readying itself for a potential attack on NATO by Russian forces in 2025, according to leaked plans published by German newspaper Bild.
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Just days after taking the oath of office, President Joe Biden directed his government to delist Yemen’s Houthi rebels as a “Foreign Terrorist Organization” (FTO). On January 28, 2021 — just eight days after Biden’s bizarre inauguration — Secretary of State Antony Blinken was asked during a press conference which policies enacted by President Trump were a priority for the State Department to reverse. He responded that reversing the terrorist designation and lifting sanctions on the Iranian-backed Houthis was “the priority in my book.”
The Biden admin made a Day 1 decision to appease Iran and dismantle Houthi sanctions.
They knew they were doing bad things for bad reasons so they lied to the public and reporters about their decision. As the Houthis escalated, they couldn't respond.
The Biden government argued that the terrorist designation and sanctions prevented humanitarian aid from reaching Yemeni civilians — roughly 80 percent of the country’s population lives in territory controlled by the Houthi rebels. Reversing the terror designation was also a decision taken to make a news splash and distinguish their foreign policy from Biden’s predecessor.
Former President Donald Trump had signed the designation declaring the Houthis a “Foreign Terrorist Organization” on January 11, 2021 — just ten days before Biden took office — and the issue still had some legs in the news cycle.
Biden officials suspended terrorism sanctions on the Houthis on Jan 25 and announced revoking them on Feb 5. That was a Friday.
Then immediately that weekend, on Saturday and Sunday, the Houthis launched an offensive of mass murdering Yemeni civilians and attacking Saudi Arabia.…
By January 25, 2021, the Biden government had put into effect a temporary suspension of sanctions on the Houthis, and on February 5 of that year, they announced that the terror designation had been officially revoked — although the official announcement was not made public until February 12. Almost immediately, the Houthi rebels renewed hostilities against Saudi Arabia and launched attacks against Yemeni civilians in territory under the control of the country’s internationally recognized government.
The Biden White House communications team was able to head off any bad press in the immediate fallout from revoking the terrorist designation by both stonewalling and lying to an already complacent media, and by hamstringing Congress through an Obama-era tactic of mixing classified and non-classified information — making it difficult for lawmakers to discuss White House actions publicly.
In fact, here are the press briefings for the whole week. Feb 8, 10, 11, and 12 in order. Just look at them lying. pic.twitter.com/slp9FMBm1T
Trump responded to Biden’s latest foreign policy flub early Friday, stating: “So, let me get this straight. We’re dropping bombs all over the Middle East, AGAIN (where I defeated ISIS!), and our Secretary of Defence, who just went missing for five days, is running the war from his laptop in a hospital room. Remember, this is the same gang that “surrendered” in Afghanistan, where no one was held accountable or FIRED. It was the most embarrassing “moment” in the history of the United States. Now we have wars in Ukraine, Israel, and Yemen, but no “war” on our Southern Border. Oh, that makes a lot of sense. Crooked Joe Biden is the worst President in the history of the United States!”
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Just days after taking the oath of office, President Joe Biden directed his government to delist Yemen's Houthi rebels as a "Foreign Terrorist Organization" (FTO). On January 28, 2021 — just eight days after Biden's bizarre inauguration — Secretary of State Antony Blinken was asked during a press conference which policies enacted by President Trump were a priority for the State Department to reverse. He responded that reversing the terrorist designation and lifting sanctions on the Iranian-backed Houthis was "the priority in my book."
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Editor’s Notes
Behind-the-scenes political intrigue exclusively for Pulse+ subscribers.
The United States and the United Kingdom have announced the start of a joint military operation against Yemen’s Houthi rebel group. For several months, the Islamist rebel group that controls large swaths of Yemeni territory has engaged in a campaign of harassment and terror against international shipping in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden. This campaign is allegedly at the behest of their primary state backer, the Islamic Republic of Iran.
As of Thursday, the Yemeni-based Houthis have carried out at least 27 attacks on international shipping off the shores of the nation –situated at the southern tip of the Arabian Peninsula.
An attempt last month by U.S. President Joe Biden to organize an international response fell apart after European partners became frustrated with the slow response from the U.S. military and decided to undertake escort missions for international shipping on their own.
Yemen, in red.
With Houthi attacks continuing to threaten U.S. military assets in the region as well as wreaking havoc with global supply chains, the U.S. and U.K. may find themselves increasingly dragged into both the long-running Yemeni civil war and a broader regional conflict which has pitted Israel and Saudi Arabia, respectively, against Iran and its regional proxies in Gaza, Lebanon, Iraq, and Yemen.
So Who Are The Houthis?
For most of its short history, the Houthi rebel movement was a minor nuisance to the Yemeni government. That changed in 2011 when the Houthis took part in the broader Yemeni revolution – though they later rejected a governing deal proposed by Yemen’s National Dialogue Conference. In 2014, rebel groups’ numbers swelled, and they were able to seize control of the country’s capital.
An uneasy political alliance struck between the rebels and former Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh aided the swift takeover of much of Yemen by the Houthi rebels. A decade before its rise to power, the rebel group had been one of the chief opposition moments against Saleh. In 2004, the Yemeni military under the Saleh government had killed the rebel group’s founder Hussein al-Houthi after they claimed he resisted arrest. The group is now primarily under the leadership of Hussein al-Houthi’s brother, Abdul-Malik al-Houthi.
Relations between the Houthis and Saleh’s political faction deteriorated, with Yemen plunged into civil war. Saudi Arabia backed a series of pro-Saudi leaders against the Iranian-backed Houthis, and in 2017, the Houthi rebels assassinated former President Saleh, after accusing him of treason. There are conflicting reports as to whether Saleh was shot by a Houthi sniper while attempting to flee his compound in a vehicle or if rebels inside the compound itself executed him.
Also known as Ansar Allah, or ‘Supporters of Allah’, the movement’s official slogan (below), reads:
Allah is the Greatest Death to America Death to Israel A Curse Upon the Jews Victory to Islam
The Houthis are mainly Zaidi Shia Muslims, who believe in an activist and political interpretation of Islam.
It’s Actually A Regional Proxy War.
The Houthi rebels began in the 1990s as a Zaidi Shia Islamist revival movement – initially focused on restoring Zaidi cultural and religious practices. Their Shia Islam affiliation and opposition to Yemen’s Sunni majority naturally aligned the group with the interests of the Shia-dominated Islamic Republic of Iran. Under Iran’s influence, the Zaidi revival movement was radicalized, abandoning a more academic pursuit of cultural revival and opting instead to instill their religious and cultural ideology through conflict.
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, along with leaders of Lebanon’s Hezbollah terrorist group (also an Iranian proxy), provided training and aid to the Houthis – accelerating their transformation into a more aggressive rebel faction. In 2014, a series of street protests escalated into a full-blown battle between the Houthi rebels and the Yemeni military. After a few days, the Houthis had routed the Yemeni forces and were able to seize the country’s capital – kicking off a decade-long civil war.
Saudi Arabia, Yemen’s northern neighbor and the regional center of Sunni Muslim political power, quickly intervened in an attempt to counter Iranian influence. The influx of weapons for various factions – provided by Iran and Saudi Arabia – escalated the conflict from a civil war to a regional proxy war.
By 2015, the Saudi-recognized government under Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi had moved the Yemeni capital from Houthi-controlled Sanaʽa to Aden. The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia itself, along with regional backers and logistical support from the U.S. under President Obama, launched a subsequent air and ground campaign aimed at ending Houthi territorial control in Yemen.
In 2018, President Donald Trump vetoed an attempt by Congress to end U.S. support for Saudi Arabia’s efforts in Yemen. After assuming office in 2021, however, President Joe Biden moved to freeze U.S. military sales to Saudi Arabia – effectively ending U.S. involvement in the conflict. A truce was established in March of 2022, freezing the conflict temporarily.
Houthis Escalate After October 7th Hamas Attacks.
On October 7th, 2023, the Muslim Brotherhood’s Hamas terror organization in Gaza – allied with the Houthis since 2021 – launched a terror attack on Israel, killing over a thousand civilians and soldiers, and taking several hundred people hostage. Israel swiftly responded with a military assault on Gaza to eliminate Hamas. Iran, which had pledged to cease arming the Houthi rebels in 2022, reversed course and began shipping arms to Yemen within days of Israel moving against Hamas – also an Iranian proxy.
Houthi insurgents initially focused their efforts against Israel – using Iranian-supplied missiles to target the Jewish state. Those missiles, however, were either intercepted by the Israeli Iron Dome defense system, U.S. military assets in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden, or by Saudi-based land-to-air defense systems. Unable to strike Israel directly, the Houthis instead opted to attempt strikes on U.S. naval assets off the Yemeni coast, as well as international shipping moving through the same waters.
Since late October 2023, Houthis have used a combination of missiles, speed boats, helicopters, and drones to launch attacks against container ships, oil tankers, and U.S. naval vessels in both the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden. The campaign of terror and piracy forced a high volume of international shipping to divert from the critical Suez Canal and Red Sea routes – instead having to sail around the African continent to avoid the Houthi attacks.
Escalation.
The renewed conflict in Yemen has the potential to explode into a broader regional war, especially as Israel’s military action against Hamas drags on. Many of the senior leaders of the Houthi rebels were educated in Islamic ideology by Hezbollah’s Hassan Nasrallah – giving the Lebanon-based terrorist leader a degree of personal investment in the success of the Houthis.
Iran, for its part, has promised retaliation for any strikes against the Houthi rebels. The Islamic Republic could use its proxies in Lebanon, Syria, and Iraq to target both Israeli and U.S. military assets in response to the joint U.S.-U.K. military operation in Yemen.
Saudi Arabia poses another potential point of escalation. While we do not yet know the scale and scope of the U.S.-U.K. military operation, it is believed targets in Yemen will include critical infrastructure used by the Houthis including ammunition depots, drone facilities, missile sites, air bases, and air defense installations. With the Houthi rebels military capabilities likely being crippled by the Western powers, Saudi Arabia may be unable to pass up the opportunity to end the Houthi presence in Yemen entirely. Such a move could not be ignored by Iran – and could risk a large-scale regional war.
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The United States and the United Kingdom have announced the start of a joint military operation against Yemen's Houthi rebel group. For several months, the Islamist rebel group that controls large swaths of Yemeni territory has engaged in a campaign of harassment and terror against international shipping in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden. This campaign is allegedly at the behest of their primary state backer, the Islamic Republic of Iran.
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Senator John Fetterman (D-PA) continues to buck the progressive trend in the Democrat Party, this time pointing out the hypocrisy of the South African government pursuing genocide charges against Israel in the International Court of Justice. During a recent event, the Pennsylvania Democrat blasted the African nation for claiming Israel was committing genocide against Palestinians given its own, genocidal policies towards white Afrikaaner farmers.
Farm murders in South Africa, where farmers are mostly white, have increased sharply quarter-on-quarter, according to a leading civil rights organization, with President Trump having taken a particularly keen interest in the subject during his time in office. Indeed, the leader of the “Kill the Boer” chants has publicly supported Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood.
“Who [is Israel] really fighting? It is a group of cowards. They hide in tunnels. They hide behind civilians. They attack, mutilate, and kill children and women. Stop talking about proportion… [Hamas] shot their best shot on October 7th,” Fetterman told a room of supporters, before continuing: “Now that we’re talking about ‘genocide’, and now South Africa is bringing that kind of a trial. Maybe South Africa ought to sit this one out.”
Fetterman, who has served for nearly one year in the U.S. Senate, has made several recent policy breaks with his Democrat colleagues — most notably on the subjects of Israel, immigration, and whether or not Sen. Bob Menendez should resign over corruption allegations. In late December, the junior Senator from Pennsylvania toldPOLITICO in an interview: “I would be the last man standing to be absolutely there on the Israeli side on this with no conditions.”
The Pennsylvania Democrat has also received praise from conservative Republicans over his recognition of the seriousness of the illegal immigration crisis at the southern border. Addressing Republican calls for action by Congress and the White House to end the crisis, Fetterman recently said: “It’s a reasonable conversation — until somebody can say there’s an explanation on what we can do when 270,000 people are being encountered on the border, not including the ones, of course, that we don’t know about.”
WATCH:
John Fetterman calls out South Africa for the genocide of white farmers.
I'm starting to feel bad for mocking him. He can wear hoodies & gym shorts all he wants if he keeps dropping more conservative talking points than people who claim to be "conservative" members of Congress. pic.twitter.com/XX07o5QcLM
Senator John Fetterman (D-PA) continues to buck the progressive trend in the Democrat Party, this time pointing out the hypocrisy of the South African government pursuing genocide charges against Israel in the International Court of Justice. During a recent event, the Pennsylvania Democrat blasted the African nation for claiming Israel was committing genocide against Palestinians given its own, genocidal policies towards white Afrikaaner farmers.
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Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky has sunk in the polls, falling from 84 percent approval at the end of 2022 to 62 percent approval at the end of 2023.
While still high overall, the Ukrainian leader’s approval rating in the Kyiv International Institute for Sociology (KMIS) surveys may be artificially inflated, with respondents paranoid about possible reprisals. Zelensky has banned most of his political opposition, and purged critics in the media, accusing them of sympathizing with Russia.
That his rating has still dropped by 22 points suggests he is finding it increasingly difficult to contain discontent over the war, after last year’s Western-backed counter-offensive failed with heavy losses. Eighteen percent of respondents openly reported that they do not trust Zelensky — up from just five percent in 2022.
Meanwhile, General Valery Zaluzhny, Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine (AFU), had the trust of 88 percent of respondents, with the AFU at large on 96 percent.
This could spell trouble for Zelensky, as he has long been rumored to be at odds with the general. Zelensky fumed over the military leader’s admission that the war was a “stalemate” last year and has reportedly been attempting to undermine his authority on the battlefield.
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Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky has sunk in the polls, falling from 84 percent approval at the end of 2022 to 62 percent approval at the end of 2023.
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McDonald’s is experiencing a “meaningful business impact” in the Middle East and elsewhere due to the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, according to company CEO Chris Kempczinski.
In a letter posted on LinkedIn, Kempczinski said that “misinformation” related to the dispute has influenced a number of McDonald’s markets worldwide. Boycott movements have been instigated against businesses such as McDonald’s and Starbucks by groups on both the pro-Israeli and pro-Palestinian side.
Kempczinski’s letter described the situation “disheartening and ill-founded”. Financial ramifications on sales remain undisclosed, with potential revelations expected in the company’s later-to-be-reported earnings.
Fall of last year saw McDonald’s confronting criticism after an Israel-based franchise offered discounts to Israeli military personnel. This decision led to boycott calls from some clients. Many of its branches in Pakistan and Indonesia financially backed aid groups in Gaza. The company’s data shows that over half of McDonald’s’ restaurants operate overseas, with many being locally governed franchises.
Starbucks, another global brand, has also been caught amid the controversy. Pro-Palestine supporters boycotted and vandalized multiple outlets under accusations of Starbucks supporting Israel. U.S. pro-Israel factions also criticized the coffee magnate, with the Orthodox Jewish Chamber of Commerce advocating for a boycott upon Starbucks Workers United expressing support for Hamas. Echoing concerns, Starbucks CEO Laxman Narasimhan issued a letter to employees last month, addressing the rising tensions and the impact on the world.
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McDonald's is experiencing a "meaningful business impact" in the Middle East and elsewhere due to the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, according to company CEO Chris Kempczinski.
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Nikki Haley’s top advisor, Jon Lerner, is a neocon “fanatic” whose consultancy firm once received roughly $15 million per election cycle from the globalist Club for Growth – dubbed the “Club for No Growth” or the “Club for China Growth” by Donald Trump – before he took up a position as Haley’s deputy at the United Nations (UN) during the Trump administration.
A profile of Lerner quoted a Gulf States Institute scholar as describing him as a “complete fanatic, totally opposed to peace,” who would be “a flag-waving fan of Hamas” if he had been born an Arab.
While serving as Haley’s deputy, Lerner was tapped by then-Vice President Mike Pence to become his national security advisor, too – until President Trump caught wind of his background.
Discovering Lerner was heavily involved in producing vicious attack ads against him for the Club for Growth during the Republican primaries, the President blocked Lerner’s appointment in 2018. It was an early warning of Pence’s then-undiscovered disloyalty, with Trump said to have wondered aloud: “Why would Mike do that?”
While Trump adopted a strong pro-Israel position as President – a fact acknowledged by Lerner, who wrote in 2019 that Haley “would not have been able” to deliver anything for Israel at at UN without his steadfast support – Haley has adopted a foreign policy stance which appears to put Israeli interests ahead of American interests, repeatedly making the bizarre claim that Israel has “never” needed America but “America needs Israel” on the campaign trail.
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Nikki Haley's top advisor, Jon Lerner, is a neocon "fanatic" whose consultancy firm once received roughly $15 million per election cycle from the globalist Club for Growth – dubbed the "Club for No Growth" or the "Club for China Growth" by Donald Trump – before he took up a position as Haley's deputy at the United Nations (UN) during the Trump administration.
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Seventeen Joe Biden for President campaign staff are in open revolt against their own candidate, demanding the incumbent shift the U.S. government’s foreign policy regarding Israel and Gaza as a “moral and electoral imperative”.
Writing on Substack on Wednesday, the anonymous staffers claimed: “…your administration’s response to Israel’s indiscriminate bombing in Gaza has been fundamentally antithetical to [our] values — and we believe it could cost you the 2024 election.”
They continued with five demands, which includes the release of Palestinian prisoners held by the Jewish state.
Publicly call for — and use financial and diplomatic leverage to bring about — an immediate, permanent ceasefire;
Advocate for de-escalation in the region, including demanding that Hamas release all hostages and that Israel release the over 2,000 Palestinians in administrative detention being held without charge;
End unconditional military aid to Israel;
Investigate whether Israel’s actions in Gaza violate the Leahy Law, prohibiting U.S. military aid from funding foreign military units implicated in the commission of gross violations of human rights;
Take concrete steps to end the conditions of apartheid, occupation, and ethnic cleansing that are the root causes of this conflict.
“As your staff, we believe it is both a moral and electoral imperative for you to publicly call for a cessation of violence,” they concluded, finishing with, “Biden for President staff have seen volunteers quit in droves, and people who have voted blue for decades feel uncertain about doing so for the first time ever, because of this conflict. It is not enough to merely be the alternative to Donald Trump.”
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Seventeen Joe Biden for President campaign staff are in open revolt against their own candidate, demanding the incumbent shift the U.S. government’s foreign policy regarding Israel and Gaza as a “moral and electoral imperative”.
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Editor’s Notes
Behind-the-scenes political intrigue exclusively for Pulse+ subscribers.
The deputy leader of the Muslim Brotherhood’s ‘Hamas’ terror group, Saleh Arouri, has reportedly been killed by an Israeli airstrike in Beirut, Lebanon. Videos from the scene show extensive damage to a city block on Tuesday, with vehicles reduced to flaming piles of twisted metal. An apartment building also appears to have been damaged in the strike. Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah cancelled a long-scheduled speech due Wednesday in the immediate aftermath.
Unconfirmed reports coming in that #Israel has killed a senior #Hamas leader in Beirut, Saleh al-Arouri.
With this strike, Israel is sending a clear message that terrorists are not safe anywhere and nor should they be! pic.twitter.com/xkTtl0aoyR
The Israeli Defense Forces have engaged in a campaign to eliminate the leadership of Hamas since the October 7th terror attack carried out by the Islamist terrorist group. The attack saw around 1,200 people killed by Muslim Brotherhood militants acting under the Hamas banner, with several hundred taken hostage and moved to Gaza.
In addition to Arouri, Hamas claims two other members of their senior leadership were killed in the strike – though their identities have yet to be confirmed.
“The cowardly assassinations carried out by the Zionist occupation against the leaders and symbols of our Palestinian people inside and outside Palestine will not succeed in breaking the will and steadfastness of our people, or undermining the continuation of their valiant resistance,” Hamas said in a statement posted on Telegram. “It proves once again the abject failure of this enemy to achieve any of its aggressive goals in the Gaza Strip.”
The targeted strike comes on the heels of news the Israeli Defense Forces intend to remove several thousand troops from Gaza, marking a shift in the war from a broad military campaign to a more targeted tactical mission to continue the elimination of Hamas leadership.
Arouri was killed near the headquarters of the Iranian proxy militant group Hezbollah. The proximity of the strike to the groups headquarters has left some observers concerned it may draw Lebanon and Iran further into the Israel-Hamas war.
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The deputy leader of the Muslim Brotherhood's 'Hamas' terror group, Saleh Arouri, has reportedly been killed by an Israeli airstrike in Beirut, Lebanon. Videos from the scene show extensive damage to a city block on Tuesday, with vehicles reduced to flaming piles of twisted metal. An apartment building also appears to have been damaged in the strike. Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah cancelled a long-scheduled speech due Wednesday in the immediate aftermath.
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Following a recent knife attack near the Eiffel Tower, France has further increased security measures, with 90,000 police officers set to be deployed across the country on New Year’s Eve. French Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin has cited a “very high terrorist threat” for the mobilization.
“I’ve requested a very strong mobilisation of police forces and the gendarmerie under the context of a very high terrorist threat, of course due to what’s happening in Israel and Palestine,” Darmanin explained.
For the first time, the authorities will also be using drones to monitor French citizens and other residents. Five-thousand soldiers and 35,000 firefighters will also be on duty.
Few Western countries have been hit harder than France by radical Islamic terrorism in recent years, with the multicultural country suffering around 130 fatalities during the Bataclan terrorist attack in 2015 and 86 fatalities during the Nice truck attack a year later, among other incidents.
Tensions have been high since the onset of the Israel-Hamas conflict, with a knifeman yelling “Allahu akbar!” stabbing a person to death in Paris four weeks ago and a Chechen migrant killing a teacher while shouting the same phrase before that.
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Following a recent knife attack near the Eiffel Tower, France has further increased security measures, with 90,000 police officers set to be deployed across the country on New Year’s Eve. French Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin has cited a "very high terrorist threat" for the mobilization.
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