In a recent interview with Al Jazeera, Ethiopia's dictator Meles Zenawi said that even if Eritreans start shooting, his troops will not shoot back.
What Meles meant without saying it is that the invasion will be handled by Eritrean opposition groups that he armed.
Meles and his Woyanne warlords are preparing for an invasion of Eritrea by proxy. ER sources are reporting that Eritrean opposition groups organized and armed by Woyanne under the umbrella Eritrean National Alliance has lined up some 30,000 fighters.
Interestingly, many of these fighters are not even Eritreans. The strategy crafted by Woyanne is to send the purported Eritrean opposition fighters along with tens of thousands of Woyanne troops disguised as Eritrean fighters into the Eritrean territory supported by air power.
Meles and Bereket the pathological liar will deny that their regime has any involvement, saying that it is the Eritrean opposition groups who are doing the fighting.
The U.S. Government will play along, and may even provide satellite intelligence to the Woyanne forces. The U.S. Congress must be informed of this possible Bush Administration complicity so that it can take preventive measures, such as passing a strongly worded resolution demanding the Administration not to get involved.
THE INDIAN OCEAN NEWSLETTER Ethiopia*s military preparations N* 1227 01/12/2007 Prime Minister Meles Zenawi has just admitted to Parliament in Addis Ababa that his government had increased the military spending budget by 16.7%, to reach $54 million, in preparation for a resumption of war with Eritrea. According to information obtained by The Indian Ocean Newsletter, Ethiopian military preparations include the construction of an airport with a two-kilometre runway at Adi Daro in the Tigray Regional State (in the north of the country). This work has been directly supervised by the general chief of staff of the armed forces, General Samora Yunis. Furthermore, three large depots for munitions and military material have been discreetly installed at Wukro,Tembien and Shire. When General Abebaw Tadesse inquired of Samora Yunis as to why the ministry of defence had not been given prior information about the construction of these depots, Yunis sent him packing.
Fact Sheet Bureau for African Affairs Washington, DC December 6, 2007 - United States policy toward the boundary impasse between Eritrea and Ethiopia is and has been for both governments to respect commitments in the Algiers Agreements, comply with relevant Resolutions of the UNSC, and engage directly to implement the Eritrea-Ethiopia Boundary Commission’s (EEBC) delimitation decision and address issues that divide them.
- The EEBC’s demarcation decision by map coordinates is the responsibility of Eritrea and Ethiopia, the parties to the Algiers Agreements, to decide whether and how to implement.
- Assistant Secretary Frazer has regularly explained this policy and most recently highlighted the importance of dialogue in developing a workable boundary regime in comments made during a State Department briefing on November 30.
- On December 5, Secretary Rice, in Addis Ababa, reiterated that the governments of Eritrea and Ethiopia should avoid any actions that might further heighten tension or reignite conflict. The United States urges both governments to cooperate with the United Nations Mission in Ethiopia and Eritrea in this effort.
From the above statement of US Bureau for African Affairs we can assume that Eritrea has fragmented the States Department in the truest sense of the word. The price was very high but Eritrea has once and for all reconfirmed irrevocable its sovereignty legally and lawfully. Never again even with law on our side let us expect mercy or justice from the so-called world power. The Truth rules, The Power of The People rules! Additional Information: >> DEMARCATION IS COMPLETE - TSZ EXPIRES
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