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#anwar sadat
girlactionfigure · 7 months
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45 years ago today: On September 17th, 1978, the Camp David Accords, a pair of political agreements between Israel and Egypt, were signed by Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin. The following year, this led to a peace treaty between the two countries.
This was a significant moment in the history of the region.
StandWithUs 
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codesquire · 5 days
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So, when will we learn that Sadat and Rabin were murdered by covert US/UK/Israeli (or joint effort of all 3) to disrupt all attempts at stability in the region?
The last 6 months seems to indicate heavily that the USA, at the very least, sees Israel as a sandbox, similar to the Americas.
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Peace on TV, 1977
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pedroam-bang · 1 year
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Call Of Duty: Black Ops Cold War (2020)
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The book stack book reviews:
The Day The Leader Was Killed by Naguib Mahfouz (1985)
Grade: B-
A novella that’s only about 100 pages. You can finish it in an afternoon. Ostensibly it’s about the day Anwar Sadat was killed by terrorists in 1981. However, it’s more about a couple of young Egyptians, living through Sadat’s open-door economic policy, and the disaster that it unleashed upon Egypt. Feeling hopeless at the idea of accumulating enough money to afford a dowry and a place of his own, the love they have for each other is not enough to sustain them against the economic reality that it’s impossible for them to actually build a life like their parents could. Something relatable in the America of 2023: not being able to afford adulthood. The ending, which I don’t want to reveal, has a Do the Right Thing quality to it, which I found very elusive but interesting. Overall a nice book to read, but it is a very Egyptian book with Egyptian sensibilities of the time. Worth checking out but I feel like it owes too much of a debt to the grand old romantic novels of young love, and it expects me to care about the young lovers, simply because they are young and in love, but not really because of who they are as people. Both lovers end up being very thin sketches of characters, because the author seems to expect we will care about them, simply because they are young and in love, and should be allowed their happiness. Perhaps so, but I would’ve appreciated a little bit more depth and detail, so I could’ve understood them as complex people and not just as placeholder young man and young woman who “love each other, but…”. Worth reading, however, it may not engage everyone. It’s the kind of book that if it had been 50-100 pages longer I probably would’ve rated it a C or a C- but its short length saves it from being substandard.
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mossadegh · 1 year
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• U.S. State Department Documents on Iran | 1951-1980
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quotes-by-dilanka · 1 year
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My contemplation of life and human nature in that secluded place taught me that he who cannot change the very fabric of his thought will never, therefore, make any progress.
—Anwar Sadat, cell 54 of Cairo Central Prison
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randomrichards · 1 year
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ALL THE BEAUTY AND THE BLOODSHED:
A photographer
Leads campaign against Sacklers
Lens on the ignored
youtube
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1talapia-007 · 22 days
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girlactionfigure · 1 year
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pastdaily · 3 months
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Gerald Ford And The Economy In Nosedive - February 1, 1975
https://pastdaily.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/news-for-week-ending-february-1-1975.mp3 – CBS Radio – The World This Week- ending February 1, 1975 – Gordon Skene Sound Collection Somehow, it always winds up being about the Economy. This first day of February in 1975 was all about the Budget and President Gerald Ford‘s proposal for Fiscal Year 1976. It was also about unemployment figures, which…
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View On WordPress
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whatisonthemoon · 10 months
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Moonie Larry Moffitt honors Ray Cline and calls Douglas MacArthur II “my longtime friend and mentor”
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The end of September saw the successful completion of the Ninth World Media Conference, which like every previous conference had a noticeably better quality of speakers and participants than the ones before.
For example, our slate of distinguished speakers included three U.S. congressmen; Mrs. Anwar Sadat, widow of the late President of Egypt; Mrs. Salvador Laurel, wife of the Vice President of the Philippines; John Lehman, former Secretary of the Navy; Douglas Kiker, national affairs correspondent for "NBC Nightly News"; Yoshiki Hidaka, vice director of NHK Television Network in Japan; Ray Cline, former deputy director of the CIA; and Ambassador Douglas MacArthur II, my longtime friend and mentor.
from a report by Larry Moffit on the 1987 Ninth World Media Conference
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Clouds Over George Bush (1998) Moonies alienate our children and serve the CIA Contragate and Counterterrorism: An Overview On Yamashita’s Gold, Singlaub, and the Events Following Marcos’ Departure
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peppermintrer · 1 year
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Reading how proud Anwar el-Sadat was about his peace deal with Israel after the Yom Kippur War in his Autobiography.
And how he finally brought peace to the region. And how it was nice the USA was willing to support the deal, how they “showed their true values of freedom and peace.” And how everyone was happy with the result like…
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nakeddeparture · 2 years
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October 6, 1981. Today in History, Anwar Sadat, the President of Egypt was assassinated. Sadat trusted/believed what stood in front of him, and he saluted a lie!
https://youtu.be/3PcRbcbmy0Y
youtube
A salute is not a defensive posture! Trust no one! Naked!!
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