Grand reporter élevé à la châtaigne | Réd’chef de la matinale @franceinfo | Formateur radio @sciencespoEdj | Prix de la presse diplo 2023 | #CHEID 1e promotion
Très honoré de recevoir le prix 2023 de l’Association de la presse diplomatique. #APDF
Merci aux jurés pour leur vote, à @radiofrance et à l’équipe de la @int3rnationalRF pour leur confiance. Et merci à l’indispensable @ismetakcagdlr aka « Le magicien »
https://t.co/ZhOOiEzl0J
Pas gagnée l’histoire de la chaîne de transmission cassée…
#Hantavirus : un résident corse évacué vers l'hôpital Bichat à Paris
https://t.co/zORwv3u1mD
APPEL À TÉMOINS : Je recherche le génie qui a écrit ça dans le magasin Grand Slam de New York, je suis très sérieux.
Si vous le connaissez, qu’il se manifeste 👑 #StazzonaCapitale
🇺🇸🇮🇷 A senior U.S. military official just called this one of the most complex special operations missions in American history
The details that are emerging are extraordinary.
Two transport planes got stuck at a remote base inside Iran after the WSO was recovered.
Commanders flew in three replacement aircraft, extracted everyone, and destroyed both disabled planes on the ground to prevent them falling into Iranian hands.
The F-15E went down in a region with significant opposition to the Iranian government.
The WSO may have received help from local civilians willing to shelter an American pilot while their own government hunted him.
The CIA reportedly facilitates exactly this kind of arrangement through a process called "unconventional assisted recovery," making contact with civilians willing to help vulnerable troops survive.
So the full picture: a pilot ejected, climbed a mountain, was sheltered by locals who risked their lives, evaded for 48 hours while Iran offered bounties, survived a massive firefight at the recovery site, was extracted on aircraft that then got stuck, required three more planes to fly in, and the originals were blown up on exit.
What a story.
Source: NYT
Media: @officialrnintel
🇺🇸🇮🇷
Le copilot du F-15 🇺🇸 abattu a été secouru dans une intense opération au sol et dans les airs
Il a pu être repéré par des forces spéciales 🇺🇸 qui l’ont évacué vers une ancienne base aérienne iranienne
C’est à partir de là que c’est devenu “compliqué”
1/3
I write in @FT that Iran is playing the long game. In war, geography matters as much as technology. Iran commands the entire northern shore of the Gulf, looming large over energy fields on its southern shore and all that passes through its waters. Its Houthi allies are perched at the entrance to the Red Sea and along the passage to the Suez Canal; Iran is thus perfectly positioned to squeeze the global economy from both sides of the Arabian Peninsula. Those in command of Iran today are veterans of asymmetric wars in Iraq and Syria. They are now applying the same strategy to fighting the US on the battlefield of the global economy. Drones, short-range missiles and mines setting tankers and ports on fire can have the same effect IEDs had in Iraq, only with greater impact — disrupting global supply chains and sending oil prices higher.
Iran could sustain its counteroffensive more easily and for far longer. Furthermore, a ceasefire alone will not lift the shadow of risk that Iran has imposed over the Gulf, which is now experiencing its nightmare scenario. That is why Iranian leaders are saying they will not accept a ceasefire until Washington fully grasps the global economic cost of waging this war. Businesses, investors and tourists may not return to the Gulf states if they assume that war could resume again. Unless the US is prepared to invade Iran to remove the Islamic republic’s leaders and then stay there to ensure stability and security, confidence in the Gulf will only return if the US and Iran arrive at a durable ceasefire.
Iran says it will only accept a ceasefire with international guarantees for its sovereignty, which would probably mean a direct role for Russia and China. It may also demand compensation for war damages and a verifiable ceasefire in Lebanon. The US would then have to agree to some form of the nuclear deal it left on the table in Geneva in February and commit to lifting sanctions. Iran’s leaders entered this war with the goal of ensuring it will be the last one. Either it breaks them or radically changes the country’s circumstances. They are betting on surviving long enough and squeezing the global economy hard enough to realise that goal.
Read full article https://t.co/63RNeA8Bza
Avec la guerre au Moyen-Orient, ça fait 24h qu'on évoque l'idée d'un Cheikh Harburant. C'est pour remplacer le Calviniste musulman Habib ?
On attend les explications de Régis Virieux... #périphériqueinterieurcompris
Très honoré de recevoir le prix 2023 de l’Association de la presse diplomatique. #APDF
Merci aux jurés pour leur vote, à @radiofrance et à l’équipe de la @int3rnationalRF pour leur confiance. Et merci à l’indispensable @ismetakcagdlr aka « Le magicien »
https://t.co/ZhOOiEzl0J
@MdePONTKALLEG@radiofrance@int3rnationalRF@ismetakcagdlr Cher monsieur, en tant que rédacteur en chef, il ne m'appartient pas de passer à l'antenne. Et si vous avez écouté attentivement la matinale de franceinfo depuis lundi, vous avez sûrement constaté que la mort de Quentin D. est évoquée dans chacune de nos éditions...1/2
#iran Quelle que soit l’issue pour Ali Khamenei, la clé du régime iranien, ce sont les Gardiens de la révolution. Si leur pouvoir ne s’effrite pas, difficile d’envisager un changement de régime. Ils ne sont pas seulement une armée. Leur emprise sur le pays est profonde… (1/5)
Rien de sérieux n’émerge, pas de leader. Pas de projet. C’est toute la difficulté avec la figure de Pahlavi. Durant ses années d’exil, a-t-il proposé autre chose que « fils du chah » ? (5/5)