Post by Mockingbird on Aug 10, 2021 13:35:08 GMT
At 6:45AM in Abul, Qurac a barrage of drone strikes raged through the historic Al-Maktaba district. The decision was one considered to be a bluff, the Pentagon threatening action against the terrorist group Al-Saalihin for the hostages they had in an abandoned refinery. While this threat was made with the expectation that the terrorists would comply, it was still harshly criticised as any attack on the district would likely result in collateral damage of protected UNESCO World Heritage Sites. Al-Saalihin refused to co-operate, executing the hostages on video. President Hale ordered an airstrike, sending 5 UCAVs to target key locations. What happened next was harrowing.
Tamzi ibn Ramman Grand Library
Tamzi ibn Ramman Grand Library
One of the drones discovered an Apokoliptian weapons stache belonging to a US-backed mercenary group fighting Al-Saalihin, the missile detonated the explosives inside, ruminating alongside the other bombardments and spreading a firestorm of 5 square miles throughout the neighborhood. Among the buildings destroyed was the Tamzi ibn Ramman Grand Library, a library founded by early Islamic scholar and Quraci national hero Tamzi ibn Ramman.
As the US is signatory to The Hague Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict, the President and commanders are criminally liable by international law for destroying a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Defendants of the President have noted that the sites themselves were never threatened, and that their destruction was the result of a horrific accident. Critics note, however, that the weapons stache belonged to a US affiliated group and had they carried out a more comprehensive scope of the area this wouldn't have happened.
As far as the most recent data records, more than two quarters of the entire neighborhood have been estimated to have been killed in the event, with even more critically injured.
As the US is signatory to The Hague Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict, the President and commanders are criminally liable by international law for destroying a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Defendants of the President have noted that the sites themselves were never threatened, and that their destruction was the result of a horrific accident. Critics note, however, that the weapons stache belonged to a US affiliated group and had they carried out a more comprehensive scope of the area this wouldn't have happened.
As far as the most recent data records, more than two quarters of the entire neighborhood have been estimated to have been killed in the event, with even more critically injured.
Written by Aswad Nasser