"I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life"

Father God, thank you for the love of the truth you have given me. Please bless me with the wisdom, knowledge and discernment needed to always present the truth in an attitude of grace and love. Use this blog and Northwoods Ministries for your glory. Help us all to read and to study Your Word without preconceived notions, but rather, let scripture interpret scripture in the presence of the Holy Spirit. All praise to our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.

Please note: All my writings and comments appear in bold italics in this colour

Saturday, April 18, 2026

Military Madness > Is Turkey still trying to find a way to enter the Middle East war? Russia issues warning to Baltic states; Dutch Navy stealth warship tracked by €5 gadget

 

The chance of a Türkiye-Israel war has never been more real


A recent media frenzy about open threats from Ankara may have been just that – but the slide toward actual conflict is there

Published 17 Apr, 2026 18:10 | Updated 17 Apr, 2026 19:15

The chance of a Türkiye-Israel war has never been more real











The latest wave of discussion about a possible Turkish-Israeli confrontation was triggered by media reports claiming Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan threatened to invade Israel.

Soon afterward, however, that interpretation was challenged in Türkiye. The specific quote turned out to be old and taken out of context, and Turkish voices insisted that Erdogan had made no direct statement about being prepared to launch a war against Israel. Still, he has undeniably been escalating his harsh rhetoric towards Israel, including calling it a terrorist state and comparing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to Hitler.

Yet even setting aside the dispute over the precise wording, the intensity of the reaction to the ‘invasion threat’ reports is revealing in itself. It shows that relations between Ankara and West Jerusalem have already reached a stage at which even an ambiguous phrase is instantly treated as a political signal, and any sharp comment can become part of the wider picture of a major regional confrontation. The ground for such a perception has long been prepared by the very trajectory of Turkish-Israeli relations.

A slide towards conflict

At first glance, this may appear to be no more than another burst of emotional rhetoric of the kind that has long been common in the Middle East, where dramatic threats and demonstrative statements have become part of the political language. But that explanation is too shallow and therefore misses the real point. What we are witnessing in fact reflects a much deeper and more dangerous process. Türkiye and Israel are gradually ceasing to see one another merely as occasional opponents divided by particular disputes, and are increasingly beginning to view each other as strategic rivals in a long game. That is what makes the current exchange of statements especially alarming. Once states enter a phase of systemic rivalry, rhetoric itself starts shaping how elites, societies, and security institutions imagine a future conflict as something almost natural.

In one sense, there is nothing surprising about this. The Middle East is structured in such a way that several ambitious centers of power can rarely coexist without an escalating competition between them. When multiple states claim exceptional status, the role of regional guarantor, or the right to speak for the region or at least for a large part of it, their interests will sooner or later collide. Türkiye and Israel are now moving ever more clearly toward precisely that point. Both states lay claim to a special mission. Both want to be indispensable to outside powers. Both believe that yielding to a rival today may become a historic defeat tomorrow. And both build their strategies not only around the defense of national interests but also around the idea of regional primacy. In such a context, even temporary tactical cooperation does not alter the deeper reality. Competition over space, influence, routes, alliances, and symbolic leadership continues to accumulate at a systemic level.

A history of partnership

It is particularly important to understand that Türkiye and Israel were by no means destined for hostility. On the contrary, for decades their relations developed along a very different trajectory. Ankara became the first Muslim-majority country to recognize Israel in the middle of the twentieth century. During the Cold War, the two maintained working ties grounded in pragmatism, shared links to the Western world, and an understanding that in an unstable regional environment it was better to have additional channels of interaction than to turn ideological differences into a permanent source of conflict. But the true flourishing of Turkish-Israeli cooperation came in the 1990s. That was when both sides began to see in the other an important element of their own security strategy.

In those years, Turkish-Israeli relations did indeed approach a near-strategic level. Military and intelligence cooperation was particularly close. For Türkiye, this meant access to technology, modernization, coordination on security matters, and the strengthening of its armed forces. For Israel, an alliance with a large Muslim country occupying a position of immense geographic importance carried both symbolic and practical value. It demonstrated that the Jewish state was capable of building durable ties in the region and moving beyond the usual boundaries of diplomatic isolation. Joint exercises, military contacts, defense agreements, technical modernization, intelligence exchanges, and political coordination all created the impression that a long-term axis was taking shape between the two states.

It is to that period that the story of Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) leader Abdullah Ocalan belongs, a story that still carries symbolic weight for understanding how Turkish-Israeli closeness was perceived both in Türkiye and across the region. What remains a confirmed fact is that Ocalan was captured by Turkish intelligence in Kenya in 1999. Yet almost immediately, a broader narrative took hold suggesting that Israeli intelligence may have assisted Türkiye in the operation. That theme became part of the half-shadowed political memory of the region. For some, it was evidence of the depth of the Turkish-Israeli partnership. For others, it became part of a wider myth that Israel, at critical moments, stood with the Turkish state in its struggle against the Kurdish movement. Even if one leaves aside the question of how accurate those perceptions were, the more important point remains. Such narratives could only take root because, in the 1990s, Turkish-Israeli cooperation appeared so close that many found it entirely plausible that Israel might have had a hand in some of Türkiye’s most sensitive operations.

And this is where one of the most striking ironies of modern Middle Eastern history lies. What once seemed like a durable strategic partnership gradually turned into a field of irritation, mutual suspicion, and then near-open rivalry. Erdogan’s rise to power did not produce an immediate rupture, but it steadily altered the ideological framework of the relationship. The new Turkish leadership viewed the region differently. It sought not merely to preserve ties to the Western security architecture, but to construct its own autonomous axis of influence, drawing upon the Islamic factor, a more active policy across former Ottoman spaces, and the projection of moral leadership on issues tied to the Muslim world. Within that model, Israel could no longer remain for Ankara simply a pragmatic partner. It increasingly became a convenient point of ideological contrast and at the same time an important target of foreign policy pressure.

Continue reading this article on RT at:

Much more than just Palestine






Russian security chief issues drone attack warning to four NATO states


Sergey Shoigu has cautioned Finland and the Baltic states against allowing Kiev to use their airspace for attacks on Russia
Published 16 Apr, 2026 20:21 | Updated 17 Apr, 2026 06:13
Russian security chief issues drone attack warning to four NATO states











Russia has the right to retaliate if Finland and the Baltic states are found to be deliberately allowing Ukrainian drones to pass through their airspace, Security Council Secretary Sergey Shoigu warned on Thursday.

“Recently, there has been an increase in Ukrainian drone strikes against Russia via Finland, Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia,” Shoigu told journalists. “As a result, civilians are suffering and significant damage is being caused to civilian infrastructure.”

Either Western air defenses are proving ineffective, or these four countries “deliberately provide their airspace, thereby becoming open accomplices in aggression against Russia,” he added. In the latter case, Moscow has the right to self-defense in response to an “armed attack” under Article 51 of the UN Charter, the security chief stressed.

In recent weeks, Kiev has intensified drone strikes on Russia in what Moscow has characterized as “terrorist attacks,” with the Russian military regularly reporting hundreds of UAVs downed in a single night.

Late last month, Kiev attacked Russia’s Baltic Sea ports of Ust-Luga and Primorsk with swarms of UAVs. The raids resulted in fires in both towns, which house extensive petrochemical infrastructure.

Kremlin aide Nikolay Patrushev said he believed that Finland and the Baltic states were “complicit in these crimes.” The provision of national airspace for Ukrainian drone strikes would “signify direct NATO participation” in attacks on Russia, he said Monday.

Multiple Ukrainian drones have also struck the territories of Finland and the three Baltic states since early March. Despite this, all four nations have avoided condemning Kiev outright for violating their airspace.

Moscow has already formally warned Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia against allowing Ukraine to send drones via their territory, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said last week. “If the regimes in these countries are smart enough, they will listen. If not, then they will have to deal with the consequences,” she said.





€5 gadget tracks down Dutch Navy's stealth warship while on mission



The regional broadcaster Omroep Gelderland determined the location of the Zr. MS. Evertsen, a stealth frigate of the Dutch navy currently on mission, by using a €5 gadget, an envelope, and two stamps. The Ministry of Defense is taking measures, the broadcaster reported.

Omroep Gelderland found the Evertsen using a Bluetooth tracker, a cheap device typically used for things like finding your keys. The broadcaster got the tracker on board the ship by posting it through the Military Postal Organization, the Ministry’s own post office that lets soldiers stay in touch with loved ones at home. Instructions for using this service are available on the Defense website.

The Ministry checks incoming post for dangerous items. But videos posted online by the Ministry show only packages passing through an X-ray scanner. Omroep Gelderland, therefore, packaged the tracker in an envelope, and it went to the Evertsen undetected.

Rowin Jansen, an assistant professor of National Security Law at Radboud University in Nijmegen, told Omroep Gelderland that Defense needs to be more careful about what it puts online, given the current geopolitical tensions. “It’s a trade-off between the private interests of soldiers who want to maintain contact with their families and national security. And with everything that is going on at the moment, you would expect national security to take precedence.”

“You would rather not have a warship’s location known,” Former Lieutenant General Mart de Kruif from Laag-Keppel told the broadcaster. “Nowadays, you can eliminate targets remotely and with great precision, but you do need to know where they are. So, as a frigate, you never want to reveal your location.” You can’t just go along with the existing rules, he said. “We are still a bit naive, and that mindset needs to change.”

The Evetsen is currently deployed to protect a French aircraft carrier against missile attacks. Information regarding the stealth ship’s location is therefore highly sensitive. Yet this is not the first time its location was easily revealed. A few weeks ago, a French soldier accidentally revealed the location by uploading his jog to the running app Strava.

The Ministry of Defense banned Dutch soldiers from using fitness apps in 2018, after such apps' data revealed Dutch military patrol routes in Mali. Yet last year, Omroep Gelderland was still able to obtain the data of 900 Dutch soldiers through Strava. 

===============================================================================================


Friday, April 17, 2026

Latin America Rising > Brazil, United States fighting organized crime; Venezuela enacts mining law; Bolivia attracting gas and oil investments; Chilean reforms to boost economic growth

 

Brazil, United States deepen cooperation to combat organized crime

An aerial photograph of cargo containers in the port of Santos in Sao Paulo, Brazil and the United States have reached an agreement to better track illegal shipments. File Photo by Isaac Fontana/EPA
An aerial photograph of cargo containers in the port of Santos in Sao Paulo, Brazil and the United States have reached an agreement to better track illegal shipments. File Photo by Isaac Fontana/EPA

April 10 (UPI) -- The government of Brazil on Friday announced an agreement with the United States to combat transnational crime -- a move that will integrate intelligence sharing and joint operations to target organized criminal networks.

The initiative was presented by Brazil's finance ministry, where Minister Darío Durigan said the agreement between Brazil's Federal Revenue Service and U.S. Customs and Border Protection will enable the exchange of cargo data, particularly on shipments leaving the United States for Brazil.

The focus will be on intercepting illegal goods, such as weapons and narcotics.

The announcement comes as Washington considers designating Brazil-based criminal groups Primeiro Comando da Capital and Comando Vermelho as terrorist organizations, according to outlet G1 O'Globo.

The effort gained traction after Eduardo Bolsonaro and Flávio Bolsonaro, sons of former President Jair Bolsonaro, urged members of the administration of Donald Trump to take action, The New York Times reported. U.S. officials have not publicly confirmed any such designation.

Brazilian authorities also highlighted the rollout of the DESARMA program, a system designed to allow real-time information sharing when customs officials identify shipments linked to firearms, ammunition, explosives and other sensitive materials.

Officials said the tool enables authorities to trace the origin of illicit goods and map criminal networks involved in the international arms trade.

Recent records show the system has expanded the ability to detect, connect and track illicit weapons flows, with early results already benefiting both countries.

U.S.-provided intelligence has helped uncover sophisticated smuggling methods, including rifle components hidden inside airsoft equipment and drugs concealed in packages labeled as common goods such as pet food sent through postal services.

Over the past 12 months, authorities identified 35 incidents involving the seizure of 1,168 items, weighing about 550 kilograms, primarily shipped from Florida using fraudulent declarations and concealment techniques.

Brazil's tax revenue secretary, ​Robinson Barreirinhas, said ‌more than 1,100 weapons ​were seized ​over the past 12 ⁠months arriving from ​the United States, ​and that in the first quarter alone, authorities ​have seized more ​than 1.5 tons of ‌drugs.

Brazil's finance ministry said consolidating this data into a structured database has improved identification of patterns, links between senders and recipients, and recurring trafficking routes. This, in turn, has strengthened information-sharing with U.S. authorities to support enforcement action at the source and dismantle criminal networks.

The ministry added that the cooperation is part of ongoing dialogue between President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and Trump, and forms part of a broader bilateral agenda focused on combating transnational organized crime.



Venezuela enacts mining law, thanks Trump for openness

People from the industry pose with a copy of the new mining law at Venezuela's National Assembly in Caracas, Venezuela, on April 9. The law allows foreign investment and was introduced under acting President Delcy Rodriguez after a visit by U.S .Interior Secretary Doug Burgum in early March. Photo by Ronald Pena/EPA
People from the industry pose with a copy of the new mining law at Venezuela's National Assembly in Caracas, Venezuela, on April 9. The law allows foreign investment and was introduced under acting President Delcy Rodriguez after a visit by U.S .Interior Secretary Doug Burgum in early March. Photo by Ronald Pena/EPA


April 17 (UPI)
--
 Venezuela's acting president, Delcy Rodríguez, signed a new mining law and thanked President Donald Trump for his "willingness" to advance bilateral cooperation, signaling a potential thaw in relations between the two countries.

The Organic Mining Law aims to reorganize and modernize the sector to turn it into a sustainable economic driver by attracting private and foreign investment, the government said.

During a signing ceremony broadcast on state television Thursday, Rodríguez also thanked Secretary of State Marco Rubio for what she described as a "willingness in the direction of having diplomatic and economic cooperative relations with Venezuela."

She said the goal is to build cooperation "adapted to a reality" that supports mutual understanding between both nations.

The measure targets increased investment in mining, which authorities consider key to the country's economic recovery. Official data cited by Rodríguez showed the sector grew 10.9% last year.

The initiative follows a visit to Caracas by U.S. Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, who said American companies are interested in operating in Venezuela.

Under the new law, domestic and international companies or consortiums may exploit gold and other "strategic minerals" through concession agreements lasting up to 30 years.

The legislation also establishes categories for small, medium and large-scale mining, in an effort to modernize a sector that previously operated largely under state control.

The new framework replaces regulations in place since 1999 and introduces changes aimed at easing restrictions. It includes the creation of a National Superintendency of Mining Activity to oversee investment, production and commercialization processes.

After recent bilateral contacts, the U.S. Treasury Department issued a license allowing American companies to participate in activities related to the extraction and commercialization of these resources.

At the law's promulgation ceremony, Rodríguez also highlighted the announcement by the International Monetary Fund on resumption of Venezuela's representation after seven years of suspension since 2019. She thanked Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva, as well as the governments of Brazil, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar for their diplomatic mediation.

The announcements by the IMF and the World Bank Group came during their Spring Meetings, which began April 13 and conclude Saturday in Washington.



Bolivia drafts hydrocarbons law to attract foreign capital

The draft of a new Bolivian hydrocarbons law prioritizes the reactivation of mature fields and traditional wells to maximize recovery of remaining reserves. File Photo by Martin Alipaz/EPA
The draft of a new Bolivian hydrocarbons law prioritizes the reactivation of mature fields and traditional wells to maximize recovery of remaining reserves. File Photo by Martin Alipaz/EPA

April 17 (UPI) -- The government of Rodrigo Paz has finalized the draft of a new hydrocarbons law, marking a key reform aimed at reviving energy investment and steering Bolivia's energy sector toward bolstering natural gas and oil production.

Hydrocarbons Minister Mauricio Medinaceli told local media the main goal of the legislation is to attract foreign investment. The proposal outlines five core pillars to reposition Bolivia as an energy-producing nation rather than a net importer.

The draft seeks to introduce more competitive conditions to draw capital, strengthen legal certainty and ease some contractual terms while maintaining state control over natural resources, according to the Bolivian newspaper El Deber.

"Bolivia is undergoing a structural shift because there will be a new hydrocarbons law, and we will present it as a national agreement among Bolivians," Paz said earlier this week during a visit to Brazil.

"That law will not benefit the state alone. It will benefit the development capacity of Bolivians across all regions."

Authorities said the framework is designed around competitiveness and legal security, aiming to establish conditions that allow immediate foreign investment inflows, local broadcaster Red Uno reported.

To that end, the proposal includes fiscal and contractual incentives intended to make Bolivia more attractive to international operators. It prioritizes the reactivation of mature fields and traditional wells to maximize recovery of remaining reserves.

On the operational side, the law calls for a deep overhaul of contracting mechanisms to make them more agile and transparent, reducing bureaucratic bottlenecks.

At the same time, the government plans to strengthen the role of state-owned Yacimientos Petrolíferos Fiscales Bolivianos as the central player in the production chain, with the aim of reducing costly fuel imports.

Officials said the reform also seeks to ensure stable domestic supply following a 2025 fuel shortage crisis marked by recurring diesel and gasoline scarcities, long lines at service stations and protests by transport workers.

Bolivia's hydrocarbons sector experienced a "golden era" between 2006 and 2014, driven by high global prices and peak production levels. That cycle later weakened due to natural depletion of reserves and limited exploration investment during years of rule by the Movement for Socialism.

Official data and industry sources show that investment in exploration and production, which exceeded $1 billion annually in the past decade, has steadily declined to below $500 million.

Natural gas output, the country's main export, has dropped from more than 60 million cubic meters per day at its peak to about 40 million cubic meters or less per day, affecting Bolivia's ability to meet export commitments with Brazil and Argentina.



Chilean government offers reforms package to revive economy

By Francisca Orellana
   
Chilean President Jose Antonio Kast (C) arrives by car at the Metropolitan Cathedral to attend aass and a 'Prayer for the People of Chile and the New Government' in Santiago on Sunday. Photo by Allen Diaz/EPA
Chilean President Jose Antonio Kast (C) arrives by car at the Metropolitan Cathedral to attend aass and a 'Prayer for the People of Chile and the New Government' in Santiago on Sunday. Photo by Allen Diaz/EPA

SANTIAGO-Chile, April 16 (UPI) -- Chilean President José Antonio Kast announced a package of more than 40 measures aimed at breaking the country's economic stagnation and restoring stronger growth.

In a nationally televised address Wednesday night, Kast outlined reforms centered on five main goals: improving Chile's tax competitiveness, strengthening formal employment, simplifying regulations, increasing legal and regulatory certainty, and restraining public spending.

"We are going to break with a state that spends more than it has. We are going to break the bureaucracy that paralyzes and suffocates investment. We are going to break everything that is bad to rebuild everything that is good," Kast said.

He added Chile must return to robust growth and job creation, arguing that while the average corporate tax rate among countries in the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development fell to 22% from 31% since 2000, Chile's rose to 27% from 15% during the same period, while national growth has remained below 2%.

By 2030, the government aims to reduce unemployment to 6.5%, lift annual economic growth to about 4% and restore structural fiscal balance, Kast said. The unemployment rate was 8.3% as of February, and the economy grow by 2.5% last year.

The centerpiece of the reform package is a proposed cut in the corporate tax rate to 23% from 27% --a measure that has drawn the strongest criticism.

"This bill is not an ideological agenda," Kast said. "It is a concrete response to real emergencies."

"I know there will be voices saying this project benefits those who have the most. That objection does not withstand the data," he added.

Economists have raised concerns about the fiscal impact of the proposal. Claudio Agostini, an academic at Adolfo Ibáñez University, told Radio Cooperativa that the package appears inconsistent with Chile's fiscal reality.

"Given the fiscal situation, where spending must converge with revenue, most of the measures significantly reduce tax collection," Agostini said. "At a first macroeconomic glance, it raises concern because this package tends to increase the fiscal deficit rather than reduce it."

Former Deputy Finance Minister Alejandro Micco, now a professor on the Faculty of Economics and Business at University of Chile, questioned the likely effect on investment.

"Global evidence shows the impact of these kinds of measures on activity and investment is limited. Therefore, we could face a future revenue problem," Micco said.

The government said it will submit the full bill to Congress on Monday for debate and approval. Analysts expect difficult negotiations because opposition lawmakers argue several measures disproportionately benefit large corporations.

Opposition lawmaker Francisca Bello said the administration is attempting to push through a disguised tax reform that benefits higher-income groups.

Sen. Daniela Cicardini, of the Socialist Party of Chile, told La Nación that the government is presenting the proposal as a growth plan when it is "a gift for Chile's richest 1%."

Political analyst Tomás Duval, an assistant professor at the Autonomous University of Chile, told Radio Bio Bio that reform would require extensive negotiation because the government lacks the congressional majorities needed to pass it in either chamber.