Jump to content
NEWS
  • In Universe Dateline: Febuary 14th 2023
  • Tensions rise in South Africa after no clear winner in Presidential election
  • Bomb in Tehran café kills three IRGC members, separatists suspected
  • Dominican Republic government on verge of collapse as gang violence escalates in Santa Domingo
  • Russia claims successful test of nuclear-powered cruise missile, experts remain skeptical
  • Man claims he was acting under Taylor Swift's secret orders after being arrested at NATO summit
  • Livonia detains 12 over suspected coup attempt
  • Sahrani troops disperse protest with gunfire, 8 reported dead
  • Hurricane rips through Florida Cemetery; Hundreds reported Dead
  • THESE HEADLINES ARE WORKS OF FICTION INTENDED TO SUPPORT THE STORYLINES OF THE 3d MRB REALISM UNIT

Leaderboard


Popular Content

Showing content with the highest reputation on 10/13/2020 in Posts

  1. 3 points
    When the game struggles to load it be like:
  2. 1 point
  3. 1 point
    Humanitarian Relief Arrives in Chenarus Ossetia Today By Tanya Turgenev After a month of some of the most brutal and intense fighting not see outside of the Syrian conflict, 37 days of fierce battle have finally come to an end in the region of Chenarus. Russian and American forces are now withdrawing from the area, and with this, healing can begin. A large influx of foreign aid and supply has begun working its way through the country, with IDAP already arriving on the shores of this broken and bruised country. With them, they bring a couple of hundred medical personnel, explosive removal experts, and other critical aid workers to help assist in returning the country to at least a semblance of what it was. There have also been pledges of support from Doctors without Borders, and the Red Cross promising to send more first-aid responders, medical supplies, and the much-needed equipment to get clean drinking water to communities hit hardest by this conflict. Refugees International has already begun helping displaced Chernarussians find temporary housing in refugee camps until their houses are rebuilt or to help them immigrate to other countries in the area.  (Pictured: IDAP first aid station on Chenarus) Outside of public sector organizations, however, support from the international community is seemingly absent. The United States and Russia have decided to vacate the region, leaving the mess of their geopolitical squabbling behind for others to clean up while they find a new theatre to trounce around. The EU has remained non-committal, and even Chenarus' close neighbor of Ukraine has refrained from dedicating any meaningful support to the now war-ravaged country. But an end to the fighting doesn't mean that threats still don't linger. The DPRC, having not officially conceded defeat, has gone to guerilla warfare, attacking CDF positions whenever able. Several confirmed and unconfirmed reports of DPRC insurgents even attacking IDAP vehicles and attempting to take IDAP personnel hostage. This new "Resistance group" has only served to mount more issues for the area, from sabotaging infrastructure like electrical grids to planting roadside bombs, making an already difficult job of removing unexploded ordnance and restoring roads to working order that much more challenging.  (Pictured: Overturned IDAP van near Staroye, Chenarus) The world's attention has mainly shifted from this side of the world, and the fighting may have subdued, for the most part, that doesn't mean that the road to recovery is over. With the help of international support, Chenarus can rebound to become what it was, and potentially even more.
This leaderboard is set to New York/GMT-05:00
  • Newsletter

    block_newsletter_signup

    Sign Up
×