Thursday, 9 July 2026

Why does Netanyahu support the Argentinean national football team?


Image generated by Grok as a result of instructions provided by the writer.

No surprise that Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu has announced his support for the Argentinean football team.

The country's president, Javier Milei, is the most rabidly pro-Zionist foreign leader of any nation on earth. Milei's government has granted automatic privileges to Israelis such as relating to pension rights and has been busily preparing the Patagonian region of Argentina for Zionist colonisation.

It is remarkable how the Jewish state has a high degree of influence in a country that was famous for shielding Nazi war criminals such as Eichmann, Mengele, Priebke, Roschmann and Kutschmann. It was also for a time the base of operations of Otto Skorzeny, the special forces officer of the Waffen-SS who came to be known as Hitler's favourite commando.

Argentina is also, a country whose junta in the 1970s was unabashedly anti-Jewish. The military government led by General Jorge Videla accused Jews of financially supporting left-wing groups such as the Montoneros guerrillas. David Graiver, a financier of Polish-Jewish descent allegedly acted as the primary investment banker and money launderer for the Montoneros organisation.

As was the case with the leaders of Nazi Germany and Francoist Spain, the junta believed that Jews were at the heart of leftist movements including the other prominent guerrillas, the Ejercito Revolucionario del Pueblo (ERP), the armed wing of the Communist Workers' Revolutionary Party.

This resulted in the junta focusing a lot of its efforts on the Jewish community during the "Dirty War" conducted against what were designated as Marxist subversives between 1976 and 1983. Although Jews made up 1% of the population, they represented 10%-12% of los desaparecidos i.e. the "disappeared ones".

Ironically, the Israeli state supplied significant amounts of weapons and gave military training to the Argentinian military during the "Dirty War". It was in this context as one of Argentina's primary arms suppliers that Israel sold weapons and munitions to Argentina during its war against Britain over the Falkland Islands.

But as mentioned earlier the transformation of Argentina from a country which harboured Nazi criminals and which in the 1970s witnessed a rise in pro-Nazi and anti-Jewish sentiment to one that has become one of the most vital allies of the Jewish state is noteworthy. Milei, the self-described "most Zionist president in the world" has been at the heart of establishing the "Isaac Accords" (the Latin American equivalent of the West Asian "Abraham Accords"), has stood in solidarity with Israel in all its conflicts and has introduced laws that provide a privileged status to Israelis including Israeli Defence Force veterans suspected of committing war crimes in war theatres such as Gaza and south Lebanon.

And Netanyahu's support for the Argentinean national football team can only be bolstered by the perceived pro-Zionist sentiments of Lionel Messi. While Messi has previously donated to hospitals in Gaza and to UNICEF projects in Palestine, images of his visit to the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem during a "Peace Tour" in 2014 with his former team, FC Barcelona, have become ingrained in the minds of both pro-and anti-Zionist fans of the game. During the visit, Messi and his teammates wore traditional yarmulkes, prayed at the holy site, and left handwritten notes between the ancient stones.

In contrast to Diego Maradona who avowedly supported left-wing causes and left-wing regimes, Messi has striven to maintain a personal policy of political neutrality. And Netanyahu appears to have respected this stance by justifying his support for the Argentinean national team by referencing President Milei.

"Before Messi,Milei", Netanyahu joked, "He's a superstar."

© Adeyinka Makinde (2026).

 Adeyinka Makinde is a writer based in London, England.

Thursday, 25 June 2026

Did Mossad Plan to Assassinate Field Marshal Munir in Switzerland?: A Brief Note of Zionism’s Record of Carrying Out Political Murders.

Field Marshal Asim Munir, Pakistani Chief of Army Staff and Chief of Defence Staff

According to Pepe Escobar, a Brazilian journalist and geostrategist who is based in East Asia, Mossad, the foreign intelligence service of Israel, recently plotted to assassinate Pakistan's Army Chief Field Marshal Asim Munir in Switzerland for his role in brokering talks between the United States and Iran. However, while it is difficult to ascertain the veracity of this claim, it is worth noting that Zionism has a record of plotting and carrying out the assassinations of statesmen who act against its perceived interests.

For instance, the Zionist Stern gang of pre-Israel Palestine assassinated Lord Moyne and Count Folke Bernadotte respectively in 1944 and 1948. Moyne was the Middle East Envoy for Britain and Bernadotte was a UN Peace Mediator. The former was gunned down in Cairo, while the latter suffered a similar fate during an ambush in Jerusalem.

And various British political and military leaders were threatened with death through a letter bombing campaign by the terrorist organisation Lehi, known to the British authorities as the Stern Gang. The targets included Prime Minister Clement Atlee, Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery, then the Chief of the Imperial General Staff, and even Sir Winston Churchill.

The letter bombs were reportedly intercepted in the Italian city of Genoa.

The threats extended to the British royal family. In 1946, extra security precautions were taken to protect King George VI because of threats of Zionist violence aimed at the state opening of Parliament. This followed a boast by a leader of the Irgun, the larger organisation from which Lehi had split, that it would “attack London’s heart and even Buckingham Palace itself.” In a front page article of its June 8th, 1947 edition, the Australian newspaper The Truth stated that the “"arrogant boasting of Jewish terrorists and their cowardly threats, particularly that Princess Elizabeth, have disgusted the world."

Ezer Weizman, a future Major General who would become the commander of the Israeli Air Force, joined a cell of the Zionist terror group Irgun to plot the assassination of General Evelyn Barker, the head of Britain's military in Palestine, by placing a mine on a road outside his home in England. However, the group gave up the plan after arousing the suspicions of Scotland Yard.

Interestingly, John Gunther Dean, a U.S. Ambassador to India in the 1980s alleged that the MOSSAD had assassinated General Zia ul-Haq, the military ruler of Pakistan. Zia died in a plane crash in 1988. Dean, who provided no evidence of this, based his assumption on the fact that Israel did not want Pakistan to obtain a nuclear weapon. He was censored by the U.S. State Department and forced to retire on the grounds that he was "mentally unbalanced".

A German Jew by heritage, Dean was targeted in a failed assassination by Israel in 1980 while he was serving as the U.S. Ambassador to Lebanon. Responsibility for the rocket attack on his motorcade in Beirut was claimed by the FLLF (The Front for the Liberation of Lebanon from Foreigners), a phantom terror group formed and directed by the Northern Command of the IDF.  Dean was able to trace the source of the projectiles that targeted him to a shipment of arms in 1974 from the United States to Israel. However, his findings were never officially investigated, although he was officially rehabilitated.

The rationale for an Israeli orchestrated assassination of Field Marshal Munir would be consistent with previous assassinations conducted by Zionist terror militias and later by the Israeli state on those seeking peaceful compromise. Count Bernadotte’s murder arose from his belief that the Palestinian people were entitled to the right of return, while Dean was targeted for his suggestion that Israel should abandon its heavy-handed approach and enter into peace talks with the Palestinian Liberation Organisation. The targeting in more recent times of peace negotiators of Hamas and the Iranian state testify to a longstanding policy embedded in the mentality of Zionists.

© Adeyinka Makinde (2026).

Adeyinka Makinde is a writer based in London, England.


Wednesday, 3 June 2026

The Calabar Landing and other Nigerian Navy amphibious operations conducted during the Nigerian Civil War

Lieutenant Colonel Benjamin Adekunle, the General Officer Commanding the Federal Third Infantry Division & the Officer Commanding Land Forces (left) and Commander James Rawe, the Forward Control Officer of naval forces on the bridge of Rawe’s vessel NNS Penelope during the amphibious attack on Oron, March 1968. (Credit: Photo archive of the late Captain James Rawe).

A post titled "The Liberation of Calabar, 1967" by a Facebook group named "Ibibio History" reminds me that I urgently need to complete my research project on all Nigerian Navy orchestrated landings during the civil war. Several errors of fact and improbable analyses stimulated me to make the following comments and observations.

These are the thoughts I jotted down soon after encountering the post:

1. The AI depiction of NNS Nigeria -a frigate- as a tiny patrol boat is a bit of an eyesore. Nigeria was 314 feet and possessed an array of gun armament vastly more than what a patrol boat would have.

2. The date of "14th, September 1967" in the image should have been removed as the combined operation occurred in October 1967.

3. Benjamin Adekunle, the General Officer Commanding the Federal Third Infantry Division, was a Lieutenant Colonel at the time - not yet a Brigadier or a Colonel as the text later states.

4. The text neglected to inform the reader how Major Anthony Ochefu, who the narrative initially states was on NNS Nigeria, later "disembarked from (NNS) Lokoja."

5. While Major Ochefu was on NNS Lokoja and successfully fought from a landing site and captured key territory in Calabar, the narrative -even if intended to be brief- ought to give an indication of how extremely tough it was for the Federal troops.

For one, the landing site was on lowland while the Biafran forces had taken up defensive positions on highland. Calabar is situated on high ground overlooking the Cross River. This meant that Ochefu and his troops were pinned down on the landing vessel Lokoja and could not open its heavy steel bow door for a considerable period because of the sheer volume of bullets smashing into the metallic structure of Lokoja.

The Federal side lost a lot of troops as they established a beachhead and slowly inched their way up the hilly terrain.

6. So, the sentence "small Biafran resistance was quickly overwhelmed" is an untrue portrayal of what went down. The Federal commanders of the navy and army expected the secessionist side to put up a spirited fight to preserve their last port. The operation was not as easy as both landing accomplished earlier at Bonny in July 1967 and at Sapele, Warri and Koko in September 1967.

At Bonny overconfidence on the part of the Biafran leadership that the Nigerian Navy was incapable of staging a landing because of the internal sabotage carried out by defecting naval personnel of Eastern region origin at the Apapa base, and by the thinking that the Nigerian Navy lacked the smarts to orchestrate an amphibious landing led to a state of gross underpreparedness.

The Biafrans failed to shift buoys at the entrance to the Bonny River which could have directed Federal naval navigators towards shallow waters where thier ships would have run aground. They failed to set up watchtowers, plant incendiaries in the river and station a garrison of appropriate strength to confront a potential invading force. They even failed to anticipate an invasion by keeping daily tabs on the rise and fall of the tide.

So far as Warri, Sapele and Koko is concerned, the Nigerian Navy vessels were extremely vulnerable to attacks while navigating the narrow rivers which were too shallow for NNS Nigeria to participate. The Nigerian ships and barges carrying soldiers of the Third Infantry Division would have been sitting ducks for an organised ambush involving rocket-propelled grenades and artillery.

But things were different for the Calabar landing.

The Biafran troops were well prepared. They laid Ogbunigwe bombs in uncharted rivers they correctly anticipated some Nigerian Navy vessels would use en route to attacking Calabar. They placed bombs on jetties, and they also placed tape recorders with sounds of gunfire amplified by loudspeakers on trees and other vantage points. The aim was to confuse the Federal soldiers as to where gunfire was coming from.

7. Another impediment to the Nigerian operation were an assortment of 105mm guns which the secessionist side fired from Oron, a town which is almost opposite to Calabar on the other side of the Cross River estuary. Lt. COL. Adekunle had wanted the operation to involve capturing both Calabar and Oron. But Commander James Rawe, the architect of the landing, successfully argued that the Federal side would be better off focusing on Calabar so as not split up naval and army resources. Rawe was aware of the "guns of Oron”, but it was a necessary risk for naval and merchant vessels to run the gauntlet to secure the more important target of Calabar.

Oron was captured in the final amphibious operation six months later in March 1968.

8. The conclusion is overblown.

The poster writes: "This decisive operation marked a turning point in the Nigerian Civil War, demonstrating the effectiveness of joint naval and ground forces in reclaiming strategic territory."

Each amphibious operation prior to the Calabar landing was incrementally important in achieving the objective of creating a southern front and setting the scene of the ultimate encirclement of secessionist Biafra.

. Capturing Bonny town and securing the mouth of the Bonny River was important in ensuring that the secessionist side would not control the production and export oil.

. Capturing Warri, Koko and Sapele ensured that the Biafran side had no sea outlet through the Mid-West after the Biafran attack on the Mid-West in August 1967. It also played a part in ensuring the recapture of the Mid-West by the Third Infantry Division in combination with the Second Infantry Division which was led by Lieutenant Colonel Murtala Muhammed.

It should also be noted that the Nigerian Navy made an unopposed landing at Forcados in August 1967 soon after the Mid-West invasion.

. Capturing Calabar ensured that the Federal side could begin gaining territory in a northward direction while completing the task of sealing off the border with Cameroon.

I hope to complete or write the bulk of what should be an 8,000 to 10,000-word scholarly article over the coming summer months.

© Adeyinka Makinde (2026).

Adeyinka Makinde is a writer based in London, England. His late father was a Nigerian Navy officer, and he has presented lectures to naval officers and other officers of the armed forces on the Naval Warfare Course run by the Naval War College Nigeria.

Adeyinka’s article "The Bonny Landing: The anatomy of Black Africa’s first amphibious operation, July to September 1967" was published in the August 2024 edition of The Mariner's Mirror, the international journal of the Society for Nautical Research.

A critique of the rationale of Mark Felton’s criticism of the diminished fleet strength of the Royal Navy

Logo of the Royal Navy, the naval warfare force of Britain.

I fear that Dr. Mark Felton is merely playing to the populist gallery and being intellectually dishonest in a recent upload at his YouTube channel titled “British Navy Doom Loop - Can Terminal Decline Be Halted?”

First, for all its glory-laden history of ruling the waves, it became apparent to all after World War 2 and particularly after Suez that Britain was finished as a global military power. And with the decolonisation of empire in Africa and Asia, it was clear that the size and reach of the Royal Navy would have to be reduced.

Secondly, the ending of the ideological Cold War with the USSR ought to have further curtailed the size a British maritime force. NATO should have been disbanded and a new security architecture established on continental Europe which would have involved Russia.

The problem is that Britain has hung onto the coattails of the United States which succeeded it as a world power. This has meant regular involvement in military endeavours engineered by the United States, a situation that gives Britain's political, military and intelligence leaders the false impression of been still relevant in shaping a global dominium.

Felton mentions in the style of a pub debate that if Britain had a Falklands-type crisis, it would not be able to reclaim the islands.

But he forgets to mention that had Margaret Thatcher's proposed cuts to the Royal Navy gone through (she sacked her Navy Minister Keith Speed who opposed them) Britain would not have been able to have mounted a task force in 1982.

Importantly, Felton assumes that a large Royal Navy would be able to cope with any and every type of Falklands-type emergency.  Does he think that the Royal Navy could have kept Hong Kong as a British colony if Britain had refused to cede it to China in the 1990s?

He also refuses to contend with developments in maritime warfare. The Russia-Ukraine War and recent conflicts in the Red Sea and Persian Gulf have exposed the limitations of naval vessels including the vulnerability of aircraft carriers to shore-based ballistic missile and drone attacks.

The Royal Navy in combination with other NATO and non-NATO navies led by the U.S. Navy failed in the attempt to open up the Red Sea during continuous operations under the Biden and Trump administrations. And the U.S. Navy has discovered that it is incapable of opening the Strait of Hormuz given Iran's capability of sinking any and all U.S. vessels if they pressed the issue.

And while not all will go so far as to rule out aircraft carriers as obsolete in a similar vein to the those who argue that tanks are, Felton should be aware of the problems associated with developing new generation naval vessels. Just as the U.S. military have had issues in developing the F35 fighter jet, the U.S. Navy has admitted the failure of the development of the Zumwalt-class of naval destroyers.

Given these facts, why on earth would Felton propose that the Royal Navy can only be effective with a multitude of frigates, destroyers and carriers?

A more purposeful critique would have been to acknowledge the diminution of Britain's world power status and the non-efficacy of maintaining a large global naval force. He could have framed his argument by expounding on what a repurposed British naval Force would look like.

This would have encompassed the role that would need to be played by manned and unmanned drones including those with an underwater role. Submarine warfare remains a crucial aspect of waging modern wars and any cuts in this area should be validly scrutinised.

A correct means of addressing reforms to the naval service would be to calibrate what quantities of equipment and manpower should be deployed for defensive and offensive capabilities.

So far as manpower is concerned Felton's focus on advertisements featuring females and persons from non-white backgrounds points to a lazy but effective way of rousing nationalistic sentiment and positioning the dire state of the armed forces in the context of the culture wars. Felton makes the subtle but unmistakable proposition that the navy has become mired in so-called "woke" culture and is seeking to recruit "wogs" and "girlies" at the expense of white males.

His assertion that the army, although facing much the same problems as the navy, is better off because it has recruited more soldiers of Gurkha and Fijian heritage is a devious attempt at deflecting from the racialist undertone by invoking two longstanding sources of loyal non-white manpower. What goes unsaid is the unequal treatment both groups have been subjected to. Over twenty years ago veteran Gurkhas took the British government to court in a racial discrimination suit over their pensions, pay and conditions.

But Felton fails to consider the reasons why young white working-class males no longer have the urge to pursue a career in the military. As in the United States there are issues related to the general physical conditioning, competitive remuneration in the private sector, the physical demands of military service and different attitudes held by the younger generation to military service. Yet another challenge to recruitment which will become more pronounced in the non-so-distant future is that of falling birth rates which is shrinking the pool of potential recruits.

Felton was recently taken to task for his views on the naval service in a history-focused YouTube channel. It is titled "Mark Felton is helping spread misinformation.

Britons who are well-versed in the maritime history of their nation unsurprisingly and understandably think of the Roya Navy - the Senior Service- as the heroic figures who sank The Bismarck, whose plucky light cruisers backed up The Admiral Graff Spee in the Battle of the River Plate, who went toe-to-toe with the High Seas Fleet at Jutland and with imperious Nelsonian pride swiftly avenged their defeat at the Coronel by destroying a German squadron during the Battle of the Falklands. The British navy also played a decisive role in suppressing the transatlantic slave trade. 

But of course, the Royal Navy had its dark side, subduing -in the service of empire- a multitude of sovereign African and Asian city states and kingdoms. It also served as the instrument for conducting gunboat diplomacy by, for instance, assuming the role of a debt-collecting Leviathan Sea monster in the Don Pacifico Affair and by launching a series of amphibious assaults and blockades in the course of forcibly opening trade with China during the Opium Wars. Also, prior to 1807, the Royal Navy protected Britain's slave-based sugar economy by escorting slave ships and directly enslaving Africans who worked as labourers at dockyards on islands such as Jamaica and pressganging people into military service.

And notwithstanding the navy's laudible efforts in combating the drug trade on the high seas, its contemporary role alongside other branches of the British armed forces is often mired by their supporting act to the hegemonic adventures of the U.S. empire, endeavours in relation to which Britain has given diplomatic cover to American-instigated conflicts which do not stand the test of morality and which consistently breach the strict application of international law.

The question Felton does not address is precisely what an imperial-sized Royal Navy would be doing in this age? Provoking Russia in the Baltic and Black Seas? Or China in the Strait of Malacca? And does he envisage the Royal Navy follow the same path as the U.S. Navy which itself has been repurposed as a piratical maritime force which extrajudicially kills the occupants of speedboats far from its national jurisdiction, enforces illegal blockades aimed at stealing the natural resources of other nations such as Venezuela, as well as conducting medieval like sieges with the objective of starving countries such as Cuba into submission?

I certainly believe Felton to be highly selective in terms of the information he has deployed on this latest critique of the Royal Navy and would go as far as to accuse him of sensationalism and even intellectual dishonesty.

© Adeyinka Makinde (2026).

Adeyinka Makinde is a writer based in London, England. His late father was a Nigerian Navy officer, and he has presented lectures to naval officers and other officers of the armed forces on the Naval Warfare Course run by the Naval War College Nigeria.

Adeyinka’s article "The Bonny Landing: The anatomy of Black Africa’s first amphibious operation, July to September 1967" was published in the August 2024 edition of The Mariner's Mirror, the international journal of the Society for Nautical Research.



Wednesday, 27 May 2026

Examining Nick Tosches' book on the life of Sonny Liston

Tosches’ book was titled Night Train: The Sonny Liston Story in the United Kingdom in contrast to its original American title The Devil and Sonny Liston.

My discovery yesterday of the publication of this article which examines Nick Tosches' biographical treatment of Charles "Sonny" Liston has just inspired me to fish out my copy of the Tosches book.

Sandwiched between biographies on Joe Frazier and Louis Armstrong, I have not opened it for a good number of years and can hardly believe how many years ago I acquired it. Accompanying the inscription of my name is the date of purchase: "27 April 2000".

The publication of Tosches' book was looked forward to by many boxing afficionados. The last treatment of Sonny's life had been that of Rob Steen which was titled Sonny Boy: The Life and Strife of Sonny Liston. It is another boxing biography among my collections and again cannot help but marvel at the passage of time. My inscription finishes with "20th of March 1993".

I recall that many aficionados were not enthralled by Steen's book and even fewer were thrilled by Tosches' effort.

It took some time for me to appreciate that many readers of the sport of boxing prefer what I would describe as a "meat and potatoes" stylizing of a biography. In other words, one that is linearly arranged, devoid of the penmanship of the hyper-intellectual overly devoted to thematic interludes on issues of culture and philosophy.

While the hard-boiled journalistic style of Budd Schulberg and the participatory journalism of Norman Mailer and was largely appreciated by the average boxing book reader, the efforts of writers such as Steen and Tosches were angrily dismissed.

Why?

I think Tosches was seen by many as fundamentally an interloper. In other words, he was cynically a non-aficionado using the rich history of sport, its litany of characters and the drama that intrinsically attaches to a contest between two gloved combatants in a squared ring for the selfish purpose of enhancing their credentials as a writer.

Also, Tosches' emphasis on the Mafia underworld at the expense of giving a more structured account of Liston's boxing career did not go down well. Neither did his unflattering evaluation of Muhammad Ali as the apotheosis of "mediocrity". Moreover, his penchant for "macho writing", described by the New York Times's reviewer as "his complex, heavy-breathing metaphors", struck boxing readers as akin to the exhibition of a show-off circus juggler.

I personally have no such qualms and seek to extract whatever knowledge and enjoyment that I can from each biography I read regardless of the author's stylization. If the biographer's aim is to present the "truth" and the essence of a person, there are a variety of ways of achieving this, including Tosches' strategy of framing Liston and his existence in America via Aristotelian ideology.

And I of course look forward to absorbing Narjisse Moumna's deconstructions of Nick Tosches' method of attempting to uncover the truth and the essence of Charles "Sonny" Liston.

The Architecture of Absence | ALMA Magazine

© Adeyinka Makinde (2026).

Adeyinka Makinde is a writer based in London, England.



Captain Eugene Simon Karpe: The U.S. naval officer whose suspected assassination inspired Ian Fleming to write the James Bond thriller From Russia, With Love

Portrait of U.S. Navy Captain Eugene Simon Karpe (Public Domain).

In February 1950, Eugene Simon Karpe, who for the previous three years had served as the U.S. Navy Attache to Romania, was returning to the United States when his mutilated body was found in a train tunnel near Salzburg, Austria.

He had been travelling on the Orient Express.

An Austrian railway lineman told reporters that both of Karpe's legs had been severed and found lying approximately sixty feet away from the rest of his body.

There had been no signs of struggle and no blood found inside the compartment. A spokesman for Austrian National Railways stated that all the doors into the train's sleeping cars opened inward and that if Karpe had lost his balance and fell, one of the doors would have had to have been left open at the last stop.

Karpe was said to have suffered from gout which made it difficult for him to stand erect.

But the reason why his death was suspected of being a political assassination engineered by one or more of the secret services of the Communist Bloc is that Karpe's close friend Robert A. Vogeler, an executive of the Hungarian subsidiary of International Telephone and Telegraph, had been arrested, tried and convicted in Hungary for what the authorities described as "espionage and economic sabotage".

It was speculated that the Hungarian authorities believed that Captain Karpe had, along with Vogeler, been a member of an allied spy-ring and that his death had been a political assassination. He had visited Vogeler's family in Vienna three days before his death, and Vogeler's wife had spoken of receiving three mysterious phone calls from a woman speaking perfect English who asked her:

"Have you heard about your friend?"

The caller then hung up. The calls occurred before news of Karpe's death was made public.

On his last visit to America, Karpe's brother-in-law recalled him saying the following:

"I kind of hate to go back to Europe. They are always keeping a close watch on me and know every move I make."

"They" referred to the communist authorities.

Karpe was buried at Arlington Cemetery on March 16th, 1950.

In 1952 a Romanian named Ryan Petrescu confessed to having killed Karpe by pushing him off the train prior to stealing important documents from him. He claimed that he had done this with the help of two accomplices. He also told the authorities in Switzerland who apprehended him that he had been acting under "orders from a foreign organisation." However, the Swiss police who disbelieved the 24-year-old law student's claim took no further action.

Karpe's death remains shrouded in mystery to this day.

NB

. While posted in Romania, Karpe was also a naval member of the Allied Control Commission (ACC) -the joint governing body of the Allied powers in occupied Germany and Austria after World War 2, which consisted of representatives from America, Britain, France, and the Soviet Union. It exercised supreme authority to supervise demilitarization, denazification, and the administration of post-war Germany.

. During World War 2, Karpe served as the captain of a destroyer in the Pacific theatre.

. He graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis in 1926.

. He won the Legion of Merit and the Navy Commendation Ribbon.

© Adeyinka Makinde (2026).

Adeyinka Makinde is a writer based in London, England.


Lieutenant Colonel Marcelino da Mata: Portugal’s Most Decorated Military Officer

 

Lt. COL. Marcelino da Mata photographed in full dress uniform (AI-treated Public Domain photograph).

Born into the Papel ethnic group in Portuguese Guinea (now Guinea Bissau), da Mata volunteered to serve in the Portuguese army in the early 1960s in place of his brother who had been conscripted.

He went on to fight in the Portuguese Colonial War (1961–1974) during which he participated in 2,412 military operations -mostly in Portuguese Guinea.

The most notable operations were:

. Operação Tridente (1963/64)

. Operação Mar Verde (1970)

Tridente was a combined operation aimed at eliminating the guerrilla presence from the Como Achipelago, while Mar Verde was the amphibious invasion of Guinea-Conakry.

He was a member of the Portuguese Commandos, an elite unit which specialised in counterinsurgency operations against the guerrillas of PAIGC (African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde / Partido Africano para a Independência da Guiné e Cabo Verde) which was led by Amilcar Cabral.

The guerrilla campaign was successful despite Cabral's assassination in 1973.

Da Mata received the following medals:

. Cruz de Guerra (War Cross) for acts of bravery. He received five in all.

. Appointed to the Order of the Tower and Sword, Portugal’s highest military decoration for valour.

He remained in Portugal after the Carnation Revolution of 1974 and was detained for a period. He served from 1960-1990. He lived quietly in Portugal until his death in 2021 from complications related to COVID. He was 80 years of age.

Da Mata's funeral was attended by senior military officials and his death acknowledged by the Portuguese president. 

© Adeyinka Makinde (2026).

Adeyinka Makinde is a writer based in London, England.