Thousands still trapped in Sudan after Seal Team Six rescue



Civil war is raging in Sudan, and thousands of Americans have been trapped there.

But there’s good news for some of them: America’s Seal Team Six has engaged in a covert rescue.

Close to 100 U.S. embassy staffers and their families were saved, while many more American citizens await evacuation.

The U.S. is currently working to assist the thousands still trapped. The White House announced that the administration is actively facilitating the evacuation of those U.S. citizens.

However, Mark Levin wonders how the U.S. plans on evacuating U.S. citizens when there is no longer a U.S. embassy.

“So, you’re a citizen and you’re stuck in Sudan,” Levin comments. “Who do you contact? There’s no embassy. You just call 911? What do you do?”

“It’s like Afghanistan,” he continues. “We’re doing everything to get our citizens out, but you evacuated the embassy, so how are we getting our citizens out? You evacuated the military and the citizens are there — and they’re still there.”

“God knows what’s happening to them,” Levin says.

Not only did they evacuate trapped American citizens' only source of reprieve, but the government knew Sudan was not in a good place.

“I don’t know why we didn’t see this coming,” Levin adds.

“Sudan has been at dagger points” with plenty of “opposition to the government for a long, long, time.”

Levin calls the government there “very corrupt, very brutal.”

“So, we have a big problem. And the problem is the Biden administration.”


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Kuwait summons top US diplomat after American Embassy posts pro-LGBTQ tweet celebrating Pride Month



Kuwait summoned a top U.S. diplomat on Thursday in connection with a pro-LGBTQ tweet from the American Embassy celebrating Pride Month.

The official Twitter account of the U.S. Embassy in Kuwait shared a quote from President Joe Biden on Thursday that read: "All human beings should be treated with respect and dignity and should be able to live without fear no matter who they are or whom they love.”

The tweet said President Biden is a "champion for the human rights of LGBTQI persons."

The post included the words "Pride Month," and featured a photo of a Progress Pride flag.

Different from the rainbow LGBTQ flag, the Progress Pride flag features transgender flag colors, plus "black and brown stripes representing marginalized LBGT communities of color, community members lost to HIV/AIDS, and those currently living with AIDS," according to Northwestern University.

The tweet was posted in English and Arabic.

\u201c\u201cAll human beings should be treated with respect and dignity and should be able to live without fear no matter who they are or whom they love.\u201d @POTUS is a champion for the human rights of #LGBTQI persons. #Pride2022 #YouAreIncluded\u201d
— U.S. Embassy Kuwait (@U.S. Embassy Kuwait) 1654159488

Kuwait's Ministry of Foreign Affairs summoned a senior U.S. official in response to the pro-LGBTQ tweet.

"This evening, Thursday, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs summoned the Acting Chargé d'Affaires of the U.S. Embassy, Mr. Jim Holtsnider, [to] meet with the Acting Assistant Secretary of State for Americas Affairs, Nawaf Abdul Latif Al-Ahmad, against the background of the embassy's publication on its social media accounts of references and tweets supporting homosexuality," the press release said.

The Kuwaiti government declared that it had rejected the American Embassy's messaging, and stressed "the need for the embassy to respect the laws and regulations in force in the State of Kuwait and the obligation not to publish such tweets in compliance with what was stipulated in the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations of 1961."

Kuwait prohibits same-sex relationships, and violators face prison time.

"Consensual intercourse between men of full age (from the age of 21) shall be punishable with a term of imprisonment of up to seven years," according to the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association.

The U.S. Embassy in Saudi Arabia also shared a Pride Month tweet with the LGBTQ flag.

"During #Pride2022, @StateDept celebrates the contributions members of the LGBTQI+ community make to our nation. We are committed to ending violence, discrimination, and stigma against LGBTQI+ persons worldwide," the tweet read.

\u201cDuring #Pride2022, @StateDept celebrates the contributions members of the LGBTQI+ community make to our nation. We are committed to ending violence, discrimination, and stigma against LGBTQI+ persons worldwide.\u201d
— U.S. Mission to KSA (@U.S. Mission to KSA) 1654091934

Engaging in homosexuality in Saudi Arabia may be punished with the death penalty.

"According to some interpretations of Sharia, the death sentence may be handed down for certain homosexual acts. Other penalties may include 100 blows of the whip and banishment for 1 year," according to Human Rights Watch.

In April 2021, the Biden administration gave authorization for U.S. embassies and consulates around the world to fly LGBTQ flags. The decision was a reversal from the Trump administration's decree that barred flying flags along with the American flag at U.S. embassies.

In 2019, several American embassies defied the Trump administration's order and flew LGBTQ flags in honor of Pride Month. The American Embassy in South Korea hung a huge LGBTQ flag and Black Lives Matter flag on the facade of the building. The flags were later removed following orders from the State Department.

How Trump outplayed Team Obama on Israeli-Arab peace push

Dire predictions by Obama administration alumni that moving the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem, Israel's capital, would ignite widespread violence have not panned out.

There has been no dedicated Arab reprisals since the doors opened with much fanfare in May 2018.

And two years later, Arab states are lining up to ...