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“I’m really missing her:” Not Angelina Jolie, Brad Pitt Preferred Being … – FandomWire

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Brad Pitt shared a comforting bond with his first wife Jennifer Aniston. Though their relationship didn’t last, the connection he shared with Aniston was indeed incomparable to any of his relationships. The moments shared between them were so memorable that Pitt once claimed that he misses his ex-partner Aniston. Pitt and Aniston tied the knot in 2000, and due to some differences, the couple called it quits.
Soon after their marriage, Pitt was linked to the Oscar-winning actress Angelina Jolie. The tension between their marriage wasn’t hidden from the media, as it often made headlines. Perhaps that’s the reason why Pitt missed his first wife. However, the Fight Club actor is over both exes and is currently seeing Ines de Ramon.
Back when everything was hunky-dory between Brad Pitt and Jennifer Aniston, the two shared a very intimate relationship. The two were so comfortable around each other that they didn’t mind farting in front of each other. Previously, during an interview, the actor cherished being married to Aniston. He said that being married is fantastic; he loves it. The Bullet Train actor said,
“Being married means I can fart and eat ice cream in bed. Jen is brilliant. I’m really missing her.” 
 
Also Read: “They will do whatever you say”: Quentin Tarantino Would Never Do One Thing While Filming With Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt, and Other Famous Stars
At that moment, the actor was away from his wife, busy with his trip to the UK. It’s indeed adorable the way Pitt admires his relationship with Aniston. Unfortunately, their beautiful relationship didn’t last long as things went south between the couple and they decided to part ways.
However, even after their sudden split, the two shared an amicable bond. Pitt and Aniston never revealed the exact reason for their separation, yet there were rumors that Pitt cheated on Aniston with his Mr. and Mrs. Smith co-star Angelina Jolie.
Also Read: Brad Pitt’s Formula 1 Movie That Almost Cast Will Smith Gets Hellish Update – Who’s Laughing Now?
Both Aniston and Pitt have moved on in their lives. After parting ways with Aniston, Pitt tied the knot with his long-term girlfriend Angelina Jolie in 2014. However, Pitt’s marriage to Jolie surfaced with several controversies. Previously, an insider reported that Pitt regrets marrying Jolie. The insider said Pitt realized that
“leaving Jen for Angelina was one of the biggest mistakes of his life.”
Pitt’s relationship with Jolie also didn’t last, as they divorced in 2019. Currently, the actor is reportedly dating Ines de Ramon. On the other hand, after separating from her second husband, Justin Theroux, in 2017, Aniston is currently enjoying her singlehood.
Also Read: “You know what? F–k him!”: Troy Actress Made Her Life Mission To Prove Quentin Tarantino Wrong After Director Refused To Cast Her In His $321M Anti-Nazi Brad Pitt Movie
Source: She Knows

Sonali is the sensational entertainment writer who serves up the juiciest celebrity insights and pop culture revelations with a tantalizing spice that keeps readers coming back for more.
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In Israel's fight for survival against tech savvy Hamas terrorists Biden seeks to micromanage the war – Fox News

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This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. ©2023 FOX News Network, LLC. All rights reserved. Quotes displayed in real-time or delayed by at least 15 minutes. Market data provided by Factset. Powered and implemented by FactSet Digital Solutions. Legal Statement. Mutual Fund and ETF data provided by Refinitiv Lipper.
 FOX News White House correspondent Peter Doocy has the latest on the Biden administration’s response to the Middle East conflict on ‘Special Report.’
As Israeli Defense Forces resumed military operations to eradicate the Hamas terrorist threat last Friday, the Biden administration is inserting itself into Israel’s war planning process, teaching the Israelis – who’ve been fighting for their survival for decades – how to properly prosecute the conflict. 
Washington warfare “experts” – who arguably haven’t secured a single clear military victory since 1945 – insist that Israeli military strategists alter their war plans to make their combat operations more targeted and their strikes more accurate, in order to minimize casualties, especially among civilians. 
The Biden administration’s demands, while noble-sounding, are misguided and unreasonable. Implementing these requirements, at the expense of achieving the main mission of eliminating Hamas and its entire supporting infrastructure, will likely prolong the conflict, ultimately resulting in many more Israeli and Palestinian deaths. Here’s why.
LABELING CHINA, RUSSIA AND IRAN AS NEW ‘AXIS OF EVIL’ WILL NOT NEUTRALIZE THE THREATS THEY POSE
President Biden and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu participate in an expanded bilateral meeting with Israeli and U.S. government officials, Wednesday, Oct. 18, 2023, in Tel Aviv. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
Hamas is no longer your grandfather’s terrorist gang, the way it used to be years ago. Like many other non-state terrorist groups, Hamas has benefited from the democratization of technology, which has made access to weapons, military-grade components, and the know-how necessary for indigenous production, much easier across the board than it used to be. 
Consequently, Hamas is now in possession of more deadly, more advanced weaponry than it had did even a decade ago. Its much more diverse weapons arsenal makes the terrorists look and fight more like a regular military force rather than a non-state terrorist group. This levels the battlefield a lot more than it did during the 2014 Gaza War between Israeli forces and Hamas.
The employment of drone warfare enabled Hamas to catch the Israelis off guard. During the initial wave of attacks on October 7, the terror group used small tactical drones to strike multiple Israeli military targets, disrupting infrastructure and destroying surveillance towers, cameras, and communications, as the terrorists  were infiltrating across the southern border, killing some 1,200 people. This element of surprise enabled Hamas to seize, at least temporarily, what’s called in modern warfare, strategic initiative, leaving Israelis stunned and scrambling to defend itself. 
Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei meets Chairman of the Hamas Political Bureau, Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran, Iran on November 5, 2023.  (Photo by Iranian Leader Press Office / Handout/Anadolu via Getty Images)
Hamas has modernized its drone arsenal, which now includes ‘Zouari’ suicide drone, named after Mohammed Zouari, the late Hamas engineer and drone pilot; Ababil-2 Iranian Tactical UAV; Misagh-1 with a high explosive-fragmentation warhead; AK-103-2 with aburst-fire setting, and RAAD-T, according to Army Recognition, OE Data Integration Network and DroneSec databases. 
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Hamas has also significantly improved its indigenously manufactured rockets, called Qassam, having extended their range from 2-3 miles in its first iteration to 10 miles, with the Qassam 3. Today’s generation of missiles used by Hamas have a range of 150 miles, covering all of Israel.
Hamas also has been the beneficiary of Iranian weapons, technical assistance, and training. In 2020, the State Department assessed that Iran sends $100 million a year to Palestinian terrorist groups, arming and training them to attack Israel and murder its civilians as Hamas did on October 7.
According to the Wall Street Journal, 500 Hamas terrorists were trained by Iran Quds Force, the foreign-operations arm of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in special combat tactics, during the weeks leading up to the October 7th terrorist attacks. Hamas used combined arms tactics during the assault, synchronizing the attacks across air, land, and sea, a warfare style used by regular armies.
Members Hamas display rockets during a military parade on the Streets in Khan Yunis, southern Gaza Strip.  (Photo by Yousef Masoud/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
During the 2023 campaign, Israelis are dying at more than twice the rate as in 2014, according to the Wall Street Journal. The upgrades in weapons and tactics are the likely reasons why Hamas is a much more lethal force than it used to be, posing a much more formidable threat to the Israeli forces.
On a visit to Tel Aviv recently, Secretary of State Anthony Blinken warned the Israeli leadership, about “the imperative to the United States that the massive loss of civilian life and displacement of the scale we saw in northern Gaza not be repeated in the south.” He demanded a “clear plan in place that puts a premium on protecting civilians as well as sustaining and building on the humanitarian assistance that’s getting into Gaza.” 
Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant (R) and US Secretary of State Antony Blinken shake hands prior to a meeting in Tel Aviv on November 30, 2023. Blinken told Israeli leaders on November 30 that a temporary truce in their war with Hamas was “producing results” and should continue.   (Photo by SAUL LOEB/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)
How in the world can the Israelis assure Washington that they will avert civilian deaths, given that Hamas is known for using civilians as human shields? How can the IDF avoid striking civilian targets if Hamas uses hospitals as operational command centers and storage facilities for weapons and combat gear?
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Whether intentional or not, what the Biden administration is doing is restricting the IDF’s freedom of action and flexibility of maneuver, as Israel is striving to eliminate the existential threat to its survival. 
It is bad enough that Israel has to deal with a much more lethal and bloodthirsty enemy that is armed to the teeth. Now its defenders have to fight with one arm tied behind their back because Washington, almost certainly driven by politics, is hell-bent on micromanaging someone else’s war.
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Rebekah Koffler is a strategic military intelligence analyst and the author of Putin’s Playbook. She is Managing Editor of an e-mail newsletter for independent thinkers, CutToTheNews.com. Follow her on Twitter @Rebekah0132
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5 Fights We Need to See After UFC Fight Night 233 – Bleacher Report

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5 Fights We Need to See After UFC Fight Night 233  Bleacher Report
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Bleacher Report Boxing Pound-For-Pound Rankings: Feb 2009 – Bleacher Report

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Bleacher Report Boxing Pound-For-Pound Rankings: Feb 2009  Bleacher Report
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