Macron Expects ISIS’ Full Defeat within Months

French President Emmanuel Macron visits the naval base at Abu Dhabi's Port Zayed. AFP photo
French President Emmanuel Macron visits the naval base at Abu Dhabi's Port Zayed. AFP photo
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Macron Expects ISIS’ Full Defeat within Months

French President Emmanuel Macron visits the naval base at Abu Dhabi's Port Zayed. AFP photo
French President Emmanuel Macron visits the naval base at Abu Dhabi's Port Zayed. AFP photo

French President Emmanuel Macron said Thursday that ISIS faced complete military defeat in Iraq and Syria within months but warned the battle against terrorism would go on.

"We have won in Raqqa and the coming weeks and months, I am quite sure, will allow us to achieve complete military victory in the Iraq-Syria theater," Macron told French naval personnel deployed in Abu Dhabi for the war against ISIS.

"But that won't be the end of this struggle. Long-term stabilization and combating terrorist groups will be indispensable complements to the inclusive and pluralist political solution we want to see emerge in the region."

A military band played "La Marseillaise" as Macron visited the naval base at Abu Dhabi's Port Zayed, and an honor guard met him before he boarded and walked through the French frigate Jean Bart.

The French president later addressed gathered sailors there. He described the base as a crucial part of France's battle against extremists in the region like ISIS.

Macron was in the United Arab Emirates capital for the opening of the Louvre Abu Dhabi -- the first museum to carry the famed brand outside France -- which he hailed as a "bridge between civilizations" and religions.



Explosion at US Air Base in Japan Injures 4 Japanese Soldiers

FILE - In this photo released by US Marine Corps, US Marines take cover behind tattered tombstones during their advance across cemetery ridge on Okinawa, Ryukyu Island, as enemy bullets pass overhead in the battle against Japanese forces in June 1945, World War II. (Cpl. Don Henderson/US Marine Corps via AP, File)
FILE - In this photo released by US Marine Corps, US Marines take cover behind tattered tombstones during their advance across cemetery ridge on Okinawa, Ryukyu Island, as enemy bullets pass overhead in the battle against Japanese forces in June 1945, World War II. (Cpl. Don Henderson/US Marine Corps via AP, File)
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Explosion at US Air Base in Japan Injures 4 Japanese Soldiers

FILE - In this photo released by US Marine Corps, US Marines take cover behind tattered tombstones during their advance across cemetery ridge on Okinawa, Ryukyu Island, as enemy bullets pass overhead in the battle against Japanese forces in June 1945, World War II. (Cpl. Don Henderson/US Marine Corps via AP, File)
FILE - In this photo released by US Marine Corps, US Marines take cover behind tattered tombstones during their advance across cemetery ridge on Okinawa, Ryukyu Island, as enemy bullets pass overhead in the battle against Japanese forces in June 1945, World War II. (Cpl. Don Henderson/US Marine Corps via AP, File)

An explosion at a storage site for unexploded wartime ordnances at a US military base on Japan's southern island of Okinawa injured four Japanese soldiers, though the injuries are not life threatening, officials said Monday.

The four soldiers had injuries to their fingers while working at a facility that belongs to Okinawa prefecture to store unexploded ordnance found on the island, where one of the harshest battles of World War II was fought, local officials said.

According to The Associated Press, prefectural officials said the injuries were not life threatening, but no other details were immediately known.

The Self Defense Force's joint staff said they were looking into reports of an explosion at Kadena Air Base that occurred while a team of Japanese soldiers that specializes in handling unexploded ordnance was working near or at the base.

The SDF said they are trying to confirm the cause of the accident and where it occurred.

Hundreds of tons of unexploded wartime bombs, many of them dropped by the US military, remain buried around Japan and are sometimes dug up at construction sites and elsewhere.

In October, an unexploded wartime US bomb exploded at a commercial airport in southern Japan, causing a large crater and suspending dozens of flights.