>>118161
/pol/ here. There was a thread on this about a year ago. I did a ton of research into the saka-suni people, who are first attested to as originating in Sumeria, or possibly before Sumeria in Ur. After Sumeria and the kingdom of Akkad fell they went around the middle east near jordan being a pain in the ass for all who they interacted with. Then they bumped into some Scythians in Syria and convinced the Scythians to join them as a warrior class, with the Saka-suni being the royal class/generals. From there they proceeded to raise holy hell all throughout the area, just going around destroying everything in their paths. The Scythian made their army so large that it had to be divided into 3 tribes. And, at the time there was no organized army large enough to resist their attacks, they'd arrive at a town and the occupants would have no choice but to flee or die. Eventually a king in the area of Turkey, possibly a hittite, ran around all over Europe and the northern middle east and assembled the largest army possible. They then went on a crusade to find the Saka-suni and when they did they were able to completely destroy one of the tribes . The other two fled the battle and this king and his army gave pursuit, chasing them all the fucking way to northern India before deciding that they had chased them far enough away. For all intents and purposes this was the first world war, and it happened before the founding of buddhism. Coincidentally, the town in which the buddha was born, as a royal, was a town populated by a Saka-Suni warrior clan. There were many mentions of the Saka-Suni in Babylonian texts which explain that their name translates to Sons of Isaac.
I posted all that in the /pol/ thread and anons reached a consensus that the timeline and events that took place during it implies that them and the sea people were probably one and the same.