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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/17/2014 10:22:01 AM

Terrorist massacre of children ‘blowback’ from U.S.-backed Pakistani offensive against Taliban, officials say

Former Pakistani ambassador to Washington calls his government’s military strategy ‘inadequate’


Michael Isikoff
Yahoo News


Yahoo News Special Report: #PeshawarAttack


The Pakistani Taliban assault on a school — killing 145, including 132 children — appears to be ”blowback” from a months-long Pakistani military offensive against the terror group that was encouraged and supported by the U.S. government, Pakistani and U.S. officials said today.

The Pakistani military launched the offensive last June, killing more than 1,800 militants as well as an unknown number of civilians, in the group’s hideouts in North Waziristan.

Just last month, Pakistan’s army chief, Gen. Raheel Sharif, visited Washington for consultations on the offensive. U.S. officials seemed modestly optimistic that the Pakistani Taliban — formally known as Tehrik-e-Taliban, or the TTP — was “under pressure” and on the run, a U.S intelligence official told Yahoo News.

But today’s assault in Peshawar — using suicide bombers disguised in military uniforms who lobbed hand grenades and fired indiscriminately at schoolchildren — was a sign that the group was far from decimated and still capable of spectacular attacks. “The scope and scale of this is unprecedented,” the U.S. official said.

“This was blowback we have been expecting for some time,” said Jalil Abbas Jilani, Pakistan’s ambassador to the United States, in a radio interview on “The Diane Rehm Show” Tuesday about the attack on the school.

The “blowback” theory was underscored by a statement from the TTP’s own spokesman, Mohammed Umar Khorasani. He called the assault “a revenge attack” for the army offensive, adding: “We targeted the school because the army targets our families. We want them to feel our pain.”

CLICK IMAGE for slideshow: Hospital security guards carry a students injured in the shootout at a school under attacked by Taliban gunmen in Peshawar, Pakistan,Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2014. Taliban gunmen stormed a military school in the northwestern Pakistani city, killing and wounding dozens, officials said, in the latest militant violence to hit the already troubled region. (AP Photo/Mohammad Sajjad)(AP Photo/Mohammad Sajjad)

CLICK IMAGE for slideshow: Hospital security guards carry a students injured in the shootout at a school under …

But despite Pakistani vows to strike back — the country’s prime minister, Nawaz Sharif, immediately flew to Peshawar and called for an emergency meeting of all political parties — there were questions about whether the country’s military has the capability and will to take meaningful action against what one analyst called “a spider web of terrorist groups” throughout the country.

Husain Haqqani, a former Pakistani ambassador to the U.S. who worked closely with Obama administration officials, said his country’s military offensive was flawed from the outset.

“It seems the Pakistani effort has been inadequate,” he told Yahoo News in an interview. The offensive was announced well in advance and “too well publicized,” giving key TTP leaders an opportunity to flee and escape the brunt of the attacks.

More important, his country continues to have a selective attitude toward terrorist groups within the country’s borders, he said. While going after the TTP — which has been focused on overthrowing the Pakistani government — it continues to protect or turn a blind eye to others, including most notably Jamaat-ud-Dawa, or JUD, a purported front group for Lashkar-e-Taiba, the terror organization that mounted the 2008 attack on Mumbai, killing 166 people, including six Americans.

The U.S. government has blacklisted JUD as a global terrorist organization and has long complained that the Pakistani military’s intelligence service, the ISI, has aided the group. (In federal court testimony in Chicago in 2010, a key government witness, David Coleman Headley, testified that he helped carry out the Mumbai attacks under the direction of an ISI handler.)

Yet just this month, Hafiz Saeed — the leader of JUD, who has a $10 million U.S. government bounty on his head — staged a public rally in Lahore, Pakistan, with no response from the Pakistani government.

“It’s like the Mafia,” said Haqqani about the terror groups in Pakistan, comparing them to American criminal organizations in different cities, with separate leaders acting in close cooperation with each other. “Each of these groups helps the other.

“It’s time for Pakistan to recognize it must go after all of them,” he said.

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/17/2014 10:37:32 AM

Australia orders sweeping investigation after system fails hostages

Reuters


Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott and his wife Margie prepare to place floral tributes near the cafe in central Sydney December 16, 2014 where hostages were held for over 16-hours. REUTERS/David Gray

By Matt Siegel

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott on Wednesday ordered a sweeping investigation into a deadly hostage crisis after tough new security laws and the courts failed to stop a convicted felon from walking into a Sydney cafe with a concealed shotgun.

Three people were killed, including hostage-taker Man Haron Monis, when police stormed a Sydney cafe early on Tuesday morning to free terrified hostages held at gunpoint for 16 hours. Police are investigating whether the two captives were killed by Monis or died in crossfire.

Monis, a self-styled sheikh who received political asylum from Iran in 2001, was well known to Australian authorities, having been charged as an accessory to murder and with dozens of counts of sexual and indecent assault. He had been free on bail.

Australia passed sweeping security laws in October aimed at stopping people from becoming radicalized and going to fight in conflicts such as those in Iraq and Syria, where scores of Australians have joined militant groups, as well as preventing attacks at home.

Despite those new powers, Abbott said Monis was not on any security watchlist and managed to walk undetected into the Lindt Chocolate Cafe with a legally obtained shotgun on a busy workday morning. New South Wales (NSW) state police later contradicted Abbott's assertion, telling Reuters in a statement that there was no record of Monis having a gun license.

Monis was convicted in 2012 of sending hate mail to the families of Australian soldiers killed in Afghanistan.

Abbott said the national and state governments would conduct an urgent review to identify where the system had failed in order to understand how attacks could be stopped in future.

"We do need to know why the perpetrator of this horrible outrage got permanent residency. We do need to know how he could've been on welfare for so many years. We do need to know what this individual was doing with a gun license," Abbott told reporters in Canberra.

"We particularly need to know how someone with such a long record of violence, such a long record of mental instability, was out on bail after his involvement in a particularly horrific crime. And we do need to know why he seems to have fallen off our security agencies' watchlist, back in about 2009."

BAIL QUESTIONED

The justice system in New South Wales, Australia's most populous state, was also under fire.

"We were concerned this man got bail from the very beginning," said state Police Commissioner Andrew Scipione.

Police had requested courts refuse Monis bail but were not paying special attention to him because his charges were not linked to political violence and he was not on any watchlist, he said. Abbott also raised concern about the bail system.

Greg Barns, a lawyer and a spokesman for the Australian Lawyers Alliance, told Reuters lengthy delays between arrests and cases being heard, along with the presumption of innocence, meant more people were on bail for longer.

"There aren't enough courts, there aren't enough judges, there is not enough legal aid. Every sector within the criminal justice system is under-funded by the government," he said.

Funding for the state's criminal justice system fell 11 percent in 2012/13, according to a government report, while delays in hearing criminal matters in the state Supreme Court grew to 6.5 months in 2013 from 1.5 months in 2010, according to its annual report.

New, tougher bail laws have already been passed in the state but delays caused by the need to train police, courts and lawyers mean they do not come into force until late January.

MOSQUE THREAT, EXTRA POLICE

Police said on Wednesday a man had been charged with making threatening phone calls to a mosque in western Sydney, one of the few confirmed reports of what was feared could be a wave of anti-Muslim sentiment in the wake of the violence.

In 2005, racially charged tension between residents from the largely white beachside neighborhood of Cronulla and Muslim youths from western Sydney degenerated into days of riots involving thousands of people.

"There has been some issues of hate or bias crime but it's certainly minimal compared to the outpouring of support," Assistant Police Commissioner Michael Fuller told reporters.

On Wednesday, people were still laying flowers and signing condolence books in Martin Place, a pedestrian mall near the scene of the cafe siege.

Police also said they would be boosting their presence in prominent locations such as Sydney Harbour, home to the Opera House, for the next three weeks as an added precaution.

Iran's Foreign Ministry said it had warned Australia repeatedly about Monis, who fled Iran claiming persecution.

Recently introduced Australian legislation expanded the intelligence services' ability to access private computer networks, cracked down on the leaking of classified information and bolstered the cooperation of the domestic and foreign intelligence services.

The government is also introducing controversial data retention laws, although Abbott said on Tuesday it was unclear whether those laws, aimed at intercepting communications between individuals plotting attacks, would have helped to stop Monis.

Critics of the security laws, touted by Abbott's conservative government as necessary to prevent attacks such as the hostage crisis, have seized on the failure to argue against the granting of further powers.

"There's no control order regime to account for this. There's no metadata inside an apparently deranged mind," Fairfax News columnist Waleed Aly wrote.

(Additional reporting by Swati Pandey, Lincoln Feast, Jane Wardell and Byron Kaye in SYDNEY and William Maclean in DUBAI; Editing by Dean Yates, Paul Tait, Robert Birsel)


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/17/2014 10:50:21 AM

Pennsylvania suspect in family killings dead of self-inflicted cuts

Reuters

WABC – NY
Suspect in Pennsylvania killing spree found dead near his home


By Daniel Kelley

EAGLEVILLE, Pa. (Reuters) - An Iraq War veteran sought in the killing of six family members in Pennsylvania was found dead on Tuesday of "self-inflicted cutting wounds" following a two-day manhunt, authorities said.

Suspect Bradley William Stone, 35, of Pennsburg was being sought in the deaths on Monday of his ex-wife, her mother, grandmother, sister and two other family members, including his 14-year-old niece. His 17-year-old nephew was seriously wounded.

Stone's body was found on Tuesday afternoon in a wooded area in New Hanover Township, about a half mile (0.8 km) from his home in Pennsburg, about 50 miles (80 km) northwest of Philadelphia, County District Attorney Risa Vetri Ferman told a news conference.

An autopsy would determine the official cause of death and how long Stone had been dead, she said.

"Based upon what we found at the scene, we believe that he died of self-inflicted cutting wounds in the center part of his body," she said.

Citing sources, WPVI-TV reported Stone killed himself with a sword and that a sword had been used in the slayings.

Stone's nephew suffered significant cuts to his hands and head and was hospitalized in stable condition.

"It certainly appears to us they were defensive in nature and that he was fighting off his attacker," Ferman said.

Stone and his ex-wife, Nicole, 33, filed for divorce in 2009 and had an ongoing custody battle over their daughters, aged 8 and 5, Ferman said.

Stone asked a court on Dec. 5 to grant him emergency custody but was denied, Ferman said.

The killing spree "certainly from a timing perspective seems to be related," Ferman said.

Local media reported Stone suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder, but Ferman said to her knowledge he had not been diagnosed with PTSD.

Stone enlisted with the U.S. Marine Corps Reserves in 2002, was deployed to Iraq and was honorably discharged at the rank of sergeant in 2011, according to a military spokesman.

Most of the victims suffered gunshot wounds and a .40-caliber handgun belonging to Stone was found at one of the crime scenes, according to a police affidavit filed in court on Tuesday. Several victims also had deep lacerations, and the throat of at least one victim had been cut open, the affidavit said.

Stone's daughters were unharmed. He had taken them from his ex-wife's house and left them with a neighbor soon after the attacks on Monday, Ferman said. His current wife and infant child also were safe.

The killings set off Pennsylvania's second recent high-profile manhunt after a seven-week chase to capture survivalist Eric Frein, accused of killing a state trooper in September.

(Writing by Ellen Wulfhorst; Additional reporting by Mary Wisniewski; Editing by Eric Beech, Bill Trott and Eric Walsh)

Body found in Pennsylvania killing spree search; preliminary ID is Bradley Stone (video)






"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/17/2014 11:02:15 AM

California needs 11 trillion gallons of water: NASA

AFP

Wochit
California Will Need 11 Trillion Gallons of Water to End Epic Drought, NASA Says


Miami (AFP) - California needs 11 trillion gallons of water to recover from its three-year drought, the US space agency said Tuesday after studying water resources by using satellite data.

The first of its kind calculation of how much groundwater would end the drought was led by Jay Famiglietti of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California and based on observations from NASA's Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment satellites.

California has experienced rainstorms in recent days but, while welcome, scientists warn that they are not enough to end the drought.

"It takes years to get into a drought of this severity, and it will likely take many more big storms, and years, to crawl out of it," said Famiglietti.

"Spaceborne and airborne measurements of Earth's changing shape, surface height and gravity field now allow us to measure and analyze key features of droughts better than ever before, including determining precisely when they begin and end and what their magnitude is at any moment in time.

"That's an incredible advance and something that would be impossible using only ground-based observations."

The more than 40-trillion-liter volume is a huge quantity of water, larger, for example, than the total amount held behind China's historic Three Gorges Dam.

The entire southwestern United States is far drier than normal, with groundwater levels across the region in the lowest two to 10 percent since 1949, scientists said.

Meanwhile, other NASA satellite data showed that so far this year, the snowpack in California's Sierra Nevada range is only half previous estimates.

"The 2014 snowpack was one of the three lowest on record and the worst since 1977, when California's population was half what it is now," said Airborne Snow Observatory principal investigator Tom Painter.

"Besides resulting in less snow water, the dramatic reduction in snow extent contributes to warming our climate by allowing the ground to absorb more sunlight.

"This reduces soil moisture, which makes it harder to get water from the snow into reservoirs once it does start snowing again."





"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/17/2014 3:26:16 PM

Our Ozone Layer is Shredded! UVB Radiation Up Over 1,000%!

Tuesday, December 16, 2014



Glenn Canady
www.project.nsearch.com - Join and get all my free ebooks – stay informed on the latest from US Intel!


Dan Wigington, of
GeoengineeringWatch.org has a very sobering report on our ozone layer! UVB is the most cancer causing of all the UV radiation and is normally only 5% of the total UV rays hitting our skin. Now it’s over 10 times that amount! The bark is being burned off trees around the world, plankton is dying off, reefs are being scorched, whales backs are being sunburned! This is very serious! This increased UV radiation hitting our planet will now accelerate global warming which is real. I don’t think the warming is caused by automobiles, I blame most of this on the chemtrails they are spraying into the atmosphere! We all know through the releases of Gordon Duff at VeteransToday that the US has had free energy systems and antigravity systems since 1945! So if these elite scumbags really cared about our environment we would all be powering our homes and vehicles with free energy many decades ago! Instead they have killed or bought off all the inventors that brought out free energy devices. Please share this video and increase your efforts at waking up new people! Gordon Duff has reported that VeteransToday has gotten massive new support of the military since his epic speech against the Illuminati in Syria! I hope all of you will support our veterans putting out the truth!


UVB Radiation Up Over 1,000% Off the Charts!




"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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