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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
6/20/2013 4:04:36 PM

Israel's Netanyahu signals annoyance with EU over Hezbollah

2 hrs 6 mins ago

Reuters/Reuters - European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton (L) speaks during her meeting with Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem June 20, 2013. REUTERS/Abir Sultan/Pool

JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu voiced exasperation on Thursday with the European Union's reluctance to classify Lebanon's Hezbollah movement as a terrorist group.

"I mean, it's hard to see how you cannot have a consensus on Hezbollah as a terrorist organization. If Hezbollah isn't a terrorist organization, I don't know what is a terrorist organization," he told Catherine Ashton, the EU's foreign policy chief, at the public start of their meeting in his office.

Responding to Netanyahu, Ashton said: "I hear what you say, especially on your concerns about what's happening with Hezbollah. And we will talk about these things."

A British proposal to put Hezbollah on the EU's terrorism blacklist was resisted on Wednesday by some of the bloc's 27 members who fear such action would fuel instability in the Middle East, diplomats said.

Britain has argued that the militant Shi'ite Muslim movement should face European sanctions because of evidence it was behind a bus bombing in Bulgaria that killed five Israelis and their driver in July. Hezbollah, which the United States lists as a terrorist organization, denies any involvement in the attack.

Diplomats said some EU governments had questioned whether there was solid evidence of Hezbollah involvement. Bulgaria's new government expressed similar doubts this month, but now says it will not impede blacklisting the group.

The British proposal gained more support in Europe in recent weeks after Hezbollah, an ally of Syria's President Bashar al-Assad, became openly involved in that country's civil war.

Israel and Hezbollah fought a war in Lebanon in 2006.

In arguing its case, Britain has also pointed to a four-year jail term a court in Cyprus imposed on a Hezbollah member accused of plotting to attack Israeli interests on the island.

Diplomats say a majority of EU member states, including France and Germany, back the British proposal. But unanimity is needed and Austria, the Czech Republic and Italy have voiced reservations over what would be a major policy shift for the EU.

Hamas, the Palestinian Islamist movement that rules the Gaza Strip, and Turkey's Kurdish militant group PKK are already on the EU blacklist, and their assets in Europe have been frozen.

(Reporting by Jeffrey Heller in Jerusalem and Justyna Pawlak in Brussels; Editing by Alistair Lyon)


"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?
6/20/2013 4:07:17 PM

China, Vietnam talk amid South China Sea tensions

Vietnamese president in China for meetings amid South China Sea tensions



Associated Press -

Vietnamese President Truong Tan Sang, left, and Chinese President, right, attend a signing ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, Wednesday, June 19, 2013. (AP Photo/Mark Ralston, Pool)

BEIJING (AP) -- Vietnam's president was being feted by China's leaders on a visit through Friday as Beijing continues to shun another rival for South China Sea territory that has challenged its claims on legal grounds, the Philippines.

President Truong Tan Sang is on a three-day visit to boost economic ties with China, Vietnam's communist ally and biggest trading partner. How to manage their disputed territorial sea claims — which last month led to a damaged fishing boat and allegations of a crew's lives being put at risk — is also on the agenda.

China and Vietnam agreed on Wednesday to set up a hotline to resolve fishing incidents in their disputed waters. Both sides should inform the other of any detentions or incidents involving fishermen or fishing boats within 48 hours.

China claims virtually the entire South China Sea and its island groups, while Vietnam and other Southeast Asian countries claim some areas. The islands sit amid some of the world's busiest commercial sea lanes, along with rich fishing grounds and potential oil and gas deposits.

The claims are longstanding but new skirmishes have erupted in the last two years between China and Vietnam and the Philippines.

Last month, Vietnam accused China of damaging a fishing boat that it said was operating in Vietnamese waters, risking the lives of 15 crew members. China said the Vietnamese fishing boat was fishing illegally around islands in Chinese waters. Earlier this month, anti-China protesters staged a show of dissent in Vietnam's capital, demonstrating the domestic pressure its government faces when dealing with China's territorial claims.

China has painted a more consolatory picture with Vietnam than with the Philippines, which made the daring move earlier this year to legally challenge China's vast claims before a tribunal under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. China has ignored the move.

China wants the disputes settled by negotiating one on one with each of the rival claimants, something that will give it an advantage because of its sheer size.

"Of course it is desirable for China to set up fishing hotlines with other countries if such agreements can be reached, but the problem is it's even more difficult to sit down for negotiations with countries like the Philippines," said Li Jinming of the Institute for South China Sea Studies at Xiamen University.

President Sang met his counterpart Xi Jinping on Wednesday. In remarks carried by the official Xinhua News Agency, Xi said the countries should seek a political solution and not let the issue affect bilateral ties. On Thursday, he was meeting Premier Li Keqiang.


"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?
6/20/2013 4:22:29 PM

RT: Ron Paul: ‘Obama’s Syria policy looks a lot like Bush’s Iraq policy’

Posted on
Published time: June 18, 2013 18:07

Former US Representative Ron Paul (R-TX) (AFP Photo / Joe Raedle)

Did the White House’s remarks about Syrian President Bashar al-Assad using chemical weapons sound familiar? Former congressman Ron Paul says the build up to a likely strike on Syria reminds him of the days before the invasion of Iraq.

Paul, the longtime Republican lawmaker from Texas who retired last year following an unsuccessful attempt to gain the GOP nomination for the presidency, published a statement on his website this week criticizing the White House for their latest remarks regarding Syria.

US President Barack Obama said months ago that any proof of Assad using chemical weapons against Syrians would constitute the crossing of a “red line” that would spur American intervention. Last week, the White House said evidence linked Assad’s government to using chemical warfare to kill as many as 150 opposition fighters during the bloody civil war that has so far costs more than 90,000 Syrians their lives, according to United Nation estimates. Washington is now likely to begin arming Syrian rebel fighters and is pondering a possible no-fly zone over Syria.

According to Paul, the latest rhetoric from the White House is something he’s seen before.

Because of this use of gas, the president claimed, Syria had crossed his ‘red line’ and the US must begin to arm the rebels fighting to overthrow the Syrian government,” Paul wrote. But at the same time, Paul called into question a previous report from the Washington Post, in which the paper cited White House officials as having decided “weeks ago” to arm Syrian rebels.

“[I]n other words, it was made at a time when the intelligence community did not believe ‘with high confidence’ that the Syrian government had used chemical weapons,” Paul said of that decision. “Further, this plan to transfer weapons to the Syrian rebels had become policy much earlier than that, as the Washington Post reported that the CIA had expanded over the past year its secret bases in Jordan to prepare for the transfer of weapons to the rebels in Syria.”

On his website, Paul wrote that things are starting to seem all too similar to what preceded the invasion of Baghdad in 2003.

The process was identical to the massive deception campaign that led us into the Iraq War,” Paul claimed.

Just like under President George W. Bush, Paul said the Obama administration is “fixing the intelligence and facts” so it can justify an already determined policy.

And Congress just goes along, just as they did the last time,” Paul wrote.

Congress has not formally decided how it will heed any calls to arm Syrian rebels just yet, but a number of influential politicians on the Hill have raised their voices already, particularly in light of the White House’s recent claim.

Sen. John McCain (R-Arizona), an outspoken supporter of the efforts to aid the rebels, said last week that the United States’ failure to act already in the civil war is “disgraceful.”

For us to sit by, and watch these people being massacred, raped, tortured in the most terrible fashion, meanwhile, the Russians are all in, Hezbollah is all in, and we’re talking about giving them more light weapons? It’s insane,” he said. “Frankly, every day that goes by and we don’t get rid of Bashar Assad, it becomes more and more complicated and difficult.”

Indeed, even Pres. Obama has said that removing Assad from office has been a priority within Washington for quite some time now. But just as with a decade earlier, he’s already finding some opponents in Washington uninterested in opening up another war.

Speaking on CBS’ Face the Nation over the weekend, House Intelligence Chairman Mike Rogers (R-Michigan) equated the news coming out of the White House as a lot of huff.

It seems to me they have a great media strategy,” Rogers said. “They don’t have a great Syrian strategy, and I don’t believe any of our members – and we had both Republicans and Democrats on the committee – express concern about where they think we are today, and where we think the administration wants to go.”

What is the plan? Where are we going in Syria? And what do you want to accomplish?” Rogers asked. “Some of the things that they’ve told us – told the Intelligence Committee – in the past doesn’t comport with what they’re presenting as the direction they want to go. So we’ve asked them to come up and say if we’re going to move in this direction, you’re going to have to come up with a more comprehensive plan.”

They’ve got a lot of explaining to do to come up and say, ‘Here’s our comprehensive plan on how we move forward on what is a catastrophic situation that’s getting worse every single day in Syria,’” Rogers said.

Speaking to PBS host Charlie Rose in an interview that aired late Monday, Pres. Obama dismissed the claims from the likes of Mr. Paul that the unrest in Syria would spark another war for his administration to be entwined in.

It is very easy to slip slide your way into deeper and deeper commitments,” Obama told Rose, referring to the possibility of another war in the Middle East.

Now, on the other side there are folks who say, you know, ‘we are so scarred from Iraq. We should have learned our lesson. We should not have anything to do with it,’” Obama said. “Well, I reject that view as well because the fact of the matter is, is that we’ve got serious interests there.”

The goals are a stable, non-sectarian, representative Syrian government that is addressing the needs of its people through political processes and peaceful processes,” added the president. “We’re not taking sides in a religious war between Shi’a and Sunni. Really, what we’re trying to do is take sides against extremists of all sorts and in favor of people who are in favor of moderation, tolerance, representative government – and, over the long-term, stability and prosperity for the people of Syria.”

Mr. Obama is currently overseas discussing the Syrian situation with other world leaders, including Russian President Vladimir Putin. Alexei Pushkov, chairman of the Russian parliament’s International Affairs Committee, said in a tweet last week that the White House’s information about the usage of chemical weapons by the Assad regime “is fabricated in the same way as the lie about Hussein’s weapons of mass destruction” in Iraq.

"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?
6/20/2013 11:48:53 PM

Father sentenced for binding kids outside Wal-Mart


LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A suburban Chicago man was sentenced Wednesday to 30 months in prison for binding and blindfolding two of his children a year ago in a Wal-Mart parking lot in eastern Kansas.

Adolfo Gomez, 53, also was ordered to serve 24 months of post-release supervision after his prison term ends, said Cheryl Wright Kunard, a spokeswoman for the Douglas County district attorney's office.

Gomez and his wife, Deborah Gomez, were arrested June 13, 2012, in Lawrence after a woman saw a child bound and blindfolded near the family's vehicle. Police reported finding two of their children, ages 5 and 7, bound by their hands and feet in the store parking lot, while three other children, ages 12, 13 and 15, were inside the SUV unrestrained.

Adolfo Gomez pleaded no contest in December to felony child abuse and child endangerment. Deborah Gomez was sentenced earlier to one year of probation after pleading no contest to child endangerment.

The Gomezes told police they were in the parking lot because their vehicle had broken down on Interstate 70 near Lawrence on their way to Arizona.

At a preliminary hearing, investigators said Adolfo Gomez told them he had been listening to an online preacher who was predicting the end of the world and that a "darkness had come over" their house in Northlake, Ill.

One of the older children told police the family believed demons were in their home and outside their SUV in the Wal-Mart parking lot. Adolfo Gomez told police the two younger children were acting out toward the older children in the vehicle during Bible studies.


"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?
6/20/2013 11:55:26 PM

Turkey's 'standing man' to join ranks of icons?


Associated Press/Malcolm Browne, File - FILE - This is a June 11, 1963 file photo of Thich Quang Duc, a Buddhist monk, burns himself to death on a Saigon street South Vietnam to protest alleged persecution of Buddhists by the South Vietnamese government. (AP Photo/Malcolm Browne, File)

FILE - In this May 4, 1970 file photo, Mary Ann Vecchio screams as she kneels by the body of a student lying face down on the campus of Kent State University in Kent, Ohio . National Guardsmen had fired into a crowd of demonstrators, killing four. (AP Photo/John Filo, File)
FILE - This is a Saturday, July 25, 2009 file photo of a woman as she protests against the political situation in Iran in Berlin. The protest is part of the Global Action Day 'United for Iran'. The photograph shows Iranian student Neda who was killed during a mass demonstration following the presidential elections in Iran. (AP Photo/Franka Bruns, File)
The image was stark: a silent, solitary figure standing in passivedefiance to the Turkish prime minister's demand for protesters to clear Taksim Square in central Istanbul.

The challenge by performance artist Erdem Gunduz is catching on with other protesters in Turkey, encouraged by social media into imitating his gesture across the country.

It's too early to tell whether the "standing man" protests will make a difference in the weeks-long challenge to the authority of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

But singular actions, captured in images distributed around the world, have sometimes influenced the course of history and transformed obscure figures into symbols of their era.

___

DEATH IN TEHRAN

Neda Agha-Soltan was a 26-year-old aspiring musician when she and her music teacher were driving to a protest rally in Tehran on June 20, 2009. The rally was one of many protests against the results of that year's presidential election, which the opposition said was rigged by supporters of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

The car's air-conditioner wasn't working so she left the vehicle to continue on foot, stopping to watch a protest some distance from the main rally. Suddenly, a bullet allegedly fired by a pro-government militiaman pierced her chest.

As amateur video captured the scene, the young woman fell to the ground. She died within minutes. The video went viral and within hours Neda became the symbol of the struggle against Ahmadinejadand the cleric-run Islamic republic.

Eventually, the government gained the upper hand, and Ahmadinejad served out his second term. But the images kept her memory alive. As Iranians celebrated the victory of reformist-backed Hasan Rowhani in last week's election, some in the crowd yelled "it's the spring of freedom, too bad Neda isn't here."

___

TANKS AT TIANANMEN SQUARE

There was no such name recognition for the "tank man," an anonymous figure who stood in front of a column of Chinese tanks on June 5, 1989, a day after Chinese troops forcibly removed pro-democracy protesters from Beijing's Tiananmen Square.

Had it not been for teams of photographers and video journalists at a nearby hotel, that personal act of defiance in the face of overwhelming power would have passed without notice.

As cameras rolled and shutters snapped, the man, whose face wasn't clearly visible in the distance, placed himself in front of the column of tanks, forcing them to stop.

Moments later, with the column halted, the man jumped on one of the vehicles, made his way to the turret and appeared to talk to the commander. Finally, video showed two figures in blue clothing pull the man away. All three disappeared into the crowd. To this day, Chinese authorities haven't identified the man nor given any indication what happened to him. Still, his actions live on in the image, an iconic symbol of one man's defiance.

___

BUDDHIST MONK'S SELF-IMMOLATION

Few had ever heard of Thich Quang Duc before June 10, 1963, when a small group of journalists gathered on a street in South Vietnam's capital, Saigon, having heard that "something important" would happen.

Suddenly, hundreds of Buddhist monks appeared carrying banners denouncing repression of the Buddhist majority by the Catholic-dominated government of Prime Minister Ngo Dinh Diem.

The procession stopped.

Duc, one of the monks, took a seat on a cushion placed on the pavement. As a colleague poured gasoline on his head, Duc recited Buddhist prayers, struck a match and set himself on fire.

A photo by Associated Press journalist Malcolm Browne captured the moment and spread shock and horror around the world. The image destroyed claims by the U.S. and the South Vietnamese that the Buddhist protests were fizzling out.

On the other side of the globe, a stunned President John F. Kennedy said no news photo in history "has generated so much emotion around the world as that one." The image stirred a Buddhist rebellion in South Vietnam, already racked by war with the communist Viet Cong.

That uprising in turn destroyed support for Diem in the U.S., his chief backer. Five months later, Diem was slain in a military coup that toppled his government.

___

KENT STATE MASSACRE

Mary Ann Vecchio wasn't even a student at Kent State University when she joined a protest at the Ohio campus against the Vietnam War on May 4, 1970.

She was a 14-year-old runaway from Florida. Yet the image of Vecchio weeping over the body of one of four students shot dead by the Ohio National Guard became the symbol of the Kent State Massacre and of the agony of a nation torn apart by the Vietnam conflict.

Florida officials quickly branded her a communist dissident even though her identity was unknown.

With her picture transmitted around the world, Vecchio tried to slip away and catch a bus to California. Police tracked her down before she could board and sent her home to her family. She eventually married and moved to Nevada. Although she never attended Kent State, she was invited to the campus several times for memorial services.


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

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