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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
9/19/2013 10:19:18 PM
Kerry directive to U.N.???

US urges UN action, Syria sees stalemate


Rebel fighters inspect a stairwell during fighting against Syrian government forces on September 19, 2013 in the Saif al-Dawla district of Aleppo. (AFP Photo/Jm Lopez)
AFP

The United States called Thursday for a binding UN resolution on Syria's chemical weapons next week, as a senior Syrian official said the country's conflict has reached a stalemate.

A "definitive" UN report had proved that the Syrian regime was behind an August chemical weapons attack, US Secretary of State John Kerry said.

"Now the test comes. The (UN) Security Council must be prepared to act next week. It is vital for the international community to stand up and speak out," he added.

Syria's deputy premier, meanwhile, said Damascus believes the conflict has reached a stalemate and would call for a ceasefire if long-delayed peace talks in Geneva were to take place.

"Neither the armed opposition nor the regime is capable of defeating the other side," Qadri Jamil told Britain's Guardian newspaper.

When asked what his government would propose at the stalled Geneva-2 summit, he replied: "An end to external intervention, a ceasefire and the launching of a peaceful political process."

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, in an interview Wednesday with US television network Fox News, insisted his country was the victim of infiltration by foreign-backed Al-Qaeda fighters. "What we have is not civil war. What we have is war. It's a new kind of war," he said, alleging that Islamist guerrillas from more than 80 countries had joined the fight.

"We know that we have tens of thousands of jihadists... we are on the ground, we live in this country," he said, after an expert report suggested that between 40 and 45 percent out of around 100,000 rebels were jihadists or hardline Islamists.

The president's latest television appearance came as UN envoys debated a draft resolution that would enshrine a joint US-Russian plan to secure and neutralise his banned chemical weapons.

Assad insisted in the interview that his forces had not been behind an August 21 gas attack on the Damascus suburbs that killed hundreds of civilians, but vowed nevertheless to hand over his deadly arsenal.

After last month's barrage of sarin-loaded rockets, which the West says was clearly launched by the regime, US President Barack Obama called for US-led punitive military strikes.

But with US lawmakers and the Western public not sold on the virtues of another Middle East military adventure, Assad's ally Russia seized the opportunity to propose a diplomatic solution.

Pressed by President Vladimir Putin, the White House agreed to hold fire while Russia and the international community -- with Assad's agreement -- draws up a disarmament plan.

That plan will face its first big test on Saturday, the one-week deadline announced by Moscow and the United States for Assad to provide a list of his chemical facilities.

Putin said Thursday he was confident but not 100 percent sure that Syria would carry out its commitments.

"Will we manage to carry it through? I can't say 100 percent, but all that we have seen recently, in the last few days, inspires confidence that it is possible and that it will be done," Putin told politicians and journalists at a meeting in the Novgorod region.

Meanwhile, Kerry urged China to play a "positive, constructive" role at the United Nations on the planned resolution.

He acknowledged at the start of talks with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi that the two sides have "disagreed sharply" over the Syrian conflict.

But Wang said he was ready for "in-depth" talks on all issues, including Syria, "with an open mind."

Away from the diplomatic front, fighters allied to Al-Qaeda tightened their grip Thursday on a town on the border with Turkey.

And a bomb attack on a bus in the central province of Homs killed 14 civilians, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said, adding to the more than 110,000 casualties of the 30-month conflict.

Residents said members of Al-Qaeda front group Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS) overran the border town of Azaz on Wednesday after an hours-long firefight with Free Syrian Army (FSA) rebels.

Residents reached by Skype said ISIS men controlled all the checkpoints in the town and that FSA fighters appeared to have left.

Azaz, on the Turkish border, was one of the first towns to be overrun, in July 2012, by FSA rebels, who set up their own administration.

Tensions between some opposition groups and ISIS have spiralled in recent months, especially in northern Syria, where the opposition controls vast swathes of territory.
















The secretary of state says the governing body must be prepared to pass a binding resolution on Syria.
'It is vital ... to stand up'




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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
9/20/2013 8:38:26 AM
Putin hopeful over Syria

Russia's Putin sees hope in Syria chemical arms deal

Reuters

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Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during a meeting with 'Valdai' International Discussion Club members in the town of Valdai September 19, 2013. REUTERS/Alexander Zemlianichenko/Pool

By Alexei Anishchuk

VALDAI, Russia (Reuters) - Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday he could not be 100 percent certain a plan for the destruction of Syrian chemical arms would be carried out successfully but he saw reason to hope it would.

Putin, whose country has been the Syrian government's main ally in the more than two-year-old civil war, praised U.S. President Barack Obama for not carrying out threats of a military strike over a poison gas attack in rebel-held areas.

He said such a strike would violate international law and reiterated suspicions that Assad's opponents had staged the attack, which killed hundreds of people on August 21, to encourage military action by the United States.

"Will we be able to accomplish it all (the destruction of Syria's chemical arms)? I cannot be 100 percent sure about it," Putin told a gathering of journalists and Russia experts.

"But everything we have seen so far in recent days gives us confidence that this will happen ... I hope so."

The former KGB spy said the "primitive" make of the warhead used for the attack provided strong grounds to believe it was staged by Assad's foes and that other alleged chemical weapons attacks in Syria also needed to be investigated. Washington says it believes the attack was carried out by Assad's forces.

"We always talk about the responsibility of the Assad government, if he was the one who used it (a chemical weapon). What if the opposition used it?," Putin said. "We have every reason to believe it was a cunning provocation."

Russia and the United States brokered a deal on Saturday to put Assad's chemical arms stockpiles under international control to avoid possible U.S. military strikes that Washington said would be intended to punish him over the gas attack.

Such a strike, Putin warned, "would be a strike on world order, not on Syria."

He complained that the threat of military action held out by Washington and other Western allies was poorly thought through and could have the unintended consequence of helping al Qaeda militants come to power.

"His (Obama's) decision was based on a real analysis of the situation, and I am very happy that our positions matched on this issue," he said.

"The United States has admitted that al Qaeda is fighting there. When I speak to my colleagues, I ask them: 'Okay, you in fact want to take their side, help them come to power. Then what?'," Putin said.

Under the U.S.-Russian deal, Assad must account for his chemical weapon stockpiles within a week and see them destroyed by mid-next year.

(Reporting by Alexei Anishchuk; Writing by Alissa de Carbonnel, Editing by Timothy Heritage and Ralph Boulton)

Putin hopeful chemical weapons will be destroyed


Russia's president still thinks Syrian rebels were the ones who used illegal arms, but he wants the deal to work.
Praise for Obama



"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?
9/20/2013 8:48:01 AM
12 shot in Chicago park

Boy, 3, among 12 injured in Chicago park shooting


The crime scene where a number of people, including a 3-year-old child, were shot in a city park on the south side of Chicago, Thursday, Sept. 19, 2013. (AP Photo/Paul Beaty)
Associated Press
1 hour ago

CHICAGO (AP) — Twelve people were shot late Thursday at a park on Chicago's southwest side, including a 3-year-old boy who was in critical condition.

Officer Amina Greer said the shooting occurred shortly after 10 p.m.

A witness, Julian Harris, told the Chicago Sun-Times that dreadlocked men fired at him from a gray sedan before turning toward Cornell Square Park in the Back of the Yards neighborhood and firing at people in the area. He said his 3-year-old nephew was wounded in the cheek.

"They hit the light pole next to me, but I ducked down and ran into the house," he said. "They've been coming round here looking for people to shoot every night, just gang-banging stuff. It's what they do."

Chicago Fire Department officials said the child was in critical condition. Two other victims were also in critical condition. The others were reported in serious to fair condition.

The shooting comes nearly three weeks after Chicago saw an outburst of violence over the Labor Day weekend that ended with eight dead and 20 others injured. The city's Police Department has responded to shootings that have grabbed national headlines by stepping up its crime-fighting efforts, paying overtime to add patrols to some neighborhoods, including the Back of the Yards, where Thursday's shooting took place.

According to Greer, at least 10 ambulances responded to the scene, transporting victims to several area hospitals. One victim transported himself to a hospital, police said.

Police spokesman Ron Gaines said victims were being interviewed to determine the circumstances of the shooting. He said no one had been taken into custody.

Francis John, 70, said she was in her apartment when the shooting occurred. She said she went down to see what was going on and "a lot of youngsters were running scared." A 30-year resident, she said she was surprised by what had happened.

She told the Sun-Times there hasn't been much gun violence in the neighborhood in recent years, adding the neighborhood went from good to bad 10 years ago, to better recently.

Boy, 3, among 12 shot in Chicago park


The child and two other victims are in critical condition after the late-night shooting on the city's southwest side.
No suspects in custody

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
9/20/2013 8:59:38 AM
D.C. shooter 'hunted' victims

Washington gunman 'hunted' his victims: FBI


Condolence notes and flowers are hung on a pole across the street from the front gate of the Washington Navy Yard, September 19, 2013 in Washington, DC. (AFP Photo/Mark Wilson)
AFP

The gunman who slaughtered 12 people at the Washington Navy Yard stalked his victims as if he was "hunting" them, officials said Thursday as they painted a chilling portrait of how the carnage unfolded.

FBI Director James Comey told reporters that former Navy sailor Aaron Alexis had roamed the offices and corridors of the Navy Yard's 197 building, blasting victims at random with a sawed-off shotgun before being shot dead.

Alexis, 34, was killed in a gun battle with police after being cornered following Monday's bloody spree.

Comey's account of the rampage came after analysis of security camera footage taken inside the 197 building, providing the most detailed chronology so far of the massacre.

The FBI chief said that after driving into the naval installation in the heart of the US capital early Monday, Alexis had headed into building 197 and gone into a fourth floor restroom, carrying a bag.

He came out of the the restroom moments later holding a sawed-off Remington 870 shotgun and began blazing away at anyone who crossed his path, Comey said.

"He emerged from the bathroom a few minutes after 8:00 am with the shotgun and almost immediately started to shoot folks on the fourth floor in a way with no discernible pattern," Comey told reporters.

"It appears to me that he was wandering the hall like hunting people to shoot."

After shooting people on the fourth and third floors of the building, Alexis went down to the ground floor, shot dead a security guard and seized the man's weapon -- a semi-automatic Beretta pistol.

He then returned to the third and fourth floors and continued shooting from the shotgun until he was out of ammunition.

Alexis then began shooting with the slain security guard's gun.

"That continued until the first responders arrived and then our team arrived and cornered him and sustained exchanged fire with him and he was downed and obviously killed at the scene," Comey said.

It was difficult to say how long Alexis had been pinned down by police, but the attack lasted roughly 30 minutes, he said.

Comey said Alexis appeared to be selecting his victims at random.

"From the video... he appears to be moving without particular direction or purpose, his movements don't appear, at least to me, as if he was looking for a particular person or a particular group," the FBI chief said.

"When you look at the folks who were shot and the folks who are alive, they're all people from different backgrounds, from all over the building."

He said workers in the building were desperately trying to take cover and "were moving everywhere to find safety."

Comey confirmed Alexis acted alone and said initial suspicions that there were other shooters resulted from a chaotic atmosphere.

"Early on, there was some confusion because a lot of good people ran towards the sounds of gunfire with a lot of weapons," he said.

The FBI did not offer a precise count on the number of shots fired by the gunman and did not say whether Alexis was killed by one or more police officers, or from which law enforcement agency.

There were bigger questions about the gunman's past that remained unanswered as well, and US officials acknowledged Wednesday that they missed "red flags" about the deeply troubled Alexis that may have averted the rampage.

Alexis had a security clearance that granted him access to the Navy Yard despite a record of misconduct in the Navy and run-ins with the law, including two shooting incidents and a Rhode Island police report showing he suffered from severe delusions.

Comey said Alexis was "a person who had mental health problems and we're trying to better understand that," suggesting authorities had still not arrived at a motive for the attack.

FBI investigators were working to better understand "the shooter's life and motivations," he said.

The bureau's behavioral experts will study the case to look for potential warning signs, and ask whether those could be of "use to prevent tragedies like that."


FBI: Navy Yard shooter 'hunted' his victims



After analyzing footage from a security camera, officials paint a chilling portrait of how the carnage unfolded.
Detailed chronology




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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
9/20/2013 9:16:22 AM
'Unprecedented' destruction

Nearly 40 percent of Rim Fire land a moonscape

Researchers say contiguous footprint of destruction inside Sierra Rim Fire largest since 1300s


In this September 2013 photo provided by the U.S. Forest Service, a soils scientist from the Burned Area Emergency Response team assesses a burn area in the Rim Fire near Yosemite National Park, Calif. Of the more than 250,000 acres that burned within the Rim Fire perimeter, the National Park Service’s Burned Area Emergency Response team estimated Monday Sept. 16, 2013, that 7 percent burned at high severity, 37 percent at moderate severity and the other 56 percent either didn’t burn or burned at low severity. (AP Photo/U.S. Forest Service, Brad Rust)
Associated Press

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -- A fire that raged in forest land in and around Yosemite National Park has left a barren moonscape in the Sierra Nevada mountains that experts say is larger than any burned in centuries.

The fire has consumed about 400 square miles, and within that footprint are a solid 60 square miles that burned so intensely that everything is dead, researchers said.

"In other words, it's nuked," said Jay Miller, senior wildland fire ecologist with the U.S. Forest Service. "If you asked most of the fire ecologists working in the Sierra Nevada, they would call this unprecedented."

Smaller pockets inside the fire's footprint also burned hot enough to wipe out trees and other vegetation.

In total, Miller estimates that almost 40 percent of the area inside the fire's boundary is nothing but charred land. Other areas that burned left trees scarred but alive.

Using satellite imagery, Miller created a map of the devastation in the wake of the third-largest wildfire in California history and the largest recorded in the Sierra Nevada.

Biologists who have mapped and studied the ages and scarring of trees throughout the mountain range have been able to determine the severity and size of fires that occurred historically.

Miller says a fire has not left such a contiguous moonscape since before the Little Ice Age, which began in 1350.

In the decades before humans began controlling fire in forests, the Sierra would burn every 10 to 20 years, clearing understory growth on the ground and opening up clearings for new tree growth. Modern-day practices of fire suppression, combined with cutbacks in forest service budgets and a desire to reduce smoke impacts in the polluted San Joaquin Valley, have combined to create tinderboxes, experts say.

Drought, and dryness associated with a warming climate also have contributed to the intensity of fires this year, researchers say.

"If you had a fire every 20 years, you wouldn't have many like this or you'd never have trees that were 400 years old," Miller said.

Some areas of the Stanislaus National Forest ravaged by the Rim Fire had not burned in 100 years. Most of the land that now resembles a moonscape burned on Aug. 21 and Aug. 22, when the fire jumped to canopies and was spreading the fastest.

In Yosemite National Park, where lightning fires mostly are allowed to burn out naturally and prescribed burns mimic natural conditions, the destruction was much less.

The Rim Fire has burned 77,000 acres in wilderness areas in the northeast corner of Yosemite, but only 7 percent of that area was considered high intensity that would result in tree mortality, said Chris Holbeck, a resource biologist for the National Park Service.

"It really burned here much like a prescribed fire would to a large degree because of land management practices," Holbeck said. "Fire plays a natural part of that system. It can't all be old growth forests, though Yosemite holds some of the oldest trees in the Sierra."

Short-term impacts in the park could include the displacement of a unique and threatened subspecies of great gray owls that makes home in treetops in the fire's range.

The Rim Fire started Aug. 17, when a hunter's fire spread, and continues to burn. It is named for a ridge near the location where the fire started — The Rim of the World, an overlook above a gorge carved by the Tuolumne River. The area that burned in 1987 and again in 1996 was filled with chaparral.

By the time the Rim Fire ripped through the canyon, it developed its own weather system that pushed it to consume up to 50,000 acres in a day.

The satellite was able to map only the parts of the fire where the canopy of trees was destroyed. Other areas burned closer to the ground, so it could take a year to determine whether root systems of trees outside the worst areas of destruction will die as well.

Researchers used satellites to measure the amount of chlorophyll left in canopies to determine which areas will now resemble a charred moonscape.

"We look at where the photosynthetic vegetation is killed," Miller said. "It's not a measure of the intensity of the fire but a measure of a change in the chlorophyll that is there by and large."

While the landscape has been ravaged, the soil that determines the amount of post-fire erosion that might occur when winter storms hit didn't suffer as badly as scientists feared.

Severe soil damage occurred on just 7 percent of the land inside the fire's footprint, said officials with the federal Burned Area Environmental Response team. Fire can destroy soil and make it susceptible to erosion by either burning the fine roots and other organic matter that holds it together, or by burning chaparral that releases oils that create an impervious barrier preventing rainwater from being absorbed.

"Before we can start talking about erosion, we have to figure out where the soil is damaged," said forest service soil scientist Randy Westmoreland.


Sierra Nevada's 'unprecedented' moonscape


The fire in and around Yosemite National Park has produced the most extreme scarring of the area's surface since the 1300s.
'It's nuked'



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