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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/16/2014 12:46:37 AM

U.S. troops found nearly 5,000 abandoned chemical weapons in Iraq from 2004 to 2011: report

Dylan Stableford
Yahoo News


New York Times
Chemical Secrets of the Iraq War


American troops found nearly 5,000 abandoned chemical weapons in Iraq from 2004 to 2011, but their discoveries were kept secret by the U.S. government, the New York Times reports.

According to the 10,000-word, eight-part interactive report ("The Secret Casualties of Iraq's Abandoned Chemical Weapons") by C.J. Chivers published on the paper's website late Tuesday, at least 17 American service members and seven Iraqi police officers were exposed to nerve or mustard agents in Iraq after 2003.

On at least six occasions, American troops and American-trained Iraqi troops were wounded by the abandoned munitions, but news of the encounters was neither shared publicly nor widely circulated among the troops, the victims told the Times. Others said they were told to be vague or deceptive about what they found.

"'Nothing of significance’ is what I was ordered to say,” Jarrod Lampier, a retired Army major, said of the 2006 discovery of 2,400 nerve-agent rockets at a former Republican Guard compound, the largest chemical weapons discovery of the war.

The paper also published heavily redacted intelligence documents it obtained under the Freedom of Information Act.

Among the reasons for the secrecy? "The discoveries of these chemical weapons did not support the government’s invasion rationale," Chivers writes. "After the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, [President George W.] Bush insisted that [Iraqi leader Saddam] Hussein was hiding an active weapons of mass destruction program, in defiance of international will and at the world’s risk. United Nations inspectors said they could not find evidence for these claims."

The discovery of pre-Gulf War chemical weapons — most of them "filthy, rusty or corroded" — did not fit the narrative.

“They needed something to say that after Sept. 11 Saddam used chemical rounds,” Lampier said. “And all of this was from the pre-1991 era.”

“I love it when I hear, ‘Oh there weren’t any chemical weapons in Iraq,’” Jarrod L. Taylor, a former Army sergeant, told the paper. “There were plenty.”

The troops began encountering the munitions in hidden caches and roadside bombs.

The paper recounted a harrowing 2004 discovery in Baghdad by two explosives-disposal technicians in detail. Staff Sgt. James F. Burns and Pfc. Michael S. Yandell were transporting what they thought was the remains of a makeshift bomb back to the base when they began experiencing symptoms of sarin gas exposure:

Sergeant Burns noticed a bitter smell and thought, he said later, that “it was rotten vegetables.”

Then he felt the onset of a headache. He told Private Yandell, who was driving, that he did not feel right.

Nauseated and disoriented, Private Yandell had quietly been struggling to drive. His vision was blurring. His head pounded. “I feel like crap, too,” he replied.

Dread passed over Sergeant Burns. Maybe, he wondered aloud, they had picked up a nerve agent shell.

The chemical shell Sergeant Burns and Pfc. Michael S. Yandell found that day was on the highway to Baghdad’s international airport, called "Death Street" at the time because of frequent insurgent attacks.

Neither man remembers the drive’s last minutes. At the base entrance, they did not clear the ammunition from their rifles and pistols — forgetting habits and rules.

As they arrived at their building, Sergeant Burns was sure. In the back of the truck, the shell had leaked liquid. Illumination rounds, he knew, do not do that.

“They put a gag order on all of us — the security detail, us, the clinic, everyone,” Burns said. “We were briefed to tell family members that we were exposed to ‘industrial chemicals,’ because our case was classified top secret.”

The paper also reported that as a result of the secrecy, military doctors were not prepared to treat the soldiers exposed to chemicals, preventing troops "from receiving proper medical care and official recognition of their wounds."

Rear Adm. John Kirby, spokesman for Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, declined to address specific incidents detailed in the Times investigation but said that the military’s health care system and awards practices were under review.

“The secretary believes all service members deserve the best medical and administrative support possible,” Kirby said. “He is, of course, concerned by any indication or allegation they have not received such support. His expectation is that leaders at all levels will strive to correct errors made, when and where they are made.”

The news of abandoned chemical weapons in Iraq comes as a U.S.-led coalition continues drone strikes on Islamic State militants in Iraq and Syria. While there is no evidence of munitions falling into the hands of the terror group, the possibility is nonetheless "worrisome," Chivers writes.

Click here to read the full Times report.








American troops found abandoned nerve-agent rockets and other biological arms from 2004 through 2011, according to a report.
Details



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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/16/2014 1:04:07 AM
More truth coming to light?



Ebola Protection Protocol; Panic Not Necessary


Article & Commentary by Ben Taylor

Protocol created by Dr. Ken O’Neal, MD, ND

There is some reason to think that this whole Ebola scare may be another false flag ploy to scare people into accepting draconian mainstream medical solutions and eventually a new drug or vaccination that will simply fill the bank accounts of the Pharma-Industrial Mafia. In any case, we believe it is happening by design, not simply by natural occurrence. This protocol is intended to give the people who don’t automatically buy the lies of this mafia drug cartel an option that is real and viable based on real science rather than the quackery and tyranny of government and its drug company manipulators. Read More.

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Note: This article was originally posted by Luella May at her 'Take Care of your Health' forum.


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/16/2014 11:16:47 AM

Islamic State Militants And Kurdish Fighters Battle In The Streets Of Syria's Kobani

Posted: Updated:


Smoke rises following a strike in Kobani, Syria while
fighting continued between Syrian Kurds and the
militants of Islamic State group, as seen from Mursitpinar
on the outskirts of Suruc, at the Turkey-Syria border,
Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2014. Kobani, also known as
Ayn Arab, and its surrounding areas, has been under
assault by extremists of the Islamic State group since
mid-September and is being defended by Kurdish
fighters. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)

MURSITPINAR, Turkey (AP) — Intensified U.S.-led airstrikes and a determined Kurdish military force on the ground appear to have had some success in halting advances by Islamic State fighters on a strategic Kurdish town near Syria's border with Turkey — at least for now.

On Wednesday, the Kurdish militiamen were fighting ferocious street battles with the Sunni extremists in Kobani and making advances on some fronts, hours after the U.S.-led coalition stepped up its aerial campaign.

In a surprising display of resilience, the Kurdish fighters have held out against the more experienced jihadists a month into the militants' offensive on the frontier town, hanging on to their territory against all expectations.

"People underestimate the power of determination," said Farhad Shami, a Kurdish activist in Kobani. "The Kurds have a cause and are prepared to die fighting for it."

They also have the advantage of fighting on familiar ground.

"Islamic State fighters have far more superior weapons, but they lack knowledge of the terrain," said Rami Abdurrahman, director of the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Kurdish fighters, on the other hand, know "every street, building and corner" of Kobani and have the powerful "will of resistance," he said. Some of them are experienced fighters who have fought alongside rebels of the affiliated PKK in Turkey as they battled for autonomy for Kurds during a three-decade insurgency.

The Islamic State group launched its offensive on Kobani in mid-September, capturing dozens of nearby Kurdish villages and a third of the town in lightning advances that sent massive waves of civilians fleeing across the border into Turkey.

Days later, the U.S. and its allies began bombing Islamic State targets in Syria, but the strikes were slow to take off in Kobani and appeared largely ineffective. Expectations were that the town would fall to the militants within days.

The Kurdish fighters, however, have put up a formidable fight, despite feeling a deep sense of abandonment by an international community they believe has failed to come to their rescue as it did with their brethren and other minorities in Iraq threatened by Islamic State militants.

The fighting in and around Kobani has killed more than 550 people, the majority of them Islamic State fighter, according to the Observatory.

Abdurrahman and other Syria observers say the Kurds have shown much more tenacity and resilience than other Syrian rebel factions who ended up making "tactical retreats" or simply fled jihadi onslaughts in other areas of Syria.

Equally important in the past few days has been more concentrated airstrikes by the U.S.-led coalition in and around Kobani targeting Islamic State infrastructure and positions.

The U.S. military says it launched 39 airstrikes near Kobani in the past 48 hours, designed to disrupt Islamic State reinforcements and resupply, and to prevent the extremist group's fighters from massing combat power on the Kurdish-held sections of Kobani.

Plumes of smoke rising from the strikes were visible across the border in Turkey.

Capitalizing on those strikes, fighters of the Kurdish People's Protection Units, or YPG, made some progress against the militants Wednesday, said Asya Abdullah, a Syrian Kurdish leader.

Speaking by telephone from Kobani, Abdullah, the co-president of Syria's powerful Kurdish Democratic Union Party, or PYD, told The Associated Press the Kurdish fighters had advanced near the hill of Tel Shair that overlooks part of the town.

Turkey's state-run Anadolu Agency said the Kurdish forces planted two flags on the hill after retaking it from the Islamic State group and removing the black flag the extremists had hoisted earlier in the week.

The U.S. and its allies also struck oil facilities to try to cut off smuggling by the extremists, hurting the group's income in both Iraq and Syria.

The Paris-based International Energy Agency said in a report that the coalition airstrikes have significantly weakened the Islamic State group's ability to produce and smuggle oil — a major source of income for the militants.

In its monthly report released Tuesday, the agency said the aerial bombardment has brought production down to around 20,000 barrels per day from a high of about 70,000 in the summer.

But in remarks underscoring the region's layered crises, Turkey's Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc mocked the Kurdish fighters defending Kobani, comparing their struggle against the Islamic State group to the guerrilla war of the affiliated Kurdish PKK rebels, who have fought a three-decade insurgency in Turkey, largely in mountainous regions in Turkey's east.

"They are not able to put up a serious fight there," Arinc told reporters in the southeastern city of Adiyaman.

"It is easy to fight on the mountain against the military, police, the teacher and the judge. It is easy to kidnap people, but they are not able to fight in Kobani," he said. "I could say a lot more but let me leave it at that so that they are not embarrassed."

The harsh comments also reflected Turkey's delicate position on the fighting in Kobani. On Tuesday, Turkey launched airstrikes against Kurdish rebels inside its borders, defying pressure from the U.S. to instead focus on the Islamic State militants.

Turkey has said it won't join the fight against the Islamic State group in Syria unless the U.S.-led coalition also goes after the government of Syrian President Bashar Assad, including establishing a no-fly zone and a buffer zone along the Turkish border.

In a stark reminder of Syria's wider civil war, a Syrian lawmaker was gunned down Wednesday in the central province of Hama — the latest assassination to target a figure linked to Assad's government.

Gunmen opened fire at Waris al-Younes' car as he was traveling on a road linking Hama with the town of Salamiyeh, according to the state-run SANA news agency. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack.

Several Syrian officials have been assassinated since Syria's crisis began in March 2011. The uprising, which later turned into a civil war, has killed more than 190,000 people, according to the United Nations.

____

Karam reported from Beirut. Associated Press writers Albert Aji in Damascus, Bassem Mroue in Beirut and Suzan Fraser in Ankara contributed to this report.

(The Huffington Post)


"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?
10/16/2014 1:02:39 PM
Russia rattles nuclear saber at U.S. over hostile economic sanctions

October 15, 2014
3:33 PM MST
Russian President Vladimir Putin
Russian President Vladimir Putin
Photo by Pool/Getty Images

In an interview on Oct. 15 with Serbian newspaper, Politika, Russian President Vladimir Putin expressed his anger at the continuing sanctions and hostile aggressions being waged by the U.S. against the Eurasian state over conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East, and emphasized the consequences that might occur when one nuclear nation threatens another with escalating economic and political actions.

President Putin's statements come at a time whenRussia is experiencing increasing pain to theireconomy and currency which is tied to the rapid decline in oil prices that appear to be instigated from a 'secret deal' made between the United States and OPEC's leader, Saudi Arabia. And with oil touching just below $80 per barrel in intra-day trading, the decline in price will have a devastating effects on more than just Russia, but also on countries such as Britain, Norway, and even the Bakken region of North Dakota, and drive economies that are on the brink of recession into full blow negative territory.

It’s futile for the U.S. and its allies to “blackmail” Russia over the Ukraine crisis, President Vladimir Putin said in a newspaper interview today.

Russia’s partners should remember the risks involved in disputes between nuclear powers, Putin said. He accused Barack Obama of adopting a “hostile” approach in naming Russia as a threat to the world in the U.S. president’s speech to the United Nations General Assembly on Sept. 24.

“We hope that our partners will realize the futility of attempts to blackmail Russia and remember what consequences discord between major nuclear powers could bring for strategic stability,” Putin told Serbia’s Politika newspaper on the eve of his visit to the Balkan nation today.

“Together with the sanctions against entire sectors of our economy, this approach can be called nothing but hostile,” Putin said - Politika

Putin's veiled threats in which he points to his nation's nuclear power as a position of strength signifies just how important ending the current proxy war between Russia and the West is, and how history validates just how quickly conflicts can turn critical, as in 1963 with the Cuban Missile Crisis.

But even more so, the world is too inter-twined financially today for one powerful nation to impose their economic will upon another without there being global consequences, as seen by how the sanctions the U.S. is impressing upon Russia over the civil war in Ukraine is causing extreme chaos to Europe and America's primary allies.

Unlike the Cold War of just three decades ago, most conflicts are now economic in nature, and fought for control over oil and other vital resources. And just as America's attacks on Iraq, Libya, Syria, and Ukraine have been done to either halt Russian oil expansion into these countries, or to chastise leaders who threaten the petro-dollar by selling energy in currencies other than the dollar, Russia's responses have to date been economic in nature, rather than military. But as Putin assured his allies in Serbia today, the world cannot forget that Russia is a military superpower by nature of their nuclear arsenal, and that accidents and events can trigger disastrous consequences when two nuclear powers escalate geo-political confrontations.



Putin's latest claim against Obama


The Russian president issues a warning to the West, and accuses his U.S. counterpart of being hostile to Moscow.
His comments

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/16/2014 11:40:39 PM

ISIS Delivers ‘Shock and Awe’ with Arms from U.S., China, and Russia

The Fiscal Times

Early this year, Islamic State forces showed a powerful new side to their murderous military operation by knocking out five of the Iraq Army’s M1A1 Abrams tanks with anti-tank guided missiles and shooting down six of the army’s helicopters with a light anti-aircraft gun and rocket launchers while damaging 60 others.

The New York Times quoted a U.S. official in June as saying that, in all, 28 Iraqi Army Abrams tanks had been damaged in fighting with the militants, including the five that suffered “ full armor penetration” when struck by the anti-tank missiles. As for the helicopters either destroyed or heavily damaged between January and May, they constituted “a significant proportion of the Iraqi Army Aviation Command’s assets.”

SLIDESHOW: 9 ISIS Weapons That Will Shock You

President Obama this week renewed his pledge to “degrade and ultimately” destroy the fast growing and powerful militant jihadists who have swarmed across Syria and Iraq killing, enslaving or displacing hundreds of thousands of people and threatening to topple the Iraqi government in Baghdad. Yet, U.S. led air strikes – and the hoped for assistance from moderate Syrian rebels being trained by American advisers -- may not be nearly enough to thwart the heavily armed ISIS forces, according to some experts.

With hundreds of millions of dollars that they stole from banks and businesses, and profits from the black market sale of oil, ISIS has amassed a huge arsenal of weaponry, including heavy armored vehicles and artillery during their 18-month offensive in Syria and Iraq. According to the International Business Times, the armaments “are predominantly a mix of veteran Soviet tanks, large, advanced U.S. made systems, and black market arms.”

Related: Obama’s Effort to Train Syrian Rebels to Fight ISIS Won’t Work: CIA

James Carafano, vice president for Foreign and Defense Policy Studies at the Heritage Foundation, said in an interview Wednesday that ISIS has assembled an extraordinarily formidable fighting force in the Middle East that will be difficult to take down.

“If you have money and you can get to a border, you can be in the arms business, and right now ISIS has a lot of both,” he said. “The problem [for the U.S. and its allies] is that ISIS is armed as well if not better than the other people they are fighting right now.”

View photo

.
Kobani

Carafano, an expert on the Middle East conflict, said that until recently, ISIS had no problem purchasing or confiscating assault rifles, light armored vehicles and trucks, grenade launchers and all the ammunition they needed. However, “the game changer” for ISIS came when they began to seize armored vehicles and heavy weapons like tanks and artillery pieces – mostly from the bedraggled Iraqi army, which frequently has been routed by the terrorists.

“The big stuff that really makes a pretty dramatic difference is the heavy weapons they obtained from the Iraqi military,” Carafano said. “The reason why those are a game changer is that they are big, powerful weapons and yet still relatively easy to operate and maintain. It’s not like a helicopter, where if you don’t have a trained pilot,” there’s not much you can do with it, he added.

While ISIS seems to be having no trouble acquiring the big guns needed to bludgeon Iraqi and Syrian fighters and civilians, the flip side is that those weapons make good targets for U.S. and allied jet fighters and drones.

Related: The Merger of ISIS and al-Qaeda Could Cripple the Civilized World

According to IBT, ISIS has acquired tanks from Syrian rebels, such as the T-72, a relatively modern Russian design, and the T-55, an obsolete model that dates back to World War II. “The group also has captured Chinese copies of Soviet field and anti-aircraft guns from the Iraqi and Syrian armies,” the publication reported.

The authoritative Brown Moses, a British blog covering the Syrian civil war, has reported that beginning in early 2013, Saudi Arabia “began smuggling weapons it had purchased from the Croatian government through Jordan to the south of Syria,” including RBG-6 grenade launchers, M60 recoilless guns, RPG-22 rocket launchers and M79 Osa rocket launchers. Those smuggled weapons ended up in ISIS hands.

The New York Times reported earlier this month that ISIS forces have been using ammunition manufactured in the United States, China and other countries that have been supporting the regional security forces fighting the jihadists. The report was based on new field data gathered by Conflict Armament Research, which tracks weapons used by the Islamic State.

Related: The New U.S. Price Tag for the War Against ISIS: $40 Billion a Year

The data suggested, among other things, that ammunition that was sent to Syria and Iraq to help stabilize governments “has instead passed from the governments to the jihadists, helping to fuel the Islamic State’s rise and persistent combat power.”

Carafano said that there is no way to prevent weapons and ammunition from falling into the wrong hands in the Middle East. And international efforts to try to choke off the flow of weapons to radical groups in the end are largely futile.

“For people who are determined to traffic in arms in the Middle East, it’s almost impossible to stop them,” he said. “So when you look at – as a strategy – choking off the arms, that is probably the most difficult thing to implement. That’s because there are so many different parties in these conflicts with different agendas. The odds are that there is always somebody who wants to sell weapons to somebody.”

SLIDESHOW: 9 ISIS Weapons That Will Shock You


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

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