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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
2/20/2015 11:23:57 PM



Israel on edge as Hezbollah, Iran move on Golan Heights


A new offensive to reclaim territory along the Syria-Israel front line raises fears of expanding conflict

BEIRUT — A recent surprise offensive against Syrian rebels in southern Syria, apparently directed by Iran, may have more to do with preparing a new front against Israel along the Golan Heights and deterring Jordan than with crushing armed opposition to the regime of President Bashar al-Assad.

Launched on Feb. 9, the offensive is intended to push rebel forces in the Quneitra and Deraa provinces back toward the Jordanian border. If it succeeds, the effort would enable Hezbollah, an Iranian-backed Shia group, to extend its front line with Israel from the Mediterranean coast to the Yarmouk River on the Syria-Jordan border, a distance of 114 miles. But Israel has warned that it will not tolerate Iran and Hezbollah building a military front in the Golan, its quietest border since the 1973 Arab-Israeli War, despite the ongoing Israeli occupation of the Syrian territory. In an apparent signal of that resolve, Israel last month staged a rare missile strike against a Hezbollah convoy in the Golan.

“It seems the old equation is changing,” said Andrew Tabler, a Syria expert with the Washington Institute for Near East Policy in Washington, D.C. “Since 1973, Syria kept the Golan quiet while activating south Lebanon with Iranian help. Now the Iranians and Hezbollah have quieted south Lebanon and are activating the Golan front under the cover of the Syrian war.”

But the anti-rebel offensive may also be directed at Jordan, which has begun to play a more assertive role in Syria since Feb. 3, when the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) tortured to death a captured Jordanian fighter pilot. Since then, Jordanian aircraft have bombed ISIL targets in Syria, and Amman has reportedly been mulling a ground operation on Syrian territory — a prospect Damascus has vowed to oppose. A Jordanian-based CIA training program for pro-Western Syrian rebels is set to expand in the coming months.

“I think the regime wants to cut off at the knees any scope for the Americans and others to talk about some sort of joint Arab force to move against ISIS in Syria,” said Yezid Sayegh, a senior associate at the Beirut-based Carnegie Middle East Center. “My sense is that they are trying to secure the south partly to tell the Jordanians and others that ‘Look, don’t think that we are feeble and unable to defend our territory. This isn’t a free playground for you to come in.’”

The attacking force, numbered at about 5,000, according to the U.K.-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, reportedly combines Syrian army troops, members of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), Lebanese Hezbollah fighters, Shia fighters from Iraq and Afghanistan and loyalist, mainly Alawite, Syrian National Defense Force militiamen. Regional media reports say that Gen. Qassem Suleimani, the commander of the IRGC’s Quds Force, has inspected the southern front line in recent days, strengthening a belief that the operation is under Iran’s direction. One of Iran’s key objectives could be to regain Tel al-Hara, a 3,500-foot hill where a signals-intelligence facility built nine years ago to tap into Israeli communications was overrun by rebels in October.

The offensive made swift initial gains when it began on Feb. 9 with the seizure of the rebel-held towns of Deir al-Adas, Deir Maker and Danaji, but it has since slowed down in the face of fierce resistance, mainly from the Al-Qaeda-affiliated Jabhat al-Nusra and its allies, as well as back-to-back snowstorms that have grounded the Syrian air force.

Another rebel group in the area, Jabhat Ansar al-Islam, announced on Thursday that it had launched a counteroffensive.

Israel has grown increasingly concerned over the past year about the impact of Syria’s civil war on the Golan Heights, the strategic volcanic plateau that looms over much of northern Israel and has been occupied by Israeli forces since the war of June 1967. Israel has been eyeing Hezbollah’s moves in the northern Golan, blaming the organization for a number of anonymous roadside bomb ambushes and rocket attacks. Earlier this month, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu complained that Iran was attempting to “build an infrastructure of terror against Israel on the Golan Heights.”

The two sides came to blows last month when an Israeli drone strike killed senior Hezbollah men and an Iranian general on Jan. 18, and Hezbollah retaliated 10 days later by ambushing an Israeli army convoy. An investigation into the incident by the United Nations peacekeeping force in southern Lebanon has revealed that the ambush was meticulously planned and skillfully executed. A team of Hezbollah fighters equipped with two Russian Kornet anti-tank missiles targeted the Israeli convoy from a distance of 3 miles, close to the limit of the 3.4-mile range of the laser-guided missiles. Because of the distance, the team fired the first two missiles simultaneously at the same target to double the chances of a hit. Both missiles struck the target, instantly killing the two occupants, an officer and a soldier.

“That both missiles hit is amazing shooting at that distance,” a military observer in southern Lebanon familiar with the U.N. investigation told Al Jazeera.

Now the Israelis fear that Hezbollah, with the backing of Iran, could be planning to deploy those skills along a new front line in the Golan Heights.

Since anti-Assad rebels gained ground in the Golan last year, Israel has developed a cautious relationship with some moderate factions. In October, Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon told Israel’s Haaretz newspaper that Israel was providing humanitarian assistance to some rebel groups “on condition they don’t allow the more extremist organizations to reach the border.”

But the Syrian regime maintains that the Israeli assistance to rebel forces includes weapons and tactical intelligence. The United Nations Disengagement Observer Force (UNDOF) reported in December that Israeli soldiers were spotted on numerous occasions talking to armed rebels through the security fence as well as individuals entering the Israeli side on foot. A source from an army that contributes to the UNDOF told Al Jazeera a truck was seen on Jan. 20 crossing to the Israeli side, where it spent 90 minutes before returning. The purpose of the visit was unknown, but it was the first time that the UNDOF spotted a vehicle crossing from rebel-held territory into the Israeli-held side of the Golan.

It is doubtful that Israel will seek to replicate the experience of southern Lebanon — where it armed, trained and funded the allied South Lebanon Army from the late 1970s until 2000 — but it’s equally unlikely to allow Iran and Hezbollah to consolidate a presence on the Golan.

The Iranian activity “has set off alarm bells” in Israel,” said Tabler, the Syria expert. “In the past it was just about Iran's nuclear program. Now it is something closer to home.”



"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?
2/21/2015 12:40:25 AM

US Marines on the Ground in Iraq as ISIS Burns 45 Alive

The Fiscal Times

REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz

Iraqi local officials in Iraq’s town of al-Baghdadi have warned of another ISIS mass burning massacre. The terror organization surrounded a compound several days ago that houses more than 1000 families and burned 45 people alive.

“ISIS has killed more than 150 people from al-Obaid tribe...some of them were burned alive and some were beheaded...they were policemen...some of them fought against ISIS before,” said sheikh Mal Allah al-Obaidi, the head of the local council in the al-Baghdadi.

Related: 9 ISIS Weapons That Will Shock You

An Iraqi air base is located next to al-Baghdadi. More than 300 US military service members are providing training, and coordinating US air raids there. As the US military official at the central command announced that the US will train 12 Iraqi brigades to start an Iraqi operation to liberate the northern city of Mosul in April or May, reports emerged suggesting US Marines will conduct a limited operation in the border area between Iraq, Syria, Jordan and Saudi Arabia to strike ISIS jihadists who control the border area.

“US forces have landed in al-Habbaniya air base,” said Saadon Shehan, a blogger from al-Ramadi, the provincial capital of al-Anbar province in western Iraq.

The target of the Marines supposed operation is to cut a major funding source to ISIS by ending its control of the border area. It is estimated that ISIS makes $150,000 daily by collecting money from travelers using the Iraqi – Jordanian highway.

The town of al-Baghdadi has been surrounded by ISIS for eight months, which launched numerous unsuccessful attacks to capture it. Finally a series of attacks carried out by suicide bombers in the town a week ago gave ISIS control of a major part of the city, including the residential compound.

Related: Three Hidden Messages Behind ISIS’s Bloody Rampages

“The people of the residential compound are now under ISIS control. They are urging the government to help them. There are more than a thousand families there. All phone and Internet communication have been cut. Al-Baghdadi is totally isolated from the rest of the world now,” sheikh al-Obaidi added.

Communication is the least that the people of al-Baghdadi worry about. With ISIS in charge, all kinds of human supply into the town have been stopped as a means to break the city resistance. Food, medicine, water, electricity and fuel have been withheld by ISIS.

“The people of al-Baghdadi are living in a true tragedy. They are facing death in every way: hunger, thirst, diseases and the extreme cold,” said sheikh al-Obaidi. Three children died today after drinking unclean water. Dozens of others were hospitalized.

“The Iraqi government is responsible for the lives of those executed by ISIS or still prisoners.... It has never answered our requests carried by formal and tribal delegations to Baghdad to act and save 50,000 people under ISIS siege in al-Baghdadi. As if we are all sentenced to genocide,” said sheikh Qatari al-Semermed, another tribal leader of al-Obaid tribe in the town.

In Baghdad, a special force in on its way to al-Baghdadi – but the people there still have to die waiting.


"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?
2/21/2015 12:55:05 AM

Greece and eurozone creditors reach deal on loan

Associated Press

Bloomberg
EU Agrees on Four-Month Extension for Greece

Watch video

BRUSSELS (AP) — Following weeks of recrimination and distrust, Greece and its creditors in the 19-nation eurozone reached an agreement Friday on extending the country's rescue loans, a move that should dramatically ease concerns it was heading for the euro exit as soon as next month.

The agreement, which looked a long way off Thursday when one German official compared Athens' request for more time to the infamous Trojan Horse, will mean that Greece will avoid going bankrupt, at least over the four months of the extension. It should also mean that capital controls won't be needed and that Greek banks will have enough money to stock up their ATMs.

To get the money though, the Greek government has one more hurdle to clear. On Monday, it has to present a series of unspecified economic reforms measures that are deemed acceptable by creditors and rooted in Greece's previously enacted bailout agreement — something the government had promised not to do.

Still, the Greek government will be the author of the reforms pursued and that represents a change from the past five years when Greece has relied on rescue money to avoid going bankrupt and was effectively ordered to enact a series of austerity measures.

"We have established common ground again," said Jeroen Dijsselbloem, the eurozone's top official, after the meeting in Brussels.

And Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis said the deal allows both Greece and Europe "to turn a page ... As of today, we are beginning to be co-authors of our destiny."

Varoufakis conceded that the Greek government would be "in trouble" if the reform measures, which are likely to include a series of measures to tackle corruption and tax evasion aren't backed by representatives from the European Central Bank, International Monetary Fund and European Commission — previously known as the troika.

However, he insisted they "won't be shot down by the institutions."

If the list of reforms is sanctioned, then it will be further detailed and agreed upon by the end of April.

Friday's agreement was clinched just a week before Greece's 240 billion-euro ($270 billion) bailout program expires and is aimed at buying time for both sides to agree on a longer-term deal to ease the burden of the bailout loans.

The Greek government isn't getting the time it requested Thursday. Instead of the six-month bailout extension it asked for, it's getting four — with Greece having to make big debt repayments after the new cut-off point, that's a sign that its creditors aren't willing to give Athens free rein.

Still, following weeks of tense negotiations in the wake of the election of the new left-wing Greek government, the final deal showed an element of compromise by both camps and investors appeared to breathe a sigh of relief with the Dow Jones index closed at a record high Friday as news of the Greek deal broke.

"This deal temporarily eases tensions and gives Greece breathing room to negotiate long term-debt relief," said Jay Jacobs, research analyst at Global X Funds. However, he warned that it could just set up another "potential future standoff four months from now if parties involved continue brinksmanship negotiating tactics."

Brinkmanship was just one of the games that was referenced over the past few weeks of discussion. More often than not, it was German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, who was the bulwark against the Greek government's ambitions.

But he emerged from Friday's meeting in conciliatory mood. "This is an important step forward," he said.

Schaeuble will no doubt be making sure that the promises Athens has made for the coming months will be kept.

"We are now in the process of confidence building," he said. "That's why there are strict conditions."

As well as presenting a list of reforms by Monday, the Greek government has committed to honoring its financial obligations to all creditors "fully and timely."

In addition, it has committed to make sure that it continues to post primary fiscal surpluses — what's left in the budget after debt-related payments. However, it looks like the government has managed to convince creditors to reduce the amount of that surplus in response to the worsening economic outlook for Greece this year. In the statement outlining the broad thrust of the agreement, the eurogroup said "the economic circumstances in 2015" will be taken "into account."

Varoufakis claimed that as a victory as it will could free up some cash to help pay for public services. Pensions, he insisted, would not be cut as previously planned.

Greece also made the concession to not take any measures that might negatively impact budget targets, economic recovery or financial stability. Previously, it had sought to loosen its budget somewhat.

Dijsselbloem said Friday's agreement was a "first step in this process of rebuilding trust" between Greece and its euro partners and allows for a strategy to get the country "back on track."

"Trust leaves on horseback and returns on foot," he said.

Varoufakis claimed the deal was a win for his country because his government will be able to decide what reforms to propose.

"The weekend will be one of joy and creativity," he said. "We are writing our own reforms."

Varoufakis said the substance of Friday's deal was to all intents and purposes the same as the government's proposal to the eurozone on Thursday.

He also said the deal has put paid to the view that ATMs would run out of cash and that he had no doubts that Greek bank shares will rebound.

"Greek depositors will be reassured," he said.

___

Raf Casert in Brussels and Geir Moulson in Berlin contributed to this report.







The debt-ridden country and its European creditors agree to a plan that will extend financial aid for four months.
'Rebuilding trust'



"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?
2/21/2015 10:50:07 AM

Troubled Ukraine marks year since protest bloodbath in Kiev

Associated Press

Soldiers pay their respects in honor of the "Heavenly Hundred" on Independence Square in Kiev, Ukraine, Friday, Feb. 20, 2015. The "Heavenly Hundred" is what Ukrainians in Kiev call those who died during months of anti-government protests in 2013-14. The grisliest day was a year ago Friday, Feb. 20, 2014, when sniper fire tore through crowds on the capital's main square, killing more than 50 people. A year later, so much has changed. Russia has annexed Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula, Ukraine has a new president and government, and the country is embroiled in a war in the east with Russia-backed separatists that has killed over 5,600 people and forced a million to flee. (AP Photo/Efrem Lukatsky)

KIEV, Ukraine (AP) — One year ago, Ihor Zastavnyi was shot three times and lost a leg while taking part in demonstrations that he hoped would lead to a better Ukraine. Today he faces a country that is racked by war, struggling with corruption and pleading to the world for financial help while still stinging from Russia's annexation of Crimea.

Yet, reflecting on the situation he still expresses a level of faith.

"All this was not in vain. It's impossible even to think like this," he said.

"When a person wants to give everything and devote himself to something, as did the Heavenly Hundred, it can't be for nothing," he said, referring to the term that Ukrainians have adopted for those who died during months of protests in 2013-14 that led to the ouster of Ukraine's Russia-friendly president Viktor Yanukovych. The grisliest day was a year ago Friday, when more than 50 people were killed by sniper fire on the capital's main square, known as Maidan.

Various sources count the total number of Heavenly Hundreds as somewhere between 110 and 123. It includes those who died in earlier clashes with police as well as opposition supporters who died in beatings or mysterious circumstances.

On Friday evening, Ukraine's current pro-Europe president, Petro Poroshenko, spoke at a gathering of thousands on the square to commemorate the dead and echoed the belief that their deaths were not pointless.

"We will stop the war and after a few years everyone will see how Ukraine has changed; we feel with every cell how the people demand that change be accelerated," he said.

He vowed to fight the "fear, panic and mistrust" that he said "a neighboring state" was trying to sow in Ukraine.

Heated, contradictory allegations still surround the question of who fired the shots on Feb. 20, 2014. Protesters and their supporters assert that the bullets came from rifles held by Ukrainian police or Russian marksmen to try to definitively put down the demonstrations against Yanukovych. Their detractors allege radicals within the protest movement were responsible, purportedly willing to slaughter their own people to drive the political crisis to a breaking point.

Poroshenko on Friday claimed Ukraine has evidence that Vladislav Surkov, one of Russian President Vladimir Putin's advisers, organized the snipers. The Russian Foreign Ministry rejected the claim as "ravings."

Whatever the intent, the gunfire helped force chaotic change. The day after the killings, European Union envoys put heavy pressure on Yanukovych and opposition leaders to sign a pact that would allow Yanukovych to stay in power for a few months, but call early elections and make constitutional changes that would weaken his power.

But hours after the pact was signed, Yanukovych vanished from view. He surfaced the next day in one of his political strongholds in eastern Ukraine and then disappeared again until he turned up in Russia, where he eventually bitterly abandoned any claim to still being president.

It was a coup, shouted his partisans in the heavily ethnic Russian east and south. Within a few weeks, Russian troops solidified their presence on Crimea and citizens on the peninsula voted to secede in a hastily called and legally questionable referendum.

A month later, armed separatists began seizing buildings in the mainland east, sparking a war with government troops that has killed more than 5,600 people and persists despite two internationally mediated cease-fires.

As the violence in eastern Ukraine slogs on, the question of who fired the shots a year ago has fallen into the shadows. Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk expressed expectations that the Interior Ministry and Prosecutor General would present a full report on their investigation by the end of the week, but by Friday afternoon there was nothing forthcoming. Three suspects, members of the Ukrainian security service, were arrested last year, but one was released on bail and disappeared.

What remains are the memories of those who were on the square terrifying day. The trade union building that had been turned into an opposition encampment had been gutted by fire and the air was filled with vile smoke from piles of tires set afire to deter police.

"I was very impressed when I came to Maidan on February 20th. It looked like hell," said Zastavnyi. "And I recognized in that moment that something serious will happen — a battle, maybe the last battle."

Then it did.

Zastavnyi suffered bullet wounds in the stomach and one arm. Trying to escape, he was shot a third time in the leg, which doctors eventually amputated.


"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?
2/21/2015 10:57:33 AM

ISIS Recruits: 3 Schoolgirls Flee Home to Join Terror Group

Good Morning America

ISIS Recruits: 3 Schoolgirls Flee Home to Join Terror Group (ABC News)

British Police have issued an urgent appeal looking for three schoolgirls after they were reported missing today, believed to be heading to Syria viaTurkey to join Islamist fighters.

The three school friends from East London’s Bethnal Green, ages 15 to 16, left their homes before 8:00 a.m. local time Tuesday and met at Gatwick airport in London where they boarded aTurkish Airlines flight, according to a police news release.

"We are reaching out to the girls using the Turkish media and social media,” Britain’s Counter-Terrorism Commander Richard Walton said, “in the hope that they hear our messages, hear our concerns for their safety and have the courage to return now, back to their families who are so worried about them."

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Should the girls see news reports about themselves, Walton said he hopes they’ll listen to such a “direct appeal.”

“Clearly if these three girls travel to Syria, they’re in grave danger,” he said. “We are aware as many people of the treatment of girls and women currently in that part of Syria. You know the prospect is not good and we want to prevent them from getting there.”

Statements attributed to one major terror group in the region, ISIS, purportedly described the way its fighters treat women -– from buying and selling young girls as slaves to justifying rape of “non-believers.”

The U.S Senior Adviser for Foreign Fighters, Ambassador Thomas Krajeski, said during a news briefing today that young girls traveling to Syria and Iraq were being considered as problematic as those traveling to fight.

“Fighters include people not only picking up a gun, but also going to support Islamists, in some way, including young women who have been attracted to the fight for various reasons and in some cases children,” he said, adding the prospect of fighters returning to their home countries to conduct attacks is of “great concern.”

Krajeski also acknowledged the difficulty of controlling the Turkish-Syrian border. “This is a very difficult border to police,” he said. “The most effective way to do it is to provide border officials with the best possible information. I believe Turks are committed to increasing checks and controls of incoming travelers and border controls.”

At the Scotland Yard briefing, officials said the case of the three missing girls was related to one concerning another 15-year-old girl who was stopped by police in December while allegedly trying to get to Syria to join ISIS. Officials said the three missing girls were friends with the 15-year-old.

Do you have information about this or another story? CLICK HERE to send your tip in to the Investigative Unit.


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

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