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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/16/2016 1:19:15 PM

Russian air strikes near Palmyra as Syrian troops advance: monitor

AFP

A Syrian army soldier fires artillery shells towards Islamic State (IS) group jihadists in northeastern Palmyra on May 17, 2015 (AFP Photo/STR)


Beirut (AFP) - Russian helicopters pounded jihadist positions around the ancient city of Palmyra on Tuesday as Syrian troops pressed a ground advance, a monitoring group said.

"Russian helicopters and warplanes, that are likely Russian, are bombarding Islamic State group positions near Palmyra," said Syrian Observatory for Human Rights director Rami Abdel Rahman.

"These strikes have allowed regime troops to advance, and they are now four kilometres (2.5 miles) south and west of Palmyra," he told AFP.

The strikes came a day after Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered the pullout of the "main part" of his forces from the war-torn country.

A security source in Syria confirmed the monitor's report.

"The Syrian army, backed by Russian warplane and helicopter strikes, have taken control of a hilltop to the west of Palmyra after a fierce battle against IS, which still holds the city," he said.

Should the regime retake Palmyra, "it would be an important victory because it would open the way towards the Iraqi border", he added.

IS seized Palmyra, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in eastern Syria known as the "Pearl of the Desert", last May, sending shockwaves across the world.

In September, satellite images confirmed that the Temple of Bel, the main one at Palmyra, had been targeted by IS as part of a campaign to destroy pre-Islamic monuments, tombs and statues it considers idolatrous.

UN experts said the main building of the temple plus a row of columns had been destroyed.

The Observatory also reported that 26 civilians had been killed on March 11 when a Russian air strike hit a bus in the Palmyra region which as on its way from IS-held Raqa to Damascus.

"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?
3/16/2016 1:31:12 PM

Moscow is winding down its presence in Syria -- Why? Why now?

By Vladimir Mikheev, Russia Beyond the Headlines | March 15, 2016 at 10:06 AM


Russian President Vladimir Putin, shown here in New York last fall. His withdrawal of troops from Syria this week could be a carefully calculated move to preserve its influence with those who will be in charge on a large area of the Levant. File Pool Photo by Chip Somodevilla/UPI
| License Photo

MOSCOW, Russia, March 15 -- On the face of it, it all looks convincing enough. President Vladimir Putin announced the pullout of Russia's main military contingent in Syria due to the fact that the military had "largely achieved its objectives" and that diplomats had set the ball rolling for an inter-Syrian dialogue to end the civil war.

It should be put on record that Moscow has managed to persuade the main power brokers, e.g. the United States, not to set as a precondition for a comprehensive settlement at its first stage the departure of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. This was a breakthrough, by all counts.

Moscow pushed the idea of embracing all the participants of the national drama, in particular the Syrian Kurds, to allow them to take part in the negotiations on the future of the country that they consider to be their own, with attention paid to the strong desire of the Kurds to be granted wide autonomy.

"It's clear that they [talks] should include the whole spectrum of Syrian political forces, otherwise this cannot claim to be a representative forum," said Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.

Syrian Kurds, just like the Alawites and the Sunnis loyal to al-Assad (originally, "80 percent of the Syrian government army were Sunni Muslims," revealed Robert Fisk of British daily The Independent) must be partially grateful to Moscow for changing the tide of the war in their favor. And this could be the key explanation of the sudden volte-face in the midst of an unfinished war.

Consolidating gains?

The decision to withdraw was taken on the first day of the new round of talks. This could well serve as a sign that it is now up to the political rivals to try to find a common ground and map out for themselves either joint or separate co-habitation in this part of the Levant.

Yet could Moscow have a hidden motive here? Could it be the apprehension of coming into contact with Turkish and Saudi "boots on the ground," should their warnings materialize?

Or is it a carefully calculated move to secure the gains of the military and diplomatic involvement in the Syrian civil war?

The logic could follow this line: Let's preside, together with the co-sponsor of the current ceasefire, the United States, over the partition of Syria, which will be turned into a "federation" with a not necessarily unfriendly new regime in Damascus and a Syrian Kurdistan that is more or less receptive to Moscow's strategic interests.

Commenting on these theories for RBTH, Grigory Kosach, an expert on the politics of the Arab world and professor at the Russian State University for the Humanities, said that he saw "more substance in the second option."

"Moscow might count on preserving its influence with the authorities, who would control two large territories: one stretching from Damascus to Aleppo all along the Mediterranean coast, and the other encompassing the northern regions inhabited largely by the Kurds. That would constitute the 'prize fund,' and it would probably suffice," said Kosach.

How does this relate to the initial goal of dealing a deathblow to ISIS and other terrorist groupings?

"It can be claimed that Russian military involvement prevented the jihadists from grabbing a significant part of Syria," said Kosach.

Notably, Moscow is not abandoning its initially unwilling allies in the fight against ISIS. The military service personnel at the Khmeimim airbase in Latakia province and at the port of Tartus will be in charge of "observing ceasefire agreements." Moreover, Russia has voiced its commitment "to coordinating" with the United States the retaking of the rebel strongholds of Raqqa and Palmyra.

But given the poor record of previous interaction, this looks to be more about style than substance. The never-formalized solidarity of the anti-terrorist forces does not bode well for comradeship-in-arms on the battlefield.

Improved image?

It is likely that Moscow considers it has achieved its objectives if success in Syria implies Russia's resumption of its role as peace broker and conflict settler in a very special region of the world.

Here the late USSR used to have a plethora of allies and a variety of tools "to make friends and influence people": from cheap credits and handouts, mostly military hardware, to jointly constructed industrial facilities (the Aswan dam/hydropower plant in Egypt), local professionals trained and educated in Soviet universities and colleges and the somewhat mystical lure of ideology.

For Russia, all this is unattainable. Still, Moscow has proved its often-reiterated narrative: In the case of regional conflicts in the relative proximity of Russia's borders, it has the leverage to influence warring parties and set the stage for a settlement.

One can dispute to what extent the recent claims made by the Syrian opposition, Turkey and Qatar that Russian airstrikes led to death of civilians have tarred the image of Moscow.

Judging by the remarks in social media and those made on European online media comments' pages, the efficiency of the Russian military in fighting ISIS has been duly appreciated, as well as its resolution to do something with what has been described as an existential threat to conventional Islam and nations that cherish democratic values.

Retreat or withdrawal?

For the sceptics, the scaling down of Russia's military involvement amid the still raging animosity between the parties to the civil war in Syria could be interpreted as a tacit admission of failure. It is a retreat.

For the loyalists, it serves as proof that the double-track strategy (beefing up the military muscle of Assad's regime and engaging its moderate adversaries though diplomacy) has paid off.

For the latter it is a withdrawal. It fits well into the traditional distinction that "retreat" implies an enforced disengagement. Withdrawal, on the contrary, is a premeditated move with a long-term purpose. As the common wisdom articulates: "I'm not retreating, this is...a strategic withdrawal!"

As for the timing, it resembles the shrewd albeit routine tactics of the broker: Buy stock when it goes down and sell when it heads up.

(UPI)

"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?
3/16/2016 2:18:57 PM

Israeli drones are about to take over the world's skies


UrbanAero Airmule droneUrbanAeroUrbanAero AirMule drone

Israel is by far the largest exporter of military drones in the world.

Take the AirMule from UrbanAero. It could have flown right off the pages of a Batman comic book.

Designed to take off and land vertically with up to 1,400 pounds of cargo and zip through the air at over 100mph, this drone is set to transport injured soldiers from urban war zones where standard helicopters simply cannot fly.

When it comes to military drones like the AirMule, Israel is by far the largest exporter in the world,shipping over 61% of worldwide volumes, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (Sipri).

But Israeli startups account for less than 1% of the $1.1 billion invested in commercial drone startups worldwide. Still, angel backed Israeli startups likeFlytrex, Dronomy and Perceptoare punching above their weight to tackle distinct segments of the drone market. (Disclosure: I am not an investor in any of the companies mentioned in this article, nor is my company, Genesis Partners.)

Drones that deliver

Flytrex for instance, is a delivery drone startup getting ready to take on UPS, Fedex and DHL. The company is led by Yariv Bash, best known as the co-founder of SpaceIL – Israel’s entry for the Google XPrize to put a spacecraft on the moon.

Flytrex droneFlytrexFlytrex drone

Backed by Joey Low, the angel behind WeWork and Taboola, Flytrex has already sold $700,000 worth of connected devices for drones to track flight paths, weather conditions and statistics like speed and distance over the cloud.

Flytrex will use the data it collects from these connected devices to build routes for autonomous drone deliveries, Bash says. Think of this like Waze maps for drones.

Flytrex is preparing to deliver everything from consumer goods to vaccines at a fraction of the time and cost of traditional ground delivery, and is currently in talks with design partners in emerging markets.

Drones that can 'see'

For drones to make the leap from gimmicks to mainstream services, experts agree the key is autonomy – or the ability for drones to fly beyond our direct line of sight and perform tasks automatically.

Dronomy droneDronomyDronomy drone

Just as Google is investing heavily in autonomous capabilities for self driving cars, Dronomy is bringing similar obstacle detection and avoidance capabilities to drones.

Dronomy, backed by executives from Skype, offers an operating system that functions as a drone’s eyes and ears. It uses sensors to help drones avoid dangerous collisions with everything from birds to projectiles.

Founders Ori Afek and Guy Raz previously developed missile detection systems and advanced vision sensors for the Israel Defense Forces so they are well accustomed to any conditions a drone may encounter midair.

Another startup, Percepto, is using similar computer vision and sensor fusion technology to offer drones for the alternative energy sector.

Percepto drone modulePerceptoThe Percepto drone module

Backed by former Citibank and TimeWarner chairman Richard Parsons as well as billionaires Mark Cuban and Xu Xiapong, Percepto operates fleets of drones to autonomously fly and inspect huge windmills located literally in the middle of nowhere.

Other Israeli startups like AiRobotics and Parazero are still flying under the radar and pioneering methods to extend the distance of drone flights and land safely under any circumstances.

These companies claim demand is already outpacing supply for their enabling technologies that could play a key role in mainstream adoption and compliance with new regulations.

All of these startups are converting military expertise into commercial applications. While Israel's distance from the global giants has given them room to be wildly creative and kept valuations sensible for investors. Launching at the dawn of the drone age, we can expect this crop of Israeli startups and others to soon fly in a sky near you.

Barak Rabinowitz is a Venture Partner at Genesis Partners, a $600 million early stage Israeli venture capital fund.


(businessinsider.com)


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/16/2016 4:07:49 PM

Turkey's worries about 'Kurds' proved to be true

The way out of this bloody quagmire would be to try to restore the peace talks between Turkey and the PKK.



Men hold Turkish flags over the coffin of a car bombing victim during a commemoration ceremony in a mosque in Ankara, Turkey, March 14, 2016. [Reuters]

What is the lesson from the March 13 terror attack in downtown Ankara, which killed 37 innocent souls, including a seven-month-old unborn baby?

For journalist David Lepeska, the lesson is that Turkey is now a "failing state". For the Turkish government has proved unable to "stop terrorists from attacking the heart of ... the centre of its capital" - three times in the past five months, and for some other reasons that are
scrutinised in these pages.

But by that measure, wouldn't some of the developing or developed countries be almost failed states as well, for they could not stop terrorists from carrying out separate waves of massacres in their major cities or had to deal with similar incidents on different levels over the past few years?

Refugees, terrorist cells, decimating cities are not uncommon instances in some of them.

The question is not to whitewash Ankara from the various mistakes and shortcomings in its security measures and foreign policy - especially with regard to Syria.

We Turks have to discuss these failures openly, and those in power should be able to listen to us honestly, without branding its critics as "traitors" to the nation.

Religious vs nationalist zealotry

Yet, one should also see that modern-day terrorism, with its sophisticated weaponry, decentralised decision-making, and vast number of active terrorists and sleeping cells, is very hard to defuse for any government.

Especially if that country has its longest border with Syria - home of the world bloodiest civil war - and a few million of its own citizens sympathise with the terror group that it is fighting with, the Kurdistan Workers' party (PKK), which
seems to be behind last Sunday's bloody attack.

The Syrian branch of the PKK may have emerged as an ally of both the United States and Russia against ISIL, but Turkey has to worry about its own peace and long-term stability, for which the PKK is nothing but an imminent threat.

One should also see that, in the face of terror, citizens should indeed "question authority" for failing to prevent it, as Lepeska duly noted. But, alas, all of us should also question, and condemn, terror itself.

Of course, everybody has condemned the deadly car bomb in Ankara. But not everybody has admitted the political meaning of it: This incident, along with the previous car bombing in Ankara in February which killed 30 people, proves that Turkey's concerns about "the Kurds" are not unfounded.

I used the term "the Kurds" in quotation marks, for that is how the armed forces of the PYD, or the Democratic Union Party in Syria, and its mothership, the PKK, Turkey's biggest terrorist foe since the early 1980s, have often been referred to in Western media.

Numerous articles have been written lately on how these "Kurds" are the finest boots on the ground against ISIL, how progressive they are with their brave women in uniform, and questioning why in the world Turkey, a NATO ally, sees them as terrorists to fight rather than freedom fighters to support.

Well, the latest attack in Ankara gives a sad answer to that question: One of those supposedly modern, secular, progressive Kurdish women in arms was Seher Cagla Demir, the 24-year-old suicide bomber,
who blew herself up in a bomb-laden car to kill dozens of innocent bystanders.

She was motivated not by the religious zealotry of ISIL, but the ethno-nationalist zealotry of the PKK - proving to us that the latter ideology is not always less lethal than the former.

Legitimate concerns

Turkey really cannot be blamed for being concerned with this ethno-nationalist threat, which is escalating from mere "guerrilla warfare" with security forces to wanton terror in Turkey's major cities.

The Syrian branch of the PKK may have emerged as an ally of both the United States and Russia against ISIL, but Turkey has to worry about its own peace and long-term stability, for which the PKK is nothing but an imminent threat - perhaps a threat bigger than ISIL, whose supporters inside Turkey are only minuscule compared with the supporters of the PKK.


OPINION: Ankara bombing and the failing Turkish state


The issue here, by the way, is not "the Kurds".

The PKK does not represent all Kurds, but only a fraction of them.

It is also true that while the Turkish Republic has been unforgivably authoritarian on its Kurdish citizens for decades - with senseless bans on their language and culture - many reforms have taken place in the past decade that gave Kurds all the cultural freedoms they deserve.

Moreover, Turkey has developed good relations with Iraqi Kurdistan, whose leader, Massoud Barzani, has recently
blamed the "arrogant PKK" for the failure of peace talkswith the Turkish government.


OPINION: Turkey is not in bed with ISIL


Of course, had those peace talks worked, everything would be much better for all of us. Turkey would have secured its peace, the PKK could have given all its energy to fighting ISIL within Syria (and even Iraq), and Western capitals would not be pressed to choose between their longtime NATO ally and their new-found friends in Syria.

Therefore, the way out of this bloody quagmire is to try to restore those peace talks - and first a ceasefire between the Turkish government and the PKK.

Western governments, in particular the US, would be only wise to work for that end, by using their apparent leverage on the PYD to force the PKK to abandon its violent campaign inside Turkey.

And this work can only begin when it is understood that Ankara's concern with "the Kurds" is not a baseless obsession.

Mustafa Akyol is a Turkish journalist, regular opinion writer for Al-Monitor, and author of
Islam without Extremes: A Muslim Case for Liberty.

The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.

Source: Al Jazeera

"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?
3/16/2016 5:03:33 PM

Job done: Russia saved Syria from US regime change… now it’s over to diplomacy

Finian Cunningham
Finian Cunningham (born 1963) has written extensively on international affairs, with articles published in several languages. Originally from Belfast, Northern Ireland, he is a Master’s graduate in Agricultural Chemistry and worked as a scientific editor for the Royal Society of Chemistry, Cambridge, England, before pursuing a career in newspaper journalism. For over 20 years he worked as an editor and writer in major news media organizations, including The Mirror, Irish Times and Independent. Now a freelance journalist based in East Africa, his columns appear on RT, Sputnik, Strategic Culture Foundation and Press TV.
Edited time: 15 Mar, 2016 13:03


School children play with a ball in a playground in Ras al-Ain city, Syria. © Rodi Said / Reuters

Five years of war, five months of Russian military intervention, and now peace talks are underway. It’s as simple as that.

However, rather than acknowledging a successful Russian mission, Western media outlets immediately began speculating that President Putin’s surprise announcement to withdraw Russian forces from Syria indicates a “rift” between Moscow and Damascus.

This is just more of the same Western media weapon of mass distraction that has obscured the real nature of the five-year war.

The sovereignty of Syria is the central principle officially underpinning peace talks that resumed in Geneva this week. Without Russia’s military intervention, Syria would not have the chance to pursue a political settlement on a such solid footing.

By contrast, after nearly two years of US-led military intervention allegedly to “defeat terrorism”, the Syrian state was on the brink of collapse from a largely foreign-backed terrorist assault. Until, that is, Russia intervened at the end of September last year.


The touchstone is that Russia from the outset was motivated by supporting the Syrian nation and supplanting the terror threat. While the US and its allies were ultimately the source of the threat.

Western media in hock to their governments’ political line still strain the implausible narrative of a “popular uprising” in Syria that somehow descended into a “global proxy war”.

But to the rest of the world, US-led illegal regime-change is the obvious, and damning, story. This should be the focus, not speculation about Putin’s alleged ulterior motives to withdraw militarily now from Syria.

US Secretary of State John Kerry speaking in Paris last weekend alongside European counterparts appeared to highlight Syria as a priority for peace efforts.

It is rather galling that Kerry should lecture Russia about making “clear choices” in Syria or elsewhere, when the only plausible explanation for the violence in the Arab country can be traced to the criminal interference of Washington and its partners, in flagrant violation of international law and thereby unleashing mayhem that destroyed millions of lives.

As opposition parties gather for tentative talks in Geneva, the New York Times informed its readers that it coincides with the “fifth anniversary of the beginning of the uprising against President Bashar al-Assad, which morphed into civil war and then a regional and global proxy war.”

This is a typical sample of Western distortion on Syria that persists in contradiction to the abundant evidence. That Western narrative is based on the dubious premise that the violence was instigated after the Syrian state crushed a genuine pro-democracy uprising. Secondly, the narrative blandly portrays that the conflict then escalated into a proxy war between foreign governments, as if the latter scenario is unrelated to the initial “uprising”.

However, thanks to alternative news media in the West and also internationally, such as channels like RT and Press TV, there is a substantial body of information that challenges the Western mainstream narrative. Not only challenges, but exposes it as willful deception.

For a start, substantive reports in the alternative media convincingly show that the initial, small-scale protests in Syria during March 2011 were infiltrated by armed provocateurs who fired on civilians and state security forces alike in order to incite large-scale violence. One of the best investigations on these crucial events was carried out by Sharmine Narwani for RT.

Secondly, we must bear in mind the well-documented long-term objective of regime change against the government of Syria authored by Washington, London and Paris. We know, for instance, from the disclosure in 2007 by US General Wesley Clark, the former NATO supreme commander, that Syria was in the Pentagon’s crosshairs for regime change as far back as 2001, along with Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya, among others.

Another important reference to this criminal agenda is the testimony of former French foreign minister Roland Dumas who revealed in 2013 that he was approached by British officials two years before the Syrian conflict erupted with a covert plan to topple the Assad government.

We also know from the revelations of former US intelligence chief Lt General Michael Flynn that the administration of President Barack Obama deliberately fomented the infiltration of “jihadist” terror groups as far back as 2012 with the calculation that these mercenaries would destabilize the Damascus government.

That’s why it is stomach-turning when John Kerry tells media in Paris at the weekend about how the “evil of Daesh [ISIS]” must be defeated.

Tellingly, from the outset of the conflict, Washington and its Western allies lost no time to make strident demands that President Assad “had to go”. These demands have become toned down of late as Washington endeavors to supposedly participate in the Geneva peace process. Nevertheless, the blatant objective of the Western governments remains, for the Damascus authorities to eventually step down after a “political process” – or, in other words, for “regime change”.

The other telling factor is the involvement of various regional despotic states in the Western chorus calling for Assad to stand down. Seriously: the regimes of Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan and the autocratic head-choppers in Saudi Arabia and Qatar on the side of a “pro-democracy uprising”?

The fact that these Western-backed regimes have poured billions of dollars into recruiting, training and weaponizing mercenaries from dozens of countries – including supplying chemical weapons – speaks of the reality of foreign-orchestrated regime change as the key determinant in the Syrian war.

Damningly, former UN envoy Lakhdar Brahimi revealed in an interviewat the weekend that the conflict in Syria could have been halted in 2012 – just over a year from its inception. Brahimi praised Russia for having “a much more realistic analysis of the situation” and that “everyone should have listened to the Russians a little bit more.” Moscow has consistently said that the political future of Syria must be decided by the people of Syria and that no external preconditions, such as Assad standing down, can be imposed by Western powers or their regional proxies. The current Geneva talks underscore this principle.

Last Friday, John Kerry flew to Saudi Arabia seemingly to urge an end to conflict in Syria. Notably, the Saudi-backed Syrian opposition, the High Negotiations Committee, suddenly reversed its rejection of the Geneva dialogue and said that it would be attending talks this week after all. The HNC comprises Al Qaeda-linked terror groups, Jaish al-Islam and Arhrar al-Shams. However, the HNC stipulated that any negotiations must be predicated on Assad’s removal.

Syria’s war, death toll and destruction are patently a result of a US-led bid for regime change in that country. The background intrigue, the explosive escalation of violence over the past five years and the belated political attempts to prosecute regime change by alternative means are all clear evidence of a criminal foreign assault on Syria.

Russia’s military intervention on behalf of the Syrian authorities, as designated by international law, has exposed the true nature of the conflict. The danger of US-backed covert war on Syria has been removed, and now it is over to diplomacy to resolve the peace. That is a stunning achievement.

The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.

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

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