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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/2/2016 11:02:57 AM

Jihadists on the run
Palmyra is retaken as the caliphate is pushed back in Iraq and Syria
| MAKHMOUR | From the print edition



LESS than a year after Islamic State (IS) burst onto the scene in June 2014, capturing Mosul and racing towards Baghdad, the jihadists stumbled. In early 2015 IS was pushed out of Kobane, in Syria, and Tikrit, in Iraq. But then its diehard fighters seized Ramadi and Palmyra, as Iraqi and Syrian troops fled.

Predicting the demise of IS is fraught with difficulty. But its opponents in Iraq and Syria now sound increasingly upbeat. Western and Russian bombers have pummelled the jihadists from the air, as local fighters push them back on the ground. Though its motto is to “remain and expand”, IS now seems unable to do either in the region. The “caliphate” is thought to have lost 20% of its territory in Syria and 40% in Iraq since its peak.

In fact, IS has not scored a big victory in its heartland since taking Palmyra, the site of Roman-era ruins, in May 2015. The jihadists made a show of destroying the temples of Bel and Baal Shamin, and the iconic Arch of Triumph—acts described as a war crime by the UN. But after weeks of fierce fighting, and with the aid of Russian air strikes, the Syrian army recaptured the city on March 27th. The ancient parts remain largely intact, including the amphitheatre (pictured) where IS beheaded the city’s chief archaeologist last year.

The taking of Palmyra allows Bashar al-Assad, Syria’s embattled president, and Russia, his backer, to argue more convincingly that they are fighting jihadists, and not only mainstream Sunni rebels. The city was an important stop on an IS supply line running all the way to Anbar province in Iraq. Mr Assad now has a bigger buffer to his east, from where he is likely to launch more strikes on IS in Raqqa, its “capital”, and Deir ez-Zor.

The jihadists, meanwhile, have retreated to the east, towards Iraq—but IS is faring no better there. Ramadi was retaken in December by the Iraqi army, local police and Sunni tribal fighters, backed by American air strikes. More recently, Yazidi and tribal fighters captured an area in the Sinjar region, on the border with Syria, and Syrian Kurds have pushed down to take the town of Shaddadeh. The main route between Mosul and Raqqa has been severed.

Mosul, Iraq’s second city, remains the big prize. An ungainly alliance of Kurdish peshmerga, Shia and Sunni militias, and soldiers from the Iraqi army are slowly encircling the city. Inside, resistance is said to be mounting. Western officials and the Iraqi government say the offensive has begun. But a big push into the city may not come until much later this year, or next. It will involve intense urban combat, for which few Iraqi soldiers are trained. The army’s moves into villages around the city have been slow and messy.

America, which is training the army, is set to increase its own troop numbers in Iraq. In March it killed Haji Iman, IS’s second-in-command, and Abu Omar al-Shishani, its minister of war, among other jihadist leaders. “We are systematically eliminating ISIL’s cabinet,” says Ashton Carter, America’s secretary of defence, using another term for the group. An American intelligence report from February estimated that the number of IS fighters in Iraq and Syria had fallen by some 20%, because of deaths and desertions. (More than 400 jihadists are thought to have been killed in the battle for Palmyra alone.)

The loss of territory has also affected IS’s finances. It has become harder for the group to export its oil since losing control of key crossing points on Syria’s northern border with Turkey. For months Western and Russian air strikes have targeted the jihadists’ oilfields, processing plants and stockpiles of cash. Wages have fallen, and tension has risen between local fighters and foreign ones, who are paid more. Recruits are being redirected to Libya, site of another civil war and a burgeoning hub for jihadists.

The retreat of IS has allowed the Kurds to carve out statelets in Iraq and Syria, and Mr Assad to strengthen his hand. If the jihadists are defeated, the difficulty will be to figure out who among its myriad opponents, split along ethnic and sectarian lines, gets to rule liberated areas. Talks to end the five-year-old Syrian war, which has killed at least 250,000 people, are scheduled to resume later this month in Geneva. The future of Mr Assad remains a sticking point. But a ceasefire between his regime and the rebels has allowed more guns to be aimed at IS, which is excluded from a truce that has lasted a month.

Even as it loses ground at home, IS is lashing out abroad—in a desperate attempt to maintain legitimacy, say some. The reason its suicide bombers struck Belgium on March 22nd, killing 32 people, “is that its fantasy of a caliphate is collapsing before their eyes,” says John Kerry, America’s secretary of state. But the attacks also suggest that control of a state may not be necessary for IS to sow terror. Even if defeated in its heartland, the group seems likely to endure elsewhere.

(economist.com)

"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?
4/2/2016 1:45:47 PM

Chicago's murder rate soars 72% in 2016; shootings up more than 88%

, USA TODAY5:15 p.m. EDT April 1, 2016


Eddie Johnson speaks to the media after Mayor Rahm Emanuel, right, announced he was appointing Johnson as the interim superintendent of the Chicago Police Department at CPD Headquarters on March 28, 2016.
(Photo: Teresa Crawford, AP)
CHICAGO — Murders in the nation's third-largest city are up about 72%, while shootings have surged more than 88% in the first three months of 2016 compared with the same period last year, according to data released Friday by the
Chicago Police Department.

Police said the disturbing rise in violence is driven by gangs and mostly contained to a handful of pockets on the city's South and West sides.

“While CPD will remain tireless in its efforts to hold criminals accountable for their actions, we all have a part to play in creating a safer Chicago,” newly appointed interim Superintendent Eddie Johnson said in a statement. “In the coming weeks and months, I plan on meeting with and listening to a range of Chicagoans — from activists and elected officials to ministers and parents — to find ways that we can come together to build mutual trust and lasting partnerships that will make our streets safer for everyone.”

The city has seen 141 murders this year, compared with 82 murders at the same point last year. Police reported 677 shootings this year compared with 359 at the same point last year.

The grim rise in violence comes after the Chicago Police Department reported 468 murders in 2015, a 12.5% increase from the year before. There were 2,900 shootings in 2015, 13% more than the year before, according to Police Department records.

The rise in violence comes as the police department reported a decrease in investigative stops by cops on the streets during the first two months of the year. The police department entered an agreement with the American Civil Liberties Union, which went into effect Jan. 1, to record contact cards for all street stops after the organization criticized the city's police for disproportionately targeting minorities for questioning and searches.

Police complained that the new forms were too time-consuming to fill out. Officers were allowed to begin using more simplified forms at the beginning of March. The department said gun arrests have increased significantly since the new forms were put in place.

Police noted that there has been some progress in slowing the pace of the rising violence.

In March, murders rose by 29% compared with increases of 75% in January and 126% in February.

Overall, the month of March saw 45 murders and 271 shooting incidents.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel appointed Johnson as his new interim superintendent this week and hopes he can help stem the violence.

Johnson replaced John Escalante, who took over the department in December after Emanuel fired Superintendent Garry McCarthy. McCarthy was ousted in the aftermath of the court-ordered release of dashcam video that showed a white police officer fatally shooting a black teen 16 times on a city street. The video of Laquan McDonald's death spurred weeks of protests in the city.

Johnson has had success fighting crime, the mayor's office says. As deputy chief of patrol in a huge swath of the city's South Side in 2013, Johnson's area of command saw a 32% drop in crime, according to the mayor's office.

"We have a challenge right now, specifically but not limited to the South and West Sides," Emanuel said this week. "We have a level of shootings and gun violence that's unacceptable and must come to an end. It means we have to have a leadership and lead from the front and get not only our officers' morale level up but our violence level down."

Follow USA TODAY Chicago correspondent Aamer Madhani on Twitter: @AamerISmad




"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?
4/2/2016 2:02:20 PM

Japan agrees to reduce nuclear stockpiles

, USA TODAY2:02 a.m. EDT April 2, 2016


US President Barack Obama speaks alongside Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, right, during the first plenary session during the 2016 Nuclear Security Summit at the Washington Convention Center in Washington, DC, April 1, 2016.
(Photo: SAUL LOEB, AFP/Getty Images)
Japan has agreed to reduce its stockpile of highly enriched uranium – nuclear fuel that could be used for bombs – and to share more information with the U.S. about its nuclear activities, affirming its commitment to a peaceful nuclear program.

The agreement, which will reduce the possibility of nuclear fuel being stolen by terrorists, was announced Friday by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and President Obama at the 2016 Nuclear Security Summit in Washington.

It illustrates Japan’s adherence to a policy that is “strictly committed to non-nuclear arms,” said Yasuhisa Kawamura, the spokesperson for Japan’s Ministry for Foreign Affairs.

Japan is the only country to have been attacked with nuclear weapons, used by the U.S. to end World War II. Japan has sworn not to produce, develop or import them and is taking these steps to assure the world that it remains committed to that goal, Kawamura told USA TODAY.

“It is unthinkable that Japan use or possess nuclear weapons,” Kawamura said.

The agreement calls on Japan to remove all highly-enriched uranium and separated plutonium fuel from the Fast Critical Assembly in Japan, and all the highly enriched uranium from a research reactor at Kyoto University. The material will be sent to the U.S. to be blended down into a less potent form of uranium. The Kyoto facility will also be converted to use low-enriched uranium for its research activities, according to a joint statement.

The announcement comes as world leaders are increasingly concerned about the possibility that terrorists could get hold of nuclear material, amid recent North Korean nuclear threats, tests and ballistic missile launches.

U.S. allies in the region are also concerned because Donald Trump, the frontrunner in the Republican presidential primary campaign, has called for Japan and South Korea, which are under U.S. nuclear protection, to provide more of their own security.

Obama, Japan’s Abe and South Korea's President Park Geun-Hye earlier issued a statement reaffirming the U.S. commitment to its allies and to the commitment of all three to trilateral security cooperation for the peace and stability of Northeast Asia.

The Japanese prime minister and both presidents gave instruction to their defense and foreign ministry officials to conduct more consultations, and to work together to repatriate Japanese and South Korean nationals who’d been abducted by North Korea, Kawamura said.

(usatoday.com)


"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?
4/2/2016 2:17:14 PM

Obama, world leaders urge action on nuclear security, terror

Associated Press


WASHINGTON (AP) — World leaders declared progress in safeguarding nuclear materials sought by terrorists and wayward nations, even as President Barack Obama acknowledged the task was far from finished.

Closing out a nuclear security summit on Friday, Obama warned of a persistent and harrowing threat: terrorists getting their hands on a nuclear bomb. He urged fellow leaders not to be complacent about the risk of catastrophe, saying that such an attack by the Islamic State or a similar group would "change our world."

"I'm the first to acknowledge the great deal of work that remains," Obama said, adding that the vision of disarmament he laid out at the start of his presidency may not be realized during his lifetime. "But we've begun."

Despite their calls for further action, the roughly 50 leaders assembled announced that this year's gathering would be the last of this kind. This year, deep concerns about terrorism were the commanding focus, as leaders grappled with the notion that the next Paris or Brussels could involve an attack with a nuclear weapon or dirty bomb.

Obama said of the terrorists, "There is no doubt that if these madmen ever got their hands on a nuclear bomb or nuclear material they most certainly would use it to kill as many innocent people as possible."

So far, no terrorists have obtained a nuclear weapon or a dirty bomb, Obama said, crediting global efforts to secure nuclear material. But he said it wasn't for lack of the terrorists trying: Al-Qaida has sought nuclear materials, IS has deployed chemical weapons and extremists linked to the Brussels and Paris attacks were found to have spied on a top Belgian nuclear official.

Throughout the two-day summit, growing fears about nuclear terrorism tempered other, more positive signs of the world coming together to confront the broader nuclear threat.

The U.N. Security Council members who brokered a sweeping nuclear deal with Iran held up that agreement as a model for preventing nuclear proliferation, as they gathered on the summit's sidelines to review implementation of the deal.

Obama also spent part of the summit huddling with the leaders of South Korea and Japan about deterring nuclear-tinged provocations from North Korea, in a powerful show of diplomatic unity with two U.S. treaty allies. Similarly, Obama's sit-down with Chinese President Xi Jinping offered the two strategic rivals a chance to illustrate mutual concern about the North, a traditional Chinese ally.

Undeterred, North Korea only hours later fired a short-range missile into the sea and tried to jam GPS navigation signals in South Korea — precisely the kind of act that South Korean President Park Geun-hye had warned would trigger even tougher sanctions and more isolation.

Aiming to show concrete action, leaders came to the nuclear summit with commitments in hand, known in diplomatic-speak as "gift baskets."

Latin America and the Caribbean are now free of highly enriched uranium, the White House said, praising Argentina by name for converting its remaining stockpile into a less dangerous form. Fissile materials like highly enriched uranium and separated plutonium are necessary ingredients to make nuclear bombs.

The United States, in newly declassified statistics, said its own national inventory of highly enriched uranium has dropped from 741 metric tons two decades ago to 586 metric tons as of 2013. And the U.S. and Japan announced they'd finished removing hundreds of kilograms of weapons-grade material from a Japanese research reactor, and pledged to do the same at another.

On the global front, a strengthened nuclear security agreement was finally poised to take force, extending safeguards for nuclear materials being used, stored and transported while requiring criminal penalties for nuclear smuggling. Those tweaks were approved in 2005, but have sat dormant awaiting ratification from a critical mass of nations, reached only in the past few days.

Still, frustration over the slow pace of reducing nuclear stockpiles shadowed the summit. The absence of key players — especially Russia — further underscored the lack of unanimity confronting global efforts to deter nuclear attacks.

After six years of prodding by Obama and others before him, the global stockpile of fissile material remains in the thousands of metric tons. What's more, security officials warn that the ingredients for a "dirty bomb," such as cesium and cobalt, are alarmingly insecure in many parts of the globe.

Ahead of the summit, fewer than half of the countries participating had agreed to secure their sources of radioactive substances, which are widely present in hospital, industrial and academic settings. Obama said as the Islamic State is squeezed in Syria and Iraq, the world must anticipate it will lash out elsewhere, citing recent attacks in Belgium and Turkey as examples.

Obama has held four such summits in hopes of advancing the disarmament goals he set at the start of his presidency, when he declared in Prague that nuclear weapons were "the most dangerous legacy of the Cold War."

"This summit is not the end of our quest to make the world safe from nuclear terrorism," Prime Minister Mark Rutte of the Netherlands said. He said the assembled leaders were passing the baton to international organizations. "Should the need arise, I know that everybody here will be ready to return."

___

Associated Press writers Bradley Klapper, Matthew Lee and Matthew Pennington contributed to this report.

___

Reach Josh Lederman on Twitter at https://twitter.com/joshledermanAP and Darlene Superville at https://www.twitter.com/dsupervilleap.

"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?
4/2/2016 4:48:24 PM
US

Some Colorado Students Will Be Getting

Satanic Books Soon

03-31-2016




A Colorado school district will soon distribute satanic and atheist literature to middle school and high school students after pressure from atheist groups.

Beginning April 1, the Delta County School District will provide students books from Freedom From Religion Foundation, the Satanic Temple, and Western Colorado Atheists and Freethinkers after the groups complained.

FFRF Co-president Dan Barker said the push to hand out satanic books happened in response to Gideon Bibles being distributed in a passive way to students while school is in session.

"The Delta County School District could have resolved the issue by not allowing religious groups inside their schools," Barker said in a FFRF news release, according to The Christian Post. "But since it has chosen to be obdurate, it's left us with no option than to respond to the religious propagandizing."

Earlier this month, FFRF stated that the refusal by leaders in another school district to distribute books cost taxpayers.

"Public schools have previously attempted to deny FFRF permission to distribute literature," FFRF Staff Attorney Andrew Seidel said.

"That resulted in a lawsuit that cost the (Orange) County Public Schools nearly $90,000, and they ended up approving all the literature for distribution anyway," he said. "Shortly after approving all the literature they closed the literature distribution forum - what FFRF had been asking for (and what FFRF has been asking DCSD 50J for) from the beginning."

Candi Cushman, education analyst with Focus on the Family, disagrees with why the atheist groups are allowed to hand out their literature.

"Common-sense standards of decency should apply to these (books)," Cushman told The Christian Post. "From the images displayed on recent television reports on this story, it appears that some of the materials may be disparaging of other religious viewpoints and even lewd in their depictions."

"So a decision to make this literature available to students should also be reviewed in light of other school policies that may protect students' exposure to inappropriately lewd images and overtly disparaging and insulting content," she said.

But Cushman said the Colorado school district's goal to allow a variety of beliefs on its campuses is positive.

"It is commendable that the school is making an effort to avoid unconstitutional discrimination in a public forum against a group simply because of its faith-based perspective," Cushman said. "As Americans, we believe the truth will rise to the surface when allowed to be heard."

Cushman said God's truth will ultimately have the victory over the lies of Satan.

"As Christians, we know the truth of the Bible will win out in a competition with any other belief system," she said. "It would be unfortunate to let intimidation from groups -- with an apparent agenda of shutting a public forum down -- to succeed in censorship for all."

Leaders of the Delta County School District are now discussing revising their policy regarding the handing out of literature on school campuses, according to a local news outlet, KJCT-TV.

(CBN News)

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

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