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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
5/11/2016 11:11:09 AM

After Secret Meetings With Saudi Arabia, Israel Publicly Repairs Relationship With Turkey

MAY 10, 2016


By Brandon Turbeville

Shortly after secret meetings between Israeli and Saudi officials were exposed by a small minority of mainstream outlets, the “reparation of relations” between Israel and Turkey began to be reported as well.

The Syrian war has accomplished many things and, apparently, the conflict in Syria has the ability to mend publicly broken relationships between Israel and other nations in a way that no other international incidents have been able to do. Either conflict in the Middle East has magical properties or these new “friends” with Israel have found so much common ground that the two countries can no longer hide their friendship even from the general public and international onlookers at the state level.

In an effort to “mend ties,” the Undersecretary of Turkish Foreign Ministers, Feridun Sinirlioglu, held a secret meeting with the Israeli spy chief in Sweden in early April.

As Al Masdar News comments,

The relations between Turkey and Israel have deteriorated after Israeli soldiers raided the Turkish flotilla (Mavi Marmara) while heading to lift Gaza blockade in May 2010. However, both countries began gradually restoring diplomatic and economic ties. In January 2009, Erdogan harshly criticized Israel’s conduct in Gaza at the World Economic Forum conference in Davos.

Nonetheless, many analysts, including Ashton Meyer, believe the Davos argument was nothing but a farce manipulated by Erdogan to present himself as the new defender of Palestinian cause. “Having failed in dealing issues with Europe, Armenia, Russia, Syria, Iraq and Iran, Erdogan began improving ties with Israel”, Meyer said. Meyer also wrote: “when I compare how the Turkish people welcomed Erdogan after returning from Davos conference in Istanbul airport with the blood-covered faces of Gaza children, I just can’t tell who is the most unfortunate.”

Much like Israel and Saudi Arabia, Israel and Turkey have a number of similar interests, most notably the goal of destroying Syria by virtue of supporting jihadist proxies and facilitating their transit across both the Turkish and Israeli borders.

Image Credit


(activistpost.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?
5/11/2016 2:35:34 PM
U.S. Likely to Lift Ban on Arms Sales to Vietnam

Despite objections from some lawmakers and human rights advocates, the White House is considering selling U.S. weapons to Hanoi — for the first time since the war.

The White House appears poised to end a ban on arms sales to Vietnam in time for a landmark visit by President Barack Obama later this month, despite misgivings from some lawmakers and human rights advocates.

The step would carry crucial symbolism in the growing contest for influence between China and the United States in the Western Pacific and also for America’s relationship with Hanoi that has come full circle since the dark days of the Vietnam War.

Anxious about China’s aggressive moves to
assert its territorial claims in the South China Sea, Vietnam’s government has pressed repeatedly for an end to the prohibition on U.S. arms exports, which would permit Hanoi to buy high-tech American military hardware such as sophisticated radar or surveillance aircraft. Two years ago, Washington partially lifted the ban to permit the sale of weapons related to “maritime security.”

But while the U.S. Defense Department views the potential step as a key strategic move to counter China, human rights groups and some U.S. senators worry the White House will give up vital leverage without getting sufficient concessions in return.

Senators from both parties, including Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), have voiced objections and reservations over lifting the ban and argue the administration should hold off on any dramatic gestures without more evidence of progress on civil liberties in a country that routinely arrests and beats dissidents.

Although Leahy has long supported broadening U.S. relations with Vietnam, he “feels quite strongly about freedom of expression” and wants the administration to explain what Vietnam is expected to do on human rights issues if the United States allows lethal arms sales, said his aide, Tim Rieser.

The United States “needs to make clear, as we do when we give aid to other governments, that we’re not going to write a blank check to the Vietnamese military,” Rieser told
Foreign Policy.

During a single week in March, Vietnamese authorities convicted seven bloggers and activists and sentenced them to prison. The country’s Communist Party commands a sweeping monopoly on power, and Vietnam remains one of the
most repressive regimes in the world, according to Human Rights Watch.

“Lifting the ban on lethal arms sales to Vietnam would be premature and undeserved at this time, unless Hanoi takes critically needed steps to address its poor human rights record,” said John Sifton, Asia Advocacy director for Human Rights Watch.

The White House has been debating the move in recent weeks, administration officials and congressional aides told
FP on condition of anonymity. U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter has already come out in favorof the move, in remarks at a Senate hearing last month that took lawmakers by surprise.

The final decision will hinge in part on the outcome of talks on Monday and Tuesday in Vietnam led by two senior State Department diplomats: Assistant Secretary of State Tom Malinowski, who oversees democracy, human rights, and labor issues, and Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Russel, who runs the agency’s East Asian and Pacific bureau.

The
State Department said in a statement that Malinowski would be urging Hanoi to “release political prisoners without condition” and carry out other reforms in line with the country’s international human rights obligations.

Vietnam has released about two dozen political prisoners over the past year, reducing the number known to be behind bars from an estimated 125 to 100 — though rights groups say it also has stepped up harassment of activists through beatings.

Analysts say the government in Hanoi may have released the dissidents to bolster its position during talks on the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade agreement, which could offer new markets for Vietnam’s growing economy. Under the trade deal, Hanoi agreed to a major change in its labor laws that would allow for independent trade unions for the first time.

It remains to be seen if Vietnam will follow through on its commitment on labor reforms. But when Malinowski helped make the case for the trade agreement last year in a commentary, he cited the ban on arms sales as a source of continued
leverage that would stay in place even once the trade negotiations were over.

The administration has not offered up that argument recently amid preparations for the president’s visit to Hanoi later this month, which will mark the first by Obama to Vietnam. He is also due to visit Japan on the same trip, and there is growing speculation the president will be the first U.S. commander in chief to set foot in Hiroshima.

It’s not the first time that the administration’s diplomatic approach and negotiating tactics have been portrayed as too conciliatory to repressive regimes. Citing overtures to Cuba and Iran, some critics in Congress have accused the White House of delivering major concessions at the outset without demanding sufficient reforms or changes up front.

Senate Foreign Relations Chairman Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) favored the 2014 partial lifting of the arms sales ban but has reserved judgment on any wholesale end to the prohibition for Vietnam.

“Any more expansive shift in policy will require further review and must align with U.S. interests, including the desire for progress on human rights,” an aide to Corker said.

However, Maryland Sen. Ben Cardin, the committee’s top Democrat, said he is open to rescinding the ban if human rights issues are taken into account.

“While I agree it is critical that the United States build a strategic, multifaceted partnership with Vietnam, we must take care to ensure that any potential arms sales are appropriate to our bilateral relationship and would support regional stability,” Cardin told
FP.

The Maryland senator traveled to Vietnam in 2014 and raised his concerns about human rights with several senior officials, including the prime minister.

When asked about a possible change in policy on Vietnam, State Department spokeswoman Katina Adams said “human rights remain an essential element of our policy with Vietnam.”

She added: “Ahead of the president’s trip, we continue to review our policies in parallel with the development of our bilateral relationship with Vietnam.”

Supporters of ending the arms ban say that Vietnam has made progress over time on rights issues and that its record compares favorably to some other U.S. partners accused of horrendous abuses, such as Saudi Arabia or Egypt.

“Human rights is not an absolute. We judge it based on a relative scale,” said Gregory Poling, a fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “We reward those who are improving and punish those who are backsliding,” and Hanoi has been on an upward trajectory, he said.

The Vietnamese recognize they must coexist with China, the looming neighbor on their northern border, Poling said. “But they are desperate to get as much strategic room to maneuver as they can. The U.S. is key to that,” he said.

The “prime motivation” behind Vietnam’s request to lift the arms restrictions is more political than military, said Carl Thayer, an expert on Southeast Asian security at the University of New South Wales and the Australian Defence Force Academy.

Vietnamese hard-liners who back the regime note that despite plenty of diplomatic overtures between Hanoi and Washington of late, many government officials still fear the United States seeks a quiet revolution through its push for human rights. Combined with lingering resentment over U.S. efforts to address wartime use of the toxic chemical mixture Agent Orange, maintaining a “discriminatory” policy on arms sales looks to Hanoi like punitive politics, Thayer said.

That said, in the context of rising tensions in the South China Sea, the United States has sought to improve the ability of its allies and partners to patrol their own waters, especially when confronted with a
large and growing Chinese maritime force.

So far, Vietnam has not given Washington a big wish list regarding future arms sales, and an end to the ban would not open the floodgates for big defense deals, experts said.

To date, U.S. military assistance to Vietnam — which is limited to the Coast Guard — has consisted of a few old, small patrol boats. And Vietnam’s major military equipment — whether advanced submarines frigates or multirole fighter jets — is Russian-made and will almost certainly stay that way. Shifting to U.S.-manufactured weapons would be too expensive at this point.

One potential area of cooperation, as between the United States and India, could be access to more advanced defense technologies.

Carter, the latest Pentagon chief to make a point of traveling to Vietnam, said in a visit to the country last June that “our countries are now committed for the first time to operate together, step up our defense trade, and to work toward co-production.”

In a joint vision statement
agreed upon during Carter’s stop in Hanoi, the two governments called for cooperation on defense technology. Vietnam, like other countries in the region, wants to upgrade older weapons systems and acquire radar, surveillance drones, or reconnaissance planes — such as P-3 Orions or P-8 Poseidons — to help them track Chinese ships and submarines, experts said.

“Vietnam would like to see some technology transferred. This is an evolving issue and the one with the most promise,” Thayer said.

U.S. officials have also privately spoken of the possibility of having American naval ships once again operate out of strategic Cam Ranh Bay, which served as a
hub for U.S. forces during the Vietnam War. But Hanoi has yet to endorse the idea publicly.

“I do not think that China’s reactions to arms procurements by Vietnam are all that decisive in Vietnam’s calculations,” Thayer said. “Vietnam is more concerned about giving the U.S. a presence, say at Cam Ranh, and how China would react to that.”

Apart from warning against ending the arms sales ban, human rights advocates have appealed to the White House to use the president’s visit to Vietnam to highlight the plight of political prisoners and bloggers in a manner similar to Obama’s recent groundbreaking trip to Cuba.

In an April 27 letter to the president, Human Rights Watch urged Obama to make time during his visit to meet with former political prisoners and civic activists, hold a joint press conference with his Vietnamese counterpart, Gen. Tran Dai Quang, and deliver a speech that highlights the importance of fundamental rights to the future of the relationship between the two countries.

“Many in Vietnam are looking to you and the United States to stand up for the ideals they are taking great risks to promote,” the letter said.


Photo credit: KHAM/AFP/Getty Images


"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?
5/11/2016 3:07:48 PM

Iran vows Syrian rebels will pay a 'heavy price' after suffering major losses


Now Lebanon via Nahrainnet
Funeral for two Iranian casualties in recent Aleppo fighting.

BEIRUT — Top officials in Tehran have vowed to exact revenge for the heavy losses suffered by Iran Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) troops in a battle in which Islamist fighters seized a village south of Aleppo over the weekend.

Mohsen Rezaee, the secretary of the powerful Expediency Discernment Council, warnedMonday that “takfiris” would pay a “heavy price” after killing 13 IRGC members and injuring 21 others in Khan Tuman on May 6, the largest single one-day loss of Iranian troops since it entered the Syria conflict.

The Iranian general hailed the killed Iranian soldiers, all of whom were from Iran’s Mazandaran province along the Caspian Sea, writing in a post on his official Instagram account that their service evoked memories of the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq War.

Razaee returned to active service in the IRGC in May 2015 following a stint in politics that saw him unsuccessfully run for president in 2009 and 2013. Rezaee commanded the IRGC from 1981 to 2005.

The high IRGC casualty count around Khan Tuman has sent shockwaves across Iran, with local newspaper Ghanoon comparing the clashes to the Battle of Karbala, a highly significant event for Shiite Muslims in which the Imam Hussein died alongside his supporters.

Rezaee claimed that insurgents “took advantage of the ceasefire” to seize Khan Tuman, adding that Saudi Arabia and Turkey were supporting insurgents in Syria.

Another Iranian security official, in turn, said that the attack on the Aleppo village revealed problems with the cessation of hostilities implemented in Syria in late February 2016.

Syria mapReuters

"Since [the] truce plan was put forward, the Islamic Republic of Iran, which didn't oppose it in principle, reminded of its structural problems," Ali Shamkhani—the the secretary of Iran's Supreme National Security Council of Iran—said.

"This event showed that the concerns raised by Iran were fully correct and based on the realities on the ground and that ceasefire would be merely an opportunity for the recruitment and reinvigoration of the terrorist groups by the governments which support them," he further claimed.

Iran has suffered over 400 casualties in Syria, according to reports, including the loss of a number of high-ranking officers. The casualty counts began rising as Iran deployed larger number of troops in support of the Syrian army’s offensives against rebels starting with Russia’s aerial intervention in late September 2015.

In April, Tehran deployed its troops from its regular army, including the 65th Airborne Special Forces Brigade, in its first official deployment outside of Iran since the end of the Iran-Iraq war.

Read the original article on Now Lebanon. Follow Now Lebanon on Facebook. Copyright 2016. Follow Now Lebanon on Twitter.


(Business Insider)


"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?
5/11/2016 5:10:43 PM


The Earth is warming at scary rates, and this GIF proves it


The steady rise of Earth’s temperature as greenhouse gases accumulate in the atmosphere and trap more and more heat is sending the planet spiraling closer to the point where warming’s catastrophic consequences may be all but assured.

That metaphoric spiral has become a literal one in a new graphic drawn up by Ed Hawkins, a climate scientist at the University of Reading in the United Kingdom. The animated graphic features a rainbow-colored record of global temperatures spinning outward from the late 19th century to the present as the Earth heats up.


Monthly global temperatures from 1850-2016.
Ed Hawkins

“The pace of change is immediately obvious, especially over the past few decades,” Hawkins, who has previously worked with Climate Central’s extreme weather attribution team, wrote in an email.

The graphic is part of Hawkins’s effort to explore new ways to present global temperature data in a way that clearly telegraphs the warming trend. Another climate scientist, Jan Fuglestvedt of the Center for International Climate and Environmental Research in Oslo, suggested the spiral presentation.

The graphic displays monthly global temperature data from the U.K. Met Office and charts how each month compares to the average for the same period from 1850-1900, the same baselines used in the most recent report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

At first, the years vacillate inward and outward, showing that a clear warming signal had yet to emerge from the natural fluctuations that happen from year to year. But clear warming trends are present in the early and late 20th century.

In the late 20th century, it is clear how much closer temperatures have come to the target the international community has set to keep warming within 2 degrees C (4 degrees F) above pre-industrial levels by the end of the 21st century. An even more ambitious target of 1.5 degrees C (3 degrees F) has increasingly become a topic of discussion, and is also visible on the graphic.

Michael Mann, a climate scientist at Penn State who created the famous “hockey stick” graph of global temperature records going back hundreds of years, said that the spiral graphic was “an interesting and worthwhile approach to representing the data graphically.”

He said that using an earlier baseline period would have better captured all the warming that has occurred, as there was some small amount already in the late 19th century.

Just how much temperatures have risen is clear in the first few months of data from 2016, its line clearly separated from 2015 — which was the hottest year on record — and edging in on the 1.5 degrees C mark.

Every month of 2016 so far has been the warmest such month on record; in fact, the past 11 months have all set records, the longest such streak in the temperature data kept by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. (Each agency that keeps such a temperature record handles the data slightly differently, which can lead to small differences in monthly and yearly values, though the overall trend is in broad agreement for all such agencies.)

The record-setting temperatures of 2016 have seen a small push from anexceptionally strong El Niño, but they are largely the result of the heat that has built up in the atmosphere over decades of unabated greenhouse gas emissions — as the spiral graphic makes clear.

“Turns out that this version [of temperature records] particularly appeals, maybe because it doesn’t require much interpretation,” Hawkins said.

(GRIST)

"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?
5/11/2016 5:22:39 PM

How Earth's magnetic field is changing

May 10, 2016

A new study has made use of data gathered by ESA's Swarm satellites, which have been ...

A new study has made use of data gathered by ESA's Swarm satellites, which have been studying the Earth's magnetic field for more than two years (Credit: ESA/ATG medialab). View gallery (4 images)

The European Space Agency (ESA) launched its trio of Earth-facing satellites – the Swarm satellites – more than two years ago. Since then, the three probes have been tirelessly making measurements of the Earth's magnetic field, mapping it out in detail. Now, that data has been used in a new study of how the magnetic field has changed over recent years, with the results echoing what's happening at the planet's core.

Earth's magnetic field might be invisible, but it's complex and ever-changing, protecting us from cosmic radiation and solar winds. Since launching at the tail end of 2013, ESA's Swarm satellites have been studying the different magnetic signals from the planet's core, mantle, crust, oceans, all the way out to the ionosphere and magnetosphere.

All that data was recently used in a study to describe where the magnetic field is getting weaker, where it's strengthening, and perhaps most importantly – how fast those changes are occurring. The findings are presented at the Living Planet Symposium, which is being held this week, and include two animations showing the changes.

The first animation, which also makes use of data from CHAMP and Ørstedsatellites, shows changes in field strength between 1999 and May 2016. The red regions are where it got stronger, while the blue regions show a weakening.

Overall, the magnetic field has weakened by some 3.5 percent over North America, but has become around 2 percent stronger over Asia. The absolute weakest area of the field, known as the South Atlantic Anomaly, also weakened by some 2 percent as it moved steadily to the west.

The second animation is a little different, describing the rate of change between 2000 and 2015. Similar to the first animation, slowing regions are seen in blue, while those speeding up are visible in red. It's a complex picture, with changes increasing in speed over Asia, while they slow down around South Africa.

What's causing all of those changes? Well, the magnetic field is thought to be the result of the vast quantities of molten iron moving around some 3,000 km (1,860 miles) beneath the surface. The changes, it's thought, are caused by alterations in how the liquid is flowing.

"Swarm data are now enabling us to map detailed changes in Earth's magnetic field, not just at Earth's surface but also down at the edges of its source region in the core," said senior scientist Chris Finlay. "Unexpectedly, we are finding rapid localised field changes that seem to be a result of accelerations of liquid metal flowing within the core."

As they continue to move through their third year of taking measurements, the Swarm satellites will continue to study the magnetic field. In so doing, they will continue to provide valuable insights into how the field is changing, while helping us to improve our understanding of what drives those changes.

Source: ESA


Since launching at the tail end of 2013, ESA's Swarm satellites have been studying the different magnetic signals that emanate from the planet's core, mantle, crust, oceans, all the way out to the ionosphere and magnetosphere(Credit: ESA/ATG Medialab)

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

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