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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
6/11/2016 4:29:25 PM
U.S. military says it has killed more than 120 Islamic State leaders
By W.J. Hennigan
JUNE 10, 2016, 4 : 16 PM


THE SUN.CO.UK

U.S. drone operators had been stalking the baby-faced British terrorist for days with infrared cameras and other sensors before the order came to kill him.

As night fell on April 25, a U.S. warplane dropped a guided-bomb that obliterated the SUV occupied by 23-year-old Raphael Saihou Hostey near Mosul, Islamic State’s stronghold in Iraq.

Hostey, a recruiter for the militants, was targeted by a U.S. military campaign that has singled out and killed more than 120 Islamic State leaders, commanders, propagandists, recruiters and other so-called high-value individuals so far this year, officials said.

The leadership attacks have picked up recently due to intelligence collected by special operations teams on night raids, from captured militants, and from intercepts of emails, cellphones and other communications.

The focus on Islamic State’s command and control structure, including its recruitment and funding systems, has helped weaken the Sunni extremist group as Iraqi, Syrian and Kurdish forces press the militants on the battlefield.

The targeted killings are so well known that militants have built “counter-drone screens” of cardboard and plywood to hide leaders and fighters in parts of Raqqa, the group’s self-declared capital in Syria. They also have belittled the attacks as insignificant.

"America, do you think that victory comes by killing a commander or more?" a spokesman, Abu Mohammed Adnani, said in a recorded message released May 21. "We will not be deterred by your campaigns and you will not be victorious."

U.S. commanders tend to agree that killing Islamic State’s leaders one by one won’t end the war any more than killing Osama bin Laden in 2011 ended the terrorist threat from Al Qaeda.

Lt. Gen. Robert P. Otto, Air Force chief of staff for intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, said leadership strikes provide only a short-term effect. Bombing Islamic State’s oil production sites and cash hoards have hurt the group much more.

“From my observation, when we take [high-value individuals] off the battlefield, there is a temporary impact on operations and then the adversary appoints someone else in his place,” Otto said in an interview. “There has always been somebody else to move into those positions and the fight continues.”

“We cannot kill our way out of this war,” he added.

The campaign, run by Joint Special Operations Command in Fort Bragg, N.C., emerged from the “kill/capture operations” that were used against insurgents in the Iraq war and that were expanded in Afghanistan. The command refers to each confirmed kill as a “jackpot.”

The Pentagon has issued press releases this year to crow about several major “jackpots.” They include Omar Shishani, Islamic State’s minister of war; Rahman Mustafa Qaduli, its minister of finance; and Abu Wahib, military emir for Iraq’s Anbar province.

For now, the airstrikes have “created distrust” in the militant ranks, said Rami Abdurrahman, founder of the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a pro-opposition monitoring group.

Islamic State has executed at least 46 people as suspected spies in the last three months, he said in a telephone interview. Some were accused of placing GPS devices on cars or at locations to signal coalition forces, he said.

“Once they’re being targeted, they start looking within to figure out how they’re being targeted,” said a U.S. defense official, who was not authorized to speak publicly on the campaign. “It leads to them replacing people. It leads to them rolling up people that are suspected spies. It’s a cumulative disruption effect.”

Hoping to stoke the disruption, U.S. aircraft dropped 45,000 leaflets Wednesday over Akashat, an Iraqi town near the Syrian border.

On one side, pictures of four Islamic State leaders had “KILLED” in red Arabic text over their faces. The flip side had a photo of the group’s leader, Abu Bakr Baghdadi.

“Baghdadi will be killed sooner or later too,” the text read. “Islamic State leadership hides in fear of coalition airstrikes while you must remain exposed. Leave Islamic State now, before you meet your fate too."

T. Mark McCurley, a retired Air Force colonel who commanded a Predator drone squadron that targeted high-ranking targets, said the targeting team often can quickly identify a militant leader, but then take its time before launching an attack.

“If you strike too early, it could disrupt a vital source of information,” said Nada Bakos, a former CIA analyst and targeting officer. “From an intelligence perspective, you need to determine whether it’s worth it.”

Once the military begins tracking a potential target, a digital “target folder” is created. It may hold his rank, associates’ cellphone numbers, maps of where he operates, videos of recent movements and other details.

Over congested cities, the military has used drones with a sensor pod, dubbed Gorgon Stare, that carries 10 cameras — instead of one — to stalk multiple targets at once.

The intelligence ultimately is condensed on PowerPoint slides, known as “baseball cards,” that display the suspect’s photo and personal details, including height and weight, as well as targeting details.

If analysts deem a militant responsible for organizing attacks, or if intelligence indicates he poses a threat to the United States or its allies, the suspect is nominated to a combatant “kill list” controlled by a Joint Special Operations Command task force in Iraq.

Hostey, the British-born recruiter, had used the nom de guerre Abu Qaqa Britani. He had encouraged Islamic State supporters to attack civilian targets in Britain and Australia, according to U.S. officials.

He was tracked after a Syrian dentist, Mohammed Rashed, was arrested in Sanhurfa, a Turkish province on the Syrian border, on Feb. 28, according to Turkish press reports.

Rashed’s laptop computer contained information about foreigners seeking to join Islamic State, including three teenage British girls who were recruited by Hostey.

Turkish authorities provided the information to western intelligence agencies. Two months later, Hostey was dead.


(Los Angeles Times)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
6/11/2016 5:07:01 PM

Global Investors Are Fleeing U.S. Stocks at a Record Pace: Chart


By OliverRenick
June 9, 2016 — 9:11 AM COT


What Changes a Market Bull Into a Bear?


The most determined seller of U.S. stocks may not be in the U.S. at all. Investors outside the country dumped $128 billion in American shares over the past year, data from the U.S. Treasury International Capital System show. Despite the higher quality of companies in the U.S., long-term investors may be drawn to the faster pace of growth in other economies, said Stewart Warther, an equity strategist at BNP Paribas SA.

(Bloomberg)

"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?
6/11/2016 5:20:28 PM

Islamophobia Hotline could be coming to your community

So now there is an Islamophobia hotline, maybe coming to your neighborhood, too. This one is set up in Alberta, Canada.

But let’s look at the truth about hate crimes: anti-semitic hate crimes, according to FBI stats, still by far surpass Islamophobia hate crimes, by a ratio of more than 3.5 to 1. One also has to remember that if Jews are more visible, for example, by increasing the wearing of Jewish symbols such as the kippah or the Star of David, then that ratio would likely be even higher. This inflation of Muslim victimology is appalling.

Another question to consider about hate crimes is whether they are accurately based on discrimination against difference of religion and ethnicity. Although hate crimes should never be tolerated, Westerners are becoming increasing intolerant of Muslims, but because of differences in religion and/or ethnicity, but because of threats to their well-being. Examples: the widespread violence in Europe from Muslim refugees, calls to violence by the Islamic State, Muslim Brotherhood advances on our university campuses, as well as the tireless work of “mainstream” Muslim organizations that claim to represent human rights and Muslim advocacy when they are really fronts for the Muslim Brotherhood (and deemed unindicted co-conspirators at the Holy Land Foundation Trial).

These factors sadly sometimes cause an adverse reaction against all Muslims, including innocent ones; and even more so when Western leaders betray their populations — in the name of diversity — by becoming politically correct useful idiots in the face of the quest for global sharia dominance, thereby being complicit to the slow destruction from within.

An important fact to keep in mind about the word Islamophobia came from former Imam, Abdur-Rahman Muhammad, who also once belonged to the International Institute for Islamic Thought. He was there when the term Islamophobia was created, and stated of it: “This loathsome term is nothing more than a thought-terminating cliche conceived in the bowels of Muslim think tanks for the purpose of beating down critics.”

islamophobia pic

“Alberta Islamophobia Hotline getting daily use”, By: Ryan Tumilty, Metro News, June 7, 2016:

A hotline meant to give victims of Islamophobia a place to call has received more than one complaint per day since it was launched.

The Alberta Muslim Public Affairs Council launched the hotline in early April and has received 78 complaints so far. Mustafa Farooq, who manages the hotline, said that’s more than they anticipated.
“Since the line has opened we keep hearing more and more feedback from our community,” he said.
The hotline was set up in response to several incidents of vandalism and other hate crimes directed towards Muslims in Alberta….


(jihadwatch.org)

"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?
6/11/2016 5:37:06 PM

WND EXCLUSIVE

ORTHODOX JEW LOSES JOB OVER 'OBSERVING PASSOVER'


Court brief warns crackdown on holiday recognition 'didn't work out so well for Pharoah'

Published: 2 days ago


BOB UNRUH


Passover

Religious rights – under fire nationwide, from demands that Christian colleges promote homosexuality to forcing nuns to pay for abortion drugs – are the focal point of a new case in the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals.

There, an Orthodox Jew is alleging she was dismissed from her job at a quasi-governmental authority, the
Metropolitan Washington Airport Authority, because she observed Passover.

That, according to friend-of-the-court brief filed by The Becket Fund, is outrageous. And a spokesman says the same attitude “didn’t work out so well for Pharoah.”

“It takes some chutzpah for the government to punish a Jewish woman for celebrating Passover,” said Eric Rassbach, the organization’s deputy general counsel.

The Old Testament records how Pharoah’s army of workers, the Jewish people, were freed from his grasp by God’s power through a series of plagues when he refused to allow them time for their religious observances.

The airport authority dispatched an email statement to WND that said the district court judge “determined that the claims of religious discrimination lacked merit.”

“We have no additional comments beyond the filings in the case.”

Susan Abeles, who worked for the airport authority 26 years, had been allowed time each year to observe Passover in accordance with her religious faith.

In 2013, she followed the same procedure she had in previous years, giving her supervisors notice of her plans and several reminders.

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“However, when she returned to work, her superiors accused her of failing to follow proper protocol for obtaining leave,” Becket explained. “Eventually they forced her into early retirement.”

The case was dismissed at the lower court because of the airport authority’s claims of improper procedures.

But Becket’s brief notes that the agency, even though it was set up by Congress and given authority by Congress, now alleges it has nothing to do with the federal government.

“As the same time, MWAA says it is not subject to state laws either,” Becket explained. “That would lead to the absurd and frightening result that MWAA is a law unto itself. MWAA would not have to follow the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) or Virginia religious freedom laws, giving it free rein to avoid many anti-discrimination laws.”

The new friend-of-the-court brief argues the airport authority is not exempt from anti-discrimination laws.

“Can a governmental entity wielding the full force of law, armed with police and eminent domain powers and tasked with the oversight of two of the busiest airports in the country, properly declare itself exempt from the reach of both state and federal anti-discrimination law? … The law says no,” it argued.

The crux of the case is that while Passover lasts eight days, Orthodox Jews are forbidden to work on the first two and the last two days.

Millions of Orthodox Jews like Abeles have observed Passover for thousands of years, yet the brief charges the MWAA’s policy is to ignore the important religious holiday.

“This case is just one more example of the rampant antisemitism that Orthodox Jews face every day,” Rassbach said. “In recent years there has been a concerted effort to keep the Orthodox out of certain neighborhoods, out of certain schools, and out of certain jobs. The Fourth Circuit can send a strong message in favor of interreligious understanding by recognizing MWAA’s duty to provide reasonable accommodations to believers.”

The brief, with which the American Jewish Committee joined, said: “Passover has been observed by millions of Jews for thousands of years. It is the quintessential human story of an unjust ruler who seeks to impose his will on a disfavored minority, but who is eventually thwarted by divine intervention. Passover has been a vital link between generations of Jews over the centuries, wherever they have lived. Its observance – particularly the recounting of the Passover history every year during the Passover seder – has been part of how Judaism has been able to continue existing despite the many tragedies of Jewish history.”

But for the airport managers, the brief explains, “none of that matters.”

“It’s position is that it can ignore Passover entirely: As long as it does not act out of outright hostility toward Jews, it can penalize Jews for observing Passover.”

But legally, the brief states: “Title VII requires that employers make reasonable accommodations for religious employees just as they do for disabled employees. And governments like the authority are liable if they fail to make those reasonable accommodations, regardless of their officials’ state of mind with respect to the protected characteristic.”

Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2016/06/orthodox-jew-loses-job-over-observing-passover/#iC46xDuIfXp5MZha.99


"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?
6/11/2016 5:54:00 PM
A young man is skinned alive, a sign of new Taliban brutality

In a remote area of Afghanistan, where thousands of years of hardscrabble tribal culture increasingly mixes with a resurgent Taliban militancy, this is how Fazl Ahmad allegedly died.

Local officials in Ghor province said one of Ahmad’s distant relatives was suspected ofkilling a former Taliban commander. In December, militants dragged Ahmad from his house and cut out his eyes in retaliation.

Ahmad was still alive and screaming when the attackers began carving the skin off his chest, leaving his heart exposed. Then they threw the 21-year old laborer off a 10-story cliff, officials said.

“They skinned him alive,” said Ruqiya Naeel, a member of parliament from the area.

The Taliban denied involvement in the grisly crime, the aftermath of which was documented in a recently circulated video and photograph.

But even so, Ahmad’s death is the latest in a string of violent acts across Afghanistan over the past six months. Rattled officials say the 15-year war is taken an increasingly brutal turn.

“The amount of casualties, particularly with civilians, is a crime — a crime against humanity, a crime against Afghanistan, and a crime against our people,” a somber Afghan President Ashraf Ghani said in a meeting with reporters last week.

Since 2001, the United States has invested more than $100 billion building Afghan military and police forces, a judicial system and schools in hopes of moving the country closer to normality. But all that spending appears to have done little to slow a cycle of rage and revenge that has made Afghanistan one of the world’s most dangerous countries.

Horrific violence is nothing new in Afghanistan.

Public executions were common when the Taliban ruled the country in the 1990s, and tens of thousands of Afghans have been killed during the post-2001 Taliban insurgency. Afghanistan, like neighboring Pakistan, also has a long history of cultural and religious conservatism associated with violent retribution.

But analysts say the scale of the brutality continues to evolve as the Taliban becomes more fragmented and pushes out into additional areas of Afghanistan. Younger Taliban commanders also now operate more independently and are increasingly inspired by other brutal acts easily viewed on the Internet, the say.

Over the past month, after a U.S. drone strike killed Taliban leader Akhtar Mohammad Mansour, militant groups have hijacked at least five buses, dragging passengers into the road to execute dozens of them, especially if they or members of their families were suspected of being police officers or soldiers.

There also have been three recent deadly attacks on Afghan courthouses or judicial employees. Last month in Jowzjan province, a reported Taliban militant armed with an assault rifle shot and killed a burqa-clad woman for alleged adultery, according to a video of the crime posted to YouTube.

“There are now tens of examples of public lashings, executions, and killings,” said Abdul Jama Jama, a provincial council member in Ghazni province.

In recent days, the United Nations, Amnesty International and the Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission also have expressed concern over what they view as a hardening culture of violence here.

Brig. Gen. Charles H. Cleveland, chief spokesman for the U.S.-led coalition, said some of the recent reports of violence “looked like the days pre-9/11.” But he cautioned that “the base line is pretty high” for sweeping assumptions about whether brutality generally is worsening.

Still, Afghan officials and analysts are worried as the violence also expands into areas of Afghanistan that until recently had remained relatively safe.

A push by the Taliban, dominated by ethnic Pashtuns, into northern and central Afghanistan, where large populations of ethnic Tajiks and Uzbeks reside, has proved especially destabilizing, officials said.

Once the Taliban settles into an area, its fighters often begin aggravating historical rivalries among ethnic groups as well as stoking more-localized feuds that in some cases have simmered for decades. That is another reason for the growing brutality, officials said.

“They are changing their war tactics,” said Shah Waliullah Adeeb, a former governor of Badakhshan province. “They are trying to show people that the government is weak . . . and show that they are in charge.”

But some analysts say that more fundamental — and dangerous — changes within the Taliban may be leading to greater upheaval.

As the original leaders of the insurgency die, they are being replaced by younger commanders who appear less interested in maintaining ties to the local areas in which they are fighting. These fighters also are more connected through the Internet to the global ambitions of militant Islamic groups, which is resulting in some Taliban commanders’ attempting to borrow the fear tactics used by the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.

This month, for example, local officials said a group of Taliban fighters killed a high school student in Ghazni province by cutting off his nose and ears after accusing him of being a spy.

“The Taliban had always been the village homeboys, but I think that is changing quite dramatically,” said Vanda Felbab-Brown, a senior security and intelligence fellow at the Brookings Institution. “But the younger generation is more accepting of violence, less remembering of the horrors of the civil war [of the 1990s], and much more socialized to the global agenda.”

Other analysts caution that the recent violence is more a symptom of the broader Afghan culture, where a pattern of revenge and killing has been common and disputes among families or villages often have little to do with the war.

“People want to settle old scores,” said Najib Mahmood, a law professor at Kabul University. “You can hardly find any house that does not own a gun because of the war, and people use a gun even for a minor issue.”

That historical inability to break the cycle of revenge is one reason that human rights groups and European ambassadors were angered by Ghani’s recent decision to resume executions of Taliban figures.

Last month, after a truck bomb killed 64 people in Kabul, the government hanged five Taliban prisoners. Since then, the Taliban has pointed to the executions to justify its attacks on the Afghan judiciary.

Some analysts also worry that President Obama made a mistake in ordering last month’s drone strike that killed Mansour, the Taliban commander.

They note that violence in Afghanistan escalated last summer after it was announced that the Taliban’s other former leader, Mohammad Omar, had died two years earlier.

They now fear that the trend will accelerate as new Taliban leader Haibatullah Akhundzada seeks to consolidate his power.

Akhundzada is an Islamic cleric and the Taliban’s former top judge. But many analysts consider him to be even more rigid than Mansour, who was a former Taliban government minister who witnessed the carnage of Afghanistan’s civil war in the 1990s.

“Mansour believed a terrible outcome for Afghanistan would be a protracted civil war in Kabul and the north,” Felbab-Brown said. “Many of the younger commanders don’t have that restraint.”

Akhundzada, in contrast, in the past issued religious edicts authorizing suicide bombings as well as Taliban-on-Taliban executions to deal with dissenters, according to Western intelligence assessments.

“The Taliban under Haibatullah will become even more dangerous,” said Rahimullah Yusufzai, a Pakistan-based expert on militancy.

As a result, Kabul University’s Mahmood predicted, Afghanistan will continue to slide even further away from “the rule of law.”

“It will take decades to see Afghanistan become a normal country again,” he said.

Mohammad Sharif and Sayed Salahuddin in Kabul and Aamir Iqbal in Peshawar, Pakistan, contributed to this report.


(washingtonpost.com)


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

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