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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
12/10/2016 3:06:50 PM
Drought is damaging California’s giant sequoias


“Headache!” is what professional tree climbers yell to warn folks about falling branches.

It’s also what many scientists are experiencing these days as they consider the fate of the giant sequoia, the biggest tree on Earth. Journalist Thayer Walker stomped into Sequoia National Park’s Giant Forest to report “Last Tree Standing” for bioGraphic, a multimedia magazine. (The story has also appeared atatlasobscura.com.)

Walker explains that California’s lengthy drought has felled many shorter leafy victims: 102 million trees and counting since 2011. But at first no one was all that worried about giant sequoias, which can live for thousands of years. Their bark is fire-resistant. They repel insects and fungi. They’re basically indestructible.

So Nate Stephenson, a United States Geological Survey forest ecologist, was taken aback in 2014 when he tipped his head way, way back to look at the top of a great sequoia and saw that it was brown instead of green.

“In more than 30 years of studying these trees Stephenson had only seen two die on their feet. Five years into the current drought, he’s now seen dozens of standing dead,” Walker writes.

That’s why forest ecologists Wendy Baxter and Anthony Ambrose were called in to analyze what the heck is going on. As described by Walker, their fieldwork is basically a kid’s dream (other than needing to wake up at 3 a.m.). They hike into the woods, put on their gear and start scaling trunks that will take them hundreds of feet into the air.

On the way, they take clippings to determine how stressed the trees have become. When things get tough, the trees’ water columns can break. “Gas bubbles form, creating an embolism that prevents the flow of water up the trunk,” Walker explains. Another problem: Stomata, which are tiny pores on their needle-shaped leaves, typically absorb carbon dioxide and spit out oxygen and water vapor. When there’s not enough water, the stomata shut down. If they stay that way, the sequoia will eventually starve.

Climbing a giant is quite a bit trickier than the photos and videos accompanying the article make it look. Walker’s first attempt ends part of the way up, with a sprained knee.


(The Washington Post)

"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?
12/10/2016 4:30:22 PM

HUNDREDS OF MEN FROM ALEPPO MISSING AFTER LEAVING REBEL-HELD AREAS: U.N.


BY


Hundreds of men from eastern Aleppo have gone missing after leaving rebel-held areas, the United Nations' human rights office said Friday, voicing deep concern that government forces could be mistreating them.

U.N. human rights spokesman Rupert Colville also said there were reports that two rebel militias—Jabhat Fatah al-Sham, formerly known as the Nusra Front, and the Abu Amara Battalion—had during the last two weeks abducted and killed an unknown number of civilians in the city who had asked armed groups to leave their neighborhoods to save the lives of civilians.

Syrian government forces pressed on with their offensive in Aleppo on Thursday night and into Friday with ground fighting and air strikes, Reuters witnesses, rebels and a monitoring group said, part of a push to retake all of the city's besieged rebel-held east.

"As pro-government forces have advanced from the north into eastern Aleppo, there have been allegations of reprisals against civilians who are perceived to have supported armed opposition groups, as well as reports that men were being separated from women and children," Colville told a news briefing in Geneva.

"We have received very worrying allegations that hundreds of men have gone missing after crossing into government-controlled areas.

The families of the men, who are mainly between 30 and 50 years old, had not heard from them since they fled a week to 10 days ago, he said, adding that it was not clear whether they were civilians.

"Given the terrible record of arbitrary detention, torture and enforced disappearances, we are of course deeply concerned about the fate of these individuals," Colville said. "One has to ring some alarm bells.

"It could mean that some have been killed, it could mean they have been arbitrarily detained and taken somewhere, we just don't know."

A senior official of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) told Reuters on December 1 that the agency was in talks with the government about gaining access to people fleeing rebel-held eastern Aleppo who were being screened or detained.

Colville said that if rebels were proven to have prevented civilians fleeing to safety, this could amount to a war crime.

"Civilians are caught between warring parties that appear to be operating in flagrant violation of international humanitarian law."

He said tens of thousands had fled the shrinking opposition-held areas of the city, but that at least 100,000 civilians were believed to remain.

(Newsweek)

"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?
12/10/2016 4:48:39 PM

THE FALL OF ALEPPO DOESN’T MEAN ASSAD WINS


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The rebel-held enclave in East Aleppo has contracted by 75 percent in the last 10 days. Syrian government forces and their allies continue to press home their advantage through a brutal combination of aerial bombardment and siege warfare.

With defeat looming, rebel groups are negotiating terms over the transfer of civilians and fighters from the city.

12_08_Aleppo_Win_01Civilians evacuating the eastern districts of Aleppo carry their belongings as they arrive in a government held area of Aleppo, Syria, on December 7. Tim Eaton writes that, while the loss of territory in Aleppo city will be crippling to the opposition, the idea that a victory in Aleppo will soon precipitate the rebels defeat is premature, and the hope that it may provide the impetus for a diplomatic solution unlikely.SANA/HANDOUT VIA REUTERS

The loss of Aleppo is indicative of the weakness of the opposition rather than the strength of the regime, which is reliant on Russian airpower and Hezbollah, Iranian and aligned militia to conduct its operations.

Related: Assad's army pushes into Aleppo's old city

A better way of looking at events on the ground is that the regime has ensured that it will not lose but that it still lacks the capability and capacity to win in any meaningful sense. Control of the whole of the country remains a distant and unrealistic prospect.

In this sense, the loss of Aleppo is not really the turning point that it is being made out to be. While it will undoubtedly be a significant blow to the rebels and their morale, it has been clear since the Russian intervention in September 2015 that the opposition could not militarily defeat the regime.

Combined with the reluctance of US to increase support for the rebels in the wake of the breakdown of US-Russian discussions over a cessation of hostilities, the regime’s progress in Aleppo has an element of inevitability to it.

But there is a major difference between the capacity required to keep fighting and the capacity required to win. Here, the approach of regional powers, Turkey, Qatar and Saudi Arabia will be critical as the US becomes increasingly peripheral.

Should President-elect Trump terminate support for the opposition, Qatar has stated that it will continue. “We are not going to stop it. It doesn't mean that if Aleppo falls we will give up on the demands of the Syrian people," Qatar’s Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani told Reuters last month when the prospect of a US policy shift was presented to him.

Saudi Arabia is also likely to continue to support the opposition. Yet, improving relations between Turkey and Russia, in concert with a Turkish priority shift towards countering Kurdish gains, leaves Turkey’s approach to the opposition uncertain.

For the regime, regaining territory also brings with it associated challenges, as the government will once again be responsible for governing them. The extent which it is able to do so is an open question.

In many regime-held areas, the regime has effectively delegated this authority to irregular forces such as the National Defence Forces and a range of militia as a result of its own limited capacity. It is perhaps in anticipation of these challenges that the regime, with Russian support, has resorted to a military strategy of depopulation of opposition areas through indiscriminate attacks.

It is also important to note that, beyond Aleppo city, the rebels will continue to fight in Syria’s north west, likely shifting towards the use of insurgency tactics in areas where they can no longer hold significant territory.

This will complicate the regime’s attempts to govern areas it has regained and require manpower that it can scarcely afford to spare if it is to launch offensives elsewhere. Even Assad exercised some caution in his comments to state media. "It's true that Aleppo will be a win for us. But let's be realistic, it won't mean the end of the war in Syria," he told Al-Watan.

The next major regime offensive is likely to come in Idlib. But it is questionable whether the regime has the capacity to launch it in the near future. Like Aleppo, it will be fiercely contested by rebel groups.

Jabhat Fateh al-Sham, formerly known as Jabhat al-Nusra, is strong in the province, as is Ahrar al-Sham. Beyond this, other rebel groups control areas of the south, on the Jordanian and Israeli border, while Kurdish-led groups control significant areas of the north, and so-called Islamic State remains in Raqqa.

The diplomatic scene also gives little sign of an endgame unfolding, given the regional and local dynamics. Even if Russia wants a deal to be done after Aleppo – as some suggest – the hope that the regime will choose to make a deal with the opposition looks forlorn given its refusal to make concessions in peace talks to date, when it was in a weaker position.

The regime is likely to seek to continue to pragmatically and systematically pick off elements of the opposition as its capacity allows. The only likely deal that the regime would countenance is one that would negotiate the opposition’s surrender. While defeat in Aleppo may bring that prospect closer, it doesn’t appear imminent.

Tim Eaton is a research fellow for the Middle East and North Africa Programme at Chatham House.


(Newsweek)

"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?
12/10/2016 5:03:36 PM

Groups Demand Arrest Of “War Mastermind” Kissinger At Nobel Peace Prize Forum

"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?
12/10/2016 5:28:50 PM

House Bill Introduced For US Govt To Stop Funding And Arming Terrorists

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

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