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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
1/12/2018 10:20:40 AM

HAMAS PRAISES WEST BANK ATTACK AS ISRAEL LAUNCHES MANHUNT FOR RABBI'S KILLERS

BY


Palestinian militant group Hamas has praised a drive-by shooting that killed a Jewish father-of-six near his home on a West Bank settlement on Tuesday night.

At least one gunman fired shots at Rabbi Raziel Shevach, 35, killing him as he drove on the highway near the outpost of Havat Gilad, close to the Palestinian city of Nablus. No group has claimed responsibility but Hamas, the Gaza-based militant organization that considers Israel to be its arch-enemy, "blessed" the attack.

In a statement to Newsweek, Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum said the attack was "a result of the Zionist occupation and crimes against our people in the West Bank and Jerusalem and the Al-Aqsa Mosque," referring to the site in Jerusalem that is the third holiest in Islam.

"The Zionist occupation government bears all the consequences of its extreme racist policies," the statement continued.

It remains unclear how many people were involved in the attack, but they remain at large. The Israeli military has launched a manhunt for those responsible and has imposed roadblocks in and around Nablus.

"A number of actions were decided upon in order to locate the terrorists who committed the shooting attack, including security checks upon entrances and exits to and from the city of Nablus and placing forces and security crossings across the city," the Israeli Defense Forces said in a statement.

Israeli special forces were operating in Palestinian villages overnight as the manhunt for the killer of Shevach intensified. IDF Chief of Staff Gadi Eisenkot joined the search. “The main mission at the moment is to locate the cell, to stop it and to prevent further terror events, and also to prepare for further activity in the area over the weekend,” Eisenkot said, according to the Times of Israel.


Israeli forces man a roadblock on January 10, 2018 in the area where a 35-year-old Israeli rabbi was killed late the previous day while driving near the wildcat settlement where he lived, around the West Bank village of Jit near Nablus.

JAAFAR ASHTIYEH/AFP/GETTY

The outpost in question, Havat Gilad, is deemed illegal under Israeli law, but far-right Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman said that he would look into the possibility of legalizing the outpost in response to the attack. “I have also ordered an examination of the possibility of legalizing Havat Gilad," he said of the settlement created in 2002 in memory of the victim of another attack, Gilad Zar.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tweeted that Israeli “security forces will do everything possible in order to reach the foul murderer, and the State of Israel will bring him to justice.”

Hamas has fought three wars with Israel in the Gaza Strip since 2007, the year that Israel implemented a crippling economic blockade on the territory. Egypt also controls a crossing in and out of the coastal enclave.

Israel seized the West Bank and east Jerusalem from Jordan in the 1967 Six Day War and maintains a military occupation there. Right-wing Israelis and the Israeli government consider east Jerusalem to be part of their "undivided capital," and refer to the West Bank by the biblical names Judea and Samaria, believing the territories to be the ancient homeland of the Jewish people.

In response to President Donald Trump's recent announcement that he had ordered the relocation of Washington's embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, Hamas had called for a third Palestinian intifada, or uprising, in response to the move that Arab leaders had opposed for months.


(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?
1/12/2018 4:13:31 PM

Flaunting British Neo-Imperialism in Asia-Pacific

JANUARY 10, 2018


By Joseph Thomas

For over a century, the British Empire exerted control over Asia-Pacific, outright colonizing India, Burma, Malaysia, Hong Kong, Singapore and Australia while influencing and encroaching upon greater China, Siam and beyond.

It exploited the people and natural resources of the region, fueled conflict as it waged war with rival European powers seeking to carve out their own colonies in Asia and left an enduring impact on the region, including ethnic and territorial feuds still unfolding today, e.g. the Rohingya crisis in present-day Myanmar.

Rather than make restitution for its decades of war, conquest and exploitation, the United Kingdom today eagerly seeks to reassert itself in the region alongside the United States who has also spent over a century in the region pursuing what US policymakers openly admit is American “primacy.”

The Diplomat, a US-European geopolitical publication focused on Asia-Pacific, described this development in its article, “The British Are Coming (to Asia).”

The article featured a single image, that of the HMS Queen Elizabeth, one of the UK’s newest warships and its largest. It is one of two “colossal warships” UK Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson recently pledged to send across the globe to aid Washington in its growing confrontation with Beijing.

The author, US Air Force Major John Wright currently serving as Japan Country Director, International Affairs, Headquarters Pacific Air Forces, Honolulu, Hawaii, attempts to construct a positive argument for the UK’s involvement thousands of miles from its own shores.

The article admits that the US has few capable allies in the region willing to “comply with mutual defence needs beyond their own territory.” It admits that the US has increasingly looked beyond Asia for partners. The UK then, is about as beyond Asia as any potential partner could be.

The article notes that the UK has already deployed warplanes to Japan in addition to the aforementioned future deployment of British warships to the region. It also suggests that:

…the U.K. could revive the old trick of acting as a “fleet in being;” its ability to steam where and when it pleased while possessing no major territory would throw off regional rivals’ military calculus and force them to commit precious reconnaissance assets to monitoring the United Kingdom.

In other words, a European military would be deployed in and harass “rivals” across Asia alongside US warships already engaged in regional meddling. This, the author concludes, “would be a great benefit to stabilising the security troubles of the region.”

Yet, when considering what actually drives “security troubles of the region,” it is evident that the presence of US forces far beyond US territory, for example, stationed in South Korea and conducting military exercises along North Korea’s borders in a deliberate attempt to provoke Pyongyang is the problem, not the solution. The addition of British warships and aircraft in the region will only further multiply “security troubles” evident in the author’s own comments regarding the need for “regional rivals” to commit to tracking and keeping in check British warships.

Omitted from Major Wright’s nostalgic review of the UK’s historic role in Asia-Pacific was the concept of “gunboat diplomacy,” where the British Empire coerced Asian states into making lopsided concessions to London or face British naval firepower. Chunks of Siam were carved off under threat of British “gunboat diplomacy,” Hong Kong was outright seized by it and other nations likewise were forced by threat of military aggression to make concessions that benefited only the British.

US “primacy” in Asia-Pacific today closely resembles British “gunboat diplomacy.” While literal gunboats training cannons on the capitals of targeted states is no longer feasible, other means of coercion are. These include options categorised under “soft power” including US-European-funded opposition groups which may or may not include armed components. There is also economic warfare. When Thailand ousted US-proxy Thaksin Shinawatra and his political allies from power, the US pursued a campaign of economic sabotage aimed at Thailand’s seafood industry and tourism sector.

The US also employs terrorism as seen in the Philippines where Manila’s failure to heed US demands was swiftly followed by the appearance of militants from the Islamic State (IS) armed and funded by Washington’s allies in Riyadh. The militant group’s sudden appearance pressured Manila to continue accommodating the US military’s presence on its territory.

Of course, just as the British Empire hid naked imperialism behind the fig leaf of “spreading civilisation,” modern-day neo-imperialism hides behind the pretext of bringing “stability” as well as fostering “democracy” and “human rights” to the four corners of the globe. In reality, UK warships confronting “regional rivals” thousands of miles from London is a direct attempt to upend stability in Asia-Pacific. The British imposing their will upon Asia through the threat of military might undermines regional and national self-determination, the very opposite of fostering democracy. And a nation imposing its will by threat of force is an obvious affront human rights.

Despite these obvious facts, we can expect publications like The Diplomat to continue promoting US-British meddling across Asia-Pacific. We can also expect the many aspects of US-European “soft power” across the region to likewise promote such meddling. However, it should be noted, that Washington’s need to find allies in Asia as far beyond Asia as northwest Europe illustrates America’s waning influence in Asia to begin with. British involvement in Asia-Pacific will only delay the inevitable removal of US influence from the region. The only question is, for how long and at what cost to both the British taxpayers and the people of Asia who must stave off attempts to disrupt, destabilise and destroy their hard-earned independence and achievements post-British Empire.

Joseph Thomas is chief editor of Thailand-based geopolitical journal, The New Atlas and contributor to the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook”, where this article first appeared.


(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?
1/12/2018 4:47:41 PM

20 hours ago

Inside Mosul Dam, Iraq's biggest potential weapon of mass destruction



Mosul Dam: Race to fix a 'weapon of mass destruction'

The race is on to fix Mosul Dam after ISIS occupation and war left the structure in danger of collapsing which can potentially harm millions of lives.

From the crack of dawn to a starry dusk, hundreds of technicians from around the world can be seen against a backdrop of pale-colored mountains and a still, sapphire reservoir. It appears serene and picturesque, but those workers are rushing to salvage Iraq’s deteriorating Mosul Dam – which was once under ISIS control and straddles the Tigris River just 40 miles upstream from the city of Mosul.

Failure to reinforce and maintain the dam could mean unleashing what is, in effect, a potential weapon of mass destruction.

dam8

Mosul Dam (Fox News/Hollie McKay )

“When we started, the risk assessment regarding the potential fate of the dam was very high. And ISIS had stolen everything that was here,” Carlos Morales, deputy project manager for Trevi, the Italian company awarded the repair and maintenance contract to prevent catastrophe, told Fox News on a recent exclusive visit to Mosul Dam.

The dam, the largest in the country with the capacity to hold 3 trillion gallons of water, controls the flow of the Tigris River north of Mosul and supplies electricity to more than a million residents. The Army Corps of Engineers estimates that if the dam ruptures, it will send floodwaters crashing more than 200 miles downstream – swallowing villages and much of Mosul City with waves as high as 80 feet. In addition, floodwaters could reach as far as Baghdad and potentially result in the loss and displacement of millions of lives and up to $20 billion in damages.

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Mosul Dam (Fox News/Hollie McKay )

Furthermore, a 2015 study from the European Commission’s Science Center concluded that even a partial fissure that released just one quarter of its full capacity would be disastrous. The concern even prompted an urgent memo from the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad in March 2016, cautioning Americans to “avoid areas within three miles of the river and have a plan in case of emergency.”

dam2

Construction on Mosul Dam (Fox News/Hollie McKay )

Progress is being made. Since the emergency work began just over a year ago, some 15,000 metric tons of cement have been poured into the 370-foot structure and more than 150 miles of electrical grids have been installed. Also, some of the “critical grouting,” the pumping of a mixture of clay, water and cement into the dangerously soft bed of gypsum on which the dam wall rests has been completed. Another year of critical grouting is planned.

The dam, which has been a cause of concern since it was built in 1984 and known at the time as the “Saddam Dam,” was captured by ISIS in August 2014 in the early onslaught of the terror group. Although it only controlled the area for 10 days before being run out by Kurdish and Iraqi forces, the massive structure has deteriorated badly as it has not received mandatory maintenance from either ISIS or, subsequently, coalition forces.

The Trevi Group is calling its work a “success” -- so far -- yet the intense pace of its work must be maintained for the sake of scores of lives downstream of the dam. The Iraqi government has not yet officially renewed the group’s contract, which the Iraqi government says was worth about $300 million and funded in large part with a loan from the World Bank. That contract expires this spring.

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Chinese memorial for workers who died constructing Mosul Dam (Fox News/Hollie McKay )

Discussions are underway about continuing the Trevi partnership into 2019, as the Iraqi government has acknowledged ongoing risks to the dam, an officials with the Corps told Fox News.

“Some grouting results look promising, but uncertainty will remain until grouting efforts have progressed across the full length of the dam,” the representative of the Corps said. “The Ministry of Water Resources has concluded that a second year of grouting and training is necessary.”

The Trevi contract also came with the Italian government’s promise to deploy 450 troops to guard the vulnerable area while repairs are underway. Along with protecting workers, the soldiers – led by the Praesidium Task Force of the 3rd Alpine Regiment of the Italian Army – have been training Iraq’s counterterrorism forces and have implemented initiatives to support the local hospitals, schools and families inside the small villages that make up the Mosul Dam community.

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Italian army soldiers train Iraqi counterterrorism forces guarding Mosul Dam (Fox News/Hollie McKay )

“We’ve been cooperating with the Italian taskforce with the objective of protecting the dam and the people around it,” explained Iraqi counterterrorism leader, Maj. Ahmed. “But the idea long-term is for us not only to help in a military way, but in a humanitarian way, too.”

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Doctor at the local Mosul Dam village clinic receives assistance from the Italian army soldiers stationed in the area (Fox News/Hollie McKay )


Hollie McKay has been a FoxNews.com staff reporter since 2007. She has reported extensively from the Middle East on the rise and fall of terrorist groups such as ISIS in Iraq. Follow her on twitter at@holliesmckay



(foxnews.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?
1/12/2018 6:10:58 PM

BRIEFLY

Stuff that matters


STRANGER THINGS

Puerto Rico’s power outage keeps getting weirder and more infuriating.

It turns out that the territory’s utility has been withholding supplies needed to restore power after Hurricane Maria.

In a tense, armed standoff last weekend, FEMA and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers seized much-needed electrical equipment from a warehouse owned by the Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, Kate Aronoff reported for the Intercept. Governor Ricardo Rosselló said the Department of Justice is investigating the power utility after the incident.

The feds quickly distributed the seized materials to contractors — who were apparently spending their time watching movies in their trucks because they didn’t have the supplies they needed.

Because the energy infrastructure in Puerto Rico is more than twice as old as the rest of the United States, many of the parts needed to repair the damaged grid aren’t readily available and need to be manufactured. The lack of materials has contributed to the epically slow recovery on the island.

Needless to say, people are really pissed off. “Hundreds of thousands of families have been in the dark for more than 125 days, people keep dying, and businesses continue to close due to the lack of energy while the necessary spare parts were in the possession of PREPA,” Eduardo Bhatia, minority leader of the Senate of Puerto Rico, told the Intercept.

This week’s drama is just the latest in a string of mismanagement that has plagued the recovery process, including the canceled contract with Whitefish Energy.


"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?
1/12/2018 6:30:59 PM

WINTER STORM HUNTER BRINGS SNOWY WEATHER, FREEZING RAIN AND FLOODS AS IT HITS OHIO, TENNESSEE AND NEW ENGLAND

BY


Low temperatures, fierce snow and ice storms will buffet large areas of the Tennessee Valley, the Ohio Valley and the Northeast as Winter Storm Hunter moves east through Friday and Saturday.

The Weather Channel reported that a front of freezing rain and sleet will pummel as far south as west Tennessee, eastern Arkansas and into the mid-Mississippi.

As the the day wears on, the icy rain will transition to snow or sleet. The rain may remain watery but bitterly cold as it falls on West Virginia, Pennsylvania, central and upstate New York to northern New England. Most of the Northeast, as far as southern Maine should expect rain.

On Saturday snow will remain across most of New York State, and the far northern areas of New England. Sleet and cold rain will continue to plague the Poconos, Catskills and the Hudson Valley, possibly moving further into the west and north of New England.

People walk along a beach covered in snow and ice as temperatures continue to stay below freezing in much of the Northeast on January 7, 2018 in Westport, Connecticut. Following a heavy snowfall last Thursday, much of New England is experiencing Arctic like weather conditions with temperatures plunging well below freezing.PHOTO BY SPENCER PLATT/GETTY IMAGES

The heaviest snowfall is predicted from the eastern Great Lakes to northern New England but snow is also expected to gather further to the south.

Treacherous weather and low temperatures have persisted across the east of the country in recent days as the result of arctic air being pulled into U.S. weather systems. The renewed freezing temperatures will cause ice to accumulate across large parts of the mid-Mississippi Valley, Tennessee Valley, Ohio Valley and interior Northeast.

The ice accumulation will make untreated roads, bridges and overpasses treacherous for drivers and pedestrians alike.

In some areas, the amount of ice could cause weak tree limbs to fall, possibly disrupting power lines and triggering power outages, the Weather Channel reported. This will be most apparent in Pennsylvania and New York state into northern New England as the further south in the Plain States where the largest amounts of ice will be seen.

The National Weather Service reported that the end of a brief thaw that will not stop likely flooding. The warmer weather, which will drop between 40 and 20 degrees fahrenheit in the next 24 hours, will cause rain and flooding over ice-covered and snow-covered surfaces. Frozen rivers are particularly expected to cause flooding from the central Appalachians into sections of New England.


(newsweek)

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

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