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Four-Star
General Sacked - In an extraordinary
move, the Army sacked a four-star general who was the subject of a
Defense Department investigation into alleged sexual misconduct, an
official said Tuesday. Gen. Kevin P. Byrnes, commander of Army
Training and Doctrine Command, was approaching retirement when the
decision to relieve him of duty was made by the Army chief of staff,
Gen. Peter Schoomaker. The Army announced no specific allegation against
Byrnes, but a senior official said it involved unspecified sexual
misconduct. The official spoke only on condition of anonymity because of
the sensitivity of the allegation. Disciplinary action against officers
is not rare, but it is extremely unusual in the case of a four-star
general. An Army spokeswoman, Lt. Col. Pamela Hart, said records from
the General Officer Management Office show no cases in recent history in
which a four-star general has been relieved of duty for disciplinary
reasons. Byrnes, 55, a Vietnam veteran, ranked third in seniority among
the Army's 11 four-star generals. more...
'Serious
Concern' at U.N. Over Iran - Diplomats at the U.N.
(search) nuclear watchdog agency were debating a draft resolution
Thursday that expressed "serious concern" over Iran's
resumption of uranium conversion but left open the possibility of more
talks on the crisis. The resolution, a copy of which was obtained by The
Associated Press, said the agency cannot confirm that Tehran has
declared all its nuclear materials and activities. But it did not
mention reporting the regime to the U.N. Security Council (search),
which has the power to impose crippling sanctions. The text, which was
to be reviewed later Thursday by the International Atomic Energy
Agency's 35-nation board of governors, expressed "serious
concern" over Iran's resumption of uranium conversion this week at
its nuclear facility at Isfahan, saying the move "underlines the
importance of rectifying the situation ... and of allowing for the
possibility of further discussions in relation to that situation."
The measure requested IAEA chief Mohamed ElBaradei (search) to provide
the board with a comprehensive report on Iran's compliance with an
agency safeguards agreement by Sept. 3.
Iran in Nuclear Sanctions Warning - The warning came
after Iran broke UN seals at its nuclear plant at Isfahan, making it
fully operational. EU countries have proposed a resolution to the UN
nuclear watchdog in Vienna calling for Iran to halt work. But Iran's
chief negotiator at the talks there said Tehran had an absolute right to
produce nuclear fuel. Cyrus Nasseri told the BBC's Newsnight programme
that talks with the EU to continue a suspension of its uranium
conversion work had broken down. Dismissing the EU's proposals of
economic and political concessions as a "package of
lollipops", Mr Nasseri said: "We do not for the moment have
much hope in the talks whether now or in the future."
Reported from Steve Quayle:
- Truck
‘vaporized’ when cargo explodes (August
11, 2005)
- A truck carrying 35,500 pounds of explosives crashed and exploded
Wednesday, leaving a huge crater in a Utah highway and injuring at
least four people. The driver was able to get out and warn other
motorists away before the truck exploded. But a passenger in the
truck cab and other motorists were rushed to hospitals with
injuries, Utah Highway Patrol Sgt. Todd Royce said. Two people were
in critical condition and another was in satisfactory condition at a
hospital in Provo, LDS Hospital spokesman Jess Gomez said. more...
- 42-year-olds
now in Pentagon's sights (August
11, 2005)
- As part of a package of "urgent wartime support
initiatives," the Defense Department has requested that
Congress raise the maximum age for military recruits to 42 for all
branches of the service. According to a report in the Army Times,
the move would raise considerably the age of potential service
members. Under current law, the maximum age to enlist in the active
components is 35, while people up to age 39 may enlist in the
reserves. By practice, the accepted age for recruits is 27 for the
Air Force, 28 for the Marine Corps and 34 for the Navy and Army,
although the Army Reserve and Navy Reserve sometimes take people up
to age 39 in some specialties, the report stated. more...
- Aussie
volcano erupts (August
11, 2005)
- A VOLCANO is erupting on Australia's most
remote territory, McDonald Island, in the sub-Antarctic. The
volcanic activity is changing the shape of the island and ultimately
changing the environmental make-up of its cold and windswept
surface. Environment Minister Ian
Campbell said satellite images had detected the volcanic activity on
the rarely visited island, 4100km southwest of Western Australia. McDonald is better known for its surrounding
waters which are home to the Patagonian toothfish, heavily poached
by ships transgressing Australian waters. Its
steep shores, surrounded by treacherous seas, were last visited by
humans in 2002. more...
- Dragons
in the Tibet Sky (August
11, 2005)
-
 
A photo of two peculiar dragon-shaped objects taken from a plane
flying over Tibet’s Himalayas piqued many users’ interest when
displayed on a Chinese website. The photographer is an amateur. On
June 22, 2004, the photographer went to Tibet’s Amdo region to
attend the Qinghai-to-Xizang Railroad laying ceremony, and then took
a plane from Lhasa to fly back inland. When flying over the
Himalaya’s, he accidentally caught these two "dragons"
in a picture that he took. He called these two objects "the
Tibet dragons." Looking at the photo, these two objects appear
to have the characteristics of crawling creatures: The bodies seem
to be covered by scales, the backs have spine-like protuberances,
and also they have gradually thinning rear ends. Although the photo
caught only a portion of the entire scene, it was sufficient create
the appearance of two gigantic dragons flying in the clouds. This
photo, shown on some websites such as post.baidu.com and other
forums, aroused the website visitors’ curiosity. One person
commented, “No wonder that China is the homeland of the dragon!
Nature is truly mysterious and powerful, it can always produce
spectacular sights beyond people's expectations.” more...
- Whistleblower
broke secret of Russian sub and 'saved men's lives'
(August 11, 2005)
- Without an anonymous phone call by a tearful
woman to a local radio station, the world may have heard too late
about the Russian submarine stranded in the Pacific to save its
seven crew, the journalist who took the call claimed Tuesday. Guzel Latypova, a journalist in the port city of
Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, says the mysterious caller shattered an
official silence and in doing so pressured the authorities to look
abroad for help in mounting the rescue. The
telephone rang at Radio 3, where Latypova is news director, about 24
hours after the AS-28 mini-sub became trapped 190 meters (625 feet)
under the Pacific. "A woman called in
tears. She was saying that a mini-sub had got stuck with seven men
aboard in the Bay of Berezovaya," Latypova, 32, recounted to
AFP. The mystery caller said she had got the news from
"someone" in the military. more...
Reported from harpazo Ready:
- Mass Prayer Rally
Against Expulsion Fills Jerusalem's Old City (August
11, 2005)
- More than a quarter million people
attended a massive prayer rally at the Western Wall Wednesday to beg their
Heavenly Father to have mercy and annul the expulsion decree. Former
Ashkenazi and Sephardi Chief Rabbis Avraham Shapira and Mordechai Eliyahu,
Shas Party Leader and former Sephardi Chief Rabbi Ovadiah Yosef, members of
the hareidi-religious Council of Torah Sages, former MK Rabbi Menachem
Porush and other prominent Hassidic rabbis all took part in the massive
event. The gathering held special significance in that it marked a rare
uniting of leading, influential Rabbis from the hareidi, Sephardic, and
National Religious sectors together in one event. At an emergency meeting
that took place last week at his home, Rabbi Menachem Porush, a well-known
hareidi-religious leader and former Member of Knesset, burst out in tears,
telling those present that over the past 80 years of his life, he cannot
remember a time where thousands of Jewish families were being expelled from
their homes in such a manner, when 25 Jewish towns were set to be utterly
destroyed, when the destruction of dozens of synagogues and houses of Torah
study was to take place, as well as the desecration of Jewish graves.
"Even in Russia it was not like this," he said. more...
- Israeli
President Asks Forgiveness for Uprooting Settlements (August
11, 2005)
- Israel's President Moshe Katsav asked settlers about to be
uprooted from their homes for forgiveness in an address to the
nation on Wednesday evening at the same time that tens of thousands
of pullout opponents gathered in Jerusalem to pray that it would not
take place. The uprooting of 21 Jewish communities in the Gaza Strip
and four in the northern West Bank is scheduled to begin next week
as part of the government-approved disengagement plan. In a rare
televised address, Katsav, the largely titular head of state, asked
those about to be evacuated to forgive the state but to recognize
that they must obey the decision of the government. "On behalf
of the State of Israel, I ask you, the settlers, for forgiveness,
over the demand that you leave after dozens of years of construction
and [terror] victims," Katsav said. Katsav said that he and
many in the nation sympathized with the pain of the settlers.
"We know that your settling in the territories was an act of
conscience that was also carried out in accordance with Israeli
governments' decisions. You have established thriving settlements
and raised generations of children and youths who glorify
Israel," Katsav said. The 25 settlements slated for removal
were started by various governments on both the right and the left,
some as many as 30 years ago. more...
- Tropical
Storm Irene could slam Southeast US next week (August
11, 2005)
- A renewed Tropical Storm Irene became better organized Thursday
and was gradually intensifying as it moved closer to the East Coast,
forecasters said. "We're forecasting it to become a hurricane
in a few days," said James Franklin, a hurricane specialist at
the National Hurricane Center in Miami. It was expected to continue
over the next five days toward the U.S. coastline from Georgia to
Virginia, though it was still too soon to tell what kind of threat
Irene posed to land, Franklin said. "It certainly doesn't look
like the main threat is Florida, but stranger things have happened.
... It may well turn sharply enough to not make landfall," he
said. Irene had top sustained winds near 40 mph, just above the 39
mph threshold for tropical storms. Hurricanes sustain winds of at
least 74 mph. more...
- Hints
of quake under central USA (August
11, 2005)
- The sleeping giant of American earthquake faults, the New Madrid
zone in the middle of the country, may be showing new signs of
activity. The journal Nature reported in June that a University of
Memphis study had detected a half-inch of fault shift in the past
five years. The movement, detected with the Global Positioning
System (GPS), could be a sign that pressure is building toward a
significant quake in a region that's home to millions. "We go
from nothing moving to a little movement. That's a huge
difference," says Arch Johnston, director of the university's
Center for Earthquake Research and Information. The New Madrid
(pronounced MAD-rid) zone is the most seismically active region east
of the Rocky Mountains. It is a 120-mile series of rifts deep
beneath the Earth's surface along the Mississippi River. more...
- Earthquake
Hits Near Trinidad, Colorado (August
11, 2005)
- A 4.9 earthquake hit near Trinidad, Colo., in southern Colo.,
Wednesday afternoon. The quake was centered about 25 miles southwest
of Trinidad and occurred at 4:08 p.m., according to the National
Earthquake Information Center in Golden, Colo. The earthquake was
widely felt, with reports coming from Raton, Colorado Springs,
Garland, Aguilar and Wild Horse. There were no reports of damage.
- 4.9
Magnitude Earthquake Hits New Mexico (August
11, 2005)
- An earthquake measuring magnitude 4.9 struck near the New
Mexico-Colorado border Wednesday, but there were no immediate
reports of damage or injuries. The quake hit southwest of Trinidad
and west of Raton, N.M., said Bruce Presgrave of the U.S. Geological
Survey. He said the quake was light and not likely to cause serious
damage. Northeastern New Mexico usually gets about four earthquakes
a year, usually less powerful than Wednesday's, according to the
National Earthquake Information Center in Golden, Colo.
- Moderate
quake strikes Nicobar Islands (August
11, 2005)
- New Delhi: A moderate intensity earthquake rocked the Nicobar
Islands in the Bay of Bengal on Thursday, the Met department said.
The earthquake measuring 5.4 on the Richter scale occurred at 5.14
am IST, with it's epicentre at 6.9 North latitude and 92.4 East
longitude, the department said in a statement.
- M4.8
quake jolts Kanto, Tohoku (August
11, 2005)
- An earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 4.8 jolted the Kanto
and Tohoku regions Wednesday afternoon, the Japan Meteorological
Agency said. There were no reported injuries or damage from the 3:12
p.m. quake. The quake measured 3 on the Japanese seismic intensity
scale of 7 in Hitachi, Ibaraki Prefecture. The focus of the quake
was about 70 kilometers below the sea surface in waters off
Fukushima Prefecture.
- Laos
Christians Face Crisis As Government Bans Bibles (August
11, 2005)
- A lack of Bibles and Christian literature in Laos is now becoming
"the biggest threat" to rapidly growing Christian
communities in rural areas of the Communist Asian nation,
evangelical leaders said Wednesday, August 10. The Communist
government-imposed restrictions on the distribution of Bibles
effected villages near the border with Thailand, where churches
experience unprecedented growth, BosNewsLife established. "But
without Bibles and Christian literature, the many new Christians can
not grow in their faith and study Gods word," said 38-year old
Pastor Khampet Deesakoun of an evangelical church in Namtee, a
remote village of roughly 700 people, about 150 kilometers from the
capital Vientiane. The father of six children became "a born
again Christian" 10 years ago and said the small church he
started with a handful families grew into a thriving congregation of
over 400 people. "About half of the villagers have become
Christians, while the rest are still Buddhists or pray to
ghosts," he explained. more...
A
Special Report from Jerusalem - Bill Koenig - [Insight from the August
5, 2005, Koenig's Eye View]
e-mail: watchmanbiblestudy comcast.net
http://www.watchmanbiblestudy.com/
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