|
EARTH
CHANGES
-IRIS Seismic
Monitor
-EMSC
Earthquake Center
-St. Helens
-WA State Emergency Management Division
-Space Weather
-Near-Earth Object
Program
-Current Solar
Wind Conditions
-Current
Solar Images
--------------------------- prophecy/
end-times research
-K-House.org
--------------------------- News
Sites
- Steve Quayle
- Watch.org
- India Daily -
harpazo Ready -
Drudge
Report - Red
NOVA - Jane's Defense
Weekly - Raider's
News
-Hal Lindsey Oracle
---------------------------
Internet
Radio Sites
- 66/40 Chuck
Missler Bible Study - The
Well Network - Turning
Point - Coast
to Coast AM
-Zola Levitt Ministries
- Prophecy
Watch - Spirit
105.3 Christian Music |
Israel kills top Gaza militant after suicide attack
- Israel killed a senior Gaza militant in an air strike on Wednesday
and wounded 10 other people, after it vowed to avenge a suicide
bombing in central Israel. The violence put a new strain on a shaky
Israeli-Palestinian ceasefire and distanced further the chances of
resuming peace efforts that were already largely on hold as Israel
readies for a national election in March. Leaders of the Popular
Resistance Committees, whose senior field commander, Mahmud
el-Arqan, 29, died when two missiles fired from an Israeli aircraft
struck his car in the Gaza town of Rafah, said they would avenge his
slaying. "Our reaction will be painful," Abu Abir, a
spokesman for the militants, said. Medics said 10 other people were
wounded in the blast, among them three children younger than 10,
struck by shrapnel from the vehicle in a residential area as it
rounded a bend on a road crowded with pedestrians. Islamic Jihad, a
separate militant organization from el-Arqan's group, had claimed
responsibility for Monday's bombing of a shopping mall that killed
five in the Israeli town of Netanya. Israeli military sources said
el-Arqan was targeted for having collaborated with Islamic Jihad in
a series of recent attacks on Israeli troops and in weapons
smuggling into Gaza. In the West Bank, witnesses said Israeli forces
had raided a village near the town of Jenin, where they surrounded a
building in search of militants suspected of hiding inside. more...
Israel
shuts door to Gaza, West Bank (December 7, 2005)
- Israel clamped an open-ended closure on the West Bank and Gaza
yesterday, banning virtually all Palestinians from Israel, and
arrested at least 15 militants in a first response to a suicide
bombing that killed five Israelis outside a shopping mall. Israeli
officials also said the army would target Islamic Jihad operatives
in the West Bank, both through arrest raids and assassinations, and
renew air strikes in the Gaza Strip in response to any Palestinian
rocket attacks. "We decided to operate in a much broader, much
deeper and more intensive manner against the Islamic Jihad
infrastructure, and I hope that we will be able to prevent such
attacks in the future," Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz told Army
Radio after a late-night meeting of security officials. The army
said the 15 arrests took place throughout the West Bank, with eight
Islamic Jihad members rounded up in Tulkarem, near the village of
Monday's bomber. The attack, in the coastal city of Netanya, was the
fifth since Israel and the Palestinians forged a ceasefire in
February. Islamic Jihad has claimed all of them, saying its attacks
are in response to Israeli violations of the truce. The closure,
which the army said would remain in effect indefinitely, prevented
thousands of Palestinian merchants and laborers from reaching jobs
in Israel. Gaza's main cargo crossing, however, remained open. more...
Reported from harpazo
Ready:
-
Tehran
shut down amid unprecedented smog alert (December
7, 2005)
- Residents of the smog-choked Iranian capital were told not to go
to work or school for two days in an unprecedented government effort
to stop Tehran from suffocating. With offices in the urban sprawl of
10 million people effectively shut down through the weekend until
Saturday, police were also out in force Wednesday to prevent
motorists from entering a large part of the city without a permit.
Officials hope that will help clear a hideous blanket of
brown-yellow haze -- denser than usual this week due to a total lack
of wind. "The air situation is really acute, but it is expected
to get better after the shutdown," Tehran city council member
Amir-Reza Vaezi-Ashtiani told AFP. "We've spelled out our
complaints in the city council, and the officials concerned have to
deal with this dangerious issue. No institution has done enough and
each blames another. That's why Tehran is suffering." The
government has proposed various steps to resolve the worsening
public health menace, such as phasing out the old cars, mandatory
emissions checks and restricting vehicle use on certain days of the
week. So far, no measure has been effectively enforced. But with the
city choking on its own fumes, Tehran's traffic police chief General
Sajedinia said attitudes were changing. more...
It's
called Apophis. It's 390m wide. And it could hit Earth in 31 years
time (December 7, 2005)
- Scientists call for plans to change asteroid's path Developing
technology could take decades. In Egyptian myth, Apophis was the
ancient spirit of evil and destruction, a demon that was determined
to plunge the world into eternal darkness. A fitting name,
astronomers reasoned, for a menace now hurtling towards Earth from outer space.
Scientists are monitoring the progress of a 390-metre wide asteroid
discovered last year that is potentially on a collision course with
the planet, and are imploring governments to decide on a strategy
for dealing with it.
NASA has estimated that an impact from Apophis, which has an outside
chance of hitting the Earth in 2036, would release more than 100,000
times the energy released in the nuclear blast over Hiroshima.
Thousands of square kilometers would be directly affected by the
blast but the whole of the Earth would see the effects of the dust
released into the atmosphere. And, scientists insist, there is
actually very little time left to decide. At a recent meeting of
experts in near-Earth objects (NEOs) in London, scientists said it
could take decades to design, test and build the required technology
to deflect the asteroid. Monica Grady, an expert in meteorites at
the Open University, said: "It's a question of when, not if, a
near Earth object collides with Earth. Many of the smaller objects
break up when they reach the Earth's atmosphere and have no impact.
However, a NEO larger than 1km [wide] will collide with Earth every
few hundred thousand years and a NEO larger than 6km, which could
cause mass extinction, will collide with Earth every hundred million
years. We are overdue for a big one." more...
-
Strong
Earthquake Strikes Kenya (December 6,
2005)
- A strong earthquake struck the Lake Tanganyika region of east
Africa on Monday, sending workers in tall buildings in downtown
Nairobi fleeing their offices in panic. There were no immediate
reports of injuries or damage. The quake, with a preliminary
magnitude of 6.8, struck at 2:20 p.m. (7:20 a.m. EST) and was
centered near the Congo-Tanzania border, about 600 miles southwest
of the Kenyan capital, the U.S. Geological Survey said. The USGS
said the quake was located about six miles below the surface, and
shook the ground in at least three Kenyan towns, including Nairobi.
It also was felt in the Kenyan coastal city of Mombasa. more...
-
Expert:
Saudis have radicalized 80% of US mosques (December
6, 2005)
- Mainstream US Muslim organizations are heavily influenced by
Saudi-funded extremists, according to Yehudit Barsky, an expert on
terrorism at the American Jewish Committee. Worse still, Barsky told
The Jerusalem Post last week, these "extremist organizations
continue to claim the mantle of leadership" over American
Islam. The power of the extremist Wahhabi form of Islam in the
United States was created with generous Saudi financing of American
Muslim communities over the past few decades. Over 80 percent of the
mosques in the United States "have been radicalized by Saudi
money and influence," Barsky said. Before the 1970s, she
explained, "Muslim immigrants who came to the United States
would build a store-front mosque somewhere. Then, since the 1970s,
the Saudis have been approaching these mosques and telling them it
wasn't proper for the glory of Islam to build such small
mosques." For many Muslims, it seemed the Saudis were offering
a free mosque. However, Barsky believes for each mosque they
invested in, the Saudis sent along their own imam (teacher-cleric).
"These [immigrants] were not interested in this [Wahhabi]
ideology, and suddenly they have a Saudi imam coming in and telling
them they're not praying properly and not practicing Shari'a
[Islamic law] properly." This Saudi strategy was being carried
out "all over the world, from America to Bangladesh," with
the Saudis investing $70-80 billion in the endeavor over three
decades. Barsky, who heads the AJC's Division on Middle East and
International Terrorism and is the executive editor of
Counterterrorism Watch, said this means that "the people now in
control of teaching religion [to American Muslims] are extremists.
Who teaches the mainstream moderate non-Saudi Islam that people used
to have? It's in the homes, but there's no infrastructure. Eighty
percent of the infrastructure is controlled by these
extremists." The same is true, Barsky said, of many of the
mainstream Muslim organizations in America. Many of them are
"pro-Saudi and pro-Muslim Brotherhood organizations." more...
-
An
absence of morality (December 6, 2005)
- It is hard to imagine a people for whom blowing oneself up in a
crowd of innocents is not considered an act of barbarism. Yet it is
hard to escape the impression that the Palestinians, even today,
remain such a people. This clearly was the case at the height of the
terror offensive against Israel, during which suicide bombings were
officially and unofficially lionized by Palestinian society. But how
else is one to interpret the antiseptic Palestinian response to
yesterday's atrocity in Netanya, in which five were murdered and 55
wounded? "I believe that this harms Palestinian interests and
is another act to sabotage efforts to revive the peace process and
to sabotage the Palestinian elections," said Saeb Erekat,
giving the official reaction to the attack. But is it wrong? Is
there anything morally wrong with slaughtering innocent Israelis?
The recent Palestinian political jockeying has, unfortunately, only
reinforced the sense that the relative lull in terrorism is not
related to any second thoughts as to its morality. Marwan Barghouti,
who is serving multiple life terms in an Israeli jail for his direct
involvement in specific terrorist attacks, and who is widely
considered a key architect of the "militarization" (a term
that itself reflects the Palestinian sanitization of terrorism) of
the attacks against Israel, was the big winner of the first Fatah
primaries. Similarly, Hamas is expected to do so well in the
parliamentary elections scheduled in January that PA leader Mahmoud
Abbas is widely expected to postpone them indefinitely. It is
certainly possible that the political tailwind Barghouti and Hamas
are enjoying has more to do with the unpopularity of the PA, either
because of corruption or the general chaos, than it does with
popular support for terrorism. But we Israelis can hardly ignore the
fact that the most popular Palestinian groups and individuals seem
to be those most associated with terror against Israel. In the rest
of the world, particularly since the withdrawal from Gaza, there
seems to be a slight increase in sympathy for Israel's position. But
even in our current post-9/11 day and age, after suicide terrorism
has proven not to be just Israel's problem, there is a barely-veiled
acceptance of the equation of "occupation" and terror, and
therefore of the right of the Palestinians to "resist" as
they wish. There are many realities that should have broken this
equation long ago. Israel has repeatedly proven its support for a
two-state solution, while the Palestinians have repeatedly
demonstrated - signed agreements aside - their refusal to accept
their own state if that means accepting Israel's right to exist. But
even more fundamentally, the Palestinian refusal to break with
terrorism is not just an assertion of a right to oppose Israel but
an expression of the true objective of that struggle. more...
-
U.S.
Army report: Israel can't stop Iran nukes (December
6, 2005)
- Geopolitical limitations render Israel's air force militarily
incapable of halting Iran's nuclear weapons program according to a
new report published the by U.S. Army War College. The report
asserts Israel lacks the military capability to locate and destroy
Iranian nuclear assets. The report said the Israel Air Force cannot
operate at such long distances from its bases. "The Israeli Air
Force has formidable capabilities and enjoys unchallenged supremacy
vis-à-vis the other Middle East air powers, but Israel has no
aircraft carriers and it cannot use airbases in other Middle East
states," the report entitled "Getting Ready for a
Nuclear-Ready Iran," said. "Therefore its operational
capabilities are reduced when the targets are located far from its
territory."
[On Sunday, Israeli Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Dan Halutz warned that
diplomatic pressure would not stop Iran's nuclear weapons program,
Middle East Newsline reported. Halutz was one of three senior
Israeli officials who warned that Iran would soon be able to turn
into a nuclear power.] In an article authored by Shlomo Brom, former
head of air force strategic planning, the report said Israel's
deep-strike air capability was based on the F-15I and F-16C/D
aircraft. At a range of more than 600 kilometers, Brom said, Israel
could not sustain an air campaign. Iran is about 1,000 kilometers
from Israel. "It is possible to determine that at long ranges
— more then 600 kilometers — the IAF is capable of a few
surgical strikes, but it is not capable of a sustained air campaign
against a full array of targets," the report said. An Israeli
air attack on Iran must also include such support aircraft as air
refueling, electronic countermeasures, support, communication, and
rescue, the report said. The mission would also require precision
intelligence. Brom said Israel's intelligence and military community
was divided over the Iranian threat. He said military intelligence
regards Iran as determined to destroy Israel. The Mossad and
National Security Council see Teheran as preoccupied with national
defense and regime survival. more...
Reported from Steve
Quayle:
|