Showing posts with label Middle East. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Middle East. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 21, 2017

Conversations with Melchizedek – “The Serpent’s head has been cut off” – ISIS Loses Caliphate

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Stranger than life coalitions join forces to destroy terrorist dreams for a caliphate.


Here is the 8th century caliphate that served as the model for the 21st century takeover.

  
Not even celebrated script writers for fiction could come up with the scenario that saw an end to the terrorist caliphate after just a couple of years.  Here is the timetable for the terrorist efforts to create and keep a caliphate.


ISIS Timetable





October 17, 2017 - ISIS loses control of its self-declared capital, the Syrian city of Raqqa. US-backed forces fighting in Raqqa say "major military operations" have ended, though there are still pockets of resistance in the city.


Forming the Caliphate

ISIS became the most feared terror group in the world when they defied all odds and took control of a wide swath of land in Iraq and Syria as the world super powers were caught sleeping at the switch.  After the collapse of intelligence and inability to react from both the USA and Russia, not to mention all the Arab nations in the Middle East, ISIS became a household name.


Ever since that fateful day, June 29, 2014, we witnessed one of the most brutal, morally corrupt reigns in modern history.  In no time millions and millions of people were killed or driven from their homes in Syria as a civil war and a terrorist war merged in the midst of the carnage already underway.



Suddenly both Obama and Putin looked foolish and weak.  In the midst of the chaos, the two most unlikely partners in war, Russia and the United States, each formed their own bizarre coalition to recapture the land from ISIS, who was rapidly spreading their brand of terror throughout the world.



A look at the two coalitions defied belief.


The Russian Coalition


In the Russian coalition was the hated President of Syria, the target of a civil war well underway.  Unfortunately, the many factors in Syria opposed to President Bashar Hafez al-Assad ( [baʃˈʃaːr ˈħaːfezˤ elˈʔasad], also commander-in-chief of the Syrian Armed Forces, General Secretary of the ruling Ba'ath Party, and Regional Secretary of the party's branch in Syria, failed to unite so there were many different rebel groups fighting the Assad forces. 


The Russian coalition also included the nation of Iran, with the tempestuous Mullahs and anti-American attitude ever since they overthrew the American backed Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi in 1979.


In other words, one side consisted of Russia, recklessly attempting to re-establish the Russian Empire or Soviet Union and former super-power and enemy of the USA.  They were joined by Syria, whose leader Assad President Obama demanded must be removed from office.  Finally, Iran, whose hatred of the USA by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and other religious leaders has extended nearly four decades.


Russia, Syria, and Iran.


The American Coalition

Obama pledged the American war machine including massive airborne firepower and an endless fleet of deadly drones while attempting to minimize American troop involvement.  The USA joined Kurdish rebels who were fighting the Egyptians at the time, allies of the USA, the rebels agreed to declare ISIS their enemy and join the USA coalition.  There was also the Iraq military with the lukewarm support of the Iraq leadership in the coalition.  Finally, there were Syrian rebels, one of the many groups, committed to overthrowing the President of Syria.   

USA, Kurd rebels, Iraq, Syrian rebels.
  

Somehow these two coalitions, filled with enemies of enemies of enemies of friends, managed to coordinate their efforts to wipe out ISIS while continuing their rivalries to wipe out each other.  Looked at from a different perspective, you have Trump, Putin, Assad, the Ayatollahs and Mullahs, Kurdish and Syrians rebels, joining to wipe out ISIS.


Melchizedek declares the serpent is dead.

Surprisingly, this was achieved October 17 and on October 18 Melchizedek said “the head of the serpent has been cut off.”


In way of explanation, he meant that without their headquarters, their capital city, their stolen money, and their caliphate, the terror movement cannot function as before.  All major resources of the terror group including bank accounts and cash were captured by the Americans and Russians.



Drones, American and Russian warplanes had blasted most of the terror framework to oblivion and sophisticated terror plans and attacks could no longer be mounted against the west.  This does not end terror, but means attacks by single person affiliates in foreign countries will be the pattern for some time to come.


From a spiritual perspective the pendulum is swinging back toward the light after years of embracing the dark.  The defeat of the rebels is a huge win after nearly two decades of fighting in the Middle East.  The nature of the coalition with so many opposing forces joining together shows the enemies can work together.  The time has come.

Syria aftermath – the Refugees

The Mercy Corp is one of the refugee support groups attempting to help overcome the worst refugee crisis in modern history.  Following is their latest report on the aftermath of the fall of ISIS.


The Syrian conflict has created the worst humanitarian crisis of our time. Half the country’s prewar population — more than 11 million people — have been killed or forced to flee their homes.

Families are struggling to survive inside Syria, or make a new home in neighboring countries. Others are risking their lives on the way to Europe, hoping to find acceptance and opportunity. And harsh winters and hot summers make life as a refugee even more difficult. At times, the effects of the conflict can seem overwhelming.

But one fact is simple: millions of Syrians need our help. According to the U.N., $4.6 billion was required to meet the urgent needs of the most vulnerable Syrians in 2017 — but less than half (only $1.7 billion) has been received.

Nearly eight years since it began, the war has killed more than 480,000 people. Crowded cities have been destroyed and horrific human rights violations are widespread. Basic necessities like food and medical care are sparse.

The U.N. estimates that 6.3 million people are internally displaced. When you also consider refugees, well over half of the country’s prewar population of 22 million is in need of urgent humanitarian assistance, whether they still remain in the country or have escaped across the borders.

QUICK FACTS: WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE SYRIA CRISIS

The Syrian conflict has created the worst humanitarian crisis of our time. Half the country’s prewar population — more than 11 million people — have been killed or forced to flee their homes.
Families are struggling to survive inside Syria, or make a new home in neighboring countries. Others are risking their lives on the way to Europe, hoping to find acceptance and opportunity. And harsh winters and hot summers make life as a refugee even more difficult. At times, the effects of the conflict can seem overwhelming.

But one fact is simple: millions of Syrians need our help. According to the U.N., $4.6 billion was required to meet the urgent needs of the most vulnerable Syrians in 2017 — but less than half (only $1.7 billion) has been received.

When did the crisis start?
Anti-government demonstrations began in March of 2011, as part of the Arab Spring. But the peaceful protests quickly escalated after the government's violent crackdown, and armed opposition groups began fighting back.


By July, army defectors had loosely organized the Free Syrian Army and many civilian Syrians took up arms to join the opposition. Divisions between secular and religious fighters, and between ethnic groups, continue to complicate the politics of the conflict.

What is happening to Syrians caught in the war?
Nearly eight years since it began, the war has killed more than 480,000 people. Crowded cities have been destroyed and horrific human rights violations are widespread. Basic necessities like food and medical care are sparse.


The U.N. estimates that 6.3 million people are internally displaced. When you also consider refugees, well over half of the country’s pre-war population of 22 million is in need of urgent humanitarian assistance, whether they still remain in the country or have escaped across the borders.

The situation in Syria went from bad to worse when outside parties became involved in the conflict in the fall of 2015. As conflict intensifies, our teams on the ground have seen an increase in the number of civilian casualties and families forced to leave their homes in search of safety.

In December 2016, fighting in Aleppo City intensified and the warring parties came to an agreement to evacuate East Aleppo. People, including some of our own team members, were forced to flee their homes and the city they had lived in all their lives, leaving their belongings behind. We met those who made it out with critical supplies in areas of northern Syria. Now, even more Syrians have been displaced.

What is happening in Raqqa?
Raqqa is located in northern Syria, along the northeast bank of the Euphrates River. Prior to the war, it had a population of around 220,000, making it Syria’s sixth-largest city.
ISIS captured the city in 2013 and one year later declared it as its capital in Syria. Approximately 200,000 people fled in the battle for Raqqa and displacement camps are overflowing.
In October 2017, the city was retaken from ISIS, but the human crisis is far from over. The UN estimates that 80% of the city is now uninhabitable, water sources have been damaged by the conflict and there are no health services available in the city. Families are eager to get home or to find more permanent shelter. No one wants to spend this winter under a tent.

Where are they fleeing to?
More than 6.3 million people have fled their homes and remain displaced within Syria. They live in informal settlements, crowded in with extended family or sheltering in damaged or abandoned buildings. Some people survived the horrors of multiple displacements, besiegement, hunger and disease and fled to areas where they thought they would be safe, only to find themselves caught up in the crossfire once again. Across northern Syria, we are seeing that 20-60% of the population is made up of people who have had to flee their homes — many of them more than once.



Millions of Syrian refugees are living in Jordan and Lebanon, where Mercy Corps has been addressing their needs since 2012. In the region’s two smallest countries, weak infrastructure and limited resources are nearing a breaking point under the strain.
In August 2013, more Syrians escaped into northern Iraq at a newly-opened border crossing. Now they are trapped by that country's own internal conflict, and Iraq is struggling to meet the needs of Syrian refugees on top of more than 3 million internally displaced Iraqis — efforts that we are working to support.
More than 3 million Syrian refugees have fled across the border into Turkey, overwhelming urban host communities and creating new cultural tensions.


Many Syrians are also deciding they are better off starting over in Europe, attempting the dangerous trip across the Mediterranean Sea from Turkey to Greece. Not all of them make it across alive. Those who do make it still face steep challenges — resources are strained, services are minimal and much of the route into western Europe has been closed.

How are people escaping?
Thousands of Syrians flee their country every day. They often decide to finally escape after seeing their neighborhoods attacked or family members killed.

The risks on the journey to the border can be as high as staying: Families walk for miles through the night to avoid being shot at by snipers or being caught by warring parties who will kidnap young men to fight for their cause.




How many refugees are there?
According to the U.N., more than 11 million Syrians have been displaced from their homes — enough people to fill roughly 200 Yankee Stadiums. This includes about 5.2 million refugees who have been forced to seek safety in neighboring countries.

Every year of the conflict has seen an exponential growth in refugees. In July 2012, there were 100,000 refugees. One year later, there were 1.5 million. That tripled by the end of 2015.
There are now 5.2 million Syrians scattered throughout the region, making them the world's largest refugee population under the United Nations' mandate. It's the worst exodus since the Rwandan genocide 23 years ago.


Do all refugees live in camps?
The short answer: no. Only 1 in 11 Syrian refugees live in camps. The rest are struggling to settle in unfamiliar urban communities or have been forced into informal rural environments.

Jordan’s Zaatari, the first official refugee camp that opened in July 2012, gets the most news coverage because it is the destination for newly-arrived refugees. It is also the most concentrated settlement of refugees: Approximately 80,000 Syrians live in Zaatari, making it one of the country’s largest cities.

The formerly barren desert is crowded with acres of white tents, makeshift shops line a “main street” and sports fields and schools are available for children.

Azraq, a camp opened in April 2014, is carefully designed to provide a sense of community and security, with steel caravans instead of tents, a camp supermarket, and organized "streets" and "villages."
Because Jordan’s camps are run by the government and the U.N. — with many partner organizations like Mercy Corps coordinating services — they offer more structure and support. But many families feel trapped, crowded, and even farther from any sense of home, so they seek shelter in nearby towns.



PO Box 2669, Dept W
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Wednesday, December 21, 2016

Happy Holidays to all my friends around the world!




OUR HOLIDAY GREETING FOR YOU

For all of the world we offer hope for world peace and wish you happy holidays for (Christian) Christmas, (African) Kwanzaa, (Hispanic) Las Posadad-Noche Buena-Navidad, (Jewish) Hanukkah-Rosh Hashanah, (Persian) Yalda, (Islamic) Eid al-Adha-Muharram, (Buddhist) Rohatsu, (Hindu) Sankranti, (Celtic) Winter Solstice and (Chinese) New Year.

Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays

Feliz Navidad y Felices Fiestas

Joyeux Noël et joyeuses fêtes

Buon Natale e Buone Feste

Frohe Weihnachten und frohe Feiertage

Vrolijke Kerstmis en Gelukkige Vakantie

Καλα Χριστουγεννα και καλες διακοπες

Feliz Natal e Boas Festas

И Рождеством Христовым праздники

メリークリスマス休暇で幸せ

聖誕快樂,節日快樂

This is Rockefeller Center in NYC - the America we want you to remember.


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From the Coltons Point Times -- have a great, safe and loving holidays....

Classic Christmas videos - American style


    
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Saturday, September 24, 2016

Why Americans struggle to understand radical Islamic terrorism




According to The New American Encyclopedic Dictionary, "An Exhaustive Dictionary of The English Language Practical and Comprehensive published by J. A. Hill and Company of New York in 1906, "bias" of things not material is defined as: "The state of mentally or morally inclining to one side; inclination of the mind, heart or will; that which causes such an inclination, leaning or tendency."

In Crabb: English Synonyms, Crabb thus distinguishes between bias, prepossession, and prejudice: "Bias marks the state of the mind; prepossession applies either to the general or particular state of the feelings, prejudice is employed only for opinions. Children may receive an early bias that influences their future character and destiny. Prepossessions spring from casualties; they do not exist in young minds. Prejudices are the fruits of a contracted education. A bias may be overpowered, a prepossession overcome, and a prejudice corrected or removed. We may be biased for or against; we are always prepossessed in favor, and mostly prejudiced against.


Is there is a bias in America based on suspicion of the intent of the Muslim people's of the world and is it based on the history and modern actions of the Muslim world, in particular the actions of the mainstream Muslim factions. The majority of Muslims belong to one of two denominations, the Sunni and the Shi'a.

According to Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, in Muslim tradition, Muhammad is viewed as the last and the greatest in a series of prophets—as the man closest to perfection, the possessor of all virtues. For the last 22 years of his life, in 610 AD, beginning at age 40, Muhammad started receiving revelations from God. The content of these revelations, known as the Qur'an, was memorized and recorded by his companions. It has been 1400 years since Muhammad started receiving revelations from God.


Sunni Muslims are the largest denomination of Islam, comprising up to 90% or nine-tenths of the total Muslim population in the world. They are often referred to as Ahl as-Sunnah wa’l-Jamā‘h or Ahl as-Sunnah.

The word Sunni comes from the word sunnah, which means the teachings and actions or examples of the Islamic prophet, Muhammad. Therefore, the term "Sunni" refers to those who follow or maintain the sunnah of the prophet Muhammad.

The Sunni believe that Muhammad did not specifically appoint a successor to lead the Muslim ummah (community) before his death, and after an initial period of confusion, a group of his most prominent companions gathered and elected Abu Bakr Siddique—Muhammad's close friend and a father-in-law—as the first caliph of Islam. Sunni Muslims regard the first four caliphs—Abu Bakr, `Umar ibn al-Khattāb, Uthman Ibn Affan and Ali ibn Abu Talib—as "al-Khulafā’ur-Rāshidūn" or "The Rightly Guided Caliphs." Sunnis also believe that the position of caliph may be democratically chosen, but after the Rashidun, the position turned into a hereditary dynastic rule. After the fall of the Ottoman Empire in 1923, there has never been another caliph as widely recognized in the Muslim world.


Shia Islam (sometimes Shi'a or Shi'ite), is the second-largest denomination of Islam, comprising anywhere between 10% or one-tenth to 13% of the total Muslim population in the world. Shi'a Muslims—though a minority in the Muslim world—constitute the majority of the populations in Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Iran, and Iraq, as well as a plurality in Lebanon and Yemen.

In addition to believing in the authority of the Qur'an and teachings of the Muhammad, Shi'a believe that his family—the Ahl al-Bayt (the People of the House), including his descendants known as Imams—have special spiritual and political rule over the community and believe that Ali ibn Abi Talib, Muhammad's cousin and son-in-law, was the first of these Imams and was the rightful successor to Muhammad, and thus reject the legitimacy of the first three Rashidun caliphs.


The Shi'a Islamic faith is vast and inclusive of many different groups. There are various Shi'a theological beliefs, schools of jurisprudence, philosophical beliefs, and spiritual movements. The Shi'a identity emerged soon after the death of 'Umar Ibnil-Khattab—the second caliph—and Shi'a theology was formulated in the second century and the first Shi'a governments and societies were established by the end of the ninth century.

Kharijite (lit. "those who seceded") is a general term embracing a variety of Muslim sects which, while originally supporting the Caliphate of Ali, eventually seceded after his son Imam Hasan negotiated with Mu'awiya during the 7th Century Islamic civil war (First Fitna). Their complaint was that the Imam must be spiritually pure, and that Hasan's compromise with Mu'awiya was a compromise of his spiritual purity, and therefore of his legitimacy as Imam or Caliph. While there are few remaining Kharijite or Kharijite-related groups, the term is sometimes used to denote Muslims who refuse to compromise with those with whom they disagree.

Sufism is a mystical-ascetic form of Islam. By focusing on the more spiritual aspects of religion, Sufis strive to obtain direct experience of God by making use of "intuitive and emotional faculties" that one must be trained to use. Sufis usually considered Sufism to be complementary to orthodox Islam.


Once Muhammad lived and provided the Qur'an by 632 AD the various factions fought a 7th century civil war before undertaking 500 years of war against the Christians for control of the Western World. The initial Muslim conquest of Syria in the 7th century under the Rashidun Caliphs began the battle between the Christians and Muslims. After the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Christians and Muslims the wars ended with Muslims in control of most Middle East nations and Christianity split between the Latin and Greek sects.

By the time Christianity reached about 1400 years of age the factions within Christianity forced the Protestant Reformation in the 16th and 17th centuries and the break up of Christianity into many independent denominations.

Ironically, the Muslim factions have now existed for 1400 years and in country after country they have turned on each other in brutal wars, suppression of competing sects, and acts of genocide that have left a sense of fear, distrust and anxiety in the Christian and Jewish worlds. Is it not surprising? If the Muslim sects can justify Holy Wars against each other in this modern age what is to stop wars with us? Just look at the tens of thousands of civilian Muslim deaths at the hands of radical Muslims in Iraq and Afghanistan. This is in the news every day.


History is a brutal lesson in fact over fiction. The origins of terrorism within the Muslim factions is no surprise as radical extremists with a religious foundation have been around for centuries. There is no single voice for the Muslim world and no central control of order to that world. Until those elements of the Muslim world can overcome their own hatred for each other and then their hatred for the Christian and Jewish so called infidels, bias will exist and caution is warranted.

Just as the Christians had to overcome the violence and bloodshed of the ill advised Crusades and the Protestant Reformation in order for Christianity to evolve, so to must the Muslim world overcome the bitter wars and rivalry of secular and non-secular violence and the offshoots of terrorism that attempt to destroy any perceived effort to threaten the single domination of one religious sect over any government in a multi-cultural and religiously diverse world.


Any bias of unease or misunderstanding on the part of Americans toward the Muslim world can be changed, if the Muslim world evolves as other religions have evolved. When radicalism and terrorism are set aside, and they exist in all cultures and religions, there are far more similarities between Christians and Muslims than differences and both share the same God or Allah.

Finally, within every culture or religion are good people.
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