Saturday, November 23, 2013

BAD IRAN DEAL - ISRAEL GOS FOR THE GUSTO KA-BOOM

KING JESUS IS COMING FOR US ANY TIME NOW. THE RAPTURE. BE PREPARED TO GO.

JEREMEIAH 49:35-37 (IN IRAN AT THE BUSHEHR OR ARAK NUKE SITE SOME BELIEVE)
35  Thus saith the LORD of hosts; Behold, I will break the bow of Elam,(IRAN/BUSHEHR NUCLEAR SITE) the chief of their might.(MOST DANGEROUS NUKE SITE IN IRAN)
36  And upon Elam will I bring the four winds from the four quarters of heaven,(IRANIANS SCATTERED OR MASS IMIGARATION) and will scatter them toward all those winds; and there shall be no nation whither the outcasts of Elam shall not come.(WORLD IMMIGRATION)
37  For I will cause Elam (IRAN-BUSHEHR NUKE SITE) to be dismayed before their enemies, and before them that seek their life: and I will bring evil upon them, even my fierce anger,(ISRAELS NUKES POSSIBLY) saith the LORD; and I will send the sword after them, till I have consumed them:(IRAN AND ITS NUKE SITES DESTROYED)

JOEL 2:3,30
3 A fire devoureth (ATOMIC BOMB) before them;(RUSSIAN-ARAB-MUSLIM ARMIES AGAINST ISRAEL) and behind them a flame burneth: the land is as the garden of Eden before them, and behind them a desolate wilderness; yea, and nothing shall escape them.
30 And I will shew wonders in the heavens and in the earth, blood, and fire, and pillars of smoke.(ATOMIC BOMB AFFECT)

ZECHARIAH 14:12-13
12 And this shall be the plague wherewith the LORD will smite all the people that have fought against Jerusalem; Their flesh shall consume away while they stand upon their feet,(DISOLVED) and their eyes shall consume away in their holes,(DISOLVED) and their tongue shall consume away in their mouth.(DISOLVED)(BECAUSE NUKES HAVE BEEN USED ON ISRAELS ENEMIES)(GOD PROTECTS ISRAEL AND ALWAYS WILL)
13 And it shall come to pass in that day, that a great tumult from the LORD shall be among them; and they shall lay hold every one on the hand of his neighbour, and his hand shall rise up against the hand of his neighbour.(1/2-3 BILLION DIE IN WW3)(THIS IS AN ATOMIC BOMB EFFECT)

Bennett: ‘Bad’ Iran deal increases need for military action

Economics minister and Jewish Home leader says Israel cannot ‘sit idly by’ while world allows Iran to be 6 weeks from the bomb

November 23, 2013, 9:07 pm 1

Economics and Trade Minister Naftali Bennett (Jewish Home) said Saturday that a “bad deal” with Iran on curbing its nuclear program would “increase the need for Israeli [military] action.”“If there will be a deal which would allow Iran to have the ability to ‘break out’ and build a bomb within six weeks, we cannot sit idly by in this situation and we will examine all the options,” Bennett told Channel 2 Saturday evening.
The Jewish Home leader’s latest statements came as top world diplomats were in Geneva Saturday working on a deal with Iran on its nuclear program, for the fourth consecutive day. It remains unclear whether an agreement will be finalized Saturday.The goal is a six-month agreement to partially freeze Iran’s nuclear program while offering Iran incentives through limited sanctions relief. If the interim deal holds, the parties would negotiate final stage deals to ensure Iran does not build nuclear weapons.A key sticking point in the talks has been Iran’s claim to a right to produce nuclear fuel through uranium enrichment. Western negotiators want Iran to stop enriching to a level higher than its main stockpile and only a technical step away from weapons-grade uranium as part of such a deal. They also seek limits on overall enrichment, and a formulation that reduces the proliferation danger from a reactor Iran is building that will produce enough plutonium for up to two weapons once completed.Earlier this month, Bennett was dispatched to the United States to lobby the US Congress and the public against easing sanctions on Iran in the framework of a possible deal which would see Tehran curbing its nuclear program, just as the Obama administration urged for more time for diplomacy, arguing against increased sanctions.“If we’re serious about pursuing diplomacy, then there’s no need for us to add new sanctions on top of the sanctions that are already very effective and that brought them to the table in the first place,” President Barack Obama said at a White House press conference last week.Bennett, who was interviewed by every major US news network during his trip, said his efforts “created a certain effect which led to clear parameters for considering the Iran deal.”Speaking at the Brookings Institute in Washington last week, Bennett told a US crowd that a nuclear deal was possible, but only if the West dialed up sanctions instead of offering to ease up on them.“I am convinced that if we ratchet up the pressure we can get the right deal,” Bennett said.Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other Israeli officials have consistently warned against easing sanctions on Iran and have called the increase the pressure, arguing that the punitive measures are what brought Iran to the negotiating table in the first place.Israel has also strongly opposed any deal that would leave Iran with the capability to quickly construct a nuclear weapon, leading Netanyahu and others to publicly clash with the US over what they see as a flawed potential agreement.In an interview before his US trip, Bennett said that “the survival of Israel and the security of the Western world” hinged on dismantling Iran’s nuclear program, and not merely “clicking on the pause button.” Bennett said that if, in 10 years’ time, “a nuclear suitcase explodes in New York,” it will “because of concessions that happened in recent days.”

Iran expresses doubt that deal will be reached Saturday

‘Dispute is over wording,’ says Iranian deputy FM as top diplomats gather in Geneva; Kerry urges caution while Hague describes ‘narrow’ but crucial gaps

November 23, 2013, 6:31 pm 7
GENEVA — Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi expressed doubt that a deal between world powers and Tehran over its controversial nuclear program could be reached Saturday, on the fourth consecutive day of talks.“Intense and difficult negotiations are under way and it is not clear whether we [will] reach an agreement tonight,” Fars news agency quoted Araghchi as saying, as translated by AFP. “The dispute is over the wording,” he added, without indicating whether talks would continue for a fifth day.
“We have now entered a very difficult stage,” Iranian Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif was quoted by AFP Saturday as telling Iranian state media.The State Department, meanwhile, announced Saturday that US Secretary of State John Kerry would travel to London on Sunday to meet with Britain’s Foreign Secretary William Hague and the Libyan prime minister, a move which may indicate that, with or without a deal, negotiations with Iran will end Saturday night — at least for this round.Kerry met with top European Union diplomat Catherine Ashton and Zarif for nearly two hours earlier Saturday to discuss the details of the emerging deal, but no statements were issued.The US secretary of state and the world’s other top diplomats joined Iran nuclear talks Saturday, cautioning there were no guarantees their participation would be enough to seal a deal to curb Tehran’s rogue program in return for limited sanctions relief.The goal is a six-month agreement to partially freeze Iran’s nuclear program while offering Iran incentives through limited sanctions relief. If the interim deal holds, the parties would negotiate final stage deals to ensure Iran does not build nuclear weapons.But it was unclear whether the current round, which began Wednesday, would produce any first-stage deal.Hague spoke of “very difficult negotiations,” saying “narrow gaps” remain on the same issues that blocked agreement at the last round earlier this month.“We’re not here because things are necessarily finished,” Hague told reporters. “We’re here because they’re difficult, and they remain difficult.”Kerry and his counterparts from Russia, Britain, France, China and Germany headed for Geneva after diplomats said Friday that Zarif and Ashton had made progress on a key sticking point — Iran’s claim to a right to produce nuclear fuel through uranium enrichment.Details were not released but it appeared the two sides were trying to reconcile Iran’s insistence that it has a right to enrich for peaceful purposes while assuaging fears that Tehran was secretly trying to build a bomb, a charge the Iranians deny.As the talks entered an intensive phase, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said the negotiations had reached “the final moment,” according to China’s Xinhua news agency.Zarif warned Saturday afternoon that the Islamic Republic would not give in to “excessive demands” of the world powers as the nuclear talks entered what he called a “critical phase.”Araghchi said earlier Saturday morning that there were only “two or three more points of disagreement” between the Islamic Republic and the P5+1 powers over the tentative deal. “The two sides are close to an agreement,” he said. “We must see if we can resolve these differences.”
Unnamed Arab officials also told CNN that a deal with Iran seemed “very near.”Others were less upbeat.
Germany’s Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle spoke of “a realistic chance” for a deal but said “there is still a lot of work to do.” Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov told RIA-Novosti news agency that negotiations were very close to a breakthrough but “unfortunately I cannot say that there is assurance of achieving this breakthrough.”French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius told reporters he wanted “a deal — but a solid deal — and I am here to work toward that end.”Fabius’s brief comments conveyed a guarded tone compared to his public comments during the previous round of talks two weeks earlier that fanned talk of disunity among the world powers negotiating with Iran.France’s concern that the negotiators were rushing into a flawed deal with Iran helped delay an agreement during a session nearly two weeks ago.Other obstacles include Iran’s plutonium reactor under construction in Arak as well as a formula for providing limited sanctions relief without weakening international leverage against Iran.The arrival of the foreign ministers followed a day in which diplomats appeared more and more optimistic that a deal could be struck.
Before departing for Geneva Friday, Kerry told reporters he was optimistic that a deal with Iran could be struck — but not over the next two days. Kerry reportedly anticipated flying on to Israel if it an agreement is signed to immediately brief Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on the terms.Netanyahu has been publicly castigating the US over the terms of the emerging deal — which provides for a partial freeze in the Iranian program and the easing of some sanctions — and has implored Kerry not to sign it. Netanyahu has also vowed to “stand alone” if necessary to prevent Iran attaining nuclear weapons.In Canada on Friday, Israel’s Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon echoed Netanyahu’s description of the likely deal as “bad.” Ya’alon, who held talks with his US counterpart Chuck Hagel, acknowledged the differences between the US and Israel over the deal, but also stressed the fundamental closeness of the US-Israel alliance.As talks in Geneva adjourned for the day on Friday night, a diplomat said Zarif and Ashton had made progress on the issue of Iran’s claim to a right to uranium enrichment. Iran’s official IRNA news agency quoted Araghchi in Geneva as saying that Iran’s right to uranium enrichment must be part of any deal, and Zarif told Iran’s Press TV that Iran’s “right” to peaceful nuclear energy, “including enrichment,” must be respected.Israel’s Channel 2 said Friday night that Iranian participants in the talks claimed the P5+1 countries had recognized Iran’s “right” to enrich uranium — a key concession bitterly opposed by Israel as legitimizing Iran’s nuclear program.

Enrichment is a hot-button issue because it can be used both to make reactor fuel and to arm nuclear missiles. Iran argues it is enriching only for power, and scientific and medical purposes. And it says it has no interest in nuclear arms.But Washington and its allies point to Tehran’s earlier efforts to hide enrichment and allege it worked on developing such weapons.Iran has insisted on that right throughout almost a decade of mostly fruitless nuclear negotiations. But Zarif last weekend indicated that Iran is ready to sign a deal that does not expressly state that claim, raising hopes that a deal could be sealed at the current Geneva round.
For the US and Iran, the talks represent more than trying to hammer out a nuclear deal. In style and substance they are an extension of the historic dialogue opened during September’s annual U.N. gathering, which included a 15-minute phone conversation between President Barack Obama and Iran’s new president, Hassan Rouhani.The nuclear negotiations have included intensive one-on-one sessions between US and Iranian envoys, offering opportunities to widen contacts and begin the long process of reconciliation after more than three decades of estrangement. For Iran, it also gives Rouhani’s government a chance to show skeptical hard-liners that dialogue is possible with Washington without putting the country’s Islamic system in peril.Iranian hard-liners are suspicious of talk of nuclear compromise since Rouhani took office in September, fearing his team will give too much at the negotiating table and not get enough in terms of sanctions relief.On Wednesday, Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said his country would never compromise on “red lines.” Since then Tehran has publicly reverted to its original stance — that the six powers must recognize uranium enrichment as Iran’s right, despite strong opposition by Israel and within the US Congress.Still, comments from Iranian officials in Geneva indicated that reverting to tough talk on enrichment may be at least partially meant for home consumption.In Geneva, a senior Iranian negotiator said the Iranian claim to the right to enrich did not need to be explicitly recognized in any initial deal, despite Khamenei’s comment, adding that the supreme leader was not planning to intervene in the talks. He did suggest, however, that language on that point remained difficult and that there were other differences.
Work is proceeding on a compromise along the lines of what the Iranian negotiator said — avoiding a direct reference to any country’s right to enrich but still giving enough leeway for Iran to accept it, said a diplomat involved in the talks.Senior Iranian analyst Trita Parsi, citing conversations with Iranian and US officials, said the draft includes a reference to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which Iran claims is the guarantor of each country’s right to enrich by granting signatories the right to pursue nuclear power for peaceful uses.
That argument is rejected by the United States and its allies, which say the treaty does not directly mention such a right.Parsi said Tehran wants the wording to make clear that Iran is not a “permanent outcast,” but has the same rights and responsibilities as all other signatories to the treaty.Russia and China in recent years have signaled acceptance of Iran’s demand that its right to enrich for peaceful purposes be recognized, and Germany supports the right of any country to that activity as long as it is peaceful. But the other three nations at the table with Iran — the United States, Britain and France — have continued to balk.The last round of talks between Iran and the six world powers ended Nov. 10 with no deal, even after Kerry, Lavrov, the foreign ministers of Britain, France and Germany and a Chinese deputy foreign minister flew in and attempted to bridge differences.The United States and its negotiating partners have signaled they are ready to ease some sanctions in return for a first-step deal that starts to put limits on Iran’s nuclear program.They want Iran to stop enriching to a level higher than its main stockpile and only a technical step away from weapons-grade uranium as part of such a deal. They also seek limits on overall enrichment, and a formulation that reduces the proliferation danger from a reactor Iran is building that will produce enough plutonium for up to two weapons once completed.But they insist that the most severe penalties — on Tehran’s oil exports and banking sector — will remain until the two sides reach a comprehensive agreement to minimize Iran’s nuclear arms-making capacity.No details on relief offered have been made public. And the US administration has not commented on reports from congressional officials that Obama’s team estimates Iran could get $6 billion to $10 billion in benefits over six months for rolling back its nuclear program.Several US senators — both Democrat and Republican — have voiced displeasure with the parameters of the potential agreement, arguing that the US and its partners are offering too much for something short of a full freeze on uranium enrichment.In Moscow this week to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Netanyahu renewed his demand for a halt to all Iranian nuclear programs that could be turned from peaceful uses to making weapons.Israel wants a settlement that is “genuine and real,” he said.“Israel believes that the international community must unequivocally ensure the fulfillment of the UN Security Council’s decisions so that uranium enrichment ends, centrifuges are dismantled, enriched material is taken out of Iran and the reactor in Arak is dismantled,” continued Netanyahu, referring to Iran’s plutonium reactor under construction.“They must not have nuclear weapons,” he told a gathering of Russian Jews. “And I promise you that they will not have nuclear weapons.”

EARTHQUAKES

ISAIAH 42:15
15  I will make waste mountains and hills, and dry up all their herbs; and I will make the rivers islands, and I will dry up the pools.

MATTHEW 24:7-8
7 For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom: and there shall be famines, and pestilences, and earthquakes, in divers places.
8 All these are the beginning of sorrows.

MARK 13:8
8 For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom:(ETHNIC GROUP AGAINST ETHNIC GROUP) and there shall be earthquakes in divers places, and there shall be famines and troubles: these are the beginnings of sorrows.

LUKE 21:11
11 And great earthquakes shall be in divers places,(DIFFERNT PLACES AT THE SAME TIME) and famines, and pestilences; and fearful sights and great signs shall there be from heaven.

1 Day, Magnitude 2.5+ Worldwide

28 earthquakes - DownloadUpdated: 2013-11-23 15:01:42 UTC-05:00Showing event times using Local System Time (UTC-05:00)28 earthquakes in map area
  1. 4.6 19km ESE of Shizunai, Japan 2013-11-23 11:26:42 UTC-05:00 56.9 km
  2. 2.7 21km SSE of Whitehall, Montana 2013-11-23 09:15:09 UTC-05:00 10.6 km
  3. 2.8 76km ESE of Adak, Alaska 2013-11-23 07:53:10 UTC-05:00 41.1 km
  4. 3.7 45km WNW of Anchor Point, Alaska 2013-11-23 06:38:05 UTC-05:00 89.8 km
  5. 3.3 54km SE of Punta Cana, Dominican Republic 2013-11-23 05:57:14 UTC-05:00 93.0 km
  6. 2.9 3km SW of Reno, Texas 2013-11-23 04:43:32 UTC-05:00 4.7 km
  7. 4.9 28km S of Kemin, Kyrgyzstan 2013-11-23 04:42:08 UTC-05:00 9.2 km
  8. 4.7 East of the North Island of New Zealand 2013-11-23 04:36:47 UTC-05:00 9.7 km
  9. 4.6 107km ESE of Hihifo, Tonga 2013-11-23 03:51:42 UTC-05:00 9.9 km
  10. 2.8 14km NNW of Garrochales, Puerto Rico 2013-11-23 03:03:07 UTC-05:00 76.0 km
  11. 6.5 Fiji region 2013-11-23 02:48:32 UTC-05:00 377.1 km
  12. 4.1 Izu Islands, Japan region 2013-11-23 01:59:46 UTC-05:00 462.3 km
  13. 4.8 60km SW of Ocos, Guatemala 2013-11-23 01:49:18 UTC-05:00 35.0 km
  14. 3.9 1km W of Champerico, Guatemala 2013-11-23 01:31:09 UTC-05:00 65.9 km
  15. 4.6 23km SE of Weichanglu, China 2013-11-23 00:44:13 UTC-05:00 16.2 km
  16. 3.0 41km NNW of Grand Canyon Village, Arizona 2013-11-23 00:32:37 UTC-05:00 5.5 km
  17. 2.8 57km WNW of Anchor Point, Alaska 2013-11-23 00:02:08 UTC-05:00 100.0 km
  18. 3.2 70km SW of Homer, Alaska 2013-11-22 22:57:46 UTC-05:00 100.0 km
  19. 4.3 246km ESE of L'Esperance Rock, New Zealand 2013-11-22 22:29:57 UTC-05:00 km
  20. 2.7 10km N of Incline Village, Nevada 2013-11-22 20:11:05 UTC-05:00 6.3 km
  21. 2.8 93km NE of Punta Cana, Dominican Republic 2013-11-22 19:47:29 UTC-05:00 7.0 km
  22. 4.3 4km SSE of Imbert, Dominican Republic 2013-11-22 18:24:47 UTC-05:00 13.2 km
  23. 4.9 39km SSE of Qian'an, China 2013-11-22 17:32:32 UTC-05:00 15.3 km
  24. 5.5 34km N of Changling, China 2013-11-22 17:04:25 UTC-05:00 12.5 km
  25. 2.7 42km N of China Lake Acres, California 2013-11-22 16:53:20 UTC-05:00 2.1 km
  26. 5.3 232km WNW of Kizukuri, Japan 2013-11-22 16:05:11 UTC-05:00 9.4 km
  27. 2.5 201km SSW of Atka, Alaska 2013-11-22 16:02:54 UTC-05:00 38.5 km
  28. 4.4 38km N of Mandali, Iraq 2013-11-22 16:02:32 UTC-05:00 9.9 km 

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