DOWN MEMORY LANES OF A FUTURE PROPHETIC FLIGHT FROM JERUSALEM – NUMBER 3

DOWN MEMORY LANES OF FUTURE PROPHECY FLIGHT

NUMBER 3

March 7, 2015

http://www.tribulationperiod.com/

Assyrian Antichrist will arise in Syria in next Administration

Elam is Now a Modern Day Country occupied by the Iranians.

THE Neo-Assyrian Empire Extended across Modern Day Iran!

Iranian Persian Shiites are fighting ISIS moving across Iraq,

Alongside American trained Iraqi Forces to Uproot the ISIS,

And eventually reach the Shiite Hizbullah army in Lebanon

Which will Link and Bond Iron and Clay Toes from Lebanon

To the Mediterranean Sea During NEXT U.S. Administration

Where This Shiite-Sunni link crosses Syria Antichrist Arises

During next U.S. Administration following President Obama

Begin Excerpt from Wikipedia

Iranian intervention in Iraq from 2014 to March 5, 2015

Following the advance of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) into northern Iraq in the summer of 2014, Iran began to provide military aid to counter the militant advance. Iran launched airstrikes against ISIL positions and provided combat troops and technical advisers to the Iraqi government, Shia militias, and Iraqi Kurdistan.

The Quds Force, along with Iran’s Lebanese ally Hezbollah, are equipping, training, advising, and directing the Iraqi Shia militia (such as Kata’ib Hezbollah, Badr Organization, and Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq) against ISIL. The militia became increasingly powerful after the 2014 advance of ISIL and comparable to the Iraqi security forces.

Strategy and tactics

Tehran‘s strategic objectives in its intervention in Iraq include keeping Iraq’s allied Shia-led government in power and stabilizing its own border.

Iran has attempted to limit its overt military involvement in Iraq as a strategy geared toward avoiding the polarization of Iraq’s Sunni minority, creating popular backlash against Iran among Iraqis, or deepening sectarian tensions. Most Iranian aid has thus far come in the form of technical assistance, the commitment of special forces troops, and air support. Iranian Brigadier-General Massoud Jazayeri stated that Iran could best help Iraq by providing it direction on its “successful experiments in popular all-around defense” that included “mobilizing masses of all ethnic groups.” Iran believes cooperation and unity among Iraq’s fractious militias is essential in its battle against ISIL. Ali Khamenei, in remarks delivered on September 15, 2014, credited “the people of Iraq, the Iraqi Armed Forces and the popular forces” for halting the ISIL advance of the previous summer.

The Washington Post reported Iran has sent more than 1,000 military advisers to Iraq, airstrikes and spent more than $1 billion on military aid.

June 2014

In June, Iran deployed approximately 500 soldiers of the Revolutionary Guard’s Qods Force to Iraq.  Qods Force personnel were deployed to Samarra, Baghdad, Karbala, and the former U.S. military post known as Camp Speicher.  In early summer, Iran also began shipping small arms and ammunition to the Kurdish Peshmerga at the request of the Kurdistan government.

On June 13, Iraqi troops backed by Qods Force units operating out of Samarra claimed to have regained control of Dhuluiyah in Saladin Province, Meanwhile, former Qods Force commander Qassem Suleimani arrived in Baghdad where he reportedly assumed the role of Iraq’s “chief tactician” in dealing with ISIL.

On June 19, ISIL troops attacked Iranian border guards near Iran’s border city of Qasre Shirin.

By the end of the month, Iran had established a special control center at Al-Rasheed Air Base in Baghdad and was flying a “small fleet” of Ababil drones over Iraq. According to the reports, an Iranian signals intelligence unit had also been deployed at the airfield to intercept electronic communications between ISIL fighters and commanders. That same day, Qods Force soldier Shojaat Alamdari was killed in Samarra. Also in June, Hezbollah reportedly set-up a dedicated command center in Lebanon to monitor developments in Iraq. Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah later said that the party was “ready to sacrifice martyrs in Iraq five times more than what we sacrificed in Syria in order to protect shrines.”

July 2014

Between June 30 and July 1, seven Su-25 aircraft were sent by Iran to al-Rashid and, later, to al-Muthanna air base. The aircraft were supported by bi-national Iranian/Iraqi ground crews who had been trained in Iran.  (During the 1991 Gulf War, seven Su-25s had been flown by the Iraqi air force to Iran as a temporary safe haven; Iran later kept the aircraft. It has been suggested these may be the same Su-25s.) Later that month, Hezbollah sent an undisclosed number of technical advisers and intelligence analysts to Baghdad in support of the Iranian deployment in Iraq. Shortly thereafter, Hezbollah commander Ibrahim al-Hajj was reported killed in action near Mosul. The news was followed by an August Reuters story which reported there were “dozens” of Hezbollah “battle-hardened veterans” in Iraq, while the Christian Science Monitor reported the party had deployed a 250-man unit “responsible for advising, training, and coordinating the Iraqi Shiite militias.”

August 2014

See also: Siege of Amirli

On August 21, Kurdish activists claimed to have spotted elements of Iran’s 81st Armored Division entering southern Kurdistan near Jalawla. The reports have not been confirmed. Al Jazeera reported a joint Iranian-Kurdish operation near Jalawla involving hundreds of Iranian troops who left the next day, but Iranian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Marzieh Afkham dismissed the reports of any Iranian military presence in Iraq.

There were unconfirmed reports of clashes between ISIL forces and Revolutionary Guard Corps units near Urmia on August 28.

Between August 31 and September 1 the Iranian-equipped and Hezbollah-trained Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq and the Iranian-backed Kata’ib Hezbollah joined an Iraqi army assault to break the ISIL siege of Amerli. The attack was supported by the U.S. Air Force at the request of the Iraqi army, according to a statement by the U.S. Central Command. (As of early 2014, reports characterized Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq as “controlled by Iran” and operating under the patronage of Qasem Soleimani..)

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