U.S. giving GREEN LIGHT for a Cobra’s Birth!
Two L itt
le Snakes may join to become Cobra,
Striking Its Poison Inside Israel In Tribulation,
While 10 Dragon Nati ons
Spit FIRE from North,
When Islamic attack is launched against Israel,
Which Drives Israel Into The Negev Wilderness!
February 21, 2009
http://www.tribulationperiod.com/
In the united Islamic attack against Israel, which I believe is likely to be launched at a point in time between 2010 and 2015, the Palestinian Cobra inside Israel will be attacking the IDF from the interior of the West Bank and Gaza, while two massive Islamic military prongs roar south down the Mediterranean coastal plains and the Jordan River Valley, one from Lebanon, and the other from Syria
Begin Excerpt from Jerusalem Post
PA official: US has given green light for Hamas-Fatah talks
February 21, 2009
Khaled Abu Toameh , THE JERUSALEM POST
The new US Administration has given the Palestinian Authority a “green light” to talk to Hamas about the possibility of forming a Palestinian unity government, a PA official in Ramallah said over the weekend.
The official said that Washington has also given Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak the go-ahead to resume his efforts to achieve reconciliation between Hamas and Fatah.
“The new administration has a different policy than that of [former US President] George W. Bush,” the official told The Jerusalem Post. “The administration of President Barack Obama believes that a Hamas-Fatah government is good for stability.”
The Egyptians have issued invitations to representatives of Hamas, Fatah and several other Palestinian groups to attend reconciliation talks that are due to begin in Cairo on February 25.
Fatah and Hamas officials confirmed that the Egyptians had invited them to the talks.
Hamas spokesman Mushir al-Masri said that in order for the talks to succeed, the PA must first release all “political prisoners” it is holding in its West Bank jails.
An attempt by the Egyptians to hold a similar conference last November failed because of Abbas’s refusal to free hundreds of Hamas prisoners and detainees ahead of the talks.
The talks were originally set for February 22. But the Egyptians announced last week that they were postponing the intra-Palestinian talks following the failure of negotiations with Hamas and Israel over reaching a new cease-fire agreement in the Gaza Strip.
PA President Mahmoud Abbas, who visited Cairo last week, reportedly told Mubarak that he’s prepared to patch up his differences with Hamas. Abbas, according one of his aides, urged the Egyptian president to set a new date for convening the Palestinian “national reconciliation” talks in Cairo.
At the talks, Hamas and Fatah are expected to form five joint committees to discuss ways of resolving their differences over a variety of issues such as control over the border crossings into the Gaza Strip, reconstructing the PA security forces and forming a new unity government.
Ahead of the pl anned parley, Hamas
and Fatah representatives met in Cairo and Ramallah over the past two weeks in an attempt to reach agreement on the agenda of the talks.
Fatah legislator Azam al-Ahmed, who has been participating in the talks with Hamas, said that the results of the last Israeli general elections, which saw the rise of right-wing parties, required the Palestinians to unite “in the face of the new challenges.” He also expressed optimism regarding the prospects of ending the Hamas-Fatah power struggle.
Another Fatah operative, Ibrahim Abu al-Naja, said the fact that Likud chairman Binyamin Netanyahu has been tasked with forming a new government “proves that the Israeli public opinion favors war and destruction.”
He said that in the wake of the “dangerous developments in Israel, the Palestinians must unite their ranks by forming a unity government.”
Meanwhile, Hamas leaders said over the weekend that US Democratic Senator John Kerry’s visit to the Gaza Strip last Thursday signals a change in US policy toward their movement.
“The visit is a move in the right direction,” said Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum. “We consider the visit as an indirect step aimed at ending the boycott of Hamas by the Americans and the international community.”
Welcoming the apparent shift in US policy, the Hamas spokesman expressed hope that the Obama Administration would “repair” the damage and injustice done to Hamas after it won the January 2006 election when the previous administration decided
to boycott and impose sanctions on it.
However, he voiced disappointment over the fact that Kerry did not meet during his tour of the Gaza Strip with “representatives of the democratically-elected government headed by Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh.”
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