Two far left Liberals are paving the way for long awaited FALSE Peace
I’ve known for some 50 years False Middle East Peace MUST Come
I Have Wondered 42 Years HOW The False Peace Would Come
I Have Considered MANY SETS Of Possibilities To Produce It
American Presidents Have Tried MANY Years to CREATE It
We now have the President who’s able to generate It
We WILL soon HEAR A CRY OF “PEACE AND SAFETY”
PRIOR to the DISASTER of I Thessalonians 5:3,4
It has never been a question it WOULD Occur
Only WHEN it would actually come to Pass
I THINK 2010 to 2015 is a GOOD Guess
For the beginning of Jacob’s Trouble
By CATALYSTS Obama AND Peres
Who Shall Influence Netanyahu
Into the final false Peace Plan
Then to Sudden Destruction!
May 4, 2009
http://www.tribulationperiod.com/
I Thessalonians 5:3,4 – For when they shall say, Peace and safety; then sudden destruction cometh upon them, as travail upon a woman with child; and they shall not escape. [4] But ye, brethren, are not in darkness, that that day should overtake you as a thief.
Matthew 24:21,22 – For then shall be great tribulation, such as was not since the beginning of the world to this time, no, nor ever shall be. [22] And except those days should be shortened,
there should no flesh be saved: but for the elect’s sake those days shall be shortened.
Revelation 7:4 – And I heard the number of them which were sealed: and there were sealed an hundred and forty and four thousand of all the tribes of the children of Israel.
Revelation 12:6 – And the woman fled into the wilderness, where she hath a place prepared of God, that they should feed her there a thousand two hundred and threescore days.
Revelation 12:17 – And the dragon was wroth with the woman, and went to make war with the remnant of her seed, which keep the comm
andments of God, and have the testimony of Jesus Christ.
Daniel 12:1 – And at that time shall Michael stand up, the great prince which standeth for the children of thy people: and there shall be a time of trouble, such as never was since there was a nation even to that same time: and at that time thy people shall be delivered, every one that shall be found written in the book.
Jeremiah 30:7 – Alas! for that day is great, so that none is like it: it is even the time of Jacob’s trouble; but he shall be saved out of it.
Begin Excerpt 1 from Jerusalem Post
Peres: Netanyahu wants to make history by making peace
May 4, 2009
JPost.com Staff , THE JERUSALEM POST
“Israel stands with her arms outstretched, and her hands held open to peace with all nations, with all Arab states, with all Arab people,” President Shimon Peres said at his keynote address at the annual AIPAC conference in Washington on Monday, stressing that current Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, a one-time political opponent, “knows history and wants to make history.”
“In our tradition,” he continued, “making history is making peace, and I am sure that peace is his priority.”
In his address, Peres spoke of the bonds “between the greatest democracy in the world and the first democracy in the Middle East,” which continue to “strengthen and deepen” thanks to AIPAC’s “hard work.”
Peres also lauded US President Barack Obama, who was “young enough to offer hope to the world and great enough to bring it to life,” and wished him success on behalf of the State of Israel.
The president applied history to the part of his address dealing with the Iranian nuclear threat, to which “we refuse to surrender,” explaining that that “the fanatic rulers of Iran are on the wrong side of history. Actually, they are outside of history.”
“We have respect for the Iranian people and its tradition,” Peres went on. “Historically, Iran sought to enrich mankind. Today, alas, Iran’s rulers enrich uranium.
“The aggressiveness of the Iranian government is not limited to Israel. Indeed, they seek regional hegemony and want to control Arab states using terror and coercion,” and their terrorist agents Hizbullah and Hamas “target Americans, Europeans and Arabs alike.”
Speaking of his vision for a regional peace, Peres gave two conditions for necessary compromises: That peace be real, lasting and mutually respected, and that it enable Israel to protect its people.
“The Palestinian people have the right to govern themselves, to invest their resources and direct their aid to civil high-tech, not military rockets… books, not bombs – so their people can be free of fear and hunger,” he said.
“Israel is prepared today to bring peace closer. Today,” he stressed, adding that Israel hoped to see the Saudi peace initiative translated into action.
“In pursuing peace, the present government of Israel shall respect commitments made by the previous one,” he continued. “My experiences have taught me that peace is not necessarily the result of detailed negotiations or map-design. Peace bursts from the soil like a geyser. It is beautiful to behold and impossible to contain.”
“I trust that the leadership of President Obama will pave the way to both to a regional agreement and meaningful bilateral negotiations,” Peres said.
Begin Excerpt 2 from Jerusalem Post
Reality Check: Character witness for the PM
May. 3, 2009
Jeff Barak , THE JERUSALEM POST
President Shimon Peres will no doubt allow himself a small smile of satisfaction tomorrow at being the first Israeli leader to meet US President Barack Obama at the White House, but there is more than a touch of bitter irony in our elder statesman serving as a character witness for Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu.
In 1996, when Netanyahu beat Peres by the slimmest of majorities in the country’s first direct elections for prime minister, the nail in the Oslo process created by Peres was hammered home. Although the Palestinians must take the blame for failing to fight terror, Netanyahu also played a major part in ensuring a breakdown in trust through provocative acts such as the opening of the Western Wall tunnel and the building of Har Homa.
With Washington and the rest of the Western world suspicious of the new government, thanks in no small part to the stream of bellicose statements from Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, Peres is being wheeled out to smooth the waters before Netanyahu finally meets Obama. The fact that Obama has already met Jordan’s King Abdullah II and is scheduled to meet PA President Mahmoud Abbas before Netanyahu makes an appearance in Washington clearly signals that Netanyahu is not the most highly anticipated guest in the new White House.
And so, just as Netanyahu needed the decimated Labor Party in his government to present a respectable face to the world, Peres too is being used by the prime minister to provide a moderate picture of Israel’s policies and ensure a warmer reception when Netanyahu finally arrives in the US capital. In particular, Peres’s remarks in Independence Day interviews that attacking Iran would only postpone, and not halt its ability to build an atom bomb, will no doubt have been noted with interest by Obama.
Unfortunately, Peres’ remarks in favor of an international diplomatic campaign to prevent Iran’s nuclearization, as opposed to unilateral Israeli military action, come in strong contrast to Netanyahu’s own statements, such as his speech at the recent state ceremony on Holocaust Remembrance Day in which he warned “We will not allow the Holocaust deniers to perpetrate another holocaust against the Jewish people,” and other speeches in which he has compared Iran to Nazi Germany and its leader, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad,
to Adolf Hitler.
LABOR’S LEADERS, meanwhile, seem so desperate to justify their sitting in Netanyahu’s coalition that they are blithely ignoring the prime minister’s saber-rattling statements toward Teheran, and also his initial insistence that the Palestinians first recognize Israel as a Jewish state
as a prerequisite for any progress in the peace process. Instead, they are lining up to praise him, insisting that today’ s Netanyahu i
s not the bad old Bibi of 1996-1999.
“This guy is going to surprise people” says Binyamin Ben-Eliezer, the minister of industry, trade and labor and party leader Ehud Barak’s closest political ally. “I’m convinced that he’ll come out with a diplomatic initiative and that this initiative will be based on the concept of two states for two peoples.”
Defense Minister Barak himself has been quoted as saying Netanyahu today “is a more mature person” who understands “that it is impossible to leave things in a state of paralysis.”
Barak and Ben-Eliezer say they are basing their comments on private conversations with Netanyahu and, of course, they have to justify to themselves, and their party members, why they decided to join the potentially most right-wing government in the country’s history instead of choosing the honorable alternative of opposition. But for those of us not privy to cozy tete-a-tete’s with the prime minister, we have to take Netanyahu at face value, where he shows no signs of being on the verge of leading a new diplomatic initiative to help bring peace to the region.
Although he did eventually backtrack on the idea that there could be no negotiations with the Palestinians without their first recognizing Israel as a Jewish state, it is clear from his clarifying statement that without such recognition “it will not be possible to advance the diplomatic process and reach a peace settlement” that Netanyahu is deeply skeptical of the possibility of a two-state solution.
At the end of the day, if there is to be true peace, there will have to be Palestinian, and wider Arab recognition of Israel as a Jewish state. But this recognition does not have to be a first step, and it is possible to understand why the Palestinians are not prepared to make such a statement before their existential issues, such as borders and refugees, have similarly been addressed. It is hard to avoid the impression that Netanyahu, in his raising his initial demand, was deliberately planting an obstacle to getting talks off the ground.
US Secretary of State Hilary Clinton seems aware of this.
Her blunt warning at the House of Representatives Appropriations Committee last month that “for Israel to get the kind of strong support it is looking for vis-a-vis Iran, it can’t stay on the sidelines with respect to the Palestinians and the peace efforts. They go hand in hand,” should prove a reminder to Netanyahu that despite the warm handshakes at this week’s Obama-Peres meeting, he will be expected to bring more than just a smile with him when he visits the White House.
The writer is a former editor-in-chief of The Jerusalem Post.
Begin Excerpt 3 from Jerusalem Post
Peres hails Arab League initiative, urges peace today
May 4, 2009
JPost.com Staff , THE JERUSALEM POST
President Shimon Peres praised the Arab League peace plan Monday, welcoming it as a shift in Arab thinking and indicating it could serve as a basis for moving the peace process forward.
He also stressed that Israel’s leaders trusted US President Barack Obama as he works toward peace, something Israel would pursue as it respected its previous commitments to the Palestinians.
Peres characterized the Arab League plan, which offers Israel full recognition in exchange for full withdrawal as well as dealing with Palestinian refugees, as “a serious a U-turn.” He noted that even though Israel was not a party to its formulation and therefore doesn’t agree with everything it sets out, “Israel respects the profound change. Israel hopes it will be translated into action, the sooner the better.”
His comments, delivered before a cheering crowd at the American Israel Public Affairs Committee annual conference, went further than any other official response from this government in embracing the plan, which was first announced in 2002 and has been largely greeted over the years with Israeli skepticism.
The Obama administration, however, has welcomed it as a sign of Arab seriousness in peacemaking, a stance the new American leadership is seeking to encourage in its quest for a regional peace.
Peres stressed that Israel stood behind the US president and his goals. “Let me make it clear,” he declared. “We trust the leadership of President Obama. We trust he will make a way to [achieve] both to a regional agreement and meaningful bilateral negotiations. It is a real change in the situation.”
He also said that “Palestinian people have the right to govern themselves” to some applause from the audience, which overall greeted his speech warmly.
Though some in the international community have criticized the new Israeli government, led by Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu of the Likud and a mostly right-wing coalition, as blocking any progress toward peace, Peres defended his one-time political opponent as a leader that “wants to make history.”
He continued, “In our tradition, making history is making peace. I am sure that peace is his real and profound priority.”
He later said, to applause from the thousands of pro-Israel activists in attendance, “In pursuing peace, let’s make no mistake: the present government of Israel shall respect commitments made by the previous governments of Israel.”
Though some in Israel have expressed concern about the direction of the Obama administration on Israeli-Palestinian policy, particularly that it might recklessly pressure Israel, Peres several times praised the American leader, with whom he will meet Tuesday in the first official Israeli visit to the White House.
Echoing Obama’s rallying cries of “hope” and “change” throughout his address, Peres said, “You are young enough to offer hope to the world and great enough to bring it to life.”
He also backed Obama’s language of outreach to the region, describing his inaugural call for “an outstretched hand instead of a clenched fist” as what is needed.
At the same time, he harshly criticized Iran, one of the countries with which Obama is seeking dialogue.
“The fanatic rulers of Iran are on the wrong side of history,” Peres stated.
Peres’s speech was briefly disrupted by three protesters, including a young woman shouting, “What about the children you killed in Gaza?” and a man who yelled, “End the siege of Gaza!”
Security guards hustled them outside and tried to cover their mouths so that people waiting to enter the convention hall wouldn’t hear them. Inside the packed room, the audience rose in an extended standing ovation to drown out their shouts.
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