Wednesday, July 31, 2019

Brace Yourselves for the Sixth Seal (Revelation 6)

http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/news/images/nj-quake-030201.gif

A couple of hundred thousand years ago, an M 7.2 earthquake shook what is now New Hampshire. Just a few thousand years ago, an M 7.5 quake ruptured just off the coast of Massachusetts. And then there’s New York.
Since the first western settlers arrived there, the state has witnessed 200 quakes of magnitude 2.0 or greater, making it the third most seismically active state east of the Mississippi (Tennessee and South Carolina are ranked numbers one and two, respectively). About once a century, New York has also experienced an M 5.0 quake capable of doing real damage.
The most recent one near New York City occurred in August of 1884. Centered off Long Island’s Rockaway Beach, it was felt over 70,000 square miles. It also opened enormous crevices near the Brooklyn reservoir and knocked down chimneys and cracked walls in Pennsylvania and Connecticut. Police on the Brooklyn Bridge said it swayed “as if struck by a hurricane” and worried the bridge’s towers would collapse. Meanwhile, residents throughout New York and New Jersey reported sounds that varied from explosions to loud rumblings, sometimes to comic effect. At the funeral of Lewis Ingler, a small group of mourners were watching as the priest began to pray. The quake cracked an enormous mirror behind the casket and knocked off a display of flowers that had been resting on top of it. When it began to shake the casket’s silver handles, the mourners decided the unholy return of Lewis Ingler was more than they could take and began flinging themselves out windows and doors.
Not all stories were so light. Two people died during the quake, both allegedly of fright. Out at sea, the captain of the brig Alice felt a heavy lurch that threw him and his crew, followed by a shaking that lasted nearly a minute. He was certain he had hit a wreck and was taking on water.
A day after the quake, the editors of The New York Times sought to allay readers’ fear. The quake, they said, was an unexpected fluke never to be repeated and not worth anyone’s attention: “History and the researches of scientific men indicate that great seismic disturbances occur only within geographical limits that are now well defined,” they wrote in an editorial. “The northeastern portion of the United States . . . is not within those limits.” The editors then went on to scoff at the histrionics displayed by New York residents when confronted by the quake: “They do not stop to reason or to recall the fact that earthquakes here are harmless phenomena. They only know that the solid earth, to whose immovability they have always turned with confidence when everything else seemed transitory, uncertain, and deceptive, is trembling and in motion, and the tremor ceases long before their disturbed minds become tranquil.”
That’s the kind of thing that drives Columbia’s Heather Savage nuts.
Across town, Charles Merguerian has been studying these faults the old‐fashioned way: by getting down and dirty underground. He’s spent the past forty years sloshing through some of the city’s muckiest places: basements and foundations, sewers and tunnels, sometimes as deep as 750 feet belowground. His tools down there consist primarily of a pair of muck boots, a bright blue hard hat, and a pickax. In public presentations, he claims he is also ably abetted by an assistant hamster named Hammie, who maintains his own website, which includes, among other things, photos of the rodent taking down Godzilla.
That’s just one example why, if you were going to cast a sitcom starring two geophysicists, you’d want Savage and Merguerian to play the leading roles. Merguerian is as eccentric and flamboyant as Savage is earnest and understated. In his press materials, the former promises to arrive at lectures “fully clothed.” Photos of his “lab” depict a dingy porta‐john in an abandoned subway tunnel. He actively maintains an archive of vintage Chinese fireworks labels at least as extensive as his list of publications, and his professional website includes a discography of blues tunes particularly suitable for earthquakes. He calls female science writers “sweetheart” and somehow manages to do so in a way that kind of makes them like it (although they remain nevertheless somewhat embarrassed to admit it).
It’s Merguerian’s boots‐on‐the‐ground approach that has provided much of the information we need to understand just what’s going on underneath Gotham. By his count, Merguerian has walked the entire island of Manhattan: every street, every alley. He’s been in most of the tunnels there, too. His favorite one by far is the newest water tunnel in western Queens. Over the course of 150 days, Merguerian mapped all five miles of it. And that mapping has done much to inform what we know about seismicity in New York.
Most importantly, he says, it provided the first definitive proof of just how many faults really lie below the surface there. And as the city continues to excavate its subterranean limits, Merguerian is committed to following closely behind. It’s a messy business.
Down below the city, Merguerian encounters muck of every flavor and variety. He power‐washes what he can and relies upon a diver’s halogen flashlight and a digital camera with a very, very good flash to make up the difference. And through this process, Merguerian has found thousands of faults, some of which were big enough to alter the course of the Bronx River after the last ice age.
His is a tricky kind of detective work. The center of a fault is primarily pulverized rock. For these New York faults, that gouge was the very first thing to be swept away by passing glaciers. To do his work, then, he’s primarily looking for what geologists call “offsets”—places where the types of rock don’t line up with one another. That kind of irregularity shows signs of movement over time—clear evidence of a fault.
Merguerian has found a lot of them underneath New York City.
Each time that occurred, the land currently known as the Mid‐Atlantic underwent an accordion effect as it was violently folded into itself again and again. The process created immense mountains that have eroded over time and been further scoured by glaciers. What remains is a hodgepodge of geological conditions ranging from solid bedrock to glacial till to brittle rock still bearing the cracks of the collision. And, says Merguerian, any one of them could cause an earthquake.
You don’t have to follow him belowground to find these fractures. Even with all the development in our most built‐up metropolis, evidence of these faults can be found everywhere—from 42nd Street to Greenwich Village. But if you want the starkest example of all, hop the 1 train at Times Square and head uptown to Harlem. Not far from where the Columbia University bus collects people for the trip to the Lamont‐Doherty Earth Observatory, the subway tracks seem to pop out of the ground onto a trestle bridge before dropping back down to earth. That, however, is just an illusion. What actually happens there is that the ground drops out below the train at the site of one of New York’s largest faults. It’s known by geologists in the region as the Manhattanville or 125th Street Fault, and it runs all the way across the top of Central Park and, eventually, underneath Long Island City. Geologists have known about the fault since 1939, when the city undertook a massive subway mapping project, but it wasn’t until recently that they confirmed its potential for a significant quake.
In our lifetimes, a series of small earthquakes have been recorded on the Manhattanville Fault including, most recently, one on October 27, 2001. Its epicenter was located around 55th and 8th—directly beneath the original Original Soupman restaurant, owned by restaurateur Ali Yeganeh, the inspiration for Seinfeld’s Soup Nazi. That fact delighted sitcom fans across the country, though few Manhattanites were in any mood to appreciate it.
The October 2001 quake itself was small—about M 2.6—but the effect on residents there was significant. Just six weeks prior, the city had been rocked by the 9/11 terrorist attacks that brought down the World Trade Center towers. The team at Lamont‐Doherty has maintained a seismic network in the region since the ’70s. They registered the collapse of the first tower at M 2.1. Half an hour later, the second tower crumbled with even more force and registered M 2.3. In a city still shocked by that catastrophe, the early‐morning October quake—several times greater than the collapse of either tower—jolted millions of residents awake with both reminders of the tragedy and fear of yet another attack. 9‐1‐1 calls overwhelmed dispatchers and first responders with reports of shaking buildings and questions about safety in the city. For seismologists, though, that little quake was less about foreign threats to our soil and more about the possibility of larger tremors to come.
“Gee whiz!” He laughs when I pose this question. “That’s the holy grail of seismicity, isn’t it?”
He says all we can do to answer that question is “take the pulse of what’s gone on in recorded history.” To really have an answer, we’d need to have about ten times as much data as we do today. But from what he’s seen, the faults below New York are very much alive.
“These guys are loaded,” he tells me.
He says he is also concerned about new studies of a previously unknown fault zone known as the Ramapo that runs not far from the city. Savage shares his concerns. They both think it’s capable of an M 6.0 quake or even higher—maybe even a 7.0. If and when, though, is really anybody’s guess.
“We literally have no idea what’s happening in our backyard,” says Savage.
What we do know is that these quakes have the potential to do more damage than similar ones out West, mostly because they are occurring on far harder rock capable of propagating waves much farther. And because these quakes occur in places with higher population densities, these eastern events can affect a lot more people. Take the 2011 Virginia quake: Although it was only a moderate one, more Americans felt it than any other one in our nation’s history.
That’s the thing about the East Coast: Its earthquake hazard may be lower than that of the West Coast, but the total effect of any given quake is much higher. Disaster specialists talk about this in terms of risk, and they make sense of it with an equation that multiplies the potential hazard of an event by the cost of damage and the number of people harmed. When you take all of those factors into account, the earthquake risk in New York is much greater than, say, that in Alaska or Hawaii or even a lot of the area around the San Andreas Fault.
Merguerian has been sounding the alarm about earthquake risk in the city since the ’90s. He admits he hasn’t gotten much of a response. He says that when he first proposed the idea of seismic risk in New York City, his fellow scientists “booed and threw vegetables” at him. He volunteered his services to the city’s Office of Emergency Management but says his original offer also fell on deaf ears.
“So I backed away gently and went back to academia.”
Today, he says, the city isn’t much more responsive, but he’s getting a much better response from his peers.
He’s glad for that, he says, but it’s not enough. If anything, the events of 9/11, along with the devastation caused in 2012 by Superstorm Sandy, should tell us just how bad it could be there.
He and Savage agree that what makes the risk most troubling is just how little we know about it. When it comes right down to it, intraplate faults are the least understood. Some scientists think they might be caused by mantle flow deep below the earth’s crust. Others think they might be related to gravitational energy. Still others think quakes occurring there might be caused by the force of the Atlantic ridge as it pushes outward. Then again, it could be because the land is springing back after being compressed thousands of years ago by glaciers (a phenomenon geologists refer to as seismic rebound).
Adapted from Quakeland: On the Road to America’s Next Devastating Earthquake by Kathryn Miles, published by Dutton, an imprint of Penguin Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House, LLC. Copyright © 2017 by Kathryn Miles.

How Trump and His Cronies are Building the Saudi Nuclear Horn (Daniel 7)

By Bandar Algaloud / Saudi Kingdom Council / Handout/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images.

By Alison DurkeeJuly 30, 2019Tom Barrack was among the members of the president’s inner circle who tried to use their influence to sell nuclear technology to Saudi Arabia, according to House Democrats.
The Trump administration’s coziness with Saudi Arabia—and willingness to kowtow to corporate interests—were thrown into sharper relief Monday, as a new House Oversight Committee report revealed the extent to which a private company and the Trump allies associated with it were able to use the administration to further their own financial interests in Riyadh. The new House report centers on how IP3, a private company described by one nuclear industry exec as “the Theranos of the nuclear industry,” has been attempting to circumvent the obstacles stopping them from transferring U.S. nuclear technology to the Saudis—with the Trump team’s help. “With regard to Saudi Arabia, the Trump Administration has virtually obliterated the lines normally separating government policymaking from corporate and foreign interests,” the House report alleges. “The documents show the Administration’s willingness to let private parties with close ties to the President wield outsized influence over U.S. policy towards Saudi Arabia.”The report, which is the second to be released on this topic and was based on a review of 60,000 documents, details how IP3 lobbied the Trump administration to relax their standards for any future nuclear agreement with Saudi Arabia. Typically, such an agreement would require the other country to agree to a “Gold Standard” that prevents the risk of nuclear proliferation, which the Saudis have already refused to comply with. IP3, which is assembled of companies wanting to build nuclear reactors in Saudi Arabia, is unhappy with this “total roadblock” to their plans to strike it rich in the Persian Gulf—and they have been making their case to the upper echelons of the Trump team. According to the report, IP3 officials were granted such “unprecedented access” to Trumpworld that they considered the administration an “extended team member,” and officials met directly with “President [Donald] Trump, Jared Kushner, Gary Cohn, K.T. McFarland, and Cabinet Secretaries Rick Perry, Steven Mnuchin, Mike Pompeo, Rex Tillerson, James Mattis, and Wilbur Ross.” This access, the report explains, “yielded promises from high-level government officials to support IP3’s efforts with Saudi officials.”One particular figure who stands out in the House report is longtime Trump ally and former Trump inauguration chair Thomas Barrack, whom the report alleges was attempting to seek a position in the administration at the same time as he was “(1) promoting the interests of U.S. corporations seeking to profit from the transfer of nuclear technology to Saudi Arabia; (2) advocating on behalf of foreign interests seeking to obtain this U.S. nuclear technology; and (3) taking steps for his own company, Colony NorthStar, to profit from the same proposals he was advancing with the Administration.” (The New York Times reported separately Monday that federal prosecutors are looking into Barrack’s foreign entanglements in the Gulf region and their connection to the Trump campaign.) Also implicated in the report is former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn, who served as an adviser to IP3. In 2016, the report alleges, Flynn told business partners about upcoming interactions with key officials in Russia and the Persian Gulf—including Vladimir Putin—and “offered to use these contacts to further IP3’s business interests.”In addition to lobbying the Trump team, IP3 and Barrack’s efforts also directly involved Saudi officials, including Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. IP3 officials traveled to Saudi Arabia in December 2016 to ask then-deputy crown prince MBS to invest in the company, using IP3’s Trump connections and the incoming administration’s support of IP3 as the primary argument to solicit funds. Trump and Kushner then met directly with MBS in March 2017, and IP3 officials said afterwards that the meeting “established the framework for our unique opportunity to take the next steps with IP3 and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.” Barrack used his Saudi connections to directly influence Trump even before the president’s 2016 victory, as Barrack sent a draft of Trump’s May 2016 energy speech to Saudi and Emerati officials to “coordinate pro-Gulf language.” (The speech’s theme, ironically, was “America First.”)“Today’s report reveals new and extensive evidence that corroborates Committee whistleblowers and exposes how corporate and foreign interests are using their unique access to advocate for the transfer of U.S. nuclear technology to Saudi Arabia,” House Oversight Chair Rep. Elijah Cummings said in a statement. “The American people deserve to know the facts about whether the White House is willing to place the potential profits of the President’s personal friends above the national security of the American people and the universal objective of preventing the spread of nuclear weapons.” Republicans issued a response countering the Democrat-led House report, which claims that “the evidence currently before the Committee does not show impropriety in the proposed transfer of nuclear energy technology to Saudi Arabia” and blames the House report on Democrats’ “[obsession] with investigating every decision made by the Trump White House.”In a statement to ABC News after the report’s release, a spokesman for Barrack said the businessman “has been cooperating with the Committee on Oversight and Reform of the U.S. House of Representatives and has provided the documents the Committee requested. Mr. Barrack’s engagement in investment and business development throughout the Middle East for the purpose of better aligned Middle East and US objectives are well known, as are his more than four decades of respected relationships throughout the region. Mr. Barrack’s consistent attempts to bridge the divide of tolerance and understanding between these two great cultures is etched in the annals of time. This is not political it is essential. Mr. Barrack has never had a position in the Trump administration.” Flynn’s attorney Sidney Powell called the report a Democratic-led “smear campaign,” telling ABC News that the “special counsel investigated all of these matters, and General Flynn cooperated extensively—answering all their questions on all their Middle East issues and everything else.”Monday’s report marks the latest sign of the Trump administration’s enduring alliance with Saudi Arabia, which has come under heightened scrutiny in the wake of the assassination of Saudi dissident Jamal Khashoggi. Trump recently defied Congress by vetoing a bipartisan block on arms sales to Saudi Arabia, an override vote for which failed Monday in the Senate. Kushner, meanwhile, has continued to ally himself with MBS, whom he’s expected to meet with once again this week. And IP3’s efforts, the report alleges, “continue to this day.” The Daily Beast reported in March that progress on transferring U.S. nuclear technology to Saudi Arabia is continuing, as the U.S. Department of Energy approved six authorizations for U.S. companies to conduct nuclear-related work in the country—two of which were approved after Khashoggi’s murder. “The alarming realization that the Trump Administration signed off on sharing our nuclear know-how with the Saudi regime after it brutally murdered an American resident adds to a disturbing pattern of behavior,” Sen. Tim Kaine said in a statement about the authorizations. “President Trump’s eagerness to give the Saudis anything they want, over bipartisan Congressional objection, harms American national security interests.”

Israel Takes Matters into Their Own Hands

July 30, 2019
Primew Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gives a statement to the press during his visit in Har Homa, on March 16, 2015. (Menahem Kahana/AFP))
Israel has expanded its operations against Iranian targets to Iraq, where Air Force jets have struck twice in ten days, a report said Tuesday morning.
Israel commonly conducts strikes in Syrian territory, targeting Iranian missile shipments meant for Lebanese terror group Hezbollah to use against the Jewish state, but strikes in Iraq by Israel have not been reported since the 1981 bombing of a nuclear reactor.
Asharq Al-Awsat, an Arabic-language newspaper published in London, cited Western diplomatic sources as saying an Israeli F-35 plane was behind a July 19 strike on a rocket depot in a Shiite militia base north of Baghdad.
The IDF has not commented on the report.
The Saudi-based al-Arabiya network reported at the time that members of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Corps and Hezbollah had been killed in the strike. It said the base had shortly before the strike received Iranian ballistic missiles, which had been hidden inside trucks.
Iraq’s military said at the time that one fighter was killed and two Iranians wounded, saying the strike was carried out by an unmanned drone. The United States denied involvement.
Asharq Al-Awsat also said that Israel was behind another strike in Iraq carried out Sunday at Camp Ashraf, the former headquarters of the exiled People’s Mujahedin of Iran, located 40 kilometers northeast of Baghdad and 80 kilometers from the Iranian border.
That strike targeted Iranian advisers and a ballistic missile shipment, the report cited sources as saying.
The report also mentioned a strike in Syria last week blamed on Israel, in which nine were killed including six Iranians fighting for the Syrian regime, claiming it was meant to prevent Iran from taking over a strategic hill in the Daraa province in the country’s south.
Israeli missiles targeted “military positions and intelligence facilities belonging to Iran and [pro-Iranian] militias” in the southern provinces of Daraa and Quneitra early on Wednesday, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at the time.
The other three killed in the strike were pro-regime Syrian fighters, it added.

Palestinians Remain Trapped Outside the Temple Walls (Revelation 11)

Caught between the blockade and the territory’s own leadership, ordinary people are forced to live lives of poverty and stasis
Janine di Giovanni
July 29, 2019
It has been more than a year since the Great March of Return began in Gaza. What started as a non-violent protest to draw attention to the plight of the Palestinian people has now been, in many ways, hijacked by Hamas, which rules the territory.
This has played right into Israel’s handstand s. The nation’s far right, which could win the elections in September, can now effectively say that the march and the agenda prove that Palestinians are Hamas, and are therefore the all intent on bringing destruction to Israel.
The truth is that many people voted for Hamas back in 2006, simply because they wanted some kind of change and preferred Hamas’s social system to that of the Palestinian Authority.
Gaza is much more than Hamas. It has been three decades since I first went there as a young academic. Since then, it has endured the first and second intifada, the failure of the Oslo Accords and three wars. Yet, I have never ceased to be amazed by the resilience and resourcefulness its people.
The Great March has had devastating effects: since March, 2018, there have been more than 32,000 injuries and hundreds of deaths. The rubber bullets, the live ammunition and the tear gas canisters all represent an indiscriminate use of force.
The injuries sustained by protesters are brutal. Many have suffered severe joint injuries or amputations, owing to a policy of shooting protesters in the legs. Jacob Burns from Doctors without Borders showed me x-rays of how their bones were split apart – wounds that take years to heal and often produce untreatable infections along the way.
“The level of pain these people go through is unthinkable,” Burns said.
The spirit of the Great March has dwindled, but people still go on Fridays, some almost treating it as entertainment to ease the dull monotony of their lives under a 12-year blockade. Boys and young men go to the fence armed with slingshots to hurl rocks at Israeli soldiers. Many of them end up being shot and wounded. Their mothers and sisters stay behind in tents, eating pumpkin seeds and listening to Hamas-inspired rhetoric by the organisers.
All this is bad news for Gaza, a place so littered with misery and hopelessness. The split between Fatah and Hamas in Gaza since 2007 has had a punishing effect on the Gazan people. Not only are they economically blockaded by Israel and Egypt, they are being punished by the Palestinian Authority. It is hard to understand, if you are young and Gazan, what to do to make your life more liveable.
Palestinians are among the most educated people in the Middle East, but when they graduate they have nowhere to go
The collective punishment by the Palestinian Authority comes in the form of withholding passports, government salaries and not taking care of vital infrastructure: drinking water, sanitation, roads. President Trump and his son-in-law Jared Kushner are taking that one step further, by pressuring American aid to be withdrawn from the United Nations Relief and Works Agency, which has effectively taken care of Palestinian education and healthcare since 1948, and withdrawing US Aid from Gaza.
The result is a mosaic of desperation, particularly among young people, among whom unemployment sits at 70 per cent. At university graduations this week in Gaza, the young and talented marched to get their diplomas in economics, computer science, microbiology and English literature, yet there are no jobs for them.
Palestinians are among the most educated people in the Middle East, but when they graduate they have nowhere to go – especially in Gaza, from which they are not allowed to leave. My driver this week is a sociologist. He considers himself fortunate to find a job driving a foreigner. If he is lucky, after renting the car and paying the fuel, for a day of hard work, from early morning until late night, he gets 70 shekels (Dh73). And he’s grateful.
This has had a horrendous effect on society. Gaza lives in a debt economy. To get married, a young man must pay a dowry, hire a wedding hall and buy the wedding gold. Most people borrow and remain in debt all their life. And that is just the middle class.
The poor, and the injured – especially the amputees from the Great March – face lives alone because they can’t afford to have a spouse. They feel they are burdening their already hard-pressed families. At one point, there were mass wedding where people split the costs and 20 people married at the same time. The suicide rate is rising, and depression and post-traumatic stress disorder are widespread.
The other enemy is migration. Dr Caitlin Procter, a Harvard researcher based in Gaza, tells me that the patterns of leaving have shifted drastically. Once, people left Gaza to work abroad, sending remittances back to relatives, coming home for summers and eventually returning when they grew old. That has stopped. Partially because of the blockade, which makes freedom of movement impossible, but also because there is nothing to return for.
In 2018, the UN special rapporteur said that Gaza would be unliveable by 2020. No one paid much attention.
“In fact by any metric, Gaza is already uninhabitable,” Ms Procter says.
What can be done? In the years since I began working here, Gaza has gone backwards. A simple solution that the Israelis will never abide is the lifting the blockade to allow economic freedom and freedom of movement for Palestinian labourer inside Israel (some of them were able to move across the Erez crossing to work before Hamas’s election in 2006). Gaza also desperately needs more youth initiatives and small businesses.
The international community needs to step up, too, and not just with Mr Kushner’s unworkable economic plan. More international pressure must be applied, in order to end the split between Hamas and Fatah. Ultimately, of course, Israel must lift the occupation and stop swallowing up the West Bank with illegal settlements.
This, of course, is a far-away dream.
Until then, as they have been doing for seven decades, the Palestinians will be forced to wait.
Janine di Giovanni is a 2019 Guggenheim Fellowship recipient and a senior fellow at Yale’s Jackson Institute. She is the author of The Morning They Came for Us: Dispatches from Syria. Follow her on Twitter @janinedigi
Updated: July 29, 2019 05:16 PM

Antichrist Uses Old Trick To Get US Involved In Major Gas Hub

Iraq Uses Old Trick To Get US Involved In Major Gas Hub

July 29, 2019, 10:00 AM MDT
Last week saw two apparently independent major events occur in Iraq centred on its gas sector but a senior oil and gas industry source who works closely with Iraq’s Oil Ministry told Oilprice.com they were a lot more connected than they seemed. The first was a statement by the Secretary General of the Iran-Iraq Joint Chamber, Seyed Hamid Hosseini, that Iran’s gas and electricity exports to Iraq are expected to reach US$5 billion by the end of the current Iranian calendar year, ending on 21 March 2020. The second was an announcement by Iraq’s Oil Minister, Thamir Ghadhban, that a U.S. consortium led by Honeywell has signed a memorandum of understanding for a huge deal that would reduce the country’s current level of gas flaring by nearly 20%.
Iraq under the auspices of Moqtada al-Sadr – the real power behind the [Adil] Abdul-Mahdi government is very good at playing the U.S. with the Iran card, so every time there is a hint that Iraq will continue with its historically close relationship with Iran, the U.S. comes in to offer the services of one of its companies at beneficial terms to Iraq,” the source said.
The deal itself involves U.S. giant, Honeywell, partnering with another U.S. heavyweight, Bechtel, and Iraq’s state-owned South Gas to build the Ratawi gas hub In the first stage that is expected to last for three years this project will process up to 300 million standard cubic feet per day (scf/d) of ‘associated gas’ (generated as a by-product of crude production) at five southern Iraqi oil fields: Majnoon, Gharib al-Qurna, al-lhiss, al-Tubba, and al-Siba. It comes shortly after the granting of a new waiver from the U.S. for Iraq to import electricity from Iran, first awarded last November and subsequently renewed in December, March, and June, each time for 90 days. At the same time, Iraq has been steadily importing around one third of its total energy supplies from Iran, which equates to around 28 million cubic feet (mcf) of gas to feed its power stations.
With peak summer power demand in Iraq perennially exceeding domestic generation, Iraq’s dependence on Iran is acute – a highly troubling situation for the U.S. in all circumstances, let alone the current impasse – and made worse still for its capacity to cause major civilian unrest in the country. Last summer’s widespread protests across Iraq – including in the major oil hub of Basra – were widely seen as being prompted in part by chronic electricity outages. The situation also promises to become much worse as, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA), Iraq’s population is growing at a rate of over one million per year, with electricity demand set to double by 2030, reaching about 17.5 gigawatts (GW) average throughout the year.
In addition to the ongoing dependence on Iran that this energy imbalance necessitates, Iraq is losing billions of dollars in two streams of revenue. The first is the oil that it is forced to burn burns crude oil directly at power plants in order to attempt to address the shortfall in power supplies accrued from other raw materials, such as gas. Although the average volume of crude oil used for power generation has fallen in the past two years from a peak of 223,000 barrels per day (bpd) in July and September 2015, it still averages around 110,000 bpd, or around US$2.5 billion per year in value.
The second reason is that the associated gas is largely flared rather than captured and either sold on as raw gas or used as feedstock for the production of value-added petrochemicals products. On the first point, according to the IEA, Iraq has around 3.5 trillion cubic metres (tcm) of proven reserves of gas, mainly associated with oil that is produced from the supergiant fields in the South hydrocarbon region. These reserves would be enough to supply nearly 200 years of Iraq’s current consumption of gas, as long as flaring is minimised. It added, though, that proven reserves do not provide an accurate picture of Iraq’s long-term production potential and that the underlying resource base – ultimately recoverable resources – is significantly larger, at 8 tcm.
On the second point, Oilprice.com was told recently by the managing director of a major foreign oil company operating in Iraq that the failure to capture this gas – more than half of the gas that is extracted in Iraq today is flared and it is the world’s second worst offender in this regard – is a key reason holding back the development of a viable petrochemicals sector in the country.  
“Iraq needs to put into action its plans to develop a second gas hub away from Basra that would get the gas volumes up to an average of 800 million to 1 billion standard cubic feet per day so that the ethane can be extracted on a sustainable and reliable basis that would give sufficient volume for a major petchems plant to be viable,” he said. “Ethane should be the initial feedstock for Iraq’s first few plants in the same way that it was in the development of Saudi Arabia’s master gas system that captured associated gas, which was then fractionated and supplied as primary feedstock to the flagship Jubail Industrial City,” he underlined.
This latest project would build on the previous plans to address Iraq’s power shortfall and to monetise its oil and gas assets better, as was the original intention of Iraq last year stating that it was joining the United Nations and World Bank ‘Zero Routine Flaring’ initiative aimed at ending this type of routine flaring by 2030. Shortly after this, the Oil Ministry announced that it had signed a gas capture deal with U.S. oil services provider Baker Hughes to harness 200 million cubic feet (mmcf) per day from the Gharraf oil field – being developed by Japan Petroleum Exploration Co. (JAPEX), Malaysia’s Petronas, and Iraq’s North Oil Co. (NOC) – and the neighbouring Dhi Qar site, Nassiriyah, plus other oilfields north of Basra. At that time, Baker Hughes stated that addressing the flared gas from these two fields would allow for the provision of 400 MW of power to the Iraqi grid.
The then- Oil Minister, Jabbar al-Luaibi, added at that point that Iraq was also currently negotiating a similar gas capture deal for the state-run Nahr Bin Umar field with Houston-based Orion Gas Processors and that there were similar plans to construct gas-processing facilities in the Missan and Halfaya fields that would have a combined capacity of 600 mmcf per day of gas when completed. This, in turn, was in line with an ambitious statement last January from al-Luaibi that Iraq would have ceased all gas flaring from its southern producing oilfields by the end of 2021, so additionally freeing up some of this gas capacity for export.
“By the end of last year, there had been some progress, with the Basrah Gas Company (BGC) processing and producing the equivalent of around 10 bcm of gas per year and earlier this year the shareholders in BGC [Iraq’s South Gas Company with 51%, Shell with 44% and Mitsubishi with 5%] stated that they’d increase the volume to around 14 bcm by 2021, with a target of 20 bcm of gas per year focussed on Rumaila, Zubair and West Qurna,” the Iraq source told Oilprice.com last week. “Unfortunately, with Iraq there is often a big gap between what is said and what is done, with the space between filled by people looking to line their own pockets [] so it is difficult to be optimistic,” the Iraq source added. “Ironically it may be the man that the U.S. hates – and vice-versa – Moqtada al-Sadr, who forces these projects through, as he is a genuine nationalist and is clever enough to see that by monetising all of these resources properly, Iraq will be able to free itself of all foreign interference, which is exactly the message he ran on in the last election and which keeps him as the major power in Iraq,” he concluded.
By Simon Watkins for Oilprice.com

The South Korean Horn Joins the Mix (Daniel 7:7)

South Korea reportedly sending destroyer to join US-led naval force protecting tankers in Gulf

ROKS Munmu the Great (DDH-976) is a Chungmugong Yi Sun-sin-class destroyer in the South Korean navy. It could be on the way to the Gulf.
By bne IntelliNews July 29, 2019
The dispatched Korean naval unit will reportedly include a destroyer and will help guard oil tankers sailing through the Strait of Hormuz.
Against the backdrop of tensions over what Iran says is a US “economic attack” on its economy, several oil tankers have been attacked and the UK-flagged Stena Impero has been seized by Iranian commandos. Iran still denies it had any role in the attacks. Insurance costs for tankers transiting the Strait of Hormuz have increased massively.
Maekyung cited an unidentified senior government official as saying South Korea had decided to send the anti-piracy Cheonghae unit operating in waters off Somalia, possibly along with helicopters.
Seoul’s defence ministry was reported as saying the government was exploring measures to protect its ships in the area but no decision had been made.
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said last week Washington had asked South Korea, Japan, France, Germany, Australia and others to take part in providing naval escorts for tankers. But the European powers, who are happy to stick with the existing nuclear deal with Iran and are opposed to the heavy sanctions the US is using to try to force the negotiation of a tougher accord, are wary of getting sucked into hostilities between Tehran and Washington. They have been looking instead at a UK proposal for a European protection fleet.
Iran appears to have seized the Stena Impero in response to the July 4 UK Royal Marine operation off Gibraltar that resulted in the seizure of Iran’s Grace 1 tanker. Iran says the UK captured the vessel at the behest of Washington. The UK claims it was following an EU policy to stop vessels illegally delivering oil to blockaded Syria. However, the EU has remained silent on the matter.
On July 29, new UK Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said there was no scope for the countries to exchange seized tankers, on the basis that the UK ship capture was legal whereas the Iranian seizure of the Stena Impero was illegal.
He said Iran needed to “come out of the dark” if it is to follow international rules and release the British-flagged tanker .
“If the Iranians want to come of the dark and be accepted as a responsible member of the intentional community they need to adhere to rules-based system of the international community,” Raab told Sky News. “You cannot go about detaining unlawfully foreign vessels.”
Tehran is angered that while the UK is officially opposed to the US abandonment of the nuclear deal and imposition of sanctions, it, and the other big European powers, have done little to protect the Iranian economy from US sanctions.
The UK defence ministry said on July 29 that a second warship, the HMS Duncan, had arrived in the Gulf to support the passage of British-flagged ships through the Strait of Hormuz, joining the HMS Montrose.

Tuesday, July 30, 2019

New York Earthquake: City of the Sixth Seal (Revelation 6:12)


New York earthquake: City at risk of ‚dangerous shaking from far away‘
Joshua Nevett
Published 30th April 2018
SOME of New York City’s tallest skyscrapers are at risk of being shaken by seismic waves triggered by powerful earthquakes from miles outside the city, a natural disaster expert has warned.
Researchers believe that a powerful earthquake, magnitude 5 or greater, could cause significant damage to large swathes of NYC, a densely populated area dominated by tall buildings.
A series of large fault lines that run underneath NYC’s five boroughs, Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, The Bronx and Staten Island, are capable of triggering large earthquakes.
Some experts have suggested that NYC is susceptible to at least a magnitude 5 earthquake once every 100 years.
The last major earthquake measuring over magnitude 5.0 struck NYC in 1884 – meaning another one of equal size is “overdue” by 34 years, according their prediction model.
Natural disaster researcher Simon Day, of University College London, agrees with the conclusion that NYC may be more at risk from earthquakes than is usually thought.
EARTHQUAKE RISK: New York is susceptible to seismic shaking from far-away tremors
But the idea of NYC being “overdue” for an earthquake is “invalid”, not least because the “very large number of faults” in the city have individually low rates of activity, he said.
The model that predicts strong earthquakes based on timescale and stress build-up on a given fault has been “discredited”, he said.
What scientists should be focusing on, he said, is the threat of large and potentially destructive earthquakes from “much greater distances”.
The dangerous effects of powerful earthquakes from further away should be an “important feature” of any seismic risk assessment of NYC, Dr Day said.

GETTY
THE BIG APPLE: An aerial view of Lower Manhattan at dusk in New York City

USGS
RISK: A seismic hazard map of New York produced by USGS
“New York is susceptible to seismic shaking from earthquakes at much greater distances” Dr Simon Day, natural disaster researcher
This is because the bedrock underneath parts of NYC, including Long Island and Staten Island, cannot effectively absorb the seismic waves produced by earthquakes.
“An important feature of the central and eastern United States is, because the crust there is old and cold, and contains few recent fractures that can absorb seismic waves, the rate of seismic reduction is low.
Central regions of NYC, including Manhattan, are built upon solid granite bedrock; therefore the amplification of seismic waves that can shake buildings is low.
But more peripheral areas, such as Staten Island and Long Island, are formed by weak sediments, meaning seismic hazard in these areas is “very likely to be higher”, Dr Day said.
“Thus, like other cities in the eastern US, New York is susceptible to seismic shaking from earthquakes at much greater distances than is the case for cities on plate boundaries such as Tokyo or San Francisco, where the crustal rocks are more fractured and absorb seismic waves more efficiently over long distances,” Dr Day said.
In the event of a large earthquake, dozens of skyscrapers, including Chrysler Building, the Woolworth Building and 40 Wall Street, could be at risk of shaking.
“The felt shaking in New York from the Virginia earthquake in 2011 is one example,” Dr Day said.
On that occasion, a magnitude 5.8 earthquake centered 340 miles south of New York sent thousands of people running out of swaying office buildings.

USGS
FISSURES: Fault lines in New York City have low rates of activity, Dr Day said
NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg said the city was “lucky to avoid any major harm” as a result of the quake, whose epicenter was near Louisa, Virginia, about 40 miles from Richmond.
“But an even more impressive one is the felt shaking from the 1811-1812 New Madrid earthquakes in the central Mississippi valley, which was felt in many places across a region, including cities as far apart as Detroit, Washington DC and New Orleans, and in a few places even further afield including,” Dr Day added.
“So, if one was to attempt to do a proper seismic hazard assessment for NYC, one would have to include potential earthquake sources over a wide region, including at least the Appalachian mountains to the southwest and the St Lawrence valley to the north and east.”

The U.K. Horn Remains Allied With US

File photo – Britain’s Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab.
July 29, 2019
Radio Farda
A day earlier on Sunday, Kamal Kahrrazi, Chairman of Iran’s Foreign Relations Strategic Council, a body that operates under the aegis of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s office, suggested that Tehran will consider hastening “judiciary procedures” about a British-flagged oil tanker it has detained, if Iran’s Grace 1 oil tanker which remains under detention in Gibraltar is released.
“There is no quid pro quo, this is not about some kind of barter. This is about the international law and the rules of the international legal system being upheld and that is what we will insist on,” Dominic Raab said.
Meanwhile, Iran’s ambassador to London, Hamid Baeidinejad attempted to steal the show in a Monday July 29 tweet: “Impossible to advance a quid pro quo or barter exchange of detained UK and Iranian ships as some British media suggest. UK has illegally detained the ship carrying Iranian oil while the British ship is detained for violating some key safety/security regulations in Hormoz Strait.”
In another interview on Monday, Raab told Sky News that Iran should act in compliance with international regulations if it wishes to become a responsible member of the world community.
Raab had said earlier that he is not in a hurry to decide about the fate of the British-flagged oil tanker detained in Iran.
Iran’s President Rouhani had also said on Boris Johnson’s first day as British Prime Minister that if Europeans stop what they have been doing in Gibraltar, they will receive an appropriate response from Iran.
He was referring to the detention of Iranian oil tanker Grace 1 at Gibraltar for violating EU sanctions against Syria on July 4, which was followed by Iranian threats of retaliation and eventually the seizure of a British vessel.
The UK has accused Iran of piracy in the waters of Oman by seizing its tanker on 19 July and has called for forming a European coalition to protect Europe’s fleets in the Persian Gulf region.
Tensions between Iran and the United Kingdom reached an unprecedented level after Iran’s revolutionary guards, IRGC, detained British-Flagged oil tanker Stena Impero.
After the standoff ensued the United Kingdom tasked its fleet in the Persian Gulf to escort UK-flagged ships sailing through the Strait of Hormuz at the mouth of the Persian Gulf.
The UK is also trying to arrange a group of European warships to protect the security of navigation in the region.
In one of the latest developments, a South Korean warship has also been deployed to the Persian Gulf to help boost the safety of navigation in the region.

Russia Fires Another ICBM Nuke (Daniel 7)

Russia’s Strategic Rocket Forces Test Fire Nuclear-Capable Topol ICBMRussia’s Strategic Rocket Forces Test Fire Nuclear-Capable Topol ICBM

Russia’s Strategic Rocket Forces have test fired a road-mobile Topol intercontinental-range ballistic missile (ICBM) from the Kapustin Yar practice range in the Astrakhan Region in south Russia on July 26, the Russian Ministry of Defense (MoD) said in a statement.
“On July 26, 2019, a combat unit of the strategic missile forces conducted a test launch of an intercontinental ballistic missile of the Topol mobile ground-based missile system from the Kapustin Yar state central practice range in the Astrakhan region,” the MoD said.
The Topol ICBM reportedly hit its target in Sary-Shagan, located near Lake Balkhash in Kazakhstan, about 1,600 kilometers from the Kapustin Yar ballistic missile test site. All test objectives were met, according to the MoD.
The Topol variant test launched on July 26 was reportedly a RT-2PM Topol (NATO reporting name: SS-25 Sickle). The Russian MoD in the past has also identified the missiles used in these experimental test launches as Topol-E, “an experimental missile for conducting the trials of new types of ICBM,” according to TASS news agency. The RT-2PM Topol first entered service in 1985. The ICBM is expected to be phased out in the coming years and will be replaced by an upgraded Topol variant.
The last test of a Topol ICBM, the Topol MR (aka RS-24 Yars/NATO reporting name: SS-27 Mod2 or SS-29),  took place in February 2019. Notably, the stated aim of the February 2019 test launch was “to check, tactical, technical and flight characteristics of the prospective missile system,” according to the MoD, which could refer to the development of a new maneuverable reentry vehicle (MaRV), decoys or other penetration aids. There have also been reports of a new independent post-boost vehicle (IPBV).
As I explained at the time, IPBVs allow “for more complex and flexible targeting by maneuvering to position and then releasing multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles (MIRVs) midcourse outside the earth’s atmosphere.” Furthermore: “IPBVs can release MIRVs sooner than conventional ICBMs, which consequently allow the individual warheads to chart a course that is much more independent of the ICBMs main trajectory.”
Prior to that, the last test launch of a RS-24 Yars ICBM occurred in June 2018.
The RS-24 Yars ICBM reportedly entered service in 2010. The RS-24 Yars is a three-stage solid fueled ICBM, with an estimated range of over 10,000 kilometers, and can deploy active and passive decoys. The RS-24 Yars can reportedly carry three to six MIRVs with each warhead having a yield of 150 to 250 kilotons. The missile reportedly takes seven minutes to launch.
The Strategic Rocket Forces have approximately 60 mobile and 10 silo-based SR-24 Yars ICBMs deployed.
The Topol-M (aka RS12M2/NATO reporting name: SS-27) also is a three-stage solid fueled ICBM with a reported maximum range of around 11,000 kilometers. The missile carries a single 550-kiloton nuclear-tipped warhead. In October 2017, the Strategic Rocket Forces fired four Topol-M ICBMs as part of a routine exercise.
Russia currently deploys around 20 road-mobile and 60 silo-based Topol-Ms.
Notably, last year’s annual readiness exercise of the Strategic Rocket Forces did not involve ICBM launches.
All remaining RT-2PM Topol ICBMs are expected to be replaced by Topol-M and Topol-MR systems by the middle of the 2020s.

Another Palestinian Killed Outside the Temple Walls (Revelation 11)



Protesters flee from incoming tear gas canisters fired by Israeli forces during clashes following a demonstration along the Israel-Gaza border, east of Gaza City in the central Gaza Strip on September 7, 2018. –AFP photo
July 27, 2019
GAZA CITY, PALESTINIAN TERRITORIES – A Palestinian was killed by Israeli army fire during clashes on the Gaza border, the health ministry in the Hamas-run enclave said Saturday.
The ministry said Ahmed Qura, 23, died „as a result of wounds sustained (from) the Israeli occupation forces‘ fire“ on Friday.
He had been hit in the stomach during demonstrations along the border fence east of Khan Yunis in southern Gaza.
The Israeli army said troops resorted to live fire against violent protesters after first using „riot dispersal means“.
Approximately 5,500 rioters and demonstrators gathered at the Gaza Strip security fence,“ a spokeswoman told AFP, saying that some threw explosive devices and grenades and tried to approach the fence.
„Troops responded with riot dispersal means and (live) fire in accordance with standard operating procedures.“
She was unable to confirm if any Palestinians were hit but said no soldiers were injured.
Since March 2018, Palestinians in Gaza have been holding often violent demonstrations along the heavily guarded Israeli border.
Israeli forces often fire on the demonstrators, saying they are seeking to prevent the border being infiltrated.
At least 296 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza by Israeli fire since then, the majority during the border demonstrations.
Seven Israelis have been killed.
The protests have declined in intensity in recent months and Qura’s was the first death in weeks.
Another 38 Palestinians were hit and wounded with live ammunition on Friday, the health ministry said in a separate statement. -AFP