NUCLEAR
WAR OR TERROR: IS IT CLOSE AT HAND?
I
have dropped the WAR page since it seemed like it was not of much use to me or
you. This articles has distinct prophetic overtones. I remind you
that Ezekiel 38, along with all other Bible prophetic discussions, do NOT have
Russia in the loop of Antichrist in the same way as Europe, the Middle East, Babylon,
Africa, and the "Isles" of the sea. Also, Russia comes down with Gomer (Germany)
and the slavic counties, first to "guard" Israel, then to take Israel a plunder.
For this to happen, Russia must again become isolationist, and she must
be such a threat that the rest of the world is too fearful to try to stop her.
A demolished USA, along with a timid Europe, would assure that Russia could
do as she pleased with Israel, and with impunity. Thus,
I decided this article would freshen up your understanding of the present and
the possibility of nuclear war being just around the corner. My father has
said for years that a nuclear exchange would be just the thing the Antichrist
could use to move the world to a one man peace offer and dictatorship. The
world will NOT be destroyed by nuclear war, but those nations which perpetrate
that war WILL be trashed. The other nations would then scream for a deliverer.
Tadaaaaaaaa... Enter old slewfoot. Along with
this article, you must read, ISRAEL, RUSSIA, AND CHINA.
This will help you to see how the world truly IS changing and aligning itself
for the final act.
Date: Mon, 17 May
1999 10:11:10 -0400 From: Eric Fawcett - fawcett@physics.utoronto.ca
"BOMBINGS REIGNITE NUCLEAR WAR FEARS" by Dr. Mary-Wynne Ashford
(Times-Colonist 13 MAY 99 page A15) Dr. Mary-Wynne Ashford is co-president
of the Nobel Peace Prize IPPNW] I am writing with an enormous
sense of urgency and dread. I have just been at a seminar in Moscow, followed
by one at the Olof Palme Institue in Stockholm. The meetings have convinced me
we are on the brink of nuclear war by the unintentional escalation of the war
against Yugoslavia. Only western press and television coverage does
not portray the significance of the change in Russian policy regarding nuclear
weapons. The media imply that Russian warnings of a looming world war, and their
refusal to ratify START II, are the usual political threats to gain concessions
from the U.S.A. and loans from the International Monetary Fund. This
analysis does not reflect the profound change in public opinion expressed even
by Moscow members of International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War.
One of our long-term IPPNW doctors, Dr. Davidenko, has changed from advocating
nuclear disarmament to advocating nuclear deterrence for Russia. Our meeting with
Aleksander Arbatov, deputy chairman of the Defence Committee of the Russian State
Duma, left us deeply concerned. Arbatov stated that U.S.-Russian
relations, in the wake of NATO's bombing campaign in Yugoslavia, are at the "worst,
most acute, most dangerous juncture since the U.S.-Soviet Berlin and Cuban missile
crises." He states that START II is dead, co-operation with NATO is frozen, co-operation
on missile defence is out of the question, and Moscow's willingness to co-operate
on non-proliferation issues is at an all-time low. Moreover, anti-U.S.
sentiment in Russia is real, deep and more wide-spread than ever, and the slogan
describing NATO action - "today Serbia, tomorrow Russia," is "deeply planted in
Russian's minds." Arbatov was bitter about 10 years of wasted opportunities on
both sides, with disarmament talks completely stalled even before this crisis.
Scientists, politicians, doctors and generals all told us the same
thing, that NATO bombings of Serbia have set back disarmament 20 years. Some said
that India and Pakistan are safe now they have nuclear weapons and that other
states like North Korea will step up their nuclear weapons programs. Officials
from Minatom, the Russian atomic energy agency, have indicated their great concern
about some 22 nuclear reactors in the region of conflict. A bomb hitting a reactor
by accident would cause a catastrophe worse than Chernobyl. Government spokesmen
told us repeatedly that Russia will not allow the bombings to continue for another
month, and that because their conventional forces are in tatters, Russia must
rely on its nuclear weapons. I must ask, "if these are idle threats, what distinguishes
them from real threats?" The credibility of the people we spoke with has convinced
me that the threats are serious. Opinion is divided in most countries,
even in peace organizations, about whether the NATO bombings were a humanitarian
effort to stop a genocide or an act of aggression by NATO, but their impact on
nuclear weapons policy is an extremely serious development. Most worrisome to
us was the consistency of the statements from speakers at the Moscow seminar and
those we met later in ministries of foreign affairs and health. The
single exception was Dr. Evgenie Chazov. He said we must renew our efforts for
nuclear disarmament in this very dangerous situation. Dr. Chazov said we are back
where we were in 1981 when he and American cardiologist Dr. Bernard Lown founded
IPPNW, but our work will be more difficult now. The Russian speakers deplored
ethnic cleansing and did not support Milosovic, but Dr. Serguei Kapitsa, a scientist
famous for his weekly television show, stated that Russians feel a sense of betrayal
by the West and a profound loss of confidence in treaties and in the United Nations
because NATO took this action outside the UN. Previously confident that Russia
was moving toward integration with Europe, they focused their security concerns
only on their southern and eastern boundaries. Now they perceive their primary
threat from the West. Officials in Foreign Affairs (Arms Control
and Disarmament) told us that Russia has no option but to rely on nuclear weapons
for its defence because its conventional forces are inadequate. When I said that
if Russia used even a single nuclear weapon the U.S.A. would respond with hundreds
or thousands of missiles, they nodded and said "Yes, it would be suicidal, but
how else can we defend ourselves?" As I left Moscow, I felt the same
dread I experienced in the Reagan years, with a similar sense of unreality. While
the Russians are comparing this situation to the Cuban missile crisis, journalists
in the West tell me that the war is almost over now that negotiations including
the Russians are under way. Why are they reassured when Milosevic has not agreed
to anything, and the bombing of the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade has added even
greater tensions to this war? Even if the bombings stop now, they
change Russia's attitude toward the West, its renewed reliance on nuclear weapons
with thousands on high alert, and its loss of confidence in international law
leave us vulnerable to catastrophe. Those of us who live in NATO
countries must convince our governments to stop the bombings until negotiations
can bring about a settlement. This crisis makes de-alerting nuclear weapons more
urgent than ever. To those who say the Russian threat is all rhetoric, I reply
that rhetoric is what starts wars. The global situation is the most
urgent crisis of our time. We must mobilize all or networks to stop this bombing
before we slide into the final world war. Here is an exceptional
link on surviving nuclear war: http://www.geocities.com/SunsetStrip/Underground/6594/nuclear.htm
Good book on survival of nuclear war to download: http://www.nuclearsurvival.com/book.htm
GE |