Deborah (5 July 2006)
"Listen to Steve Quayle's "Connecting the Dots" July 4th Broadcast!"


Listen to Steve Quayle's July 4th Radio airing which he is making available to everyone:
 
Steve Quayle's World: It's a Blast!
 
 
 
North Korea jaming subs communications off Hawaii.
 
North Korea launches 6 missles.
 
U.S. Airforce bases on heightened alert.
 
PA lobbing rockets into Israel.
 
Israel threatens to attack Damascus.
 
Security Cabinet approves deeper incursion into Gaza.
 
Russia seeks approval to launch military.
 
Escalation of rhetoric has reached a feverish pitch around the world.
 
Has "the fuse" been lit???????
 
Steve Quayle receives a word from the Lord:
 "This is not the beginning of The End, it IS the End."

 
 
CNN.com - U.S. officials: North Korea tests long-range missile - Jul 4, 2006
 
 
N. Korea Launched 6 Missiles Today




July 4, 2006
ABC

North Korea launched six missiles today, including one believed to be the long-range Taepodong-2, which is believed to be capable of reaching U.S. soil, sources told ABC News.

The Bush administration called the missile launches "a clear provocation," but said there was no immediate threat to the United States.

The first two missiles launched appeared to be short- or mid-range Scud-type missiles and both fell into the Sea of Japan, but the third — which broke up less than a minute after it launched — was the longer range missile, sources said. The fourth missile launched was another Scud, and after that two Nodongs, which have a range that could include Japan.

The last time North Korea launched a Taepodong missile was in 1998, and that test failed as well.

The Bush administration had warned North Korea against testing the Taepodong-2, and has said Pyongyang should return to the six-party negotiations regarding its nuclear weapons program. North Korea has said it wants one-on-one talks with the United States, a demand the Bush administration has repeatedly spurned.

President Bush was in constant communication with Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley throughout the afternoon, White House spokesman Tony Snow said.

Ambassador Chris Hill, the assistant secretary for the Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs, spoke with his counterparts in Japan, South Korea and China, and he will travel to the region on Wednesday.

The decision today to launch the missiles is most likely an effort to force the United States to change its stance, ABC News consultant and retired Gen. Jack Keane said.

"They're being used at this time certainly not to test them, they already know what their capabilities are," Keane said. "This is all part of the negotiations that they're trying to leverage here with the United States, and also to demonstrate, you know, once again, that they're a regional power."

However, other analysts said that if North Korea was trying to send a message, the message that came across might not be the one that was intended.

"To have it blow up shortly after it took off and while it was still the first stage is much more an indication of North Korean incompetence, than that North Korea's a threat," ABC News security consultant Anthony Cordesman said.

All the launches were detected and tracked by NORAD — the North American Aerospace Defense Command — sources told ABC News. No actions were taken by the U.S. military in response to the launches, sources said.

The first launch occurred around 2:30 p.m. ET, and the second came at around 3 p.m. The launch of the long-range missile came an hour later.

The United States had been watching the launch pad for nearly a month, and Bush administration officials have issued stern warnings to the North Koreans not to test fire the missile.

Bush said last month that a launch of the Taepodong-2 would be "unacceptable," and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said, "It would be a very serious matter and indeed a provocative act."

http://abcnews.go.com/International/story?id=2153034&CMP=OTC-RSSFeeds0312

N. Korea Warns of Nuclear War If Attacked




July 3, 2006
AP

SEOUL, South Korea - North Korea will respond to a pre-emptive U.S. military attack with an "annihilating strike and a nuclear war," the state-run media said Monday, heightening its antagonistic rhetoric.

Photo: North Korean leader Kim Jong Il is seen in this framegrab taken from Chinese television on January 18, 2006. The North stepped up its rhetoric with the United States on Monday. State-run media reported that the country would respond to any pre-emptive U.S. military attack with an 'annihilating strike and a nuclear war.' (AP Photo/Kyodo News, File)

The Korean Central News Agency, citing an unidentified Rodong Sinmun newspaper "analyst," accused the United States of increasing military pressure on the isolated communist state.

The North Korean threat of retaliation, which is often voiced by its state-controlled media, comes amid U.S. official reports that Pyongyang has shown signs of preparing for a test of a long-range missile.

"The army and people of the DPRK are now in full preparedness to answer a pre-emptive attack with a relentless annihilating strike and a nuclear war with a mighty nuclear deterrent," the report said. DPRK stands for the North's official name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.

The report accused Washington of escalating military pressure on the country with war exercises, a massive arms buildup and aerial espionage by basing new spy planes in
South Korea.

North Korea routinely accuses the U.S. of aerial espionage, issuing a tally of such flights at the end of every month. The U.S. military doesn't comment, although it acknowledges monitoring North Korean military activity.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060703/ap_on_re_as/nkorea_us

 

CNN.com - U.S. officials: North Korea tests long-range missile - Jul 4, 2006
 
 


Maranatha!
Deborah

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