• Prophecy Being Fulfilled - Euphrates River

    From Jeff Snyder@1:345/3777 to All on Sat Oct 16 11:07:00 2010
    With so many interesting and controversial issues and events being reported
    in the news on a daily basis, the following news article is one which
    probably very few people -- at least very few Americans -- even bothered to read. However, if we view world events with a prophetic eye -- as we Endtime Christians should be doing -- we will understand that this article bears a
    lot of prophetic significance.

    Over the years, I have mentioned a number of times how the Book of
    Revelation states that God will cause the Euphrates River to dry up, in
    order to prepare the way for the "kings of the east", who will partake in
    the great Battle of Armageddon, as we see here:

    "And the sixth angel poured out his vial upon the great river Euphrates; and the water thereof was dried up, that the way of the kings of the east might
    be prepared." Revelation 16:12, KJV

    As I explain in my articles, contrary to what is taught by a number of other Bible teachers, I have proposed that the term "kings of the east" is not referring to the political leaders and military leaders and their armies of
    the Orient -- that is, China, Japan, the Koreas, etc., -- but rather to the military leaders and forces of Turkey.

    Why am I convinced of this?

    To reiterate my point, it is because the phrase "kings of the east" actually means the "kings of Anatolia" in the original Greek language of the New Testament. The word "east" is derived from the Greek "anatole", which is pronounced an-at-ol-ay'. In case you had forgotten, Anatolia has long been
    the name of Turkey, and it is STILL used in Turkey today. The name Turkey is
    a modern concoction -- derived from Mustafa Kamal Ataturk, (please refer to
    my articles) -- and isn't even a hundred years old. In older times, Turkey
    was known as Anatolia, and before that, as Asia Minor. That is where most of the Seven Churches of the Book of Revelation were located. That region of
    the world was the home of the Hittites -- the descendants of Heth -- who we read about throughout the Old Testament.

    But returning to my main point, it is very significant then, that God's Word says that the Euphrates River -- which finds its origins in Turkey, and the water flow of which is largely controlled by Turkey -- will some day dry up.

    In light of this prophetic Biblical fact, the following article is indeed significant, because it explains once again how areas around the Euphrates River -- in both Syria and Iraq -- are drying up like a prune, as are the
    water lenses in those areas. Millions of people have already suffered as a result of this, and have been displaced. This problem is so serious now,
    that the governments of both Syria and Iraq are very concerned about it.

    In the not-too-distant future, there may be wars in the Middle East over
    water rights, and Turkey will probably be at the center of it all, because
    the Turks are hogging up the water from the rivers that feed into the Euphrates.


    Earth Is Parched Where Syrian Farms Thrived

    By ROBERT F. WORTH - NYT

    October 13, 2010


    AR RAQQAH, Syria -- The farmlands spreading north and east of this Euphrates River town were once the breadbasket of the region, a vast expanse of golden wheat fields and bucolic sheep herds.

    Now, after four consecutive years of drought, this heartland of the Fertile Crescent -- including much of neighboring Iraq -- appears to be turning
    barren, climate scientists say. Ancient irrigation systems have collapsed, underground water sources have run dry and hundreds of villages have been abandoned as farmlands turn to cracked desert and grazing animals die off. Sandstorms have become far more common, and vast tent cities of dispossessed farmers and their families have risen up around the larger towns and cities
    of Syria and Iraq.

    "I had 400 acres of wheat, and now it's all desert," said Ahmed Abdullah,
    48, a farmer who is living in a ragged burlap and plastic tent here with his wife and 12 children alongside many other migrants. "We were forced to flee. Now we are at less than zero -- no money, no job, no hope."

    The collapse of farmlands here -- which is as much a matter of human mismanagement as of drought -- has become a dire economic challenge and a rising security concern for the Syrian and Iraqi governments, which are
    growing far more dependent on other countries for food and water. Syria,
    which once prided itself on its self-sufficiency and even exported wheat, is now quietly importing it in ever larger amounts. The country's total water resources dropped by half between 2002 and 2008, partly through waste and overuse, scientists and water engineers say.

    For Syria, which is running out of oil reserves and struggling to draw
    foreign investment, the farming crisis is an added vulnerability in part because it is taking place in the area where its restive Kurdish minority is centered. Iraq, devastated by war, is now facing a water crisis in both the north and the south that may be unprecedented in its history. Both countries have complained about reduced flow on the Euphrates, thanks to massive
    upriver dam projects in Turkey that are likely to generate more tension as
    the water crisis worsens.

    The four-year drought in Syria has pushed two million to three million
    people into extreme poverty, according to a survey completed here this month
    by the United Nations special rapporteur on the right to food, Olivier De Schutter. Herders in the country's northeast have lost 85 percent of their livestock, and at least 1.3 million people have been affected, he reported.

    An estimated 50,000 more families have migrated from rural areas this year,
    on top of the hundreds of thousands of people who fled in earlier years, Mr.
    De Schutter said. Syria, with a fast-growing population, has already
    strained to accommodate more than a million Iraqi refugees in the years
    since the 2003 invasion.

    "It is ironic: this region is the origin of wheat and barley, and now it is among the biggest importers of these products," said Rami Zurayk, a
    professor of agricultural and food science at the American University in
    Beirut who is writing a book on the farming crisis.

    The drought has become a delicate subject for the Syrian government, which
    does not give foreign journalists official permission to write about it or grant access to officials in the Agriculture Ministry. On the road running south from Damascus, displaced farmers and herders can be seen living in
    tents, but the entrances are closely watched by Syrian security agents, who
    do not allow journalists in.

    Droughts have always taken place here, but "the regional climate is changing
    in ways that are clearly observable," said Jeannie Sowers, a professor at
    the University of New Hampshire who has written on Middle East climate
    issues. "Whether you call it human-induced climate change or not, much of
    the region is getting hotter and dryer, combined with more intense, erratic rainfall and flooding in some areas. You will have people migrating as a result, and governments are ill prepared."

    The Syrian government has begun to acknowledge the scale of the problem and
    has developed a national drought plan, though it has not yet been put in
    place, analysts say. Poor planning helped create the problem in the first place: Syria spent $15 billion on misguided irrigation projects between 1988 and 2000 with little result, said Elie Elhadj, a Syrian-born author who
    wrote his Ph.D. dissertation on the topic. Syria continues to grow cotton
    and wheat in areas that lack sufficient water -- making them more vulnerable
    to drought -- because the government views the ability to produce those
    crops as part of its identity and a bulwark against foreign dependence, analysts say.

    Illegal water drills can be seen across Syria and Iraq, and underground
    water tables are dropping at a rate that is "really frightening," said Mr.
    De Schutter, the United Nations expert. There are no reliable nationwide statistics, and some analysts and Western diplomats say they believe the
    Syrian government is not measuring them.

    As in other countries across the Arab world, corruption and failed administration are often to blame. "A lot of powerful people don't abide by
    the regulations, and nobody can tame them," said Nabil Sukkar, a
    Damascus-based economic analyst.

    In Ar Raqqah, many displaced farmers talk about wells running dry, and
    turning polluted.

    "My uncle's well used to be 70 meters deep, now it's 130 meters and now the water became salty, so we closed it down," said Khalaf Ayed Tajim, a stocky sheep herder and farmer who heads a local collective for displaced
    northerners. He left his native village 60 miles from here when half of his herd died off and his fields dried up, and now lives in a concrete bunker
    with his 17 children, two wives, and his mother.

    In Iraq, 100,000 people had been displaced as of a year ago, according to a United Nations report. More than 70 percent of the ancient underground aqueducts have dried up and been abandoned in the past five years, the
    report said. Since then, the situation has only worsened.

    "We saw whole villages buried in sand," said Zaid al-Ali, an Iraqi-born lecturer at the Institut d'Etudes Politiques in Paris who returned in August from a survey of water and farm conditions in Kirkuk and Salahuddin
    Provinces, in northern Iraq. "Their situation is desperate."

    Southern Iraq has seen similar farming collapses, with reduced river flow
    from the Euphrates and the drying up of the once vast southern marshes.

    Syrian officials say they expect to get help from water-rich Turkey, which
    has recently become a close ally after years of frosty relations. But it may
    be too late to save the abandoned villages of northern Syria and Iraq.

    "At first, the migrations were temporary, but after three or four years,
    these people will not come back," said Abdullah Yahia bin Tahir, the United Nations Food and Agriculture representative in Damascus.

    "Back in the village, our houses are covered in dust; it's as if they'd been destroyed," said Mr. Tajim, the farmer who moved here two years ago. "We
    would love to go back, but how? There is no water, no electricity, nothing."



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