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It's An Evil And Sinister Conspiracy That Involves Very Rich And Powerful People Who Mastermind Events And Control World Affairs Through Governments And Corporations And Are Plotting Mass Population Reduction And The Emergence Of A Totalitarian World Government!   By Using Occult Secret Societies The ILLUMINATI Will Bring All Of The Nations Of This World Together As One.   We'll Have No Recourse But To Submit And Be Under Their Control Utilizing Their Digital Central Bank Currency Or To Reject This Ill-Fated Digital Identification.   The Goal Is UN Agenda 2030!   This Is The Beginning Of The End!
Spain unveils sweeping spending cuts; leaders silent on bailout

 By Michael Birnbaum,  Washington Post  September 27  2012


BERLIN — Amid a growing sense that Europe is slipping back into instability after months of relative calm, Spanish leaders unveiled sweeping spending cuts and new taxes Thursday in a last-ditch attempt to get their country’s finances on track. But they were silent about whether they would seek a formal bailout to prop up their turmoil-wracked economy.

Europe’s financial crisis appears to be going strong nearly three years after it started, with talks in Greece about its future again at an impasse, European economic indicators pointing toward recession and even relatively strong France confronting a bleak financial outlook. Violent anti-austerity protests rocked Spain and Greece this week, while a June deal to give aid to banks seemed to partially unravel after finance ministers questioned basic assumptions about it.

In Spain, the attempt to close a $52 billion gap in the budget follows $84 billion in grinding cuts and taxes that were announced in July, and it underscores just how difficult the country’s road to recovery may be.

With Spain’s borrowing costs skyrocketing and its overall debt burden rapidly rising, the money raised by new taxes is funneling straight into interest payments. And its recession has been far deeper than anticipated in earlier forecasts, meaning that even these new measures may not be enough to stabilize the economy. In fact, analysts say, they may worsen unemployment, which at 25 percent is already the highest of the 17 nations that share the euro currency.

The measures came after two days of massive anti-austerity protests on the streets of Madrid and renewed separatist efforts in the restive Spanish province of Catalonia. Spanish citizens are increasingly questioning how much more budget pressure they can take.

Also Thursday, Greek leaders announced that they had reached preliminary agreement on $14.8 billion in additional cuts demanded by the international debt inspectors making a do-or-die decision about whether to give Greece a fresh installment of its bailout or leave it to go bankrupt and possibly off the euro. Negotiations have been beset by conflict amid reports that Greece has wildly missed the financial targets that were set out less than a year ago.

And a key European Commission business and consumer survey released Thursday painted a gloomy picture of September, with signs pointing toward a significant recession.

In Spain, Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy has been trying to benefit from the early September promise of aid from the deep-pocketed European Central Bank without actually resorting to that help, because it would require him to seek a bailout and accept strict oversight from European watchdogs who have pushed painful cuts in Greece and other struggling countries.

Affecting a range of citizens 

The measures announced Thursday could preempt at least some of the requirements that would be imposed on Spain if it did seek a bailout, thus easing the sting to Spanish sovereignty. Officials repeatedly emphasized that they were acting within European Union recommendations, perhaps an indication that was indeed their plan.

Spanish borrowing costs plunged after the Sept. 6 announcement that the ECB would use “unlimited” resources to buy government bonds from struggling countries if the euro’s future were at stake. But in recent days, markets have caught on to Rajoy’s caution about seeking assistance, and Spanish bond yields are again edging close to the 6 percent mark that many analysts say is a red line of danger.

Most European markets, which closed as the late-in-the-day Spanish announcement was being made, were up slightly. So was the euro, up a hair at $1.29.

In a measure of the political unpopularity of the cuts, Rajoy avoided cameras Thursday, sending out deputies to make the difficult announcement.

“We are complying with . . . our commitments to our European partners,” said Deputy Prime Minister Soraya Saenz de Santamaria in a news conference in Madrid.

The budget proposal in Spain would impose new measures to discourage early retirement and try to get more people to retire at the official age of 65. Some sectors of the economy will be liberalized, and an independent commission will be set up to monitor progress on the structural overhauls, officials said. Several taxes would be increased, and ministry spending would drop 8.9 percent.

The budget is subject to approval by the Spanish parliament, which has been under siege from protesters in recent days. More than half of Spaniards ages 18 to 25 are unemployed.

The plans brought praise from E.U. Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn, who said in a statement Thursday that “the reforms are clearly targeted at some of the most pressing policy challenges.”

But some analysts questioned whether the measures would be enough, suggesting that it is only a matter of time before Spain is forced to seek more European assistance. Rajoy told the Wall Street Journal this week that he has not made up his mind about asking for more help, but that if his country’s interest rates were “too high for too long . . . I can assure you 100 percent that I would ask for this bailout.”

Many analysts see a bailout as inevitable. Spain “has to ask for money, or everyone knows that things will get worse,” said Sony Kapoor, managing director of Re-Define, a Brussels-based think tank. Without a bailout, he said, borrowing costs would spiral upward and deposits would keep emptying from Spanish banks. But he said that the austerity being pushed on Spain was so onerous that he was not sure a bailout would be enough to offset it.

Audit findings coming

There is also fresh uncertainty about future assistance for Spain’s banking system, with the finance ministers of Germany, Finland and the Netherlands saying that governments may for the time being be liable for any European bailout money given to the country’s troubled banks. That would appear to go against an agreement reached in June, which sought to disentangle the financial problems of governments and their banks, and could leave Spain with a burden of up to $129 billion for the help for its banking sector.

On Friday, the results of an audit of Spain’s banks will be released, putting a concrete figure on how much money the troubled sector will need to shore up balance sheets. Rajoy said this week that their financing needs would be significantly less than that.

Spain this year has been trying to reduce its deficit to 6.3 percent of its gross domestic product. Although Spanish officials said Thursday that they would make the target, most analysts expect the government to fall short, making it more difficult to hit a 4.5 percent mark in 2013.

Spain’s problems are compacted by increasing unrest in regions that have long had simmering separatist tendencies, which have been exacerbated by the federal austerity measures. This week, the leader of Catalonia, Arturo Mas, called early regional elections for November, a move that could give extra power to separatists there who are planning a referendum on the region’s future. The promise of more turmoil and perhaps more budget autonomy will only add stress to Spain’s tenuous position on the international bond markets, analysts say.




Netanyahu draws "red line" on Iran's nuclear program

By Jeffrey Heller UNITED NATIONS (Reuters)  



UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu drew his "red line" for Iran's nuclear program on Thursday despite a U.S. refusal to set an ultimatum, saying Tehran will be on the brink of a nuclear weapon in less than a year.

By citing a time frame in an address to the U.N. General Assembly, Netanyahu - who has clashed with President Barack Obama over the urgency of military action against Iran - appeared to suggest no Israeli attack was imminent before the November 6 U.S. presidential election.

Holding up a cartoon-like drawing of a bomb with a fuse, Netanyahu literally drew a red line just below a label reading "final stage" to a bomb, in which Iran was 90 percent along the path of having sufficient weapons-grade material.

Experts put that at the point that Iran has amassed enough uranium, purified to a level of 20 percent, that could quickly be enriched further and be used to produce an atomic bomb.

Netanyahu told the United Nations he believes that faced with a clear red line, Iran will back down in a crisis that has sent jitters across the region and in financial markets.

"And this will give more time for sanctions and diplomacy to convince Iran to dismantle its nuclear weapons program altogether," he added.

Netanyahu's remarks were the closest he or any top Israeli official has come to publicly laying out precisely which Iranian actions could trigger an Israeli military strike on Tehran's nuclear infrastructure.

But by referring to a spring or summer 2013 time frame for Iran to complete the next stage of uranium enrichment, the Israeli leader also seemed to dispel, at least for now, fears that Israel might strike Iran before the U.S. presidential election, 40 days away.

Netanyahu's remarks also seemed to deliver a two-part message to the Obama White House - along with Iran's leaders, his most important audience - signaling that the hawkish prime minister wanted an end to the all-too-public war of words with Washington over Iran's suspected nuclear ambitions. But they also showed that he was not backing down an inch on his insistence that much harsher warnings must be delivered to Tehran.

"NEXT SPRING OR SUMMER"

In his speech, Netanyahu never explicitly said that if Iran crossed his red line, Israel would launch attacks against the Iranian nuclear facilities, but he did seem to imply such a threat.

"At this late hour, there is only one way to peacefully prevent Iran from getting atomic bombs. That's by placing a clear red line on Iran's nuclear program," Netanyahu said.

Iran, Netanyahu said, was well into what he defined as the second stage of enrichment - 20 percent purification - and predicted it would complete it by "next spring, at most by next summer, at current enrichment rates."

According to an August report by the U.N. International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Iran has stockpiled 91.4 kg (201.5 pounds) of the 20 percent material.

Some experts say Iran would need 200 to 250 kg (440 to 550 pounds) of such material for a weapon. Other experts suggest less might do it. Iran could potentially reach that threshold soon by producing roughly 15 kg (33 pounds) a month, a rate that could be speeded up if it activates new enrichment centrifuges.

According to the U.N. nuclear watchdog, around 25 kg (55.1 pounds) of uranium enriched to a 90 percent purity level would be needed for a single nuclear weapon.

In his own speech to the General Assembly on Tuesday, Obama said the United States will "do what we must" to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons and that time is not unlimited for diplomacy to resolve the issue.

Obama set no ultimatum or clear "red line" of his own, despite public urging from Netanyahu over the past several weeks that has aggravated strains between the two leaders.

"CHART A PATH FORWARD"

Seeking re-election, Obama has faced criticism from Republican challenger Mitt Romney that the president is being too tough with Israel and not tough enough with Iran.

"I very much appreciate the president's position, as does everyone in my country. We share the goal of stopping Iran's nuclear weapons program," Netanyahu said.

"Israel is in discussions with the United States over this issue, and I am confident we can chart a path forward together," he said.

He spoke a day after Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad addressed the General Assembly. Ahmadinejad said on Monday he did not take seriously the threat that Israel could launch a military strike on Iran's nuclear facilities. He also said Israel has no roots in the Middle East and would be "eliminated." [ID:nL1E8KO5BL]

Netanyahu was due to meet with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton later in the day. White House spokesman Jay Carney said he expected Obama to have a follow-up phone call with Netanyahu, probably on Friday.

Obama has drawn criticism from Republicans for opting not to meet Netanyahu or other foreign leaders on the sidelines of the General Assembly and focus instead on campaigning for re-election.

ISRAELIS WARY

Netanyahu has faced opposition within his cabinet and from former Israeli security chiefs to any go-it-alone attack on Iran. Opinion polls show that Israelis are wary of any such strike by their military, whose capability of destroying underground Iranian facilities is limited.

Israel, believed to have the Middle East's only atomic arsenal, sees a nuclear-armed Iran as a threat to its existence and has expressed frustration over the failure of diplomacy and sanctions to rein in Tehran's nuclear activity. Iran says it is enriching uranium only for peaceful energy and medical purposes, not for nuclear bombs.

Daryl Kimball, executive director of the Washington-based Arms Control Association, said Iran's uranium enrichment program is improving.

"By sometime next year, Iran could potentially amass enough 20 percent enriched material that could - if Iran decides to expel inspectors and convert the material to weapons grade - provide enough nuclear material for one bomb," Kimball said.

"But enough material for one bomb doesn't constitute an effective, deliverable nuclear arsenal."




LRAD Sonic Weapons To Be Deployed “Throughout” America For Crises


Devices commonly used by police to quell civil unrest, disperse protests

Infowars.com           September 27, 2012

The U.S. Air National Guard has purchased half a million dollars worth of portable LRAD acoustic systems, which are commonly used by police to quell protests and civil unrest, ensuring that the sonic weapons will be deployed “throughout” America during upcoming national emergencies and other crises.


The video above demonstrates how the portable LRAD works even at 200 feet high and amidst the noise of a helicopter.


LRAD Corporation has received an order worth $550,00 from the Air National Guard to ship LRAD 100X devices this quarter.
“With this order, LRAD systems will be in use by every major force of the Department of Defense,” Tom Brown, president and CEO of LRAD told Government Security News. “The Air National Guard will be deploying the LRAD 100X systems throughout the country to support and assist civil authorities in the event of severe natural or man-made disasters. LRAD systems have proven highly effective in communicating warnings, instructions and commands over wide areas before, during, and in the aftermath of catastrophes.”
As well as being powerful communication devices, LRADs emit piercing sounds that amount to nothing less than auditory torture, and serve to disperse people from geographical areas, breaking up demonstrations and other gatherings.
Larger versions of the LRAD, previously used against Somali pirates and insurgents in Afghanistan, are increasingly being deployed inside America. In 2009, the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department deployed an LRAD against people going to a town hall meeting.
The largest version of the LRAD is routinely used to break up “unlawful assemblies” at protests of global summits,including at the 2009 G20 in Pittsburgh, during which an LRAD was used to terrify local residents who weren’t even involved in the protest.

The LRAD 100X is weather proof, able to be heard clearly at distances of 600 meters and is 20 to 30 decibels louder than a standard bullhorn. The sound which the device is capable of emitting to disperse people is both a tool of torture and psychological warfare. Despite being described as “non-lethal,” the most powerful versions of the device can kill under certain conditions.

Studies have found that the type of sound waves emitted by the sonic weapon can cause epileptic seizures, long term problems affecting brain tissue, as well as cardiovascular and central nervous system damage in humans.

As we have previously highlighted, preparations on behalf of law enforcement bodies, the federal government and branches of the military for domestic disorder have been ongoing.

The Department of Homeland Security has purchased over 1.4 billion rounds of ammunition in the last six months alone.

Last year, DHS chief Janet Napolitano directed ICE to prepare for a mass influx of immigrants into the United States, calling for the plan to deal with the “shelter” and “processing” of large numbers of people.
The U.S. Army has also been preparing for domestic disorder.
A recently leaked US Army Military Police training manual for “Civil Disturbance Operations” outlines how military assets are to be used domestically to quell riots, confiscate firearms and even kill Americans on U.S. soil during mass civil unrest.
U.S. troops are also being provided with new state of the art headgear in order to carry out “homeland security operations.”
Back in 2008 the Washington Post reported how 20,000 U.S. troops returning from Iraq would be stationed inside America under Northcom for purposes of “domestic security” from September 2011 onwards.
Northcom officials were forced to subsequently issue a denial after the Army Times initially reported that the troops would be used to deal “with civil unrest and crowd control.”

Watch a clip of a larger version of the LRAD dispersing protesters at the 2009 G20 in Pittsburgh, the first time the device was used inside the United States.