Sunday, May 31, 2009

END OF DAYS PART II – THE DAY OF JUDGEMENT IS ALREADY HERE

...continued from "End of Days Part I".

Interpretation Derived From The Qur’an:

The latest the Day of Judgement commenced was 1950, at the start of the Korean War. Technically speaking, the Korean War never ended, the two countries have been at war since 1950…otherwise why is there still a DMZ (Demilitarized Zone)? The fact they are still at war is understood in international legal terms as an Armistice. Hence since 1953, during the past 56 years Gog (North Korea) and Magog (meaning ‘a people from or of Gog’, i.e. South Korea) have had an extended 'breather or 'regrouping' of sorts. The first wave or sets of waves were unleashed when the two sides attacked each other during the years 1950-1953. Hence, when the Qur’an says,

Abdel Haleem 21:96
“when the peoples of Gog and Magog are let loose and swarm swiftly from every highland, when the True Promise draws near, the disbelievers ‘eyes will stare in terror, and they will say, ‘Woe to us! We were not aware of this at all. We were wrong.’

It is clear from the above verse that God will not reveal Himself immediately upon the first wave when the people of Gog and Magog swarm down upon each other. The first wave or surge (i.e. the 1950-1953 Korean War), however, was a clear event which signified the Day of Judgement had already and definitively arrived, as per the following verse:

Abdel Haleem 18:99
On that Day, We shall let them surge against each other like waves and then the Trumpet will be blown and We shall gather them all together.”

The capital ‘D’ denotes the Day of Judgement, as oppose to a small ‘d’ which means a human day. So clearly, the implication is the Day of Judgement is already upon us, and has been since at least 1950. Now, if you think a 56 year period for a ‘temporary truce’ is a long time, well it depends on your reference point. In terms of God’s Day - being 1,000 years by our measurement of time (see 22:47 below) – the fact that 56 years have already gone by only implies that God’s True Promise, i.e. Our Reckoning, is imminently near, just as 21:96 above implies.

Abdel Haleem 22:47
“They will challenge you (Prophet) to hasten the punishment. God will not fail in His promise – a Day with your Lord is like a thousand years by your reckoning. To many a town steeped in wrongdoing I gave more time and then struck them down: they all return to Me in the end.”

Gog Wants To Re-Unite with Magog:

It has been the singular objective of North Korea, ever since the Korean War, to unite the two Koreas and make them subservient to the Stalinist modeled regime of the North. That’s it, nothing more, nothing less. They do not want world conquest. They do not want to influence any other country. They just want all of Korea; they are of the same blood after all, they are literally ‘from’ or ‘of’ each other. In fact, genetically speaking, the North and South Koreans are the most homogeneous population in the world. This is a direct result of their geography; for thousands of years they have been living in a peninsula isolated and surrounded by ocean on three sides, mountains all over the place, and effectively 'barricaded' by China on the north – which is a distinctly different culture and race. The Koreans, literally, were contained with nowhere to go. This is exactly the way the Qur’an describes them, Gog and Magog will be isolated - until such time of God’s choosing - when He will release them against each other.

The key phrase here is each other, not against the world as most doomsayers have been predicting. George W. Bush and the good old boyz club got it all wrong, Gog and Magog aren't Iraq or the Muslim world after all. God, in His infinite wisdom, tucked Gog and Magog away where we would least expect to find them. And now, with the truth revealed and we have found them - even if you all thought I wasn't a total crackpot, agreed with me, and spread the word - well quite frankly, it's too late. There's not a darn thing anyone can do about it, for as we shall see...the war will go forward, by God's leave. God's plan must come to pass...for there is no changing God's plan.

Since the Korean War, Kim II-Sung, the founder of North Korea, has promised to unite the two Koreas before his death. Well…he didn’t make it - he passed away in 1994 – and left this task to his son, Kim Jong-il, to complete. Kim Jong-il has reiterated the same vow, with an incredible resolve and backed by impressive results for a country with such little means. Since the 1990’s there has been a slow but deliberate movement of troops amassed at the heavily fortified North-South Korean border. The movement has been slow, and spread well over a decade, in order to avoid suspicion - the term being “creeping normalcy’. There are now over 700,000 North Korean troops lined at the border along with all the infrastructure necessary to support them. Now what possible ultimate purpose can this serve except preparation for eventual invasion?

The nuclear ambitions of North Korea, to this day, remain unmitigated. The reason: North Korea doesn’t want to nuke South Korea - it just wants an effective deterrent against imperial powers - mainly the U.S. North Korea wants the nukes, and the ability to deliver them to South Korea, Japan, and if possible U.S. soil, in order to deter the U.S. from resorting to nukes in the event the North appears to be unassailably winning the war. The aim of North Korea has been to develop the nuke arsenal along with sufficient delivery capabilities to reach an effective level of deterrence.

Once this is attained, the unrelenting conventional assault on South Korea would be given the green light. The North Korean strategy has been a wholly specialized strategy – it’s sole purpose is to strategically counter the U.S. backed military arsenal and fully leverage the unique terrain of the Korean peninsula. To that end, they have over 11,000 fortified underground facilities, 8 million reserves on top of the 1.2 million army, a fibre optics based specialized communications system, and the use of constant flux frequencies that no one, not even the U.S. can tap into. According to Intel, the North Korean army is the only army in the world capable of successfully executing a significant military maneuver without radio communication; now that is one formidably well trained and loyal army - truly a force to be reckoned with.

Regardless of how much North Korea plans, the overall plan however, belongs to God. God has intervened, and is putting a wrench in their nuclear ambitions. Or so it would seem. In the final analysis, we don’t know for sure what the North Korean capabilities really are. The best Intel suggests the North Koreans are not yet able to miniaturize the nukes onto a warhead for delivery. Without this critical capability, it’s as if they never had a nuclear bomb. And now the U.S. et al, will surely close the noose and board any ships entering and leaving North Korea, backed by U.N. resolutions supporting the same. This critical vote will almost definitely get the big 'Yes' this coming week. This really is tantamount to war. The North Koreans are correct to view it as such. What would happen if some country did that to US ships? What do you think the US would view it as? Why would it be any different for the North Koreans?

Gog’s Options

North Korea has its back against the wall. Considering the sole objective since its very foundation has been to unite the Koreas (on their own terms), it has virtually zero options left other than war. If North Korea relents to U.S. demands, it will likely never reach nuclear capability, and by now the U.S. had made it no secret that it intends to not just halt but completely dismantle North Korea's nuclear program.

On the conventional side, North Korea has invested whatever resources it has on thousands and thousands of military hardware - at the cost of millions of their own citizen's lives who died from starvation during the 1990's famine for example. There wasn't enough food, but somehow the military continued to grow and march forward. This should be a wake-up call on how determined this regime is on 'uniting' the Koreas. Most of North Korea's conventional military equipment however, is out-dated by today’s leading weaponry standards. The term is 'out-dated' not 'obsolete'. The two are not the same. Most military strategists vehemently assert North Korea’s 'out-dated' military equipment will be lethally effective when combined with their total peninsula specific infrastructure and strategy. But North Korea really cannot wait any longer to use it; the longer they wait the more likely ‘out-dated’ will in fact become ‘obsolete’. For all intent and purposes, it is a ‘now or never’ scenario - literally, 'do or die' for North Korea.

To be continued…in part III

Peace. Imran.

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