JEWISH KING JESUS IS COMING AT THE RAPTURE FOR US IN THE CLOUDS-DON'T MISS IT FOR THE WORLD.THE BIBLE TAKEN LITERALLY- WHEN THE PLAIN SENSE MAKES GOOD SENSE-SEEK NO OTHER SENSE-LEST YOU END UP IN NONSENSE.GET SAVED NOW- CALL ON JESUS TODAY.THE ONLY SAVIOR OF THE WHOLE EARTH - NO OTHER. 1 COR 15:23-JESUS THE FIRST FRUITS-CHRISTIANS RAPTURED TO JESUS-FIRST FRUITS OF THE SPIRIT-23 But every man in his own order: Christ the firstfruits; afterward they that are Christ’s at his coming.ROMANS 8:23 And not only they, but ourselves also, which have the firstfruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body.(THE PRE-TRIB RAPTURE)
NORTH KOREA FIRES RECORD 23 MISSLES OVER NIGHT. BENJAMIN IS ON HIS WAY TO VICTORY IN ISRAEL.
2022
electionsLapid said preparing for prospect of power transition-With 86%
of votes tallied, Netanyahu on verge of breaking deadlock, regaining
power-Partial results give Likud leader’s bloc 65 seats, with far-right
set to gain unprecedented power; however, vote landscape can change if
Meretz, Balad cross threshold-By Michael Bachner-NOV 2,22-Today, 1:01 pm
16
As the ballots in the Knesset election were being tallied
Wednesday, all signs were pointing to a resounding victory for
opposition leader Benjamin Netanyahu and his bloc of right-wing,
far-right and religious parties, a result that could end a political
crisis that has seen five general elections held in under four
years.With some 86 percent of the votes counted, the bloc of parties
loyal to Netanyahu was predicted to win 65 seats in the 120-seat
Knesset, a comfortable majority, although the numbers were expected to
shift as officials had yet to begin tallying the so-called
double-envelope ballots cast by members of security forces, prisoners,
people with disabilities, diplomats serving abroad, and others.The
coalition shaping up to be Israel’s next is made up of Netanyahu’s Likud
party, ultra-Orthodox parties Shas and United Torah Judaism parties,
and the far-right Religious Zionism party led by Bezalel Smotrich, which
includes extremist Itamar Ben Gvir’s Otzma Yehudit faction. Ben Gvir is
seen as the biggest star of the election, having gone from leading a
fringe party to becoming a popular leader in a party representing some
10% of Israeli voters.If the results don’t change significantly, it
would mark a stunning comeback for Netanyahu, currently on trial in
three corruption cases, and end four years of political stalemates that
have dragged the country through a series of elections.But critics warn
that it could also hand power to ultra-nationalists such as Ben Gvir and
his political partner Bezalal Smotrich, who could strip Arab citizens
of rights, defang the Supreme Court and pass legislation that will do
away with Netanyahu’s legal woes, and ratchet up societal divisions.The
critical remaining factor was the fate of the left-wing Meretz party and
the hardline Arab party Balad, which were both hovering barely under
the 3.25% minimal electoral threshold. Meretz was predicted to get 3.19%
while Balad was at 3.01%, meaning that as it stands, both parties will
not be in the next Knesset.The only scenario that could thwart the
Netanyahu bloc’s majority is if both Meretz and Balad end up above the
threshold and if fellow left-wing Labor party — currently at 3.57% —
doesn’t fall below it.Hebrew media reported that Prime Minister Yair
Lapid’s Yesh Atid party was already preparing for a possible power
transition, with Lapid intending to phone Netanyahu as soon as the final
results are published, which could take several days.Facing potential
political oblivion, Meretz MK Mossi Raz told Army Radio Wednesday
morning: “What we are seeing are partial results. We maintain cautious
optimism. We will continue to represent our voters, even if outside the
coalition or outside the Knesset.”Meanwhile, an unnamed senior Labor
politician was quoted lashing out against party leader Merav Michaeli
following Labor’s apparent poor showing.The party member said Labor —
the ruling party during Israel’s first few decades and a major political
force until a few years ago — was saved by party loyalists who voted
for Labor despite Michaeli, the Ynet news site reported.“We expect her
to draw the obvious conclusions, otherwise we will send her home,” he
said. “It is unbelievable that the Labor Party is struggling to cross
the electoral threshold. Merav is a colossal failure and disconnected
from reality.”On the other side of the political divide, Ben Gvir told
reporters that he would work for all the people of Israel.Ben Gvir vowed
to be part of a “completely right-wing” government, but added: “I want
to say that I’ll work for all of Israel, even those who hate me.”Earlier
in the morning, Netanyahu himself told supporters that he was “on the
cusp of a huge victory,” promising a government that would restore pride
to Israel and make it strong again.“If the actual results reflect the
exit polls, I’ll set up a national government that will look after all
the citizens of Israel,” he told supporters, using a word for that is
also used to describe nationalist sentiment.Earlier, his chief rival
Lapid refused to concede defeat, telling party faithful in Tel Aviv to
wait until all votes were counted and saying his Yesh Atid party had
secured record levels of support.“They want politics not based on hate
and incitement,” Lapid said of his voters.One party that fell well below
the threshold was Ayelet Shaked’s Jewish Home, which ran with a
pro-Netanyahu campaign but was met with little support due to anger
among its potential voter base over Shaked having joined the current
government that ousted Netanyahu last year after 12 years in
power.Jewish Home only got 1.17% of the votes, according to the
non-final results, but a report by Channel 12 news claimed that Shaked
running until the end had been coordinated with Netanyahu, in an attempt
to increase the general vote count, thus increasing the number of votes
needed to pass the 3.25% electoral threshold and potentially helping to
sink some rival parties.On Tuesday night, exit polls from Israel’s
major networks gave Netanyahu a clear path back to power, with 62 seats
between his Likud faction, the far-right Religious Zionism and the
Haredi parties Shas and United Torah Judaism. At least 61 seats are
needed to secure a majority and form a government in the 120-seat
Knesset.As pollsters revised their findings and early returns began to
come in overnight, the numbers shifted more in Netanyahu’s favor.Israel
has been rocked by political turmoil since a Netanyahu-led government
fell apart in late 2018. Two rounds of elections, in April 2019 and
September 2019, failed to yield a winner, and a short-lived unity
government formed after the third vote in March 2020 collapsed after
less than a year.Starting in June 2021, Lapid’s unlikely coalition,
which he helmed with his predecessor as premier Naftali Bennett, managed
to push Netanyahu from power after over a decade, but the alliance,
which included right-wing Yamina and Islamist Ra’am, struggled to
overcome deep ideological divisions and collapsed, partly due to
pressure from Netanyahu and his allies.Times of Israel staff contributed
to this report.
Why the remaining ballots are likely to sink
Balad, confirm Netanyahu’s victory-Arab party, currently below
threshold, is critical for denying Likud a majority. But Israel
Democracy Institute data shows double-envelope ballots majorly
disadvantage Arab parties-By TOI staff-NOV 2,22-Today, 2:22 pm 1
As
the vote tallying in this week’s Knesset election nears its final
stages, and with the bloc of parties loyal to right-wing leader Benjamin
Netanyahu on course for a convincing victory, all eyes are on the over
600,000 so-called double-envelope ballots, which will determine the fate
of two parties opposed to the Likud chairman that are currently
hovering just below the minimal threshold for entering the Knesset.With
some 85 percent of the votes counted, the Netanyahu-led bloc was
predicted to win 65 seats in the 120-seat Knesset, a comfortable
majority. The critical remaining factor was the fate of the left-wing
Meretz party and the hardline Arab party Balad, which were barely under
the 3.25 percent minimal electoral threshold. Meretz was hovering at
3.2% while Balad was at 3.04%, meaning that as it stands, both parties
will not be in the next Knesset.But there are still the double-envelope
ballots cast by members of security forces, prisoners, hospital patients
and staff, diplomats serving abroad, residents of senior-citizen and
assisted living facilities, and people who voted at polling stations for
those with movement disabilities.For Netanyahu’s bloc to end up without
a majority, Meretz and Balad will both likely need to pass the
threshold. But how likely is this to happen?According to an analysis by
the Israel Democracy Institute (IDI), the double-envelope ballots have
become increasingly significant recently since their share of all
ballots has more than doubled over the past few national votes — from
5.5% in April 2019 to 6.3% in September 2019, 7.2% in 2020, and 9.6% in
2021. In this week’s election, the figure is over 12.5%.This is in part
due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which saw many Israelis vote in designated
booths, according to IDI researchers Dr. Or Anabi and Prof. Ofer Kenig.
But it is also a result of more and more Israelis taking advantage of
accessible polling stations meant for those with disabilities, which
give people the option not to vote at their assigned polling station
according to their address on record. In practice, anyone can arrive at
these stations, sign a declaration that they are disabled, and vote.
While it is illegal, there is no enforcement.According to the IDI, in
previous elections, the double-envelope ballots — which
disproportionately represent young Jewish voters — tended to favor
right-wing parties and trendy fringe parties, while significantly
disadvantaging ultra-Orthodox and Arab parties, which would mean the
chance of Balad passing the threshold is slim.“It is quite likely that
if any of [the Arab parties] are hanging on to the electoral threshold
by their fingernails after all the regular ballots have been counted,
the double-envelope ballots will leave them below the threshold and
outside the Knesset,” the researchers said in their analysis.However,
Meretz has reason for optimism since in the March 2021 election, its
share of votes in the double-envelope ballots was slightly higher than
among the rest of the votes, which could be enough to propel it into the
next Knesset.Meretz making it into the Knesset would decrease the
Netanyahu bloc’s majority, but without Balad entering as well, it would
likely still garner at least 61 seats — enough for a majority.Therefore,
barring an unexpected turn of events, Netanyahu’s election victory is
likely to be confirmed by the remaining votes, giving his bloc an
outright Knesset majority for the first time in years.
The New
York Times-Russian Military Leaders Discussed Use of Nuclear Weapons,
U.S. Officials Say-Helene Cooper, Julian E. Barnes and Eric Schmitt-Wed,
November 2, 2022 at 8:04 AM
WASHINGTON — Senior Russian military
leaders recently had conversations to discuss when and how Moscow might
use a tactical nuclear weapon in Ukraine, contributing to heightened
concern in Washington and allied capitals, according to multiple senior
American officials.President Vladimir Putin was not a part of the
conversations, which were held against the backdrop of Russia’s
intensifying nuclear rhetoric and battlefield setbacks.But the fact that
senior Russian military leaders were even having the discussions
alarmed the Biden administration because it showed how frustrated
Russian generals were about their failures on the ground, and suggests
that Putin’s veiled threats to use nuclear weapons might not just be
words.Still, American officials said they had seen no evidence that the
Russians were moving nuclear weapons into place or taking other tactical
measures to prepare for a strike.The intelligence about the
conversations was circulated inside the U.S. government in
mid-October.U.S. officials would not describe the scenarios the military
leaders considered for use of a nuclear weapon. However, William J.
Burns, the CIA director, has previously said that Putin’s “potential
desperation” to extract a victory in Ukraine and setbacks in the war
could lead Russia to use one.John F. Kirby, a National Security Council
official, declined to comment on “the particulars of this
reporting.”“We’ve been clear from the outset that Russia’s comments
about the potential use of nuclear weapons are deeply concerning, and we
take them seriously,” Kirby said. “We continue to monitor this as best
we can, and we see no indications that Russia is making preparations for
such use.”The Pentagon estimates that Russia has a stockpile of as many
as 2,000 tactical nuclear weapons, which are designed to be used on
battlefields to overwhelm conventional forces. No tactical nuclear
weapon has ever been used in combat, but one could be deployed any
number of ways, including by missile or artillery shell.Tactical nuclear
weapons carry lower yields and are meant to be used at shorter ranges
than the warheads carried on intercontinental ballistic
missiles.Military experts say the use of a nuclear weapon — for the
first time in more than 75 years — would fundamentally change the shape
of war. Although the resulting destruction would depend on many factors,
including the weapon’s size and the winds, even a small nuclear
explosion could cause thousands of deaths and render parts of Ukraine
uninhabitable.Putin has sole authority over whether to use a tactical
device and would make the decision to deploy one regardless of the views
of his generals.The new intelligence surfaced when Moscow was also
promoting the baseless notion that Ukraine was planning to use a
so-called dirty bomb — a conventional explosive laced with radioactive
material. And it came amid a flurry of contacts between U.S. and other
Western officials and their Russian counterparts, including two calls
between Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and the Russian defense minister,
Sergei Shoigu.While the risk of further escalation remains troublingly
high, Biden administration officials and U.S. allies also say that the
phone calls between Western and Russian counterparts late last month
helped ease some of the nuclear tensions. A speech by Putin last
Thursday in which he denied that Moscow was preparing to use a nuclear
weapon in Ukraine further lowered the temperature, according to some of
the officials.“We see no need for that,” Putin said in his speech.
“There is no point in that, neither political, nor military.”Since
Russia invaded Ukraine in February and suffered significant casualties,
Putin himself has fanned fears that he might resort to a nuclear
weapon.A European official said the speech was seen among allies as part
of Putin’s regular pattern of inflaming tensions, watching the reaction
of the West and his own public, then taking steps to calm the
situation.Russia conducted an annual military exercise last week testing
nuclear-capable missiles. Austin said U.S. officials did not believe
the maneuvers were “some kind of cover activity” to use a tactical
nuclear weapon against Ukraine.In Washington, administration officials
say they still do not think Putin has made plans to use a tactical
nuclear weapon or even a dirty bomb.“We have not seen anything to
indicate that Putin has made a decision to use a dirty bomb,” Austin
told reporters at the Pentagon last Thursday. He said that even talk of
the use of nuclear weapons was “dangerous.”But he said the
administration was “certainly concerned about escalation,” as it has
been since the war started.“It would be the first time a nuclear weapon
has been used in over 70 years,” he said. “If this happened, we have
been clear from the very beginning that you would see a very significant
response from the international community.”Biden administration
officials have steadfastly refused to publicly describe what that
response would be, but the president has indicated he has no plans to
retaliate with a U.S. nuclear device.“I’m the guy that makes the
recommendation to my boss on what we should do and how we should do it,
and so I’ll make sure that he has credible responses that are actually
effective in terms of what we want to do,” Austin said, without
elaborating.For Putin, using a smaller-yield, tactical nuclear weapon in
Ukraine presents more complications than ordering the firing of a
strategic weapon, like an ICBM. Moving a tactical nuclear weapon is not
simply a matter of giving an order and having two people turn keys.There
would be practical steps that Russian commanders would be alerted to be
ready to carry out, including how to mitigate any risk to Russian
military personnel in the blast area.“If there’s an order from the
Kremlin, it can’t just magically happen,” Peter B. Zwack, a retired
one-star Army general who was the U.S. defense attaché in Moscow from
2012 to 2014, said in an interview last week.From the beginning of the
war, U.S. intelligence agencies have been looking for signs that Putin
is taking preparatory steps to use a nuclear weapon, such as undeclared
nuclear exercises or strategic forces being put on alert.But American
officials said that the warning systems to detect such steps were
imperfect, and that there was no guarantee that military or intelligence
officials would be able to give the White House much advance warning.
That is one reason the intelligence about the Russian discussions was
viewed with such interest.With the high-level nuclear discussions, the
Russian military is weighing what might prompt Moscow’s use of a
tactical weapon. And any additional intense discussions among senior
leaders about the use of a nuclear weapon is something American
officials have been profoundly concerned about — especially if Russia’s
army in the south of Ukraine were to collapse.Tensions over nuclear
weapon use have been rising steadily since Ukraine’s successful
counteroffensive in early September.Since then, Putin has taken steps to
escalate the conflict — calling for a mobilization, annexing territory
in Ukraine, getting more directly involved in war planning, and
approving a campaign to attack and degrade the electrical power grid of
Ukraine with cruise missiles and Iranian drones.Those steps have not
changed Russia’s fortunes, and Ukrainian forces continue to move forward
on fronts in the northeast and the south.Still, some of those
escalatory moves, like bringing in more troops, could have more impact
on the battlefield by early next year.Officials expect intense fighting
to continue into next month, but muddier conditions and colder weather
in the next few weeks could force a pause into earlier next year.
Bloomberg-North
Korea Fires Off Biggest-Ever Daily Missile Barrage-Sangmi Cha and Jon
Herskovitz-Wed, November 2, 2022 at 7:11 AM
(Bloomberg) -- North
Korea fired at least 23 missiles Wednesday including the first ballistic
one to fly over a nautical border with South Korea, in its biggest
daily barrage under leader Kim Jong Un.The launches came about a day
after Pyongyang threatened to take “powerful measures” if the US doesn’t
halt military drills with partners including South Korea, in what might
be an effort by Kim to lay the groundwork for his first nuclear test in
five years.South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol called the launch a
territorial violation, and his country responded a few hours after
barrages were fired off in the morning by firing three air-to surface
missiles into international waters on North Korea’s side of the sea
border known as the Northern Limit Line. South Korea also closed some
air routes east of the peninsula for safety reasons, the transport
ministry said.The North Korean missiles were fired in batches that
included four short-range ballistic missiles at 6:51 a.m., three
short-range ballistic missiles at 8:51 a.m. and 10 missiles of various
types fired to the east and west at 9:12 a.m., South Korea’s Joint
Chiefs of Staff said. It confirmed an additional six surface-to-air
missiles were shot off later in the day and that Pyongyang also fired
about 100 artillery shells into a maritime buffer zone off the east
coast.One of the missiles fired at about 8:51 a.m. fell into
international waters some 26 kilometers (16 miles) south of the sea
border known as the Northern Limit Line, it said.‘Unprecedented’
ProvocationUS Secretary of State Antony Blinken and South Korean Foreign
Minister Park Jin discussed the launches and condemned what they saw as
an “unprecedented” military provocation, the Foreign Ministry in Seoul
said in a statement.The missiles triggered the first ever air raid alert
on South Korea’s Ulleung Island, about 100 kms east of the coast. South
Korea last sounded such a warning in 2016, after a long-range rocket
launched by North Korea prompted an alert on an island near a western
sea border, an interior ministry official said.South Korea protested the
launches, which came as it was in a national mourning period for 156
people killed in a crowd crush at a nightlife district in Seoul over the
weekend. South Korea’s military also raised its alertness level, Yonhap
News Agency reported.South Korean and Japanese defense stocks advanced
after North Korea began its latest short-range ballistic missile
barrage, with Hanwha Aerospace Co. surging as much as 5.9% to its
highest since Sept. 26.The tit-for-tat missile exchange is an escalation
of tensions after the two Koreas on Oct. 24 fired warning shots at each
near a nautical border on the west side of the peninsula. Earlier that
day, Seoul said a merchant vessel from its neighbor crossed the sea
border. That exchange coincided with the US and South Korea beginning
joint naval drills that included warships such as guided-missile
destroyers.“We have been in the season of North Korean provocations for
the past couple months, so the latest missile launch should not be seen
as an anomalous behavior,” said Soo Kim, a policy analyst with the Rand
Corp. who previously worked at the Central Intelligence Agency.The
largest single-day ballistic missile barrage under Kim had been on June 5
of this year when North Korea fired eight short-range missiles from
four locations within about 35 minutes, South Korea’s military said. The
test appeared to be a demonstration of the state’s ability to quickly
deploy and fire off missiles from various sites, which could make it
difficult for US-operated interceptors in the region to shoot them
down.The US and South Korea this week started air drills known as
Vigilant Storm that will run through Friday and involve about 240
aircraft in about 1,600 sorties to “hone their wartime capabilities,”
the US 7th Air Force said in a statement. The drills have added to a
series of joint exercises on land, sea and air in recent weeks, some of
which have also included Japan, that have led to complaints and
provocations from Pyongyang.Since the end of September, when the USS
Ronald Reagan aircraft carrier group was in the region for exercises,
North Korea has fired one of its biggest barrages of missiles under
Kim.The US, Japan and South Korea have warned Kim could soon raise the
stakes even higher with a nuclear test, which would be its first in five
years and seventh overall. Washington, Tokyo and Seoul have all
promised a harsh and coordinated punishment if Pyongyang sets off an
atomic device, which would be a violation of United Nations Security
Council resolutions.The test might be used to advance Kim’s pursuit of
miniaturized nuclear warheads to mount on missiles to strike South Korea
and Japan, which host the bulk of America’s troops in Asia.The North
Korean leader is finding space to ramp up provocations as the Biden
administration focuses on Russia’s war in Ukraine. Russia and China, two
long-time partners of North Korea, have veto power at the UN Security
Council and have shown no intent to punish Kim with extra
sanctions.“North Korea has made it clear, at the highest levels of the
government, that it will respond to US and South Korean military drills
in kind, and it will not back down,” said Rachel Minyoung Lee, a
regional issues manager at the Vienna-based Open Nuclear Network who
worked as an analyst for the CIA’s Open Source Enterprise for almost two
decades.“We can thus expect North Korea to continue stepping up
military activities and weapons tests,” she said, adding this could
include an inter-Korean military conflict in the Yellow Sea and a
seventh nuclear test.--With assistance from Sophie Jackman, Shinhye
Kang, Seyoon Kim, Philip Glamann, Youkyung Lee and Muneeza
Naqvi.(Updates with additional missiles in lead, third paragraph.)
North
Korea threatens South, US with ‘most horrible price in history’
Pyongyang ups rhetoric against rivals’ ongoing military drills, warning
it will use nuclear weapons if Washington or Seoul attacks; accuses
Pentagon of planning regime collapse-By Hyung-Jin Kim-1 November 2022,
9:24 pm 0
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — North Korea issued a veiled
threat Tuesday to use nuclear weapons to get the US and South Korea to
“pay the most horrible price in history,” an escalation of its fiery
rhetoric targeting the ongoing large-scale military drills between its
rivals.Animosities on the Korean Peninsula have been running high in
recent months, with North Korea testing a string of nuclear-capable
missiles and adopting a law authorizing the preemptive use of its
nuclear weapons in a broad range of situations. Some experts still doubt
North Korea could use nuclear weapons first in the face of more
superior US and South Korean forces.North Korea has argued its recent
weapons tests were meant to issue a warning to Washington and Seoul over
their series of joint military drills that it views as an invasion
rehearsal, including this week’s exercises involving about 240
warplanes.Pak Jong Chon, a secretary of the ruling Workers’ Party who is
considered a close confidant of leader Kim Jong Un, called the
so-called“Vigilant Storm” air force drills “aggressive and
provocative.”Pak also accused the Pentagon of formulating a North Korean
regime collapse as a major policy objective in an apparent reference to
the Pentagon’s recently released National Defense Strategy report. The
report stated any nuclear attack by North Korea against the United
States or its allies and partners “will result in the end of that
regime.”He slammed South Korean military leaders over what he called
“rubbish” comments that threatened to destroy North Korea if it uses
nuclear weapons. South Korea’s military has warned North Korea that
using its nuclear weapons would put it on a “path of
self-destruction.”“If the US and South Korea attempt to use armed forces
against (North Korea) without any fear, the special means of the
(North’s) armed forces will carry out their strategic mission without
delay,” Pak said, in an apparent reference to his country’s nuclear
weapons.“The US and South Korea will have to face a terrible case and
pay the most horrible price in history,” he said.US and South Korean
officials have steadfastly said their drills are defensive in nature and
that they have no intentions of attacking North Korea.Pak’s statement
is the North’s second warning to the United States and South Korea this
week. On Monday, the North’s Foreign Ministry warned of “more powerful
follow-up measures” in response to its rivals’ air force drills.South
Korean officials have said North Korea could up the ante in coming weeks
by detonating its first nuclear test device since September 2017, which
could possibly take the country a step closer to its goals of building a
full-fledged nuclear arsenal capable of threatening regional U.S.
allies and the American mainland.Some experts say North Korea would
eventually want to use its expanded nuclear arsenal as a leverage in
future negotiations with the United States to win sanctions relief and
other concessions.
US officials say Saudis warning Iran may
attack the kingdom imminently-National Security Council ‘concerned about
the threat picture,’ warns there will no hesitation to act in defense
of American regional interests and partners-By AAMER MADHANI, Matthew
Lee and Lolita C. Baldor-NOV 2,22-Today, 2:46 pm 0
WASHINGTON
(AP) — Saudi Arabia has shared intelligence with American officials that
suggests Iran could be preparing for an imminent attack on the kingdom,
three US officials said Tuesday.The heightened concerns about a
potential attack on Saudi Arabia come as the Biden administration is
criticizing Tehran for its crackdown on widespread protests and
condemning it for sending hundreds of drones — as well as technical
support — to Russia for use in its war in Ukraine.“We are concerned
about the threat picture, and we remain in constant contact through
military and intelligence channels with the Saudis,” the National
Security Council said in a statement. “We will not hesitate to act in
the defense of our interests and partners in the region.”Saudi Arabia
did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Nor did Iran’s
mission to the United Nations.One of the officials who confirmed the
intelligence sharing described it as a credible threat of an attack
“soon or within 48 hours.” No US embassy or consulate in the region has
issued alerts or guidance to Americans in Saudi Arabia or elsewhere in
the Middle East based on the intelligence. The officials were not
authorized to comment publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.Asked
about reports of the intelligence shared by the Saudis, Brig. Gen. Pat
Ryder, the Pentagon press secretary, said US military officials “are
concerned about the threat situation in the region.”“We’re in regular
contact with our Saudi partners, in terms of what information they may
have to provide on that front,” Ryder said. “But what we’ve said before,
and I’ll repeat it, is that we will reserve the right to protect and
defend ourselves no matter where our forces are serving, whether in Iraq
or elsewhere.”State Department spokesperson Ned Price said America was
“concerned about the threat picture,” without elaborating.The Wall
Street Journal first reported on the Saudis sharing the intelligence on
Tuesday. Iran has alleged without providing evidence that Saudi Arabia
and other rivals are fomenting the dissent on its streets by ordinary
Iranians.Of particular ire is protest coverage by Iran International, a
London-based, Farsi-language satellite news channel once majority-owned
by a Saudi national.The US and Saudis blamed Iran in 2019 of being
behind a major attack in eastern Saudi Arabia, which halved the oil-rich
kingdom’s production and caused energy prices to spike. The Iranians
denied they were behind the attack, but the same triangle-shaped,
bomb-carrying drones used in that attack are now being deployed by
Russian forces in their war on Ukraine.The Saudis have also been hit
repeatedly in recent years by drones, missiles and mortars launched by
the Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen. Saudi Arabia formed a coalition
to battle the Houthis in 2015 and has been internationally criticized
for its airstrikes in the war, which have killed scores of civilians.In
recent weeks, the Biden administration has imposed sanctions on Iranian
officials for the brutal crackdown on demonstrators after the death of
22-year-old Mahsa Amini in September after her arrest by Iran’s morality
police. The administration has also hit Iran with sanctions for
supplying drones to Russia for use in its war in Ukraine.At least 288
people have been killed and 14,160 arrested during the protests,
according to the group Human Rights Activists in Iran. Demonstrations
have continued, even as the feared paramilitary Revolutionary Guard has
warned young Iranians to stop.Iran already launched a series of attacks
targeting Kurdish separatist positions in northern Iraq amid the
protests, killing at least 16 people, including an American citizen.US
relations with Saudi Arabia have also been strained after the Riyadh-led
alliance of oil producing nations, OPEC+, announced in October that it
would cut production by 2 million barrels per day starting in
November.White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby on
Tuesday reiterated that the administration remains concerned that Iran
may also provide Russia with surface-to-surface missiles.“We haven’t
seen that concern bear out, but it’s a concern we have,” Kirby said.Even
as the US and others raise concerns about possible Iranian action, the
administration has not ruled out the possibility of reviving the 2015
Iran nuclear deal, which was brokered by the Obama administration and
scrapped in 2018 by the Trump administration.The US special envoy to
Iran, Robert Malley, said on Monday that the administration was not
currently focused on the deal, which has been stalled since
August.Still, Malley refused to declare the deal dead and said the
administration “makes no apology” for “trying to do everything we can to
prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon.”The deal had provided
Tehran with billions of dollars in sanctions relief in exchange for the
country agreeing to roll back its nuclear program. It includes caps on
enrichment and how much material Iran can stockpile and limits the
operation of advanced centrifuges needed to enrich.
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