Tuesday, March 17, 2015

Is Netanyahu Fulfilling Prophecy

Friends,
it appears the pace of prophetic events is picking up again. It appears Netanyahu will form a coalition in Israel and on Friday we will experience a solar eclipse. The blood moons are a warning to the nation of Israel while the solar eclipse is a warning to the world to repent. Also we are mid way through the Shemitah year. 
Bible prophecy says that the Palestinians (the House of Edom and Esau) will never establish a nation; all they will do is proclaim one, and then, their leaders shall suffer destruction. Here is what God says: “They shall call its nobles to proclaim the kingdom, but nothing shall be there, and all its princes shall be no more.” (Isaiah 34:12)
The millstone of world events is grinding forward in this case. Soon, other nations will join Sweden and other nations in recognizing the Palestinian State. At some point in the very near future Palestinian and Hamas leaders (nobles) will declare that the Palestinian State is now a reality. That proclamation will set in motion God’s prophecy in Isaiah 34:12,”…..but nothing shall be there, and all its princes shall be no more.” Watch the videos below about the Israeli election.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu claimed victory in elections as exit polls put him neck-and-neck with centre-left rivals after a late fightback in his bid for a third straight term.



Figures published by public Channel 1 and private Channel 10 television both gave Netanyahu's Likud and Isaac Herzog's Zionist Union 27 seats each in the 120-member parliament.
A third poll by private Channel 2 gave Likud a one-seat lead.
"Against all odds we achieved a great victory for the Likud. We achieved a great victory for the national camp under the leadership of the Likud. We achieved a great victory for our people of Israel!" Netanyahu told cheering supporters at campaign headquarters in Tel Aviv.
"Now we have to build a strong and stable government," he added.
But Herzog, 54, insisted he was still in the race to form the next government.
"Everything is open," he told activists in Tel Aviv.
"I intend to make every effort to build a real social government in Israel."
The result of the vote is likely to have implications for prospects for new Middle East peace talks and Israel's troubled relations with its US ally.
In a late appeal to the far-right ahead of the polls, Netanyahu ruled out the establishment of a Palestinian state if reelected, effectively reneging on his 2009 endorsement of a two-state solution.
Herzog has repeatedly called for the creation of a Palestinian state alongside Israel.
Netanyahu made a last-minute call on his supporters to go to the polls to counter a high turnout among Arab Israelis.
"The rule of the rightwing is in danger. Arab voters are going to the polls in droves!" he said in a video on Facebook. "Go to the polling stations! Vote Likud!"
The main Arab parties took third place with 13 seats after joining forces to challenge the premier, according to exit polls.
Likud activists at a temporary headquarters set up in a Tel Aviv convention hall danced in celebration at the late surge.
"This is a great victory, almost a miracle," Netanyahu confidant Ofir Akunis said.
"Now we need to focus on building the new government. We will talk to every party, old and new."
His Likud had been trailing the Zionist Union by up to four seats in surveys in the week leading up to the vote, which was seen as a referendum on his premiership.
Experts said Netanyahu looked like the most likely party leader to be asked by President Reuven Rivlin to form a government after the official results, which are expected in the coming days.
"Netanyahu has done it. He has managed to catch up in the final lap," said Claude Klein, a specialist in constitutional law at Jerusalem's Hebrew University.
"On paper, Isaac Herzog has no chance of putting together a majority which would depend on the support of the Arab List which includes openly anti-Zionist MPs."
Under Israel's electoral system, the prime minister is not the head of the party that gains the most seats but whoever can build a coalition commanding a majority of at least 61 seats in parliament.
Moshe Kahlon, once a popular minister under Likud, could find himself in the position of kingmaker after exit polls predicted his centre-right Kulanu party won 10 seats.
Kahlon talked to both Netanyahu and Herzog "and told them both he'd make his decision based on the final results," his spokesman said.
Israel Democracy Institute president Yohanan Plesner said that although Netanyahu had made a remarkable recovery the outcome was still not certain and in terms of overall voting the centre-left parties were forecast to win 57 seats while the right and religious parties would get around 54.
"In the middle we have Kahlon, who is not committed to either bloc," he said.
"I think the clearest political outcome is that he's going to be the kingmaker and it really depends on how he decides TO PLAY  his cards."
Some 5.8 million people were eligible to vote, with 25 parties vying for the Knesset.
Turnout was 71.8 percent, up from 67.8 percent in 2013.
"Israel has serious problems, and only a rightwing leader can handle them," said a Jerusalem voter who gave his name as Yehoshua, pledging support for Netanyahu.
But others took a different view.
"I'd like to see Netanyahu disappear for many, many years. The most important issue is relations with the Palestinians," said Shulamit Laron.
Netanyahu put SECURITY  at the forefront of his campaign, arguing he is the only one capable of protecting Israel from an Iranian nuclear threat and vowing never to allow the Palestinians to establish a capital in east Jerusalem.
The Palestinians vowed to step up their diplomatic campaign for statehood.
"It is clear that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will form the next government, so we say clearly that we will go to the International Criminal Court in the Hague and we will speed up, pursue and intensify" all diplomatic efforts said chief negotiator Saeb Erakat.

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