Wednesday, April 29, 2026

The Drums Of War Are Not Random—They Are Prophetic


The Drums Of War Are Not Random—They Are Prophetic




Yes, the drums of war are beating, louder and louder. Across the globe, tensions are rising at a pace that feels escalations are inevitable. Nations are aligning, alliances are shifting, and conflicts once considered regional are now threatening to ignite on a global scale. For those who study Bible prophecy, these developments are not surprising; they are expected.

The question is not if war will come. The question is: Are we watching the stage being set for the final wars described in Scripture?

Jesus warned: “…you will hear of wars and rumors of wars…” Matthew 24:6 Today, we are no longer simply hearing rumors—we are witnessing escalation. We see this through Middle East tensions involving Israel and Iran, global power struggles between superpowers, military buildups, and shifting alliances. This is not random. It is a startling convergence.

Zechariah 12:3 warns that God “will make Jerusalem a very heavy stone for all peoples…” Israel remains the epicenter. It is the constant global focus of world leaders, at the UN, on college campuses, and in the media. The Jewish State is surrounded by hostility, political and spiritual conflict, and antisemitism is emerging at an increasing pace.

Ezekiel 38 describes a coalition forming against Israel. Key elements today make this undeniable, including a restored Israel (since 1948), identifiable nations within this prophecy coming into alignment, and an increasing cooperation among adversaries. What was prophecy is now forming in real time.

We now live in an age of instant communication and logistics. This allows for a different type of war, artificial intelligence warfare. This modern war includes AI-assisted targeting, predictive military strategy, and autonomous operations (drones and remote missile strikes). Battlefields are shifting from human-led to system-driven. War is becoming faster and less dependent on human presence, but more focused on human destruction.

Through Cyber Warfare, nations can now shut down power grids, collapse financial systems, and disrupt communication networks. War can now happen without a single soldier crossing a border.

Technology now allows digital currency systems, biometric identification, and real-time tracking. An unsettling level of control through technology—on a global scale—is no longer a “someday” thing; it is now a reality.

Matthew 24:4 Jesus stated, “Take heed that no one deceives you.” Modern deception is everywhere. AI-generated content, “deepfakes,” and controlled narratives run rampant. Truth itself is under attack.

The three forces of war, technology, and control are merging. War creates instability, instability creates demand for order, and technology enables that order.

The final war described in God’s Word does not end in uncertainty. It ends in victory! The world sees chaos, but those who know Scripture see alignment. The drums of war are not random—they are prophetic. And while nations prepare for conflict, believers prepare for eternity.

IDF chief says there is ‘no ceasefire’ in south Lebanon as fight against Hezbollah continues


IDF chief says there is ‘no ceasefire’ in south Lebanon as fight against Hezbollah continues



IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir says there “is no ceasefire” in southern Lebanon as troops continue to operate against the threat of Hezbollah.

He also says that the IDF “will not tolerate” Hezbollah’s attacks, while adding that Israel will not leave its new security zone until the threat to Israel’s northern communities is removed.

“In Lebanon, the mission assigned to us by the political echelon is to position ourselves along the line to prevent direct fire on the communities. We have achieved this; this is the line we are on. We may be required to remain on it,” Zamir says during a visit this morning to the southern Lebanon town of Taybeh, where troops are deployed.

“We will not tolerate attacks and fire on our communities, and we will not leave until long-term security for the northern communities is ensured,” he says, according to remarks published by the IDF.

Zamir says the IDF is continuing to fight: “We continue fighting and are working to deepen the operational achievements and to protect our forces.”

“On the combat front, there is no ceasefire; you continue to fight, to remove direct and indirect threats from the northern communities, to thwart terror infrastructure, to locate and kill terrorists,” he continues.

“Any threat, anywhere, to our communities or our forces, including beyond the Yellow Line and north of the Litani [River], will be removed. Your mission and duty are to act with freedom of action and remove any threat,” Zamir says.

He says that “at this stage we are not advancing beyond the line, but we will continue to act and remove threats freely.”

“The forces on the ground continue to operate, and there is no restriction on [destroying] infrastructure and killing terrorists,” Zamir adds.

Zamir also says that “Everything defined for us by the political echelon regarding the current campaign in Iran and Lebanon has been achieved and even beyond that.”

“In doing so, we have created the operational conditions for the processes now being led by the political echelon,” he says.


‘Ceasefire on paper’: Conricus warns Iran, Hezbollah, and Hamas are using the pause to prepare


‘Ceasefire on paper’: Conricus warns Iran, Hezbollah, and Hamas are using the pause to prepare
GABRIEL COLODRO/THE MEDIA LINE



Jonathan Conricus, a former international spokesperson for the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, warned that the current ceasefire frameworks surrounding Israel should not be mistaken for a strategic resolution. 

“I think both sides, all sides, Iran, Israel, various Gulf countries, the Iranian proxies, Hezbollah, everybody is using this time, militarily speaking, in order to resupply and prepare for what probably inevitably is going to come,” Conricus told The Media Line. He said that renewed fighting could come locally, between Israel and Hezbollah, or more regionally, involving Israel, Iran, and the United States.


Speaking amid continued uncertainty over the ceasefire framework promoted by President Donald Trump, Conricus said Israel and its adversaries are using the pause to rebuild their military capacity. “Gulf states are frantically trying to improve their defensive capabilities, and Israel is replenishing all of the stockpiles, both offensive and defensive ones,” he said. “And I think that the Iranian regime is trying to do the same in order to try to brace themselves for whatever will come.” 

Conricus described the diplomatic track with Iran as deeply limited. “The negotiations, they look like two parallel lines that are not going to meet,” he said, arguing that “the maximum that the Iranian regime is willing to address doesn’t meet the very basic minimum that the US is willing to consider.” He added that Iran is not “in a position to be dictating terms,” pointing to its exposure to economic pressure and damage to energy infrastructure. 

On Iran’s military position, Conricus was careful not to describe the regime as defeated: “The Iranian regime is down, but it’s definitely not out.” He argued that Iran’s ability “to project force,” manufacture ballistic missiles and drones, and act as “the bully of the region” has been “significantly reduced,” but “not permanently destroyed.”

“If the regime is left in place, then I have very little doubt that what we will eventually see within a relatively short period of time would be the Iranian regime going back to what they did before,” he said, listing nuclear weapons, ballistic missiles, drones, and support for terror organizations as likely priorities. “There’s no indication … that the Iranian regime is changing its trajectory,” he added.

Turning to Lebanon, Conricus said the term “ceasefire” no longer reflects the reality on the ground. “We have a ceasefire on paper, but it isn’t really a ceasefire in the way that I would interpret the phrase, whereby both sides of a conflict cease their military operations,” he said. Israel is acting “to defend Israeli civilians in northern Israel” and to degrade Hezbollah’s capabilities, while Hezbollah continues firing rockets and drones and fighting Israeli troops deployed inside Lebanon.

Conricus said the only area in which Israel appears to be observing the American request is in limiting major attacks on Hezbollah’s strategic assets in Beirut and the Beqaa Valley. “In that … we have a certain aspect of a ceasefire,” he said. But the core issue, he argued, remains Hezbollah’s existence as an armed Iranian proxy inside Lebanon.

“What really needs to happen here is for a strategic decision to be made by the Lebanese government,” he said. “That is to make sure that there’s only one military in Lebanon, and that is the military of the state of Lebanon, the Lebanese Armed Forces.” Until then, Conricus said, Israel and Lebanon will continue facing “various aspects of ceasefires and violations of ceasefire and fighting and attacks and moving population and many other things.”

Asked about the Litani River, Conricus said he does not see it as the central strategic marker. “I don’t think that the Litani River holds any strategic significance,” he said. Instead, he argued that Israel should focus on severing the link between Iran and Hezbollah and preventing Hezbollah from obtaining both strategic and basic weapons.


Conricus said any arrangement with Lebanon will remain weak unless Beirut acts directly against Hezbollah. “Until we see the Lebanese government order the Lebanese armed forces to take meaningful kinetic military action against Hezbollah, action that would also entail casualties on the Lebanese side, then everything said and done will be void and of very little relevance,” he said.

He argued that the moment Lebanese authorities begin such action, “then we know that they crossed the Rubicon.” At that stage, he said, Israel should provide “maximum support, intelligence, and kinetic support and diplomatic support,” while avoiding steps that would make it harder for the Lebanese government to act domestically.

In Gaza, Conricus said Hamas remains in control of territory beyond the Israeli deployment line. “If we’re honest about it, Hamas controls half of the Gaza Strip,” he said. “Is it a robust, functioning, and well-oiled bureaucracy? No, it’s jungle laws.” He described Hamas rule as “the survival of the fittest and the rule of the most cruel and violent,” adding that Hamas “still has weapons, and still controls the Palestinian civilian population.”

Conricus said Hamas’ refusal to disarm should surprise no one. “Hamas was never going to disarm,” he said. “The only way to disarm Hamas is to defeat them.” He described that process as long and politically uncomfortable. “This is not a quick fix. This doesn’t align with American or Israeli political calendars,” he said.

For Conricus, the central lesson across the three fronts is that partial military degradation does not amount to strategic success. “Until you are able to force an enemy to surrender and give up and capitulate, it doesn’t really matter how much of his assets you’ve been able to degrade,” he said. “Whether you destroy 40%, 60% or 70 or 80%, it is important, but it is not decisive and crucial.”





The takeover continues: FAA exploring 'partnership' deal with Palantir to integrate AI into air-traffic control systems


The takeover continues: FAA exploring 'partnership' deal with Palantir to integrate AI into air-traffic control systems



reported earlier this week that Palantir Technologies, the secretive data firm co-founded by the billionaire transhumanist Bilderberg insider Peter Thiel and his sidekick Alex Karp, had inked a $300 million contract to take over all federal government roles related to data collected on American farmers by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.


This contract gets added to the billions worth of other contracts across 26 other federal government departments, including in military, Homeland Security, law enforcement and intelligence operations.

In short, the entity in Washington that people refer to as the federal government is increasingly being merged into this one very powerful private technology company, Palantir.


And now we have another federal role on the brink of falling into the hands of Palantir: air travel safety.

It’s well known that the United States of America has an aging, subpar air-traffic control system that is in urgent need of substantial upgrades.


More than a third of the computer systems that guide 45,000 daily flights across the United States have been rated “unsustainable” by federal auditors.


Government Accountability Office report published in April 2024 found that 51 of the FAA’s 138 critical systems were classified as “unsustainable” in the agency’s own 2023 risk review. Another 54 were labeled “potentially unsustainable.” For some of the worst-rated systems, projected replacement timelines stretched 10 to 13 years, a gap the GAO called a serious operational and safety risk.


And guess who is negotiating with the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to overhaul the system? Why, of course, it’s the same company that is taking over the rest of the federal government, 27 federal agencies to date. That would be Palantir Technologies, the AI giant that provides data analysis to the U.S. military, to state and local law enforcement, to federal spooks in the intelligence agencies (FBI and CIA), to our nation’s tax-collecting agency (IRS), to its agriculture-regulation agency (USDA), and its main health-services agency, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, among others.


Inserting Palantir’s AI programs into the air-traffic control system is apparently the next big takeover that Palantir investors are chomping at the bit to see go down. Replacing human beings with algorithms. Hmm. What could possibly go wrong?


The Morning Overview reports:

“Now, as the agency opens the door to outside vendors, one of the most closely watched questions in government tech is whether Palantir Technologies and its AI platform will play a central role in what comes next.”


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Why Iran Can’t Be Bombed, Invaded, or Nuked Into Submission


Why Iran Can’t Be Bombed, Invaded, or Nuked Into Submission


The reality is that if the US is serious about invading Iran, it would likely require total mobilization.

A successful ground invasion of Iran to overthrow the government, occupy the country, and pacify it enough to install a US-friendly puppet regime (i.e., Shah 2.0) would most likely require far more manpower and, in all likelihood, the return of the military draft, which Trump’s press secretary recently refused to rule out.

Even then, a full-scale US ground invasion would offer no guarantee of success. Remember, the US did not even succeed in neighboring Afghanistan, which is far more primitive, poorer, and not as well armed as Iran.

Unlike most other nation states in the Middle East, Iran (known as Persia before 1935) is not an artificial construct. By race, religion, and social history, it is a nation. European bureaucrats didn’t dream up Iran by drawing zigzags on a map. The map reflects the geographic reality of a country with natural, fortress-like mountain borders. In the east, the Roman Empire generally ended where the Persian Empire began.

Iran has powerful friends throughout the Middle East—like the Houthis in Yemen, Hezbollah in Lebanon, and various Iraqi militias—who are willing to fight.

Further, Iran is Russia’s and China’s key ally in the Middle East. A US-aligned government in Tehran could help block China’s Belt and Road Initiative from pushing farther west and potentially cut off 14% of China’s oil imports. It would also hinder Russian trade through the Caspian Sea and serve as a launchpad for destabilizing Russia from its southern flank.

In short, bringing Iran under US influence would open the door to further undermining both Russia and China. For these two great powers, Iran is strategic depth. Russia and China cannot afford to let Iran fall. So I wouldn’t be surprised to see Russia and China support Iran with intelligence, weapons, supplies, and other forms of assistance that would make the conflict even more costly for the US.

Most importantly, just look at Iran’s topography. Similarly, Switzerland’s rugged mountainous terrain has helped protect it from invasion for centuries. And Iran (1,630,848 sq km) is not just the size of Switzerland (41,291 sq km), but the equivalent of roughly 40 Switzerlands.

Faced with the bleak prospects of a successful ground invasion, the US (or Israel) could resort to using nuclear weapons.

Iran is well aware that the US or Israel could use nuclear weapons against it. It has contingency plans for that outcome to ensure the survival of its government. Iran’s plans also likely include making a dash for developing its own nuclear arsenal to be able to respond in kind.

Further, it’s doubtful that Russia and China would just sit back and do nothing if the US and Israel looked like they might nuke Iran. For example, Russia could decide to station nuclear weapons and Russian soldiers on Iranian soil as a deterrent.

Suppose the US and Israel used nuclear weapons on Iran. It would shatter the global taboo and effectively give other countries the green light to use them. Could Russia then nuke Ukraine or another part of Europe? Could China nuke Taiwan? What about India and Pakistan?

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