This Week in History
HISTORY, 21 Nov 2016
Satoshi Ashikaga – TRANSCEND Media Service
Nov 21-27
QUOTE OF THE WEEK:
NOVEMBER 21
- Today is the WORLD TELEVISION DAY:
- Today is the WORLD HELLO DAY:
2012 At least 28 are wounded after a bomb is thrown onto a bus in Tel Aviv.
2009 A mine explosion in Heilongjiang province, northeastern China, kills 108.
2006 Anti-Syrian Lebanese Minister and MP Pierre Gemayel is assassinated in suburban Beirut.
2004 The Paris Club agrees to write off 80% (up to $100 billion) of Iraq‘s external debt.
2004 The island of Dominica is hit by the most destructive earthquake in its history. The northern half of the island sustains the most damage, especially the town of Portsmouth. It is also felt in neighboring Guadeloupe, where one person is killed.
2004 The second round of the Ukrainian presidential election is held, giving rise to massive protests and controversy over the election’s integrity.
2002 NATO invites Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia to become members.
Enlargement of NATO:
- Enlargement of NATO – Wikipedia
- Five Former Communist Countries in NATO – usnews.com
- Enlargement – nato.int
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO):
- NATO – Official Site
- What Is NATO? – About.com
- North Atlantic Treaty Organization – Infoplease.com
- NATO – Background – About.com
- The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) – Council on Foreign Relations – CFR.org
- Member states of NATO – Wikipedia
History of NATO:
- A short history of NATO – NATO
- FORMATION OF NATO AND WASAW PACT – History.com
- North Atlantic Treaty Organization (1949) – Office of the HISTORIANS – US Department of State
- The Establishment of NATO – Naval History Blog
- NATO: History of NATO: Information about NAOT – Tripod.com
- Timeline of key events in NATO’s 59 years of history – Monday, March 31, 2008 – Reuters.com
Problems of NATO:
- The Need for NATO – GlobalIssues.org
- Interview: Issues NATO Facing On Its 60th Birthday – Council on Foreign Relations – Interviewee: F. Stephen Larrabee, Distinguished Chair in European Security, RAND Corporation; Interviewer: Bernard Gwertzman, Consulting Editor, CFR.org – February 26, 2009 – CFR.org
- NATO Expansion and the Problem of a NATO Strategy – Global Intelligence Update, Red Alert, March 15, 1999
- Problems with the new NATO – CATO.Org
- OPERATIONS AND ISSUES – UNITED STATES MISSION TO NATO
- The Costs and Danger of NATO Expansion – FPIF.Org
- World Against Russia: Can NATO Solve the Putin Problem? – NBCNews.com
- NATO – DemocraticHub.com
- Nato’s Growing Pains, by Charles M. Spofford – October 1952 Issue – Council on Foreign Relations – CFR.org
- Military-Political Strategy of NATO and Security Issues in the Middle East – March 12, 2011 – Social Science Research Network
- “To cite but one example, NATO air support for UN troops in Bosnia took place under the general authorisation by security council resolutions and under the case-to-case authorisation provided for by the dual-key command structure where both UN and NATO officials had to agree on particular air raids.” – The Politics of Humanitarian Intervention – The Journal of Humanitarian Assistance
- United States to NATO: Ditch the ‘Cold War playbook’ – The Washington Post
The United States and NATO:
- Connect with our NATO missions – US ARMY NATO
- The United States and NATO – Embassy of the United States of America – REGIONAL PARTNERSHIPS
- The United States, NATO and the Destruction of Libya, by Horace G. Campbell – August 1, 2014 – CounterPunch.org
- Time for the United States to Leave NATO, by Andrew J. Bacevich – September 16, 2013 – The New York Times
- Renewing A, G, and NATO visas in the United States – US Visas
- COSTS AND BENEFITS TO THE UNITED STATES OF THE NATO INFRASTRUCTURE PROBLEM
- NATO Bases in the United States – MapQuest.com
1944 World War II: Allied troops begin the attack on Paris.
Liberation of Paris of 1944:
- The Liberation of Paris, 1944 – EyeWitnessToHistory.com
- World War II – The Liberation of Paris – HistoryNet.com
- Timeline in 1844 in World War II – Surrender in Europe – Bloody combat
- World War II 1939 – 1945: 1944 – Worldology.com
- Bombing of France during World War II – Wikipedia
1996 Humberto Vidal explosion: Thirty-three people die when a Humberto Vidal shoe shop explodes.
1995 The Dayton Peace Agreement is initialed at the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, near Dayton, Ohio, ending three and a half years of war in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The agreement is formally ratified in Paris, on December 14 that same year.
Dayton Peace Agreement:
- GENERAL FRAMWORK AGREEMENT FOR PEACE ON BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA – Letter dated 29 November 1995 from the Permanent Mission of the United States of America to the United Nations addressed to the Secretary-General – A/50/79C – S/1995/999 – 30 November 1995 – General Assembly – Security Council – United Nations – pdf
- Text of The General Framework Agreement for Peace in Bosnia and Herzegovina – pdf – OSCE.org
- Summary of the Dayton Peace Agreement on Bosnia-Herzegovina – UMN.edu
- Excerpts of the Dayton Peace Agreement, signed Dayton, Ohio on November 21, 1995 – MTHOLYOKE.edu
- The Dayton Peace Accords on Bosnia – UMN.edu
- The General Framework Agreement for Peace on Bosnia and Herzegovina – OHR.int
- Dayton Accords – US Department of State
- Dayton Accords – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Dayton Peace Accords – Ohio History Central – OhioHistoryCentral.org
- Interacting Map: Understanding the Dayton Accords – Women, War & Peace – PBS.org
Background and Analysis of the Dayton Peace Agreement:
- An Analysis of the Dayton Negotiations and Peace Accords, by Adriana Camisar, Boris Diechtiareff, Bartol Leitica, Christine Switzer – Tufts.edu – pdf
- The Secret History of Dayton – US Diplomacy and Bosnia Peace Process 1995, by Derek Chollet and Bennett Freeman – National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book No. 171 – GWU.edu
- CHAPTER 2 HISTORICAL BACKGROUND TO THE DAYTON AGREEMENT – Yorku.ca
- Implications of Dayton Peace Agreement on Current Political Issues in Bosnia-Herzegovina, by Hasan KORUKT and Muhidin MULALIĆ – pdf
- “The path to peace in Bosnia was a long one, its final phase marked by tragedy, a change in the fortunes of war and NATO military intervention. Events during the summer of 1995, including the Serb massacre of thousands of Muslims at Srebrenica and the marketplace shelling of Sarajevo, energized a U.S.- led negotiating effort. Bloodied by an increasingly successful Muslim-Croat ground offensive and two weeks of NATO air strikes, the Bosnian Serbs finally agreed to talk peace in Dayton, Ohio.” – Nation Building in Bosnia, by Jim Mokhiber and Rick Young – PBS.org
- Bosnia and Herzegovina: From Dayton and beyond – Amnesty International – Amnesty.org.au
- Yugoslavia – History – Infoplease.com
War in Bosnia-Herzegovina:
- Bosnian War – Wikipedia
- The War in Bosnia 1992-1995 – OFFICE of the HISTORIAN – US Department of State
- The Bosnian War 1992-1995 – OnWar.com
- Bosnian Conflict – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Bosnian War 1992-1995 – MTHOLYOKE.edu
- US Involvement in Bosnia-Herzegovina – U-S-History.com
- BOSNIAN GENOCIDE – History.com
- Bosnia-Herzegovina 1992-1995 200,000 Deaths – Genocide in the 20th Century – The History Place – HistoryPlace.com
- Conflicting Truths: The Bosnian War, by Nick Hawton – Volume 59, Issue 8 August 2009 – HistoryToday.com
- Background information: For persons unaccounted for in connection with the conflict on the territory of Bosnia and Herzegovina – ICRC.org
- HISTORY OF REPUBLIC OF SRPSKA – Tripod.com
Bosnian War on the Ground:
- Various YouTube videos on Bosnian War
- YouTube video (2 min. 58 sec.):The last scene of Welcome to Sarajevo – Albinoni’s Adajo G in minor, and Vedran Smailović – Wikipedia
- YouTube video (1 h. 37 min. 24 sec.): Dobordodošli u Sarajevo (Welcome to Sarajevo) full movie.
- YouTube video (1 h. 28 min. 30 sec.): Romeo and Juliet in Sarajevo – Documentary film, or YouTube video (3 min. 39 sec.): Admira Ismić and Boško Brikić
Timeline of the War in Bosnia-Herzegovina:
- War in Bosnia: Timeline – Original Timeline appropriated from Kristina Lerman – Selenasol.com
- The War in Bosnia 1992-1995 – OFFICE of the HISTORIAN – US Department of the State
- TIMELINE: What happened during the war in Bosnia? – Mon Jul 21, 2008 – Reuters.com
- Bosnia History Timeline & Facts – FindFacts.org
- Balkans 1940s to 1999 – The WashingtonPost – WashingtonPost.com
Wright Patterson Air Force Base:
- Wright-Patterson Air Force Base
- YouTube video (1 h. 30 min. 54 sec.): The Real Area 51 is Wright Patterson Air Force Base
- YouTube video (54 min. 10 sec.): Wright Patterson AFB and Underground Hangars and Secret Tunnels
1986 Iran–Contra affair: National Security Council member Oliver North and his secretary start to shred documents allegedly implicating them in the sale of weapons to Iran and channeling the proceeds to help fund the Contra rebels in Nicaragua.
Iran-Contra Affair:
- Crime History, Nov 21, 1986: Oliver North, Fawn Hall, begin shredding Iran-Contra evidence – D.C. Crime Stories
- The Iran-Contra Scandal – Boundless.com
- The Iran-Contra Affair, by Jon Carroll and Ronald Reagan – AlvaradoHistory.com – pdf
- Chapter 31 Edwin Meese III: November 1986 – FAS.org
- Evidence and Analysis: The Iran-Contra Affair As seen through American, Middle Eastern, and Soviet news sources, by Devin Chavira – 1-1-2004 – UPenn.edu – pdf
- Iran-Contra: Reagan’s Scandal and the Unchecked Abuse of Presidential Power, by Malcolm Byrne – 2014 – JHU.edu – pdf downloadable
- NOV 25, 1986: THIS DAY IN HISTORY: Iran-Contra connection revealed – History.com
- McCain Linked To Private Iran-Contra Group – October 7, 2008 – CBSNews.com
- Iran-Contra Affair, 1986 – Noam Chomsky – Libcom.org
- The Iran-Contra Affair – 1986-87 – WashingtonPost.com
- The Iran-Contra Affair (1986-1987) – Jewish Virtual Library
Timeline of the Iran-Contra Affair:
1985 United States Navy intelligence analyst Jonathan Pollard is arrested for spying after being caught giving Israel classified information on Arab nations. He is subsequently sentenced to life in prison.
1983 US military campaign in Granada ends.
US Military Campaign in Granada:
- Invasion of Grenada – Wikipedia
- Operation URGENT FURY: The Invasion of Grenada, 1983 – Army.mil
- The Invasion of Grenada – AMERICAN EXPERIENCE – PBS.org
- The Invasion of Grenada (1983) – HistoryGuy.com
- The US Invasion of Grenada – United States History – U-S-History.com
- Remembering Reagan’s Invasion of Grenada – June 10, 2004 – DemocracyNow.org
- The US Invasion of Grenada, by Stephen Zunes – October 2003 – Foreign Policy In Focus – Global Policy Forum – GlobalPolicy.org
- War report on US invasion of Grenada – History.com
- US invasion of Grenada laid blueprint for war, published 25 Oct, 2010; edited 26 Oct, 2010 – RT.com
- CASUALTIES IN GRENADA Oct. 28, 1983 – The New York Times – NYTimes.com
1980 A deadly fire breaks out at the MGM Grand Hotel in Paradise, Nevada (now Bally’s Las Vegas). Eighty-seven people are killed and more than 650 are injured in the worst disaster in Nevada history.
1979 The United States Embassy in Islamabad, Pakistan, is attacked by a mob and set on fire, killing four.
1974 The Birmingham pub bombings kill 21 people. The Birmingham Six are sentenced to life in prison for the crime but subsequently acquitted.
1972 Voters in South Korea overwhelmingly approve a new constitution, giving legitimacy to Park Chung-hee and the Fourth Republic.
1971 Indian troops, partly aided by Mukti Bahini (Bengali guerrillas), defeat the Pakistan army in the Battle of Garibpur.
1970 Vietnam War: Operation Ivory Coast: A joint United States Air Force and Army team raids the Sơn Tây prisoner-of-war camp in an attempt to free American prisoners of war thought to be held there.
Vietnam War in 1970:
Operation Ivory Coast:
- Operation Ivory Coast – Wikipedia
- List of the allied military operations in the Vietnam War (1970) – Wikipedia
1970 US performs nuclear test (underground) at Nevada Test Site.
US Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- List of the nuclear weapons tests of the United States – Wikipedia
- Nuclear Weapons and the United States – Wikipedia
- The Cold War – AtomCentral.com
Nuclear Weapons and the United States:
- Nuclear Weapons and the United States – Wikipedia
- Nuclear Weapons Testing: History, Progress, Challenges: Verifications and Entry into Force of the CTBT – US Department of State
- US Nuclear Weapons Stockpile Life Extension Programs – January 3, 2013 – US Department of State
- 50 Facts About US Nuclear Weapons Today – April 28, 2014 – Brookings.edu
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Michaela Dodge – The Heritage Foundation
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Policy – Arms Control Association
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Linton F. Brooks – ResearchGate.net
- US Nuclear Weapons Policy in the 21st Century – Rose Gottemoeller, Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security, Dixie State University, St. George, Utah – October 21, 2014 – US Department of State
Nevada Test Site:
- NEVADA TEST SITE – FAS.org
- NEVADA TEST SITE – GlobalSecurity.org
- Nevada Test Site Overview – OnlineNevada.org
- Nuclear testing at the Nevada Test Site – Brookings.edu
- Nevada Test Site – Toxipedia.org
- Nevada Test Site – Oral History Project
- NUKE TESTING in NEVADA – Archure.net
- ECOLOGY OF THE NEVADA TEST SITE: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
- Nevada Test Site Workers Exposed to Radiation – National Cancer Benefits Center – NevadaTestSite.info
- 50 Facts About the US Nuclear Weapons – Brookings.edu
- Gallery of US Nuclear Tests – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- The Nuclear Matters Handbook
Ecological and Health Issues in and around the Nevada Test Site:
- Environment and the Quality of Life in Nevada – UNLV.edu
- ECONLGOY OF THE NEVADA TEST SITE: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY WITH NARRATIVE SUMMARY, KEY WORD INDEX, AND SPECIES LISTS – DOE/NEV/11718-594
- Nevada Applied Ecology Information Center: a review of technical information support provided to the Nevada Applied Ecology Group – Sci-Tech Connect
- “Between 1951 and 1992, the United States bombed its own soil with nuclear weapons — 945 times. All but 17 of those explosions took place on a stretch of basin-and-range desert northwest of Las Vegas called the Nevada Test Site (NTS),…” – Sovereignty at Shoshone Mountain – EcologyCenter.org
- The Containment of Underground Nuclear Explosions – Princeton.edu
- Nevada Test Site Workers Exposed to Radiation – National Cancer Benefits Center
1969 The first permanent ARPANET link is established between UCLA and SRI.
1969 US President Richard Nixon and Japanese Premier Eisaku Satō agree in Washington, DC, on the return of Okinawa to Japanese control in 1972. Under the terms of the agreement, the US is to retain its rights to bases on the island, but these are to be “nuclear-free”.
US Policy toward Japan of 1969 and the 1971 Okinawa Reversion Agreement:
- 1971 Okinawa Reversion Agreement – Wikipedia
- SUBJECT: Policy toward Japan – National Security Memorandum 13 – TOP SECRET – May 28, 1969 – NATIONAL SECURTY COUNCIL – GWU.edu
- “On Nov. 21, 1969, President Richard Nixon met with Prime Minister Eisaku Sato in Washington to discuss an extremely delicate issue…The result of the Nixon-Sato meeting was a secret agreement that would allow the U.S. to bring in and transit nuclear weapons through Okinawa after the islands were handed over. If it were not for this secret agreement, political scientists believe, the reversion could not have been achieved as smoothly as it was.” – Nuclear pact ensure smooth Okinawa reversion – Secret agreement on transport and storage of weapons exacted high toll in terms of public trust – by Eric Johnston – May 15, 2002 – The Japan Times – JapanTimes.co.jp
- “Despite Japan’s repeated denials that a secret Japan-US agreement existed to permit nuclear weapons to be brought to Okinawa, official U.S. documents are now revealing it happened. The secret agreement, which was linked to Okinawa’s reversion to Japanese control in 1972, has been discussed and theorized about for years.” – Secret deal on nukes on Okinawa confirmed – posted 2007-10-09 – JapanUpdate.com
- “The fresh discovery of US government documents mentioning a secret deal reached during Japan-US talks over the reversion of Okinawa Prefecture to Japanese rule has served as another convincing piece of evidence for the long-held suspicion that the two governments agreed to allow nuclear weapons to be brought into the post-reversion prefecture.” – Still Classified US-Japan Nuclear Arms Deal Exposed, by Satoshi Ogawa and Yuji Yoshikawa – October 13, 2007 – ConstantineReport.com
- Japan Confirms Secret Nuclear Pacts With US, by Anthony Kuhn – March 11, 2010 – NPR.org
Richard Nixon:
- Nixon and the bomb: “I just want you to think big, Henry!”, by Alex Wellerstein – October 25, 2013 – RISTRICTED DATA – The Nuclear Secret Blog – NeclearSecrecy.com
- “On the morning of October 27, 1969, a squadron of 18 B-52s — massive bombers with eight turbo engines and 185-foot wingspans — began racing from the western US toward the eastern border of the Soviet Union. The pilots flew for 18 hours without rest, hurtling toward their targets at more than 500 miles per hour. Each plane was loaded with nuclear weapons hundreds of times more powerful than the ones that had obliterated Hiroshima and Nagasaki.” – The Nukes of October: Richard Nixon’s Secret Plant to Bring Peace to Vietnam, by Jeremi Suri – 02.25.08 – Wired.com
Eisaku Sato:
Eisaku Sato and Okinawa:
- Diplomatic documents show US wanted to change Sato’s speeches in Okinawa visit in 1965 January – 16, 2015 – Asahi.com
- US pressed Sato to soften 1965 Okinawa speech, praise troops’ role – January 15, 2015 – The Japan Times
- MEMORIAL DAY: Okinawa stuck with US bases more than40 years after reversion despite local opposition – June 23, 2015 – Asahi.com
- 1971 Okinawa Reversion Agreement – Wikipedia
Japan’s Non-Nuclear Weapons Policy:
- Japan’s non-nuclear weapons policy – Wikipedia
- Three Non-Nuclear Principles – Wikipedia
- De facto nuclear state – Japanese nuclear weapon program – Wikipedia
- Rewriting Japanese History: Article reveals new information about US nukes in “non-nuclear” Japan during the 1950s and 1960s – Washington, D.C., December 13, 1999 – GWU.edu
- Nuclear – Japan – Country Profiles – NTI.org
- Ambiguities of Japan’s Nuclear Policy, by Norihiro Kato – April 13, 2013 – The New York Times – NYTimes.com
- Japan’s Nuclear Policy: Between Non-nuclear Identity and US Extended Deterrence – Nautilus Institute – Nautilus.org
- “Japan does not plan to support a document circulated among U.N. members that calls for a ban on nuclear weapons, after the United States, its security ally and provider of nuclear deterrence, urged it not to,…” – Because of US nuclear umbrella, Japan not to support Australian document seeking atomic weapons ban – March 13, 2015 – The Japan Times
- Abe renews pledge of nuclear weapons free Japan – August 10, 2015 – JapanToday.com
A Secret Nuclear Weapons Agreement between the United States and Japan, signed by the President of the United States (Richard Nixon) and the Prime Minister of Japan (Eisaku Sato = a Nobel Peace Prize Laureate):
- Text of Secret Agreement – TOP SECRET – AGREED MINUT TO JOINT COMMUNIQUE OF UNITED STATES PRESIDENT NIXON AND JAPANESE PRIME MINISTER SATO ISSUED ON NOVEMBER 21, 1969
- Document on secret Japan-US nuclear pact kept by ex-PM Sato’s family – Hiroshima Peace Media Center – Dec 24, 2009 – HiroshimaPeaceMediaCenter.jp
- Secret nuclear deal between Tokyo and Washington – November 27, 2009 – AsiaNews.it
- Nuclear Noh Drama: Tokyo, Washington and the Case of the Missing Nuclear Agreements – edited by Dr. Robert A. Wampler – posted October 13, 2009 – GWU.edu
- More on US-Japan “Secret Agreements”, by Jefferey – ArmsControlWork.com
- US Violated Nuclear Arms Pledge in Japan, Records Show
By JUDITH MILLER – The New York Times December 12, 1999 – Converge.org.nz - Japan-US secret nuclear deal discovered: reports – DefenceTalk.com
- Japan’s secret pact with US spurs debate – LATimes.com
- Paper on secret nuke pact kept by Sato family – December 23, 2009 – The Japan Times
- Secret US-Japan Nuke Deal Reportedly Held by Former PM’s Family – NTI.org
- Former US senior gov’t official: secret nuclear pacts on Okinawa are still valid – September 22, 2014 – Japan Press Weekly
Okinawa and Nuclear Weapons:
- 1971 Okinawa Reversion Agreement – Wikipedia
- Okinawa’s Henoko was a “storage location” for nuclear weapons: published accounts, by Steve Rabson – JapanFocus.org
- REVELATIONS IN NEWLY RELEASED DOCUMENTS ABOUT US NUCLEAR WEAPONS AND OKINAWA FUEL NHK DOUMENTARY – May 14, 1997 – GWU.edu
- “There are 58,500 Americans working for the American military in Japan (2003). These include 14,000 sailors whose home ports are in Japan and 28,900 servicemen in Okinawa…” – AMERICAN MILITARY IN OKINAWA AND JAPAN – FACS AND DETAILS – FactsAndDetails.com
- Hans Kristensen Japan Under the US Nuclear Umbrella – Nuclear Policy – Nautilus.org
- Okinawa’s first nuclear men break silence – TAC Missileers – TACMissileers.org
- H Bomb Lost at Sea in ’65 Off Okinawa, US Admits – May 09, 1989 – Los Angeles Times – latimes.com
- Okinawa group asks UN to inspect US bases, by David Allen – March 17, 2003 – Stars and Stripes
- Archival papers suggests US military carried out nuclear weapon drill in Okinawa during 1960s, by Kenyu Uchima and Wakako Oshiro of Ryukyu Shimpo, August 18, 2011
- Okinawa, nuclear weapons and ‘Japan’s special psychological problem’, by Jon Mitchell – July 8, 2012 – The Japan Times
- “Secret” 1965 Memo Reveals Plans to Keep US bases and Nuclear Weapons Options in Okinawa After Reversion, by Steve Rabson – JapanFocus.org
- Japan Focus: Okinawa, Nuclear Weapons – TokyoProgressive.org
- Japan supported US nuclear training in Okinawa – December 23, 2010
- Removal of nuclear weapons from Okinawa delayed its reversion to Japan – December 23, 2011 – Ryukyu Shimpo
- Nuclear Weapons Were Stored At Camp Schwab Henoko Okinawa – August 3, 2013 – USS BENNINGTON – PG4
A Huge Explosion Sound Heard and a Huge Mushroom Cloud Witnessed near Kumé Island, Okinawa, on May 21, 2014. An Explosion of an Underwater Volcano in the Region, an Explosion of a Nuclear Device, or Something Else? :
- Japan: Large Mushroom Cloud Near Kume Island
- YouTube video (1 min.00 sec.): Mushroom Cloud Reported Over Kume Island, Japan, or YouTube video (42 sec.): Mushroom cloud, Kume, Okinawa, Japan.
Okinawa and Agent Orange:
- For more relevant information on Agent Orange, visit This Week in History, the date of AUGUST 10, 1961: First use in Vietnam War of the Agent Orange by the US Army., and/or the TMS Archive Search.
- “Growing evidence indicates that during the U.S. occupation of Okinawa from 1945 to 1972, the U.S. violated a treaty to not store herbicides within Japan’s political boundaries.” – Growing Evidence of Agent Orange in Japan, by Amy Chavez – June 27, 2012 – HuffigtonPost.com
- Japan finds traces of US herbicides on Okinawa, by Travis J. Tritten and Chiyomi Sumida – July 26, 2013 – Stars and Stripes – Stripes.com
- AGENT ORANGE: Okinawa, by Bob Hanafin – September 24, 2011 – VeteransToday.com
- Agent Orange in Okinawa – New Evidence, by Jon Mitchell – JapanFocus.org
- Agent Orange on Okinawa – JonMitchellInJapan.com
- “A recently discovered U.S. army report puts lie to the Pentagon’s denials that it exposed soldiers and civilians to Agent Orange on Okinawa.” – The Agent Orange on Okinawa: The Smoking Gun, by Jon Mitchell – FPIF.org
- “Thousands of barrels of Agent Orange were unloaded on Okinawa Island and stored at the port of Naha, and at the U.S. military’s Kadena and Camp Schwab bases between 1965 and 1966, an American veteran who served in Okinawa claims.” – US Veteran Exposes Pentagon’s Denial of Agent Orange Use on Okinawa, by Jon Mitchell – NationOfChange.org
- Ailing US veteran wins payout over Agent Orange exposure in Okinawa, by Jon Mitchell – March 17, 2014 – The Japan Times
US Biological Weapon Experiments in Okinawa
- Report: US army tested biological weapons in Okinawa, Japan in 1960 – January 12, 2014 – News.com.au or US Army tested biological weapons in Okinawa: Rice fungus released in at least two sites in early 1960s, documents show – January 12, 2014 – The Japan Times
- PROEJCT 112 – WorldHeritage.org
- YouTube video (3 min. 08 sec.): US biological weapons tested in Okinawa in 60s
- Inclusion of Extracontinental Site 2, Okinawa – Project 112 – Wikipedia
- Project SHAD – Wikipedia
- Project 112/SHAD – Biological and Chemical Testing on Human Beings – OpsecNews.com
- Project 112/SHAD – Health.mil
Okinawa Travel Guide:
- Guide to Okinawa, by Shizuko Mishima – About.com
- Okinawa – WikiVoyage.org
- Trip Adviser – Okinawa – Japan
- Okinawa Travel Guide – VirtualTourist.com
History of Okinawa:
- History of the Ryukyu Islands (Okinawa) – Wikipedia
- A Brief History of Okinawa – Okinawan-Shorinryu.com
- History of Okinawa – RCA.Open.ed.jp
- Background and History – Okinawa.com
Okinawa and World War II:
- BATTLE OF OKINAWA – History.com
- Battle of Okinawa – Wikipedia
- Battlefield’s and bunkers: Exploring Okinawa’s World War II history – CNN
- World War II: Battle of Okinawa – About.com
- Battle of Okinawa, by Laura Lacey – MilitaryHitoryOnline.com
- Battle of Okinawa – The History Learning Site
- OKINAWA: THE LAST BATTLE – Center of Military History, United States Army – Army.mil
- Oral History – Battle for Okinawa – 24 March – 30 June 1945 – Naval History and Heritage Command
- Memories of Battle of Okinawa – ‘Operation Iceberg’ – WarHistoryOnline.com
- Okinawa – A Rope in the Open Sea
US Occupation of Okinawa:
- Chronology of Occupation – 15 August 1945 – 30 March 1946
- Volume V: Victory and Occupation – History of US Marine Corps
- Okinawa prefecture under American occupation – H-net.org
- US Military Occupation in Okinawa – USMilitaryInOkinawa.Blogspot.com
The Origin or One of the Main Origins of the Presence of the United States Military in Okinawa:
- “Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers Diplomatic Section: 20 September, 1947 – Memorandum for General MacArthur: Mr. Hidenari Terasaki, an adviser to the Emperor, called by appointment for the purpose of conveying to me the Emperor’s ideas concerning the future of Okinawa. Mr. Terasaki stated that the Emperor hopes that the United States will continue the military occupation of Okinawa and other islands of the Ryukyus.” – Emperor of Japan’s Opinion Concerning the Future of the Ryukyu Islands
- The same document, as mentioned above, is posted also on other websites, in the digitalized format, which are, for instance, among others, as follows: The Origins of the Bilateral Okinawa Problem: Okinawa in Postwar US-Japan – Sebald’s Memorandum to Douglas MacArthur, SCAP and “Emperor of Japan’s Opinion Concerning the Future of the Ryukyu Islands” Tokyo, September 22, 1947 [with the Japanese translation]
- “On September 20, 1947, Hirohito conveyed to MacArthur’s political adviser, William J. Sebald, his position on the future of Okinawa. Acting through Terasaki, his interpreter and frequent liaison with high GHQ officials, the emperor requested that, in view of the worsening confrontation between the Soviet Union and the United States, the American military occupation of Okinawa and other islands in the Ryukyu chain continue for ninety-nine years. Hirohito knew MacArthur’s latest views on the status of Okinawa when he made this offer.” – Attitude toward Okinawa in Japan, 1945 – 1947
The Presence of the United States Military in Okinawa:
- US Bases, Japan and the Reality of Okinawa as a Military Colony, by Kensei Yoshida – JapanFocus.org
- Okinawan Perspectives on Japan’s Imperial Institution, by Steve Rabson – JapanFocus.org
- US presence in Okinawa – Wikipedia
- United States Army Air Forces in Okinawa – Wikipedia
- United States military installations in Okinawa – Wikipedia
- Kadena Air Base in Okinawa – Wikipedia
- Kadena Air Base – Home
- Marine Corps Air Station Futenma in Okinawa – Wikipedia
- “Naha Air Base (那覇基地 Naha Kichi?), formally known as the Kōkū Jieitai Naha Kichi (航空自衛隊那覇基地?), is an air base of the Japan Air Self-Defense Force formerly under control of the United States Air Force.” – Naha Air Base in Okinawa – Wikipedia
- Naha, the capital city of Okinawa Prefecture – Wikipedia
- Naha AB, Okinawa – SVSARAH.com
- Okinawa since 1945 – Wikipedia
- Military Base Issues in Okinawa
- Militarization and Demilitarization in Okinawa: As a Geostrategic “keystone” under the Japan-US Alliance – August 10 -12, 2013
- Veterans Reveal 1962 Nuclear Close Call Dodged in Okinawa – 31 March 2015 – Asia-PacificResearch.com
- Deception and Diplomacy: The US, Japan, and Okinawa, by Gavan McCormack – JapanFocus.org
- Japan’s Sacrificial Lamb – The Okinawa Military Base Controversy – Tofugu.com
- US-Japan Status of Forces Agreement – Wikipedia
- Full text of the US-Japan Status of Forces Agreement
- The US-Japan Status of Forces Agreement and Okinawan Anger – TokyoProgressive.org
- Why US military base divide Okinawa and mainland Japan, by Shino Hateruma
- US Military Base Map in Okinawa – Okinawa-Institute.com
- Okinawa Japan Marine Corps Bases – USMCLife.com
- ‘Okinawans sick and tired of US military presence’ – RT.com
- Okinawa’s Revolt: Decades of Rape, Environmental Harm by US Military Spur Residents to Rise Up – Thursday, January 16, 2014 – DemocracyNow.org
- 70 years after Hiroshima, Okinawa’s long resistance to US military occupation – 6 August 2015 – The Ecologist
- US Filled Okinawa With Bases And Japan Kept Them There: Okinawans Again Say No – Forbes.com
1967 Vietnam War: American General William Westmoreland tells news reporters: “I am absolutely certain that whereas in 1965 the enemy was winning, today he is certainly losing.”
Vietnam War in 1967:
- VIETNA WAR HISTORY – History.com
- 1967 in the Vietnam War – Wikipedia
- List of allied military operations in the Vietnam War (1967) – Wikipedia
- VIETNAM WAR: NOVEMBER 1967 – FACES FROM THE WALL – FacesFromTheWall.com
- Vietnam War – Battle Field: Timeline 1967 – PBS.org
1965 USSR performs nuclear test at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalatinsk USSR.
- List of nuclear weapons tests of the Soviet Union
- Soviet Nuclear Test Summary – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Soviet Nuclear Weapons Program – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Database of nuclear tests, USSR/Russia: overview – JohnstonArchive.net
- Slow Death of Kazakhstan’s Land Of Nuclear Tests – Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty – RFRL.org
- Semipalitinsk nuclear testing: the humanitarian consequences – Norwegian Institute of International Affairs
- The lasting toll of Semipalitinsk’s nuclear testing – TheBulletin.org
- External Doses of Residents near Semipalitinsk Nuclear Test Site – ResearchGate.net
- Radiation Exposure on Residents due to Semipalitinsk Nuclear Tests – IRPA.net
1964 Second Vatican Council: The third session of the Roman Catholic Church‘s ecumenical council closes.
Vatican Council II:
- Vatican Council, Second – Infoplease.com
- Vatican Council II – Overview, by Rev. Benjamin P. Bradshaw – pdf – FRBEN.com
- Why Is Vatican II So Important? ,by Jordan G. Teicher – October 10, 2012 – NPR.org
- Second Vatican Council, Heresies, Documents, Summary, and Fact – Vatican Council II – DoomsDayProficies.info
Vatican Council II Documents:
- Vatican II – Summary and Reflection of Vatican II Documents – pdf – Serchlightsvs.com
- A Summary and Guide to the Documents of the Second Vatican Counci – CatholicCulture.org
- DOGMATIC CONSTITUTION ON THE CHURCH LUMEN GENTIUM SOLEMNLY PROMULGATED BY HIS HOLINESS POPE PAUL VI ON NOVEMBER 21, 1964 – Vatican.va
- DOGMATIC CONSTITUTION ON DIVINE REVELATION DEI VERBUM SOLEMNLY PROMULGATED BY HIS HOLINESS POPE PAUL VI ON NOVEMBER 18, 1965 – Vatican.va
- SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL – The 16 Documents – EWTN.com
1964 The Verrazano–Narrows Bridge opens to traffic. (At the time it is the world’s longest suspension bridge.)
1962 The Chinese People’s Liberation Army declares a unilateral ceasefire in the Sino-Indian War.
1953 The British Natural History Museum announces that the “Piltdown Man” skull, initially believed to be one of the most important fossilized hominid skulls ever found, is a hoax.
1927 Columbine Mine massacre: Striking coal miners are allegedly attacked with machine guns by a detachment of state police dressed in civilian clothes.
1922 Rebecca Latimer Felton of Georgia takes the oath of office, becoming the first female United States Senator.
1920 Irish War of Independence: In Dublin, 31 people are killed in what became known as “Bloody Sunday“. This included fourteen British informants, fourteen Irish civilians and three Irish Republican Army prisoners.
Irish War of Independence:
- The Irish War of Independence – A Brief Overview – TheIrishHistory.com
- Irish War of Independence – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Irish War of Independence – THE IRISH WAR – TheIrishWar.com
- The War of Independence – AskAboutIreland.ie
- The Anglo-Irish War – BBC
- Timeline of the Irish War of Independence – Wikipedia
History of Ireland:
- History of Ireland – WesleyJohnston.com
- History of Ireland – Wikipedia
- HISTORY OF IRELAND – HistoryWorld.net
- A BRIEF HISTORY OF IRELAND – LocalHistories.org
- History of Ireland – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Ireland History – Destination360.com
- History of Ireland – OracleIreland.com
- Events in Irish History – IrelandsEye.com
- History – YourIrish.com
- A Brief History of Ireland, by John Howell – GenealogyPro.com
1918 A pogrom takes place in Lwów (now Lviv); over three days, at least 50 Jews and 270 Ukrainian Christians are killed by Poles.
1918 The Flag of Estonia, previously used by pro-independence activists, is formally adopted as the national flag of the Republic of Estonia.
1916 World War I: A mine explodes and sinks HMHS Britannic in the Aegean Sea, killing 30 people.
1910 Sailors onboard Brazil’s most powerful military units, including the brand-new warships Minas Geraes, São Paulo, and Bahia, violently rebel in what is now known as the Revolta da Chibata (Revolt of the Lash).
1905 Albert Einstein‘s paper, “Does the Inertia of a Body Depend Upon Its Energy Content?“, is published in the journal Annalen der Physik. This paper reveals the relationship between energy and mass. This leads to the mass–energy equivalence formula E = mc².
Albert Einstein:
- ALBERT EINSTEIN – History.com
- Einstein Proposes His Theory of Relativity – About.com
- The Annus Mirabilis of Albert Einstein – LOC.gov
On Einstein’s 1905 Papers:
- Einstein paper outlines E=mc2, November 21, 1905, by Suzanne Deffree – EDN Network – EDN.com
- Einstein’s Significant 1905 papers – MiniPhysics.com
Texts of Einstein’s 1905 Papers:
- Concerning an Heuristic Point of View Toward the Emission and Transformation of Light. – pdf
- On the Movement of Small Particles Suspended in Stationary Liquids Required by the Molecular-Kinetic Theory of Heat. – pdf
- ON THE ELECTRODYNAMICS OF MOVING BODIES, by A. Einstein – June 30, 1905 – UB.es – pdf
- DOES THE INERTIA OF A BODY DEPEND UPON ITS ENERGY CONTENT? ,by A. Einstein – September 27, 1905; or the same paper on this site: LaWebdeFisica.ca
1894 Port Arthur, Manchuria, falls to the Japanese, a decisive victory of the First Sino-Japanese War, after which Japanese troops are accused of the massacre of the remaining inhabitants of the city. (Reports conflict on this subject.)
1877 Thomas Edison announces his invention of the phonograph, a machine that can record and play sound.
NOVEMBER 22
2012 Ceasefire begins between Hamas in the Gaza Strip and Israel after eight days of violence and 150 deaths.
Israel-Gaza Conflict in 2012:
- Israel-Gaza Conflict 2012: Palestinian Civilian Toll Climbs In Gaza (VIDEO, PHOTOS, LIVEBLOG) – posted 11/12/2012 – HuffingtonPost.com
- Israel-Gaza Conflict 2012: Rocket Fired Toward Jerusalem From Gaza Land On Outskirts Of Holy City, by Aron Heller – posted 11.20.2912 – HuffingtonPost.com
- Operation Pillar of Defense – Wikipedia
- IN GAZA – NOVEMBER 2012 – News Archive – WordPress.com
- MONTHLY ARCHIVES: NOVEMBER 2012 – Gaza’s Ark – GazaArk.org
- YouTube video (31 sec.): Muslim Aid – EMERGENCY APPEAL, Gaza November 2012
2005 Angela Merkel becomes the first female Chancellor of Germany.
Angela Merkel:
- Angela Merkel (1954- ) – Biography.com
- Angela Merkel Biography – Eight Women Around the World – MtHOLYOKE.edu
- Angel Merkel: The Authorised Biography by Stephan Kornelius – review – Friday 20 September 2013 – TheGuardian.com
- THE QUIET GERMAN – The astonishing rise of Angela Merkel, the most powerful women in the world. – NewYorker.com
- Six things you didn’t know about Angela Merkel, by Stephan Kornelius in Munich – Tuesday 10 September 2013 – TheGuardian.com
2004 The Orange Revolution begins in Ukraine, resulting from the presidential elections.
Orange Revolution in Ukraine of 2004:
- Orange Revolution – Encyclopedia Britannica
- “The last months of 2004 were certainly an exciting time in Ukraine’s history. Presidential elections were forthcoming, and there was a hotly contested campaign being fought between the two principal candidates, Victor Yanukovych and Victor Yushchenko…..Voter wise Yushchenko was supported by the vast majority of Western Ukraine and much of Ukraine’s younger generation. The campaign was not fought cleanly, with Yushchenko nearly dying of Dioxin poisoning (he survived but was visibly disfigured) widely regarded to be perpetrated by supporters of Yanukovych.” – The Future’s Bright…? – Local-Life.com
- Orange Revolution in Ukraine – StudyMode.com – downloadable
- “Ukrainians are back on the streets nine years after the Orange Revolution – voicing similar aims but with a hardened sense of reality.” – Ukraine’s two different revolutions, by Oleg Karpyak – 3 December 2013 – BBC
- Timeline of the Orange Revolution – Wikipedia
2003 Baghdad DHL attempted shootdown incident: Shortly after takeoff, a DHL Express cargo plane is struck on the left wing by a surface-to-air missile and forced to land.
- EXCLUSIVE: DHL Airbus A300 Missile Strike and Crash Landing at Baghdad International Airport 11/22/2003 (OC) – LiveLeak.com
- DHL Cargo – Airbus A2=300-B4 Baghdad, Iraq: 22nd November, 2003 – 1001Crash.com
- Testimony to an A300B4 – DHL Missile Incident in Baghdad – AircraftResourceCenter.com
- “The Airbus, owned by European Air Transport and operated on behalf of DHL, was hit by a SAM-7 surface-to-air missile while climbing through 8000 feet shortly after departure from Baghdad. The missile struck the wing and penetrated the no. 1A fuel tank. Fuel ignited, burning away a large portion of the wing. To make things worse, the plane lost all hydraulics and the pilots had to attempt a landing back at Baghdad Airport.” – Aviation Safety Network
- “A civilian plane belonging to international express courier DHL was hit by a SA-7 surface-to-air missile over Baghdad on Saturday forcing it to make an emergency landing…” – DHL plane hit by missile over Baghdad – BAGHDAD (AFP) – Nov 22, 2003 – SpaceWar.com
- YouTube video (46 min.): DHL2003 Crash Documentary – Attack Over Baghdad; or the same video YouTube video (46 min. 44 sec.): Air Crash Investigation Attack Over Baghdad plane crash (Air disaster)
2002 In Nigeria, more than 100 people are killed at an attack aimed at the contestants of the Miss World contest.
1995 A MW earthquake of 7.3 strikes Gulf of Aqaba between the Sinai Peninsula and Saudi Arabia, the largest tectonic event in the area for many decades.
1995 Toy Story is released as the first feature-length film created completely using computer-generated imagery.
1990 British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher withdraws from the Conservative Party leadership election, confirming the end of her premiership.
1989 In West Beirut, a bomb explodes near the motorcade of Lebanese President René Moawad, killing him.
1988 In Palmdale, California, the first prototype B-2 Spirit stealth bomber is revealed.
1987 Two Chicago television stations are hijacked by an unknown pirate dressed as Max Headroom.
1981 USSR performs nuclear test at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk USSR.
USSR Nuclear Tests in 1981:
USSR’s Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- List of nuclear weapons tests of the Soviet Union
- Soviet Nuclear Test Summary – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Soviet Nuclear Weapons Program – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Database of nuclear tests, USSR/Russia: overview – JohnstonArchive.net
Effect and/or Impact of Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- Page 3: Effects of Nuclear Weapon Testing by the Soviet Union – Economic, social, and environmental impacts – CTBTO
- GENERAL OVERVIEW OF THE EFFECTS OF NUCLEAR TESTING – CTBTO
- The Secret Effort To Clean Up a Former Soviet Nuclear Test Site – Slashdot.org
- A Review of Nuclear Testing by the Soviet Union at Novaya, by Vitaly I. Khalturin , Tatyana G. Rautian , Paul G. Richards , and William S. Leith – CiteSeerX- PSU.edu
Underground Nuclear Tests:
- The Containment of Soviet Underground Nuclear Explosions, by Vitaly V. Adshkin, and William Leith – OPEN FILE REPROT 01-312, September 2001 – US DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GEOLOGICAL SURVEY
- Political Seismology or Seismological Politics: Natural Resources Defense Council – USSR Experiments in Underground Nuclear Test Verification, by Anna Amramina
- What happens with an underground nuclear test? , by Kevin Voigt – February 19, 2013 – CNN
- APPENDIX H – UNDERGROUND NUCLEAR TESTING
- Buried History: Underground Nuclear Tests – GAJITZ.com
- Underground Nuclear Tests – TheBlogBelow.com
- Borovoye Archive Data from Underground Nuclear Tests – Columbia.edu
- Physical Environment of the Underground Nuclear Test Site on Novaya Zemlya, Russia, by John R. Matzko – Open-File Report 93-501- Reston, Virginia – 1993 – THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GEOGRAPHICAL SURVEY
Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site:
- Kazakhstan’s radioactive legacy – Boston.com
- “My home: nuclear base Semipalatinsk – 21”, Episode 02 “Main Testing Field” (Video: 3 min. 14 sec.) – WN.com
- Slow Death In Kazakhstan’s Land Of Nuclear Tests – Radio Free Europe Radio Library
- Visit to the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site – SPEICAL NUCLEAR MATERIAL
- The Semipalatinsk Test Site, Kazakhstan – IAEA.org
- Semipalatinsk Test Site – NTI.org
- The Tragic Story of the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site, by Vincze Miklós – io9.com
- 60 Years After First Soviet Nuclear Test, Legacy Of Misery Lives On In Kazakhstan – Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty – Monday, August 10, 2015 – RFERL.org
- Soviet nuclear tests leave Kazakh fallout – Sunday, 6 September 2009 – BBC
- In Kazakhstan, the race for uranium goes nuclear, by Philip P. Pan – Thursday, February 25, 2005 – The Washington Post
- Secrets of Semipalatinsk: How nuclear theft was averted in Central Asia – NuclearNo.com
- Top 10 Nuclear Test Sites, Michael Affleck, May 15, 2012 – Our World – ListVerse.com
Health, and Ecological Issues in Kazakhstan/Semipalatinsk:
- Kazakstan/Kazakhstan – Environmental Problems – Reference.AllRefer.com
- “In Semipalatinsk, the local population was exposed to high levels of radioactivity from nuclear weapon tests for several decades…” – Semipalatinsk, Kazakhstan: Nuclear test site – Nuclear-Risk.org
- Semipalatinsk nuclear testing: the humanitarian consequences – Norwegian Institute of International Affairs
- Radionuclide Contamination at Kazakhstan’s Semipalatinsk Test Site Implications on Human and Ecological Heath, by T.M. Carlsen, L.E. Peterson, B.A. Ulsh, C.A. Werner, K.L.Purvis, A.C. Sharber
- Radiation Exposure on Residents due to Semipalatinsk Nuclear Tests – IRPA.net
- Plutonium and Uranium in Human Bones from Areas surrounding the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site – NukeFreeTexas.org
- “Their research done on sample villages near the test site found cancer mortality rates 2-1/2 times greater than those in a control village. The agency says some 356,000 people face radiation risk, with 70 percent of those being descendants of exposed villagers…” – Secrets of Semipalatinsk: How nuclear theft was averted in Central Asia – The Christian Science Monitor
- Studies of Health Effects from Nuclear Testing near the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site Kazakhstan, by Bernd Grosche, Tamara Zhunussova, Kazbek Apsalikov, Ausrele Kesminiene
- Information Report on Biological Studies Conducted At the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site – IDOSI.org
- Mortality from Cardiovascular Disease in the Semipalatinsk Historical Cohort, 1960 – 1999, and its Relationship to Radiation Exposure – Europe PubMed Central
1977 British Airways inaugurates a regular London to New York City supersonic Concorde service.
1975 Juan Carlos is declared King of Spain following the death of Francisco Franco.
1974 The United Nations General Assembly grants the Palestine Liberation Organization observer status.
PLO Permanent Mission to the United Nations:
Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO):
- Palestine Liberation Organization – Wikipedia
- Background: Yasser Arafat and the PLO – PalestineFacts.org
- Palestine Liberation Organization – Infoplease.com
- Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) – GlobalSecurity.org
- The Palestine Liberation Organisation – HistoryLearningSite.co.uk
- Permanent Observer Mission of the State of Palestine to the United Nations New York
- EU-PLO Agreement – Media.be
- YouTube videos on the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO)
History of the PLO:
- Founding the Palestine Liberation Organization – What led to the founding of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) in 1964? – PalestineFacts.org – pdf
- Text of the Palestinian National Charter: Resolutions of the Palestine National Council July 1-17, 1968 – Avalon Project – Yale Law School
- Palestine Liberation Organization – History & Overview – Jewish Virtual Library
- Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO): History & Formation – SchoolWorkHelper.net
- PLO’s history of terrorism is a barrier to peace talks, by Andrew L. Fish – MIT.edu
- PLO in Lebanon (1960s-1982) – Wikipedia
- What is Fatah? – PalestineFacts.org – pdf
- Palestinian State (proposed) – FactMonster.com
- Terror Campaigns and Funding of the PLO – War, Peace & Politics – International Fellowship of Christians & Jews – IFCJ.org
- The history of the PLO and the International Legitimization of Terrorism – EretzYisroel.org
- The True Identity of the So-called Palestinians – Myths, Hypothesis and Facts – Imninal.net
- Palestinian nationalism – Wikipedia
- The Truth About the Palestine People – TargetOfOpportunity.com
- European Union and the Palestinians – Official Site
- European Court Reverses Designation of Hamas as a Terrorist Organization – December 18, 2014 – The New York Times – NYTimes.com
- Chronicling the PLO – 31 Aug 2009 – Aljazeera.com
1973 The Italian Fascist organization Ordine Nuovo is disbanded.
1968 US performs nuclear test (underground) at Nevada Test Site.
US Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- List of the nuclear weapons tests of the United States – Wikipedia
- Nuclear Weapons and the United States – Wikipedia
- The Cold War – AtomCentral.com
Nuclear Weapons and the United States:
- Nuclear Weapons and the United States – Wikipedia
- Nuclear Weapons Testing: History, Progress, Challenges: Verifications and Entry into Force of the CTBT – US Department of State
- US Nuclear Weapons Stockpile Life Extension Programs – January 3, 2013 – US Department of State
- 50 Facts About US Nuclear Weapons Today – April 28, 2014 – Brookings.edu
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Michaela Dodge – The Heritage Foundation
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Policy – Arms Control Association
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Linton F. Brooks – ResearchGate.net
- US Nuclear Weapons Policy in the 21st Century – Rose Gottemoeller, Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security, Dixie State University, St. George, Utah – October 21, 2014 – US Department of State
Nevada Test Site:
- NEVADA TEST SITE – FAS.org
- NEVADA TEST SITE – GlobalSecurity.org
- Nevada Test Site Overview – OnlineNevada.org
- Nuclear testing at the Nevada Test Site – Brookings.edu
- Nevada Test Site – Toxipedia.org
- Nevada Test Site – Oral History Project
- NUKE TESTING in NEVADA – Archure.net
- ECOLOGY OF THE NEVADA TEST SITE: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
- Nevada Test Site Workers Exposed to Radiation – National Cancer Benefits Center – NevadaTestSite.info
- 50 Facts About the US Nuclear Weapons – Brookings.edu
- Gallery of US Nuclear Tests – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- The Nuclear Matters Handbook
Ecological and Health Issues in and around the Nevada Test Site:
- Environment and the Quality of Life in Nevada – UNLV.edu
- ECONLGOY OF THE NEVADA TEST SITE: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY WITH NARRATIVE SUMMARY, KEY WORD INDEX, AND SPECIES LISTS – DOE/NEV/11718-594
- Nevada Applied Ecology Information Center: a review of technical information support provided to the Nevada Applied Ecology Group – Sci-Tech Connect
- “Between 1951 and 1992, the United States bombed its own soil with nuclear weapons — 945 times. All but 17 of those explosions took place on a stretch of basin-and-range desert northwest of Las Vegas called the Nevada Test Site (NTS),…” – Sovereignty at Shoshone Mountain – EcologyCenter.org
- The Containment of Underground Nuclear Explosions – Princeton.edu
- Nevada Test Site Workers Exposed to Radiation – National Cancer Benefits Center
1967 USSR performs nuclear test at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk USSR.
- For some more pertinent information, see “1981 USSR performs nuclear test at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk USSR”, mentioned above.
1967 UN Security Council Resolution 242 is adopted, establishing a set of the principles aimed at guiding negotiations for an Arab–Israeli peace settlement.
UN SC Resolution 242:
- Text of the UN Security Council Resolution 242 – S/RES/242 (1967), or see the same text on the following sites: The Six-Day War – SixDayWar.org; MidEast Web Historical Documents – MidEastWeb.org; or Jerusalem in International Diplomacy – UN Security Council Resolution 242 – November 22, 1967 – Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs – JCPA.org
Explanations and/or Pertinent Arguments on UNSC 242:
- United Nations Resolution 242 – Six-Day War – Encyclopedia Britannica
- UN Security Council: The Meaning of the Resolution 242 – Jewish Virtual Library
- Understanding the UN Security Council Resolution 242 of November 22, 1967 on the Middle East, by Dr. Meir Rosenne – DefensibleBorders.org
- “Resolution 242 was a vital document drafted by the United Nations Security Council, to guide the actions of both the Arabs and Israelis in the aftermath of the 1967 Six Day War. The Resolution addressed such issues as the withdrawal of Israel’s armed forces from newly occupied areas; the termination of all belligerency and all threats to national sovereignty in the region; and a just settlement of the Palestinian refugee issue.” – TEXT AND MEANING OF UN RESOLUTION 242 – DiscoverTheNetworks.org
- “Set up under the 1993 Oslo Accords, security coordination involves the sharing of intelligence between Israel and the Palestinian Authority. The PA was also established under Oslo. Before the official signing of the agreement, the two sides had agreed on a “Declaration of Principles”, which included a pledge from PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat to uphold UN Security Council Resolution 242. That created a framework allowing for Palestinian statehood in exchange for Israeli security.” – Report: Palestinian Security Cooperation with Israel – PalestineChronicle.com
- Myths and Facts: UN Security Council Resolution 242 – Adopted November 22, 1967 – Eli E. Hertz – MythsAndFacts.org – pdf
Six-Day War of 1967:
- The Six-Day War – sixdaywar.org
- Six-Day War – Encyclopedia Britanica
- “In 1967 Israel did not wake up one morning and decide to go to war – she woke up one morning and found she had to defend herself.” – SixDayWar.co.uk
- The Six Day War – History Learning Site
- Six-Day War begins
- The Six-Day War – My Jewish Learning
- The Archives: Six Day War – BBC Watch
- Six Day Facts
1963 In Dallas, Texas, US President John F Kennedy is assassinated and Texas Governor John Connally is seriously wounded. Suspect Lee Harvey Oswald is later captured and charged with the murder of both the President and police officer J. D. Tippit. Oswald is shot dead two days later by Jack Ruby while in police custody. Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson, becomes President upon Kennedy’s death.
John F Kennedy:
- JOHN F KENNEDY – History.com
- John F Kennedy – Biography.com
- John Fitzgerald Kennedy Biography – American History – Let.Rug.nl
- Life of John F Kennedy – JOHN F KENNEDY – PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM
Assassination of John F Kennedy:
- NOV 22, 1963: John F Kennedy assassinated – History.com
- The Assassination of President John F Kennedy, 1963 – EyeWitnessToHistory.com
- November 22, 1963: Death of the President – JOHN F KENNEDY – PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM
- IN DEPTH – JFK Assassination – CBSNews.com
- YouTube videos on John F Kennedy
Why JFK Killed? Who Killed JFK? :
- WHY Was Kennedy Assassinated? – The Question of the 20th Century – Hermes-Press.com
- WHY WAS JFK ASSASSINATED? ,by Tim Kelly – March 1, 2013 – EXPLORE FREEDOM – FFF.org
- Why was John F Kennedy assassinated? – Quora.com
- THE MURDER OF JFK – JFK MURDER SOLVED – JFKMurderSolved.com
- Who Killed Kennedy and Why? – CoverUp.com
- Who Killed John F Kennedy?
- James Files: JFK Murder Conspiracy Theories Resurface As Hitman Who Confessed To Assassination Prepares For Prison Release – INQUISITR.com
- Background of Assassination – NOVEMBER 22, 1963 – Weebly.com
- Mystery of Who Killed John F Kennedy – 123HelpMe.com
1955 USSR performs nuclear test (atmospheric) at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk USSR.
USSR Nuclear Tests in 1955:
USSR’s Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- List of nuclear weapons tests of the Soviet Union
- Soviet Nuclear Test Summary – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Soviet Nuclear Weapons Program – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Database of nuclear tests, USSR/Russia: overview – JohnstonArchive.net
Soviet Atmospheric Nuclear Tests:
- Soviet Atmospheric Tests – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- USSR Atmospheric Nuclear Tests Database – Zvis.com
- List of nuclear weapons tests of the Soviet Union
- Soviet Nuclear Test Summary – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Soviet Nuclear Weapons Program – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Database of nuclear tests, USSR/Russia: overview – JohnstonArchive.net
- Slow Death of Kazakhstan’s Land Of Nuclear Tests – Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty – RFRL.org
- Semipalitinsk nuclear testing: the humanitarian consequences – Norwegian Institute of International Affairs
- The lasting toll of Semipalitinsk’s nuclear testing – TheBulletin.org
- External Doses of Residents near Semipalitinsk Nuclear Test Site – ResearchGate.net
- Radiation Exposure on Residents due to Semipalitinsk Nuclear Tests – IRPA.net
Effect and/or Impact of Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- Page 3: Effects of Nuclear Weapon Testing by the Soviet Union – Economic, social, and environmental impacts – CTBTO
- GENERAL OVERVIEW OF THE EFFECTS OF NUCLEAR TESTING – CTBTO
- The Secret Effort To Clean Up a Former Soviet Nuclear Test Site – Slashdot.org
- A Review of Nuclear Testing by the Soviet Union at Novaya, by Vitaly I. Khalturin , Tatyana G. Rautian , Paul G. Richards , and William S. Leith – CiteSeerX- PSU.edu
Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site:
- Kazakhstan’s radioactive legacy – Boston.com
- “My home: nuclear base Semipalatinsk – 21”, Episode 02 “Main Testing Field” (Video: 3 min. 14 sec.) – WN.com
- Slow Death In Kazakhstan’s Land Of Nuclear Tests – Radio Free Europe Radio Library
- Visit to the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site – SPEICAL NUCLEAR MATERIAL
- The Semipalatinsk Test Site, Kazakhstan – IAEA.org
- Semipalatinsk Test Site – NTI.org
- The Tragic Story of the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site, by Vincze Miklós – io9.com
- 60 Years After First Soviet Nuclear Test, Legacy Of Misery Lives On In Kazakhstan – Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty – Monday, August 10, 2015 – RFERL.org
- Soviet nuclear tests leave Kazakh fallout – Sunday, 6 September 2009 – BBC
- In Kazakhstan, the race for uranium goes nuclear, by Philip P. Pan – Thursday, February 25, 2005 – The Washington Post
- Secrets of Semipalatinsk: How nuclear theft was averted in Central Asia – NuclearNo.com
- Top 10 Nuclear Test Sites, Michael Affleck, May 15, 2012 – Our World – ListVerse.com
Health, and Ecological Issues in Kazakhstan/Semipalatinsk:
- Kazakstan/Kazakhstan – Environmental Problems – Reference.AllRefer.com
- “In Semipalatinsk, the local population was exposed to high levels of radioactivity from nuclear weapon tests for several decades…” – Semipalatinsk, Kazakhstan: Nuclear test site – Nuclear-Risk.org
- Semipalatinsk nuclear testing: the humanitarian consequences – Norwegian Institute of International Affairs
- Radionuclide Contamination at Kazakhstan’s Semipalatinsk Test Site Implications on Human and Ecological Heath, by T.M. Carlsen, L.E. Peterson, B.A. Ulsh, C.A. Werner, K.L.Purvis, A.C. Sharber
- Radiation Exposure on Residents due to Semipalatinsk Nuclear Tests – IRPA.net
- Plutonium and Uranium in Human Bones from Areas surrounding the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site – NukeFreeTexas.org
- “Their research done on sample villages near the test site found cancer mortality rates 2-1/2 times greater than those in a control village. The agency says some 356,000 people face radiation risk, with 70 percent of those being descendants of exposed villagers…” – Secrets of Semipalatinsk: How nuclear theft was averted in Central Asia – The Christian Science Monitor
- Studies of Health Effects from Nuclear Testing near the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site Kazakhstan, by Bernd Grosche, Tamara Zhunussova, Kazbek Apsalikov, Ausrele Kesminiene
- Information Report on Biological Studies Conducted At the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site – IDOSI.org
- Mortality from Cardiovascular Disease in the Semipalatinsk Historical Cohort, 1960 – 1999, and its Relationship to Radiation Exposure – Europe PubMed Central
1954 The Humane Society of the United States is founded.
1943 Lebanon gains independence from France.
History of Lebanon:
- History of Lebanon – Wikipedia
- History of Lebanon – LGIC.org
- Lebanon – History – Infoplease.com
- Lebanon – History – LonelyPlanet.com
- History of Lebanon – HowStuffWorks.com
- History – Lebanon – CountryStudies.us
- History of Lebanon – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Lebanon – History – GlobalSecurity.org
- Lebanon: A brief history – Telegraph.co.uk
- Lebanon profile – Timeline – BBC
Lebanon:
- Lebanon – THE WORLD FACTBOOK – CIA
- Lebanon – CountryStudies.us
- Lebanon – UN Data – UN.org
- Lebanon – Wikipedia
- Lebanon – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Lebanon – Infoplease.com
- Lebanon – News Coverage – The New York Times
- Lebanon country profile – Overview – BBC
Foreign Relations of Lebanon:
- Foreign relations of Lebanon – Wikipedia
- FOREIGN RELATIONS – Lebanon – CountryStudies.us
- Lebanon – Council on Foreign Relations – CFR.org
- Foreign Relations – Politics in Lebanon – GHAZI.de
- US Relations With Lebanon – US Department of State
- Renewed Conflict in Lebanon: Contingency Planning Memorandum No.22, by Mona Yakoubian – June 2014 – Council on Foreign Relations –CFR.org
Economy of Lebanon:
- Economy of Lebanon – Wikipedia
- Economy of Lebanon – The Heritage Foundation
- Lebanon – THE WORLD BANK
- Lebanon – Data – THE WORLD BANK
1943 World War II: Cairo Conference: US President Franklin D Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and Chinese Premier Chiang Kai-shek meet in Cairo, Egypt, to discuss ways to defeat Japan.
Cairo Conferences of November 22-26, and December 3-6, 1943:
- NOV 22, 1943: Cairo Conference is held – WorldHistoryProject.org
- Cairo Conference – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Cairo Conference – Infoplease.com
- Cairo Conferences – HowStuffWorks.com
- CHAPTER XVI: Cairo-Tehran A Goal Is Reached: November – December 1943 – Army.mil
- Second Cairo Conference – Wikipedia
1st Cairo Conference Communique:
- Cairo Conference November 1943, released December 1, 1943 – Avalon Project – Yale Law School; the same text on these websites: Cairo Conference 22-26 November 1943 – TaiwanDocuments.org; or CAIRO CONFERENCE, NOVEMBER 1943, released December 1, 1943 (Dept. of State Bulletin, Vol. IX, p.393) – iBiblio.org
2nd Cairo Conference Communique:
1942 World War II: Battle of Stalingrad: General Friedrich Paulus sends Adolf Hitler a telegram saying that the German 6th Army is surrounded.
1940 World War II: Following the initial Italian invasion, Greek troops counterattack into Italian-occupied Albania and capture Korytsa.
1935 The China Clipper, the first plane to offer commercial transpacific air service, takes off from Alameda, California, for its first commercial flight. It reaches its destination, Manila, a week later.
1931 Al-Mina’a SC was founded in Iraq.
1928 The premier performance of Ravel‘s Boléro takes place in Paris.
1908 The Congress of Manastir establishes the Albanian alphabet.
Albanian Language:
- Languages of Albania – Wikipedia
- Albanian language – Wikipedia
- Albanian language – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Albanian (shiqip / gjuha shqipe) – Omniglot.com
- The Albanian Language, by Robert Elsie – AlbanianLanguage.net
- “The Albanian language belongs to the eastern group of the Indo-European family, along with the Indo-Iranian languages, Balto-Slavonic languages and the Armenian language.” – Albanian – UCLA.edu
- Indo-European Languages – Balkan Group: Albanian, by Austin Simmons and Jonathan Slocum – UTexas.edu
1869 In Dumbarton, Scotland, the clipper Cutty Sark is launched and is one of the last clippers ever built, and the only one still surviving today.
NOVEMBER 23
2011 Arab Spring: After 11 months of protests in Yemen, Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh signs a deal to transfer power to the vice president, in exchange for legal immunity.
Arab Spring:
- Impact of the Arab Spring – Wikipedia
- Arab Spring: A Research & Study Guide – Cornell University Library – Cornell.edu
- What is the Arab Spring? – Middle East Uprisings in 2011 – About.com
- Arab Spring – Infoplease.com
- Definition of the Arab Spring – About.com
- The Arab Spring: A Year of Revolution – NPR.org
- Arab Spring – Encyclopedia Britannica
- The Arab Spring, made in Tunisia, broken in Egypt – January 16, 2014 – TheGuardian.com
- Who are the winners and losers of the Arab Spring? – 12 November 2014 – BBC
- The Arab Spring: The Root Causes? , by Hamze Abbas Jamoul – Almanar.com.lb
- The Arab Spring Descends into Islamist Winter: Implications for US Policy, by James Philips – December 2012 – Heiratage.org
- Arab spring: an interactive timeline of Middle East protests – March 22, 2011 – TheGuardian.com
- The Real Big Winner of the Arab Spring, by Gabriel Scheinmann – October 2013 – TheTower.org
- Timeline: The Major Events in the Arab Spring – NPR.org
- Timeline of the Arab Spring – Wikipedia
Arab Spring and the CIA:
- It’s Official: “Arab Spring” Subversion US Funded – April 15, 2011 – Infowars.com
- The CIA’s Fake “Arab Spring” Becoming A Long, Hot Summer Of War, by Webster G. Tarpley, Ph.D. – June 20, 2011 – TARPLEY.net
- THE ARAB SPRING CONSPIRACY – Sunday, December 25, 2011 – AANGIRFAN
- The Arab Spring and the CIA – One Year on, by Dylan Evans – 01/02/2012 – The Huffington Post – HuffingtonPost.co.uk
- Did the CIA Miss the Arab Spring, by Servando Gonzalez – 02/16/12, or the same article on this site IntelliHub.com
- The Hijacked Arab Spring, by Ali Baghdadi – March 16, 2012 – The Final Call – FinalCall.com
- WITNESS TO HOULA, CIA’S ARAB SPRING – Monday, June 04, 2012 – AANGIRFAN
- The CIA-MI6-Mossad Brotherhood Trick Egypt With Muslim Trojan Horse, by Saman Mohammadi – Monday, June 25, 2012 – Infowars.com
- The “Arab Spring”, the CIA, and Censorship – The I-Revolution Series on CNN, and the Control of “News Media” as Propaganda – Sept 10, 2012 – Archive.org
- CIA warned Tunisian officials about murder of opposition politician – September 23, 2013 – IntelNews.org
- CIA Made the Arab Spring, by JC MacQueen – Thursday, 03 October 2013 – ReadersSupportedNews.org
- The CIA Role in the Arab Spring – January 18, 2014 – THE MOST REVOLUTIONARY ACT
- 2011 ARAB SPRING AND THE CIA – November 7, 2015 – GrondaMorin.com
- Arab Spring = CIA Construct? – HubPages.com
- In director and the CIA He plans to the Arab Spring since 2006: YouTube video (2min. 09 sec.)
- Noam Chomsky | Emerging World Order and the Arab Spring: YouTube video (1 h. 01 min. 05 sec.)
- Other Pertinent YouTube videos on the Arab Spring and the CIA
Arab Spring and Al-Qaeda:
- “The Arab spring has “delighted al-Qaida” and caused “an intelligence disaster” for the US and Britain, the former head of the CIA unit in charge of pursuing Osama bin Laden has warned.” – Arab Spring created ‘intelligence disaster’, warns former CIA boss – Sunday, 28 August 2011 – TheGuardian.com
- The Arab Spring and its Influence on Al-Qa ̀ida – May 22, 2012 – COBATING TERRORISM CENTER – USMA.edu
- The Arab Spring and al-Qaeda’s Peripheral Infiltration: A Tour d’Horizon, by Michael Shkolnik – June 25, 2012 – pdf – UNAC.org
- Al-Qaeda’s Response to the Arab Spring, by Donald Holbrook – RESPECTIVES ON TERRORISM – Vol.6, No. 6 – TerrorismAnalysts.com
- Thomas Joscelyn: Al-Qaeda and the Arab Spring – January 11, 2013 – NationalPost.com
- The Gift: How the Arab Spring turned out to be a win for al Qaeda. , by Marc Lynch – August 8, 2013 – ForeignPolicy.com
- How the Arab Spring Unleased Al Qaeda – January 7, 2014 – CounterJihadReport.com
- Former CIA official cists agency’s failure to see al-Qaeda’s rebound – by Greg Miller – May 3, 2015 – The Washington Post – WashigtonPost.com
- ARAB SPRING AND THE AL QAEDA: PETER BERGEN – Peter Bergen al Qaeda Interview Full Text – August 17, 2011 – WealthVest.com
- ‘Arab Spring was really a spring for al-Qaeda’ – OPINION – 17 May 2015 – Aljazera.com
- Book: Al-Qaeda and the Arab Spring: An Ideological Assessment, by Naval Postgraduate School – published by CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform – July 2014 – ISBN-10: 1500578436; ISBN-13: 978-1500578435
- Some Pertinent YouTube videos on the Arab Spring and Al-Qaeda
Arab Spring and Israel:
- What The Arab Spring Means For Israel and Palestine – June 16, 2011 – NPR.org
- Israel and the Arab Spring, by Lucy kurtzer-Ellenbogen – May 3, 2011 – United States Institute for Peace – ISIP.org
- Israel in the Wake of the Arab Spring: Seizing Opportunities, Overcoming Challenges, by Elle Podeh and Nimrod Goren – May 2013 – pdf – 2013.PresidentConf.org.il
- Arab Spring, Arab Storm: Implications for Israel, by Dan Schueftan and Michael Singh – October 24, 2011 – The Washington Institute – WashingtonInstute.org
- Israel’s Palestine Arab Spring, by Kent Bolton – May 16, 2011 – Hydrablog.CSUSM.edu
- Israel and the Arab Spring, by Jonathan Freedland and Daniel Levy; Chair by Yossi Mekelberg – 12 December 2011 – pdf – ChatmanHouse.org
- Is the Arab Spring Israel’s Winter? , by Menachem Klein – Vol. 18, No. 1, 2012 – PALESTINE-ISRAEL JOURNAL – PIJ.org
- Arab Spring Israeli Summer, by Richard Rabkin – AISH.com
- Israel and the Arab Spring – 12/19/2012 – The Jerusalem Post – JPost.com
- Arab Spring and the Israeli enemy – Saturday, 6 October 2012 – ArabNews.com
- Israel and the Arab Spring – The Israeli Institute for Regional Foreign Policies – MITVIM.org.il
- The Arab Spring Arrives Israel’s Doorstep – September 22, 2014 – HonestReporting.com
- 5 Arab Spring Opportunities for Israel – 06.20.13 – The Daily Beast – TheDailyBeast.com
- Arab Spring, Israeli Isolation, by Richard Yavad Heydarian – October 13, 2011 – Foreign Policy In Focus – FPIF.org
- Arab-Israeli Conflict & Arab Spring – The Embassy of Israel to the United States
- Why the Arab Spring Failed: Choosing survival over chaos – Haaretz.com
- Egyptian play suggests Mossad behind the Arab Spring – 02/16/2014 – The Jerusalem Post – JPost.com
- Egyptian Play Blames Mossad for Arab Spring, by Elad Benari – 2/17/2014 – IsraelNationalNews.com
- THE REAL ARAB SPRING IS HAPPENING IN ISRAEL, by Adam Lebor – 4/13/2015 – Newsweek.com
- “Let me remind you that the main consequence if the Arab Spring from Israel’s perspective has been the loss of its main ally in the region, Hosni Mubarrak. Another big result was the flow of Islamic extremists to Syria. Most of all, it’s shifted the world’s attention from the Irani nuclear situation, which is a big issue for Israel. ” – What has been Mossad involvement in the Arab Spring, by Gil Eyal – Quora.com
- “Former Mossad chief Meir Dagan doubted the ‘Arab Spring’ Tuesday and said a Sunni government could succeed that of Syrian President Bashar Assad, which may inhibit Hezbollah.” – Dagan doubts the Arab Spring, by Yaov Zitun – 06.21.11 – YNetNews.com
Yemen and the Arab Spring:
- Pertinent Articles on Yemen and the Arab Spring – TMS
- The Effect of the Arab Spring in Yemen – February 20, 2012 – Wooster.edu
- Yemen’s Arab Spring, by Uzi Rabi, Director of the Moshe Dayan Center at Tel Aviv University – October 17, 2012 – SHARNOFF’S GLOBAL VIEWS – SharnoffsGlobalViews.com
- Yemen: From the Arab Spring to a Leaderless Nation – DefenseOne.com
- Yemen Making Strides in Transition to Democracy After Arab Spring, by Neil MacFarouhar – May 25, 2013 – The New York Times – NYTimes.com
- For Yemen’s Arab Spring activists, hope plummets as chaos deepens, by Hugh Maylor – Feburary 26, 2015 – The Washington post – WashingtonPost.com
- Yemen – Arab Spring – Wikipedia
- Yemen and the Arab Spring: Elite Struggles, State Collapse and Regional Security, by Thomas Juneau – ScienceDirect.com
- Arab uprising country by country – Yemen – 16 December 2013 – BBC
- Yemen – Arab Spring – SourceWatch.org
- A Closer Look at Yemen, Post-Arab Spring – August 8, 2013 – Here & Now – HereAndNow.WBUR.org
- Yemen’s Arab Spring – CHRONICLE – Fanack.com
- Timeline of the Yemeni Revolution – Yemeni Revolution – Wikipedia
History of Yemen:
- History of Yemen – Wikipedia
- Yemen – History – Infoplease.com
- History of Yemen – Yemen.com
- History – Yemen – YemenWeb.com
- History of Yemen – NationsOnline.org
- Yemen profile – Timeline – BBC
Yemen:
- Yemen – THE WORLD FACTBOOK – CIA
- Yemen – UN Data
- Yemen: Country Profile – About.com
- Yemen – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Yemen – Infoplease.com
- Yemen profile – Overview – BBC
Foreign Relations of Yemen:
- Foreign relations of Yemen – Wikipedia
- Yemen – Council on Foreign Relations – CFR.org
- US Relations With Yemen – US Department of State
- UK and Yemen – Gov.uk
- Yemen – Article Archives – Foreign Policy magazine – ForeignPolicy.com
Economy of Yemen:
- Economy of Yemen – Wikipedia
- Yemen – Economy – Infoplease.com
- Yemen – WORLD BANK
- Yemen – Data – WORLD BANK
- Yemen – Index – THE HERITAGE FOUNDATION
- Yemen Economy Watch – YemenEconomy.org
2010 Bombardment of Yeonpyeong: North Korean artillery attack kills two civilians and two marines on Yeonpyeong Island, South Korea.
2009 The Maguindanao massacre occurs in Ampatuan, Maguindanao, Philippines
2006 A series of bombings kills at least 215 people and injures 257 others in Sadr City, making it the second deadliest sectarian attack since the beginning of the Iraq War in 2003.
2005 Ellen Johnson Sirleaf is elected president of Liberia and becomes the first woman to lead an African country.
2004 The Holy Trinity Cathedral of Tbilisi, the largest religious building in Georgia, is consecrated.
2003 Rose Revolution: Georgian president Eduard Shevardnadze resigns following weeks of mass protests over flawed elections.
Rose Revolution of Georgia in 2003:
- Rose Revolution – Wikipedia
- Georgia’s “Rose Revolution” – globalsecurity.org
- Georgians overthrow a dictator (Rose Revolution), 2003 – Nonviolent Action Database – swarthmore.edu
- How the Rose Revolution happened – bbc.co.uk
- Georgia’s Rose Revolution – SPECIAL REPORT – usip.org
- Georgia’s Rose Revolution: A Participant’s Perspective – by Giorgi Kandelaki – July 1, 2006 – usip.org
- GEORGIA: CAUSES FOR THE ROSE REVOLUTION AND LESSONS FOR DEMOCRACY ASSISTANCE – USAID – amazonaws.com
2001 The Convention on Cybercrime is signed in Budapest, Hungary.
1996 Ethiopian Airlines Flight 961 is hijacked, then crashes into the Indian Ocean off the coast of Comoros after running out of fuel, killing 125.
1993 Rachel Whiteread wins both the £20,000 Turner Prize award for best British modern artist and the £40,000 K Foundation art award for the worst artist of the year.
1992 The first smartphone, the IBM Simon, is introduced at COMDEX in Las Vegas, Nevada.
1985 Gunmen hijack EgyptAir Flight 648 while en route from Athens to Cairo. When the plane lands in Malta, Egyptian commandos storm the aircraft, but 60 people die in the raid.
1984 USSR performs nuclear test (underground) at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk USSR.
USSR Nuclear Tests in 1984:
USSR’s Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- List of nuclear weapons tests of the Soviet Union
- Soviet Nuclear Test Summary – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Soviet Nuclear Weapons Program – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Database of nuclear tests, USSR/Russia: overview – JohnstonArchive.net
Effect and/or Impact of Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- Page 3: Effects of Nuclear Weapon Testing by the Soviet Union – Economic, social, and environmental impacts – CTBTO
- GENERAL OVERVIEW OF THE EFFECTS OF NUCLEAR TESTING – CTBTO
- The Secret Effort To Clean Up a Former Soviet Nuclear Test Site – Slashdot.org
- A Review of Nuclear Testing by the Soviet Union at Novaya, by Vitaly I. Khalturin , Tatyana G. Rautian , Paul G. Richards , and William S. Leith – CiteSeerX- PSU.edu
Underground Nuclear Tests:
- The Containment of Soviet Underground Nuclear Explosions, by Vitaly V. Adshkin, and William Leith – OPEN FILE REPROT 01-312, September 2001 – US DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GEOLOGICAL SURVEY
- Political Seismology or Seismological Politics: Natural Resources Defense Council – USSR Experiments in Underground Nuclear Test Verification, by Anna Amramina
- What happens with an underground nuclear test? , by Kevin Voigt – February 19, 2013 – CNN
- APPENDIX H – UNDERGROUND NUCLEAR TESTING
- Buried History: Underground Nuclear Tests – GAJITZ.com
- Underground Nuclear Tests – TheBlogBelow.com
- Borovoye Archive Data from Underground Nuclear Tests – Columbia.edu
- Physical Environment of the Underground Nuclear Test Site on Novaya Zemlya, Russia, by John R. Matzko – Open-File Report 93-501- Reston, Virginia – 1993 – THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GEOGRAPHICAL SURVEY
Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site:
- Kazakhstan’s radioactive legacy – Boston.com
- “My home: nuclear base Semipalatinsk – 21”, Episode 02 “Main Testing Field” (Video: 3 min. 14 sec.) – WN.com
- Slow Death In Kazakhstan’s Land Of Nuclear Tests – Radio Free Europe Radio Library
- Visit to the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site – SPEICAL NUCLEAR MATERIAL
- The Semipalatinsk Test Site, Kazakhstan – IAEA.org
- Semipalatinsk Test Site – NTI.org
- The Tragic Story of the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site, by Vincze Miklós – io9.com
- 60 Years After First Soviet Nuclear Test, Legacy Of Misery Lives On In Kazakhstan – Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty – Monday, August 10, 2015 – RFERL.org
- Soviet nuclear tests leave Kazakh fallout – Sunday, 6 September 2009 – BBC
- In Kazakhstan, the race for uranium goes nuclear, by Philip P. Pan – Thursday, February 25, 2005 – The Washington Post
- Secrets of Semipalatinsk: How nuclear theft was averted in Central Asia – NuclearNo.com
- Top 10 Nuclear Test Sites, Michael Affleck, May 15, 2012 – Our World – ListVerse.com
Health, and Ecological Issues in Kazakhstan/Semipalatinsk:
- Kazakstan/Kazakhstan – Environmental Problems – Reference.AllRefer.com
- “In Semipalatinsk, the local population was exposed to high levels of radioactivity from nuclear weapon tests for several decades…” – Semipalatinsk, Kazakhstan: Nuclear test site – Nuclear-Risk.org
- Semipalatinsk nuclear testing: the humanitarian consequences – Norwegian Institute of International Affairs
- Radionuclide Contamination at Kazakhstan’s Semipalatinsk Test Site Implications on Human and Ecological Heath, by T.M. Carlsen, L.E. Peterson, B.A. Ulsh, C.A. Werner, K.L.Purvis, A.C. Sharber
- Radiation Exposure on Residents due to Semipalatinsk Nuclear Tests – IRPA.net
- Plutonium and Uranium in Human Bones from Areas surrounding the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site – NukeFreeTexas.org
- “Their research done on sample villages near the test site found cancer mortality rates 2-1/2 times greater than those in a control village. The agency says some 356,000 people face radiation risk, with 70 percent of those being descendants of exposed villagers…” – Secrets of Semipalatinsk: How nuclear theft was averted in Central Asia – The Christian Science Monitor
- Studies of Health Effects from Nuclear Testing near the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site Kazakhstan, by Bernd Grosche, Tamara Zhunussova, Kazbek Apsalikov, Ausrele Kesminiene
- Information Report on Biological Studies Conducted At the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site – IDOSI.org
- Mortality from Cardiovascular Disease in the Semipalatinsk Historical Cohort, 1960 – 1999, and its Relationship to Radiation Exposure – Europe PubMed Central
1983 USSR leave weapon disarmament talks.
USSR’s Withdrawal from the Weapon Disarmament Talks:
- “Decision by the Soviet Union to discontinue the current round of negotiations in Geneva on intermediate-range nuclear forces (INF).” – 23 Nov 1983 – NATO Update – NATO.int
- “1983 — November 22-23 U.S. INF DEPLOYMENT The West German Parliament approves Pershing II deployments on November 22. The first U.S. INF missiles arrive in Europe the next day, and the Soviet delegation walks out of the INF negotiations in Geneva. The United States offers to resume thetalks whenever the Soviets are willing to return, but the talks remain suspended until March 12, 1985.” – Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces [INF] Chronology – FAS.org
- “November 1983: Breakdown of INF Talks – On November 15, 1983, the United States proposed that the two sides agree to an equal global ceiling of 420 LRINF warheads, although it continued to express a preference for the elimination of such missiles. However, the Soviets left the talks on November 23, in response to the initiation of U.S. LRINF deployments in Western Europe; the United States offered to resume the talks whenever the Soviets wished to return.” – United States Relations with Russia – US Department of State – Archive
1981 Iran–Contra affair: Ronald Reagan signs the top secret National Security Decision Directive 17 (NSDD-17), giving the Central Intelligence Agency the authority to recruit and support Contra rebels in Nicaragua.
- The Iran-Contra Scandal – Boundless.com
- The Iran-Contra Affair, by Jon Carroll and Ronald Reagan – AlvaradoHistory.com – pdf
- Chapter 31 Edwin Meese III: November 1986 – FAS.org
- Evidence and Analysis: The Iran-Contra Affair As seen through American, Middle Eastern, and Soviet news sources, by Devin Chavira – 1-1-2004 – UPenn.edu – pdf
- Iran-Contra: Reagan’s Scandal and the Unchecked Abuse of Presidential Power, by Malcolm Byrne – 2014 – JHU.edu – pdf downloadable
1980 A series of earthquakes in southern Italy kills approximately 3,000 people.
1979 In Dublin, Ireland, Provisional Irish Republican Army member Thomas McMahon is sentenced to life in prison for the assassination of Lord Mountbatten.
Irish Republican Army (IRA)/Provisional Republican Army (PIRA):
- Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) (aka, PIRA, “the provos,” Óglaigh na hÉireann) (UK separatists) – Council on Foreign Relations, by Kathryn Gregory – CFR.org
- Irish Republican Army (IRA), Provisional Irish Republican Army (PIRA) the Provos Direct Action Against Drugs (DADD) – GlobalSecurity.org
- Provisional Irish Republican Army – Military.Wikia.com
- Provisional IRA: War, ceasefire, endgame? – BBC
- PROVISIONAL IRISH REPUBLICAN ARMY – Tumblr.com
- Irish Republican Army – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Irish Republican Army – Wikipedia
- Irish Republican Army – News Archives – The Huffington Post
- Guide to the Irish Republican Army – About.com
- Irish Republican Army – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Irish Republican Army – Infoplease.com
- Irish Republican Army (IRA) – Provisional Irish Republican Army (PIRA) – the Provos – Direct Action Against Drugs (DADD) – GlobalSecurity.org
- Guide to the Irish Republican Army – About.com
- Terrorism – Irish Republican Army, by Michele Koznicki, Corey Willett, Michal Griffin, Eric Manley, and Ronald Matten – Eastern Michigan University
IRA’s Terrorism:
- Irish republican attacks during the “Troubles” – List of terrorist incidents in London – Wikipedia
- Terrorism and the IRA: Methodologies and Context – WorldReportNews.com
- Chronology of Provisional Irish Republican Army actions (1990-99) – Wikipedia
- London past terror attacks – Thursday, 7 July 2005 – TheGuardian.com
- IRA terror suspects to lose immunity from prosecution – 2 Sep 2014 – TheTelegraph.co.uk
- New 7/7 London Bombings Documentary – PrisonPlanet.com
- IRA Terrorism – Global Issues on Terrorism – Fall 2014 – Stedwards.edu
- Irish Republican Army – History Assignment: Terrorism in the 20th Century, by Luke Styles and Tom Nicol – WikiSpaces.com
- The Impact of Terrorism on Democracy in Northern Ireland, by Alex Schmidt – PERSPECTIVES ON TERRORISM – TerrorismAnalysists.com
- Irish Republican Army (IRA) – TERRORISM RESEARCH & ANALYSIS CONSORTIUM – TrackingTerrorism.org
- List of terrorism incidents in Great Britain – Wikipedia
- Irish Terrorism goes to Islamic (IRA and Muslim terrorists) – 3/7/2008 – FreeRepublic.com
History of the IRA:
- History of the Irish Republican Army – Irish History
- History of the Irish Republican Army History Essay – UKEssays.com
- History of the Irish Republican Army – Video – TimeToast.com
Sinn Féin:
- Sinn Féin – Official Site
- National Website of Republican Sinn Féin
- OFFICIAL DOCUMENTS AND PRESS RELEASES – SINN FÉIN – SinnFein.org
- THE IRA & SINN FEIN – FRONTLINE – PBS.org
- Sinn Féin – Wikipedia
- Sinn Féin – Infoplease.com
- History of Sinn Féin – Wikipedia
- Leaders of Sinn Féin – Wikipedia
- Sinn Féin – News Archive – TheGuardian.com
- Sinn Feinn – News Archive – The New York Times – NYTimes.com
- Sinn Fein News – ABC.go.com
- Articles on Sinn Fein – Philly.com
History of Sinn Féin:
- History of Sinn Féin – Wikipedia
- History – Sinn Féin – Official Site
- A Brief History of Sinn Fein – Corks Sinn Fein
Sinn Féin, IRA and the Catholic Church:
- The Catholic Church vs. the IRA Hunger Strikes of 1923, by Lily Murphy – July 10, 2015 – CounterPunch.org
- The Catholic Church and the Revolution in Ireland – Academia.edu
- In Catholic Church Belfast, IRA Becomes Public Enemy – March 14, 2005 – Los Angeles Times – LATimes.com
- Sinn Fein chief says he met Catholic priest involved in 1972 bombing, didn’t discuss it – September 8, 2010 – FoxNews.com
- THE ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH IN IRELAND AND SINN FEIN – THE SPECTATOR ARCHIVE – Spectator.co.uk
- Questions for Catholic Church over Sinn Fein – 03/09/2013 – Belfast Telegraph – BelfastTelegraph.co.uk
- Gross hypocrisy from DUP/Sinn Fein and Catholic Church over brutal murder. – YouTube video (12 min. 17 sec.)
1976 USSR performs nuclear test (underground) at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk USSR.
USSR Nuclear Tests in 1976:
- 1976 Soviet nuclear tests – Wikipedia
- For some more pertinent information, see “1984 USSR performs nuclear test at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk USSR”, as mentioned above.
1976 US performs nuclear test (underground) at Nevada Test Site.
US Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- List of the nuclear weapons tests of the United States – Wikipedia
- Nuclear Weapons and the United States – Wikipedia
- The Cold War – AtomCentral.com
Nuclear Weapons and the United States:
- Nuclear Weapons and the United States – Wikipedia
- Nuclear Weapons Testing: History, Progress, Challenges: Verifications and Entry into Force of the CTBT – US Department of State
- US Nuclear Weapons Stockpile Life Extension Programs – January 3, 2013 – US Department of State
- 50 Facts About US Nuclear Weapons Today – April 28, 2014 – Brookings.edu
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Michaela Dodge – The Heritage Foundation
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Policy – Arms Control Association
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Linton F. Brooks – ResearchGate.net
- US Nuclear Weapons Policy in the 21st Century – Rose Gottemoeller, Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security, Dixie State University, St. George, Utah – October 21, 2014 – US Department of State
Nevada Test Site:
- NEVADA TEST SITE – FAS.org
- NEVADA TEST SITE – GlobalSecurity.org
- Nevada Test Site Overview – OnlineNevada.org
- Nuclear testing at the Nevada Test Site – Brookings.edu
- Nevada Test Site – Toxipedia.org
- Nevada Test Site – Oral History Project
- NUKE TESTING in NEVADA – Archure.net
- ECOLOGY OF THE NEVADA TEST SITE: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
- Nevada Test Site Workers Exposed to Radiation – National Cancer Benefits Center – NevadaTestSite.info
- 50 Facts About the US Nuclear Weapons – Brookings.edu
- Gallery of US Nuclear Tests – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- The Nuclear Matters Handbook
Ecological and Health Issues in and around the Nevada Test Site:
- Environment and the Quality of Life in Nevada – UNLV.edu
- ECONLGOY OF THE NEVADA TEST SITE: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY WITH NARRATIVE SUMMARY, KEY WORD INDEX, AND SPECIES LISTS – DOE/NEV/11718-594
- Nevada Applied Ecology Information Center: a review of technical information support provided to the Nevada Applied Ecology Group – Sci-Tech Connect
- “Between 1951 and 1992, the United States bombed its own soil with nuclear weapons — 945 times. All but 17 of those explosions took place on a stretch of basin-and-range desert northwest of Las Vegas called the Nevada Test Site (NTS),…” – Sovereignty at Shoshone Mountain – EcologyCenter.org
- The Containment of Underground Nuclear Explosions – Princeton.edu
- Nevada Test Site Workers Exposed to Radiation – National Cancer Benefits Center
1972 The Soviet Union makes its final attempt at successfully launching the N1 rocket.
1971 Representatives of the People’s Republic of China attend the United Nations, including the United Nations Security Council, for the first time.
1965 US performs nuclear test (underground) at Nevada Test Site.
- For some more pertinent information, see “1976 US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site”, as mentioned above.
1963 The BBC broadcasts “An Unearthly Child” (starring William Hartnell), the first episode of the science-fiction television serial of the same name and the first episode of Doctor Who, which is now the world’s longest running science fiction drama.
1959 French President Charles de Gaulle declares in a speech in Strasbourg his vision for “Europe, from the Atlantic to the Urals“.
1955 The Cocos Islands are transferred from the control of the United Kingdom to that of Australia.
1946 French naval bombardment of Hai Phong, Vietnam, kills thousands of civilians. This was to lead to the First Indochina War.
1943 World War II: Tarawa and Makin atolls fall to American forces.
1943 World War II: The Deutsche Opernhaus on Bismarckstraße in the Berlin neighborhood of Charlottenburg is destroyed. It will eventually be rebuilt in 1961 and be called the Deutsche Oper Berlin.
1940 World War II: Romania becomes a signatory of the Tripartite Pact, officially joining the Axis powers.
1939 World War II: HMS Rawalpindi is sunk by the German battleships Scharnhorst and Gneisenau.
1936 Life magazine is reborn as a photo magazine and enjoys instant success.
1934 – An Anglo-Ethiopian boundary commission in the Ogaden discovers an Italian garrison at Walwal, well within Ethiopian territory. This leads to the Abyssinia Crisis.
1924 Edwin Hubble‘s scientific discovery that Andromeda, previously believed to be a nebula within our galaxy, is actually another galaxy, and that the Milky Way is only one of many such galaxies in the universe, was first published in a newspaper.
1914 Mexican Revolution: The last of U.S. forces withdraw from Veracruz, occupied seven months earlier in response to the Tampico Affair.
1910 Johan Alfred Ander becomes the last person to be executed in Sweden.
1810 Sarah Booth debuts at the Royal Opera House.
1808 French and Poles defeat the Spanish at battle of Tudela.
1733 The start of the 1733 slave insurrection on St. John in what was then the Danish West Indies.
1644 John Milton publishes Areopagitica, a pamphlet decrying censorship.
1531 The Second War of Kappel results in the dissolution of the Protestant alliance in Switzerland.
1510 First campaign of the Ottoman Empire against the Kingdom of Imereti (modern western Georgia). Ottoman armies sack the capital Kutaisi and burn Gelati Monastery.
NOVEMBER 24
2013 Iran signs an interim agreement with the P5+1 countries, limiting its nuclear program in exchange for reduced sanctions.
2012 A fire at a clothing factory in Dhaka, Bangladesh, kills at least 112 people.
1976 The Çaldıran-Muradiye earthquake in eastern Turkey kills between 4,000 and 5,000 people.
1979 US admits troops in Vietnam were exposed to the toxic Agent Orange.
- Also see “August 10, 1961 First use in Vietnam War of the Agent Orange by the US Army.”
Some Pertinent Information on “Agent Orange”:
- AGENT ORANGE – History.com
- Agent Orange – Encyclopedia.com
- Orange Agent – ScienceClarified.com
- “From 1965 to 1969, the former Monsanto Company was one of nine wartime government contractors who manufactured Agent Orange. The government set the specifications for making Agent Orange and determined when, where and how it was used. Agent Orange was only produced for, and used by, the government.” – Agent Orange: Background on Monsanto’s Involvement – Monsanto.com
- Chemical companies, US authorities knew dangers of Agent Orange – TheWe.cc
- Agent Orange’s Long Legacy, for Vietnam and Veterans – The New York Times
- “Nearly 30 years after the Vietnam war, a chemical weapon used by US troops is still exacting a hideous toll on each new generation. Cathy Scott-Clark and Adrian Levy report. Hong Hanh is falling to pieces. She has been poisoned by the most toxic molecule known to science; it was sprayed during a prolonged military campaign….. There are an estimated 650,000 like Hong Hanh in Vietnam, suffering from an array of baffling chronic conditions. Another 500,000 have already died. ” – Spectre Orange – TheGuardian.com
- Victims of Agent Orange/dioxin: ‘Agent Orange in Vietnam was a crime against humanity’ – Links.org.au
- Public Health – Agent Orange – US Department of Veterans Affairs
- Compensation – Veterans Exposed to Agent Orange – US Department of Veterans Affairs
- Veterans’ Diseases Associated with Agent Orange – US Department of Veterans Affairs
- “Vietnam veterans with type 2 diabetes are eligible for disability compensation from the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) based on their presumed exposure to Agent Orange or other herbicides. – Agent Orange – Diabetes.org
- Agent Orange and Cancer – Cancer.org
- Veterans Exposed to Toxic Chemical Accuse VA Of Foot-Dragging – Agent Orange – The Huffington Post
- AMERICA’S MOST LETAH SEVRET AGENT? – AgentOrangeRecord.com
- Orange Agent Zone – Veterans and Human Rights Attorneys Seek Information Weapons Use in Iraq – October 27, 2014
Chemical Weapons and International Law:
- Chemical Weapons Convention – Wikipedia
- CHEMICAL WEAPONS – UN Office for Disarmament Affairs (UNODA)
- Full Text of the Convention on the Prohibition of the Development, Production, Stockpiling and Us of Chemical Weapons and on their Destruction (signed 3 September 1992; effective 29 April 1997)
- Status of the Convention on the Prohibition of the Development, Production, Stockpiling and Us of Chemical Weapons and on their Destruction
- Chemical weapons: An absolute prohibition under international law – ICRC.org
- International Law, Security, and Weapons of Mass Destruction, by Jayantha Dhanapala, Under-Secretary-General for Disarmament Affairs, United Nations, 9 May, 2002
- Can International Law Achieve the Effective Disarmament of Chemical Weapons? ,by Peggy Lefevre
- Chemical Weapons Facts – Physicians for Human Rights
- Chemical Weapons – Chemical weapons are generally prohibited by the 1992 Chemical Weapons Convention – WeaponsLaw.org
- Are Chemical Weapons Reason Enough to Go to War? – August 30, 2013, MotherJones.com
- Human Rights Watch and UN chemical weapons report – September 27, 2013 – HumanRightsInvestigations.org
1977 France performs nuclear test at Muruora Island.
Muruora:
- Muruora – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Muruora – Weapons of Mass Destruction – GlobalSecurity.org
- Case Identifier: MURUORA – Case Name: French Nuclear Tests in South Pacific – ICE Case Studies, by Tish Falco – American.edu
France’s Nuclear Tests:
- France’s Nuclear Weapons – Origin of the Force de Frappe
- Database of nuclear tests, France: Introduction, by Robert Johnston – JohnstonArchive.net
- France’s Nuclear Weapons – Development of the Nuclear Arsenal
- France – Weapons of Mass Destruction – Nuclear Weapons – GlobalSecurity.org
- Nuclear Test Sites – AtomicArchive.com
- Declassified files expose lies of French nuclear tests – France24.com
- History of French Nuclear Tests in the Pacific – Part I, Part II, Part III
- French nuclear tests ‘showered vast area of Polynesia with radioactivity – 3 July 2013 – The Guardian.com
- List of nuclear weapons tests of France – Wikipedia
1974 Donald Johanson and Tom Gray discover the 40% complete Australopithecus afarensis skeleton, nicknamed “Lucy” (after The Beatles song “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds“), in the Awash Valley of Ethiopia‘s Afar Depression.
1973 A national speed limit is imposed on the Autobahn in Germany because of the 1973 oil crisis. The speed limit lasts only four months.
1972 USSR performs underground nuclear two tests one in Orenburg, Russia, another in Kostanay, Kazahstan.
USSR Nuclear Tests in 1972:
Orenburg:
USSR’s Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- List of nuclear weapons tests of the Soviet Union
- Soviet Nuclear Test Summary – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Soviet Nuclear Weapons Program – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- Database of nuclear tests, USSR/Russia: overview – JohnstonArchive.net
Effect and/or Impact of Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- Page 3: Effects of Nuclear Weapon Testing by the Soviet Union – Economic, social, and environmental impacts – CTBTO
- GENERAL OVERVIEW OF THE EFFECTS OF NUCLEAR TESTING – CTBTO
- The Secret Effort To Clean Up a Former Soviet Nuclear Test Site – Slashdot.org
- A Review of Nuclear Testing by the Soviet Union at Novaya, by Vitaly I. Khalturin , Tatyana G. Rautian , Paul G. Richards , and William S. Leith – CiteSeerX- PSU.edu
Underground Nuclear Tests:
- The Containment of Soviet Underground Nuclear Explosions, by Vitaly V. Adshkin, and William Leith – OPEN FILE REPROT 01-312, September 2001 – US DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GEOLOGICAL SURVEY
- Political Seismology or Seismological Politics: Natural Resources Defense Council – USSR Experiments in Underground Nuclear Test Verification, by Anna Amramina
- What happens with an underground nuclear test? , by Kevin Voigt – February 19, 2013 – CNN
- APPENDIX H – UNDERGROUND NUCLEAR TESTING
- Buried History: Underground Nuclear Tests – GAJITZ.com
- Underground Nuclear Tests – TheBlogBelow.com
- Borovoye Archive Data from Underground Nuclear Tests – Columbia.edu
- Physical Environment of the Underground Nuclear Test Site on Novaya Zemlya, Russia, by John R. Matzko – Open-File Report 93-501- Reston, Virginia – 1993 – THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GEOGRAPHICAL SURVEY
1971 During a severe thunderstorm over Washington state, a hijacker calling himself Dan Cooper (aka D. B. Cooper) parachutes from a Northwest Orient Airlines plane with $200,000 in ransom money. He has never been found.
1969 Apollo program: The Apollo 12 command module splashes down safely in the Pacific Ocean, ending the second manned mission to land on the Moon.
1966 – Bulgarian TABSO Flight 101 crashes near Bratislava, Czechoslovakia, killing all 82 people on board.
1965 Joseph-Désiré Mobutu seizes power in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and becomes President; he rules the country (which he renames Zaire in 1971) for over 30 years, until being overthrown by rebels in 1997.
1963 In the first live, televised murder, Lee Harvey Oswald, the assassin of President John F Kennedy, is murdered two days after the assassination, by Jack Ruby in the basement of Dallas police department headquarters.
Assassination of John F Kennedy:
- NOV 22, 1963: John F Kennedy assassinated – History.com
- The Assassination of President John F Kennedy, 1963 – EyeWitnessToHistory.com
- November 22, 1963: Death of the President – JOHN F KENNEDY – PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM
- IN DEPTH – JFK Assassination – CBSNews.com
- YouTube videos on John F Kennedy
Why JFK Killed? Who Killed JFK? :
- WHY Was Kennedy Assassinated? – The Question of the 20th Century – Hermes-Press.com
- WHY WAS JFK ASSASSINATED? ,by Tim Kelly – March 1, 2013 – EXPLORE FREEDOM – FFF.org
- Why was John F Kennedy assassinated? – Quora.com
- THE MURDER OF JFK – JFK MURDER SOLVED – JFKMurderSolved.com
- Who Killed Kennedy and Why? – CoverUp.com
- Who Killed John F Kennedy?
- James Files: JFK Murder Conspiracy Theories Resurface As Hitman Who Confessed To Assassination Prepares For Prison Release – INQUISITR.com
- Background of Assassination – NOVEMBER 22, 1963 – Weebly.com
- Mystery of Who Killed John F Kennedy – 123HelpMe.com
1962 The West Berlin branch of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany forms a separate party, the Socialist Unity Party of West Berlin.
1944 World War II: Bombing of Tokyo: The first bombing raid against the Japanese capital from the east and by land is carried out by 88 American aircraft.
First Bombing Raid by the US against Tokyo:
- NOV 24, 1944: THIS DAY IN HISTORY: US B29s raid Tokyo – History.com
- Air raids on Japan – Wikipedia
- 1944 – Mariana victories put Japan in bombing range – Aunt Ethel’s War – WW2Cartoons.org
- DAUNTLESS DOTTY LED FIRST B-29 RAID ON TOKYO, NOVEMBER 24, 1944 – B29.ORG
- “Washington, Nov. 24. — One hundred or more B-29 Superfortresses, officially opening a two-pronged air offensive to soften Japan for invasion, bombed Tokyo by daylight today, (Tokyo Time) and the enemy admitted factories and other important installations had been damaged.” – OFFICALLY OPEN TWO PRONGED DRIVE SOFTEN TO JAPAN, by Fred Scherff – November 24, 1944: DAYLIGHT RAID ON TOKYO
1943 World War II: The USS Liscome Bay is torpedoed near Tarawa and sinks, killing 650 men.
1941 World War II: The United States grants Lend-Lease to the Free French Forces.
1940 World War II: The First Slovak Republic becomes a signatory to the Tripartite Pact, officially joining the Axis powers.
First Slovak Republic:
- FIRST SLOVAK REPUBLIC – Self.Gutenberg.org
- “Then, in March 1939 Germany invaded what remained of Bohemia and Moravia and established a German protectorate. Slovakia had already declared its independence on March 14, 1939, and had become a Nazi German puppet state led by Jozef Tiso.” – Slovak Republic History – WorldRover.com
- Prvá Slovakiá Republika – TUMBLR.com
- Slovak Republic (1939-1945) – Quazoo.com
- “The (First) Slovak Republic (Slovak: [prvá] Slovenská republika) otherwise known as the Slovak State (Slovak: Slovenský štát) was a client state of Nazi Germany which existed between 14 March 1939 and 4 April 1945. It controlled the majority of the territory of present-day Slovakia, but without its current southern and eastern parts, which then formed part of Hungary. The Republic bordered Germany, the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, Poland – and subsequently the General Government (German-occupied remnant of Poland) – and Hungary.” – Slovak Republic (1939-1945) – Wikipedia
Slovakia and Jews:
- The Holocaust in Slovakia – Holocaust Encyclopedia – USHMM.org
- Slovakia – The Virtual Jewish World – Jewish Virtual Library – JewishVirtualLibrary.org
- Slovakia – Slovak Republic Jewish Community
- The Fate of the Slovak Jews – Holocaust Education & Archive Research Team – HolocaustResearchProject.org
- A Brief History of Slovakian Jewry – JewishGen.org
- Slovakia – Jewish Web Index – JewishWebIndex.com
- Czech and Slovak Republics: Jewish Family History Research Guide – CJH.org – pdf
History of Slovakia:
- History of Slovakia – Wikipedia
- Slovakia – History – Slovakia.org
- History – Slovak Republic – Slovak-Republic.org
- History of Slovakia – SlovakiaSite.com
- Slovakia – History – LonelyPlanet.com
- Slovakia – History – Infoplease.com
- A BRIEF HISTORY OF SLOVAKIA – LocalHistories.org
- An Overview of the Major Events in Slovak History – Slovakia.org
- The Culture and History of Slovakia – First Catholic Slovak Ladies Association – FCSLA.org
- Culture of Slovakia – EveryCulture.com
- History of Slovakia – Academia.edu
- An Overview of the History of Jews in Slovakia – Slovak-Jewish-Heritage.org
- Slovak History for Genealogical Researchers – IABSI.com
1935 The Senegalese Socialist Party holds its second congress.
1932 In Washington, DC, the FBI Scientific Crime Detection Laboratory (better known as the FBI Crime Lab) officially opens.
1922 Nine Irish Republican Army members are executed by an Irish Free State firing squad. Among them is author Robert Erskine Childers, who had been arrested for illegally carrying a revolver.
1917 In Milwaukee, nine members of the Milwaukee Police Department are killed by a bomb, the most deaths in a single event in U.S. police history until the September 11 attacks in 2001.
1877 Anna Sewell‘s classic animal welfare novel Black Beauty is published.
1859 Charles Darwin publishes On the Origin of Species.
1850 Danish troops defeat a Schleswig-Holstein force in the town of Lottorf, Schleswig-Holstein.
1642 Abel Tasman becomes the first European to arrive at the island Van Diemen’s Land (later renamed Tasmania).
Tasmanian Aboriginal People:
Tasmanian Genocide
- Aboriginal Genocide – Google.com/site/aboriginalGenocide
- “‘Don’t let them cut me up, but bury me behind the mountains.’ – Truganini, the last Tasmanian. In this quote, Truganani, the last living full blooded Tasmanian, is begging to be buried in her homeland when she dies. It was a custom in Tasmania for the dead to be buried where they were born. But Truganini was instead buried in Hobart and eventually exhumed. Her body was displayed in a museum until the 1900s when a lot of fuss finally allowed her ashes to be scattered in Tasmania.” – The Tasmanian Genocide (1817-1876) – Tasmanian Genocide – PyramidOfHate410
- “The question of whether indigenous Australians were victims of genocide has caused great angst in Australian politics and culture. Wide-ranging public debates – known as the History Wars – took place throughout the country in the 1990s and early 2000s about the historical treatment of indigenous peoples, which centred on whether that treatment amounted to genocide and, crucially, what that would mean for current community relations. In Britain such debates were viewed with curiosity, a society on the other side of the world going through a process of coming to its terms with its past, as if that was nothing to do with us…” – A British Genocide in Tasmania, by Tom Lawson – History Today Volume 64 Issue 7 July 2014 – HistoryToday.com
- “For 10,000 years the population of the island of Tasmania lived in complete isolation from the rest of humanity. In 1803 the government of Britain began to settle Australia with criminals. 73 years later the last Tasmanian died. This completed the total annihilation of the residents of Tasmania 6,000 in total, by the Australian settlers.” – THE TASMANICAN GENOCIDE – THE COMBAT GENOCIDE ASSOCIATION – CombatGenocide.org
- Tasmanian Genocide – Anonymous – TheAnarchistLibrary.org
- “In a book launched this week, Keith Windschuttle argues that the genocide was a myth, which began as a vendetta against Van Diemen Land’s Governor George Arthur, and has been perpetuated by historians ever since….He argues only 118 Tasmanian Aborigines were killed directly by the British. The rest died from a lethal cocktail of introduced diseases.” – Historian dismisses Tasmanian aboriginal genocide “myth” – PM – Thursday, 12 December 2002 – ABC.net.au
- “Yet while European notions of blood are not as catholic in their liberating possibilities for identity as initiation into the Law, it is in these notions of blood which denied Tasmanians their identity for so long, that Aboriginal Tasmanians now find themselves writhing in a new torment. A people who suffered so completely from a racist ideology, and whose very existence was denied for over a century, now have to face once more their recurrent, mocking fate: the derision of a world that, in the end, still thinks they don’t exist.” – The Lost Tribe – October 14, 2002 – TheGuardian.com
- From Terror to Genocide: Britain’s Tasmanian Penal Colony and Australia’s History Wars, by Benjamin Madley – JSTOR.org
NOVEMBER 25
2009 Jeddah floods: Freak rains swamp the city of Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, during an ongoing Hajj pilgrimage. Three thousand cars are swept away and 122 people perish in the torrents, with 350 others missing.
2008 Cyclone Nisha strikes northern Sri Lanka, killing 15 people and displacing 90,000 others while dealing the region the highest rainfall in nine decades.
2000 The 2000 Baku earthquake, with a Richter magnitude of 7.0, leaves 26 people dead in Baku, Azerbaijan, and becomes the strongest earthquake in the region in 158 years.
1999 The United Nations establishes the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women to commemorate the murder of three Mirabal sisters for resistance against the Rafael Trujillo dictatorship in the Dominican Republic.
1996 An ice storm strikes the central U.S., killing 26 people. A powerful windstorm affects Florida and winds gust over 90 mph, toppling trees and flipping trailers.
1992 The Federal Assembly of Czechoslovakia votes to split the country into the Czech Republic and Slovakia, with effect from January 1, 1993.
1987 Typhoon Nina pummels the Philippines with category 5 winds of 165 mph and a surge that destroys entire villages. At least 1,036 deaths are attributed to the storm.
1986 The King Fahd Causeway is officially opened in the Persian Gulf.
1986 Iran–Contra affair: U.S. Attorney General Edwin Meese announces that profits from covert weapons sales to Iran were illegally diverted to the anti-communist Contra rebels in Nicaragua.
Iran-Contra Affair:
- NOV 25, 1986: THIS DAY IN HISTORY: Iran-Contra connection revealed – History.com
- The Iran-Contra Scandal – Boundless.com
- The Iran-Contra Affair, by Jon Carroll and Ronald Reagan – AlvaradoHistory.com – pdf
- Chapter 31 Edwin Meese III: November 1986 – FAS.org
- Evidence and Analysis: The Iran-Contra Affair As seen through American, Middle Eastern, and Soviet news sources, by Devin Chavira – 1-1-2004 – UPenn.edu – pdf
- Iran-Contra: Reagan’s Scandal and the Unchecked Abuse of Presidential Power, by Malcolm Byrne – 2014 – JHU.edu – pdf downloadable
1984 Thirty-six top musicians gather in a Notting Hill studio and record Band Aid‘s “Do They Know It’s Christmas?” in order to raise money for famine relief in Ethiopia.
1981 Pope John Paul II appoints Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger (the future Pope Benedict XVI) Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
1980 Coup in Burkina Faso abolishes constitution. Colonel Saye Zerbo overthrew President Lamizana in a bloodless coup.
History of Burkina Faso:
- History of Burkina Faso – Wikipedia
- Burkina Faso – History -Infopleasec.om
- Burkina Faso – History – LonleyPlanet.com
- Burkina Faso – History – NationsEncyclopedia.com
- HISTORY OF BURKINA FASO – HistoryWorld.net
- Burkina Faso – History & Politics – Our-Africa.org
- Burkina Faso – African-Volunteer.net
- Burkina Faso – History – MapsOfWorld.com
- History of Burkina Faso – HowStuffWorks.com
- Burkina Faso country profile – Timeline – BBC
Burkina Faso:
- BURKINA FASO – THE WORLD FACTBOOK – CIA
- Burkina Faso – UN Data
- Burkina Faso – US Department of State
- Burkina Faso – Infoplease.com
- Burkina Faso – Africa.com
- Burkina Faso – NationsOnline.com
- Burkina Faso country profile – Overview – BBC
Foreign Relations of Burkina Faso:
- Foreign relations of Burkina Faso – Wikipedia
- List of diplomatic missions in Burkina Faso – Wikipedia
- US Relations With Burkina Faso – US Department of State
Economy of Burkina Faso:
- Economy of Burkina Faso – Wikipedia
- Burkina Faso – Economy – Infoplease.com
- Burkina Faso – WORLD BANK
- Burkina Faso – Data – WORLD BANK
- Burkina Faso – Index – THE HERITAGE FOUNDATION
1980 France performs nuclear test at Muruora Island.
Muruora:
- Muruora – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Muruora – Weapons of Mass Destruction – GlobalSecurity.org
- Case Identifier: MURUORA – Case Name: French Nuclear Tests in South Pacific – ICE Case Studies, by Tish Falco – American.edu
France’s Nuclear Tests:
- France’s Nuclear Weapons – Origin of the Force de Frappe
- France’s Nuclear Weapons – Development of the Nuclear Arsenal
- France – Weapons of Mass Destruction – Nuclear Weapons – GlobalSecurity.org
- Nuclear Test Sites – AtomicArchive.com
- Declassified files expose lies of French nuclear tests – France24.com
- History of French Nuclear Tests in the Pacific – Part I, Part II, Part III
- French nuclear tests ‘showered vast area of Polynesia with radioactivity – 3 July 2013 – The Guardian.com
- List of nuclear weapons tests of France – Wikipedia
1977 Former Senator Benigno Aquino, Jr., is found guilty by the Philippine Military Commission No. 2 and is sentenced to death by firing squad.
1975 Suriname gains independence from the Netherlands.
1973 George Papadopoulos, head of the military Regime of the Colonels in Greece, is ousted in a hardliners’ coup led by Brigadier General Dimitrios Ioannidis.
1970 In Japan, author Yukio Mishima and one compatriot commit ritualistic seppuku after an unsuccessful coup attempt.
1960 The Mirabal sisters of the Dominican Republic are assassinated.
1958 French Sudan gains autonomy as a self-governing member of the French Community.
French Sudan:
- French West Africa – Wikipedia
- “French Sudan originally formed as a set of military outposts as an extension of the French colony in Senegal.” – Colonial establishment – French Sudan – Wikipedia
- French Sudan – Infoplease.com
French Sudan, Independent as “Mali”:
- Mali – THE WORLD FACTBOOK – CIA
- Mali – Data – UN Data
- Mali – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Mali – Infoplease.com
- Mali – Africa.com
- Exploring Mali – Geographia.com
- Mali country profile – Overview – BBC
Foreign Relations of Mali:
- Foreign relations of Mali – Wikipedia
- US Relations with Mali – US Department of State
- Mali – Council on Foreign Relations – CFR.org
- EU Relations with Mali – Europa.eu
- Mali and China – China.org
- Mali – Russia relations – Wikipedia
- Mali and Germany – Federal Foreign Office of Germany
Mali and the United Nations:
- The Permanent Mission of the Republic of Mali to the United Nations, New York
- Permanent Mission of the Republic of Mali to the United Nations Office and other international organizations in Geneva
- Mali – National Communications Support Programme (NCSP) – UNDP
- Mali – UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights
- Mali – UN Office of the Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict
US–Mali Military Relations/Cooperation:
- US could resume direct Mali military aid if elections successful, by Pascal Fletcher – Mon Feb 18, 2013 – Reuters.com
- Will US Go Back to Training Mali’s Military? , by John Knefel, – August 16, 2013 – RollingStone.com
- How US military assistance failed in Mali – April 21, 2014 – Bridges from Bamaka
- Military of Mali – Wikipedia
History of Mali:
- History of Mali – Wikipedia
- Mali – History – Nations Encyclopedia
- HISTORY OF MALI – HistoryWorld.net
- A Brief History of Mali – About.com
- Mali – History – LonelyPlanet.com
- Mali – historical empire, Africa – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Mali Empire (ca. 1200 – ) – BlackPast.org
- Mali – History & Politics – Our-Africa.org
- Mali Conflict: Three Things to Know – Council on Foreign Relations – CFR.org
- Mali profile – Timeline – BBC
Economy of Mali:
- Economy of Mali – Wikipedia
- Mali – Economy – Infoplease.com
- Mali – Economy – Nations Encyclopedia
- Mali – Economy & Industry – Our-Africa.org
- Mali – African Economic Outlook
- Mali – Country Overview – THE WORLD BANK
- Mali – THE WORLD BANK
- Mali – Data – THE WORLD BANK
1952 Korean War: After 42 days of fighting, the Battle of Triangle Hill ends as American and South Korean units abandon their attempt to capture the “Iron Triangle“.
Korean War in 1952:
- Korean War 1950-1953 – OFFICE of the HISTORIAN – US Department of State
- Korean War Timeline 1952 – EmersonKent.com
- Stalemate, the War in 1952-1953 – Overview of the war from 1952 – Australia’s Involvement in the KOREAN WAR
- Korean War (1952) – Bio Terror Bible
Battle of Triangle Hill:
- Oct 14 to Nov 25 1952 – Battle of Triangle Hill – WorldHistoryProject.org
- Battle of Triangle Hill – Wikipedia
- Battle of Triangle Hill (Summary) – HistoryWarsWeapons.com – pdf
- Korea – Battle of Triangle Hill – pdf
- Battle of Triangle Hill – Korean War – October 14 through October 25, 1952 – 12 Days – Schiele.us
- Battle of Triangle Hill: the War in 1952 – Cultural China
- BATTLE OF TRIANGLE HILL – World Public Library – WorldLibrary.org
- Battle of Triangle Hill Video – OVGuide.com
- Futile Battle on Korea’s Triable Hill, by Richard Ecker – Veterans of Foreign Wars – October 14, 2011 – RealClearHistory.com
- GRIM BATTLE FOR TRIANGLE HILL – NLA.gov.au
Korean War:
- KOREAN WAR – History.com
- Korean War and Its Origins – Documents – TrumanLibrary.org
- Military Resources: Korean War – NARA Resources
- Korean War, 1951-1953 – OFFICE of the HISTORIAN – US Department of State
- The Korean War: An Overview, by Kennedy Hickman – About education – About.com
- Korean War – 1950-1953 – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Korean War – Infoplease.com
- Korean War – Encyclopedia.com
- People & Events – The Korean War – AMERICAN EXPERIENCE – PBS.org
- The Korean War – US History.org
- KOREAN WAR, edited by R A Guisepi – History-World.org
- The Korean War: An Overview – History – BBC
- KOREAN WAR VIDEOS – KOREAN WAR – History.com
- “The Korean War is the forgotten war of the 20th century. Maybe it was because it took place so soon after the end of of Wolrd War II, or maybe because it ended in a stalment and to this day that stalemate has not been resolved. For whatever reason it was a war that no great movie(other then the TV show Mash) were done about it, there was never much discussion about it. But for the 5,720,000 US troops who served, of which 36,995 died and another 103,235 were wounded it was every bit a war.” – HistoryCentral.com
- Korean War News – ABC.go.com
Korean War Timelines:
- THE KOREAN WAR (1950-1953) – Timeline – SparkNotes.com
- Timeline of the Korean War Events – KoreanWar60.com
- THE KOREAN WAR TIMELINE – Shmoop.com
- Korean War –Timeline Description – SoftSchool.com
- Korean War – Timeline – The History Guy – HistoryGuy.com
- Korean War – Pre-Korean War Timeline and the Korean War Timeline – TotallyHistory.com
- KOREAN WAR TIMELINE – KoreanWarOnline.com
1952 Agatha Christie‘s murder-mystery play The Mousetrap opens at the Ambassadors Theatre in London. It will become the longest continuously-running play in history.
1947 New Zealand ratifies the Statute of Westminster and thus becomes independent of legislative control by the United Kingdom.
1947 Red Scare: The “Hollywood Ten” are blacklisted by Hollywood movie studios.
Hollywood Ten:
- HOLLYWOOD TEN – History.com
- Hollywood Blacklist – United States History – U-S-History.com
- The Hollywood Ten – Listal.com
- Hollywood Ten – Research Resources – Lib. Berkeley.edu
- HOLLYWOOD BLACKLIST, by Dan Georgakas – UPenn.edu, or the same essay on this website Illiois.edu
- Hollywood Ten – Spartacus-Educational.com
- Hollywood Ten – Encyclopedia Britannica
1943 World War II: Statehood of Bosnia and Herzegovina is re-established at the State Anti-fascist Council for the National Liberation of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Bosnia-Herzegovina, Ant-fascist Movement, and World War II:
- History of Bosnia and Herzegovina (1941-1945) – Wikipedia
- Kosovo and Bosnia During World War II, by Carl K. Savich – GreyFalcon.us
- HercegBosna – World War 2: Heart of Darkness (1941 – 1945)
- Book Introduction: Bosnian Muslims in the Second World War II, written by Mark Attila Hoarl – May 22, 2012 – WordPress.com
- THE ROLE OF WOMEN FROM WORLD WAR II TO POST-WAR YUGOSLAVIA. FROM ANTI-FASCISIT FIIGHTERS TO UNKNOWN HEROINES – Geschichtswerkstatt-Europa.org
1940 World War II: First flight of the de Havilland Mosquito and Martin B-26 Marauder.
1936 In Berlin, Germany and Japan sign the Anti-Comintern Pact, agreeing to consult on measures “to safeguard their common interests” in the case of an unprovoked attack by the Soviet Union against either nation. The pact is renewed on the same day five years later with additional signatories.
Germany and Japan, and the Anti-Comintern Pact of 1936:
- Text of the Anti-Cominern Pact – “Germany-Japanese Agreement and Supplement Protocol, Signed at Berlin, November 25, 1936” – Avalon Project – Yale Law School; or the same text on this website – German-Japanese Agreement and Supplementary Protocol, Signed at Berlin, November 25, 1936 (Anti-Comintern Pact) SOME DOCUMENTS RELEVANT TO THE ALLIANCE OF GERMANY, JAPAN AND ITALY DURING WORLD WAR II – iBiblio.org
- Anti-Comintern Pact – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Nov 25 1936 to Nov 6 1937 – Axis Powers formed through Anti-Comintern Pact – WorldHistoryProject.org
- Anti-Comintern Pact – Encyclopedia.com
- The Anti-Comintern Pact of 1936 (signed November 25, 1936) – HistoryGuy.com
- Germany and Japan (1920-1945) – Germany and Japan relations – Wikipedia
- World History/Causes and course of the Second World War – Wikipedia
1926 The deadliest November tornado outbreak in US history strikes on Thanksgiving Day. Twenty-seven twisters of great strength are reported in the Midwest, including the strongest November tornado, an estimated F4,that devastates Heber Springs, Arkansas. There are 51 deaths in Arkansas alone, 76 deaths and over 400 injuries in all.
1918 Vojvodina, formerly Austro-Hungarian crown land, proclaims its secession from Austria–Hungary to join the Kingdom of Serbia.
History of Vojvodina:
- History of Vojvodina – Wikipedia
- Vojvodina – History – Vojvodina.com
- History of Vojvodina – IJKM.nl
- History of Vojvodina – Spartacus-Temporis.com
Kingdom of Serbia:
- History of Serbia – Wikipedia
- History of Serbia – HowStuffWorks.com
- History of Serbia – InvisionFree.com
- SERBIA & MONTENEGRO – History – HistoryCentral.com
- History of Serbs – Kosovo.net
- Kingdom of Serbia – Video 1h. 31 min. 20 sec. – WN.com
- Allies – Page 11 – Kingdom of Serbia – NZHistory.net.nz
- Serbia – History – Infoplease.com
- History – Yugoslavia: 1918-2003 – BBC
1917 World War I: German forces defeat Portuguese army of about 1200 at Negomano on the border of modern-day Mozambique and Tanzania.
Battle of Negomano:
- Battle of Negomano – Wikipedia
- Battle of Negomano – Freebase.com
- Timeline of Portuguese Involvement in WWI – Balagan.info
1915 Albert Einstein presents the field equations of general relativity to the Prussian Academy of Sciences.
Albert Einstein:
- ALBERT EINSTEIN – History.com
- Einstein Proposes His Theory of Relativity – About.com
- The Annus Mirabilis of Albert Einstein – LOC.gov
Einstein’s Papers:
- Einstein’s original paper, Die Feldgleichungen der Gravitation, or The Field Equotions of Gravitation – pdf
- Einstein Archives Online – AlbertEinstein.info
- List of scientific papers by Albert Einstein – Wikipedia
- Einstein Papers Project – Wikipedia
- The Foundation of the General Theory of Relativity, by A. Einstein – English Translation from Selected Texts – The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein – pdf
On Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity:
- Die Einsteinschen Feldgleichungen – Uni-Stuttgart.de – pdf
- Einsteinsche Feldgleichungen – Wikipedia
- EINSTEIN’S FIRST SYSTEMATIC EXPOSITION OF GENERAL REALATIVITY, by Michel Janssen – Pitt.edu – pdf
- Einstein’s Paper: “Explanation of the Perihelion Motion of Mercury from General Relativity Theory, by Anatoli Andrei Vankov – GSJournal.net – pdf
- General Relativity – Illinois.edu
- General Relativity – Einstein 1915 – Sunysb.edu – pdf
- Eistein and 1915 General Relativity – Dr. Gali Weistein’s Patent Office
- American Institute of Physics – AIP.org
1876 American Indian Wars: In retaliation for the American defeat at the Battle of the Little Bighorn, United States Army troops sack Chief Dull Knife‘s sleeping Cheyenne village at the headwaters of the Powder River.
Battle of the Little Bighorn:
- Battle of the Little Bighorn – Wikipedia
- Great Sioux War: Battle of the Little Bighorn – about education – about.com
- Battle of the Little Bighorn – nps.gov
Native People of America (a.k.a. American Indians):
- Native Americans in the United States – Wikipedia
- Indigenous peoples in the Americas – Wikipedia
- Indians/Native Americans – NATIONAL ARCHIVES – archives.gov
- Native Americans – About education – about.com
- Native American – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Native Americans – Encyclopedia.com
- Native Americans – THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF ARKANSANS HISTORY & CULTURE – encyclopediaofarkansas.net
- NATIVE AMERICAN CULTURES – History.com
- List of Native Americans Tribes and Languages – native-languages.org
- First Owners of West America – NATIVE AMERICANS LEGENDS – legendsofamerica.com
- Interview: Native Americans – PBS.org
- US Department of Interior – Indian Affairs – bia.gov
- Trump’s casual racism toward Native Americans, by Simon Moya-Smith – May 21, 2016 – CNN
- Native Americans are crying foul at this poll saying native people don’t find the name ‘Redskins’ offensive – 5/20/16 – fusion.net
History of Native People of America:
- “The first evidence showing indigenous people to inhabit North America indicates that they migrated there from Siberia over 11,000 years ago. More than likely, they crossed the Bering Land Bridge, which was in existence during the Ice Age. After that time period, several large waves of migration took place, including many groups of people from Asia and South America.” History of Native Americans – Native Americans – Indians.org
- Native American History Facts – HistoryOfNativeAmericans.com
- Native Americans and the Federal Government – HistoryToday.com
- PATH THROUGH HISTORY – Native Americans – iloveny.com
- Native American Resilience and Violence in the West – US History – ushistory.org
- “Unbelievably, it was Jackson who authorized the Indian Removal Act of 1830 following the recommendation of President James Monroe in his final address to Congress in 1825. Jackson, as president, sanctioned an attitude that had persisted for many years among many white immigrants. Even Thomas Jefferson, who often cited the Great Law of Peace of the Iroquois Confederacy as the model for the U.S. Constitution, supported Indian Removal as early as 1802.” – A Brief History of Trail of Tears – Cherokee.org
- Native Americans – North America: Historic Background – cornell.edu
- Native Americans – ohiohistorycnetral.org
- The history of Native America – Hartford-hwp.com
- An Ancestry of African-Native Americans – smithsonianmag.com
- YouTube videos: History of Native American Indians, Documentary – ¼, Pt. 2/4, Pt. ¾, and Pt. 4/4.
Wars of Native People of North America:
- AMERICAN INDIAN WARS – History.com
- American Indian Wars – Wikipedia
- TOP 10 HISTORIC INDIAN BATTLES – californiainidaneducation.org
- WESTERN INDIAN WARS – si.edu
- A Native Nations Perspective on the War of 1812 – pbs.org
- NATIVE AMERICAN LEGENDS – Indian Wars Timeline – legendsofamerica.com
- “In the late 1800s, Native Americans were losing the U.S-Indian wars, particularly after the Civil War freed up troops to patrol the West. But there was still the “Indian problem.” – INDIAN BOARDING SCHOOLS – PBS.org
- Indian Wars Time Table – United States History – u-s-history.com
Genocides Committed against Native Americans:
- The US and the Crime of Genocide Against Native Americans, by Lindsay Clauner – Racism.org, or the same article on this site UDayton.edu
- Genocide – Past genocide committed against Native Americans – ReligiousTolerance.org
- The American Indian Holocaust, known as the “500 year war” and the “World’s Longest Holocaust In The History Of Mankind And Loss Of Human Lives.” – EspressoStalinist.com
- Population history of indigenous peoples of the Americas – Wikipedia
- Atrocities against Native Americans – EndGenocide.org
- Were American Indians the victims of genocide? , by Guenter Lewy – September 2004 – HNN – History News Network – HistoryNewsNetwork.org
- The Eight Unfolding Stages of the Great American Genocide (Part 5): DENIAL – May 7, 2013 – TheCommonSensesHow.com
- South Dakota committed shocking genocide against Native Americans, by Albert Bender – June 3, 2013 – People’s World – PeoplesWorld.org
- Is it true white people committed genocide against Native Americans when the former came to America? – “Collective guilt is wrong and immoral. An entire people do not commit genocide. Particular people do. Out of all Europeans and Anglo-Americans, a small but significant percentage did commit genocide…A larger proportion of whites, sometimes up to a majority in some time frames, did support genocide. An also large proportion of whites, up to a majority in some time frames, did oppose genocide.” – Quora.com
- Hidden from History: The Canadian Holocaust – Chronology of Events: Genocide in Canada – CanadianGenocide.NativeWeb.org
- Native American Netroots – Genocide – NativeAmericanNetroots.net
- Celebrating the Genocide of Native Americans, by Gilber Mercia – November 26, 2014 – CounterPunch.org
- “Non-native Americans like Ms. Yecke have conveniently forgotten their own genocidal history as they hypocritically condemn people in the Middle East, Africans, Europeans, and others for 20th century genocide. They need to step back and come to terms with the fact that this country was built on blood stained soil. Americans have a lot to learn from their indefatigability….” – AMERICAN INDIAN MOVEMENT GRAND GOVERNING COUNCIL PRESS CONTACT: Clyde Bellecourt Peacemaker Center – PRESS STATEMENT FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE November 10, 2003 – AIMovement.org
- What were American leaders thinking when they committed genocide against Native Americans? – Answer: Clarence Sherrick – Quora.com
- The Redsk*ns Moniker Monopolizes on Genocide Committed Against Native Americans, by Danielle Miller – LastRealIndians.com
- Columbus and the Beginning of Genocide in the “New World” – MIT.edu
- Genocide Of Native Americans Essay – EssayMania.com
- USA Committed Genocide Against Native Americans – YouTube video (1 min. 15 sec.)
- “Thanksgiving”: “The untold genocide of the Native Americans” – YouTube video (27 min. 41 sec.)
- American Holocaust: The Destruction of American’s Native Peoples – YouTube video (1 h. 42 min. 27 sec.)
- American Holocaust, by David E. Stannard: YouTube videos: Prologue (21 min. 52 sec.) – Chapter 1 (39 min. 38 sec.) – Chapter 2 (2h. 04 min. 14 sec.) – Chapter 3 (2 h. 04 min. 25 sec.) – Chapter 4 (2h. 38 min. 20 sec.)
Genocide Committed against Native Caucasians:
Indigenous Peoples and Their Rights:
- Indigenous peoples – United Nations Human Rights: Office of the High Commissioner – OHCHR.org
- Indigenous Peoples – United Nations Global Compact – UNGlobalCompact.org
- Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples – Wikipedia
- GENERAL ASSEMBLY ADOPTS DECLARATION ON RIGHTS OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLES; ‘MAJOR STEP FORWARD’ TOWARDS HUMAN RIGHTS FOR ALL, SAYS PRESIDENT – 13 September 2007 – UN.org
- Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples – United Nations Human Rights: Office of the High Commissioner – OHCHR.org
- Text of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples – UN.org – pdf
- Rights of Indigenous People – GlobalIssues.org
- The Rights of Indigenous Peoples – Human Rights Library – UMN.edu
- Indigenous Peoples – Amnesty International – Amnesty.ca
1839 A cyclone slams India with high winds and a 40-foot storm surge, destroying the port city of Coringa (which has never been completely rebuilt). The storm wave sweeps inland, taking with it 20,000 ships and thousands of people. An estimated 300,000 deaths result from the disaster.
1833 A massive undersea earthquake, estimated magnitude between 8.7-9.2, rocks Sumatra, producing a massive tsunami all along the Indonesian coast.
1795 Partitions of Poland: Stanisław August Poniatowski, the last king of independent Poland, is forced to abdicate and is exiled to Russia.
1759 An earthquake hits the Mediterranean destroying Beirut and Damascus and killing 30,000-40,000.
1758 French and Indian War: British forces capture Fort Duquesne from French control. Later, Fort Pitt will be built nearby and grow into modern Pittsburgh.
Fort Duquesne:
- Battle of Fort Duquesne – Wikipedia
- Capture of Fort Duquesne – exploringofthebeatenpath.com
- Fort Duquesne – UNITED STATES HISTORY – u-s-history.com
- Fort Duquesne (1754-1758) – brooklineconnection.com
French and Indian War:
- FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR – History.com
- French and Indian War/Seven Years’ War, 1754-63 – OFFICE of THE HISTORIAN – US Department of State
- Events leading to war – French and Indian War – Wikipedia
- French and Indian War – Encyclopedia Britannica
- French and Indian War 1754-1763 – HistoryCentral.com
- French And Indian War – HistoryNet.com
- French and Indian War – MountVernon.org
- THE FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR 1754-1763 – SparkNotes.com
Timelines of the French-Indian War:
- Timeline of The French and Indian War – FrenchandIndianWar.info
- THE FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR TIMELINE – Shmoop.com
- Timeline of the French & Indian War – FrenchandIndianWarSociety.org
- French and Indian War timeline – WorldHistoryProject.org
- French and Indian War: Timeline – U-S-History.com
- FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR TIMELINE – Qued.org
1755 King Ferdinand VI of Spain grants royal protection to the Beaterio de la Compañia de Jesus, now known as the Congregation of the Religious of the Virgin Mary.
1667 A deadly earthquake rocks Shemakha in the Caucasus, killing 80,000 people.
1491 The siege of Granada, the last Moorish stronghold in Spain, ends with the Treaty of Granada.
1343 A tsunami, caused by an earthquake in the Tyrrhenian Sea, devastates Naples (Italy) and the Maritime Republic of Amalfi, among other places.
NOVEMBER 26
2012 Aam Aadmi Party Indian political party formally started.
2011 The Mars Science Laboratory launches to Mars with the Curiosity Rover.
2011 NATO attack in Pakistan: NATO forces in Afghanistan attack a Pakistani checkpost in a friendly fire incident, killing 24 soldiers and wounding 13 others.
2008 Mumbai attacks by Pakistan-sponsored Lashkar-e-Taiba.
2004 The last Poʻouli (Black-faced honeycreeper) dies of avian malaria in the Maui Bird Conservation Center in Olinda, Hawaii, before it could breed, making the species in all probability extinct.
2004 Ruzhou School massacre: A man stabs and kills eight people and seriously wounds another four in a school dormitory in Ruzhou, China.
2003 Concorde makes its final flight, over Bristol, England.
Concorde’s Final Flight:
Concorde:
- Concorde – ConcordeSST.com
- Concorde – Encyclopedia Britannica
- How Concordes Work – HowStuffWorks.com
- Concorde Supersonic Transport – GlobalSecurity.org
- The Concorde Airplane – TheBrightHub.com
- Introduction of CONCORDE – SAE.org
- Concorde aircraft histories – Wikipedia
- TEN FACTS ABOUT CONCORDE – TenFactsAbout.co.uk
- GREAT AIRCRAFT OF HISTORY: CONCORDE – SPARTAN – TenFactsAbout.co.uk
- CONCORDE HISTORY – Aerospaceweb.org
Concorde Crash of July 25, 2000:
- JUL 25, 2000: THIS DAY IN HISTORY : Concorde jet crashes –History.com
- Untold Story of the Concorde Disaster – AskThePilot.com
- Concorde plane crash – airsafe.com
- Concorde Success or Failure – CollegeTermPapers.com
- What brought down the Concorde? , by Peter Greenberg – NBCNews.com
- Concorde’s Steller Safety Record, by David Ruppe – July 26, 2000 – ABCNews.com
- THE CONCORDE CRASH: THE SUPERSONIC AIRLINER; Until Now Safety Wasn’t One of the Many Problems, by Laurence Zuckerman and Matthew L. Wald – July 26, 2000 – The New York Times – NYTimes.com
2000 George W Bush is certified the winner of Florida’s electoral votes by Katherine Harris, going on to win the United States presidential election, despite losing in the national popular vote.
US Presidential Election in 2000:
- Text: Florida Secretary of State Declares Bush Winner: Sunday, November 26, 2000 – UCSB.edu
- Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris Certifies Florida’s Vote – November 26, 2000 – The 2000 Presidential Election – AuthenticHistory.com
- Florida gives it to Bush – November 26, 2000 – St Petersburg Times – SPTimes.com
- 2000 Election – Katherine Harris – SourceWatch.org
- Katherine Harris – Infoplease.com
- 2000 Events Timeline – Post-Election – USElectionAtlas.org
- Al Gore, Jr. v. Katherine Harris (order) – JUSTIA.com
1998 Tony Blair becomes the first Prime Minister of the United Kingdom to address the Oireachtas, the parliament of the Republic of Ireland.
1991 National Assembly of Azerbaijan abolishes the autonomous status of Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast of Azerbaijan and renames several cities back to their original names.
History of Azerbaijan:
- History of Azerbaijan – Wikipedia
- HISTORY OF AZERBAIJAN – AZERBAIJAN AMERICA ALLIANCE
- History of Azerbaijan – Orexca.com
- Azerbaijan – History – Infoplease.com
- Azerbaijan – History – LonelyPlanet.com
- Azerbaijan profile – Timeline – BBC
Azerbaijan:
- Azerbaijan – THE WORLD FACTBOOK – CIA
- Azerbaijan – UN Data
- Azerbaijan – CountryStudies.us
- Azerbaijan – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Azerbaijan – Infoplease.com
- Azerbaijan profile – BBC
Foreign Relations of Azerbaijan:
- Foreign relations of Azerbaijan – Wikipedia
- Foreign Relations – Azerbaijan – CountryStudies.us
- Azerbaijan – Council on Foreign Relations – CFR.org
- Foreign Relations of Z=Azerbaijan – MusicIllustratedMagazine.com
- US Relations with Azerbaijan – US Department of State
- Azerbaijan Foreign Relations – GlobalSecurity.org
- YouTube video (3 min. 01 sec.): A Closer Look To Foreign relations Of Azerbaijan
Economy of Azerbaijan:
- Economy of Azerbaijan – Wikipedia
- Azerbaijan – Index – THE HERITAGE FOUNDATION
- Azerbaijan – Overview- THE WORLD BANK
- Azerbaijan – Data – THE WORLD BANK
- Azerbaijan Economy – ASIAN DEVELOPMENT BANK
1990 The Delta II rocket makes its maiden flight.
1986 Iran–Contra affair: US President Ronald Reagan announces the members of what will become known as the Tower Commission.
Iran-Contra Affair:
- The Iran-Contra Scandal – Boundless.com
- The Iran-Contra Affair, by Jon Carroll and Ronald Reagan – AlvaradoHistory.com – pdf
- Chapter 31 Edwin Meese III: November 1986 – FAS.org
- Evidence and Analysis: The Iran-Contra Affair As seen through American, Middle Eastern, and Soviet news sources, by Devin Chavira – 1-1-2004 – UPenn.edu – pdf
- Iran-Contra: Reagan’s Scandal and the Unchecked Abuse of Presidential Power, by Malcolm Byrne – 2014 – JHU.edu – pdf downloadable
1983 Brink’s-Mat robbery: In London, 6,800 gold bars worth nearly £26 million are stolen from the Brink’s-Mat vault at Heathrow Airport.
1977 An unidentified hijacker named Vrillon, claiming to be the representative of the “Ashtar Galactic Command”, takes over Britain’s Southern Television for six minutes, starting at 5:12 pm.
1975 US performs nuclear test (underground) at Nevada Test Site.
US Nuclear Weapons Tests:
- List of the nuclear weapons tests of the United States – Wikipedia
- Nuclear Weapons and the United States – Wikipedia
- The Cold War – AtomCentral.com
Nuclear Weapons and the United States:
- Nuclear Weapons and the United States – Wikipedia
- Nuclear Weapons Testing: History, Progress, Challenges: Verifications and Entry into Force of the CTBT – US Department of State
- US Nuclear Weapons Stockpile Life Extension Programs – January 3, 2013 – US Department of State
- 50 Facts About US Nuclear Weapons Today – April 28, 2014 – Brookings.edu
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Michaela Dodge – The Heritage Foundation
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Policy – Arms Control Association
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Linton F. Brooks – ResearchGate.net
- US Nuclear Weapons Policy in the 21st Century – Rose Gottemoeller, Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security, Dixie State University, St. George, Utah – October 21, 2014 – US Department of State
Nevada Test Site:
- NEVADA TEST SITE – FAS.org
- NEVADA TEST SITE – GlobalSecurity.org
- Nevada Test Site Overview – OnlineNevada.org
- Nuclear testing at the Nevada Test Site – Brookings.edu
- Nevada Test Site – Toxipedia.org
- Nevada Test Site – Oral History Project
- NUKE TESTING in NEVADA – Archure.net
- ECOLOGY OF THE NEVADA TEST SITE: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
- Nevada Test Site Workers Exposed to Radiation – National Cancer Benefits Center – NevadaTestSite.info
- 50 Facts About the US Nuclear Weapons – Brookings.edu
- Gallery of US Nuclear Tests – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- The Nuclear Matters Handbook
Ecological and Health Issues in and around the Nevada Test Site:
- Environment and the Quality of Life in Nevada – UNLV.edu
- ECONLGOY OF THE NEVADA TEST SITE: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY WITH NARRATIVE SUMMARY, KEY WORD INDEX, AND SPECIES LISTS – DOE/NEV/11718-594
- Nevada Applied Ecology Information Center: a review of technical information support provided to the Nevada Applied Ecology Group – Sci-Tech Connect
- “Between 1951 and 1992, the United States bombed its own soil with nuclear weapons — 945 times. All but 17 of those explosions took place on a stretch of basin-and-range desert northwest of Las Vegas called the Nevada Test Site (NTS),…” – Sovereignty at Shoshone Mountain – EcologyCenter.org
- The Containment of Underground Nuclear Explosions – Princeton.edu
- Nevada Test Site Workers Exposed to Radiation – National Cancer Benefits Center
1970 In Basse-Terre, Guadeloupe, 1.5 inches (38.1 mm) of rain fall in a minute, the heaviest rainfall ever recorded.
1968 Vietnam War: United States Air Force helicopter pilot James P Fleming rescues an Army Special Forces unit pinned down by Viet Cong fire. He is later awarded the Medal of Honor.
Vietnam War in 1968:
- NOV 26, 1968: THIS DAY IN HISTORY: Air Force pilot rescues Special Forces team – History.com
- 1968 in the Vietnam War – Wikipedia
- Vietnam 1968, by Tim Lickness – VietVet.org
- The History Place Presents: The Vietnam War – The Jungle War 1965-1968 – HistoryPlace.com
- The Vietnam War 1965-68 – HistoryOfWar.org
1965 In the Hammaguir launch facility in the Sahara Desert, France launches a Diamant-A rocket with its first satellite, Asterix-1, on board.
1950 Korean War: Troops from the People’s Republic of China launch a massive counterattack in North Korea against South Korean and United Nations forces (Battle of the Ch’ongch’on River and Battle of Chosin Reservoir), ending any hopes of a quick end to the conflict.
Korean War in 1950:
- TIMELINE OF KOREAN WAR EVENTS – KoreanWar60.com
- Korean War Timeline – SoftSchools.com
- KOREAN WAR (1950-1953) – TIMELINE – SparkNotes.com
Korean War and the Chinese Intervention:
- NOV 26, 1950: THIS DAY IN HISTORY: Chinese counterattacks in Korea change nature of war – History.com
- The Koran War – The Chinese Intervention – Army.mil
- The Korean War – The Chinese Intervention – SparkNotes.com
- Chinese interventions –(October – December 1950) – Korean War – Wikipedia
- China rewrites history of Korean War – 25 Jun 2010 – Telepgraph.co.uk
- Korean War – China enters the war – HowStuffWorks.com
- Chapter 25: The Korean War (1950-1953) – Army.mil
- The Korean War (1950-1953) – JohndClare.net
- Peoples’ Volunteer Army – Wikipedia
1949 The Constituent Assembly of India adopts the constitution presented by Dr. B R Ambedkar.
1944 World War II: Germany begins V-1 and V-2 attacks on Antwerp, Belgium.
1944 World War II: A German V-2 rocket hits a Woolworth’s shop in London, United Kingdom, killing 168 people.
1943 World War II: HMT Rohna is sunk by the Luftwaffe in an air attack in the Mediterranean north of Béjaïa, Algeria.
1942 World War II: Yugoslav Partisans convene the first meeting of the Anti-Fascist Council of National Liberation of Yugoslavia at Bihać in northwestern Bosnia.
AVNOJ, Yugoslavia and World War II:
- Yugoslavia – The Resistance Movement – Country-Data.com
- The Resolution on the Establishment of the Anti-Fascist Council of National Liberation of Yugoslavia, November 27, 1942 – Arhivyu.gov.rs
- Anti-Fascist Council for the National Liberation of Yugoslavia – Encyclopedia Britannica
- The AVNOJ-Regulations and the Genocide of Germans – Danube Swabian History – DVHH.org
- Profile: Anti-Fascist Council of the National Liberation of Yugoslavia – a.k.a. AVNOJ – HistoryCommons.org
Yugoslavia during World War II:
- World War II in Yugoslavia – Wikipedia
- History – Partisans: War in the Balkans 1941-1945, by Dr Stephen D Hart – BBC
- Yugoslavia – World War II – Country-Data.com
- YUGOSLAVIA IN WORLD WAR II (1941-1945) – WW2f.com
- YUGOSLAVIA DURING WORLD WAR II – Serbian contribution to the Victory – Srpska-Mreza.com
- Yugoslavia, by C. Peter Chen – World War II Database – WW2DB.com
- History – Yugoslavia and World War II (1918-1990) – Croatia.eu
- The Kingdom of Yugoslavia in World War II – Kingdom-Of-Yugoslavia-In-WW2.com
- World War II in Yugoslavia – A Historical Review – Balkan Savage – WordPress.com
History of Yugoslavia:
- Yugoslavia – Wikipedia
- A brief History of Yugoslavia – ReligiousTorrelance.org
- Yugoslavia – History – Infoplease.com
- Yugoslavia, by Robert Wilde – About.com
- The former Yugoslavia – About.com
- History of Yugoslavia – DidYouKnow.org
- A Brief History of Yugoslavia – Friends Commission on National Legislation – FCNL.org
1939 Shelling of Mainila: The Soviet Army orchestrates an incident which is used to justify the start of the Winter War with Finland four days later.
1922 The Toll of the Sea debuts as the first general release film to use two-tone Technicolor. (The Gulf Between was the first film to do so, but it was not widely distributed.)
1922 Howard Carter and Lord Carnarvon become the first people to enter the tomb of Pharaoh Tutankhamun in over 3000 years.
1918 The Montenegran Podgorica Assembly votes for a “union of the people”, declaring assimilation into the Kingdom of Serbia.
History of Montenegro:
- History of Montenegro – Wikipedia
- Montenegro – History – Infoplease.com
- HISTORY OF MONTENEGRO – Montenegro.org
- Montenegro – History – LonelyPlanet.com
- History of Montenegro – Encyclopedia Britannica
- History – Montenegro through the Ages – Montenegro-Adventures.com
- History of Montenegro – HowStuffWorks.com
- Montenegro history – EuropeTravelz.com
- Montenegro : its people and history, by Denton W. William), published 1877 – downloadable – Archive.org
- A History of Montenegro, by Stevenson, Francis Seymour, published 1914 – downloadable – Archive.org
- Montenegro Timeline – WorldAtlas.com
- History of Montenegro – SafariTheGlobe.com
- History of Serbia and Montenegro – Kosovo.net
- Montenegro History – MontenegroMap.net
- Montenegro profile – Timeline – BBC
Kingdom of Serbia:
- History of Serbia – Wikipedia
- History of Serbia – HowStuffWorks.com
- History of Serbia – InvisionFree.com
- SERBIA & MONTENEGRO – History – HistoryCentral.com
- History of Serbs – Kosovo.net
- Kingdom of Serbia – Video 1h. 31 min. 20 sec. – WN.com
- Allies – Page 11 – Kingdom of Serbia – NZHistory.net.nz
- Serbia – History – Infoplease.com
1865 Battle of Papudo: A Spanish navy schooner is defeated by a Chilean corvette north of Valparaíso, Chile.
1863 United States President Abraham Lincoln proclaims November 26 as a national Thanksgiving Day, to be celebrated annually on the final Thursday of November. (Since 1941, it has been on the fourth Thursday.)
1842 The University of Notre Dame is founded.
1825 At Union College in Schenectady, New York, a group of college students form the Kappa Alpha Society, the first college social fraternity.
1789 A national Thanksgiving Day is observed in the United States as proclaimed by President George Washington at the request of Congress.
1784 The Catholic Apostolic Prefecture of the United States established.
1778 In the Hawaiian Islands, Captain James Cook becomes the first European to visit Maui.
History of Hawaii:
- History of Hawaii – Wikipedia
- History of Hawaii – gohawaii.com
- A brief history of Hawaii 300 AD – 1900
- The Hawaiian Historical Society – HawaiianHistory.org
- Hawaii – History – LonelyPlanet.com
- Hawaiian History – Destination360.com
- Hawaii – history.com
- Hawaii – Infoplease.com
- Hawaii History – HawaiiHistory.org
- History of Hawaii – HistoryOf.net
- Hawaii History – Hawaiian Roots – Hawaiian-Roots.com
- Polynesian Cultural Center – Polynesia.com
NOVEMBER 27
2009 Nevsky Express bombing: A bomb explodes on the Nevsky Express train between Moscow and Saint Petersburg, derailing it and causing 28 deaths and 96 injuries.
2006 The Canadian House of Commons approves a motion tabled by Prime Minister Stephen Harper recognizing the Québécois as a nation within Canada.
2005 The first partial human face transplant is completed in Amiens, France.
2004 Pope John Paul II returns the relics of Saint John Chrysostom to the Eastern Orthodox Church.
2001 A hydrogen atmosphere is discovered on the extrasolar planet Osiris by the Hubble Space Telescope, the first atmosphere detected on an extrasolar planet.
1999 The left-wing Labour Party takes control of the New Zealand government with leader Helen Clark becoming the first elected female Prime Minister in New Zealand’s history.
1997 Twenty-five are killed in the second Souhane massacre in Algeria.
1992 For the second time in a year, military forces try to overthrow president Carlos Andrés Pérez in Venezuela.
1991 The United Nations Security Council adopts Security Council Resolution 721, leading the way to the establishment of peacekeeping operations in Yugoslavia.
1989 Avianca Flight 203: A Boeing 727 explodes in mid-air over Colombia, killing all 107 people on board and three people on the ground. The Medellín Cartel will claim responsibility for the attack.
1984 Under the Brussels Agreement signed between the governments of the United Kingdom and Spain, the former agreed to enter into discussions with Spain over Gibraltar, including sovereignty.
1978 The Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) is founded in the city of Riha (Urfa) in Turkey.
1978 In San Francisco, city mayor George Moscone and openly gay city supervisor Harvey Milk are assassinated by former supervisor Dan White.
1975 The Provisional IRA assassinates Ross McWhirter, after a press conference in which McWhirter had announced a reward for the capture of those responsible for multiple bombings and shootings across England.
1973 Twenty-fifth Amendment: The United States Senate votes 92 to 3 to confirm Gerald Ford as Vice President of the United States. (On December 6, the House will confirm him 387 to 35).
1971 The Soviet space program‘s Mars 2 orbiter releases a descent module. It malfunctions and crashes, but it is the first man-made object to reach the surface of Mars.
1968 Penny Ann Early became the first woman to play major professional basketball, for the Kentucky Colonels in an ABA game against the Los Angeles Stars.
1965 Vietnam War: The Pentagon tells US President Lyndon B. Johnson that if planned operations are to succeed, the number of American troops in Vietnam has to be increased from 120,000 to 400,000.
Vietnam War in 1965:
- The Vietnam War – 1965 – Weebly.com
- Battlefield: Timeline – PBS.org
- 39 Photos That Captured the Human Side of the Vietnam War, by Eliza Berman – April 30, 2015 – TIME
Viet Nam War and Some Pertinent Events:
- VIETNAM WAR HISTORY – History.com
- Chronology of Viet Nam War and Pertinent Events – Digital History – DigitalHistory.UH.edu
- The Vietnam War – The Jungle War 1965 – 1968 – The History Place – HistoryPlace.com
- The VIETNAM WAR: US Involvement & Escalation – ARCHIVAL TELEVISION AUDIO Inc. – RESEARCH REPORT – PART ONE – April 23, 1961 – May 27, 1968 – ATVAudio.com
- The Diplomatic Course of the Vietnam War, by David L Anderson – Illinois.edu
- America’s Vietnam War in Indochina – U-S-History.com
- Foreign Relations of the United States, 1964-1968, Volume VII, Vietnam, September 1968-January 1969 – OFFICE of the HISTORIAN – US Department of State
- Britain and the Tet Offensive 1967-1968: A ‘Turning Point’ in British Foreign Policy? – All Empires – AllEmpires.com
1963 The Convention on the Unification of Certain Points of Substantive Law on Patents for Invention is signed at Strasbourg.
1962 US performs nuclear test (atmospheric) at Nevada Test Site.
Atmospheric Nuclear Testing at the Nevada Site:
Atmospheric/High-altitude Nuclear Explosion Testing:
- Atmospheric nuclear explosion – Wikipedia
- High-altitude nuclear explosions, by Wm Robert Johnston – JohnstonsArchive.net
- “Atmospheric testing refers to explosions which take place in the atmosphere.” – TYPES OF NUCLEA WEAPONS TESTS – CTBTO.org
- US Atmospheric Nuclear Test Page – Nuclear Weapons – Zvis.com
Atmospheric Nuclear Tests of the United States and Radioactive Fallout:
- Atmospheric Nuclear Testing at the Nevada Site – OnlineNevada.org
- The Years of Atmospheric Testing 1945-1963 – Trinity Atomic Web Site – Abomb1.org
- High-altitude nuclear explosions – JohnstonArchive.org
- RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT FROM NUCLEAR TESTING AT NEVADA TEST SITE, 1950-60 – GPO.gov – pdf
- Cancer Mortality at the US Nuclear Weapons Tests – US Department of Veterans Affairs – VA.gov
- Atmospheric Nuclear Testing and The US Navy – A BILIOGRAPHY – FMD-INC.org
- Feasibility Study of Weapons Testing Fallout – CDC.gov
- “Between 16 July 1945 and 23 September 1992 the United States of America conducted (by official count) 1054 nuclear tests, and two nuclear attacks….These pages focus principally (although not exclusively) on the period from 16 July 1945 to 4 November 1962, the era of atmospheric testing.” – RADIOCHEMISTORY SOCIETY – US NUCLEAR TESTS – Info Gallery – Radiochemistry.org
- When We Tested Nuclear Bombs, by Alan Taylor – May 06, 2011 – TheAtlantic.com
- US ATMOSPHERIC NUCLEAR TESTING – The Connection Between John Wayne and Radioactive Fallout, and Other Tales, by Bruce W Church – October 22, 2000 – FalloutRadiation.com – pdf
- Marshall Islands, site of largest-ever U.S. nuclear weapons test, sues 9 superpowers including USA – June 6, 2015 – BoingDoing.net
- YouTube video (13 min. 49 sec.): Declassified US Nuclear Test Film #55
- YouTube video (14 min. 35 sec.): High-altitude Atomic Tests – Operation Dominic parts 1-2 – 1962
Nuclear Weapons and the United States:
- Nuclear Weapons and the United States – Wikipedia
- Nuclear Weapons Testing: History, Progress, Challenges: Verifications and Entry into Force of the CTBT – US Department of State
- US Nuclear Weapons Stockpile Life Extension Programs – January 3, 2013 – US Department of State
- 50 Facts About US Nuclear Weapons Today – April 28, 2014 – Brookings.edu
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Michaela Dodge – The Heritage Foundation
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Policy – Arms Control Association
- The Future of the US Nuclear Weapons Program, by Linton F. Brooks – ResearchGate.net
- US Nuclear Weapons Policy in the 21st Century – Rose Gottemoeller, Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security, Dixie State University, St. George, Utah – October 21, 2014 – US Department of State
US Nuclear Tests at Nevada Site:
- List of the nuclear weapons tests of the United States – Wikipedia
- Nuclear Weapons and the United States – Wikipedia
- The Cold War – AtomCentral.com
- NEVADA TEST SITE – FAS.org
- NEVADA TEST SITE – GlobalSecurity.org
- Nevada Test Site Overview – OnlineNevada.org
- Nuclear testing at the Nevada Test Site – Brookings.edu
- Nevada Test Site – Toxipedia.org
- Nevada Test Site – Oral History Project
- NUKE TESTING in NEVADA – Archure.net
- ECOLOGY OF THE NEVADA TEST SITE: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
- Nevada Test Site Workers Exposed to Radiation – National Cancer Benefits Center – NevadaTestSite.info
- 50 Facts About the US Nuclear Weapons – Brookings.edu
- Gallery of US Nuclear Tests – NuclearWeaponArchive.org
- The Nuclear Matters Handbook
Ecological and Health Issues in and around the Nevada Test Site:
- Environment and the Quality of Life in Nevada – UNLV.edu
- ECONLGOY OF THE NEVADA TEST SITE: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY WITH NARRATIVE SUMMARY, KEY WORD INDEX, AND SPECIES LISTS – DOE/NEV/11718-594
- Nevada Applied Ecology Information Center: a review of technical information support provided to the Nevada Applied Ecology Group – Sci-Tech Connect
- “Between 1951 and 1992, the United States bombed its own soil with nuclear weapons — 945 times. All but 17 of those explosions took place on a stretch of basin-and-range desert northwest of Las Vegas called the Nevada Test Site (NTS),…” – Sovereignty at Shoshone Mountain – EcologyCenter.org
- The Containment of Underground Nuclear Explosions – Princeton.edu
1954 Alger Hiss is released from prison after serving 44 months for perjury.
1945 CARE (then the Cooperative for American Remittances to Europe) was founded to a send CARE Packages of food relief to Europe after World War II.
1942 World War II: At Toulon, the French navy scuttles its ships and submarines to keep them out of Nazi hands.
1940 World War II: At the Battle of Cape Spartivento, the Royal Navy engages the Regia Marina in the Mediterranean Sea.
1940 In Romania, the ruling Iron Guard fascist party assassinates over 60 of arrested King Carol II of Romania‘s aides and other political dissidents, including former Prime Minister Nicolae Iorga.
1912 Spain declares a protectorate over the north shore of Morocco.
1901 The US Army War College is established.
1895 At the Swedish–Norwegian Club in Paris, Alfred Nobel signs his last will and testament, setting aside his estate to establish the Nobel Prize after he dies.
1886 German judge Emil Hartwich sustains fatal injuries in a duel, which would become the background for Theodor Fontane‘s Effi Briest.
1868 American Indian Wars: Battle of Washita River: United States Army Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer leads an attack on Cheyenne living on reservation land.
1856 The Coup of 1856 leads to Luxembourg‘s unilateral adoption of a new, reactionary constitution.
1839 In Boston, Massachusetts, the American Statistical Association is founded.
1830 Saint Catherine Labouré experiences a vision of the Blessed Virgin standing on a globe, crushing a serpent with her feet, and emanating rays of light from her hands.
1815 Adoption of Constitution of the Kingdom of Poland.
History of Poland:
- Kingdom of Poland (1916-1918) – Wikipedia
- History of Poland – Wikipedia
- HISTORY OF POLAND – HistoryWorld.net
- Poland – History – LonelyPlanet.com
- History of Poland – Encyclopedia Britannica
- Poland – HISTORY – CountryStudies.us
- A BRIEF HISTORY OF POLAND – LocalHistories.org
- Poland – The Virtual Jewish World – Jewish Virtual Library
- Timeline of Polish History – Roots Web – Ancestry.com
- Historical Maps of Poland – Buffalo.edu
- Poland country profile – Timeline – BBC
1095 Pope Urban II declares the First Crusade at the Council of Clermont.
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(Sources and references: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/november21 novermber_27; http://www.onthisday.com/events/november/21 to november/27; http://www.brainyhistory.com/days/novermber_21.html. to november_27.html; and other pertinent web sites and/or documents, mentioned above.)
- The views expressed in the cited or quoted websites and/or documents in this article do not necessarily reflect those of the author of this article. These websites and/or documents are cited or quoted for academic or educational purposes. Neither the author of this article nor the Transcend Media Service (TMS) is responsible for the contents, information, or whatsoever contained in these websites and/or documents.
- One of the primary purposes of this article is to provide the readers with opportunities to think about “peace”, including positive peace and negative peace as well as external/outer peace and internal/inner peace, and more, directly or indirectly, from various angles and/or in the broadest sense, through historical events. It is because this article is prepared specifically for the TMS whose main objective is to address “peace”.
Satoshi Ashikaga, having worked as researcher, development program/project officer, legal protection/humanitarian assistance officer, human rights monitor-negotiator, managing-editor, and more, prefers a peaceful and prudent life, especially that in communion with nature. His previous work experiences, including those in war zones and war-torn zones, remind him of the invaluableness of peace. His interest and/or expertise includes international affairs, international law, jurisprudence, economic and business affairs, project/operations or organizational management, geography, history, the environmental/ecological issues, science and technology, visual/audio documentation of nature and culture, and more. Being a member of the TRANSCEND Network for Peace, Development and Environment, he is currently compiling This Week in History on TMS.
This article originally appeared on Transcend Media Service (TMS) on 21 Nov 2016.
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