|
 Under Siege (1992)
IMDB rating: 6.20
Plot: The battleship Missouri is about to be decomissioned. Casey Ryback is Captain Adam’s personal cook. And Ryback is always butting heads with the ship’s XO Commander Krill but the Captain always intercedes. One day, after the President visits the Missouri, which is also the Captain’s birthday, the Captain learns that a helicopter has been cleared to land on the ship by Commander Krill, which he was not informed of. When questioned Krill tells the Captain that it’s a surprise for his birthday, the Captain then allows it. Later after another one of their scuffles, Krill has Ryback locked in the freezer. During the party, the rock band reveals themselves to be mercenaries, led by William Stranix, a CIA operative, who is in league with Krill to unload all of the ship’s nuclear warheads. They lock up all of the crew and make preparations to remove the warheads. And Krill remembers Ryback, Stranix sends two of his men to take care of Ryback, only thing is that Ryback took care of them. Upon discovering their bodies, Stranix deduces that Ryback is more than a cook. He then sends Krill to check on him, and Krill discovers that Ryback’s a NAVY SEAL, who got busted down to a cook after an incident in Panama. And Ryback continues to create trouble for them, so Stranix tries to hunt him down. Along the way, Ryback meets Jordan, a former playmate, who was supposed to entertain at the party but was also forgotten.
|
download Under Siege cheap
Directors: Davis Andrew
Actors: Seagal Steven,Chapa Damian,Evans Troy,McKnight David,Hinton Lee,O’Neal Patrick,Busey Gary,Morshower Glenn,Alexander Leo,Rottger John,Rea Brad,Welden Michael,Casey Bernie,Pierre Rickey,Cruz Raymond,Action,Drama,Thriller,
Did the prophecy of the destruction of the port city of Tyre come true?
So, I did my own research because the answers I found didn’t have enough info or weren’t sufficient or historically sound. This is what I found. The Bible makes this prediction of the city:
Ezekiel 26:1-14 has at least six prophesies regarding Tyre that have been fulfilled. These predictions are the following:
Nebuchadnezzar would attack Tyre (v. 7-11)
The city would be destroyed (v. 8-12)
The rocks would be scraped into the sea (v. 4)
Many nations would fight against the city (v. 3)
Fisherman would spread their nets on the city (v. 5, 14)
It would never be rebuilt (v. 14)
When Ezekiel prophesied against this city it was the most prosperous port city in the area. If Ezekiel had looked at Tyre in his day and made these predictions in human wisdom, there would had been only the slightest of chances of them all coming true (some estimates are around one in 75,000,000).
The city of Tyre consisted of a mainland metropolis and a small Island that stood about half a mile offshore.
The prophecy mentioned in Ez. 26:14 found its fulfilment regarding mainland Tyre under Nebuchadnezzar. Three years after Ezekiel’s Prophecy Nebuchadnezzar moved in and besieged the ancient city of Tyre. He attacked the mainland city and held it besieged for about thirteen years. He then marched into the city to find it nearly deserted. The Tyrians had abandoned the mainland and fortified themselves on the Island of Tyre. The mainland was over-run and defeated, and it was thrown down and left in ruins. The Island continued to be a mighty power in the Mediterranean until many years later.
Insular Tyre recovered partly, after seventy years (Is. 23:17,18), but again suffered under Alexander, then under Antigonus, and finally under the Saracens at the beginning of the fourteenth century A.D.
Alexander the Great besieged the island of Tyre during his war on the Persians. Alexander III after defeating Darius moved on towards Egypt. He called upon the former cities of the Persians to open their gates and let him in, hoping to prevent the cities being used by the Persian fleets. Tyre refused to do so and so Alexander became so angry that one city held out against him that he laid siege to it. But having no fleet of ships and not being able to get to them would have caused him some considerable problems, so he destroyed the remains of mainland Tyre and threw the remains into the sea to build a causeway to the Island. The causeway was 60ft wide and half a mile long and at the end he cast siege engines and towers. Alexander realised he needed ships to take the city and he started mustering a huge fleet from his conquered subjects: Sidon, Aradus, Byblus, Rhodes, Soli, Mallos & Macedon and Cyprus. The massive fleet ensured the destruction of Tyre was just a matter of time.
Though Tyre recovered from this she never rose to that splendid position again. But she still stood.
Antigonius was one of the successors of Alexander the great and a great leader. He won many battles and among them was another siege of Tyre.
Later, During the Crusades in 690 A.D. the city was taken by the Muslims and this caused the Crusaders to fight for it. When the inhabitants heard the Sultan had sent soldiers to capture it they opened their doors to let them in. They believed they were protected by a truce but they beheld their population massacred and the Muslims fury extended even to the stones they destroyed.
LeStrange quotes that the city was in ruins right until then, in 1321 A.D. and even to this day the ruins of Tyre can be seen.
Nothing but a small fishing village remains and the fishermen spread their nets their to dry or to fix. The once great city of Tyre is gone. Old Tyre was never rebuilt after its destruction by Nebuchadnezzar; and there are now no traces left to mark its site. Now its harbours are choked with sand, precluding all hope of future restoration. "Not one entire house is left, and only a few fishermen take shelter in the vaults" (Maundrell). The new city, when visited by Maundrell, Bruce, and other travellers, was literally "a place for fishers to dry their nets on".
Now Tyre "cannot be found" or rather that which was the ancient city is no longer there. Instead, on the island of Tyre you will find a small fishing village that bears the name Sur.
The Prophecies of God fulfilled are these
1. Nebuchadnezzer would attack he attacked three years after Ezekiel’s
This was predicted in 590 b.C. Nebuchadnezzar laid siege to Tyre four years after the prophecy was made. After a 13 year siege (586-573 b.C.). The mainland city was destroyed in 573 b.C. as foretold, but the island city of Tyre still remained.
2. The city would be destroyed
It cannot be found today. Old Tyre is gone and we can only find evidence of it by digging down.
3. The rocks would be scraped into the sea
Alexander did this in 333 b.C. against the Island of Tyre. When island Tyre refused to submit to Alexander, he demolished the ol
Your argument about the city of Tyre is essentially from Josh McDowell’s Evidence that Demands a Verdict. McDowell grossly misrepresented the facts. In fact, Ezekiel’s prophecy about Tyre is a false prophecy, for Tyre is a living city today and it is in the same place it was in ancient times.
The actual city of Tyre was on the island off shore. McDowell lied about Tyre being the city on the mainland because the actual city of Tyre still exists and he wanted to make it appear that the prophecy came true. The city on the mainland was essentially a support settlement for the island city and was called Ushu in ancient times. The island city was called Sur, which means "rock" in Phoenician and referred to the geologic nature of the island; it was called Tsor in Hebrew and that is the word used in the original Hebrew of Ezekiel. In saying that Tyre would be made bare as a rock, he was making a play on the name of the island.
The island city of Tyre had two excellent natural harbors. That is why it gained the prominence it did. The mainland city, on the other hand, does not appear to have had a harbor of any significance.
In his prophecy, Ezekiel said that Nebuchadrezzar would totally destroy Tyre and it would never be rebuilt. Read the prophecy yourself. Also, Ezekiel was one of those in the Babylonian Captivity when he made his prophecy, and he knew full well of Nebuchadrezzar’s plans to attack Tyre. The fact is that Ezekiel prophesied against Tyre because its inhabitants had spoken ill of Jerusalem following its recent destruction as recounted in Ezekiel 26:2-3. The prophecy was therefore against the Tyrians of his own time, not those of several hundred years in the future.
The prophesy was not made three years before the fact. McDowell was lying about that to support his argument. The prophecy was made in the eleventh year of the Captivity, which was 586 BC, and being one of those in the Babylonian Captivity, Ezekiel would have known full well that Nebuchadrezzar was preparing to attack Tyre. Nebuchadrezzar began his siege of Tyre in 585 BC, but the siege was a failure and after 13 years an agreement was made that Tyre would become a vassal of Babylon.
Despite its visitudes over time, the city of Tyre still stands today on what was the original island, though it is now connected to the mainland by the causeway that Alexander the Great built.
See Tyre Through the Ages, by Nina Jidejian, and The History of Tyre by H. Jacob Katzenstein.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tyre,_Leban on
Added:
By the way, Ezekiel also prophesied that Nebuchadrezzar would attack Egypt and that Egypt would be uninhabited for 40 years. That was also a false prophecy.
The real truthseeker | Dec 14, 2009
Not really
Kirk | Dec 14, 2009
I going to assume the "prophesies" were written *after* the events.
EddieJ | Dec 14, 2009
Far-called, our navies melt away;
On dune and headland sinks the fire:
Lo, all our pomp of yesterday
Is one with Nineveh and Tyre!
Judge of the Nations, spare us yet,
Lest we forget – lest we forget!
David H | Dec 14, 2009
In a manner of speaking, yes, it was destroyed. Tyre was the ancient name for Newark, NJ. Hope this helps.
Schmeckette Oops! | Dec 14, 2009