Your "solid examples" are a laundry list of instances where God uses an army as a means of judgment against Israel. No one argues with that. However no where do those examples use the language of
Daniel 9:26, "the people of the prince that shall come." Looking at the chronology of
Daniel 9:26 "Messiah" has already been cut off. Then "the people of the prince that shall come" is mentioned. Now if Christ has already come and been crucified, how can we call him the prince that shall come? This prince is obviously someone else, not Jesus. All of your "solid examples" can't address the chronology of this passage, nor the fact that God makes a distinction from the first 69 weeks to the 70th week and the "he" in 9:27 can't be Jesus based on the context and flow of the preceding verses. You offer that the 70th week is the so-called 3 1/2 years of Christ's ministry before crucifixion. You offer no "solid" evidence for what the leftover 3 1/2 years is all about besides supposing that it is the time between the crucifixion and the baptism of Cornelius---highly speculative, and perhaps based on a "feeling"?
What about the
Matthew 24 chronology? What do you do with post-70 AD scriptures in Revelation that obviously mirror what Daniel prophesied about future events to come that foretells of "the beast" in
Rev. 13 who has a mouth speaking great things, just like the man of
Daniel 7, the man who makes war with the saints, just like
Daniel 7, a man who emerges from a confederation of nations, just like
Dan 7? What about the the 42 month authority the beast is given mentioned in post-70 AD
Revelation 13? 1260 days, and time, times and half a time are all referenced in post 70-AD Revelation. How can these scriptures be prophetic, if these events had taken place some 20 years before John penned Revelation?
What about the resurrection foretold by Paul in his epsitles? What about Paul's reference to the man of sin and son of perdition? John's refrence to antichrist?
The 70 AD explanation of prophecy scriptures might seem plausible in some cases, and certainly some events related to the Roman destruction of Jerusalem in the first century were foretold, but it doesn't fit the body of work of prophecy that is in the Bible.
(BTW my less than convincing posts void of scriptures earlier is because I was responding lying flat on my back at 5:30 am trying to write on my mobile phone half awake)