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Friday,
 January 4, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, calls ring out for the 
government to be dissolved, Victoria Nuland is again forced to address 
Iraq in a press briefing, Parliament calls a special meeting for Sunday,
 and more. 
  
Weeks ago, Nouri threatened to call early elections.  Today someone called his bluff.  Alsumaria notes 
 Iraqiya leader Ayad Allawi has joined Nouri's call for early elections 
-- this is parliamentary elections, not provincial elections which are 
scheduled to take place in a few months.   KUNA quotes 
 Deputy Prime Minister Saleh al-Mutlaq stating, "The incumbent 
government has to step down."  Like Allawi,  al-Mutlaq is a member of 
Iraqiya.  Though Nouri's had no response as of yet.  Alsumaria reveals 
 that MP Jabbar Kanani with Nouri's State of Law states that the answer 
to the current problems is to dissolve the Parliament and hold early 
elections.  Paul D. Shinkman (US News and World Reports) states 
 they have been told by a source (unnamed) that "the fledgling Baghdad 
government may be on the brink of dissolving parliament within days" and
 that this may happen "as soon as 48 hours."
  
  
  
Allawi's not just calling for early elections, he's calling for an interim government to be set up.  In
 2010, there was a push for just such a thing.  The United Nations and 
France were on board with the idea but the US government killed that 
proposal.  As reported in Michael R. Gordon and Bernard E. Trainor's The Endgame: The Inside Story of the Struggle for Iraq, from George W. Bush to Barack Obama ,
 the top US commander in Iraq, Gen Ray Odierno, had concerns that if 
Nouri's State of Law did not come in first in the March 2010 
parliamentary elections, Nouri would refuse to stand down.  France, the 
UN and Odierno were right to be concerned.
  
Nouri's
 State of Law was supposed to run in a landslide -- that's what he said 
would happen.  But the voters had a different plan.  There was no 
landslide for Nouri and, in fact, State of Law didn't win.  Iraqiya came
 in first.  State of Law came in second.  Having won the elections, per 
the Constitution, it would be Iraqiya's job to form the government.  
Someone from the slate would be named prime minister-designate.  That 
person would then have 30 days to create a Cabinet (that's a full 
Cabinet, the Iraqi Constitution does not recognize a partial Cabinet).  
If the person can't form a Cabinet within 30 days, it's up to the 
President of Iraq to name another person prime minister-designate.   
  
None
 of that happened.  Nouri had the White House on his side.  And he 
refused to stop being prime minister.  He refused to let a new 
government be formed.  He basically threw a temper tantrum for over 
eight months holding Iraq hostage.   It was a political stalemate.   
  
Instead
 of reasoning with the loser (Nouri), the White House told the other 
political blocs that Nouri could continues this for months and, for the 
good of the country, to allow Iraq to move forward, it was time for the 
leaders of the political blocs to be the bigger person and let go of 
their objections to the loser remaining prime minister.   
  
The
 White House basically said to what they had termed a "democracy," 
'Forget what the Iraqi people voted for, forget what the Constitution 
says, let Nouri have a second term as prime minister.  Now, for that to 
happen, what do you need in return?" 
  
The 
extra-Constitutional contract that the US brokered is known as the Erbil
 Agreement.  Had an interim government been set up, Nouri would have had
 no edge, no place from which to toss a tantrum and bring the country to
 a standstill. 
There were consequences for what the US did.  John Barry's "'The Engame' Is A Well Researched, Highly Critical Look at U.S. Policy in Iraq " (Daily Beast ) notes: 
 Washington has little political and no military influence
 over these developments [in Iraq]. As Michael Gordon and Bernard 
Trainor charge in their ambitious new history of the Iraq war, The Endgame,
 Obama's administration sacrificed political influence   by failing in 
2010 to insist that the results of Iraq's first proper election be 
honored: "When the Obama administration acquiesced in the questionable 
judicial opinion that prevented Ayad Allawi's bloc, after it had won the
 most seats in 2010, from the first attempt at forming a new government,
 it undermined the prospects, however slim, for a compromise that might 
have led to a genuinely inclusive and cross-sectarian government."
  
There were other consequences as well. 
  
What
 some called a 'democracy' would have been an 'emerging democracy' at 
best.  Barack Obama decided the lesson to teach Iraqis was (a) your vote
 doesn't matter and (b) your Constitution doesn't matter.  This does not
 make for building blocks to a strong democracy.  This was hugely 
damaging.  You puff out your chest and lie that you've brought people 
democracy -- when all you've really brough them was death and 
destruction -- and then the ones who were willing to hope that was true,
 the ones who were willing to believe in the process are given the 
message that your vote doesn't matter and it can be overturned in a 
backroom bargain, your Constitution doesn't matter and the US government
 can circumvent it on a whim.   
  
The White 
House, in an honest moment, would argue that they were comfortable with 
(US puppet) Nouri and felt he was a 'stabilizing' force.  In a really 
honest moment, which they are incapable of, they'd admit that Nouri 
swore now, finally, he could push through the oil and gas law the US has
 long wanted.  Now this is the same law that Nouri promised to push 
through years ago.  In fact, these are part of the Bush White House's 
benchmarks which Nouri agreed to in 2007.  He didn't accomplish it then 
or in all the years since. 
  
A smart person 
looks at the record and says, "Uh, Nouri can't accomplish this.  If he 
could have, he would have done it yesterday."  However, an idiot says, 
"He just screwed Bush.  Nouri would never screw me over.  It will be 
different this time, Nouri will keep his word."  That's what an idiot 
said and that's why the US insisted Nouri get a second term. 
  
Allawi
 wants a caretaker government because that's the only thing that can 
curb Nouri.  A temporary government can prevent him from hanging on to 
an office if he hasn't earned it.  Zaid Sabah and Khalid al-Ansary (Bloomberg News) has 
 State of Law's MP Khalid al-Aadi stating, "The State of Law didn't ask 
to dissolve the parliament.  But when any party asks for dissolving the 
parliament and dissolve the government and call for early election, we 
will not stand against it."  They also say that the request is for Nouri
 to continue -- after the Parliament is dissolved -- "to govern as a 
caretaker."  That is completely false and it is not what Ayad Allawi 
stated.
  
  
As protests continued to spread in Iraq today, Nouri al-Maliki, prime minister and thug of the occupation, had a message.  KUNA quotes 
 him stating, "The recent calls by extremists to turn the protests into 
civil disobedience only serve external agendas and could undermine the 
entire political process in Iraq."  By Nouri's 'standards,' Martin 
Luther King Jr., Hendry David Thoreau, Mahatma Ghandi and other 
proponents of civil disobedience would be branded 'terrorists' as would 
the Muslim women in Pakistan in 1947.  Not only is that global tradition
 ignored, Sun Yunlong (Xinhua) reported 
 March 25, 2008, "Iraq's radical cleric Muqtada al-Sadr Tuesday called 
on Iraqis to hold sit-ins across Iraq if attacks by U.S. and   Iraqi 
troops continue against his follwers, a Sadr statement said."  
  
Despite Nouri's attempts to demonize protests, Pakistan Today reports ,
 "Thousands of Sunni Iraqis have continued to protest in Fallujah and 
other Iraq cities" and that they continue to insist upon "the release of
 prisoners and the end to allegedly sectarian policies."  And Nouri 
continues to refuse to allow Iraqis to exercise their rights freely.  AFP reports ,
 "Demonstrators gathered at the Abu Hanifa mosque in the mostly-Sunni 
neighbourhood of Adhamiyah, but were barred by security forces from 
leaving the compound to rally on the street, an AFP correspondent said."
 The Voice of   Russia adds ,
 "The protests, which were attended by hundreds of thousands of people 
took place in other cities across the country as part of a declared 
'Resistance Friday'."  SAPA Asian News Agency spoke 
 with two protesters, one male, one female.  Abu Adbullah wondered, "How
 much longer will our children stay in prisons for no other reason than 
being Sunni."  Umm Mohammed states, "My three children were arrested 
four years ago for no reason and I ask Maliki -- release them."  Ahlul Bayt News Agency notes 
 that "anit-government protests took place in several Iraqi cities, 
including Salahuddin, Diyala, Kirkuk, and Nineveh provinces, while 
demonstrators in western Anbar province continued to block off a highway
 linking   Iraq to Syria and Jordan for a 12th succssive day."
  
All Iraq News notes
 that, following today's morning prayers, Arabs in Kirkuk took to the 
streets to protest and demand the release of the prisoners and the 
abolition of Article 4 which is seen as being used for political 
purposes against Sunnis.  October 31, 2010 ,
 Our Lady of Salvation Church in Baghdad was assaulted.  Today, cleric 
and movement leader Moqtada al-Sadr visited the Church to show 
solidarity with Iraqi Christians and underscore that the dream is one 
Iraq that is welcoming and home to all Iraqis regardless of faith.  Alsumaria notes 
 he spoke of sending delegates to speak to the protesters in Anbar 
Province for that reason.  He repeated his statements from earlier this 
week noting that the protesters had a legitimate right to express their 
grievances.   All Iraq News notes  that he stressed the importance of the Christian community to Iraq.  Alsumaria adds  that Moqtada then went to Kilani Mosque in central Baghdad for morning prayers.  Emily Alpert (Los Angeles Times) offers ,
 "Sadr is believed to be making gestures to the Sunni protesters and 
religious minorities in order to style himself as a unifying figure 
ahead of the provincial vote."  Adam Schreck (AP) echoes 
 Alpert, "Al-Sadr [appears] to be trying   to capitalize on the 
political turmoil by attempting to portray himself as a unifying figure 
ahead of provincial elections in the spring." 
  
Maybe
 so.  But what is known is that Nouri's held onto the arrest warrant for
 Moqtada.  It's part of the reason Moqtada stayed out of Iraq 
(especially after Nouri's 2008 attacks on Basra and Baghdad's Sadr 
City).  Moqtada is taking a real chance going into Baghdad today.  
Whether that's to see himself up as "a unifying figure," I have no 
idea.  Since 2010, we've talked about how he believes he will be Iraq's 
next prime minister.  But ambitions or no ambitions today, with that 
still outstanding arrest warrant (which dates back to the US 
occupation), Moqtada took a real chance going into Baghdad, speaking of 
the need for unity and decrying what is taking place. 
  
  
While Moqtada was talking inclusion and one Iraq, Nouri continues his attempts to divide the country.  Al Mada reports 
 that Speaker of Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi has called out Nouri's 
attack on him (saying al-Nujaifi was unfit because he supported the 
protesters).  al-Nujaifi has responded that the right of protest is 
guaranteed in the Constitution and that the citizens have the right to 
exercise their freedoms and to reject tyranny and injustice.  Kitabat states 
 that there was supposed to be a meeting of various political leaders 
today but the head of the National Alliance, Ibrahim Jafaari, postponed 
the meeting.  Nouri was busy today too. Kitabat reports  that he sent out forms to the local   governments asking the identify the people leading the protests and to arrest them.
  
That's a fact US State Dept spokesperson Victorial Nuland worked hard to avoid at today's State Dept press briefing.  
  
  
  
QUESTION: Just on Iraq. 
  
  
MS. NULAND: Yeah. 
  
QUESTION:
 More protests today. Have you guys had contacts with the Iraqi 
government about how they're going to respond to this, how they're going
 to reduce tensions? 
  
  
MS.
 NULAND: We have had contacts with the Iraqi government. We've had 
contacts with all of the stakeholders in Iraq along the lines of the 
comments that I made yesterday calling for peaceful protesters to be 
allowed to protest peacefully, but that also for restraint on all sides,
 including on the part of protesters and on the part of security forces.
 Our understanding is that they were relatively big protests today but 
that they were somewhat more peaceful than they had been in previous 
days, which is a good thing. 
  
  
QUESTION:
 Victoria, are you involved directly in mediating, like at the Embassy 
level or perhaps at the "someone from the building level" between the 
different parties in Iraq? Because Allawi, the Iraqiya – the head of the
 Iraqiya – today called on Maliki to resign. Are you mediating any kind 
of talks between the two? 
  
  
MS.
 NULAND: Well, Said, I wouldn't use that word. We've talked about this 
before here. You know that on a weekly basis, sometimes on a daily 
basis, our Ambassador in Iraq has meetings with all of the key leaders, 
encouraging them to work with each other to settle issues that they have
 through dialogue, to protect and preserve the basic tenets of the Iraqi
 constitution. He regularly sees the Prime Minister, the deputy prime 
ministers, the Vice President, cabinet ministers, deputy ministers, 
parliamentarians. So we try to use our good offices with all of the 
groups to encourage them to participate actively in dialogue with each 
other. 
  
  
QUESTION:
 Okay. And Muqtada al-Sadr, the fiery Shia leader who heads Jaish 
al-Mahdi – the Mahdi Army is also is threatening to sort of break away 
with Malaki. Do you see this as a good sign as breaking away from Iran's
 hold? 
  
  
MS.
 NULAND: Again, what we want to see is the major stakeholders in Iraq, 
political leaders, work through their issues through dialogue in 
consultation with each other. I'm obviously not going to comment on 
specific political moves by one player or another, except to say that 
when there are grievances, we don't want them settled through violence. 
We don't want to see them settled through moves that will hurt 
innocents. We want to see conversation, we want to see dialogue, we want
 to see protection of the constitution. 
Still on Iraq? No? 
  
  
QUESTION: Yes. 
  
  
MS. NULAND: Yes on Iraq? 
  
  
QUESTION:
 Yeah. One of the issues that the protesters are angry about is the 
prisoners. They say that up to 50,000 people are being imprisoned in 
Iraq just because of their – this sectarian reasons. And the government 
is denying that number, and they're saying there are 900 women, and they
 didn't provide the number of male prisoners. Between those numbers of 
the government and the protesters' numbers, from your people on the 
ground during those meetings, do they have an idea? I mean, can they – 
do they have anything solid regarding the number of prisoners? Because 
this is one of the main issues that the people are protesting against in
 Iraq. 
  
  
MS.
 NULAND: I'm not prepared to address here our assessment of what the 
accurate numbers may or may not be. I will say that this is one of the 
issues that we have encouraged dialogue and transparency on. It's 
important in any democracy for the justice system to be transparent, for
 there to be fairness and a level playing field, and that's something 
that needs to be addressed, obviously. 
  
  
  
Fallujah,
 Ramadi, Tikrit, Mosul - all saw demonstrations against the Maliki 
government, with some, including Mosul, calling for the withdrawal of 
the Iraqi government and police forces. Never one to shirk from a 
challenge to his power, Maliki has responded with ominous language - 
including calling up protesters to 'end their strike before the state intervenes to end it'. 
While
 Maliki has faced threats from the Sunni areas before, he has never 
faced them in isolation. This time, however, the Kurds are no longer his
 allies and instead have increasingly common cause with their Sunni 
neighbours. Following years of poor relations between Erbil and Baghdad,
 caused over disputes over oil and gas policy, budgetary allocations, 
the status of the disputed territories (including Kirkuk), and an 
overall disenchantment within Erbil towards the Maliki government, the 
relationship between the two capitals has, by the start of 2013, become 
appalling. 
Following a military stand-off 
in the disputed territories at the end of 2012, the scene is set for 
2013 to be one of the Kurds moving ahead with securing their autonomy by
 strengthening their relationship with Turkey and the Arab Gulf states, 
and by exporting oil and gas directly to their northern neighbour. In 
order to protect their region, it would make sense for them to do so 
from the disputed territories themselves, and so raise the spectre of 
increased military confrontation with Maliki in such volatile 
flashpoints as Kirkuk, Diyala, and Ninevah. This is a confrontation that
 the Kurds, with at least tacit Sunni support, may feel capable of 
winning. The Kurdistan War of 2013 may not be too unlikely, looking at 
the current pieces on the board. 
  
  
Speaker
 of Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi and Deputy Prime Minister Saleh 
al-Mutlaq have called a special session of Parliament for Sunday.  Alsumaria notes  that MP Ali al-Tamimi, member of the Sadr bloc, states that they will be attending the Sunday special session.
  
  
A bombing yesterday  in Musayyib targeted pilgrims taking part in the Arbaeen rituals.  Today Yasir Ghazi and Christine Hauser (New York Times) report 
 the death toll rose to at least 32 (injured is at twenty-eight).  They 
also note a Thursday Baghdad roadside bombing which left 4 dead and 
fifteen injured.   The UN News Center notes 
 that United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq has strongly condemned 
the bombing and  "The Mission expresses its profound sympathy to the 
families of the victims, to whom it extends sincere condolences,   and 
wishes for a speedy recovery to the wounded."  The month has just begun,
 is not even a week old, and already Iraq Body Count  counts 55 people killed by violence in Iraq so far in January.  Today,  
Alsumaria reports that a grenade attack on a Mosul checkpoint left two police officers injured. 
  
  
  
 Fars News Agency notes, "Turkish Fighter jets bombed over 20 targets of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) in Northern Iraq late Monday."  Trend News Agency points out, "The conflict between Turkey and the PKK has lasted over 25 years."   Aaron Hess (International Socialist Review) described the PKK in 2008,
 "The PKK emerged in 1984 as a major force in response to Turkey's 
oppression of its Kurdish population. Since the late 1970s, Turkey has 
waged a relentless war of attrition that   has killed tens of thousands 
of Kurds and driven millions from their homes. The Kurds are the world's
 largest stateless population -- whose main population concentration 
straddles Turkey, Iraq, Iran, and Syria -- and have been the victims of 
imperialist wars and manipulation since the colonial period. While 
Turkey has granted limited rights to the Kurds in recent years in order 
to accommodate the European Union, which it seeks to join, even these 
are now at risk."  Today the World Tribune reports
 the government of Turkey is in talks with the PKK on a disarmament 
treaty, "Officials said Turkey's intelligence community was examining 
the prospect of a long-term ceasefire with the PKK. They said the 
intelligence community offered the PKK a range of options after Ankara 
determined   that Kurdish insurgents could not be defeated militarily." 
 This follows their report from yesterday that Turkey was speaking to Abdullah Ocalan (imprisoned PKK leader) about a ceasefire.  Hurriyet Daily News adds,
 "Peace and Democracy Party Deputy Ayla Akat Ata, lawyer Meral Danış and
 independent deputy Ahmet Türk traveled to İmralı Island on Jan.3 to 
meet with the imprisoned leader of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) 
Abdullah Öcalan, according to daily Radikal."  
  
Citing Turkish Minister of the Interior Naim Sahin, AP states 
 that the Turkish military will continue its operations even as talks 
are pursuded.  Sahin states, "Operations are continuing.  They will 
continue until members of the group who bear enmity against our people 
are no longer in a position to attack or shed blood."  Hurriyet Daily News informs ,
 "Imprisoned Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) leader Abdullah Ocalan said 
during a meeting on Imrali island on Jan. 3 that he should be considered
 the 'only authority' in the process of  of PKK disarmament."
  
  
  
     
The
 baby is crying. Her cheeks are swollen and yellowish as are those of 
many of the older children. "Al Sfar" (jaundice), confirms Um Ahmed. She
 says the clinic offers no help. One mother hugs her 3-year-old 
daughter. "I'm just watching my child get sicker every day and there is 
nothing I can do."    
Another
 woman, Intisar, wordlessly pulls the base of the tent out to show me 
how damp the gravel is under the tent. "It seeps into those sponge 
mattresses, into our bones, into our skin. There is no way of staying 
warm or dry." Her husband shows me the deep crevice dug by their 
resident rats. "All night they crawl under us, trying to get warmth. The
 children scream, and I spend all night beating the rats out."    
As
 I walk out, the tears rise in me. It hurts to look into the despair on 
the children's faces, to see a toddler barefoot on the gravel. There is 
so much that needs to be done. Without support these children truly 
suffer. As winter tightens its grip on Syria's neighboring countries, 
stories like those I heard in Al Qaem are far from unique.    
[.  . .]    
As
 with all other organizations responding to the humanitarian needs of 
the Syrian refugees in the region, our greatest challenge is funding. We
 are on the ground. We have established operations in Al Qaem, which is 
no small feat. We are ready to deliver aid immediately but we need the 
funds to make it happen.    
That
 night, I cannot get warm, despite the blankets and thick walls. I 
cannot stop thinking of the children, out in the desert cold.    
To
 donate to Save the Children's Syria Children in Crisis Fund, which 
provides relief and support for Syrian children seeking refuge in 
Lebanon, Iraq and Jordan, please click here.    
  
  
The Bill of Rights Defense Committee 
 is a US group that works on issues effecting the basic rights.  It is a
 national group that first came on my radar when I was going campus to 
campus speaking about the then-just started Iraq War.  When Congress was
 unwilling or unable to stop the Patriot Act, BRDC organized city by 
city to get local governments to pass resolutions against the Patriot 
Act.  Usually, people appeared before the municipal body to speak about 
why such a measure was necessary.  Often they would be color coordinated
 (such as all wearing blue shirts).  When the Patriot Act needed 
resistance it came down to librarians and the BRDC fighting for the 
rights we too often take for granted.   Barack Obama has a Drone War in 
the rest of the world.  He's bringing the drones closer in 2013.  Many 
US cities and towns will discover the   surveilance drones.  From 
surveilance, what comes next?  The Congress doesn't care.  The weapons 
lobby has, as usual, bought off the Congress which is how drones are now
 about to operate freely just above US soil.  The Bill of Rights Defense
 Committee is hoping to repeat their earlier efforts and get cities and 
towns to stand up.  This year, they made the list of Great Nonprofits .  If you're not familiar with their work, you can check out the website  and you can also refer to the following news articles:
  
  
1/4, Daphne Eviatar, Reuters, The secrecy veiling Obama's drone war1/3, Daniel Byman & Benjamin Wittes, The Atlantic, How Obama Decides Your Fate If He Thinks You're a Terrorist1/3, Matt Sledge and Ryan J. Reilly, Huffington Post, NDAA Signed Into Law By Obama Despite Guantanamo Veto Threat, Indefinite Detention Provisions1/3, Charlie Savage, New York Times, Obama Disputes Limits on Detainee Transfers Imposed in Defense Bill1/3, Peter Finn, Washington Post, Defense bill's Guantanamo Bay provisions have human rights groups upset with Obama1/3, Dave Boyer, Washington Times, Obama signs defense measure he once vowed to veto 
  
  
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