Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Iraq again

Foreign Policy In Focus posted nonsense about Iraq today.  I left the following comment:







    Even the tags are insufficient. Where's The Erbil Agreement in your analysis? This is how Nouri got the second term. It was imposed upon Iraqis in 2010. This was gone over yet again at The Common Ills yesterday:
    http://thecommonills.blogspot..... noted Obama's November 2010 statement on The Erbil Agreement, "Before
    I discuss the G20, I want to briefly comment on the agreement in Iraq
    that's taken place on the framework for a new government. There's still
    challenges to overcome, but all indications are that the government
    will be representative, inclusive, and reflect the will of the Iraqi
    people who cast their ballots in the last election. This agreement marks
    another milestone in the history of modern Iraq. Once again, Iraqis
    are showing their determination to unify Iraq and build its future and
    that those impulses are far stronger than those who want Iraq to descend
    into sectarian war and terror. For the last several months, the United
    States has worked closely with our Iraqi partners to promote a
    broad-based government -- one whose leaders share a commitment to
    serving all Iraqis as equal citizens. Now, Iraq's leaders must finish
    the job of forming their government so that they can meet the challenges
    that a diverse coalition will inevitably face. And going forward, we
    will support the Iraqi people as they strengthen their democracy,
    resolve political disputes, resettle those displaced by war, and build
    ties of commerce and cooperation with the United States, the region and
    the world."
    Why does this analysis not include The Erbil Agreement?
    Why does it not note that Nouri never nominated people to head the three security ministries in his entire 4 year second term?
    Why does it not note his forces killing protesters?
    Why does it not note the six months of ongoing war crimes where he has bombed the residential neighborhoods of Falluja killing and wounding civilians?
    This analysis is really nonsense.
    'It's not Nouri!' insists the analysis that leaves out so much including his targeting of gays and lesbians, his secret prisons exposed repeatedly by the Los Angeles Times and so much more.
    He's a tyrant. He's a thug.
    The US put in charge in 2006 and demanded a second term for him in 2010.
    He is part of the problem -- as is the US.
    But this analysis is short on fact and really rushes to excuse away Nouri's very real problems.
    Start including The Erbil Agreement in the discussion if you want me to even think you're attempting to offer an honest analysis.


Woman hating Justy Raimondo of Antiwar.com, however, loves the 'analysis.'

He really is a piece of crap sometimes.


This is C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"


Tuesday, June 17, 2014.  Chaos and violence continue, Iraq is again having a refugee crisis, we look at the next US Ambassador to Iraq, we note the return of one of the biggest fake-ass organizations on the left (I really thought Antiwar.com would have beat us to noting the return of the fake-ass and ridiculing them but looks like we're first), Tom Hayden lies because that's what trash does, and much more.


First an announcement, Iraq is in crises.  It's awful on the ground there.  Iraqi community members who wish to be out of Iraq are already being supported by me.  Any other community members that seek asylum will get the same support.  In addition to those, there are Iraqi journalists that I have communicated with for years.  And I'm helping those who are seeking asylum as well.

My plate is full.

I can't do any more and serve the people I'm trying to help right now.  I've never presented myself as refugee guru.  I have helped a number of Iraqis over the years -- especially with regards to the US, the UK and Jordan where I try to call in any favors I have.

In the last five days, 457 Iraqis have contacted this site for help.

They are not community members or anyone I've communicated with before.  A few reference being referred to by _____ who was a stringer for US outlets in Iraq.  I helped him and his family gladly but that was many years ago and he was one of a handful that year.

Right now, through a miracle, we've gotten a community member and her family out of Iraq and into a European country.  A French official (old boyfriend) assisted on opening a dialogue with officials of another European country.  That's a window and it is going to close very quickly.  While it is open, any community members I can route through there, I will.

To the 457 in the last five days, I can't take you on.  I'm sorry.

In part, I don't know you or your story.  I can make an effective argument for Iraqis -- community members or journalists -- that I've been in contact with for years.  (I would even extend that to ____ of the Sadr bloc and to several with Nouri's State of Law.)  If you were added to my list of Iraqis to help, I wouldn't get to you in this calendar year.  I've already felt I'm failing community members.

I can't take on anymore people (unless they're community members or Iraqi journalists I've been communicating with for years).

This is a crisis right now and people need help but I'm one person who's already overtaxed on this issue and failing people I've promised I would try to help.

I understand that many people are in danger.  I'm so sorry and I apologize that my country, my government, is responsible for the pain and danger so many Iraqis are experiencing now.  But I'm already over the number of Iraqis I can help -- and that list is going to get longer as the violence continues -- which is why I said in Friday's round-robin for community members in Iraq who are even just thinking of leaving to let me know now.

If Senator Ted Kennedy were still alive and in functioning health, Iraqis would get the support they need.  They wouldn't need advocates on their behalf.  But Ted was the one who understood the US' obligation to help Iraqis and, with him gone, no one in Congress has stepped forward to lead on this issue.

It breaks my heart that I'm repeatedly writing or dictating e-mails in the last five days saying I'm sorry but I can't take you on.

But I can't take them on.

I'm already over the limit and there are, sadly, people I'm trying to help that I will most likely not be able to help.

There is a crisis and the world needs to step up.

It's also true that it shouldn't be about who you know.  But the Iraqis I know are ones I have an obligation to.

I am sorry but that is how it is.

If you and I don't have some form of a relationship, you are wasting your time contacting me to request help. I am over committed as it is and I am aware that, the worse it gets in Iraq, the more the list I'm working will increase. I'm going to fail so many but I will try my hardest for those I know.  But if I take on others as well, I'm going to fail everyone.  I'm sorry.

I put this at the top because it's a serious issue, because those who I don't know need to be focusing their efforts on other sources and because the world needs to grasp -- no ones paying attention -- that Iraq is in the midst of another refugee crisis.  This time, Syria really isn't an option.  NINA reports today that "hundreds" of Syrian refugees are fleeing Iraq and returning to Syria due to the violence in Iraq.

The violence in Iraq continues, Martin Chulov, Dan Roberts and Patrick Wintour (Guardian) report:

Iraqi government forces fought off jihadi rebel forces north of Baghdad on Tuesday amid signs from the US that the Obama administration is hesitating before being drawn into a new war.
Heavy clashes were reported from Baquba after it was taken over by fighters of the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (Isis), and in Baghdad eight people were killed by a suicide bomber. Iranian-backed militiamen were out in force in Shia areas of the capital in an attempt to assure residents that they have a highly volatile situation under control.

Nouri never takes the blame for his failures.  Today, he's decided to blame commanders in the military.  All Iraq News reports:

Prime Minister General Commander of the Armed Forces Nouri al-Maliki decided on Tuesday to dismiss Nineveh operations commander Lt. Gen. Mahdi al-Gharrawi and a number of other military leaders from office, because failure and leaving their positions and not carrying out their duties as required.
A statement by the Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces said that al-Maliki decided to dismiss Lt. Gen. Mahdi Gharrawi commander of Nineveh operations and his deputy, Maj. Gen. Abdul Rahman Al Handhal and his chief of staff, Brigadier General Hassan Abdul Razzaq, from office.
1He added that it is decided also to dismiss Brigadier General Hedayat Abdel-Karim Commander of the 3rd Infantry Division, and hand over him to the military court.


AFP notes, "The dismissals came after soldiers and police fled en masse as insurgents swept into Nineveh's capital Mosul, a city of two million people, abandoning their vehicles and uniforms."

Things are changing very quickly, from minute to minute even, with regards to Iraq.  Let's not bury the KRG but note  near the top of the snapshot what's going on there.  Gnomes National News Service reports, "In a statement that could have a dramatic impact on regional politics in the Middle East, a spokesman for Turkey’s ruling party recently told a Kurdish media outlet that the Kurds in Iraq have the right to self-determination. The statement has been relatively overlooked so far, but could signal a shift in policy as Turkey has long been a principal opponent of Kurdish independence, which would mean a partitioning of Iraq."  This would be a major shift and, if the attitude and sentiment is genuine and holds, a long way towards achieving what Kurds have long sought in the region.  Staying with the topic of Turkey, Daily Sabah reports:

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan yesterday accused his Iraqi counterpart, Nouri al-Maliki, of failing to protect the Turkish consulate in Mosul and leaving the Turkmen population defenseless in front of ISIS's onslaught.
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan at his party's group meeting yesterday panned the government of Iraq for failing to provide security for the staff at the Turkish Consulate as well as the 31 Turkish truck drivers who were abducted by militants from the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS).




We'll come back to today in a moment.  However, due to the crisis, we've focused on violence and cities fallen and other things.  I stated here last week that we'd get to a hearing at some point.  Let's do that now before I forget.

It was last Wednesday when US Ambassador to Iraq Stephen Beecroft appeared before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.  He was not there to testify about Iraq.  No, he was present because Barack has nominated him to be the next US Ambassador to Egypt.

Iraq is in turmoil and Barack's trying to pull the Ambassador out and bring in a new one.

What Barack has offered is an ever changing Ambassador to Iraq.

Chris Hill was an utter failure.  We noted he would be before he was confirmed.  A simple look at his personnel file was all anyone needed to grasp the failure Hill would be.  This was who Barack went with for his first Ambassador to Iraq.  After Hill's failures were too big to ignore, Barack then nominated James Jeffrey.  Like Hill, Jeffrey was confirmed.  Unlike Hill, Jeffrey wasn't a non-stop embarrassment in the post. Barack then nominated I'll-stick-my-cock-in-anything Brett McGurk to be the next Ambassador.  He withdrew his nomination when his e-mails about blue balls only further made his nomination seem like a joke. Then Barack nominated Beecroft.

And now he's moving Beecroft to Egypt and has nominated Stuart E. Jones to be Ambassador to Iraq.  Jones currently serves as the US Ambassador to Jordan.

Barack is currently in the sixth year of his presidency.  Jones is Barack's fifth nominee to be Ambassador to Iraq.  Not only does that not instill confidence, it also demonstrates a lack of vision and a lack of consistency in the US government's dealings with Iraq.


In his prepared remarks, Jones noted:

Mr. Chairman, I am both humbled and thrilled to have the opportunity to serve as Chief of Mission at American Embassy Baghdad, one of our largest and most complex diplomatic missions. I had the honor of serving as Deputy Chief of Mission in Baghdad. I also served as the Governorate Coordinator in Ramadi, in Anbar Province under the Coalition Provisional Authority in 2004. Later I was Director for Iraq Affairs on the National Security Council staff here in Washington. These jobs have helped me prepare for the complexity and challenges of the assignment ahead. We are all familiar with the history of Iraq's past decade. It is impossible to serve in Iraq without recalling and honoring the sacrifice and achievement of our U.S. servicemen and women and civilians. More than 4,000 Americans lost their lives to give the Iraqi people a chance at a better future. Today we are committed to helping build a new Iraq, which has moved beyond the isolation and oppression of its past, with secure borders, strong democratic institutions, and where all citizens benefit from its abundant resources.


And that contained the first evidence that Jones isn't up for the job.

I'm sick of these nominees Barack keeps offering who do not value life.  I'm tired of it, their work demonstrates that if they short cut life at their confirmation hearings, they don't suddenly develop a respect for it later on.

"More than 4,000 Americans lost their lives"?

The number of US military personnel the Dept of Defense states died in the Iraq War is [PDF format warning] 4489.

'Well, by Price Is Right showcase showdown rules, Stuart Jones is right!  He didn't overbid!'

I guess that's true, but it's also true that this isn't a game show.

He wants to be Ambassador to Iraq.  He submits the statement he read out loud to the Committee in writing. And he can't get the number right?

He can -- and does -- provide accurate statistics for suicide bombers.  And you should listen to him yack on with oil statistics.  But when it comes to how many US military personnel died in Iraq, he goes all soft and fuzzy.

Again, if you're not interested in human life when you're angling for the position, you don't later develop an affinity for it while performing your duties as Ambassador.

Chair Robert Menendez:  In Iraq, while political leaders are deal making to form a government, the Iraqi people are not benefiting from their country's increased oil output and the conflict continues to surge in western Iraq as the spillover from Syria has enabled the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria to take hold.  Clearly, we must continue to support Iraqi security forces but I'm concerned by reports that they have been using barrel bombs in their operations.  Serious questions remain unanswered: Iraq's role in Syria, the activities of Iraqi Shi'ite militias fighting with Assad's security forces,  the Iranian influence in Iraq and the commitment of the Iraqi government to protect the residents of Camp Liberty until we can conclude a resettlement process. 


Barrel bombs?  Human Rights Watch noted barrel bombs in their May 27th report:

Iraqi government forces battling armed groups in the western province of Anbar since January 2014 have repeatedly struck Fallujah General Hospital with mortar shells and other munitions, Human Rights Watch said today. The recurring strikes on the main hospital, including with direct fire weapons, strongly suggest that Iraqi forces have targeted it, which would constitute a serious violation of the laws of war.
Since early May, government forces have also dropped barrel bombs on residential neighborhoods of Fallujah and surrounding areas, part of an intensified campaign against armed opposition groups, including the Islamic State of Iraq and the Sham (ISIS). These indiscriminate attacks have caused civilian casualties and forced thousands of residents to flee.

“The government has been firing wildly into Fallujah’s residential neighborhoods for more than four months, and ramped up its attacks in May,” said Fred Abrahams, special adviser at Human Rights Watch. “This reckless disregard for civilians is deadly for people caught between government forces and opposition groups.”


Camp Liberty refers to the Ashraf community and they'll be mentioned again in a moment.  Menendez is the Committee Chair, Senator Bob Corker is the Ranking Member.  Corker noted at the top of the hearing, "Iraq, we're continue to read daily, the devolution that is taking place there.  You feel it on the ground.  The lack of -- The lack of involvement that we have had in terms of shaping things on the ground is very, very apparent and I know we'll talk about that during Q &  A."

Along with Beecroft and Jones, the Committee also heard from Dana Shell Smith who's nominated to be the US Ambassador to Qatar. Our focus is Iraq, we won't be addressing her nomination.  We will note she was able to look up frequently as she read her opening remarks because someone took a nomination seriously enough to review their written remarks and probably practice delivering them.  Well done, Shell Smith.

By contrast, Jones badly read from his prepared remarks and ran with Brett McGurk's overused buzzwords such as "holistic approach" to Iraq. The bulk of his statements focused on Iraq's oil.  Oil, oil, oil.

Chair Robert Menendez:  Ambassador Jones, you know, we had Prime Minister Maliki here last year.  It was a difficult meeting.  I don't know whether or not he will actually, uh, be the prime minister again.  I guess by many accounts, he may very well ultimately build the coalition necessary to do that. But, as I said to Ambassador Beecroft as it relates to our relationship with the Egyptian government, in this case, the Iraqis must understand that the use of barrel bombs, that the overflights and the transiting of airspace by Iran sending troops and military equipment into Syria with impunity, and the lives of the people at Camp Liberty until they are resettled is going to be part of what this Committee judges as it relates to future arm sales, as it relates to our relationship.  So I would like to hear from you.  We understand the importance, we honor the lives of those who were lost in pursuit of a more democratic Iraq from the United States and an enormous national treasure.  But there has to be some change in the course of events here including having a government that is more inclusive, in which every Sunnis isn't an 'enemy' of the state.  There are many Sunnis who want to be part of Iraq as a nation but they have to be included as well.  Can you tell me about what you'll be messaging there as it relates to these issues?



Ambassador Stuart Jones:   Thank you, Mr. Chairman.  Let me take your last point first which is, uh, of course, we completely agree, for Iraq to succeed, the different el -- the different political elements, the sectarian groups need to come together and create a shared vision.  They need to create a shared vision for their national security, they need to pull together to address the terrorist threat posed by ISIL and, uh, although the news from Mosul is very bad, I think one, uh, positive aspect of this may be that the groups are indeed coming together to address this challenge.  At least we're seeing signs of that in the last 24 hours.  In regards to the use of barrel bombs, the use of barrel bombs is completely unacceptable.  It's an indiscriminate weapon against civilians and it cannot be tolerated.  This is something that my colleague, Steve Beecroft has raised with the senior levels of the Iraqi government.  There has been an instruction handed down through the military that barrel bombs will not be used.  And we've also heard from military contacts that they recognize that instruction.  In regards to the overflights, this is an issue that remains a problem.  We are concerned that Iran is supplying the Bashar regime with overflights over Iraq.  This is something that we would like to see the Iraqis stop.  And this is, again, something that we have raised at the most senior levels.  And I will continue to do that and look for ways to find a way to stop -- to stop this traffic.  Uhm, on the issue of Camp Liberty, uhm, I know this is an issue of particular concern and it's a very important issue.  When I was the Deputy Chief of Mission in Iraq in 2010 and 2011, uhm, we witnessed a terrible attack on Camp Ashraf in which many people were killed and others were wounded.  I think the steps that we've taken since then have been quite positive, moving the residents of Ashraf to Camp Liberty has improved their security.  The government of Iraq has also responded to our requests and others requests to improve the security around Camp Liberty and that's encouraging.  But the solution, of course, is to remove the members of Mojahedin-e-Khalq from Iraq and get them to a safer place. They will not be safe until they are outside of Iraq and, uh-uhm, our government is taking the lead on this.  The Special Envoy for the Secretary [of State John Kerry], Jonathan Weiner, is meeting with representatives of countries around the world and asking them to take members of the Mojahedin-e-Khalq.  And we also now have a team in Baghdad to interview members to see -- working towards receiving a group of those here in the United States.  And I think this is the best solution that we can present.


Chair Robert Menendez:  Well two final points so that you're crystal clear. I don't want to hear Iraq tell us that we need actionable intelligence.  When we have it, we'll provide it. But they have a responsibility in doing random surveillance of over flights.  And that is an excuse that is unacceptable. Secondly, I agree with you that resettlement of the MEK is the ultimate solution.  I hope -- and I have urged the State Department to consider bringing some of them to the United States as an example to the rest of the world that we're asking to seek resettlement to do so.  But in the interim, I hold the prime minister responsible for the lives of those individuals at the Camp.

Ideally, we'll note more from the hearing in tomorrow's snapshot.  For now, we'll move to an exchange with the Ranking Member.

Ranking Member Bob Corker:  Ambassador Jones, you know, I've visited Ambassador Beecroft and been to Iraq -- like many of us [on the Committee] many times.  Today, when you're there, unlike Jordan where you still are, it feels like a vacant, deserted lot, relative to our emphasis on it.  It feels like we've checked the box and moved on, that we've really lost influence.  That's, I think, everybody acknowledges that. That we really haven't been robust in all levels relative to our efforts there. We had a great conversation yesterday and we talked a little bit about the lack of a SOFA [Status Of Forces Agreement] and the fact that our troops are gone and that's contributed to the lack of influence in a pretty big way.  You've had two tours there.  And I mentioned I was going to bring this up just to kind of set the record straight. Many of us have felt -- and maybe after you say what you say -- may still feel that one of the reasons that Iraq is the way that it is is that we, you know, didn't leave behind some presence and that we actually, this was actually what the administration wanted to occur.  You have a very different perspective on that and I thought, don't take too long, if you will, but I thought it would be good for you to share your thoughts relative to why we do not have a presence in Iraq today.

Ambassador Stuart Jones:  As you said, we spoke about this yesterday.  My view on this is that, uhm, is that the Iraqi people really did not come together and ask us to stay in a way that made it possible for us to stay.  And it's as simple as that.  No secr -- No major Iraqi leaders -- with the exception of the Kurds -- came forward and invited us to stay in a public matter.  And they didn't go on television.  Uhm, we obviously needed to have a Status Of Forces Agreement for the security of our troops and the Iraqis didn't meet us half way on that.  So I think that this was the result of-of-of that negotiation and that's how it ended.

Ranking Member Bob Corker:  And so, from your perspective, the fact that we have no presence there and, candidly, much less influence, uh, is a result really of just the Iraqi people not wanting it to be that way?

Ambassador Stuart Jones:  Yes, sir.

Ranking Member Bob Corker: That's interesting and a very different perspective than I've heard from most but I appreciate your sharing that.  Uhm, and I would agree with the Chairman.  We had a pretty terse meeting with Maliki here.  I'd had one on the ground, just before that. [Menendez, Corker and others met with Nouri in the last week of October of last year.]  He's obviously not been a good prime minister. He has not done a good job of reaching out to the Sunni population which has caused them to be more receptive to al Qaeda efforts.  Uh, obviously the Syrian conflict -- I know there's analysis today saying that that's really not having an impact on Iraq -- I believe it's having a major impact on Iraq.  But with our diminished status in Iraq and the fact that we used to play shuttle diplomacy, if you will, between the Sunnis and Shia and causing that to work in a better way -- I think you did that before in your previous capacity -- how do you view your role there going there now under the circumstances that we have and trying to mitigate some of the problems that exist between the -- especially the Shia and the Sunni.

Ambassador Stuart Jones:  Yeah, uhm, well I think I'm blessed to be following in the footsteps of Steve Beecroft.  I think Steve has established very good relations with all of the groups in Iraq and I think this is a role that we should continue to play -- brokering, using our good offices to broker solutions to the myriad problems that face -- that face Iraq.  I think we've made great progress in recent months in trying to broker an arrangement by which the hydrocarbon, uhm-uh, law could be finalized and the relations between Kurdistan -- the Kurdish Regional Government and Baghdad could resolve their problems.  I think we also could find ways to support a process of political conciliation between some Shi'ite, uh, Sunni groups and, uh, and the government.  This is the role that the United States has played in Iraq in the last ten years and I certainly hope to continue that role.  I think we do have significant influence because of our, uh, continuing presence in the commercial and the petroleum sector as well as continuing presence in the military sector though, obviously, not with troops on the ground.


Are you feeling it for the nominee?

He's well liked in the State Dept and is considered to have shown real skill and talent in Jordan.  But when he says something like "great progress in recent months" on the hydrocarbon issue?  Well it may seem that way to him.  To others, probably not.

I've been hearing that claim in Congressional hearings since 2006.

And there's been no law passed.

And, more importantly, nothing's happening now.  Nor will it happen.

Over the weekend, Parliament held what was their last session.

So you'll have a new Parliament at some point.  (In 2010, it took over 8 months after the parliamentary election for Parliament to have a real session and name a president and Speaker of Parliament and prime minister-designate.)  And the process of discussing a law will start all over.  As it repeatedly has.  And Stuart Jones -- he will be confirmed (and that's not a complaint, he's better than Hill and most think he'll be better than Jeffrey) -- will become the latest Sisyphus to start each day pushing the same rock up the hill.


Let's change topics to grab another issue.  Is it dementia or drunkeness?  Only his bartender knows for sure.  Yes, we're talking Tom Hayden who, at the age of 74, seems bound and determined to disgrace himself one last time.

Monday, the first SDS sell-out wanted to remind people of how craven he could be with a lousy column.

It's bad enough his opening paragraph includes this garbage:

American activist anti-war networks are perfectly right in standing against renewed US intervention in Iraq. So far Obama has been forced by events to send some 275 US troops for embassy protection, while a decision on bombing is being mulled.

Events "forced" Barack to do that.

Is Barack a helpless maiden in one of the Child ballads?  Is he "Mary Hamilton"?

Last night there were four Marys
Tonight there'll be but three
There was Mary Beaton and Mary Seton
And Mary Carmichael and me.


Barack was "forced" -- a passive figure in history, bent by events and ruled by circumstance?

That sounds like a really weak president.

Barack makes choices and makes them of his own accord.  Don't strip him of his power.

This notion that a sitting president is weak and unable to take stands?  I'm wondering if skin color isn't effecting these repeated efforts to strip Barack of his own agency, of his own power?  It seems a lot of Tom Haydens are uncomfortable with seeing a person of color make their own decisions.  Tom seems much more comfortable portraying a person of color as a victim of events.


And Tom's always been a little bitch.  There's a reason his tired ass was kicked out of the commune, a reason he had to change his name and go underground.  The government?  Hell no.  Tom pissed off the New Left with his constant whoring, his constant lying and his inability to make a coherent argument.  All of this happened during Vietnam.

Now Tom goes whoring again and writes:

Some positions of the anti-Obama Left are too extreme to be helpful. For example, there are many in the anti-war movement who refused to believe that the US actually withdrew its troops from Iraq. This notion was meant to refute and discredit any notion that Obama had "ended" the war. Now that the raging debate is over whether to send US troops back, it's hard to argue that they are secretly still there.

If we could, we'd kick him off the online commune right now.  And, as was the case in Berkeley, things would improve significantly the minute Tom was forced out.

A few e-mails wanted to know why I wasn't opening with the 275 US troops being sent into Iraq.

Because the US never withdrew.

Am I unhelpful?  I think blackmailing a woman, threatening her to steal her money is "unhelpful."  Telling the truth?  It's never unhelpful.

December 2011 saw a drawdown of US troops.  The Defense Dept used that term and not "withdrawal."  The press -- most of whom withdrew by the end of 2008 -- used the term "withdrawal."  Or, most of them did.  A few people actually provided real reporting.  In December 2011,  Ted Koppel filed an important report on Rock Center with Brian Williams (NBC).



MR. KOPPEL: I realize you can't go into it in any detail, but I would assume that there is a healthy CIA mission here. I would assume that JSOC may still be active in this country, the joint special operations. You've got FBI here. You've got DEA here. Can, can you give me sort of a, a menu of, of who all falls under your control?


AMB. JAMES JEFFREY: You're actually doing pretty well, were I authorized to talk about half of this stuff.

So, no, Tom, there was no withdrawal.  US troops remained in Iraq.  You only care about cash, so think of the troops as dollars Jane Fonda earned.  Yes, you bilked her out of millions in the property settlement with your threats of making public allegations; however, Jane still had millions after you drove your beat up, getaway car away from the robbery.

In addition, over 15,000 troops were stationed in Kuwait following the drawdown.

Now this morning I noted Tom was humiliating himself again.

Poor old drunk or poor old crazy, I don't know.  Thing is, I don't care.  I don't like liars.

Let's drop back to October 13, 2012 and pull from an "I Hate The War" entry I did:

Tuesday, September 26th, I both called out Tom Hayden and gave him credit.  He had found an important sentence in a report on Syria in the New York Times (by Tim Arango) and blogged about it at The Nation.  He had ignored an even more important sentence.  I called him out.  As is obvious in that entry, I really would have preferred not to.  I do give him credit for highlighting the fact that a Special-Ops brigade has just been sent back into Iraq.  Ted Koppel, however, had already reported in December that Special-Ops would remain in Iraq.  In addition, Tom missed Arango's most important sentence -- a point we'd been making for months because it is happening -- the White House is in negotiations with Nouri to send more US troops into Iraq -- back into Iraq.  That sentence was right before the one Tom blogged six paragraphs about.
This is news and Tom's failure to find that sentence (it was right next to the one he highlighted) needed to be called out.  And I will beat up on Tom here as needed.  Sadly, it's needed a great deal as he's betrayed everything he either stood for or pretended to stand for.  (I have been around Tom for years.  I would have said "I know Tom Hayden" at one point in my life but now I wouldn't pretend to know what is real with him and what is fake.)

Tom did not like the above as was made very clear to me.  I responded, "Tough s**t."

Now here's what Tim Arango reported for the New York Times:

 
Iraq and the United States are negotiating an agreement that could result in the return of small units of American soldiers to Iraq on training missions. At the request of the Iraqi government, according to General Caslen, a unit of Army Special Operations soldiers was recently deployed to Iraq to advise on counterterrorism and help with intelligence.

Caslen is Lt Gen Robert L. Caslen and he's now over West Point.

Worthless Tom Hayden huffed Monday, "For example, there are many in the anti-war movement who refused to believe that the US actually withdrew its troops from Iraq."

I'm sorry you worthless piece of trash, but Ted Koppel's reporting demonstrated that special ops remained and at the end of September 2012, Arango had Caslen on the record stating "a unit of Army Special Operations soldiers was recently deployed to Iraq".

This is hard for Tom.  Like when people made fun of his pockmarks or, when he was with Jane, people would refer to them as beauty (Jane) and the beast (Tom).  So Tom would insult Jane, he'd go out of his way to point to other women whose bodies he would say were more attractive.  He was a little bitch.  At his bitchiest, he liked to repeat a joke he did not think up.  It went something like this: 'Try The Peter Fonda Workout.  Wake up, roll out of bed, roll a joint, smoke it, call your sister two hours later and beg her for money."  Tom found that hilarious.  But, thing is, Peter doesn't beg or ask for money.  Peter's Easy Rider fortune has carried him throughout life.  Unlike Tom, Peter earned his money.  Tom, who used to mock Peter, only has money because he was 'feminist' enough to demand half of a woman's earnings.  Tom was the definition of a 'kept man.' (And Peter always knew Tom was trash and bad for his sister.  Peter was never fooled by Tom Hayden.)

Today, Tom's the definition of a known liar. Tom read Tim Arango's 2012 article -- he even wrote about it.  He now wants to pretend it never existed and that it never noted the redeployment of US troops into Iraq.

Which is a good time to note other liars.

Guess who's back?

No, not Slim Shady.

It's United for Peace and Justice.  They posted their goodbye note, remember the day after the 2008 election.  And then the little whores -- Tom was part of UPFJ -- were no where to be found as people were killed in The Drone War, as people were killed in Afghanistan and Iraq, as . . .

Well they're back now.

Yes, the organization filled with political closet cases (many are Socialist, Leslie Cagan is a Communist) that went around smearing Ramsey Clark and A.N.S.W.E.R. is back.

Why are they back?

They offer a rambling say nothing explanation.


The real answer was provided last month in Costa Rica by Medea Benjamin who wanted people to know that things could get really bad after Barack leaves the White House -- she fears the next president might be Hillary "Clinton or a Republican."

So it's time for the usual group of whores to get active.  They need the 'peace' outlets to influence Democratic primaries because if they couldn't pose as 'peace activists,' they might have to use political party labels and this crowd runs from "Communist" and "Socialist" -- self-loathing closet cases that put the late Malcolm Forbes to shame.


Tom's the perfect fit for this crowd.  Barack's sending a couple of hundred troops into Iraq.  Tomorrow, we'll tell you what the media's missing on that story.  Today, we just had time to take on demented or drunk Tom Hayden (who was last this embarrassing in the spring of 2008 when he ordered a female intern to do a 'little spin' for the camera -- Tom, that harassment doesn't play these days).  Barack is (again) sending US troops into Iraq.  ABC News notes, "Under the plan being considered, those 'advisors' could be involved in field operations with Iraqi forces, ABC News' Luis Martinez reported."

Jay Carney is still on the job as White House spokesperson for a little longer.  Today, on Air Force One, he was asked about Iraq.

Q    After last night’s meeting, what’s the timetable for the President’s decision on Iraq?  Can you give us any more insight into that?

MR. CARNEY:  The President, as we noted, met with his National Security Council yesterday, late yesterday, to discuss the situation in Iraq.  And he will continue to consult with his national security team in the days to come.  They will also -- he and his team will continue to consult with members of Congress to share views and discuss possible responses.  Those consultations will continue, including closed briefings with a number of committees this week.
As you know, the President directed his national security team to develop a range of options, and that work is ongoing.  I think that rather than discuss timetables, I would note that the national security team is preparing options that are part of a comprehensive strategy -- because we have been clear, the President has been clear, that this is not primarily a military challenge.  It is evident, of course, that Iraq needs significantly more help to break the momentum of extremist groups and to bolster the capabilities of the Iraqi security forces.
But there is no military solution that will solve Iraq’s problems, which is why we’ve been urgently pressing Iraq’s leaders across the political spectrum to govern in a non-sectarian manner; to promote stability and unity among Iraq’s diverse population; to address the legitimate grievances of Iraq’s Sunni, Kurd and Shia communities; and build and invest in the capacity of Iraq’s security forces. 
Along those lines, we welcome the Iraqi Federal Supreme Court’s ratification of the April 30th election results.  This is an extremely important step as Iraq undertakes a peaceful transition of power from one elected government to another.  With the election results officially ratified, we call on Iraq’s leaders to move forward expeditiously to form an inclusive and representative government that represents the people of Iraq as determined through the democratic and constitutional process. 

It’s critical that all political leaders come together without delay to put the interest of the Iraqi people foremost in their negotiations to establish the makeup of a new government.


Leslie Clark (McClatchy Newspapers) notes, "As his national security team considers his options -- and insurgents move closer to Baghdad, President Barack Obama will host congressional leaders at the White House on Wednesday to discuss the situation."  What's to be done?

I oppose military action, I oppose US troops in Iraq.  I oppose military air strikes as well.  Washington Post has an article by Craig Whitlock on the problems with strikes and Anna Mulrine (Christian Science Monitor) explores the issue here.

Others feel differently.  I called out Fareed Zakaria yesterday and noted that he was capable of so much more.  Tom Hayden?  Really not capable so we ignore him except when he's doing damage.  Click here for Fareed and two guests discussing Iraq today.  At Fox News, media critic Howard Kurtz has a piece about Iraq and the media.  Ned Parker (Reuters) has a report on Nouri's media appearance today.














Monday, June 16, 2014

Iraq




Isaiah's The World Today Just Nuts "He wins again!" is a great riff on Snow White.  You should also check out  "The media rediscovers Iraq (Ava and C.I.)" which is Ava and C.I. critiquing the newfound media interest in Iraq.  You'll learn, for example, which three big name idiots think Nouri al-Maliki is "president of Iraq" (he's the prime minister).


And on Iraq, James Cogan (WSWS) has a report that's awful.  I left the following comment earlier today:



    Avatar


    I'm sorry but I don't take seriously any 'analysis' that doesn't point out the 2010 elections were decided by The Erbil Agreement, a legal contract the US pushed to give Nouri al-Maliki a second term. As The Common Ills has pointed out, Nouri used that contract to get a second term but refused to honor the promises he made to leaders of the political blocs -- promises in that contract.
    If you're not going to talk about that or how Barack Obama personally called Ayad Allawi to get him to send Iraqiya back into the Parliament, then you have nothing to say. You don't know the facts.
    I'm sorry but WSWS needs to do a better job covering Iraq.
    For starters, address The Erbil Agreement. Note the 8 month political stalemate that came before it.
    This is nonsense and reads like you haven't paid attention to events on the ground since Barack Obama became president.
    By the summer of 2011, Moqtada al-Sadr, the Kurds and Iraqiya were calling publicly for Nouri to implement The Erbil Agreement. His failure to do so would lead towards an effort to hold a no-confidence vote. You miss all these details in a supposed piece of analysis.
    You need to note how The Erbil Agreement went around the Iraqi constitution, went around the voters to give Nouri a second term. You need to note how the White House swore the contract had their full backing but then pretended it didn't exist.
    Otherwise, you're honestly wasting everyone's time.
    And I don't have time to waste and I'm sure the Iraqi people don't.
    I'll also point out I am grossly offended that Nouri has been bombing residential areas of Falluja -- a known war crime -- and The Common Ills and BRussells Tribunal and Human Rights Watch can call it out but in the six months that civilians have been killed and wounded by Nouri's bombings, WSWS hasn't made this a major issue.




    I copied it after I left the remark.  I doubt WSWS will delete it but NPR does all the time so I now copy and paste all comments I want to share here.  I leave the comment, then copy it and paste it into an e-mail and pull it up when I'm ready to write my nightly post.


    Making more sense is Michael Brenner at CounterPunch whose article includes this:


    The shi’ite dominated government of Nuri al-Maliki in Baghdad does not pose a direct problem in this respect insofar as it is a creature of the American occupation and Washington is committed to defend it as the legitimate authority in Iraq.  However, Maliki is a tacit member of the political coalition that includes Iran, Assad in Syria, and Hezbullah.  His oppression of Iraq’s sunnis has cast him as one of the evil-doers in the minds of the salafist groups and as an opponent by the Saudis.  As the contests across the region take on darker and darker tones of an all-out sectarian war, the United States finds itself in a position whereby any expression of support for a given party is taken as a sign that it is choosing sides.  





    This is C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"


    Monday, June 16, 2014.  Chaos and violence continue, another city in Iraq falls to rebels, whores come out to pretend like The Erbil Agreement never happened (they're trying to cover for Barack), John Kerry floats the US and Iranian governments working together, and much more.

    It wasn't that long ago, Marc A. Thiessen (Washington Post) reminds, that the White House was hailing the 'success' of Iraq, "In 2011, the situation in Iraq was so good that the Obama administration was actually trying to take credit for it, with Vice President Joe Biden declaring that Iraq 'could be one of the great achievements of this administration'.”

    Why stop with Joe Biden?  It was US President Barack Obama who spoke at Fort Bragg December 14, 2011 and declared, "Now, Iraq is not a perfect place.  It has many challenges ahead.  But we’re leaving behind a sovereign, stable and self-reliant Iraq, with a representative government that was elected by its people."

    Or how about we go more current?

    Remember this?

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    Remember that?

    Maybe this will jog memories.  After the meet-up above took place,  Former US Ambassador Marc Ginsberg pointed out at The Huffington Post:


    By most accounts Iraq is heading toward an unchecked meltdown, and Maliki would like us to believe he deserves a red carpet welcome as the innocent plaintiff in the upheavals he created, not as the felonious defendant he should be adjudged.
    And to top off his disastrous management of Iraq, he wants Washington to legitimate his charade by endorsing his bid for re-election in Iraq's crucial 2014 elections.


    Ginsberg served in the Carter administration and the Clinton administration.  Grasp that when Barack had his last face-to-face with Nouri al-Maliki, November 1, 2013, seven months ago, Nouri's actions were well known.  Ahead of that meet-up, Human Rights Watch issued a press release which noted:

    Iraq’s crackdown on peaceful government critics and an epidemic of executions should be top agenda items during the prime minister’s state visit to Washington, Human Rights Watch said today in a letter to President Barack Obama. Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki is scheduled to meet with Obama on November 1, 2013.
    Iraqi officials say that Maliki’s priority will be to accelerate US provision of arms, intelligence, and other counterterrorism support, including the immediate delivery of drones and F-16 fighter jets. But Obama should make clear that his administration will prohibit security aid, especially arms, equipment, and training for security forces, unless the Iraqi government ends its widespread use of torture.
    “Iraq is plagued by terrorist attacks that are killing civilians in record numbers, but relying on torture and executions after unfair trials only makes the situation worse,” said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director. “Obama needs to send a clear message to Maliki that the US will not support his assault on human rights.”

    There was all of that and so much more going on.

    And yet Barack met with Nouri and made nice.

    Let's note some of what Barack said after the meeting:

    And we appreciate Prime Minister Maliki’s commitment to honoring that sacrifice by ensuring a strong, prosperous, inclusive and democratic Iraq.
    [. . .]
    I emphasized the ambition of continuing counterterrorism support and partnership, that we were encouraged by the work that Prime Minister Maliki has done in the past to ensure that all people inside of Iraq -- Sunni, Shia and Kurd -- feel that they have a voice in their government.  And one of the most important expressions of that will be elections next year.  I encouraged that Iraq pass an election law and that that moves forward so that people understand that when they have differences they can express them politically, as opposed to through violence.


    What a bunch of lies.  Nouri was attacking Sunni protesters, Iraqiya had walked out of the government, Nouri was at war with the Kurds and yet Barack lied.

    A strong, prosperous, inclusive and democratic Iraq?

    Yes, it's an obvious lie now.  It was an obvious lie then if you were paying attention.

    Days before the meet-up, US Senators Carl Levin, John McCain, Robert Menendez, Lindsey Graham, Bob Corker and James M. Inhofe released an open letter to President Barack Obama which noted:


    It is essential that you urge Prime Minister Maliki to adopt a strategy to address Iraq’s serious problems of governance. Such a strategy should unite Iraqis of every sect and ethnicity in a reformed constitutional order, based on the rule of law, which can give Iraqis a real stake in their nation’s progress, marginalize Al-Qaeda in Iraq and other violent extremists, and bring lasting peace to the country. To be effective, an Iraqi political strategy should involve sharing greater national power and revenue with Sunni Iraqis, reconciling with Sunni leaders, and ending de-Baathification and other policies of blanket retribution. It should include agreements with the Kurdistan Regional Government to share hydrocarbon revenues and resolve territorial disputes. And it requires a clear commitment that the elections scheduled for next year will happen freely, fairly, and inclusively in all parts of Iraq, and that the necessary preparations will be taken.
    If Prime Minister Maliki were to take actions such as these, he could cement his legacy as the leader who safeguarded his country's sovereignty and laid the foundation for the new Iraq. In this endeavor, Prime Minister Maliki and our other Iraqi partners would have our support, including appropriate security assistance, and we would encourage you to provide U.S. diplomatic support at the highest levels to help Iraqis reach the necessary political agreements before the 2014 elections. However, if Prime Minister Maliki continues to marginalize the Kurds, alienate many Shia, and treat large numbers of Sunnis as terrorists, no amount of security assistance will be able to bring stability and security to Iraq. That is not a legacy we want for Prime Minister Maliki, and that is not an outcome that would serve America’s national interests.



    Nouri met, that week, with members of the US Congress.  On The NewsHour (PBS -- link is video, audio and text), Margaret Warner reported that meet-up did not go well:


    JUDY WOODRUFF: So, Maliki did spend time on the Hill?


    MARGARET WARNER: Mm-hmm.



    JUDY WOODRUFF: And how much progress did he make there? What happened?



    MARGARET WARNER: It went very badly.

    The key meetings yesterday were with Senator McCain and -- excuse me -- Wednesday -- and then with Corker and Menendez. And I'm told that that latter meeting was particularly contentious. They laid out all their concerns. He sort of sat impassively and, according to the aides present, he simply repeated platitudes about how he's governing by the constitution.
    And, finally, Menendez got so -- I don't know if it's angry, but certainly peeved, that he looked at him and he said: Look, I feel you're just glossing over our concerns. And you need to know you're not getting any of this without our OK.
    And Senator Corker came out afterwards and said: We felt he was completely dismissive of our concerns.


    JUDY WOODRUFF: And it's known that one of the things they feel strongly about is he needs to share power.


    Yeah, that was a known.

    And he didn't.

    And look where things stand today.

    It's cute to watch partisan whores try to spin this.  'It's Bully Boy Bush's fault' a lot of stooges insist.

    Fareed Zakaria (Washington Post) agrees Nouri's problematic but wants to distract and deceive:

    But how did Maliki come to be prime minister of Iraq? He was the product of a series of momentous decisions made by the Bush administration. 



    I'm not in the mood for damn liars.

    Nouri got a first term (2006) because Bully Boy Bush insisted on it.

    But he got a second term -- despite losing to Ayad Allawi in the March 2010 elections -- because of Barack.  What the Iraqi Constitution couldn't give Nouri, what the Iraqi people refused to give Nouri, Barack did.  He ordered US officials to negotiate a contract (The Erbil Agreement) to give Nouri a second term.  This contract -- signed by Nouri and the heads of all of Iraq's major political blocs -- found the leaders agreeing to a second term for Nouri in exchange for things they wanted (the Kurds wanted Nouri to implement Article 140 of the Constitution -- which resolves disputed Kirkuk, Iraqiya wanted an independent security council to be headed by Ayad Allawi, etc).

    Fareed, stop lying, stop whoring.

    If you think it was bad for the Iraqi MPs in 2006 to agree to giving Nouri a term as prime minister, it was even worse in 2010 when voters rejected Nouri and Barack spat on the most basic principle in a democracy (voting) to keep Nouri on for a second term.

    November 10, 2010 a power sharing deal resulted in the Parliament meeting for the second time since the March 2010 vote and this was only possible due to The Erbil Agreement.  At that meeting,  Iraqiya felt double crossed on the deal and the bulk of their members stormed out of the Parliament. David Ignatius (Washington Post) explained, "The fragility of the coalition was dramatically obvious Thursday as members of the Iraqiya party, which represents Sunnis, walked out of Parliament, claiming that they were already being double-crossed by Maliki. Iraqi politics is always an exercise in brinkmanship, and the compromises unfortunately remain of the save-your-neck variety, rather than reflecting a deeper accord. "

    How long does Fareed intend to lie and whore?

    In November 2010,  Karen DeYoung (Washington Post) reported:

    Vice President Biden made numerous calls to senior Iraqi leaders over the past several months and U.S. officials directly participated in top-level negotiating sessions that lasted until just moments before the Iraqi parliament finally convened to approve a new power-sharing government Thursday, a senior Obama administration official said Friday.
    Hoping to rebut criticism that it had lost influence in Iraq and was too passive over the eight months since the March election there, or that its efforts were designed to keep Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki in power, the administration offered a detailed written account of previously unreported meetings, visits and calls it said Biden and others had made.

    The negotiated power-sharing deal DeYoung is writing about is The Erbil Agreement.  Back then, Michael Jansen (Gulf Today) observed, "The deal making that produced last Thursday’s session of parliament is nothing to boast about." She then goes on to note:

    It is not clear why Iraqiya thought Maliki -- a sectarian Shiite whose Dawa party was a bitter enemy of the Baath -- would implement this pledge. Maliki has also failed to carry out solemn promises to recruit into the security forces or find civil service jobs for fighters of the Sunni Awakening Councils -- or Sons of Iraq movement -- who helped US and government forces curb Al Qaeda in 2007-08. Maliki has shown himself to have absolutely no intention of sharing power with Sunnis and certainly not with secular politicians like Allawi who represents the "old Iraq" where politics was non-sectarian.
    In spite of Obama's declaration that an "inclusive" government formula had been found after months of wrangling, Maliki is not interested in including Sunnis, secularists, former Baathists and others who do not subscribe to the ethno-sectarian system imposed on Iraq by the previous Bush administration.

    And Farred wants to whore and lie?

    What Fareed hides, The Erbil Agreement, Barack made a statement about Novemeber 12, 2010:
     

    Before I discuss the G20, I want to briefly comment on the agreement in Iraq that's taken place on the framework for a new government.  There's still challenges to overcome, but all indications are that the government will be representative, inclusive, and reflect the will of the Iraqi people who cast their ballots in the last election. This agreement marks another milestone in the history of modern Iraq.  Once again, Iraqis are showing their determination to unify Iraq and build its future and that those impulses are far stronger than those who want Iraq to descend into sectarian war and terror. For the last several months, the United States has worked closely with our Iraqi partners to promote a broad-based government -- one whose leaders share a commitment to serving all Iraqis as equal citizens.  Now, Iraq's leaders must finish the job of forming their government so that they can meet the challenges that a diverse coalition will inevitably face.  And going forward, we will support the Iraqi people as they strengthen their democracy, resolve political disputes, resettle those displaced by war, and build ties of commerce and cooperation with the United States, the region and the world.

    And Barack did far more than make a statement that week.  Let's drop back to the November 11, 2010 snapshot to note what happened when The Erbil Agreement wasn't being implemented right away (in fact, it never would be) and Iraqiya walked out of Parliament in protest:


    Martin Chulov (Guardian) reports one hiccup in the process today involved Ayad Allawi who US President Barack Obama phoned asking/pleading that he accept the deal because "his rejection of post would be a vote of no confidence". Ben Lando, Sam Dagher and Margaret Coker (Wall St. Journal) confirm the phone call via two sources and state Allawi will take the post -- newly created -- of chair of the National Council On Higher Policy: "Mr. Obama, in his phone call to Mr. Allawi on Thursday, promised to throw U.S. weight behind the process and guarantee that the council would retain meaningful and legal power, according to the two officials with knowledge of the phone call." 

    But Fareed wants to whore and lie and pretend he can get away with it, that he can rewrite history and tell lies and no one will be the wiser.  Patrick Martin (WSWS) notes it was Bully Boy Bush and Barack both who installed and kept Nouri the prime minister of Iraq:

    Who installed Maliki? His regime was the culmination of the supposed transformation of Iraq into a “democracy.” His election was hailed as a great success, first by George W. Bush, who launched the war, and then by Obama, who completed it on the schedule laid down by his predecessor.


    In 2006, the Parliament wanted to give Ibrahim al-Jafaari a second term as prime minister.  The Bully Boy Bush White House did not trust al-Jafaari for a number of reasons and one of their fears was a second term for anyone so early in Iraq's new 'democracy' stage would risk setting up a new dictator.  They insisted on Nouri and got their way.

    That was bad.

    But in 2010, the voters made clear that they preferred Iraqiya over Nouri's State of Law.  That should have been the end of it.  But Barack ensured that Nouri got a second term he didn't earn.

    Fareed damn well knows that the second term to Nouri was far worse for Iraq than the first term.

    Fareed needs to stop lying and stop whoring.

    And, hopefully, he will.  Too many others have nothing to offer but lying and whoring.  So we'll just ignore them for today.

    The Erbil Agreement is not minor. Ann, in the comments, rightly notes in a comment on James Coogan's WSWS 'analysis' which ignores The Erbil Agreement, "I'm sorry but I don't take seriously any 'analysis' that doesn't point out the 2010 elections were decided by The Erbil Agreement, a legal contract the US pushed to give Nouri a second term."

    David Ignatius (Washington Post via Real Clear Politics) points out:

    Maliki's failure has been increasingly obvious since the elections of 2010, when the Iraqi people in their wisdom elected a broader, less-sectarian coalition. But the Obama administration, bizarrely working in tandem with Iran, brokered a deal that allowed Maliki to continue and has worked with him as an ally against al-Qaeda. Maliki's coalition triumphed in April's elections, but the balloting was boycotted by Sunnis.
    Given Maliki's sectarian and authoritarian style, a growing number of Iraq experts are questioning why the Obama administration continues to provide him billions in military aid -- and is said to be weighing his plea for lethal Predator drones. The skeptics include some who were once among Maliki's champions.
     
    Iraq's on fire today because Nouri didn't honor The Erbil Agreement and instead attacked Sunni politicians and protesters, because he refused to nominate people to head the Ministries of Defense, Interior and National Security in order to steal control of those ministries.  As the head of the Minister of the Interior, he was responsible for sending the MoI employees into schools to demonize Iraqi gays and lesbians, to encourage students to attack and kill those they suspected of being gay, to lie and state that they sucked blood as vampires did, that they deserved to be killed and much more.  Nouri, of course, denied such claims were made.  However, Alsumaria and Al Mada got ahold of handouts MoI employees passed out at their school presentations proving that they were making these smears in an attempt to incite violence against Iraq's gay and lesbian population (and those who might be perceived as such).  Gay men (and men thought to be gay) were killed with bricks, they were killed via torture, they were killed in so many ways and this took place on Nouri's orders.

    So for those dirty, nasty whores -- Katrina vanden Heuvel, step up -- who cover for Nouri today?  You're homophobic trash and you threaten the safety of not just gays and lesbians but of minorities around the world.  You should be ashamed of yourselves and, honestly, shut your mouths and hang your heads in shame.  [If you're interested in some of the people who got it wrong and some of the people who got it right last week, see "The media rediscovers Iraq (Ava and C.I.)."]

    Today, Iraq is in crisis.

    Martin Chulov (Guardian) reports, "The northern Iraqi city of Tal Afar is in the hands of jihadists after a two-day battle with security forces – the third major centre to fall to the insurgents in less than a week.  The loss of the mixed Sunni and Shia town is another setback to the Iraqi government's attempts to establish control over the country's north and centre, which is now a centre of gravity for the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (Isis) and a potential launching pad for its plans to push south to Baghdad."  Patrick Cockburn (Independent via ICH) notes, "Early on Monday the mayor of the northern town of Tal Afar said it had become the latest landmark settlement to fall to Sunni militants.  Abdulal Abdoul told reporters his town of some 200,000 people, 260 miles (420 kilometres) northwest of Baghdad, was taken just before dawn."  Aryn Baker (Time) offers, "But ISIS's blitzkreig to Baghdad isn't based on military prowess alone.  Many of the Sunni tribes in the areas around Mosul and Tikrit, which ISIS captured a day after taking Mosul, backed the militants out of a deep-seated resentment for the Shi'ite-dominated government of Prime Minister Nouri Maliki.  In fact, many Iraqis say that ISIS played a relatively minor role, and that without Sunni support they wouldn't have been able to gain any traction at all."  Falah Alwan (ICH) offers this:

    The media, especially that which is allied with the Iraqi government and western states, has been focusing on the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant/Syria (ISIS) and its control over several Iraqi cities, provoking its audiences against the militant group. Indeed, ISIS terrorist groupings do exist among armed groups there and its influence in the recent events is clear. However, it is also true that Iraqis generally reject ISIS, whether in the central or southern regions of Iraq or in parts of the country that are no longer under government control: the so-called “Sunni” areas or the “Sunni Triangle”, a term that intelligence services, particularly the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), devised as part of a plan to engineer sectarianism in Iraq. At the same time, Iraqis generally reject Maliki’s regime and its policies, built as they are on an ethno-sectarian basis. This is especially the case in urban areas where sectarian discrimination is most concentrated, wherein the government treats ordinary people as political enemies.

    The fall of several Iraqi cities in the hands of armed groups does not represent the dreams of the people who live there. Their demands to be rid of sectarianism are clear and direct. They expressed them through nonviolent sit-ins, but armed terrorist groups took advantage of this environment to take power. The people’s demands against discrimination and sectarianism are just and fair, whereas Maliki’s policies are reactionary and discriminatory, and are therefore rejected. In the meantime, ISIS’ control of cities and people poses a serious threat to everyday life and to society.


    Patrick Cockburn (Independent via CounterPunch) frets, "One unverified statement from Isis militants on Twitter says that it has executed 1,700 prisoners. Pictures show killings at half a dozen places. Isis has posted pictures that appear to show prisoners being loaded on to flatbed trucks by masked gunmen and later forced to lie face down in a shallow ditch with their arms tied behind their backs."  Oh goodness.  The horror.  Like CNN, Cockburn's failed to report  when Nouri started killing civilians in Falluja.

    Never forget that.

    At the start of the year, Nouri began bombing residential areas of Falluja -- a legally defined War Crime -- killing and wounding civilians.

    It has gone on for six months.

    Where's the CNN anchor expressing outrage over those actions?  When does Cockburn intend to note the War Crimes?




    نموذج لأهداف جيش المالكي الارهابي في حربه على الشعب: .




    That's one of the many children who've been wounded from the War Crimes of thug Nouri al-Maliki.

    And CNN (on American airwaves) and Patrick Cockburn in his many 'reports' have never bothered to express horror over the many dead and wounded.


    But they're both bothered -- CNN and Cockburn -- that the rebels aren't practicing some Catch & Release program but are instead killing Iraqi soldiers.

    A) This is a war.

    B) For months now, Nouri's forces have been killing suspects.  Not arresting people and putting them on trial but killing them.  And often, as you can see all over YouTube and have been able to see for months, they're not shooting them dead.  They're not beheading them either.  They are burning suspects to death.  Setting them on fire and burning them to death.

    We've covered that here but Patrick Cockburn and CNN Television haven't been interested in the topic.

    Now I'm sorry that anyone anywhere is killed (unless they're a War Criminal) but I'm not going to play stupid like Cockburn and CNN.  These same Iraqi forces are guilty of murder and rape.  There was a huge issue about rapes in the provinces and governors insisting on the right to prosecute Iraqi soldiers who raped in their provinces.  Nouri wouldn't even turn over a rapist from his forces.  These same Iraqi forces are guilty of killing innocent people.

    I'm not going to play stupid and act like recent history didn't take place.

    The Pacifica Evening News is an hourly newscast (Monday through Friday) produced by Pacifica Radio's KPFA, KCFC and KPFK.  This evening, Maryam Labib explored recent history with a number of people including McClatchy Newspapers' Mohammed Al Dulaimy and Reuters' Ned Parker.

    Maryam Labib: Mohammed Al Dulaimy, an Iraqi journalist who reported for  Iraq for years and is now seeking US asylum, and now he fears for his safety when he returns says that the Shi'ite Iraqi government, put in place by the US, has fueled the Sunni extremist groups.

    Mohammed Al Dulaimy: Mister Maliki has failed to build an Iraqi military that will respect human rights.  Fanatics, Islamists, feed on such human rights breaches.  It helps them to further their cause and to win more recruits.  This is what is happening in Iraq.  And you can see the videos of how the Iraqi army dealt with demonstrators in Hawija, how they killed men carrying sticks -- only iron sticks -- or sometimes nothing.  All of us should speaking loudly to stop pushing ordinary people towards fanatics -- to join their lines just to defend themselves against an army that is willing to kill them all. 

    Maryam Labib: Al Dulaimy also says that Maliki refused to disarm Iranian-backed Shi'ite militias like Asaib Ahl al-Haq [League of Righteous].  Ned Parker, the Reuters bureau chief in Baghdad, says factions of sectearian militais  are playing a significant role in pushing Iraq towards extremism.

    Ned Parker: Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq which is a breakaway faction from the Sadr movement that is supported by Iran, that has been active, that has been fighting outside of Baghdad for months now since the fighting started in January.  So we have seen militia style fighting and killings and fighting.  Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq and another group called Kata'ib Hezbollah, they have had their fighters alongside Iraqi forces they actually follow under an Iraqi government  chain  command now.  It shows the power of sectarian passions right now and the danger that the more you see Sunni extremism, it breeds Shi'ite extremism and it cancels out the space for moderation and it impels Iraq towards the  danger of a new sectarian conflict. 


    In other news, Barack moves towards aiding Nouri.  Zack Beauchamp (Vox!) declares, "It's official: President Barack Obama is sending American troops back to Iraq." What's he talking about?  Well not just the fact that the USS George H.W. Bush now floats just off the coast of Iraq and more US personnel are arriving in Iraq.  Not the fact that Mohammed Tawfeeq, Yousif Basil, Ashley Fantz and Mark Morgenstein (CNN) report, "Between 50 and 100 U.S. Marines and U.S. Army personnel have arrived at the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad, a U.S. official told CNN on Sunday.  A U.S official acknowledged to CNN that the additional embassy security personnel being added include U.S. Marines who specialize in embassy protection during high-threat conditions."  Mitchell Prothero (McClatchy Newspapers) calls the move "a tacit acknowledgment that the situation in the Iraqi capital had become unpredictable and that violence seemed likely."

    But what  Beauchamp is talking about the announcement the White House made today:

    Statement by the Press Secretary on the War Powers Resolution Report for Iraq


    Today, consistent with the War Powers Resolution, the President transmitted a report notifying the Congress that up to approximately 275 U.S. military personnel are deploying to Iraq to provide support and security for U.S. personnel and the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad.  The personnel will provide assistance to the Department of State in connection with the temporary relocation of some staff from the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad to the U.S. Consulates General in Basra and Erbil and to the Iraq Support Unit in Amman.  These U.S. military personnel are entering Iraq with the consent of the Government of Iraq.  The U.S. Embassy in Baghdad remains open, and a substantial majority of the U.S. Embassy presence in Iraq will remain in place and the embassy will be fully equipped to carry out its national security mission. 


    Yes, last week Barack insisted no boots on the ground.  That was last week.

    Jennifer Collins, Gilgamesh Nabeel, Ammar Al Shamary and Oren Dorell (USA Today) report,  "President Obama notified Congress on Monday that about 275 U.S. military personnel are deploying to Iraq to provide support and security for U.S. personnel and the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad. Obama also said the troops are equipped for combat and will remain in Iraq until the security situation becomes such that they are no longer needed."   Zaid al-Sanjary and Arshad Mohammed (Reuters) add, "Obama, who was being presented with recommendations from his top national security advisers on Monday evening, has made U.S. action contingent on Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's taking steps to broaden his Shi'ite-dominated government."

    When does Nouri have to take those steps?

    Apparently after Barack provides Nouri with US military cover.  And this despite objections from members of Congress and many others.  Mohamed Salman (McClatchy Newspapers) reports:


    A former Qatari ambassador to the United States offered up a warning to the Obama administration Monday that any military intervention on behalf of the government of Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki would be seen as an act of “war” on the entire community of Sunni Arabs.
    Sheikh Nasser bin Hamad al Khalifa also warned against the United States working with Iran to repulse the advance by the radical Sunni group the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, something that Secretary of State John Kerry said Monday the United States would be willing to consider.

    Read more here: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2014/06/16/230512/qatari-us-intervention-in-iraq.html#storylink=cpy


    Matthew Lee (AP) notes US Secretary of State John Kerry has been tasked with floating the trial balloon on talks between the governments of the US and Iran.

    The trial balloon needs to be floated because (a) the US government has repeatedly portrayed the Iranian government as terrorists, devils and a world wide threat, (b) Barack's tanking in the polls, (c) the lack of trial balloon on the recent Taliban swap caught the American people off guard and is part of the reason for the anger and/or shock over the surrendering of five Talbian and (d) it's important that it come from Kerry and not Barack who's already a lame duck president and who, with any further erosion of public support, will be weaker than any recent US president in his final two years of his last term.

    There are those in the US who will rejoice because of their desire for improved relations between the two governments.  They might want to temper that long enough to ask themselves if the answer for Iraq is to have Iranian troops on the ground?

    The Iraq - Iran war may be nothing to many Americans -- some of whom will not even be aware it took place.  But it's still known in Iraq and why any ruler of Iraq has to a dance between showing warmth towards the Iranian government -- a neighbor which shares a border -- while also demonstrating public independence from that government.  That show of independence?  It's why Nouri's National Security Advisor Falih al-Fayadh held a press conference -- held a press conference -- yesterday to insist that the government was denying entry to any and all Iranian forces and insisted that reports otherwise were "groundless."

    So what is Kerry floating?



    He sat down this morning with Katie Couric (Yahoo News with Katie Couric) and she raised the issue of Iran.


    Katie Couric:  Will you reach out to Iran and how can that country be helpful?  Or is that like entering into a hornet's nest because --

    Secretary John Kerry: Well we're open to -- Look, we're open to discussions if there's something constructive that can be contributed by Iran, if Iran is prepared to do something that is going to respect the integrity and sovereignty of Iraq and the ability of the government to reform, uh,  --

    Katie Couric:  Can you see cooperating with Iran militarily?

    Secretary John Kerry:  I, uh, at this moment, I think we need to step-by-step and see what, in fact, might be a reality.  But I wouldn't rule out anything that would be constructive to providing real stability, a respect for the Constitution, a respect for the election process and a respect for the ability of the Iraqi people to form a government that represents all of the interests of Iraq -- not one sectarian group over another.  It has to be inclusive.  And that has been one of the great problems of the last few years.

    Katie Couric: If Iran recognizes that, would you be willing to work with that country?

    Secretary John Kerry:  Let's see what Iran might or might not be willing to do before we start making any pronouncements.  I think we are open to any constructive process here that could minimize the violence, hold Iraq together -- the integrity of the country, and eliminate the presence of outside terrorist forces that are ripping it apart.


    On violence, 2610 is the number of Iraqis who've been killed in violence so far this month (through yesterday) according to Iraq Body Count.

    That makes it the deadliest month in Iraq since July 2007 when IBC counted 2690 deaths.  But 2690 is the number killed in the full month of July 2007 -- right now, we're only at the half-way point of June.
















    martin chulov
    david ignatius


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