Thursday, January 28, 2016

Hillary's Haiti 'success'

Glen Ford (Black Agenda Report) notes Hillary Clinton's claim to fame with regards to Haiti


But, even the prospect of a one-man contest could not stop the Americans from insisting on going ahead with the run-off. The U.S., which pays for the Haitian elections and, therefore, believes it has the right to decide who wins and who loses, growled that Haiti should go along with the fraudulent process. The Americans were upset that they might have no reliable replacement for their loyal puppet, “Sweet Mickey.” Plus, the discrediting of the elections would also reflect very badly on presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, who claims to have brought stability to Haiti when she was at the State Department but, in fact, is culpable for all of the Haitians who were murdered by the Martelly regime. The truth is that Hillary and Bill were the Bonnie and Clyde of Haiti, robbing the country for their own and other corporate criminals’ benefit. The teams of FBI agents that are now matching Hillary’s emails with contributions to the Clinton Foundation are tapping a Mother Lode of corruption that may yet bring her down before Election Day in the United States.
If that happens, the Haitian people will deserve some of the credit for saving the U.S. from another period of rule by the Crooked Clintons, in the process of saving Haiti’s sovereignty and self-respect. The Haitians’ furious grassroots resistance forced the cancellation of Sunday’s run-off election; “Sweet Mickey” is slated to leave office in less than two weeks; and negotiations are underway to form an interim government that would hold clean elections. The struggle now is for Haiti’s poor majority to make its voice heard above the growling of the U.S. imperialist occupiers and their hired Haitian flunkies – some of whom are real killers, whose names aren’t funny at all.

Where there's a buck to be made or an individual to be killed, you will find the Clintons.

Somehow, Hillary's not using that for a campaign slogan.

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



Thursday, January 28, 2016.  Chaos and violence continue, the Iraqi government continues persecuting Sunnis, Susan Sarandon speaks out for Bernie Sanders, and much more.


Today, the US Defense Dept announced:

Strikes in Iraq
Attack, fighter and remotely piloted aircraft and rocket artillery conducted 15 strikes in Iraq, coordinated with and in support of Iraq’s government:

-- Near Baghdadi, three strikes struck two separate ISIL tactical units, suppressed an ISIL mortar position, and destroyed three ISIL rocket caches, two ISIL rocket rails, four ISIL mortar tubes, an ISIL heavy machine gun and an ISIL vehicle.

-- Near Habbaniyah, a strike struck an ISIL tactical unit.

-- Near Ramadi, eight strikes struck four separate ISIL tactical units, denied ISIL access to terrain, and destroyed six ISIL vehicle bombs, an ISIL vehicle, an ISIL staging area, an ISIL fighting position and an ISIL mortar position.

-- Near Sinjar, two strikes struck an ISIL tactical unit and destroyed an ISIL heavy machine gun, an ISIL light machine gun and five ISIL fighting positions.

-- Near Sultan Abdallah, a strike destroyed an ISIL vehicle.


Task force officials define a strike as one or more kinetic events that occur in roughly the same geographic location to produce a single, sometimes cumulative, effect. Therefore, officials explained, a single aircraft delivering a single weapon against a lone ISIL vehicle is one strike, but so is multiple aircraft delivering dozens of weapons against buildings, vehicles and weapon systems in a compound, for example, having the cumulative effect of making those targets harder or impossible for ISIL to use. Accordingly, officials said, they do not report the number or type of aircraft employed in a strike, the number of munitions dropped in each strike, or the number of individual munition impact points against a target.


Over 16 months after Barack Obama began bombing Iraq, there are no new ideas.

No positive results and no new ideas.

Unable to turn the mythical corner in Iraq, he does as Bully Boy Bush did before him, send more US troops into Iraq.


SPUTNIK reports, "US Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter is prepared to ask for additional troops in Iraq if additional actions need to be undertaken against the Islamic State terror group, US Department of Defense spokesperson Peter Cook told reporters on Wednesday."  Cook stated that there are currently 3700 US troops in Iraq.  Lisa Ferdinando (FORT CAMPBELL COURIER) adds, "The United States potentially will make recommendations to position U.S. troops with Iraqi security forces in northern Iraq to support the next phase of isolating the key city of Mosul, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said."


The continued talk of sending more US troops to Iraq comes as there's yet another US death in Iraq.

STARS & STRIPES reports, "A coalition servicemember supporting operations against Islamic State militants in Iraq and Syria died of a noncombat-related injury in Iraq, the Combined Joint Task Force in charge of Operation Inherent Resolve said in a statement."

Back in November, Pvt Chrisopher J. Castaneda died at Al Asad Air Base from a "non-combat related incident."

These are deaths in Barack's endless wars.

His endless and illegal wars.

There's no authorization from Congress for what he's ordering in Iraq and Syria.


The issue of the lack of authorization was raised in today's US State Dept press briefing moderated by spokesperson Mark Toner.



QUESTION: About the authorization for the use of military force against ISIL that Mitch McConnell put forward, do you have any concerns about it being effectively an international martial law declaration where the U.S. could take action anywhere with any number of troops and for any duration of time? Do you find anything concerning about this kind of authorization?


MR TONER: I haven’t looked at the draft legislation. I’m sure that we’re working with Congress. I’d also refer you to the White House on some of these issues, so I don’t have any particular comment to that. What we want to see, as in any case like this, is a robust debate within Congress, and we’re ready to look at any legislation once it passes.


QUESTION: It offers sweeping powers to the President. Do you think – would you like the next President of the U.S. to have such an authorization?


MR TONER: Again, without having it in front of me, without having studied it, I’m not going to offer a judgment on it.
Please.


QUESTION: Do you feel that this is a step to sort of augment the President’s strategy in the fight against ISIS, Mitch McConnell’s --


MR TONER: Look, again, this is something we’ve been back and forth with on Congress many times. It’s an ongoing discussion. What I think we want to see is, as I said, is a robust debate within Congress on the AUMF going forward. We would welcome that.


QUESTION: And in the absence of a different kind of authorization, is the Administration – would the Administration be inclined to accept this sweeping one?


MR TONER: Again, we’re looking into the legislation, working with Congress, but nothing to announce on that.
Please.


QUESTION: But the point is you still don’t think you need this anyways, right? You’re – you have a legal war as far as you’re concerned.



MR TONER: We believe we have legal justification, yes.



He believes wrong according to most legal scholars.


Being on the wrong side?








  • A truly horrific video circulating showing a Shia militiaman disemboweling &/or skinning a Sunni corpse in , with 2 other men beheaded.



  • These militias are part of the Iraqi government.  Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi brought them in under the umbrella of the 'Popular Mobilization.'

    And they carry out crimes against Sunni citizens.

    Repeatedly.

    Earlier this week,  Human Rights Watch published "Iraq: Civilians Pay Price of Conflict:"


     Iraqi security forces and pro-government militias committed possible war crimes during 2015 in their fight against the extremist group Islamic State, also known as ISIS, by unlawfully demolishing buildings in recaptured areas and forcibly disappearing residents, Human Rights Watch said today in its World Report 2016.
    Iran, the United States, Russia, the United Kingdom, Germany, France, and other countries provided military support to the Iraqi government despite a continued absence of credible accountability for those responsible for these crimes.
    ISIS carried out numerous atrocities, including summary executions and indiscriminate bombings.

    “ISIS and Iraq’s government-affiliated militias are both committing atrocities against civilians with evident support from their commanders,” said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director. “Making matters worse – much worse – is the fact that Iraq’s justice system isn’t providing any semblance of accountability.”


    As we stated last week, the Islamic State is a terrorist organization.

    Terrorist organizations commit crimes.  They do awful things.

    That's what a terrorist organization does and is.

    But a government is supposed to protect its citizens.

    When a government fails to do that or, worse, when it targets and persecutes its citizens, that's what's known as news.


    Was it treated as news?

    Before we answer that question, let's remember last week, when the United Nations issued a report making similar points, the western press ran with condemnations of the terrorist group the Islamic State while avoiding the crimes of the Iraqi government.


    Tuesday, the 19th, when the report was released, it was one piece after another about the Islamic State.  By the end of last week, only Aisha Maniar (TRUTHOUT) had bothered to cover the reports of the Iraqi government targeting civilians.

    Was it any different this week?

    Yes.

    Without the Islamic State to focus on, the so-called press ignored the Human Rights Watch report.

    Ignored it.

    One western outlet after another took a pass.

    A government is supposed to protect its citizens.

    Repeating, when a government fails to do that or, worse, when it targets and persecutes its citizens, that's what's known as news.

    The US government has thrown its lot in with a government that attacks its own people.

    That's in violation with many US laws, with international law and with many treaties the US is a signatory to.


    And even so-called 'realists' -- people who tolerate any broken law if they think it results in some advantage -- can't argue that this benefits anyone.


    The persecution that's taking place?

    It's been going on for years and it's what fueled the rise of the Islamic State in Iraq.


    Related . . .


    Two Sundays, Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) broke the news that 3 Americans were missing in Iraq.  CBS NEWS and AP then reported, "A group of Americans who went missing over the weekend in Iraq were kidnapped from their interpreter's home in Baghdad, according to an Iraqi government intelligence official."  Susannah George (AP) reported   that "two powerful Shiite militias are top suspects" in the kidnapping:  Asaib Ahl al-Haq and Saraya al-Salam -- both linked to Iran.


    Today, Imran Kahn (AL JAZEERA) reports:

    The abducted Americans are only a small fraction of the people that go missing in Iraq every day.
    Accurate figures on kidnappings are impossible to come by as the Iraqi government doesn't maintain a database on crime. One member of the Iraqi parliament told Al Jazeera that the amount of kidnappings has skyrocketed over the last six months and is now in the thousands.
    In Sadr City we spoke Hussien Sarmad. He has witnessed intense activity in his neighbourhood over the last 10 days. He described to us late-night raids, helicopters buzzing over homes and counter-terrorism forces in the streets.
    He is angry that when Iraqis are kidnapped from his neighbourhood, no one seems to care. "It's funny, all this fuss for three Americans. The security forces are turning our neighbourhood upside down. I doubt that they are even here," Sarmad said.
    It's a common sentiment among Iraqi families who fall victim to this sort of crime.
    The search for the kidnappers doesn't involve the military. Often times families of the victims receive no help from the police or international community and are left to deal with the threats from the kidnappers themselves.


    This is yet another indictment of a government -- the Iraqi government -- which refuses to protect its citizens.  It just doesn't care.

    It has to care about Americans because without US support the puppet government out of Baghdad collapses.


    Turning to the US political scene, Academy Award winning actress Susan Sarandon is in the news.

    She's supporting US Senator Bernie Sanders in the race for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination.







  • Spent some great time sticking labels on flyers at Waterloo HQ. Their commitment is so inspiring.
    Embedded image permalink



  • Bernie's chief rival for the nomination appears to be War Monger Hillary Clinton.  Jessica Chasmar (WASHINGTON TIMES) reports:



    Ms. Sarandon said Mrs. Clinton lost her support after voting for the Iraq War in 2002 as a New York senator.
    “The biggest foreign decision that had to be made in terms of foreign policy was whether or not to go into Iraq and go into war, and she failed that test,” she told the Daily Mail.
    Mrs. Clinton went on to be secretary of state, “but what has she done that we’re bragging about? How has she led?” Ms. Sarandon asked.



    She didn't lead on equality.

    Until 2013, she was a foe of marriage equality.  Long after others in elected office -- including US Vice President Joe Biden -- had taken a leadership role arguing for equality, Hillary was still opposing equality.

    Susan noted Hillary's cowardice on the issue of equality.  Matthew Clark (SUN TIMES) notes:

    “It is one thing to be for gay rights and gay marriage once everybody else is for it,” Sarandon said. “That’s not difficult.”
    After her speech, Sarandon spoke with the Daily Mail, expounding on the idea that Clinton hasn’t been a leader in the LGBT rights movement, despite receiving an endorsement from the Human Rights Campaign.
    “There’s a number of issues where she has come around but she very clearly equivocated or was not there in the beginning.

    “She was not, and that’s a matter of record, and yes she has come around. But my point is, it’s great that she came around, but wouldn’t it be great to be a leader instead of a follower, especially if you’re going to hold the highest office in the land?”


    Let's close with Trina's "3 reasons we need to vote for Hillary Clinton"

    1) Overpopulation.

    The earth is small, the population is growing.

    A President Hillary Clinton would mean many, many wars and many, many, many deaths.

    Hillary is the cure.

    2) Lying will be accepted.

    Hillary will not just popularize lying, she'll make it socially acceptable.

    We'll no longer have to get on to our children for lying.

    If we do, they'll just tell us that they're acting "presidential."


    3) Equality is scary to some.

    Hillary will ensure that vast poverty continues in the United States -- if only to assist her Wall Street friends.


    Those are three reasons to vote for Hillary -- for some people.

    They are among the three reasons I will not vote for Hillary.






    Tuesday, January 26, 2016

    She's twisted

    Hillary Clinton's taken to declaring that the country needs "more love and kindness."

    No, she's not announcing that she's out of the race -- that would be too much kindness, apparently.

    But what if, Jesse Walker (Reason) wonders, Hillary was speaking honestly:




    But a ruthless pol whose private sense of self really looks like this, a ruthless pol who genuinely believes a campaign to elect her president is "about" "inspiring" "more kindness"? That's sort of sad, and it's a little megalomaniacal too. What the world needs now may be love, sweet love, but Washington isn't going to provide it; of all the things that might inspire people to do more to help their friends and neighbors, surely the presidency is nowhere near the top of the list. Yet here Clinton is casting her candidacy as a kind of national encounter group, with herself as our therapist-in-chief.
    Add the fact that this particular politician is better known for war than warmth, and we find ourselves in deeply dark territory. President Clinton lecturing us on love and kindness as she drops bombs on Syria or Yemen—that would be bad enough. But if the lecture is sincere, if she sees each airstrike as an act of love: Now that would be unbearable.

    Hillary's insanity threatens us all.


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



    Tuesday, January 26, 2016. Chaos and violence continue,  the spin continues, US troops keep returning to Iraq, Hillary Clinton says her vote for the Iraq War was a mistake because of Bully Boy Bush, and much more.



    Oh, how the whores lie.

    I don't just mean the Bully Boy Bush whores.

    But I do remember a woman practically wetting herself while he was speaking on television and basically declaring him god.  I thought those Bush zombies were the worst the United States would ever see.

    But they had nothing on the Cult of St. Barack.

    And today I just don't have the stomach for either of these camps and their never ending lies and endless squabbles as they insist the other one is responsible for what's wrong in Iraq.

    There's more than enough blame to go around.

    NEWSHOUNDS was always a partisan front pretending to be about ethics and issues. The last eight years have not been easy on them.

    Because War Criminal _____ has returned to the public eye in a desperate bid for sordid coin, NEWSHOUNDS is suddenly interested in Iraq.

    Or 'interested' in Iraq.

    They don't give a damn about Iraq.

    Partisan whores on either side never gave a damn about Iraq.


    NEWSHOUNDS slams the ridiculous Sean Hannity (he's as ridiculous as NEWSHOUNDS itself) for blaming Iraq's problems on Barack Obama:





    Whatever that job was supposed to be after more than eight years of war. 
    More than 8 years?

    They're ending the Iraq War in 2011.
    How nice for them.
    In the real world, of course, the Iraq War has not ended.
    In the real world, of course, Barack's drawdown (there was no withdrawal) was followed by publicly sending US troops into Iraq.
    A process that continues.
    Four years after last homecoming, rocket battalion headed back to
     
     
     
    The Iraq War has not ended.
    The US positioned one portion of the Shi'ites in charge.  They remain in Iraq to prop up that government.
    That's the reality.
    More reality, things are getting worse.
    The U.S. is headed toward deeper military involvement in Iraq, Syria and Libya to fight the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS), according to President Obama's former national security adviser Tom Donilon.  
    "My own judgment is ... we're going to become more deeply involved in both Iraq and Syria going forward here to address the challenge," Donilon said at a Politico event Monday evening. 
    Donilon, who served as national security adviser between 2010 and 2013, said U.S. forces are "going to have to become deeply involved" in helping Iraqi security forces retake Mosul, the second largest city in Iraq.
    Reality escapes NEWSHOUNDS which whines:

    And, of course, nobody pointed out that when Obama left, “Essentially, he implemented the phase-out plan laid out by Bush.”
     

    Is that what Barack did?

    Because that's not what he led Americans to believe he would do in 2008 while campaigning.

    Back then, he was saying the US would be out of Iraq in 16 months of his being sworn in.


    (Samantha Power resigned from his campaign after she told the BBC that he did not mean these promises and he'd decide what he'd actually do after he was in the White House.)

    When we go around speaking about Iraq, from time to time we'll encounter a Cult of St. Barack-er who will insist to me that Barack had to break his promise because of the Status Of Forces Agreement Bully Boy Bush pushed through in November of 2008.

    There are two main problems with that lie.

    The first is that Barack (and Joe Biden) had campaigned insisting that any such agreement would have to have the consent of the US Senate -- because it would be a treaty.

    When Bully Boy Bush pushed that through -- well after the 2008 presidential election -- Barack could have stuck to his guns (yes, I'm laughing at that notion as well) and Dems in Congress -- who already were on record opposing any agreement that did not have Congressional approval -- would have helped torpedo it.

    Barack didn't do that.

    Barack embraced that Status Of Forces Agreement.

    That means Bully Boy Bush may have birthed the SOFA but Barack happily adopted it.

    The second problem is where I usually lose the ability to be nice.

    Because we explained the SOFA here and we were right.

    All the opinion-ators were wrong.

    Various news outlets got it wrong.

    Contract law.  Know it or just sit your tired and uninformed ass down.

    No one needs your thoughts if you don't know contract law.

    Not about what a contract means.

    And the idiots who say Barack was bound by it?

    I don't have time for their stupidity.

    There were out clauses in the contract.

    If I was in the mood to still spoon feed The Cult of St. Barack's ignorant and lazy ass, I'd quote from it.

    But I just don't care anymore because you cannot teach the willfully stupid.

    Barack broke his campaign promise (one of many) and did so to use the SOFA as he excuse if anything went wrong in Iraq.


    Of the War Hawk whose wares we're not promoting, NEWSHOUNDS whines:


    This is the guy who was part of the de-Baathification that caused so much destabilization in the first place. 
    Wait?

    Do those idiots and liars at NEWSHOUNDS think de-Ba'athification ended?


    It didn't.

    It was supposed to.

    National reconciliation was put into writing, in the Bully Boy Bush "benchmarks" of 2007.  The November 2006 mid-terms had put Democrats in charge of both houses of Congress.

    They had campaigned with promises of accountability and ending the war.

    Now, afraid the Dems would pull funding for the Iraq War, the BBB White House came up with a series of benchmarks that the Iraqi government would have to meet to continue to receive US tax dollars and support.

    These benchmarks would demonstrate progress in Iraq.

    But there was no progress.

    And though Nouri al-Maliki signed off on the benchmarks in 2007, he never met them.

    Not in 2007.

    Not in 2008.

    Not in 2009.

    Not in 2010.  (Key year that, remember it, we will be coming back to it.)

    Not in 2011.

    Not in 2012.

    Not in 2013.

    And not in 2014 (his final year as prime minister).

    It wasn't met in 2015 either.

    This is why the Islamic State found support or apathy in parts of Iraq and was able to establish a base in the country.

    The persecution of the Sunnis led some Sunnis to support anyone who would stand up to this and led others to look the other way.

    And Barack's responsible for that.

    He's had two terms to do something about that and refused.


    As we noted this week at Third in "Editorial: Barack's not even trying"


    There is no US diplomacy in Iraq.
    Last week, REUTERS reported, "The U.S. government has approved the probable sale to Iraq of smart bombs, AIM-9M Sidewinder missiles and other munitions for use on its fleet of 36 F-16 fighter jets in a deal valued at up to $1.95 billion, the U.S. Defense Department announced on Wednesday."
    Barack didn't use Iraq's desire for the deal to force the Iraqi government to work on national reconciliation or on a national guard or on any political solutions.
    He's not even trying.
    He clearly doesn't even care.
    No one, not even Barack, could be that inept.
    No one.





    Now we said we'd come back to 2010.

    We're at that point now.

    In 2010, Iraq held elections.

    Though the media predicted Nouri al-Maliki would win by a large margin . . .

    he lost.


    And then he refused to step down.

    Iraq's "political stalemate" is the 8 months the country comes to a standstill because he will not step down as prime minister.


    Barack Obama, that great defender of freedom and democracy, does what?


    Supports the winner and insists Nouri step down?


    No.


    He had US officials negotiate a contract (The Erbil Agreement) that went around the will of the Iraqi people and gave Nouri al-Maliki a second term.

    That's reality.

    And what Nouri did in his second term took Iraq even closer to the brink.

    That's on Barack.  Bully Boy Bush wasn't in the White House.

    There's plenty of blame to place on both men.

    Unless you embrace false gods and your false idol (Bush or Barack) is the only thing you hold dear.


    Here's some of the violence inflicted upon Iraq today per the US Defense Dept's announcement:


    Strikes in Iraq
    Attack, fighter, and remotely piloted aircraft conducted 15 strikes in Iraq, coordinated with and in support of the Iraqi government:
    -- Near Huwayjah, a strike suppressed an ISIL mortar position.
    -- Near Habbaniyah, a strike struck an ISIL tactical unit and destroyed five ISIL mortar systems.
    -- Near Kisik, a strike struck an ISIL tactical unit and destroyed an ISIL fighting position.
    -- Near Mosul, two strikes struck an ISIL tactical unit and an ISIL weapons storage facility and destroyed four ISIL fighting positions and an ISIL weapons cache.
    -- Near Ramadi, nine strikes struck an ISIL tactical unit, denied ISIL access to terrain and destroyed an ISIL staging area, two ISIL tactical vehicles, an ISIL vehicle, an ISIL armored bulldozer and an ISIL fuel tanker.
    -- Near Sinjar, a strike struck an ISIL tactical unit and destroyed an ISIL fighting position.

    Task force officials define a strike as one or more kinetic events that occur in roughly the same geographic location to produce a single, sometimes cumulative, effect. Therefore, officials explained, a single aircraft delivering a single weapon against a lone ISIL vehicle is a strike, but so is multiple aircraft delivering dozens of weapons against buildings, vehicles and weapon systems in a compound, for example, having the cumulative effect of making those targets harder or impossible for ISIL to use. Accordingly, officials said, they do not report the number or type of aircraft employed in a strike, the number of munitions dropped in each strike, or the number of individual munition impact points against a target.

    In related news, Dan Lamothe (WASHINGTON POST) reports, "As the U.S. military prepares to expand its operations against the Islamic State militant group in Iraq and Syria, it has altered how and when it discloses sensitive information about when it kills civilians with airstrikes."

    The changes will further obscure reality.

    Lamothe notes CENTCOM spokesperson Patrick Ryder:

    Ryder added that the process to declassify and redact documents associated with the cases can take months, so it made sense to release the limited information available now separately, and ahead of the documents. But the decision also means the documents will likely only be released in response to Freedom of Information Act requests, which have historically taken Central Command many months, and sometimes years, to respond to fully.


    I guess you could say CENTCOM is pulling a full-on Hillary.

    Hillary Clinton, the anti-transparency candidate.  Her e-mails, that she insisted she wanted the American people to see, are still not fully released.  And her speeches to Wall Street -- the same Wall Street she swears she'll reign in -- are off limits to the public.


    Hillary Clinton declared on CNN last night, "I have a much longer history than one vote, which I said was a mistake because of the way that it was done and how the Bush administration handled it."

    She said it was a mistake.

    But she can't shut her damn mouth, can she?

    She's the liar who can't take accountability.

    "I wrecked your car."

    "But if that other car hadn't been on the road . . ."

    "I have a much longer history than one vote, which I said was a mistake because of the way that it was done and how the Bush administration handled it."

    Her vote was a mistake.

    And then she adds "because of the way that it was done and how the Bush administration handled it."

    No, you damn liar.

    Iraq had no WMDs.

    Iraq was not a threat.

    These are the lies Hillary embraced with her vote.

    And after saying she dealt with her vote in her last ghost written book -- no, she didn't deal with it -- she now wants to prove that she's still a liar.

    "I have a much longer history than one vote, which I said was a mistake because of the way that it was done and how the Bush administration handled it."

    The Iraq War was wrong.

    No matter how it had been executed, it would have remained wrong.

    It was built on lies.

    Stop blaming everyone else for your poor judgment, take accountability.


    Jeff Stein (VOX) reports:

    Bernie Sanders went after Hillary Clinton's record on Iraq at a CNN town hall event Monday night, attacking Clinton's vote to invade more aggressively than in previous debates.
    "I have tried — as I hope you all know — not to run a negative campaign ... to keep this discussion on a high level where we debate the issues facing this country," Sanders said, standing up from his chair at the forum, held in Iowa a week before primary voting begins.

    ""The truth is that the most significant vote and issue regarding foreign policy that we have seen in this country in modern history is the vote on the War in Iraq," Sanders said. "I voted against the War in Iraq ... Hillary Clinton voted for the war in Iraq."
    "I said, 'No, I think that war is a dumb idea.'"



    Hillary voted for it.  She supported it.


    Stephen Zunes (FPIF) points out:

    The 2016 Democratic presidential campaign is coming down to a race between Hillary Clinton, who supported the Bush Doctrine and its call for invading countries that are no threat to us regardless of the consequences, and Bernie Sanders, who supported the broad consensus of Middle East scholars and others familiar with the region who recognized that such an invasion would be disastrous.
    There’s no question that the United States is long overdue to elect a woman head of state. But electing Hillary Clinton — or anyone else who supported the invasion of Iraq — would be sending a dangerous message that reckless global militarism needn’t prevent someone from becoming president, even as the nominee of the more liberal of the two major parties.

    It also raises this ominous scenario: If Clinton were elected president despite having voted to give President Bush the authority, based on false pretenses, to launch a war of aggression — in violation of the UN Charter, the Nuremberg Principles, and common sense — what would stop her from demanding that Congress give her the same authority?











    kristina wong





    Monday, January 25, 2016

    How they lie

    Ben Schreiner (COUNTERPUNCH) notes how PBS works to distort support for single-payer:


    On Friday’s broadcast, during the program’s weekly left/right debate segment, featuring New York Times columnist David Brooks on the right and Washington Post columnist Ruth Marcus (seen burnishing her “progressive” credentials here) on the “left,” the topic of discussion turned to the differing health care proposals of Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders.
    Sanders supports a Medicare for all system, while Clinton supports maintaining the status quo of the 2010 Affordable Care Act.  But with Sanders now surging in both Iowa and New Hampshire, the health care schism between the Democratic front-runners has taken center stage in the campaign, with Clinton camp surrogates attacking Sanders by going so far as to incredulously assert that Sanders, by seeking to expand health care to all Americans, is really threatening to strip health coverage from millions.
    Taking up this debate between the two Democratic candidates, Brooks commented Friday on the Newshour that, “They also had an interesting debate about health care reform. And that was her [Clinton] making an incremental argument, we have got to make our changes gradually, and him [Sanders] making a radical argument. And so it was interesting. That was a substantive, real argument about how you change any system.”
    Newshour co-anchor Judy Woodruff then interjected to clarify, “…essentially, the argument is whether you just wipe away…what we have done and you go to a single-payer health care system, which most Americans say they don’t want… [emphasis added]”

    Wait, what?  Most Americans say they don’t want a single-payer health care system?  Where did Woodruff pull that one from?

    PBS has an estranged relationship with the truth.


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



    January 25, 2016.  Chaos and violence continue, the White House plans to send more US troops to Iraq, the US bombing of Iraq continues, and much more.




    Today, the US Defense Dept announced:


    Strikes in Iraq
    Coalition military forces used rocket artillery and attack, fighter, and remotely piloted aircraft to conduct 16 strikes in Iraq, coordinated with and in support of the Iraqi government:
    -- Near Baghdadi, two strikes destroyed two ISIL weapons caches and an ISIL bunker.
    -- Near Kisik, two strikes destroyed three separate ISIL fighting positions and suppressed an ISIL light machine gun.
    -- Near Mosul, four strikes struck three separate ISIL tactical units and destroyed an ISIL heavy machine gun, an ISIL vehicle, an ISIL communications facility, and four ISIL fighting positions.
    -- Near Ramadi, six strikes struck two separate ISIL tactical units, cratered an ISIL-used earthen bridge, and destroyed an ISIL barge, an ISIL sniper position, two ISIL bunkers, two ISIL mortar positions, an ISIL weapons cache, three ISIL buildings and three ISIL tactical vehicles.
    -- Near Sinjar, a strike struck an ISIL tactical unit and destroyed an ISIL fighting position.
    -- Near Tal Afar, a strike destroyed seven ISIL fighting positions.

    Task force officials define a strike as one or more kinetic events that occur in roughly the same geographic location to produce a single, sometimes cumulative, effect. Therefore, officials explained, a single aircraft delivering a single weapon against a lone ISIL vehicle is a strike, but so is multiple aircraft delivering dozens of weapons against buildings, vehicles and weapon systems in a compound, for example, having the cumulative effect of making those targets harder or impossible for ISIL to use. Accordingly, officials said, they do not report the number or type of aircraft employed in a strike, the number of munitions dropped in each strike, or the number of individual munition impact points against a target.



    Nothing changes.

    And Barack Obama's 'strategy' is not working.

    Which is why he's calling for even more of the same: More US troops in Iraq.


    Former US Ambassador John Bolton Tweets:






  • There are roughly 3,500 Americans in already and some unknown number in and Secretary of Defense Ash Carter wants to send more.


  • There are over 3,5000 US troops in Iraq.  The 3,500 figure does not cover the US Special Forces.



    And even more US troops are being considered for Iraq.

    The US Defense Dept noted over the weekend:


    The United States potentially will make recommendations to position U.S. troops with Iraqi security forces in northern Iraq to support the next phase of isolating the key city of Mosul, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said.
    Marine Corps Gen. Joseph F. Dunford Jr., who met here with his French counterpart for talks focusing on the multinational effort against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, told reporters traveling with him that the U.S. troops would be placed where they can best support the Iraqi forces in the fight.
    "We're about winning. ... We want to have the Iraqis win," he said.

    The details are still being worked out, noted Dunford, who said he will make the recommendations to President Barack Obama based on what U.S. commanders and Iraqi security forces identify as the type of support the United States can provide in a plan to retake Mosul.



    Richard Sisk (MILITARY TIMES) reports:

    Defense Secretary Ashton Carter has again addressed the controversial issue of U.S. "boots on the ground" in Iraq and Syria, saying that more American troops would be deployed in an "enabling" role.
    "Boots on the ground? We have 3,500 boots on the ground" in Iraq and "we're looking for opportunities to do more," Carter told CNN's Fareed Zakaria in an interview last week at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
    Carter acknowledged there are about 50 U.S. Special Forces troops serving as advisers in Syria to local forces opposed to the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, in addition to the 3,500-3,600 American troops serving as trainers and advisors to the Iraqi Security Forces.



    Turning to the issue of the missing Americans in Iraq . . .


    Two Sundays ago, Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) broke the news that 3 Americans were missing in Iraq. Then  CBS NEWS and AP reported, "A group of Americans who went missing over the weekend in Iraq were kidnapped from their interpreter's home in Baghdad, according to an Iraqi government intelligence official."  Susannah George (AP) reported Thursday morning that "two powerful Shiite militias are top suspects" in the kidnapping:  Asaib Ahl al-Haq and Saraya al-Salam -- both linked to Iran.

    Yesterday, right wingers Max Boot and Michael Pregent took to THE WASHINGTON POST to accuse Barack of underplaying the kidnapping of the three Americans:


     On Jan. 16, a group of militants driving SUVs and wearing military uniforms kidnapped three Americans in Baghdad. At least two of the men were apparently working as trainers for the Counter Terrorism Service, Iraq’s elite special operations unit, which is not only the most effective part of its military (it led the recent assault on Ramadi) but also virtually the only part of it not infiltrated by Shiite militias. Various media outlets are reporting that the Americans were taken to Sadr City, a Shiite stronghold, and that AAH is most likely responsible, possibly in coordination with another Iranian-backed militia, Saraya al-Salam. 
    AAH is a wholly owned subsidiary of Iran’s Quds Force. It is inconceivable that it could kidnap and hold Americans — a course of action with significant international repercussions — without at least the acquiescence, and probably the active support, of Tehran. Yet the Obama administration is doing all it can to obfuscate that reality. Reuters cited “U.S. government sources” in reporting that “Washington had no reason to believe Tehran was involved in the kidnapping and did not believe the trio were being held in Iran, which borders Iraq.”


    Last week, Haider al-Abadi spoke to the issue.

    The prime minister of Iraq had no public statement when the Americans disappeared.  He only found his voice after people began linking the kidnappers to Iran.

    Haider then rushed in to insist that Iran was innocent and that maybe the three Americans weren't even kidnapped.


    Today, Jay Solomon (WALL ST. JOURNAL) reports:


    The suspected kidnappings in Iraq serve as a fresh test for the White House’s efforts to strengthen its ties with Tehran in the wake of the recent prisoner swap—in which five U.S. citizens were freed from Iranian captivity in exchange for the release of seven Iranian nationals held by the U.S.—and July’s landmark nuclear agreement, current and former U.S. officials said.
    The Obama administration is seeking to build Tehran into a partner in combating Islamic State, and in ending wars in Syria and Yemen, but has been receiving conflicting signals from Iran’s theocratic leaders and military.
    Mr. Kerry and other Obama administration officials have said there are no indications Iran played a role in abducting the Americans. They also haven’t ruled out the possibility that the disappearances resulted from criminal activity common in Baghdad. But they have said Tehran may be able to use its influence with the Iraqi militias to gain the Americans’ release.

    “I asked him [Zarif]…if Iran knew any way to provide help or there were some ways they could have an impact on getting the right kind of outcome,” Mr. Kerry said after his meeting with the Iranian diplomat in Davos. “I asked him to give us that input.”



    This morning, RT Tweets the following development in Iraq:




    doesn’t need international help to fight - FM al-Jaafari


    Well that is good to know.  It's an oil rich state and the oil brings in billions each year, so it's good to know the US-propped up government of Iraq is finally self-sufficient.


    Or something.









  • Development Bank provides 500 million euros to



  • And then there's this:


    In , $4mil from enables to rebuild areas liberated from ISIS:
    Embedded image permalink


    And then there's this:









  • The Iraqi government is claiming record highs in oil pumped in central and southern Iraq for the month of December.  Where are the billions?

    When protesters took to the street, US-installed prime minister Haider al-Abadi insisted he would end corruption.

    He didn't.

    And one of the richest countries in the world continues to fail at providing for its people because the corrupt officials continue to steal the money.

    Remember this Tweet from last week:



  • has $2b USD left of its budget! We are in January. 2016 is a game-changer.



  • Where has the money gone?


    And remember the failure to pay the Kurdistan Regional Government its shares of the federal monies?


    Where has the money gone?



    At NPR, Alice Fordham offers a shallow 'analysis' which includes:


    In 2014 Iraq lost a lot of its territory to ISIS and had to start fighting back and looking after millions of civilians driven from their homes in the north and the west of the country.

    At the same time, oil prices started to fall. Oil is now going for around $30 a barrel, down from about $100 when the prices began to crash in the summer of 2014.

    Basically, all Iraq's government income comes from oil.

    To help pay for the war, the U.S. has offered loans to cover defense equipment, but it doesn't cover salaries — either for soldiers or for the millions of Iraqis on the government payroll for jobs or pensions.


    About 4.5 million workers are on the government payroll, with 3.7 million more receiving pensions. And people have come to expect other benefits like food rations and cheap gas.


    Fordham never notes the annual oil revenues, the refusal of the central government in Baghdad to pay the KRG its share of federal revenues, etc.





    iraq