Thursday, November 14, 2013

The NewsHour's nonsense

babs visis dc

That's  Isaiah's The World Today Just Nuts "Babs Visits DC" from Tuesday.

The misinformation about Lara Logan continues.  I just left the following up at The NewsHour (PBS):



  • Ann Wilson
    I'm appalled by PBS's 'discussion' because it's dishonest. The report was flawed. The Morgan Jones aspect was retracted. That was about of the report which no one noted in the discussion. Equally true, no one's noted that the 'journalists' demanding her head on a platter -- like David Corn -- refuse to do their own corrections. Corn wrongly wrote -- in three different pieces over a 2 week period -- that Bill Clinton pardoned two women when, in fact, Clinton commuted their sentences. I was one of the many calling Mother Jones about that error and one of the many that was told by the woman answering the phone that it didn't matter and everyone was too busy working on stories to do a correction.
    Finally Corn corrected one of his three posts . . . by insulting Clinton for pardoning Marc Rich.
    Why doesn't PBS take a look at her critics and how they 'correct.' Greg Mitchell? He corrects by changing his posts and not noting he's changed it. That allows him not to ever make mistakes, I guess.
    Those unfamiliar can see this (which has screen shots of the before and after):
    http://thirdestatesundayreview...
    I have no problem with a serious discussion of the issue. I do have a problem with a bunch of unethical people trying to pretend like they've got ethics.
    And I have a problem with a PBS discussion that implies Logan's report was all wrong when three-quarters of it are not wrong.




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

    Wednesday, November 13, 2013.  Chaos and violence continue, another mayor is assassinated in Iraq, Congress holds a hearing on Iraq, Brett McGurk attempts to lie about a 'discussion,' Iraq War vet Mike Prysner reflects on the war, and more.




    Due to his own texts, we know that Gina Chon gave Brett McGurk blue balls before they both decided to cheat on their spouses in Iraq, the question is: Who stuffed Brett full of crap?

    Judging by his demeanor and statements to the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on the Middle East and North Africa, Brett stuffed himself and goodness how the nonsense poured out of him.

    US House Rep Ileana Ros-Lehtinen is the Subcommittee Chair and US House Rep Ted Deutch is the Ranking Member.  In addition to those two, US House Reps David Cicilline, Steve Chabot, Juan Vargas, Joe Wilson, Grace Meng, Brad Schneider, and Dana Rohrabacher were present.  I hope I didn't miss anyone.

    The way this is going to play out is that we're going to focus on some of the hearing today and some of it tomorrow.  I also attended a VA hearing today and would like to work that in but with two snapshots being needed for Subcommittee hearing (and that may go into three), it may be next week before we get to the VA hearing.




    Chair Ileana Ros-Lehtinen:  Before we begin this afternoon's hearing I will hand Deputy Assistant Secretary McGurk an envelope and ask that he please deliver it to Secretary [of State John] Kerry.  These are my previous letters to Kerry pleading for the United States to help the residents of Camp Ashraf and Camp Liberty and to prevent another deadly attack like the one from September at Camp Ashraf which left 52 dead and 7 hostages who are still missing. There's also a video taken by the residents of Camp Ashraf during the last assault that I urge Secretary Kerry and all members of this Subcommittee to view.  And finally, a letter to Secretary Kerry regarding the return of Iraqi-Jewish community artifacts that are now on display at The National Archives.  In 2003, US and coalition forces found a  trove of Iraqi-Jewish cultural artifacts being warehoused in the basement of Saddam Hussein's secret police headquarters.  And the US subsequently brought them here, to The National Archives, for restoration, preservation and display; however, these artifacts are scheduled to be returned to Iraq where the government will claim possession of these artifacts which were unjustly taken from the Iraqi-Jewish community.  The US government must not return those stolen treasures to the Iraqi government but instead should facilitate their return to their rightful owners or descendants.  Therefore, on behalf of me, Congressman Steve Israel and over 40 of our House colleagues, we ask you, Deputy Secretary McGurk, to personally deliver this letter to Secretary Kerry and the Dept of State ensures that the Iraqi-Jewish community does not get robbed again of its collective memory and treasures. 



    That was the Chair speaking at the start of the hearing.  After opening statements, Chair Ileanna Ros-Lehtinen started by noting the contents of the envelope she was asking McGurk to pass on to Kerry and asked about the issues she'd noted above.

    McGurk elected to go with the issue of the Jewish archives.




    Brett McGurk:  I'll start with the Jewish archives.  As you know, the archives are on display at The National Archives. I went to see them last week.  It is a really remarkable display -- both about the Jewish heritage and the tragic history of this community in Iraq.  Uhm, we are also in a daily conversation with the government of Iraq, uhm, and with the Jewish community here in Iraq -- uh, this morning, I was in communication with Rabbi Baker from the American Jewish Council.  I've also been in regular conversation with Ambassador Fahly who's here, uh, representing the Iraqi government.  Uh, as you know, we have a commitment from an agreement in 2003 to return, uh, the archives to Iraq, uh, next summer -- by the end of next summer.  Uh, we have paid for Iraqi archivists who are here now training with The National Archives to make sure uh that these archives are preserved -- and protected.


    At this point, the Chair noted that her time was brief and she needed him to touch on her other topics and that she was sure others present would ask about the archives.


    Brett McGurk:  I'll say just briefly on the archives, we're open to discussions on discussing this position of the archives and I know the ambassador agrees with that.  And I'm happy to discuss this further. 


    What was Brett McGurk saying?

    He was lying.

    He was lying plain and simple.

    Discussions?

    Doesn't it sound like, from his words, that the State Dept is reconsidering their pact?

    Because they should be.  The artifacts were stolen property, stolen by the government of Iraq (Saddam Hussein's government).  So they don't belong to Iraq or the Iraqi government.  In fact, if they're turned over to the Iraqi government, the government will be in possession of stolen property.

    There is no legal binding contract despite the nonsense from the State Dept and the White House.  Only the owner of the property can enter into a contract regarding the property.

    A thief cannot steal property and legally sell it.  A thief has no ownership rights to property they stole.

    But McGurk thought he could lie.  He wasn't expecting so many members of the Subcommittee to be interested in this topic.  Let's note this exchange.



    Ranking Member Ted Deutch:  I'd actually like to get back to the issue of the archives.  And you said that you're "open to discussions."  And these are just a couple of observations -- and I appreciate the attention that you've paid to this issue already.  Iraq, Babylon, was the center of Judaism for a thousand years and-and these documents, tattered as they were, found a decade ago are -- according to the agreement that was reached with the -- with the Coalition Provisional Authority were supposed to be sent -- were supposed to be sent back to a place where the number of Jews, the number is perhaps in the single digits.  The documents -- many of the documents are very personal in nature, records of the community, things that are of real value to the members of the community and their descendants who simply aren't there.  So help me.   I understand what the agreement was.  You've also said you're now open to discussions. And can we explore that a little bit?  Can we explore that a little bit?  And if you could just continue where you left off?   What discussion can we have?  And what can we do?  What -- what would be the hold up to ensure that these items are so, so personal to the community that is no longer living in the country can actually reside with the community?

    Brett McGurk:  All I can say is that is that everybody should go see the exhibit and if you meet the technicians who actually traveled to Baghdad in the heart of the worst -- one of the worst periods of the war in 2003 to preserve these materials, it's really a remarkable effort by The National Archives.  The State Dept's proud to be a partner with them in that -- in that effort.  They will be on display at the archives.  They will -- they will then be on display in New York.  The commitment that we made in 2003 is a legal agreement to get them out of Iraq to preserve this important material.  Without that agreement, the material never would have been preserved.  Uhm, they will be on display in New York and then under this commitment, they will -- they will transfer to Baghdad in the late summer of next year.  All I can say is that, uh, we have an agreement with the, uh, Iraqi ambassador here to begin a conversation about, uh, long-term loans here in the United States to make sure that people can --  can view them, but that will be an ongoing discussion.  It's November now.  We have until the end of the summer, so we do have some time to discuss this.  We have heard very loudly and clearly the concerns of the community.  We've listened to them, we've taken them to heart and we'll see what we can do.

    Ranking Member Ted Deutch:  And I would -- I would just add to that there are, as I understand it, some 2700 books, tens of thousands of documents.  It certainly seems that -- that it would be possible to be able to have the ability to highlight the-the community that existed in Iraq in some fashion while still ensuring that the bulk of these records continue to stay with-with those who are the most closely affiliated with them and presumably whose lives they effect. 

    And there we find out that Brett McGurk lied.

    Are we surprised?

    So there are no discussions currently about this most important topic: Legal ownership.

    The Iraqi government has no legal ownership.

    And that's actually the first thing you establish.

    Try to get just how crooked and corrupt the State Dept is on this.

    I swipe your emerald necklace.

    The US government sees that the stones need polishing.  They take it to polish the stones and tell me they'll get it back to me.  You show up and say, "That necklace is stolen property!  It belongs to me!"  Brett McGurk hears you "very loudly and clearly."

    Brett shows up at my door to tell me . . .


    that I should probably let the necklace be displayed in New York.

    Why is he negotiating with me about possible showings of property I've stolen?

    That's so insulting and it's so stupid.  You establish ownership first and foremost.

    And the US should have done that in 2003 before entering into any agreement.

    But the law's the law.  And the law is not 'the US must honor the contract!'  No, the law is the contract is invalid if the property was stolen.  That does not mean ownership goes to the US -- it does mean the US has to hand it over to the rightful owners.

    As it is, the US government has wasted a ton of a tax dollars -- US tax dollars -- making the property more valuable and it's about to hand this increased worth over to thieves.

    And that's what the Iraqi government is -- not Saddam, the current one -- if they're trying to grab stolen property which they have no claim to.


    Can you imagine if all the Shi'ites had been run out of Iraq in 1993 and Saddam was holding items he stole from them in 1984?  Can you imagine the outrage?

    And it would be justifiable outrage.

    I'm honestly surprised the clerics, like the Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, have not spoken on the matter since we are talking religious artifacts and heritage.  You'd think the Shi'ite  religious elders, who knew what it was to suffer under Saddam Hussein, would be the first to speak up and say, "Stolen Jewish artifacts do not belong to our country, they belong to the Jewish people."


    The lies of Brett McGurk never ended.  It was as though everyone of us in that room were his first wife and he was all insincere charm insisting to us that he wasn't sleeping with some crazy reporter with the Wall St. Journal.

    The lies started immediately.  Even though the Chair said his  full written statement would be entered into the record, he attempted to read all ten pages.

    He lied at the start about Baghdad and Erbil, but we'll come back to that.

    It was offensive to hear him go on and on about Shi'ite victims of violence.  Violence is awful no matter who is harmed.  But there are levels of violence.

    It's awful when anyone goes on a mad tear to destroy and harm.  But when it's the government?  That's even worse.

    Brett did not want to acknowledge, for example, the April 23rd massacre of a sit-in in Hawija which resulted from  Nouri's federal forces storming in.  Alsumaria noted Kirkuk's Department of Health (Hawija is in Kirkuk)  announced 50 activists have died and 110 were injured in the assault.
    AFP  reported  the death toll rose to 53. UNICEF noted that the dead included 8 children (twelve more were injured).

    The 52 dead are not more dead than, for example, a Shi'ite pilgrim.  But the fact that the killers were tools of a government which is supposed to protect the population, which exists for that reason first and foremost?  That makes the violence worse.

    Brett McGurk kept blustering about al Qaeda in Iraq and 2011 and 2012 and how the US sent al Qaeda in Iraq running and blah, blah, blah.

    But just as he refused to note the Hawija massacre, he didn't want to note that Nouri's responsibilities.  His failures.

    Chief among them?

    Back in July 2012, Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) observed, "Shiite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has struggled to forge a lasting power-sharing agreement and has yet to fill key Cabinet positions, including the ministers of defense, interior and national security, while his backers have also shown signs of wobbling support."   That's still true.

    And it's not a minor point at any time but it's especially not a minor point that you've got no Minister/Secretary of Defense, Interior and National Security as your country's security unravels.

    I have yet to hear -- during all this time those spots have been empty -- one member of Congress challenge a witness as to whether or not Nouri's refusal to fill those seats may have helped violence increase in Iraq.


    It was so irritating to hear Brett McGurk babble on endlessly.


    Brett McGurk:  In short, Iraq's hydrocarbon sector is vital to U.S. interests in the region, and its development is essential to Iraq's long - term stability. These shared interests have led to a close and ongoing partnership as to how Iraq can best manage its abundant resources to generate increasing revenues and align the interests of disparate groups in a unified and federal Iraq. For example, four export platforms that came on line south of Basra in 2012 -- each with capacity to export 900,000 barrels per day -- were the result of joint efforts beginning in 2007 to address serious deficiencies in Iraq's infrastructure. Today, U.S. policy is focused on a similarly ambitious -- and achievable -- vision: a strategic pipeline from the super giant oil fields in Basra (with 80 percent of Iraq's proven reserves) to the Haditha refinery in Anbar province; south west through Jordan to the Red Sea; and connected to the north , Turkey and the Mediterranean. These three export routes -- the Arabian Gulf, Red Sea, and Mediterranean  -- will build redundancy into Iraq's national export infrastructure, facilitate prosperity to all parts of the country, and align the interests of regional partners in a stable and prosperous Iraq. Coupled with this vision is a revenue sharing agreement to ensure that revenues are shared equitably, and, longer term, new legislation to manage the hydrocarbon sector and ensure legal predictability to market entrants . The United States wants to see Iraqi oil from all parts of the country  --  north to south -- reaching global markets as soon as possible, and in a manner that reinforces stability. Iraq today is producing 3 million barrels-per-day, but the IEA projects under its central scenario potential increases to 6 million barrels-per-day by 2020 , and 8 million barrels-per-day by 2035 , with revenues over this period approaching $5 trillion.


    Ignore the numbers and Brett McGurk was saying this same crap in 2006 and 2007 and 2008 and . . . (McGurk was an Iraq War cheerleader in the administration of Bully Boy Bush.)

    There is no hydrocarbons law.

    For those who've forgotten, the hydrocarbons law was in the 2007 benchmarks.  The White House made that a benchmark and Congress would see success on it and not cut off funds!

    There was never any progress on it but a spineless Congress refused to follow up.

    That's not fair.  An uncaring Congress.  By 2008, there was only one member of the House who was asking where the progress was on the benchmarks: US House Rep Lloyd Doggett.

    We have heard over and over that a hydrocarbon law is on its way.

    It has never, ever happened.


    Why does that matter?

    It's at the heart of the problems between Baghdad and Erbil to hear Brett tell it.  (He skipped over Kirkuk.  He skipped over so much.)

    Not only that, he had the nerve to insist, "The United States does not take sides in the internal disputes regarding the distribution of revenues and management of oil resources."


    The how about someone explain this statement issued by Victoria Nuland November 23, 2011, "We have always advised and continue to advise all oil companies, including Exxon-Mobil, that they incur significant political and legal risks by signing any contracts with the Kurdistan Regional Government before national agreement is reached on the legal framework for the hydrocarbon sector."


    The US government has been taking sides on the oil issue from day one of the illegal war.

    They led Nouri to believe they could get the ExxonMobil contracts cancelled.  I noted in passing here that they couldn't which led the State of Law MP that reads this site to deluge the public account with e-mails about how this works.

    That's when I realized that many Iraqis -- at least Nouri's State of Law -- were living under the misguided assumption that the US government owned oil companies.  In Iraq, they had state-controlled oil and the government could dictate. That was not the case in the US.  In fact, if anything, the multi-national oil conglomerates control the US government.



    Brett McGurk offered testimony that things were improved between the Baghdad and Erbil due to US "diplomatic engagement."


    Brett McGurk:  Due to a series of disagreements over the Iraqi budget, and in the disputed boundary areas of northern Iraq, Kurdish ministers and parliamentarians were boycotting the central government, and its Peshmerga forces faced off against Iraqi Army units -- with both sides daring the other to open fire. Fortunately, intensive diplomatic engagement led to a detente , with both sides pulling back and disputes returning to the political arena where they belong. On June 10 , Prime Minister Maliki visited Erbil for the first time in tw o years; then, on July 7 , IKR President Barzani visited Baghdad, for the first time since late 2010 . As a result of these visits, the IKR and the central government established seven joint committees with mandates to address the most difficult issues of federalism : security cooperation, revenue sharing, and balancing powers between the central and regional governments. Since then, there has been progress in the area of security cooperation, and we are working to facilitate serious discussions on revenue sharing, to help ensure that all Iraqis -- in all parts of Iraq -- benefit equitably from Iraq's national patrimony. 

    Hmm.  The US brokered peace between Baghdad and Erbil?  Set aside that it's no lasting peace as last week demonstrated.  Brett claimed other US victories.


    Brett McGurk:  Beginning in March, the United States launched a quiet but active campaign to ease tensions with Turkey, settle accounts with Kuwait, strengthen ties to Jordan, and accelerate efforts to reintegrate Iraq with its Gulf neighbors. These efforts are important to bolstering Iraq's independence, and, when combined with economic and security initiatives, aligning its long -- term interests to ours. These efforts have seen some success . Iraq and Kuwait settled key accounts dating to the 1991 Gulf War, and in June the U.N. Security Council voted unanimously to finalize a process to normalize relations between both countries. Two weeks ago, the Iraqi cabinet voted to open Kuwaiti consulates in Erbil and Basra. In April, the United States began a trilateral process with Iraq and Turkey, focused on mutual interests . This week , Turkey’s Foreign Minister visited Baghdad for the first time in [. . .]



    I'm sorry, this makes no sense.  And maybe that's why Nouri's government is so screwed up.

    Nouri created the problems with Turkey -- as he has with all neighbors except Iran.  He's attacked everyone, dubbed foreign leaders terrorists, accused them of upsetting the balance n Iraq and said the most rude and threatening remarks imaginable.

    And Brett McGurk wants to tell the Congress that the State Dept is wasting over a billion US tax payer dollars in Iraq each year to go around smoothing things over for Nouri?

    At what point does Nouri put on his big boy pants and solve his own damn problems?  Ones that he created?

    Bully Boy Bush installed Nouri as prime minister in 2006.  The 2010 elections saw Nouri's State of Law come in second to Ayad Allawi's Iraqiya.  That meant Nouri was out.  But he refused to step down and brought the government to a stand still for eight months.  Barack had Brett McGurk and others negotiate The Erbil Agreement (the Kurds don't like McGurk, Iraqiya doesn't like McGurk) which gave Nouri a second term in spite of the votes of the people.

    So get ready to laugh as we quote Brett's election wisdoms.


    Brett McGurk:  Shortly after Prime Minister Maliki’s return to Iraq last week, the parliament broke a deadlock to enact the law to govern national elections in 2014. These elections are now set for April 30, 2014. This will be the third election for a full - term national parliament, but the first since the departure of U.S. forces in 2011. Thus, it is a critical test of Iraq’s democratic process, and we have made clear to all Iraqi contacts that the elections must be on time, well prepared, and designed to produce a genuine and credible result. Our Embassy team is working closely with the United Nation s Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI) and the Independent High Electoral Commission (IHEC) to ensure preparations remain on track.



    The US has not supported democracy in Iraq.  Not under Bully Bush, not under Barack Obama.

    Iraqis don't get to decide who their leaders are.  So far the US government has made the choices.

    In the hearing, US House Rep Steve Chabot noted, "Iraq may very well be on the verge of a civil war." Ranking Member Ted Deutch noted there have been over 7,000 violent deaths in Iraq so far this year.
    He pointed out,  "Many believe that the rise in sectarian violence to be a result of the efforts by Prime Minister Maliki to consolidate political power at the expense of Sunni and Kurdish opponents."


    And violence in Iraq was on the grand scale today.  AP reported an attack on "Shiites marking Ashoura in the eastern city of Baqouba, a former al-Qaida stronghold, 60 kilometers (35 miles) northeast of Baghdad. That attack killed eight people, including two children, and wounded 35, a police officer said."  Reuters emphasized, "10 people were killed when a suicide bomber drove a truck packed with explosives into a police checkpoint in the town of al-Alam near Tikrit, police said."

    National Iraqi News Agency notes that Falluja Mayor Adnan Hussein was shot dead.  Alsumaria adds a bodyguard of the mayor's and an engineer who was traveling with the mayor were also injured.  Last month, at least 5 mayors were assassinated in Iraq.  Much more fortunate, NINA notes, was Baghdad Mayor Ali Timimi who survived an assassination attempt today (five bystanders were left injured).

    National Iraqi News Agency also reports an eastern Mosul attack left 2 police members dead, a Mosul roadside bombing left one police officer injured, an armed clash in Imam Village left 5 militants dead and one Iraqi soldier injured, a western Mosul roadside bombing claimed the lives of 3 police officers and left two more injured, 2 Baquba bombings claim 3 lives and leave thirty injured, 2 police homes in Qarma were blown up killing 4 people and leaving seven more injured, an armed clash in Dujail left 2 militants dead and five police officers injured, and a Baghdad roadside bombing left three police officers injured.  Xinhau adds, "In northern Iraq, a soldier was killed and four others wounded in a roadside bomb explosion near their patrol in the town of Riyadh near the city of Kirkuk, about 250 km north of Baghdad, a local police source said."  By nightfall, more violence had been reported.  NINA notes a Baghdad attack that left 2 brothers dead, a Baghdad attack that left a military colonel dead, a Mosul attack left 2 police members dead and a third injured, and an Abu Ghraib bombing claimed 2 lives and left four people injured.

    That's  46 reported dead and  ninety-eight injured. Iraq Body Count counts 241 violent deaths for the month so far through Monday.

    Still on violence, Jomana Karadsheh and Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) report:


    A Western security contractor was brutally assaulted in southern Iraq this week by a Shiite mob after he reportedly insulted their sect of Islam.
    A 10-minute video circulating on social media sites showed an angry mob of men carrying metal rods, a pickax and other sharp objects attacking the car the man was in, smashing the glass and dragging him out.



    Yesterday, the White House issued the following:



    The White House
    Office of the Vice President

    Readout of Vice President Biden's Call with Iraqi Kurdistan Region President Masoud Barzani

    Vice President Biden spoke today with President of the Iraqi Kurdistan Region Masoud Barzani.  The two discussed Iraq’s security challenges and the need for close coordination between Erbil and Baghdad to isolate terrorist networks.  The Vice President affirmed the United States’ commitment to partner with Iraq against al Qaeda.  Vice President Biden congratulated President Barzani on the recent passage of a law to govern Iraq’s upcoming parliamentary elections.   The two also discussed Iraq’s important progress in building relations with its neighbors, including Turkey.



    Alsumaria notes it here, National Iraqi News Agency notes it here.


    Campaigning continues in Iraq in expectation of parliamentary elections on April 30th.  All Iraq News notes Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq's leader Ammar al-Hakin declared today that the next big fight in Iraq will be defeating corruption. Corruption's a seriously problem but the inability of the Nouri-led government to address the security issues don't speak well for the ability of the government to address much these days.

    Yet again, the optics are not good for Nouri's own campaigning -- All Iraq News notes Sadr City is flooded for the sixth day in a row.  That's due to Nouri's refusal to spend any of oil billions pouring into Iraq each month to give Iraq a decent sewage system -- Nouri's refusal to do that for seven years now.  All Iraq News notes Iraqiya MP Qais al-Shathar states the streets flooded with water demonstrate the failurs of the government:


    The services provided to the citizens cannot be compared with the allocated funds for the services sector.  The specified budgets for the services must be spent and be reflected on the services level.  There should be an investigation over the spent funds for the services sector.




    Bill Dores wrote the following:


    Contradicting peace gestures by the Obama administration, U.S. warplanes attacked Syria. U.S.-made F16s fired U.S.-made missiles at two bases of the Syrian Arab Army on Oct. 31, allegedly causing large explosions. On the same day U.S. planes also fired missiles into the besieged Palestinian enclave of Gaza, killing two young men.
    The U.S. government announced the attack on Syria, saying it was carried out by Israel. But the only difference between a U.S. air strike and an Israeli air strike are the colors painted on the fuselage of the airplanes. Israel’s warplanes and air-to-ground missiles are made in the U.S. Israeli pilots train in the USA and may be U.S. citizens. Israel’s military machine runs on U.S. dollars.
    The very evening of the attack, U.S. Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel told a Zionist dinner in New York City that Israel would be the first state to receive the Marine Corps’ new V22 Osprey tilt-rotor aircraft and that production was being sped up to get them there quickly. “The Israeli and American defense relationship is stronger than ever, and it will continue to strengthen,” Hagel said.




    That's his opening to his piece for Workers World which is our way of noting that Workers World has new content up after a week or so of being in frozen mode.


    Iraq War veteran Mike Prysner is a co-founder of March Forward.  At his Twitter feed today, he reflected on lessons from the war.





  • I was told we had to invade cuz they had "no freedom to protest." Since been in countless peaceful protests violently attacked by cops
  • I was told we had to invade cuz they "kill their own people." Came home to a place where cops kill innocent ppl daily.
  • I was told we had to invade b/c they had no freedom of speech. Since then I've been arrested 5 times for exercising free speech.






  • cnn

    cnn
    jomana karadsheh

    Wednesday, November 13, 2013

    The idiot Bob Abrams at Chicago Now

    the apology


    I enjoyed  Isaiah's The World Today Just Nuts "The Apology" and I bet you did as well.

    I posted the following to a bad article by Bob Abrams:



     
    • Ann Wilson
      Thank you, JD Yoders! You've covered some of the important points so let me grab one more. Chicago Now needs to learn to read.
      Lara Logan made a mistake and should be fired?
      Okay, if that's the standard then Chicago Now needs to fire Bob Abrams.
      Somehow he's forgotten that Mary Mapes (producer of Dan Rather's segment) was in contact with the John Kerry campaign and that CBS News, when that got exposed, issued a statement saying that never should have happened.
      That's a key detail and part of the problem with the Rather story.
      Lara Logan? It's a do pile from a bunch of people who don't even bother to learn facts before attacking Logan for, get this, getting a fact wrong.
      • JD Yoders · Top Commenter
        It's interesting that you choose to believe that the entire story was based on Davies' account the way that Rather's entire story was based on his fake documents was. It most certainly was not. There were SEVERAL sources quoted in the story saying security was lax in Benghazi and an attack was imminent. Gregory Hicks' interview, for example, was never even questioned. It's the same story he's told in congressional testimony.

        Also, if Davies did, indeed, lie about going there that night because he wasn't authorized by his employer, Blue Mountain Security, to do so do you really believe he'd be the first security professional to disobey orders from his employer to try and save lives? Davies might have told a different story to Blue Mountain Security but that doesn't mean one of them wasn't true.
        • Sandra Earles Downs · Top Commenter
          This is why I also doubt her account of her Tahrir Square "assault". Apparently eyewitness accounts didn't help her case either.
          • JD Yoders · Top Commenter
            You think she wasn't sexually assaulted? Wow. She was examined by medical personnel and her rescuers said her clothes were entirely ripped off when they finally pulled her away. There's a special place in hell for people like you.

        I included Jd Yoders because didn't he do a great job taking Abrams' article on.

        It really is amazing how The Cult of St. Barack is lining up to take out Lara Logan.

        Will they succeed?

        Only if their lies go unchallenged.


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


        Tuesday, November 12, 2013.  Chaos and violence continue, campaign season gears up even though elections may not take place April 30th, we take a look at Moqtada al-Sadr, flooding in Baghdad reflects poorly on Nouri, Alan Grayson proclaims war on Syria has been stopped, NOW pretends there's a new element of a war on women (and they insult us all with this sort of partisan lying), and much more.


        In New Zealand, a man has been appealing his sentence.  Not his conviction, mind you, just his sentence.  He doesn't deny the crimes just questions the sentence.  The crimes?  The Dominion Post reports of former Iraqi soldier Najeeb Dawood:



        Dawood stabbed his wife in a shed at the back of her home in Wellington, Strathmore, on September 2, 2011.   

        He tied her to a chair with tape and stabbed her 55 times while their daughters watched the attack from the shed window. When one tried to intervene, Dawood stabbed her in the leg.


        Who knows? Maybe it was an 'honor' crime.  Regardless the brutal murder goes to a wave of attacks on women and comes as  the CEO of Thomson Reuters Foundation, Monique Villas, (at Huffington Post) notes:



        The picture is grim. A perception poll of gender experts by the Thomson Reuters Foundation shows that the rise of political Islam across Arab Spring countries has had a real impact on secularism. Almost three years after popular uprisings toppled autocratic leaders in one of the most conservative corners of the world, three out of five Arab Spring countries rank among the bottom five states for women's rights
        Many political gains for women have been lost. In fact, women are struggling to preserve their dignity, and far from progressing, they are now fighting to preserve the rights they had before the Arab Spring.
        Egypt, the country that embodies the spirit of the revolution, is today the worst country for women among the 22 Arab League states surveyed. The revolution has unequivocally failed to deliver on women's expectations, the experts in those states said.


        Oh, yes, that beautiful and blessed 'Arab Spring.'  Brought to you by so many.  There was 'Arab Spring' blogger Lambert extolling the wonders and joy at Corrente as he watched it unfold on Al Jazeera.  Now Lambert didn't have the brains to ask whether the monarchy of Qatar might have an interest in slanting the coverage -- no, he just rejoiced and praised Al Jazeera as the gospel of truth and went about the internet witnessing to others.

        The realities were always there, if you bothered to look.  Lara Logan's rape was especially telling as (a) first there was an effort to mock and ridicule her and (b) then the crap-ass beasts like Amy Goodman worked overtime to ignore what happened and the attacks on Lara.

        Amy did even better -- she brought on a supposed rape victim who insisted that being raped was fine and dandy and for the revolution.  (In "continuing c.i., i grab goodman," Rebecca called that out and that guest in January 2012.)  Again, it's not a surprise that Goodman is a 'journalist' who elected to regularly and repeatedly publish in the pages of Hustler until the outcry became too much for even her.

        The 'Arab Spring' which was going to improve lives -- so insisted the town criers in the US -- did not.

        A visit to Corrente finds Lambert has not noted the realities for women or that maybe single-source advocacy writing is neither factual nor helpful?  With no grasp of the Middle East (or interest in it), Lambert got seduced by p.r. (and it was public relations) and became the US web crier for the Arab Spring as portrayed by the government of Qatar -- the same government that just squeezed $500 million out of Egypt .  Yet he feels no responsibility for the destruction of women's lives?  Possibly, Lambert has a great deal more in common with Bully Boy Bush than even his many detractors could have guessed.


        We lived up in Cambridge
        And browsed in the hippest newsstands
        Then we started our own newspaper
        Gave the truth about Uncle Sam
        We loved to be so radical
        But like a ragged love affair
        Some became disenchanted
        And some of us just got scared
        Now are you playing possum
        Keeping a low profile
        Are you playing possum for a while
        -- "Playing Possum," written by Carly Simon, first appears on the album Playing Possum



        The NewsHour (PBS) notes, "The countries' placement from best to worst were: (1) Comoros, (2) Oman, (3) Kuwait, (4) Jordan, (5) Qatar, (6) Tunisia, (7) Algeria, (8) Morocco, (9) Libya, (10) United Arab Emirates, (11) Mauritania, (12) Bahrain, (13) Djibouti, (14) Somalia, (15) Palestinian territories, (16) Lebanon, (17) Sudan, (18) Yemen, (19) Syria, (20) Saudi Arabia, (21) Iraq, and (22) Egypt."
        AFP adds, "In Iraq, women’s freedoms have regressed since the 2003 US-led invasion and overthrow of Saddam Hussein, the poll showed. Iraq ranked second-worst after Egypt, followed by Saudi Arabia, Syria and Yemen.."   Suadad al-Salhy and Isabel Coles (Reuters) filed a report Monday night which included:


        Domestic abuse and prostitution have increased, illiteracy has soared and thousands of women have been left widowed and vulnerable. Many women also rue the political leaders that came to power after Saddam was overthrown and the growing social conservatism that has diminished their role in public life.
        Once at the vanguard of women's rights in the region, Iraq ranked 21st out of 22 Arab states in a poll of 336 gender experts released on Tuesday by Thomson Reuters Foundation (poll2013.trust.org).


        The article quotes Iraqi women such as Majeed who states,  "Islamist parties started to control Iraq and that was the worst nightmare Iraqi women have ever faced.  Religious parties and militia have stolen free life from Iraqi women."



        Moqtada al-Sadr, cleric and movement leader in Iraq, has declared no third term as prime minister for Nouri al-Maliki.  All Iraq News reports that in response to a question about Nouri getting "a third term despite the problems that face Iraqis because of Maliki"?  Moqtada responded he "would not approve" of granting Nouri a third term.

        In anticipation of expected parliamentary elections (said to take place April 30th), campaign season is kicking off in Iraq.  In 2011, Bobby Ghosh (Time magazine) dubbed  Moqtada -- who made Time's list of top 100 influential people in the world -- "the ayatullah in training" (Peter James Field offers a nice ink and pen sketch of Moqtada with Ghosh's copy).  As the Iraq War continues, Moqtada changes and grows -- at least for public consumption.   In July, Ali Abel Sadah (Al-Monitor) quoted Moqtada making a statement about how the next prime minister of Iraq would "stand against the occupier" and this was in response to remarks by US Ambassador to Iraq Stephen Beecroft.

        Iraq may or may not hold elections in April -- with the Iraqi political system, nothing is ever a given.  And there are serious concerns being raised by the political blocs and, yes, by some on the Independent High Electoral Commission, about Iraq's move to electronic voting and the security of that vote.  In addition, Wael Grace reports that there's a complaint filed today with the federal court challenging the law stating it is illegal since it was not sent from the presidency but from the Parliament.  Moqtada's bloc has weighed in insisting that the law is legal.  State of Law weighs in via MP Hassan al-Yasiri declaring that the law is in violation.  This is also why State of Law is stating that a verdict agreeing the law is illegal will mean the current government is extended until 2016.  No, I don't understand how that would be the outcome either but this is the court Nouri controls so the law gets tossed out by them all the time.

        So let's talk Moqtada.  The 40-year-old was born August 12, 1973 in Najaf or the 39-year-old was born August 12, 1974.  Even his date of birth is in dispute.

         Moqtada's late father, said to have been killed on the orders of Saddam Hussein, was Grand Ayatollah Mohammad Mohammad Sadeq al-Sadr.  Moqtada has influence within Iraq due to his family.  The US invasion of Iraq aided Moqtada's reputation as the US and British governments targeted him.  This only increased his profile.  Encyclopedia Britannica notes how quickly Moqtada rose, "Almost immediately after U.S.-led forces toppled Ṣaddām’s regime in 2003 (see Iraq War), Ṣadr emerged from the shadows and began to open offices in his father’s name (known collectively as the Office of the Martyr Ṣadr) in Baghdad, Al-Najaf, Karbalāʾ, Al-Baṣrah, and other areas. He had immediate success in Madinat al-Thawrah (Revolution City), a poor Baghdad suburb of two million Shīʿites, which he renamed Ṣadr City in honour of his father. By the end of that year Ṣadr headed a Shīʿite political movement known as the Ṣadrist Movement and had attracted millions of Shīʿite followers across Iraq, mainly youth and the poor and downtrodden, to whom he offered a variety of social, educational, and health services."


        He was referred to as "anti-American cleric Moqtada al-Sadr" in the press when maybe he should have been termed "pro-Iraqi cleric"?  In Civil Rights In Peril: The Targeting of Arabs and Muslims (Elaine C. Hagopian, editor), it's noted that "Al-Sadr has a following among the two million Shia who live in Sadr City (formerly Saddam City), a poor Shia area of Baghdad. "  In addition to that stronghold area, he also has millions of followers in southern Iraq.   The Council on Foreign Relations states:

        Muqtada's movement did not grow out of an organized structure, and instead emerged as a loose coalition of young imams and armed volunteers rushing to fill a power vacuum. But political prowess and a penchant for drama -- along with a steadfast opposition to the U.S. occupation and his family credentials -- coalesced to reinvent the younger Sadr. As the Sadrist insider told the ICG in early 2006, "One hardly hears the expression za'tut anymore." Comprised mainly of young, impoverished Iraqi Shiites, much of Sadr's base lives in Sadr City, though he also has strong ties to Najaf, the holy city where the cousin and son-in-law of the Prophet Mohammed, Ali ibn Abi Talib, is buried. Sadr's followers have also been active in Basra and other majority Shiite towns, including Kut, Nasiriyah, Karbala -- Iraq's other holy Shiite city -- and Kufa. Estimates of Sadr's support base range from 3 million to 5 million. 


        Moqtada was far from a saint in this period and he ran a militia -- which most people who could have would have done the same when foreigners occupied their country.  Even more so when you grasp he was being targeted by the US military.   Matt J. Martin and Charles W. Sasser notes one battle in their book Predator: The Remote-control Air War Over Iraq and Afghanistan: a Pilot's Story:

        On July 31 [2004], al-Sadr broke the ceasefire after U.S. Marines and the Iraqi National Guard raided a safe house in Karbala and nabbed some al-Sadr representatives.  Al-Sadr issued a blatant challenge to the new government, demanding that his people "be freed, and if this is ignored then we will respond at the appropriate time."
        Iraqi police and U.S. troops surrounded al-Sadr's house on August 3 and engaged in a furious firefight with hundreds of Mahdi fighters defending the house.  Clashes spread to the old city of Najaf.  By August 13, the cleric and the main body of the resistance were trapped inside a cordon around the Imam Ali Mosque.  Day after day I flew over the shining dome and its twin minarets and watched insurgents below brazenly shooting rockets and mortar rounds indiscriminately into the surrounding neighborhoods.  
        It looked like the stalemate might finally reach a conclusion as August drew toward an end, thanks to Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani.  At seventy-four years old, he was an Iranian and "Twlever" (those who believed that the return of the Twelfth Mahdi and the end of the world were imminent) who had resided in Iraq since 1951.  He returned from London, where he had sought medical treatment, and traveled to Najaf in a "peace convoy . . . to stop the bloodshed."  Al-Sadr was apparently ready to call another truce: the Mahdi resistance had suffered hundreds of casualties since April, whereas U.S. Marine losses were fairly light.
        The following day, al-Sistani announced that he had compromised an agreement with al-Sadr: The Mahdi Army would voluntarily disarm and leave Najaf if U.S. forces withdrew from the city and returned control of it to Iraq authorities.  I watched from the air as the disarmament process unfolded.



        Moqtada's part of the Shi'ite majority and, in 2006, when Saddam Hussein was executed by the puppet government of the United States, and even though Nouri al-Maliki was prime minister at the time and had been for over 8 months, when Iraqi guards executed Hussein, they chanted "Moqtada! Moqtada! Moqtada!" -- according to Patrick Cockburn's Muqtada: Muqtada al-Sadr the Shie Revival, and the Struggle for Iraq.  Dahr Jamail and Ali al-Fadhily (IPS) reported:



        Footage of Saddam’s last moments, taken by an onlooker with a mobile phone, shows the former dictator appearing calm and composed while dealing with taunts from witnesses below him. The audio reveals several men praising the Shia cleric Muqtada al-Sadr and Mohammed Bakr al-Sadr, founder of the Shia Dawa Party, who was killed by Saddam in 1980.
        “Peace be upon Muhammad and his followers,” shouted someone near the person who filmed the events. “Curse his enemies and make victorious his son Muqtada! Muqtada! Muqtada.” These chants are commonly used by members of Muqtada al-Sadr’s Mehdi Army militia..
        There has been a huge international backlash to the footage. In India millions of Muslims demonstrated against the execution being carried out during the sacred festival of Eid.


        An arrest warrant was issued by the occupied government for Moqtada and he left Iraq until  the start of 2011.  Hayder al-Khoei (Guardian) wrote at the time:


        Moqtada al-Sadr has finally returned to Najaf in Iraq after almost four years of self-imposed exile. Senior Sadrists claimed that the reason he left Iraq was to continue his theological studies in Iran. However, there was another thorny issue behind his absence: Sadr is still wanted by the Iraqi judiciary for his alleged involvement in my father's murder eight years ago.

        The arrest warrant for Sadr stands to this day as Iraqi judge Raed al-Juhi signed it in April 2004. Juhi is the investigative judge who presided over the first hearing of the Dujail massacre that eventually led to Saddam Hussein's execution in December 2006.



        The father assassinated was Abdul-Majid al-Khoei, on April 10, 2003, mere weeks after the US invaded.  Why was he assassinated?  He was using his position to advocate on behalf of the occupiers, the United States.  From 1992 until after the US invasion, he had lived in England.  The exile returned to Iraq the month of his death.  No sooner did he return, than he started advocating for the US.  That's not a description that begs for a war welcome.  He was assassinated in Najaf and any number of people could have carried out the assassination on any number of people's orders. More importantly, was the mob that attacked attacking al-Khoei or Haydar al-Killidar al-Rufaye?  That's who al-Khoei was with and he's the one who was murdered by the mob immediately, al-Khoei near the end of the 90 minute assault.

        As Linda Robison explains in Masters of Chaos: The Secret History of Special Forces, in Najaf, despite a move in Najaf when even the mayor was being rejected ("There was a mounting murmur of opposition, however, from residents who said Hattar was from outside Najaf and not one of them."), al-Khoei decided to go through Najaf and to do so without US proection ("My people will protect me.").  In Proceedings of the Combat Studies Institute 2006 Military History Symposium(Kendall D. Gott, Michael G. Brooks), possible motives are noted:

        Whatever the motive behind the killing, whether it was a rejection of reconciliation with Ba'athists or of al-Khoei's westernizing influence, or merely a criminal effort to gain control of the Shrine's lucrative revenues, it protended a rising tide of Iraqis killing other Iraqis. 


        Was Moqtada responsible?  Even AP was skeptical as evidenced by the wording in this 2010 report:



        U.S. officials blamed al-Sadr for the April 10, 2003, assassination of Shiite cleric Majid al-Khoie, who was slain after returning to the holy city of Najaf south of Baghdad in hopes of winning support for the Americans from Shiite clergy.
        A warrant was issued for al-Sadr in the al-Khoie slaying by Iraqi authorities in 2004, but he was never arrested. Instead, the warrant was quietly shelved as part of the cease-fire deals the Americans accepted under pressure from Shiite clerics and politicians.


        In 2011, The Economist attempted to sum up the many strands in the public image of Moqtada:

        Mr Sadr was once derided as “Ayatollah Atari”, a nickname denoting his love of computer games. He was also widely regarded as a thug, albeit one who performed astutely in the violent game of Iraqi politics. But he has still not revealed his latest goals and allegiances. After two years in exile, Mr Sadr has made only two high-profile appearances in Iraq to address his followers. A spokesman said he was testing to see whether Mr Maliki or the Americans would arrest him. But Mr Sadr has recently spent more time in Iraq, mainly in the Shia's holy city of Najaf. As the Americans draw down their numbers, his supporters may see a lot more of him. 




        And what they, and what Iraq and the world, saw was a new Moqtada.    If you weren't noticing it, you weren't paying attention.  In June of 2012, I wrote:


        In December Nouri went from prime minister-designate to prime minister.  And Nouri made clear that the Erbil Agreement wasn't a priority.  By summer 2011, the Kurds, Iraqiya and Moqtada al-Sadr are calling for the agreement to be implemented.  This is the ongoing political crisis.
        Who has benefitted the most from it?
        Moqtada al-Sadr.
        'Too eratic, too radical, too young.'  There was a list of 'toos' attached to the name of the person who wanted to be prime minister.  While Nouri has looked like a dictator and out of control, Moqtada's actually benefitted from Little Saddam's tantrums which provided al-Sadr with the opportunity to show a rational and reasoned side as well as leadership skills that rarely translated prior on the world stage.  It's a more mature Moqtada al-Sadr.
        And that's really funny because the US government has always feared "radical cleric Moqtada al-Sadr."  True of the Bush adminsitration, true of the Barack administration.
        In 2014, new elections are supposed to be held.  If the US backs their puppet Nouri (who has had flunkies state that he would not run for a third term but whose attorney has stated Nouri can seek a third term), not only will it be clear to one and all that he is Little Saddam and 'democracy' in Iraq is a joke, but it will also become clear who has more power in the 'new' Iraq: DC or Tehran?
        In 2010, Moqtada was not a viable choice for Tehran which feels closer ties to al-Sadr than Nouri but which was bothered by the 'too' list applied to Moqtada and by the fact that he was seen as divisive among Shi'ites (not to mention most Sunnis weren't crazy about him).  The political crisis has allowed Moqtada to strut as a statesman and he's grabbed that opportunity and used it very well.  He is the political star of Iraq currently.



        By February 2013, even the Council on Foreign Relations was noting the new, public Moqtada.  Eli Sugarman and Omar al-Nidawi offered:


        Then, last spring, he abruptly changed course, and he has spent the past year reforming his image and serving as a voice of moderation in Iraq. Sadr now openly decries violence, advocates the peaceful resolution of Iraq’s political disputes, and prays with religious leaders from other faiths and sects.
        On the one hand, Sadr’s new tune could reflect his genuine maturation and a newfound desire to play a positive role in Iraq’s dysfunctional political system; on the other hand, it could be just a new tactic to expand his influence and power. Either way, the more Sadr can convince Iraqis -- disenfranchised Shia, Kurds, and Sunnis alike -- that he is a reliable and moderate partner, the more power he will accrue at the expense of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, also a Shiite. Iraq’s Sunni Arabs and Kurds face a tough choice, because working with Sadr could lead to two very different outcomes. Joining him to challenge Maliki could perhaps promote a more inclusive political process, but it could also re-empower the rule of sectarian militias. The key for Iraqis is to vet the new Sadr carefully and insist that he backs his sweetened rhetoric with concrete actions.


        Last April, Time's Sarah Price offered a look at Moqtada which closed with :



        The discontent among Sunnis toward Maliki and his actions against them has also presented an opportunity for Sadr, says Alla Jumaa, a political professor at University of Anbar. He said Sadr is trying to get close to them by fighting for their rights, and using the unrest to gain their trust and following, trying to convince them to leave their feelings of sectarianism behind them. If it has not yet won the hearts of Sunni Iraqis, it does seem to be working with many of their leaders, who seem to believe that he is trying to put an end to the sectarianism that was perpetuated for years by Sadr himself, and violently through his followers.
        But for an Iraq that has grown weary of power- and money-hungry leadership, the concern is not from where the help arrives, but how soon. And for Moqtada al-Sadr, the time could not be more ripe for him to take the lead.



        Is this new Moqtada real?  Was the 2003 Moqtada real?  Who knows.  But he's matured publicly and has become one of Iraq's 'elders of state' -- despite his young age.  And he might just be the next prime minister of Iraq.  Who is he?

        Killer?

        Innocent?

        Disturber?

        Healer?

        Uniter?

        Divider?

        Rigid?

        Matured?


        It's all still a mystery to the west and maybe that's fitting?  In 2008, Ali Al Mashakheel (ABC News) reported Moqtada's early love for mysteries:


        Better known for fiery sermons against America’s military presence in Iraq, the Shiite cleric Muqtada al Sadr has revealed a softer side of his character, saying that as a young man he enjoyed reading Agatha Christie detective novels. The disclosure came during a rare appearance by the cleric in a 45-minute exclusive interview on an Iraqi TV station. During the interview, al Sadr concentrated mostly on his childhood, saying that he grew up with a fear of Saddam Hussein’s regime because members of his family were politically opposed to the former Iraqi dictator. Al Sadr told Afak TV station, “I liked to read detective stories,” particularly those of Agatha Christie, an English novelist who traveled extensively through Iraq in the early 20th century. In her opening chapter of "Murder on the 0rient Express," Christie describes a railway journey across Iraq by a young English woman in her 20s. When compared to the current level of danger and violence in Iraq, it’s a revealing insight into how safe it once was to travel the country. Iraq also features in another Agatha Christie novel called "Murder in Mesopotamia."


        All Iraq News notes Moqtada visited a Najaf polling center today to update his electoral record and that "The Independent High Electoral Commission (IHEC) called upon all citizens to update their electoral records to ensure their rights in voting for their candidaes during the upcoming parliamentary elections in 2014."  All Iraq News also notes that Ammar al-Hakim, head of the Islamic Supreme Council in Iraq met with representatives of the European Union today at Ammar's Baghdad office.   Ammar's into campaign mode as well.

        Whither Saleh al-Mutlaq?

        Whipped puppy Saleh is at the feet of his master Nouri al-Maliki.  He's sold out Iraqiya, leading many Sunnis to turn on him (as was seen last December and in the months after when signs with a big X over his face began appearing at the ongoing protests).  He also needs to keep a low profile to avoid the Justice and Accountability Commission.  Remember, Iraq's Deputy Prime Minister wasn't allowed to run in the 2010 elections.  The Commission said no, said he was Ba'athist.

        So Saleh rolls over on his back at the feet of Nouri, whimpering for Nouri to scrach his belly or toss him a bone.

        As for thug Nouri?  It's not been a period of good opticals for Nouri.   Sunday, we noted:


        Al Mada reports that cleric and movement leader Moqtada al-Sadr called on his followers to participate in the parliamentary elections expected to be held in April 2014.  He stated voting is a right and that Iraqis must use their rights for the good of the people.  He encouraged his followers to vote for those who will serve the people.
        Clearly that person couldn't be Nouri. We've noted why many times but click here and look at All Iraq News' photo of a section of Baghdad today.  The cars are almost underwater.  And why?  Rain.  Rain in a country that Nouri's 'led' for over 7 years and never bothered to improve the sewage system.  So when it rains, the water doesn't drain, it stands and floods.


        Monday,  Wael Grace (Al Mada) reported that in addition to drainage and sewage issues, Baghdad is sinking.  This has to do with a channel from fifty years ago and the government's aware of it and, at one point in the last few years, had $500 million to spend on it but didn't spend it on fixing the problem.And you can check out the photo in this report by Alsumaria -- a report which notes the current sewage system -- in the capital of the country -- dates back to the 1960s.  It's over five decades old and further destroyed by war but Nouri's done nothing to update it.  Alsumaria also reports the flooding is taking place in Anbar Province as well and that roads are being cut off.


        How bad is the problem -- this problem that's worsened with 7 years of Nouri's neglect?

        All Iraq News reports Nouri's announced "a meeting with Governors to discuss the raid-related floods."

        Poor Nouri. Elections might take place April 30th and right now, only months before, Iraq's are yet again seeing the proof of his neglect and his ineptitude.

        Instead of focusing on the needs of the Iraqi people, Nouri spends each day on his petty wars against rivals.  For example, Alsumaria reports that Nouri dismissed Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi's advisers today.  Whether he has that power or not, the fact that they've been paid up until now goes to the point we've long made: Tareq is not a 'former' Vice President.  Only Parliament can remove him and they have repeatedly rejected Nouri's call for Tareq to be removed from office.


        While Nouri dismissed Tareq's staff today, he lost one of his own.  Alsumaria reports a Baghdad sticky bombing claimed the life of a captain who worked for Nouri.   National Iraqi News Agency reports Nouri's federal forces killed 4 suspects by "setting their vehicles on fire," the storming of his Sheikh Hamad Village home left police officer Abdul Rahman Jawhar dead,  the military shot dead 1 suspect to the north of Tikrit, a Shureh bombing left 3 police officers dead, a Ruttbah sticky bombing killed 1 person, a Heet sticky bombing claimed the lives of 2 Iraqi soldiers and left a third injured, 1 traffic police officer was shot dead in Baghdad and a Baghdad roadside bombing left eight people injured.  All Iraq News adds that Wathiq Mamdoh ("former director of electricity projects") and Nagham Jacob (former council member in Nineveh, an Iraqi Christian) were attacked in Mosul and Mamdoh was shot dead.  Through Monday, Iraq Body Count notes 229 violent deaths so far this month.


        On security, we'll note this Twitter exchange:



        1. Ambassador will discuss "Managing 's Image Through Effective PR." Join us, we'll be live-tweeting!



      • Turning to the US for two press releases -- two less than honest ones.  First up, US House Rep Alan Grayson's which is less objectionable than the second one.  Grayson writes:

        Two months ago, we were told that if the United States did not attack Syria, we would see a new era of chemical weapons warfare.

        Yet here is last week's Reuters headline: "Syria Meets Deadline To Destroy Chemical Production Facilities."

        Let's celebrate.

        Let's celebrate the war that never happened.

        Let's celebrate NOT having to hold sad and somber funerals for young Americans who would have lost their lives fighting in Syria.

        Let's celebrate NOT having to nurse and care for the wounded veterans who would have returned from the U.S.-Syrian war.

        Let's celebrate Congress NOT having to appropriate billions of tax dollars in emergency spending to support U.S. military operations in Syria.

        Let's celebrate NOT having to attend bitter marches protesting the U.S. war in Syria.

        Let's celebrate NOT having to rebuild Syria's roads and bridges and schools, so that we can have a shot at rebuilding our own.

        Let's celebrate peace.

        We won the battle, and the military-industrial complex lost the war.

        We should be proud of our victories, because our victories matter. I know that politics sometimes can seem discouraging right now. Progressive often seem to lose, and lose frequently. But, you know what? Sometimes we win. And when we win, we save lives. We promote equality. We serve the cause of justice. We improve people's lives.

        I'm going to crow a bit, right now. Because, together, we stopped a U.S. attack on Syria. The military-industrial complex said attack, and attack now. We said what John Lennon once said: "All we are saying is give peace a chance." We said that there is no such thing as humanitarian bombing. We said that we can't go around the world launching missiles and dropping bombs every time we see something that we don't like.

        Well, we were right, and the military-industrial complex was wrong. We forced diplomacy rather than more carnage, and now the chemical weapons stockpiles are being destroyed.

        This is victory. Our victory. Two months ago, 100,000 of us signed a petition at DontAttackSyria.com. Eighty thousand of us shared it on Facebook, and tens of thousands more shared it on Twitter.

        And you know what? We stopped an attack. We saved hundreds, if not thousands, of lives.

        And you know what else? We got those chemical weapons production sites destroyed.

        Peace won. Lives were saved. Thanks to you. Good job!

        We progressives, each one of us, we have a head, a heart and a spine. We can win. We will win.

        Peace,

        Rep. Alan Grayson


        First off, war in Syria has not started.  Grayson sees it as avoided.  I hope he's right.  Second, "We progressives, each one of us . . ."  Huh?

        Libertarians were part of the effort as well and, certainly, Justin Raimondo and Antiwar.com did more to raise awareness and object to a war on Syria than The Nation and The Progressive combined.   We'll note Antiwar.com's donation pitch:



        Help us do it again!
        The war plans were finalized, the war planes were on the tarmac, and the news media was salivating for some "shock and awe" – but the bombing of Syria never happened!
        That's because a broad-based movement spanning "left" and "right" rose up and just said NO! That cry of protest was resounding enough to scare Congress – and the White House – into saying "Never mind!"
        Antiwar.com was a vital part of that protest: every day for weeks we headlined the crisis and urged our readers to call Congress. In our news and opinion columns we debunked the war propaganda that claimed this was to be a war of "liberation": we expose the Syrian "rebels" for the thugs they are, and we kept blasting away at the phony rationale for this war: that it was a "humanitarian" effort to "save lives." Yeah, and War is Peace, as Orwell put it.
        But they're already ginning up another war – this time with Iran – and we can't let down our guard. Eternal vigilance is the price of peace as well as liberty. Antiwar.com is needed now more than ever – but we can't continue our work without your financial support.
        We won last time – but we need your donations to make sure we're around to win again. Please make your tax-deductible contribution today!





        Today the National Organization for Women sent out a ridiculous e-mail.  They're against a filibuster Republicans in the Senate are staging and demand an up or down vote.  Unlike NOW, I support the right to filibuster.  I think it's an important element in Congress.  Actually, NOW agrees with me -- which is why, January 17, 2006, NOW demanded a filibuster on Samuel Alito.  Not only that, they prepared a flier of four women who had died -- apparently due to Samuel Alito? -- and declared "Senators Must Filibuster Samuel Alito."  And, of course, as even NOW admitted on December 23, 2005, the PATRIOT Act suffered a defeat "in the face of a Democratic filibuster."  The ridiculous e-mail opens with this nosnesne:


        The National Organization for Women (NOW),  Feminist Majority and the Black Women’s Roundtable today deplored the Senate Republican leadership extending the War on Women to judicial nominations.  On a conference call with reporters, Terry O’Neill, president of NOW, Ellie Smeal, president of Feminist Majority, and Melanie Campbell, president of the National Coalition on Black Civic Participation and convener of the Black Women’s Roundtable, called on the Senate to move to an up-or-down vote on President Obama’s nomination of Nina Pillard to the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals.  


        Do they really think people are that stupid?  It's not a 'War on Women' and apparently, later this month, when the Republicans block Judge Robert Wilkins (as they're currently planning to do), NOW will have to find a new talking point.  NOW really needs to step the hell away from partisan politics or surrender their tax exemption.

        The filibuster has benefited both parties over the years.  It's been really sad to watch political idiots insist, since 2009, that the filibuster needs to be done away with.  And it's really sad today to watch NOW mislead people that some sort of 'War on Women' is taking place on the same day when women across the Arab world are facing a real war on their rights but, for partisan reasons, Terry O'Neill, Eleanor Smeal and Melanie Campbell would rather lie to the American people about a pretend war on women.  They really should be ashamed.