Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Progressive White Democrats of America


Tm Carpenter and his Progressive Democrats of America are a never ending joke.

Medea Benjamin?

Didn't that piece of trash just claim to be a Green mere weeks ago?

But go to PDA's home page and you'll see Medea.

PDA isn't Green and it isn't Democratic.

It's a bunch of Socialist pretending.

And I usually ignore them because whorish liars don't factor in my life.

But then comes this bad Valley Advocate article on Senator Bernie Sanders:

In a number of recent interviews, Sanders—a democratic socialist who runs as an Independent but caucuses with the Democrats in the Senate—has said he’s considering running in part because of his concerns about presumed Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton’s commitment to addressing crucial issues like climate change and economic inequities.
And he’s not the only one with those concerns: a group of progressives from Clinton’s own party is now calling on Sanders to run for president as a Democrat.
Earlier this month, Progressive Democrats of America launched an online petition (at www.credomobilize.com) praising Sanders as “a lifelong champion of working-class Americans, and an eloquent defender of labor unions, living wages, expanded Social Security, protecting Medicare [and] Medicaid, moving towards single-payer health care for all, and choosing ‘prosperity’ over ‘austerity.’” It also calls Sanders an effective leader in the fight to stem climate change and “one of the very few top officeholders who will stand up to the 1 percent, who gets it that money is not speech, and corporations are not people.”

Later on, fat ass Tim Carpenter (does he weigh 340 pounds or is it higher?) will knock Hillary for her Iraq vote.

He will never take accountability for the whoring PDA did (and still does) for Barack.

I'm not voting for Hillary.

But, thank you, PDA, I won't support Bernie either.

If he's got these tricksters behind him, I'm not interested.

Progressive PunkAssBitches of America doesn't interest me.

John Nichols is such a cheap and well used whore.  And so typical of the group.


Here's a photo of them.



10thSpeakers
Jim Hightower, Tom Hayden, Ben Day,
Mimi Kennedy, Thom Hartmann,
Cole Stangler, Medea Benjamin,
Andrea Miller Rep. Jim McGovern,
Tim Carpenter, Mark Dudzic and
John Nichols





Did you notice?

If you're Black (like me) you probably did.  13 people.  Only one person of color.

How telling.


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


Wednesday, March 26, 2014.  Chaos and violence continue, Nouri's assault on Anbar continues, Barack lies about Iraq, Amnesty International reveals Iraq executed even more people in 2013 than in 2012, the Parliament moves to provide the election committee with more powers (and immunity) and much more.

Let's start with the big lie from US President Barack Obama today.  Speaking in Brussels today, as he attempted to sell war on Russia, Barack declared that what's going on in Ukraine is nothing like the illegal war in Iraq and the illegal war was benign and helpful:


It is true that the Iraq War was a subject of vigorous debate – not just around the world, but in the United States as well. I happened to oppose our military intervention there. But even in Iraq, America sought to work within the international system. We did not claim or annex Iraq’s territory, nor did we grab its resources for our own gain. Instead, we ended our war and left Iraq to its people and a fully sovereign Iraqi state could make decisions about its own future.

It was not a subject of vigorous debate in the US.  Those of who spoke out were told to "shut up."  If you wanted to hear an argument against going to war on Iraq, your best chance was catching Janeane Garofalo or Michael Moore on Fox News. Fox would attack the guests, so praise for Janeane and Michael for going into the lion's den -- but they would allow the guests to express their views.

Elsewhere, people were just shut out.  And worse.  We've noted the journalist who left the Dallas Morning News and is at another daily today but remembers full well that orders went out to attack the anti-war critics. Sheryl Crow was attacked and slandered by the paper, said to be unworthy of her Grammy nomination.  Why did the music critic write that?  Why did she lie by arguing that instead of Sheryl being nominated a baby pop tart should have been nominated?  Pop tart wasn't even eligible for a nomination because she had nothing to be nominated for -- the Grammy rules aren't secret and that includes the eligibility time period.   She attacked Sheryl because she was under orders.  In the local pieces, others were under orders as well. Which is how the local columnist attacked protesters in Dallas and compared their actions to treason.  This was a hippie and a stoner.  But he marched to the orders he was given.

I can do that on seven other daily newspapers, we're using the Dallas Morning News because its actions were in part an effort to continue to have the government allow it to skirt FCC regulations over ownership in local markets.

Yeah, Big Business profited from the Iraq War.  The FCC was used to help sell the war and that is one of the many things that's buried today.

So Barack's a damn liar. There was no vigorous debate.  A month before it started, in fact, the day after liar Colin The Blot Powell lied to the United Nations, "case closed" was the phrase the media began using.


Aaron Blake (Washington Post) reports on Barack's remarks and we'll note two comments to Blake's article:



drray-yup
Then get out, as requested by the puppet governor we installed.

And:


macktan894


Sorry, but this has stunned me into speechlessness. Not one country sanctioned the US for invading a sovereign country on a phony pretext, destabilizing it, occupying it, setting up an American govt....

And not one country ever sanctioned the US for its torture of suspects.

The US doesn't need to annex that which it occupies and then controls through puppet regimes.

This was totally unwise. 


Jason Ditz (Antiwar.com) is on a streak this week.  Yesterday he wrote something (we noted it in the snapshot) that I've already nominated for "Truest statement of the week" at Third and, writing today about Barack's nonsense remarks, Ditz cuts right through the nonsense:


“America sought to work within the international system. We did not claim or annex Iraq’s territory,” Obama insisted, going on to praise Iraq as a “fully sovereign state” that “could make decisions about its own future.”
Which is to say the US forced a puppet government into power before it left, despite Prime Minister Maliki losing the last election, and put in place an election system so crooked that even the Maliki-appointed election commission resigned en masse yesterday rather than take part in April’s planned vote.


Barack's refusal to note the lies that the US government told to start the Iraq War is understandable when you think of all the lies he and others in the administration (Secretary of State John Kerry, for example) have told to try to sway the public to support a war with Russia.

Everything Barack said above was a lie.

It is true that the Iraq War was a subject of vigorous debate – not just around the world, but in the United States as well. I happened to oppose our military intervention there. 

We've noted there was no vigorous debate.  Equally true, his claim to oppose the illegal war?  Only before it started.  Once it started, he was on board.  I know because he told Elaine and I that when he was running for the Senate (and we left the fundraiser immediately and didn't give his campaign a dime).


But even in Iraq, America sought to work within the international system. 

Lie.  The United Nations provided no approval of starting a war.  The statement that a second resolution would be sought was dropped when the US government learned (by illegal spying on UN representatives) that they didn't have the votes necessary, they started the illegal war anyway.

We did not claim or annex Iraq’s territory, nor did we grab its resources for our own gain. 

Actually, the US government did and does.  The illegal war was about markets -- that includes the oil market.  The illegal war 'opened' the oil wells in Iraq.  The country's being polluted as it tries to pump out as much oil as possible.  There are pools, lakes, of oil in Iraq, on the surface, polluting the land, ensuring that less and less of it can be used for farming.  Iraq's giving the world cheap oil and, in the process, destroying itself.

Instead, we ended our war and left Iraq to its people and a fully sovereign Iraqi state could make decisions about its own future.

We already quoted Jason Ditz addressing the nonsense of a 'fully sovereign' nation.  So let's deal with 'we ended our war and left Iraq to its people' instead.

The US drawdown out of Iraq was completed by the end of December 2011.  The US military called it a drawdown, not a "withdrawal."  It wasn't a withdrawal.  Not only did every US service member not leave Iraq at that time (Ted Koppel was the only one to report this in December 2011), but approximately 15,000 US troops were re-positioned to Kuwait.  And, almost a year later, at the end of September 2012, Tim Arango (New York Times) reported:

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


Barack's such a liar and he gets away with it because so many embrace lies.  We'll come back to that at the end of the snapshot.  Right now we'll note the immediate effect of Barack's latest nonsense.  Julianna Goldman and Mike Dorning (Bloomberg News) report, "As Obama spoke, U.S. stocks fell, erasing earlier gains, on investor concern that the conflict may escalate. The Standard & Poor’s 500 lost 0.3 percent to 1,859.76 at 3:19 p.m. in New York, after earlier climbing to within three points of its record closing level reached March 7. "


Let's note some Tweets on Barack's nonsense:





  • Anger, Disbelief as Obama Defends US Invasion of Iraq: President Barack Obama delivers ...






  • Barack Obama was against the Iraq war, before he was for it.



    1. When you didn't think Obama could get any worse, but then he did. Apologist for the U.S. invasion of Iraq.






  • Anger, Disbelief as Obama Defends Bush's Iraq Invasion while denouncing Putin's invasion of Crimea-Ukraine




  • Today, Obama criticized Russia's invasion of Crimea, saying the US only "intervened" in Iraq and did not "annex" it. Two wrongs, no right.



  • Obama overlooks destruction US has wrought upon Iraq. "We ended our war & left Iraq to its people."






  • There's a lot to cover on Iraq today so let's move to "Death sentences and executions in 2013."  Amnesty International issued their latest report on executions.  Click here for an Amnesty video presentation.



    5 BIGGEST EXCUTIONERS
    CHINA
    IRAN
    IRAQ
    SAUDI ARABIA
    USA



    The report notes "an alarming rise in executions in Iran and Iraq."  Here's a section on Iraq:


    For the third year in a row, a stark rise in executions was reported in Iraq . At least 169 people were executed, an increase of more than 30% over the known total for 2012 (at least 129) and the highest figure since 2003. The vast majority of executions in recent years are believed to have followed convictions under Article 4 of the Anti-Terrorism Law, Law 13 of 2005. This includes a number of nationals of other predominantly Arab states. The law covers, in vague terms, acts such as provoking, planning, financing, committing or supporting others to commit terrorism. The government claims that the death penalty is needed to confront the high level of attacks by armed groups against civilians. There is no evidence to support the position that the death penalty is a deterrent to crime or attacks. The security situation in the country has actually worsened in recent years. No executions have taken place in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq since 2008.
    Amnesty international recorded at least 35 death sentences in Iraq, including one woman. Most were imposed for murder and other killings, but others for non - lethal crimes such as kidnapping or "belonging to a terrorist group". The real figure is likely to be much higher , as many death sentences are not reported. According to an Iraqi Ministry of Human Rights report published early in the year, criminal courts had pronounced more than 2,600 death sentences between 2004 and 2012, or more than 280 per year on average. Death sentences are often handed down after grossly unfair trials, during which prisoners do not have access to proper legal representation . "Confessions" are frequently extracted through torture or other ill-treatment, which according to credible reports can include electric shocks to sensitive parts of the body, being suspended from handcuffs, beatings on the sole of the feet ( falaqa ) and with a cable or a pistol butt, and use of a drill.



    Grasp that this is the Iraq Barack was bragging about today.  Back to the report:



    In statements in September and October, the Iraqi Ministry of Justice stated that all death sentences were reviewed and confirmed by the Court of Cassation before executions took place. However, the generally paper-based procedure does not provide a genuine review, as defendants are limited to written submissions  and the court regularly fails to address t he issue of contested evidence such as "confessions" allegedly made following torture and other ill-treatment , and subsequently withdrawn . Hundreds of prisoners are on death row with their sentences ratified by the Presidency, the last formal step before implementation . Executions are often carried out in large groups, and at very short notice. The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights stated in reaction to the execution of 21 prisoners on the same day in April that the justice system in the country was "too seriously flawed to warrant even a limited application of the death penalty, let alone dozens of executions at a time. Executing people in batches like this is obscene. It is like processing animals in a slaughterhouse."


    The good news never really emerges out of Iraq.  Yesterday brought the news that the entire board of the Independent High Electoral Commission was submitting their resignations -- 35 days prior to expected parliamentary elections April 30th:


    Jason Ditz (Antiwar.com) provides context,  "IHEC’s complaints roughly mirror those of the last election, that the Maliki government is trying to use the electoral law’s ban on candidates of “ill repute” to ban potential rivals en masse." 



    Ken Hanly (Digital Journal) observes, "The existing electoral law allows for candidates of 'ill repute' to be barred from running for office. The De-Baathification laws which prohibit candidates associated with Hussein's old political party are also used to disqualify candidates. Critics claim that the Maliki government is using these laws to ban any potential rivals particularly Sunnis. The Sunnis already feel marginalized in the Shia majority government and radical Sunni groups including some associated with Al Qaeda are rebelling against the government."  "Ill repute," by the way, also includes any candidate who is gay or suspected of being gay.

    All Iraq News notes the al-Ahra bloc's Mushriq Naji accused Nouri and his State of Law of having interfered with the work of the IHEC.  Alsumaria reports that, in his weekly speech today, Nouri al-Maliki blamed the Parliament.  He stated Parliament overstepped its bound and said the UNHCR did as well.  He declared the board's resignation should be immediately accepted.  By contrast, Nihad Qais (Alsumaria) reports Speaker of Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi is calling for the commissioners to reconsider their resignations. Iraq Times notes he conveyed this message today in a meeting with the IHEC board chair.

    So where do things stand currently?    All Iraq News notes that the planned press conference the IHEC was supposed to hold today was postponed.  But apparently, the meeting with Osama al-Nujaifi was productive.  Hamza Mustafa (Asharq Al-Awsat) reports:

    Iraq’s parliament is set to issue a resolution giving the Independent High Electoral Commission (IHEC) judicial immunity following its decision to resign this week, in a bid to preserve its independence and impartiality.
    In comments to Asharq Al-Awsat, Iraqi parliamentary rapporteur Mohamed Al-Khalidi said: “Parliament is moving to pass a resolution granting judicial immunity to the IHEC,” adding, “This will put it in a comfortable position, particularly following the council of commissioners’ decision to resign en masse.” 


    The US Embassy in Baghdad released the following today:

    March 26, 2014
    The United States fully supports Iraq’s democracy and democratic institutions as defined and established in the Iraqi Constitution, specifically Article 102, which provides for the independence and neutrality of the Independent High Electoral Commission.

    Ensuring that upcoming parliamentary elections are held on schedule is of the utmost importance and we commend the IHEC for its work in preparing for these elections under difficult circumstances. These preparations have ensured that there is no basis for any delay in the elections as scheduled for April 30. We urge the commissioners to continue this important work, to ensure elections proceed as scheduled, and affirm that the United States will stand behind the full independence of IHEC over the weeks and months ahead.


    Did you catch it?

    The IHEC announces their resignations and cite interference.  The US Embassy issues a statement . . . urging the IHEC "to continue this important work" but fails to call out those who have undermined the IHEC.



    The Arab Summit wrapped up today in Kuwait.  Sylvia Westall, Amena Bakr, Rania El Gamal, Sami Aboudi and Kevin Liffey (Reuters) note, "Arab leaders, at loggerheads over inter-Arab issues including Egypt and Syria, offered little evidence of progress after a two-day summit in Kuwait on Wednesday."

    Last night, Elaine noted the first day of the summit:

    As Sylvia Westall and Amena Bakr (Reuters) report the Arab Summit kicked off in Kuwait. Among those attending were Qatar's Shaikh Tamim Bin Hamad Bin Khalifa Al Thani.
    March 12th, Thug and Prime Minister of Iraq Nouri al-Maliki gave an interview to France24 in which, among other things, he attacked Qatar saying it was responsible for terrorism in Iraq.
    Gulf News notes:  "Without naming Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki, he criticized what he says were attempts to sideline entire segments of that Arab nation."
    Hamza Hendawi (AP) elaborates



    Tamim criticized the Iraqi government for discrimination against the country's Sunni minority, which often complains of being excluded from power amid domination by the Shiite majority. Iraq saw a wave of Sunni protests the past year, and Sunni extremists have seized control of the western city of Fallujah.
    "It's about time for Iraq to emerge from the vicious circle of violence and differences," Tamim said. "That cannot come about through the sidelining of entire segments of society or accusing them of terrorism if they demand equality and inclusion."



    Read more here: http://www.kansascity.com/2014/03/25/4914418/qatars-emir-criticizes-egypt-iraq.html#storylink=cpy

    It must be hard for Nouri to be so incompetent and unloved.
    He thinks he can steal a third term.  Maybe he can.  Barack helped him steal the second term.
    But the Iraqi people don't want him.
    Eight years and he's failed to improve the lives of Iraqis.
    It's time to send him packing.




    Nouri's assault on Anbar Province continues.  He's had a little new 'success' with regards to targeting civilians.  NINA reports the military's shelling targeting Falluja not only left five people injured but also set afire a power plant -- burning over 50% of the plant.

    In other violence,  National Iraqi News Agency reports Baghdad Operations Command announced they killed 2 suspects,  then Baghdad Operations Command announced they killed 6 more suspects1 person was shot dead in south Baghdad (Mada'in), former Brigadier General Fa'iz Abdu al-Rahman was shot dead in Baghdad,  3 grenades thrown in Mosul left thirty people injured, a Mosul battle left 2 Iraqi soldiers dead,  and 1 corpse was discovered in Baghdad ("riddled with bullet holes in his head").  Alsumaria notes a Tikrit car bombing left 3 people dead and six injured, and 1 elderly man was shot dead in Mosul.


    March 8, 2014, International Women's Day, Iraqi women protested in Baghdad against Nouri al-Maliki's proposed bill which would allow father's to marry off daughters as young as nine-years-old, strip away the need for consent to sex,  and would strip custodial rights from mothers.  The State Dept only commented when pressed during a briefing.  The White House -- despite pretending to support women -- has still had no public statement.  Human Rights Watch's Erin Evers explains:

    Reaction from a wide cross-section of Iraqi society has been swift and scathing, with many protests on International Women’s Day and a plethora of criticism from journalists, members of Parliament and even Shia religious leaders. Resistance has in part been driven by anger over what many Iraqis see as yet another sectarian measure but also by a deep, if too often ignored, concern over deteriorating women’s rights—and the fear that the bill is just the tip of the iceberg.
    The Council of Ministers’passage of the Jaafari law highlighted the short shrift Iraq’s government has given to women’s eroding rights, amid political instability and mounting sectarian violence. Some have also claimed that the uproar over the proposal is a distraction from Iraq’s “real” problems. But given that violence, absence of the rule of law and political sectarianism show no sign of waning in Iraq, when would be the “right” time to talk about the abysmal state of women’s rights in the country?

    Isobel Coleman (Foreign Affairs) writes about the bill today:

    In some respects, the timing of the bill is curious. When it was first introduced last October, the Council of Ministers seemed likely to table it until after the upcoming parliamentary elections, scheduled for April 30. But the council’s approval of the bill on February 25, and the introduction of companion legislation establishing special religious courts, can be viewed only as political pandering to conservative Shia parties and voters in the run-up to the vote. Parliament must still approve the bill for it to become law, but the move has added sectarian tinder to a highly volatile, and increasingly violent, political situation.
    But sectarianism is not the only problem. The shocking prospects of Iraqi child brides as young as nine, legally sanctioned marital rape, and restrictions on a woman’s ability to leave her own home have also caught headlines around the world. UN officials have denounced the legislation, as have civil society groups such as Human Rights Watch. And they should continue to do so. International bodies, including the United Nations and the World Bank, which recently signed a loan agreement with Iraq to finance important infrastructure improvements, should express their unambiguous concerns. The United States should also be unequivocal in denouncing the bill. Nongovernmental organizations such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch should continue to track the issue closely.




    In the US, Jonathan Schell passed away today.  His passing should give many pause.  The journalist accomplished a great deal during the Vietnam era.  AP writes about his death here. Jonathan died long ago.  Sorry.  I knew him.  He was coward in the '00s.  He 'protested' the Iraq War.  But he wouldn't write about it.  He tried, he was knocked down.  He didn't pursue it then, he just whined.  As a writer of his stature, he could have pushed back against the power structure.  He didn't.  His output was embarrassing for the last 14 years.


    Probably time for the elderly to wake the hell up.  What you did during Vietnam?  You can't coast on it through life.  There are serious issues going on right now and if you're too much of coward to speak out, then just take your tired ass of the public stage.  If you can't find your voice in the midst of  The Drone War, with manufactured efforts to attack Syria, the effort to manufacture consent for war on Ukraine, the illegal spying and so much more, you have nothing to say.  You're just a coward sitting on a past that helps no one today.  I know the excuses, the justifications.  Guess what?  Class of Vietnam?  You're most likely not going to outlive your excuses.

    Jonathan's death should be a wake up call to all 70 and above who consider themselves leftits or an 'activst, author and actress' because you will be dead soon and you will be remembered not for something you did 40 or more years ago but for the coward you went out as.


    I knew Jonathan very well.  I'm personally sad that he passed away.  I'm sadder that he made his life so useless by cooperating with the Katrina vanden Heuvel faction which puts electing Democrats above humanity and justice.  I knew Tony Benn and we spent a long time on his death.  Because he fought to the end.  He wasn't a coward.  Tony Benn's death was a real loss.

    In The Russia House, Michelle Pfeiffer's Katya declares, "I hope you are not being frivolous with me, Barley.  My life now only has room for truth."  It's a shame so many on the left over 70 seem to think they've got 50 or more years ahead of them and can lay low until a Republican's in the White House and then emerge to pretend they care about the Constitution, human rights and so much more.

    Vietnam Generation (and others on the left), should read closely what Glenn Greenwald's wrote yesterday at First Look about how Barack announced he would release photos of detainee abuse and the 'left' applauded but then he retreated from that position and the 'left' applauded:


    Now, obviously, the people who had been defending Obama’s original pro-transparency position (which included the ACLU, human rights groups, and civil liberties writers including me) changed course and criticized him. That’s what rational people, by definition, do: if a political official takes a position you agree with, then you support him, but when he does a 180-degree reversal and takes the exact position that you’ve been disagreeing with, then you oppose him. That’s just basic. Thus, those of us who originally defended Obama’s decision to release the photos turned into critics once he took the opposite position – the one we disagreed with all along – and announced that he would try to suppress the photos.
    But that’s not what large numbers of Democrats did. Many of them first sided with Obama when his administration originally announced he’d release the photos. But then, with equal vigor, they also sided with Obama when – a mere two weeks later – he took the exact opposition position, the very anti-transparency view these Democrats had been attacking all along when voiced by Bill Kristol and Liz Cheney.
    At least for me, back then, that was astonishing to watch. It’s one thing to strongly suspect that people are simply adopting whatever views their party’s leader takes. But this was like the perfect laboratory experiment to prove that: Obama literally took exact opposition positions in a heated debate within a three week period and many Democrats defended him when he was on one side of the debate and then again when he switched to the other side.
    [. . .]
    That’s when I fully internalized that many Democrats literally had no actual political beliefs other than we support Obama in everything that he does, even when he takes precisely opposite positions in a three week period [. . .].













     
     






    Tuesday, March 25, 2014

    It's all smoke and mirrors

    So Barack thought he could get away with breaking the Fourth Amendment. And that we would never know.

    Then when Ed Snowden blew the whistle, Barack thought he could get away with lying.  And we'd never know he was lying.

    Then when more leaked out?

    Does Barack get honest?

    No.

    Now he thinks he can trick us.

    Jason Ditz (Antiwar.com) notes:


    President Obama’s first public comments on his plan to end NSA bulk surveillance couched it as a chance to “win back the trust of ordinary citizens.” It is a very telling choice of words, as the rebranding effort seems much more significant than the reality of the plan.
    President Obama has made no bones about how comfortable he was with the status quo, and his promises of reform have all been half-measures and empty pledges of studies that don’t amount to any real changes.


    Barack is ridiculous.

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


    Tuesday, March 25, 2014.  Chaos and violence continue, the board of the Independent High Electoral Commission announces their resignations, Nouri and the US government continue to try to (mis)use a death to create havoc in Iraq, an 'analysis' embarrasses herself, and much more.


    Anadolu Agency reports a bombing targeted 3 Iraqi MPs.  3 bodyguards were killed in the bombing with another four wounded; however MPs Raad al-Dahlaki, Mohamed al-Khaldi and Abd al-Jabouri all three survived.  All are members of Speaker of Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi's Motahedoum coaltion.  All three had planned to run in the upcoming elections; however, in a sign of the state of Iraq, surviving an assassination attempt doesn't mean you've now survived the last obstacle.

    They were luckier than others today.  National Iraqi News Agency reports  Ghaidaa Hussein Khader was shot dead in Mosul (she belonged to the Alfadheelah Party).

    But while Iraq is set to hold parliamentary elections on April 30th, that may not happen. Despite the assurances Sarbast Mustafa (head of the Independent High Electoral Commission's board) offered to All Iraq News yesterday that elections would take palce and be held "in every area in Iraq" and that "It is difficult to set a new mechanism to postpone the next elections in any area of Iraq including Anbar," those statements are now in doubt.


    Today, AFP reports, "All of Iraq’s election commissioners presented their resignations to parliament Tuesday in a collective protest over political and judicial 'interference' in upcoming legislative polls, sources have said."  What sort of interference?  An attempt to strip them of their powers via a little noticed clause in a bill Nouri's Cabinet wrote and Parliament passed into law.  BBC explains:

    A clause approved last year allows for the exclusion of candidates considered not "of good reputation".

    Prime Minister Nouri Maliki, who is seeking a third term, has been accused of using the law to prevent his political enemies from standing.


    Jason Ditz (Antiwar.com) provides context,  "IHEC’s complaints roughly mirror those of the last election, that the Maliki government is trying to use the electoral law’s ban on candidates of “ill repute” to ban potential rivals en masse."  AFP's Prashant Rao Tweets:


  • Five weeks before legislative polls, Iraq's election commission has resigned. This country is astounding.

  • Indeed.

    Al Mada reports that the Dawa Party was specifically accused of exploiting the judiciary to settle scores with political rivals.  Dawa, for those who don't know, is Nouri's political party, State of Law is his coalition.  Al Mada notes that the commission felt wrongly accused of bowing to Nouri's wishes to dismiss his political opponents, especially when the decisions were coming from the Baghdad judiciary.

    In a statement the IHEC posted to their website, they insist the move was due to a need to protect the IHEC's integrity and that they await the approval of their resignations.  Raheem Salman and Robin Pomeroy (Reuters) observe, "IHEC's sudden move further complicates the outlook for a vote already clouded by violence across the country where Sunni Islamist militants have regained momentum over the past year."

    Staying with this topic, let's drop back to Friday's snapshot:


    The editorial board of Arab News argues voting should be postponed and they recap some of the events since the 2010 parliamentary elections including this from December 2011:



    [. . ] Al-Maliki began the effective demolition of the National Unity government he headed by having an arrest warrant issued for Vice-President Tareq Al-Hashimi, a Sunni. Hashimi was accused of involvement in death squads. Helped by Kurds, he fled the country, only to be tried in his absence and found guilty.
    Al-Maliki pretended at the time that the prosecution was important because no one should be able to escape punishment for past crimes. But this argument was fatally weakened by the presence in his government of Shiite politicians who were equally suspected of involvement in the inter-communal violence that had threatened to tear the country apart. Besides, however terrible the crimes committed by all parties in Iraq, the country’s future could only be ensured by reconciliation. Iraq desperately needed to put its dark past behind and look to a brighter and more prosperous future.
    Unfortunately Al-Maliki hardly tried to convince skeptical Sunni politicians and voters that the prosecution of Hashimi was not motivated by the fact that the vice-president was a Sunni. That this was indeed the reality has since become even more apparent as Shia legislators have moved to exclude former and serving Sunni politicians, including former Finance Minister Rafie Al-Issawi from standing in next month’s elections. Former interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi, a Shiite, and leader of the National Iraqi Alliance, has himself warned that in the light of these moves against Sunni politicians, as well as the deteriorating security situation in the country, the vote cannot go ahead.


    How did Rafea al-Isawi and others get banned?  Niqash attempts to explain it:



    The Independent High Electoral Commission, or IHEC, the authority that is supposed to prepare Iraq for elections and run electoral procedures, such as voter registration and the actual voting, recently decided to ban a number of politicians from competing in the elections. These were independent Shiite Muslim MP, Sabah al-Saedi, Shiite Muslim MP, Jawad al-Shuhaili, who is aligned with the Sadrist bloc, MP Haider al-Mulla from the mostly-Sunni Muslim Iraqiya bloc, MP Rafea al-Isawi, also a Sunni Muslim from the Iraqiya bloc and one of the country’s most senior Sunni Muslim politicians as well as a former MP, Mithal al-Alousi, who made headlines in 2004 as one of the first Iraqi politicians to visit Israel and who previously headed the de-Baathification commission.
    IHEC says the reason for the ban on these politicians is because they have violated the rule about good conduct. However there are clearly some problems with this clause – many local legal and constitutional experts have already said that it is too general and that it could be used in myriad ways by the unscrupulous.
    Iraqi lawyer Munir Haddad, who is perhaps best known outside the country for his time as a judge, presiding over the trial of former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, told NIQASH: “Iraqi MPs should have been more careful when they voted on this article. It’s not clearly formulated enough.”
    “This paragraph is very general and it can be interpreted any way a person wants,” adds judge Abdul-Raheem al- Ukaili, who formerly worked with Iraq’s Commission on Integrity. “Unfortunately IHEC has interpreted this paragraph in an arbitrary way and it has been used against politicians who are well known for opposing the government.”
    Indeed it seemed to many that the “bad behaviour” these MPs had undertaken simply involved publicly criticizing Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki or his allies.
    “Politicians who speak about corruption in the government are now people with bad reputations,” one of the banned MPs, al-Alousi, complained to NIQASH. “There is a deliberate plan to silence al-Maliki’s opponents and to ruin democracy in Iraq. We are going to file a lawsuit at the Supreme Federal Court to defend our rights and we hope this court won’t bow to political pressure,” he argued.


    At some point, IHEC is going to have to be asked about the Niqash report.  AFP reports:

    Several candidates have been barred in recent weeks on the grounds of alleged ties to now executed dictator Saddam Hussein's Baath party.
    But a greater source of frustration for the IHEC board has been the exclusion of scores of hopefuls on the basis of what critics say is a vague provision in Iraq's electoral law that requires that parliamentary hopefuls be "of good reputation".

    Those barred, who include former finance minister Rafa al-Essawi, a Maliki opponent, have no obvious avenue of appeal against the judicial panel's decision.

    So was the IHEC a fall guy or were they going along?  Niqash's report was important last week, today's actions only made it more important.






    Maliki may be the primary reason for the radicalization of the Sunnis and growing sectarian reflexes, but the Anbar standoff is not likely to weaken him electorally. Indeed, renewed violence over the last three months, the absence of Sunni unity (some tribes are even calling for a boycott of the elections), and the fragmentation of the Shia political landscape (Moqtada al-Sadr announced his withdrawal from politics in February) all create favorable conditions for another term for Maliki. This will be even more the case if the elections are marked by low turnout from the Sunnis because of their disillusionment with the transition. In a context of security vacuum, Maliki depicts himself as the only viable and legitimate leader for the country, the “strong man” that Iraqis need.
    Nouri's State of Law underperformed in the 2013 provincial elections.  Which is a nice way of saying that, as with the 2010 parliamentary elections, they lost.  Among those who did well in the 2013 elections?  Many were surprised by how well two young leaders ran their parties -- Ammar al-Hakim (Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq) and cleric and movement leader Moqtada al-Sadr.

    The two are Shi'ite.  The two are rivals of Nouri al-Maliki's.  There's also Nouri original blood rival, the man Nouri loathes but must pretend to respect: Ibrahim al-Jafaari.

    That's the man who should have remained prime minister.

    Following December 2005 elections, the Parliament wanted to have al-Jafaari as prime minister for a second term.  The US government said no.  The public reason was that Iraq was too new to have incumbents hold several terms, it might create a new Saddam Hussein.  Instead, the US government insisted that Nouri be named prime minister (the safe reason given in whispers to some journalists was that Nouri didn't have his own militia, the real reason was the psyche profile the CIA did on Nouri -- paranoid and pliable).  Ibrahiam al-Jafarri is a Shi'ite, a powerful one, and he remains in charge of Iraq's National Alliance coalition.

    Ayad Allawi is a Shi'ite.  He has stood with mixed coalitions.  The previous mentioned stand with Shi'ite coalitions.

    While you might leave Allawi out of the mix (despite the fact that his winning Iraqiya in 2010 also received Shi'ite votes), you can't leave Hakim, Moqtada and Ibarhiam out of the mix.

    They are very powerful Shi'ite leaders of Shi'ite coalitions.

    And there members have not flocked to Nouri.  Not in the 2009 provincial elections, not in the 2010 parliamentary elections, not in the 2013 provinical elections.

    So what crazy pill did you take that led you to believe this election would be different?

    Nouri's actions frustrate and worry me and I'm an American in the United States.  Try to grasp what they do to the Shi'ites who don't support him.

    It's not just Sunni opinion that's hardening against Nouri.

    Shi'ites see the continued violence, actually the violence that increased when Nouri got a second term.  They see the nonsense of his "I have a four billion dollar weapons deal with Russia!" followed by "No, I don't!  It's corrupt but it is not due to my son who set up a sweet side deal during negotiations!"  They see the lights out, the lack of drinking water, the lack of jobs, they see all of this.

    And they don't rally around Nouri.

    That's especially true of the National Reform Trend which is damn well aware that Parliament was blocked from naming their own Ibrahim to lead the country in 2006.
    Shi'ites are not a monolithic group but there's always some simpleton or racist in the press or speaking to it which attempts to portray Shi'ites as such. Despite acknowledging Shi'ite divisions, Myriam Benraad dismisses it when it comes to voting.

    The National Reform Trend  will not be voting for Nouri.  Ammar al-Hakim's group also won't be voting for Nouri.  They stuck with his late father Abdul Aziz al-Hakim and, in the fall of 2009, many decided to stick with Ammar as the new leader.  As the 2010 elections demonstrated, some chose to leave.  But that had actually been evident in the 2009 provincial elections and may have resulted from Abdul Aziz al-Hakim's inability to provide direct oversight of the party and politicians due to his illness (he'd die in the fall of 2009 from cancer).  Frances Romero (Time magazine) noted Septemeber 4, 2009, "Ammar al-Hakim was confirmed as the Iranian-backed SIIC's next leader this week and will begin his work promoting Shi'ite policies throughout the country."  That only gave him six months to take on the leadership tasks and steer the political party before parliamentary elections were held.

    His 2013 wins and post-election wins suggest the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq may see their best parliamentary election performance since the 2005 elections.

    His supporters are not Nouri's supporters.  This was even more evident in July of last year when he joined with Moqtada in publicly calling for Nouri al-Maliki to resign.

    Moqtada al-Sadr announced his political retirement February 15th.  February 18th, he delivered a speech --  CounterPunch posted the speech in full  -- emphasizing his decision. February 26th,  NINA noted the rumors that Moqtada left Iraq, "The sources noted in a press statement that Mr. Muqtada al-Sadr left today's afternoon the city of Najaf heading to the Islamic Republic of Iran in order to complete his religious studies and stay away from the political scene as he officially announced for all Iraqis."  Yet March 14th, Moqtada returned to Iraq.


    Why did Moqtada return?

    We covered this in the March 14th snapshot:


    Background. Nouri's big mouth ended up tanking his own two-day conference.  For those who missed it, Nouri's fat mouth was flapping last Saturday insulting many as he spoke to France24.  France 24's Mark Perelman interviewed (link is text and video) Nouri for a half hour broadcast which aired Saturday.  In the interview, Nouri's well noted paranoia was on full display as he repeatedly declared, in the very first two minutes, his alleged 'victory' over those attempting to turn Iraq and Syria into one country ("there are goals to create a one state," "create a state -- one part in Syria and one part in Iraq").  He continued to gab and began accusing other countries of supporting terrorism (he was supposedly going to reveal proof of his gossip in the conference but, as usual, his fat mouth made empty promises).  He also insulted Moqtada.

    And let's note what the US and western press didn't, what happened on Saturday March 15th.  Moqtada returned to Iraq because of Nouri's insults and to lead the protest against them.









    That's Dar Addustour.





    That's Alsumaria.




    That's Al Mada.


    See the turnout?  Does it appear Moqtada's faded?

    No, it does not.

    It's curious that an 'analysis' of the elections would miss the above especially when the analyst takes the time to note the France24 interview but avoid the remarks about Moqtada.

    In fact, here's Myriam Benraad's 'analysis' of Moqtada's impact in full, "[. . .] and the fragmentation of the Shia political landscape (Moqtada al-Sadr announced his withdrawal from politics in February) all create favorable conditions for another term for Maliki."

    How can you be so stupid?  She's so stupid she must require someone to follow her around reminding her to breathe.

    Not only is there what we've charted above, there's more -- in Nouri's Iraq, there always is.  NINA reports conflict between Nouri's forces and Sadr followers in Sadr City.  A witness tells the news agency, "A group of followers of the Sadrist movement entered into a verbal altercation with the federal police force in the Sadrain checkpoint at the entrance to the area, which led the police to shoot fire in the air to disperse the group. The region has been shut down by the police and helicopters flight in low level has been seen over the area."  These Sadrists are voters for Nouri al-Maliki?  No, they're not.  That's even more the case in the Sadr strong-hold of Basra.

    No where in her 'analysis' is anything as fundamental as this by Jason Ditz (Antiwar.com):

    The previous election saw the Sunni-dominated Iraqiya Party win the largest plurality, with Maliki’s State of Law faction eventually retaining power in a “power-sharing” deal imposed on them by the US. Maliki reneged on virtually all power-sharing, and retains the position of Prime Minister, Defense Minister, Interior Minister, and Chief of Staff for the military.

    Maybe next time, Carnegie should just ask Jason Ditz to write the analysis?

    FYI, I'm being kind by assuming she's dumb.  She might be another lie, another whore, another Quil Lawrence.  It's much kinder just to assume she's stupid.  And, no, Quil, we haven't forgotten you or what you did.  Next month, we again acknowledge your role in corrupting democracy in Iraq.


    Violence continues across Iraq.  National Iraqi News Agency reports an armed battle "between Taji and Tarmiya" left 4 Iraqi soldiers dead and fifteen more injured, the Ministry of the Interior announced they killed 2 suspects in Baiji, 1 police officer was shot dead in Tikrit,  Joint Special Operations Command announced they killed suspect Abdul-Jabbar Majid in Samarra, a Baquba bombing left 1 woman and 1 child dead (and three more people injured), an attack "on a civilian car on the road to the Hanarh resort in Arbil" left 2 women dead and three people injured, 1 corpse was discovered northwest Baghdad ("handcuffed with gunshot wounds in his head"), 1 federal police member was shot dead and one soldier left injured at "the entrance to the Faculty of Engineering at the University of Mosul," an an Ein al-Ijel Village attack left 5 Iraqi soldiers, a Ramadi battle left 1 police officer dead, a Balad Ruz bombing left three people injured, an attack on a Jalawla military checkpoint left two Iraqi soldiers injured, an al-Muthanna Bridge truck bombing left ten people injured (and the update on the bridge bombing is 6 dead and twenty-nine injured), and last night a Sensal Village battle left 1 rebel dead.

    In addition, Nouri's continued assault on Anbar continues.  His shelling of residential neighborhoods in Fallujah today has left 6 civilians dead and ten injured (the injured include two children).

    Throughout the assault, which began December 30th, Nouri's shelling of Falluja has killed and wounded many.

    But not one word from the US State Dept despite the fact that these are War Crimes.

    Yesterday, we noted the Saturday incident in which a Peshmerga (Kurdish military) shot dead Mohamed Bedewi who had worked for years for the US propaganda outlet Radio Free Iraq (which is to Voice of America what Phyllis was to The Mary Tyler Moore Show).  We noted how the US government and Nouri al-Maliki were engaging in dangerous behaviors and statements intent upon creating a crisis in Iraq.  IANS reports today:

    The Kurdish regional government Tuesday accused the central government in Iraq of stirring up political trouble with the Kurds by politically exploiting the killing four days ago of an Iraqi journalist by a Kurdish officer in Baghdad.
    "It's regrettable that the Iraqi prime minister used strange and inconvenient words like "blood for blood" after the incident, which is outside law, state governance and the culture of coexistence and democracy," said the office of Massoud Barzani, president of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), in a statement.

    Middle East Monitor points out that the US government has insisted upon calling the death a "murder." Rudaw reports:

    The Kurdistan Region Presidency has warned of attempts by Iraqi leaders, among them Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki to take the death of journalist Muhammad Bidaiwi out of its judicial context and using it to settle political scores with the Kurds.
    “It's regrettable that the Iraqi prime minister used the strange and ugly phrase of "blood for blood" after the incident,” said the office of President Massoud Barzani in a statement. “This is outside the law, governance and the culture of co-existence and democracy.”
    The statement expressed condolences to the family of Bidaiwi, an Iraqi academic and journalist who was shot dead by a Kurdish presidential guard in Baghdad on Saturday.

    All Iraq News quotes MP Latif Mutafa ("member of the Parliamentary Legal Committee") stating, "The Iraqi constitution assure the independence of the judiciary and no other authority should interfere in the performance of the judicial authority where the interference must be rejected according to the Iraqi Punishment Law No. 11 in 1969.  Since Bidaiwi's murder, we witness the interference by the key officials, MPs and Maliki in particular to affect the judicial decision over this case where Maliki should adhere to the oath that he made over preserving the independence of the judiciary."  The KRG Presidency issued a statement which announced sorrow and regret over Mohamed Bedaiwi's death (which they term "an unfortunate accident" -- and it well may have been) and dencounces Nouri al-Maliki's statements which are "inappropriate and strange" and a wide stretch from the rule of law that the Iraqi government is supposed to embrace and practice. 


    Yesterday, the House Veterans Affairs Committee issued the following:



    HVAC Webpage To Track How VA Stonewalls the Press

    Mar 24, 2014


    WASHINGTON, D.C.— Today, Chairman Jeff Miller launched VA Honesty Project, a new web component of Veterans.House.Gov designed to highlight the Department of Veterans Affairs’ lack of transparency with the press, and by extension the public. View the page here.

    Because the Department of Veterans Affairs is a taxpayer funded organization, it has a responsibility to fully explain itself to the press and the public. Unfortunately, in many cases, VA is failing in this responsibility, as department officials – including 54 full-time public affairs employees – routinely ignore media inquiries.


    VA Honesty Project documents nearly 70 recent instances in which VA has failed to respond to reporters’ requests for information or refused to answer specific questions. The department’s apparent disregard for the press has become an object of reporters’ scorn, leading some to openly accuse VA of “thumbing their nose at us” and others to write entire articles focusing on VA’s stonewalling tactics. VA Honesty Project will be continually updated with new examples of VA refusing to respond to the press as they arise.
    Following the launch of VA Honesty Project, Chairman Miller issued the following statement.


    “With 54 full-time public affairs employees, VA’s media avoidance strategy can’t be anything other than intentional. What’s worse, the tactic leaves the impression that department leaders think the same taxpayers who fund the department don’t deserve an explanation of VA’s conduct. VA Honesty Project is dedicated to showing America’s veterans, American taxpayers and department leaders how VA’s media avoidance strategy is doing the public an extreme disservice while damaging VA’s reputation in the process. By keeping a running record of VA’s attempts to stonewall the press, we hope to convince the department to put a renewed focus on being responsive and transparent with the media so America’s veterans and taxpayers can get the answers they deserve.” – Rep. Jeff Miller, Chairman, House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs