Wednesday, May 14, 2014

The one where the Joe Bidens become the Dick Cheneys

You knew this was coming, right?  Check it out:

 "ICH" - "DND" - Kiev: Hunter Biden is now on Board of directors of Burisma Holdings, Ukraine’s largest private gas producer.

Hunter Biden will head legal unit and will provide support for the Company among international organizations. On his new appointment, he commented:

“Burisma’s track record of innovations and industry leadership in the field of natural gas means that it can be a strong driver of a strong economy in Ukraine. As a new member of the Board, I believe that my assistance in consulting the Company on matters of transparency, corporate governance and responsibility, international expansion and other priorities will contribute to the economy and benefit the people of Ukraine.”



Well it certainly is nice that they're getting rich, right?

War on Ukraine and riches for the Bidens.

It's like war on Iraq and riches for the Cheney.

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



Tuesday, May 13, 2014.  Chaos and violence continue, Massoud Barzani does not want Nouri to have a third term, Barack Obama loves to lecture but does he listen (apparently not when it comes to Falluja -- he doesn't even listen to himself), this year Barack termed Iraq "a failed state," the US has a failed VA, CBS News breaks the latest VA scandal of another facility with alleged fake wait lists, a War Crimes investigation is launched by the ICC,  Chair of the US House Veterans Affairs Committee Jeff Miller calls for the creation of "a bipartisan commission on VA medical care access" and much more.


Major news breaks in the US today.  Wyatt Andrews (CBS News -- link is text and video) reports the latest on the never-ending VA scandals. Similar to the wait lists at the Phoenix VA -- two sets, the real one and the cover one to make it look like vets are getting timely treatment -- Chicago steps into the spotlight.  Whistle-blower Germaine Clarno has stepped forward.

Wyatt Andrews:  Germaine Clarno is a VA social worker and employee representative in Chicago.  She alleges there are multiple waiting lists for veterans kept here at the Hines VA Medical Center.  Which divisions of the hospital kept these secret waiting lists

Germaine Clarno:  Well employees are coming to me from all over the hospital -- from outpatient, inpatient, surgery, radiology.  

Wyatt Andrews:  Clarno says veterans were put on a secret waiting lists when they called for an appointment but wouldn't formally get an appointment booked in the computer until one came up within the VA's goal of 14 day The purpose of the list, she says, was to hide how often veterans were not being seen on time.  Is it too strong to call this fraud?

Germaine Clarno: No.

Wyatt Andrews:  To what purpose 

Germaine Clarno:  To make the numbers look better for their own recognition and for bonuses

Wyatt Andrews:  The VA grants bonuses to executives and doctors partly based on wait times.  Whistle-blowers, including Dr. Sam Foote who revealed the scandal in Phoenix where up to 40 veterans may have died, believe that bonuses give an incentive to conceal delays in care. Clarno says it's easier for bosses to claim short wait time and collect the reward than it is to explain the targets cannot be met. And you think, throughout the VA, people were faking these numbers to get bonuses? 

Germaine Clarno:  Yes.

Wyatt Andrews:  And never mind how long veterans truly waited for care?

Germaine Clarno:  Correct.


And this is when Eric Shinseki needs to go.

The Secretary of Veterans Affairs needed to resign in the fall of 2009.

That's when many veterans attempting to attend college were suffering.

The VA lied.

They flat out lied in every damn way possible and, in a functioning administration, Shinskei wouldn't have resigned, he would have been fired.

'We care about veterans, support the blah, blah, we'll do a parade . . .'

Save all your b.s.

When you let veterans suffer, when some aren't able to provide their children Christmas because of your screw up that you don't fix month after damn month, stop pretending you give a damn.

Veterans were waiting for fall tuition checks.  Many didn't get them.

For those who've forgotten, VA tried to blame colleges and universities.

They lied.  The outright lied.

They knew it wasn't the colleges.

What's even worse, they knew months ahead of time the new program wouldn't work for all veterans.  And they didn't inform veterans and they didn't inform Congress.

From the October 14, 2009 snapshot, reporting on that day's House Veterans Affairs Committee hearing:

Erick Shinseki: A plan was written, very quickly put together, uh, very short timelines, I'm looking at the certificates of eligibility uh being processed on 1 May and  enrollments 6 July, checks having to flow through August.  A very compressed timeframe. And in order to do that, we essentially began as I arrived in January, uh, putting together the  plan -- reviewing the plan that was there and trying to validate it. I'll be frank, when I arrived, uh, there were a number of people telling me this was simply not executable. It wasn't going to happen. Three August was going to be here before we could have everything in place. Uh, to the credit of the folks in uh VA, I, uh, I consulted an outside consultant, brought in an independent view, same kind of assessment.  'Unless you do some big things here, this is not possible.'  To the credit of the folks, the good folks in VBA, they took it on and they went at it hard. We hired 530 people to do this and had to train them. We had a manual system that was computer assisted. Not very helpful but that's what they inherited. And we realized in about May that the 530 were probably a little short so we went and hired 230 more people. So in excess of 700 people were trained to use the tools that were coming together even as certificates were being executed.  


He came and was told of a serious problem and didn't alert Congress.  He hired an outsider to evaluate and was told the plan in place "was simply not executable."  He still didn't inform Congress.  He tried training additional employees but, if you remember, that wasn't the problem.  And maybe if he'd been honest with Congress about what was looming, the issue could be addressed.

Instead, veterans had to take out loans.  They had to work with landlords on delaying rent.  Even after lying to Congress -- and he lied -- in October that this was going to be wrapped up quick, as late as December, some veterans had to delay Christmas for their kids because they still were waiting for the check that shouldn't have come months ago.

Shinseki should have been fired.

There has been one scandal after another including the backlog which has not been fixed, which is a shell game and VSOs are only now starting to grasp this due to complaints from their members.

It's only going to get worse.

And Barack Obama doesn't have another term as president of the United States.  This is it.  He's in the second year of his second term.

Through one scandal after another, he's allowed Shinseki to continue as VA Secretary.

How does Barack think that will look in the history books?  His infamous paragraph that he's spoken of?


It's not going to look good at all.  VA and DoD still aren't integrated so that they can produce the one electronic record -- a record which would be created for a service member and, when the service member became a veteran, the record would follow the veteran into the VA.  This would help with claims, this would reduce paperwork, you name it.

While Shinseki's been VA Secretary for Barack's full first term and now into his second, the Secretary of Defense was Robert Gates, then it was Leon Panetta, then it was Chuck Hagel (who remains in the position today).  Shinseki wasted Gates' time with a plan for the electronic record.  He never implemented it.  Then Shinseki wanted to start at square one when Panetta came in.  He'd probably still be delaying if he hadn't pissed off Hagel by lying to Congress and insisting the delay was Hagel's fault.

Hagel hit the roof (and had every reason to) and went to the White House.  That's the only reason there's been any movement (finally) on this issue.

May 5th, the American Legion called for the resignations of VA Secretary Eric Shinseki, VA's Dr. Robert Petzel and the VA's Allison Hickey.






In front of local media and a live Internet audience, American Legion National Commander Daniel M. Dellinger today called for the resignations of Department of Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki, Under Secretary of Health Robert Petzel and Under Secretary of Benefits Allison Hickey.
Dellinger cited poor oversight and failed leadership as the reason for calling for the resignations – something The American Legion hasn’t done regarding a public official in more than 30 years.
“Gen. Eric Shinseki has served his country well,” Dellinger said. “His patriotism and sacrifice for this nation are above reproach. However, his record as the head of the Department of Veterans Affairs tells a different story. The existing leadership has exhibited a pattern of bureaucratic incompetence and failed leadership that has been amplified in recent weeks.”
Dellinger pointed to allegations from multiple whistleblowers of a secret waiting list at the Phoenix VA Health Care System that may have resulted in the death of approximately 40 veterans, that VA previously had acknowledged that 23 veterans throughout the health-care system have died as a result of delayed care in recent years, and a the findings of an investigation by VA’s Office of Medical Inspector that clerks at the VA clinic in Fort Collins, Colo., were instructed last year how to falsify appointment records so it appeared the small staff of doctors was seeing patients within the agency's goal of 14 days, according to the investigation.
“These disturbing reports are part of what appear to be a pattern of scandals that has infected the entire system,” said Dellinger, noting issues that have come up in Pittsburgh, Atlanta and Augusta, Ga. “Those problems need addressed at the highest level – starting with new leadership. The existing leadership has exhibited a pattern of bureaucratic incompetence and failed leadership that has been amplified in recent weeks.”
Dellinger said that the failure to disclose safety information or to cover up mistakes is unforgivable – as is fostering a culture of nondisclosure. “VA leadership has demonstrated its incompetence through preventable deaths of veterans, long wait times for medical care, a benefits claims backlog numbering in excess of 596,000, and the awarding of bonuses to senior executives who have overseen such operations,” he said. “Some veterans have waited years to have their claims decided. That same leadership has failed to provide answers to why these issues continue to occur.”
Dellinger said that while errors and lapses can occur in any system, “The American Legion expects when such errors and lapses are discovered, that they are dealt with swiftly and that the responsible parties are held accountable. This has not happened at the Department of Veterans Affairs. There needs to be a change, and that change needs to occur at the top. “
When asked by media what the Legion would do if the trio didn’t resign, Dellinger said a draft of the request was being sent to the White House. “This is a very serious situation,” he said. “The administration needs to take steps now. It’s long overdue. Whenever you’re talking about a patient’s life – a veteran’s life – in jeopardy, it’s always serious.”


Dellinger also wrote an op-ed piece calling for the resignations. Read it here


It needs to happen.

The latest scandal?

If true, there's nothing that ties it to Eric Shinseki . . .

except lack of leadership.

One scandal after another indicates he's not leading and he's certainly not demanding accountability.

If the worst that can be said is that Shinseki may have encouraged fudging of the numbers, the best that can be said is he's incompetent, unable to properly review those employees under him and completely unaware of what's taking place in the department he heads.

US House Rep Jeff Miller is the Chair of the House Veterans Affairs Committee.  His office issued the following:


May 13, 2014
WASHINGTON, D.C. --  Today, Chairman Jeff Miller wrote President Obama to request that he establish a bipartisan commission on VA medical care access. Afterwards, he released the following statement:
“Judging by the throngs of veterans, families and whistleblowers who keep courageously stepping forward, VA’s delays in care problem is growing in size and scope by the day. That’s why I am asking for President Obama’s personal involvement in helping fix this crisis. For nearly a year, we have been pleading with top Department of Veterans Affairs leaders and the president to take immediate steps to stop the growing pattern of preventable veteran deaths and hold accountable any and all VA employees who have allowed patients to slip through the cracks. In response, we’ve received disturbing silence from the White House and one excuse after another from VA. Right now, President Obama is faced with a stark choice: take immediate action to help us end the culture of complacency that is engulfing the Veterans Health Administration and compromising patient safety, or explain to the American people and America’s veterans why we should tolerate the status quo.”  – Rep. Jeff Miller, Chairman, House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs
Related
Chairman Miller letter to President Obama
May 13, 2014
Chairman Miller letter to President Obama
May 21, 2013

The scandal plagued VA is not a star on Barack's record and Shinseki's excuses/failures/both are now apparently costing lives.  It's past time this issue was addressed.


In other news, Matt Maupin  was captured April 9, 2004 in Iraq. In a briefs roundup, March 30th, 2008,  the Washington Post noted:



The father of a soldier listed as missing-captured in Iraq since 2004 says the military has informed him that his son's remains were found in Iraq.
Keith Maupin said that an Army general told him Sunday that DNA was used to identify the remains of his son, Sgt. Keith Matthew Maupin, who went by "Matt."
Matt Maupin was a 20-year-old private first class when he was captured April 9, 2004, after his fuel convoy was ambushed west of Baghdad. Arabic television network al-Jazeera aired a videotape a week later showing Maupin sitting on the floor surrounded by five masked men holding automatic rifles.



Friday, Amanda Lee Myers (AP) reported that a trial date has been set in Iraq for next Tuesday for an Iraqi whom Lt Col Alayne Conway states has "confessed to killing Maupin."  An unnamed Iraqi judge states the confession took place in 2009 and led to a conviction and sentence of death; however, the conviction's set aside or reversed as a result of some paperwork issue resulting in the need for a new trial.  Central Illinois' 31 News (link is video and text) reported Matt's father Keith Maupin "is traveling to the Pentagon on Monday to learn more about the confession." Jessica Jerreat (Daily Mail) adds this will involve Keith Maupin speaking "to the [Iraqi] judge through a translator."  Monday, Karin Johnson (WLWT -- link is video and text) spoke with Keith Maupin at the airport before he left for DC. I'm not going up there for revenge.  I'm going up there for accountability and just justice, I guess."

Brad Evans (WLWT) speaks with Keith Maupin today and Maupin tells him, "Well I think maybe it might be just a shade a little bit closer (for closure) because what I always thought was that I got justice or I got resolve having them bring Matt home.  I really thought it would all go away after that but it didn't, so this comes up and it will I think when this guy is finally, whatever happens to him, I think it will. [. . .] They got the guy that actually pulled the trigger. That’s important to me."

The lies that led to the Iraq War are important to many.  In England, the Iraq Inquiry was held and was long ago supposed to have published its results.  That has still not taken place.  James Chapman (Daily Mail) reports:


Tony Blair was blamed yesterday for a delay in publishing an official report into the Iraq War.
Norman Baker, a Home Office minister, accused the former premier of trying to block the release of secret communications between him and George W Bush.
He has told Sir John Chilcot, who is heading the inquiry, of his deep concern at the length of time it is taking.
A letter from the former Whitehall mandarin – seen by the Daily Mail – shows that publication of notes sent by Mr Blair to former US president Bush, and records of their conversations, is an issue.

Let's stay with England for a moment.  Ian Cobain (Guardian) reports:

Allegations that British troops were responsible for a series of war crimes following the invasion of Iraq are to be examined by the international criminal court (ICC) at the Hague, officials have announced.
The court is to conduct a preliminary examination of around 60 alleged cases of unlawful killing and claims that more than 170 Iraqis were mistreated while in British military custody.

Gavin Cordon (Scotsman) observes, "The inquiry will be the first time the UK has been the subject of an ICC investigation."  BBC News' Jonathan Beale offers:

There'll be a mixture of emotions in government to today's news.
There'll be anger, frustration as well as a sense of embarrassment.
When Britain signed up to the International Criminal Court it would not have envisaged itself being the subject of any investigation - albeit the earliest "preliminary examination" stage.

Britain joins the likes of Afghanistan, the Central African Republic, Guinea and Georgia. 

KUNA reports the International Criminal Court prosecutor Fatou Bensouda held a press conference today explaining "that she cannot go after American forces who allegedly committed war crimes in Iraq during the same period, because the US is not party to the Rome Statue."  Press TV explains, "In January, her [Bensouda's] office received documents from the Berlin-based European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights (ECCHR) together with the Birmingham-based Public Interest Lawyers (PIL), alleging British involvement in torture. The documents were based on interviews with over 400 Iraqi prisoners."  Jill Reilly and Ian Drury (Daily Mail) expand on that:

It took the first step towards a formal investigation after studying more than 400 allegations of beating, sexual assault, mock executions and electric shocks of Iraqi captives.

The claims are made in a 250-page dossier compiled by Phil Shiner’s Public Interest Lawyers.
It raises the prospect of soldiers, commanders and politicians, including four former Labour defence secretaries – Geoff Hoon, John Reid, Des Browne and John Hutton – who are named in the file being put on trial for war crimes.

 
Chris Ship (ITV News) files a video report which includes Phil Shiner declaring,  "Many of these cases are deaths in custody so they couldn't be more serious.  People taken into British military facilities very much alive coming out a few hours or days later very much dead in body bags."
The International Criminal Court issued the following statement: 

Today, 13 May 2014, the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (“ICC”), Mrs Fatou Bensouda, announced that she has decided to re-open the preliminary examination of the situation in Iraq, previously concluded in 2006, following submission of further information to the Office of the Prosecutor in January 2014 in accordance with article 15 of the Rome Statute. The new information received by the Office alleges the responsibility of officials of the United Kingdom for war crimes involving systematic detainee abuse in Iraq from 2003 until 2008.  Iraq is a not a State Party to the Rome Statute, however, the ICC has jurisdiction over alleged crimes committed on the territory of Iraq by nationals of States Parties. The re-opened preliminary examination will analyse, in particular, alleged crimes attributed to the armed forces of the United Kingdom deployed in Iraq between 2003 and 2008.
During the preliminary examination, the Prosecutor shall consider issues of jurisdiction, admissibility and the interests of justice, in order to decide whether or not the criteria to open an investigation under article 53(1) of the Rome Statute have been met.  No decision on the opening of an investigation will be taken until a thorough analysis of all the relevant information is completed by the Office.
Background
On 9 February 2006, Mr Luis Moreno-Ocampo, the then Prosecutor of the ICC announcedhis decision not to seek authorisation to initiate an investigation of the situation in Iraq because based on the information available to the Prosecutor at the time, the required gravity threshold of the Rome Statute was not met. In that decision, the Prosecutor indicated that this conclusion could be reconsidered in the light of new facts or evidence, in accordance with article 15(6) of the Rome Statute.
On 10 January 2014, the Office of the Prosecutor received a new communication from the European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights (“ECCHR”) together with the Public Interest Lawyers (“PIL”), alleging the responsibility of officials of the United Kingdom for war crimes involving systematic detainee abuse in Iraq from 2003 until 2008. The United Kingdom deposited its instrument of ratification of the Rome Statute on 4 October 2001. The ICC has therefore jurisdiction over war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide committed on the territory of the United Kingdom, or by UK nationals as of 1 July 2002, representing the date of the entry into force of the Rome Statute.
Based on an initial assessment of the information received, the 10 January 2014 communication provides further information that was not available to the Office in 2006. In particular, the communication alleges a higher number of cases of ill-treatment of detainees and provides further details on the factual circumstances and the geographical and temporal scope of the alleged crimes. The Prosecutor will therefore conduct a preliminary examination in order to analyse the seriousness of the information received, in accordance with the requirements of article 15(2) of the Rome Statute, and ultimately determine whether there is a reasonable basis to proceed with an investigation.



Mike Corder (AP) adds, "War crimes cases at the ICC are not considered admissible at the Hague-based court if a country can prove it is prosecuting them itself."

It would be great if the issue of War Crimes could aim a little bit higher than boots on the grounds and zoom in on the master criminals who plan and carry out illegal wars. Public Interest Lawyers agrees and issued the following statement today:

There are considerable reasons to allege that those who bear the greatest responsibility for the crimes are situated at the highest levels, including all the way up the chain of command of the UK Army, and implicating former secretaries of state for defence and ministers for the armed forces personnel.

Jonathan Owen (Independent) notes, "Some of Britain’s most senior military and political figures came a step closer to facing a war crimes inquiry today, as the International Criminal Court (ICC) announced it would make a “preliminary examination” into claims of “systemic” abuse by British forces in Iraq."

Nouri's War Crimes continue.  Maybe he'll be next at the Hague?  As he continues the shelling of residential neighborhoods in Falluja, NINA reports 1 civilian was killed by this and five more injured.

As this slaughter continues daily, it's worth noting this from David Reminick's  New Yorker profile of Barack last January: regarding the issues of Falluja and 'terrorists':



“The analogy we use around here sometimes, and I think is accurate, is if a jayvee team puts on Lakers uniforms that doesn’t make them Kobe Bryant,” Obama said, resorting to an uncharacteristically flip analogy. “I think there is a distinction between the capacity and reach of a bin Laden and a network that is actively planning major terrorist plots against the homeland versus jihadists who are engaged in various local power struggles and disputes, often sectarian.
“Let’s just keep in mind, Falluja is a profoundly conservative Sunni city in a country that, independent of anything we do, is deeply divided along sectarian lines. And how we think about terrorism has to be defined and specific enough that it doesn’t lead us to think that any horrible actions that take place around the world that are motivated in part by an extremist Islamic ideology are a direct threat to us or something that we have to wade into.”

He went on, “You have a schism between Sunni and Shia throughout the region that is profound. Some of it is directed or abetted by states who are in contests for power there. You have failed states that are just dysfunctional, and various warlords and thugs and criminals are trying to gain leverage or a foothold so that they can control resources, populations, territory. . . . And failed states, conflict, refugees, displacement—all that stuff has an impact on our long-term security. But how we approach those problems and the resources that we direct toward those problems is not going to be exactly the same as how we think about a transnational network of operatives who want to blow up the World Trade Center. We have to be able to distinguish between these problems analytically, so that we’re not using a pliers where we need a hammer, or we’re not using a battalion when what we should be doing is partnering with the local government to train their police force more effectively, improve their intelligence capacities.”


So why did the US government choose sides on Falluja and why is the White House arming Nouri?

Follow up: Does Nouri know Barack's called Iraq a failed state?

And why has no one pointed that out?


Through yesterday, Iraq Body Count counts 376 violent deaths in Iraq so far this month.

Along with Nouri's killing of civilians, National Iraqi News Agency reports an Albo-Nimir battle left 4 Sahwa dead and four more injured, a Mosul roadside bombing left 1 Iraqi military officer dead, 1 person was shot dead in Doura, Joint Operations Command announced they killed 5 suspects in Falluja, 1 man was shot dead in an attack on a Mosul barbershop, an al-Yarmouk roadside bombing left two people injured, an al-Ghufran roadside bombing left four college students injured, an attack on a Mosul elementary school left 1 student dead, a Balad car bombing left 11 people dead and sixteen injured, 1 man was shot dead in Latifiya, a southern Baghdad shooting left one attorney injured, and 1 corpse was discovered dumped in Baghdad ("handcuffed and blindfolded").  In addition, AP reports 28 people were killed in a wave of Baghdad car bombings this evening.




Wednesday, April 30th, Iraqis voted in parliamentary elections. Iraq's Independent High Electoral Commission has named May 25th as the date the tally of the votes will be released. All Iraq News notes that the Independent High Electoral Commission stated today they are investigating complaints about the election process.

Ned Parker and Isabel Coles (Reuters) report, "The president of Iraqi Kurdistan, Masoud Barzani, said Iraq had been led in an authoritarian direction by Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and threatened to end the oil-rich autonomous region's participation in the federal government."  National Iraqi News Agency notes Barzani met with the US State Dept's Brett McGurk today to discuss "the political situation and the general election and the formation of the next Iraqi government."   Rudaw speaks with Kurd Muhsin Abd al-Hamid about the elections.  al-Hamid was "head of the Iraqi Governing Council after the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003."  Exceprt. 

Rudaw: How do you see the situation in Iraq after the elections? Will a coalition be easily formed this time if they choose Nouri al-Maliki as prime minister?


Muhsin Abd al-Hamid: The situation in Iraq is an incentive to make some changes after the elections and creating new alliances, because many of the political groups have realized that the old sectarian alliances have pushed Iraq backward. The old alliances have harmed Iraq a great deal by disintegrating the social fabric, causing bloody crimes, causing failure of economic projects and spreading sectarianism. Now is the chance for Maliki and the other groups to form a broad-based national alliance. This will include the entire political process and the constitution as its source.


Rudaw: Is the Kurdish and Sunni concern about a third term for Maliki justified?


Muhsin Abd al-Hamid: The Kurds have been through many issues with Baghdad. They are worried about a third term for Maliki as the Iraqi PM because they do not believe that the issues can be solved with Maliki. Therefore, they insist on their positions.


Saad Jawad (The Conversation) offers his take on the election here.  All Iraq News notes Ammar al-Hakim, head of the Islamic Supreme Council in Iraq -- and the new Citizen Coaliton -- declared that the Citizen Coalition is the best way to end the ongoing crises and to be a path to change.



Moving over to the US State Dept.  Today's press briefing was handled by spokesperson Jen Psaki.  We'll note this on the issue of the subpoena of Secretary of State John Kerry:


QUESTION: All right. And then I have one more housekeeping issue before people can go to Ukraine or Syria or whatever.

MS. PSAKI: Okay.

QUESTION: And that is: Yesterday, there seemed to be some conflicting statements coming from the Hill and then from you about the subpoena issue. Has this been resolved in a way that is agreeable to both sides? Because the committee spokesman seemed to say that you guys had said, “Well, let’s just reschedule Secretary Kerry for after he returns from Mexico,” but then your statement suggested that Secretary Kerry might not be the most appropriate witness at all.

MS. PSAKI: Mm-hmm.

QUESTION: So can you enlighten us as to where you are on this?

MS. PSAKI: Well, as both of our statements noted, we’ve been in close touch with the Hill. We’ve noted several times from here that Secretary Kerry was previously scheduled to be in Mexico on the day he was subpoenaed to testify, and we have not yet made arrangements for a hearing date. Obviously, satisfying the request and the needs of the committee is an utmost priority for us and has been for months, but no, there hasn’t been a resolution at this time.

QUESTION: Okay. Well, so when you said that there – you’re – you want to work with the committee, but the committee seems to be – at least this committee in this instance seems to be focused on document production issues.

MS. PSAKI: Mm-hmm.

QUESTION: You suggested yesterday in the statement that the Secretary’s time would – he’s spending most of his time conducting important foreign policy business, and that perhaps – or not perhaps, but there might be – there would be a more appropriate witness. Is that still your position? And if there would be a more appropriate witness on document production issues, who might that be?

MS. PSAKI: Well, I don’t have any specifics on that. Obviously, that’s part of our discussions we’ll continue to have with the committee. And there’s been some issues around which committee has oversight over these types of issues, so we simply want to be responsive to the committee, but the person who testifies and what information we provide, of course, will be dependent on a range of factors on their end.

QUESTION: So my – okay. So my last one on this: So you will provide someone, a witness of some – an appropriate – what you would consider an appropriate witness to the committee to answer their questions? Is that in response to their --


MS. PSAKI: Certainly, we’re open to doing that. We haven’t made a determination yet in terms of how this will be resolved.


That is a how a spokesperson responds.  Not with nonsense about 'rules' that have nothing to do with the Constitution or any law in the United States, not by citing what a Republican did a million years ago, not by being a smart ass, not by being rude.  Last week, Marie Harf was clowning at the podium and it was unworthy behavior for a State Dept spokesperson.  We called her out.  Whether you agree with Psaki's comments or not, that is how a government spokesperson should speak.  She's not ridiculing anyone, she's not taking partisan swipes.  Jen Psaki's comments went to the dignity her position and her department is supposed to demonstrate.



Lastly, we'll note Alice Fordham's NPR report in tomorrow's snapshot.





















Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Sade Doyle disappoints

Kat's three album reviews  -- "Kat's Korner: Tori Climbs The Mountain In Stiletto...," "Kat's Korner: Childhood Home is an adult classic" and "Kat's Korner: Livingston Taylor brings the songs t..."  blazed across the internet on Sunday.

Kat continues to be a unique and needed voice.

Sade Doyle?

Monday, Doyle wrote about Tori Amos' new album for In These Times. I'll give her credit for that,  I just wish she'd known what she was writing about:

She was massively popular, and has continued to be so: Abnormally Attracted to Sin was a Top 10 album on the Billboard 200 chart, and so were Posse and Beekeeper. For all that I might complain about Amos being under-appreciated, we’re talking about an artist for whom debuting at #9, rather than #5 or #1, constitutes a “decline” in popularity. (And she’s been consistently debuting in the top 5 of Billboard’s “Top Internet Albums” chart roughly since it was created.) But the record industry’s initial efforts to capitalize on the alt-singer-songwriter niche she’d created mostly resulted in wispy, wimpy, disposable acts: Your Jewels, your Joan Osbornes, your Vanessa Carltons. Of that first wave of post-Amos signings, only Fiona Apple managed to match Amos in both vulnerability and power. And, perhaps because of Amos’ perceived connection to those acts, the indie world of the time—with its undying commitment to lo-fi guitar rock—spurned her. You were about as likely to see Pavement praising Tori Amos as you were to see them attending a Star Trek convention, and for roughly the same reasons. 

Why does Sade have to be such a damn bitch?

Your Jewels, your Joan Osbornes, your Vanessa Carltons?

First wave of post-Amos signings?

What the hell does that bitch mean?

She appears to mean that these artists were the first group of women signed after Tori's success which is 1991.

Really?

Tori's success leads to Jewel, Joan and Fiona releasing their albums?  Because they all hit in 1995 or 1996.

And Vanessa Carlton?

2002.

Vanessa is not a part of that group.

Now in Kat's review, she put Tori up against a legend (Bruce Springsteen).  And Tori came out on top.

Sade?

She's using Tori to beat other women down.

Sade really needs to take at her feminism.

Kat did three reviews.  One was a man's album (Livingston Taylor) and she worked women into the review (Laura Nyro, Carly Simon and Melanie).  One was a man and a woman -- Ben Harper and Ellen Harper and Kat worked in The Judds and The Cowsills.

The slam at Jewel really pisses me off.  Jewel was never trying to be anything but Jewel.

That's probably true of Vanessa Carlton and Joan Osborne.

I wish Doyle could have been a little more supportive of women.  Kat reviews female artists and, like Ava and C.I., provides a context where women matter.

When Sade Doyle does her comparisons, what we're left with is 'useless girls.'  She's not creating a context for women.


Ava and C.I. are the standard.  They weave in women and use women as reference points.  Sade's just name checking and insulting.  It's a very different world from what Ava and C.I. do -- what Ava and C.I. do so beautifully.


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



Monday, May 12, 2014.  Chaos and violence continue, the killing of civilians in Falluja attracts a little more attention, Nouri meets with US General Lloyd Austin and the media runs to cower, Facebook doesn't want you addressing The Drone War, all that and Benghazi.


Chris Carroll (Stars and Stripes) reports today on changes the Pentagon is making with regards to imminent danger pay and notes, "Imminent danger pay and current R & R programs remain unaffected in Afghanistan, Iraq, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Pakistan, Syria and Yemen."

US service members in Iraq still get danger pay.  And should.  Thing is, few Americans seem aware that US troops are still in Iraq.

Even fewer may be aware of this meet-up.

That photo of yesterday's meet up went up on Nouri's website





As the article at Nouri's site notes, Nouri met with US Ambassador Robert S. Beecroft and with US Gen Lloyd Austin.   It was news but we noted it Sunday night -- and were the only English language website to do so -- it was even in the Iraqi press.  It's now Monday and there are still no reports on it in the Western press.
Why is it news that Austin went to Iraq?
Saturday, David Swanson (War Is A Crime) mentioned, "The White House is trying to keep the occupation of Afghanistan going for TEN MORE YEARS ("and beyond"), and articles have been popping up this week about sending U.S. troops back into Iraq."


Let's drop back to last Thursday's snapshot:

Gordon Lubold has long covered the Iraq War -- including for the Christian Science Monitor.  He has a post with disturbing news at Foreign Policy -- on the discussions of sending (more) US troops into Iraq:


But the nature of the fight the Maliki government confronts in western Iraq is such that officials say Baghdad is looking not only for better reconnaissance and surveillance capability, but also for more robust, lethal platforms. Iraq has been unwilling to accept American military personnel in the country in any operational form, but the willingness to revisit that policy appears now to be shifting. A spokesman for the Iraqi Embassy declined to comment on the issue of allowing American military personnel into the country to conduct drone operations, but acknowledged that the U.S. and Iraq share a "common enemy" in al Qaeda.
"Iraq's view is that all available tools must be utilized to defeat this threat, and we welcome America's help in enhancing the capabilities we are able to bring to bear," the spokesman said.  

You need to put that with other news because Lubold isn't smart enough to.  There's the fact that all US troops never left Iraq.  There's the fact that Barack sent a brigade of Special-Ops in during the fall of 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."  And let's include the news from the April 25th snapshot:

Mark Hosenball, Warren Strobel, Phil Stewart, Ned Parker, Jason Szep and Ross Colvin (Reuters) report, "The United States is quietly expanding the number of intelligence officers in Iraq and holding urgent meetings in Washington and Baghdad to find ways to counter growing violence by Islamic militants, U.S. government sources said."  It was 1961 when US President John F. Kennedy sent 1364 "advisors" into Vietnam.  The next year, the number was just short of 10,000.  In 1963, the number hit 15,500.  You remember how this ends, right?



Last week,  Dar Addustour reported that US Gen Lloyd Austin was expected to visit Iraq and meet with Nouri to discuss weapons and US forces.  That's what the meet-up was about.
And we all need to be aware (a) of the meet-up and (b) of the press doing their part to conceal that the meet-up took place. Austin is not only the current commander of CENTCOM, he was also the top US commander in Iraq up until the drawdown of December 2011.
As the US cozies up to Nouri, Amnesty International's just issued Torture in 2014: 30 Years of Broken Promises notes, "Torture and other ill-treatment have also blighted the records of countries emerging from conflict.  In Iraq, the phenomenon remains widespread in prisons and detention centers.  More than 30 people are believed to have died in custody as a result of such treatment between 2010 and 2012."

Nouri and his War Crimes, Aswat al-Iraq notes, "Renowned Sunni Sheikh Abdul Malik al-Saadi" on Saturday called out the attacks on Falluja, referring to them as "the greatest proof of sectarian genocide."  Genocide is the term for it, genocide and War Crimes.

Chief Thug and Prime Minister of Iraq Nouri al-Maliki is committing War Crimes.  He's using the weapons provided to him by the US government to target civilians in Falluja.  They are being punished because he says there are terrorists in the city.  There are Iraqis in the city.  By going along with the lie that they're 'terrorists,' the US government is choosing sides in a civil war. So today, the continued shelling of Falluja's residential neighborhood ("collective punishment" is the term for this legally defined War Crime) has killed 2 civilians and left eleven more injured. Every day the civilian death toll climbs -- Iraqi civilians killed by the Iraqi military on the orders of Nouri al-Maliki.

But here's the thing about War Crimes, no Iraqi soldier can fall back on the excuse that they were 'just' following orders.  That assertion was rejected in Nuremberg.

Over the weekend, Al Jazeera's reported:

Shelling by the Iraqi army in the city of Fallujah has killed more civilians, hospital sources and witnesses have said, amid allegations that government forces were using barrel bombs in an attempt to drive out anti-government fighters from the area, 
The use of barrel bombs in civilian areas is banned under international conventions given their indiscriminate nature.
But Mohammed al-Jumaili, a local journalist, told Al Jazeera that the army has dropped many barrel bombs "targeting mosques, houses and markets" in Fallujah.


This is the government Barack Obama has backed.  And this is what has resulted from it.  Saturday, UNAMI issued the following:


Baghdad, 11 May 2014 – The Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary-General for Iraq (SRSG), Mr. Nickolay Mladenov remains concerned at reports of increased armed activities in Fallujah and particularly its effects on civilians.


“The people of Anbar have suffered from terrorism and violence for too long. All efforts must be made to ensure that fighting ends, people return to their homes, and reconstruction can begin. It is vital that those affected by the fighting are able to receive humanitarian support”, Mr. Mladenov said. 
“As the Iraqi Security Forces continue their efforts to restore law and order in Anbar, they should ensure that the fight against terrorism is conducted in accordance with Iraq’s international and constitutional human rights obligations”, he added. 
“I am particularly concerned about the impact of violence on civilians and the deteriorating conditions in Fallujah. The UN humanitarian team will continue working with the Government and local authorities to ensure that, despite the difficulties, aid reaches those in need. Continued fighting, including shelling, often hampers the delivery of badly needed emergency aid”, the SRSG added. 
Since the outbreak of violence, the United Nations delivered a total of 15,186 food parcels, blankets, and tents; 37,943 Water and Sanitation Supplies (WASH) and hygiene kits that have reached a total of 233,958 Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) affected by fights in Anbar and floods in Abu Ghraib. 
During the past week: 
UNICEF reached 3,000 families with the distribution of hygiene and household kits in Rawa, Anah, Haditha and Sitak in Anbar. Another 1,500 affected families were reached with hygiene kits in Abu-Ghraib (Baghdad) and 5,000 more hygiene kits were distributed in Samarra and Jazeera (Salah-al-Din). UNICEF also distributed 81 water tanks, installed 6 water storage tanks (of 250,000 litres capacity each) in Rutba, Al-Qaim, Heet, Khalidiayh, Obaidi and Amiryat al-Fallujah, (benefiting 15,360 individuals), and two water storage tanks (of 10,000 litres capacity each) in Samarra. UNICEF also continued with the water truck delivery of 300,000 litres per week in Rutba, Heet and Al-Qaim (benefiting 15,126 individuals).
UNHCR continued with the distribution of Core Relief Item (CRIs) kits including 175 tents in Amiriyat al-Fallujah and Al-Habaniya areas, as well as in Mansour area in Baghdad, bringing its total distributed Core Relief Item kits to date to 6,519. UNHCR is also planning to assist 400 displaced families from Abu-Ghraib with cash money.
IOM distributed to date a total of 7,507 Non-Food Items to Anbar population and delivered on behalf of WFP 930 new food parcels to Saqlawiya, Heet, Amiriyat al-Fallujah, Al-Madina al-Siyahiya, Al-Karma, Al-Habaniya, Al-N'emiyeh, Al-Qaim, Ramadi and Abu-Ghraib, bringing the total number of food parcels distributed to date in Anbar to 15,186. 
WHO in coordination with the Ministry of Heath delivered 2 Inter-Agency Emergency Health Kits (each kit can meet the needs of 10,000 persons) and 1 Trauma Kit (sufficient to carry out 100 major surgeries) to Abu-Ghraib flood victims as well as 3 Emergency Kits of medical and surgical supplies to hospitals in Ramadi and Fallujah, as well as additional medical supplies to Al-Qaim


Of the crisis, Abdul Rahman al-Rashed (Asharq Al-Awsat) notes, "No one will win in this war, which may go on as long as the government in Baghdad believes it can solve the crisis through force of arms."


Among Sunni Arab blocs, campaign rhetoric reflected extreme polarisation. Speaker Osama Al Nujayfi's Mutahidun, the largest Sunni bloc, described Mr Al Maliki's counterinsurgency campaign as an all-out war against Sunni Arabs, warning that Mr Al Maliki's reelection would result in "genocide" against Sunnis.
That's from Kirk Sowell's "With results due, Iraq anticipates a post-election fight" (The National) where he offers his take on the recent elections which also include:


Saleh Al Mutlaq's Arab Coalition, by contrast, framed the Kurds and Mr Al Nujayfi's promotion of an autonomous Sunni region as the greatest threat to Iraq. Former prime minister Iyad Allawi's predominately Sunni but cross-sectarian Nationalist Coalition took an anti-Maliki but more moderate line than Mr Al Nujayfi.
Wednesday, April 30th, Iraqis voted in parliamentary elections. Iraq's Independent High Electoral Commission has named May 25th as the date the tally of the votes will be released.
Walter Pincus (Washington Post) notes today, "In Iraq, it’s been Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, a Shiite who came into power in 2006 during the Bush administration and has been using his authority to destroy the opposition and perpetuate his time in office while ignoring U.S. advice to compromise with the country’s Sunni and Kurdish elements. As a result, there is renewed violence and a return of ­al-Qaeda-associated Sunni insurgents."


Hmmm.

If he came to power in 2006, why is he still in power right now?  Is prime minister of Iraq an eight-year term?

No.

It's a four year term.


And in 2010, the White House demanded that Nouri get a second term.  Despite losing the 2010 election to Ayad Allawi and Iraqiya, Barack Obama -- not Bully Boy Bush -- demanded Nouri get a second term.  And since votes didn't give him a second term, Barack had US officials broker a contract giving Nouri a second term.  This contract is known as The Erbil Agreement.

Related, poor dumb Prashant Rao.  He was kindly called an idiot by an analyst and he had no response to it.  That tends to happen when you spend more time Tweeting about Spider-Man than you do noting the meet-up Lloyd Austin had with Nouri yesterday.  In fact, Prashant never noted that meet-up.  I'd said here Sunday that I might rescue him.  Not doing it.  He's on his own.


Today, Iraq finally makes the front page of the New York Times.

The ongoing genocide?

No, Blackwater.

For background, we need to drop back to the Monday, September 17, 2007 Iraq snapshot:

Turning to the issue of violence, Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) reported Sunday that  a Baghdad shooting (by private contractors) killed 9 Iraqi civilians and left fifteen more wounded. Later on Sunday, CNN reported, "In the Baghdad gun battle, which was between security forces and unidentified gunmen, eight people were killed and 14 wounded, most of them civilians, an Interior Ministry official said. Details were sketchy, but the official said witnesses told police that the security forces involved appeared to be Westerners driving sport utility vehicles, which are usually used by Western companies. The clash occurred near Nisoor square, in western Baghdad.  CBS and AP report that Abdul-Karim Khalaf, spokesperson for the Interior Ministry, announced "it was pulling the license of an American security firm allegedly involved in the fatal shooting of civilians during an attack on a U.S. State Department motorcade in Baghdad," that "it would prosecute any foreign contractors found to have used excessive force" in the slaughter (eight dead, 13 wounded) and they "have canceled the liscense of Blcakwater and prevented them from working all over Iraqi territory." 

No one's come to justice thus far as the result of deals the State Dept made with Blackwater.  They basically offered immunity for information -- why they'd do something like that, why anyone would?  To prevent anyone from being prosecuted.

Matt Apuzzo writes a long-winded, say-nothing article which is entitled "Trying to Salvage Remains of Blackwater Case" and kicks off on the front page before concluding on A-9.

Apuzzo quotes attorney Susan Burke (disclosure, I know Susan) stating, "As citizens, we need to ask why our government fails to achieve any accountability for such blatant wrongdoing."

Too bad Apuzzo's not interested in that.

As a reporter, the story should be about the government of the United States.

It's not really about Blackwater.

Deaths resulted.  I believe the whole world now knows that.  Justice will come for that or it won't.

As it is, Blackwater's on its third or fourth name change which goes to the awareness of what happened -- they keep trying to shed their bad image by changing names.

The US government made the decision not to seek accountability or justice.  They did that when the immunized the Blackwater employees.

At one point, Apuzzo's quoting a State Dept employee about how they were made to pick up shell casings to protect Blackwater.  I don't doubt that.  But most people, presented with that claim, would ask the obvious question:  Made to pick up those casings by whom?

'By the US government' would be the most likely response.

This event took place in 2007 but all these years later, we still don't know who was in the convoy Blackwater was 'protecting,' what US official.

We went over all of this Friday.  Apuzzo's doing a governmental mop up in response to the issues we raised. His article attempts to take the heat off the US government and put it on the Blackwater employees.

The reason none of them have been punished is not because of Blackwater (under whichever name it currently operates).  The reason they've escaped punishment is because of the US government.

Susan Burke's a smart person.  At some point, she'll probably grasp that if she wants the government to really get on board with real prosecutions, she's going to have to make it worth their while.  She could, for example, demand to know the official being protected by Blackwater.  The US government doesn't want to give up that information but it's not a state secret and, with seven years having passed, it's past time they do. Were Burke to demand the government supply the name, she might find the US government suddenly discovers some evidence that can be used in a court of law.  And if the current administration doesn't want to cooperate, it's time to subpoena Condi Rice who, after all, is all about accountability these days and so eager to impart wisdom to groups of students so surely she would have no problem informing the American people and a court of law the name of the US official being transported by Blackwater.



Iraq War veteran Matt Maupin  was captured April 9, 2004. In a briefs roundup, March 30th, 2008,  the Washington Post noted:



The father of a soldier listed as missing-captured in Iraq since 2004 says the military has informed him that his son's remains were found in Iraq.
Keith Maupin said that an Army general told him Sunday that DNA was used to identify the remains of his son, Sgt. Keith Matthew Maupin, who went by "Matt."
Matt Maupin was a 20-year-old private first class when he was captured April 9, 2004, after his fuel convoy was ambushed west of Baghdad. Arabic television network al-Jazeera aired a videotape a week later showing Maupin sitting on the floor surrounded by five masked men holding automatic rifles.



Friday, Amanda Lee Myers (AP) reported that a trial date has been set in Iraq for next Tuesday for an Iraqi whom Lt Col Alayne Conway states has "confessed to killing Maupin."  An unnamed Iraqi judge states the confession took place in 2009 and led to a conviction and sentence of death; however, the conviction's set aside or reversed as a result of some paperwork issue resulting in the need for a new trial.  Central Illinois' 31 News (link is video and text) reported Matt's father Keith Maupin "is traveling to the Pentagon on Monday to learn more about the confession." Jessica Jerreat (Daily Mail) adds this will involve Keith Maupin speaking "to the [Iraqi] judge through a translator."

Today, Karin Johnson (WLWT -- link is video and text) spoke with Keith Maupin at the airport before he left for DC. I'm not going up there for revenge.  I'm going up there for accountability and just justice, I guess."


As he searches for truth regarding his son's death, POLITICO's Katie Glueck falls into a tizzy over Glenn Greenwald's 'remarks' about Hillary Clinton.  Where's the link?  If they can steal from us but they can't link to us, we don't link to them.  They have to steal because they're not very smart and they're business model proves it (they're hanging on by their fingernails right now and praying they can last until 2015 when they just know the presidential campaign of 2016 will heat up interest in their site).  Glueck's not very smart either which is why she pull quotes from "GQ magazine" without adding anything to the issue she's raising via poll quotes.

Michael Paterniti.  Those are the two words 'journalist' Glueck forgot to include.  How does a journalist use the work of another and not even credit the journalist?  Not credit the journalist?  Oh, that's the POLITICO way.

Glenn Greenwald was not smart to bring Hillary up.  In a long interview -- six pages in the write up -- many important issues are discussed and addressed.  All Glueck can do is zoom in on the Hillary 'remarks' and ignore everything else.  Here's the section from Paterniti's article:


How do you feel about the early presidential jockeying?

Hillary is banal, corrupted, drained of vibrancy and passion. I mean, she's been around forever, the Clinton circle. She's a f[**]king hawk and like a neocon, practically. She's surrounded by all these sleazy money types who are just corrupting everything everywhere. But she's going to be the first female president, and women in America are going to be completely invested in her candidacy. Opposition to her is going to be depicted as misogynistic, like opposition to Obama has been depicted as racist. It's going to be this completely symbolic messaging that's going to overshadow the fact that she'll do nothing but continue everything in pursuit of her own power. They'll probably have a gay person after Hillary who's just going to do the same thing.


I hope this happens so badly, because I think it'll be so instructive in that regard. It'll prove the point. Americans love to mock the idea of monarchy, and yet we have our own de facto monarchy. I think what these leaks did is, they demonstrated that there really is this government that just is the kind of permanent government that doesn't get affected by election choices and that isn't in any way accountable to any sort of democratic transparency and just creates its own world off on its own.


That's basically five brief sentences -- in a six page article -- and it's what will be glommed on.

We may note Ed Snowden and other things in the interview later in the week.  But I have to get to Benghazi, yes, I have to get to Benghazi and Hillary's our entry point.  (Nod to Tori Amos' "Black Dove" -- "But I have to get to Texas, said I have to get to Texas" -- Tori's new album Unrepentant Geraldines is released tomorrow -- Kat reviewed it here.)

Glenn's remark weren't sexist -- what a nice change -- but where does he get his information?  Who are these women who will rally to Hillary?  A number refused to in 2008, she's also lost the support of a number of women who did support her in 2008.  I won't be supporting and I won't be voting for her.  I'm among the people she lost.  And it was over her secrecy as Secretary of State -- an issue that can bury her campaign, should she choose to run. And it was over her Congressional explosion re: Benghazi.

Forget what did or didn't happen in Benghazi, I'm just not in the mood for her shouting at people.  Her conduct was unbecoming as a government official and it's even more unbecoming when you consider that she's a former US senator.  Her remarks were rude and insensitive and they were delivered in a bully manner.  I don't want to see that.  She was never the smartest candidate but in 2008 she still knew how to conduct herself in public.

I'm not in the mood for her screaming fits. The press lapped that moment up because they're so craven.  They saw that bully moment and it excited them, delighted them.  We called it out the day it happened.  I will never forget my revulsion, sitting in that hearing, watching Hillary explode like the "Hilda-beast" so many on the right had mocked her as.  I'm not in the mood for a president who acts like a bully and diminishes the sacrifices of the American people.

On September 11, 2012, a terrorist attack in Benghazi left four Americans dead: Sean Smith, Glen Doherty, Tyrone Woods and US Ambassador Chris Stevens.  The US government has done nothing.  I support a legal response (arrest and try those said to be responsible).  Some support that, some support some sort of military strike.  Regardless, the attack has gone unpunished despite the fact that the White House knows who's responsible -- or says they do.  That's a message of weakness.

The attack had many implications.  We seem to be the only ones to give a damn about the diplomatic corps. We give a damn in part because I have so many friends in the diplomatic corps and I heard from them -- and continue to hear from them -- about the meanings of the attack and the lack of response.

The message to any would-be terrorist right now is that you might want to go after the US military in a foreign country but, hey, look at this, if you go after the diplomatic corps (which, yes, does and always has included CIA agents and assets), the US government might not even mount a response.  One year and eight months after the attack, there has been none despite the White House saying they know who is responsible.

Why was there no response while the attack was happening?

That's an issue that needs to be raised and why a special committee is needed.

We're told (lied to) that this was because the attack only lasted X length of time.

Well, yes, we know that now.  But after the attack started?  There was no way of knowing if it would last one hour or seventeen hours.  There was no way to know that.  Why weren't forces dispatched?

They may or may not have made it in time but why weren't they dispatched?

That's one of the key questions people in the diplomatic corps are asking.  They've never heard of anything so stupid.

The nation asks people in the diplomatic corps to go all over the world.  Most US Embassies are protected by a number of Marines.  This protection is seen as solid.  But when it's not enough, when an emergency takes place, what is the alternate plan?

People I'm speaking to at the State Dept see Benghazi as (a) revealing there is no alternative plan or (b) announcing a new policy of when Americans are under attack on foreign soil, their government that dispatched them to this area has no intention of protecting them.

Setting aside the CIA element that uses diplomatic status as cover, there are many men and women who give their entire lives, all of their energy to try to increase and improve relations with other countries.  While everyone else was drooling over Ann Wright being a former colonel, we made a point to repeatedly note she was also former State Dept.  While a lot of Democrats online who never served and never would serve in the US military went ga-ga year after year about former colonel Ann Wright, we saw her service in the diplomatic corps as important and worthy of note.

The diplomatic corps is the one threatened by the Benghazi assault and no one ever wants to address that on the left.  They want to have their hissy fits -- which we'll get to in a moment -- and they want show their ass (hello, Jon Stewart).  It's really sad.

Bob Somerby's painted himself into yet another corner and his ridiculous and ongoing defense of Susan Rice is painful to watch.  Rice lied.  She lied in the same way Bully Boy Bush did.  After using false linkage to tie Iraq and 9-11 together, the response from the Bush supporters was to insist that it never happened.  They could insist this because BBB repeatedly implied a link.  That's what Rice did as well.

We opposed the trial balloon floated for her to be nominated as Secretary of State.  That's because I value the diplomatic corps, that's because Rice is a War Hawk and it's because -- after her disgraceful performances on the Sunday chat & chews -- everyone I knew in the diplomatic corps that weighed in on the topic was of the opinion that Rice shouldn't represent them.

Represent?

Ari Rabin-Havt argues at The American Prospect (no link to Podesta trash) that Democrats should participate on the House Select Committee and that US House Rep Alan Grayson should be on lead.  No. That is one of the stupidest things anyone's ever suggested in 2014 thus far.

Grayson has many strong points.  He has many weak points.  There is no ideal marriage between him and this issue.  We'll come back to that point.

Today, Bob Somerby noted Kevin Drum (Mother Jones) yet again.  Kevin's made an ass out of himself yet again but Bob Somerby can never call out a man.  Kevin's praising a stupid article and using it to note his past coverage of Benghazi, four posts he's mistakenly proud of.

Four people died.  You'll never see them named in the four posts Kevin wrote in real time and linked to.  Four Americans died.  And who was politicizing it?  Read the four posts Kevin so proud of today.  Mitt Romney is "ham fisted" and other things and it's so wrong to "smear" Barack.

Kevin Drum never gave a f**k about four dead Americans.  From the start he made it into political hay.  He's a tawdry whore who doesn't even have the sense to post a photo that doesn't look like he was taking a dump when he was photographed.  How apropos because Kevin Drum is a little s**t.

I don't know what's worse, that they don't care or that they think everyone's too stupid to notice that they don't care?  Kevin Drum is in love with Martin Longman's ridiculous article "The Origin of Benghazi Fever" (Washington Monthly).  He tells you he was "irritated" and "very angry" about the attack.  He notes that "facts were in short supply" immediately after the attack.

But Martin doesn't care.  He doesn't give a damn and Americans aren't as stupid as he would like them to be.

In his piece he mentions Mitt Romney's name ten times.  He mentions Chris Stevens' name three times.

And in his 732-word piece, how many times does he mention Tyrone Woods?

Zero.

In his 732-word piece, how many times does he mention Sean Smith?

Zero.

In his 732-word piece, how many times does he mention Glen Doherty?

Zero.

You don't care about the dead or you would name them.

Your arrogance buries you.

And it would bury Alan Grayson.

Too many on the left have been giggling about the four dead Americans (when not ignoring them completely) ever since September 11, 2012.  They've giggled and they've made jokes and they've done it with each other -- it's been one circle jerk after another.

All they've done is made asses of themselves and lost any high ground on the issue.  We noted when the first hearings started that Democrats had to name the dead, that four dead were not too many to name.  (We also noted that the press needed to stop saying "Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans.")  Eventually, most Democrats in Congress grasped that they needed to name the dead.  It's very sad that they needed a tutorial.

It's even sadder that outlets like Washington Monthly think they can pretend to care about veterans while ignoring Tyrone Woods and Glen Doherty.

Tyrone Woods was an Iraq War veteran.  Glen Doherty was an Iraq War veteran and an Afghanistan War veteran.

From the start, Benghazi has been politicized.

Not by Mitt Romney.

By the press.

A press that should have immediately asked questions spent the hours after the attack, the day after the attack, slamming Mitt Romney who was the Republican presidential candidate.

Even now Washington Monthly and Mother Jones want to make Mitt the story.

They rush to politicize it and they do that in order to protect Barack Obama.

That's the job of the Secret Service.  They're trained in that job, they do it very well.

A free press is not a press that would spend forever and a day obsessing over Mitt Romney's actions while ignoring (or lying) about what took place in Benghazi.

There's a push for Alan Grayson because it's thought he can politicize the committee.

The visuals on this are and have been all wrong for Democratic partisans.  That's why they've lost on this issue.

Alan Grayson would only make the loss greater.

Theatrics and screaming are not needed at this point.  If the Democrats choose to participate in the investigation (they should, for a number of reasons), they need serious people not carnival barkers.  Susan Davis, Mike Michaud, those type of people who are not seen as ever trivializing death and are seen as willing to consider and evaluate with an open mind.

But if Democrats want to lose further ground on this issue, go ahead and turn it over to Alan.  Let him scream, yell, ridicule and see how that plays out across America.  Maybe Alan will scream Mitt Romney's name over and over which will further convince Americans that this is about politics (for the Democrats) and not about the truth.



Lastly, The Drone War.  Adam Kokesh notes the censorship on Facebook:


I’ve been getting text messages from concerned friends and fans for the last several hours about the official ADAM VS THE MAN Facebook page being down. I logged in, and it turns out that the meme below is the reason. This is a young girl who was badly burned in one of Obama’s drone strikes. As obscene as this photo is, it’s still only a small symbol of the pain experienced by millions in the Middle East suffering due to Obama’s war policies and the families of the hundreds of children who have been confirmed killed by Obama’s drone strikes.
FOR WAR

Why does Facebook have an interest in covering up Obama’s war crimes? Well, if you know anything about Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerburg, you know he’d rather cozy up to the murderer-in-chief than call him out or tell the truth about his crimes. In fact, he won’t even let us portray the grizzly reality that is being kept from the American people. 













Saturday, May 10, 2014

bell hooks put it mildly

Go read Ruth's "The blood letting (Dracula and more cancelled)" -- it is an amazing piece of writing.

She needed some help and C.I. and I helped her.

The help she needed?

Being told, "Yes, you can!"

She wrote an amazing piece that went through several drafts.

She kept dropping things.

And I didn't notice it until C.I. pointed it out and told her she had to restore those cuts because that was part of the whole spine of her piece.

When C.I. caught that and explained it, I saw it.  Even me.  And I said, "Ruth, she's right."

Ruth tries to be a lot kinder than I do.

And she was writing with fire each draft but killing the revisions with kindness.

So with us urging her to be true to her own voice, she put back in all she had cut and it is an amazing piece of writing.

Yea, Ruth!!!!!

Atlanta Black Star reports:

Beyonce has earned a lot of titles during her career, from a modern feminist to Queen of the BeyHive, but now feminist scholar bell hooks is deeming the “Partition” songstress a “terrorist.”
On Wednesday night, the New School hosted a panel discussion between Black women activists and creative that led to an intense debate over Beyonce’s impact on young women.
During the discussion, hooks (who chooses not to capitalize her name in order to indicate the importance of text and content over the name of the author) argued that Beyonce had little to no control over her scantily-clad Time Magazine cover that makes her image far from that of a powerful feminist.

“Let’s take the image of this super rich, very powerful Black female and let’s use it in the service of imperialist, white supremacist capitalist patriarchy because she probably had very little control over that cover – that image,” bell said.


The Feminist Wire interviews bell here.

bell hooks was exactly right in what she said.

We didn't get a discussion of feminism though -- Jezebel has the video here -- because bell was the only addressing reality.

Instead we had another lesbian with damp panties telling bell that Beyonce changed her life by making her wet when Beyonce strutted around near nude.

I am just tired of it.

For years, women have had to struggle against men who couldn't stop sexualizing women and now we're having to struggle with Black lesbians.

Stop thinking with your clit.

You're embarrassing us all.

Beyonce is nothing but a pole dancer.  She's not an artist.

Stop trying to misrepresent her grinding as feminism.  I don't care that it made your vagina wet.

The best-case scenario?  Beyonce is the closet lesbian so many need to believe she is.  And some day she'll be healthy enough to step out of that closet.

Worst-case scenario?


A hoochie mama learned if she snapped that thang in your face, you'd overlook the fact that she promotes violence against women, that her crappy songs are nothing to remember and that she's a whore for empire.





That's Tori Amos.  She's an artist.

She doesn't glorify violence against women in her work the way Beyonce does.

Tori will never ever attempt to glamorize Ike Turner beating Tina Turner.

But Beyonce did.  Because Beyonce's pure trash.   A Hoochie Woman.




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


Friday, May 9, 2014.  Chaos and violence continue, Nouri tries to storm Falluja and fails, a US general is supposed to visit Iraq next week to talk about US forces and weapons, there's a call for the Iraqi elections to be declared fraudulent, and much more.



December 2011 saw the drawdown in Iraq.  The Pentagon used the term and only that term.  The media ran with "withdrawal."  All US troops never left.  Some were transitioned to Kuwait -- where thousands remain.  Some stayed in the country.  Ted Koppell was reporting on this -- for NBC News and NPR -- in December 2011 but it was apparently too much for most to handle.

While thousands remained inside Iraq -- those who would be 'trainers' on weapons purchases, CIA, FBI, Special-Ops, etc -- there's been movement on bringing more in -- in fact more have come but that's been too much for a whorish 'progressive' community to handle, cope with or even recognize.

Let's drop back to yesterday's snapshot for the following:



Gordon Lubold has long covered the Iraq War -- including for the Christian Science Monitor.  He has a post with disturbing news at Foreign Policy -- on the discussions of sending (more) US troops into Iraq:


But the nature of the fight the Maliki government confronts in western Iraq is such that officials say Baghdad is looking not only for better reconnaissance and surveillance capability, but also for more robust, lethal platforms. Iraq has been unwilling to accept American military personnel in the country in any operational form, but the willingness to revisit that policy appears now to be shifting. A spokesman for the Iraqi Embassy declined to comment on the issue of allowing American military personnel into the country to conduct drone operations, but acknowledged that the U.S. and Iraq share a "common enemy" in al Qaeda.
"Iraq's view is that all available tools must be utilized to defeat this threat, and we welcome America's help in enhancing the capabilities we are able to bring to bear," the spokesman said.  

You need to put that with other news because Lubold isn't smart enough to.  There's the fact that all US troops never left Iraq.  There's the fact that Barack sent a brigade of Special-Ops in during the fall of 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."  And let's include the news from the April 25th snapshot:

Mark Hosenball, Warren Strobel, Phil Stewart, Ned Parker, Jason Szep and Ross Colvin (Reuters) report, "The United States is quietly expanding the number of intelligence officers in Iraq and holding urgent meetings in Washington and Baghdad to find ways to counter growing violence by Islamic militants, U.S. government sources said."  It was 1961 when US President John F. Kennedy sent 1364 "advisors" into Vietnam.  The next year, the number was just short of 10,000.  In 1963, the number hit 15,500.  You remember how this ends, right?





If we're all up to speed, at today's State Dept press briefing moderated by spokesperson Jen Psaki, the issue of Iraq came up.



QUESTION: Talking about the drones, Foreign Policy has reported today that Iraqi Government is actively seeking armed drones from the U.S. to combat al-Qaida in Anbar, and it would welcome American military drone operators back in the country to target those militants. Are you in discussions with the Iraqi about having American troops going back to Iraq with the drones?


MS. PSAKI: We are – we have seen, of course, this report. It does not reflect discussions we are having with the Government of Iraq. We are not in discussion with the Iraqi Government about the use of armed, unmanned aerial systems, nor are we considering such options. So it sounds like they need some better sources on that one.


QUESTION: Are you ready to discuss this option in case the Government of Iraq asked for?


MS. PSAKI: We’re not in discussion with it, so I’m not going to – about it, and I’m not going to predict or answer a hypothetical.


QUESTION: Is the U.S. discussing the return of any troops to Iraq to help with its ongoing security challenges?


MS. PSAKI: You’re familiar with the steps we’ve taken. That’s what we’re continuing to implement. As you know, we remain deeply concerned about the increased levels of violence in Iraq and the situation in Anbar. Our assistance has not been limited to the security sphere; we’ve worked on a consistent basis to develop a holistic approach and – with a focus on recruiting local tribal fighters, insuring resources are reaching areas that need them.
We also acknowledge that Iraq will not succeed unless its security forces are well supplied, trained, and equipped. And as you know in here, because we’ve talked about it a bit, we’ve also provided additional assistance, including the delivery of 300 Hellfire missiles, thousands of rounds of tank ammunition, helicopter-fired rockets, machine guns, grenades, flares, sniper rifles, M-16s and M-4 rifles. We also delivered additional Bell IA-407 helicopters late last year, and 10 ScanEagle surveillance platforms. So obviously, our assistance is expansive. I don’t have anything else to predict for you about the future, but that’s not something we’re considering, no.


QUESTION: Has the U.S. expedited the delivery of F-16 to Iraq?

MS. PSAKI: We have talked about that a little bit in here in the past. I don’t think I have any additional specific update for you today.


Who's doing this talking?  One person is said to be gearing up for talks.  Dar Addustour reports that US Gen Lloyd Austin is expected to visit Iraq next week and meet with Nouri to discuss weapons and US forces.

The article also notes Stuart Jones.  The White House has yet to announce US Ambassador to Iraq Robert S. Beecroft is going to become the new Ambassador to Egypt.  That has been reported and Laura Rozen was the first on it (weeks ago) and it's pretty much a given.  Stuart Jones is who Barack would like to replace Beecroft with.


Some in the Iraqi press are confused on this and I don't mean that as a slam.  There are many process issues I get wrong on Iraq and people kindly call and e-mail to let me know that.  US President Barack Obama may name Stuart Jones as the nominee for US Ambassador to Iraq.  That doesn't mean Jones becomes it.  Just as Nouri can only nominate people to serve in his Cabinet and requires Parliament to actually make someone a Cabinet Minister, Barack requires the US Senate's support.  They did not give it -- and would not -- to Brett McGurk which is why Barack had to find a different nominee (Beecroft).  All Iraq News offers a bio of Stuart Jones here.

Kitabat reports the proposed nomination comes a dangerous time for Iraq, when people speak of civil war as a real possibility in Iraq's near future and reminds that in their last meeting (November 1, 2013), Barack told Nouri al-Maliki that Iraq needed the participation of all the blocs in the decision-making process and that the attempts to marginalize the Sunnis and the Kurds needed to cease.

Wednesday, April 30th, Iraqis voted in parliamentary elections. "For the first time, the Iraqis utilized an electronic voting system," Iraq's Ambassador to the US Lukman Faily in a NCUSAR podcast.

He also bragged, "There was not a single security incident in Baghdad."  Why would there be?  Not only were the usual checkpoints maintained, additionals ones were added in Baghdad.  Traffic was banned.  Stores were forced to close.  Baghdad was a ghost town.

That there were no security incidents there?

Why are you bragging?

And why are you boasting of Baghdad?

Baghdad isn't Iraq.  It's just where the failed leaders hide out.

Across Iraq on election day?  Let's go Iraq Body Count:



Wednesday 30 April: 22 killed

Khanaqin: 3 killed by suicide bomber at polling station.
Baiji: 5 by suicide bombers.
Dibis: 4 by IEDs.
Falluja: 2 by shelling.
Muqdadiya: 3 by IED.
Udheim: 2 by IED.
Ramadi: 3 by mortars. 




Is Lukman the Ambassador of Baghdad or is he supposed to represent the country of Iraq?

If it's Iraq, he damn well should have -- but didn't -- note what happened throughout the country.


But, hey, he's a puppet from thug Nouri's party so it's not like we can expect anything but propaganda from him.



Ahead of the elections, Ayad Allawi Tweeted the following:








It's 10 days since the elections and people continue to wait for the results.  The Financial Times of London's correspondent Borzou Daragahi Tweeted the following this week:



election commission says 20% of ballots counted so far; at this rate, two weeks before fully counted 




Supposedly, the Independent High Electoral Commission will announce results May 25th (though they've noted the vast amount of complaints regarding irregularities and alleged violations could push the announcement back).  We're not interested in covering leaks or alleged leaks on vote totals.  The leaks of 2010?  They were false.  There's no reason to believe that the leaks four years later aren't false as well.

For those who just can't seem to let these illusions go, we'll note Ned Parker's Tweet from earlier this week (Ned Parker is now with Reuters):





  • False is also supposed to be rumors that Nouri al-Maliki has made a secret visit to Tehran to plead with Iranian officials for them to back him for a third term as Iraq's prime minister.  Trend News Agency quotes Iran's Deputy Foriegn Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian stating, "Mr. Maliki . . . is the highest-ranking official in Iraq.  His visits to the Islamic Republic of Iran have always been official and public.  No confidential visit has been made to Tehran by Mr. Maliki and any [future] visit will take place within official and legal framework."

    Kitabat reports that Speaker of Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi met with US Ambassador to Iraq Robert Stephen Beecroft today in Baghdad and complained about what is being seen as fraudlent ballot boxes.  The two are said to have discussed the large number of reported violations and that some voting centers did not open their doors.  (On the latter, there have been reports that voting centers in Sunni majority districts turned away all voters for over half the day -- often with the orders coming from Nouri's military -- and when this was reported to the IHEC, the centers that were supposed to open in the morning managed to open by mid-day. al-Nujaifi has been among those making that complaint publicly so it is likely that he would bring that issue up to Beecroft in a face-to-face.)  Struan Stevenson is the President of the European Parliament's Delegation for Relations with Iraq and he writes at The Hill about the elections:

    Now Ayad Allawi, leader of al Iraqiya, has said that 2 million ballot papers are missing, raising deep suspicions that major electoral fraud has taken place. News that all Iraqi police and army personnel were issued with two ballot papers each, one in their camps and the other sent to their homes, has compounded fears that the election was rigged.
    [. . .]
    The UN, US and EU should intervene and declare that this was not a free and fair election. They must not stand back and wash their hands of this affair. The people of Iraq have suffered enough. They need a democratic election that will provide them with a government that can restore freedom, democracy, justice, human rights and women's rights to Iraq. Four more years of corrupt dictatorship by Maliki will be in no-one's interest.



    May 2nd, Kurdish News Network carried accounts of fraud in the voting in northern Iraq.  We'll note journalist Muhammed A. Ahmed and elections observer Chya Khdir's comments:

    “I was attacked by a group of PUK supporters who were in a public uniform and stood in front of Gojar School polling station in Ranya. I had the official IHEC badge and was officially allowed to cover the voting process for Iraq Oil Report, a leading foreign organization that provides business, political and security news and analysis on Iraq‌." Muhammed A. Ahmed, a freelance journalist who covered the elections for Iraq Oil Report.
    “I took my camera out to take a picture of the school when I heard someone say, "take him; he is recording." Around 30 to 40 people came to me and violently grabbed my camera. One of them had a knife. Many of them were recognized PUK intelligence members and Peshmarga. Asaysh intervened. However, instead of detaining these people who were unlawfully stood there to threaten people, Asaysh detained me and deleted my photos.” Ahmed charged. 
    “We were taking food and drink to the staff and observers but the PUK forces hit my head with a revolver,” a Gorran‌'s observer who is badly wounded told KNNC correspondent on the scene. 
    “We as the observers of the political entities having been allowed officially by the IHEC, took food and drink to the staff and workers, but the PUK forces wearing casual clothes harassed and attacked us” Chya Khdir, observer of the election, told KNNC. 



    Iraq Times reports MP Hussein Sharifi, with the Sadr bloc, declared again today that the Sadr position is no on a third term as prime minister for Nouri al-Maliki.  State of Law is Nouri's coalition.  Iraq Times reports State of Law MP Ihsan al-Awadi insisted today that State of Law will not allow Speaker of Parliament al-Nujaifi to hold any position in the next government.


    Mohammed Sabah (Al Mada) reports that the leader of the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq Ammar al-Hakim met today with cleric and movement leader Moqtada al-Sadr and how they state that the prime minister is not shielded from the rule of law and that they oppose Nouri being given a third term.  They dismiss Nouri's claims of forming a government and note that no one bloc or party is expected to have won enough seats in the Parliament to form a government on its own so Iraq will need a power-sharing government and the prime minister will be selected by Shi'ites, by Sunnis and by Kurds.  Mushreq Abbas (Al-Monitor) explains that "the movements of Sadr and Hakim have been clearly trying, since the provincial elections in 2013, to find a balance among the Shiite forces’ alliance to face Maliki’s rise that is happening at their expense in the Shiite street."  And Hamza Mustafa (Asharq Al-Awsat) adds, "Both the Sadrist Movement and the ISCI were highly critical of the prime minister during his second term in office, particularly over his security record. They are now trying to block the coalition endorsing his premiership."

    Dar Addustour columnist As Sheikh notes today his belief that beyond this discussion and others, the need is for Iraq to build and become a nation of citizens.

    Imran Khan (Al Jazeera) offers today:

    By 2006 the SCIRI had morphed into ISCI and then Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim died ‎of cancer in 2009. Ammar al-Hakim took on the leadership of ISCI and a new chapter was born. Hakim the younger had seen the influence of the party wane and sought to reverse that trend. He reached out to all political players and began to change the image of ISCI and build alliances with other religious Shia groups, including traditional rivals like the Sadrists led by cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.
    In many ways Hakim has the perfect credentials. He has a religious law background and studied in seminaries in Iran where he became a Sayyid or cleric. It's a powerful title which gives him religious authority. He's also from a well-known family. Generations of Hakims have been involved in politics and religion.
    Hakim also has an almost mythical status among his supporters. ‎One Iraqi I asked, Mahmoud, who lives in Baghdad, said: "Hakim is a man who commands respect. He isn't a dirty politician, he is a man of God and he shows us the right path for Iraq. He is our bridge, our guiding light."
    Hakim's style of leadership is also winning him support in the international arena. One Western diplomatic source said: "Hakim is inclusive. He reached out to the youth, to women and that's impressed us. He isn't just talk."
    Others agree. I asked one European diplomat what her embassy thought of Hakim. "We love him" was her reply. Clearly it was meant as a light-hearted comment but in all seriousness it's very difficult to find open critics of Hakim who aren't political rivals or driven by sectarian rage.
    Hakim is a smart operator and under his leadership he has rebuilt ISCI into a very influential and powerful organisation. Before last month's elections he launched the citizen coalition with a simple and clear message that Iraq needs reform, both country-wide and throughout government. Many politicians flocked to his call and his bloc is very powerful. So then, why is this young, charismatic and well respected ‎man not the leader of Iraq?




    Nouri al-Maliki's four months of killing civilians in Falluja in what is collective punishment (a legally defined War Crime) gets far less attention.  Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) notes the assault today increased as Nouri attempts to 'retake' Falluja (when was Nouri ever in charge of Falluja?).  Tawfeeq notes, "About 700,000 people live in Falluja, a Sunni city in Anbar province west of Baghdad. More than 300 people, most of whom are civilians, have been killed in Falluja since the beginning of the year."  NINA notes the military's shelling of residential neighborhoods today left 7 civilians dead and thirteen more injured.  Wael Grace (Al Mada) speaks to Falluja General Hospital's Dr. Ahmed Chami who states 310 civilians have been killed and 1322 injured in the last months from the military shelling residential neighborhoods.

    Friday began with news of an assault.  Press TV reported, "Iraqi army and tribal fighters have launched an operation to retake militant-held areas in the city of Fallujah in Anbar province."  JC Finley (UPI) puts it this way, "Iraq's Ministry of Defense announced Friday that a full-scale military operation is underway in the embattled Sunni city of Fallujah."  How'd that turn out for Nouri?










  • Nouri always gets excited when he can wound or kill a Sunni child.

    So maybe the day's a success for that?

    Maybe.  But even Nouri may have a difficult time clutching to that alone.


    World Tribune reports, "The sources said ISIL led tribal forces in expelling the last bastion of Iraq Army troops and pro-government militias from the city, located in the Anbar province." Kitabat notes it was a failed military operation.

    Another failure for Nouri.  His list of failures continues to grow.  He began his assault on Anbar Province December 30th.  He kept avoiding Falluja.  His forces would surround it.  But actually entering it?

    Nouri was a coward.  But a smart coward because he couldn't win by storming the city.  As Kitabat notes, he tried to storm it today.  Nouri pretended for weeks and weeks that he was seeking other means.  He wasn't.  But he was too chicken to call for the attack until today.  And he was too chicken to go to Falluja.  Remember when he attacked Basra in 2008?  He went there. He said, as commander in chief, it was his duty to be there.

    But it's not his duty to be in Falluja for this attack?

    Well it's different.

    See, in 2008, he went to Basra with US forces to protect him.  That's not a possibility right now for Falluja (though maybe he and Gen Lloyd Austin can work out something with regards to that).


    In other violence, National Iraqi News Agency reports 4 Yezidis were shot dead in Karanah Village, an al-Qayyarah roadside bombing left 3 police members dead and two more injured, a Tammooz roadside bombing left three police members injured, a Tikrit roadside bombing and armed attack left 3 police members dead and one police officer injured, and Joint Operations Command announced they killed 2 suspects.


    Iraq War veteran Matt Maupin who was captured April 9, 2004. In a briefs roundup, March 30th, 2008, in a briefs round up of various news, the Washington Post noted:



    The father of a soldier listed as missing-captured in Iraq since 2004 says the military has informed him that his son's remains were found in Iraq.
    Keith Maupin said that an Army general told him Sunday that DNA was used to identify the remains of his son, Sgt. Keith Matthew Maupin, who went by "Matt."
    Matt Maupin was a 20-year-old private first class when he was captured April 9, 2004, after his fuel convoy was ambushed west of Baghdad. Arabic television network al-Jazeera aired a videotape a week later showing Maupin sitting on the floor surrounded by five masked men holding automatic rifles.



    Today, Amanda Lee Myers (AP) reports that a trial date has been set in Iraq for next Tuesday for an Iraqi whom Lt Col Alayne Conway states has "confessed to killing Maupin."  An unnamed Iraqi judge states the confession took place in 2009 and led to a conviction and sentence of death; however, the conviction's set aside or reversed as a result of some paperwork issue resulting in the need for a new trial.

    Central Illinois' 31 News (link is video and text) reports Matt's father Keith Maupin "is traveling to the Pentagon on Monday to learn more about the confession." Jessica Jerreat (Daily Mail) adds this will involve Keith Maupin speaking "to the [Iraqi] judge through a translator."


    Lastly, I like Hilda Solis, former Secretary of Labor.  That means when you're in hot water, we don't look the other way.  I like Sandy Berger and called him out over his stuffing classified documents into his pants to smuggle them out of a secure room.  Hilda has stepped down as Secretary of Labor and is now running to be elected a Los Angeles County supervisor.  She's also the subject of a criminal investigation.  Paul Pringle and Abby Sewell (Los Angeles Times) report:



    A letter sent last year to Solis by the U.S. Office of Special Counsel, an independent agency that investigates allegations of administrative violations of fundraising rules by federal officials, said it began an inquiry after receiving a complaint that Solis had solicited a donation from a Labor Department employee. According to the letter, the complaint alleged that in March 2012, Solis "left a voicemail message on a subordinate employee's government-issued Blackberry in which you asked the employee to contribute toward and assist with organizing others to attend a fundraiser for the President's reelection campaign."
    Solis has declined to comment on the investigation, but a spokesman reiterated Friday that she believes she has done nothing wrong.


    I hope Solis did nothing wrong.























    mushreq abbas