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Nov 25, 2009
we have another theme post tonight. the topic is black friday - the big day of sales after thanksgiving. to shop or not to shop, that is the question. question? isn't it obvious! of course you shop! why wouldn't you shop? i love to shop. and organized shopping? my
sisters and i swear it off every few years and then decide we've got to
do it again. they're not as into shopping as i am. so i am thrilled
that they're ready to do it again. after the 2003 incident - a fist
fight - they have just not been in the mood. i'll talk about that. 1
of my sisters found a gorgeous blouse. i have no idea who found it 1st
but they began yelling at each other claiming that the other had it
1st. they stopped yelling when another woman tried to grab it from
them. she was told to release it and instead hauled off and punched my
oldest sister. sucker punched her. you know i wasn't letting that go. i punched her right in the nose. always
goes for the nose because they bleed. and the blood shocks them more
than any pain could and if any 1 gets asked to leave, it's going to be
the woman bleeding all over the merchandise, not you. i'm laughing but i am serious. i
love the conflict of black friday. i love being part of it. i don't
have to hit any 1 to love it but, yeah, some 1 comes after my sister,
i'll be right there throwing down. but i have a blast without fist a
cuffs. so should you shop or not? for me, it's never been
an issue. i love those sales. i loved those sales back when i didn't
have money and i love them even more now. it's the sport of the shop
more than the prices at this point. let's close with c.i.'s ' Iraq snapshot:' Wednesday,
November 25, 2009. Chaos and violence continue, the Iraq Inquiry
continues in England, the Liberal Democrats call out Gordon Brown's
attempts to short-circuit the inquiry, another inquiry waits in the
wings -- one into British forces possible abuse and murder of Iraqis,
and more.
Today in London, the Iraq Inquiry continued its public hearings. Janet Stobart (Los Angeles Times) explains,
"The six-member panel is looking into the decision of former Prime
Minister Tony Blair's government to join the U.S.-led war that brought
down the Iraqi dictator in 2003. It will interview policymakers, secret
service chiefs, military commanders and relatives of soldiers who died
in the war. Blair is scheduled to appear in January. " The day's focus
was WMDs. John Chilcot heads the Inquiry.
Chair John Chilcot:
Good morning. Our objective today is to look at the issue of Iraq's
weapons of mass destruction. This will take us from the time of the
first Gulf War and the inspections that followed it right up to the
final report of the Iraq Survey Group, the organisation with
responsibility for providing an account of Saddam's weapons' programmes
after the Iraq conflict. Several reports have already been published on
issues relating to weapons of mass destruction. We do not propose in
this session to go in detail into areas which have already been
examined closely before by other investigations, but what we do hope to
do is to elict communities' concern about Saddam's weapons, the
development of the government's policy on this issue, the threat that
the government believed that Iraq's weapons posed, and what was found
after the conflict. I would like to recall that the Inquiry has access
to literally thousands of government papers, including the most highly
classified for the period we are considering and we are developing a
picture of the policy debates and the decision-making process.
Unless attributed to a news outlet, all quotes from today's hearings are from the [PDF format warning] rush transcript provided by the Inquiry (which they note may change) or from the videos of the hearing provided by the Inquiry. Emma Alberici (Australia's ABC and link has text and audio) summarizes,
"The Chilcot inquiry has now heard two days of evidence from the most
senior Foreign Office officials who received and analysed intelligence
on Iraq for two years before the war and in the year after the
invasion. It has emerged that Britain's Foreign Office also told former
prime minister Tony Blair that Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass
destruction had been dismantled, 10 days before Britain invaded Iraq."
Tim Dowse and William Ehrman were today's witnesses. Channel 4's Iraqi Inquiry Blogger observes,
"One thing I'll remember about today's hearing was watching two career
diplomats relive the moments that must surely be the absolute nadir of
their professional lives. I'm talking about the weeks and months
following the Iraq War when the weapons their department had so
confidently assessed would be found failed to turn up." And it is
apparently difficult for some liars to ever get honest. From today's
hearing:
Committee Member Lawrence Freedman: So in terms of your
concerns over this period, you mentioned Iran, you mentioned North
Korea, you mentioned Libya, you mentioned Pakistan, at least through AQ
Khan, and you mentioned Iraq, but in terms of rank ordering again,
where would Iraq come on that list, in terms of the most threatening in
proliferation terms?
Tim Dowse: It wasn't top of the list. I
think in terms of -- my concerns on coming into the job in 2001, I
would say, we would have put Libya and Iran ahead of Iraq.
William
Ehrman: I would like to add to that. In terms of nuclear and missiles,
I think Iran, North Korea and Libya were probably of greater concern
than Iraq. In terms of chemical and biological, particularly through
the spring and summer of 2002, we were getting intelligence, much of
which was subsequently withdrawan as invalid, but at the time it was
seen as valid, that gave us cause for concern, but I think there is one
other thing that you need to recall about Iraq, which was different in
a sense from some of the other countries. First of all, they were in
breach of a great many Security Council Resolutions. Secondly, as Tim
Dowse has mentioned, Iraq had used chemical weapons bother internally
against its own people and externally against Iran. Thirdly, it had
started a war against Iran and it had invaded Kuwait and it had also
fired missiles to Iran, Kuwait, Israel and Saudi Arabia. So in that
sense in terms of use and in terms of -- ignoring a great many Security
Council Resolutions, Iraq was unique.
Was Iraq the big threat in
2001 or 2002? No. Dowse says other countries ranked ahead of it. Ehrman
can't have that and it's time for him to lie and confuse the issue. He
does that by bringing a number of areas which, pay attention, were
offered as reasons . . . for . . . the . . . FIRST GULF WAR. It is
equivalent to the US and England declaring World War II based on the
1914 assassination of Franz Ferdinand.
Ehrman also appears to
have been snoozing (or hoping everyone else was) only minutes prior
when Dowse had addressed the issue of missiles and noted that they "are
not weapons of mass destruction in themselves". Now let's go to do
Dowse addressing what they saw as real concerns prior to the start of
the Iraq War (March, 2003).
Tim Dowse: Could I maybe illustrate
that with regard to some of the countries concerned? Take Libya as one
example. Between 1998 and 2003, the assessments that were being carried
out painted a picture of steady progress on Libya's nuclear and
ballistic missile programmes. It had been identified by 2003 as a prime
customer of AQ Khan network. We were also concerned about activity in
the chemical weapons field and about work at research sites on dual-use
potential to support biological weapons-related work. With Iran, Iran
had used ballistic missiles in the Iran/Iraq war in the 1980s. It had
aquired Scud B missiles from Syira and from North Korea and after -- it
also produced Scud C sllightly longer-range missiles. After the war,
North Korea sold to Iran production technology for Scud B and Scud C
and in the mid-1990s, it brought a few examples of North Korean No-Dong
1 missiles. These were long-range and, from that, it devloped its own
missile, the Shahab 3, of 1300 kilometres. Iran's nuclear fuel
activities had developed steadily over more than two decades by 2001 to
2003. It had announced, or the IAEA had reported, a large Iranian
conversion facility at Isfahan; a large facility for gas centrifuge
fuel enrichment; it had indigenous facilities to manufacture centrifuge
components; it had obtained P2 centrifuges; it had got technical
drawings, whose origin the IAEA had concluded was AQ Khan. So we were
considerably worried about the development in Iran. As for North Korea
--
Committee Member Lawrence Freedman: I think you have made
your point that there are a vareity of different stages and the example
you have given us from Iran is quite interesting perhaps as a
comparative with what was thought to be the case with Iraq. Can we move
on to Iraq itself? You have mentioned all the things before that Iraq
was known to have done, but these were all prior to 1991 in terms of
attacking its neighbours and actually using these weapons. So, since
1991, do you believe that it had been effectively contained?
Tim
Dowse: I would say we regarded the effect of the -- certainly with WMD,
the weapons inspectors, UNSCOM's activities, the IAEA's activities
through the 1990s, until 1998, as effectively disarming Iraq. There
were quite a large number of unaswered questions, things that we were
unsure about.
While Dowse appeared to be making some effort
towards answering questions, William Ehrman could not stop spinning.
There was no evidence of a link between Iraq and al Qaeda but Ehrman
could not let go of that lie and repeated it throughout his testimony.
One example, "But there was also the fact that he was supporting
terrorist groups, Palestinian terrorist groups, and although we never
found any evidence linking him closely to AQ Khan and we did not --
sorry, to Al-Qaeda, and we did not belive that he was behing, in any
way, the 9/11 bombings, he had given support to Palestinian terrorist
groups and also to a group called the MEK, which was a terrorist group
directed against Iran." There is no linke, NON, to al Qaeda but Ehrman
repeatedly worked it in and then would walk it back as though it was an
accident. He seemed to feel he was Mr. Subliminal and the Inquiry
should have told him to stop making the linkage. As for the MEK, the
Inquiry should have asked Ehrman which country he thought he was
working for in the lead up to the Iraq War? Did England classify the
MEK as a terrorist organization in 2002? Then why is Ehrman blathering
on about them?
While Ehrman repeatedly (and falsely) attempted to link Iraq to al Qaeda (and then rush back a qualifier), there was no link. CBC's report
makes that clear and notes that Dowse testified there was no link and
that, "After 9/11 we concluded that Iraq actually stepped further back.
They did not want to be associated with al-Qaeda. They weren't natural
allies."
For perspective, in the US, George W. Bush started the
illegal war and he's a Republican (Democratic Barack Obama continues
it). In Australia, then-Prime Minister John Howard started the Iraq War
and he is a member of his country's Liberal Party. He was replaced by
Kevin Rudd of the Labor Party who has ended Australia's miltiary
presence in Iraq with "the last 12 Australian soldiers" still in Iraq departing at the end of July.
Of the three major countries pushing for the illegal war, only England
has seen the original pimp replaced with a member of the same party.
Tony Blair was replaced as prime minister by Gordon Brown and both men
are members of the Labour Party. Not only are Blair and Brown members
of the same party and also of the New Labour segment of the party, they
have a relationship which goes back decades and Blair's ascendancy to
the top of his party took place with the promise that Brown would be
his successor. Brown supported Blair on every major policy decision
including the Iraq War. Bully Boy Bush lied about 'programs' and
'yellow cake' and pretty much everything including, most likely, his
own choking (allegedly on a pretzel). In England, the lie was that Iraq
had the capabilities to launch a WMD attack on England in less than one
hour. Rob Welham (Xinhua) observes,
"The intelligence about Iraq's military capability, set out in the
so-called "dodgy dossier", proved to be wrong, and the decision to go
to war became one of the most controversial foreign policy decisions in
living memory." Richard Norton-Taylor (Guardian) addresses that false claim in his report:
Asked
about suggestions that the Blair government's 45-minute deployment
claim had referred to weapons of mass destruction usable by Iraq to
strike another nation, Dowse said: "I don't think we ever said that it
was for use in a ballistic missile in that way." The inquiry panel
member Sir Lawrence Freedman pointed out: "But you didn't say it
wasn't."
Liberal Democrat Party MP and chief of staff Edward Davey issued the following statement today:
"It is becoming ever more clear that the case for war was nothing more
than sophistry and deception. The threat that Saddam could deploy WMD
within 45 minutes was fundamental to the Government's arugment that
Iraq presented an imminent danger. Yet this new evidence shows that the
intelligence was, if anything, pointing towards Iraq becoming less of a
threat. A leader of courage and conviction would have used such
evidence to halt the drumbeat for war, but Blair just turned a blind
eye to intelligence that contradicted his case. This evidence proves
what has long been suspected, that intelligence was cherry-picked or
dismissed to support the case the Government wanted to make. It is
becoming ever more clear that the case for war was nothing more than
sophistry and deception flying in the face of the latest and best
intelligence." David Brown (Times of London) emphasizes,
"Intelligence information that Saddam Hussein had dismantled his
weapons of mass destruction programme was received by the Foreign
Office days before Tony Blair ordered the invasion of Iraq, an inquiry
into the war heard today." Ben Macintyre (Times of London) revisits MP Robin Cook's decision to leave Blair's cabinet in 2003 and his calling out the rush to illegal war:
With
delicate ferocity, he presented the case against war: "Iraq probably
has no weapons of mass destruction ... Neither the international
community nor the British people is persuaded there is an urgent and
compelling reason for this action in Iraq." He warned that a
dangerous sense of Muslim injustice was building, that Britain was
being dragged into conflict by a far more powerful ally, and that the
deep misgivings of voters were being ignored: "The prevailing mood of
the British people is sound. They do not doubt that Saddam is a brutal
dictator, but they are not persuaded that he is a clear and present
danger to Britain." Above all, Cook insisted that Britain must not
be taken to war without a vote in Parliament. "From the start of this
present crisis, I have insisted on the right of this place to vote on
whether Britain should go to war," he said in his resignation
statement. Two days later, the government motion supporting the use of
British forces in Iraq passed by 412 to 149. To listen to
politicians speak today, one might imagine that the consensus in 2003
was opposed to war, and Blair and his inner circle the sole
drum-beaters. Parliament backed the war. The majority of MPs voted for
it. The Cabinet supported it and remained in their jobs with the
exception of Cook and, eventually, Clare Short. The media were broadly
supportive of military action.
Tony Blair continued to make the claim that Iraq could launch an attack on England in less than an hour. A false claim. Gordon Rayner (Telegraph of London) reports
on that aspect and notes Ehrman testifying, ""On March 10 we got a
report saying that the chemical weapons might have remained
disassembled and that Saddam hadn't yet ordered their re-assembly and
he might lack warheads capable of effective dispersal of agents." Mark Stone (Sky News) offers this observation of today's hearing:
One
thing bugged me though. The Inquiry committee appeared not to follow up
some points with obvious questions. An example. One of the panel, Sir
Roderic Lyle, referring to a statement Blair made in 2003, asked the
following pertinent question: "Would you regard the Prime
Minister's statement in December 2003 that 'the Iraq Study Group
[tasked with finding WMD after the invasion] has already found massive
evidence of a huge system of clandestine laboratories' as corresponding
to advice you were giving to ministers?" The response from Tim Dowse was, somewhat sheepishly: "I did not advise him to use those words." But
then... nothing from the panel! They did not ask whether the advisors
told the PM to back off from words which appeared clearly to be out of
kilter with the advice they were giving him. None of what was said
today will make Mr Blair feel very comfortable as he prepares for his
appearance. We have to wait until January for that though.
Channel 4's Iraqi Inquiry Blogger notes these reactions:
Simon Carr in the Independent wasted no time; "The Chilcot Inquiry looks set to be boring, miasmic and faintly dishonest. "This is a panel that the toadiest of Blair toadies would have chosen. Why Brown agreed to it is a mystery." The Daily Mail was scarcely more optimistic for the Inquiry's prospects, John Kampfner writing
that as the Inquiry began "one conclusion could be drawn before a
single person had said a single word: Tony Blair will get away with it.
Again."
On only the second day of the public hearing, Nico Hines and David Brown (Times of London) reported
the accusations that England's current prime minister, Gordon Brown,
was attempting to derail the inquiry, "When the Prime Minister
announced the inquiry, he claimed that national security would be the
only legitimate barrier to full disclosure in Sir John Chilcot's report
into the Iraq war. A set of protocols published on the Cabinet Office
website, however, indicates that a tranche of additional restrictions
have been imposed. The guidelines issued to Sir John and his team set
out nine extra restrictions, including commercial and economic
interests, that would allow a government agency or department to remove
a section from the report." BBC News (link has text and video) reports
the Liberal Democrat Party leader Nick Clegg has stated, "This protocol
includes nine seperate reasons why information can be suppressed" and
acts as "rights of veto" to keep, at best, embarrassing moments from
the public: "How on earth are we, and is the whole country, going to
hear about the full truth of the decisions leading up to the invasion
of Iraq if the inquiry is being suffocated on day one by his
government's shameful culture of secrecy?" Sian Ruddick (Great Britian's Socialist Worker) declares,
"Only by declaring Tony Blair guilty of war crimes will it help to
bring justice for those millions of Iraqis who have paid with their
lives for a bloody, pointless war."
In other Iraq news out of England, BBC reports
that former-Justice Thayne Forbes has been appointed to head the
investigation into the inquiry into whether British forces killed 20
Iraqis and abused nine others in 2004 and the BBC's Caroline Hawley
explains, " An internal army document says a Red Cross doctor
believed that facial injuries to the Iraqis suggested 'that when the
injuries were received the person had either been held down or
defenceless.' It is because the MoD failed to produce these documents
when required by the High Court that the government has had to agree to
this inquiry." CNN adds,
"The release of a photo published in British media and obtained by CNN
about the incident shows an armed soldier standing near four people
face down on the ground with their hands bound behind their backs and
their faces covered. Attorneys for the men say they were beaten and
evidence shows a breach of the Geneva Conventions prohibiting
humiliating and degrading treatment of prisoners. But, the defence
ministry disputes that." Simon Basketter (Great Britian's Socialist Worker) reports,
"Evidence of torture includes close-range bullet wounds, the removal of
eyes and stab wounds. The death certificates described how the Iraqis
died: 'Several gunshot wounds to body -- severance of sexual organs.'
'Gunshot to head.' 'Gunshot in face, pulling out of the eye, breaking
the jaw, gunshot to the chest'."
Today in Iraq, Michael Christie and Mark Trevelyan (Reuters) report
an assault in Tarmiya in which 6 family members were murdered by males
"wearing [Iraqi] army uniforms . . . The women had their throats cut
while the men were shot in the head". Jomana Karadsheh (CNN) adds
that three females had thie throats slit -- two adults and one
"13-year-old girl" and that "It is not known in either case whether the
attackers were soldiers or were masquerading as Iraqi service members."
Lin Zhi (Xinhua) adds,
"The attacker left alive a woman and her child, who were relatives of
the victims visiting the family when the attack occurred, the source
said." Marc Santora (New York Times) observes
this is the second such attack in recent days and notes, "One theory
about the motivation for the attacks is that militants are posing as
members of the Army in order to foment distrust among Sunnis, turning
them against government troops and thereby making it easier to
establish safe havens. However, the government has provided no evidence
to this effect and the theory is based on little more than speculation
voiced by local security officials, who would speak only on the
condition of anonymity."
In other reported violence . . .
Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) reports
a Baghdad sticky bombing which wounded one person, a Baghdad roadside
bombing which injured four people, a Nineveh Province roadside bombing
which injured two Iraqi soldiers and one person, a Baquba roadside
bombing which left three police officers injured, a Kirkuk sticky
bombing which injured one police officer and a Karbala roadsdie bombing
and motorcylce bombing -- one after the other -- which claimed the
lives of 13 people and left twenty-six more injured.
Turning to the US, like Bush, Barack loves land mines. Cedric's "Princess Di died for his sins" and Wally's "THIS JUST IN! HE'S A MORON!" covered that last night. In addition, other community sites did theme posts on TV shows you can't stand last night, Betty's "Somerby and the awful 7th Heaven," Mike's "Mammograms, V," Rebecca's "hawaii oh-no," Stan's "The awful Democracy Now!," "TV show you loathe" (Law & Order franchise), Ruth's "Perfect Strangers," Marcia's "The Office," Trina's "Worst TV show" (Andy Griffith Show), Ann's "Download Carly's new album for just $5.00" (The Jamie Foxx Show) and Kat's "24 -- ugh."iraqsky newschannel fourthe telegraph of londongordon raynerruth barnettthe times of londondavid brownnico hinesbbc newsthe guardianrichard norton-taylormcclatchy newspaperssahar issathe los angeles timescnnjomana karadshehthe new york timesmarc santorathe socialist worker
Posted at 08:44 pm by politicsscree
Permalink
Nov 24, 2009
from allie bohm's ' Join Us in D.C. to Protect Abortion Coverage in Health Care
Reform' ( blog of rights):
On November 17, I
asked if you were angry about the Stupak amendment to the House health care
reform bill. Well it's clear that you are. So far, over
27,000 of you have signed our
petition to President Obama and congressional leadership
urging them to stand up for reproductive health care and ensure that the
anti-choice Stupak
amendment is not included in any final health care reform
bill.
Well, now there's more that you can do. On Wednesday, December 2,
reproductive rights advocates from across the country will come together in
Washington, D.C., for a Capitol Hill Lobby Day. Make your voice heard in
opposition to health care reform that limits access to abortion. Come join
us!
We will kick off the day at 9 a.m. in the Dirksen Senate Office Auditorium
(Dirksen G50). Throughout the day, you'll hear from members
of Congress, receive lobby training, and meet other activists who want to
protect a woman's ability to make private health care decisions without
government interference. This is your opportunity to meet with your members of
Congress to tell them that health care reform should improve women's lives, not
interfere in their ability to get the health care they need.
Sign-up
to attend the December 2 Lobby Day. We'll send you more specific information
about the day as it is released. so that's you p.s.a. thank you
to c.i. for the kind words in today's snapshot. tonight we've got a theme for
those posting: tv. specifically bad tv. a show you hate. a
show that sends you rushing to another channel. for me that show is
hawaii 50. i don't mind the theme song. though i once threw a drink in a
guy's face over the theme song. a number of us were at a club in the
early 90s and this guy attached himself to our group. some 1 brought up the
theme to this show and i did the ba-ba-ba-ba-bah-bah, ba-ba-ba-ba-baah. he
insisted that was theme to the rockford files. no, we told him, it was
the theme to hawaii 50. and i did it again and another guy used the table as a
drum to do the pounding on it and show how the theme goes next. but the
idiot kept insisting this wasn't the song. then he got rude about how we
were all stupid because we didn't even know the theme. at which point i
threw my drink in his face. (he called us stupid c**ts and i don't care to be
called the c-word, sorry.) i didn't mind the macarthur guy who was
frequently cute. danno was his character's name. but i could not get
through jack lord's bad toupees. every 1 rags on william shatner but i can take
him a lot easier than jack lord. so pompous, so serious. so eager to play
the same 'i fall in love' story every other year. and the episodes are so
boring. there's 1 we like. ava and c.i. wrote about that 1. it's got some
1 famous in it. famous now. she's a hippie on the show. found
their review. it was susan dey. that's the only episode worth
watching. if they could just air that episode, or just clip down the
episodes so that it's just dano and the theme song, i could stomach the show and
probably enjoy it. but jack lord is the deal breaker for me. let's close
with c.i.'s ' Iraq
snapshot:'
Tuesday, November 24, 2009. Chaos and violence
continue, the Iraq Inquiry in London begins hearing public testimony, a former
British ambassador calls the inquiry out as a sham, the January elections in
Iraq may take place in February, and
more.This morning Al Jazeera
reported that, "The storm clouds are already
gathering over this Inquiry being held among high security in London." That is
the Iraq Inquiry chaired by John Chilcot. Ruth Barnett
(Sky News -- link has text and video) reports that
Chilcot used his opening remarks this morning to insist that the inquiry would
be "fair and frank." Since the announcement that it would start this year (and
continue next year with former prime minister Tony Blair expected to testify
after England holds elections), there has been much speculation that the inquiry
would be a farce. We'll note the following from Chilcot's opening
statement:
Welcome to the Iraq Inquiry's first day of public hearings. For
those of you who do not know me, I am Sir John Chilcot chairman of the Iraq
Inquiry. I am joined by my colleagues Professor Sir Lawrence Freedman, Professor
Sir Martin Gilbert, Sir Roderic Lyne and Baroness Usha Prashar. Together we form
the Iraq Inquiry Committee. Next to me is Margaret Aldred who is the Secretary
to the Inquiry.
The Iraq Inquiry was set up to identify the lessons that should be
learned from the UK's involvement in Iraq to help future governments who may
face similar situations.
To do this, we need to establish what happened. We are piecing this
together from the evidence we are collecting from documents or from those who
have first hand experience. We will then need to evaluate what went well and
what didn't -- and, crucially, why.
My colleagues and I come to this task with open minds. We are
apolitical and independent of any political party. We want to examine the
evidence. We will approach our task in a way that is thorough, rigorous, fair
and frank.
The Committee and I are also committed to openness and are
determined to conduct as much of our proceedings in public as possible. I
welcome those members of the public who join us here today -- thank you for
taking the time and effort to travel here this morning. I also welcome the media
present here at the QEII. For those not physically present, I am pleased that
the Inquiry proceedings are available for broadcast and are being streamed on
the internet.
These public hearings are the activity which will attract the most
publicity but they form only one part of our work.
Ben Quinn (Christian
Science Monitor -- text and audio) offers that
no one may be pleased with the outcome, "Critics of the war probably won't get
what they most want from the government-appointed panel – a public drubbing of
unpopular former Prime Minister Tony Blair for leading the nation to war in the
mistaken belief that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction. And
supporters of the war are unlikely to get a clear declaration that Britain's
participation in the invasion was the right thing to do." Quinn goes on to note
that many critics of the inquiry point out that the "six member panel [. . .]
includes not a single lawyer or judge" leading people to doubt the inquiry's
ability to determine the legality of the war. From the
audio.Pat Murphy: Ben, first off, can
you tell us a little bit about these people that are making up this British
board of inquiry?Ben Quinn: Yes, Pat.
Well there are six members on the panel. They were appointed by the prime
minister, by Prime Minister Gordon Brown. The chair is Sir John Chilcot, a
British civil servant. He's a Whitehall mandarin -- Whitehall being the
headquarters of the British civil service. He has the unenviable task of
chairing this panel. He has come into criticism in the past from, uh, various
commentators who feel that he has taken a soft-touch to questioning in previous
probes. So he'll be eagerly watched in terms of his handling of this inquiry.
There are five others on the panel. Perhaps one of the more interesting figures
is Sir Lawrence Friedman who is a distinguished academic. Now he's, he's been a
professor of war at King's College in London since 1982 but notably he's
credited with writing a large part of Tony Blair's famous -- infamous, perhaps
-- some would say -- 1992 Chicago speech where he basically made the case for
liberal military intervention.Gideon Rachman
(Financial Times of London)
refrains from making any predictions while reminding
that there were expectations on past British inquiries into Iraq: the Hutton
inquiry which people thought "would destroy Tony Blair" instead whitewashed
everything and falsely attacked the press (that's my call on the Hutton inquiry,
not Rachman's) and the Bulter inquiry which Rachman feels wasn't a whitewash.
John F. Burns
and Alan Cowell (New York Times) feel
reflective and observe, "The unpopularity of the war
— and its impact on Mr. Blair's once glittery image among British voters --
contributed to his ouster by Prime Minister Gordon Brown two years ago." Of
course, Gordon Brown was Tony's lap dog, his hand picked successor and the one
who has carried out every one of Tony's policies (including refusing to release
the files on John Lennon and citing 'national security' as a reason). As
Gordon's stock continued to plummet, he finally yieled to public pressure this
summer and announced he'd do what he had promised several years ago: Launch an
inquiry into the Iraq War. Rose Gentle's song Gordon Gentle died serving in Iraq
June 28, 2004. He is one of the 179 British forces
who were killed in the Iraq War (ongoing Iraq War -- and ongoing for the British
which expects to keep 200 service members in Iraq for the foreseeable future.)
ITV News speaks with her
(link is video) and she tells them, "I just hope the
committee stuck to their word because they promised us that they'd look inside
and outside and if there were mistakes made, the fingers would get pointed at
the person making mistakes." Rose Gentle is a member of Military Families Against the
War. Yesterday Julia Reid (Sky
News -- link has text and video) spoke with Geoff
Dunsmore, father of Chris Dunsmore who died serving in Iraq (July 19, 2007). He
speaks of the Iraq Inquiry due to start this week in London, "The nation needs
to know why we went to Iraq, clearly and concisely. We need to know why it cost
money, but the biggest thing is why it cost a lot of lives -- my son's as one of
them. I hope the inquiry will help the families that are struggling and trying
to get some sense out of all this." Back in June Independent Labour MP
Clare Short
explained why she felt a real inquiry was
necessary:
We need an inquiry that forces all parties and the public to face
up to the fact that we got involved in Iraq because George Bush and the
neo-conservatives wanted to overthrow the unpopular regime of Saddam Hussein --
regime change -- and establish a friendly power in Iraq, so that they could
relocate American bases in the middle east, dominate the Gulf and have close
relations with a country that contained a large proportion of the world's
remaining oil. As has been said, all of that is laid out for all to read in the
documents published by the Project for the New American Century, which many of
those who became senior figures in the Bush Administration had signed up to.
Of course, the US expected the invasion of Iraq to be popular with
Iraqis and therefore thought that it would help to stabilise the middle east.
The only problem was that international law, laid down after the second world
war under the leadership of President Roosevelt and with the support of Prime
Minister Churchill, did not permit that, and thus the lying became necessary in
order to do what the neo-conservatives thought to be right.
I did not know that Tony Blair had the published documents of the
Project for the New American Century drawn to his attention -- they were
certainly not drawn to the attention of the Cabinet -- but I think that he was
desperate to be close to George Bush and worried that he would not be because of
the closeness of his relationship with President Clinton, and that he therefore
gave his word early on that Britain would be with him in the planned invasion of
Iraq. From that, it all flows: the exaggeration of the threat from weapons of
mass destruction to give an excuse for war, because regime change is not
legal.
The Butler report and the various leaks from our intelligence
agencies have shown that the intelligence was being fixed around the policy.
Hans Blix started out believing that there were WMD in Iraq, but when he found
and reported that there were not -- he reported to the Security Council what he
had found, and also achieved the dismantling of large numbers of ballistic
missiles -- he was briefed against and smeared because his truthful findings
were obstructing the excuse for war. Clare Short
resigned from Tony Blair's cabinet May 12, 2003
declaring, "I am afraid that the assurances you
[Tony Blair] gave me about the need for a UN mandate to establish a legitimate
Iraqi government have been breached. The security council resolution that you
and Jack have so secretly negotiated contradicts the assurances I have given in
the House of Commons and elsewhere about the legal authority of the occupying
powers, and the need for a UN-led process to establish a legitimate Iraqi
government. This makes my position
impossible."Andrew Gilligan
live blogged the first day of the inquiry for the
Guardian. He calls attention to several
moments in the hearing including, on the issue of the panel itself, this on the
day's three witnesses (Peter Ricketts,
Simon Webb and William
Patey):This
is interesting. Webb also says that, during the time in question, he received a
promotion in the MoD after going through a selection process that involved two
members of the inquiry assessing candidates - Lady Prashar, who, as First Civil
Service Commissioner, was involved in senior appointments of this kind and Sir
Lawrence Freedman, who I presume was on the panel as a member of the "great and
the good". This disclosure does rather reinforce the impression that the inquiry
represents the establishment interrogating
itself.Nicholas Witchell (BBC News)
offers a video report of today's hearing. Nico Hines
(Times of London) offers up "best of the
evidence. The Telegraph of London
reports a witness has stated that Bush and Blair
were planning the Iraq War two years before it began:
Sir Peter Ricketts, who was chairman of the Joint
Intelligence Committee in 2001, said there was concern in both London and
Washington that the strategy of ''containment'' of Saddam Hussain was
''failing''. Giving evidence at the
first public hearings of the inquiry, he said a review of the Iraq policy was
already under way in Whitehall in anticipation of the arrival of the new Bush
administration. He said that, in
discussions with Secretary of State Colin Powell, it appeared the Americans were
''thinking very much on the same lines''. He added, however, that others in Washington were
already thinking further ahead.
A second report
from the Telegraph offers a second witness testifying that the
US was planning the Iraq War back in 2001:
Sir William Patey, then head of Middle East policy at
Foreign Office said that in February 2001, the UK knew that some in the new US
administration wanted to topple Saddam He said: "We were aware of the drum beats from
Washington." However, he said that
Britain was not then willing to engage in regime change in Baghdad. "Our policy
was to stay away from that."
David Brown and
Nico Hines (Times of London)
add of Ricketts, "He said a review of the Iraq
policy was already under way in Whitehall in anticipation of the arrival of the
new Bush Administration." On Monday, Chris Ames
(Guardian) explained that Andrew Gilligan
was unearthing a great deal and his scoops "are perhaps as significant for what
they tell us about Sir John
Chilcot's Iraq inquiry. They are a humiliation for
the inquiry, which -- as I write -- has not put a single piece of new evidence
into the public domain. [. . .] The Telegraph, on the other hand, is putting a
lot of new information into the public domain. It has published extracts from
two of the papers on which it has based its stories. It does have to be said
that the first of these, 'Stability
Operations in Iraq', was published last year on
Wikileaks, but the whole effect of what Gilligan has done is to add to the sum
of public knowledge." Sunday Gilligan
summarized "hundreds of pages of secret Government
reports" regarding the Iraq War:
Tony Blair, the former prime minister,
misled MPs and the public throughout 2002 when he claimed that Britain's
objective was "disarmament, not regime change" and that there had been no
planning for military action. In fact, British military planning for a full
invasion and regime change began in February 2002. The need to conceal this
from Parliament and all but "very small numbers" of officials "constrained" the
planning process. The result was a "rushed"operation "lacking in coherence and
resources" which caused "significant risk" to troops and "critical failure" in
the post-war period. Operations were so under-resourced that some troops
went into action with only five bullets each. Others had to deploy to war on
civilian airlines, taking their equipment as hand luggage. Some troops had
weapons confiscated by airport security. Commanders reported that the Army's
main radio system "tended to drop out at around noon each day because of the
heat". One described the supply chain as "absolutely appalling", saying: "I know
for a fact that there was one container full of skis in the desert." The
Foreign Office unit to plan for postwar Iraq was set up only in late February,
2003, three weeks before the war started. The plans "contained no detail once
Baghdad had fallen", causing a "notable loss of momentum" which was exploited by
insurgents. Field commanders raged at Whitehall's "appalling" and "horrifying"
lack of support for reconstruction, with one top officer saying that the
Government "missed a golden opportunity" to win Iraqi support. Another commander
said: "It was not unlike 1750s colonialism where the military had to do
everything ourselves."
In another report, Gilligan
explains, "In the papers, the British chief of staff
in Iraq, Colonel J.K.Tanner, described his US military counterparts as 'a group
of Martians' for whom 'dialogue is alien,' saying: 'Despite our so-called
"special relationship," I reckon we were treated no differently to the
Portuguese'." Richard
Norton-Taylor (Guardian) adds:
Fresh
evidence has emerged about how Blair misled MPs by claiming in 2002 that the
goal was "disarmament, not regime change". Documents show the government wanted
to hide its true intentions by informing only "very small numbers" of
officials. The documents, leaked to the Sunday Telegraph, are
"post-operational reports" and "lessons learned" papers compiled by the army and
its field commanders. They refer to a "rushed" operation that caused
"significant risk" to troops and "critical failure" in the postwar
period.
Norton-Taylor
has come up with a list of five questions that the
inquiry must answer to be seen as genuine. We'll note his first
one:1 What assurances did Tony Blair
give George Bush about Britain's involvement in the war with Iraq? The
overriding factor that took Britain into war is a crucial secret the Chilcot
inquiry could unlock. Key could be what assurances Tony Blair gave George Bush
in a series of bilateral meetings, notably at the president's ranch in Crawford,
Texas, in April 2002. One leaked classified document reveals that two months
later, Whitehall officials noted: "When the prime minister discussed Iraq with
President Bush at Crawford in April, he said that the UK would support military
action to bring about regime change." But asked in July 2002 about whether the
government was preparing for military action, Blair told MPs: "No. There are no
decisions which have been taken about military
action."England's Channel 4 News also live blogged the
inquiry:Lyne: in terms of a military
threat was Saddam and his regime in a cage? Patey: Yes. about 6 hours ago from
web
Lyne: And we could continue like that until such
time as he departed? Patey: Possibly. about 6 hours ago from
web
"
Among the issues explored today were [PDF format warning] the No Fly
Zone. Evidence submitted to the committee on this
was largely historical (beginning with Iraq's 1990 invasion of Kuwait -- for any
wondering, nothing in the evidence acknowledges that the administration of
George H.W. Bush gave the go ahead for that assault). The No Fly Zone began
April 1991 and it ended "formally on 1 May
2003."
The hearing continues to hear
testimony this week: tomorrow with Tim Dowse and William Ehrman scheduled to
speak on Weapons of Mass Destruction, on Thursday with Christopher Meyer
scheduled to testify on the Transatlantic Relationship and on Friday with Jeremy
Greenstock to offer testimony on the Developments in the United
Nations.
Former British
Ambassador Craig Murray evaluates the day's hearing and comes to a conclusion
that the investigation is a
farce:
Sir John Chilcot was just ten minutes in to the first public
session of the Iraq Inquiry when he told the first big lie -- and a lie which,
when examined, exposes the entire charade.
"My colleagues and I come to this inquiry with an open mind."
That is demonstrably untrue. Three of the five members -- Rod Lyne,
Martin Gilbert and Lawrence Freedman -- are prominent proponents of the Iraq
war. By contrast, nobody on the committee was in public against the invasion of
Iraq. How can it be fine to pack the committee with supporters of the invasion,
when anyone against the invasion was
excluded?
Mehdi Hasan (New
Statesman) is also unimpressed with the inquiry and offers "Five reasons to
be cynical." Thomas Penny and
Kitty Donaldson (Bloomberg News)
note that this is the fifth inquiry into the Iraq
War. Yesterday, Stan weighed in on the inquiry
and pointed out that "you'll notice that in the US we still don't have an Iraq
inquiry. In England, Gordon Brown is Labour and he replaced Tony Blair as Prime
Minister. They are both Labour and Brown was Blair's chosen successor. And yet
they get an inquiry." The BBC tries to
call US Senate papers and a daft committee (Iraq
Study Group -- Baker and Hamilton, not Mike's group that he
started) inquiries. As the world's eyes turn to London, Sami Ramadani
(Guardian) looks to
Iraq:
The
attitude of those in Baghdad who are invited to comment on the inquiry swiftly
changes from expressions of pain and sadness to that of anger and strong
denunciation of the war and its architects, George Bush and Tony Blair. It is
striking that the one common thought that comes to the fore is that Bush and
Blair have escaped justice and "got away with murder". They certainly don't have any confidence that the
outcome of the inquiry will lead to Blair appearing before a legal tribunal to
account for his role in engineering and launching the illegal
war. The terms of the debate in Iraq
are very different from those here in Britain. For while here people are seeking
to establish beyond much doubt who did what, when and why, people in Iraq regard
it as an open and shut case: US policymakers, followed meekly by most of the
British political and establishment notables, planned the invasion and
"destruction" of Iraq many years before 2003. They cite the 13 years of
murderous sanctions from 1991 to 2003 as a prelude for the occupation of the
country. They stress that Saddam Hussein's 35-year dictatorship and non-existent
WMD were "used as a pretext" for the
war.
Yesterday in Iraq, the
Parliament passed election law amendments. Liz Sly and
Caesar Ahmed (Los Angeles Times)
explain "The amendments did not offer any extra
seats to Iraqi refugees, who include many Sunnis, and therefore did not adress
the complaint that prompted Vice President Tariq Hashimi to veto the original
law last week." Steven Lee Myers
(New York Times)
explains, "The three-member Presidency Council,
which includes Mr. Hashimi, President Jalal Talabani, and a second vice
president, Adel Abdul Mahdi, now has 10 days to approve or veto the law."
CNN walks
through on the Constitutional powers, "According to
Iraq's constitution, the presidency council -- made up of Kurdish President
Jalal Talabani, Shiite Vice President Adel Abdul Mehdi and al-Hashimi -- must
unanimously approve a bill for it to become law." That was so confusing to so
many last week -- or they pretended it was. The Constitution is very clear that
the council has the power to veto and everything passed by the Parliament has
gone to the council -- though most outlets only paid attention to this aspect
when the SOFA went to the council last year. CNN adds that if the council offers
a veto, it would require a 2/3 vote from the majority of the MPs to push the
legislation forward. Aamer Madhaniand
Ahmed Fadaam (USA Today)
quotes Iraqi Accordance Front spokesperson Salim
Abdullah stating, "What has happened today represents a setback" and states
Iraq's Independent High Electoral Commission believes the election will be
pushed back to February. Nada Bakri
(Washington Post) also
notes the latter point, "Faraj al-Haidari, the head
of the electoral commission, suggested that the elections would be held in
February, although he said he was waiting for Hashimi's decision." Waleed Ibrahim
(Reuters)
reports the commission head Faraj al-Haidari
declared today, "In all cases the possibility of holding the vote in January is
over." Warren P.
Strobel and Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers)
explore the election climate, "Prime Minister Nouri
al Maliki, a Shiite, has launched a campaign warning that forces loyal to Saddam
are trying to regain power. On Sunday, his government put on television three
suspects it said were behind Oct. 25 bombings, which killed more than 150 people
in Baghdad; they said remnants of Saddam's Baath party were behind the
attacks."
Also in Iraq, Ahmed Rasheed, Alex Lawler,
Michael Christie and William Hardy (Reuters)
report that Iraq's pipeling to Turkey is not
functioning following it being bombed over the weekend and that it is expected
to take at least "four more days to fix". Staying with violence . . .
Bombings?
Sahar Issa
(McClatchy Newspapers) reports a Baghdad
sticky bombing which wounded three people, a second one which wounded two
people, a Baghdad roadside bombing which left three people injured, and,
dropping back to Monday, a Nasriyah roadside bombing which left four Iraqi
police officers injured, a Falluja sticky bombing which claimed the life of 1
Imam and left three of his relatives wounded and a Baghdad sticky bombing which
claimed the life of 1 Imam, 1 person traveling with him and injured a third
person.
Yesterday's
snapshot included this: " Sahar Issa
(McClatchy Newspapers) reports an
assassination attempt on Ayad Allawi that injured two of his body guards (Allawi
is the former Iraqi Prime Minister and also a rival of Nouri al-Maliki's) and an
assassination attempt on journalist Emad al-Abadi in which he was shot 'in the
head, neck and shoulder' and is now in critical condition." Raheem Salman
and Usama Redha (Los Angeles Times) report,
"Baghdad is buzzing about the shooting Monday night of a prominent TV
commentator who regularly criticized the government on his show 'Without Fences'
on the privately owned Al-Diyar TV station." They offer an alternative spelling
of Imad Abadi and quote the Journalistic Freedoms Observatory's Ziad Ajili
stating, "For sure it is the politicians who are responsible. He was very brave
in exposing corruption and he is one of the most prominent journalists who are
criticizing the political parties."
PROGRESS AGAINST AL QAEDA
By U.S. Senator Byron Dorgan (D-ND) Chairman, Senate Democratic Policy Committee
A new policy paper released by
the Senate Democratic Policy Committee outlines progress the Obama
Administration's new strategy is making in the fight against al Qaeda.
The Obama administration has opted
for a different strategy -- an aggressive, comprehensive, and integrated
approach to combating the terrorist network. The result is a significantly
disrupted and weakened al Qaeda. In
its first ten months, this new strategy has: • Disrupted the most serious terrorist threat against
the United States since 9/11, and others; • Killed the top leader of Pakistan's Taliban
insurgents, Baitullah Mehsud; and • Killed other key terrorist leaders around the world,
including the most important terrorist leaders in East Africa and Indonesia
At the heart of this progress
lies the following: • A proactive
and aggressive counterterrorism approach at home based on effective and
efficient coordination between the federal government and state and local law
enforcement. • Intelligence
collection and skillful analysis, combined with efficient coordination between
the federal government and state and local partners. • An increase in cooperation from foreign governments
and intelligence services due to the new image and outreach the Obama
Administration has put forth to the global community, particularly its renewed
commitment to diplomacy and international law. • Refocusing on Afghanistan and Pakistan, in order to
combat the threat of al Qaeda, Taliban, and affiliated terrorists. .
The results are encouraging.
Today, many of al Qaeda's top leaders are no longer in place, replaced instead
with less experienced and less capable individuals. The organization finds it
more difficult to finance its terrorism. Its operations are more often detected
and disrupted. While we continue to
face significant threats from al Qaeda and affiliated terrorists, the Obama
Administration's tough and smart strategy and the courageous work of law
enforcement, military, and diplomatic officials across the country and
throughout the world are making real progress in our efforts to defeat terrorist
threats at home and around the globe.
In the US, Thursday is Thanksgiving and, as a result, many outlets
will be in repeats and many programs will either air repeats or not air.
NOW on PBS will
offer a new program this weekend (begins airing Friday on most PBS stations,
check your local listings):
The Maldives, a nation of roughly 1200 low-lying islands in the
Indian Ocean, could be underwater by the end of this century if climate change
causes ocean levels to rise. On the eve of the big climate summit in Copenhagen,
the country's president, Mohamed Nasheed, is warning of a massive exodus from
the Maldives if drastic global action is not taken. On Friday, November 27 at
8:30 pm (check local listings), NOW on
PBS talks with President Nasheed about the
climate crisis and why he compares it to genocide.
And because music is so frequently all that we can count on, let's
note Carly
Simon's latest album is Never Been Gone
(Kat sang its praises here) and
this week only you can download
the entire album at Amazon for $5.00. That's all 12
tracks. Never Been Gone finds Carly revisiting her songwriting canon to
re-imagine some of her best loved hits including "You're So Vain,"
"Anticipation," "Let The River Run," "Coming Around Again," "The Right Thing To
Do," "That's The Way I've Always Heard It Should Be" and "You Belong To Me."
Today Carly Will
be at J&R Music World in New York (23 Park Row) signing copies of Never
Been Gone beginning at 6:00 pm. Carly will be
on Greater Boston
(WGBH) Wednesday and Thursday (Thanksgiving day)
she'll be performing in the Macy's Parade on the Care Bear's Float as well as be
on Extra for part-two of her interview. And
if you're on the fence about downloading the album, Kat pointed
out that if the issue is needing to know the credits
for each track, that's covered in "For those about
to download . . ." -- and I'd be surprised if the
credits weren't either up or soon to be up at Carly's website. One
more thing, Rebecca's been
covering the assault on women's health and women's rights in both the US House
and Senate, she's been covering that topic for over two weeks now. Last
night, she utilized Joni Mitchell's "Big
Yellow Taxi" to explain what's happened:
late last night, i heard the screen door slam, and a
democratically controlled congress took away all i am. don't it always seem
to go that you don't know who you can trust until after you voted
they paved paradise and took away all my rights. they paved paradise
and took away all my rights.
Trina, Betty, Stan, Ann and Ruth have also
covered this issue -- to be sure and give credit where it's due -- but I think
Rebecca's the only one that's covered in every one of her posts.
|
Posted at 09:08 pm by politicsscree
Permalink
Tuesday,
November 24, 2009. Chaos and violence continue, the Iraq Inquiry in
London begins hearing public testimony, a former British ambassador
calls the inquiry out as a sham, the January elections in Iraq may take
place in February, and more. This morning Al Jazeera reported
that, "The storm clouds are already gathering over this Inquiry being
held among high security in London." That is the Iraq Inquiry chaired
by John Chilcot. Ruth Barnett (Sky News -- link has text and video) reports
that Chilcot used his opening remarks this morning to insist that the
inquiry would be "fair and frank." Since the announcement that it
would start this year (and continue next year with former prime
minister Tony Blair expected to testify after England holds elections),
there has been much speculation that the inquiry would be a farce.
We'll note the following from Chilcot's opening statement: Welcome
to the Iraq Inquiry's first day of public hearings. For those of you
who do not know me, I am Sir John Chilcot chairman of the Iraq Inquiry.
I am joined by my colleagues Professor Sir Lawrence Freedman, Professor
Sir Martin Gilbert, Sir Roderic Lyne and Baroness Usha Prashar.
Together we form the Iraq Inquiry Committee. Next to me is Margaret
Aldred who is the Secretary to the Inquiry. The
Iraq Inquiry was set up to identify the lessons that should be learned
from the UK's involvement in Iraq to help future governments who may
face similar situations. To do this, we
need to establish what happened. We are piecing this together from the
evidence we are collecting from documents or from those who have first
hand experience. We will then need to evaluate what went well and what
didn't -- and, crucially, why. My
colleagues and I come to this task with open minds. We are apolitical
and independent of any political party. We want to examine the
evidence. We will approach our task in a way that is thorough,
rigorous, fair and frank. The Committee
and I are also committed to openness and are determined to conduct as
much of our proceedings in public as possible. I welcome those members
of the public who join us here today -- thank you for taking the time
and effort to travel here this morning. I also welcome the media
present here at the QEII. For those not physically present, I am
pleased that the Inquiry proceedings are available for broadcast and
are being streamed on the internet. These public hearings are the activity which will attract the most publicity but they form only one part of our work. Ben Quinn (Christian Science Monitor -- text and audio) offers
that no one may be pleased with the outcome, "Critics of the war
probably won't get what they most want from the government-appointed
panel – a public drubbing of unpopular former Prime Minister Tony Blair
for leading the nation to war in the mistaken belief that Saddam
Hussein had weapons of mass destruction. And supporters of the war are
unlikely to get a clear declaration that Britain's participation in the
invasion was the right thing to do." Quinn goes on to note that many
critics of the inquiry point out that the "six member panel [. . .]
includes not a single lawyer or judge" leading people to doubt the
inquiry's ability to determine the legality of the war. From the audio. Pat Murphy: Ben, first off, can you tell us a little bit about these people that are making up this British board of inquiry? Ben
Quinn: Yes, Pat. Well there are six members on the panel. They were
appointed by the prime minister, by Prime Minister Gordon Brown. The
chair is Sir John Chilcot, a British civil servant. He's a Whitehall
mandarin -- Whitehall being the headquarters of the British civil
service. He has the unenviable task of chairing this panel. He has
come into criticism in the past from, uh, various commentators who feel
that he has taken a soft-touch to questioning in previous probes. So
he'll be eagerly watched in terms of his handling of this inquiry.
There are five others on the panel. Perhaps one of the more
interesting figures is Sir Lawrence Friedman who is a distinguished
academic. Now he's, he's been a professor of war at King's College in
London since 1982 but notably he's credited with writing a large part
of Tony Blair's famous -- infamous, perhaps -- some would say -- 1992
Chicago speech where he basically made the case for liberal military
intervention. Gideon Rachman (Financial Times of London) refrains
from making any predictions while reminding that there were
expectations on past British inquiries into Iraq: the Hutton inquiry
which people thought "would destroy Tony Blair" instead whitewashed
everything and falsely attacked the press (that's my call on the Hutton
inquiry, not Rachman's) and the Bulter inquiry which Rachman feels
wasn't a whitewash. John F. Burns and Alan Cowell (New York Times) feel reflective and observe,
"The unpopularity of the war — and its impact on Mr. Blair's once
glittery image among British voters -- contributed to his ouster by
Prime Minister Gordon Brown two years ago." Of course, Gordon Brown
was Tony's lap dog, his hand picked successor and the one who has
carried out every one of Tony's policies (including refusing to release
the files on John Lennon and citing 'national security' as a reason).
As Gordon's stock continued to plummet, he finally yieled to public
pressure this summer and announced he'd do what he had promised several
years ago: Launch an inquiry into the Iraq War. Rose Gentle's song
Gordon Gentle died serving in Iraq June 28, 2004. He is one of the 179
British forces who were killed in the Iraq War (ongoing Iraq War -- and
ongoing for the British which expects to keep 200 service members in
Iraq for the foreseeable future.) ITV News speaks with her (link is video)
and she tells them, "I just hope the committee stuck to their word
because they promised us that they'd look inside and outside and if
there were mistakes made, the fingers would get pointed at the person
making mistakes." Rose Gentle is a member of Military Families Against the War. Yesterday Julia Reid (Sky News -- link has text and video) spoke
with Geoff Dunsmore, father of Chris Dunsmore who died serving in Iraq
(July 19, 2007). He speaks of the Iraq Inquiry due to start this week
in London, "The nation needs to know why we went to Iraq, clearly and
concisely. We need to know why it cost money, but the biggest thing is
why it cost a lot of lives -- my son's as one of them. I hope the
inquiry will help the families that are struggling and trying to get
some sense out of all this." Back in June Independent Labour MP Clare Short explained why she felt a real inquiry was necessary: We
need an inquiry that forces all parties and the public to face up to
the fact that we got involved in Iraq because George Bush and the
neo-conservatives wanted to overthrow the unpopular regime of Saddam
Hussein -- regime change -- and establish a friendly power in Iraq, so
that they could relocate American bases in the middle east, dominate
the Gulf and have close relations with a country that contained a large
proportion of the world's remaining oil. As has been said, all of that
is laid out for all to read in the documents published by the Project
for the New American Century, which many of those who became senior
figures in the Bush Administration had signed up to. Of
course, the US expected the invasion of Iraq to be popular with Iraqis
and therefore thought that it would help to stabilise the middle east.
The only problem was that international law, laid down after the second
world war under the leadership of President Roosevelt and with the
support of Prime Minister Churchill, did not permit that, and thus the
lying became necessary in order to do what the neo-conservatives
thought to be right. I did not know that
Tony Blair had the published documents of the Project for the New
American Century drawn to his attention -- they were certainly not
drawn to the attention of the Cabinet -- but I think that he was
desperate to be close to George Bush and worried that he would not be
because of the closeness of his relationship with President Clinton,
and that he therefore gave his word early on that Britain would be with
him in the planned invasion of Iraq. From that, it all flows: the
exaggeration of the threat from weapons of mass destruction to give an
excuse for war, because regime change is not legal. The
Butler report and the various leaks from our intelligence agencies have
shown that the intelligence was being fixed around the policy. Hans
Blix started out believing that there were WMD in Iraq, but when he
found and reported that there were not -- he reported to the Security
Council what he had found, and also achieved the dismantling of large
numbers of ballistic missiles -- he was briefed against and smeared
because his truthful findings were obstructing the excuse for war. Clare Short resigned from Tony Blair's cabinet May 12, 2003 declaring,
"I am afraid that the assurances you [Tony Blair] gave me about the
need for a UN mandate to establish a legitimate Iraqi government have
been breached. The security council resolution that you and Jack have
so secretly negotiated contradicts the assurances I have given in the
House of Commons and elsewhere about the legal authority of the
occupying powers, and the need for a UN-led process to establish a
legitimate Iraqi government. This makes my position impossible." This
is interesting. Webb also says that, during the time in question, he
received a promotion in the MoD after going through a selection process
that involved two members of the inquiry assessing candidates - Lady
Prashar, who, as First Civil Service Commissioner, was involved in
senior appointments of this kind and Sir Lawrence Freedman, who I
presume was on the panel as a member of the "great and the good". This
disclosure does rather reinforce the impression that the inquiry
represents the establishment interrogating itself. Nicholas Witchell (BBC News) offers a video report of today's hearing. Nico Hines ( Times of London) offers up " best of the evidence. The Telegraph of London reports a witness has stated that Bush and Blair were planning the Iraq War two years before it began: Sir
Peter Ricketts, who was chairman of the Joint Intelligence Committee in
2001, said there was concern in both London and Washington that the
strategy of ''containment'' of Saddam Hussain was ''failing''.Giving
evidence at the first public hearings of the inquiry, he said a review
of the Iraq policy was already under way in Whitehall in anticipation
of the arrival of the new Bush administration. He
said that, in discussions with Secretary of State Colin Powell, it
appeared the Americans were ''thinking very much on the same lines''.He added, however, that others in Washington were already thinking further ahead. A second report from the Telegraph offers a second witness testifying that the US was planning the Iraq War back in 2001: Sir
William Patey, then head of Middle East policy at Foreign Office said
that in February 2001, the UK knew that some in the new US
administration wanted to topple SaddamHe said: "We were aware of the drum beats from Washington."However,
he said that Britain was not then willing to engage in regime change in
Baghdad. "Our policy was to stay away from that." David Brown and Nico Hines (Times of London) add
of Ricketts, "He said a review of the Iraq policy was already under way
in Whitehall in anticipation of the arrival of the new Bush
Administration." On Monday, Chris Ames (Guardian) explained that Andrew Gilligan was unearthing a great deal and his scoops "are perhaps as significant for what they tell us about Sir John Chilcot's Iraq inquiry.
They are a humiliation for the inquiry, which -- as I write -- has not
put a single piece of new evidence into the public domain. [. . .] The
Telegraph, on the other hand, is putting a lot of new information into
the public domain. It has published extracts from two of the papers on
which it has based its stories. It does have to be said that the first
of these, ' Stability Operations in Iraq',
was published last year on Wikileaks, but the whole effect of what
Gilligan has done is to add to the sum of public knowledge." Sunday Gilligan summarized "hundreds of pages of secret Government reports" regarding the Iraq War: Tony
Blair, the former prime minister, misled MPs and the public throughout
2002 when he claimed that Britain's objective was "disarmament, not
regime change" and that there had been no planning for military action.
In fact, British military planning for a full invasion and regime
change began in February 2002. The need to conceal this from
Parliament and all but "very small numbers" of officials "constrained"
the planning process. The result was a "rushed"operation "lacking in
coherence and resources" which caused "significant risk" to troops and
"critical failure" in the post-war period. Operations
were so under-resourced that some troops went into action with only
five bullets each. Others had to deploy to war on civilian airlines,
taking their equipment as hand luggage. Some troops had weapons
confiscated by airport security. Commanders
reported that the Army's main radio system "tended to drop out at
around noon each day because of the heat". One described the supply
chain as "absolutely appalling", saying: "I know for a fact that there
was one container full of skis in the
desert." The Foreign Office unit to plan for postwar Iraq was set up only in late February, 2003, three weeks before the war started. The
plans "contained no detail once Baghdad had fallen", causing a "notable
loss of momentum" which was exploited by insurgents. Field commanders
raged at Whitehall's "appalling" and "horrifying" lack of support for
reconstruction, with one top officer saying that the Government "missed
a golden opportunity" to win Iraqi support. Another commander said: "It
was not unlike 1750s colonialism where the military had to do
everything ourselves." In another report, Gilligan explains,
"In the papers, the British chief of staff in Iraq, Colonel J.K.Tanner,
described his US military counterparts as 'a group of Martians' for
whom 'dialogue is alien,' saying: 'Despite our so-called "special
relationship," I reckon we were treated no differently to the
Portuguese'." Richard Norton-Taylor (Guardian) adds: Fresh
evidence has emerged about how Blair misled MPs by claiming in 2002
that the goal was "disarmament, not regime change". Documents show the
government wanted to hide its true intentions by informing only "very
small numbers" of officials. The documents, leaked to the Sunday
Telegraph, are "post-operational reports" and "lessons learned" papers
compiled by the army and its field commanders. They refer to a "rushed"
operation that caused "significant risk" to troops and "critical
failure" in the postwar period.Norton-Taylor has come up with a list of five questions that the inquiry must answer to be seen as genuine. We'll note his first one: 1 What assurances did Tony Blair give George Bush about Britain's involvement in the war with Iraq? The
overriding factor that took Britain into war is a crucial secret the
Chilcot inquiry could unlock. Key could be what assurances Tony Blair
gave George Bush in a series of bilateral meetings, notably at the
president's ranch in Crawford, Texas, in April 2002. One leaked
classified document reveals that two months later, Whitehall officials
noted: "When the prime minister discussed Iraq with President Bush at
Crawford in April, he said that the UK would support military action to
bring about regime change." But asked in July 2002 about whether the
government was preparing for military action, Blair told MPs: "No.
There are no decisions which have been taken about military action." Lyne: in terms of a military threat was Saddam and his regime in a cage? Patey: Yes. about 6 hours ago from web Lyne: And we could continue like that until such time as he departed? Patey: Possibly. about 6 hours ago from web " Among the issues explored today were [PDF format warning] the No Fly Zone. Evidence
submitted to the committee on this was largely historical (beginning
with Iraq's 1990 invasion of Kuwait -- for any wondering, nothing in
the evidence acknowledges that the administration of George H.W. Bush
gave the go ahead for that assault). The No Fly Zone began April 1991
and it ended "formally on 1 May 2003." The
hearing continues to hear testimony this week: tomorrow with Tim Dowse
and William Ehrman scheduled to speak on Weapons of Mass Destruction,
on Thursday with Christopher Meyer scheduled to testify on the
Transatlantic Relationship and on Friday with Jeremy Greenstock to
offer testimony on the Developments in the United Nations. Sir
John Chilcot was just ten minutes in to the first public session of the
Iraq Inquiry when he told the first big lie -- and a lie which, when
examined, exposes the entire charade. "My colleagues and I come to this inquiry with an open mind." That
is demonstrably untrue. Three of the five members -- Rod Lyne, Martin
Gilbert and Lawrence Freedman -- are prominent proponents of the Iraq
war. By contrast, nobody on the committee was in public against the
invasion of Iraq. How can it be fine to pack the committee with
supporters of the invasion, when anyone against the invasion was
excluded? Mehdi Hasan ( New Statesman) is also unimpressed with the inquiry and offers " Five reasons to be cynical." Thomas Penny and Kitty Donaldson (Bloomberg News) note that this is the fifth inquiry into the Iraq War. Yesterday, Stan weighed
in on the inquiry and pointed out that "you'll notice that in the US we
still don't have an Iraq inquiry. In England, Gordon Brown is Labour
and he replaced Tony Blair as Prime Minister. They are both Labour and
Brown was Blair's chosen successor. And yet they get an inquiry." The BBC tries to call US Senate papers and a daft committee (Iraq Study Group -- Baker and Hamilton, not Mike's group that he started) inquiries. As the world's eyes turn to London, Sami Ramadani (Guardian) looks to Iraq: The
attitude of those in Baghdad who are invited to comment on the inquiry
swiftly changes from expressions of pain and sadness to that of anger
and strong denunciation of the war and its architects, George Bush and
Tony Blair. It is striking that the one common thought that comes to
the fore is that Bush and Blair have escaped justice and "got away with
murder".They certainly
don't have any confidence that the outcome of the inquiry will lead to
Blair appearing before a legal tribunal to account for his role in
engineering and launching the illegal war.The
terms of the debate in Iraq are very different from those here in
Britain. For while here people are seeking to establish beyond much
doubt who did what, when and why, people in Iraq regard it as an open
and shut case: US policymakers, followed meekly by most of the British
political and establishment notables, planned the invasion and
"destruction" of Iraq many years before 2003. They cite the 13 years of
murderous sanctions from 1991 to 2003 as a prelude for the occupation
of the country. They stress that Saddam Hussein's 35-year dictatorship
and non-existent WMD were "used as a pretext" for the war. Yesterday in Iraq, the Parliament passed election law amendments. Liz Sly and Caesar Ahmed (Los Angeles Times) explain
"The amendments did not offer any extra seats to Iraqi refugees, who
include many Sunnis, and therefore did not adress the complaint that
prompted Vice President Tariq Hashimi to veto the original law last
week." Steven Lee Myers (New York Times) explains,
"The three-member Presidency Council, which includes Mr. Hashimi,
President Jalal Talabani, and a second vice president, Adel Abdul
Mahdi, now has 10 days to approve or veto the law." CNN walks through
on the Constitutional powers, "According to Iraq's constitution, the
presidency council -- made up of Kurdish President Jalal Talabani,
Shiite Vice President Adel Abdul Mehdi and al-Hashimi -- must
unanimously approve a bill for it to become law." That was so confusing
to so many last week -- or they pretended it was. The Constitution is
very clear that the council has the power to veto and everything passed
by the Parliament has gone to the council -- though most outlets only
paid attention to this aspect when the SOFA went to the council last
year. CNN adds that if the council offers a veto, it would require a
2/3 vote from the majority of the MPs to push the legislation forward. Aamer Madhaniand Ahmed Fadaam (USA Today) quotes
Iraqi Accordance Front spokesperson Salim Abdullah stating, "What has
happened today represents a setback" and states Iraq's Independent High
Electoral Commission believes the election will be pushed back to
February. Nada Bakri (Washington Post) also notes
the latter point, "Faraj al-Haidari, the head of the electoral
commission, suggested that the elections would be held in February,
although he said he was waiting for Hashimi's decision." Waleed Ibrahim (Reuters) reports the commission head Faraj al-Haidari declared today, "In all cases the possibility of holding the vote in January is over." Warren P. Strobel and Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) explore
the election climate, "Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki, a Shiite, has
launched a campaign warning that forces loyal to Saddam are trying to
regain power. On Sunday, his government put on television three
suspects it said were behind Oct. 25 bombings, which killed more than
150 people in Baghdad; they said remnants of Saddam's Baath party were
behind the attacks." Bombings? Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) reports
a Baghdad sticky bombing which wounded three people, a second one which
wounded two people, a Baghdad roadside bombing which left three people
injured, and, dropping back to Monday, a Nasriyah roadside bombing
which left four Iraqi police officers injured, a Falluja sticky bombing
which claimed the life of 1 Imam and left three of his relatives
wounded and a Baghdad sticky bombing which claimed the life of 1 Imam,
1 person traveling with him and injured a third person. Yesterday's snapshot included this: " Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) reports
an assassination attempt on Ayad Allawi that injured two of his body
guards (Allawi is the former Iraqi Prime Minister and also a rival of
Nouri al-Maliki's) and an assassination attempt on journalist Emad
al-Abadi in which he was shot 'in the head, neck and shoulder' and is
now in critical condition." Raheem Salman and Usama Redha (Los Angeles Times) report,
"Baghdad is buzzing about the shooting Monday night of a prominent TV
commentator who regularly criticized the government on his show
'Without Fences' on the privately owned Al-Diyar TV station." They
offer an alternative spelling of Imad Abadi and quote the Journalistic
Freedoms Observatory's Ziad Ajili stating, "For sure it is the
politicians who are responsible. He was very brave in exposing
corruption and he is one of the most prominent journalists who are
criticizing the political parties." PROGRESS AGAINST AL QAEDA By U.S. Senator Byron Dorgan (D-ND) Chairman, Senate Democratic Policy Committee A
new policy paper released by the Senate Democratic Policy Committee
outlines progress the Obama Administration's new strategy is making in
the fight against al Qaeda. The
Obama administration has opted for a different strategy -- an
aggressive, comprehensive, and integrated approach to combating the
terrorist network. The result is a significantly disrupted and weakened
al Qaeda. In its first ten months, this new strategy has: • Disrupted the most serious terrorist threat against the United States since 9/11, and others; • Killed the top leader of Pakistan's Taliban insurgents, Baitullah Mehsud; and •
Killed other key terrorist leaders around the world, including the most
important terrorist leaders in East Africa and Indonesia At the heart of this progress lies the following: •
A proactive and aggressive counterterrorism approach at home based on
effective and efficient coordination between the federal government and
state and local law enforcement. •
Intelligence collection and skillful analysis, combined with efficient
coordination between the federal government and state and local
partners. •
An increase in cooperation from foreign governments and intelligence
services due to the new image and outreach the Obama Administration has
put forth to the global community, particularly its renewed commitment
to diplomacy and international law. •
Refocusing on Afghanistan and Pakistan, in order to combat the threat
of al Qaeda, Taliban, and affiliated terrorists. . The
results are encouraging. Today, many of al Qaeda's top leaders are no
longer in place, replaced instead with less experienced and less
capable individuals. The organization finds it more difficult to
finance its terrorism. Its operations are more often detected and
disrupted. While
we continue to face significant threats from al Qaeda and affiliated
terrorists, the Obama Administration's tough and smart strategy and the
courageous work of law enforcement, military, and diplomatic officials
across the country and throughout the world are making real progress in
our efforts to defeat terrorist threats at home and around the globe. In
the US, Thursday is Thanksgiving and, as a result, many outlets will be
in repeats and many programs will either air repeats or not air. NOW on PBS will offer a new program this weekend (begins airing Friday on most PBS stations, check your local listings): The
Maldives, a nation of roughly 1200 low-lying islands in the Indian
Ocean, could be underwater by the end of this century if climate change
causes ocean levels to rise. On the eve of the big climate summit in
Copenhagen, the country's president, Mohamed Nasheed, is warning of a
massive exodus from the Maldives if drastic global action is not taken.
On Friday, November 27 at 8:30 pm (check local listings), NOW on PBS talks with President Nasheed about the climate crisis and why he compares it to genocide. And because music is so frequently all that we can count on, let's note Carly Simon's latest album is Never Been Gone ( Kat sang its praises here) and this week only you can download the entire album at Amazon for $5.00.
That's all 12 tracks. Never Been Gone finds Carly revisiting her
songwriting canon to re-imagine some of her best loved hits including
"You're So Vain," "Anticipation," "Let The River Run," "Coming Around
Again," "The Right Thing To Do," "That's The Way I've Always Heard It
Should Be" and "You Belong To Me." Today Carly Will be at J&R Music World in New York (23 Park Row) signing copies of Never Been Gone beginning at 6:00 pm. Carly will be on Greater Boston (WGBH) Wednesday and Thursday (Thanksgiving day) she'll be performing in the Macy's Parade on the Care Bear's Float as well as be on Extra for part-two of her interview. And if you're on the fence about downloading the album, Kat pointed out that if the issue is needing to know the credits for each track, that's covered in " For those about to download . . ." -- and I'd be surprised if the credits weren't either up or soon to be up at Carly's website. One more thing, Rebecca's
been covering the assault on women's health and women's rights in both
the US House and Senate, she's been covering that topic for over two
weeks now. Last night, she utilized Joni Mitchell's "Big Yellow Taxi" to explain what's happened: late last night, i heard the screen door slam, and a democratically controlled congress took away all i am. don't it always seem to go that you don't know who you can trust until after you voted they paved paradise and took away all my rights. they paved paradise and took away all my rights. Trina, Betty, Stan, Ann and Ruth
have also covered this issue -- to be sure and give credit where it's
due -- but I think Rebecca's the only one that's covered in every one
of her posts.
Posted at 02:38 pm by politicsscree
Permalink
Nov 23, 2009
they paved paradise & took away all my rights
 above is Isaiah's The World Today Just Nuts " Barack 'Listens'" and that may be the only thing that makes you smile in this post. you have been warned. 1st up, a press release from the center of reproductive rights: 11.23.09
- (PRESS RELEASE) Late last evening, the Senate voted to open debate on
Majority Leader Harry Reid's proposed healthcare bill. The legislation
prohibits federal money from being used to pay for abortion, and
requires that there be at least one plan in the Health Exchange that
offers abortion coverage and at least one plan that does not. In
contrast, a bill passed earlier this month by the House of
Representatives effectively bans private insurance companies from
providing abortion coverage by prohibiting any coverage of abortion in
the public option and anyone receiving federal subsidy from purchasing
an insurance plan that includes abortion. Nancy Northup, president of
the Center for Reproductive Rights issued this statement in response: "Last
night, we took another major step towards passing legislation that
protects women's health coverage. While not ideal, the language in
Senator Reid's bill at the very least ensures that millions of women
keep the abortion coverage that they have today. "However, the
battle is far from over. We fully anticipate attempts to restrict
women's abortion coverage on the Senate floor and are counting on
Senators to stand firm against them. "The Stupak ban poses a
tremendous threat to women across the country by making it nearly
impossible for private insurers participating in the new insurance
marketplace to offer abortion coverage, even when a woman would use her
own money to purchase it. It is critical to both women's health and
rights that any similar language, or other measures to restrict women's
reproductive health care options, that may be offered in the Senate are
defeated."Health reform promises affordable and expanded coverage — not
new and burdensome restrictions on what women currently have."late last night, i heard the screen door slam, and a democratically controlled congress took away all i am. don't it always seem to go that you don't know who you can trust until after you voted they paved paradise and took away all my rights. they paved paradise and took away all my rights. with apologies to joni mitchell, the above is my update of her 'big yellow taxi.' at the nation, sharon lerner writes: Even
so, at least some of the Stupak problem was about how women's advocates
played the game: extremely nicely. Women's groups were measured in
their politics, trying hard to get along and keeping their gripes and
dissatisfactions to themselves. But such good behavior rarely does well
in Washington. And against the kind of strong-arm techniques that the
bishops and antichoice Democrats wielded, it didn't stand a chance.as the saying goes, 'doi!' this was what ava and c.i. were getting at in ' Bitches for Barack (Ava and C.I.):' Gloria
did what Gloria always does and what no feminist should ever do again:
She fell back into explaining why she wasn't what she was falsely
charged.Here's reality for most aggressive men, if
'George' slugs 'Andy,' Andy doesn't stop a moment and try to explain
why he shouldn't have been slugged, he hits back.It's past time that women started doing the same.What
Gloria should have done was not refute the charge, she should have made
the people charging her falsely with racism explain themselves.let's close with c.i.'s 'Iraq snapshot:' Monday,
November 23, 2009. Chaos and violence continue, the 'intended'
elections remain in disarray, the US military announces a death, Nouri
parades forward more show confessions, and more.
On Sunday, the US military announced:
"FORWARD OPERATING BASE KALSU, Iraq -- A Multi-National Division South
Soldier was killed in action, Nov. 22.The name of the deceased is being
withheld pending notification of next of kin and release by the
Department of Defense. The names of service members are announced
through the U.S. Department of Defense official website at http://www.defenselink.mil/releases/.
The announcements are made on the Web site no earlier than 24 hours
after notification of the service member's primary next of kin.The
incident is under investigation." The announcement brought the number
of service members killed in Iraq since the start of the illegal war to
4365.
Turning to the issue of the 'intended' January elections. As Carole King sings ("Chalis Borealis," Speeding Time), "Didn't work out quite the way you wanted, how were you to know?" Last week, Tareq al-Hashemi vetoed the election law
citing the law's refusal to recognize the large number of Iraqi
refugees. Saturday the Parliament met to resolve the issue and . . .
nothing. AFP reported,
"The vote is postponed until tomorrow, parliament speaker Iyad
al-Samarrai told reporters on Saturday, after a further day of meetings
failed to resolve a dispute on a key provision in the law which will
govern the national poll." Waleed Ibrahim, Ahmed Rasheed, Khalid al-Ansary, Michael Christie and Sonya Hepinstall (Reuters) explained,
"Parliament must now either address Hashemi's complaints and amend the
law, which may invite other interest groups to demand other changes, or
send it back to him unchanged only for him to possibly veto it again." DPA added
"According to [MP Ezzeddin] al-Dawla, MPs were divided during
Saturday's discussions, with 'a majority calling for a rejection of
al-Hashemi's demand.' A few, al-Dawla said, 'sought a compromise of
reserving 10 per cent of the seats for expatriates'." Sunday saw a
repeat of the stagnation with Waleed Ibrahim, Michael Christie and Janet Lawrence (Reuters) reporting the Parliament is still at "an impasse" and plans to take up the matter (again) tomorrow. Some motion took place today with Waleed Ibrahim, Michael Christie and Jon Hemming (Reuters) reporting
this morning that the Parliament has finally passed an election law but
that it doesn't appear to address the issues that led to the presidency
council's veto and may (yet again) be vetoed.
Sahar Issa and Warren P. Strobel (McClatchy Newspapers) observe
that the elections could be "delayed by weeks, if not longer" following
today's vote which "cut Sunni Muslim voting power even more in several
major provinces. More than 50 parliament members walked out in protest,
most of them Sunnis, but including a smattering of secular lawmakers
and Shiites as well." Nada Bakri (Washington Post) quotes
Sunni MP Oussan al-Nujaifi stating, "We're going to veto the law
because it's unconstitutional. And that means a delay in the election."
Steven Lee Myers (New York Times) insists
that the "effort to hold parliamentary elections on schedule in January
collapsed on Monday" and explains, "The failure to agree on even the
terms of the national election has inflamed ethnic and sectarian
tensions that had waned somewhat in the last year or so." BBC News adds,
"Our correspondent [Jim Muir] says most MPs seem to be determined to
reject the veto this time, meaning the law should eventually go
through."
Today at the US State Dept, Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton met with the Bulgarian Foreign Minister Rumiana Zheleva and
after the two delivered remarks to the press, the issue of Iraq arose.
AFP's
Lachlan Carmichael: Madame Secretary, since we have an opportunity to
talk to you, perhaps on another subject, Iraq? There's a prospect of
the electoral law being vetoed again. What kinds of concerns do you
have about that? And do you have any -- can you use your influence to
help get it passed, iron out the differences among the factions?
Secretary
of State Hillary Clinton: Well, Lachlan, we support the Iraqi
government's efforts to pass an election law so that they can proceed
with planned elections. We know that there are some continuing concerns
as expressed by the vice president that have to be addressed. We will
continue working with all of the parties. Our ambassador, Chris Hill,
on the ground has been deeply involved in doing so already. This
morning, I met and heard a report about the way forward. There are a
number of ideas that we will be presenting. There's an interim period
because the Council of Representatives will not be meeting for a number
of days that we think provide the opportunity for all the parties to
come together, and with the help of not just the United States, but
UNAMI and others to work out these continuing differences. We believe
on balance that there will be elections. They might slip by some period
of time until this is worked out, because at some point the law has to
be in place for the planning to begin, and so there necessarily needs
to be a period of time in which the planning can occur. But we have
every reason to believe that elections will be held, which will be
another milestone on the journey that Iraqis are taking toward full and
comprehensive democracy.
And since Hillary raised the
timeline, let's note it because it changed and no one seems to have
noticed that (more likely, they've chosen not to raise the issue). Waleed Ibrahim, Michael Christie and Janet Lawrence (Reuters) reported
Sunday, "There are only a couple of days left for parliament to address
Vice-President Tareq al-Hashemi's veto of an election law, as the law
must be passed 60 days before a vote and Jan. 23 is viewed by Iraq's
majority Shi'ite Muslims as the last possible date in January for the
ballot to take place."
How does it happen I don't know It's so hard to understand Now you see it Now you don't Is this a case of sleight of hand Sleight of hand -- "Sleight of Hand," written by Carly Simon and Don Sebesky
B-b-but . . . What happened to 90 days? Salah Hemeid (Al-Ahram Weekly) reported
a month ago, "The commission, responsible for organizing polls in Iraq,
has said that it needs 90 days to print and distribute ballots. Iraqi
and UN officials fear that the election could be delayed if lawmakers
fail to pass a revised election law this week." October 29th, Renee Montagne talked about the timeline with Quil Lawrence (NPR's Morning Edition):
Renee
Montagne: What, Quil, is at stake with the delay of this election
law?Quil Lawrence: Well, as you say, the Iraqi prime minister and his
government's term run out on January 31st so the election commission
here has said they need 90 days to organize a legitimate poll and
Parliament is deadlocked on over a dozen or so complicated issues
regarding the election. They may vote on it today. If the elections are
delayed or if they are rushed, there's a risk that Iraq's government
could be deemed illegitimate and then a whole Pandora's Box of problems
can open up -- issues of legitimacy of the government, maybe even a
crisis like we've seen in Afghanistan.
How does 90 days become 60? And why did the press never notice the missing thirty? "Sleight of Hand" indeed. Carly Simon's latest album is Never Been Gone (Kat sang its praises here) and this week only you can download the entire album at Amazon for $5.00.
That's all 12 tracks. Never Been Gone finds Carly revisiting her
songwriting canon to re-imagine some of her best loved hits including
"You're So Vain," "Anticipation," "Let The River Run," "Coming Around
Again," "The Right Thing To Do," "That's The Way I've Always Heard It
Should Be" and "You Belong To Me." Tomorrow Carly Will be at J&R Music World in New York (23 Park Row) signing copies of Never Been Gone beginning at 6:00 pm. Carly will be on Greater Boston (WGBH) Wednesday and Thursday
(Thanksgiving day) she'll be performing in the Macy's Parade on the
Care Bear's Float as well as be on Extra for part-two of her interview.
You
should notice that the reporter who raised the issue of Iraq with
Hillary Clinton was from a foreign news agency (AFP). Domestic
reporters just don't give a damn. Doubt it? At the White House today, a
bunch of trained yammers (with few exceptions) stroked and fondled
Robert Gibbs with questions of such easy nature as could he explain
"diplomatic entertaining" and State dinners. They had plenty of time to
make like In Style magazine but damn little time to make like actual
reporters. It was the usual embarrassment everyone's come to expect and
that can be blamed only partly on Robert Gibbs. Blame? Hillary
mentioned Chris Hill, US Ambassador to Iraq, in her comments and this
may have been the first time his name has come up in the last few days.
For example, the New York Times' awful editorial last week
didn't mention him when it called out Iraq for the delay. Shouldn't
Hill have been on this issue from day one? Yes, he should have. And who
picked Hill? Who picked Hill over qualified people -- many, many other
qualified people? Barack Obama. So the candy ass White House press
corps should have pressed on the issue of Iraq. Instead they wasted
everyone's time and, with few exceptions, better hope their editors and
producers don't study that transcript. And on Chris Hill, let's
remember one more time that the Republicans in the Senate structured
their objections to Hill very carefully and very precisely. They knew
he could be the anchor that could hang around Barack's neck. But no one
wanted to pay attention back then and now it appears it may be too
late. If Iraq falls to pieces, Republicans running for office will not
blame military generals. They will, however, go to town on a US
civilian like Hill. And they laid the groundwork for that back in his
confirmation hearing.
Meanwhile, thug of the occupation Nouri
al-Maliki hasn't come out with a color-coded terror chart, but like the
Bully Boy who installed him, he schedules 'media events' to increase
his electoral prospects. Most recently? Sunday saw the broadcast of excerpts of more forced confessions.
The for-show confessions act as a kind of political advertisement for
Nouri and, to no surprise, the forced confessions said exactly what
Nouri had said about the Baghdad bombings on 'Bloody Sunday'. AP rightly notes
that this is Nouri's "latest anti-Ba'athist attack" and that
"Al-Maliki's intensified rhetoric worsens one of Iraq's most dangerous
sectarian fault lines -- one which the United States has long struggled
to calm." Jomana Karadsheh (CNN) notes,
"In recent months the Iraqi government has played a number of such
videos for reporters. Many Iraqis have voiced skepticism about their
authenticity. [. . .] In recent weeks, the government and Iraqi Prime
Minister Nuri al-Maliki have stepped up the anti-Baath rhetoric ahead
of the country's upcoming national elections, an escalation that some
fear is a political ploy to keep some Sunni Arab candidates from
running in the elections." Turning to some of the violence Nouri seems to breed like bunnies . . .
Bombings?
Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) reports
a Baghdad roadside bombing which left two people wounded, another one
that left two people wounded, a third one which left two people
wounded, a Baghad sticky bombing which wounded four people, a fourth
Baghdad roadside bombing which wounded person, a second Baghdad sticky
bombing which injured two people, a Mosul roadside bombing which
claimed the life of 1 Iraqi service member and left one person wounded,
a Kikuk assassination attempt on Aras Mohammed ("deputy chief of
criminal investigation) which he survived and a Kirkuk assassination
attempt on Rajim Awa (police chief) which he survived but which
"damaged a number of civilians cars and caused material damages to the
nearby houses." Reuters drops back to Sunday to note a Baghdad car bombing which left 1 police officer injured.
Shootings?
Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) reports
an assassination attempt on Ayad Allawi that injured two of his body
guards (Allawi is the former Iraqi Prime Minister and also a rival of
Nouri al-Maliki's) and an assassination attempt on journalist Emad
al-Abadi in which he was shot "in the head, neck and shoulder" and is
now in critical condition. Reuters notes US forces and Iraqi forces killed 1 suspect in Mosul while arresting five others
Kidnappings?
Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) reports 1 55-year-old Iraqi Christian was kidnapped in Kirkuk today.
Returning to the topic of elections, the most recent Inside Iraq (Al Jazeera)
began airing Friday night. Host Jasim al-Azzawi addressed the issue
with guests MP Mustafa al-Hiti with the Iraqi National Movement and
analyst Fereydun Hilmi.
Jasim al-Azzawi: Mustafa al-Hiti, let us
get the Constitutional and the legal aspect out of it. al-Hashimi is
within his Constitutional right to veto the bill -- either in its
entirety or part of it. So I don't understand why al-Maliki is
questioning his privileges as Vice President in power to do so.
Mustafa
al-Hiti: Well really Tariq al-Hashimi is doing his job according to the
Constitution and certainly he is one of the Iraqis who should feel,
like others, the rights of the Iraqi refugees whether they are outside
Iraq or anywhere. So you know all the refugees live under really
hostile conditions abroad because they are not even, in the Arab
countries, they are legal -- what you call it -- refugees. So he was
doing the right thing and he is with the Constitution -- he is very
really complying with the Constitution and he is not out of that.
Jasim
al-Azzawi: The hue and cry caused by Hashimi's action, Fereydun Hilmi,
there must be sort of a political calculus on some political
machination behind it. It is not in the interest of most of the current
blocs in Iraq for this four and a half million or maybe five million
Iraqis to be included in the political process.
Fereydun Hilmi:
Well that's right. Hashimi was presiding over the displacement of these
millions of people that he's now worried about and crying over. He was
in power when they were driven out of their homes. He didn't do
anything to stop that. And now he's in a political jam because the
group that he came with to power is no longer supporting him. He is --
I believe he is no longer with the Islamic Party that actually put him
in his place and he needs support. And that's why he's now trying to
drum up the support from the people who are outside Iraq -- the
refugees -- and those people that he's trying to get the vote for but
he's one of the people responsible for driving these people out of the
country in the first place.
Jasim al-Azzawi: Mustafa al-Hiti,
Fereydun Hilmi is alluding to something very important and very
critical and that is, Tariq al-Hashimi, when he was with the Islamic
Party, which he is no longer with, he has a new party called the
Renewal, his vote at the time to approve the Constitution was
absolutely critical. Had he said "no," that entire Constitution would
have gone no where. Is it, in retrospect, he's trying to reclaim
something?
Mustafa al-Hiti: Well really we are talking about two
things. Upon his responsibility for accepting this Constitution and all
the material -- and you know that four years ago, yes, we can say he's
responsible about the Constitution. What we are talking now is whether
he is complying with the Constitution according to this veto or not?
This is a different story. Yes, he was responsible for that bad
Constitution and should be reformed. I agree with Mr. Fereydun about
that. But regarding this objection or veto, he is indeed right and it
is not just his idea, by the way. We were talking about this
Constitution -- about the election law a long time ago. I mean, for the
last three months, we were talking. And he had heard, certainly, the
opinion of most blocs -- political blocs -- in the Iraqi Parliament who
were objecting to two main things regarding the Iraqi Kirkuk and the
percentage for the refugees. Although Kirkuk was the main issue but, I
mean, this issue regarding ten or five or fifteen percent of those
seats for the refugees and the quota for other religious parties in
Iraq. So, in fact, Constitutionally he's going right and today, as I
have heard, that the Constitutional Court, they were really with
al-Hashimi regarding his veto or objection because it is very clear in
the Constitution saying that each seat for a parliamentary member
should be represented by 100,000 Iraqis people. So --
Jasim
al-Azzawi: If that is the case, Mustafa al-Hiti, let me ask Fereydun,
we do understand why Hashimi is objecting to the law, explain to me why
the Kurds are objecting to the law. One leading member of the Kurdistan
Regional Government says that we are not going to participate in this
election.
Fereydun Hilmi: The Kurds are taking advantage of
this situation, obviously, because they have never been happy about the
election law. They are not happy about the way the government is run.
They are trying to get maximum -- maximum advantage out of this whole
situation of chaos. It is actually chaos. I mean it doesn't matter that
there's been a government or something called a government for the past
seven years but to this day there is a lot of services that are
missing. There are many, many important things that are not being
catered for. There are many, many hundreds of very rich contracts being
signed away by the so-called politicians today. The wealth of the
country is now in the hands of the foreigners and the people who occupy
the country --
Jasim al-Azzawi: But Fereydun --
Fereydun Hilmi: -- so there are some --
Jasim
al-Azzawi: -- the Kurds, specifically what they are saying is that the
annual growth for Suleimaniah, Erbil and Dohuk does not tally with the
rest of the country. The rest of the country -- some of it is going to
be three percent, five percent, ten percent. For instance, Suleimaniah
is stagnant. Can you comment on that one, Fereydun?
Fereydun
Hilmi: Yes. I mean, if -- I actually wrote a book about the elections
and also, in that book, there are population growth figures that show
that, after the fall of Saddam, Suleimaniah, Erbil and Dohuk had a very
big rise in population. Far above the average rise in the other cities.
And of course you understand that because a lot of Kurds were outside
Kurdistan or they were in different, displaced places. But now, of
course, the situation has reversed. They -- those areas are stagnant
because they already had the population surge into the cities and the
areas. Whereas the other parts had a migration of a lot of people,
Sunnis and other people who were being driven out of their own homes
and they had to go to the safer areas of Kurdistan and Mosul and that
sort of areas. So that explains why you have this sort of different
surges at different times.
Jasim al-Azzawi: Mustafa?
Mustafa
al-Hiti: Mr. Jasim, if Mr. Fereydun excuse me for this point really, I
want to emphasize two things regarding the Kurdish objection upon the
law. First of all, they are, the Kurdish -- the immigrant Kurdish
people outside of Iraq -- they are like the other Iraqis. They live
really under very hostile conditions. So we have to treat all of the
people of Iraq as the same. They have the same conditions, they escape
the country because one reason or another, really. And this migration
started a long time ago so you cannot say that the Iraqis, they were
immigrant after 2003. They were really leaving the country in excessive
waves starting from 1958 until now -- under different conditions. This
is in one hand. So they are objecting upon that because they need their
people as well to have the rightful voting. Second, as Mr. Fereydun
said, the 2.6% rate of growth in Iraq which is -- this is the common
WHO [World Health Organization] figures -- there -- I mean, we should
have all the Iraqis to have an annual increment which is about 2.6 or
sometimes they call it 3%. So, in any case, this should be applied on
all Iraqis, to be in the right way. You shouldn't depend only upon this
food ration coupon which is under the law we should follow that. If you
want to be more precise or accurate we have to go for the census for
Iraq which is really will tell you the truth, what's going on.
Winding down, we'll note this from David Bacon's "St. Francis Hotel Workers Strike"
(Under The Name of Reason):About 650 workers at the St. Francis Hotel,
one of the city's oldest and most luxurious, walked out on strike on
November 18. This was the third of what may be many strikes hit San
Francisco's Class A hotels. The contract with the workers' union, UNITE
HERE Local 2, expired on August 14. Since then, Local 2 has been trying
to bargain a new agreement in the middle of an economic depression. San
Francisco's largest hotels are demanding cuts in health and retirement
benefits, and increased workloads, saying that the economic crisis has
reduced tourism in the city. The luxury hotel chains want workers begin
paying for their healthcare premiums -- $35/month this year, $115/month
next year, and $200/month the year after. A typical San Francisco hotel
worker earns $30,000 per year, and many can't work a full 40-hour week. Over
the first nine months of 2009, Starwood Hotels and Resorts, which
manages the Westin St. Francis, earned $180 million in profits.
Starwood also manages three other San Francisco Class A hotels. The
owner of the St. Francis, Strategic Hotels and Resorts, saw $11 million
in earnings during the same period. The company bought the hotel for
$439 million in 2006.David Bacon's latest book is Illegal People -- How Globalization Creates Migration and Criminalizes Immigrants (Beacon Press) which just won the CLR James Award. Bacon can be heard on KPFA's
The Morning Show (over the airwaves in the Bay Area, streaming online)
each Wednesday morning (begins airing at 7:00 am PST). Oops, I lied.
Aimee Allison is co-host of The Morning Show. She and David Solnit
paired up to write the amazing Army Of None. With his sister Rebecca Solnit, of Courage to Resist, David has written the just-released book The Battle of the Story of the Battle of Seattle.
If you're having trouble finding a copy of it, you're not alone and
let's assume that's a good sign and meaning there's a large audience
out there for this important book. But in the meantime, there are
several actions David Solnit is noting.
Today from seven to nine
pm at the First Unitarian Universalist Church in San Francisco (1187
Franklin St) -- admission $10 to $25 but "no one turned away for lack
of funds" organizing efforts for today and the "spirit of Seattle" will
be addresed by David, Rebecca, Jia Ching Chen, Kevin Danaher, Anuradha
Mittal (Oakland Institute) and Claire Greensfelder, Jerry Mander and
Victor Menotti (IFG). Tomorrow in Oakland (Humanist Hall, 390 27th St)
at 6:30 pm, there will be a teach-in and they're asking for $5 to $10
dollars but "no one turned away for lack of funds":
On December
7, 2009, world leaders and international NGOs will meet in Copenhagen
to chart out a course for a new global climate deal, and in doing so,
try to set up a new post-WTO framework for economic globalization.
Outside the conference halls, a convergences of climate justice
activists from the Global South will be waiting to say "Another World
is Possible." Join environmental and climate justice activists for a
lead up discussion to the November 30th day of action and on the road
to Copenhagen .
Both of those events are wheelchair
accessible. A third tomorrow at 5:30 is at a location yet to be
determined but will be preparation for a national day of action for
Climate Justice and you can click here for more information.iraqafpdpareuterswaleed ibrahimahmed rasheedkhalid al-ansarymichael christiesonya hepinstallmcclatchy newspaperssahar issawarren p. strobelthe washington postnada bakrithe new york timessteven lee myerssalah hemeidnprmorning editionrenee montagnequil lawrencecarly simonnever been gonejomana karadshehal jazeerainside iraqjasim al-azzawidavid baconkpfathe morning showdavid solnitaimee allisoncourage to resist
Posted at 08:06 pm by politicsscree
Permalink
Nov 21, 2009
Today marks the 20th anniversary of the Convention on the Rights of the Child, the
most comprehensive treaty on children's rights. The convention has been ratified
by nearly every country in the world, except for the United States. The
convention would fill current gaps in U.S. laws, and provide all children in
America with the same robust protections that children in 193 countries are
already entitled to.
The Convention on the Rights of the Child provides a framework for thinking
about how we can best educate and care for our youth. It calls upon us to
provide young people with the information and skills they need to lead healthy,
productive, and peaceful lives. These are core principles and goals we should
all be able to rally behind. Yet, we have failed for so long to secure a world
built on these ideals.
An important piece of realizing such a world includes ensuring young people's
health, including their sexual health, and how we prepare them to be healthy
adults. For too long, our government has financed and pushed an abstinence-only-until-marriage
approach to scare young people into not having sex and to push a social
agenda that promotes discrimination against LGBT communities and women. This
push has been in full-swing, both domestically and internationally,
for more than a decade. We have been disseminating misinformation about birth
control, condoms, and the role of sexuality in our lives. And we've been
exporting a failed
and unjust social policy that leaves young people bereft of the tools and
skills they need to avoid unintended pregnancy and sexually transmitted
infection and to build supportive relationships and intimate human
connections.
that's from the aclu's blog of rights. i saw it and
thought, 'this needs to be shared.' for the record, i don't
think abstinence works. it didn't work when i was kid and it doesn't work today.
what works is information shared. knowledge combats ignorance,
knowledge teaches us how to avoid certian situations an how to deal with other
ones. let's close with c.i.'s 'Iraq
snapshot:'
Friday, November 20, 2009. Chaos and violence
continue, the US Defense Dept announces a death in Iraq, the 'intended' January
elections remain murky, a War Hawk is denied a title, another War Hawk refuses
to meet with the parent of a child kidnapped in Iraq, Congress explores the
wounded, and more. Today the
Defense
Department issued a release noting "the death of a
sailor who was supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom. Petty Officer 2nd Class Brian
M. Patton, 37, of Freeport, Ill., died Nov. 19 in Kuwait in a non-combat
accident." M-NF missed announcing the death (DoD is only supposed to identify
the fallen) and the announcement brings to 4363 the number of US
service members killed in Iraq since the start of the illegal war.
"According to the Defense Manpower Data Center, at the
Department of Defense, approximately 35,000 service members have been wounded in
Iraq and Afghanistan," explained US House Rep Stephanie Herseth Sandlin
yesterday afternoon. She was opening the House Veterans Affairs' Subcommittee on
Economic Development's hearing entitled Adaptive Housing Grants. What are
Adaptive Housing Grants? The VA explains:
"Veterans or servicemembers who have specific service-connected disabilities may
be entitled to a grant from the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) for the
purpose of constructing an adapted home or modifying an existing home to meet
their adaptive needs. The goals of the Specially Adapted Housing (SAH) Grant
Program is to provide a barrier-free living environment that affords the
veterans or servicemembers a level of independent living he or she may not
normally enjoy." The first panel was
composed of Disabled American
Veterans' John L. Wilson, Paralyzed Veterans of
America's Richard Daley, Blinded Veterans
Association's Thomas Zampieri and Homes For Our
Troops' John S. Gonsalves. From Daley's opening
statement, we'll note this section:
The $63,700 currently available using the
Specially Adapted Housing grant is a significant help for a veteran to make the
needed modifications to their existing home or newly purchased previously owned
home. Since it is difficult to find an existing home that can be made totally
accessible, some veterans choose to design a new house incorporating
accessibility into the plans. Often financial considerations or a convenient
living location near family members may preclude designing a new home. In those
situations the often monumental task of making the existing structure accessible
must be considered. Guidance and information to make modifications for
accessibility can be found in the VA's newly issued VA pamphlet 26-13, Handbook
for Design: Specially Adapted Housing for Wheelchair Users, which was also
reviewed by PVA's Architecture Department before its publication.
Many existing homes can be modified to improve access for a
wheelchair user and enhance the function of the home. Some basic alterations
would include creating an accessible entrance to the home including an
accessible route to the entrance door, a level platform that is large enough for
maneuvering during door operation, and enlarging entrance doorways. One bathroom
would need complete renovation including plumbing arrangements if an accessible
roll-in shower is required. The movement of an existing wall may be necessary
for a person in a wheelchair to use each fixture of the bathroom, allow room for
door operation and general circulation in the bathroom. Similar construction
alterations would be required for the kitchen to be accessible and usable, and
perhaps alterations to the master bedroom. The current grant amount of $63,700
in many situations would not pay for the entire project of making a home
accessible for a wheelchair user. Since the house must be made accessible for
the veteran, they would have no other option than to pay for remaining
construction costs from personal savings, arrange a loan from a bank, or borrow
needed funds from family members. We have been told that more often, than not,
this is the situation the veteran faces.
That provides a general overview of some
needs shared by many disabled veterans. We'll now zero in on an example of one
person's needs in particular. Thomas
Zampieri: I had an OIF blinded service member that sent me an e-mail about the
special housing grant program which I included in my [prepared] testimony
because it sort of explains some of the frustration. While he was happy that he
got the $10,000 grant in 2007, I actually had to spend $27,000 to do the adapted
housing changes that he needed to provide room and space for his computer, the
monitors, the scanners, the printers and the magnifiers in order for him to
complete his college degree. All of this was great VA adaptive technology that
was provided to him as a blind veteran but you have to have a place in order to
store it and a way for that equipment to be connected. A lot of the blind
veterans have unique, uh, requirements in regards to lighting and electrical
work and the current amounts don't cover that.
Today Kerry Feltner
(The New Hampshire) reports on Nathan
Webster's campus lecture "Can't Give This War Away: Three Iraqi Summers of
Change and Conflict." Webster is a photo journalist. Feltner spoke with people
who attended the lecture. Gretchen Forbes declared, "It's really unusual to get
a first-hand report of the war. You'd think by now it would be our duty to have
major news organizations over there to write about the war . . . that really
surprises me. I feel like it's the media's responsibility." Betty Nordgren
declared, "I'm always interested in hearing about the war and the images were
great to see, but I think that the news organizations are in trouble if they
don't start covering this war more thoroughly." Both women are correct and it's
also true that the least covered in any war are the ones with visible wounds.
It's apparently too tempting to look away. That's true of the challenged and
disabled population in general but especially true of those members of that
population whose wounds derive from a war or military conflict. We'll note the
following exchange from the hearing.
Chair Stephanie Herseth Sandlin: One of the
concerns, I know that, Dr. Zampieri, you have in terms of the updated version --
Well, maybe not a concern. But maybe you could elaborate for us. With the
updated version of the handbook, is that helpful for visually impaired veterans.
What further provisions would your organizations like to see in-in the
handbook? Thomas Zampieri: Yeah, the
handbook is helpful. A lot of the modifications in regards to lighting and
additional electrical outlets and all those things. And then the --
Chair Stephanie Herseth Sandlin: You
had mentioned that in your oral statement. That you would like to see those
types of adaptions added. Thomas
Zampieri: Right. Chair Stephanie
Herseth Sandlin: So maybe a comprehensive list of what would be available
-- Thomas Zampieri: Okay.
Chair Stephanie Herseth Sandlin: Is
that? Thomas Zampieri: Right. And the
voice activated types of devices are also, you know, he [John Gonsalves] had
mentioned. Especially for blind veterans who now days live alone. All those
things add to safety and other things.
Chair Stephanie Herseth Sandlin: And then, Mr.
Gonsalves, you had expressed concerns that I think that in terms of some
requirements in the grants -- that there are injuries that require some sort of
adaptions or its sort of mandatory but to have some additional flexibility in
the grants would be helpful. John
Gonsalves: Right. Chair Stephanie
Herseth Sandlin: Is that correct? John
Gonsalves: Yes, and I think some of that may have been taken I hadn't seen the
new VA pamphlet. I-I hadn't seen it before the testimony but one of the things
that Homes For Our Troops does now -- and you can kind of tell from one of the
pictures that we have here -- we have a soldier who actually, before his house
is being built -- this is under the Fully Functioning Kitchens For Mobility. We
qualify what kind of adaptations are going to happen in a house based on injury.
And I guess it would sort of work the way VA rates disability percentage. We --
At the time a service member gets qualified for SAH, we have enough information
at that time. And what Homes For Our Troops has done is we have an adaptation
check list. We only have five sets of home plans that we build. And the home,
the footprint is always the same. The windows are always the same. The floor
plan is always the same. But there's an adaptation check list based on what the
soldier needs and that's why I provided some photos in here. It really gives you
an idea. Obviously a quadriplegic would need a lifting care system where
somebody that has the mobility of their upper arms probably doesn't need it. And
I think at the time of being qualified for SAH, basically all of the technology
is there. We've built for, I think, every type of injury out there from amputees
who are blind to different levels of spinal cord injuries. So we know what's
available to put in a home and it would be really great to be out in the front
once they qualify. A whole checklist be put together.
Chair Stephanie Herseth Sandlin: I think that
that's very helpful and you have some ideas and recommendations that would be
helpful and would like you to share those with us, with the VA. I think that
with addition to what they've done to update their pamphlet, to have someone
who's undertaken the mission that you've undertaken doing this work on the
ground would be beneficial in creating those types of checklists. I would also
think that it would be somewhat beneficial based on the work that you've done in
having these checklists for the different types of injuries that the veteran may
have suffered from and how to construct a home suitable to his or her needs as
it relates to the overall cost of that. And I know that you agree in addition to
TRA that the specially adapted housing grant be increased and again that's sort
of the historical analysis that you're providing specific in Exhibit One for
that grant. What do you -- do you have a ballpark figure? I mean, knowing again
that if we adjust ed it to inflation, it would be up to $170,000. But based on
the work you've done and the relative cost of doing that, do you have a ballpark
figure? John Gonsalves: Yes. On
average, uhm, we've averaged $343,00 for the cost of building a new
home. Chair Stephanie Herseth Sandlin:
Okay. So that's even greater than the average new home price.
John Gonsalves: Right. But these are 100% fully
adapted homes -- Chair Stephanie
Herseth Sandlin: Yes. John Gonsalves: -- which they do
cost a little more to build. You need a little extra square footage compared to
what the average home that the census bureau uses.
[. . .]
Chair Stephanie Herseth Sandlin: One last
question. Mr -- Dr. Zampiri. Can you explain the difference in changing the
Specially Adaptive Housing Grant from 5 - 200 to 20 - 200 with regard to visual
impairment? Thoomas Zampieri: Yes. In
fact, thank you very much. I was afraid someone didn't notice that. And also I
appreciate that Congressman [John] Boozman [Ranking Member] just coincidentally
showed up at the right time [laughter from Zampieri and Boozman]. I'm legally
blind. I can't drive. A lot of jobs I can't do. My vision is worse than 20/200.
And I don't qualify for anything under this program because the requirement is
5/200 which is really just you can't tell if there's a light on. There's no
light/dark perception for lack of a better way to describe it. If somebody has
5/200 and they waive their hand in front of your face and you don't see it,
you're quote-quote, 'meet this requirement, "totally blind." Our concern is --
and this is growing thing -- a lot of the Traumatic Brain Injured service
members who have significant functional impairments, who need extra lighting and
all these other things get zip. When I was in Houston and I was first
service-connected for my blindness, for example, because of the 20/200 vision,
they said no. So I went and I ended up spending not a whole lot but almost
$7,000 to do the modifications to my house in Houston because, you know. And so
the total number of service members coming back that would be 5/200 is fairly
low. In fact, the Navy says there's less than 20 in the last 8 years out at
Bethesda. But there are 140 that are enrolled in the VA with this 20/200 and are
told "nope" and -- So it's a frustrating thing. And I realize of course that the
magic problem is that if you change this section and you open it up to 20/200 as
the definition of blindness then of course, you know, the automatic reaction is
"Uh-oh. You're going to expand the costs of the program." And-and, I'm always
suspicious of that. It's sort of like a few years ago, a couple of years ago
when you did the TRA legislation. I'm sure people initially reacted by saying
this is going to cost millions and millions and you're going to have all sorts
of veterans applying for this. And the experience that I have is it usually
isn't that way. People don't apply automatically. But I think Mr. Boozman may
have some thoughts about this problem of the vision complications.
Ranking Member John Boozman: I appreciate you
bringing that up and you make such an important comment -- that probably the
VA's the only entity in the world that uses that standard versus the 20/200
standard. As an optometrist, I helped start -- in fact I started the School For
The Blind's low vision program in Little Rock. And I would say probably about
90% of the kids in there did not -- would not meet the -- did you say 5/200 was
the standard? Yeah, I mean, that's the standard I'm familiar with because nobody
uses it. But I would say that if you looked at all the kids in blind schools or
schools for the impaired, the vast majority, the vast-vast majority, there's no
way that they would meet a 5/200. Most people, and lay people don't understand
this but, most people that-that are blind have a lot of usable vision that can
be worked with. And it truly does, you know, going in and setting up a kitchen
or setting up a house so that a person can easily pour a cup of coffee -- you
know, do things, that we just take for granted. Somebody might really struggle
with that that did not meet this definition of vision which is so stringent in
the VA so I think you make a great point. Thursday's
snapshot noted the House Foreign Affairs
Subcommittee on the Middle East and South Asia which Kat covered Thursday night.
Wednesday's
snapshot covered the Senate Veterans Affairs
Committee hearing and Kat covered that Wednesday
night.
Remember the two women in New Hampshire noting
the lack of Iraq coverage in the media? On NPR today, The Diane Rehm
Show didn't have time for Iraq but it did have
time for Nadia Bilbassy to laugh condescendingly at an e-mailer (Tom from
Jacksonville, Florida) caller and presumably all Americans before she went on to
declare what American tax payer money should be spent on. Nadia scored a double:
She managed to (a) be insulting and (b) also pimp opinion passed off as fact. It
was not attractive. And it was cute the way she worked every answer back to her
own community and issues -- a fact not revealed on the broadcast. I wonder if
the Basques in Spain will next be brought on to lobby for an hour without NPR
revealing who they are? Her remarks did not approach journalism. But, hey, she
got to be rude and insulting and isn't that what NPR is all about? Strangely,
Diane's show last week (with a guest host) told people the vote was on track in
Iraq. That's now up in the air so you'd think they would have felt the need to
do an update. But possibly when one guest keeps talking about 'her people' (but
forgetting to inform the listeners of that) there's very little time for
anything else. Let's turn to the issue
of the elections. Jane Arraf (Christian Science
Monitor) reported this afternoon that "the country's
top election official said that even if lawmakers resolved all their
differences, it would be impossible to hold elections in January" and quoted
Independent High Electoral Commission's Faraj al-Haydari stating, "We have
already stopped all our work." Arraf reminds that both the "IHEC and the United
Nations officials have said they need at least 60 days to prepare a credible
election." This morning, the
New York
Times editorialized on the election issues
noting: The
Constitution requires the election by the end of January. Election officials had
said that the law needed to be done by Oct. 15 to allow enough time to prepare
for the voting. Even though Iraq's Parliament overshot that deadline when it
approved compromise legislation, the election was expected to take place between
Jan. 18 and Jan. 23. But the
Presidency Council (composed of the president, a Kurd, and two vice presidents,
a Sunni and a Shiite) has the final say. And Mr. Hashimi chose to exercise his
veto power and put in doubt Iraq's second national election, a critical test of
whether democracy can endure as the United States withdraws its troops.
The editorial board thinks the Constitution
matters . . . sometimes. Sometimes Iraq's Constitution doesn't matter. It
appears the editorial board is concerned with the Constitution only when what
they want doesn't happen. Refuse to conduct a national census? The editorial
board's okay with that. Refuse to resolve the Kirkuk issue (as the Constitution
mandated be done by 2007)? The editorial board's okay with that. It's a funny
sort of semi-devotion to the Constitution but then the New York Times is a funny sort of news outlet.
Sami Moubayed
covers the developments in Iraq at Asia
Times notes the argument that the Iraqi
refugees will be underrepresented in the Parliament (true even if there wasn't
an effort to expand the number of seats and to hand the bulk to Shi'ites).
Mouybayad explains, "Frantically [Nouri al-] Maliki responded. On Thursday
evening, the Constitutional Court (over which Maliki has plenty of influence)
overruled Hashemi's veto, calling it 'unconstitutional'." Let's jump to what's
happening and then come back to the 'unconstitutional' assertion. Waleed Ibrahim, Suadad
al-Salhy, Aseel Kami, David Alexander, Deepa Babington, Samia Nakhoul and Todd
Eastham (Reuters)
report, "Instead of addressing Hashemi's demand that
the law give more seats to Iraqi refugees and minorities, lawmakers squabbled
over whether the veto was legal. They scheduled a session Saturday in which they
would vote on whether to reject Hashemi's veto and send the law back for
approval by the three-person presidency council without changes, said the
speaker of parliament, Ayad al-Samarai." Now back to the "unconstitutional"
claim. The reporters go on to address the claims Baha al-Araji was making (see
yesterday's
snapshot) about the veto being "unconstitutional"
and how this is "political wrangling" and MP Saleh al-Mutlaq states, "To my
knowledge, the federal court did not say the veto is not constitutional. They
are trying to create a real political crisis."
Turning to the daily violence. First, a
correction. McClatchy was included in yesterday's daily violence and that was
Wednesday's daily violence. Not Thursdays. It will not be counted in the weekly
total at Third. McClatchy didn't do a violence report on Thursday or, thus far,
on Friday. Apparently, there were other things to do. Reuters noted the following violence
today a Mosul roadside bombing today which injured a
police officer, a Mosul stabbing of "an Egyptian" last night and another
civilian shot dead in Mosul last night as well as a Thursday Baghdad bombing
which left nine people injured.
Moving
to Europe where noted War Hawk Tony Blair was delivered some, for him, bad news.
As Middle East
Online reports, "Former British premier Tony
Blair took a blow after being rejected as EU president, mainly due to his
stained repuation after supporting and taking part in the US-led invasion of
Iraq in 2003." There is no joy in the killing fields tonight, Poodle Tony has
struck out. Blair is the former British prime minister. His roll dog Gordon
Brown is the current one. Leicester
Mercury reports Brown is refusing to meet with
the father of Peter Moore who was kidnapped along with 4 other British citizens
in Iraq back in May 2007. The other four are all dead or thought by the
government to be dead. Only Peter Moore is assumed to be alive at this point.
But Brown has refused to meet with him and the reason given is that the
"designated next of kin" is not Graeme Moore. Though some are shocked by Brown's
decision, it should be remembered that Gordon is himself a War Hawk and, as
such, may not be able to fake compassion very well and just attempting to do so
may wear Gordon Brown out. In which case, he needs to limit the occassions on
which he fakes sympathy in public.
Yesterday
(or last night, for those not on the West Coast), KPFA's Flashpoints
Radio spoke with Stephen Funk, Eddie Falcon,
Clare Baird and Courage to Resist's Sarah Lazar. Nora Barrows-Freidman was
speaking with them about the efforts of Iraq and Afghanistan war resisters
to work with Israeli refuseniks. Stephen Funk
wrote about this project earlier this month. Stephen
is the first known Iraq War resister who self-checked out starting on February
9, 2003 and went public April 1st announcing that he would not deploy. We've
noted Stephen Funk here before and will again, but he went public before this
site started so we'll note his story in the following excerpt.
Nora Barrows-Freidman: We are now joined on the
phone by Stephen Funk. He was one of the earliest who refused to serve in the
occupation of Iraq. And, Stephen, thank you so much for being with us again on
Flashpoints. Stephen Funk:
Thanks for having me. Nora
Barrows-Freidman: Tell us a little bit about your own history of refusing
military service and then what can you say about this international push to
dismantle militarism and the specific relationship between the United States and
its expanding policies of entrenched occupations in the Middle East and Israel's
ongoing and long suffering project of occupation and colonialism? What are the
similarities that-that you're seeing there on the ground in Palestine, Israel?
And what about the solidarity and the meetings you've been having with Israeli
refuseniks? Stephen Funk: I guess,
with my own story, I joined the military after 9-11. I voluntarily enlisted in
the Marine Corps. I came from a background of activism. I grew up in Seattle,
organized for the WTO and I moved to LA and protested against the Democratic
National Committee in 2000 and I also spent two months in the Philippines when
their president was being impeached -- that was at the same time George W. Bush
was being inaugurated for the first time and I was hoping that the same kind of
thing could happen in the United States that was happening in the Philipines.
But despite that background, I enlisted. I feel -- maybe as an activist, I
thought I could be a more reasonable person in Afghanistan and not be like a
racist, hot head which is what I thought a lot of people joining at the time --
there was a lot of a fear going on and lot of people joining at the time were
very reactionary about 9-11 and, you know that was -- that was where I was
coming from. But when I went to the Marine Corps, I went to the violent training
and I had to shout "Kill! Kill! Kill!" all the time and, you know, I also had to
deal with being queer in the military. And I realize that I didn't want to be
violent and I did not want to participate in any war -- especially the Iraq War
for political reasons. But then, that I couldn't aim a gun at anybody and pull
the trigger and that, ultimately, that is what I would be doing if I stayed in
the marines. I had the option -- because I was gay, I had the option to get out
under Don't Ask, Don't Tell. And everybody knew I was gay, everybody thought I
was gay. It wouldn't have been difficult. But my issue wasn't that I was being
oppressed it was that I was being asked to oppress others. And I felt that it
would be more honest to get out under conscientious objection. So I started work
on that. I went back to San Francisco and participated in the shut down before
the war began and kept on protesting and was speaking out anonymously. But then
there wasn't very -- despite all of the rallies that were happening every
weekend, despite, you know, all of the worldwide mobilizations and all of the
people that were in the streets, the media wasn't paying attention to anybody.
And I believe the difference between 2003 and the war began, it was as if
everybody in the United States agreed with it -- despite the fact that I was
living in San Francisco and clearly people were not happy that the war was
happening. So I guess I just talked to people and I decided that I would become
a public war resister. And I was the first person to do it. And, you know, the
next several months, traveling the country -- I was based in New Orleans -- and
I traveled the country. I was eventually sent to jail. That was the long story.
Eddie Falcon is a member of Iraq Veterans Against the War
and he writes about the current project that he and others are working on
here.
TV notes, NOW on PBS
debuts its latest episode Friday on most PBS stations and this one examines:
The Pentagon estimates that as many as one in five American soldiers are coming home from war zones with
traumatic brain injuries, many of which require round-the-clock attention.
But lost in the reports of these returning soldiers are the stories of
family members who often sacrifice everything to care for them. On Friday,
November 20 at 8:30 pm (check
local listings), NOW reveals how little has been done to help these
family caregivers, and reports on dedicated efforts to support
them. Washington Week also
begins airing on many PBS stations tonight (and throughout the weekend, check
local listings) and joining Gwen around the roundtable are John Dickerson (CBS
News, Slate), Doyle McManus (Los Angeles Times), David Sanger (New York Times) and Karen Tumulty (Time magazine). Meanwhile Bonnie Erbe will sit
down with Avis Jones-Deweever, Page Gardner, and Tara Setmayer to discuss the
week's events on PBS' To The Contrary.
Check local listings, on many stations, it begins airing tonight. And turning to
broadcast TV, Sunday CBS' 60
Minutes offers:
The Cost of
Dying Many Americans spend their last days in an intensive care
unit, subjected to uncomfortable machines or surgeries to prolong their lives at
enormous cost. Steve Kroft reports. Watch
Video
Witness
Recently freed after four months of interrogation and torture at the hands
of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, Newsweek reporter Maziar Bahari tells his
story to Bob Simon and writes about his ordeal in the next issue of
Newsweek.
Cameron's
Avatar Morley Safer gets
the first broadcast look at how "Titanic" director James Cameron created his
$400 million 3D fantasy "Avatar." Watch Video
60 Minutes, Sunday, Nov. 22, at 7 p.m. ET/PT.
iraq the christian science
monitor jane arraf
the new york times the asia times sami moubayed waleed ibrahim suadad al-salhy aseel kami david alexander deepa babington sami nakhoul todd eastham reuters 60 minutes cbs news pbs now on pbs to the contrary bonnie erbe npr the diane rehm show washington week nora barrows friedman
flashpoints
|
Posted at 09:39 pm by politicsscree
Permalink
Nov 19, 2009
katty van-van gets smacked
Don't let the anti-choice Stupak
amendment become law. Sign the petition --> Latest
News and Updates Activists across the country are standing up for women's
health care. You can, too! Sign the
petition to President Obama, Majority Leader Reid, and Speaker
Pelosi. It's the first step to stopping the Stupak ban and
protecting women's access to abortion coverage. Join us in DC on
December 2 for a National Lobby Day, when Planned
Parenthood and allies will be taking our message straight to Congress. Read
the Issue
Brief: Impact of Stupak Amendment on Access to Abortion Coverage and
CareStupak
ban in the mediathat's from planned
parenthood. trina passed it
over. trina's an honest katrina. then there's the dumb bunny katrina vanden
heuvel of the nation magazine. stephen
lednman (the people's voice) traces katty van-van's non-stop lying and
spinning: Pro or con, major media spin distorts, exaggerates, and
lies to avoid key truths on this critically important issue. After the House
passed HR 3962: Affordable Health Care for America Act, a November 11 Nation
magazine editorial (likely by editor, publisher, and part-owner Katrina vanden
Heuvel) admitted the bill's faults, yet praised it saying: -- "something
remarkable happened on November 7 when the House voted 220-215 for legislation
that the Congressional Budget Office says will extend insurance coverage to 36
million uncovered Americans....in the House bill there is certainly something to
work with, and something to fight for." Earlier on MSNBC's Morning Joe, she
hailed the moment as "a historic day....a victory in Congress....this is the
most important piece of legislation we've seen in decades." In a September 9
article titled, "Obama Shows His Progressive Spine," vanden Heuval praised his
"plain-spoken, at times tough, and masterful address to a joint session of
congress....about the importance of healthcare reform as a test of our nation's
character."Never mind how
HR 3962's 1,990 pages ration care to enrich the insurance, drug and large
hospital chain cartels that love it but want more. Insurers especially are
lobbying furiously for its no public-option dream bill to give them an open
field for millions more customers returning billions more
profits.here's reality for you, until the 'independent' voices
stop whoring, don't ever expect the u.s. to have a honest
conversation. let's close with c.i.'s 'Iraq
snapshot:' Thursday, November 19, 2009. Chaos and violence
continue, the 'intended' elections remain up in the air, the US State Dept
ignores warnings on refugees, another Iraqi is sentenced to execution, and
more.
Starting with the 'intended' January elections in Iraq which are in
question as a result of the veto by Iraq's Sunni vice president Tariq
al-Hashemi. Waleed Ibrahim, Suadad al-Salhy, Aseel Kami and Deepa
Babington (Reuters) reports that the MPs are stating
presently they intend to ignore his objection and just revote on the same draft
law -- while exploring whether or not he has the 'power' to veto. This will
reportedly take place on Saturday. Abu Dhabi's the National
condems al-Hashemi's action in an editorial, "Mr al Hashemi
has claimed that his veto was in defence of the constitution, but that is
seriously in doubt. Even his right to a veto is dubious as the constitutional
provisions regulating the presidency council state that all its decisions must
be unanimous. This was not the case here. If anything, it appeared to be
motivated by blind sectarian interest, which is all the more shameful
considering the effort it took to overcome those same interests and pass the law
in the first place." But the paper's Phil Sands and Nizar Latif
report that Iraqi exiles are ecstatic over al Hashemi's
move and quotes Jalil Abu Arshad stating (from Syria), "I fully support the need
to give more seats to exiles. The .parliament agreed to have one MP representing
each 100,000 Iraqis and nobody can believe that the seven or so seats that would
be chose by refugees is enough. There are millions of Iraqis with no choice but
to live outside the country and they have the right to a say in choosing the
next government. This is a matter of democratic principles, it has nothing to do
with Sunni, Shia or Kurd."
On Democracy Now! today pampered Raed Jarrar
joined Amy Goodman for a segment of non-stop spinning. Baby
Raed treated Iraqi refugees as an afterthought, a footnote. But then Baby Raed's
never wanted for a damn thing his entire life. And the spoiled candy ass sure
does spin so very well. Here's Raed revealing that his tiny, limp brain doesn't
allow him to read:
Now, unfortunately, the Obama administration -- in the
beginning, it was good in being vocal and clear about the withdrawal being
time-based, not conditions-based, which is the main difference between the Obama
plan and the Bush plan. Bush talked for six years about how the US will leave
when conditions permit. But Obama talked about a timetable for withdrawal that
is not conditions-based, and that's why his plan had a lot of support in the US
and Iraq. Poor, stupid Raed, apparently play-acting tires him out. Reality,
Barack always talked conditions based. Raed was too busy self-stroking to
posters of Barry O to deal with reality but those of us who aren't WHORES knew
reality some time ago. Let's drop back to the January 15th snapshot -- before
Barack was even sworn in:
Today Elisabeth Bumiller and Thom Shanker (New York
Times) report on the US military commanders contingency
plan for Iraq. Last month Bumiller and Shanker
reported on the military commanders presenting a partial
drawdown of US troops in Iraq on a slower scale than Barack's 'pledge' of 16
month withdrawal (of "combat" troops only). No objections were raised over the
timeframe by the president-elect but, in case objections are registered in the
immediate future, they've come up with an alternate plan they could implement.
This calls for a high of 8,000 a month (more likely four to six thousand) to be
pulled. Using the high figure, 48,000 US service members could be out of Iraq
(with at least 30,000 of that number redeployed to Afghanistan) in six months.
That would still leave close to 100,000 US troops in Iraq. And there is no full
withdrawal planned by Barack. That is why he refused to promise that, if
elected, all US troops would be out of Iraq by the end of his first term (2012).
Of course, Barack also rushed to assure the Times (2007) that he would easily
halt any drawdown and rush more troops back into Iraq (and no words to declare
this a temporary measure) when he sat down with Michael Gordon and Jeff Zeleny
(see this Iraq snapshot and
Third's article and
the actual transcript of
the interview -- a transcript Tom Hayden should have read before humiliating
himself in public, then again Tom-Tom seems to enjoy public humiliation). So the
article tells you that the military's preparing for all possibilities . . .
except the possibility the American people want (and some foolishly believe
Barack ever promised) full withdrawal of Iraq. That is not an option the
military even considers. "In the beginning," Raed? Before Baby Jarar Jarar
grabs his crayola to do another one of those laughable e-mails, let's note that
the "this Iraq snapshot" links back to November 2, 2007. Yes,
before Barack was even the Democratic Party nominee, he was explaining any
subtracting of troops (not a full withdrawal -- he never promised that outside
of campaign slogans) would be conditions based. From the November 2, 2007
snapshot:
So let's be clear that the 'anti-war' Obama told the paper he
would send troops back into Iraq. Furthermore, when asked if he would be willing
to do that unilaterally, he attempts to beg off with, "We're talking too
speculatively right now for me to answer." But this is his heavily pimped
September (non)plan, dusted off again, with a shiny new binder. The story is
that Barack Obama will NOT bring all US troops home. Even if the illegal war
ended, Obama would still keep troops stationed in Iraq (although he'd really,
really love it US forces could be stationed in Kuwait exclusively), he would
still use them to train (the police0 and still use them to protect the US
fortress/embassy and still use them to conduct counter-terrorism
actions.
Facts is hard for Baby Raed. Someone change his diaper, he's
looking cranky.
Raed does what Amy loves her guests to do: Channel
spirits from the Land of Fantasy. Having no facts, Raed starts offering
fantasies of why the vice president vetoed the election law. Naturally, since
Raed wants the election law, the vice president must be evil and full of malice
to do something Raed doesn't approve of. Amy laps that s**t up because, after
all, this is the Crazy who, in Decmeber 2003, was broadcasting across the air
waves -- with fellow lunatic John Nichols -- that Hillary would take over the
2004 DNC convention in an attempt to grab that year's presidential nomination.
It takes a lot of crazy to live in Amy Goodman's world and Raed's crazy enough
to qualify as a next-door neighbor.
Raed's real tight with CODESTINK --
which we all know isn't a peace group (by their actions, they revealed
themselves) -- so he spins for Barry and states that the US military withdrew
from all Iraqi cities at the end of June. The bases? Raed doesn't want to think
about them, that would require work and the only work most could picture him
doing is deciding which photo of Barry to place on his pillow while he humps the
bed to climax each night. Hey, anyone remember when Raed was 'informing' that
the 'surge' was really going to be used to attack Shi'ite militias? Oh, that
fact-free, wacky child. Kisses, Raed, kisses.
Also making an ass out of
himself is Baha al-Araji who has given multiple statements to the press today
(they may or may not print them tomorrow). The Shi'ite who serves on Iraq's
Constitutional Court states/rules (depending upon which outlet he's speaking to)
that Tariq al-Hashmi doesn't have the power to veto the election law. Now that
would toss the issue up in the air and require examination but chatty al-Araji
goes on to weaken his own case by blathering on about how his own (al-Araji)
deciding was based on what al-Hashmi objected to. That would undercut al-Araji's
alleged conclusion. Either the presidential council has the power to veto or
they don't -- it doesn't matter what their reasoning is. They possess the power
or they don't. At every other point, the council's possessed this power. Most
outlets will probably ignore the ravings of al-Araji because the Parliament's
taking up the issue on Saturday. Today at the Pentagon, US Secretary of Defense
Robert Gates spoke on the subject of the veto and where things stand currently,
"And we hope that the concerns that have been expressed can be resolved quickly
and a -- and new legislation passed to that the election can take place within
the constitutional framework, meaning before the end of
January."
Al Jazeera interviewed (link is video) Tariq
al-Hashemi.
Tariq al-Hashemi: What I have done in
fact is based on my Constitutional obligation. When I discovered there was a
major loophole, it's our duty -- according to the Constitution -- to try to make
some sort of remedy on a legal basis and that is what I have done
today.
Kamahl Santamaria: Okay, so you've done it according to the
Constitution. You've done what you say is legal. My question to you though is
the repercussions of this. If this election can't happen as it is supposed to
happen by January the 31st, then what happens? It is a huge opportunity lost for
Iraq. Well I don't think that this sort of amendment is going to defer the
timetable of the commission. I made a thorough discussion with the commission
staff the day before yesterday. I very much assured that all logistic had been
already covered, action had been taken, so just to make this amendment is going
to take one or two days, is not going to make any major shift to the timetable
that has been agreed upon.
Kamahl Santamaria: But what's interesting is I
spoke to a member of the electoral commission only an hour ago. He said
everything's off, they're not pressing on with anything, of course it's been
thrown into doubt.
Tariq al-Hashemi: I'm not -- I'm not agree. I think
this announcement is not based on any -- on any acceptable ground because, as I
told you in fact, I-I-I had a lengthy discussion the day before yesterday. I
checked everything and the chairman of the commission told me specifically that
all action being taken, all what we need in fact to press the button on the form
which will be according to number of seats and this could be sorted out within
hours. Kamahl Santamaria: Why is five-percent, the sticking point of
five-percent for Iraqis in exile, Iraqis abroad, why is five-percent not
enough?
Tariq al-Hashemi: Well five-percent, in fact, if you just -- if
you just reflect it to a number of seats -- we are talking a number not
exceeding, in no way, seven seats. Seven seats according to Article 49 of the
Constitution doesn't mean anything. According to the text of this article, we
have to ensure that each 100,000 Iraqis, whether they are living inside or out
-- or outside Iraq, they should be entertained by one seat. So seven seats
doesn't entertain the least figure which ministry of migration has maintained
time being. The number of Iraqis outside of-of Iraq which has been recorded as
per Ministry of Migration is one-million-five hundred. If you're talking NGOs,
international human rights, this figure could reach to 4.5 million. So if we are
allocating only seven seats, this means that we are entertaining 700,000 Iraqis
and ignored 800,000.
If you paid attention, not only did Amy Goodman not
book anyone to present the side above, it was never addressed. Just nutty
conspiracy theories from Raed. Amy calls it "public affairs" -- no one
knowledgable would use that term.
Monday's snapshot noted
the assassinations of the Sahwa members in Sadan village and that the assassins
were said to be wearing Iraqi forces uniforms. Aswat al-Iraq reports Tariq
al-Hashemi declared at a Wednesday news conference, "What happened in Abu-Ghraib
two days ago is that groups in army uniform arrested 17 people from their
houses, then killed them with cold blood in a nearby ceremony." Staying with the
topic of Sahwa, we're dropping back to the March 30th
snapshot:
Laith Hammoudi (McClatchy Newspapers) explained
Saturday, "16 people were injured (seven Sahwa members,
four Iraqi soldiers and four civilians) after clashes broke out between the
Iraqi army and Sahwa members in Fadhil neighborhood in downtown Baghdad around 2
p.m. The clashes broke out during an operation of the Iraqi army to arrest the
leader of Fadhil Sahwa and one of his deputies. Five Iraqi soldiers were
kidnapped in the incident." McClatchy's Leila Fadel added Adel
Mashhadani was the arrest target and that the arrest of him (as well as an
assistant) "heightened fears among Sunnis that the Iraqi government plans to
divide and disband the movements now that its taken control of all but a few
thousands of the 94,000 members across the country."
Adel Mashhadani is
in today's news cycle. The Telegraph of London
reports that he has been "condemned to death" for an
alleged kidnapping and murder. John Leland (New York Times)
adds that he has his defenders and detractors and that
rumors swirl including: "Many Fadhil residents said that Mr. Mashhadani was not
in police custody but was in Turkey, and that the courts announced the sentence
to incite Sunni violence and justify a government crackdown. Some said the plan
was led by Iranians in the government." Larry Johnson (Seattle PostGlobal)
reports, "Iraq is planning to excute up to 126 women by the
end of the year. At least 9 may be hanged with the next two weeks. Human rights
goupt say the only crime committed by many of these women was to serve in the
government of Saddan Hussein. Others, according to human rights groups like
Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, were convicted of common crimes
based on confessions that were the result of torture." Last September, Amnesty
International released a report [PDF format warning] entitled "A Thousand People Face The Death Penalty In
Iraq" which noted that the country "now has one of the
highest rates of executed in the world" and:
Defendants commonly complain
that "confessions" were extracted from them under torture during pre-trial
interrogation, often when they were held incommunicado in police stations or
detention facilities controlled by the Ministry of Interiror. These
"confessions" are then often used as evidence against them at their trials, and
are accepted by the courts without taking any or adequate steps to investigate
defendants' allegations of torture. Defendants also complain that they are not
able to choose their own defence lawyers; those tried before the CCCI [Central
Criminal Court of Iraq] on capital charges have defence lawyers appointed by the
court if they are unable to pay for defence counsel, but the quality of such
representation is low. Some lawyers refuse to represent defendants accused of
"terrorism", mostly Sunni Muslims, fearing reprisals by armed milita groups
linked to Shi'a political parties represented in the Iraqi Council of
Representatives (parliament).
Back in November of 2006, Brian Bennett (Time magazine)
reported on the "glitches and logistical snafus" in the
executions including a man hanged September 6th -- the rope broke and he fell
fifteen feet and declared "Allah saved me! Allah saved me!" while a debate took
place among officials for forty minutes over whether it was divine intervention
or not. In October of 2008, Robert Fisk (Independent of London)
reported on the executions and quoted an unnamed British
official who explained a hanging recently observed, "They made him stand on the
bench, put the rope round his neck and pushed him off. But he jumped on to the
floor. He could stand up. So they shortened the length of the rope and got him
back on teh bench and pushed him off again. It didn't work. They started digging
into the floor beneath the bench so that the guy would drop far enough to snap
his neck. They dug up the tiles and the cement underneath. But that didn't work.
He could still stand up when they pushed him off the bench. So they just took
him to a corner of the cell and shot him in the head."
"The reports
already out," declared Michael H. Posner this afternoon to US House Rep Jim
Costa. "Those designations will happen in the next few months. The human rights
-- the broader human rights report is just a factual summary." Posner, the
Assistant Secretary for Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor at the US
State Dept, was appearing before the US House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on
the Middle East and South Asia. The report he was refering to was the State
Dept's International Religious Freedom
Report which was released October 26,
2009.
On Iraq, the State Dept's publication
notes:
At the end of the reporting period, national
identity cards continued to note the holder's religion, which has been used as a
basis for discrimination; however, passports did not note religion. Law No.
105 of 1970 prohibits the Baha'i Faith, and a 2001 resolution prohibits the
Wahhabi branch of Islam. Although provisions on freedom of religion in the new
Constitution may supersede these laws, no court challenges have been brought to
have them invalidated, and no legislation has been proposed to repeal them.
In April 2007 the Ministry of Interior's Nationality and Passport Section
canceled Regulation 358 of 1975, which prohibited the issuance of a nationality
identity card to those claiming the Bahai' Faith. In May 2007 a small number of
Baha'is were issued identity cards. The Nationality and Passport Section's legal
advisor stopped issuance of the cards thereafter, claiming Baha'is had been
registered as Muslims since 1975 and citing a government regulation preventing
the conversion of "Muslims" to another faith. Without this official citizenship
card, Baha'is experience difficulty registering their children for school and
applying for passports. Despite the cancellation of the regulation, Baha'is
whose identy records were changed to "Muslim" after Regulation 358 was
instituted in 1975 still could not change their identity cards to indicate their
Baha'i faith, and their children were not recognized as Baha'is. A March 2006
citizenship law specifically precludes Jews from regaining citizenship if it is
ever withdrawn. [. . .] There were allegations that the Kurdistan Regional
Government (KRG) engaged in discriminatory behavior against religious
minorities. Christians and Yezidis living north of Mosul claimed that the KRG
confiscated their property without compensation and that it began building
settlements on their land. Assyrian Christians alleged that the Kurdistan
Democratic Party (KDP)-dominated judiciary in Ninewa routinely discriminated
against non-Muslims and failed to enforce judgments in their favor. There were
reports that Yezidis faced restrictions when entering the KRG and had to obtain
KRG approval to find jobs in areas within Ninewa Province administred by the KRG
or under the security protection of the Peshmerga. There were also
allegations that the KRG exhibited favoritism toward the Christian religious
establishment, and it was alleged that on February 17, 2008, KRG authorities
arrested and held incommunicado for four days an Assyrian blogger, Johnny
Khoshaba Al-Rikany, based on articles he had posted attacking corruption in the
church. Yezidi and Shabak political leaders alleged that Kurdish Peshmerge
forces regularly committed abuses against and harassed their communities in
Ninewa Province. Districts that are within the security control of the Peshmerga
include Sinjar, Sheikhan, Ba'asheq (sub-district of Mosul), and Bartalla
(sub-district of Hamdaniya). Minority leaders alleged that Kurdish forces were
intimidating minority communities to identify themselves as Kurds and support
their inclusion in the KRG. Yezidi political representatives also reported that
because of their religious affiliation, they were not allowed to pass through
security checkpoints in areas controlled by Kurdish Peshmerga as they traveled
from Baghdad to their communities in northern Iraq. The KRG denied
allegations that it was behind violent incidents directed at Christians and
other minorities. Moreover, despite such allegations, many non-Muslims reside in
northern Iraq and the KRG area, and there were reports that some sought refuge
there from other parts of the country where pressures to conform publicly to
narrow interpretations of Islamic tenets were greater. In February 2009, the IOM
estimated that there were 19,100 internally displaced families in the Ninewa
Plain and that 43,595 internally displaced families were located in the
Kurdistan region.
In reply to a question from US House Rep Bob Inglis
today, Posner said there were three things the US government could do to support
religious communities being targeted around the world:
1) Be very
viligant when religious communities are targeted and in trouble.
2) The
US government can help amplify their voices.
3) The US government can
provide direct, material, financial support.
With regards to the US
government speaking out against targeting of religious communities, Posner
declared that "governments take notice of that" and that "it is always valuable
for us to speak out."
Religious minorities are among Iraq's refugee
population. The genocide and ethnic cleansing of Iraq led to millions of
refugees -- some internal, some external. Julien Barnes-Dacey (Christian Science Monitor)
reports that "up to 2 million" of the external refugees
"remain stranged in neighboring countries" while the United Nations faces
shortfalls in funding. As Barnes-Dacey reports, that has not prevented Iraqi
refugees from continuing to leave Iraq. One example of that is Abu Ali who
entered Syria in August and states, "I had to leave: they say there's security,
but on the ground it's a different story. They still kill you because of your ID
papers." As a backdrop to the crisis, the US State Dept's Eric Schwartz wrapped
up a multi-day bad will tour today. Over the weekend, Schwartz made the usual
ass of himself including when AP interviewed him and,
despite the fact that various humanitarian organizations have issued studies
this year pointing out how little the Baghdad government or 'government' has
done for refugees, he declared 'strides have been made'. And the 'answer' is for
Iraqi refugees to return to Iraq -- despite the fact that the Red Cross and the
United Nations both have stated that that Iraq is not 'safe' enough for refugees
to begin returning nor is that country able to handle a mass return. Wednesday he was in Syria which estimates they currently
house 1.2 million Iraqi refugees. Khaled Yacoub Oweis (Reuters)
reports that Schwartz declared the influx of Iraqi refugees
to the US this current fiscal year would be "substantial." And Schwartz declares
it will be "at least 17,000." That's substantial? By whose measurement? Or have
we forgotten Schwartz promised 20,000 would be settled in FY '09 -- a little
over 18,000 were re-settled in the US for that fiscal year. So 'substantial' is
now even less than his predications for the last fiscal year? Phil Sands (The National)
reports:
Abdul Rahman Attar, the president of the
Syrian Arab Red Crescent, criticised the international community and the Iraqi
government, saying both were failing in their duty to care for displaced Iraqis.
And he cautioned there were dangerous implications in four million people
continuing to live as refugees, many of them struggling to cope with increasing
levels of poverty. "Perhaps the world is underestimating the significance of
the Iraqi refugees issue," he said. "It is not a short-term matter. We are
talking about medium- and long-term impacts. It has already been six years or
more for some refugees and they need greater support. "The international
community should not allow its attention to drift easily away from the refugees.
This issue is a bomb that can still explode at any time."
It would
certainly seem that Eric Schwartz is underestimating the significance. But the
State Dept has always done that with Iraq -- especially with regards to Iraq's
LGBT community and the continued assault on the community. Tuesday, Kelvin Lynch (Dallas Examiner) was
reporting that Iraqi LGBT was
estimating the number of LGBT men and women murdered in Iraq since the start of
the illegal war is 720 and Lynch observes, "But the big question continues to
be, why hasn't the U.S. government done anything to help?" Taylor Luck (Jordan Times) reports on
the Sabian Mandaeans who left Iraq due to the violence and are currently in
Jordan:
Fatwas were issued declaring Mandaens kuffar, or infidels.
Mandaens, known for their gold and jewellery craftsmanship, became frequent
targets of kidnappings, with ransoms set as high as $100,000. Since the
US-led invasion, the Mandaean Human Rights Group has recorded around 180
killings, 275 kidnappings and 298 assualts and forced conversions within
Iraq.
As Jake Armstrong (Pasadena Weekly)
notes, it's day 2420 of the Iraq War. And as the war
continues, so does the violence.
Bombings?
Mohammed al Dulaimy (McClatchy Newspapers)
reports a Baghdad sticky bombing which injured one
"governmental employee". Deutsche Presse-Agentur
reports a Mosul roadside bombing which claimed the lives of
3 police officers (five more injured).
Shootings?
Mohammed al Dulaimy (McClatchy Newspapers)
reports Mohammed Aziz Al Shamari was injured in a Baghdad
assassination attempt on his life (he is "an advisor for the Iraqi government").
Deutsche Presse-Agentur
reports 1 man shot dead in Mosul with another left
wounded.
Please note, Reuters has filed no story on violence today. That
is why you do not use ICCC for an Iraqi body count -- ICCC only goes by Reuters,
'their' count is a tally of Reuters.
Meanwhile in the United States,
Gidget Funetes (Navy Times)
reports that Ray Mabus, Secretary of the Navy, "rejected a
clemency request from a Marine infantry squad leader convicted of killing an
Iraqi man in 2006, a case that drew two jury convictions and five guilty please
from seven other members of his squad." This is the case where US service
members ("the Penleton 8") plotted to kill an Iraqi and went to his home April
26, 2006 only to find him not at home and instead grabbed another Iraqi whom
they bound, dragged and shot dead. Jeanette Steele (San Diego Union-Tribune)
reports Mabus was asked to review the case in terms of
Lawrence Hutchins conviction and eleven year sentence and that Mabus denied
Hutchins clemency and "also ordered that four of the other seven defendants in
the case be discharged from the military." Mark Nero (LA Examiner)
identifies the four, "Marine Lance Cpls. Tyler Jackson,
Jerry Shumate and John Jodka III, and Navy Corpsman Melson Bacos were the
servicemembers ordered removed. They had been originally been allowed to stay on
active duty after serving short jail terms for lesser offenses."
Finally,
NOW on PBS debuts its latest episode
Friday on most PBS stations and this one examines:
The Pentagon estimates
that as many as one in five American soldiers arecoming home from war zones with
traumatic brain injuries, many of whichrequire round-the-clock attention. But
lost in the reports of thesereturning soldiers are the stories of family members
who often sacrificeeverything to care for them. On Friday, November 20 at 8:30
pm (checklocal listings), NOW reveals how little has been done to help
thesefamily caregivers, and reports on dedicated efforts to support
them.iraqreuterswaleed ibrahimsuadad al-salhyaseel kamideepa babingtonlaith
hammoudimcclatchy newspapersleila
fadelthe new york timesjohn
lelandthe seattle postglobelarry
johnsonkelvin lynchthe telegraph of londontime
magazinebrian bennettthe independent of londonrobert
fiskgidget fuentesjeanette steelesan diego union-tribunemark
neropbsnow on pbs
Posted at 07:04 pm by politicsscree
Permalink
Nov 18, 2009
a blue dog democrat from the dlc's new group
e-mails to tell me that a) i'm just talking about abortion, b) not every 1 cares
about abortion and c) some democrats are even opposed to abortion. hey,
new democrat, stf up. like i give a damn what you say? do you want to me
make fun of your hair? that usually sends you chicken s**ts whining to
c.i., tattling to c.i. on me in an e-mail. i thought you'd all gone
away. apparently you're success in installing 1 of your own into the
white house convinced you that you must have some pull. you have
none. i cover abortion because it's an important issue. if any 1
doesn't like it, they can find somewhere else to go. bite me. this
is from bonnie erbe's 'House
Healthcare Abortion Ban Would be Widespread' ( u.s. news & world
reports): Now the George Washington University's School of
Public Health has released an analysis of the amendment, which says
in part: In view of how the health benefit services industry operates and
how insurance product design responds to broad regulatory intervention aimed at
reshaping product content, we conclude that the treatment exclusions required
under the Stupak/Pitts Amendment will have an industry-wide effect, eliminating
coverage of medically indicated abortions over time for all women, not only
those whose coverage is derived through a health insurance
exchange. Who's going to be hit hardest? Poor women, that's who. These
are the women who are least able to provide for the children they will have to
bear and raise due to their lack of coverage for abortion. If only the burden
could be shifted to the people who limit access to abortion, the debate would be
over. Let the uber-religious folks (who want to impose their view of "life" on
the rest of us) pay for these children including all food, clothing, medical
care, education, rent and so on from birth through the age of 18, and they'd
stop being so-called pro-life in a skinny minute. Instead we all have to
pay--all taxpayers—in the form of huge taxes for social services. It's a crazy
world we inhabit and this is one of the craziest aspects as far as I am
concerned.and that's why we need to be vocal and loud. let's
close with c.i.'s 'Iraq
snapshot:' Wednesday, November 18, 2009. Chaos and violence
continue, the Army's suicide rate for 2009 is already higher than last year, the
US Senate explores veterans employment, the Iraq election law has met a veto,
Anderson Cooper 360 began their 4-part series on the murder of 4 Iraqis last
night, and more.
"These are difficult times for many Americans," declared
US Senator Daniel Akaka today, "with an unemployment number higher than it has
been for 20 years. When the number of those who have given up looking for work
because they believe none is available is combined with those who are only able
to find part-time employment, the extent of our challenge is staggering. For our
nation's veterans, especially those who have recently separated from active
duty, the search for a job can be particularly difficult. Skills honed on the
battlefield are not easily translated to a resume for the civilian job market.
Add to that the need for a readjustment to civilian life and the problem is
compounded."
Akaka was chairing the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee's
hearing entitled Easing The Burdens Through Employment. To underscore the
problems with employment, Senator Patty Murray explained that the
citizen-soldiers of the 81st Brigade Combat Team of the Washington Army National
Guard "just returned this summer after serving their country honorably in Iraq,"
that there were approximately 2300 in the brigade "about 1/2 of them tried to
get direct job placement or job training" but "only 20% have been able to get a
job so far."
The first panel was the Assistant Secretary for Veterans
Employment and Training from the US Dept of Labor, Raymond Jefferson who noted
that this was his 100th day on the job in his current position andh touted the
Dept of Labor's Veterans Employment and Training Service (VETS) in his opening
remarks. He also noted that the veterans population included under-served
populations such as (from prepared remarks, except for a nod to Senator Jon
Tester, more or less the same as what he stated to the committee) "Native
American Veterans, especially those on tribal lands, are one such population.
[Labor] Secretary [Hilda] Solis hosted a Summit of Tribal Leaders at the
Department of Labor earlier this month that VETS participated in. We discussed
the challenges facing Native American Veterans and potential solutions. This
event began the process of better serving this community. VETS will also be
participating in a number of major Native American outreach events in 2010.
Furthermore, we are conducting a study on the employment needs of Native
American Veterans living on tribal lands to identify best practices for serving
this population." Another population he noted was "wounded, ill or injured"
veterans which the VETS program is mainly addressing via REALifelines and America's Heroes At Work. We'll note
one exchange from this panel for two reason. (A) I don't think we've noted
Senator Mark Begich in any hearing before. (B) Because the exchange resulted in
some laughter.
Senator Mark Begich: Let me, if I can add, expand a little
bit on, Senator Tester commentary. Being from Alaska, you know we also have a
very strong rural component of our state but also of Indian country can you -- I
was listening carefully to what you were describing to Senator Tester. What it
sounds like, and I don't want to put words in your mouth, but I -- and I want
this to be viewed as positive -- that there has not been an aggressive approach
in reaching out to rural communities, especially American Indian country. Is
that a fair statement?
Raymond Jefferson: Senator, when I took office 100
years ago, and I've assessed it -- [Laughs] 100 days ago,
Senator Mark
Begich: 100 days ago.
Senator Jon Tester: I like the way he looks for 100
years.
Raymond Jefferson: It's been a lot of midnights.
Senator
Mark Begich: It feels like 100 years, I know.
Raymond Jefferson: But,
senator, I'm just not satisified.
Senator Mark Begich:
Okay.
Raymond Jefferson: I realize that with the resources we have, we
have to work. Working harder isn't going to cut it, I think we have to work more
innovatively. And there's two key components. The first is the dialogue we're
having with the Native American veterans and the tribal leaders and also, as
Senator Tester alluded to, broadening that to the representatives of the rural
community to find out from them what will best serve them. And then what I'm
looking at is parternships, partnerships with other agencies and specifically
non-profits and some of these new veteran volunteer initiatives can be helpful
there.
Panel two was composed of America
Works's Peter Wikul (US Navy Capt, retired), Vietnam
veteran Dexter Daniel (with Marriott), National Organization On
Disability's Helen Tymes, Iraq War veteran Joshua
Lawton-Belous (with Oracle) and Lutz Ziob (Microsoft). We'll provide a sample
exchange from the second panel.
Chair Daniel Akaka: It seems that one of
the themes running through all of your testimonies this morning is mentoring,
coaching and hands-on approach to providing assistance. Let me ask each of you
to rate this aspect of any program that might be developed in terms of its value
and as a factor for success.
Helen Tymes: I'll make a statement on
that.
Chair Daniel Akaka: Ms. Thymes.
Helen Tymes: Yes, sir. As
far as the effectiveness of our program, it is right now 90% as far as the
veterans that we serve and the opportunities that we have assisted to get. We --
we give individualized services to veterans. As far as the transition from being
in the military has been stated later and to the civilian sector, many of those
skill sets, the individual, the veteran, is not aware of what they are. Because
of our education and history and knowledge of the military, we are able to get
those skill sets out and come up with resumes that are working resumes, not just
a show resume, but something that actually has substance to make that veteran
competent for employment and to also help with any other application process
there is for education. Our veterans today are facing a lot of mental problems
-- PTSD, TBI, a combination of both. This makes the veterans upset, they get
angry, have a very low temper tolerance and, because of our services -- because
of our personalized services, we're able to assist the veteran with what needs
to get accomplished.
Dexter Daniel: I concur with --
Chair Daniel
Akaka: Mr. Daniels.
Dexter Daniel: -- Miss Helen. Thank you very much,
Mr. Chairman. What I personally experienced was I was so ashamed when I came
home, I just couldn't, you know, really face the reality of wanting to talk to
people about my problems and I just didn't reach out. And, you know, the shame
that I felt caused me to react in a lot of the ways that I did. Again, I always
thank God for MAC VETS (Maryland Center for Veteran's Education and Training
1-410-642-1693) because they reached out in a way that no one else ever had. You
know, I was literally in prison and they had a represenative that came around, I
was in the cell and, at that time, I knew I was facing a lot. Then an individual
came around and found out first and foremost, he's a veteran, number two, this
is an availability of a program that we have. Longterm, two year availability to
be able to do it, that to me is personalized. Once I got there, the counselors
welcomed me with open arms and I still had a lot on my plate at that time. I
still had obligations and commitments to the division of parole and probation to
come out. They went the extra mile to even talk to my probation agent and the
judge, to solidify this one final -- and that's how I felt, one final --
opportunity that I'd have in this life to do good. They gave me my shot and, you
know, we've just had a wonderful partnership ever since then. That's the effect
that it's had on me. Chair Daniel Akaka: Mr. Belous?
Joshua
Lawton-Belous: Mr. Chairman, as a representative of Oracle corporation, we've
found that there are many reasons we don't actually need to ask for money from
the federal government to run our wounded warrior program. Mainly because each
wounded warrior we take in is a value added proposition for Oracle corporation.
They add something to it. And it's a dual mentorship. It's a two-way street on
the mentorship role. One is that those who are in the industry need to mentor
wounded warriors, soldiers, marines, veterans coming out of the military to
explain to them the career path. It's a completely different world when you go
inside and understanding it will take some time. There's always that uptick no
matter what job you go to where there's a learning curve. But secondly, it
behooves veterans to mentor those who are mentoring them to show them 'This is
exactly what I learned in the military, this is what I'm capable of doing.'
Because, as we find now, only 1/2 of 1% of the population is actually serving in
the wars that we are fighting today which means that over time -- and it has
already occured where those who are hiring do not understand the valued added
proposition that service members can bring to an organization. That, I believe,
is the greatest effect of the mentorship program. That way programs that we have
today to help veterans transition out of the military will be more successful
when the vast majority of senior to mid-level managers are no longer military
veterans.
Chair Daniel Akaka: Captain?
Peter Wikul: Chairman Akaka
when America Works is racked and stacked against organizations that do similar
types of work in the New York area, we consistently rank number one in terms of
getting people jobs. People come in the door, we give them mentoring, we give
them mentoring. We give them interview skills so that when we get them an
interview, they give the right answers to the right questions so they can get
them the jobs. We don't get them the jobs, we get them the interviews. They have
to get the job and we coach them in that process. If you're a veteran and you
need a suit, we get 'em a suit. There's a program to get them a suit. And I have
to tell you just recently with in the last two weeks, I went to two veterans
homeless shelters in New York City to give a motivational speech and some of
these guys are really whipped down and they're broken. And you start talking to
them and I try to motivate them and I try to tell them, "Look when we help you
get a job, you will get back your self-respect and dignity and-and it will put
you on the road to getting an even better job." And so we go there, we go right
into the shelters, we talk to them, we give them a speech, and around town, we
have a card and it says: "Do you need a job? America Works. If you're a New York
City resident and are having difficulty finding a job, call this number and go
here. No fee." And we are right in the trenches, we get these people, we bring
them in the door . What's amazing is when I first hooked up with this company,
which I really find amazing, is you walk in the door at the beginning of the day
and it's loaded with people. It's just, you have to fight your way in to get to
the offices. And I came back, we went on some sales calls, and I came back about
five hours later and I said, "Where are all the people?" And they said, "Out on
interviews getting jobs." And so this is what this company does. Against similar
companies, we're ranked number one. We get people jobs. We're right on the
streets. We're in the trenches. We go to homeless veterans shelters, we talk to
the people, we mentor them, we bring them out of their shells, we give them the
interview skills and a suit if necessary and we help them restore their dignity
and their self-respect so that they can become whole and good American
citizens.
Lutz Ziob: To answer your question, Chairman Akka, I believe
internships are very important. Occupational success is typically the
combination of subject matter expertise. You have to be a good nurse, system
manager, but also know how to navigate the world of work, the changing world of
work. It's your - your - what you know about your job. The mentorship people
that are in the trenches can provide that guidance. The difficulty is they have
a day job as well so we need to free up their time and find the opportunity to
connect them -- mentor and mentee -- in an effective way.
This was
more of a fact finding hearing and Senators Tester and Begich set up time next
month with Raymond Jefferson to address concerns for rural veterans and Senator
Murray sounded out Lutz Ziob specifically on potential legislation (a bill)
she's attempting to draft and plans to bring to the Senate floor next
year.
This morning Anthony Shadid (Washington Post)
reported that Tariq al-Hashimi, Iraq's Sunni vice president
(they have two vice presidents, one Shia -- Adel Abdul Mehdi, one Sunni) vetoed
the election law: "The veto by Vice President Tariq al-Hashimi was the latest
wrinkle in growing criticism over the law by the country's biggest minorities,
Sunni Arabs and Kurds. Both groups are effectively demanding the allocation of
more seats to their blocs in the next parliament, which is almost assured of
having a Shiite Muslim majority." In yesterday's snapshot, we
noted that the food rations cards being used for the registry was a joke and
included a number of reasons why. All Shadid can do is tell you that the food
rations cards are overseen by the Trade Ministry. The name we used yesterday --
the one Shadid fails to attach to this story -- is Abdel Falah al-Sudani -- a
Nouri appointee, to Minister of Trade, a member of Nouri's own political party
and someone who was forced to resign in May of this year over corruption issues.
It is not a minor issue when your voter roll was overseen by a minister who has
had to resign in disgrace. In real time, Bloomberg News noted
that al-Sudani "acknowledged cases of corruption and said the system needed to
be revised" in May of this year and that "Iraq's Commission on Public Integrity
earlier this month charged nine trade ministry officials with financial and
administrative corruption related to the country's food import program."
"Financial and administrative corruption related to" what is now being hailed as
a legitimate voter roll. CNN added this morning
that Tariq al-Hashimi "refused to sing the law without an amendment that would
increase the number of seats allocated to refugees, many of whom are Sunnis,
from five percent to 15 percent. The Constitution stipulates that every 100,000
Iraqis should have one representative in the country's parliament but al-Hashemi
said that refugee numbers are not included in how seats have been calculated."
Martin Chulov (Guardian)
observes, "However, Hashimi's move has set the scene for a
showdown between MPs and the Sunni minority, which increasingly feared it was
likely to lose even more political ground. The last election, almost five years
ago, was boycotted en masse by Sunnis." Liz Sly and Raheem Salman (Los Angeles Times)
provide this context: "Iraq's constitution stipulates that
elections must be held by the end of January, and failure to meet that deadline
could plunge the country into a constitutional crisis. The vote was originally
slated for Jan. 16, but the commission had already said that would be
impossible. Hussaini estimated that the latest date on which it can feasibly be
held is Jan. 21. It will be impossible to hold the election in the last 10 days
of January, Hussaini said, because of the Shiite Ashura holiday, when millions
of pilgrims converge on foot on the holy city of Karbala from all over the
country and the world. The roads will be clogged, and many Shiites will be away
from their home constituencies and unable to vote." Anne Barker (Australia's ABC)
reminds that the current Parliament is set to expire by the
end of January. So where are things right now? Anthony Shadid and Daniel Dombey (at the
Financial Times of London) flip through the memory books to
pull this now-forgotten reality back out, "The election deal was only reached
after sustained lobbying by Joe Biden, US vice-president, and had been portrayed
by the Obama administration as a rare piece of good news from the Middle East
and 'critically important' for Iraq's prospects". On today's All Things Considered (NPR), Corey
Flintoff examined the latest news.
Corey Flintoff:
When President Obama hailed the passage of the law on November 8th, he cited the
link between elections and the US withdrawal.
US President Barack Obama
(November 8th): This agreement advances the political process that can bring
lasting peace and unity to Iraq and allow for the orderly and responsible
transition of American combat troops out of Iraq by next September.
Corey
Flintoff: US officials have said that if the security situation in Iraq is
stable they can begin withdrawing troops 60 days after the election. Iraq's
Constitution calls for a new Parliament to be elected by the end of January when
the current government's mandate expires. Flintoff notes that Constitutional
crisis could take place but that some MPs state that the Parliament has the
authority to extend the term by one month. At the US State Dept today, in the
daily press briefing, spokesperson Ian Kelly declared:
We're disappointed
at these developments related to the elections law. We urge the Iraqi leaders
and Parliament to take quick action to resolve any of the outstanding concerns
that have been expressed. And this is so elections can go forward. And these
elections, of course are mandated by the Iraqi Constitution. We believe that
it's the responsibility of all Iraqi partiest to ensure that the Iraqi people
are able to exercsie their democratic right to vote and this election law
represent the best way forward for the Iraqi government to be able to
consolidate the democratic and political achievements.
The proper
response to Kelly's statement was: "Oh, explain that law to us." Naturally, no
one embarrassed Kelly with a difficult question -- one his laughable remarks
begged for. Ahmed Rasheed and Deepa Babington (Reuters)
quote the Independent High Electoral Commission's chief
commissioner Hamdiya al-Hussaini stating, "As a result of the veto, we have
decided to stop all our activities and work as we await a final law with a
presidential decree that determines the exact date of the election." BBC News quotes Tariq al-Hashemi
stating, "I sent a letter to parliament asking for the law to be amended.
Parliament said I could veto the contested first article, which is what I have
done today. The proposed amendment affords justice to all Iraqis abroad, in all
countries, and not just those residing in, or forcefully displaced to,
neighbouring countries. Furthermore, the amendment would consecrate the concept
of political pluralism and would preclude the monopolisation of the political
scene by the strong electoral lists that win the elections." Rod Nordland (New York Times)
adds, "Gen. Ray Odierno, the commanding general of U.S.
forces, said he Wednesday was still hopeful elections would be held on time, but
he added that the military could adapt if there were a delay." Ben Lando (Wall St. Journal)
explains, "The election law now appears headed back to
parliament, which only approved it after months of sectarian squabbling and
heavy U.S. lobbying. The key sticking point in the final weeks of debate was how
to carry out the vote in the contested Kirkuk province, claimed by Kurds, Arabs
and Turkmen." Li Xianzhi (Xinhua)
notes noted gum flapper Nouri al-Maliki whined today that
"the veto is a serious threat to the political process." Richard Spencer (Telegraph of London)
quotes Nouri whining, "The high national interests were not
taken into consideration."
Violence continued today . .
.
Bombings?
Mohammed Al Dulaimy (McClatchy Newspapers)
reports a Baghdad sticky bombing which wounded "a
governmental employee". Reuters notes a Garma roadside
bombing which left two police officers wounded and, dropping back to last night,
a Falluja bicycle bombing which injured one police
officer.
Shootings?
Mohammed Al Dulaimy (McClatchy Newspapers)
reports a Baghdad assassination attempt on Mohammed Aziz Al
Shamari ("advisor for the Iraqi government") which left him wounded. Reuters notes a Baquba home invasion
which claime dthe life of a Sahwa "leader and his cousin".
Turning to the
US, Nancy A. Youssef (McClatchy's Kansas City
Star) reports, "Suicides in teh Army are expected to reach
a new high this year, with 140 suspected cases among active-duty soldiers so
far, Army officials said Tuesday. This will be the fifth year in a row that grim
stastic rose despite an aggressive military campaign to tackle the mental health
stigman in the Army." Ann Scott Tyson (Washington Post) also
reports on Army Vice Chief of Staff General Peter
Chiarelli's press conference: "Substance abuse, which can be related to mental
health problems and suicide, is on the rise in the Army, Chiarelli said, and he
added that the force is short about 300 substance abuse counselors." Luis Martinez (ABC News) offers a video
report here.
Last night Anderson
Cooper 360 (CNN) began the first part in Abbie Boudreau's
four-part investigative series on the killing by US forces of four Iraqis.
Click here for
transcript, here for video. "It's
the story," explained Anderson, "about three decorated Army sergeants who killed
four Iraqis execution-style on the battlefield. They were convicted of
premeditated murder. And they're all serving long sentences at Fort Leavenworth.
But, as you're going to see tonight, in war, nothing is cut and dry." Here's an
excerpt and note that Joshua Hartson was not charged or tried for any actions
related to the murders.
Abbie Boudreau: The Army has a strict policy on
detainees. At the time, the rules called for soldiers to drop off detainees at
the detainee housing area, of the DHA. Bu tthat didn't happen.
Joshua
Hartson: My 1st Sgt comes up to me and pulls me away from everybody. Then he
asks me, if -- if we take them to the detainee facility, the DHA, that they're
goign to be right back on the streets doing the same thing in a matter of weeks.
He asked if I had a problem if we take care of them. And I told him
"no."
Abbie Boudreau: And what do you think he meant by
that?
Joshua Hartson: To kill them.
Abbie Boudreau: How could you
be okay with that?
Joshua Hartson: They were bad guys. If we would have
let them go or take them in, we risked the chance of them getting out and
killing us, killing other people.
Abbie Boudreau: So, in a convoy of
three vehicles, 13 soldiers holding 4 Iraqi detainees headed down this dusty
road leading to the canal. 1st Sgt John Hatley was in charge. At the end of this
canal, the soldiers lined up the men in their custody. The three leaders, Sgts
Hatley, [Joseph] Mayo and [Michael] Leahy, put their .9-millimeter pistols at
the back of the detainees' heads, shot and killed them. They left their bodies
in the canal. A year later, divers could not find the bodies. For nine months,
the soldiers kept the murders a secret. But, in time, the truth came out.
Earlier this year, 1st Sgt Hatley, Sgt 1st Class Mayo and Sgt Leahy would be
convicted of premeditated murder and conspiracy to commit premeditated murder.
All three are in prison at Fort Leavenworth.
The four-part series
continues through Friday night. Anderson Cooper 360 airs on CNN at 10:00 pm EST
and tonight's report includes an interview with Jamie Leahy who is married to
Sgt Michael Leahy.
In non Iraq news, Ben Smith (Politico)
tackles an issue today which I've avoided because (a) it
belongs at Third and (b) the 'outside' help Newsweek has so often relied on. Ben
Smith notes that women's groups seem dumbfounded on Palin's assertion that
Newsweek has treated her in a sexist manner. The idiot Marie Wilson of the
laughable White House Project (let's see, they couldn't save a TV show and they
let women go down in flames in 2008 -- maybe they should just pack it in) says
of the Newsweek cover, "It's much more complicated than sexism." What a piece of
trash. She continues that, "What the [Republican] Party was selling, and people
were buying -- and what the candidate colluded [in] -- is what shows up in that
Newsweek picture. She winked at people, right?" Marie's never winked at people.
With her lopsided and semi-disfigured face, a wink would be incredibly
frightening.
Marie wants to blame a woman for sexist treatment. In
Marie's world, any woman who doesn't follow Marie's rules gets what they
deserve. No, it's not feminism. But Marie's not a feminist. Just another
unattractive woman who couldn't cut it in the real world and tried to build
herself a niche. Terri O'Neill has just made her first IGNORANT move as the head
of NOW and she damn well better be aware that after Kim Gandy's misleadership of
NOW, we're not in the mood. She better get her s**t together and get it together
real damn quick. Her job is not to be a Barack cheerleader, her job is to defend
women. She states of the Newsweek cover that it "didn't strike me as horribly
offensive" but also claims it is part of a the "basically sexist" world we live
in. Terri, what you're willing to live with, other women aren't. And you are no
longer an individual, you are the president of NOW so start acting like
it.
The photo is offensive since Newsweek previously allowed the wives of
employees to screen Barack's cover shot. Or have we all forgotten that? Trophy
wives, even smelly ones, don't feel the need to defend women, however, which is
how the Newsweek cover began. The cover plays on "How Do You Solve A Problem
Like Maria?" which Terri O'Neill tries to pass off as a "proto-feminist anthem."
Terri needs to get out more. Many a (male) lounge singer has performed that song
for decades now and it's about as feminist as Paul Anka's "You're Having My
Baby." The cover tag line was snide, the photo choice was snide. That's before
you open the magazine. Newsweek's not supposed to be doing opinion journalism in
what they present as news (they have columnists who write columns). The cover
exists to ridicule and mock Palin and to mock all women. It's no different than
when Vanity Fair decided to run a cheesecake photo of Sherry Lansing (a photo
from several decades prior). What did that have to do with her job of running a
studio (Paramount)? Not a damn thing but teh-hee, look at her body. It was
sexism. It's sexism for Newsweek to run the photo of Palin. There's nothing
wrong with the photo for Runner's World -- which is the publication Palin posed
for. Newsweek ran it to ridicule her and to mock her. And any woman who can't
grasp that isn't a feminist.
Flip through the magazine where they will
find a 'doll' of Sarah Palin dressed as though she is Britney Spears filming the
". . . Baby One More Time" video. You'll find 'noted' woman hater Christopher
Hitchens has contributed an article on Palin. You'll find a sexualized photo --
the same sort that the New York Times used against Hillary's campaign in 2008 --
of Palin speaking in public that strips away her identity and her view to render
her a sex object. It's disgusting and Newsweek did it intentionally. I'd thought
that could wait until Sunday. Marie's usual idiocy wasn't surprising but Terri's
non-response is highly distressing.
Women's groups are not supposed to
be in service of the Democrat Party, they're supposed to exist to fight for
women's rights. Ben Smith has another
report which will seem familiar to you -- maybe you'll
grasp Maxy Blumenthal and Thomas Frank just 'wrote' columns with all the same
talking points? Despite the lies, the crowds are turning out for Palin. As
Cedric and Wally pointed out last
night, polls are showing Palins' more popular than Barack. No woman has to
silence her disagreement with Sarah Palin's politics (if she has them -- I do)
but she has no business tearing Palin apart and ignoring that the attacks on
Palin are attacks on all women. Palin's being attacked in such a scorched earth
manner that it damn well effects all women. I honestly don't know why so many
women are willing to whore themselves out. Sarah Palin's not yet said there were
57 states in the United States so these cries of her being an "idiot" seem
little more than yet another attempt to attack a woman in order to protect
Barack -- Barack who, for the record, declared that he had visited that many
states. Barack makes idiotic remarks like that and the press (and Saturday Night
Live) all play "Lovely robes, Emperor!" Palin does it and she's ripped apart.
When Max Blumenthal's father was (wrongly) accused of beating his wife, we were
offended (on the left). These days, Sidney's son is one of the people hurling
lies non-stop at Sarah Palin. It's ugly and it needs to stop and women damn well
need to call it out. Too many of us were silent when it was Hillary, were silent
when it became Sarah, were silent when Cynthia McKinney was rendered invisible.
It's no longer acceptable to dismiss it as, "That's her problem." If your a
woman, it is your problem, it is our problem and we better start calling it out
and stop contributing to it. iraqthe washington postanthony shadidthe new york timesrod
nordlandcnnnprall things consideredreutersahmed rasheeddeepa babingtonmartin
chulovthe guardianthe los angeles timesliz
slyraheem salmanmcclatchy newspapersmohammed al dulaimythe wall street journalann
scott tyson abc newsluis martinezcnnanderson cooper 360abbie
boudreau
Posted at 08:31 pm by politicsscree
Permalink
Nov 17, 2009
don't become 'the battered woman of the house'
Are you angry yet? You should be. As
you’ve probably heard by now, on November 7, the House passed its health care
reform bill. The problem? It also passed an onerous amendment sponsored by Reps.
Bart Stupak (D-Mich.) and Joe Pitts (R-Pa.) that prohibits anyone who
participates in the health insurance Exchange and receives federal subsidies
from purchasing a plan that covers abortion except in the case of rape or incest
or to save the woman’s life. Anyone receiving a federal subsidy who wants
abortion coverage would have to purchase a separate abortion rider covering only
abortion. Of course, how many people plan for an unplanned pregnancy and
therefore purchase supplemental insurance? Oh, and in
the states that already prohibit insurance companies from covering abortion
except through a separate rider, many insurance companies don’t offer said
rider. Of course, insurance companies could offer plans
that cover abortion for individuals who pay their premiums fully out of their
own pockets, provided that the companies also offer identical plans that do not
cover abortion. Given the costs associated with offering two identical plans and
the limited pool of people eligible to enroll in one of the plans, we don’t know
how many insurance companies will elect to take this
route.that's from allie bohm's ' Tell the Senate to Protect Abortion Care' (aclu blog of
rights). are you angry yet? you should be. it doesn't matter if you're for the
'reform' to health care or not. this is an attack on women's rights. to make a
deal, like so many of the women who came before us, we're being tossed on the
flames, we're being sacrficed. it's time to say no damn way. and 1 group that's saying
no-way-no-how is now: NOW to Rally in Pitts' Pennsylvania
District to Denounce Stupak-Pitts Amendment November 17, 2009 "Once again,
women's reproductive rights are under attack in this country," said NOW
President Terry O'Neill. "Anti-choice legislators are using health care reform
as an opportunity to further restrict women's access to abortion. One such
plunderer is Pennsylvania Representative Joseph Pitts, who co-authored an
amendment to deny millions of women abortion coverage, and then when the
Stupak-Pitts Amendment passed, Pitts voted against the main bill
anyway." O'Neill continued: "Thanks in large part to Pitts' efforts, the
House's version of health care reform now stands as the greatest threat to
women's fundamental right to abortion in decades. That's why NOW and our allies
will protest on Representative Pitts' home turf this
Saturday." Event: Press Conference/Rally to Denounce Stupak-Pitts
Amendment to House Health Care Bill Organizers: National Organization for
WomenPennsylvania NOWPlanned Parenthood Southeastern
Pennsylvania Speakers: Terry O'Neill, NOW presidentJoanne Tosti-Vasey, PA
NOW presidentLois Herr, candidate for Congress in Pennsylvania's 16th
DistrictLouise Williams, Lancaster City Council presidentOthers to be
announced Date/Time: Saturday, Nov. 21, 10:30 am - 11:30
am Location: Chester County Courthouse, 2 North High St., West Chester,
Pa., 19380 "NOW is working overtime to ensure that an amendment similar to
Stupak-Pitts is not included in the Senate's version of health care reform or
the final bill," said O'Neill. "But it's also critical that we send a message to
those who initiated this attack: We will not go back and we will
remember." ###For Immediate ReleaseContact: Mai Shiozaki, 202-628-8669, ext.
116; cell 202-641-1906 Sign up to receive press
releases by email by RSSthis
is not a minor issue, it is not a subissue. it is about our rights and until
we're ready to stand up and say, 'you can't take away our rights,' get used to
always being the 1 to be robbed of them. when you're nothing but a punching bag,
every 1 takes a shot. i do not intend to become 'the battered woman of
the house.' (i believe nancy pelosi already holds that title.) and you shouldn't
either. yesterday i mentioned i couldn't get into my e-mail and there was
something on sunsara taylor i wanted to highlight. this is it:
The
Ethical Humanist Society of Chicago has acted unethically and now a man is
facing criminal charges stemming directly from their attempts to cover up and
justify their actions. Come to Skokie, Wednesday, Nov 18, at 1:30 pm to
demand criminal charges be dropped against the videographer arrested while
recording Sunsara Taylor's statement on Nov 1 at the Ethical Humanist Society of
Chicago.
When:
Wednesday, November 18, 1:30
pm
Where:
Skokie Courthouse, Room 104
5600 Old Orchard Road, Skokie, IL
The
"Ethical" "Humanist" Society of Chicago (EHSC) is shamefully pressing charges
against the videographer who was arrested and brutalized while documenting
Sunsara Taylor's statement to the EHSC on November 1, before the start of their scheduled
program. Read news flash here newsflash
Sunsara
Taylor had gone to EHSC to make a statement explaining why it was wrong for them
to have disinvited her from her long-scheduled talk on "Morality Without Gods"
because some disagreed with her analysis and perspective. She
pointed to the broader chill in society to which this act contributed when a
group such as this suppressed rather than debated controversial
opinions. She planned to leave EHSC to give her talk "in exile" at
the nearby home of an EHSC member and invite all who wanted to hear it to join
her. Sunsara announced her intention to do this the day before at a
well-attended workshop she gave at EHSC on "The Liberation of Women and the
Emancipation of Humanity." [See her statement here:. youtube
This same videographer taped that workshop, without
incident and working with members of the Society to do so.
In
a move that defies any logic other than the continued cover-up and unethical
suppression of Sunsara's views, EHSC had the police arrest the videographer,
whose only action was recording her words in a "Michael Moore moment." If EHSC
felt Sunsara was causing some harm through her 2-minute statement before the
start of their program, why did they not ask her to stop? Why did they instead
arrest the videographer?
That
the EHSC is willing to trample on the future, health and freedom of a man simply
to justify and cover-up their dis-invitation of Sunsara Taylor is itself even
more profoundly immoral and unethical -- and it must be stopped.
As
Sunsara put it in her Nov. 6 statement, "Today, progressive and radical thinkers
across the country are routinely dis-invited, their speech is routinely
suppressed, they are pressured to self-censor, they are fired or denied tenure,
and the discourse of this society is routinely kept within 'safe' limits that do
not challenge a bloody status quo. To go along with this, and contribute to
this, is to do great harm. Indeed, the ideas that are allowed to circulate in
society and the ideas that are suppressed, have everything to do with whether
the crimes of this world will be allowed to continue or whether these will be
called out, resisted and stopped. I ask that each of you reading this now add
your voice against this act of suppression.... Write and call the EHSC and Skokie police department to demand
that charges be dropped against my videographer."
Come
to the Skokie courthouse Wed. Nov. 18 to show your support and demand all
charges against the videographer be dropped. Write to EHSC at office@ethicalhuman.org to demand they drop the
charges. Please send copies to sunsaratour@yahoo.com (your statement will not be
used without your consent).
Please
contribute whatever you can to the costs of his legal defense by sending a
check, earmarked "videographer defense," to Frankel and Cohen, 77 W. Washington, Suite 1720, Chicago, IL
60602 address.
For
more information see "Sunsara Taylor on the 'Ethical' Humanist Society of
Chicago, or...Why I was Dis-Invited, Why I Did Not Just Shut Up And Go Away, and
Why It Still Matters" and eyewitness statements at sunsara-blogspot
that's
tomorrow. let's close with c.i.'s 'Iraq
snapshot:' Tuesday, October 17, 2009. Chaos and violence
continue, the 'intended' elections get more iffy, the US Justice Dept files
charges against a contractor, CNN begins airing a four-part investigation into
US abuse of Iraqi prisoners, and more.
Starting with the 'intended'
elections in January. There was already objection to the law [yesterday's snapshot: "
Waleed Ibrahim, Michael Christie and Micheal
Roddy (Reuters) reports Iraq's Sunni vice president, Tariq
al-Hashimi, has stated the law needs to be changed to allow external Iraqi
refugees to participate and to be represented. If the law is not changed (by
Tuesday afternoon), he states he will veto it. (The Presidency Council is made
up of Iraq's President and two vice presidents. After Parliament passes a law,
it goes to the council which decides whether to implement it or not.)"]. Today
that's even more the case. RTT News reports that
the KRG has "decided . . . to boycott the country's January national elections,
protesting disparity in allocation fo parliamentary seats for the provinces."
Jomana Karadsheh and Yousif Bassil (CNN)
report that this is a threat at present, but one which is
"casting further shadows over a vote" and note that the issue has to do with the
perecentage of seats in the Parliament allocated currently for Kurds. Tariq
al-Hashimi is also concerned with the allocation and the two reporters note, "He
said the country's constitution stipulates that there should be one seat in the
parliamentary Council of Representatives for every 100,000 Iraqis, but, he said,
this does not take refugees -- or minorities including Christians into account."
Equally true is that this 'development' is neither new nor
unrelated.
Have we all forgotten November 2004? The lead up to the 2005
vote? What were some of the last minute objections? In that case, they were
resolved in time for the vote. That may or may not be the case here. But this
issue of the number of seats and representation popped up in 2004. That was when
exiles, refugees and other groupings (such as "expatriates") suddenly became an
issue and the US and the United Nations had to change their positions. The UN
and the US had stated that no one not in Iraq would be voting. They had to
change their stance (begrudingly) and the Independent Electoral Commission of
Iraq set up polling places in Jordan, Syria, Turkey, the UK, the US, etc. Whty
did that take place then?
The easiest reason is that the Grand Ayatollah
Ali al-Sistani called for it to. The reality was that, at that time, the bulk of
Iraqis outside of Iraq were considered to be Shi'ites so it was thought that
allowing voting to take place outside of Iraq's borders would benefit Shi'ites.
(al-Sistani is a Shi'ite.) Little has ever been done, since the vote, on the
press' part to determine whether that hypothesis was accurate or
not.
After Shi'ites, the group then expected to benefit the most was the
Kurds. So today's issues are not really all that 'new' but traceable back to
2004. The real changes are (a) that the persecuted who became refugees since
2004 have been Sunnis and (b) the number of seats. (Thank you to three Western
correspondents in Iraq for walking me through the seats issue over the phone.)
To dilute non-Shi'ite populations, the Shi'ite dominated Parliament is
attempting to expand the number of seats in Parliament from 275 to 323. The
press hasn't really gone into that and you have to wonder why not until you
grasp that the US Embassy is air brushing in their statements to the press. The
additional seats will go across Iraq; however, the Shi'ite majority provinces
are the ones getting the most seats. That flies in the face of all logic and
there's no way that anyone studing just the internal migration within Iraq --
forget the external -- would buy the percentage growth that the 'government' in
Baghdad is attempting to claim. For example, northern Iraq is where a large
number of Iraq's internal refugees have fled. And yet this northern region, the
Kurdistan Regional Government, is seeing only 3 additional seats (3 out of the
48 that would be added)? That makes no sense at all to anyone who's followed the
migration patterns within Iraq.
The allocation of the new seats
becomes even more problematic when reviewing the press release the Kurdistan Regional
Government issued today:
Dr Fuad Hussein, the
Kurdistan Region Presidency's Chief of Staff, said that President Masoud Barzani
has been closely following the mechanism recently put in place to allocate
parliamentary seats to each Iraqi governorate for elections. He said that
President Barzani believes that it is not possible to accept such a
seat-allocation based on the food-rationing registry of the Iraqi Trade
Ministry, because the mechanism is illogical, contradicts the reality on the
ground and is a distortion of facts. Dr Hussein stated that the Kurdistan Region
Presidency views this as an attempt to reduce the number of Kurdistan Region
representatives in the next Iraqi parliament and diminish their achievements. He
added that President Barzani is absolutely clear, that unless this seat
allocation formula is reconsidered in a just manner, the people of Kurdistan
Region will be compelled to boycott the election. As this is an historic moment
in the history of Iraq, he also called on all political parties to shoulder
their responsibility to promote democracy. He urges them to refrain from
supporting a deceptive mechanism that obviously targets the Kurdistan Region,
and which undermines the democratic achievements made so far.
The
food-rationing registry? At this point, if you listen closely, you'll hear
laughter.
The food-rations was a program (a needed one then and now)
under Saddam Hussein that provided staples to Iraqis. The Kurdish north has
never utilized it to the degree other areas of Iraq have. Why is that? Well, for
starters, it was always a wealthier region than most parts of Iraq. Since the
invasion, under US 'assistance,' the rations have been cut repeatedly to the
point that they're nearly 60% less than they were under Saddam.
Now in
2004, the food registry was used (the cuts to the program hadn't been started
yet -- despite efforts by Paul Bremer). And it was used with apology and,
goodness, oh how, oh how will we ever do a census in time for an election, we
have to use this!
The 2005 Constitution mandated a census. It has still
not been done. So in 2009, it's pretty pathetic and a sign of how little
'progress' has been made in Iraq that they still haven't done a
census.
Now the ration cards are impossible for refugees (for reasons
we've outlined many times) and, for many, they're still listed in their old
neighborhoods -- the ones they left. Which means a number of areas are being
"padded." Not only that, what's not being told is that the registery got padded
itself in the lead up to the 2009 provincial elections in 14 of Iraq's 18
provinces. This is an important point and since the press did such a lousy job
in January covering those elections -- many news consumers WRONGLY believe that
was elections across the country, it wasn't -- they'll probably continue to get
it wrong. But [PDF format warning] you can review this United Nations
document and you will see that the 'database' for the 14
provinces got padded. How? "Approximately 2.9 million Iraqis turned out for the
voter registration update." This is, no doubt, part of that claim of population
surge. But nothing equivalent took part in the four other provinces -- the ones
not voting in January. Those were Kirkuk and the three provinces making up the
Kurdistan Regional Government.
There is no national census. There is an
effort by the Shi'ite dominated government to further increase their gains by
expanding the number of seats in the Parliament and to do so by using the
regsitry that was already laughable before the 2009 elections but that is
completely unfair to the northern region which didn't do an 'update' to it.
Before any vote takes place, the issue of the additonal seats should be resolved
and the smartest thing to do would be to eliminate that, to add no new seats.
But if they're going to try to push that through, they better be prepared to
back up this alleged population growth. Without a national census, no
respectable news outlet should accept any claims but do we have any respectable
news outlets working in Iraq? (I'm referring to Western media.) If we did, maybe
they'd be attempting to explain what's actually taking place instead of allowing
spin from the US Embassy and their own desire to 'close the chapter' on Iraq to
drive their 'reporting.' They might also note that a minister over the food
ration program was among the ministers to have corruption charges filed against
them. And this is the voter roll? Really? (That was Abdel Falah al-Sudani -- who
resigned in disgrace in May of 2009. He was and remains a member of al-Maliki's
Dawa Party.) Those who remember the problems with the 14 provinces voting in
January may also remember the complaints that people had to go to one polling
station only to be told go here, go there. This does not in any way indicate
that the ration rolls are accurate.
In addition, the new seats and where
they are going need to factored into Nouri's continued assault on minority
rights. Not only has he and his spokesperson repeatedly stated that guaranteeing
minority representation was bad for the government in recent months, the January
2009 elections saw minorities awarded less representation due to a law change
that 'no one' had 'noticed' until it was too late. This is not a minor issue and
it's really telling that the expansion of the Parliament didn't raise concerns
from election watchers. One group that has voiced objection to the election law
(and been ignored) is Iraq's Communist
Party:
"The Parliament, in the first article of the
law, cut down the number of compensatory seats, originally allocated to the
lists that do not meet the electoral threshold at the provincial level but
achieve it at the national level, from 45 in the original law to about 15 seats!
And when we know that part of these seats will be allocated to quotas for some
of the ethnic and religious minorities (8 seats), and for the deputies who would
be elected by Iraqis living abroad who constitute more than 10 percent of Iraq's
population, we can see how this reduction is arbitrary and irresponsible. The
seven or eight remaining seats will not be enough to cover even the votes
abroad." "On the other hand, this reduction (of the number of compensatory
seats) effectively usurps the right of the lists that achieve the national
electoral threshold to gain representation in Parliament. This reveals the
selfishness of most of the dominant blocs and their disregard of plurality and
diversity in the Parliament, their quest to extend full control over Parliament
and the whole of political power, monopolizing and carving it up among
themselves, in contravention of democratic norms." "In Article 3 of the law, the
big parliamentary blocs went much further in violating democracy and displaying
blatant disregard for the voters. They have imposed, once again, giving the
vacant seats to the top winning lists, rather than putting them - as obligated
by democracy, logic and justice - at the disposal of the lists that attain the
highest remaining votes. They have thus opened the door again to a repetition of
the infamous experience in the provincial elections earlier this year, when the
big blocs stole the votes of more than two and a quarter million people who had
given their votes to other lists. This was used by those big blocs to grab
additional seats in the provincial councils."
Today BBC News reports the UN Special Envoy
to Iraq, Ad Melkert, is dubbing efforts to ensure a free and fair election which
will stand up to world scrutiny a "Herculean task." He stated that to the United
Nations' Security Council where he put his concerns for emphasis on the time
issue. Xinhua quotes him
stating, "Success is far from guaranteed as inside and outside forces continue
their efforts to impose an agenda of division and
destruction."
Meanwhile Iraq plans to hold another oil bidding next
month; however, they still haven't finalized the contracts
from last month. Hassan Hafidh (Dow Jones) reports
that the "two major oil deals" were not approved today due to the fact that 11
ministers did not attend today's cabinet meeting due to being out of town.
October 13rh, Italian oil company Eni
bragged of being "awarded the license for the development
of the Zubair giant field in Iraq, following a successful first round bid."
Suadad al-Salhy, Ahmed Rasheed, Michael
Christie and Keiron Henderson (Reuters) remind the approval
of the Eni deal and a deal with a conglomerate including Exxon and Sehll were
supposed to have been approved last Tuesday but that was kicked back to this
Tuesday and it's still not happening.
One thing that never gets postponed
is the daily violence . . .
Bombings?
Mohammed al Dulaimy (McClatchy Newspapers)
reports a Baghdad stationary store bombing which wounded
four people, a Kirkuk sticky bombing which wounded two police officers.
Reuters notes a Falluja
roadside bombing which left one police officer injured, a Falluja home bombing
which left three members of a family injured and a Kirkuk liquor store bombing
which injured two people.
Shootings?
Mohammed al Dulaimy (McClatchy Newspapers)
reports an attempted assassination of Judge Abdul Kareem
Mohamed in Nineveh Province today in which his driver was wounded. Reuters notes a Mosul attack in which
a 1 man in a car was shot dead and his son was left
injured.
Corpses?
Mohammed al Dulaimy (McClatchy Newspapers)
reports 2 corpses discovered in Kirkuk. AFP reports 1 corpse was discovered
yesterday in Baghdad. The corpse was that of a child who'd been kidnapped and
killed by Baghdad Police Lt Haidar Atlas.
Over a million Iraqis have died
since the start of the illegal war. One is Baha Mosua whose 'crime' was going to
work. The 26-year-old was arrested in a dragnet at the hotel -- arrested by
British forces and he went on to die in their custody. As Adrian Shaw (Daily Mirror)
reminds, Baha died of 93 injuries -- all while in British
custody. The ongoing inquiry into Baha Mosua's
death is taking place in England. Yesterday's testimony by
War Criminal Donald Payne got some press attention. Press TV notes that
Payne "accused his superiors of routinely abusing and threatening civilian
detainees in Iraq." Thomas Harding (Telegraph of London)
adds:He also alleged that a platoon commander, Lt Craig
Rodgers placed a petrol can in front of a young prisoner's hooded face then
poured water over him and lit a match simulating a threat to his life.Minutes
before he arrived to give evidence before the inquiry in London into the death
of Baha Mousa, an Iraqi who died in British custody in Basra in 2003, Payne
issued a short statement in which he accepted the disclosures would "harm the
reputation of the both my former regiment and the British Army".Changing the
evidence he had given to previous investigations, Payne said he saw every member
of a unit commanded by Lt Rodgers "forcefully kick or punch" the group of Iraqi
prisoners that included Mr Mousa.Payne claims that he previously covered up the
extent of the abuse of Iraqis by British soldiers out of "misguided loyalty".
Yes, he did make that claim in his prepared statement as well as in his
testimony. He also made another claim. As noted in yesterday's
snapshot:Gerald Elias: Can you help about this, Mr Payne:
why were you lying about orders that you had received?Donald Payne:
Self-preservation. Elaine covered one aspect of the hearing last
night:
During the hearing, a video was shown. Payne
was in the video. He was abusing and cursing the Iraqi detainees. His verbal
abuse included racist remarks. He was asked about prior experience in the
military and whether he used racist language when dealing with people or
prisoners in those countries? Payne replied that it was only in Iraq. Was he
telling the truth? He might have been telling the truth. I have no idea. He has
repeatedly lied to investigators. He admitted as much in his testimony today --
which was basically, 'I lied every other time but, this time, I'm telling the
truth!' Along with claiming that he didn't use racist remarks anywhere else he
was stationed, he also claimed not to know the video was being filmed. Gerald
Elias pointed out that the video was clearly taken by a video camera and not by
a cell phone. Payne replied that he didn't notice it. Elias then noted the spot
in the video where Payne is clearly looking at the camera. He continued to deny
that he knew the filming was taking place or had taken place immediately after
and that he had no idea who was doing the filming. Sidebar, last Wednesday's snapshot
covered the US Senate's Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee's Housing,
Transportation and Community Development's Subcommitte on homeless veterans.
Kat covered that Wednesday
night and I haven't had time to note that until now. Back
to the inquiry, Simon Basketter (UK Socialist Worker)
reports:
His revelations expose a widespread pattern
of abuse that extends well beyond Baha. Payne said that his former commanding
officer (CO) held a gun to a prisoner's head and threatened "to blow his face
off". The inquiry also heard that prisoners were scalded with boiling water,
urinated on, kicked, punched, hooded, sleep deprived and made to stand in stress
positions. Payne said the soldiers in his unit enjoyed an "open season" of
punching and kicking Baha and other prisoners. He described how he was
travelling in a patrol with his CO Colonel Mendonca when someone shot a flare
into the air. An Iraqi was arrested and Mendonca interrogated him. Payne
said, "The CO then cocked his pistol and said he was going to blow his face off.
He was holding the pistol above the man's mouth. . . we left him there on the
floor and drove off."
Robert Verkaik (Independent of London)
observes, "The new allegations raise concerns about
widespread abuse of dozens of Iraqi detainees and come days after the Ministry
of Defence said it was investigating 33 other separate cases of torture carried
out by British soldiers in Iraq and revealed in The Independent on Saturday." 33
cases? Last night, Stan noted, "UPI reports today that
there's talk this could be "a second Abu Ghraib" -- the infamous prison the US
ran in Iraq in which Iraqi prisoners were repeatedly tortured and abused. So
keep your eyes peeled for developments on that." The allegations emerged late
Friday night. BBC News reported that
Phil Shiner, an attorney for some Iraqis, is calling for an inquiry into abuse
allegations which include British soldiers raping "a 16-year-old boy".
Robert Verkaik (Independent of London)
explained, "Claims that British soldiers recreated the
torture conditions of Abu Ghraib to commit the sexual and physical abuse of
Iraqi civilians are being investigated by the Ministry of Defence. The fresh
allegations raise important questions about collusion between Britain and
America over the ill-treatment of Iraqi prisoners during the insurgency."
BBC News (link has text and video)
noted that the UK Armed Forces Minister Bill Rammell is
insisting that there's no need for a public inquiry and claiming that any
investigation can be handled (privately) by the Ministry of Defence.
(Mike and Kat noted the story
Friday night.)Meanwhile, in the US, CNN's Anderson Cooper 360 begins a four-part series
(Anderson's show airs at 10:00 pm EST) into the way Iraqis were treated in US
custody:
U.S. soldiers interrogated by the Army in
the 2007 murders of four Iraqi detainees blamed a military policy they said made
it too hard to detain suspected insurgents, a CNN investigation has
found. Soldiers questioned in the killings said the sergeant in command of
their detachment ordered the suspected insurgents killed because Army rules made
it too difficult to hold them. "They're gonna be right back on the streets,"
one soldier put it. CNN obtained an extraordinary 23½ hours of Army
interrogation videotapes that detail the March 2007 executions of the prisoners
by three sergeants who were attached to Alpha Company, 1st Battalion, 18th
Infantry Regiment. The tapes, to be shown on CNN's "AC360," show one of the
sergeants confessing to the crime, as well as agents from the Army's Criminal
Investigations Division telling soldiers involved in the crime that the
military's reputation was at stake. On one tape, an Army interrogator
compares the potential fallout from the slayings to the scandal over the
treatment of inmates at Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison, telling a soldier, "This is
gonna be ugly, 'cause it is."
In other news, yesterday the US Justice Dept issued this press
release:
The United States has joined a
whistleblower suit against Public Warehousing Company (PWC), The Sultan Center
Food Products Company (TSC), and PWC's chief executive officer, Tarek Abbul Aziz
Sultan Al-Essa, the Justice Department announced today. The lawsuit, which was
filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, alleges
that since 2003, defendants have violated the False Claims Act by presenting or
causing others to present false claims for payment under PWC's multi-billion
contracts with the Defense Logistics Agency to supply food for U.S. service
members serving in Kuwait, Iraq and Jordan. The complaint alleges that
defendants knowingly overcharged the United States for locally available fresh
fruits and vegetables that PWC purchased through TSC. The complaint also alleges
that PWC failed to disclose and pass through rebates and discounts it obtained
from its U.S.-based suppliers, as required by its contracts. The case was
initially filed under seal by Kamal Mustafa Al-Sultan, the owner of a Kuwaiti
company that originally partnered with PWC to submit a proposal on the food
supply contracts. The case remained under seal to permit the United States to
investigate the allegations and determine whether it would join the lawsuit.
Under the False Claims Act, the United States may recover three times the amount
of its losses, plus civil penalties. "We will not tolerate fraudulent practices
from those tasked with providing the highest quality support to the men and
women who serve in our armed forces," said Tony West, Assistant Attorney General
for the Civil Division. "Those who do business with the government must act
fairly and in accordance with the law. As this case illustrates, the Department
of Justice will investigate and pursue allegations of fraud against contractors
and subcontractors, whether they are foreign or domestic." "The decision to join
in this civil lawsuit follows a multi-year probe into abuses in Middle East
subsistence prime vendor contracts," said Acting U.S. Attorney F. Gentry
Shelnutt. "This Office and the Department of Justice will spare no effort in
investigating those persons and companies, regardless of location, who seek to
defraud the United States." The U.S. Attorney's Office for the Northern District
of Georgia also announced today that a grand jury returned a six-count
indictment against Public Warehousing Company, also known as Agility, in
connection with its prime vendor contracts. Assistant Attorney General West and
Acting U.S. Attorney Shelnutt thanked the joint investigation team, which
includes Special Agents with Defense Criminal Investigative Service; the Federal
Bureau of Investigation; and U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command (Army
CID), auditors from the Defense Contract Audit Agency, and the Department of
Defense, Office of the Inspector General, for the investigation of this defense
procurement fraud matter.
Walter Pincus (Washington Post)
explains, "Under the False Claims Act, the government may
recover three times the amount of its losses plus civil penalties, according to
the Justice Department announcement." Finally, NOW on PBS debuts
its latest episode Friday on most PBS stations and this one
iexamines:
The Pentagon estimates that as many as one in five American
soldiers arecoming home from war zones with traumatic brain injuries, many of
whichrequire round-the-clock attention. But lost in the reports of
thesereturning soldiers are the stories of family members who often
sacrificeeverything to care for them. On Friday, November 20 at 8:30 pm
(checklocal listings), NOW reveals how little has been done to help thesefamily
caregivers, and reports on dedicated efforts to support
them.iraqcnnjomana karadshehmcclatchy newspapersmohammed al dulaimyxinhuathe telegraph of londonthomas hardingadrian shawthe
daily mirrorthe independent of londonrobert verkaikbbc newsthe socialist workerthe washington postwalter
pincuspbsnow on pbs
Posted at 08:32 pm by politicsscree
Permalink
Nov 16, 2009
 that's c.i.'s Isaiah's The World Today Just Nuts " The Gesture" and i love it. nancy pelosi was also a choice he was toying around with. after reading glenn thursh (politico) tonight, i hope nancy pops up soon. here's silly & harmful pelosi: The
first woman speaker of the House hit back at critics who say she never
should allowed the amendment to be considered -- arguing that
Republicans planned to introduce it as a substitute "motion to
recommit." Allowing the GOP to control the abortion debate would have
been "very destructive," she said, likely resulting in the defeat of
the entire reform package. When
Gergen asked if pro-abortion rights advocates were "right in saying
[the Stupak Amendment] will actually diminish" access to abortions?"
Pelosi shot back with "Yes, they are." nancy pelosi needs to take some responsibility for what she's done to american women and our reproductive rights. this is from the center for reproductive rights: Center Launches First Abortion Ad in Anticipation of Historic Senate Health Care Reform Vote Millions of Women Could Lose Abortion Coverage; New TV Ad Starts Running Tuesday 11.16.09 - (PRESS RELEASE) The Center for Reproductive Rights released a new television and online advertisement today calling on pro-choice constituents to contact their senators and demand they not ban abortion coverage that millions of American women already have. Watch the ad here > "The promise of healthcare
reform is expanded coverage and affordability, eliminating denials of
coverage for pre-existing conditions, and a new basic package of
essential benefits," said Center for Reproductive Rights President Nancy Northup. "Yet some in Congress are attempting to use the reform bill as a vehicle for banning insurance coverage for abortion services, coverage that millions of women have today. But healthcare reform is not an abortion bill. This attempt to roll back the clock on women's health and rights cannot be tolerated." D.J. Feldman,
a federal employee denied insurance coverage after a termination of a
anencephalic fetus, said the denial of coverage surprised and shocked
her: "That's when I learned just how punishing, invasive, and painful
federal policy is when it comes to women's lives. A decision that
should have been left between me and my doctor was made instead by
politicians." On November 7, the House of Representatives voted 240 -to-194 to approve an amendment offered by Rep. Bart Stupak (D.-Mich.) and other representatives to the healthcare
reform package. The amendment was sold as a measure that merely
maintains current law prohibiting the use of federal funds to pay for abortion. But the Stupak
ban reaches beyond those restrictions and would in effect prohibit
millions of women from using their own money to buy private health
insurance that covers abortion. Currently, a majority of private insurers offer abortion coverage. Under the Stupak-Pitts abortion ban, women would not be covered for abortions
in the new health insurance market despite spending their own money on
premiums. And women who opt into the more affordable public option
would be banned from getting coverage for abortion
services, even if their own money is used to buy their insurance
coverage. With Stupak-Pitts, it would be far harder — and highly
unlikely given market incentives — for private insurance companies to
offer abortion coverage for plans in the health reform marketplace. The
ad will run on cable networks in the Washington, DC, market and on
prominent Internet news sites starting Tuesday. The ad was also
launched online as part of the Center's campaign at www.NoAbortionBan.org, which also includes a repository of legal and research information on the impact of healthcare reform on abortion services overage. The script and documentation of "No Joke" are as follows: i'm
trying to note sunsara taylor but i just can't get into my e-mail. i
was reading an e-mail that noted her earlier today and planned to
include it. i'll do it tomorrow night. i can log in right now but when
i hit 'inbox,' i end up waiting and waiting for a page that keeps
trying to load but never does. Monday,
November 16, 2009. Chaos and violence continue, the US military
announces another death, a War Criminal testifies in England giving
contradictory answers as to why he abused Iraqis, new problems with the
'intended' elections in January, Warren P. Strobel and Sahar Issa don't
seem to grasp that McClatchy signs their checks, and more.
Today the US military announced:
"Contingency Operating Base Speicher, Iraq -- A Soldier, assigned to
Multi-National Division -- North, died Nov. 16 from injuries sustained
in a vehicle accident. Members of the Soldier's patrol immediately
performed medical treatment and evacuated the Soldier to a nearby U.S.
medical facility where the Soldier died of injuries. The name of the
deceased is being withheld pending notification of next of kin and
release by the Department of Defense. The names of the deceased is
being withheld pending notification of next of kin and release by the
Department of Defense. The names of service members are announced
through the U.S. Department of Defense official website
[. . .]. The announcements are made on the Web site no earlier than 24
hours after notification of the service member's primary next of kin.
The incident is under investigation." The announcement brings the
number of US service members killed in Iraq since the start of the war
to 4363.
AFP reports
that 13 Sahwa members have been assassinated in Sadan village today.
Sahwa is also known as "Awakening Council" members and "Sons Of Iraq"
and were placed on the US payroll by the US military in an attempt to
-- according to US Gen David Petraeus and then-US Ambassador Ryan
Crocker in testimony to Congress in 2008 -- to get these Sunnis to stop
killing and wounding US military service members and to get them to
stop destroying US military equipment. Nouri al-Maliki was supposed to
have taken over payment for the Sahwa near the close of 2008. He was
also supposed to have integrated them into the Iraqi forces. Neither's
happened. Despite non-stop media hype in November and at the start of
this year and again in April, Nouri had still not taken up payment and
the bulk were not integrated into Iraqi forces. (Nouri repeatedly
stated -- as late as mid-2008 -- that he had no intention of bring
Sahwa into the Iraqi forces.) Last week, Richard Sale (Washington Times) reported,
"A [US] congressional staffer who spoke on condition that he not be
named because he was discussing sensitive intelligence said that after
the U.S. stopped paying Sunni forces directly in June, it wasn't long
before payments to the tribes 'simply stopped. You got paid if you were
a power in the government, and the tribal leaders were last on [Prime
Minister Nouri al-] Maliki's list,' the staffer said." AFP reports that
the 13 were killed "execution-style" by assailants wearing "Iraqi army
uniforms". Among those murdered was Sahwa leader Attala Ouda al-Shuker
and his three sons. Xinhua has a text and audio report here.
The attack is being blamed (by Iraqi officials) on, you know this is
coming, al Qaeda in Iraq. What was, according to Petraeus, a very small
group and, according to the now top US commander in Iraq Gen Ray
Odierno, a group that had suffered severe push back must be the most
well connected group in the world if they're doing everything they're
accused of. And the way they manage to get all these Iraqi military and
police uniforms. Simply amazing. (Alternative explanation: It's
predictable and unbelievable to blame every incident of violence on al
Qaeda in Mesopotamia.) An unnamed US "intelligence official" tells Warren P. Strobel and Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers)
that the assassinations raise concerns about Sunni vulnerability in the
near future and also the "regrouping" of al Qaeda in Mesopotamia.
Regrouping? To listen to Nouri al-Maliki, they organization is huge and
thriving and always has been.
We'll come back to Strobel and
Issa in a moment (and it won't be pretty). For now let's move over to
the other reported violence today -- reported. Because violence goes on
constantly in Iraq and the bulk of it is never reported (which is how
those mass graves still pop up every few months).
Bombings?
Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) reports
a Baghdad roadside bombing which claimed the lives of 2 Iraqi service
members and left six civilians injured, a Mahmoudiyah bombing which
claimed the lives of 6 Iraqi service members and left six more injured,
a Falluja double bombing of two homes which reulsted in six people
being injured, a Falluja triple bombing of homes which left eight
people wounded and a Kirkuk car bombing which claimed 6 lives and left
eight people injured.
Shootings?
Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) reports 1 person was shot dead in Kirkuk and two more were injured.
Hey,
for 'funs' let's see how many of the above incidents were reported on
by Reuters today in their 'factbox'? Okay? Five bombings and 1 shooting
-- all today -- according to McClatchy. Reuters reports
only 2 bombings today and no shooting in Kirkuk. Wow. I guess if you
were only going to go by one outlet for your information, it wouldn't
be smart to depend on Reuters to discover how many Iraqis die each day,
huh?
But two do just that. And now we're back to them. Warren P. Strobel and Sahar Issa sag the jeans, flip the caps around and toss some signs while asking:
Wanna copy me and do exactly like I did -- yeah! yeah! Try 'cid and get f**ked up worse than my life is -- huh? My brain's dead weight I'm tryin' to get my head straight
That's
the only excuse for their writing the following: "So far, November has
been the least violent month in Iraq in recent memory. According to the
Web site icasualties.org, political violence has killed one U.S.
soldier and, before Monday, 12 members of the Iraqi security forces and
29 civilians. The site says that the civilian casualty figures are
incomplete, however, and the true numbers are undoubtedly much higher."
That's two wrongs. Let's break them up.
1) ICCC says "political
violence has killed one U.S. soldier" -- is that what reality is? What
a stupid, idiotic thing to write. Shameful. We've already noted one
death announcement from the US military released today. It has one
thing in common with every other announcement this month? Do you know
what that was? Strobel and Issa were too busy free stylin' to notice.
Here's the key phrase in every death announcement from the US military
(Iraq only) this month:
* US military announced: "The incident is currently under investigation."
*US military announced: "The incident is under investigation."
* US military announced: "The incident is under investigation."
* US military announced: "The incident is under investigation."
*US military announced: "The incident is under investigation."
Get
the picture? "The incident is under investigation." So you really don't
know how the person died. That includes, please note, the helicopter
crash last week.
2) ICCC says X number of Iraqis have died? Who the hell cares what they say?
It
is offensive for anyone to use the ICCC 'count' but especially for
McClatchy. In October, I warned we would rip apart the next IDIOT who
used it. ICCC is not doing a count. It is noting Reuters. They don't
even include -- pay attent Strobel and Issa -- McClatchy in their
'count.' As Warren should know and Sahar damn well knows (as does Laith
and Jenan and everyone else who does their daily roundup of violence),
McClatchy covers a lot more violence on any given day than does
Reuters. In fact, we just proved that earlier in the snapshot.
ICCC's count is 41 dead so far for the month? Well let's check. Okay?
From Third November 8th: "Sunday saw 25 Iraqis reported deaths and 97 injured. Monday saw 4 reported dead and 3 reported wounded. Tuesday saw 3 reported dead and 10 reported injured. Wednesday saw 7 reported dead and 25 reported wounded. Thursday saw 5 person reported dead and 15 reported injured. Friday saw 4 people reported dead and six people reported injured. Saturday
saw 3 reported dead and 3 reported injured. Totals: 51 reported dead,
159 reported wounded -- and many more people were killed and wounded
than were reported." From Third November 15th: "Sunday were reported 8 dead and 6 were reported wounded, Monday it was 2 dead and 15 wounded, Tuesday it was 4 dead and 2 wounded, Wednesday found 3 dead and 5 wounded, Thursday it was 6 dead and 10 wounded, Friday there were reported 3 dead and on Saturday
the number killed was 3 and the number injured was 6. [Saturday's
number may be 4 -- we are going with 3, use links and you'll see why.]
For a total of 29 reported dead and 44 reported injured." Now that
leaves aside yesterday and the death total is 80 and the wounded is 203.
ICCC does nothing but count Reuters
(click on their links). They ignore McClatchy, they ignore Los Angeles
Times and everyone else. They do a "Reuters" "count." Reuters which can
-- and has -- gone a whole day without publishing anything from Iraq.
Reuters?
You don't use ICCC for the Iraqi death toll. ICCC does
such a BAD job on the death toll of Iraqis that even the Ministries in
Iraq have a higher death toll at the end of each month. It's a joke and
you make yourself a joke when you use it.
If you are McClatchy
Newspapers, you're an ASS for using ICCC's count of Iraqis killed. Why?
Because ICCC doesn't even register you. And I happen to know what the
economics at McClatchy are right now and I damn well know that
promoting a count that doesn't even acknowledge McClatchy's reporting
is going to be seriously frowned upon by the ownership. So get your act
together. And grasp that when the bad news comes down after the
holidays, you're really not going to want to be looking around and
wondering, "How responsible am I for it?" Translation, you shouldn't be
promoting Reuters or anyone else's count. You do a daily roundup of
violence, you should be keeping track of that and have your own monthly
count. It's not difficult. When Nancy A. Youssef was in charge of
Baghdad, she was able to see that McClatchy kept their own count. When
McClatchy has the capability right now to do their own count, they
really shouldn't be promoting some other outlet's count. That's bad
business. And no one can afford it in this economy.
In England there is an ongoing inquiry into Baha Mosua's death -- Baha is an Iraqi who died while in British custody. The November 9th snpashot
noted that day's developments: British soldiers Gareth Aspinall and
Garry Reader testified that Baha was abused repeatedly while in British
custody, that he was beaten to death and that they were ordered to keep
quiet about what took place. This morning, Robert Verkaik (Independent of London) reported
that Donald Payne, already convicted for his role in Baha's death (and
kicked out of the military) will testify today. Verkaik notes that
Reader and Cooper identified Payne and Aaron Cooper as being
responsible for the death of Baha -- to clarify that, they did not see
him killed. They saw Payne and Cooper enter the room, they heard the
cries and shreiks of Baha while the two were in the room and they saw
Baha died after the two men left the room. The Daily Mail reports
that Payne has testified today that he saw "every member of the unit
commanded by Lt [Craig] Rogers, known by the call sign G10A,
'forcefully kick and/or punch' the group of Iraqi prisoners that
included Mr Mousa." Payne also asserted that abuses covered up by him
were done due to "misguided loyalty."
Under questioning from
Gerald Elias, Payne stated that the purpose of the hooding was to
"disorient" the prisoner. Elias then went through various documents
before picking back up on this thread.
Gerald Elias: You were told, you say, about the shock of capture. What do you remember being said about the shock of capture?
Donald Payne: Keep it going.
Gerald Elias: Were you told why?
Donald Payne: No.
Gerald Elias: Your statement goes on: ". . . lack of sleep and to keep prisoners confused as much as we could."
Donald Payne: Yes.
Gerald Elias: Was anything said as to what the purpose of that was: shock of capture, lack of sleep?
Donald Payne: It was to aid the tactical questioner, or the interrogator.
Gerald
Elias: How did you understand it aided the interrogator to maintain the
shock of capture, lack of sleep and keep them confused?
Donald Payne: So that they were disoriented when they was questioned.
Gerald Elias: That was your understanding, was it?
Donald Payne: Yes.
Gerald Elias: You go on in this statement to say: "We were to keep this up until tactical questioning was completed."
Donald Payne: Yes.
Gerald Elias: Was that what you were told?
Donald Payne: Yes.
Gerald Elias: What did you understand then would happen when tactical questioning was completed?
Donald Payne: They could go to sleep.
Payne
referred to receiving orders from a superior doing a handover but he
stated he could not remember who it was or what he looked like. This
was when, according to Payne, they were informed to keep the prisoners
hooded and in stress positions until questioning ended. Not noted in
the exchange but worth noting here is that questioning was not a few
hours. For example, Baha's questioning went on Sunday, Monday and
Tuesday and might have continued was he not murdered Tuesday. While he
was alive and in British custody, his questioning never ended. The
Chair of the inquiry, the Right Honourable William Gage, asked for a
clarification regarding when the stress positioning and other things
ended and Payne established that it ended not when they were done
questioning the prisoner but when they were done questioning everyone
brought in with that prisoner.
Gerald Elias: Did you find this
instruction from the TQer contrary to what you believed to be your
orders for humane treatment of detainees?
Donald Payne: Yes.
Gerald Elias: Did you raise that question with anybody?
Donald Payne: No.
Gerald Elias: Why not?
Donald Payne: Never did.
Gerald Elias: Why not?
Donald Payne: Just didn't.
The
"misquided loyalty" was a prepared statement he submitted to the
inquiry today before questioning began. Gerald Elias asked him about
that and about his admission that, despite what he stated previously
(including in his court-martial), he did use "greater" force with each
visit to the prisoners brought in with Baha.
Gerald Elias: Did your conduct in fact include kicking and punching --
Donald Payne: Yes.
Gerald Elias: -- routinely to detainees?
Donald Payne: Yes.
Gerald
Elias: And in relation to these detainees, what I have called the Baha
Mousa detainees, why did you involve yourself in kicking and punching
them?
Donald Payne: No reason.
Did others do that as
well? Yes, Payne stated, the whole multitude. Everyone but, under
questioning, the drivers, he declared. But he could not give specifics,
he stated he just knew that everyone was involved at one time or
another because he saw them.
As Elias brought in Payne's past
statements -- now agreed to by Elias and Payne to have been lies --
Payne yet again did a turn around. From the "misguided loyalty" excuse
for his silence in the prepared statement he submitted to . . .
Gerald Elias: Can you help about this, Mr Payne: why were you lying about orders that you had received?
Donald Payne: Self-preservation.
Payne
took issue with Gerald Elias suggestion that the prisoners were given
"a regular beating" by the Payne and those serving with him, "I
wouldn't say a regular beating, no. [. . .] They were given a beating,
yes, but not constant." Under questioning from Elias, it was
established that Baha and those in his group were being beaten for 48
straight hours. It might have continued after that, Payne didn't know.
He stated that he left after Baha died.
Gerald Elias: From that
time of assaulting the detainees on the Sunday evening through until
the death of Baha Mousa, should the Inquiry understand -- tell me this
is wrong if it is -- from your evidence that more or less whenever you
went back to the TDF you would involve yourself in more violence of
this kind?
Donald Payne: Yes.
We'll stop there. I don't
believe Payne's account of his last treatment of Baha and don't see how
anyone reading the transcript could believe it. It was all the more
embarrassing when you grasped that Payne had already been convicted --
meaning there was no reason to continue lying, especially when he kept
insisting that 'this time' he was 'finally' going to tell the truth. Stephen Bates (Guardian) observes,
"Other members of the unit told the inquiry they covered up a violent
assault by Payne on Mousa shortly before he died. Former private Aaron
Cooper told the inquiry in a statement: 'He seemed to completely lose
his self-control. He started to lash out wildly, punching and kicking
Baha Mousa's ribs. Corporal Payne also certainly kicked Baha Mousa's
head, which rebounded off the wall'." Michael Evans (Times of London) reports, "Colonel Daoud Musa, Mr Musa's father, who attended the hearing today, emerged tearful from the morning session."
Meanwhile news out of Iraq is the possible blocking of the election law Parliament passed last Sunday. Waleed Ibrahim, Michael Christie and Micheal Roddy (Reuters) reports
Iraq's Sunni vice president, Tariq al-Hashimi, has stated the law needs
to be changed to allow external Iraqi refugees to participate and to be
represented. If the law is not changed (by Tuesday afternoon), he
states he will veto it. (The Presidency Council is made up of Iraq's
President and two vice presidents. After Parliament passes a law, it
goes to the council which decides whether to implement it or not.)
On the latest Inside Iraq (Al Jazeera) which began airing Friday,
host Jasim Azzawi was joined by Orhan Kettene (Turkman Front), Mundher
Adhami (King's College) and Firyad Rawadnouzi (Kurdish MP) addressed
the 'intended' elections.
Jasim Azzawi: So finally the Iraqi
Parliament has passed this long delayed law. Many people, they called
it a great achievement. Firyad Rawandouzi, this law stipulates we are
going to use the open list in comparison with the closed list that was
used in 2005. It is going to separate religion from politics by
removing the religious symbols. So is it really a good law in
comparison with the old law that belongs to the old regime?
Firyad
Rawandouzi: Actually the demand of the Great Ayatollah Sistani was
there. Therefore the most political blocs in the Parliament go for open
list. And I think that this open list will create a little bit of
change in the political map of Iraqi Parliament in the next election.
But it not going to be a great change.
Jasim Azzawi: But all
yardsticks, Orhan Kettene, Iraq is far from democracy. The fact that
elections are day in, day out that does not make Iraq a democracy, far
from it. There is, has to be, a culture before that. But since you are
an activist representing the Turkmen and their interests and perhaps,
people say, their plight, how do you look at this election in light of
the fact that some Turkmen, they accuse the Kurdish authorities in
Kirkuk, they have resettled by force hundreds and thousands of Kurdish
Iraqis either from the north or even from other parts of Iraq -- from
Salahuddin, for instance.
Orhan Kettene: Well we don't see it as
a democracy with full meaning of the word because in 2003, when the
invasion removed the old regime, the Turkmens had very high hopes that
the justice, democracy, equality, equal participation will show itself
finally and they will have a voice finally in Iraqi politics after
being deprived from that right for over nine years. But the fact is
they were surprised with a flood of Kurdish people from other parts of
Iraq, especially from the north. And they filled the city. There is no
space left in the city. And it was claimed that they were refugees from
Kirkuk. And we know in Kirkuk where -- which areas were demolished,
which people were removed. So the people were surprised by this influx.
And now we are faced with doubling the number of constituents. Kirkuk
used to be 369,000 in 2004 and now it's 800,000 and Turkmens regard
Kirkuk as the cultural center of Turkmens in Iraq. And the whole Iraqi
people know Kirkuk as a Turkmen city. But over the years, by the
Ba'ahtists' racist pressure lots of Arab people were forced to be --
Jasim Azzawi: Orhan, let me give a chance to Firyad to answer that before I go to Mundher. Make it very short, Firyad.
Firyad
Rawandouzi: I don't think that this accusation is right because since
2003, we hearing from various people in Kirkuk and other areas that
Kurdish people fled to Kirkuk and occupied the city. And the fact is
that many thousands of Kurdish people were displaced by Saddam
Hussein's regime since 1997 to 2003. And those people now have
opportunity to return back to this city, to their home, and get their
property too. Therefore, we, everytime hearing this accusation but --
Jasim
Azzawi: Except for the fact, Firyad Rawandouzi, and that is the United
Nations, the envoy, has cast a great doubt about the numbers that
currently live in the city, trying to find out their origin. More
importantly, in 2003, in May, in the Attaakhi newspaper which is a
Kurdish newspaper, mentioned in an article published at the time that
the number of people expelled out of Kirkuk by Saddam Hussein exceeded
16,000 while the extra influx Orhan Kettene referred to now --
Firyad Rawandouzi: No.
Jasim Azzawi: -- runs in the
Firyad Rawandouzi: No.
Jasim
Azzawi: -- hundreds of thousands. We'll come to that in just a few
moments. Mundher Adhami, in 2005 a great segment of Iraqi socieity
opted willingly not to vote in that controversial election and now, in
2009, most probably, all of them, they will be voting. Will they be
voting willingly or will they be voting for other considerations?
Mundher
Adhami: There is two level in this. One related to the political groups
in the Green Zone and outside the Green Zone -- the so-called Red Zone.
And the other one is in the public, in the streets. In the political
groups, the United States is making huge efforts in order to cajole and
invite everybody including the people who were part of the resistance
or insurgency or anything to participate. And they're trying to give
them guarantees. But there is a great doubt about these guarantees
because a lot of the guarantees which were given before about the
Constitution, about other things in the political process did not
materialize. But on the street this is complication that there are
people who actually participated in the 2004, 2005 and the local
elections and they are very disappointed. There is an improvement
gradually in the provincial elections but even then they were not happy
with the -- with the manuevering of the electoral commission. On the
other hand, the areas which did not vote a great deal in 2005 and not
vote at all in 2004, they are thinking that they have been marginalized
by not voting and they are willing to give it a go regardless because
they have nothing to lose. They have been marginalized --
Jasim
Azzawi: So there is a fear that they might receive the short end of the
stick by not participating in the political process and, consequently,
they might have a lot to lose. Orhan Kettene, why would you be worried,
especially that this political deal that was struck between the various
political parties that stipulates that if the results of the election
in January -- especially for Kirkuk -- is exceeded by 15% than the last
election there might be going back to the drawing board and finding
some sort of a compromise.
Orhan Kettene: Well we don't have
great faith in reviewing election results because, back in 2005, we had
lots of complaints and we gave it to the High Commission. They said
they reviewed it and nothing happened. And all these violations, these
frauds, these horrible acts done against this people, no results came
out. And now they are talking about postponing this problem without
solving it -- let's do the elections and, after that, we'll form a
commission and then we'll review all the issues. The experience tells
us that once things are done deal in Iraq, there is no way to go back.
So if we have these elections --
Jasim Azzawi: So you're
extremely cynical and you don't have faith, in the words of the Iraqi
politicians? How about that, Firyad Rawandouzi? And before you answer,
let us just take a recent example. For instance, in the provincial
elections that happened just a few months ago, when in Mosul the
elections actually reversed the results of the 2005 and it gave the
Arabs the majority in the governorate as well as in other parts of the
city. And yet, to this day, they cannot exercise their political
powers. So why should Turkmens and the Arabs in Kirkuk trust in this
deal knowing full well there is no honor among the Iraqi politicians to
adhere to this, the outcome?
Firyad Rawandouzi: I don't know.
You might ask them. But in my point of view, they should go forward
with the election because it is a good chance to exercise their rights.
And I think that Kirkuk is a little bit different from other provinces
and Arab, Turkmen, Kurds and Christians should exist in Kirkuk and make
a compromise even in running the country. But in the general election
something is different because the general election and the result of
these elections will not left an impact on the future -- political
future in Kirkuk. For example, we are now in the Parliament five
member. We have five member representing Kirkuk and others have four.
But this -- we exercise the majority but that does [not] mean that we
impose any kind of a solution.
Orhan Kettaneh: Let me ask who is
rulling the street? Who is holding the security? Who's touring the
streets and letting the people do what they want? It's the Kurdish
Asayish which is security force, it's the Kurdish militia, armed
militia, called Peshmerga. They are in every street, every corner. They
are the ones who command the city. So during elections, we had hundreds
of examples that they took away the boxes, the ballot boxes, and they
changed it. And next day, all we can see is these completely Turkmen
quarters, the votes come completely in the favor of the Kurdish parties.
Firyad
Rawandouzi: No, that is not right because -- this is not right because
Turkmen divided among themselves and they could get -- couldn't get
seats in the Parliament so they put the accusation on the others. I
think that the law this time and even the voter registers are
completely different and they should go forward with the election not
put accusations on the other. I think it is very important for Turkemn
to cooperate with Arab with other persons to make everything succeed,
this election in Kirkuk. As I said this election and the results --
Orhan
Kettaneh: Well it is, sorry, excuse me, the Turkmens are not divided.
The Turkmens are united but they don't have chance, they don't have
chance --
Firyad Rawandouzi: This is not right.
Orhan Kettaneh: No, they don't have
Firyad
Rawandouzi: This is not right. There is a huge, there is a huge
difference between East Turkmens and even East Turkmens and those
linked to Turkey and those linked to Iran and those to others. You're
saying something is not -- you can't find it on the ground
Orhan
Kettaneh: No, that's not true. I find the Shi'ite Turkmens and the
Sunni Turkmens are one people and they don't see any difference betwen
the other. What you say about Shi'ites --
Firyad Rawandouzi: I don't say that they are the same people but they are different political parties, they --
Jasim Azzawi: Let me bring Mundher Adhami who has [loud cross-talk] Let me bring Mundher Adhami who has the following
Munher Adhami: Could I say? Could I just say?
Jasim
Azzawi: Munher Adhami, hold on just a second. Let me ask you something.
Somehow you cannot help but be sympathetic to the people who were
bitten once and they don't want to be bitten twice. What happened in
Mosul and what happens to the Constitution if you remember very well.
Article 141 states that before 2007 is out, Iraqi Parliament will
convene again and will review the entire Constitution and amend it
according to political deal. So as we speak right now, politically and
Constitutionally, Iraq is run without a Constitution, isn't it?
Munher
Adhami: Yes. That's right. That's exactly right. I mean the whole
process if faulty on various steps. This election is being run on a
Constitution which should not be there because it should have been
revised. So that's the first fault. The whole Constitution and the
whole election laws so far has been done according to [former US
Adminstrator of Iraq L. Paul] Bremer's laws which came after illegal
occupation. So that whole process is illegal. But the problems is that
Iraqis are practical people and they have to feed their children and
these roadblocks which the Americans are putting in their ways, they
have to go through them. They are impelled to go through them and they
do the best they can. They -- I think it is to the credit of Iraqis,
rather in Kirkuk oand Mosul so far, that they have refused the
enticement to fight each other on ethnic grounds. I think this is to
the credit of some wise people.iraqthe independent of londonrobert verkaikthe daily mail reportermcclatchy newspaperssahar issawarren p. strobelal jazeerainside iraqjasim al-azzawithe times of londonmichael evansthe washington timesrichard saleafpxinhua
Posted at 08:44 pm by politicsscree
Permalink
Nov 14, 2009
from now: If you are having trouble viewing this email, please read it online. | Background All NOW Actions Take action! |  | TAKE ACTION: Tell Your Senators to Vote Against 'Hyde on Steroids' The
Senate may be voting on a "Hyde on steroids" amendment similar to
Stupak-Pitts that would prevent millions of women from obtaining
insurance coverage for abortion under health care reform. Floor debate
begins next week, and senators are being pressured to accept this
outrageous evisceration of Roe v. Wade in order to get reform
legislation passed. It is not acceptable to achieve health care reform
by pushing women back to the back alleys. The Senate must not adopt
this House-passed amendment that would expand the Hyde Amendment (which
prohibits federal funding of abortion, except in cases of rape, incest
and threat to a woman's life). Please tell your senators Stupak-Pitts
is not status quo and it is not okay. Please Take Action NOW! Background: The
Senate will soon begin floor debate on the most important health care
legislation (S. 1796) in decades. Women have much to gain from both
Senate and House bills, which end insurance industry abuses and extend
coverage to millions currently uninsured, but we are not willing to pay
for this with an accompanying rollback of women's fundamental and
constitutional rights. Several senators who oppose abortion rights are
said to be planning to offer an amendment like the sweeping abortion
prohibition offered by Reps. Bart Stupak (D-Mich.) and Joseph Pitts
(R-Penn.) and adopted by the House on Nov. 7. Reportedly,
Sens. Ben Nelson (D-Neb.) and Bob Casey (R-Penn.) may offer a version
of the Stupak-Pitts Amendment to be attached to the Senate bill. That
means, in all likelihood, if the Senate adopts this harmful amendment,
it will remain in the final Senate-House conference bill and become
law. Alternatively, a modified variation of Stupak-Pitts could be
incorporated into the bill. Either way, millions of women lose -- big
time. Please Take Action NOW! The Stupak-Pitts amendment explained: - The
ban on abortion coverage in insurance would apply to both the proposed
public option and to private health insurance plans sold in the new
regional health insurance exchanges. It is estimated that some 36
million uninsured persons would be purchasing insurance policies
through new exchanges and would be eligible for federal affordability
subsidies.
- Health insurers may not sell plans that cover abortion to customers who are paying without
a subsidy, if even just one person who is receiving the federal
affordability credits (the subsidy) were to purchase a plan. In other
words, even if you are paying 100 percent of your insurance costs,
abortion coverage would not be available in your plan if anyone with
affordability credits joins the same plan.
- Women may purchase
a separate abortion "rider" for coverage, though many doubt that these
riders would be offered by the insurance companies.
- Small
companies (fewer than 100 employees) would also likely purchase health
insurance through the exchange, but if any of their employees received
affordability credits no abortion coverage could be included.
- Eighty-seven
percent of employer-based insurance plans now cover abortion services,
but if employers withdraw coverage and send their employees to the
health insurance exchanges, those employees would likely lose abortion
coverage under these new prohibitions.
There may be a
modified version of this harmful amendment that is included in the
Senate health care reform bill that will be debated next week. We want
to make sure that Stupak-Pitts language is not used and that no
variation of this harmful amendment is passed. Please send a message to
your senators that you oppose any restrictions on insurance coverage of
abortion. Thank you for all the work you do for women's rights. Please share this action alert with friends and family.
| and then | | |
| | SUPPORT NOW: Support NOW's Work for Equal Rights | Join NOW | Monthly Giving | Catalog | Shop Amazon TAKE ACTION: Get Involved | Find Your Nearest Chapter | Tell a Friend | Learn More | i'm
going to repeat, if you gave me money to bet with and told me i could
bet on any group to stand tall against the dems caving on reproductive
rights, i would bet on now. naral? don't make me laugh. those chicky-baby-boom-booms made fools of themselves, made asses of themselves. naral needs to give it up. and
i always laugh when i watch the video that c.i. and the gang shot on
their cell phones in d.c. i forget if it was the alito confirmation or
the roberts 1 but there's naral's original idiot katie mich. and she's
sobbing and crying and making a spectacle of herself. that always makes me laugh and it always underscores how pathetic naral is. they'd rather cry in the halls of congress than fight the democratic party. they'd rather play the victim than show any self-respect. that's the reality. i'm
not saying i'll win by betting on now, but i'm saying that's the best
shot i have. they will not cave and cower. the new leader means
business and i'd advise you to watch and see how they fight. again, we
may not win. but now's ready to fight, they're not going to roll over
and smile pretty while women are stabbed in the back and used for
political gain. thank you to c.i. who insisted upon watching my
daughter tonight so we could go out with every 1 that was going to the
concert (matthew sweet and susanna hoffs). let's close with c.i.'s ' Iraq snapshot:' Friday,
November 13, 2009. Chaos and violence continue, a war cheerleader need
to profit from the war gets even messier, McClatchy becomes the first
US outlet to speak out in support of the Guardian and press freedom,
more lawsuits are filed against KBR and more. This afternoon, Jenan Hussein and Warren P. Strobel (McClatchy Newspapers) report
a satire by Warid Badr Salim in al Mada has led over 150 members of
Parliament sign on to suing the newspaper. The reporters note, "The
chilling atmosphere for the news media was underscored this week when
an Iraqi court fined the London-based Guardian newspaper nearly
$87,000, finding that it had defamed Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki. An
article in the paper in April quoted unnamed Iraqi intelligence
officials describing what they said was Maliki's increasingly
authoritarian rule. [. . .] Free expression is one of the few benefits
that Iraqi count from the March 2003 U.S.-led invasion. Basic services
such as electricity and sewage are still in disrepair, and sectarian
violence, while much reduced, is still a daily occurence. The backlash
against journalists and curbs on book, cartoons and plays, often for
religious reasons, raise questions about what kind of society the
United States will leave behind when American troops withdraw from Iraq
at the end of 2011." The article in question is Ghaith Abdul-Ahad's " Six years after Saddam Hussein, Nouri al-Maliki tightens his grip on Iraq" (April 30, 2009). Tuesday the court or 'court' rendered their or 'their' verdict. As Elaine observed Wednesday,
"The above topic should have been the front page of every daily paper
this morning. Instead everyone turned their heads, averted their eyes
and, in doing so, endorsed the assault on the press. If Nouri al-Maliki
saw that the entire world would jeer him over these nonsense law suits,
you better believe he'd think twice about doing it again. As it is,
he's been allowed to attack the press. Let me add: Yet again." And let
me add, because I've been waiting to see if this would be the case,
that's All Things Media Big and Small. ALL. Get the picture? Thursday
the Guardian editorialized,
"But the case against the Guardian in Iraq is notable alarming. Despite
repeated hearings over several months, the paper was not asked to
present written evidence or provide statements from the editor or the
reporter invovled. Compensation was apparently awarded for damage to
the Iraqi prime minister, even though he was not a party to the legal
action. The Iraqi people were promised freedom after the fall of
Saddam. They deserve a free press and fair courts, robust enough to
stand up to government." Exactly. And yet where has the media been on this story? I am he as you are he as you are me and we are all together. See how they run like pigs from a gun, see how they fly. I'm crying. -- "I Am The Walrus" (recorded by the Beatles, written by John Lennon, credited to Lennon & McCartney) Thursday we noted that the Guardian
is out there pretty much all alone. No outlet has stepped forward to
stand with them. That's disgraceful. And when Nouri's other cases (both
pending ones and ones yet to be filed) against news outlets come
forward, some of these same outlets are going to want others to stand
up for them and stand with them. Why should anyone bother? When none of
them can stand up for the press right now, why should anyone later
stand up for the cowards? Thursday night, it turned out I might have been a bit harsh. That's when Bill Keller, executive editor of the New York Times, took a brave stand and stated: This
rulling has to send a shiver up the spin of anyone who hopes for a
genuinely democratic Iraq. What the court calls libel is, in most
countries, called journalism. Indeed, if a respected journalist like
Ghaith Abdul-Ahad can be punished for reporting on concerns about a
trend toward authoritarian government, the verdict would seem to lend
credence to those very concerns. What
a brave editorial statement from Bill Keller and thank goodness he was
not afraid to put that in print in his paper because . . . Oh, wait. That didn't appear in the New York Times. Bill Keller was quoted in Julian Borger's article for the Guardian
that posted Thursday ngiht and appeared in Friday's paper. You know
what, Bill, I think Guardian readers have some idea about the case.
It's readers of the New York Times that might be helped by hearing your comments. But the New York Times
has been so very busy on so many other things. Certainly, they're some
panty sniffing they're prepared to splash on the front page any day now
and pass it off as journalism, right? There's not a damn thing wrong with Bill Keller's statements. And I'll applaud them . . . when they appear in the New York Times.
Instead, it's as though Nouri attacked Guardian at school and Billy
stood by and didn't nothing but later that day Billy ran over to
Guardian's house and said, "Oh man, that was so wrong. I'm so mad. Man,
I could just kick Nouri's ass." Brave statements become less brave when
they're not made where it matters. What the
press tried to ignore, groups we spoke to about Iraq after the Tuesday
verdict got. They got it instantly. They got that it was about press
freedom. They got that it was about Iraq. They understood that a
messages were being sent globally. They grasped that one message was
that Nouri could get away with what ever he wanted and that he would be
emboldened as a result. They also grasped that a message was sent to
the Iraqi people to let them know that they were once again on their
own and that the world press would look the other way as they did so
often under Saddam. Those pulling a blank on what I'm referring to can
jog their memories by reading Eason's now infamous NYT column where he whined for forgiveness for CNN's efforts at covering for Saddam in order to have continued access to Iraq. This is not a minor issue but outside of the Committee to Protect Journalists, Chris Floyd and one or two others, find anyone commenting on it outside of the Guardian.
Imagine what it must be like to be the average Iraqi right now.
Following the start of the illegal war, you might have had some
internet access and some access to satellite TV and you could see the
press get lively (too lively for Paul Bremer who launched an attack on
Falluja largely because he didn't like a cartoon -- no, it wasn't of
his butt, the newspaper wasn't a broadsheet). And now you've seen the
US install exile puppet Nouri al-Maliki. And you've seen him crack down
on the internet and satellite channels. You've seen him run Al Jazeera
out of the country. Now you're seeing him go after a Western outlet
(the Guardian) and trash the work of Iraqi journalist Ghaith
Abdul-Ahad. And you look around to see that world press you hear so
much of. That brave, strong, independent, call out the tyranny where
ever it is press. And you see silence. From the East to the West, you
see silence. And slowly it sinks in that
today's thug is going to get away with the same things the previous one
did because your life isn't very important on the world stage. And
let's get real damn honest, that's why Iraqis suffered in silence all
those years. They suffered in silence because they were less important
-- to the world press -- than their leader. They suffered because the
press wanted to curry favor with Saddam. And now the same world press
is sending the message -- with few exceptions (count McClatchy now as
one exception) -- that they will cover for Nouri because freedoms and
the people of Iraq are unimportant. That is the message being sent and you better believe that is the message being received. Amy Goodman couldn't give us that today or yesterday or the day before. In fact, Goody missed Iraq a lot this week but Ava
and I will tackle that at Third on Sunday. Mad Maddy Rothschild likes
to pretend he gives a damn about the free press (in 2008, he liked to
pretend he was a Democrat, this year he finally outed himself publicly
as a Socialist so maybe in 2010 he'll reveal that he really doesn't
give a damn about the press?). But for all of his bluster, Mad Maddy
didn't have time to defend the Guardian. And then there's The Nation.
Did John Nichols losing his daily paper mean that he lost interest in
the press? Apparently because he's tossing more sop out about Sarah
Palin. But then John Nichols HATES women. Is there any woman he hasn't
attacked this decade? This is the man, please remember, who attacked Barbra Streisand,
BARBRA STREISAND, for the Iraq War. That was Barbra's fault. Now not in
the mind of any sane person, but as you read his attack on Barbra, you
knew you weren't dealing with a sane person. (The basic 'logic' of his
argument was that Barbra donated her money -- HER money -- as she saw
fit to Democratic politicians and not as John Nichols felt she should
donate HER money. Therefore, Barbra was responsible for the Iraq War.)
At some point, Panhandle Media's
going to have to have to start offering group therapy for all these
misogynists but in the meantime, we all suffer because they can't
address what really matters. Another swipe at Palin or advocating a
free press? Nichols goes with another slam at Palin. The topic wasn't discussed on the second hour of NPR's The Diane Rehm Show today, but guest host Susan Page and panelists Karen DeYoung ( Washington Post), Roy Gutman ( McClatchy Newspapers) and David E. Sanger ( New York Times) did discuss other Iraq issues. Susan
Page: Roy Gutman, I know that you were reporting from Iraq last month.
This week we hear that Iraq's Parliament finally has approved a law for
its election in January. There had been a kind of stalemate before that. Roy
Gutman: Well there had been and it was a very damaging stalemate. If
they hadn't approved the law by this point then you begin to have to
predict the country going downhill rather quickly. Uhm, had they
approved it a month ago, you could have said Iraq is almost heading
towards a normalcy despite all of the violence. This kind of muddled
middle that took a long time to decide actually is nevertheless huge
progress. This election, uh, is in a way is going to create a new
Parliament. There will be what they call open lists -- every
parliamentarian or every person running for a seat uh will be named
before the elections so it's possible for people to find out who they
are and rather they have dual citizenship. You know I heard while I was
there that as many as 70% of the Iraqi -- of the current Iraqi
Parliament has dual citizenship. Many of them Iranian-Iraqi dual
citizenship. So that-that part will end and it looks like -- they have
an independent election commission, they run elections that I think, in
comparison with Afghanistan, certainly in comparison with Iran, are
going to look good, very clean. It's possible that this election could
make a real big difference. Susan
Page: Karen, this week we found out that top executives at Blackwater,
the private military company, okayed bribes for Iraqi officials. Why
were they going to bribe them? Karen
DeYoung: This was in connection to the late 2007 attacks in Baghdad for
which I believe five Blackwater employees who were working for the
State Department have been charged. 17 Iraqis were killed. At a time
when it was not clear which way the Iraq government was going to go in
terms of prosecuting them, preventing them from leaving the country.
This was reportedly Blackwater's attempt to influence those decisions
and also the decision whether Blackwater whose-whose income is derived
from -- has been derived from -- huge contracts in Iraq would be
continued to allow -- be allowed to work there. Susan Page: Alright. Yes, Roy? Roy
Gutman: One of the -- one of the most incredible things about the
American war in Iraq is that we relied on outside contractors to the
extent that we did. I heard the figure while I was there of -- from
American military -- that there was as many as 170,000 contractors,
maybe even more than that, to 140,000 troops. I think that -- obviously
it drove up the cost -- but it was the idea of outsourcing the war
obviously to people like Blackwater to do all the functions that would
normally be carried out by the military. It's a hell of a way to run a
war. It's -- maybe it's the modern way of war but I think that the Bush
administration in a way into thinking that it was only 140,000, only
160,000, in fact the numbers were far, far higher. Karen
DeYoung: I-I think that's true and the bulk of the contractors
certainly work for the Defense Department. [Clears throat.] Excuse me.
The bulk of the controversy has been over-over personal security
contractors working for the State Department and that's what -- that's
what Blackwater was doing. This is a problem as policy becomes a sort
of civil-military hybrid where we're trying to do reconstruction in a
war zone, we're trying to boost the civilian components of our efforts
in places like-like Iraq and in Afghanistan. And now the question is
always: Who is going to protect these people? Is this the proper role
for the military, is this something that we want soldiers to do? The
State Department doesn't want soldiers to do it and so you're going to
have this problem increasingly going on. Susan
Page: Do private military contractors continue to play as big a role
during the Obama administration as they did during the Bush
administration, David? David
E. Sanger: Well certainly as the war has moved to Afghanistan and as
our attention is focused to Afghanistan -- we still have more troops in
Iraq today than we have in Afghanistan -- something you could lose
sight of -- Karen DeYoung: Twice as many. David
E. Sanger: -- picking up -- picking up the newspaper. Yeah. That may
not be true six months from now but it certainly is true now. Uh, I
don't believe that there are as many contractors at work in the Afghan
theater. But it's a very different kind of situation. The exception to
this, again, is the personal security forces including around the
embassies. Roy
Gutman: But you know when you enter the American Embassy in Baghdad,
you get first questioned by Peruvians who are contractors. I-I think
the traditional role of the marines as being the guard for embassies is
actually a good one. And I think the idea of contracting that out,
however necessary it was during the war because there simply weren't
enough troops of any force to do it -- is a real question. I don't see
-- and the State Department didn't master having these private
contractors. They-they lost control of them again and again and again.
There not able to manage them, frankly. And, uh, the whole embassy. You
go to this embassy, it's an immense thing really. It was built kind of
for a pro-counsel's role. And you have to ask: 'Why did we do this in
the middle of the war?' Susan Page: Roy, Roy, I don't understand. So this security at the US Embassy in Baghdad is Peruvian? Roy Gutman: The first line. Karen DeYoung: The outer parameter. Roy Gutman: The outer parameter. Susan Page: And who's employing the Peruvians to provide the security? Roy Gutman: Uh, I don't know. Maybe it's Triple Canopy. I forget the name of the contractor. Susan Page: But it's a contractor working for the US government? Roy Gutman: Oh yeah. Susan Page: Huh. Alright. That surprises me. Meanwhile James Bone (Times of London) reports
on the problems for an adivsor to the KRG: "A prominent former United
Nations official was forced to defend himself yesterday against
accusations that he used his influence in Iraq to enrich himself. Peter
Galbraith, 58, a former US ambassador who recently quit as deputy head
of the UN mission in Kabul, struck a potentially lucrative oil deal in
Iraqi Kurdistan which could reportedly earn him $100 million (£60
million). He helped the Kurds to negotiate provisions in the 2005 Iraqi
Constitution that gave them control over new oil finds on their
territory." Peter Galbraith is denying any wrong doing. He repeated his
denials in Melissa Block's interview which aired on yesterday's All Things Considered: Melissa
Block: Ambassador Galbraith, you've been on our program many times
before, you've published many op-eds, you've written books. Why not
disclose your business ties before this? Put this out in the open if it
is so-so benign as you say.
Peter Galbraith: It's obviously
quite common for people to be in government, to be in private business.
And it is the nature of private business that the precise arrangements
are often confidential. And, indeed, some of my arrangements were
subject to confidentiality agreements. But I did disclose that I was in
business and that I had corporate clients in Iraq. So I think that
people did know that I had these interests. Melissa
Block: Ambassador Galbraith, do you see how this business connection,
your connection with the oil company, would fuel the anger that US
interests in Iraq are purely about oil and about profit?
Peter
Galbraith: I -- uh, well I can understand that there will be
politicians that will want to use that as part of their debate with the
Kurds but, uh, frankly, I was a private citizen at the time, I had no
role in the US -- with the US government. The US government did not, in
any way, facilitate any of my visits to Iraq. Uh, so, I was like many
other former government officials who have become private citizens and
who, uh, in -- generally the practice do not disclose what clients they
may have in their business activities. While
he was happy to share his notions of discosure to Melissa Block
yesterday, others attempted to address his lack of disclosure. Noting
that he's written columns on the Kurdistan issues for the New York Times since 2004 (when his relationship with DNO began), an " Editor's Note" in today's paper (published online yesterday) concludes: Like
other writers for the Op-Ed page, Mr. Galbraith signed a contract that
obligated him to disclose his financial interests in the subjects of
his articles. Had editors been aware of Mr. Galbraith's financial
stake, the Op-Ed page would have insisted on disclosure or not
published his articles. The New York Times
is stating Peter Galbraith didn't disclose to them and that, had they
known about the deal, they would have either not published his columns
on Iraq or required that he disclose those interests -- those financial
interests. Please note that Melissa Block conducted a lengthy interview
with him (over four minutes) and those are only excerpts above. Peter
Galbraith continues to maintain he has done nothing illegal, wrong or
unethical. Chris Floyd (Empire Burlesque) weighs in: The New York Times is shocked -- shocked! -- to find personal enrichment of American elites
at the heart of the rape and gutting of Iraq. Who could possibly have
ever foreseen such a scenario as the Times revealed on Thursday,
describing how "influential American adviser" Peter Galbraith helped
"ram through" highly controversial provisions in the constitution that
the occupying force and its collaborators imposed -- provisions that
could put more than $100 million in Galbraith's pocket.
Of
course, Galbraith's war-profiteering machinations are hardly unique;
the roll call of "advisers" and officials and other insiders feasting
on Iraqi corpseflesh is longer than the Mississippi, and considerably
more muddy. Just this week, the Financial Times noted
that another gaggle of occupation geese, "including Zalmay Khalilzad,
former US ambassador to Baghdad, and Jay Garner," the first appointed
satrap of the conquered land, are now cashing in on their blood-soaked
connections in Iraq. Chris Garofolo (Brattleboro Reformer) notes
that Galbraith was speaking at an event at the Brattleboro Centre
Congregational Church last night when the issue was raised and he said
of the New York Times article (by James Glanz and Walter Gibbs ),
"I actually find the article quite, well, it is full of innuendo. If
you read the facts [with the implications and innuendo], I find [it]
offensive. [. . .] The article argues, or suggests, that somehow I had
a conflict, hmm, it doesn't say it, but there's innuendo there. That
there's a conflict of interest because I advised the Kurds on the
constitution at the same time I had business interests, including a
contract with a Norewegian oil company DNO, in which I assisted them to
make investments in the oil industry." Garofolo also notes that Peter
Gailbraith supported the 2003 invasion of Iraq. From greed to the violence it led to . . . Bombings? Shootings? Corpses? Turning to the United States, Jake Armstrong (Pasadena Weekly) notes
"lawsuits in 32 states have been filed against Halliburton, KBR and
other military contractors over so-called 'burn pits' the companies
allegedly used in Iraq to burn everything from human body parts to
tires, the Associated Press reported Tuesday." Ed Treleven (Wisconsin State Journal) reports
Iraq War veteran Michael Foth and Afghanistan War veteran Brett Mazzara
have filed against KBR: "The lawsuit, filed Tuesday in U.S. District
Court in Madison, brings to 34 the number of similar lawsuits pending
across the United States, said Susan Burke, a Washington, D.C., lawyer
representing the soldiers, including Mazzara and Foth. A first wave of
lawsuits filed earlier this year have been merged for pretrial
proceedings in Greenbelt, MD., she said." Lisa Guerriero (MetroWest Daily News) reports
on Iraq War veteran Jeffery Cox (we've noted his lawsuit against KBR
already this week). O fthe KBR burn pit he was exposed to, Cox notes,
"This is not your little leaf fire. This is 10 acres or greater." On
the health issues relating from exposure to the burn pits, Cox
observes, "It's widespread. A lot of people have some type pulmonary
issue. It's the Agent Orange of the Iraq war." Meanwhile the Houston Chronicle offers the editorial " Invisible wounds: Returning soldiers with mental health problems are ill-served by their country"
which includes this: "It's also ironic that the same legislators who
sign off on billions to wage wars -- conservatively estimated at almost
$700 billion to date for Iraq and Afghanistan -- are often loath to
invest even modest sums for the care of the soldiers wounded in those
wars." Meanwhile, KBR and others can profit
off the war but telling the truth? Apparently not allowed in the United
States. Valerie Plame is a former CIA agent. Former not by choice. She
was outed by the Bully Boy Bush administration in an attempt to get
back at and attack her husband, former diplomat Joe Wilson. The CIA
sent Wilson on a fact-finding mission to Niger ahead of the Iraq War to
determine whether or not Saddam Hussein was seeking or had sought
yellow cake uranium (which would allow him to make deadly, nuclear
bombs). Wilson's investigation determined no attempt had been made.
Despite that, the administration (including Bully Boy Bush) began
publicly making statements to the contrary. Wilson originally corrected
the issue with some members of the press. When he came out publicly in
the New York Times with " What I Didn't Find In Africa"
(July 6, 2003), the administration began working to attack him and
using adminstration friends in the press. These friends would include
Matt Cooper who keeps trying to crawl out from under his rock despite
the fact that he's never, NEVER, gotten honest about his part in this
or his covering for so many in the administration and for Karl Rove.
Robert Novak (now dead) was the one who finally outed her. (As John R.
MacArthur has noted, there's nothing wrong with outing CIA agents --
with the press doing it. It is, however, a different story for the
government to out you. Valerie Plame worked for the United States
government as an undercover agent and her cover was blown by the
Executive Branch of the federal government. That is wrong, that is a
problem.) David Kravets (Wired) reports
that here efforts to go public with details (non national security
details) such as the time of her employment are being withheld (despite
them already being part of the Congressional record) and other petty
measures are taking place. Why? A judge decided but never forget that a
judge decided (wrongly, my opinion) only due to the fact that the
Barack Obama administration decided to fight Plame on this. Yes, Barack
is yet again proving to be Bush III. So two administrations have now
disgraced themselves in the manner in which they've treated Valerie
Plame. TV notes. NOW on PBS begins broadcasting on many PBS stations tonight (check local listings) and this week's show What
exactly is going on with the economy? Stocks are up and big bonuses are
back, but while they're throwing parties on Wall Street, there's pain
on Main Street. One out of every six workers is unemployed or
underemployed, according to government statistics - the highest figure
since the Great Depression. This week NOW gets answers and insight
from Harvard professor Elizabeth Warren, who's been heading up the
congressional panel overseeing how the bailout money is being spent.
NOW Senior Correspondent Maria Hinojosa talks with Warren about how we
got to this point, and where we go from here. What will it take to put both bankers and American businesses on the same road to recovery? Washington Week also
begins airing tonight (and throughout the weekend) on many PBS
stations. Joining Gwen around the table this week are Peter Baker ( New York Times), Naftali Bendavid ( Wall St. Journal), John Dickerson (CBS News and Slate) and Ton Gjelten (NPR). Meanwhile Bonnie Erbe will sit down with Bernadine Healy, Melinda Henneberger, Star Parker and Patricia Sosa to discuss the week's events on PBS' To The Contrary. Check local listings, on many stations, it begins airing tonight. And turning to broadcast TV, Sunday CBS' 60 Minutes offers: The Deadliest Weapon Byron
Pitts and 60 Minutes cameras spend two days on the road with a
bomb-hunting unit in Afghanistan as they encounter one deadly bomb
after another. | Watch Video B. Rex Lesley
Stahl meets the inspiration for the lead character in the classic film
"Jurassic Park" and reports on how famed dinosaur hunter Jack Horner is
shaking up the paleontology world. | Watch Video Resurrecting Eden In Southern Iraq, where many biblical scholars place the Garden of Eden, Scott Pelley
finds a water world where the "Marsh Arabs" are making a comeback after
Saddam nearly destroyed the "cradle of civilization." | Watch Video 60 Minutes, Sunday, Nov. 15, at 7 p.m. ET/PT.
60 minutescbs newspbsto the contrarybonnie erbewashington week
Posted at 07:42 pm by politicsscree
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