Saturday, November 21, 2009

No vote today on those 'intended' January elections

So today the Iraqi Parliament was going to meet and, for the dreamers among the press, resolve the issues arising from Iraq's Sunni vice president, Tareq al-Hashemi vetoing the election law earlier this week. As Carole King sings ("Chalis Borealis," Speeding Time), "Didn't work out quite the way you wanted, how were you to know?" Well you couldn't have 'known,' but you could have expected. You could have made a best-guess simply by looking at how slowly the Parliament moves. (For example, do we want to again count how long the Parliament 'operated' without a Speaker after they drove off their previous one?) AFP reports, "Iraqi MPs will meet again on Sunday to try to break the deadlock on a stalled electoral law which has left the country's planned January general election in doubt. 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) explains, "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 adds, "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'."


So, taking the past into consideration, it's not really a surprise what happened today; however, it ended up taking many in the press by surprise -- the same way al-Hashemi's veto did. And that also wasn't a surprise.

Was it legal?

Every law the Parliament's passed has gone before the presidency council for approval. Any member of the council can object (or all of them) and the law is voided. It's never been an issue before whether or not they had these powers because people (or those in power) apparently 'liked' the decisions by the council prior to this one.

From Thursday's snapshot:

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.

So what happened there? Was it legal or not? Alsumaria reports the courts have rule (non-surprisingly) that the veto power did exist, "In a statement, the committee noted that the court's response stipulated that the Independent High Electoral Commission should determine a suitable mechanism to turn the law from unconstitutional to constitutional. [. . .] Iraq's court decision stressed that Al Hashemi's veto is constitutional, the committee added."

In related news, Khalid al-Ansary, Michael Christie and James Jukwey (Reuters)report that the vote on approval of the bids on West Qurna and Zaubair oil fields -- which was supposed to have taken place Tuesday (but didn't) -- may not take place this Tuesday as newly scheduled according to a government spokesperson. Still related, Timothy Williams (New York Times) reports that after spending $53 billion in tax payer monies onf "relief and reconstruction in Iraq," US officials are now faced with "growing concerns . . . that Iraq will not be able to adequately maintain the facilities" when US forces depart -- whenever that may be. Such an inability would mean billions were wasted.

Meanwhile Nouri uses al Qaeda in Mesopotamia the way some (with high blood pressure) use salt: He sprinkles it on everything and does so excessively. As he's continued to blame every explosion and sneeze and the homegrown group, the US military has been at a loss for what to do. Ernesto Londono (Washington Post) reports the brass has come up with a game plan: Declare that they have "rebounded in strength" and that they're on the move. Such a declaration, not noted in the article, would of course mean the one claim to fame the brass had to spit shine is now gone -- if the US military didn't even wipe out al Qaeda in Iraq, what did they accomplish? No doubt Thomas Friedman will compose a fanciful 'essay' on that topic in a bit. Until then, Londono reports:

Although the group has lost many top leaders, funding sources and popular support, it stands to gain from a deeply split political establishment, growing Sunni resentment toward the Shiite-led government, disjointed Iraqi security agencies and the diminishing ability of U.S. forces to engage in combat operations in Iraq.

Turning to some of today's violence

Laith Hammoudi (McClatchy Newspapers) reports
2 Baghdad roadside bombings which injured nine people, a Baghdad sticky bombing which claimed 1 life and left three people wounded and, dropping back to last night, a Kirkuk suicide bombing which claimed the life of the bomber and no one else.

Laith Hammoudi (McClatchy Newspapers) reports 1 teacher shot dead in Mosul and two Iraqi soldiers injured in a second Mosul shooting.

Since Thursday night, the following community posts have published:

"Feinstein questions at the NSA hearings"
"Easy Enchilada Bake in the Kitchen"
"Economy, abortion, mammograms"
"Drama Queen tries to upstage the Great Wall"
"Top 10 reasons Oprah's quitting"
"An underrated 80s classic"
"How they waste our time"
"sexual beings"
"katty van-van gets smacked"
"The bribes"
"New Jersey's important vote"
"House Veterans Affairs"
"House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on the Middle East and South Asia"
"Day of rememberance "
"Jayne Lyn Stahl strikes again"
"The Pirate"
"Bye Oprah, don't hurry back"
"Hillary Is 44 on Elizabeth Drew"
"House ArmedServices Committee"
"Ahnuld goes to Iraq, abortion, etc."
"THIS JUST IN! BARRY O DOES EMPLOYMENT!"
"Barack finds some jobs"
"The Rainbow Tour ends with a whimper "
"THIS JUST IN! THE BUBBLE BURSTS!"
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.


























thomas friedman is a great man






oh boy it never ends

Children, abuse within the forces and a female bomber

Hussein Mohammed Janabi is a loving little boy who adores his younger siblings, Amneh, 3, and six-month-old twins Zeid and Sajad. But his parents find it difficult to answer him when he asks -- as he often does -- "Why are they beautiful and I am not?"
Hussein's dream is that the "kind doctors" in Amman will make him as pretty as the rest of his family. "Mama," he says every day, "look at how beautiful and perfect the eyes and eyebrows of Zeid and Sajad are. When can mine be the same?"
Hussein was 10 months old and asleep in his cot having his morning nap when a car bomb exploded outside the family home in Hilla, 60 miles south of Baghdad, four years ago. Burning shrapnel rained through the windows of his house and the nylon sheets on his cot caught fire.
As the flames took hold, the synthetic fabric melted and stuck to the baby's skin. His screams brought his mother, Hind Ghazi, 26, rushing into the bedroom. "There was fire on his face and some parts of his body, and where there was no fire his skin had turned black, especially his hands and fingers," she recalls. "I started to dab the fire with my hands and I covered him with a cloth and carried him outside as I wailed and cried for help."

The above is from Hala Jaber's "Christmas Appeal: How you can help the children of Iraq" (Times of London) who goes on to explain that Doctors Without Borders had to leave Iraq in 2004 due to the violence and, while it is still not safe to return, they have set up a clinic in Amman, Jordan where they provide assistance to Iraqis. The assistance is needed because Iraq has a huge shortage of doctors (of trained nurses as well, but the report doesn't note that). In the 90s, the country had approximately 34,000 and, of that figure, 20,000 have departed Iraq.

Meanwhile the abuse of Iraqis by foreign forces receives attention. Joe Sterling (CNN) reports US Sgt Jarrett Taylor was court-martialed on Friday "for mistreating troops in Iraq". From M-NF, here's their press release on that:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
RELEASE No. 20091121-01
November 20, 2009

Soldier found guilty of maltreatment

Camp Arifjan, Kuwait -- A U.S. Army Soldier has been found guilty of making false official statements and cruelty and maltreatment of subordinates.

Sgt. Jarrett Taylor, 23, from Edmond, Okla., was found guilty during a special court martial that concluded today.

Sgt. Taylor was found guilty of violating the Uniform Code of Military Justice Article 93, Cruelty and Maltreatment; and Article 107, Making a False Official Statement. He was sentenced to confinement for 180 days, reduction to the rank of Private E-1, and forfeiture of $933 in pay for six months.

Sgt. Taylor was one of four Soldiers charged Aug. 19. Another Soldier, Spec. Daniel Weber, 24, from Frankenmuth, Mich., was discharged in lieu of a court martial.

Two other Soldiers, Staff Sgt. Enoch Chatman, 30, from West Covina, Calif., and Staff Sgt. Bob Clements, 29, from Eastland, Texas, are subject to a pending future General Court Martial.

-30-

FOR QUERIES, CONTACT THE MULTI-NATIONAL DIVISION – SOUTH PUBLIC AFFAIRS AT MND-S_PAO@IRAQ.CENTCOM.MIL This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it ; BY PHONE AT (IRAQNA) 0790-194-2865 OR 770-263-9379. FOR MORE MND-S NEWS, VISIT OUR WEBSITE: WWW.THEREDBULLS.ORG.

FOR THIS PRESS RELEASE AND OTHERS, VISIT WWW.MNC-I.COM



Sterling notes, "Taylor was among four Multi-National Division South soldiers who were charged with cruelty and maltreatment of soldiers in their platoon, Lt. Col. Kevin Olson, MNF-South spokesman in Basra, told CNN in an email Saturday. All were from the 13th Cavalry Regiment out of Fort Bliss, Texas. The charges, filed August 19, stemmed from information discovered during an investigation of Pvt. Keiffer P. Wilhelm's suicide in August." This comes as Danny Brierley (Independent of London) reports British Defence Secretary Bob Ainsworth will announce to the House of Commons Wednesday a "new public inquiry into fresh allegations of torture against British troops" with a "focus on the Battle of Danny Boy, which took place in May 2004 and involved soldiers from the Argyll and Southern Highlanders and the Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment."


Meanwhile the Observer features an article by Alissa J. Rubin which was published previously in the New York Times Sunday Magazine (back in August). Rubin reports on meeting a young Iraqi woman in police custody for attempting to become a suicide bomber. Rubin and Baida have a free flowing conversation -- or Rubin thinks so. Baida brags of how a nurse lets her keep a cell phone. Strangely no one thought to report that. Strangely no one thought to ask why the nurse would allow such a thing. Because Baida's charming? Rubin finds her charming. She begins calling for Rubin repeatedly at which point an interpreter working for the paper warns Rubin that Baida may be attempting to set up Rubin's kidnapping. Rubin meets with her again but does not give her details ahead of time. She asks Baida about that and Baida appears to think the idea just struck her but, as Baida speaks more and more, she informs Rubin that it would not bother to see someone like Rubin kidnapped and tortured.

It's a strong article and the only one by the Times that didn't attempt to patholigize gender. All other reports on female suicide bombers were written as though the (male) reporters typing up the report were doing so with one hand while the other slid down the front of their pants.

Possibly they wrote such bad reporting -- which couldn't stop marveling over how a 'girl' would become a bomber -- because of the conversations they had with (male) Iraqi authorities?

That would explain how Baida was allowed to keep a cell phone on her person while imprisoned. Suicide bombers know no gender. It's only the sick and the naive minds that can't grasp that. The naive will never learn, the sick? They appear to be in charge in Iraq and were way too stupid to grasp that when a nurse is allowing Baida to have a cell phone? That nurse is part of the problem and may even be part of the resistance. If she's not, she's far too naive to be working around prisoners.

Nouri and his crowd of thugs will always understimate women.


The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.











Friday, November 20, 2009

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 refuseniksStephen 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.


 
 
 

Those 'intended' elections

A number of mortar shells have targeted the sprawling US military bases on the outskirts of Tikrit in Iraq's northern province of Salah al-Din.
A local police source told the Aswat al-Iraq news agency that multiple mortar rounds landed Thursday morning inside Camp Anaconda, which is located in the Yathrib district on the southern outskirts of Tikrit.

The above is from Iran's Press TV which adds that Camp Speicher was attacked with rockets on Tuesday. Meanwhile Reuters reports 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. While all of those serious events take place, the New York Times' editorial board never fails to provide huge guffaws.

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.
It was a new reminder that while violence in Iraq has significantly declined over the last couple of years, underlying ethnic tensions remain raw and unresolved.

The above is from "Iraq's Election Law Morass" and note, yet again, how 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:

Hashemi claims the election law does not properly represent Iraqis living in the diaspora, granting them no more than 5% of the 323-seat parliament. According to numerous records, including those of the government, well over a million Iraqis live outside of Iraq, most of them Sunnis. To grant them proper representation, they ought to be given 15% of the seats, Hashemi argued.
Frantically, Maliki responded. On Thursday evening, the Constitutional Court (over which Mailik has plenty of influence) overruled Hashemi's veto, calling it "unconstitutional".
The problem will now be returned to parliament, which on Saturday will vote on two options: it can send the same law that Hashemi vetoed back to the three-member presidency council, where it is likely to be vetoed again - or it can amend the law to address Hashemi's concerns.
Under the constitution, however, parliament can override a second veto with a three-fifths majority, which it probably could amass if most Shi'ite and Kurdish lawmakers chose to.

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." They 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."

Tracy Barker was raped while working in Iraq for KBR. She has received a settlement and that's great for her and she deserves much more than she has but we're not going to be playing that up because it's only a matter of time before KBR (currently appealing the judgment) turns around and starts trying to argue that this is proof that arbitration works (it's not proof) and that there's no need to utilize the court system (there is).

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.




Radio notes, today on NPR's The Diane Rehm Show (begins airing on most NPR stations live at 10:00 am EST and begins streaming online at the same time) finds Diane and her guests addressing the week's news. The first hour, domestic, has Naftali Bendavid (Wall St. Journal), Eleanor Clift (Newsweek) and Byron York (Washington Examiner) joining her while the second hour's panel (the international hour) is Nadia Bilbassy (MCB TV), James Fallows (Atlantic Monthly) and Moises Naim (Foreign Policy). Also, yesterday on the first hour, Diane and her guest explored the mental health issues (including the news of the increased suicide rate this year in the Army) on the second hour of the program. The most recent Cindy Sheehan's Soapbox (began airing and streaming Sunday) is her interview with Noam Chomsky -- this is the interview where she asks the questions her listeners e-mailed. Eddie notes this from Cindy's "Barack Obama Does Not Speak For Me" (Cindy Sheehan's Soapbox):

I can't count how many times I have been called an "anti-war radical," and I have never killed anyone or plotted to kill anyone, but I will NOT support the troops by supporting insupportable missions.
I will not support the "mission" by paying my Federal income taxes and I will not support the troops by flying the imperial flag or putting a yellow ribbon on my car, either. I will support the troops the only way I know how: by being an "anti-war radical," no matter what the cost.
If we "lose" in the "wars" that the Bush regime started and the Obama regime has escalated it only will be because they were ever started in the first place.



Page Gardner, who'll be on Bonnie Erbe's show, is the president of Women's Voices, Women Vote which announced yesterday:

Women's Voices. Women Vote is pleased to announce the appointment of Amy C. Young as our Executive Director. She will be responsible for managing the organization's programs and overseeing its daily operations.

Ms. Young comes to WVWV with extensive experience in the non-profit and for-profit sectors, specializing in organizational development, strategic planning, fundraising, and grassroots organizing. In her nearly 20 years of experience, Amy has developed a particular expertise in mobilizing citizens to participate in elections and public policy debates.

Most recently, Amy was president of the consulting firm Progressive Solutions Group. Previously, she was the Executive Director of Voices for Working Families. Prior to that Amy served as Midwest and Deputy Political Director for the Democratic National Committee. She also served two years as the Executive Director of the Ohio Democratic Party. Amy has also worked for the ACLU, AFL-CIO, and SEIU. She began her career as a legislative aide to Ohio State Senator, Neal Zimmers.

A native of Ohio, Amy graduated Magna Cum Laude from the University of Dayton with Bachelor of the Arts degrees in History and Political Science.

We're very excited to have Amy joining the organization and we look forward to her leadership as we develop the next generation of models, methods, and messages to keep the Rising American Electorate engaged in our democracy.

And we'll close with this from Debra Sweet's "Propelling the Resistance into 2010" (World Can't Wait -- national meeting in NYC, use link):


I'm looking forward to meeting with people from around the country at World Can't Wait's national meeting this weekend. We are determined to go forward and mobilize people on the basis of principle to oppose, resist, and stop the crimes of our government, the fascist re-making of the U.S., and to do all this with creativity, daring and confidence that we can succeed.
In the past year, under different political conditions than when World Can't Wait was founded to drive out the Bush Regime, we have done some amazing things with limited resources and a national network of volunteers:

challenged the broader anti-war movement to stand up against the "good war" Obama is escalating: Afghanistan

  • stayed visible, in the streets, resisting and protesting in cities from Hawaii to New York and many between
  • organized the We Are Not Your Soldiers tour, bringing the true story of what the military is like as told by veterans themselves to high school students around the country
  • broke into national media with our protests of John Yoo (the torture lawyer now teaching at UC Berkeley), protests shutting down the Army Experience Center, on the anniversary of the invasion of Afghanistan in front of the White House, and while sucessfully defending the heroic Dr. Carhart in Omaha, Nebraska from violently anti-choice groups
  • recently, we've been in the streets of DC with many thousands at the National Equality March, and helped organize a national tour for British author and filmaker Andy Worthington, with his new film, Outside the Law: Stories from Guantanamo.



  • The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.

















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    The fallen

    35-year-old Staff Sgt Ryan Zorn died while serving in Iraq November 16th. He hails from Upton, Wyoming. Steve Miller (Rapid City Journal) speaks with his father Myron Zorn who reveals the family has "no information about when the body will arrive in Wyoming" but intend "to hold funeral services in Wright and bury Ryan Zorn at Black Hills Nation Cemetery". Myron Zorn describes the lack of information as "frustrating." Jeremy Godmeier (Gillete News Record) adds:

    The Zorn house is packed with food. People just keep dropping by with a fresh dish to plop on the table.
    "I could feed an army," says Myron, a coal miner at Black Thunder.
    Flags fly at half-staff throughout town. Yellow ribbons adorn poles in memory of Zorn.

    Meanwhile Amanda Kim Stairrett (Killeen Daily Herald) reports on a ceremony at Fort Hood yesterday to remember four of the fallen: Pfc Daniel Jose Rivera (killed in Mosul last month), Sgt Bradley Espinoza (killed in Q-West, Iraq last month) and Spc Jason Dean Hunt and Pvt Francheska Velez who were among the ones murdered in the November 5th Fort Hood shooting. All four were part of the 1st Cavalry Division. Stairrett reports:

    Rivera was exactly where he wanted to be when he died -- with his buddies, said his friend, Spc. Jose Guzman. When he went home during leave to visit his family, all he could talk about was getting back to his friends in Delta Company, 3rd Battalion, 8th Cavalry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team.
    Rivera was raised by a single mother and she said that he -- her first-born son -- was the love of her life. He had a tough-guy mentality and wanted to do something big, she told Lt. Col. Andre Cieply, the division's rear detachment chaplain.
    Rivera was 22 at the time of his death.
    Espinoza was a 26-year-old combat engineer who embodied the motto of his military occupational specialty, "Clearing the way," said Capt. Russell Toll, rear detachment commander for the 3rd Brigade Combat Team's 1st Battalion, 12th Cavalry Regiment.
    Espinoza and Toll served in the brigade together in Baqubah during the division's second deployment to Iraq.
    Roadside bombs wreaked havoc on the battalion and leaders decided that combat engineers would go out before patrols to clear the way. Toll said he had no doubt that Espinoza's work during that 15 months saved the lives of their fellow soldiers.
    Espinoza set an example of a devoted husband, father and noncommissioned officer, Toll said. He was always there for his soldiers, even if it meant getting in the dirt with them.
    Espinoza aspired to be a drill sergeant and was set to begin schooling after returning from Iraq. He had a presence about him that gave soldiers confidence, Cieply said.
    Espinoza is survived by his wife, Maria, and their children, Joseph and Celeste.

    Jeremy Schwartz (Austin American-Statesman) notes:

    Velez, 21, was three months pregnant, and friends and officers said she was excited about being a mother. She had returned from Iraq early because of the pregnancy.
    Soldiers remembered Velez, the child of Colombian immigrants, as someone who loved dancing and writing poetry.
    "We may never know the reasoning behind the attack," Capt. Peter Friend said during the service. "But we will always know the impact she made in our lives. She would not like to be seen as victim. Remember her as a battle buddy."
    Hunt had just married his girlfriend, Jennifer, two months before he was killed and had only learned of an impending deployment to Iraq the day before the attack. She and their three children were scheduled to move to Killeen this weekend from his native Oklahoma. His wife collapsed in tears after the memorial and had to be helped out of the 1st Cavalry Division Chapel.

    Meanwhile Gregg Zoroya (USA Today)reports that eight service members wounded in the November 5th shooting intend to deploy to Afghanistan and Iraq according to Army Reserve Major General Lie-Ping Chang and, of the Fort Hood shooting, "This was not the first tragedy for the 1908th unit heading for Iraq, Chang says. One of that unit's psychiatrists, Matthew Houseal, 54, volunteered this year to deploy to Iraq with another Reserve unit, the 55th Combat Stress Control Team. Houseal was working at a clinic on an installation outside Baghdad on May 11 when Army Sgt. John Russell allegedly opened fire, killing Houseal."

    Staying with the Fort Hood shooting, Monday the Senate Armed Services Committee had a hearing scheduled to begin at 4:30 in the afternoon to review the Fort Hood shootings. However, the administration refused to participate. For whatever reasons, they refused to involve the public in the issue. The White House would try to have a 'meeting' where they discussed it with some senators. Senator Susan Collins, who serves on the Senate Armed Services Committee, blasted the 'information' provided -- as Mike noted earlier this week. Yesterday, Senator Joe Leiberman scheduled a hearing a refused to cancel it when the administration refused to participate. Dana Milbank (Washington Post) notes that former Homeland Security adviser Frances Fragos Townsend, former deputy national security adviser Juan Carlos Zarate and the former vice chief of staff of the army Jack Keane were present to offer testimony:

    Conspicuously absent: anyone from the Obama administration. They declined a request for their testimony by Joe Lieberman, chairman of the Senate homeland security committee.
    It was a familiar trope of the Bush years: A congressional committee would try to investigate the administration's actions -- over intelligence failures in Iraq, for example -- but the administration would stiff the committee and then set up its own internal inquiry to preempt the lawmakers' probe and keep embarrassing details quiet. On Thursday, the Obama administration followed every element of the script, short of hiring Ari Fleischer.

    Lieberman's office issued the following yesterday:

    Lieberman, Collins Open Fort Hood Investogation
    Hearing Witnesses Agree Incident was a Terrorist Attack

    WASHINGTON - Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee Chairman Joe Lieberman, ID-Conn., and Ranking Member Susan Collins, R-Me., Thursday opened their investigation into the circumstances surrounding the murder of 13 people at Fort Hood, Texas, with testimony from witnesses expert in the military, Islamist extremism and self-radicalization, and federal intelligence collection and information sharing.
    "We will look at the Fort Hood murders not as an isolated event, but as part of a larger pattern of homegrown terrorism that has emerged over the past several years," Lieberman said. "Our purpose is to determine whether that attack could have been prevented, whether the federal agencies and employees involved missed signals or failed to connect the dots in a way that enabled Hasan to carry out his deadly plan. If we find such errors or negligence we will make recommendations to guarantee, as best we can, that they never occur again. "
    After acknowledging the intelligence information-sharing improvements made in the wake of 9/11, Collins said, "the shootings at Fort Hood may indicate that communication failures and poor judgment calls can defeat systems intended to ensure that vital information is shared to protect our country and its citizens. The case also raises questions about whether or not restrictive rules have a chilling effect on the legitimate dissemination of information, making it too difficult to connect the dots that would have allowed a clear picture of the threat to emerge.
    U.S. Army Major Nidal Malik Hasan is charged with killing 12 of his fellow soldiers and one civilian on November 5. When asked, four of the five panel witnesses agreed that, based on available evidence, the incident was a terrorist attack. The fifth witness, a member of the New York City Police Department, declined comment because of the ongoing federal criminal investigations. In addition, Retired Army Vice Chief of Staff General John Keane testified that he was not aware of any U.S. Army guidelines to help commanders, officers, and soldiers identify behavior that could be categorized as Islamist extremism. Keane, who commanded the Fort Bragg, N.C., army base shortly after the murder of two African American civilians in 1995 by white supremacist soldiers, said the Army subsequently developed guidelines to identify white supremacist behavior.
    Lieberman began the hearing by recognizing the thousands of Muslim-Americans who serve in our military with honor and stressed that the Committee investigation would respect them, and every other Muslim resident of our country. But he said, "we do no favor to all of our fellow Americans who are Muslim by ignoring real evidence that a small number of their community have become violent Islamist extremists and terrorists."
    Lieberman also said he had had discussions with Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Attorney General Eric Holder about the Administration's cooperation with the Committee investigation with regard to document and witness production. Both said they respected the Committee's authority to conduct an investigation as long as it did not interfere with the ongoing criminal investigation.
    "We are off to a good cooperative start," Lieberman said. "I am optimistic that we will work out a way for both investigations to proceed without compromising either."
    Collins added: "Our ongoing investigation will also seek answers to questions specific to the Fort Hood case. For example, how did our intelligence community and law enforcement agencies handle intercepted communications between Major Hasan and a radical cleric and known al Qaeda associate? Did they contact anyone in Major Hasan's chain of command to relay concerns? Did they seek to interview Major Hasan himself? When Major Hasan reportedly began to openly question the oath that he had taken to support and defend the Constitution of the United States, did anyone in his military chain of command intervene? When Major Hasan, in his presentation at Walter Reed in 2007, recommended that the Department of Defense allow "Muslim soldiers the option of being released as 'conscientious objectors' to increase troop morale and decrease adverse events," did his colleagues and superior officers view this statement as a red flag? "Were numerous warning signs ignored because the Army faces a shortage of psychiatrists and was concerned, as the Army Chief of Staff has subsequently put it, about a 'backlash against Muslim soldiers?' These are all questions that we will seek to answer."
    In addition to General Keane, witnesses were Frances Fragos Townsend, former Assistant to President Bush for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism; Mitchell D. Silber, Director of Intelligence Analysis at the New York City Police Department; Juan Carlos Zarate, Senior Advisor, Center for Strategic and International Studies and Former Deputy National Security Advisor for Combating Terrorism; and Brian Michael Jenkins, Senior Advisor at the RAND Corporation.
    Since 2006, the Committee has held 10 hearings and issued a report on the phenomenon of violent Islamist extremism and self radicalization in the U.S., and the role the internet plays in both.

    In this morning's gina & krista round-robin, you can find Wally's report on the hearing (he attended it).

    In the San Francisco Bay Area, Dennis Cuff (Contra Costa Times) reports that "BART will offer $50 free ride tickets to members of the armed services on leave from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. [. . .] To get the tickets, military members would need to appear at a BART ticket center and present their military identification and leave papers." And R. Norman Moody (Florida Today) reports on the training at Camp Blanding for deployments:

    The guard unit will leave in early January for Fort Hood, Texas, where they will train for several more weeks before deployment to Iraq and Kuwait in early February.
    They will take with them 1,000 vehicles and weapon systems to protect convoys and transportation routes between Iraq and Kuwait as the United States continues troop withdrawal and turns over security responsibilities to the Iraqi government.

    The following community sites updated last night:

    And Ruth's "New Jersey's important vote," Marcia's "Jayne Lyn Stahl strikes again," Trina's "Economy, abortion, mammograms," Ann's "Top 10 reasons Oprah's quitting," Kat's "House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on the Middle East and South Asia" and Isaiah's "Feinstein questions at the NSA hearings."

    The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.




















    thomas friedman is a great man






    oh boy it never ends