Saturday, February 12, 2011
Slammed by a bombing, secret talks to extend SOFA
Yes, the ethnic cleansing of 2006 and 2007. Today, Al Rafidayn reports, a mass grave was discovered in Baquba wih 153 corpses -- thought to be part of the 2006 and 2007 blood letting. Supposedly, the police got a confession from someone they had arrested two weeks ago (this is according to Maj Gen Abdul Hussein al-Shammari) and that allowed them to find the bodies. Australia's ABC reminds "it is unclear who is responsible for the deaths."
Let's move over to Iraqi politics. Ayad Allawi is playing hardball. Recap: the March 2010 elections found Iraqiya -- a political slate headed by Allawi -- garnering the most votes (this was even after Nouri was able to 'massage' tallies in some areas). For nine months, Nouri pulled one stunt after another and finally won the blessing of the Kurds to become prime minister-designate. Unable to actually meet the requirements to move to prime minister, he was still dependent upon the Kurds (who follow US orders because they still believe they're going to get Kirkuk any day now) to go along with the pretense that he'd named a full Cabinet. Iraqiya was supposed to see members whom Nouri smeared to prevent them from running for office get their names cleared and a National Council -- on security issues -- was supposed to be created with Allawi being in charge. No National Council has been created in the months since the agreement was announced (November). Dar Addustour reports Allawi's now threatening to bail on the agreement and also making noises about taking down with him some of the concessions the Kurds wanted. Al Rafidyan reports that MP Talal al-Zobaie (of the National Alliance) has dismissed Allawi's remarks as "threats" and insists that Allawi should be focusing on the issue of services to the people. Ayas Hossam Acommok (Al Mada) reports that Said Khoshnaw (Kurdish Alliance member and MP) is denying reports about where his loyalties lie and maintaining that Article 140 (Kirkuk's status) will be implemented and that pressure on the US government will ensure that it is. Sounds like someone took Joe Biden's promises seriously. The question now is, did the White House take Biden seriously?
White House? Al Mada notes the secret talks taking place to extend the Status Of Forces Agreement and cites Qassim Mohammed Jalal as the source for the extension meetings currently taking place between Nouri's reps and the US inside the Green Zone. Qassam Mohammed Jalal is part of the National Coalition. He is a member of Parliament's Commission on Security and Defense. How long before the US media gets around to noting the meetings to extend the SOFA? Maybe January 2012?
Something else you most likely won't find in the US media is that today is the Iraq Communist Party's Martyr's Day. And on his day, Al Mada reports, the Party has issued a strong critique of the current government saying that malicious diseases entered the process and partisanship trumped Iraq's needs which is "the mid-wife" for further pain for the people of Iraq which will include poor services, a deteriorating standard of living and more government corruption.
Tomorrow on Cindy Sheehan's Soapbox (radio program) she interviews Cindy Corrie (Rachel Corrie's mother). It streams at 2:00 pm PST and then is archived. We'll close with this from "A Debate on Violence: Ted Rall and David Swanson" (War Is A Crime):
Ted Rall's new book "The Anti-American Manifesto" advocates for violent revolution, even if we have to join with rightwingers and racists to do it, and even if we have no control over the outcome which could easily be something worse than what we've got. We have a moral duty, Rall argues, to kill some people.
Now, I much prefer a debate over what radical steps to take to a debate over whether it's really appropriate for President Obama to whine about people's lack of enthusiasm for voting. Should we try to pep people up for him or gently nudge him to appoint a new chief of staff who's not a vicious warmongering corporatist? Decisions. Decisions.
Rall's book is packed with great analysis of our current state and appropriate moral outrage. I highly recommend it for the clear-eyed survey of the tides in this giant pot of slowly boiling water where we float and kick about like frogs. To an Obama proposal to create 17,000 jobs, Rall replies:
"The U.S. economy needs to add one hundred thousand new jobs a month to keep up with population growth and keep the unemployment rate even. At this writing, in March 2010, it would require four hundred thousand new jobs each month for three years to get back to December 2007.
"Seventeen thousand jobs? Was Obama still using drugs?"
I recommend Rall's manifesto as a call to action. The only question is what action?
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
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Xenophobia and EZ coverage
The above is from Liz Sly's "Egyptian revolution sparks protest movement in democratic Iraq" (Washington Post) and it's a problem. It's a cute little narrative, it's just incorrect. The Egyptian people revolted against their own corrupt government. That didn't happen because of the US but this need to be 'we' -- but from a safe distance, of course -- had so many crediting this or that or whatever. Egyptians didn't need WikiLeaks to inform them that they had a corrupt government. They were not unintelligent idiots whom WikiLeaks finally 'educated.' That's an offensive viewpoint that robs them of not only their agency but also their intelligence. It works as a narrative because the news media in the US loves to stroke us and make us the center of the damn world, where nothing can ever happen without our input, assistance and help.
What happened in Egypt had been building for years and is the credit and/or blame -- and will be the credit and/or blame -- of the Egyptian people. Should the whole thing turn into a nightmare tomorrow (a possibility), watch the same outlets rush to remove the US from the narrative. But while it appears successful, we're not supposed to notice that while failure is a bastard, success has many fathers. Or at least men wanting to step claim credit for the work of others.
The circus could have gone and we would have ignored it as we have. But now they want to drag Iraq in?
Stop your damn lying ass. I'm not in the damn mood.
Protest after protest in Iraq -- NOT COVERED BY THE U.S. OUTLETS WHICH COULDN'T BE BOTHERED WITH IRAQ -- THE WASHINGTON POST, FOR EXAMPLE, HAS IGNORED IRAQ ALL DAMN WEEK -- has had spokespeople who have specifically and repeatedly stated that they were not copying Egypt. Now southern Iraq has had protests this month and last, southern Iraq has also had protests last year. The Iraqi people are not the Egyptian people. They live under a different system (an occupation, in fact) and the reason we need to reject the nonsense the Washington Post has run is not just because it's xenophobic and attempts to put the US in the primary position when all the US did was grab some fold out chairs and watch the action from the cheap seats. [Before anyone at WP calls me -- and I know at least one will -- when you make a claim that Iraqis have repeatedly denied, that's xenophobia. When they are speaking of their own motivations and you chose to ignore them and impose your own narrative upon them, that's xenophobia.] It's also because Iraqis don't need to be insulted. And it's a short step from falsely claiming that they're copying Egypt to arriving at "Witness: Unlike Iraq, Egyptians do regime change their way."
That offensive crap comes from Reuters and their correspondent Samia Nakhoul. Egyptians do it their way, unlike Iraqis?
Iraqi didn't get to "do" regime change, it was forced on them, you stupid, stupid idiot. Lefty 'leaders' are still whining about Bill Keller's report on Little Julie Assange and that's so typical of the f**k backwards idiots that make up the 'leadership' of the left. Little Julie, one man, becomes the thing to defend. Watch and wait for anyone to defend Iraqis. A whole group of people are being slandered -- people already under physical attack -- but don't expect our 'brave' 'leaders' to step forward with the two weeks of whining they have offered for Little Julie.
When we self-stroke and make ourselves the center of the world, we don't just inject ourselves into a story and demand the close ups (even though we're nothing but bit players), we also push the real participants out of camera range.
And because a narrative always has to be embellished, it's only a matter of time before "How Great We Are" (chest thumping cheers of "USA! USA!") becomes "And Look At How Lousy They Are." Which is the short path from the Washington Post article over to the Reuters one.
Good heavens, the Iraqi people live under occupation. Their country has been destroyed. It has been polluted with weapons that most people won't even take the time to imagine. The youthful population will suffer massive birth defects for many years to come. Currently, the puppet government installed by the US still cannot deliver basic services -- services they had before 2003. Nouri's daughters live very, very well. And outside of Iraq.
Iraq's daughters and sons starve and beg on the streets. The widows of Iraq make do however they can.
So Reuters can go f**k itself before it again attempts to mount a high horse about how wonderful Egyptians are and how lazy and unsuccessful the Iraqis are.
Iraqis have yet, all these years after the war began, been able to pick their own government. If they had, it wouldn't be Nouri now. They made that clear in their voting.
The only real lesson regarding Iraq that Egypt has demonstrated is that when the US media can pull out the lawn chairs and root from the sidelines, when they can harken back to the old days of the gladiator stadiums and have no 'skin in the game' themselves, they can and will obsess over easy stories.
PEW's study that we noted this week? Iraq never got that attention. In three weeks, Egypt was the story. Iraq never got that attention.
Now the PEW study only goes back to 2007. You can argue that Iraq got that kind of attention the first month of the war and you can say it went on until Bully Boy Bush stood under the "MISSION ACCOMPLISHED" banner.
But you need to grasp that the Iraq War is still ongoing and that it never received that kind of attention. The PEW study found the closest was in 2007 when the surge was being sold. But that was US coverage of US events. That was Congressional testimony padding out the so-called Iraq coverage.
The US government is responsible for the destruction of Iraq. I guess it is a whole hell of a lot easier for American media (including American bloggers) to obsess over Egypt and ignore Iraq. Egypt allows them to self-stroke and claim credit that has not been earned. Iraq would force them to examine the consequences of their government's actions and take accountability.
The following community sites updated last night:
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The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
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Friday, February 11, 2011
Iraq snapshot
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Continued protests in the streets of Iraq
In other news, Al Mada reports the Health and Environment Committee in the Maysan Province is warning of an impending environmental disaster as a result of the continued influx of contaminated water from Iran. The salt in the water, is threatening farming and and animals, the committee learned on a visit to Amara. Still on water news, Water World reports:
On Thursday, 10 February 2011, Swiss President Micheline Calmy-Rey presented the report "The Blue Peace: Rethinking Middle East Water" to the Swiss Press Club in Geneva. Supported by Switzerland and by the Swedish government, the report compiles a list of 10 recommendations whose objective is to contribute to building peace and to reducing the conflicts in the Middle East thanks to a sustainable trans-border management of water in the region.
On Thursday, 10 February 2011, the "Blue Peace" report was officially presented by Swiss President Micheline Calmy-Rey. The document assesses the principal challenges linked to the trans-border management of resources. At present a factor of division and tension, water harbours the potential of becoming an instrument of peace and cooperation. This emerges as the report's central thesis. Subsequently, it compiles a list of ten recommendations, calculated in the short, medium, and long terms, which are aimed to lead to pragmatic solutions.
Water resources in the Middle East are subject to an unprecedented pressure which is threatening the populations of entire regions along with their economic activities. Population growth, migration, urbanization, and climate change are all exerting an enormous impact on these resources. In fact, over the last 50 years, the flow rate of numerous rivers in turkey, Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, and Jordan has plunged by 50 to 90 percent. And yet at the same time, the sustainable management of trans-border water resources is vital to provide for the requirements of agriculture, the need for clean drinking water, and for socio-economic development in general. It is key to avoiding human tragedy and to fostering the promotion of peace.
AFP also notes the joint Swiss and Swedish report adds, "Downstream territories such as Israel, Jordan and Palestinian territories were in the worst position with mounting clean water deficits of up to 500-700 million cubic metres each. The report also argued that technical solutions such as desalination or wastewater recycling in Israel would ultimately have limited scope."
In other news, Al Rafidayn reports that Behouz Aziz Older, a journalist in northen Iraq, is said to have taken his own life after being discovered hanged in a cemetary. His funeral services were yesterday.
TV notes. Washington Week begins airing on many PBS stations tonight (and throughout the weekend, check local listings) and joining Gwen are Dan Balz (Los Angeles Times), Helene Cooper (New York Times), Yochi Dreazen (National Journal) and John Harwood (New York Times). Gwen's latest column is "Sending Signals." Meanwhile Bonnie Erbe will sit down with Gretchen Hamel, Avis Jones-DeWeever, Kim Gandy and Star Parker to discuss the week's events on PBS' To The Contrary. Check local listings, on many stations, it begins airing tonight.
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
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Children taken into custody, homelessness (vet issues)
In other veterans news, William M. Welch (USA Today) reports that another study has found veterans are at greater risk of becoming homeless and that, in 2009, "136,334 veterans spent at least one night in a homeless shelter -- a count that did not include homeless veterans living on the streets." Rhonda Pence (Press TV, link has text and video)adds, "The urgency of the problem is growing as more men and women return from serving in Iraq and Afghanistan. More younger veterans aged 18 to 30 are spending time in shelters."
(Washington, D.C.) – Today, Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee Chairman, Senator Patty Murray, released the following statement on the joint report from the Departments of Veterans Affairs and Housing and Urban Development's on veterans homelessness which was released today.
"I commend the Obama Administration for taking real steps to shine a light on a problem that has for too long been ignored. For too long homeless veterans have been forgotten heroes. But this report provides an important foundation to better understand who these veterans are, the nature of the problems they face, and how to develop solutions to address their needs. This is a critical piece of the Obama Administration's laudable effort to prevent and end homelessness among veterans.
"What this report shows is a stark and finally more accurate picture of this serious issue. It shows that the disabilities and mental health challenges facing many of our nation's veterans put many of them, particularly those living in poverty, at greater risk of homelessness. It also shows that current economic conditions and the influx of young veterans are putting many more of our veterans at risk of homelessness."
"What this report calls on all of us to do is clear - more. We need to build on the work we have begun. With the HUD-VASH program that I restarted in 2008 we have been able to provide vouchers and supportive services for those who have sacrificed for our nation but are now homeless. We need to continue this program that has proven its worth.
"But we also need to do more to prevent veteran homelessness before it starts. That means prevention programs like the pilot program I worked with my colleagues to create near some of our nation's military installations. Prevention also includes focusing on getting our veterans into stable employment. We need to help veterans translate the skills and expertise they learned on the battlefield into the skills needed in today's working world.
"We also need the Administration to continue to come together as they have with this report. If we are going to bring veterans off the streets and into steady housing and employment we need VA, HUD, and the Department of Labor to continue working together. I look forward to working with all of these agencies, as well as the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness to put forth innovative and effective solutions to get our veterans into safe, secure, and stable housing."
As Chairman of the Senate Housing Appropriations Committee and the Veterans' Affairs Committee, Senator Murray has initiated and passed into law critical help for homeless veterans including the Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing (HUD-VASH) program which provides housing vouchers and supportive services for homeless veterans and the Veterans Homelessness Prevention Demonstration (VHPD) program which provides housing, health and other supportive services at areas adjacent to military installations to help prevent homelessness. Both programs were cited by today's report as critical sources of help for homeless veterans.
Today's report shows that female veterans are twice as likely to be represented in the homeless population as they are to be the U.S. adult female population. Last Congress, Public Law 111-275, Veterans' Benefits Act of 2010, included provisions derived from legislation introduced by Chairman Murray which provides new support for homeless women veterans reintegrating into the workforce.
Chairman Murray has also introduced veterans jobs legislation that aims to reduce a rising unemployment rate among returning veterans.
Yesterday Oxfam published the report "Whose Aid Is It Anyway?" and AFP notes, "The non-profit group Oxfam said on Thursday that major powers were concentrating too much aid on countries for political and military reasons and were overlooking other severe crises. The aid organisation said billions of dollars had been used for "unsustainable, expensive and sometimes dangerous aid projects" supporting short-term foreign policy and security objectives. Oxfam particularly highlighted tens of billions of dollars spent in Iraq and Afghanistan over the past decade."
The following community sites -- plus Antiwar.com, Military Families Speak Out and Jane Fonda -- updated last night:
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And we'll close with this from "Rendition: America's Torturers for Hire in Egypt" (Revolution via World Can't Wait):
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