Saturday, October 08, 2011
The pretense of withdrawal
Immunity will have to be addressed or US troops won't be able to stay. It can be addressed via a memo of understanding between the White House and the prime minister of Iraq, it can be addressed via immunity being passed by the Parliament, it can be addressed by twisting the interpretations of several existing documents, it can be addressed by shoving all the US troops under the State Dept banner (if you've forgotten, the US State Dept will be handling 'training' as well), it can be addressed with a new agreement, it can be addressed by using NATO. And those are just some of the notions the White House is tossing around.
NATO, as noted in yesterday's snapshot, is one of many possibilities for keeping US troops in Iraq if (note the "if") Iraq can't provide immunity. Dan Zak (Washington Post) reports tonight, " A State Department official said Saturday that while Iraq is not likely to budge on its resistance to military immunity, there are other paths to continuing the U.S. training mission in the country." Iraqi MP Mahmoud Othman is quoted stating, "Americans misuse immunity. They've had it for eight years. They made a lot of violations . . . Sometimes they killed people, attacked people, captured people, and no one could tell them anything. Iraq doesn't want a repeat of that."
And while negotiations continue and other options are pursued, what else is going on?
Mary Beth Sheridan and Dan Zak (Washington Post) report, "The State Department is racing against an end-of-year deadline to take over Iraq operations from the U.S. military, throwing together buildings and marshaling contractors in its biggest overseas operation since the effort to rebuild Europe after World War II." As Jason Ditz (Antiwar.com) observes, "Though much of the narrative of the past several months has been about the US military not leaving Iraq after December, the US State Department is still operating under the assumption that they are, and as such are throwing together an operation they say will be the largest since the Marshall Plan to rebuild Europe after World War II."
Marissa Gallo (Baltimore Sun) reports, "Families and friends of Maryland Army National Guard soldiers gathered Saturday morning at the Edgewood Area of Aberdeen Proving Ground to honor and say goodbye to their husbands, wives, brothers, sisters and all of the important people in their lives before they are deployed to Iraq Sunday." And be sure and read further into the article or you might miss this, "When the troops return in a year or so, Adkins says the MNG will do its best to find jobs for the soldiers and help them readjust to the 'real world'." When the troops return in a year . . .
In today's violence, Reuters notes a Mosul bombing injured six people, a Mosol home invasion resulted in the death of 1 woman and a second Mosul home invasion resulted in an ex-police officer being injured.
Two peace makers spoke this week: Cindy Sheehan and Cynthia McKinney. Click here to listen to the dialogue from Cindy Sheehan's Soapbox program and click here to read the transcript:
CM: Not in a bad way, that’s right. But now and I have honestly I have believed in the United Nations but not any more.
CS: Right.
CM: Not any more. I saw what the United Nations was supposed to do. Actually my first involvement with what the UN was supposed to do was Rwanda. But prior to Rwanda there was East Timor. So I have seen the failings of the United Nations of course now we can list amongst the failings, we can list Haiti as an abject failure and it was the UN that brought in the cholera and no reparations have ever been paid Haitian people for that. The United Nations peacekeepers go around the world and with them go all the vices known to human kind. So not anymore, not anymore. The United Nations has become a tool from the aspect of justice. So apparently as I have traveled I’ve noticed there is a kind of apartheid around the world. Now that apartheid even extends into the global economy, administration of justice, culture such that there was a time that the United Nations I really believed that the United Nations was there to protect people, protect cultures, to protect. But not anymore I don’t believe it. So I think that as we look for new structures to promote peace, to promote our values the United Nations is one of those structures whose time has come and gone.
CS: You know Cynthia when the UN first passed the resolution of the no fly zone in Libya I sent out an e-mail to my supporters and I said, "you all know that a no fly zone is just code for we are going to begin bombing soon." And it was just a few days. As a matter of fact it was the anniversary of the initial invasion of Iraq in 2003 that the Obama administration starting bombing Libya and of course there was no congressional approval of that.
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
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chelsea j. carter
the washington post
dan zak
mary beth sheridan
antiwar.com
jason ditz
the baltimore sun
marissa gallo
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cindy sheehans soapbox
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A lot of lies, a little truth
Again, he can hide behind his collar all he wants. And he can pretend to be something noble and wonderful even though he can't leave the Green Zone because most Iraqis long ago learned that he was, in effect, a double agent, offering a 'religious' ear and then turning over information to the US and British officers of the occupation. We won't pretend that he is noble and wonderful. He is a War Hawk who whored for the war ahead of the war. And hides behind his collar.
He's used his spot in Baghdad to do covert actions and hid behind his collar.
He's a known liar.
We are not interested in Gutman's article due to the 'source.' And it's a shame because that topic is so under-reported on. But we don't treat Colin Powell as a trusted source because he's a known liar and we don't treat two-bit whores as trusted sources just because they hide behind a collar. Citing or depending upon an article built around the comments of a known liar is begging to be part of a disinformation campaign. (And, glancing at the article, it would appear the assignement collar's been given is to discredit WikiLeaks and inflame tensions against it.)
From Liar With A Collar, to Truth Teller. Steven Lee Myers (New York Times) files a Saturday profile on Peter Van Buren who is the author of the new book
What makes Mr. Van Buren's account so striking is its gleeful violation of the spirit -- and perhaps the letter -- of the written and unwritten code of America's diplomatic corps.
In anything but diplomatic language, he skewers the Army’s commanders and the Iraqis, the embassy, its staff, and even its ambassador at the time, Christopher R. Hill, though not by name. He takes sarcastic aim at the ambassador's Sisyphean effort to grow a lawn in the sprawling embassy compound beside the Tigris River.
"No matter what Iraq and nature wanted, the American Embassy spent whatever it took to have green grass in the desert," he writes. "Later full-grown palm trees were trucked in and planted to line the grassy square. We made things in Iraq look the way we wanted them to look, water shortages through the rest of the country be damned. The grass was the perfect allegory for the whole war."
Truth and lies battle out every day. Sometimes one is forced to speak truth. The editorial board of Pakistan's The Nation offers a blistering editorial against Barack that reads as though they feel they're responding to the White House:
Turning a blind eye to the reality on the ground in Afghanistan that almost every informed person is telling the world, he [Barack] claimed that his forces were closer than before to defeating Al-Qaeda and its network. His other view included: 'despite possessing the required might, the Americans are ending the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq in a responsible manner'; and 'the US has proven the point that it is not fighting against Islam anywhere in the world'. Hardly have heads of state taken stands that reek of such outlandish untruths! But then, with Obama insisting that killer Raymond Davis had diplomatic status, the international community would not, perhaps, be so much surprised at the utter falsehood of his remarks. The world would rather go along the reading of the situation by German General Harald Kujat, the man who planned the Bundeswehr's mission in Afghanistan and oversaw it: the mission has been a failure, and the Taliban will regain power within months of US withdrawal. That is the reality that is making the US uneasy and that Obama wants to hide.
Events appear to have forced The Nation to face reality. But, as many US reporters have demonstrated when it comes to Iraq violence, reality can be 'managed.' Today AP wanted you to know that Iraqi cities set to be turned over from the Iraqi military to the police are not being turned over due to violence but, please understand, it's decreasing violence.
Decreasing violence? Really. For the last two years, violence has increased in Iraq. How can you pretend otherwise? By managing reality.
By forever using 2006 and 2007, years of ethnic cleansing as the US military largely stood on the sidelines (from time to time, they helped with the ethnic cleansing, having been told this political enemy was actually a 'terrorist' and what not).
That is insane and if there were publications that gave a damn about the Iraq War, by this point they'd be insisting that people stop this bulls**t. 2007 is four years ago. 2006 is five years ago. Is Iraq violence increasing? Yes, after a slight drop in 2008 and 2009, it has increased. And it's past time that people stopped being full of s**t and started telling the truth.
There is no reason in the world to use 2006 and 2007 as a baseline. They're in the past. A past the press is happy to let go as evidenced by the cute little terms they give the ethnic cleansing and their refusal to ever get honest about what went down. (Equally true, US press in 2006 and 2007 was insisting things were okay in Iraq.)
Wally and Cedric updated this evening as did World Can't Wait, NPR and Antiwar.com:
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- THIS JUST IN! NO DENYING THE TRUTH!2 hours ago
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"Turley"
"THIS JUST IN! HOW LOW CAN HE GO?"
"Princess Barry gets more bad news"
Lastly Zed Books has a new slate of books and events. Click here for Zed on Facebook, here for Zed on Twitter and here for Zed on Blogspot.
The Global Minotaur
America, the True Origins of the Financial Crisis and the Future of the World Economy
Yanis Varoufakis
'Yanis is one of the best, brightest and most innovative economists on the planet' - Steve Keen, author of Debunking Economics
'In the most comprehensive guide to the contemporary economic crisis yet written, Yanis Varoufakis traces out the path from post-war US economic supremacy to the current predicament. This book's provocative thesis, written in lively and impassioned prose, is that which neither the US nor the EU nor any other nation can now restore robust global growth. Whether you agree or disagree, this book's lively and impassioned prose will engage you both heart and mind, and hold you in thrall to the last word. The Global Minotaur is a masterwork that registers for all time the challenge of our time.' - Prof. Gary Dymski, University of California, Riverside
Paperback ISBN: 9781780320144 £12.99
www.zedbooks.co.uk/paperback/the-global-minotaur
Debunking Economics - Revised and Expanded Edition
The Naked Emperor Dethroned?
Steve Keen
'Economics still awaits its Darwin. Keynes came close, but not close enough. Keen comes closer still. Economics, like biology used to be, remains mostly faith-based. No book poses a bigger threat to that faith than the second and expanded edition of Debunking Economics.' - Edward Fullbrook, Editor, Real World Economics Review
'It is notorious that only the most mediocre students have the stomach to stick with graduate economics degree. The assumptions become so narrow-minded and tunnel-visioned that reality-based minds drop out. But economics obviously is important too much so to be left to economists. Fortunately, Steve Keen is an empirical mathematician who views the economy logically and systematically. Having made a pioneering explanatory statistical model, he looked through the literature to review the history of economic thought and saw how little today's assumptions had to contribute to Reality Economics. So his book does two things. First, it explains some of the most wrong-headed logical paths that led today's 'free market' economics down its detour to rationalize the status quo. Second, it explains how to view the economy from a more realistic, cause-and-effect light.' - Michael Hudson, Distinguished Research Professor of Economics, University of Missouri
Paperback ISBN: 9781848139923 £18.99
www.zedbooks.co.uk/paperback/debunking-economics-revised-and-expanded-edition
Confronting Managerialism
How the Business Elite and Their Schools Threw Our Lives Out of Balance
Sven Harten
'Everyone should read this book to see what is so wrong with finance capitalism U.S.-style. The book's expose of bad "management philosophy from hell" carries one forward like an adventure story as it describes the academic and global diplomacy whose infighting has spread it. Most important is the authors' conclusion that it doesn't have to be this way!' - Michael Hudson, author of Super Imperialism
Paperback ISBN: 9781780320717 £12.99
www.zedbooks.co.uk/paperback/confronting-managerialism
Catastrophe: What Went Wrong in Zimbabwe?
Richard Bourne
'In the plethora of one-sided and ill-informed works on Zimbabwe, Richard Bourne's new book stands out as deeply-thought, highly-detailed, judicious and balanced. Bourne's capacity to weigh evidence and to arrive at sober and sobering judgements is superb. There will not be a better account of Zimbabwe for some time to come.' - Professor Stephen Chan, author of Robert Mugabe: A Life of Power and Violence
'Richard Bourne has written a clear, well-linked history of Zimbabwe from its earliest days as a territory invaded and seized by whites to its recent history under the dictatorship of Robert Mugabe. Perceptive and fair, Bourne offers no quick solutions or easy receiver plans but remains optimistic that Zimbabweans themselves will reconcile and rebuild.' - Richard Dowden, author of Africa: Altered States, Ordinary Miracles
Paperback ISBN: 9781848135215 £14.99
www.zedbooks.co.uk/book/paperback/2011/catastrophe-what-went-wrong-zimbabwe
Al-Qaeda
From Global Network to Local Franchise
Christina Hellmich
'If you think you know anything at all about al-Qaeda or simply want an accessible introduction to the subject, this book is a must-read. For the novice and expert alike, Al-Qaeda by Christina Hellmich is currently the best book in the very large field of al-Qaeda studies. An eloquent and incisive deconstruction of the mythology surrounding al-Qaeda and a trenchant critique of the contradictions at the heart of Western security policy, Christina Hellmich delivers an intelligent and balanced assessment of perhaps the most misunderstood group in the world.' - Richard Jackson, Aberystwyth University, UK
'A sensible, sharp, reasoned, comprehensive overview of analysis of modern Islamic militancy and discussion of the nature of the phenomenon of al-Qaeda.' - Jason Burke, author of al-Qaeda: The True Story of Radical Islam
Paperback ISBN: 9781848139084 £12.99
www.zedbooks.co.uk/paperback/al-qaeda
Who's Afraid of China?
The Challenge of Chinese Soft Power
Michael Barr
'One need not agree with every aspect of Michael Barr's 'Whose Afraid of China' to benefit from his exploration of China's use of 'soft power' and its attempt to exploit the global information space. China's challenge in this dimension, its attempt to mis-position the West, to diminish Western values and appeal, reflect a maturing 'battle of ideas' about governance. Michael Barr offers interesting perspective on these dynamic questions. A good read for anyone concerned about governance, values and the increasingly informational dimension in which China increasingly challenges the West.' - Dr Stefan Halper, University of Cambridge
''Who's Afraid of China?' by Michael Barr provides a very solid answer to the puzzle of why there is international fear of China's rise. Both those advocating and opposing the theory of Chinese threat will understand why neither of their arguments holds water after reading this book. It is especially worth reading for those who plan to shape a friendly environment for China's rise.' - Professor Yan Xuetong, Tsinghua University, Beijing.
Paperback ISBN: 9781848135901 £16.99
www.zedbooks.co.uk/paperback/whos-afraid-of-china
Congo Masquerade
The Political Culture of Aid Inefficiency and Reform Failure
Theodore Trefon
'The Trefon volume is indispensable reading for all those interested in post-conflict state-building. He provides a devastating critique of how the large international investment in this project in DR Congo has fallen far short, through the failings both of the external parties and the Congolese political elite.' - Professor Crawford Young, University of Wisconsin
'Trefon's sweeping survey of reconstruction efforts in Congo, from bridge repairs to security sector reform, delivers a stinging indictment of both the Congolese government and its international partners, leaving no one unscathed. Sure to create controversy, this book makes for a compelling read and calls for an understanding of Congo and the Congolese on their own terms.' - Professor Pierre Englebert, Pomona College
Paperback ISBN: 9781848138360 £12.99
www.zedbooks.co.uk/book/paperback/2011/congo-masquerade
The New Maids
Transnational Women and the Care Economy
Helma Lutz
'Through compelling ethnographic portraits and astute theory, The New Maids takes us beyond narratives of exploitation or empowerment to capture mutual dependences, transnational motherhood, and intimate labor under shifting gender, migration, and welfare regimes. It moves the scholarship on paid domestic work under globalization to new heights!' - Eileen Boris, Hull Professor and Chair, Department of Feminist Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara
'With insight and conviction, Helma Lutz takes us inside the world of the foreign domestic work. She shares poignant narratives that reveal the paradoxical lives of today's maids as one of simultaneous professionalism and personalism at work, distance and proximity in the family, and the unrecognized dependency on their labor by the state. This is an important book that should be read by policy makers and scholars alike.' - Rhacel Salazar Parreñas, Professor of Sociology, University of Southern California
Paperback ISBN: 9781848132887 £18.99
www.zedbooks.co.uk/book/paperback/2011/new-maids
Policing Sexuality
Sex, Society, and the State
Julian C. H. Lee
'Policing the body politic always entails sequestering the body sexual; the questions are only how and why, exactly where and when. This trans-regional examination of the different, and always self-contradictory, modalities of sexual state control and self-control is a treasure chest. Authors from Michel Foucault to Judith Butler would pawn one of their books to read this one: a combination of socio-cultural anatomies with humanist thinking. The anthropological wealth and comparative sociological imagination of this painstaking, yet amazingly easy-to-read book are scholarship at its best: accessible but never simplifying, liberating but never patronizing.' - Gerd Baumann, University of Amsterdam
Paperback ISBN: 9781848138971 £16.99
www.zedbooks.co.uk/book/paperback/2011/policing-sexuality
Women, Violence and Tradition
Taking FGM and other practices to a secular state
Edited by Tamsin Bradley
'Women, Violence and Tradition takes a unique approach to generating its content. It has involved women who are students and/or activists in collecting and writing up the stories of BME women who have been affected by the cultural traditions and practices that are the focus of the book - from FGM to dowry within Hindu communities. Many of the contributors to this volume also have first-hand experience of the traditions and practices that they are writing about and this lends a sense of authority and insight to their writing that is often absent in purely academic studies. The volume aims to highlight how women uphold, challenge and defend aspects of these traditions and practices, which often result in violence, in the context of the "secular" British state. It draws our attention the ways in which they are often underpinned by particular understandings of religion and culture that can make it difficult to challenge and negotiate them. The chapters are engaging and personal, and result in a volume that will appeal to the general public as well as an academic audience.' - Dr Emma Tomalin, University of Leeds
Paperback ISBN: 9781848139589 £19.99
www.zedbooks.co.uk/paperback/women-violence-and-tradition
Common Ground
The Sharing of Land and Landscapes for Sustainability
Mark Everard
'Common Ground is a must-read for anyone concerned about the sustainability of the landscapes that support us. The book is based on the many societal benefits provided by ecosystems, exploring shifting perceptions of people's rights, priorities for land management and economic flows across landscapes, and suggesting a range of pragmatic implications for achieving sustainable 'living landscapes'. Insightful, engaging and extremely well researched, Common Ground is an indispensible guide for academics, policy-makers and the concerned public.' - Professor Jim Longhurst, Assistant Vice Chancellor, University of the West of England
Paperback ISBN: 9781848139626 £16.99
www.zedbooks.co.uk/book/paperback/2011/common-ground
Elections and the Media in Post-Conflict Africa
Votes and Voices for Peace?
Marie-Soleil Frère
'There is simply no equivalent volume and no other author with a similar in-depth knowledge of the minutiae of Africa?s media landscape. Frère provides the reader with a broad and clear exposé, in which she shines an uncompromising light on the theory and practice of the role of the media in democratic and post-conflict transitions. Building on years of participatory fieldwork in six Central African countries, she highlights with compassion the systemic consequences of the physical vulnerability and material precariousness of African journalists. A real eye-opener!' - Pierre Englebert, Pomona College
Paperback ISBN: 9781780320182 £21.99
www.zedbooks.co.uk/paperback/elections-and-the-media-in-post-conflict-africa
UPCOMING EVENTS
Book Launch for
Africa's Odious Debt
How Foreign Loans and Capital Flight Bled a Continent
Léonce Ndikumana and James K. Boyce
10 October 2011 7-9 p.m.
Khalili Lecture Theatre
The School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS)
Thornhaugh Street, London WC1H 0XG
Speakers: James Boyce and Leonce Ndikumana
Respondent: John Christensen (Director, International Secretariat, Tax Justice Network)
Chair: Professor John Weeks (SOAS)
For more information see here
For more information on the book see here
Book Launch for
Congo Masquerade
The Political Culture of Aid Inefficiency and Reform Failure
Theodore Trefon
17th October 2011 7-9pm
Khalili Lecture Theatre
The School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS)
Thornhaugh Street, London WC1H 0XG
Speakers: Dr. Theodore Trefon (Author), Ben Shepherd (Associate fellow, Africa programme, Chatham House) and Christian Mukosa (Amnesty International).
For more information see here
For more information on the book see here
The New Maids
Transnational Women and the Care Economy
Helma Lutz
Thursday 20 October, 6.30pm, £2 (refreshments inc)
Bookmarks Bookshop,
1 Bloomsbury Street, London, WC1B 3QE
Please contact us to reserve a place:
020 7637 1848 or email: events@bookmarks.uk.com
For more information on the event see here
For more information on the book see here
The Crises of Multiculturalism
Racism in a Neoliberal Age
Alana Lentin and Gavan Titley
Wednesday 26th October, 6.30pm, £2 (refreshments inc)
Bookmarks Bookshop,
1 Bloomsbury Street, London, WC1B 3QE
Please contact us for more information about the event or to reserve a place:
020 7637 1848 or email: events@bookmarks.uk.com
For more information on the book see here
Zed Books AUTUMN SALE
50% Discounts on all stock
Get a bargain direct from the publisher
Just come along to our office on Wednesday October 19th
for unbelievable bargains on ALL ZED STOCK!
FREE DRINKS AND SNACKS FOR ALL VISITORS!
We apologise that this sale is only available direct from the Zed Office and is not available to anyone unable to attend on the day in person.
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
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the nation
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Friday, October 07, 2011
Iraq snapshot
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True confessions from NYT
The paper lied. They were far from the only outlet to do so. But those that lied do share responsibility for the continuation of the illegal war. When you tell people -- over and over, it was never one-day coverage -- in article after article, that the Iraq War ends at the end of 2011, that it has to and all US troops have to leave at the end of 2011, you don't just mislead, you give many a reason to focus on other things, to (wrongly) believe that this issue is taken care of and they can focus on something else.
The media pimped that lie hard. They share responsibility. Share. They are not solely responsible. The Cult of St. Barack also shares responsibility. They were beyond desperate to believe the lie, so much so that they would take the Bush administration's Status Of Forces Agreement and treat that as proof not just that the illegal war would end but that Barack was better than Bush, they would turn a Bush agreement into a Barack treaty. People who are that eager to self-deceive are the reason the media can't be the sole culprit but it was an active accomplice.
Maybe Arango and Schmidt's article should have been called "True Confessions"? They certainly supply a lot of information the press has been concealing.
All summer, all year, we've had to take the crap for telling the truth that Barack was pushing for US troops to stay in Iraq while crackpots no longer with the CIA launched one disinformation that Barack didn't want that, didn't know a thing about it, that it was these out of control military officers and, Barack, please, please, please speak clearly on this issue so that your military will know you are opposed to this -- On and on that garbage went. So it is refreshing to see Arango and company report (finally): "And this June, Mr. Obama spoke by telephone with the Iraqi prime minister, Nuri Kamal al-Maliki, and indicated he was willing to leave nearly 10,000 troops, according to a Western diplomat and an Iraqi official who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the discussions had been private."
I am not a Barack supporter. So it's interesting that we've always recognized his agency and power here while the Cult of St. Barack has repeatedly portrayed him as a victim, naive, apparently stupid to what the people he appointed are doing, unaware of what was going on around him.
I hope the Cult of St. Barack is aware that their portrayal of him the last years has contributed to the negative image he now holds (and that it's too late to change it now) with the public at large. You can only whine for so long that he's a victim, that he's Patty Hearst, that he doesn't want to do ___ but people won't listen to him, before that all contributes to his being seen as inept. And underlying the negative polling of Barack currently is that image that the Cult of St. Barack created. (Don't expect LieFace Melissa Harris Perry to ever tell that at The Nation. This is the cheap liar who went to work for the Obama campaign in 2007 but 'forgot' to disclose that in January 2008 on Democracy Now! or in March 2008 on The Charlie Rose Show.)
Had the paper bothered to offer reality in 2008 or 2009, I'd be raving over the article today. Instead, it plays a lot like someone broke the window and Arango and Schmidt got stuck taking the blame for everyone when they came to ask for their baseball back.
Al Mada reports that Ayad Allawi, leader of Iraqiya which came in first in the March 2010 elections, announced yesterday that he was no longer going to seek to head the security council. The security council? Never created. The Erbil Agreement, which allowed Nouri al-Maliki to remain as prime minister, was supposed to, among other things, create an independent security council and Allawi was supposed to head it. After Nouri got what he wanted out of the agreement, he went back on his word and trashed the agreement. The Kurds and Iraqiya and the National Alliance have been calling for a return to the Erbil Agreement.
In his statements yesterday, Allawi decried the policies of the government currently and noted the "rampant corruption" taking place. He said there is no partnership nationally and noted the failure to implement the Erbil Agreement. As mixed up and messed up as he sees the national scene currently, he also stated that Iraq's relations with other countries and within the region was being harmed by the current approach of the current government (Nouri).
As Sheikh (Dar Addustour) notes of the Tuesday meet up at President Jalal Talabani's home, that Iraqis were expecting the governmental issues to be discussed but instead the meeting became solely about US troops remaining in Iraq. He writes of failed opportunities and of a pattern of sewing dissatisfaction and mistrust.
As Political Stalemate II continues, so does the violence. Aswat al-Iraq reports a Baghdad bombing has claimed 5 lives and left twenty injured, a Mosul bombing claimed the life of 1 woman and left another person injured, and a police officer was shot dead in Baghad.
The following community sites -- plus Antiwar.com -- updated last night:
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- Get a damn life, Terry O'Neill11 hours ago
- Just Words11 hours ago
- 4 men, 1 woman11 hours ago
- Dems try to take over11 hours ago
- Witches11 hours ago
- Solyndra, BlackBerry, press conference11 hours ago
- The whining tattle-tale11 hours ago
- Tablets, democracy11 hours ago
- THIS JUST IN! HOW LOW CAN HE GO?11 hours ago
- Princess Barry gets more bad news11 hours ago
Among the speakers will be Cong. Charles Rangel; New York City Public Advocate Bill DiBlasiol; City Council member Gale Brewer; Rev. Earl Kooperkamp, Rector of St. Mary's Episcopal Church; legendary Broadway actress Vinie Burrows; peace leader Dave McReynolds, renowned civil liberties attorney Norman Siegel, and many more. Entertainment will be provided by the Raging Grannies.
"This is not only America's longest war, it's the first not to be funded, but put on a credit card costing us billions," said Jerry Moss, Vice President of Peace Action Manhattan. "We desperately need that money here at home for jobs, schools, scientific research, health care, repair of infrastructure, and so on."
Sponsors are Military Families Speak Out, the War Resisters League, the Granny Peace Brigade, Afghanistan Veterans Against the War, Code Pink, Peace Action Manhattan, Grandmothers Against the War, Westchester Concerned Families, the Gray Panthers, Veterans for Peace, West Side Campaign Against Hunger, Citizen Soldier, and others.
"There are almost 7,000 dead, hundreds of thousands who lost a limb or developed
long- term medical and mental issues. We must call for an end to a war causing
so much destruction, economic disaster and which has no clear mission or goals achieved," stated Lionelle Hamanaka, a leader of Military Families Speak Out.
DATE: Oct. 7, 2011
TIME: 12 noon to 2 p.m. -- Rep. Rangel scheduled to speak 1 p.m.
LOCATION: SE corner of 42nd St. at 7th Ave
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
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joan wile
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