Saturday, October 22, 2011
Nouri says negotiations continue, Moqtada wants an emergeny session of Parliament
Guy Raz: Jim, let's move to Iraq. The president announced a full US withdrawal by the end of the year. His take is that this is a fulfillment of a campaign promise but there's a bit of spin there, isn't there?
James Fallows: Oh sure. It's not at all the way he expected to fulfill the promise. The reason there's going to be this complete -- or near complete withdrawal-- of US troops by the end of this year is not so much the commitment of the US government to wind things down as the view on the Iraqi side that they are not willing to keep US forces in their country any longer than the end of this year and the reason for that of course is the disagreement about whether US uniformed troops and also contractors would be subject to Iraqi law for things that went wrong while they were serving in that country.
Near complete withdrawal. It takes but a moment to include those words. But with a press that, as Rebecca rightly points out, confuses itself for a public relations agency, those realities get tossed aside.
Negotiations to continue the US military presence in Iraq did not end. I thought it might take a few days for the facts noted in the snapshot yesterday to be evident. Didn't take that long at all. Wasn't the case of the SOFA where we spent almost three years repeatedly (and, for the record, rightly) explaining what it actually meant as opposed to the lies and spin so many insisted upon pimping.
Negotiations aren't over. Waleed Ibrahim (Reuters) reports that Nouri spoke today about how excited he was that "all" US troops would be leaving Iraq and how US "trainers" are needed by Iraq and that discussions will continue on that. Like the White House, Nouri's always drawn a false line between "trainers" and soldiers. So Nouri expects a "full" withdrawal of US soldiers and he's also expecting to be able to include US "trainers" after the end of 2011.
If you're a stupid or a liar, that is indeed a withdrawal. If you're even semi-honest, no, it's not.
Tim Arango, in a moment of kindness, I'm sure, made a perfect idiot out of himself with his Tweet yesterday (see yesterday's snapshot). Negotiations did not end last Saturday -- that is what AP reported last Saturday, check the article. Negotiations continued this week and, today, Nouri al-Maliki publicly acknowledged that negotiations still continue.
In other words, Tim Arango, the AP didn't have a scoop. They were misled. News is what happens, news is not predictions. I know reporters love to glorify themselves; however, they are not prophets and would be wise to stick with what happened as opposed to entering the land of fantasy and attempting to pass that off as real events.
I am not and have not attacked or negatively criticized Lara Jakes or Rebecca Santana of the AP. They went with what their sources told them. They accurately described that in their report; however, what they were told was not, in fact, accurate. And your first clue was the fact that no announcement took place on Monday. Or Tuesday. And you should pay attention to what Barack said Friday and what Nouri said today.
Al Sabaah quotes him stating that it's "natural" to have US trainers in Iraq. How will the number be determined? He says by the weapons purchasing contracts Iraq signs. Dar Addustour reports that Nouri claims he and Barack did not discuss the issue of the US Embassy "and immunity" on their tele-conference (it's Nouri, meaning they may have or they may not have) but tha the US embassy will be similar to other embassies in Iraq. Yeah, right. Where's a flying shoe tossed in Nouri's direction when you need it? While declaring the Status Of Forces Agreement dead, he noted that the Strategic Framework remains alive and "open" and that it can be altered and modified. Where's the US coverage of that? Guess they don't want to rain on Funny Girl Barack's parade.
The article quotes Moqtada al-Sadr declaring that he has learned the US Embassy in Baghdad plans to increase its employee numbers from 5,000 to 15,000. And Al Mada reports Moqtada called Saturday for the Parliament to hold an emergency session to address withdrawal and what's taking place (he doesn't appear to believe that is withdrawal).
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The Turkish assault on northern Iraq continues
It was an aside, a point made in passing, but one that Martha reports resonated in a number of Friday e-mails to the private and public e-mail accounts. Martha notes that four of you pointed out that even the usual nuclear disarmament coverage in The Nation magazine has disappeared. That's because you can't bore the world with gas baggery on the 2012 election as well as provide non-stop excuses for Barack and still cover what's actually needed. It should go down in contemporary history that when the magazine thought it had someone responsive and sympathetic to nuclear disarmament, instead of pressing forward on this issue they go on and on about when a Republican's in the White House, instead of leading with it and really applying pressure, they shrank away from it.
When he periodically runs for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination, Dennis Kucinich makes a Department of Peace one of his campaign planks and some outlets ignore that and some ridicule it but few weigh it. That wasn't Dennis' invention (nor has he ever claimed it was). In this country a cabinet for peace is first proposed in 1793 by Benjamin Banneker. In a sketch at PBS' Africans in America, they note many things but not Banneker's call for a Secretary of Peace in 1793. Their sketch includes the following:
Benjamin Banneker -- author, scientist, mathematician, farmer, astronomer, publisher and urban planner -- was descended from enslaved Africans, an indentured English servant, and free men and women of color. His grandmother, Molly Welsh, was an English dairy maid who was falsely convicted of theft and indentured to a Maryland tobacco farmer. After working out her indenture, Welsh rented and farmed some land, eventually purchasing two African slaves whom she freed several years later.
In violation of Maryland law, Welsh wed one of her former slaves, Bannke or Bannaka, said to be the son of a chief. Their daughter Mary also married an African -- a man from Guinea who had been enslaved, baptized as Robert, and freed -- who took Banneker as his surname upon their marriage. In 1731, they named their first child Benjamin.
Young Benjamin grew up in Baltimore County, one of two hundred free blacks among a population of four thousand slaves and thirteen thousand whites. He was taught to read by his grandmother Molly, and briefly attended a one-room interracial school taught by a Quaker. He showed an early interest in mathematics and mechanics, preferring books to play.
[. . .]
In 1792, Banneker published an almanac, based on his own painstakingly calculated ephemeris (table of the position of celestial bodies), that also included commentaries, literature, and fillers that had a political and humanitarian purpose. The previous summer, he had sent a copy of the ephemeris to Thomas Jefferson, along with a letter in which he challenged Jefferson's ideas about the inferiority of blacks.
Read the sketch for more details on Banneker's accomplishments, but it's the almanac we're focused on here, entitled Benjamin Banneker's Pennsylvania, Delware, Maryland and Virginia Almanack and Ephemeris and published yearly from 1792 through 1797, specifically 1793 when Banneker proposes the creation of a Secretary of Peace. 218 years ago, a noted American first proposed it and it's never been followed up on. Not even by the current president who swore he would change the "mind-set" that led to war.
But why should Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, George H.W. Bush, Ronald Reagan, Jimmy Carter or any other elected president take the idea seriously when repeatedly the left publications and programs demonstrate that peace is the last damn thing that they care about. Shortly after the Iraq War starts, for example, Pacifica Radio kills their national peace program. With two wars going on, Peace Watch was the show to axe? Freeing the host for 'proud' moments like Verna Avery-Brown's August 4, 2010 'expose' on Sarah Palin's 'fake' pregnacy? What a wonderful momemnt for Verna and Pacifica Radio -- if their life's goal has been to be a floater in a toilet.
You can't have all that trash, all that distraction and still address the issues that actually matter. But, let's be honest, a lot of the hosts and gas bags aren't up to addressing issues that really matter. They are submerged in the sewer of gossip because that's truly all that they can manage and process.
The Israeli-Palestinian issue needs to be resolved peacefully, sooner than later, not because Israel is "evil" -- which is pretty much all that certain elements can advance in the US. It needs to be resolved because the current structure is unfair and breeds violence. This is true of so many conflicts around the world. It's true in the US, in terms of economics, as 1% waits to see if the protests will just go away thereby allowing no concessions to fairness will have to be made.
The never ending US war on terror is exactly what never should have happened but it's the mind-set that we get when we are all repeatedly debased and dumbed down by a so-called 'activist' press that exists not for enlightment or education but for to promote tribalism (see Bob Somerby's strong work on the topic) and talking points. They work to gin up outrage (at the other side) and to manage outrage (so that anger doesn't cause you to stop voting for Democrats). Most of all, they work to pursue their drug habit -- the most addictive drug for the left establishment being not crack or heroin, but funding. Want to see a real nasty detox? Threaten to cut off their funding.
So the PKK issue is ignored by The Nation and Democracy Now and Pacifica and all the pretend 'independent' outlets supposedly interested in peace but repeatedly tabling that issue in order to tell you what rotten thing some Republican -- you most likely never heard of -- just did.
AP reports that today the Turkish military boasted they'd killed 49 PKK -- a rebel group of Kurds who fight for the rights of an oppressed minority in Turkey. The PKK and Turkish security forces have been battling non-stop since 1984. 49 dead, if they are, doesn't mean the end of the PKK. If you want to put an end to the PKK, you do so by granting Kurds the same rights as others living in Turkey. Until you do that, the PKK grows, the PKK is empathized with and the battles continue.
There's no mythical secret here. This is basic poli sci, this is basic conflict resolution. But instead of offering leadership, Barack, Hillary and a host of other US officials issued stupid and ignorant remarks in the middle of the week basically egging the Turkish government on in wave of violence that's only going to breed more violence.
Today's Zaman is a major newspaper in Turkey. As is always the case, idiot Othaman Ali can't tell the truth. (He's the Iraqi exile who only returned after the US invasion. He's a joke and foreign funded.) He contributes disinformation with "Why is the PKK trying to sabotage constitutional reform?" There is no Constitutional reform. Erdogan made the pretense of reform in 2009. Even the pretense has now been tossed aside. We'll assume Mumtazer Turkone isn't attempting to deceive and that "Why is the PKK attacking?" is an honest attempt on his part. It can be very confusing when you're a part of the power structure and others are attacking it, it can confusing when you have full rights to grasp that others don't. And then there's the dense and stupid like Vonca Poyraz Dogan who honestly thinks you can grab words of peace and craft them on to an assualt. Like one of the 21st centuries greatest idiots thus far, Bully Boy Bush, Vonca thinks you can call war "peace" and call "deaths" progress.
Want to end the PKK? Take away there reason for existence. When you do that, they're an irritant for Turks and for Kurds. Currently that's not happening becasue the Turkish government broke it's word after the election and began jailing various Kurdish officials, labeling them criminals and terrorists. Presumably, had these officials not won public office, they would be free to roam as they were prior to the election results. A lousy TV station broadcasting in Kurdish -- a language still banned in Turkey despite officially being unbanned -- is a sign of full equality? No. There have been no serious steps, no serious efforts to bring the Kurds into the process.
Currently the Israeli government finally gets demographics. They don't get how to have peace, but they get demographics. Palestinians are reproducing at a high rate, hence Israel's need over the last ten years to bring in outside Jews. That need will only become more pressing and it will never, in fact, address the issue. By the same token, the government Turkey would do well to look at their own demography. What the government refuses to do today, they'll be forced to do in forty or sixty years if population trends in Turkey remain the same.
If the Turkish government hasn't addressed by then, by the point where Kurds comprise the majority population in Turkey, they may face the same treatment they've dispensed for over a century now.
The smart thing to do is to bring the Kurds into the process, to provide full inclusion and to do so quickly. If that happens, the PKK either disbands or it continues its attacks and loses all support from Kurds just as weary as the Turkish government of all the fighting.
The following community sites -- plus Random Thoughts, Antiwar.com, the White House*, and the New York Times updated last night or today:
- Hoaxes, Etc.2 hours ago
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- Sinking fast3 hours ago
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- Idiot of the week22 hours ago
- What end to the Iraq War?22 hours ago
- 4 men, 2 women22 hours ago
- Mad Hatter Salad in the Kitchen22 hours ago
- What do you do?22 hours ago
- What about the Air Force?22 hours ago
- A centrist departs22 hours ago
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- Bad Teacher22 hours ago
- Cheri22 hours ago
- Correspondents Reflect on the War in Iraq23 hours ago
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Friday, October 21, 2011
Iraq snapshot
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Turkey continues to assault northern Iraq
From the article:
"We have no intention of sending any reinforcements to the site of the conflict on the border," said Jabbar Yawar, spokesman for the Kurdish peshmerga defense force, adding that this was "because force is not the answer."
AP reports that Turkey and Iran are stating they will work together on the issue of Kurdish rebels. Iran recently worked out some form of an understanding with PJAK, the Kurdish rebels that attack Iranian security targets. So whether this is a real partnership or just an effort to strengthen its relationship with Turkey by offering public statements of support remains to be seen. In related news, Alsumaria TV reports, "Iraq’s Ahrar bloc affiliated to Sadrist Movement criticized, on Tuesday, head of White Iraqiya Party Hassan Al Alawi's statements which called to unify the two main Kurdish parties in Kurdistan 'in preparation to declare the independent Kurdish state.' These statements reflect the failure of Alawi's overstated ambitions, Al Ahrar argued confirming that Kurds are an integral component of Iraq’s community."
Meanwhile negotiations continue regarding a US military presence in Iraq beyond 2011. Al Mada notes Nouri's statements to the press that the number of trainers will be no more than one thousand. In a separate report, Al Mada notes that US Vice President Joe Biden is due in Iraq shortly to discuss the issue of 'trainers' and immunity and that Biden will be citing US laws and the US Constitution as the need for immunity. In addition to meeting with Nouri, he will also meet with Massoud Barzani, KRG President and with Amar al-Hakim (Supreme Islamic Council of Iraq leader).
Meanwhile Dar Addustour reports the Iraqi government is spending $150 million to buy three deluxe planes -- one of which will be for the Iraqi president, another for the prime minister. Dar Addustour also notes that the Iraqi government is meeting with the United Nation's Secretary-General's Special Envoy to Iraq regarding how to improve their water stability and security in the face of potential drought.
In other news, the Iraqi press has been full of articles this week (such as this one at Al Rafidayn) about calls for certain professors to lose their jobs or be demoted on charges that they are Ba'athists. Alsumaria TV notes, "Iraqi Minister of Higher Education Ali Al Adib accused on Wednesday his predecessor Abd Diab Al Ujaili of having run the ministry upon Baathist Party's directions. The 140 staff members that were sent away from the University of Tikrit were subject to the Justice and Accountability Law, Adib pointed up. The University’s president reported their names to the ministry, he added." Aswat al-Iraq reports, "Deputy Premier Saleh al-Mutlaq rejected what he called 'demotion' of a number of professors from Mosul and Tikrit universities, pointing out that these procedures are 'disappointing and depressive' to the coming political stability and uprising of scientific and economic situations. In a field visit done by Mutlaq to Salah al-Din province, he met the governor, university teachers and tribal sheikhs." Presumably crying "Ba'athist" every five seconds allows many to refuse to focus on real issues such as Dar Addustour's report on new data which finds that the number of Iraqi widows and orphans continues to rise.
Al Mada offers a lengthy report on the state of press freedoms in Iraq and notes the crackdown on journalists when "government agents" started arresting those who dared to cover the Friday protests, how their cameras and laptops were confiscated, how security teams beat demonstrators, used tear gas, water cannons and bullets on the protesters, how journalists were arrested, etc. Hadi al-Mahdi, the Iraqi journalist and activist, was arrested February 25th, the article notes, after covering the protest. He and two other journalists were eating lunch when Iraqi forces rushed up and began beating them with sticks and the butts of the rifles. The paper notes the assassination of Hadi al-Mahdi and how friends believe the murder was part of the government crackdown. That's just the first part of the article.
And we'll close with this from Justin Raimondo's "Moammar Gadhafi, R.I.P." (Antiwar.com):
The grisly scenes of Gadhafi’s body being dragged through the streets of Sirte, and the unseemly celebrations of the Libyan dictator’s death in the Western media, are enough to make any decent person wince. Yes, he was a brutal dictator, and I hold no brief for him or his works, but is this kind of savagery really what we want to see in the “new” Libya?
Whether or not we want it, it is coming: the crew in charge of that unfortunate nation is no better, and perhaps worse, than Gadhafi. The fate of the rebels’ former commander-in-chief, Abdul Fatah Younis, prefigures a revolution that eats its own, and the ferocity of that revolutionary fervor is hardly abated.
Gadhafi loyalists include the largest tribe in the country, and after the smoke clears and the new regime extends its grip over dissident pockets of resistance, nostalgia for the relatively peaceful days of Gadhafi’s reign is more than likely to set in. Worse, the arsenals of the Libyan military have been systematically looted, with missiles and other sophisticated weaponry falling into the hands of radical Islamist militias. These militias are not fringe elements in the Libyan revolution, but rather they are in charge, with one of their number taking the place of the slain Younis as head of the rebel “armed forces.”
Indeed, the rebels’ military leadership consists largely of members of the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG), which is still prominently featured on our official list of designated terrorist organizations. Now we are allied with them — under a new name, the “National Transitional Council” – and US taxpayer dollars are pouring into their coffers. That money will be used to consolidate the rebels’ rule, a regime that promises to be every bit as repressive as the one that preceded it – albeit friendly, at least at first, to its Western sponsors.
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