Thursday, December 11, 2008

At least 47 dead in Iraq bombing

A suspected suicide bomber has killed at least 47 people at a restaurant near the northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk, police say.
Around 102 people have been injured in the explosion at the Kurdish restaurant, some 5km (three miles) north of Kirkuk, police told the BBC.
The reason for the attack is not yet clear, but Kirkuk is home to a volatile mix of Kurds, Arabs and Turkomans.
The blast comes as Muslims celebrate the Eid-al-Adha holiday.


The above is from the BBC's "Blast at Iraq restaurant kills 47" and Caroline Alexander (Bloomberg News) notes the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan warned earlier this morning (when the death toll was said to be 30) that the "toll in today's attack is expected to rise." Hurriyet adds, "The bomber detonated explosives inside a Kurdish restaurant about 10 km (6 miles) north of Kirkuk, said Major General Jamal Tahir, police chief of Kirkuk."

It's interesting how every time Operation Happy Talk gets started, something like this comes along to refute it. Mustafa Mahmoud (Reuters) adds:

Hussein Ali al-Salih, head of a district council in the nearby city of Hawija, was in the restaurant called "Abdullah", 10 km (6 miles) north of Kirkuk. He said it was crowded with women and children.
"After we had our tea, a huge explosion occurred. I saw bodies on the ground. As we were rushing to leave the restaurant, we saw women wounded and civilians," he said. Five of his bodyguards were wounded.


Meanwhile Iraqi journalist Anwar Ali shares his thoughts on the September 16, 2007 slaughter in "Blackwater? So Many Others:"


I did not feel anything going to Nisour Square. I consider it something minor. It was only one site among so many where such things happened in Iraq, whether it was Americans or terrorists who did the shooting.
It is only because of media interest that Americans saw the injustice of this particular incident. Otherwise it would have been easily forgotten just like other violence here.
If we concentrated on each incident that happened to Iraqis it would take hundreds of years to bring justice to all that Iraqis have suffered since 2003 -- and maybe will suffer in the future and in the next generation.
I can't deny there is humanitarian justice in the behavior of the Americans in this regard, yet it is also intended to show to the world that the Americans will punish people who committed violations, even if they were Americans.
In fact, in the year after this incident, there were many other incidents, sometimes explosions and at other times killing and assassinations. Many Iraqis were killed. Women, children and men of all ages and professions. Most of them were poor, mostly their only guilt is that they were in the street shopping, or earning a living.


That runs at the New York Times, on their Iraq blog. It should have run in the paper, on the front page.


Kayla notes this from Team Nader:

Our Post-Election Issues Survey

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Our Post-Election Issues Survey .

In case you missed it, Ralph Nader appeared on Democracy Now! Friday morning, December 5th.

You can catch the segment here.

Also, thanks to all of you who participated in our recent survey.


We wanted to know what issues you were most interested in working on.

More than 10,000 of you responded.

And the results are now in.

The full picture, complete with charts and tables, can be seen at votenader.org/survey/results.

The top five issues were:

  1. Adopt single payer health care — 18.68%
  2. Full military and corporate withdrawal from Iraq and Afghanistan — 16.37%
  3. Convert to a renewable energy economy — 12.53%
  4. Others — 8.72%
  5. End corporate welfare, subsidies and bailouts — 8.54%

Thank you again for your input.

And thank you for standing with us in this momentous year.


Onward

The Nader Team


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And US Senator Russ Feingold's office issued the following release yesterday:

FEINGOLD CALLS ON PRESIDENT-ELECT TO TAKE “CONCRETE STEPS” TO RESTORE RULE OF LAW

Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senator Russ Feingold is urging President-elect Barack Obama to take "concrete steps" to restore the rule of law after the eight-year assault by the Bush Administration on the Constitution. In a letter to the President-elect, Feingold offered recommendations for action in four key areas -- the separation of powers, excessive government secrecy, detention and interrogation policy, and domestic surveillance and privacy. In addition to outlining specific actions the new administration should take, Feingold called on the new president to clearly and unequivocally renounce President Bush's extreme claims of executive authority. In the letter, Feingold suggested to the President-elect that mentioning the issue during his inaugural address would "affirm to the nation, and the world, that respect for the rule of law has returned to the Oval Office."

"In light of this recent history, I believe that one of the most important things that you can do as President is to take concrete steps to restore the rule of law in this country -- that is, to return to the White House respect for an appropriate separation and balance of powers among the branches, for the President's important but not paramount place in our constitutional system of government, for the laws that Congress writes and the importance of its oversight functions, and for the judiciary's crucial role in interpreting the law." Feingold wrote. "As I know you recognize, we can protect our national security -- in fact, we can do it more effectively -- without trampling on the rights of Americans or the rule of law."

In September, Feingold chaired a hearing in the Senate Judiciary Committee's Constitution Subcommittee entitled "Restoring the Rule of Law." The hearing featured testimony and recommendations from about forty historians, law professors and advocacy organizations, including the head of President-elect Obama's transition team, John Podesta. Feingold provided a copy of the written record of the hearing to the President-elect. The recommendations include:

  • Closing the facility at Guantanamo Bay – a step Obama has supported

  • Banning torture and establishing a single, government-wide standard of humane detainee treatment

  • Conducting a comprehensive review of Office of Legal Counsel opinions and repudiating or revising those that overstate executive authority

  • Supporting significant legislative changes to the Patriot Act and the FISA Amendments Act

  • Cooperating with congressional oversight, including providing full information to intelligence committees

  • Establishing presumptions of openness and disclosure in making decisions on the classification of information and responding to requests under the Freedom of Information Act.

The text of the letter is below:


December 10, 2008

The Honorable Barack Obama
President-elect of the United States
451 Sixth Street NW
Washington, D.C. 20001

Dear President-elect Obama:

Congratulations on your historic election. You will take office in difficult times, and I wish you the best of luck with the challenges you will confront. I stand ready to help you in any way that I can.

While you will face many difficult issues in the comings months and years, I want to raise one that I believe is critical for the presidential transition: restoring the rule of law. The countless abusive policies of the past eight years and the extreme legal theories on which they were based have left our nation weaker and our constitutional framework in a precarious position. In light of this recent history, I believe that one of the most important things that you can do as President is to take concrete steps to restore the rule of law in this country -- that is, to return to the White House respect for an appropriate separation and balance of powers among the branches, for the President's important but not paramount place in our constitutional system of government, for the laws that Congress writes and the importance of its oversight functions, and for the judiciary's crucial role in interpreting the law. I am sure that as a constitutional scholar you can appreciate that we must ensure that the Bush Administration's views of executive supremacy do not become so ingrained in our system of government that they become the "new normal."

As I know you recognize, we can protect our national security -- in fact, we can do it more effectively -- without trampling on the rights of Americans or the rule of law. I am pleased that your transition team is already working to address a number of rule of law issues, and I am confident that you are committed to undoing the damage of the past administration.

In September, I chaired a hearing in the Constitution Subcommittee of the Senate Judiciary Committee to examine concrete steps that can be taken to restore the rule of law. The subcommittee received detailed recommendations and proposals from an impressive array of experts, including historians, law professors and advocacy organizations. Many of these contributors are very familiar to you and are working with your transition team. I am enclosing a copy of the written record of that hearing, which you can also find on my website at www.feingold.senate.gov/ruleoflaw and on the Government Printing Office website at http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/getdoc.cgi?dbname=110_senate_hearings&docid=f:45240.pdf and http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/getdoc.cgi?dbname=110_senate_hearings&docid=f:45240err.pdf. I hope you and your team find the hearing record useful as you prepare to take office.

All three branches of government must be engaged in the process of restoring the rule of law, but the role of the President is particularly important because turning back the excesses of the Bush Administration may be seen in some respects as contrary to the institutional interests of the presidency. That is why it is all the more important that you clearly and unequivocally renounce, early in your tenure, President Bush's extreme claims of executive authority. Indeed, stating this position in your inaugural address would affirm to the nation, and the world, that respect for the rule of law has returned to the Oval Office. I urge you to take the opportunity in your first speech as President to make a strong and clear statement of your intention to restore the rule of law in our country.

In addition, I want to draw to your attention some particularly significant recommendations for executive branch action that came out of the hearing, and that I hope will receive your serious consideration. I will be working separately to advance other, related proposals that clearly require legislative action. Most of the recommendations below can be acted on early in your administration. They fall into four categories: separation of powers; excessive government secrecy; detention and interrogation policy; and domestic surveillance and privacy.

  • Separation of Powers

    • The new administration should make the restoration and advancement of the rule of law an overarching theme. This should include an explicit rejection of the extreme theory of Article II executive power that the Bush administration has used to justify torture and illegal warrantless wiretapping; a pledge to work with Congress to give priority to measures to restore public confidence in the rule of law; and an announcement of a zero tolerance policy for official misconduct.

    • The new administration should recognize and cooperate with the legitimate oversight function of Congress. In certain key areas like interrogation policy and surveillance, Congress was kept in the dark for years and there remain significant impediments to congressional inquiries. I urge your administration to provide requested information on these issues to Congress as soon as possible and to cooperate with future oversight efforts.

    • The new administration should view the congressional intelligence committees as a partner rather than a nuisance. It must commit to full compliance with the National Security Act, ending the abuses of the limited "Gang of Eight" notifications and ensuring that the full committees are kept fully and currently informed of all intelligence activities.

    • The new administration should conduct a comprehensive review of opinions issued by the Department of Justice Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) under the Bush administration, and repudiate or revise those that overstate executive authority.

  • Excessive Government Secrecy

    • The new administration should conduct a review of pending cases in which the state secrets privilege has been invoked to assess whether the invocation was proper. It should also support legislative efforts, such as the State Secrets Protection Act (S. 2533/H.R. 5607), to allow more meaningful judicial scrutiny when the privilege is invoked.

    • The new administration should rewrite President Bush’s executive order regarding classification policies and procedures (Executive Order 13292) to reinstate provisions from the previous classification order (Executive Order 12958, signed by President Clinton) that established a presumption against classification; allowed senior agency officials to declassify information in certain exceptional cases; and prohibited re-classification of properly declassified information. The new administration also should seriously consider ordering each entity with classification authority to do a thorough review of its classification policies and practices to reduce over-classification.

    • The new administration should reverse the October 2001 "Ashcroft Memorandum," which stated that the Justice Department will defend an agency's decision to withhold a document requested under the Freedom of Information Act if the document even arguably falls within one of FOIA's exemptions. Instead, the new administration should reinstate the presumption of disclosure established under a 1993 memorandum issued by Attorney General Reno, which stated that DOJ will defend an agency's decision to withhold a document only if the agency reasonably foresees that disclosure would be harmful to an interest protected by one of FOIA's exemptions.

    • Past and future memoranda and opinions issued by the Department of Justice Office of Legal Counsel should be made available to the public to the maximum extent possible. In addition, public release early in your administration of some of the more controversial OLC opinions governing interrogation policy and warrantless wiretapping (redacted, if necessary, to protect sources and methods) would help assure Congress and the American people that the new administration is committed to transparency and the rule of law.

    • The new administration should revoke Executive Order 13233, issued in November 2001. This executive order limited public access to presidential records by allowing former presidents and their heirs to block access to presidential records, and by creating a new vice presidential privilege. Revoking it would simply give effect once again to the longstanding regulations of the National Archive and Records Administration governing the release of presidential records.

  • Detention and Interrogation Policy

    • The new administration should express its unqualified commitment to enforcing the ban against torture and cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment, and should establish as a matter of policy a single, government-wide standard of humane detainee treatment. I have supported efforts in Congress to make the Army Field Manual on Human Intelligence Collector Operations that standard. The new administration should revoke all existing orders and legal opinions authorizing cruel interrogations, including Executive Order 13440 and any relevant opinions of the OLC.

    • The new administration should commit to providing timely notification of and access to the International Committee of the Red Cross for any and all detainees held in U.S. custody anywhere in the world.

    • The new administration should close the facility at Guantanamo Bay, as you have pledged to do. Closing Guantanamo raises a number of complex questions, many of which were addressed in the hearing submissions. I hope those submissions can serve as a resource to your administration in addressing these difficult issues. As you tackle the Guantanamo problem, however, I urge you not to establish an entirely new preventive detention regime based on concerns about a very small number of difficult cases.

    • The new administration should reject the flawed military commission trial system being used at Guantanamo Bay.

    • The new administration should develop effective means of enforcing the ban against rendering individuals to countries where they have a credible fear of being tortured.

  • Domestic Surveillance and Privacy

    • As an early demonstration of the new administration's commitment to transparency and cooperation with Congress, I urge you to declassify basic information about the implementation of controversial provisions of the USA Patriot Act to allow more open consideration and debate when that legislation is reauthorized in 2009. I can discuss with your transition team in a classified setting some of the information that I believe can be declassified without compromising national security.

    • The new administration should support significant legislative changes to domestic surveillance authorities as part of the 2009 Patriot Act reauthorization process, including reforms to the National Security Letter statutes and others. It should commit to working collaboratively with Congress on this legislation, rather than in the counter-productive adversarial posture that the Bush administration has so frequently adopted.

    • I believe that Congress should undertake a comprehensive review of domestic intelligence activities and authorities to assess the most effective ways to prevent a terrorist attack and collect other critical intelligence while also protecting the rights of Americans -- and it will be critical to have the cooperation of the new administration if such a review goes forward. This review should include an assessment of the threat inside the U.S., an evaluation of all current laws and their implementation, and a review of the respective roles of relevant agencies and departments.

    • The new administration should support significant legislative changes to the FISA Amendments Act to ensure that it is effective in combating terrorism and collecting foreign intelligence while also protecting the privacy of innocent Americans. At the same time, the new administration should incorporate more privacy protections -- such as stronger minimization procedures to limit the use of information gathered about Americans -- into its implementation of the legislation. I can make more specific suggestions in a classified setting for important changes in implementation that can be made by the executive branch without congressional action.

    • The new President and Attorney General should reconsider the new Attorney General Guidelines governing FBI investigations that went into effect on December 1, 2008, to make sure the FBI is devoting its limited resources to the greatest threats and not wasting its time investigating people who have done nothing wrong. In particular, investigations based on ethnic or racial profiling or the First Amendment-protected activities of the targets should not be countenanced.

Finally, I want to raise with you the need for a detailed accounting of what happened over the past eight years, and how the outgoing administration came to reject or ignore so many of the principles on which this nation was founded. It seems to me that we must fully understand the mistakes of the past in order to learn from them, address them, and prevent them from recurring. At the same time, there need not be a focus on retribution or pay-back, and such an effort should not be used to score partisan points. There are a range of options for ensuring that this very important endeavor takes place. I hope you agree that this kind of accounting is needed and would welcome your input on the most efficient and credible way to bring it about.

I and my staff would be happy to discuss these issues in further detail if it would be helpful. I look forward to working with you on this and many other initiatives in the coming years.

Sincerely,

Russell D. Feingold
United States Senator



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the new york times
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