Thursday, June 25, 2015

America Going, (Going, Gone!) To The Dogs (Of War) (Sherwood Ross)

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Isakson Statement on Supreme Court Decision on King v. Burwell










 
 


Senator Johnny Isakson is the Chair of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee and his office issued the following:



 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Amanda Maddox, 202-224-7777
Thursday, June 25, 2015
Marie Gordon, 770-661-0999
 
 
Isakson Statement on Supreme Court Decision on King v. Burwell
 
WASHINGTON – Today, U.S. Senator Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., today issued the following statement regarding the Supreme Court’s decision on King v. Burwell:
 
"Today the Supreme Court failed to recognize how terribly flawed President Obama's health care law is for millions of Georgians suffering under the law’s health insurance premium spikes and intrusive mandates. Despite this action by the Supreme Court I will continue to work with my Senate colleagues to repeal and replace Obamacare."
 
Background:
 
Since voting against its enactment in 2009, Isakson has voted to defund or repeal Obamacare more than 60 times. Isakson has co-sponsored numerous legislative proposals that would repeal the law in full or repeal provisions in the law in previous sessions of Congress, including both the Obamacare Repeal Act, and the Defund Obamacare Act. On February 2, 2011, he voted to repeal the health care law altogether, and on March 13, 2013, he voted in favor of Cruz’s amendment to defund Obamacare in the Continuing Resolution.
 
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Description: Description: cid:image001.gif@01CB9C61.36E8FA70
AMANDA MADDOX
Press Secretary

OFFICE OF UNITED STATES SENATOR JOHNNY ISAKSON
131 Russell Senate Office Building | Washington, DC 20510
phone: 202.224.3643 | fax: 202.228.0724

Where's that political solution?

AP reports a Baghdad bombing has left at least 6 people dead with sixteen more injured while a Mahmudiyah bombing left at least 2 people dead with six more injured.


As the violence continues, with even the Yazidis participating in the cycle of vengeance, there seems no end in sight.

And Barack Obama certainly has no plan.  Over a year ago, he insisted publicly that the US would have a limited role militarily and that the only answer for Iraq was a political solution.

But for over a year the focus has been on the military.

And that's not been well received in Iraq.

You've had various military members in the last few weeks sounding off in the press with their complaints, insisting they don't have enough weapons or enough bombs being dropped.

(I criticize Barack freely and repeatedly.  But I don't agree with that criticism and, time permitting, we'll address it in the snapshot today.)

Dropping bombs from war planes doesn't stop the cycle of violence.  Nor has dropping bombs resulted in a reduction of violence.


For Wednesday, Margaret Griffis (Antiwar.com) reported 109 violent deaths across Iraq today.

Those numbers aren't going down.


 Emma Sky is the author of The Unraveling: High Hopes and Missed Opportunities in Iraq.  Today, she offers "Can Iraq Be Saved?" (The Daily Beast):


President Obama recently admitted that “We don’t have a complete strategy” for dealing with the Islamic State. It was an honest admission. And honesty has not been in abundance when it comes to Iraq policy. Politicians try to use the situation in Iraq for political advantage, without much consideration of Iraqis themselves. Democrats blame Republicans for invading Iraq in the first place and Republicans blame Democrats for not leaving troops there. The current extent of the debate in Washington appears limited to whether or not to send troops back to Iraq.
But numbers of boots on the ground is not a strategy. Strategy should be about how to achieve a political settlement. And increasing the commitment of U.S. military support to Iraq should only be as part of a strategy to achieving such an outcome—not as an ends in itself.


Are we seeing the White House grasp this?

Or act on it?

Not so far.

And as no real efforts take place, Yaroslav Trofimov (Wall St. Journal) reports on a growing belief among some Iraqis that the US government isn't really interested in defeating the Islamic State.


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