Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Camp Lejeune

I hope Camp Lejune families, victims really, realize what an advocate they have in Senator Richard Burr.  Burr is the Ranking Member on the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee.

They held a hearing today about proposed legislation.  Senator Burr again raised Camp Lejeune where the water is contaminated and probably causes cancer.  But it was a base and people were stationed there.  Some service members lived there with their families.  Now they have diseases like breast cancer, leukemia, etc.

They made the 'mistake' of assuming the government would not station them in a place that was unsafe.

Over and over, I have seen Senator Burr raise this issue and try to get support for his legislation.  This is my sixth year of sitting in these hearings.

I cannot believe that the Senate, the Congress, in fact, still cannot address this issue, refuses to.

S.277
Latest Title: Caring for Camp Lejeune Veterans Act of 2011
Sponsor: Sen Burr, Richard [NC] (introduced 2/3/2011)      Cosponsors (10)
Latest Major Action: 8/1/2011 Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 123.
Senate Reports: 112-42



All Information (except text) Text of Legislation CRS Summary Major Congressional Actions

All Congressional Actions

All Congressional Actions with Amendments
With links to Congressional Record pages, votes,reports
Titles Cosponsors (10) Committees
Related Bills Amendments
CBO Cost Estimates Subjects




You can read up on it with the above links.

I really don't understand why this is not an issue that received immediate attention.  I really hope that next year I am not still seeing him try to reason with other Senators that doing the right thing is the best thing.



Closing with C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"



Wednesday, June 13, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue as Iraq is slammed with bombings which leave over 70 dead, the issue of burn pits is raised in the Senate, modern day sob sisters try to turn Brett McGurk and Gina Chon into a modern day King Edward VIII and Mrs. Wallis Simpson, Republicans ask Barack to withdraw the nominee, and more.
 
"The second bill I'd like to mention," declared Senator Patty Murray this morning, "is the Servicemembers Rights Enforcement Improvement Act of 2012.  This is a bill that I wish wasn't necessary but one that circumstances demand.  It builds on current protections put in place to help shield our nation's heroes from unemployment and foreclosure.  These protections have been violated in a disturbing number of cases within the past several years.  This bill would strengthen the ability of the Department of Justice and Office of Special Counsel to investigate and enforce the employment protections of USERRA, which are so important to members of the National Guard and Reserve.  And it would improve the protections of the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act as well as how they are enforced.  I introduced this bill because we as a nation owe it to the men and women who serve with dignity a guarantee that the protections put in place to ease their burden will be enforced when they return home.  This legislation will ensure the Departments charged with enforcing these valuable protections have the tools they need to get the job done."
 
She is the Chair of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee and was presiding over today's hearing on various veterans bills.  The one above, in addition to home issues, goes to additional resources to pursue those employers who illegally are refusing to allow Guard and Reserve members to return to the civilian jobs that they have to leave when they are called up for trainings and deployments.  They cannot be fired because they have been called up by the military.  This is not a new legal standard.  But employers are regularly breaking the law and firing Guard and Reserve members.  Most recently, Home Depot had a store in Arizona which had done that.  To the corporation's credit, Home Depot did not attempt to fight the charges or drag it out  but instead immediately settled with the Justice Dept which noted, "Under the terms of the settlement, embodied in a consent decree that has been submitted for approval to the federal district court, Home Depot will provide Mr. [Brian] Bailey [Army National Guard soldier] with $45,000 in monetary relief and make changes to its Military Leaves of Absence policy.  The settlement further mandates that Home depot review its Military Leaves of Absence policy with managers from the district where Mr. Bailey worked."   This is only one example, there are many others. 
 
Here's a summary of the bill Chair Patty Murray introduced (third paragraph begins covering the employment issue):
 
Servicemembers Rights Enforcement Improvement Act of 2012 -- Amends the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (the Act) concerning the protection of servicemembers against default judgments to require a plaintiff, before filing an affidavit, to conduct a diligent and reasonable investigation to determine whether or not the defendant is in the military service, including a search of available records of the Department of Defense (DOD) and any other available information.
Makes a private right of action for a violation of the Act retroactive to December 19, 2003.
Allows a veteran on whose behalf a complaint of a violation of employment or reemployment rights is made by the Attorney General (AG) to intervene in such action, and to obtain appropriate relief.  Requires the AG, within 60 days after receiving a referral of an unsuccessful attempt to resolve a complaint relating to a state or private employer, to notify the person on whose behalf the complaint is submitted of either the decision to commence such an action or of when such decision is expected to be made.  Requires, in the latter case, such decision to be made within an additional 30 days.  Requires the AG to commence such an action when there is reasonable cause to believe that a state or private employer is engaged in a pattern of practice of resistance to the full enjoyment of such employment and reemployment rights and benefits, and that the pattern or practice is intended to deny the full exercise of such rights and benefits.
Provides the Special Counsel with subpoena power to require the attendance and testimony of, and production of documents from, federal employees, to be enforced through the Merit Systems Protection Board.
Authorizes the AG to issue and serve a civil investigative demand for the production of documentary material relevant to an investigation under the Act.
 
 
The Committee heard from two panels about proposed bills. The first panel was the VA's Curtis Coy. The second panel was IAVA's Tom Tarantino, Military Officers Association of America's Robert Norton and Student Veterans of America's Peter Meijer.  Bills are proposed legislation that, if passed by both Houses of Congress, go to the President for his or her signature and are signed into law or vetoed.  A two-thirds majority of Representatives and Senators can override a presidential veto.  And this is explained at the Kids in the House website (which I promised a friend I'd link to over a month ago).  The House Leadership and the Office of the Clerk are responsible for the Kids in the House website and it's a strong (and free) resource for kids, parents, teachers, people who would like to learn more about the way the House works.
 
Each session finds many bills buried in committees, a smaller number being passed on for a floor vote of the full house (House or Senate) and a smaller number being referred to the other chamber after passage.  It is very important to get the bill out of Committee and that's why you will see lawmakers who do not sit on a Committee show up for that Committee's legislation hearing.  Senator Frank Lautenberg, for example, testified to the Committee today about his concerns that efforts must be made to preserve the Post 9/11 G.I. Bill.  He has proposed the GI Educational Freedom Act of 2012 (co-sponsors are Senators Richard Blumenthal, Scott Brown, Tom Harkin, Jeff Merkley and Marco Rubio.
 
 
Senator Frank Lautenberg:  I was proud to work with Senator Webb and former Senators [Chuck] Hagel and John Warner to create a new GI Bill for the 21st Century.  The new GI Bill is making a real difference for thousands of veterans and their families every year.  As our veterans return home from war, we must work to make sure that this important benefit is protected for years to come.  That's why I am outraged to hear that bad actors in the education community are taking advantage of our heroes.  By using misleading advertising, they rope veterans and their G.I. Bill benefits into an education that does not adequately prepare them for employment.  The VA offers counseling services to help veterans navigate the educational process.  But the services are available only to veterans who specifically request educational counseling.  One thing is clear: The VA's current approach is not sufficient.  Last year, out of the hundreds of thousands receiving VA educational assistance, fewer than 6,500 beneficiaries requested this counseling.
 
 
There were four other non-Committee Senators who spoke about bills.  Our focus today is one one bill.
 
 
Senator Mark Udall:  Sitting in the audience today is Master Sergeant Jessey Baca a member of the New Mexico Air National Guard and his wife Maria.  [to them] Just give everybody a waive here, you two.  Master Sgt. Baca was stationed in Balad, Iraq and exposed to burn pits. His journey to be here today was not easy.  He has battled cancer, chronic bronchitis, chemical induced asthma, brain lesions, TBI, PTSD and numerous other ailments. Maria has traveled that difficult road with him.   They know first hand the suffering caused by burn pits and they need to know the answers.  It is because of them and so many others like them that we are here today.  Last year, I introduced S. 1798, the Open Burn Pits Registry Act with Senator Corker.  Representative Todd Akin introduced it in the House.  It is not a partisan issue.  We have each met with veterans and active duty members of the military and they have told us how important it is that we act now.  In both Afghanistan and Iraq, open air burn pits were widely used at forward operating bases.  Disposing of trash and other debris was a major challenge.  Commanders had to find a way to dispose of waste while concentrating on the important mission at hand.  The solution that was chosen, however, had serious risks.  Pits of waste were set on fire -- sometimes using jet fuel for ignition.  Some burn pits were small but others covered multiple acres of land. Often times, these burn pits would turn the sky black.  At Joint Base Balad Iraq, over 10 acres of land were used for burning toxic debris.  At the height of its operations, Balad hosted approximately 25,000 military, civilian and coalition provision authority personnel.  These personnel would be exposed to a toxic soup of chemicals released into the atmosphere.  According to air quality measurements, the air at Balad had multiple particulates harmful to humans: Plastics and Styrofoams, metals, chemicals from paints and solvents, petroleum and lubricants, jet fuel and unexploded ordnance, medical and other dangerous wastes.  The air samples at Joint Base Balad turned up some nasty stuff. Particulate matter, chemicals that form from the incomplete burning of coal, oil and gas garbage or other organic substances, volatile organic compounds such as acetone and benzene  -- benzene, as you all know, is known to cause leukemia --  and dioxins which are associated with Agent Orange.  According to the American Lung Association, emissions from burning waste contain fine particulate matter, sulfur dioxide, carbon monoxide, volatile organic compounds and various irritant gases such as nitrogen oxides that can scar the lungs. All of this was in the air and being inhaled into the lungs of service members.  Our veterans have slowly begun to raise the alarm as they learn why -- after returning home -- they are short of breath or experiencing headaches and other symptoms and, in some cases, developing cancer.  Or to put it more simply, by Maria Baca, when she describes her husband's symptoms, "When he breathes, he can breathe in, but he can't breathe out.  That's the problem that he's having.  It feels like a cactus coming out of his chest.  He feels  these splinters and he can't get rid of them."  The Dept of Army has also confirmed the dangers posed by burn pits.  In a memo from April 15, 2011, Environmental Science Engineering Officer, G. Michael Pratt, wrote an air quality summary on Baghram Airfield.  And I would respectfully ask that the full memo be included in the record.  Referring to the burn pits near Baghram Airfield,  he said there was potential that "long-term exposure at these level may experience the risk for developing chronic health conditions such as reduced lung function or exacerbated chronic bronchitis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, asthma, atherosclerosis  and other cardio pulmonary diseases.  Many of our service members are coming home with these symptoms.  I believe, like you do, Madam Chair, that we are forever in debt for their service, so we must ask the question, "How did these burn pits impact the health of our returning heroes?"  This bill is a step towards finding the answers we owe them.  The legislation will establish and maintain and Open Burn Pit Registry for those individuals who may have been exposed during their military service.  It would include information in this registry that the Secretary of the VA determines is applicable to possible health effects of this exposure. develop a public information campaign to inform individuals about the registry and periodically notify members of the registry of significant developments associated with burn pits exposure.  It is supported by numerous groups including BurnPits 360, Veterans of Foreign Wars, the Association of US Navy,  Retired Enlisted Association, the Uniformed Services Disabled Retirees and the National Military Family Association.  Madam Chair and Ranking Member Burr, thank you for your attention to this important issue.  I look forward to working with both of you and members of your distinguished Committee on this important legislation.  Thank you and a pleasure once again to be with you today. 
 
Chair Patty Murray:  Thank you very much, Senator Udall.  And thank you for your critical work on this.  I really appreciate it.
 
Senator Mark Udall:  And I would also ask to be excused unless there are questions from the Committee.
 
Chair Patty Murray:  Absolutely.  I appreciate it very much. 
 
Senator Mark Udall:  Thank you very much.
 
Chair Patty Murray:  Senator Nelson?
 
 
Senator Bill Nelson: Madam Chairman, Senator Burr, members, I want to second what Senator Udall just said.  We've had a number of cases of the burn pit exposure in Florida and it is horrific.  So thank you, Senator Udall, for that testimony.
 
 
 
Senator Nelson and Chair Murray spoke highly of the bill Senator Udall is sponsoring.  Certainly, any time the Committee Chair considers your bill important, that's a good thing. 
 
And S. 1798 has a great deal of support in the Congress.  For example, along with Senators Udall and Corker, the bill has the following Senate co-sponsors: Senators Lamar Alexander, Jeff Bingaman, Richard Blumenthal, Bob Casey, Dean Heller, Claire McCaskill, Jeff Merkley, Bill Nelson, John D. Rockefeller IV, Bernie Sanders, Chuck Schumer, Olympia Snowe, Jon Tester and Mark Udall.  In the House, the co-sponsors of H.R. 3337 are Representatives Joe Baca, Roscoe Bartlett, Dan Benishek, Shelley Berkley, Earl Blumenauer, Madeleine Bordallo, Russ Carnahan, Andre Carson, Kathy Castor, Judy Chu, David Cicilline, Gerry Connolly, John Conyers, Joe Courtney, Mark Critz, Peter DeFaio, Bob Filner, J. Randy Forbes, Trent Franks, Tim Griffin, Raul Grijalva, Luis Gutierre, Richard Hanna, Vicky Hartzler, Joseph Heck, Martin Heinrich, Randy Hultgren, Steve Israel, Hank Johnson, Walter Jones, Marcy Kaptur, Larry Kissel, Tom Latham, Barbara Lee, Daniel Lipinski, Fran LoBiondo, Billy Long, Blaine Luetkemeyer, Ben Ray Lujan, Tom Marino, Jim McDermott, Jim McGovern, Mike Michaud, Tim Murphy, Elenor Holmes Norton, Richard Nugent, Alan Nunnelee, William Owens, Steven Pearce, Chelle Pingree, Bill Posey, Charlie Rangel, Scott Rigell, David Roe, Jon Runyan, Tim Ryan, Adam Schiff, Allyson Schwartz, Adam Smith, Pete Stark, Mike Thompson, Paul Tonko, Michael Turner and Robert Wittman.
 
 
That's a lot of support for proposed legislation. 
 
 
But remember this?
 
I am here today to testify about a tragedy that took place in 2003 on the outskirts of Basra in Iraq. I am here on behalf of Lt Col James Gentry and the brave men and women who served under his command in the First Battalion, 152nd Infantry of the Indiana National Guard. I spoke with Lt Col Gentry by phone just this last week. Unfortunately, he is at home with his wife, Luanne, waging a vliant fight against terminal cancer. The Lt Col was a healthy man when he left for Iraq. Today, he is fighting for his life. Tragically, many of his men are facing their own bleak prognosis as a result of their exposure to sodium dichromate, one of the most lethal carcinogens in existence. The chemical is used as an anti-corrosive for pipes. It was strewn all over the water treatment facility guarded by the 152nd Infantry. More than 600 soldiers from Indiana, Oregon, West Virginia and South Carolina were exposed. One Indiana Guardsman has already died from lung disease and the Army has classified it as a service-related death. Dozens of the others have come forward with a range of serious-respiratory symptoms. [. . .] Mr. Chairman, today I would like to tell this Committee about S1779. It is legislation that I have written to ensure that we provide full and timely medical care to soldiers exposed to hazardous chemicals during wartime military service like those on the outskirts of Basra. The Health Care for Veterans Exposed to Chemical Hazards Act of 2009 is bipartisan legislation that has already been co-sponsored by Senators Lugar, Dorgan, Rockefeller, Byrd, Wyden and Merkley. With a CBO score of just $10 million, it is a bill with a modest cost but a critical objective: To enusre that we do right by America's soldiers exposed to toxic chemicals while defending our country. This bill is modeled after similar legislation that Congress approved in 1978 following the Agent Orange exposure in the Vietnam conflict.
 
 
That's then-Senator Evan Bayh speaking to the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee on behalf of the Burn Pit Registry October 21, 2009.  Just like Senator Udall did today.
 
And Bayh believed there would be action on it.  He believed in the issue and he had support in Congress.  But the person who killed Bayh's bill is still on the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee.  He's not running for re-election (he can't after that and after his fit over the benefits Secretary of the VA Eric Shinseki extended to the victims of Agent Orange).  But he's still on the Committee.  And as I watched Senator Jim Webb in the hearing, I saw the same bored look he gave when Bayh spoke of the importance of this proposed legislation in 2009.
 
I support the registry.  I think it's needed.  I supported when Bayh proposed it and I applaud Evan and former-Senator Byron Dorgan for all the hard work they did highlighting the burn pit issue, educating the Congress and we the American people on this issue. 
 
I find it appalling that there's been no leadership on this issue from the White House.  Barack Obama has repeatedly lied about the American people with regards to Vietnam.  Most recently, he did so on Memorial Day.
 
If the veterans of Vietnam were betrayed (I believe they were), it was the government that betrayed them.  It betrayed them first of all by sending them to Vietnam.  It further betrayed them when they returned.  We can list one example after another but the one that's pertinent here is the Agent Orange registry.  It was not until the 90s that it was created.  Agent Orange was a destructive agent used in Vietnam and the effects on people exposed to it were severe. 
 
It was not the American people that ordered Agent Orange to be sprayed.  It was not the American people that fought one legal battle against Vietnam veterans after another denying that Agent Orange did any harm.  It was not the American people that did not support an Agent Orange Registry which could be used to ensure medical care and medical benefits. 
 
It was the American government.  And it's the American government today -- the one he heads -- that's refusing to allow a Burn Pit Registry.  Let's hope everyone following the issue registers that.  And registers how hollow his words are when he starts talking about 'turning your back on veterans' if he's refusing to champion the Burn Pit Registry.
 
Why is it needed right now?  Because there's still a small focus in the press on veterans.  Iraq's off the page, Afghanistan's sliding.  Once the attention's gone, it's gone.  And that was part of the problem with the Agent Orange Registry.  Many politicians and officials knew their refusal to implement it wouldn't result in massive press coverage.  Vietnam veterans couldn't afford all the years they had to wait (and many have only received help and recognition since Eric Shinseki became VA Secretary).  Iraq and Afghanistan veterans can't afford to wait years either.
 
 
Turning to the topic of Two and a Half Men . . .  James Jeffrey, Ryan Crocker and adolescent Chris Hill signed a letter.  Josh Rogin (Foreign Policy) reports the three signed a letter to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee insisting that Brett McGurk is qualified to be the US Ambassador to Iraq.  Jeffrey is the outgoing US Ambassador to Iraq.  Chris Hill was the nightmare ambassador.  Prior to Hill's brief stint, Ryan Crocker served as US Ambassador to Iraq.  Rogin writes, "In their letter, the former ambassadors argue that McGurk showed his understanding of the complexities facing Iraq in his June 6 confirmation hearing and said that he has the full trust and confidence of the current leadership team at the embassy. "  I'm sorry, where were they?
 
They weren't at the hearing.  I was.  How can they vouch for his performance at a hearing they didn't attend?
 
They can't.  And this isn't the 1960s.  Meaning forget the press coverage because there was none.  Note to what passes for a press corps: Your 'great job, Brett!' wasn't reporting.  Most outlets ignored the hearing completely (including TV evening news).  Find a report where they report what McGurk said and examine if it was accurate.  You can't find that in the MSM.  We covered it here, the hearing, in three snapshots.  We covered what he said versus reality.  We covered it in the editorial for Third as well:
 
 
McGurk took credit for the surge.  The only aspect of the surge that was successful was what Gen David Petraeus implemented and US service members carried out.  That was not what McGurk and other civilians were tasked with.  Their part of the surge?  The military effort was supposed to create a space that the politicians would put to good use by passing legislation.  It didn't happen.  McGurk's part of the surge was a failure.He revealed incredible ignorance about al Qaeda in Iraq and seemed unaware that, in 2011, then-CIA Director (now Secretary of Defense) Leon Panetta told Congress it amounted to less than 1,000 people or that in February of this year, the Director of National Intelligence declared that a significnat number (of that less than 1,000) had gone to Syria.Though the press has reported for years about Nouri's refusal to bring Sahwa members into the process (give them jobs) and how he refuses to pay these security forces (also known as "Awakenings" and "Sons of Iraq"), McGurk told Congress that Nouri was paying them all and had given government jobs to approximately 70,000.  (For point of reference, in 2008, Gen David Petraues told Congress there were approximately 91,000 Sahwa.)
 
It's really easy to pretend someone's 'qualified' when you refuse to do the work required to vet the nominee.  Those links above don't go to MSM reporting on the hearing because there is NO MSN reporting on the hearing.  They go to the Wednesday, Thursday and Friday snapshot (as well as a 2008 snapshot for Petreaus' testimony in 2008).  The press didn't do the job they're paid to.  You can say they're overworked and many are.  But that doesn't excuse anyone filing a 'report' that fails to examine one word of what was said, that fails to provide context.  There's a world of difference a transcript and a report or a 'feelings check' and a report.  No reporting was done by the MSM on McGurk's hearing.
 
AP reported this morning that Republicans on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee were drafting a letter that would ask the White House to pull McGurk's nomination.  Aamer Madhani (USA Today) posted the letter which expresses concern over his management experience and his judgment (as well as his ability to work with Iraqis -- remember the political slate that won the 2010 elections, Iraqiya, has asked that he not be made ambassador). 
 
 
Now before the hearing we were reporting on the e-mails.  I say that because I cannot believe the stupidity of so-called professional writers.  Tuesday, June 5th, we were reporting on the e-mails between Brett McGurk and Wall St. Journal reporter Gina Chon who began an affair in 2008 and concealed it from their superiors.  Yesterday, Chon lost her job.  Lisa Dru (Business Insider) reported on the news as well and includes the Wall St. Journal's statement:
 
Wall Street Journal reporter Gina Chon agreed to resign this afternoon after acknowledging that while based in Iraq she violated the Dow Jones Code of Conduct by sharing certain unpublished news articles with Brett McGurk, then a member of the U.S. National Security Council in Iraq.
In 2008 Ms. Chon entered into a personal relationship with Mr. McGurk, which she failed to disclose to her editor. At this time the Journal has found no evidence that her coverage was tainted by her relationship with Mr. McGurk.
Ms. Chon joined the Journal in 2005 in Detroit, followed by an assignment as Iraq correspondent in Baghdad from 2007 to 2009. She also reported for the Journal from Haiti in 2010 in the aftermath of the earthquake and has served as a M&A reporter for Money & Investing in New York since April 2010.
 
 
Dru's done a fine job reporting on the e-mails and the issues.  We're about to get to two who are doing a lousy job.
 
Reality, Chon was asked to resign and given the choice of resigning or being fired.  She opted to resign.  Let's start with Maressa Brown whose work experience is "entertainment and women's magazines." It shows, dear, it really shows. Maressa Brown's "not quite sure Chon should have had to lose her job over the affair itself" -- if your company has a code of ethics, you follow it or your risk losing your job.
 
In addition, those ethics were the same code of ethics of any professional news outlet.  Now I know, in entertainment writing, you're encouraged to sleep with your interview subject.  But in most fields of journalism, you're only paid for the story, not for also granting sexual favors.
 
Maressa Brown might want to consider that and might want to consider that Gina Chon's little love life shouldn't mean a thing to the readers of the Wall St. Journal.  They shouldn't know about it, they shouldn't follow it.  Those rules, ethics, they exist for that reason.
 
The public is supposed to be able to trust that everything is ethical.  Gina Chon's decision to sleep with her source was grounds for instant termination.  Michele Norris is one of the finest radio journalists around.  She's a host of NPR's All Things Considered.  She's got reporting chops and she's earned a reputation of being a fair and accurate journalist.  To ensure that she's seen that way, she and NPR agreed early on that if her husband was working for a campaign, she couldn't cover it.  Last October, Norris went on an extended leave from All Things ConsideredShe explains why here:
 
Hello everyone,
I need to share some news and I wanted to make sure my NPR family heard this first.
Last week, I told news management that my husband, Broderick Johnson, has just accepted a senior advisor position with the Obama Campaign. After careful consideration, we decided that Broderick's new role could make it difficult for me to continue hosting ATC.
Given the nature of Broderick's position with the campaign and the impact that it will most certainly have on our family life, I will temporarily step away from my hosting duties until after the 2012 elections.
I will be leaving the host chair at the end of this week, but I'm not going far. I will be wearing a different hat for a while, producing signature segments and features and working on new reporting projects. While I will of course recuse myself from all election coverage, there's still an awful lot of ground that I can till in this interim role.
This has all happened very quickly, but working closely with NPR management, we've been able to make a plan that serves the show, honors the integrity of our news organization and is best for me professionally and personally.
I will certainly miss hosting, but I will remain part of the ATC team and I look forward to contributing to our show and NPR in new and exciting ways.
My very best,
Michele
 
Again, Michele Norris a well known reporter with a sterling reputation for her work.  And yet, she follows the rules.  She goes out of her way to make sure there is no appearence of a conflict of interest.  She doesn't say, "Oh, well, everybody knows my husband is working on campaigns so since everybody knows, it doesn't matter."  She's a serious journalist who takes her profession seriously.
 
Dow Jones cannot afford the reputation of employing Little Ms. or Mr. Hot Pants who's going to sleep with the source and then possibly cater the news to benefit their lover.  Dow Jones has a reputation to uphold.  Chon probably could have gotten away with what she did -- which wouldn't have made it ethical -- if she'd worked for a different outlet.  But Dow Jones is a considered a trusted name and the reason for that is they don't tolerate unethical reporters.
 
People need to let go of the idea that this is love story or it's a happy ending.  I'm not concerned with whether Chon's found happiness or not.  I'm concerned with the fact that she was the chief reporter on Iraq for the paper in 2008 and she was sleeping with a US government official.  That would be the ultimate embed.  How much did that color what she reported? 
 
I don't know and that's a question that a real news outlet never wants any news consumer to have to ask.  That's why there is a code of ethics.
 
Bonnie Goldstein (Washington Post) wants to talk about the "brutal" confirmation process while, as an aside, noting the e-mails didn't come up in the hearing.  No, they didn't.  As I explained here already, I learned about the e-mails in a senator's office (a senator on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee).  (I overheard a conversation, there was not a leak.)  That was Tuesday afternoon.  The Committee was aware of the e-mails on Tuesday (the day before the hearing), they just weren't aware if they were genuine or not.  (I can say a great deal more about that on the Democratic side but I'll stay silent right now while I wait to see what happens.)  McGurk was fawned over.  In addition, this story should have been all over but it's not.  The Washington Post is covering it.  One of the few papers that is.  CJR has daily blogs and were just posting about 'racy e-mails' last week but they've ignored this story and the ethics involved.  Goldstein writes:
 
 
 
Having read some of the correspondence in an excerpt in the Above the Law blog, I have to say it presents unusual but material evidence of McGurk's qualification to work with the reconstruction team and the Iraqi government.  His sequencing choices notwithstanding, the written correspondence indicates the nominee possesses confidence, sincerity and a lovely sense of humor (a quality I suspect he's needing to call on in great quantities as this painfully personal matter gets sorted out in public ... ).
 
Next time, try reading the e-mails posted, not excerpts and trying paying attention to what you're reading not on how wet it makes you.
 
In the e-mails it is very clear -- and was on Tuesday afternoon when I left the senator's office and pulled up the e-mails on my iPhone.  It wasn't hard, it wasn't difficult.  And maybe next time you should read all of them before weighing in.  Brett McGurk's words are very clear.  Ryan Crocker did not know about the affair.  Whether Crocker wants to take a bullet for him now or not doesn't matter.  It's in writing, Crocker didn't know, McGurk was concealing the affair.  Now he was married and that's one reason he was concealing.  But that doesn't excuse it, it actually adds to more problems because when the government sends you to another country to represent the US, you put your best face forward.  Not your trashy, bootie call face.  But your best face.
 
(Scary thought, what if trolling for women is the best face of Brett McGurk.)
 
It sure is cute to read Bonnie's stupidity and Maressa's as well.  Little girls, grow the hell up and pay attention, we're going to go over it one more time.
 
Iraq is a country.  It's not a mythical place.  People actually live there.  Children are born there.  For children to be born -- pay attention, girls -- women have to be present.
 
The Iraq War has destroyed the rights of women in Iraq.  Now I know, Maressa and Bonnie, that you're both too lazy to have ever attended a hearing in the last year on what the State Dept's doing in Iraq.  But among the excuses they've sent lower-level flunkies in with is that they are working on women's rights.
 
 
Yes, the country that destroyed Iraqi women's rights now will supposedly fix them. 
 
So Bonnie, Maressa, tell me how in a country in which so many males are embracing fundamentalism, in which so-called 'honor' killings regularly take place (women are put to death -- usually by family members -- for so-called crimes against 'honor' -- sex, divorce, being the victim of a rape, etc.), tell me how Iraqi women can comfortably visit the Embassy if Brett McGurk is the Ambassador? 
 
Brett McGurk is all over the Iraqi press.  Kitabat, you name it.  They are covering this story.  No surprise.  And McGurk's got a little reputation now in Iraq.  So tell me please, Bonnie, Maressa, how the hell are Iraqi women going to be served by a US Ambassador they can't be alone with unless they want to risk an honor killing or something more.
 
Let's be really clear, the only males that get killed for these so-called 'honor' killings are ones thought to be gay.  The man that sleeps with a woman or that rapes a woman or that divorces is not put to death.  Just the woman.
 
And you want to tell me that Mr. Can't Keep It In His Pants is the best Iraqi women can hope for?
Bonnie and Maressa, it's time you both woke up and realized that your  little fantasies of romance are something you should save for when you're alone,  Right now you should be focusing on Iraqi women.  No, it won't bring you to orgasm, but less focus on yourself for once in your lives might make you better women.
 
 
Essay topic: What is the connection between thinking and writing?  Short answer: Maressa and Bonnie demonstrate there is none.  They not only ignore the fact that a man who sends out blue balls e-mails to a woman he has not yet slept with probably isn't the one to supervise female employees, they also don't even bother to consider the fate of Iraqi women.  Shame on you both, shame, shame.
 
Here's another tip for those covering it, 'McGurk didn't disclose any classified . . .'  You don't know what he did.  He's never gone on the record about this relationship.  He's avoided the press and it wasn't raised in his hearing.  RT gets it right, "Though the Journal believes that Chon disclosed information on unpublished articles with McGurk, it is not yet clear if he had shared any classified intel with the reporter. " It is not yet clear.  You stumble onto a topic at the last minute, manage to write a few paragraphs and want to pretend like you know what took place when no questions have been asked, let alone answered?  Margaret Carlson writes a column on the topic for Bloomberg here and I'll be kind and leave it at that.  (Tomorrow we may devote several paragraphs to it.)
 
 
 
Today Iraq was slammed with multiple bombings in what's been called the deadliest attack since December 18th (when most US troops left Iraq).  AP offers a timeline of the attacks since thenEmily Buchanan (BBC News -- link is video) notes ten locations in Baghdad alone and that the first bombing struck at five this morning.  In Kirkuk, Buchanan noted, the headquarters of Massoud Barzani's political party was targeted.  (Massoud Barzani is the President of the KRG.  His political party is the Kurdistan Democratic Party.)

Lee Moran (Daily Mail -- link is text, video and photos) reports most of the people targeted in Baghdad were pilgrims while security forces were targeted elsewhere in Iraq.  Kitabat notes that the pilgrims are making the holy journey on the anniversary of the death of Imam Musa al-Kadhim Saturday.   Moran counts 13 bombings across Iraq today.  Alsumaria counts 32 bombings in 8 of Iraq's 18 provinces.  There were also shootings as Mohamad Ali Harissi (AFP) notes, "Gunmen also attacked a house north of Baquba, killing a father and wounding his wife and three children, while a car bomb against a police patrol in the city wounded four people, the [police] colonel said."  Alsumaria notes that Mosul saw a car bombing which claimed the life of 1 Iraqi soldier and left another and two bystanders injured.  Alsumaria notes the Baghdad bombings included one in the military barracks which injured four soldiers.  In addition, Alsumaria notes 1 Sahwa was killed in an armed attack to the south west of Baquba -- this was a "Daughter of Iraq" (as the female Sahwa are also known).

The Telegraph of London counts 63 dead and notes, "The attacks were the third this week targeting the annual pilgrimage that sees hundreds of thousands of Shiites converge on Baghdad on foot to commemorate the 8th century death of revered Imam Moussa al-Kadhim."  Yes, they were.  And shouldn't someone be noting that, as AP reported early yesterday morning, that Nouri's spokesperson announced he had stepped up security.  He had stepped up security.  Now his plan is to make tomorrow a holiday.  AFP's Prashant Rao re-Tweets his collegue's Tweet on the death toll:
 

Wave of attacks kill 72 people, wound over 250 in #Iraq during Shiite pilgrimage; @AFP journalist wounded by car bomb http://yhoo.it/LU28R0


Haddad Salih (BBC News) observes, "Soon after the attacks, websites of local political parties critical of Shia Prime Minister Nouri Maliki blamed the political crisis in which Iraq has been embroiled for the past few months. But Mr Maliki's State of Law coalition pointed the finger of blame at the recent failure of attempts by the prime minister's rivals to topple him with a vote of no-confidence."  Well Nouri al-Maliki was supposed to appoint a Minister of Defense, Minister of Interiror and Minister of National Security to move from prime minister-designate to prime minister.  He was named prime minister-designate in November 2010.  He was made prime minister in December 2010.  He has still refused to nominate anyone for the posts because this allows him to control them.  So if there's a problem with the violence -- I think most people would agree there was -- that goes to Nouri.  He's the Minister of Defense, he's the Minister of Interior, he's the Minister of National Security.  Why won't he protect the people?  That should be the cry he faces every day.
 
 
Back to the US and the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee hearing.  As usual, Kat will cover Ranking Member Richard Burr at her site tonight.  There are other aspects of the hearing that we may cover tomorrow.  If there's interest, we can easily include coverage of the hearing in tomorrow and Friday's snapshot.  We are very limited for space tonight.  So we'll note some of a news release from Committee Chair Patty Murray's office (and we'll note the release in full in tomorrow's snapshot):
 
 
 
Today, under questioning from Senator Patty Murray, Chairman of the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta announced that he has ordered the heads of every branch of the U.S. military to review diagnoses for the invisible wounds of war going back to 2001. The Secretary's announcement comes after Murray worked to spur a similar review by the Army which arose from hundreds of soldiers being misdiagnosed and in many cases accused of faking the symptoms of PTSD at Madigan Army Medical Center in Washington state.
 
"The Pentagon and the VA are losing the battle on mental and behavioral health conditions," Murray told the Secretary at today's hearing. Murray also noted that the Army has already begun a system-wide review saying "This is not just an Army disability evaluation system. This is a joint DOD and VA program covering all of the services. Why has the Department not taken the lead in evaluating and making improvements to this system?"
 
"What I've asked is the other service chiefs to implement the same approach that the Army's taken" Secretary Panetta responded. "…I'm not satisfied either. We're doing everything we can to try to build a better system between the Pentagon, the Department of Defense and VA. But there are still huge gaps in terms of the differences in terms of how they approach these cases and how they diagnose the cases and how they deal with them, and frankly, that's a whole area we have to do much better on."
 
Secretary Panetta indicated that the Pentagon-wide review will be led by the Undersecretary for Personnel and Readiness. At the hearing Senator Murray also highlighted the impact that mental health care shortcomings are having pointing to statistics that show that military suicides are outpacing combat deaths.
 
 
 
afp

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

WTF?

Thanks to C.I., we know that Brett McGurk can't follow rules and regulations and engages in an affairs he hides from his superiors to avoid getting in trouble for violating policy.

Brett McGurk is completely unqualifed to be US Ambassador to Iraq.  But I'm reading POLITICO and come across a headline about a battle between Barack and Marco Rubio (Latino Republican Senator out of Florida) and the battle's over a nominee that Rubio wants blocked.  I'm not surprised and figure I'm not going to agree with Rubio because he's a Republican.

But then my mouth drops as I read this:



It's a convoluted tale I wrote about in detail in February, but the gist is this: Rubio is wedged between the competing demands of his pal Jim DeMint (R-SC) -- who opposes Aponte (over a relationship she had with a Cuban spy years back) -- and Florida's huge Puerto Rican Community, clustered in the Orlando area, who views Aponte's nomination with pride.

Excuse me?

Since when do we make appointments of anyone -- let alone to be an ambassador -- when we know they've have a sexual relationship with a foreign spy?

We don't.

What the hell?

No wonder Barack's such a joke.

He wants someone who is already known to have slept with a foreign spy to be the ambassador for the US to another country?

The woman may be the sweetest thing in the world.  My guess is I would like her.  But that's a strike against you.  It's always been a strike against you for any government job where you were privy to classified information.

Closing with C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"


Tuesday, June 12, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, Gina Chon and the Wall St. Journal part ways, Iraq and Iran grow further entwined, is Brett McGurk the reason the alleged killer of 5 US soldiers will likely walk, Cindy Sheehan talks about how the peace movement got hijacked by Democratic Party operatives, and more.
 
It's official: The Barack Obama administration is now the least accountable administration in modern history.  How did it earn that dishonor?
 
When Rupert Murdoch's Wall St. Journal shows stronger ethics than your administration, there is a problem.  When Wall St. Journal reporter Gina Chon and married Bush administration figure Brett McGurk decided to get hot and heavy in Baghdad in 2008, each was violating written policies of their employers.  At present McGurk is still attempting to become US Ambassador to Iraq.  Gina Chon, however, has parted with employer today.
 
Howard Kurtz (Daily Beast) reports, "Wall Street Journal reporter Gina Chon resigned on Tuesday over her relationship with a U.S. official who is now President Obama's nominee to be ambassador to Iraq." Lisa Dru (Business Insider) reports on the news as well and includes the Wall St. Journal's statement:
 
Wall Street Journal reporter Gina Chon agreed to resign this afternoon after acknowledging that while based in Iraq she violated the Dow Jones Code of Conduct by sharing certain unpublished news articles with Brett McGurk, then a member of the U.S. National Security Council in Iraq.
In 2008 Ms. Chon entered into a personal relationship with Mr. McGurk, which she failed to disclose to her editor. At this time the Journal has found no evidence that her coverage was tainted by her relationship with Mr. McGurk.
Ms. Chon joined the Journal in 2005 in Detroit, followed by an assignment as Iraq correspondent in Baghdad from 2007 to 2009. She also reported for the Journal from Haiti in 2010 in the aftermath of the earthquake and has served as a M&A reporter for Money & Investing in New York since April 2010.

 

 
 
Whitney Lloyd, Jake Tapper and Dana Hughes (ABC News) explain, "The emails, first published by the blog Cryptome last week and confirmed by ABC News, are sexually explicit and suggest that Chon got much of her information, guidance and access for her reporting from McGurk during their affair."  Joe Coscarelli (New York magazine) quotes Senator James Risch on McGurk's nomination,  "Prior to these e-mail revelations, I had reservations about confirming Brett McGurk as ambassador to Iraq. Now that additional issues have been raised, more information will be needed and I reserve final judgment until all the facts are brought to light."  Adam Martin (The Atlantic) observes, "In the end, it wasn't the sex with a source but the admission she shared unpublished stories with him that caused Wall Street Journal reporter Gina Chon to resign from the paper."  Like Howard Kurtz, Meenal Vamburkar (Mediaite) is reporting that Chon took her leave of absence from the paper after the e-mails were published.
 
 
 As usual The Huffington Post does a lousy job covering this story (while Poynter and CJR ignore it outright) as demonstrated by the comments where stupidity is flaunted with comments like "They got married!" or that they only had an affair.  You don't sleep with your source.  And, yes, HuffPo should do a better job covering the issues involved; however, most grown ups should already know that sleeping with your source -- especially someone working for the government -- is a huge conflict of interest.  Not an apparent one.  A conflict of interest.
 
That's what Lisa Du was explaining yesterday, "Aside from the fact that Chon probably committed the biggest no-no in the journalism industry by sleeping with her source, McGurk, by the way, was apparently still married when he and Chon had their rendezvous in the summer of 2008, the Washington Free Beacon is reporting."  And McGurk also had a written code of conduct.  We knew McGurk was hiding the affair from his bosses (and he was hiding it because it was a violation of the written rules of conduct he signed and agreed to follow).  And it's the point Erik Wemple (Washington Post) makes today, "Not alerting an editor to a relationship with a ranking official in the center of her beat is a job-ending breakdown. Though a grace period must apply to the initial stages of courtship, Chon had progressed beyond that point, as the e-mails make clear. Let's just say that if you're discussing masturbation with a high-ranking lover/source, you have some news for your editor. The statement from the Wall Street Journal states that Chon neglected to take that step."
 
 
And more troubles keep coming Brett McGurk's way.  Josh Rogin (Foreign Policy) reports on Senator Mark Kirk, "One Republican senator [Kirk] is now making an issue out of McGurk's role in the case of Ali Musa Daqduq, the alleged Hezbollah commander who was transferred from U.S. to Iraqi custody last December and acquitted in an Iraqi court last month. He remains in Iraqi custody pending an automatically triggered appeal, but could be released thereafter. "
 
Who?
 
In May, Mike Jaccarino (Fox News -- link is text and video) quoted Charlotte Freeman stating, "It was like a pit (opening) inside of me. I briefly read it and couldn't read on.  I couldn't go there.  It wasn't like he was dying again.  It was more shock that these people get away with what they do.  There's no justice. It's amazing and shocking to me that someone who did what he did could go free."  That was her reaction to the news that Iraq planned to set freem the man who allegedly killed her husband, 31-year-old Spc Brian S. Freemen as well as 22-year-old Spc Johnathan B. Chism, 20-year-old Pfc Jonathon M. Millican, 25-year-old Pfc Shawn P. Falter and 25-year-old 1st Lt Jacob N. Fritz.  The 5 US soldiers were murdered in January 2007.  The US military had Ali Musa Daqduq in custody along with others who were said to have orchestrated the killings.  But they let go of the League of Righteous members in the summer of 2009 to help out England (5 Brits had been kidnapped -- only one would be returned alive after the League was released).  They kep Daqduq in US military custody.  What happened?
 
December 16, 2011, Liz Sly and Peter Finn (Washington Post) reported on the US handing Ali Musa Daqduq over to the Iraqis, "He was transferred to Iraqi custody after the Obama administration 'sought and received assurances that he will be tried for his crimes,' according to Tommy Vietor, spokesman for the National Security Council in Washington."  Though US Senators objected to his being handed over to Nouri's legal system, the White House insisted he would be prosecuted and, if for nothing else, he might do eight years for entering Iraq illegally!
 
5 deaths.  Brutal deaths.  This was an attack that involved kidnapping.  And Barack was fine with  Ali Musa Daqduq just getting a slap on the wrist for entering Iraq without the proper travel visa.  Then on May 7th, Suadad-al Salhy, Patrick Markey and Andrew Heavens (Reuters) reported that Iraq's 'justice' system has cleared Ali Mussa Daqduq of all charges related to the "2007 kidnapping attack that killed five U.S. troops."  This is currently on appeal but it's not exepcted to be any trouble for Ali Mussa Daqduq to walk on all charges.   Kitabat reported  in May that Nouri caved to pressure from Tehran and that's why he was released.   It was also noted that a number of US Senators were asking the White House not to turn Daqduq over to Iraq but to move him to Guantanamo or another facility. 
 
Was Brett McGurk involved in those decisions?  He was in Iraq as the decision was being made and as we quoted him in last Wednesday's snapshot telling the Senate Foreign Relations Committee:
 

In my last assignments in Iraq, I participated in almost every internal conversation -- both inter-agency and in Baghdad -- about how not only to plan the transition after our troops were withdrawing but also uhm, uh-uh, how to get the size down.  Uh, quite frankly, our presence in Iraq right now, uh, is too large.
 
 
But not that one, Brett McGurk?  You were supposedly a whiz on the Iraqi legal system.  Didn't you blog about that?  What happened to that blog?
 
 
 
Your now deleted blog?  Maybe the Committee should ask you questions about that?
 
 
 
Currently War Criminal Colin The Blot Powell and his media psychophants are attempting to blur reality so that they can alter the lies Powell told to sell the Iraq War.   That makeover won't take.  But on this week's Cindy Sheehan Soapbox, Cindy spoke with independent researcher and scholar Edmund Berger (click here for his writing at Dissident Voice) about the professional left that exists to divert energies and actions and funnel everything into the Democratic Party.  Excerpt.
 
 
Cindy Sheehan:  [. . .] in 2005, when I camped out at Crawford, Texas, I was there on a Saturday and I think that on Monday CODEPINK was there, the founder of CODEPINK was there.  Tuesday, MoveOn was there and they sent some p.r. people.  Then we were there for 26 days.  And so I just want to make a quick disclaimer right here. I love, I love-love-love CODEPINK. I love the ladies on the ground. The ladies on the ground in the different chapters around the country are far, far more radical than the leadership is.  And as you point out in one of your articles, one of the founders of CODEPINK was a $50,000 bundler for Obama.  The other founder went around the country getting out the vote for Obama.  So now, three and a half years later, they're trying to say, "Oh, but we don't like his drone program and blah blah blah."  Well, you know, once you let the horse out of the barn, it's hard to get the horse back in.   But anyway, so I just want to say I love CODEPINK.  I just did an action with them last week at Beale Air Force Base, the Bay Area CODEPINK and Sacremento CODEPINK.  But the leadership, of course, they also were involved in the 99% Spring, if I'm not mistaken, right?
 
Edmund Berger:  Yeah, they were one of the key people, I believe.  It's listed on their website.
 
Cindy Sheehan:  And as you point out in your article too, is that they do extremely good things, especially around Gaza and things like that. So, you know, we can't throw out the whole baby just because some of the bath water is fishy.  But anyway, So I think these Democratic-leaning organizations recognized the power of Camp Casey in Crawford, Texas, recognized the power that I was able to draw all these people in, people who didn't even know there was an anti-war movement growing.  But we also brought other family members who lost loved ones in the war.  We brought veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan, from Vietnam and things like that.  So it was a very powerful movement that sprang up in 2005.  An organization that I also think is really good at undermining movements to move towards a Democratic agenda is United for Peace and Justice, I don't know if you are familiar with them.
 
Edmund Berger:  I'm not too familiar with them but they are a member of the 99% Spring.
 
Cindy Sheehan:  Right. So they all came to Camp Casey and then the power of Camp Casey was funneled into the elections of 2006, of getting Democrats back into power in the House of Represenatives.  And I had some leaders of MoveOn come out to Camp Casey, like on one of the last days.  And they told me that they had spent a lot of money on the Camp.  And I said, "Well it's not money that I asked you to spend. You know, I didn't ask you to do it.  So if you spent it, that's your problem."   But they said that -- they said that there was a bill in Congress and I don't remember exactly what the bill was about but I always called it the Get Out Of Iraq Eventually bill.  And it was co-sponsored by Dennis Kucinich, Neal Abercrombie -- however, you say his name -- and Ron Paul and Walter Jones on the Republican side.  So they said, 'You, Camp Casey and you, have to endorse this bill.'  I said, "No, our demand -- our demand is Troops Out Now! It's not Troops Out Whenever They Feel Like Getting Troops Out." So I refused and then they totally pulled out of Camp Casey and then these organizations -- I can see in hindsight what happened.  They were keeping me so busy, I didn't know what was happening.  And they totally co-opted the anti-war movement that could have made powerful, structural change if it wasn't co-opted into getting Democrats elected.  But then we also have to talk about the Democrats because all of the leading Democrats, right to my face,  told me, "Cindy, if you and the anti-war movement help us get in power, we'll help you end the war."  Well, you know, in 2007, the first thing they did was fund the war.  They didn't end the war, they voted to fund the wars.  So, and then, MoveOn -- that year, MoveOn.org, they were encouraging their members to support the Democrats in voting "yes" for the funding.   Yeah.  That's when I say Wes Boyd and Eli Pariser, they have blood on their hands.  But I was the devil for pointing this out.  That it was okay to call for defunding the wars when Republicans were in office but, when Democrats got in office, all the sudden we had to support funding the wars. That was a really, really difficult time.  And then 2008 was the fifth anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq and we wanted to have -- a lot of organizations wanted to have a big demo in DC, like we did in 2005 when we had hundreds of thousands of people there and we were told by organizations like United for Peace and Justice and Iraq Veterans Against the War that we weren't going to have a big demo in DC because we didn't want to embarrass the Democrats.  And of course it was another election year. 
 
 
 
 Meanwhile Arianna Huffington (The Huffington Post) observes which country has become Nouri al-Maliki's best friend in recent months:
 
 
With the war there officially "ended" and most of our troops back home, Iraq isn't getting much ink these days. But the story is far from over. Indeed, according to Wadah Khanfar, former director general of Al Jazeera, Iraq is still the most important story in the Middle East -- with a far greater impact on the region's future than Syria. "Nobody's paying attention to Iraq anymore," he told me during dinner in London over the weekend, "but it's becoming a client state of Iran, with a giant amount of oil between them." This state of affairs is, of course, primarily our doing.
And yet, as our soldiers have left, so has our attention. "The war in Iraq will soon belong to history," proclaimed President Obama at Fort Bragg as he marked the occasion of bringing the last troops home. But while the military chapter of that disastrous undertaking might belong to history, its consequences belong very much to the present. A present in which the very same voices that rose to push us into war with Iraq are again rising to push us into war with Iran -- but without ever noting that it was their misadventure in Iraq that gave Iran a new and powerful ally.
 
 
As noted yesterday, Iran and Iraq are now planning for ways for Iraq to secure leadership of OPEC -- that would be the post of Secretary General.   Peg Mackey (Reuters) notes the two countries stand at odds with Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates and that Iraq and Iran's desire to make more than $110 per barrel of oil is going to lead the two to demand "Saudi Arabia, pumping its highest in decades, [. . .] cut back when producers meet in Vienna on Thursday."  Mackey explains that Iraq worked out its strategy "when Iran's Oil Minister Rostam Qasemi visited Maliki in Baghdad last week, Maleki ordered the oil ministry to adopt a unified position with Iran on OPEC production levels, say Iraqi oil sources." Iraq and Iran, plotting together, like old friends.  Una Galani and Christopher Swann (Reuters) adds, "If Iraq's rising output isn't calibrated with the market's ability to absorb it, oversupply could become chronic and prices could fall further."
 
 
 
In the latest violence, Alsumaria notes 4 assailants shot up the Basra home of provincial council member Mohammed Saadoun al-Abadi last night and 2 people were shot dead while walking in southern BaghdadSinan Salah (AP) reports that a Baghdad bombing has left 2 pilgrims dead who were taking part in "the annual pilgrimage honoring a revered imam."
 
 
 
 
 In the US, Senator Patty Murray is the Chair of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee which holds a hearing tomorrow.  Her office notes:
 
FOR PLANNING PURPOSES
Tuesday, June 12, 2012
CONTACT: Murray Press Office
(202) 224-2834
 
 
Murray to Question Defense Secretary on Military-Wide Mental Health Care Shortcomings
 
As military suicides continue to outpace combat deaths, Murray to urge Pentagon to expand ongoing Army-wide review of behavioral health evaluations and diagnoses to all branches, call for transparency in review process
 
(Washington, D.C.) – Tomorrow, U.S. Senator Patty Murray, Chairman of the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee, will question Defense Secretary Leon Panetta on the Pentagon's commitment to ensuring accurate mental health diagnoses and treatment for servicemembers as the military continues to face an epidemic of military suicides. Murray's questioning, which comes one week after the Pentagon announced that there had already been 154 active duty military suicides this year, will focus on expanding a comprehensive Army review of mental health evaluations and diagnoses and new Army directives on mental health care to other branches of the military. The Army's recently announced review comes on the heels of a review of mental health diagnoses at Madigan Army Medical Center in Washington state that has already returned PTSD diagnoses to over a hundred servicemembers who had in many cases been accused of faking symptoms.
 
 
WHO: U.S. Senator Patty Murray
Defense Secretary Leon Panetta
WHAT: Senate Defense Appropriations Subcommittee Hearing
WHEN: TOMORROW – Wednesday, June 13th 2012
10:30 AM EST/7:30 PST - Hearing start time
Questioning from Murray likely to take place after 11:30 EST/8:30 PST
WHERE: Dirksen 192
 
 
Matt McAlvanah
Communications Director
U.S. Senator Patty Murray
202-224-2834 - press office
202--224-0228 - direct
 
 
 
 

Monday, June 11, 2012

The embarrassing Jay Carney


Do I feel lazy, an e-mail asked, when Isaiah does so many comics and I do few album reviews? I agreed to do 10 albums a year and a year-in-review.  So anything over that is gravy.  In addition, Isaiah's always done far more than I do.  This is nothing new.  Not only does he do the comics that go up at The Common Ills, he does comics for all the community newsletters.  So (a) it's not a competition but (b) if it was, I'm losing and fine with that.  Now here's his The World Today Just Nuts "The Ambassador to Swingtown"

ambassador to swingtown

He's done two.  Here's  "The Trusted Driver of Commerce."


commerce driver

Jay Carney is such a little bitch.  Read POLITICO.  Here's reality, you either Tony Snow it or you admit that you're too old to be the spokesperson.

It's a young person's job except for a very few.

Jay Carney looks like a little bitch every day.  He should be embarrassed.  His children should be ashamed of the camp there father pulls every day.

"Do your jobs," supreme bitch Jay declared to reporters today.

He is a pissy little bitch because they did: They reported what Barack said.

At a certain age, and Jay past it long ago, you look pathetic whoring for a politician.  A 27-year-old man could pull this off.  Young George Steph did.  But he could not pull it off today.

If Barack gets a second term, they should find a new and young spokesperson.

Closing with C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"


Monday, June 11, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, some OPEC members see Iraq as a problem, the UN says the relocation of Camp Ashraf is in jeopardy, Nouri al-Maliki lives to thug another day, Jalal Talabani sells out his own people, Brett McGurk's nomination (and all that surrounds it) creates strange silences, and more.


Starting in the US.  For years and years, CJR (Columbia Journalism Review) was said to be the left-wing journalism site and AJR (American Journalism Review) was said to be the right-wing.  Over the years, they both denied any real tilt, insisting that they covered the media and did so with regard to issues.

Lisa Du observes, "Aside from the fact that Chon probably committed the biggest no-no in the journalism industry by sleeping with her source, McGurk, by the way, was apparently still married when he and Chon had their rendezvous in the summer of 2008, the Washington Free Beacon is reporting."

And she's right. 


But, sadly, Lisa Du is writing for Business Insider and not CJR.  She is writing about the nominee to be US Ambassador to Iraq Brett McGurk and Wall St. Journal reporter Gina Chon who carried on in Baghdad in 2008 with McGurk concealing the relationship from then-US Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker.

As Ryan Chittum's June 8th post makes clear, CJR hasn't developed a sudden aversion to taking on the Wall St. Journal.  And Erika Fry's "The superintendent's racy e-mails" went up today indicating that CJR has no problem covering "racy e-mails."  So why the silence? CJR should be leading on this issue and instead they are silent.  This is the sort of silence that has people suspecting CJR tilts left and allows that tilt to influence their coverage?


(Does AJR tilt right?  I honestly don't know.  I ignored that publication until I started The Common Ills.  Then, if I was asked to highlight something from it, I did.  But I had heard it all my life and assumed it was true.  The truth is that I honestly don't know.  The pieces we've highlighted here have always been strong writing.  CJR?  I always assumed it was left like me.  But I kidded myself that being left didn't influence what it would cover.  I stopped kidding about that around 2008.) 

Nominated for the post in March by President Obama, McGurk's confirmation hearings finally began last Wednesday, but the bipartisan backing he'd enjoyed having served under Bush seemed to be evaporating in the wake of the scandal.
"Overnight, support for him has cratered," a Republican staffer on the Foreign Relations Committee told ABC News.
Nevertheless analysts told ABC they expect him to ultimately succeed in securing the position.
In a statement published on Gawker, the Wall Street Journal said it was "looking into the matter" and that Chon was already scheduled to go on leave this summer in light of McGurk's nomination.



Following the leaked emails Sen. James Inhofe, R-Oklahoma, who is on the Armed Services Committee, has said that he will not meet with McGurk, as he typically would, the Washington Post reported. 
'Senator Inhofe always prefers to meet with nominees personally before giving his support,' said his spokesman, Jared Young. 'In regards to this nominee, Senator Inhofe has heard some concerning issues, and until those issues are cleared up, he will not meet with Mr. McGurk.'


Cheri Roberts (OpEdNews) weighs in on Brett McGurk's nomination for US Ambassador to Iraq, "Is this the right man to be the new Ambassador to Iraq? I think not. If a man cannot hold up the weight of his zipper, there is no way he should be given the weight of Diplomacy."  Today Peter Van Buren offers:


State claims that McGurk is "uniquely qualified" for the job, and that he was the subject of "rigorous vetting." Yet now-authenticated, salacious emails, which call into question his judgment, maturity, discretion and ethics popped up online, straight out of State's own archives and blew his once certain Senate approval on to a back burner, at best.
As part of any political vetting process, especially in the age of the web, the candidate is asked at some point "Is there anything else? Anything out there that might come up we need to know about? Any skeletons in the closet, old affairs, angry ex', anything?" Because today, if it is out there, it will surface.


Peter Van Buren is the author of We Meant Well: How I Helped Lose the War for the Hearts and Minds of the Iraqi People.  As a result, the State Dept has gone after Peter.  The book should have a sticker proclaiming it, "The book the US State Department doesn't want you to read!"
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries is better known as OPEC.  It is run by the Secretary General.  Since 2007, the former Libyan Minister of Oil, Abdalla Salem el-Badri, has served in that position.  A conference president is not in charge of OPEC and serves only a one-year term (and is elected with an Altnerate President who serves that same year).  Calling Abdul Kareem Luaibi "OPEC president" is false.  He's a Conference President and only presides over the conferences.  He is not "President of OPEC" or "OPEC President."   Luaibi is the Oil Minister of Iraq. 



Reuters reported this morning the OPEC is concerned that a "glut of oil" is depressing the price per barrel of crude and Iraq's Oil Minister Abdul Kareem Luaibi is noted in the report, "Luaibi said his own country, Iraq, would export 2.9 million bpd next year -- up from 2.4 million bpd now.  That implies total Iraqi output of 3.4 million bpd, which would allow it to overtake Iran as OPEc's second biggest producer.  Iraq has ambitious plans to expand production held back by decades of war and sanctions."  Peg Mackey and Daniel Fineren (Reuters) report that Saudia Arabia Minister of Oil, Ali al-Naimi, states, "Our analysis suggests that we will need a higher ceiling than current exists." They then state, "Iraq and Iran are expected to argue that Saudi Arabia should reduce supplies to help support prices." The three are apparently also divided on prices with Saudia Arabia feeling $100 per barrel of oil is fine but Iraq and Iran wanting $125 per barrel.

The disagreement comes ahead of the 5th OPEC International Seminar to be held in Vienna's Hofburg Palace starting June 13th.   KUNA notes that the meeting will also see the issue of Secretary General raised and that this will "overshadow on the meeting's deliberations after Iran and Iraq have officially nominated their candidates for this position against a contester from Saudi Arabia."  Who's proposed so far? 

Middle East Economic Survey notes that Iraq's pushing for Thamir Ghadhban (close ties to Nouri), Iran's pushing for one of their former Ministers of Oil, Gholamhossein Nozari, Equador's putting up Minister of Oil Wilson Pastor-Morris and Saudi Arabia is backing their OPEC Governor Majid al-Munif.  IOGN notes, "The selection of OPEC secretary generals is traditionally a fraught task, typically with unexpected compromise candidates eventually being selected."   There have been 22 secretary generals so far, that covers the period from 1961 to the present (el-Badri's term runs out at the end of 2012).  A citizen of Equador last served as Secretary General from 1979 to 1981.  Iran can claim the first Secretary General and it's never held the post since.  The Islamic Revolution of 1979 has made additional terms heading OPEC especially problematic with Arab member-states of OPEC.  Iraq has held the post only once, from 1964 to 1965 when Dr. Abdul Rahman al-Bazzaz was Secretary General.  Unlike Nouri's proposed candidate, al-Bazzaz was a pan-Arab nationalist. (He was also a Sunni.)  RIA Novisti offers a series of photos of then-Iraqi Prime Minister al-Bazzaz arriving July 27, 1966 in the USSR for an official visit and speaking with Premier Alexei Kosygin who headed the Council of Ministers from 1964 to 1980.  And here's one of then-Prime Minister Abd ar-Rahman al-Baazaz in Red Square.

In terms of prices, this year we have generally seen moving in an upward direction. However, current prices are not due to market fundamentals. Speculation is pushing prices higher. Trading is being made on the perception of a suppy shortage, rather than evidence of any actual or impending shortfall. It is related to geopolitics. In many respects it can be described as a 'fear factor'.
As we are all aware, oil is increasingly being treated as an individual asset class by finanical investors. Since 2005, the total open interest of the NYMEX and ICE Brent crude oil futures and options have increased sharply.

Una Galani and Christopher Swann (Reuters) note that Iraq's increase has thrown OPEC off balance, "If Iraq's rising output isn't calibrated with the market's ability to absorb it, oversupply could become chronic and prices could fall further. Iraq has said that it would like to rejoin OPEC's quota system in 2014. Rivals may now want that to happen sooner even though Iraq will seek a large quota to reflect its high level of reserves." In some western countries, it all comes down to what's the price at the pump but in the oil-rich Middle East, this is a very serious issue. Ahmed al-Jarallah (Arab Times) reports that "Iran's representative Mohammed Ali Khatibi" is accusing Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia of flooding the market and al-Jarallah compares that accusation to the one which led Saddam Hussein to attack Kuwait, "I think the leaders of Iran think they can repeat the same stupidity like Saddam Hussein or even more stupidity because on one hand the world at the moment cannot entertain such kinds of adventures and on the other the world will never allow it to happen under current economical hardships witnessed by several countries."

May 30th,  United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI) released "Report on Human Rights in Iraq: 2011."  As the report notes, Camp Ashraf is "over 3,000 residents affiliated with the People's Mujahedin of Iran (PMOI)" that are being moved to Camp Liberty.  These are Iranian dissidents who were welcomed into Iraq decades.  That changed with Nouri's Iraq.  The report notes the 36 deaths when Nouri's forces went into the camp April 8, 2011 and that it followed the assault of July 2009.  The report notes that the United Nations -- specifically UNAMI and UNHCR -- have been attempting to act "as an impartial facilitator" in moving the residents to Camp Liberty. 

That apparently has become more difficult.  The UN Secretary-General's Special Envoy to Iraq Martin Kobler declared today, "I urge the remaining residents of Camp Ashraf to relocate to Camp Hurriya without delay.  The relocation process should not be stalled.  I am concerned that there will be violence if the relocation doesn't recommence.  Any violence would be unacceptable.  I call on the Government of Iraq to avoid any forceful relocation.  Each relocation must be voluntary.  The United Nations supports only a peaceful, humanitarian solution and stands ready to facilitate."

So far, approximately 2,000 have been moved to Camp Liberty (Hurriya).  The last third are not moving.  They state that they want the US and the United Nations to inspect Camp Ashraf for weapons while they remain present because they fear that Nouri's forces will plant things in the camp after all residents are out.  (Information in this paragraph via two friends at the UN and one at the US State Dept.)

Why does when the search take place matter?


Because the US State Dept has made it an issue stating such a search will determine their classification of 'terrorist' or not 'terrorist.'   If you're late to the part, from the June 1st snapshot:

Which takes us into legal news, it's a shock to the administration but most others saw the ruling coming.  Jamie Crawford (CNN) reports, "A federal appeals court has ordered Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to make a prompt decision on whether to remove an Iranian dissident group from the State Department's list of foreign terrorist organizations."  This was a unanimous decision handed down by the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.  Why was it unanimous?  Because the administration has been in violation for some time now.  James Vicini (Reuters) reminds, "The appeals court ruled nearly two years ago that Clinton had violated the group's rights and instructed her to 'review and rebut' unclassified parts of the record she initially relied on and say if she regards the sources as sufficiently credible.  It said Clinton had yet to make a final decision."  The administration was in contempt.  The courts and the executive branch were in conflict.  (They still are.)  What generally happens there is the court of appeals makes a united front because this is now a court issue (as opposed to the merits of the case from when it was heard earlier).  Unlike the executive branch, the judicial branch has no security forces.  So they want to send a message but they also want to do so without looking weak if the administration ignores them.  So since two months was the target date for the State Dept to finish a review on the MEK, they gave State four months which, they hope, is more than enough time. However, the two months (as the judges know) was a guideline, not a promise.  State made very clear before the court that they were not promising two months.  So it could go on past four months.  Four months carries them into October.  If they're not complying by then, there's a good chance they won't.  Whether Barack Obama wins a second term as US President or not, Hillary Clinton has already stated she was only doing one term as Secretary of State.  So when November arrives, if there's no decision, there won't be a rush for one.  If Barack wins re-election, he'll state that he has to find someone to oversee the department first.  If Barack loses, they've already blown off the appeals court for over two years now, continuing to blow them off for sixty more days will be a breeze.

Nouri al-Maliki has twice attacked Camp Ashraf -- and done so -- both times -- while US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates was on the ground in Iraq.  He loathes the residents and has repeatedly attempted to force them back to Iran (where they would most likely be hamed and possibly put to death).  This is not an unreasonable request on their part.  If the US State Dept is declaring that a search must take place of Camp Ashraf and that the search will determine whether the group is terrorist or not, of course that search needs to take place immediately.

Nouri would be doing Iran's bidding (yet again) by having weapons planted after the residents were all out.  If the US is making this a determinating factor then the residents are not being unreasonable by refusing to leave -- the last residents -- until a search has taken place. 

Last week, an execution took place in Iraq.  Only now are details beginning to emerge.  From the  Thursday, June 7th:



In other news of violence, a spokesperson of the Ministry of Justice announces to Alsumaria that Abed Hamid Hmoud was hanged today.  Hmoud was the former secretary of Saddam Hussein.    AP adds, "As Saddam's presidential secretary, Hmoud controlled access to the Iraqi president and was one of the few people he is said to have trusted completely, U.S. officials said in 2003."  And, if the ghost of Hussein came back, apparently there was fear Hmoud would control access to that as well?  Whispers insist he was bad, really bad, really, really bad.  And they'd tell you about it but they're sworn to secrecy on what the court was told.  This is the democracy that trillions were spent on?  Secret trials that result in executions?  And no one can discuss what took place?

There are whispers of  'persecution of Shi'ites.'  So, in twenty or so years, we can expect those who targeted Iraq's LGBT community to be put to death as well?  That's not ever going to happen, is it?  Because it really wasn't about 'wrong doing' -- real or merely alleged -- it was about a group given power wanting to settle old scores.  Settling old scores?  That only leads to new scores in need of settling.  I don't support execution to begin with but when you're executing people you can't even claim killed someone, you're about vengence and not justice and you're on a dark path that never leads to sunlight.



With the news details, Felicity Arbuthnot (Dissident Voice) reports:



"What you have not heard", states the commentator,  "is that (Mr Hamoud) was led to his execution whilst under the impression that he was going for a medical check up. The Iraqi government didn't even notify his family or relatives or make arrangements with them to deliver his body."
A chilling observation on America and Britain's "New Iraq" is that the Maliki government is "… so intent on revenge that they have waived the formalities of telling a person they were taking him to his execution."
Deep concern is expressed for the fate of both Tareq Aziz and Sadoun Shakir in the light of this appalling act. They were sentenced at the same Court hearing.

In other violence, AFP reports an attack on a Hamam al-Alil police checkpoint claimed the lives of 3 police officers and left two more injured, 1 Iraqi soldier was shot dead in Baquba, 1 police officer was wounded in a Baghdad shooting and a Khales roadside bombing injured three polices officers.

In August 2007, Beth Fouhy (AP) reported, "In a statement released by her Senate office, Mrs. [Hillary] Clinton echoed a call by the Senate Armed Services Committee chairman, Carl Levin, for Iraq's Parliament to oust Mr. Maliki in favor of a leader who could restore order to Iraq's unity government."  Then-Senator Clinton was quoted from her statement, "During his trip to Iraq last week, Senator Levin . . . confirmed that the Iraqi government is nonfunctional and cannot produce a political settlement because it is too beholden to religious and sectarian leaders.  I share Senator Levin's hope that the Iraqi Parliament will replace Prime Minister Maliki with a less divisive and more unifying figure when it returns in a few weeks."  War Criminal and Professional Buffoon Bully Boy Bush is quoted saying, "I support him. It's not up to the politicians in Washington, D.C. to say whether he will remain in his position. It is up to the Iraqi people who now live in a democracy and not a dictatorship."

What a fat liar. 

So in 2007, we had a strong indication where Hillary stood out on Thug Nouri.  We knew where Carl Levin, Russ Feingold, Barbara Boxer and many other Democrats stood.  What we didn't know was where Professional Weenie Barack Obama stood.

But roll the dice and take a chance, it's just Iraqi lives, right?

Prior to 2010 -- George The Idiot Bush, pay attention -- had no voice in it. The US government chose Nouri al-Maliki.  Not the people of Iraq.  Most Iraqis didn't even know the ass from his low level position where he sucked up to Paul Bremer.  They didn't know him because the coward fled Iraq in 1979, spent a few years in Syria, the rest of the decade in Iran and then went back to Syria.  He only returned to Iraq in 2003.  In 2006, the US government made Nouri prime minister.  He was not the choice of Parliament.  Until 2010, only Parliament could remove him.  Though there were many talks of doing so, it never came to be.

If only it had.

If only the Oval Office currently had President Hillary Clinton.

Instead, it had the fool named Barack.

In 2010, elections were finally held.  Iraqiya coming in first should have had first crack at forming a government.  Some liars in the press tell you that doesn't matter and that Iraqiya -- a 'Sunni party' -- could never have had that post.  That's nonsense.  Saleh al-Mutlaq wasn't up for the post, Shi'ite Ayad Alawi was and not only could he be prime minister, he had been prime minister before. But because Barack is a stupid idiot who doesn't respect democracy, the US government backed and shielded Nouri al-Maliki.

We'll never know but it's likely that a President Hillary Clinton would have said, "Tough s**t, Nouri, the Iraqi people chose someone else, get your ass out of the office."

Instead it was Barack who apparently only wanted to know if he had to kiss the crown or swallow the shaft.

He apparently did a little bit of both.

Eight months after the election, nothing had happened.  This was gridlock that was named Political Stalemate.  It was actually Political Stalemate I but people just didn't know it then.   Nouri refused to allow things to move forward.  Even with the court he controlled handing down verdicts to favor him, he still couldn't pull it off, he still couldn't circumvent the will of the people, democracy and the Iraqi Constitution.  To do that, he needed the support of two supposed bitter rivals: the US government and the Iranian government.  The two worked together to protect Nouri for eight months so that he couldn't be forced out.  When the UN was honestly wondering if a caretaker government needed to be set up -- it should have been and it should have been prior to the elections -- the White House made clear to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon that no such action would be taken.

The US government then pretended to give a damn about the Kurds, the Iraqi people as a whole, democracy and peace.  When's the last time the US government gave a damn about peace?  World War II?

The US government would put together an agreement that would save the day!  (When's the last time the US government saved the day?  World War II?)  Now this agreement wouldn't be perfect, the US told various political blocs, but it would end the gridlock.  (The gridlock caused by Nouri demanding a second term.) 

When various blocs objected to the early draft of the agreement, the US government had excuses.  It told the Kurds, 'Yes, Nouri gets a second term.  But, look, you get Article 140 implemented!'  No, they got screwed and they know it now.

Article 140 shouldn't have required a contract for Nouri to implement it.  Article 140 is part of the Constitution.  As prime minister, Nouri has no choice but to implement it.  However, he refused to do so during his first term as prime minister despite the Constitution stating it must be implemented by the end of 2007.  (Article 140 addresses the disputed territories.  Oil-rich Kirkuk is disputed with both the central government in Baghdad and the KRG claiming they have the sole rights to it.  Per Article 140, a census and referndum should be held.) 

Why did the Kurds go along with such nonsense? Again, the Constitution already mandated the Nouri had to hold the census and referendum but he'd ignored it.  The Kurds and others went along because the US government gave their word, swore that the US President Barack Obama, himself, backed this agreement (contract) and would personally insist on it being honored.

With that kind of backing and the delusions so many had that Barack was someone of honor who could be trusted, the various blocs -- and Nouri -- signed off on the contract.  Nouri used it to grab his second term and then quickly insisted upon ignoring it.

The Erbil Agreement has never been honored.  And the White House doesn't even give a damn.  Long after Barack is out of office, Iraqis will still remember that a US president's word was supposedly attached to a contract and that the US broke that word.

When Nouri refused to honor the contract he signed on to, Political Stalemate II began.  It continues in Iraq.  Last summer, the Kurds, Iraqiya and Moqtada al-Sadr began insisting that the Erbil Agreement be honored.  Nouri ignored the cries.

December 21, 2011 Speaker of Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi began loudly insisting that a national convention be held to address the political crisis.  Professional Capon Jalal Talabani added his sotto voice to the call.  Nouri rejected such a conference and then stalled on it.  When it was finally scheduled, it was called off at the last minute.

Iraqiya, KRG President Massoud Barzani, Moqtada al-Sadr and the slatternly Iraqi President Jalal Talabani began exploring a no-confidence vote.  When they gathered the necessary signatures -- that no one thought they would -- Jalal insisted suddenly that he had to verify the 176 signatures.  First indication that Jalal would be a stumbling block.

Saturday,  Alsumaria reported that State of Law was insisting that the curtain has come down on the hopes of a no-confidence vote.  How did they know?  Because they always had Jalal Talabani in their pocket.  Kitabat reported Talabani declared Saturday night that he wouldn't forward the signatures for a no-confidence vote, thereby ending that process for the Parliament to vote Nouri al-Maliki out as prime minister.  Sunday Qassim Abdul-Zahra (AP) noted, "Talabani has close ties to Iran, which has been using its leverage in Iraq to keep al-Maliki in place. Divisions among the prime minister's opponents may also be undercutting the no confidence push."  Dar Addustour also focused on the messages that Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has been sending Jalal Talabani.

Alsumaria reports that the meet-up in Erbil yesterday found the participants engaged in discussions about how to mobilize Parliament to take on the issue of the power grab and Nouri's monopoly of power.  There is anger over Iraqi President Jalal Talabani's refusal to forward the list of signatures for the no-confidence vote.  There is also insistence that there were 176 signatures and not the 160 Jalal is claiming (after he removed four, he stated the petition only contained 160 -- even State of Law last week was noting there were 176 -- Moqtada al-Sadr also declared last week that there were 176 signatures).  Moqtada al-Sadr says the process has not ended, that it's only now begun. Al Hayat notes the "shock" among some that Talabani acted as he did and that Talabani is seen as cutting some deal with Iran which will provide him some sort of political advantage over KRG President Massoud Barzani.  Kurdish MP Farhad Atroshi is quoted stating that Talabani sided with Nouri because Iran threatened to use force against the KRG.  I don't doubt that Jalal might tell such a self-serving story; however, it's just believable.  If Iran were to attack the KRG, the backlash would be immense.  Not only would it turn many Iraqis against Iran -- years of war have already made the two countries wary of one another -- it would also involve the region.  Iran could not get away with an attack on the KRG and the government Tehran knows that.  Others insist to Al Hayat that Jalal acted the way he did because he realized there was now a chance of a national conference and he felt his impartial stance would allow him to have more say in the conference.  Others whisper that Nouri threatened people with criminal charges.  Not noted, but it was reported last week that Nouri has stolen files from Parliament.  From the June 5th snapshot, "Meanwhile Al Mada reports that the Parliamentary Integrity Committee is stating that Nouri has taken their files and the fear appears to be that he will use them to go after political rivals.  One Commssion member states that the work of the Commission for the past months has now vanished."

Al Rafidayn reports Thug Nouri is calling for a dialogue. Political Stalemate II continues and may soon reach the two year mark.

It didn't have to be that way.  Dropping back to the April 8, 2008 snapshot:

"For the past five years," Senator Clinton pointed out, "we have continuously heard from the administration that things are getting better, that we're about to turn a corner."  Still nothing.  It's time "to begin an orderly withdrawal."   With Petraeus, Clinton referenced the Washington Post [Cameron W. Barr's "Petraeus: Iraqi Leaders Not Making 'Sufficient Progress'"] and how the general had told them last month that "'no one feels there has been sufficient progress.' Those are exactly the concerns that my colleagues and I raised when you testified before us in September."  At that time, Clinton pointed out, Petraeus responded that "if we reached that point in a year you'd have to think very hard about it.  We're there now. . . . What conditions would have to exist for you to recommend to the President that the current strategy is not working?"

Nothing's changed.  It was all predictable four years ago.  The Obama administration pursued the same worthless strategy Bully Boy Bush did: Back Thug Nouri.  And that's why nothing is accomplished in Iraq today just as it wasn't throughout his first term as prime minister.

And just as it was known then that Nouri was ineffectual, it was known then that Nouri was closer to Iran than to the US.  From the same day's snapshot, this is about US Senator Barbara Boxer's exchange with then-US Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker:

 She then focused on Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad noting, "The Bush administration told the American people more than five years ago that we would be greeted as liberators in Iraq and supporters of the war said that they would be dancing in the street with American flags."  That didn't happen and not only did that not happen but when Ahmadinejad goes to Iraq, he's greeted warmly while Bully Boy has to sneak "in, in the dead of the night."  She wondered, "Do you agree that after all we have done, after all the sacrifices, and God bless all of our troops . . ., that Iran is stronger and more influential than ever before?"
 Crocker wanted to debate that reality.  He stated it was just militias.  Boxer pulled out reports that demonstrated it wasn't, where Ahmadinejad was greeted warmly even by children who gave him flowers, kissed him on both cheeks.  "I'm saying that after all we have done," Boxer declared, "the Iraqi government kissing the Iranian leader and our president has to sneak into the country -- I don't understand it."  Crocker still wanted to argue leading Boxer to respond, "I give up.  It is what it is.  They kissed him on the cheek. . . . He had a red carpet treatment and we are losing our sons and duaghters every day for the Iraqi people to be free. . . . It is disturbing."

To this day, US officials have to sneak into Iraq.

Prashant Rao (AFP) observes, "Key positions such as the ministers of defence and interior remain manned by interim choices, and rivals of Maliki, ranging from his Sunni Arab deputy premier to powerful Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, have decried him as a 'dictator' and sought to unseat him via a vote of no confidence."  And so it was an so it remains.