Wednesday, August 07, 2013

Washington Post?

So the Amazon geek buys the Washington Post and we're supposed to be thrilled?

Jeff Bezos has no idea what to do.  Amazon's 'success' is built around an unfair playing field -- no sales tax.

Now that this has changed, Amazon's struggling.

Bezos also has NSA ties so I guess we can forget about the NSA coverage.

I find it amazing that there's no more criticism of the sale.

People seem to have forgotten all about common sense.

He's got no experience in journalism and should be forced to explain how he sees the paper and its future.

It should also be remembered that it took no real pressure for Amazon to stop allowing donations to WikiLeaks.

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


Tuesday, August 6, 2013.  Chaos and violence continue, Bradley Manning exposed counter-insurgency, his defense team failed him, will Julian Assange also be failed, and more.


Iraq is slammed with bombs yet again.  Mohammed Tawfeeq and Jason Hanna (CNN) report, "At least 30 people were killed and more than 100 others were injured in car bombings and roadside bomb explosions in Baghdad neighborhoods Tuesday evening, police officials in the Iraqi capital said.  Most of the explosions happened in Shiite areas, police said. Nearly all of the blasts happened just before people were to celebrate iftar, the fast-breaking dinner eaten at sunset during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan."  The UK Daily Express adds, "The explosions mainly targeted markets in and near Baghdad."  AFP observes, "Iraq is struggling to contain the worst violence to hit the country since 2008 when it was emerging from a bloody sectarian conflict."

Through Monday, Iraq Body Count counts 106 violent deaths in Iraq so far this month -- a month that isn't even 10 days old.  National Iraqi News Agency reports that a Hamrin bombing claimed 2 lives and left three people injured, and Nouri's Tigris Operation command has killed at least 11 Iraqis in their latest efforts today at mass arrests. Alsumaria reports 1 police officer was shot dead outside of Falluja, a Mosul armed attack has left 4 people dead (three were brothers)Ahmed Rasheed (Reuters) explains, "The past four months have all had higher death tolls than any in the five years before April, leading the Interior Ministry to declare last week that Iraq was now once again in 'open war'."

 Since December 21st, Iraq has seen an ongoing wave of protests.  The protests continued on Friday and from that day's snapshot:


World Bulletin reports today that reporters who attempted to cover a protest in Baghdad's Tahrir Square, "A group of journalists wanted to go to Tahrir Square to follow the protests which are to be held for the improvement of security standards in the state, but were detained by Iraqi security officials, sources said. The journalists' cameras and video cameras were also confiscated."  Nouti's back to imprisoning journalists.  Will anyone bother to condemn his latest attack on the press? This protest was part of the Consolidated Friday theme and included recognition of International Quds Day.  National Iraqi News Agency notes that it featured "hundreds of members of the League of the Righteous, Hezbollah, Badr Organization and other parties" took part in actions which were "called by Iranian Imam Khomeini."   In Baghdad, All Iraq News notes, hundreds turned out.  Looking at the photo with the article, you'll see that it should probably be changed to "thousands."  They explains "International Quds Day is an annual event that began in Iran in 1979 that is commemorated on the last Friday of Ramadan, expressing solidarity with the Palestinian people and opposing Zioneism as well as Israel's control of Jerusalem."  But NINA makes clear, that the Baghdad Tahrir Square demonstration also included those who were "demanding the government to address the security file and the elimination of terrorism as well as the abolition of the use of broken sonar devices in the multiple checkpoints in Baghdad and of other provinces. Iraqi Spring MC notes that Nouri's SWAT forces cut off roads leading to Tahrir Square.  In addition, the SWAT forces began arresting people in Tahrir Square and downtown Baghdad.  And they turned out in Baghdad's Adhamiya, in Baiji, in Jalawla,  and these protests also took place today in Basra and in Karbala.   The protests have been going on since December 21st (and today's theme was Consolidated Friday which allowed the ongoing protests to also include the Quds focus).


Saturday, Al Mada reported that at least two activists are still being held.  Buthaina al-Suhail wants to know where her son Ahmed al-Suhail is?

Mushreq Abbas (Al-Monitor) divides the two protests in Baghdad on Friday, stating that the Quds protest was permitted while the Iraqis protesting each Friday was denied a permit:


The issue of these young people trying to get approval for their demonstration seems like a paradox. In a statement posted on the group’s Facebook page on the evening of Aug. 4, the group said that they went to the local government in Baghdad to get a permit for the demonstration and were told to “go to the Council of Ministers.” So, they went to the Council of Ministers, which told them that demonstration permits were under the jurisdiction of the Interior Ministry. They then went to the Interior Ministry, which told them that they would get the permit from the Baghdad Operations Command on the day of the demonstration.”
According to the statement they issued, on the morning of the demonstration, the “Iraq Rises Up” demonstrators distributed flowers to the military forces who deployed around them. But soon after, the military forces attacked them.
That long scenario about granting a demonstration permit illustrates one of the most important aspects of the imbalance in the Iraqi legal system. Article 38 of the constitution provides that the state shall guarantee “freedom of assembly and peaceful demonstration, and this shall be regulated by law.”
The phrase “regulated by law,” which is everywhere in the Iraqi constitution, may be one of the most prominent aspects of the Iraqi political crisis. The Iraqi parliament never sought to pass a law that translates the essence of the phrase “the state shall guarantee ... freedom of assembly and peaceful demonstration.” But rather, the Iraqi administrative and security bodies are relying on laws that go back to the era of the former Iraqi regime.


We're now turning to a topic that has to do with Iraq and will bring us back to it, in fact.

Monday April 5, 2010, WikiLeaks released  military video of a July 12, 2007 assault in Iraq. 12 people were killed in the assault including two Reuters journalists Namie Noor-Eldeen and Saeed Chmagh. Monday June 7, 2010, the US military announced that they had arrested Bradley Manning and he stood accused of being the leaker of the video. Leila Fadel (Washington Post) reported in August 2010 that Manning had been charged -- "two charges under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. The first encompasses four counts of violating Army regulations by transferring classified information to his personal computer between November and May and adding unauthorized software to a classified computer system. The second comprises eight counts of violating federal laws governing the handling of classified information." In March, 2011, David S. Cloud (Los Angeles Times) reported that the military has added 22 additional counts to the charges including one that could be seen as "aiding the enemy" which could result in the death penalty if convicted. The Article 32 hearing took place in December. At the start of this year, there was an Article 32 hearing and, February 3rd, it was announced that the government would be moving forward with a court-martial. Bradley has yet to enter a plea. The court-martial was supposed to begin before the November 2012 election but it was postponed until after the election so that Barack wouldn't have to run on a record of his actual actions.  Independent.ie added, "A court martial is set to be held in June at Ford Meade in Maryland, with supporters treating him as a hero, but opponents describing him as a traitor."  February 28th, Bradley admitted he leaked to WikiLeaks.  And why.


Bradley Manning:   In attempting to conduct counter-terrorism or CT and counter-insurgency COIN operations we became obsessed with capturing and killing human targets on lists and not being suspicious of and avoiding cooperation with our Host Nation partners, and ignoring the second and third order effects of accomplishing short-term goals and missions. I believe that if the general public, especially the American public, had access to the information contained within the CIDNE-I and CIDNE-A tables this could spark a domestic debate on the role of the military and our foreign policy in general as [missed word] as it related to Iraq and Afghanistan.
I also believed the detailed analysis of the data over a long period of time by different sectors of society might cause society to reevaluate the need or even the desire to even to engage in counterterrorism and counterinsurgency operations that ignore the complex dynamics of the people living in the effected environment everyday.




For truth telling, Brad was punished by the man who fears truth: Barack Obama.  A fraud, a fake, a 'brand,' anything but genuine, Barack is all marketing, all facade and, for that reason, must attack each and every whistle-blower.  David Delmar (Digital Journal) points out, "President Obama, while ostensibly a liberal advocate of transparency and openness in government, and of the 'courage' and 'patriotism' of whistleblowers who engage in conscientious leaks of classified information, is in reality something very different: a vindictive opponent of the free press willing to target journalists for doing their job and exposing government secrets to the public."   Tuesday, July 30th, Bradley was convicted of all but two counts by Colonel Denise Lind, the military judge in his court-martial.  He remains in his sentencing phase.

We're spending a second day on this week's Law and Disorder Radio,  an hour long program that airs Monday mornings at 9:00 a.m. EST on WBAI (except during pledge drives) and around the country throughout the week.  It's streamable at the Law and Disorder Radio,  website and the program is  hosted by attorneys Heidi Boghosian, Michael S. Smith and Michael Ratner (Center for Constitutional Rights).   



Michael Ratner:  Then there was the story within the last year taken from the Wikileaks documents -- really the Iraq War Logs from Bradley Manning about torture centers run in Iraq in 2003, 2004 -- around that period.  The US knew about them, the US helped set them up.  Hundreds of people were taken for torture every single month.  Gen [David] Petraeus who was in Iraq at that time was aware of it.  Nothing happened at that time.  The only reason we kenw about that was Bradley Manning.  And, of course, we knew about the [Zine El Abidine] Ben Ali government in Tunisia.  The Tunisian government -- the current government -- gives those cables credit for bringing down Ben Ali and beginning the Arab Spring.  That's just a little bit of what Bradley Manning has revealed to all of us about the criminality of our own country, and information we ought to know and debate as Bradley Manning has said.  I look at the debate that's going on now about 'Well he was just prosecuted too heavily.'  Very few people are saying he shouldn't have been prosecuted at all but in fact of course that's the case because he's brought out some material that had to be brought out -- that in a secret government -- which is what we have right now -- a secret government of criminality and blood, really, we need to know what it's doing.  But in addition -- and here's the second point, the really critical one in my view.  People are crying for Bradley Manning's scalp or they are saying, 'Well at least you have to get him a little bit otherwise or you're going to have people just willy nilly giving u[ classified material, etc."  Now before I would ever, ever say that someone like Bradley Manning would be prosecuted for anything, I would have to say, "First, let's prosecute the Bush torture team, then let's look at the people calling for the prosecution and prosecute them for the war crimes they've committed.  Let's look at the illegal war in Iraq -- it's killed and hundreds of thousands, cost trillions of dollars and was an illegal war to boot.  None of those people are being prosecuted.  People like Hillary Clinton who we maybe perhaps can't be prosecuted for voting for the war but she like others, Bill Keller at the New York Times are what people like Tony Jude the famous writer called "Bush's useful idiots" -- the liberals who went along with the war.  So every time I hear people saying Bradley has to be prosecuted, I say to them,  "First, he's a truth teller.  Secondly, and importantly, I don't want to see a hair touched on Bradley Manning until we start -- I never want to see it touched -- We shouldn't even be talking about it until this country starts prosecuting its own war criminals." It's outrageous, it's a one-sided debate.  And it's incredible to me that is the focus.  That's the main point I wanted to make.  The second point -- which I often hear in these debates -- is: 'These cables, these revelations, the Iraq War Logs, the Afghanistan war logs, they caused tremendous harm to the United States.  They put people in jeopardy.'  I heard it again, I had to debate PJ Crowley -- the former State Dept official who is the one who -- at least to his credit exposed the torture, or criticized the torture of Bradley Manning in prison.  Since then, he's become pretty typical, you know, liberal calling for Bradley Manning's prosecution, saying he knows there was harm in the field.  Of course, he worked at the State Dept at the very time that Hillary Clinton was exposed as spying on at the United Nations, getting their credit card numbers and their airline reservations and everything else.  That's who he worked for apart from Hillary's role in the war.

We're going to start with how to run off listeners: Rank sexism.  I have no problem with "Hillary" (or "Bill") but I use the term "Barack" -- Ratner doesn't.  It's always "Obama" or "President Obama."  If Hillary were President, I'd still say "Hillary." Michael Ratner and Michael Smith already went down sexist lane not all that long ago on Kathryn Bigelow (as disclosed before, I know Kathryn).  She, they insisted was promoting torture.

So, big boys that they are, they had to call her out.  Bigelow will be distorted and attacked.  But watch how they rush to ignore, for example, Doug Liman because they believe his politics line up with their own.  They've really never paid attention to those Jason Bourne fans nor Mr. and Mrs. Smith.  But they really don't pay attention to the T&A fest he pimps on the USA Network: Covert Affairs.  On the most recent episode, Annie (Piper Perabo) is endorsing torture, is present for the torture of a witness (and this is supposed to be the CIA in 2013).  A bat's used on the victim, he's beaten, none of it bothers her.   It's interesting that when what they falsely accused Kathryn Bigelow of is done a show Liman created and produces, our media critics Ratner and Smith have nothing to say.

Well maybe they didn't see it!

Maybe they didn't.  But they hadn't seen Kathryn's Zero Dark Thirty when they spent the opening segment of the show trashing Bigelow.


They've also made a point to ridicule the two women who may have been raped by Julian Assange.

This is how people get a very bad image.

Well Hillary voted for the war and she is their senator!

She was their senator, she was one of two.  But they never went after Chuck Schumer, now did they?

As for her ordering the spying -- what's your proof?   Let's go to Crapapedia simply because we're short on time:

The disclosed cables on the more aggressive intelligence gathering went back to 2008 when they went out under Condoleezza Rice's name during her tenure as Secretary of State.[5]
US State Department spokesman Philip J. Crowley stated that Clinton had not drafted the directive and that the Secretary of State's name is systematically attached to the bottom of cables originating from Washington.[6] In fact, further leaked material revealed that the guidance in the cables was actually written by the Central Intelligence Agency before being sent out under Clinton's name, as the CIA cannot directly instruct State Department personnel.[3][7] Specifically, the effort came from the National Clandestine Service, a CIA service formed in the years following the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks with the goal of better coordinating human intelligence activities.[3] According to former US officials, the instructions given in these cables may have been largely ignored by American diplomats as ill-advised.[7]




Again, when you constantly attack women, you get a reputation.  As for Hillary's "role" in any war -- no, you  cannot prosecute her for a vote.  In addition, her "role" in a war would be much less significant than Barack's role.

That's right, Barack is the President and Clinton's left the government so why are you obsessing over Hillary?

Michael Ratner should explain who said this:

We should first say that, as hosts, we're against this war to begin with, apart from the legality, that this is just another US imperialistic war in the Middle East. I mean, whatever we think about that. But, in addition, what's come out lately is that it's flatly illegal and the administration is fighting an illegal war. I wrote an op-ed on this way back at the end of March that this was an unconstitutional war because it was attacking another country and under the Constitution you have to get the consent of Congress. He didn't. Since then, of course, the War Powers Resolution has clicked in. That's the resolution that was passed in the wake of the Vietnam War. And it was passed for a particular reason: Congress was afraid that presidents would continue to go to war without their consent and so they built an automatic trigger into the War Powers Resoultion saying that 60 days after the president initiated a war, for whatever reason, whatever basis, if it didn't have explicit Congressional consent, the troops had to automatically be withdrawn. I say that again: automatically be withdrawn within 30 days after the 60-day time clock expires. So that's 90 days. There shouldn't be any attack on Libya going on that the United States is involved in at all -- not involved in coordination, not involved in helping with the radar, not involved in helping send its own missiles -- which it's still doing, not involved in bombing -- which it's still doing. So the 90 days are over. The war started over 90 days ago. And there's now been a big debate in the administration with Obama saying, 'I'm not violating the War Powers Resolution. There's no hostilities. We haven't entered into hostilities.' I mean, it doesn't pass the straight-face test. I mean, it's ridiculous. It's a total lie.

That's Michael Ratner speaking the last Monday in June 2011 on  Law and Disorder Radio.  

When Hillary became Secretary of State, a lot of us longed for the day when she'd leave the post so that the Cult of St. Barack would have to stop attacking her for Barack's actions.  I've held Hillary accountable here.  Her January testimony before Congress was called out more loudly here than on any left site and I doubt even most right wingers called Hillary out as loudly as I did.  She needed to be called out (instead the press fawned) and, you better believe, had she been Senator Clinton and a witness had spoken to her like that, she would have called them out.  Her remarks were unacceptable.

I have no problem calling her out for what she does wrong or calling out Eric Holder when he does something wrong.  Hillary's not over The Drone War.

She's not Commander in Chief.

If you don't believe Brad should have been prosecuted, you start your criticism with the name Michael Ratner avoided this week: Barack Obama.  Barack could have ended it at any point but instead chose to pronounce Brad guilty before Brad's court-martial had even started.

Michael Ratner needs to grasp real quick that he harms his own reputation (and that of his clients) when he acts this way.  The average reaction from those new to Ratner will not be, "Good points," but instead, "Why is he obsessed with Hillary?"  It's a question he should ask himself.

Back to his statements noted above:

Now before I would ever, ever say that someone like Bradley Manning would be prosecuted for anything, I would have to say, "First, let's prosecute the Bush torture team, then let's look at the people calling for the prosecution and prosecute them for the war crimes they've committed.  Let's look at the illegal war in Iraq -- it's killed and hundreds of thousands, cost trillions of dollars and was an illegal war to boot.  None of those people are being prosecuted.  People like Hillary Clinton who we maybe perhaps can't be prosecuted for voting for the war but she like others, Bill Keller at the New York Times are what people like Tony Jude the famous writer called "Bush's useful idiots" -- the liberals who went along with the war.  So every time I hear people saying Bradley has to be prosecuted, I say to them,  "First, he's a truth teller.  Secondly, and importantly, I don't want to see a hair touched on Bradley Manning until we start -- I never want to see it touched -- We shouldn't even be talking about it until this country starts prosecuting its own war criminals." It's outrageous, it's a one-sided debate.  And it's incredible to me that is the focus.  That's the main point I wanted to make.  The second point -- which I often hear in these debates -- is: 'These cables, these revelations, the Iraq War Logs, the Afghanistan war logs, they caused tremendous harm to the United States.  They put people in jeopardy.'  I heard it again, I had to debate PJ Crowley -- the former State Dept official who is the one who -- at least to his credit exposed the torture, or criticized the torture of Bradley Manning in prison.  Since then, he's become pretty typical, you know, liberal calling for Bradley Manning's prosecution, saying he knows there was harm in the field.  Of course, he worked at the State Dept at the very time that Hillary Clinton was exposed as spying on at the United Nations, getting their credit card numbers and their airline reservations and everything else.  That's who he worked for apart from Hillary's role in the war.


What did Brad reveal?  As attorney for Julian Assange and WikiLeaks, Michael Ratner should be able to address these topics.  But he's not.  He's doing an awful job conveying what Brad did and what WikiLeaks did.  Via Alexa O'Brien's transcript of Brad's remarks to the court-martial Feb. 28th, let's see if we can follow:


I graduated from AIT on 16 August 2008 and reported to my first duty station, Fort Drum, NY on 28 August 2008. As an analyst, Significant Activities or SigActs were a frequent source of information for me to use in creating work products. I started working extensively with SigActs early after my arrival at Fort Drum. My computer background allowed me to use the tools organic to the Distributed Common Ground System-Army or D6-A computers to create polished work products for the 2nd Brigade Combat Team chain of command.
The non-commissioned officer in charge, or NCOIC, of the S2 section, then Master Sergeant David P. Adkins recognized my skills and potential and tasked me to work on a tool abandoned by a previously assigned analyst, the incident tracker. The incident tracker was viewed as a back up to the Combined Information Data Network Exchange or CIDNE and as a unit, historical reference to work with.
In the months preceding my upcoming deployment, I worked on creating a new version of the incident tracker and used SigActs to populate it. The SigActs I used were from Afghanistan, because at the time our unit was scheduled to deploy to the Logar and Wardak Provinces of Afghanistan. Later my unit was reassigned to deploy to Eastern Baghdad, Iraq. At that point, I removed the Afghanistan SigActs and switched to Iraq SigActs.
As and analyst I viewed the SigActs as historical data. I believed this view is shared by other all-source analysts as well. SigActs give a first look impression of a specific or isolated event. This event can be an improvised explosive device attack or IED, small arms fire engagement or SAF, engagement with a hostile force, or any other event a specific unit documented and recorded in real time.
In my perspective the information contained within a single SigAct or group of SigActs is not very sensitive. The events encapsulated within most SigActs involve either enemy engagements or causalities. Most of this information is publicly reported by the public affairs office or PAO, embedded media pools, or host nation (HN) media.
As I started working with SigActs I felt they were similar to a daily journal or log that a person may keep. They capture what happens on a particular day in time. They are created immediately after the event, and are potentially updated over a period of hours until final version is published on the Combined Information Data Network Exchange. Each unit has its own Standard Operating Procedure or SOP for reporting and recording SigActs. The SOP may differ between reporting in a particular deployment and reporting in garrison.
In garrison, a SigAct normally involves personnel issues such as driving under the influence or DUI incidents or an automobile accident involving the death or serious injury of a soldier. The reports starts at the company level and goes up to the battalion, brigade, and even up to the division level.
In deployed environment a unit may observe or participate in an event and a platoon leader or platoon sergeant may report the event as a SigAct to the company headquarters through the radio transmission operator or RTO. The commander or RTO will then forward the report to the battalion battle captain or battle non-commissioned officer or NCO. Once the battalion battle captain or battle NCO receives the report they will either (1) notify the battalion operations officer or S3; (2) conduct an action, such as launching a quick reaction force; or (3) record the event and report-- and further report it up the chain of command to the brigade.
The reporting of each event is done by radio or over the Secret Internet Protocol Router Network or SIPRNet, normally by an assigned soldier, usually junior enlisted E-4 and below. Once the SigAct is recorded, the SigAct is further sent up the chain of command. At each level, additional information can either be added or corrected as needed. Normally within 24 to 48 hours, the updating and reporting or a particular SigAct is complete. Eventually all reports and SigActs go through the chain of command from brigade to division and division to corps. At corps level the SigAct is finalized and [missed word].
The CIDNE system contains a database that is used by thousands of Department of Defense-- DoD personnel-- including soldiers, civilians, and contractors support. It was the United States Central Command or CENTCOM reporting tool for operational reporting in Iraq and Afghanistan. Two separate but similar databases were maintained for each theater-- CIDNE-I for Iraq and CIDNE-A for Afghanistan. Each database encompasses over a hundred types of reports and other historical information for access. They contain millions of vetted and finalized directories including operational intelligence reporting.
CIDNE was created to collect and analyze battle-space data to provide daily operational and Intelligence Community (IC) reporting relevant to a commander's daily decision making process. The CIDNE-I and CIDNE-A databases contain reporting and analysis fields for multiple disciplines including Human Intelligence or HUMINT reports, Psychological Operations or PSYOP reports, Engagement reports, Counter Improvised Explosive Device or CIED reports, SigAct reports, Targeting reports, Social and Cultural reports, Civil Affairs reports, and Human Terrain reporting.

Leaving aside the issue of military jargon, you still may not understand what Brad's disclosing.  It's counterinsurgency which is war on a native people.  On the left, we rejected that during Vietnam.  The Battle of Algiers became a famous film about how awful counter-insurgency is.  James Cameron's Avatar is an anti-counter-insurgency film.  While artists can still condemn counter-insurgency today, the brave voices of The Nation, The Progressive, et al can't and won't say a word.  Speaking out means taking on academia since so much of it is now in bed with the military.  The Human Terrain reporting, for examples, misuses anthropology by having them use their training to find the weaknesses in people.

Michael's yacking about the video of an attack.  Brad's talking about counter-insurgency:


For me, the SigActs represented the on the ground reality of both the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan.
I felt that we were risking so much for people that seemed unwilling to cooperate with us, leading to frustration and anger on both sides. I began to become depressed with the situation that we found ourselves increasingly mired in year after year. The SigActs documented this in great detail and provide a context of what we were seeing on the ground.
In attempting to conduct counter-terrorism or CT and counter-insurgency COIN operations we became obsessed with capturing and killing human targets on lists and not being suspicious of and avoiding cooperation with our Host Nation partners, and ignoring the second and third order effects of accomplishing short-term goals and missions. I believe that if the general public, especially the American public, had access to the information contained within the CIDNE-I and CIDNE-A tables this could spark a domestic debate on the role of the military and our foreign policy in general as well as it related to Iraq and Afghanistan.
I also believed the detailed analysis of the data over a long period of time by different sectors of society might cause society to reevaluate the need or even the desire to engage in counterterrorism and counterinsurgency operations that ignore the complex dynamics of the people living in the effected environment everyday.


That's not even at the half-way point of Alexa O'Brien's testimony for that day.

Colonel Denise Lind will ask Brad questions repeatedly after the above in that day's transcript -- we're not even at the half-way mark.  She will ask about the video and other things -- many other things.  She will never touch on counter-insurgency.  That's not by accident.  And David Coombs' failure to put counter-insurgency on trial was a huge mistake.  For all the academic endorsements of COIN, it remains controversial.

Cooms bid Lind a huge favor because she didn't want to talk about it.

Julian Assange is Michael Ratner's client.  If Michael's going to help Julian, he's going to need to address counter-insurgency.  It wasn't an isolated incident.  It was an ongoing policy that robbed Iraqis of their dignity, their right to self-determination and their right to democracy.  That's what must be on trial for Brad or Julian's work to matter or have meaning.  The whistle-blower aspect becomes stronger when counter-insurgency is addressed and it's even more the case as counter-insurgency tactics come back to the US.


Peter Van Buren (Middle East Online) notes that techniques the US used in Iraq and Afghanistan are now being used within the US:


Even before the [Bradley] Manning trial began, the emerging look of that new America was coming into view. In recent years, weapons, tactics, and techniques developed in Iraq and Afghanistan as well as in the war on terror have begun arriving in “the homeland.”
Consider, for instance, the rise of the warrior cop, of increasingly up-armored police departments across the country often filled with former military personnel encouraged to use the sort of rough tactics they once wielded in combat zones. Supporting them are the kinds of weaponry that once would have been inconceivable in police departments, including armored vehicles, typically bought with Department of Homeland Security grants. Recently, the director of the FBI informed a Senate committee that the Bureau was deploying its first drones over the United States. Meanwhile, Customs and Border Protection, part of the Department of Homeland Security and already flying an expanding fleet of Predator drones, the very ones used in America’s war zones, is eager to arm them with “non-lethal” weaponry to “immobilize targets of interest.”
Above all, surveillance technology has been coming home from our distant war zones. The National Security Agency (NSA), for instance, pioneered the use of cell phones to track potential enemy movements in Iraq and Afghanistan. The NSA did this in one of several ways. With the aim of remotely turning on cell phones as audio monitoring or GPS devices, rogue signals could be sent out through an existing network, or NSA software could be implanted on phones disguised as downloads of porn or games.
Using fake cell phone towers that actually intercept phone signals en route to real towers, the U.S. could harvest hardware information in Iraq and Afghanistan that would forever label a phone and allow the NSA to always uniquely identify it, even if the SIM card was changed. The fake cell towers also allowed the NSA to gather precise location data for the phone, vacuum up metadata, and monitor what was being said.
At one point, more than 100 NSA teams had been scouring Iraq for snippets of electronic data that might be useful to military planners. The agency’s director, General Keith Alexander, changed that: he devised a strategy called Real Time Regional Gateway to grab every Iraqi text, phone call, email, and social media interaction. “Rather than look for a single needle in the haystack, his approach was, ‘Let’s collect the whole haystack,’ ” said one former senior U.S. intelligence official. “Collect it all, tag it, store it, and whatever it is you want, you go searching for it.”
Sound familiar, Mr. [Ed] Snowden [NSA whistle-blower]?

These tactics 'come home' because they aren't called out when they're used elsewhere.  So, for example, the cowardice of The Nation magazine on the issue of counter-insurgency led to silence.  They should have been calling out its use in Iraq.  The magazine certainly called out counter-insurgency in the past.  But it was silent as Iraqis were subjected to this terrorism -- as they still are.  And what's the result, what's the end product?

Counter-insurgency rushes throughout the US.  From Lesley Stahl's 60 Minutes report:


In the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, our soldiers have been waging what's known as counterinsurgency. They're supposed to be both warriors and community builders, going village to village driving out insurgents while winning the hearts and minds of the population. But counterinsurgency has had mixed results - at best. We met a Green Beret who is finding out -- in his job as a police officer -- that the strategy might actually have a better chance of working, right here at home, in the USA.
Call him and his fellow officers counterinsurgency cops! As we first reported in May, they're not fighting al Qaeda or the Taliban, but street gangs and drug dealers in one of the most crime ridden cities in New England.



 We'll close with this from Senator Patty Murray's office (she Chairs the Senate Budget Committee and serves on the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee):



FOR PLANNING PURPOSES                        CONTACT: Murray Press Office
Tuesday, August 6th, 2013                                        (202) 224-2834
TOMORROW: Murray at JBLM for Update on Local Implementation of Veterans Jobs Law
90% of transitioning service members from JBLM are taking advantage of transition programs mandated by Murray’s VOW to Hire Heroes Act
Murray will receive briefings from Joint Base officials on transition programs, tour a classroom where veterans receive apprenticeship training
(Washington, D.C.) – Tomorrow, Wednesday, August 7th, 2013, at 2:00 PM U.S. Senator Patty Murray, a senior member of the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee, will travel to JBLM to discuss her VOW to Hire Heroes Act, a landmark veterans employment law, to see how it is making an impact in Tacoma. The Senator will receive briefings from Joint Base officials on the successes of VOW at JBLM, and will discuss VOW’s impact within the local community, ongoing challenges to implementation, and how to work together to produce better outcomes in the future. 
JBLM was selected as the first installation in the nation to pilot the apprenticeship program where active duty members are allowed to take time to participate in apprenticeship programs and still get paid.  Senator Murray will tour a classroom where veterans receive this apprenticeship training.
 
The VOW to Hire Heroes Act is a bipartisan, comprehensive law that works to lower the rate of unemployment among our nation’s veterans. The law is designed to help put veterans back to work by providing them with real-world skills and job training as they leave the military and by easing the training and certification process veterans face.  At JBLM, it is estimated that 90% of transitioning service members are taking advantage of the programs Senator Murray’s legislation created, and nationally, veterans’ unemployment rates among recent veterans have dropped dramatically from double-digits, and are now at or below civilian unemployment rates.
 
WHO:             U.S. Senator Patty Murray
                                    Colonel Hodges, Joint Base Commander
                                    Mark Brown, Director of Human Resources, JBLM
                                    Robin Baker, Transition Services Manager, JBLM
                                    Lourdes “Alfie” Alvarado Ramos, Director, WDVA
                                    Mike Schindler, President, Operation Military Family
                                    Chris Winters, Veterans Rep, International Union of Painters & Allied Trades
                                    Todd Mitchell, Helmets to Hardhats
                                    Kathleen Connelly, Education Director, JBLM
                                    Amy Moorash, Chief, Advising Branch, David L. Stone & John D "Bud" Hawk Education Centers, JBLM
                                 
WHAT:        Senator Murray will meet with JBLM officials to discuss the successes of her VOW to Hire Heroes Act within the local community
         
WHEN:        TOMORROW: Wednesday, August 7th, 2013
          2:00 PM PT
WHERE:    Joint Base Lewis McChord Stone Education Center
 
###
 
Kathryn Robertson
Deputy Press Secretary 
Office of U.S. Senator Patty Murray
154 Russell Senate Office Building
Washington D.C. 20510
202-224-2834


 
 
 
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Monday, August 05, 2013

The collapse and the sinking

If you've forgotten, in an attempt to force the Russian government to hand over NSA whistle-blower Ed Snowden, the questionable US Attorney General Eric Holder penned a little letter that informed that if Russia handed Ed over to the US, Ed would not be tortured.  Ed Hightower (WSWS) notes:


“Torture is unlawful in the United States,” Holder declared.
The very fact that the United States government felt obliged to deny that it engages in torture testifies to the undermining of its democratic pretensions and the impact on world public opinion of its open recourse to criminal methods—including kidnapping, indefinite detention without trial, and torture—since it launched its so-called “war on terror.”
The American government has unalterably become associated with terms that evoke revulsion and horror, such as Abu Ghraib, waterboarding, extraordinary rendition and Guantanamo.

That such practices continue unabated as a matter of policy under Obama, notwithstanding Holder’s sanctimonious denials, was demonstrated by two rulings last month by the US District Court of Washington DC and the response of the administration to them.


It really is sad how far our society has collapsed, how low our government has sunk.

What's even sadder is how some rush to defend this and act like it's okay and acceptable.

No, it's not.

As John Grant (CounterPunch) points out, "America 2013 is a far cry from the days of Patrick Henry ('Give me liberty or give me death!') and even the days of Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers. It’s a brave new world 30 years beyond Orwell’s imagined 1984 dystopia."

We're in a very scary and sad place.

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


Monday, August 5, 2013.  Chaos and violence continue, we review the Memorandum of Understanding the US government signed with the Iraqi government last December, the US troops that never left as well as the ones that returned to Iraq, how the SOFA came not to be renewed in 2011, Bradley Manning, Glenn Greenwald and more.

Iraq War veteran and whistle-blower Bradley Manning gets defended by his family and gets a some-time spot-on analysis from Michal Ratner and a some-time ridiculous one. The analyis is provided on this week's Law and Disorder Radio,  an hour long program that airs Monday mornings at 9:00 a.m. EST on WBAI (except during pledge drives) and around the country throughout the week.  It's streamable at the Law and Disorder Radio,  website and the program is  hosted by attorneys Heidi Boghosian, Michael S. Smith and Michael Ratner (Center for Constitutional Rights).

If I controlled the world, every episode of Law and Disorder would be perfection and I'd only ever offer positive criticism.  I don't control the world.  So today we have to deal with claims made on it regarding Iraq.  We'll get to it.  First the basics.

Monday April 5, 2010, WikiLeaks released  military video of a July 12, 2007 assault in Iraq. 12 people were killed in the assault including two Reuters journalists Namie Noor-Eldeen and Saeed Chmagh. Monday June 7, 2010, the US military announced that they had arrested Bradley Manning and he stood accused of being the leaker of the video. Leila Fadel (Washington Post) reported in August 2010 that Manning had been charged -- "two charges under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. The first encompasses four counts of violating Army regulations by transferring classified information to his personal computer between November and May and adding unauthorized software to a classified computer system. The second comprises eight counts of violating federal laws governing the handling of classified information." In March, 2011, David S. Cloud (Los Angeles Times) reported that the military has added 22 additional counts to the charges including one that could be seen as "aiding the enemy" which could result in the death penalty if convicted. The Article 32 hearing took place in December. At the start of this year, there was an Article 32 hearing and, February 3rd, it was announced that the government would be moving forward with a court-martial. Bradley has yet to enter a plea. The court-martial was supposed to begin before the November 2012 election but it was postponed until after the election so that Barack wouldn't have to run on a record of his actual actions.  Independent.ie added, "A court martial is set to be held in June at Ford Meade in Maryland, with supporters treating him as a hero, but opponents describing him as a traitor."  February 28th, Bradley admitted he leaked to WikiLeaks.  And why.


Bradley Manning:   In attempting to conduct counter-terrorism or CT and counter-insurgency COIN operations we became obsessed with capturing and killing human targets on lists and not being suspicious of and avoiding cooperation with our Host Nation partners, and ignoring the second and third order effects of accomplishing short-term goals and missions. I believe that if the general public, especially the American public, had access to the information contained within the CIDNE-I and CIDNE-A tables this could spark a domestic debate on the role of the military and our foreign policy in general as [missed word] as it related to Iraq and Afghanistan.
I also believed the detailed analysis of the data over a long period of time by different sectors of society might cause society to reevaluate the need or even the desire to even to engage in counterterrorism and counterinsurgency operations that ignore the complex dynamics of the people living in the effected environment everyday.




For truth telling, Brad was punished by the man who fears truth: Barack Obama.  A fraud, a fake, a 'brand,' anything but genuine, Barack is all marketing, all facade and, for that reason, must attack each and every whistle-blower.  David Delmar (Digital Journal) points out, "President Obama, while ostensibly a liberal advocate of transparency and openness in government, and of the 'courage' and 'patriotism' of whistleblowers who engage in conscientious leaks of classified information, is in reality something very different: a vindictive opponent of the free press willing to target journalists for doing their job and exposing government secrets to the public."   Tuesday, July 30th, Bradley was convicted of all but two counts by Colonel Denise Lind, the military judge in his court-martial.

Before we get to Michael Ratner's analysis, Heidi Boghosian has a wording in her introduction (we'll include it in a second) that probably could be worded better.  That's not a slam on Heidi, it is a slam on me.  I doubt Heidi's been repeatedly speaking about Brad to groups.  I have and I've used the same wording.  We've been respectful of Denise Lind, the military colonel over Brad's court-martial, here and at all community sites because, honestly, I was told that she would be negatively influenced by personal attacks (and the military is following the coverage on websites -- not just at news outlets).  Denise Lind has gotten it easier than anyone except the man who ruled in Ehren Watada's Article 32 hearing (whom I was told would hit the roof on personal attacks).

That influenced my wording (it may have influenced Heidi's as well, what I know about Lind isn't exactly secret knowledge).  But in the early stages, I was wrong to treat this or refer to it as a courtroom, for example.  Military 'justice' is not justice.  That would be true even with a military jury determining guilt or innocence (but I would have had more respect for a military jury verdict).  Heidi's wording is minor (and she may not feel it was a mistake -- if so, she may be right).  Mine were not minor.  I have called the court-martial a "trial" and done so at times to avoid being repetitive (having "court-martial" used over and over).  For me, that was wrong.  It's not a trial and it's not a courtroom.  A "military courtroom" would be better.  But I don't have respect for so-called military 'justice' and shouldn't have used terms that give it credence.  A court-martial, by its very nature, is not a trial as we understand it.  So I've made many mistakes and errors in the last months in describing Brad's court-martial.  I started grasping a lot of it on Saturday (too late to make a difference) and today in Heidi's introduction when she used "courtroom" (which I am not slamming her for and which she may not see as a mistake).  Michael Ratner makes many strong points.  He also makes points that have to be called out because we cover Iraq here and what he's saying is not correct.  That happens when you don't pay attention to Iraq and -- sorry, Michael Ratner -- he hasn't paid any attention to Iraq in a long time.

Here's a section. The plan was to include two sections.  That's not possible due to what we have to go over to backup our points.  We'll return to Michael tomorrow as well.  And, by the way, Heidi Boghosian's new book Spying on Democracy: Government Surveillance, Corporate Power and Public Resistance is in bookstores Tuesday. We're noting it now because there may not be time or room later.  Now for the excerpt from Law and Disorder.


Heidi Boghosian:  Michael, from the inception, you've been one of the few individuals who've followed every aspect of the Bradley Manning case -- making multiple trips to Fort Meade to be in the courtroom, making analysis on Law and Disorder and many other outlets.  And now we have a verdict.  Military judge Denise Lind found Bradley Manning not guilty on charges of aiding the enemy, for releasing hundreds of thousands of documents to WikiLeaks for publication on the internet.  But she convicted Manning of six counts of violating The Espionage Act.  What do you make of this verdict?

Michael Ratner: Heidi, thanks for the introduction.  This is Michael Ratner and, as you said, Heidi, I've been going back and forth to the trial and, of course, represent Julian Assange and WikiLeaks.  And Bradley Manning, according to his own testimony, was one of the main sources of documents for WikiLeaks -- some 700,000 documents that were uploaded to Wikleaks I've been doing a lot of media lately on this issue, getting into debates about it,  whether Bradley Manning should be prosecuted, etc.  I take a very firm position here: He should never have been tried in the first place -- not for espionage or aiding the enemy.  He shouldn't have been tried for anything.  He's a hero.  He's a whistle-blower.  And anyone who says otherwise is ignoring the criminality of the United States and the secrecy that it keeps about that criminality.   And there's a legal basis for me saying that.  He is a whistle-blower.  He publicly exposed the truths about the nature of this country -- particularly its human rights violations, its criminality and its corruption.  That constitutes a whistle-blower and whistle-blowing is a legal defense to whatever kind of crimes the United States wanted to try him.   He was an idealistic soldier.  He saw horrible things.  He acted on his conscious and that's a whistle-blower in the classic sense of the word. What's really disturbing about this is the public debate about this.  The public debate -- even from a lot of liberals -- are, "Well, yeah, he acted on his conscious, he was idealistic, but he took a risk, he knew what he was doing and he should at least get some punishment.  We can't just have people going around revealing classified information."  Even liberals say that.  They simply say that government shouldn't have been as harsh about prosecuting him. So you see the New York Times saying he shouldn't get such a heavy sentence, you have other people saying he shouldn't be prosecuted for espionage but, in fact, my position, and the right position, I believe, is that he shouldn't have been prosecuted at all.  Let's look for a second at why I say that -- not only because he was a whistle-blower, but look at what he revealed.  First, we've all seen -- I hope we have -- the Collateral Murder video:  The killing of two Reuters journalists and I believe 10 civilians shot with a gung-ho blood lust, as Bradley Manning described it.  Those crimes were never really investigated, no one was prosecuted for them and yet it was cold-blooded murder taking place from an Apache helicopter on the streets of Baghdad.  Then think about what the Iraq War Logs revealed -- all this material from Bradley Manning to WikiLeaks.  The Iraq War Logs:  20,000 more civilians killed in Iraq than the United States [government] has said were killed.  That alone, that fact -- apart from the terrible tragedy of those civilians being killed -- that fact caused the government of Iraq to not sign another Status of Forces Agreement with the United States, because a Status of Forces Agreement would have given immunity to US troops.  And after all of these killings of civilians, Iraq said  we're not going to do it.  Because there was no immunity for US troops, the US said we're not staying in Iraq.  Think about how important that is.

 Great job on many thing in the above including Michael backing up his opinion,  And I agree with him that Brad never should have been prosecuted.  By the way, "Brad" or "Bradley" or "Ed" when we discuss Ed Snowden?  That's what the left should be doing.  "Manning"?  Are we the damn military?  WTF?  Attorneys know (or damn well should) that you personalize.  That's how you make your client (a) less the scary monster that the prosecution paints him/her as and (b) how you get people to start seeing your client as an average person.  Brad should not have been prosecuted.  I would add that it is cowardly of the New York Times especially since they, and others, only gave a damn in the first place due to the 'aiding the enemy' charge and their fears that it could have effected them.


This is wrong:

 The Iraq War Logs:  20,000 more civilians killed in Iraq than the United States [government] has said were killed.  That alone, that fact -- apart from the terrible tragedy of those civilians being killed -- that fact caused the government of Iraq to not sign another Status Of Forces Agreement with the United States, because a Status Of Forces Agreement would have given immunity to US troops.  And after all of these killings of civilians, Iraq said  we're not going to do it.  Because there was no immunity for US troops, the US said we're not staying in Iraq.  Think about how important that is.


It's wrong in a manner of oversimplification and Michael might argue he had to condense.  Possibly so. But it's wrong in that The Iraq War Logs revelation of an additional 20,000 Iraqis killed didn't result in the SOFA not being signed.  Many other things impacted.  Dropping back to the Monday, September 17, 2007 snapshot:



Turning to the issue of violence, Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) reported Sunday that  a Baghdad shooting (by private contractors) killed 9 Iraqi civilians and left fifteen more wounded. Later on Sunday, CNN reported, "In the Baghdad gun battle, which was between security forces and unidentified gunmen, eight people were killed and 14 wounded, most of them civilians, an Interior Ministry official said. Details were sketchy, but the official said witnesses told police that the security forces involved appeared to be Westerners driving sport utility vehicles, which are usually used by Western companies. The clash occurred near Nisoor square, in western Baghdad.  CBS and AP report that Abdul-Karim Khalaf, spokesperson for the Interior Ministry, announced "it was pulling the license of an American security firm allegedly involved in the fatal shooting of civilians during an attack on a U.S. State Department motorcade in Baghdad," that "it would prosecute any foreign contractors found to have used excessive force" in the slaughter (eight dead, 13 wounded) and they "have canceled the liscense of Blcakwater and prevented them from working all over Iraqi territory."  The news was addressed today on Democracy Now!:
 
AMY GOODMAN: We have this breaking news out of Iraq today: The Iraqi government says it's pulling the license of the US security company Blackwater over its involvement in a fatal shooting in Baghdad on Sunday. Interior Ministry spokesperson Abdul-Karim Khalaf said eight civilians were killed and thirteen wounded, when security contractors believed to be working for Blackwater USA opened fire in a predominantly Sunni neighborhood of western Baghdad. Khalaf said, "We have canceled the license of Blackwater and prevented them from working all over Iraqi territory. We will also refer those involved to Iraqi judicial authorities." It was not immediately clear if the measure against Blackwater is intended to be temporary or permanent. Naomi Klein, take it from there.  
 
NAOMI KLEIN: Well, that's an extraordinary piece of news. I mean, this is really the first time that one of these mercenary firms may actually be held accountable. You know, as Jeremy Scahill has written in his incredible book Blackwater: The Rise of the [World's] Most Powerful Mercenary Army, the real problem is, there haven't been prosecutions. These companies work in this absolute gray zone, and, you know, they're either boy scouts and nothing has going wrong, which completely doesn't mesh with what we know about the way they're behaving in Iraq and all of the sort of videos that we've seen online of just target practice on Iraqi civilians, or the lawlessness and the immunity in which they work has protected them. So, you know, if this is -- if the Iraqi government is actually going to kick Blackwater out of Iraq, it could really be a turning point in terms of pulling these companies into the law and questioning the whole premise of why this level of privatization and lawlessness has been allowed to take place.
 
The mercenary corportation Blackwater has not only made a lot of money in Iraq, it's had a lot of friends in the US White House (and members of Congress who looked the other way).  So it's little surprise that Aseel Kami (Reuters) reports US Secretary of State and Anger Condi Rice plans a firm phone call to puppet of the occupation Nouri al-Maliki in which she will "make it clear" that the US is "investigating this incident" -- no doubt in the usual look-the-other-way manner the US government has "investigated" other incidents. No word on whether she plans to use/haul her favorite false line out of mothballs, "No one could have guessed . . ."


When the US judge tossed the lawsuit on this massacre aside (because of agreements the State Dept had made with the contractors to get testimony -- agreements the State Dept knew would get the case tossed out and agreements that were not at all necessary), the rage over the US forces and contractors and the issue of accountability moved from and center in Iraq.

That was part of the issue as well.

But the main thing was the ongoing protests, Moqtada al-Sadr and other prominent Iraqis saying it wouldn't happen and the United Nations mandate.

In 2006, Nouri al-Maliki became prime minister.  The United Nations provided no mandate for the start of the illegal war.  After the war started, the UN did provide a mandate for foreign forces to be on the ground in Iraq.  In the fall of 2006, Nouri renewed the mandate causing huge outrage among Iraqi politicians because the Parliament was opposed to it and not consulted (they were supposed to be consulted).  To ease tensions, Nouri lied.  He said that next time he would let the Parliament vote.  The UN mandate was an annual mandate.  As 2007 drew to a close, Nouri did what he did in 2006, extended it without consulting the Parliament.  (In both years, as he and the US government knew, if the agreement went before the Parliament it would not be renewed.)

The UN mandate could not be renewed again.  It would be Nouri's head if, at the end of 2008, he approved it.  He knew it, the US government and the British government knew it.  So both countries began negotiating their own agreements with the Iraqi government.

For the US government, the thing was that the agreement not be an annual one.  It was hurting Nouri too much, having to extend it yearly.  So they went with a three year term in the Status Of Forces Agreement.  At the end of the three years, the agreement could be renewed (as Barack Obama's administration tried), be replaced with a new form of agreement (as Barack did and we'll get to that -- Michael Ratner has no clue about this -- if he did, Law and Disorder Radio would have done a program on it in the last 8 months) or the US could just pull most forces (which is what they did) or all forces out of Iraq.

There was no support for allowing US forces to stay in Iraq.  That had been the case for at least five consecutive years before 2011.  Nouri was urged (by then-Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta) to ram a new SOFA through without Parliament's permission.  (Nouri was specifically told that he could argue Parliament had their input when they voted for the 2008 SOFA and that a renewal did not require their agreement.)  But the Arab Spring or 'Arab Spring' (depending on your view) was sweeping the region and Nouri had faced massive protests in February 2011 -- protests that continued but that had grown smaller (a) because Moqtada told his followers to stop participating (renewing the SOFA would have meant Moqtada would have ordered his supporters back into the streets) and (b) because Nouri was having protesters attacked and arrested.  Those massive protests could come back at any minute (and would in December 2012), as Nouri fully knew.

Did the Iraq War Logs have an impact?  Yes.  But they were part of a series of events and, among those events, they were not the main part.

To all of the above, Michael Ratner can respond, "I was condensing for time."  And for some websites, that would be correct.  We cover Iraq here and you can't condense and leave out the elements that we went over above.


Michael Ratner: Then think about what the Iraq War Logs revealed -- all this material from Bradley Manning to WikiLeaks.  The Iraq War Logs:  20,000 more civilians killed in Iraq than the United States [government] has said were killed.  That alone, that fact -- apart from the terrible tragedy of those civilians being killed -- that fact caused the government of Iraq to not sign another Status of Forces Agreement with the United States, because a Status of Forces Agreement would have given immunity to US troops.  And after all of these killings of civilians, Iraq said  we're not going to do it.  Because there was no immunity for US troops, the US said we're not staying in Iraq.  Think about how important that is.

The only way to read those statements is that the Iraq War Logs caused the US military to withdraw from Iraq.  I would "think about how important that is" were it true.  But it's not true.  It wasn't true in December 2011, as Ted Koppel noted on Rockcenter With Brian Williams.

Let's go to the Decmeber 10, 2012 snapshot to extract a few things. First:

How many US troops remain in Iraq? December 12, 2011, Ted Koppel filed an important report on Rock Center with Brian Williams (NBC) about what was really taking place in Iraq -- what 'reporters' insisted on calling a 'withdrawal' but what the Pentagon had termed a "drawdown." Excerpt.

 
MR. KOPPEL: I realize you can't go into it in any detail, but I would assume that there is a healthy CIA mission here. I would assume that JSOC may still be active in this country, the joint special operations. You've got FBI here. You've got DEA here. Can, can you give me sort of a, a menu of, of who all falls under your control?


 
AMB. JAMES JEFFREY: You're actually doing pretty well, were I authorized to talk about half of this stuff.
 
US forces never left Iraq.  That's why the military brass repeatedly used the term "drawdown" and not "withdrawal."  In addition to the forces Koppel noted, there were approximately 200 'trainers.'  Back to the December 12, 2012 snapshot:
 
As September drew to a close, Tim Arango (New York Times) reported that the US had just sent in a Special-Ops division into Iraq. Yesterday Press TV reported:
 
Over 3,000 US troops have secretly returned to Iraq via Kuwait for missions pertaining to the recent developments in Syria and northern Iraq, Press TV reports.
According to our correspondent, the US troops have secretly entered Iraq in multiple stages and are mostly stationed at Balad military garrison in Salahuddin province and al-Asad air base in al-Anbar province.
 
 Noting those 3,000 troops going into Iraq, The Voice of Russia adds today, "Another 17,000-strong force is preparing to cross the Kuwait-Iraq border over time, Iraqi press says."
 
 
Tim Arango's report was ignored by everyone but Tom Hayden and sites in this community.  That's because it was the Times reporting as outlined by Gore Vidal long ago.  You have to go far into a story -- around the 13 paragraph -- to get any truth from the New York Times' reporting.  In this case, Tim Arango was reporting on Syria and tucked in the middle of his report was some key information on Iraq and the US.  We'll go to this year's April 30th Iraq snapshot:




December 6, 2012, the Memorandum of Understanding For Defense Cooperation Between the Ministry of Defense of the Republic of Iraq and the Department Defense of the United States of America was signed.  We covered it in the December 10th and December 11th snapshots -- lots of luck finding coverage elsewhere including in media outlets -- apparently there was some unstated agreement that everyone would look the other way.  It was similar to the silence that greeted Tim Arango's September 25th New York Times report which noted, "Iraq and the United States are negotiating an agreement that could result in the return of small units of American soldiers to Iraq on training missions.  At the request of the Iraqi government, according to [US] General [Robert L.] Caslen, a unit of Army Special Operations soldiers was recently deployed to Iraq to advise on counterterrorism and help with intelligence."
 
 
That's Tim Arango's key details on Iraq extracted.  Again, they're in the middle of an article on Syria.  We have noted Tim Arango's report repeatedly here.  At one point in 2007, the most noted piece of writing here was Naomi Klein's "Baghdad Year Zero" for Harper's magazine.  Since we noted Tim's article back in September, it's become the most noted and cited piece -- there's not a week that goes by where we don't note it at least once and, most weeks, we note it multiple times. In the not-yet year since it was first published, we have noted it in at least 136 entries at this site.
Why hasn't Law and Disorder?  Because they don't know about it.  They should.  Not only did 'all' US forces not leave but, in September, more US forces were sent in.
And before we get to Tim Arango from the April 30th snapshot, we've got that MOU (and links to our coverage).  Has any news outlet reported on the MOU even now?
Hell no.  I'm referring to the New York Times, the Washington Post, CNN, Al Jazeera, etc.  They've all stayed silent.

December 6, 2012, the Memorandum of Understanding For Defense Cooperation Between the Ministry of Defense of the Republic of Iraq and the Department Defense of the United States of America was signed.  We covered it in the December 10th and December 11th snapshots -- lots of luck finding coverage elsewhere including in media outlets -- apparently there was some unstated agreement that everyone would look the other way. 
We covered it December 6th when the Defense Department issued a press release on it.  And, if you go that snapshot, not only will you find the DoD press release, you'll find that Iraqi news outlets considered it news and were reporting on it.  
Though they announced it on the 6th, they did not release it the 6th (this despite the press release offering a link for you to read the memo at).  We picked up on December 10th (when it was finally available) and I explained that it allowed for joint-patrols -- the US and Iraq -- in Iraq.  I noted other things as well but the pushback from visitors was on the joint-patrols.

You are wrong! You are dead wrong! You are a liar! Bitch, stop lying! If this was true, it would be reported!
That's an accurate characterization of over 10,000 e-mails that came in following the December 10th Iraq snapshot where I went over the Memo Of Understanding which is why we returned to the topic the next day.  From the December 11th snapshot:
 
In yesterday's snapshot, we covered the Memorandum of Understanding For Defense Cooperation Between the Ministry of Defense of the Republic of Iraq and the Department of Defense of the United States of America.  Angry, dysfunctional e-mails from Barack-would-never-do-that-to-me criers indicate that we need to go over the Memo a little bit more.  It was signed on Thursday and announced that day by the Pentagon.   Section two (listed in full in yesterday's snapshot) outlines that the two sides have agreed on: the US providing instructors and training personnel and Iraq providing students, Iraqi forces and American forces will work together on counterterrorism and on joint exercises.   The tasks we just listed go to the US military being in Iraq in larger numbers.  Obviously the two cannot do joint exercises or work together on counterterrorism without US military present in Iraq.
 
This shouldn't be surprising.  In the November 2, 2007 snapshot -- five years ago -- we covered the transcript of the interview Michael R. Gordon and Jeff Zeleny did with then-Senator Barack Obama who was running in the Democratic Party's primary for the party's presidential nomination -- the transcript, not the bad article the paper published, the actual transcript.  We used the transcript to write "NYT: 'Barack Obama Will Keep Troops In Iraq'" at Third.  Barack made it clear in the transcript that even after "troop withdrawal" he would "leave behind a residual force."  What did he say this residual force would do?  He said, "I think that we should have some strike capability.  But that is a very narrow mission, that we get in the business of counter terrorism as opposed to counter insurgency and even on the training and logistics front, what I have said is, if we have not seen progress politically, then our training approach should be greatly circumscribed or eliminated."
 
This is not withdrawal.  This is not what was sold to the American people.  Barack is very lucky that the media just happened to decide to take that rather explosive interview -- just by chance, certainly the New York Times wasn't attempting to shield a candidate to influence an election, right? -- could best be covered with a plate of lumpy, dull mashed potatoes passed off as a report.  In the transcript, Let-Me-Be-Clear Barack declares, "I want to be absolutely clear about this, because this has come up in a series of debates: I will remove all our combat troops, we will have troops there to protect our embassies and our civilian forces and we will engage in counter terrorism activities."
 
So when the memo announces counterterrorism activies, Barack got what he wanted, what he always wanted, what the media so helpfully and so frequently buried to allow War Hawk Barack to come off like a dove of peace.
 
 
 For those who still can't grasp what I outlined in December of last year, starting in the spring of this year, the Congressional Research Service began noting these same details in  Kenneth Katzman monthly report on Iraq.  Those reports are prepared for members of Congress.  While Law and Disorder should have covered these facts a long time ago, they have the excuse that they were not headline news -- hey, where's our Project Censored award! -- so they didn't know about it.  But why are members of the US Congress silent about this?  Are they (or their aides) not reading the Congressional Research Service reports or are they complicit in keeping the truth from the American poeple?  This is the from the Arpil version of  "Iraq: Politics, Governance, and Human Rights" but it's also included in subsequent monthly "Iraq: Politics, Governance, and Human Rights" reports:



General [Martin] Dempsey's August 21, 2012, visit focused on the security deterioration, as well as the Iranian overflights to Syria discussed above, according to press reports.  Regarding U.S.-Iraq security relations,  Iraq reportedly expressed interest in expanded U.S. training of the ISF, joint exercises, and accelerated delivery of U.S. arms to be sold, including radar, air defense systems, and border security equipment. [. . .]
After the Dempsey visit, reflecting the Iraqi decision to reengage intensively with the United States on security, it was reported that, at the request of Iraq, a unit of Army Special Operations forces had deployed to Iraq to advise on counterterrorism and help with intelligence, presumably against AQ-I.  (These forces presumably are operating under a limited SOFA or related understanding crafted for this purpose.)  Other reports suggest that Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) paramilitary forces have, as of late 2012, largely taken over some of the DOD mission of helping Iraqi counter-terrorismf orces (Counter-Terrorism Service, CTS) against AQ-I in western Iraq. Part of the reported CIA mission is to also work against the AQ-I affiliate in SYria, the Al Nusrah Front, discussed above.
Reflecting an acceleration of the Iraqi move to reengage militarily with the United States, during December 5-6 2012, Under Secretary of Defense for Policy James Miller and acting Under Secretary of State for International Security Rose Gottemoeller visited Iraq and a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) was signed with acting Defense Minister Sadoun Dulaymi.  The five year MOU provides for:

* high level U.S.-Iraq military exchanges
* professional military education cooperation
* counter-terrorism cooperation
* the development of defense intelligence capabilities
* joint exercises

The MOU appears to address many of the issues that have hampered OSC-I from performing its mission to its full potential.  The MOU also reflects some of the more recent ideas put forward, such as joint exercises.

We'll come back to Michael Ratner tomorrow to provide more of his commentary on Brad.  Susan Manning is Brad's mother.  Nic North (Daily Mail) quotes her stating, "Never give up hope, son.  I know I may never see you again, but I know you will be free one day.  I pray it is soon.  I love you, Bradley, and I always will." His aunt Sharon Staples states, "If anyone was going to get themselves arrested for leaking hundreds of thousands of secret documents and end up jail for it, it was going to be our Bradley.  He just seemed to have a burning sense of wanting to right any injustice from such a young age."  John Naughton (Guardian) offers this perspective:

Just to put that in perspective, cast your mind back to 16 March 1968, when a platoon of US soldiers led by Second Lieutenant William Calley entered the hamlet of My Lai in what was then South Vietnam. They rounded up between 70 and 80 villagers and then shot them dead. In all, between 347 and 504 My Lai civilians were murdered that day by US troops.
Eventually, there was a court martial, just like the one organised for Manning. Despite claiming that he was following orders from his commanding officer, Calley was convicted on 29 March 1971 of premeditated murder for ordering the shootings and was given a life sentence. Two days later, President Nixon ordered that he should be released, pending an appeal against his sentence, which was later reduced. Calley eventually served three and a half years under house arrest at an army base.
So: three and a half years house-arrest for ordering and participating in the premeditated murder of scores of unarmed civilians. And potentially 136 years for downloading stuff – including compelling video evidence of a war crime by US forces – and giving it to WikiLeaks. Makes you think, doesn't it?
 
 
In Iraq, the US embassy and consulates are open.   All Iraq News reports, "The US embassy in Baghdad and its Consulates in the Iraqi prvoinces resumed its activities on Monday after it was suspended on last Sunday for security concerns."  The US State Dept issued the following late yesterday:


Press Statement

Jen Psaki
Spokesperson, Office of the Spokesperson
Washington, DC
August 4, 2013


Given that a number of our embassies and consulates were going to be closed in accordance with local custom and practice for the bulk of the week for the Eid celebration at the end of Ramadan, and out of an abundance of caution, we've decided to extend the closure of several embassies and consulates including a small number of additional posts.
This is not an indication of a new threat stream, merely an indication of our commitment to exercise caution and take appropriate steps to protect our employees including local employees and visitors to our facilities.
Posts in Abu Dhabi, Amman, Cairo, Riyadh, Dhahran, Jeddah, Doha, Dubai, Kuwait, Manama, Muscat, Sanaa, Tripoli, Antananarivo, Bujumbura, Djibouti, Khartoum, Kigali, and Port Louis are instructed to close for normal operations Monday, August 5 through Saturday, August 10.
The following posts that are normally open on Sunday, but were closed on Sunday, August 4, are authorized to reopen for normal operations on August 5: Dhaka, Algiers, Nouakchott, Kabul, Herat, Mazar el Sharif, Baghdad, Basrah, and Erbil.

 
Today Iraq came up during the US State Dept press briefing moderated by spokesperson Marie Harf.
 
 QUESTION: Marie?

MS. HARF: Yes, Said.

QUESTION: There’s been prison breaks – there were many, but the most prominent were two in Iraq, at Taji and Abu Ghraib.

MS. HARF: Mm-hmm.

QUESTION: Are you satisfied that – the Iraqis have not been able to round up except maybe a handful since the break. Are you satisfied with their conduct, the conduct of the security forces in Iraq?

MS. HARF: Well, we have encouraged – I know there have been a number of prison breaks in different places. Clearly, they’re concerning to us, and that’s why I think you saw the Interpol notice go out this weekend. Clearly, we call – we’ve called on the Government of Iraq to continue to try to find people that have escaped. Again, it’s a tough process to do so. And we remain concerned by the fact, yes.

QUESTION: So – but the prison breaks in Iraq in particular, they were conducted in a very sophisticated military operation, and it shows that they have really reconstituted their presence in Iraq. Aren’t you concerned that after so many years of training and spending so much money on the Iraqis that they have failed to do at least that?

MS. HARF: Well, we do remain very concerned about the terrorist activity that we see in Iraq today. I think I’ve made clear that it’s important to remember that both the majority of the Iraqi people have rejected this violence and that it really is being perpetrated by terrorists in Iraq, and also that the government and the political leadership has taken steps in the last few months to come together to fight this threat together. They’ve been talking about it and meeting about it in a way that we hadn’t seen previously. So we’re going to continue working with Iraq to help them fight this threat that they’re facing.

QUESTION: How are the U.S. Government’s working with Interpol or the Iraqis or the Pakistanis or the Libyans, wherever these prison breaks occurred, to assist in tracking these escapees? I assume in Iraq a lot of these prisoners were people we put behind bars because they killed Americans.

MS. HARF: I don’t have more details on who’s working with them on that in each of the cases. I’m happy to look into it and get you some more information. I just don’t have that in front of me.
 
 
What was in front of Iraqis today was more violence. Sunday was the fourth day of the month and, through Sunday, Iraq Body Count counts 80 violent deaths so far this month  -- that averages out to 20 deaths a day so far.  Today, National Iraqi News Agency reports a Mosul roadside bombing killed 4 Iraqi soldiers, 1 contractor was shot dead in Mosul, 1 "power genartor's owner and his son were killed by gunmen with silenceer in the early morning today [. . .] in Al-Jaarh area south of Baghdad" and the same assailants then shot dead another person, and late last night a 13-year-old boy was kidnapped outside his Kirkuk home. All Iraq News notes a Mosul bombing claimed the life of 1 police officer.  Xinhua reports, "In Iraq's eastern province of Diyala, gunmen in a car shot dead a government-backed Sahwa paramilitary group member and his relative in the city of Maqdadiyah, about 40 km northeast of the provincial capital city of Baquba, a provincial police source said.Sameer N. Yacoub (AP) terms a bombing targeting a bakery "the deadliest attack" today and notes 4 people were killed while fourteen more were left injured.  In addition, NINA notes a Raweh bombing injured one person, an armed attack on a Baghdad bus left nine people injured (including seven police officers), a Mosul car bombing has left 2 people dead and sixteen more injured, 2 men were shot dead in Hilla, and 2 Sahwa were shot dead in downtown Hawija (Kirkuk Province).
 
 
 

On the violence, last night, we noted:

In Baghdad, Ayad al-Tamimi (Al Mada) reports trenches are being dug in the Green Zone around Saddam Hussein's former palace and other buildings to protect them and their inhabitants, that security measures are so huge that those living in the Green Zone are assuming it's just not safe to leave the Green Zone.  In addition, Iraqis are complaining as more money goes to secure the Green Zone while everyone else lives it at huge risk. Another thing that is taking place is mass arrests.  NINA notes 183 people arrested in Baghdad alone today.  For those not paying attention, mass arrests are among the reasons for the ongoing protests.


 

NINA reports today that over 300 people have been arrested in Baghdad in the last 24 hours.  These arbitrary arrests -- usually targeting Sunnis -- do little to ease tensions and most likely will only increase the tension. 
 

Finally, turning to the topic of the ongoing, unconstitutional spying (the US government -- Barack -- spying on American citizens), Amy Goodman (Democracy Now! -- link is audio, video and text) interviewed the Guardian's Glenn Greenwald today.  Excerpt.



AMY GOODMAN: The timing of the embassy closings comes at a time of heated debate in Washington over the powers of the National Security Agency. It was two months ago today when Glenn Greenwald of The Guardian newspaper published his first article revealing the existence of a secret court order for Verizon to hand over the telephone records of millions of Americans to the NSA.
Since then, The Guardian has published a trove of articles detailing the NSA’s vast surveillance powers based on documents leaked by Edward Snowden. Just last week, Greenwald exposed a secret program called XKeyscore that gives NSA analysts real-time access to, quote, "nearly everything a typical user does on the internet," including emails, chats and browsing history. In his latest article, Greenwald reports members of Congress have been repeatedly thwarted when attempting to learn basic information about the NSA and the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court.
To talk more about these developments, Glenn Greenwald joins us now from his home in Brazil.
Glenn, welcome back to Democracy Now! Since we’ve spoken to you, Edward Snowden has been granted temporary asylum in Russia for a year. It’s not known where he is right now in Russia. Have you spoken to him? Do you know?
GLENN GREENWALD: I have, and he’s doing very well. He’s obviously happy that his very strange situation of being in this kind of no-person’s land in the airport has been resolved. He now is able to be safe, or at least relatively safe, for the next year from persecution by the United States. And he is most interested, whenever I talk to him, in talking not about his own situation, but about the really extraordinary debate that he helped provoke, both in the United States and around the world, about privacy, surveillance and Internet freedom.
AMY GOODMAN: What Russia has done, giving him temporary asylum, has infuriated the U.S. government, leading to questions about whether actually President Obama will be going on a planned trip to Russia next month. Your comments on the U.S.’s fury?
GLENN GREENWALD: Well, first of all, it’s really kind of amazing if you try and count the number of countries at whom the United States has directed its fury and threatened over the last two months in connection with the Snowden affair. They began with the government of Hong Kong, followed that up with the government of China, then moved to Latin America and threatened countries including Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador and Nicaragua over whether he would be granted asylum. They’ve threatened Cuba over giving him the right to refuel. So it seems like the list of countries that the United States is threatening and expressing their fury at, which now includes Russia, is almost getting to be longer than the list of countries at which they’re not. I mean, you can’t go around the world beating your chest and threatening everybody for very long without starting to appear rather ridiculous. And I think one of the things that the United States has done is really kind of showed the world what its character is in—over the last two months, through its really extreme and radical behavior. I mean, I can tell you here in Latin America what was really event-shifting was when they caused the plane Evo Morales to be downed in Austria by blocking airspace rights over their European allies.
You know, and I think the final point to note about this is, everyone in the world knows, probably except for Americans, that the United States routinely refuses to extradite all sorts of people accused of horrible crimes. I mean, in Bolivia, the ex-president, who’s accused of all sorts of war crimes and was protected and propped up by the CIA, is living comfortably in the United States, which refuses to turn him over. And that’s been true of other Latin Americans who have been accused of serious crimes of terrorism. So, I think when the United States pretends to be outraged that they don’t get what they want in extradition, everyone in the world knows that they frequently do the same thing in much more extreme cases.













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