Wednesday, June 06, 2018

Stand with Julian


My BFF online, Kevin Zeese, is in the news.  From WSWS, his statement in support of Julian Assange:
 

 
Julian Assange through his work as editor of WikiLeaks has made major strides toward democratizing the media by creating a vehicle for whistleblowers to share the truth and correct the misinformation of the mass corporate media. Assange and WikiLeaks have given people a precious tool—access to the undeniable truth about what governments and big business are doing. This is a tool we can all use to educate each other about what is really going on around us.
Assange is being persecuted because a democratized media threatens the monopoly over media control of the elites. A democratized media makes it more difficult for them to misinform, mislead and propagandize.
Through WikiLeaks, Assange with whistleblowers like Edward Snowden and Chelsea Manning have exposed war crimes, the truth about the Guantanamo Bay prison, the corporate domination of US policy and the actions of governments around the world and more. This has led to popular revolts around the world that have challenged those who abuse their power.
Freedom of speech and freedom of the press is being defined by the treatment of Julian Assange. Everyone who cares about these freedoms should speak out and take action on his behalf by joining the demonstration in Sydney, Australia on June 17 and the vigils being held in London and around the world on June 19—the anniversary of when Julian sought asylum in the Ecuadorian embassy six years ago. On June 19 at 11:00 a.m. we will be holding a protest in support of Julian Assange at the White House. Please join us to call for an end to his persecution.
Kevin Zeese, co-director of Popular Resistance, member of the advisory board of the Courage Foundation
 
 
Martha, Trina, Mike and Elaine cover Julian often.  In fact, already this week, Trina’s offered “Freedom for Julian Assange” and Mike offered  “The Supreme Court ruling and idiot Michael Moore .” I don’t know if I cover him very often.  (We all know I’m lazy.)  If I don’t, I just figure that it’s covered elsewhere.  Yesterday, I almost noted him because WSWS had a piece on Roger Waters (Pink Floyd) supporting him.  I was going to quote from that but then I saw the piece was a photo so I couldn’t quote.
 
But, of course, I support Julian and I believe the UK needs to stop trying to arrest him.  The charges he was wanted for have been dropped by Sweden.  He needs to be left alone.  Instead, he’s being persecuted.
 

I stand for and with Julian.  I hope you do as well.  You wouldn’t want to be a turncoat like Michael Moore, would you?  Then stand with Julian.


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


Wednesday, June 6, 2018.  Iraq . . . where democracy goes to die via assisted suicide.


AP can't get it right this morning.  It's Wednesday, Hayder al-Abadi has done his weekly speech as prime minister of Iraq.  In the speech, he announces that a body no one's heard of before, one he appointed from his own Cabinet has found 'irregularities' -- no details on what they are -- that will require calling off the votes of the displaced outside of Iraq and the displaced inside Iraq.

This would be the same Hayder, remember, who may be the outgoing prime minister because he did not win the elections last month.  Hayder did not come in first, that was the Moqtada al-Sadr's alliance.  Moqtada is the Shi'ite cleric and movement leader who was vastly underestimated by gas bags.  Hayder did not come in second, that was the party of the militias.  Hayder came in third.  Distant third.

And now he's saying the election results are being tabled -- for the displaced.


Oh, and it gets worse.

Hayder's announced there will be recounts.

Why is that worse?

Because it's not allowed.


Ibrahim Saleh (ANADOLU AGENCY) reports:



Iraqi law does not allow election results to be annulled or manual vote recounts to be conducted, Iraq's Supreme Judicial Council said Tuesday.
“Article 8 of the Electoral Commission Law No. 11 of 2007 gives voters the right to challenge [poll] results before the Independent High Electoral Commission’s board of commissioners,” the judicial council said in a statement.
“If the plaintiff is not satisfied by the board’s decision, they can bring the issue before an electoral tribunal, which must rule on the appeal within 10 days of referral,” the statement read.
It added: “There is no provision within the law giving the judiciary the authority to partially annul election results.”
“Nor is there any provision within the law giving the judiciary the authority to request a partial recount of poll results,” the judicial council asserted.


So the loser, Hayder, who thought he'd win campaigning on his alleged defeat of ISIS doesn't like the results and thinks that's all it takes.

He doesn't have to follow the Constitution, he doesn't have to listen to the courts, he can just do whatever he wants, create his own commission and what he decides goes?

That's how it works now?

Let's drop back to note the hysterical reaction to Moqtada's win.

For example, Danny Sjursen (NATIONAL INTEREST) insists:


Sadr has since re-branded himself as an enemy of corruption and a cross-sectarian proponent of governance reform. Nonetheless, to my men and most U.S. troopers, he’ll always be the fiercely anti-American thug who sent his impoverished, hopeless fighters out into the streets to kill soldiers and marines.


So sorry, Danny, but you don't get to vote in the Iraqi elections.  Yes, you invaded their country, yes, US weapons were used on the Iraqi people, but that doesn't mean you get to decide for them. 


And, Danny, I'll take your hysterics a little more seriously after you call out the 2009 deal that released the leader of the League of Righteousness from US custody -- despite the fact that he did have US blood on his hands.  You've never called that out.  You've never even acknowledged it. 

For any late to the party on that reality,  let's drop back  to the June 9, 2009 snapshot:


This morning the New York Times' Alissa J. Rubin and Michael Gordon offered "U.S. Frees Suspect in Killing of 5 G.I.'s." Martin Chulov (Guardian) covered the same story, Kim Gamel (AP) reported on it, BBC offered "Kidnap hope after Shia's handover" and Deborah Haynes contributed "Hope for British hostages in Iraq after release of Shia militant" (Times of London). The basics of the story are this. 5 British citizens have been hostages since May 29, 2007. The US military had in their custody Laith al-Khazali. He is a member of Asa'ib al-Haq. He is also accused of murdering five US troops. The US military released him and allegedly did so because his organization was not going to release any of the five British hostages until he was released. This is a big story and the US military is attempting to state this is just diplomacy, has nothing to do with the British hostages and, besides, they just released him to Iraq. Sami al-askari told the New York Times, "This is a very sensitive topic because you know the position that the Iraqi government, the U.S. and British governments, and all the governments do not accept the idea of exchanging hostages for prisoners. So we put it in another format, and we told them that if they want to participate in the political process they cannot do so while they are holding hostages. And we mentioned to the American side that they cannot join the political process and release their hostages while their leaders are behind bars or imprisoned." In other words, a prisoner was traded for hostages and they attempted to not only make the trade but to lie to people about it. At the US State Dept, the tired and bored reporters were unable to even broach the subject. Poor declawed tabbies. Pentagon reporters did press the issue and got the standard line from the department's spokesperson, Bryan Whitman, that the US handed the prisoner to Iraq, the US didn't hand him over to any organization -- terrorist or otherwise. What Iraq did, Whitman wanted the press to know, was what Iraq did. A complete lie that really insults the intelligence of the American people. CNN reminds the five US soldiers killed "were: Capt. Brian S. Freeman, 31, of Temecula, California; 1st Lt. Jacob N. Fritz, 25, of Verdon, Nebraska; Spc. Johnathan B. Chism, 22, of Gonzales, Louisiana; Pfc. Shawn P. Falter, 25, of Cortland, New York; and Pfc. Johnathon M. Millican, 20, of Trafford, Alabama." Those are the five from January 2007 that al-Khazali and his brother Qais al-Khazali are supposed to be responsible for the deaths of. Qassim Abdul-Zahra and Robert H. Reid (AP) states that Jonathan B. Chism's father Danny Chism is outraged over the release and has declared, "They freed them? The American military did? Somebody needs to answer for it."


Still waiting for honest discussions on that reality.

In the meantime, US troops don't get to decide who runs Iraq -- whether the US government sent them there or not.  Guess that wasn't covered in basic training?




Didn't turn out quite the way you wanted
How were you to know
Boom town broke down
What a let down
Where did the mountain go?
-- "Chalice Borealis," written by Carole King and Rick Sorensen, first appears on Carole's SPEEDING TIME


The turn out for the latest election was low -- historically low.

Why might that be?

Maybe because Barack Obama nixed Nouri al-Maliki's plans for a third term and installed Hayder al-Abadi as prime minister.  And -- or -- maybe because Nouri lost the election in 2010 and Ayad Allawi should have been named prime minister-designate.  Instead, Nouri refused to allow the process to move forward.  He dug his heels in.  For eight months, Iraq was at a standstill.  The political stalemate ended because Barack okayed The Erbil Agreement, a legal contract brokered by the US government which was signed off on by all party leaders -- but not by the Iraqi voters.  This contract gave Nouri a second term in exchange for concessions to various parties.  Nouri used the contract to get a second term, then stalled on honoring his side of the contract until his attorney announced that the contract wasn't valid.

Nouri, of course, was installed by the US in 2006.  A nobody, a nothing.  But he did have a CIA profile which found him to be highly paranoid and the US government felt that this could be worked, they could use it to control him.

Golly gee, after 2006's result, 2010's result and 2014's result, why do you suppose Iraqis might not feel the need to turn out and vote?

But Moqtada's supporters did.

Why was that a surprise?

He's demonstrated repeatedly over the years that he can get his followers to turn out.  And to turn out in public, mind you, where they might be attacked.  Getting them to turn out at the polls was so much easier.

The US government has been sputtering over Moqtada's win for weeks now.

And it's not even like Moqtada's going to be prime minister.  He can't be.  He didn't run for Parliament and the prime minister has to be an elected Member of Parliament.

But it's been non-stop hand wringing over Moqtada.

So now Hayder al-Nobody thinks he can disregard Iraq's Constitution and Iraq's judiciary.  And you don't think that further destroys the average Iraqi's faith in democratic institutions?

Hayder's whining about the new electronic voting machines.  We might manage to care if we weren't raising issues about that in March, long before the elections.  If he's only concerned after he loses, then he's really not concerned about the machines, he's just got sour grapes over losing.

It's almost a month since elections.  And yet again Iraqis have to wait because the process is not honored, the rules are not respected.

This is not how you grow democracy.

And at a time when the Islamic State is still active in Iraq, you need a peaceful and reasonable transfer of power.  The longer this draws out, the more questions there will be for leadership.  The more attacks by the Islamic State, the more this inability to follow the process becomes an issue.





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Tuesday, June 05, 2018

Who sells dinos?

Read the following and see if it seems right to you because it doesn’t to me.  Paul Praider (ABC NEWS) reports:
 

 
 
The 150 million-year-old, largely-intact skeleton of a still-unknown species of dinosaur went to auction today in Paris and sold for more than two million dollars - and if paleontologists’ hunches prove true, the mystery winning bidder may get a chance to bestow a name on a previously undiscovered species.
The remains of the prehistoric predator – which is 30 feet long and 9 feet high - were discovered at Morrison Formation site in Wyoming in 2013.
“The skeleton is 70% complete,” paleontologist Eric Mickeler told ABC News while observing the skeleton. “This is remarkable to have such a large amount of original fossilized bones."
 
 
 
 
Why is that even being sold?  Why isn’t it in a museum – in the area it was found – so that the people can see it?  Exactly who decided that they had the right to sell this to begin with?
 
I find it outrageous.  And disrespectful.
  
Pins and needles, waiting for the results, probably blog about them tomorrow night.

Closing with C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"
 
Tuesday, June 5, 2018.  The fakery never ends.


18 years after the ongoing Iraq War began, we finally have an answer as to why.

Kate Hoit Retweeted Leo Shane III
Dear , Iraq War veteran here. I don’t agree with the President (at all). Take a knee. Kneel in the face of injustice. You have the right to protest. That’s what we fought for and will continue to defend.
Kate Hoit added,
 
 


Kate Hoit explains that the Iraq War was about the 'evildoer' Saddam Hussein refusing to allow American football players to take a knee.

And wherever Kate sees an evildoer refusing to allow someone to take a knee, she will be there.

Do the lies ever stop?

The Iraq War is about oil.  It has always been about oil.  It was never about Weapons of Mass Destruction -- there were none.



From THE LOS ANGELES TIMES, September 17, 2007:

"The Iraq war is largely about oil," former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan says in his new book -- an assertion disputed by lawmakers and the U.S. Defense secretary.
"I'm saddened that it is politically inconvenient to acknowledge what everyone knows," Greenspan, 81, writes in "The Age of Turbulence: Adventures in a New World."
Greenspan writes that the attention given by developed nations to the political situation in the Middle East is directly tied to oil security.
"Whatever their publicized angst over Saddam Hussein's 'weapons of mass destruction,' American and British authorities were also concerned about violence in an area that harbors a resource indispensable for the functioning of the world economy," he writes.



11 years ago, Greenspan was forced to walk those remarks back due to outrage.  The outrage should be over the fact that even now the truth cannot be discussed honestly.  Greenspan's remarks above are not off the cuff statements from an interview.  He thought about them, he wrote them down, he read them in the galleys and he okayed their publication.  He knew exactly what he was writing.

You were not fighting for freedom to take a knee, Kate.  You might have been fighting for the 'freedom' of low gas prices.  But don't ever pretend this was about some wonderful free speech issue because it was a war of lies.

It's 18 years on and people are still fighting in the Iraq War.  Don't you think it's time you got honest?  Do you seriously intend to lie your entire life?

It's an ongoing war.  It will probably continue until we can get honest.

My dad is home safe from his deployment in Iraq!!!! I’m so happy!!!!!!! ❤️❤️❤️
 
 


I'm glad too, Sophie Rose.

I don't want anyone dying in this war.  And no US troops should be there to begin with.  But until we can get sanity in our government, US troops will continue to be sent to Iraq.



Say a little prayer till they all get home
Say a little prayer till they all get home
I knew when we woke up
You would be leaving
You knew when you left me
It might be too long
That kiss on your shoulder
It's me looking over
Close to your heart
So you're never alone
Say a little prayer till they all get home
Say a little prayer till they all get home
-- "Till They All Get Home," written by Melanie (Safka) and first appears on Melanie's Crazy Love



US troops need to come home.  The Iraqi people need to be allowed to sort out their future.  The US needs to stop installing puppets in Iraq.  If you believe in democracy and self-determination, then you shouldn't support this 18 year war that shows no end in sight.


IRAQI NEWS reports a clash outside Samarra left 2 militia members dead and four more injured (no reports of ISIS deaths or injuries in the clash) and, yesterday, four militia members were killed in a clash with ISIS in Salahuddin Province.


In other violence, Turkey and the PKK.    Aaron Hess (International Socialist Review) described the PKK in 2008, "The PKK emerged in 1984 as a major force in response to Turkey's oppression of its Kurdish population. Since the late 1970s, Turkey has waged a relentless war of attrition that has killed tens of thousands of Kurds and driven millions from their homes. The Kurds are the world's largest stateless population -- whose main population concentration straddles Turkey, Iraq, Iran, and Syria -- and have been the victims of imperialist wars and manipulation since the colonial period. While Turkey has granted limited rights to the Kurds in recent years in order to accommodate the European Union, which it seeks to join, even these are now at risk."

Over the objections of the Baghdad based government, the Turkish government has repeatedly bombed norhtern Iraq and sent Turkish troops into Iraq on the ground to attack.  The US government has backed this.

Farmers and villagers have been killed as Turkey has insisted it was killing PKK.


ANADOLU AGENCY reports  today:

Turkish jets “neutralized” three PKK terrorists in northern Iraq, according to the military on Wednesday.
In a statement, the Turkish General Staff said the airstrikes targeting the terror group were carried out in northern Iraq’s Zap region.
Turkish authorities often use the word "neutralized" in their statements to imply that the terrorists in question either surrendered or were killed or captured.


And AP notes:

Turkey has threatened to attack Iraq's Qandil region, where outlawed Kurdish rebels maintain their headquarters.
Deputy Prime Minister Bekir Bozdag told reporters Monday that militants of the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, frequently carry out attacks against Turkey from bases in the Qandil mountains and elsewhere in Iraq.
Bozdag said "everyone knows that Qandil is a center for terror. Turkey could enter Qandil, everything is possible at any time."

At this point, it's worth noting WikiLeaks revelations on the PKK suggest that the US government also backs them from time to time.  Worth noting because YENI SAFAK is reporting:

Turkey’s possible Qandil operation has thrust the U.S. front into panic. There are claims that once Qandil, the main base of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), is cleared of terror elements, the group will relocate to Sinjar. The U.S. deployed 200 troops to Sinjar, which is being evaluated as a move to protect the PKK. This deployment was confirmed by the Sinjar District Governor.
There are claims that Special U.S. Presidential Envoy for the Global Coalition to Defeat Daesh Brett McGurk, who met with members of the terror group in June 2016, pointed to Afrin as an alternate to Qandil. Once the Afrin option was off the table as a result of Turkey’s ongoing Operation Olive Branch, Sinjar was presented as an alternative.


Great.  As if the US government hasn't abused US troops enough.  Now, like toy soldiers, they're moved over to Sinjar to protect the PKK -- which the US government has always insisted they were opposed to but which, in fact, the US government has helped and aided for some time.

US troops are not used to protect freedom, they're used as toys in a destabilization operation.  That's outrageous.  They need to all be brought home.


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Monday, June 04, 2018

Go home Dianne, Kevin is the future!

moore


From Sunday, that's Isaiah's THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "He crawls out from under his rock"



   
 
 
 
When she first won election in 1992, Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D) was decidedly on the liberal side of the Democratic Party. A generation later, Feinstein’s views are much more mainstream — so much so that they anger some liberals who wish she would take more progressive stands.
Feinstein faces a challenge from de León, the former state Senate president, who amassed a fiercely liberal record in Sacramento.
De León has struggled to raise the money to compete with Feinstein, who loaned her own campaign $5 million in December. But the contest has split the state Democratic Party between established interests like the Human Rights Campaign and United Farm Workers, which back Feinstein, and progressive interests like Daily Kos, local chapters of Our Revolution and the California Nurses Association, which back de León.
Most public polls show Feinstein poised to earn somewhere around 40 percent of the vote on Tuesday, guaranteeing her a spot in the November general election. De León is polling just under 20 percent, according to a survey taken last month by the Public Policy Institute of California. Those polls show a vast majority of Californians have an opinion about Feinstein, while de León remains largely unknown.
(At least one survey, conducted online by the University of California, Berkeley, shows Republican James Bradley with a shot at winning the second slot.)
Is Feinstein vulnerable to a serious challenge from the left? If she can’t break 40 percent of the vote on Tuesday, look for progressive groups to make de León's campaign a top priority this year. But with so many other Democratic opportunities on the ballot this year, any sign of weakness from Feinstein’s challenger will virtually guarantee Feinstein another six years in the Senate.
 
 
It’s time for Dianne Feinstein to go home.  She’s the oldest member of the Senate.  Go home.  She wants to die in office and force a special election – and all that cost – off on the state – which means our taxes.  Dianne is worthless.  Go home, Dianne.
 
 
Kevin De Leon could be our future.  We need to be prepared to do what we should and support our future – not hold the hand of a corpse who’s spent the last decades betraying us and whose ethics are the absolute worst.

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


Monday, June 4, 2018.

Starting with the Hobby Lobby of journalists Rukmini Callimachi who stole thousands of documents from Iraq.


1. Many of you have written to ask me what will happen to the ISIS Files we recovered in Iraq? Ever since we found the first set of records, my editor & I recognized their historic value. We have some exciting news we can finally share:



Is that exciting?  It's not news.  It's propaganda.  The real news, noted in Friday's snapshot, was much more exciting.  The Iraqi government has ordered Rukmini and THE NEW YORK TIMES to return the documents immediately and to apologize for the theft.


Despite the order being posted online, Rukmini has yet to be honest about what has taken place.


A thief without honor, who would have thought such a thing could exist!!!!


Not only has she not been upfront, she's flat out lied.


Next level BS from and
 
 
 



What a liar.  What a thief.

Not everyone's impressed with the colonial thief.

NYT admitted the historical values of the files, yet they insist on keeping them without even trying to apologize for how everything happened.
 
 
  • Always nice to see you on my timeline . The Q & A above specifically says that we’re handing the originals to the Iraqi Embassy. At the same time, we’re giving digital copies to a university which will make them available online. Are you arguing this is a bad thing?
     
     
  • Thr documents do not belong to the NYT and therefore good or bad isn’t for you to ask let alone decide. Return them. The profit can’t be justified by the we are making them available in line refrain.
     
     
  • Respectfully, as the Q and A posted on my timeline above explains, the NYT is indeed returning them. Are you arguing that we shouldn’t make them available to the public online? How does that serve anyone except the ISIS members who will therefore be shielded from prosecution?
     
     
    perhaps you could write a piece about what you going to do can't find Q&A in 263 comments on twitter. What about research ethics and protection of innocent here its a bit more complicated that just posting everything online. its smacks of colonial plundering hence.
     
     
      1. New conversation
    Replying to   and 
    found your q&a article the point you will never get past is that they weren't yours for taking, you should return them to the Iraqi legal system and insitutions with no further debate. this volume of docs on line will endanger an innocent you will make a mistake.
     
     
  • The NYT’s justification is essentially this: without our q&a amd our podcast these documents would never have been public b/c the infrastructure is Iraq is non-existent. Basically what the British said to Pakistan/India/Africa. And you know that worked out.
     
     




    Replying to 
    Spoiler alert: She stole them.


    She did.

    But the thief does have her defenders:

    Dear lady, you work for a newspaper, you should know that copying/xeroxing is stealing. Can I come to your house , Xerox your personnal letters and documents and ask for your forgiveness ? Admit that you think that third world countries are your playgrounds. Arrogance.
     
     
  • You will be able to view those documents someday yourself. So will your neighbors who are scholars and researchers. Doesn’t that feel liberating?
     
     
    1. End of conversation
  • Replying to   and 
    Or what they want to share. Question is why she stole it? What were they searching for? Or trying to cover?
     
     
  • Iraqi Intelligence had already deemed it of no value and tossed it in the burn pile. How can you steal something that has no value?
     
     
  • That's her version. Iraqi version is that it was a theft of evidence they actually want to go through. She has prevented investigation by stealing it.
     
     
  • You will be able to investigate it yourself someday soon.
     
     
  • I dont believe the documents wont be altered & carrefuly selected-no value left as we know any incriminating informations they may have contained were already taken care of.I hope you understand my distrust to US authorities after million of Iraqis was slaughtered,Abu Ghraib etc.
     
     
    1. End of conversation
  • Replying to   and 
    I think your argument stems from a lack of understanding of how a Constitutionally Protected Free Press is supposed to function:
     
     
    New conversation
  • "Constitutionally protected press"?? Really? How about Iraq's constitution, laws she broke by stealing evidence of crimes? She committed a crime and all you have to say is that?
     
     




    She was not given these papers.  She can lie all she wants.

    Nor did the military of Iraq tell her she could take them -- a claim she and her defenders make.  She was imbedded with the militia.  Read her articles from the time period.  She was not dealing with the head of the military.  She had no permission at all.  She did not consult the Iraqi government when she left with the documents -- which is more than mere theft, it's known as smuggling.

    The 'digitizing' b.s. only comes up after she's been called out for being yet another example of empire, where a nation and its inhabitants just take what they want with no regard for the law.

    She stole.  And she smuggled.

    And she lied when leaving the country of Iraq and when entering the country of the US.  She is guilty of smuggling and should be behind bars.

    Replying to   and 
    Give back what you stole and stop arguing. You are a thief and you know it. Would you do the same at home ? No. The "third world" is not your playground.
     
     


    It is theft and how sad that it's another stain on THE NEW YORK TIMES.  They can't spin their way out of this fast enough.  They're trying.  But they can't.

    Next level BS from and
     
     
     
  • . - Could you please help clear things and confirm whether you have or haven't received such correspondence, and whether there has been any follow-up? I'd appreciate a response. Thanks!
     
     
    Replying to   and 
    Hello all - Our New York office is making arrangements for delivery of the documents to the Iraqi embassy in Washington. That is moving forward. Ramadan Kareem!
     
     


    Coker responding by refusing to answer the question is the actual answer.


    And as someone who saw through Rukmini's b.s. over two years ago, let me explain what's going on in that head of hers right now.  She thinks this will blow over.  She thinks she has beaten back the scandal -- after asking friends to Tweet her praises over the last few days -- confirmed by a friend at NYT and two who refused to Tweet in support of her now that they knew she'd stolen the papers from Iraq.

    She thinks it's all over and that, in a month, no one will remember.

    Wrong.

    Countries will remember and any time she attempts to leave one, she will find that customs will be doing extra searches on her bags and her persons.

    More to the point, this never goes away.  It is her reputation now and it will define her more and more as each year passes.  Her smugness, her sense of entitlement will be the prism through which her work is now viewed.  She is the Ugly American.

    She is a thief.

    She lied to get through customs in both Iraq and the US.

    Enjoy the name you've made for yourself, Rukmini.  As I warned everyone in early 2016, you're even worse than Judith Miller.


    Her disrespect for the rights of others and the law is hardly unique in the US.  In fact, it's the position of the US government itself. Josh Gerstein (POLITICO) reported Friday night:


    The Defense Department recorded at least 18 phone calls intended to allow confidential communication between an American citizen being held prisoner by U.S. forces in Iraq and the prisoner’s attorneys at the American Civil Liberties Union, according to a court filing late Friday.
    In at least two instances, a civilian Defense Department employee listened to the attorney-client calls, government lawyers disclosed.


    On the topic of Iraq, Friday the ACLU issued the following:

    WASHINGTON — The Trump administration today submitted to Congress a report revealing how many civilian casualties it believes resulted from U.S. military operations in Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan, Somalia, Libya and Yemen. The administration provided a classified version of the report to Congress and made public an unclassified version.
    The Department of Defense’s report estimates that military operations in the first year of the Trump administration have killed approximately 499 civilians and injured approximately 169 civilians. It says it is still assessing more than 450 reports of casualties in Iraq and Syria from 2017.
    Hina Shamsi, director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s National Security Project, issued the following statement in response:
    “Importantly, the Trump administration has recognized it needs to report publicly on the number of civilians it has killed overseas, but this death count is simply not credible. Even as the Trump administration confirms that the number of lethal strikes dramatically increased in 2017, it provides only a total number of unidentified people killed in all those countries, without any additional detail.
    “The administration’s low death claims cannot be meaningfully tested and therefore cannot be trusted. Independent media and watchdog assessments make clear that the number of civilians killed overseas is many times higher than what the Trump administration acknowledges. The administration’s explanation of discrepancies shows that it applies too high a standard for assessing whether reports of civilians deaths are ‘credible,’ and in far too many instances, the investigations it conducts are insufficient. Secrecy about the costs and consequences of Trump’s killing policies prevents meaningful public oversight and accountability for wrongful deaths. The victims of our government’s lethal actions deserve better, as does the American public in whose name the Trump administration is ordering people killed.”
    The public version of the Department of Defense’s report on civilian casualties can be found here: https://www.aclu.org/report/department-defenses-annual-report-civilian-casualties-connection-us-military-operations-june


    Iraq is a victim of its neighbors -- specifically Iran and Turkey who are denying it access to water.  RUDAW reported yesterday:

    The water crisis has spread in southern and central provinces of Iraq and the Kurdistan Region as dams built by Turkey and Iran, irrespective of international laws, slow the flow of rivers into Iraq to a trickle.

    There are growing fears up to seven million people will be displaced due to the dramatic fall in water resources.

    “Nine months ago, the Iraqi water resources ministry warned of water shortage during this summer. It called for necessary measures to be taken to tackle the issue,” Iraq’s Water Resources Minister Hassan al-Janabi told reporters on Saturday.

    “The government responded to us, forming a high level committee  comprising of many parties from agriculture, interior, defense, industry, electricity, housing and reconstruction and municipalities as well as the Iraqi Media Network in order to tackle the matter in question on a national level in case of water decrease,” he added




    Richard Spencer (TIMES OF LONDON) notes that the Iraqi Parliament held an emergency session on this issue over the weekend.  On the topic of Turkey, AHVAL adds:


    Turkey is intensifying its military presence in northern Iraq in the run up to elections, scheduled for 24th June, wrote journalist Menekse Tokyay in an article for the The Arab Weekly on Sunday.
    Turkish commandos have recently moved about 20km into Iraq’s Duhok and Erbil provinces, controlled by the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), according to local media reports quoted by Tokyay.
    The moves aim to counter the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which has been fighting for self-rule in Turkey’s mainly Kurdish south-east since 1984 and which has a strong presence in the region.


    Meanwhile, facts deeply trouble AFP:

    Iraqi judicial authorities have issued an arrest warrant for a Kurdish politician at the centre of last year's failed independence bid, a source from within the provincial administration said on Sunday.
    Rebwar Talabani, head of the Kirkuk Provincial Council, was one of the architects of the September referendum in which an overwhelming majority backed independence for Iraqi Kurdistan.


    Failed independence bid?  It was a non-binding resolution.  It's only intent was to measure the public's response.  How is that a failure?  The only failure is the AFP's -- specifically, their inability to report honestly.

    I am by no means hoping for Rebwar Talabani's arrest and I hope the government is smart enough to drop the charges.  That said, there's more than a bit of karma involved here.  Jalal Talabani's son returned to Iraq from his US home in an attempt to disrupt the vote and he also ordered Kurdish security to stand down and allow Kirkuk to be taken.  So there is karma here in that a Talabani is now the one targeted with arrest.  Rebwar is currently in Erbil.  He'll probably choose to stay there for awhile.  Baghdad has no power over Erbil (demonstrated by Moussad Barzani when he gave asylum to Tariq al-Hashemi during the reign of thug Nouri al-Maliki).


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