|     |     | Monday, August 23, 2010. Chaos and violence continues, the US military  announced another death on Sunday, Joe Biden serves up a course in creative  speaking, Margaret Hassan's killer has escaped from an Iraqi prison,  Ayad  Allawi tells Vladimir Putin that the US wants Iran's approval of any Iraqi  government, Medea Benjamin tangles with Blackwater and more.   The Hindu explains, "Over 50,000  U.S. troops are to remain in Iraq, and their numbers could rise to 70,000. They  will be called 'Advise and Assist brigades'; they have warplanes and helicopters  and will accompany Iraqi troops into combat. The U.S. also has several big,  effectively permanent military bases in Iraq; and intends to maintain about  200,000 mercenaries as 'protectors' of western business and other interests  across the country." Before we get to anything else, we need to grasp that  reality.  A lot of spin was spun today.      In the United States this morning, Vice President Joe Biden gave a very  strange speech.  Matt Negrin (Politico) has the money  quote  if not the analytical ability to realize what he has: "Don't buy into  'we have failed in Afghanistan.' We are now only beginning, with the right  general and the right number of forces, to seek our objectives."  Anyone see the  problem?  That's a swipe on Stanley McChrystal.  So McChrystal was the wrong  general?  Well darn that Bully Boy Bush for putting McChrystal in charge of  Afghanistan.  Oh wait, McChrystal was Barack's choice.  Ann Scott Tyson (Washington Post), June 3,  2009 : "Army Lt. Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal, President Obama's choice to lead  the war in Afghanistan, said yesterday that violence and combat deaths will  intensify as more U.S. troops surge into Taliban-held areas, but he vowed to  execute a "holistic" strategy in which killing insurgents would be subordinate  to safeguarding Afghan civilians. McChrystal, a former Special Operations  commander, pledged that if confirmed he will take extreme measures to avoid  Afghan civilian casualties -- a problem that has long tarnished the U.S.-led  military campaign -- putting civilians at risk only when necessary to save the  lives of coalition troops."  So Barack's been overseeing a war for how long?  He  chose the wrong general and it took him how long to realize that?  Biden was there to talk about Iraq and, though he knows better, he gave the  usual sap and sop.  Instead of talking about how the service members should have  the public's 'gratitude,' he should have offered the government's sympathy for  sending them off to fight an illegal war and a war built on lies.  Joe was in  crowd pleaser mode and nothing he said matched with the facts.    "You would not recognize the country today!" he insisted.  As proof he  pointed to the ethnic cleansing/civil war of 2006 and 2007.  That would be the  ethnic cleansing which created the Iraqi refugee crisis.  After you create 4.1  million refugees (higher by some estimates), you would see less violence but, of  course, the thugs need someone new to target and it's a damn shame, A DAMN  SHAME, that neither Joe Biden or Barack Obama has said one damn word about the  targeting of Iraq's LGBT community.  It is as shameful as the long silence  Ronald Reagan had on AIDS and they -- Joe and Barack -- better accept how ugly  this will look historically on their record.  The LGBT community targeted and  they never said a word.      Last October, New York Magazine published a horrifying article about the  persecution of gays in Iraq. The article describes men presumed to be  homosexuals being hunted down, tortured, and shot dead at close range.  The militias that commit these horrific acts often leave the bodies on  the side of the road, with the word "PERVERT" taped to their  chests.                      But an even more brutal method of torture and murder  has been adopted. Militias use super glue to close the men's anuses, and then  force them to drink a fluid that induces diarrhea, causing them to explode from  the inside.                        As a filmmaker, I spent eight months living in Syria documenting  the lives of gay Iraqi men.                       One of them, a 24 year-old, left his Baghdad home after a note  arrived on his front door reading "If your gay son doesn't leave the country,  we'll kill the whole family." He told me he considered himself lucky -- "at  least they warned me."                                       So we should  not be taken in by the tomfoolery on the Kuwaiti border in the last few hours,  the departure of the last "combat" troops from Iraq two weeks ahead of schedule.  Nor by the infantile cries of "We won" from teenage soldiers, some of whom must  have been 12-years-old when George W Bush sent his army off on this catastrophic  Iraqi adventure. They are leaving behind 50,000 men and women - a third of the  entire US occupation force - who will be attacked and who will still have to  fight against the insurgency.             Yes,  officially they are there to train the gunmen and militiamen and the poorest of  the poor who have joined the new Iraqi army, whose own commander does not  believe they will be ready to defend their country until 2020. But they will  still be in occupation - for surely one of the "American interests" they must  defend is their own presence - along with the thousands of armed and  indisciplined mercenaries, western and eastern, who are shooting their way  around Iraq to safeguard our precious western diplomats and businessmen. So say  it out loud: we are not leaving.       Defend and protect their country?  They don't even have the capabilities to  secure their own borders which is, traditionally speaking, the first measure of  a nation-state's level of security.  (For those in doubt, look to Greece.)  Jane Arraf (Christian Science Monitor)  reports  that attempts are being made to integrate the Kurdish and the Iraqi  forces and quotes US Lt Gen Michael Barbero stating, "The Iraqis realize they  have to get the Iraqi Army focused on defending the sovereignty of Iraq. There  is a realization that we have to move on and start doing this and get as far  down the road as we can in the next 16 months."  Arraf reminds, "Iraq, carved  out of the remnants of the Ottoman Empire by the victors of World War II,  borders six countries -- Saudi Arabia, Syria, Kuwait, Turkey, Jordan, and Iran."      Jane Dutton: Iraqis have endured invasion, economic stagnation,  wars, sanctions and internal conflict for decades. Today in the aftermath of the  seven year war in Iraq, citizens lack even the most basic of services leaving  many of them feeling helpless, desperate and in utter disbelief that their  homeland is still in a state of chaos. Now the United Nations is promising to  create a better future for the people of Iraq. The UN will work closely with a  government, civil organizations, academia and the private sector to achieve a  series of development goals in Iraq.  These goals are: Eradicate extreme poverty  and hunger, achieve universal primary education, promote gender equality and  empower women, reduce child mortality, improve maternal health, combat HIV/AIDs,  malaria and other diseases, ensure environmental sustainability and create  global partnership for development. To find out more about the Millenium  Development Goals and whether the UN will be able to achieve in developing them,  I'm joined from Erbil by Christine McNab.  Ms. McNab is a director of the office  of development and humanitarian support at the United Nations Assistance Mission  for Iraq and also the United Nations' resident and humanitarian coordinator for  Iraq.  And from Baghdad, by Ali Babin, the Iraqi Minister of Planning and  Development Cooperation.  Welcome both of you to the program. Ms. McNab, the  very comendable goals, these Millineum Goals, but how do you plan to go about  achieving them?   Christine McNab: It's not really a matter of whether they're  comendable, it's a matter of the fact that they are very, very good shorthand  for a developmental agenda of any country. And even in a country like Iraq which  is still struggling with the impact of conflict.  They do give us very clear  guidelines of what needs to be done.  They're not just development goals because  they also concentrate on the most vulnerable.  So they're also humanitarian  goals.  Can we achieve them by 2015? It's possible. It's going to be very, very  difficult -- partly because of the violence. But we are working closely with the  ministries and the Minister of Planning is one of our close partners. We have a  network of 600 UN workers across the country -- these are national staff.  We  have another 150 international staff who are working in and out of the country  as possible. And this is done in close coordination -- as you said -- with local  NGOs.  And the local NGOs and our staff are going to be the real heroes of the  Millenium Development Goals because we can help them and we can support them  with government.  And, especially with the local government and local societies,  they are already making a difference.   Jane Dutton: But this is a very big week for Iraq.  You touched on  the violence, it's one of the bloodiest months since the invasion.  The US  troops have pulled out which will eventually leave Iraq with only 50,000 support  troops. There's sewage running down the street in certain parts of the country.  The basic services aren't there.  Who really cares about these goals?  Who has  the desire to push them forward?    Christine McNab: Are you still asking me --    Jane Dutton: I'm asking you Ms. McNab.   Christine McNab:  -- or are you asking the Minister?   Jane Dutton: I am asking you.   Christine McNab: Okay, well who has the desire?  I certainly have  the desire and my team has the desire but that's not enough. It has to come from  within, it has to come from the country. And I don't quite recognize the picture  you painted because although there is terrific violence going on, there's also  normal life going on in many parts of the country, many governorates.  People  are actually able to go about their business. Hospitals have been rebuilt or new  hospitals built. We have been rebuilding the schools. The access to clean water  is increasing. And I would be the first to admit it's not fast enough.   Sanitation still is a huge issue. And the environment has been terribly  neglected.   Jane Dutton: Mr. Baban --   Christine McNab: Women are getting --   Jane Dutton:  Excuse me --   Christine McNab: -- better access.   Jane Dutton: Okay, Mr. Baban do you support these goals, do you  think that this is something that is achievable in your country?   Ali Baban: Of course, we achieve a lot. But the problem, as you  diagnose it, the  lack of stablity in the country. The country face many  challenges.  The chaos, the political antagonism, the lack of stability -- this  is the main problems and challenges the country faces. I think without  defeating, without overcoming those problems, we cannot achive a lot.  You  cannot -- You are not talking about a normal country.  You are talking about an  extraordinary situation. So we should take that in our consideration.     Jane Dutton: How do you think these goals which are often cited as  being better suited to Africa, how do you think they fit into this middle-income  country of yours?   Ali Baban: Of course the humanitarian need is equal -- are equal  around the world. So I think the problem now that Iraqi people can overcome  their antagonism -- political antagonism -- and go for work for development.   Iraq, as you know and as all people know, is a rich country. So there is no lack  of money and we have everything in this country. We have the fortune. But the  problem mainly concentrate on development    Jane Dutton: Let's put that to Ms. McNab.  How does the UN view  this political standoff at the moment. Five months on and there's still no  credible government or there's no government at  all. |    There is no goverment.  March 7th, Iraq concluded Parliamentary elections. The  Guardian's editorial  board notes, "These elections were hailed prematurely by Mr Obama as  a success, but everything that has happened since has surely doused that  optimism in a cold shower of reality." 163 seats are needed to form the  executive government (prime minister and council of ministers). When no single  slate wins 163 seats (or possibly higher -- 163 is the number today but the  Parliament added seats this election and, in four more years, they may add more  which could increase the number of seats needed to form the executive  government), power-sharing coalitions must be formed with other slates, parties  and/or individual candidates. (Eight Parliament seats were awarded, for example,  to minority candidates who represent various religious minorities in Iraq.) Ayad  Allawi is the head of Iraqiya which won 91 seats in the Parliament making it the  biggest seat holder. Second place went to State Of Law which Nouri al-Maliki,  the current prime minister, heads. They won 89 seats. Nouri made a big show of  lodging complaints and issuing allegations to distract and delay the  certification of the initial results while he formed a power-sharing coalition  with third place winner Iraqi National Alliance -- this coalition still does not  give them 163 seats. They are claiming they have the right to form the  government. In 2005, Iraq  took four months and seven days to pick a prime minister. It's now 5  months and 16 days. Phil Sands (National  Newspaper) notes that if the stalemate continues through  September 8th, it will then be a half a year since Iraqis  voted. 
And Joe Biden, with a straight face, declared to the VFW today, "It's  because politics and nationalism has broken out in Iraq."  [Jon Garcia, Karen Travers and Jake Tapper (ABC News)  quote  him stating, "Politics, not war, has broken out in Iraq."  I'm sure  they are correct that he said that but I'm going by the speech as it was  written, working from the prepared text.]  Politics have not broken out in  Iraq.  They've broken in Iraq.  Five months after an election and you still  can't form the government?  That's a broken process.  US national security types  threatening Iraqi politicians with "state of emergency" being declared if they  don't form a government?  That's a broken process.  US suggesting that a new  position -- that Allawi or Nouri could take -- be created out of whole cloth and  contrary to the country's Constitution?  That's a broken process.  Leila Fadel (Washington Post) reported: on the  stalemate yesterday and quoted Hoshyar Zebari, Foreign Minister, stating, "In  Washington, I told them, 'It would be embarrassing if you left and there's no  government in place.' The U.S. will still have a substantial force here, but it  needs to use it to produce results. . . . The Iraqi leaders are at an impasse,  and we need help from our American friends."  Doesn't sound as sweet as the  words flowing from Joe's mouth.  Andrew England (Financial Times of London) reports  that State Of Law and Iraqiya are supposed to begin talks again today and that  the break off in talks over Nouri al-Maliki's assertion (on state TV) that  Iraqiya was a "Sunni" party/slate have been mitigated by an  elaboration/explanation on Nouri's part. Talks have broken off before and may again. Meanwhile  the Voice of  Russia reports that Ayad Allawi is supposed to make a trip to  Russia shortly to, in the words of an Iraqiya spokesperson, "establish trust  relations between Iraq and its friends."   Joe was  crowd-pleasing so much, his nose should have grown 17 inches.  Certainly he was  orbiting the earth and no longer bound by gravity or facts when he declared that  Iraqis voted for the people they wanted to and none of these candidates "were  wanted by Iran."  Uh, no, Joe.  No.   In fact, that's  not just wrong, that's grossly wrong, that's insulting.  Did the Iraqi people  get to vote for the candidates they wanted to?  Does no one remember the Justice  and Accountability Commission that purged multiple candidates from the lists?   And Ahmed Chalabi and his pal Ali al-Lami were working on whose authority?   Iran.  So not only were voters denied the chance to vote for some candidates  they would have liked to have, Iran pretty much ran through the lists.  And the  winners?  Nouri's beloved by Iran.  (The US wants Nouri because Nouri's  indicated -- according to State Dept friends -- that he will gladly go along  with extending the US occupation if he is made prime minister.  So it's no  surprise that Joe is spinning so wildly for Nouri.)  Politics have broken out,  declared Joe today but the Financial Times of London points  out, "The reality is that the political space the surge was meant to  open up created a vacuum that remains unfilled. Iraq's elections are the Arab  world's freest, but nearly six months on from the last polls politicians have  still not managed to form a new government. And not only the state, but Iraqi  society is broken. One in six Iraqis, disproportionately middle-class  professionals, have fled their homes, around half for other  countries."   Earlier today the Voice of  Russia reported that Ayad Allawi was to make a trip to Russia  in order to, in the words of an Iraqiya spokesperson, "establish trust relations  between Iraq and its friends." Alsumaria TV reports he has met with Russia's  Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and Allawi stated the US opposed him becoming  prime minister and that they will not back anyone who does not have "good  relations with Iran".   Joe insisted,  "I am absolutely confident that Iraq will form a national unity government that  will be able to sustain the country."  Really?  It hasn't so far.  And that  includes the 2005 election that led to the formation (April 2006) of Nouri's  government.  That government did not sustain the country.  Saturday in  Nasiriyah, there was a demonstration.  Bassem Attiya (AFP) reports that nineteen people were  injured in the demonstration with people shouting, "Where is the electricity?"   Press TV adds that 40 people were arrested.  Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) estimates 200 people  participated in the protests "over power outages and bad basic services."   Nouri's been prime minister for over four years now -- in large part because he  kicked back the elections (missing the scheduled date) and in part because he  refused to step aside -- so that's all on him, Joe.   Turning to  legal news, David Batty (Guardian) reports that the only  person convicted (Ali Lufti Jassar) in the 2004 kidnapping and killing of CARE  International's Margaret Hassan has escaped from prison at some point and  appears to have been aided in his prison break. Mohammed Tawfeeq and CNN  add:
 [Deputy Justice Minister  Busho] Ibrahim said officials did not know of al-Rawi's escape until a month  ago. The British Embassy last month said Foreign Secretary William Hague spoke  of the matter to Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari. "Mr. Zebari assured Mr.  Hague that the Iraqi government were aware of the case and were keen to ensure  justice," an embassy statement said.
 A spokesman for Hassan's family said in a statement  last month that al-Rawi had been due in court July 16 as part of an appeal  against his conviction. Concern was growing over his fate, as he had missed some  earlier hearings, the statement said. The court was told he had escaped in an  "incident."
 "Jassar is known to be part of the gang that kidnapped  and killed my sister," said Deirdre Manchanda, Hassan's sister, in the  statement. "We have fought for justice for six years, only to find that not one  member of this gang can be brought to justice."
 Hassan's family only wants to know  where her remains are and bring them home for burial, she said. "We can only  ever hope to do that if he is recaptured and brought back to face  justice."
 
 AFP reports the British Foreign Office  issued the following statement: "Justice must be done for this dreadful crime,  committed against someone who dedicated her life to helping all Iraqis."  The Irish Independent adds, "Last night, one  of Mrs Hassan's sisters, Geraldine Riney, said the family was still looking for  Margaret's remains to be returned to them."  In other prison news, Trudy Rubin (Philadelphia Inquirer) reports that  Salem, her driver who was assisting the US military, was released from jail  finally but now is living an underground life to avoid retaliation from Shi'ite  militias and that his two sons remain imprisoned.     Sunday the US military announced:  "CONTINGENCY OPERATING BASE BASRA, Iraq – A United States Forces -- Iraq Soldier  was killed today in Basra province while conducting operations in support of  Operation Iraqi Freedom. The name of the deceased is being withheld pending  notification of next of kin and release by the Department of Defense. The names  of service members are announced through the U.S. Department of Defense official  website at http://www.defenselink.mil/releases/. The announcements are made on  the Web site no earlier than 24 hours after notification of the service member's  primary next of kin. The incident is under investigation." Martin Chulov (Guardian)  explains, "Details of the incident were not released, but Basra  airport base, which is still home to about 4,000 US forces, had experienced  increased numbers of rocket attacks in recent weeks as the deadline drew near  for the withdrawal of combat troops. Two soldiers suffered minor wounds in a  rocket strike early last week, and rockets have hit the Green Zone in Baghdad  almost daily for the past month."  The announcement brought the total number of  US service members killed in the Iraq War since it began to  4417.    In today's  reported violence, Saad Abdul-Kadir (AP) reports at least 3 people died  in Baghdad "overnight and early Monday" and at least twenty more were left  injured -- two died from mortar shells (three wounded), 1 Iraqi soldier killed  in Ramadi (six people wounded), three Iraqi soldiers wounded in a Mosul grenade  attack.  Reuters notes a Sulaimaniya mortar  attack (from Iran) which injured one person and 5 people shot dead in Haditha.  Mohammed Tawfeeq and CNN explain the five were  employees of the Oil Ministry and that the killers escaped with a ton of money  (approximately $400,000 in US dollars). Meanwhile Hugh Sykes (BBC News) reports, "Iraqi police have broken up an  alleged al-Qaeda gang whose members have been killing traffic police in Baghdad,  officials said."     The top US  commander in Iraq, Gen Ray Odierno hit the US airwaves yesterday. James Gordon Meek (New York Daily News) told CNN's  State of the Union that the US "could be there [in Iraq] beyond 2011."  For many other outlets the 'news' was something else. AP thinks the news is that Odierno  stated the US could resume combat operations (unlikely, says Odierno, but  possible). Don Lee (Los Angeles Times) thinks that the  big and new news too. By contrast, Xinhua leads with the same point  Meek sees as news:
 Top U.S. commander in  Iraq Ray Odierno said on Sunday that the United States could have a military  presence in Iraq well after 2011 when all U.S. troops are set to  leave.
 Less than two weeks before the scheduled  end of U.S. combat operations in Iraq, Odierno told CNN's Candy Crowley on  Sunday talk show "State of the Union" that he could imagine a scenario where "we  could be there beyond 2011."
 
 So which is the big news?
 That call can be made. The news is that the US could be in Iraq  beyond 2011. That's news thanks to the news industry. Despite a cranky CBS gas bag's claim that the internet is  repeating rumors  (I would guess that would be AM Talk show radio hosts,  actually, but Bob Schieffer's not going to go there and risk being called out on  radio) while CBS doesn't repeat rumors. (CBS legal department came to a  different conclusion, Bob, or have you forgotten the AWOL Bush story on 60  Minutes II ?) The reality is that CBS is among the multitude of outlets that  have spent the last 18 months plus insisting that the Status Of Forces Agreement  means that the Iraq War ends in 2011. That's not what it means, that's never  been what it means. But the media outlets have overwhelming 'reported'  otherwise. That makes Odierno's statements on that aspect news.  And he told Bob that Sunday on Face The Nation (CBS News  -- link has text and video), "If they ask us that they might want us to stay  longer, we certainly would consider that.  That would obviously be a policy  decision that would be made by the national security team and the president over  time."  The "national security team"?  Ray Odierno spoonfed press types a  mouthful in that statement but watch them all play dumb again and pretend  Hillary's running Iraq. And if you're still not getting it, read "Blame Hillary " at Third, and key point for those  who can't grasp reality:  Let's set aside reality for just a moment and pretend Hillary will  be over 'an army' in Iraq. If that's true (it's not true), why would there be  anger at Hillary? If Barack was putting Hillary in charge of such an apparatus,  the anger should be aimed at him.           Or have we all forgotten the  Christ-child's fabled 'superior sense of judgment.' You know, the super power  which allows him to, after the fact, know what should have been done? Some call  it Monday morning quarterbacking, others call it Barack Obama's glorious  know-how.
 And remember how in campaign appearance  after campaign appearance and debate after debate, he declared himself right on  Iraq and Hillary wrong? Have you forgotten that?
 If Hillary were being put  in charge of Iraq, it would be the biggest slap in the face to Barack Obama's  primary supporters you could imagine. They'd elected to vote for him and not  Hillary due to the Iraq War and, yet, she's being placed (by him) in charge of  the Iraq War?
 It's not happening but, if it were, the Cult of St. Barack  should be storming the barricades and issuing cries of, "Barry, how could  you!!!!"
 So Bob and CBS, where was your SOFA reporting in real  time?  Where did you explain to the American people that the SOFA didn't mean  the end of the Iraq War?  That's right, you never did.   The didn't lie on the  other aspect: US troops returning to combat. They just rarely reported it;  however, they did report it. You can refer to the November 2, 2007  "Iraq snapshot " the  Third Estate Sunday Review 's "NYT: 'Barack Obama Will Keep  Troops In Iraq' "and the latter is based on the transcript of  the interview conducted by  Michael Gordon and Jeff Zeleny  with then-candidate Barack Obama (the  transcript was much more illuminating than what Gordon and Zeleny wrote up for  the article that the paper ran). In the case of the SOFA, the media --  with very few exceptions -- has repeatedly and wrongly 'informed' that it means  the end of the Iraq War. They practiced -- as we noted in real time --  prediction, prophecy, etc. but they were not practicing reporting. Reporting is  telling readers what has happened. Barack's plan to send combat troops back into  Iraq after pulling them out if things went badly was reported on. It wasn't  emphasized -- didn't fit the falese image the press was attempting to paint for  the Cult of St. Barack -- but it was reported. The SOFA? They're still  misreporting it. Take a look at the USA Today editorial board today   serving up this crap: "Seven years after the invasion and 16 months before the  last U.S. soldier is scheduled to depart, few would be bold enough to proclaim  victory in Iraq or foolish enough to declare defeat. Instead, U.S. operations  seem destined to end in a slow, unsatisfying fadeout as Iraq muddles its way  into an uncertain future. This will leave the U.S. to play a high-stakes endgame  with steadily decreasing sway." Scheduled to depart? There's no such schedule at  current, there never has been. Contract law isn't a tricky thing. We went over  this repeatedly in the last nearly two years. And yet it's still a 'surprise'  and 'news' to many because the media continues to get it wrong. And that, Bob  Schieffer, is far more damaging than an opinion someone holds about whether or  not someone else belongs to this religion, that religion or no religion. And, in  fact, what Simmi Aujla (Politico) does  is so questionable,  Politico should review Aujla's resume (Aujla emphasizes the combat  aspect but insists that Odierno "said the country will be ready for the U.S.  withdrawal to be completed in Sept. 2011" without noting that Odierno stated US  forces could remain in Iraq after 2011. A few people  are telling the truth about what did and did not happen last week (no, Virginia,  the war did not end).  We'll try to spotlight a few of them each day this week  and we'll start with two today.  Last week Barack offered  some pretty lies and the media ran with them. Bill Van Auken (WSWS)  observed: The White House and the Pentagon, assisted by a  servile media, have hyped Thursday's exit of a single Stryker brigade from Iraq  as the end of the "combat mission" in that country, echoing the ill-fated claim  made by George W. Bush seven years ago.
 Obama is more skillful in packaging false propaganda  than Bush, and no doubt has learned something from the glaring mistakes of his  predecessor. Bush
 landed on the deck of the US aircraft carrier Abraham  Lincoln on May 1, 2003 to proclaim -- under a banner reading  "Mission Accomplished" --  that "major combat operations" in Iraq were over. A captive audience of naval  enlisted personnel was assembled on deck as cheering extras.Obama wisely did not fly to Kuwait to deliver a  similar address from atop an armored vehicle. He merely issued a statement from  the White House, while leaving the heavy lifting to the television networks and  their "embedded" reporters, who accompanied the brigade across the border into  Kuwait and repeated the propaganda line fashioned by the administration and the  military brass.
 
 Anthony Cordesman offered similar thoughts in  "Iraq: 'Mission Accomplished' Mark  II":
 
 Well, he did not wear a  flight suit, stand on a carrier deck, or have a "Mission Accomplished" banner  behind him. The fact remains, however, that President Obama did issue a second  "mission accomplished statement on Iraq on August 18th, and one just as wrong  and irresponsible as the one given by President Bush:
 
 Today, I'm pleased to report that -- thanks to the  extraordinary service of our troops and civilians in Iraq -- our combat mission  will end this month, and we will complete a substantial drawdown of our  troops...By the end of this month, 50,000 troops will be serving in Iraq. As  Iraqi Security Forces take responsibility for securing their country, our troops  will move to an advise-and-assist role. And, consistent with our agreement with  the Iraqi government, all of our troops will be out of Iraq by the end of next  year. Meanwhile, we will continue to build a strong partnership with the Iraqi  people with an increased civilian commitment and diplomatic  effort.
 
 
 Political posturing is the norm in Washington, and  claiming victory and an end
 to a war is far more popular than bearing the burden  of leadership and dealing  with reality. The Iraq War is not over and it is not  "won." In fact, it is at as critical a stage as at any time since 2003.  Regardless of the reasons for going to war, everything now depends on a  successful transition to an effective and unified Iraqi government, and Iraqi security forces that can  bring both security and stability to the average Iraqi. The creation of such an  "end state" will take a minimum of another five years, and probably  ten.
 Iraq still faces a serious insurgency, and deep ethnic and sectarian  tensions. In spite of its potential oil wealth, its economy is one of the  poorest in the world in terms of real per capita income, and it is the second  year of a budget crisis that has force it to devote most state funds to paying  salaries and maintaining employment at the cost of both development and creating  effective security forces.
     It felt surreal to be inside the home of Erik Prince, the founder,  owner and chairman of Blackwater (or Xe, as it is now called). Prince, a former  Navy Seal, provides security for the CIA, the Pentagon and the State Department.  His company trains 40,000 people a year in skills that include personal  protection. Yet his home in McLean, Virginia, has no security. None. Not even a  fence or a guard dog or a No Trespassing sign. And his mother-in-law, who helps  care for his young children, invited a total stranger--me--into his home without  hesitation.  
 I had gone to Princes' home, together with two CODEPINK  colleagues, assuming it would be empty. I'd read in the New York Times that Mr.  Prince and his family had moved out of the country, fleeing from a series of  civil lawsuits, criminal charges and Congressional investigations stemming from  his company's contracts in Iraq and Afghanistan. According to the news, "In  documents filed last week in a civil lawsuit brought by former Blackwater  employees accusing Mr. Prince of defrauding the government, Mr. Prince sought to  avoid giving a deposition by stating that he had moved to Abu Dhabi [which is in  the United Arab Emirates] in time for his children to enter school there on  August 15." Susan Burke, the lawyer seeking the deposition, announced that she  was flying to the Emirates to find him.
 
 I  had been feeling particularly upset about Blackwater lately. Seeing the combat  troops leaving Iraq, I'd been thinking about the banner CODEPINK members held in  countless anti-war vigils: "Iraq War: Who Lies? Who Dies? Who Pays? Who  Profits?" Politicians lied about weapons of mass destruction, Iraqis and  American soldiers died, U.S. taxpayers paid, and companies like Blackwater make  a killing. In just a few years, Blackwater received over $1 billion in U.S.  government contracts, contracts that accounted for 90 percent of its revenue.  Erik Prince, the company's sole owner, was now taking his profits, trying to  sell the company and running away to the Emirates, a country that has no  extradition treaty with the United States.
   |  |