| Friday, September 24, 2010. Chaos and violence continue, another member of  the US Congress says the Iraq War needs to end right now, the FBI raids  activists home, the National Lawyers Guild issues an 88-page report about the  attacks on political speech and action, Iraq becomes a topic at the United  Nations, and more.     That's what we have to do. We should have done it a long time ago.  Is it likely that there will be conflict when we leave? Yes. We set in motion  forces that are irrevocable. You cannot simply launch a war against a country  where there were already factions - Sunnis, Shiites and Kurds who were at odds  with each other - and think that you can leave there without difficulties.  That's going to happen no matter what. But the fact that the conflict that we  helped to create is still quite alive does not justify staying there. War  becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy of continued war, unless you break the  headlong momentum by getting out.     "What are they there for, if it's not combat? To monitor elections?  To mediate religious disputes? Let's get them home," Frank said at a breakfast  hosted by the Christian Science Monitor. "What the hell are they there  for?"                Frank, the chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, said  that designating the troops "non-combat" does not persuade insurgents not to  shoot at them.    So that's two members of Congress on the record about the need for a real  and immediate withdrawal.  If, as most (including Joe Biden who is public and on  the record about this) current and former US officials expect and//or suspect,  US renegotiates an agreement/contract/treaty with Iraq to extend the US military  presence beyond 2011, will the two of them object?  Will other members of  Congress join them?    Today UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon declared that it was highly  important that Iraq form a government "for stability and prosperity."   Yesterday, Iraq's President Jalal Talabani spoke to the United Nations  and,  along with spin, he served up the talking point that all Iraqi officials  appearing before the UN in the last few years repeat:  The most important issue his country is  facing is ridding itself of the "burden" of Security Council resolutions adopted  under Chapter VII of the UN Charter, he said, calling for an end to the  remaining restrictions in the field of disarmament, wrapping up outstanding  contracts of the Oil-for-Food programme, and finding the appropriate mechanism  to protect Iraqi money to replace the Development Fund for Iraq and the  International Advisory and Monitoring Board for Iraq.
   Iraq's most pressing issue? That's the talking point the UN Assembly and  Security Council here every year from the Iraqi officials. It's never true but  they do love to repeat it. (The tag sale on Iraq's assests cannot really take  place until the UN allows the puppet government complete autonomy.)  Last  December, the UN Security Council extended the Chapter VII arrangments through  December of this year.  This was first adopted by the UN Security Council in May of  2003 .  That's not Iraq's most pressing problem.  The rise in violence is  among Iraq's most pressing problems and many observers tie the rise into the  continued political stalemate.  Jalal doesn't.  Many in the press WRONGLY call  Nouri's continued occupation of the prime minister a "caretaker government."   That is not factual.  There is no basis for that.  A caretake government would  be one appointed by the United Nations.  Chapter VII, as Ayad Allawi has been  pointing out for nearly two months now, gives the UN Security Council the right  to appoint a caretaker government.  None has been appointed.  Nour's term has  expired.  He is not a part of a caretake government.    Back to Talabani and his spin before the UN General Assembly [click, PDF format  warning, here for his speech in full]:  This year has also witnessed the success of  legislative elections held on 7 March 2010, with considerable Arab, regional and  international interest. The United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq as well  as the observers of the Organization of the Islamic Conference, the League of  Arab States, the international community and civil society organizations all  expressed their convictions that the elections had been transparent and fair.  The principal political parties have been in continuous communication in order  to hold a fruitful session of the Iraqi Council of Representatives, which will  vote to elect a Speaker for the new Council of Representatives which will vote  to elect a Speaker for the new Council of Representatives and President of the  Republic of Iraq, after which, according to the Iraqi Constitution, the elected  President will request the new Prime Minister to form the government. It is our  hope that this new government will be formed as soon as possible, as any delay  in its formation will negatively affect the security situation, reconstruction  and prosperity.    March 7th, Iraq  concluded Parliamentary elections. The Guardian's editorial board noted last  month, "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 six  months and seventeen days with no government formed.     
 Hey, thanks  everybody. Good evening. I know it's late. Many of you are calling from suites,  perhaps other establishments, so let me run through a couple of things real  quick. The Secretary did have her two bilaterals this evening, one with Foreign  Minister Zebari of Iraq and the other with Foreign Minister Rassoul of  Afghanistan. Let me briefly run through the topics of discussion. With Foreign  Minister Zebari and Iraq, as you might imagine, the major topic of discussion  was where Iraq stands on the formation -- government formation. The Secretary  and minister agreed that this is becoming of critical importance and that we  don't want to see Iraq drift and have a security vacuum result. They talked  about the importance of Iraq's leaders stepping up and making decisions and  forming a government. Ambassador Jim Jeffrey is significantly engaged in Baghdad  in this effort. As you may recall, Assistant Secretary Jeff Feltman has been to  the region for multiple meetings, as has the Vice President. But the Secretary  solicited some ideas from the foreign minister about how the United States will  be helpful while making clear that ultimately, this has to be Iraq's decision to  come to an agreement on forming a new government. They went through a handful of  bilateral issues, but also finished the meeting by briefly touching on the peace  process. The foreign minister commended the Secretary on the U.S. engagement on  the Middle East process and hoped that a solution can be found so the parties  will continue to pursue the direct negotiations that we started three weeks  ago.   How effective her words were? Not at all. Hoshyar Zebari's been making the  same statements himself. For months. I believe it's called preaching to the  choir.  May 1st, Lara Jakes (AP) reported , "Iraq's foreign minister  chided the U.S. and Britain for not taking an active role in resolving his  country's bitter election dispute, and accused Washington of being more  concerned with sending home U.S. soldiers."  In July, AFP and Lebanon's Daily Star  reported  that Zebari termed the stalemate "embarrassing." Those are just two  examples.  There are many, many more that can be provided.  Equally true is that  Hillary and Hoshyar Zebari have already had this conversation -- and issued a  joint-statement and took questions from Elise Labbot  (CNN)  and Nihad Ali (Al Iraqiya Channel), see the July 13th snapshot .  Today Dina al-Shibeeb and Mustapha Ajbaili (Al Arabiya News  Channel) report  that Nouri is attempting to curry favor with Moqtada al-Sadr  by making an offer to release prisoners if al-Sadr would support him as prime  minister -- this according to Bahaa al-Araji, of al-Sadr's political bloc, who  states that Moqtada al-Sadr rejected the bribe and that the al-Sadr bloc  continues to support Adel Abdul Mehdi (Iraq's Shi'ite vice president) for the  post of prime minister.   The violence also continued today in Iraq.   Bombings?   Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) reports three  rocket attacks in Baghdad (including one on the Green Zone) in which one person  was injured, a Mosul suicide bomber who took his own life and the life of 1  police officer and injuring two people and, dropping back to last night for the  rest, mortar attacks on a Baghdad bridge (remember a few years back and the  efforts to knock out bridges?) and a Baghdad roadside bombing which claimed the  lives of two of the children of Anmar Taha and her husband Muhammed al Qassim  and the lives of their two nephews while leaving both adults wounded. Reuters notes  a Baghdad hand grenade attack which  left three police officers injured, a Baghdad sticky bombing on a police car  which left two police officers injured and, dropping back to last night, a  Hawija rocket attack which left five people injured.   Shootings?       Thursday US President Barack Obama wasted everyone's time with another  speech that repeatedly referenced himself, He also found time to (falsely) link  Iraq to 9-11.  What a War Whore he's turned out to be.  The one-time media star  couldn't even dominate this morning's headlines with his performance.  Instead  the news media was chasing after rumors about a politician from across the  Atlantic Ocean:  England's Deputy Prime Minister Nick  Clegg .  Gerri Peev (Daily Mail) reports  "Clegg will  voice a thinly veiled condemnation of the Iraq war" in his speech. Ian Dunt (Politics) quotes  from the expected  speech: "But our approach will also be hard-headed and realistic. In recent  years, we have learned - sometimes the hard way - that democracy cannot be  created by diktat. Freedom cannot be commanded into existence." Jon Swaine (Telegraph of London) adds , "While  he will not use the word "sorry", Mr Clegg will come close to apologising on the  world stage for the war, which he believes was in breach international law, in a  speech to the UN General Assembly." The Edmonton Journal looks  at that  quote and states, "The passage clearly suggest regret over Britain's role in the  war against Iraq, which was not explicitly backed by the UN Security Council."  Instantly forgettable, Barack's speech is already upstaged in the news cycle and  England's second-in-charge is geared to show leadership as the world watches. Tom Peterkin (Scotsman) reports  that, in his  speech today, Clegg declared that democracy is not something which can be  imposed.    This morning, while posturing as the earnest student of empirical  investigation, Webb prefaced his hostile line of questioning of witness Veterans  Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki saying Webb is concerned about protecting the  "credibility of our [VA] programs."           I was hoping Shinseki would pull out a can of aerosol composed of  dioxin [tetrachlorodibenzodioxin (TCDD)] and offer to spray it around the  Committee room and see if anyone of the august senators had a presumptive  problem with it.   Chuck Palazzo (Veterans Today) notes  that Senators Bernie Sanders and Jay Rockefeller stood up for veterans in the  hearing.  Having attended the hearing yesterday, I am noting Committee Chair  Daniel Akaka also needs to be noted -- he is a soft spoken person and has to  maintain a role as Chair but even with both of those things, he still made very  clear in his opening where he stood.  Senator Patty Murray made clear that she  supported veterans, Mark Begich appeared to be coming out in support ("appeared"  because I really don't know him, his words indicated support but I don't know  his record and I don't know him).  The strongest voice in the hearing was  Senator Roland Burris.  You can see Ava's report or you can watch the hearing  which is at Palazzo's link and which is also online here  at the Senate Committee on Veterans'  Affairs website.  David Rogers (Politico) notes :    In  comments later, Webb told POLITICO that he would like to return more  decision-making power to Congress itself, rather than leave so much discretion  to a single Cabinet secretary. And Webb said he was also attracted to a proposal  by Principi to take a more incremental approach in the case of common diseases  -- and put emphasis on medical care before disability payments.  
   Now we're going to talk numbers so that we all get just what a s**t  Jim Webb is.  The Bush tax cuts were set to expire.  Webb supports extending all  of them -- not just the middle class and working class and working poor but also  the top earners in the country.   Paul Krugman (New York Times) explained why that was  such a bad idea last month:   What's at stake here? According to the nonpartisan Tax Policy  Center, making all of the Bush tax cuts permanent,  as opposed to following the Obama proposal, would cost the federal government  $680 billion in revenue over the next 10 years. For the sake of comparison, it  took months of hard negotiations to get Congressional approval for a mere $26  billion in desperately needed aid to state and local governments.         And where would this $680 billion go? Nearly all of it would go to  the richest 1 percent of Americans, people with incomes of more than $500,000 a  year. But that's the least of it: the policy center's estimates say that the  majority of the tax cuts would go to the richest one-tenth of 1 percent. Take a  group of 1,000 randomly selected Americans, and pick the one with the highest  income; he's going to get the majority of that group's tax break. And the  average tax break for those lucky few -- the poorest members of the group have  annual incomes of more than $2 million, and the average member makes more than  $7 million a year -- would be $3 million over the course of the next decade.     Now it's tacky and appalling to put a dollar amount on the issue of  care -- especially needed care resulting from the government playing reckless  with human lives -- but Leo Shane III (Stars & Stripes)  reports, "According to VA estimates, the move could cost more than $13  billion in compensation payouts in the next 18 months." $680 billion.  Wow.   Kind of dwarfs the $13 billion figure, doesn't it? Webb has his priorities and  they just don't appear to include veterans.       
   Police  preparation for mass assemblies routinely involves infiltration and spying on  activist groups, sometimes years in advance, including the use of agents  provocateurs.  Time and time again, millions of dollars have been obtained by  police departments for personnel and equipment at large events justified by  confidential informant testimony that large numbers of 'anarchists' are planning  to attend and engage in violence. Closer examination of the facts often reveals  the falsity of such allegations: numerous police infrormants, many with criminal  backgrounds, admit when later questioned that activist groups they infiltrated  never planned any violent activities. Indeed millions more have been spent  paying damages to the demonstrators victimized by these tactics.    New  anti-terrorism legislation and prosecution practices have resulted in  individuals being charged with conspiracy to riot merely by virtue of having  helped organize a protest at which other individuals unknown to them were  arrested.  As evidence of conspiracy to riot, the government cites such First  Amendment protected activities as attending meetings, writing about protests,  organizing protests, and engaging in rhetorical or politically charged  speech. Faulty  intelligence gathering and grossly attenuated criminal charges are accompanied  by additional strategies to quell dissent.  Asserting the need to defend against  terrorism and protect national security, the government targets leaders of  social and political movements, employs grand juries to search for evidence of  political affiliation, stigmatizes groups of activists, and uses the mass media  to denigrate demonstrators, reinforce negative stereotypes or publicize  high-profile arrests on charges which are frequently later dropped for lack of  evidence.   We  will note the report in more detail next week.  Heidi co-hosts  WBAI's  Law and Disorder Radio (10:00 a.m. EST Mondays  -- also plays on other stations around the country throughout the week) with  fellow attorneys Michael Ratner and Michael Smith.  The report may be discussed  on one of the shows in the next weeks and, if so, we will note it then as well.  On today's raids, Jacob Wheeler (The UpTake -- link has video)  speaks with Mick Kelly who was among the activists whose homes were raided  today.   Mick  Kelly:  The FBI has raided my home. Right now there's about ten, twelve FBI  agents rummaging through my papers, documents. They've  confiscated computers, they've taken my passport, etc.   Jacob  Wheeler: And we're in the Hard Times Cafe in Cedar-Riverside and your apartment  is just upstairs from the cafe, right?   Mick  Kelly: That's correct.   Jacob  Wheeler: So there are agents upstairs right now?   Mick  Kelly: That's correct.    Jacob  Wheeler: How many?   Mick  Kelly: Ten to twelve.   Jacob  Wheeler: When did they arrive?   Mick  Kelly: Several hours ago.   Jacob  Wheeler: And what did they say -- Approximately what time? Any  guess?   Mick  Kelly:  I'm going to say 7:30.   Jacob  Wheeler: Okay.  What did they tell you? What interaction did you have with  them?   Mick  Kelly: Well I wasn't there. I was at work.     Jacob  Wheeler: Okay.   Mick  Kelly: And I received a call that they were there. They came in -- my  understanding is they came in guns drawn, kicked the door open, smashed a fish  tank and proceeded to execute a search warrant.    Mick  notes he is an antiwar activists and that " I see this as harassment of anti-war  activists and those who stand in solidarity with those who are fighting for  freedom and justice around the world."  Mick was one of the organizers of the  protests at the 2008 GOP convention.  Ahndi Fridell (Reuters) reports  the FBI is admitting  to searching "eight homes in Chicago and Minnesota" today and claiming it is  "terrorism" related -- or adjacent.  Or maybe just a sleepy suburb of.  They're  not really sure as is evidenced by the fact that eight homes were raided (or the  FBI admits to raiding at least eight homes) and not one arrest was made.  Not  one arrest was made.  That's a key point.  Along with Mick Kelly, one of the  eight homes known to be raided belongs to Jess Sundin.  Sarah Laskow (Washington Independent)  reports :  "Sundin was 'a principal leader of the mass antiwar march of  10,000 on the opening day of the Republican National Convention two years ago,'  and Kelly has said he would march on the Democratic National Convention if it  were held in Minneapolis this year, according to the  Minneapolis Star-Tribune ."      Yesterday's  snapshot noted the Cat Food Commission and how Ruth credited Lambert  (Corrente) with coining and/or popularizing that phrase but there  were no links to either Ruth or Lambert.  To read one of Lambert's most recent  posts on the efforts by the White House to attack Social Security, click here.  This morning, I noted David  Swanson's "Changing and Facilitating" (War Is A Crime) but I screwed up the link. My  apologies.   Click here to read the piece.: Excerpt from  Swanson's article (based on a speech he gave):   Our representatives strive to  represent three groups of people: the ones who give them money, the ones who  produce cable television news shows, radio shows, and newspapers, and the ones  in charge of their political parties including especially the president when he  is the leader of their party. In George Mason's view the president was to  execute the will of the Congress, and no power of the Congress was more  important than that of impeachment. Now Republicans will only impeach Democratic  presidents, and Democrats will only impeach Democratic judges. And the executive  is largely freed to tell the legislature how to do its job, rather than the  reverse.      When Congress is too  craven and cowardly to impeach someone or isn't sure what they've done wrong, do  you know what it used to do? It used to subpoena people. And it used to take  that Capitol Police force that now does such a fine job of beating up peace  activists in hallways, and it used to send the police to pick up witnesses who'd  been subpoenaed. And when people testified but refused to respectfully answer  questions, or acted like our recent attorney general Alberto Gonzales who said  "I do not recall" four times a minute during his testimony, do you know what  congressional committees would do? They would hold that person in contempt? And  do you know where they would hold them in contempt? In a jail cell. During 2007  and 2008 Democratic committees subpoenaed dozens of top members of a Republican  administration, including the vice president and the secretary of state, all of  whom told Congress to go Dick Cheney itself.
 So Congress asked the Justice Department to enforce  its subpoenas, and the Justice Department said no. So Congress took it to court  and later won. But with one weird and partial exception, not a single one of  those subpoenas has been reissued and enforced by either the new Justice  Department or by the committees themselves. In fact, the House Committee on  Oversight has been basically put out of its misery, and the judiciary and other  committees have crawled out of sight beneath the emperor's throne. Congress just  impeached and tried a judge for getting lap dances and frozen shrimp, and  earlier this year impeached a judge for groping people, but it leaves a judge in  a lifetime seat who wrote secret laws authorizing aggressive war and torture.  Impeachment has been reserved for sex and Democrats, and the subpoena has gone  the way of the dodo bird -- at least unless Republicans get Congress  back.
 Why don't we ever talk about the  problem of Congress handing all power over to presidents? Because both political  parties are happy about it, and anything they both want left alone is not news.  We have a substantial right to free speech in this country, but a free press is  another story altogether. A small cartel of mega media corporations has been  given our public airwaves without compensation, and the more information we get  from them the dumber we are. When Americans believed lies about the urgent need  to attack Iraq, they believed them more depending which media outlet they got  most of their news from. I'm not naming any names. 
 
     TV notes. On PBS' Washington Week, Naftali Bendavid (Wall St. Journal), Jackie  Calmes (New York Times), Tom Gjleten (NPR) and Nancy A. Youssef (McClatchy  Newspapers) join Gwen around the table while Dan Balz (Washington Post) files a  report from Des Moines on the speech Sarah Palin makes to Iowa's GOP. Gwen now  has a weekly column at Washington Week and the current one is still "Who Exactly Are the Bums?" This week, Bonnie  Erbe will sit down with Debra Carnahan,  Eleanor Holmes Norton, Leslie Sanchez and Tara Setmayer on the latest broadcast  of PBS' To The  Contrary to discuss the week's events. And  this week's To The Contrary online extra is on college tuition --  its cost and its worth is debated. Need To  Know is PBS' new program covering current events. This week's hour long  broadcast airs Fridays on most PBS stations -- but check local listings -- and  in some markets it may explore US combat in Afghanistan, the US role in  institutionalizing Afghan corruption; abuse and mistreatment of US seniors at  home-based senior centers, Jon Meacham discussing "superlativism" and more. If  you saw that last week (pledge drives and special programming meant not all PBS  stations that air the show did last week), then you can look for Nial Ferguson  talking about the budget, the Tea Party, the jobless recovery and Human Rights  Watch's Anneke van Woudenberg discussing the Congo.   Turning to broadcast TV, Sunday CBS' 60 Minutes  offers:
 
  A Relentless EnemyLara Logan's report takes viewers to  the border area between Afghanistan and Pakistan, where she and her crew came  under enemy fire from fighters who the U.S. military says keep coming from their  sanctuary in Pakistan.
 
 Islamic CenterScott Pelley looks at the national debate that  has flared up around Ground Zero in New York City over opposition to building an  Islamic center and prayer room nearby.
 
 Cool BreesSteve Kroft profiles Drew Brees, the MVP quarterback  who led the New Orleans Saints to their first-ever Super Bowl victory, just a  few years after the city was nearly destroyed by Hurricane Katrina.
 
 60 Minutes, Sunday, Sept. 26, at 7 p.m. ET/PT.         |