| Monday, September 20, 2010.  Chaos and violence continue, Baghdad slammed  by bombings on Sunday, reporter Michael Ware speaks out about the US military  shooting an Iraqi civilian, the political stalemate continues, a wealth of  Iraq's resources are discovered . . . in Nouri's storeroom, the lie that the  Iraq War is over gets a pushback, rallies take place for Bradley Manning, and  more.   We're starting with Michael Ware, in part because a mutal friend asked that  we do.  Michael Ware has reported from everywhere and, for CNN, he reported from  Iraq.  He filed many explosive reports and they rarely got the attention they  required.  This after fighting to get them on the air and then to only be  greeted with silence as everyone attempted to look the other way. For example,  let's drop back to the December 29, 2008 snapshot:     Michael Ware: Following a nighttime military operation outside of  Baghdad two weeks ago, the US army is now investigating allegations an Iraqi  man, a suspected al Qaeda member, was executed in cold blood by a secretive  American unit.  An Iraqi farmhouse after a recent raid by US forces.  Items  scatted by the soldiers search for weapons.  An elderly mother mourns.  Hadan,  her son shot dead by the Americans in Madain on Baghdad's outskirts.  It was  Hadan the special forces had come for suspecting he was a bomb maker for  al Qaeda.  But now troubling questions have arisen from the operation, questions  not of Hadan's life as a potential bomber but rather questions into his death at  American hands. Questions grave enough that the US army has launched an inquiry  probing claims the death was a special forces execution. The military released  to CNN a few details of the night's operation, saying the shooting was  provoked.       An unidentified voice reads from this December 10th M-NF  press release: A man from the building initially  complied with Coalition forces' instrucitons, but then returned inside the  house.  When he returned outside, he attempted to engage the forces with an  AK-47.  Perceiving hostile intent, the force engaged the armed man, killing  him.     Michael Ware: But the dead man's brothers who witnessed the raid  say that's a lie. Hadan, they say, was unarmed, his killing an American  execution. The truth however is unclear.  . . . But the Iraqi version is  different.  They say all [four] the brothers were stripped to their underwear  and forced to lay on the ground, unable to move without the Americans  permission, let alone grab a rifle. When Hadan did return inside, they say, it  was the Americans who ordered him to do so.     Nurhi Subbi [translated]: The American forces ordered my brother to  go back into the house.      Michael Ware: He was told to turn the lights on, says his brother  named Nurhi, and the moment he turned on the lights, the soldiers open fired and  then dragged him deeper inside the house.        "Hardan al-Jaburi". is the correct spelling.  Where's the outcome of that  investigation?  Jasim Azawi, on this week's Inside Iraq, was noting how the  Iraqi government will sometimes note an investigation into abuses or deaths but  that no one ever hears of any outcome.     Back to Ware, the Australian reporter stepped away from war reporting as a  result of his PTSD. Michael Ware is back in the news.  Monday, he stated on  Australian TV:   There was just not the one war in Iraq. You had the American war  versus the insurgency, who are nationalists fighting to free their country and  who were purely politically motivated. Then there's the American war with al  Qaida in Iraq. Then there's the Sunni and Shia war amongst the Iraqis  themselves. There was the Arab versus Kurdish on again off again little  conflict. And then there was the Iranian war versus most of those named above.  And for better or for ill, everyone spoke to me. And it took a lot of earning  but everyone trusted me and I tried to live up to those trusts. I went out and I  found the Iraqis who were on the other side of everything. And first it was for  the purpose of stories but they became my friends. Once someone invited you to  their house, it's incumbent upon them, at the dire risk of losing their good  family name and all public standing, losing face, they must with that invitation  of hospitality give you protection. Even if his brother shows up wanting to kill  you he must defend you against all threats.    That was from part one of Prisoner Of War  (Australia's ABC) --  here for transcript  -- and Tuesday (yes, tomorrow, but there's  a time difference) --  here for transcript  -- he discussed the incident that will  draw the most attention to the Prisoner Of War  special:     MICHAEL WARE: There was an incident  that I filmed back in 2007. It was in a remote Iraqi village, a village that had  pretty much been owned by Al Qaeda. A young man who turned out to be 16, 17,  maybe 18 years of age, you know like so many Iraqis had a weapon to protect  himself, approached the house we were in and the soldiers who were watching our  backs, one of them put a bullet right in the back of his head. Unfortunately it  didn't kill him. We all spent the next 20 odd minutes listening to his tortured  breath as he died. I had this moment that I realised despite what was happening  to this man in front of me, I'd been more concerned with the composition of my  shot than I was with any attempt to either save him or at the very very least,  ease his passing. I indeed had been indifferent as the soldiers around me whose  indifference I was attempting to capture. Technically being it a breach of the  Geneva Convention at least or arguably a small war crime, if there's such a  thing, that film, to this day, it's never seen the light of  day.         JOHN MARTINKUS, JOURNALIST: When I  went back to Baghdad in 2007. One of the first things he showed me was that tape  and he was watching it over and over and over again. Part of him was like 'how  could I, how could I just stand by and watch that happen'. It was a really  horrible stark moral choice that he faced and he still wrestles with  that.       MICHAEL WARE: There came a point where  something inside me started to tell me that it was time to leave Iraq. That was  a hard thing for me to come to terms with. I was sitting in the garden of the  CNN house with one of my great mates Tommy the producer, I said 'Tommy I think I  need to leave' and it was with enormous comfort for Tommy to say 'I think so  mate'. I hit New York like a meteor plunging into the earth, I mean, those first  six months I felt nothing but pain and I suspect I caused nothing but  pain.       DAVID BELLAVIA, FMR STAFF SERGEANT, US  ARMY: The last time I saw Michael I didn't even recognise him. He'd aged eighty  years in his eyes. He just looked tired. He looked exhausted.       MICHAEL WARE: I couldn't walk to the  corner store and buy milk. I couldn't go to a dinner party. I couldn't stand in  a crowd. I couldn't catch the subway, you know, I couldn't live.         Jasim Azawi: Malcolm Smart, let me start with you,  I was struck by  a quote you have given and let me just read it to you to make sure that I read  it correctly.  It says: "Iraq's security forces have been responsible for  systematically violating detainees' rights and they have been permitted to do so  with impunity."  Looking at the statement, this is nothing short of a massive  indictment of the entire Iraqi judicial system. Basically, you are saying, 'The  government is sanctioning this abuse.'     Malcolm Smart:  Well I fear that's the case and although we have  many public statements to the contrary from the government -- as your previous  report has shown -- there have been now a number of incidents where secret  detention prisons have been located, the government has said it's carrying out  investigations, those investigations have not achieved any outcome that we know  of.  Officials accused of torture have not been brought to justice as far as  there is information to show and, at the same time, we at Amnesty International  get reports constantly from families, from detainees of people who are missing,  who have been tortured in detention and that's what we're drawing attention to.   We recognize that some attempts have been made by the Human Rights Ministry,the  Justice Ministry, to bring things under control but there's a long way to go yet  and much more needs to be done.   Jasim Azawi: Mr. Alhamdani, immediately upon issuing this report,  Iraqi government officials were quick to draw a distinction between numbers.  'No, it's not 30,000 as Amnesty International alleges, it's only about 15,000.'   I'm not going to play the number game with you but in the face of overwhelming  evidence of major human rights abuse and torture in Iraqi prisons, denial by  itself is not going to serve anybody, especially the Iraqi government.      Talib Alhamdani: Yeah, of course it's not going to serve, I mean,  to play the numbers  is not, my intake into this report.  In fact, the [. . .]  report, I read the whole of it.  In fact, the Council of the Ministers  Secretariat are reviewing the report by the legal departments there. And I as  the head of the follow up department, I am going to follow the recommendations,  what we goiing to do about it.  In fact, I contacted many of my colleagues, the  Justice Dept in Iraq, the Ministry, and also the Ministry of Human Rights and  even the Security Councils here and they going to cooperate. And they say there  is no, in fact, coordination between the Amnesty International and them. They  would have opened the jails for them to investigate every allegation there is  but they say they never heard anything from Amnesty International  --   Jasim Azawi : Well let's leave the coordination aspect aside, Are  you and the Iraqi government saying that basically there is no abuse, there is  no torture in Iraqi prisons?  I mean --    Talib Alhamdani:  No, of course not.   Jasim Azawi: -- aside from the follow up of we are going to do that  and we are going to do this, you are not denying, are you, that torture is  endemic in Iraqi prisons?   Talib Alhamdani: In fact, Jasim, I lived in the US for almost 25  years. I used to head one of the organizations monitoring human rights abuses  during the previous regime.  We used to knock the door on Amnesty International,  give them reports of abuses in Iraq.  In fact, this report just give us a wake  up call that we need to do more. We at administrative arms of the Council of  Ministers, we going to follow up all the allegations in this report to the minor  details and we encourage Amnesty International to come to Baghdad, to give us a  call and --   Jasim Azawi: That's a wonderful notion, Mr. Alhamdani. We shall  find out whether such promises -- as have been made in the past -- over the past  six, seven years -- will materialize.  But let me go to Mr. Pollock and let me  do also another thing which is quote something also from the report.  It says:  "Yet the US authorities, whose own record on detainees' rights has been so poor,  has now handed over thousands of people detained by US forces to face this  catalogue of illegality, violence and abuse, abdicating any responsibility for  their human rights."  If there is one entity, Mr. Pollock, quite aware and  extenisvely about the human rights abuse, it's the American forces in Iraq. In  light of that knowledge, why did they hand over tens of thousands of Iraqis to  Iraqi authorities knowing full well some of them, it not a great segment of  them, would be tortured?    David Pollock: I think, Jasim, that we have to begin by noting that  Iraq is now a sovereign, independent country. And you, of all people, who have  argued for so long that the American occupation of Iraq should end., should, I  think, recognize that as part of ending that occupation, which we are doing, the  transfer of responsibility and full soverignity to Iraq is taking place.  And  that is something, in my opinion, to be applauded. Even, I hope, by  you.   Jasim Azawi: Indeed I would applaud that massively. [Crosstalk]  Indeed, I've called for the ending of this occupation.  But I'll let you finish  before I come back to you.   David Pollock: Thank you.  And so as to your point about  responsiblity for prisoners and detainees, this is now an Iraqi responsibility  and, therefore, I was happy to hear the representative of the new democratic  government of Iraq who, as he said --   Pollack's an ass and we're not interested in rehashing Saddam Hussein.  These liars who whored it for an illegal war?  They can't have spent all of 2002  and 2003 screaming for the Iraq War -- as they did -- and insisting Hussein was  somehow akin to Hitler -- as they did --  and now attempt to use Hussein as a  baseline by which to grade modern day Iraq.  It's not ethical, it's not  consistent and I HATE liars.   Jasim Azawi: Shouldn't the American forces have acquired and asked  for and demanded guarantees from the Iraqi authorities to prevent torture in  Iraqi prisons, Mr. Smart?   Malcolm Smart: Well the American and Iraqi governments made a  Status Of ForcesAgreement at the end of 2008 which covers the withdrawal  and the handover of prisons and prisoners.  And there is absolutely no human  rights safeguards written into that which is quite astonishing.  We raised that  at the time and nothing has been done.  And we've seen this process of handover,  indeed we cite in our report cases of people who've been detained -- some times  for years --  by the US forces without any charge or trial, without any  independent tribunal they can go to to challenge their detention, who the  American forces have recommended for release but actually haven't been released  by the Iraqi government but have been handed over to them. So there's a big  question about the US role and its failure to uphold the human rights principles  that the US has once spoken so highly for.
   Excuses popped up from two of the guests (not Smart) that Iraq  was a 'newborn' and Jasim rightly pointed out that this was not the case.  Nouri  al-Maliki, for example, has been prime minister since April 2006.  That's more  than enough time to address abuses.  If you want to.  "If you want to" being the  key. Or maybe if you're forced to by the world's gaze?  September 10th's snapshot  noted that antiquities  were being returned to Iraq; however, some of the previously returned items were  missing.  This puzzled the world and, wouldn't you know it, when outlets across  the world wondered what could have happened, Nouri and crew 'find' the items. In  today's paper, the New York Times reports  (no individual  reported credited, the byline reads: "BY THE NEW YORK TIMES"  -- probably not  wanting to suffer the wrath of Nouri) that over 600 of the items which went  missing after they were returned to Iraq in 2008 were found . . . "in a  storeroom of the office of Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki" and they're now  (supposedly) going to be "turned over to Iraq's National Museum". The possession  by Nouri shouldn't have been a surprise.  Not only is he a thug, Jane Arraf (Christian Science Monitor News  Service) reported  September 8th, "He [Iraq's Ambassador to the US Samir  Sumaidaie] noted, however, that a previous shipment of 632 stolen pieces  recovered in the US had gone missing after being delivered to Prime Minister  Nouri al-Maliki's office last year."  Muhanad Mohammed (Reuters) quotes  the Minister of  Tourism and Antiquities, Qahtan al-Jibouri, declaring, "We found these  artificats in one of the storerooms of the prime minister's office along with  some kitchen appliances."  The news comes after Paul Barford (Portable Antiquity Collecting and  Heritage Issues) caught  an earlier 'clarification' by the Iraqi  government last week.  Again, the valuables, the historically and culturally important items were  discovered in Nouri's storeroom.  Possibly all Iraq's potable water is in there  as well?  Four years and counting, and he refuses to step down as prime minister  despite his term having expired, Nouri's not provided security, not provided  potable water, not provided reliable electricity, he's done nothing but sit on  billions and enrich his own pockets.  Ma'ad Fayad (Asharq Alawsat Newspaper) spoke   with Ayad Allawi who declared "Maliki must understand ... no one stays in power  forever" and "I think that matters will be highly tempestuous within the  country, and I expect, god forbid, a reaction against democratic principles and  policies. I don't think that the Iraqi people will believe in going to the polls  in the future, and this will lead to further divisions on the Iraqi  streets.."  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 thirteen days with no government formed.  Colin Freeman (Telegraph  of London) also spoke with Allawi this weekend and Allawi told  him, "Violence is increasing, services are stagnant, the economy is extremely  poor, and unemployment is rising. For the last six months the government has  been without leaders, and unfortunately we are seeing the problems increase as  the US draws down."  The weekend was filled with speculation about Iraq forming  a government.  northsum32 (All Voices) recaps  the talk coming  out of Iraq: "The deal would involve the Iraqiya group of Allawi that won the  most seats the INA which includes Al Sadr and the Kurdistan Allliance. The prime  minister would be current vice president Adel Abdulmahdi a member of the Iraq  National Alliance and also lead of the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council. The SIIC  lost many seats while supporters of Al Sadr gained and took over leadership of  the group. Ayad Allawi would become president. The Kurdistan Alliance would get  the chairmanship of the parliament."  Asso Ahmed (Los Angeles  Times) interviewed  KRG Prime Minister Barham  Salih:               Q: Regarding forming the  government, in one of your previous statements you have stated not forming the  government is a disgrace, Why? A: In fact, it is a shame…. We do not have a  government that has emerged as a result of this [March] election. The country is  exposed to serious terrorist attacks and crises in the basic services of  electricity and water supply to the people. In normal circumstances, governments  fall because of these problems and a new government comes. What is happening now  is a major failure for the political elites in front of the Iraqi voter who  challenged terrorism when he went to the ballot boxes and wanted to establish a  new beginning for his country.   Salih also noted the publiic "democrations denoucing the government's  performance in the field of services" and felt that the political stalemate  continuing would cause "the current political elite to lose its credibility  before the people."  Today Steven Lee Myers (New York Times) reports  that 24  members of Parliament met yetersday and quotes MP Mahmoud Othman insisting that  the people can't be ignored while Myers observes, 'In fact, they can and have,  and after the unofficial rum session on Sunday of a body elected more than six  months ago but still not functioning, it was clear they might continue to do so  for some time to come."  Will neighboring countries be able to help ease the  statlemate?  Press TV reports , "Iran, Bahrain,  Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Syria and Turkey will attend the  seventh conference of the Interior Ministers of Iraq's Neighboring Countries" on  Tuesday. This month is supposed to be 'big.' Iraq's supposed to be on the verge  of forming a government finally! It's allegedly been on the verge of that for  over six months now. Nouri has promised that stalemate over or continued, Iraq  will finally have a census this month. (This was supposed to have taken place  years ago and is required by the country's Constitution.) Nothing, Nouri has  maintained, will stop it. However, nothing was supposed to stop this month's gas  field auctions either . . . and . . . yet Jijo Jacob (International Business Times)  reports  that the bidding on three fields has been postponed until  October 20th.  In other oil and gas news, Todays Zaman reports , "Turkish Energy  Minister Taner Yıldız went to the Iraqi capital of Baghdad on Sunday to attend  the signing ceremony of an agreement on the Kirkuk-Ceyhan Crude Oil Pipeline."   AFP notes , "Baghdad has reached an  agreement with Damascus to build two oil pipelines linking Iraq to Mediterranean  sea ports via Syria for the export of crude, an Iraqi oil ministry spokesman  said Monday."  Noting the deals with Turkey and Syria, Ben Lando (Iraq Oil Report) observes   that "Iraq has taken essential steps towards its goal of becoming the world's  premier oil exporter."   Reuters notes today's violence includes  1 police officer shot dead in Mosul, 1 Sahwa shot dead in Shirqat, a Baghdad car  bombing which injured six people and, dropping back to Sunday, a Falluja  roadside bombing which claimed 1 life and left three injured.  That was a  Falluja roadside bombing on Sunday, it wasn't the big Falluja bombing already  reported.   Yesterday Baghdad was slammed with bombings. Timothy Williams and Stephen  Farrell (New York Times)  explain , "The blasts were the latest in a series of attacks across  Iraq during the past several weeks, coinciding with the country's political  crisis. Iraq held parliamentary elections more than six months ago, but  political leaders have failed to agree on a coalition government, and insurgents  have sought to exploit the power vacuum." Shashank Bengali and Mohammed al  Dulaimy (McClatchy Newspapers) report , "Twin car bombs exploded  within moments of each other around 11 a.m. in Baghdad — one near a facility  housing federal police, which killed 19 people, the other a few miles away at a  busy intersection in the Mansour neighborhood, killing 10, Iraqi authorities  said. More than 110 people were injured. Hours later, a suicide bomber drove  into an Iraqi army checkpoint in central Fallujah, a heavily guarded city 40  miles west of Baghdad. Three soldiers and three civilians were killed, and 14  others were injured." Jamal Hashem (Xinhua) reports  that Xinhua  correspondent Bashar was there when the suicide car bombing "struck an office of  a mobile phone company Asiacell, destroying the company building and a building  nearby" and quotes him stating, "I am safe, but it was a very huge blast that  collapsed the front part of Asiacell building, and I can see several cars either  charred or badly damaged." Janine Zacharia and Aziz Alwan  (Washington Post) report ,  "Traffic snarled in parts of Baghdad as Iraqi police tightened checkpoints after  the twin car bombings struck at 10 a.m. in the Mansour and Kathumya  neighborhoods, killing 29 people and wounding 111, according to Iraqi security  authorities." Barbara Surk (AP) explains , "Most of those killed  in Sunday's apparently coordinated attacks in Baghdad were civilians, and  residents of the areas bombed directed their anger at a government they feel has  left the city vulnerable to repeated attacks despite a network of police and  army checkpoints paralyzing traffic." Ned Parker and Jabr Zeki (Los Angeles Times) count  33 dead  from the 2 Baghdad bombings and the Falluja one and report, "A man who gave his  name only as Majid described in a phone call people walking around in a daze.  Some screamed 'God is great!' in grief for the dead while others expressed anger  at the country's politicians. 'G** damn the government!' he heard one man shout  in anger over what is widely seen as a deteriorating security situation."  Jason Ditz (Antiwar.com) observes , "The killings  are the clearest reminder yet that despite the Obama Administration's claims  that the war is over, Iraq remains a very dangerous place,one in which US troops remain engaged ."   The Iraq War is not over.  Colin Clark (DoDBuzz) quotes  an e-mail  from a soldier serving in Iraq on the so-called 'change' and 'end' of 'combat  operations':  The  reason I'm sending this out is because I have had a few people ask if I left  Iraq early because all of the combat troops are out of Iraq and I wanted to let  everyone know the real deal.      Take  our Brigade for example.  We were originally called a HBCT (Heavy Brigade Combat  Team).  Well, since Obama said he would pull all of the "combat" troops out by  Aug, all they did before we left was change our name from a HBCT to an AAB  (Advise and Assist Brigade).  We have the same personnel/equipment layout as  before and are doing the same missions.  The ONLY difference is that they  changed our name from a HBCT to an AAB and that's how we pulled all of the  'combat' troops out.  There  are other Brigades just like ours that are doing the same missions that are  still over here.  So anyway now you know the REAL story, so that's why I'm not  coming back early.
 
   The  Iraq War hasn't ended.  And COWARDS who can't call it out need to sit their  tired asses down.  Barack Obama's 'polish,' 'smoothness,' 'historic nature' and  all other bulls**t doesn't matter a damn bit to the Iraqis dying and shame on  any asshole who can't call out Barack at this late date but feels the needs to  offer a tongue bath to Barack's balls before addressing the issues that matter.   Yes, this refers to several people specifically who honestly need to find  something else to do because they're worthless and they're cowards.  They know  who they are.  Also, they're pathetic.   Turning to groups not afraid to stand up, rallies were held over the  weekend for Bradley Manning. For anyone not up  to speed, Monday April  5th, WikiLeaks released US  military video of a July 12, 2007 assault in Iraq. 12 people were  killed in the assault including two Reuters journalists Namie Noor-Eldeen and  Saeed Chmagh. Monday June 7th, the  US military announced that they had arrested Bradley Manning and he stood  accused of being the leaker of the video. This month, the military charged  Manning. Leila Fadel (Washington  Post) reported in August that Manning had been charged -- "two  charges under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. The first encompasses four  counts of violating Army regulations by transferring classified information to  his personal computer between November and May and adding unauthorized software  to a classified computer system. The second comprises eight counts of violating  federal laws governing the handling of classified information." Manning has been  convicted in the public square despite the fact that he's been convicted in no  state and has made no public statements -- despite any claims otherwise, he has  made no public statements. Manning is now at Quantico in Virginia, under  military lock and key and still not allowed to speak to the press. As Daniel  Ellsberg reminded from the stage in Oakland Thursday night, "We don't know all  the facts." But we know, as Ellsberg pointed out, that the US military is  attempting to prosecute Bradley.Julia Ledoux (Inside Nova) reports demonstrators  at Quantico yesterday protested for Bradley to be freed and quotes Pete Perry  stating, "We're concerned because specifically we believe there are war crimes  being committed in Iraq and Afghanistan. When crimes are committed, it helps  when there is a whistleblower to report them." The Guardian's Greenslade blog notes the rallies.  The Uptake has video of the rally  in Minneapolis. Coleen Rowley participated in that  rally and she explains in the video:We're here today to support Bradley Manning, the  Private who is being charged with exposing the video known as Collateral Murder showing the Apache helicopter shooting 11 Iraqi  civilians, also including two children and two Reuters employees. He is a  whistle blower who is blowing the whistle on War Crimes so, therefore, he cannot  have done anything wrong. Nikol Purvis (Associated Content) reports, "In  Santa Monica, approximately 75 people showed up in support of Bradley Manning  and in hopes to raise awareness to free the 23 year old soldier who allegedly  leaked over 90,000 pages of sensitive classified material" and that the rally  included ISO gubernatorial candidate Carlos Alverez who expressed his support for  Bradley. In addition, Will David (Lower Hudson Journal News) reports  that a protest took place in Cortlandt, New York outside a fundraiser for US  House Rep John Hall who is running for re-election and that the demonstrators  utilized "a mock coffin draped with an American flag and held up signs  protesting the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan" and quotes 61-year-old Bennett  Weiss stating, "I was an ardent supporter of John Hall. I worked tirelessly to  get him elected. He has not lived up to expectations as a true  progressive."       |