| Monday, October 11, 2010.  Chaos and violence continue, a lot of Sunnis are  targeted today, fears of a military coup continue to float in Iraq, Iraqi  Christians receive attention from the Vatican, Nouri tries to trick Sunni  exiles, Gloria Feldt starts a movement conversation, and more.   Phil Sands (National Newspapers) reports  on the 5,000 Iraqi Palestinians who are refugees in Syria who have to live in  temporary camps, "Syrian policy is that displaced Palestinians are the  responsibility of all Arab states and that each must contribute to their cause  and support their right to return to ancestral homes. Damascus already hosts  more than 450,000 Palestinians and believes that the Baghdad government should  have safeguarded the 35,000 Palestinians who were living in Iraq. That did not  happen and many fled, leaving 12,000 Palestinians in Iraq, according to UN  estimates." The United Nation's Walter Kalin speaks with WRS (World Radio Switzerland) today  discussing  Iraq's internal refugees.     Walter Kalin: Many of them have found a  kind of acceptable way of life but as many are living in very, very difficult  conditions particularly in Baghdad there because there was no alternative they  had to squat on the public land where they are illegally occupying public  buildings. They are threatened by eviction. They are really living in poverty,  totally inadequate housing, no access to water, in some parts of the city even  no access to education and health. Up in the north, it's a bit better. But  people up there spend the meager income they have mainly on rent meaning that  they can't send their kids to school. There's a huge amount of child labor. And  we're also told that for instance involving trafficking which is a general  problem, displaced women are prone to be a target.
   Last week, Walter was wrongly billed by me as  Walter Kearns. I do not regret the error. Especially when I hear him babble on  about 'safety' when you consider 2006 . . . 2006 is four years ago. 2006 was the  height of ethnic cleansing. While, in 2010, it might make some sense to point to  2009 if a yearly trend can be established, it makes no sense to hide behind  2006. After bringing it up, he quickly adds, "But still if you're looking just  at the UN security reports, there are security incidents everyday particularly  in and around Baghdad, in and around Mosul." So, no, the answer it isn't safe in  Iraq.  That is one of the main reasons there is no Great Return to Iraq.  The  political stalemate is not the reason that there's no Great Return.  This has  been addressed by many and addressed many times.  One of the true experts on  Iraqi refugees is Deborah Amos who spoke with Steve Inskeep (NPR's  Morning Edition -- link has text and audio) August 10th :     Steve  Inskeep: And let's just emphasize here, is this turning into almost a permanent  refugee population, a permanent population of Iraqis who will be outside their  country the same way that there are Palestinians who have been outside of the  Palestinian territories for decades now?           Deborah  Amos: It begins to look that way.  Not that there was ever a flood of returnees,  there wasn't, but 2010 has been less than 2009. And people are making this  calculation, that as long as there's a government crisis as the Americans  drawdown, why would you go back now?  It is not easy to be a refugee.  It's  likely that your kids are out of school. It is likely that your diet is a mess,  that you're probably eating mostly, you know, sugared tea and bread, for at  least two of those meals.  The international community's largesse -- while never  large, is less. People want this crisis to be  over.      The most recent broadcast of War News Radio  (began airing Friday)  also featured Deborah Amos.    Emily Crawford: The US invasion of Iraq triggered an explosion of  sectarian violence especially after Saddam Hussein's fall from power.  Until  then, the minority sect of Arab Sunnis had been the dominant political force but  they lost influence along with Saddam and a dramatic power struggle ensued.  Uprooted by sectarian militias and the general chaos of a nation suddenly  without government or infrastructure, there was a mass exodus of Iraqis.  As the  closest and most accessible of the surrounding countries, Syria was an obvious  choice of a destination for the refugees.  Deborah Amos, NPR foreign  correspondent and author of the book   Eclipse of  the Sunnis [: Power, Exile, and Upheaval in the Middle  East]. has devoted extensive research to the flight  of these Iraqis and their lives in exile. She says that the majority of the  refugees were the newly persecuted Sunnis.   Deborah  Amos: It was overwhelmingly Sunnis who were leaving Baghdad.  It was a  demographic exodus to be sure.  It was also an exodus that was a middle class  exodus -- these were the professionals from Baghdad and that tended to be the  Sunnis of Baghdad, the more educated of Baghdad.  It was the doctors, it was the  lawyers, it was the school teachers, it was the poets, it was the television  producers.  It was the very people that the government was going to need to  rebuild the nation and they were leaving.     Emily  Crawford: Although most of the refugees in Syria are Sunni, there are also  significant numbers of Iraqi Christians, secular Shias, Kurds and other  marginalized minorities.  Saddam's regime had been oppressive but it had least  ensured a degree of stability in Iraq. With that gone, sectarian tensions became  intensified.  Ahmed Ibrahim al-Karkhi, an Iraqi artist who lived in Syria for  three years before coming to the US, remembers the eruption of sectarian tension  in Baghdad.    Ahmed  Ibrahim al-Karkhi: Honestly, I remember the day I left Baghdad because I felt  like I was an outlaw. I did not have any other guilt except I was from one sect  and living with another -- and this wasn't present before the war. Everybody  used to live together -- the Christian, the Kurd, and the Shi'ite and the  Sunni.  But all of these concepts changed with the appearance of all the  militias. The struggle for power started so all of these things  happened.    Meanwhile  Mona Nagger, Nick Amies and Rob Mudge (Deutsche Welle)  report that threats and fears mean even more Iraqi Christians could become  exiles and they quote London School of Economics and Political Science's Dr.  Kristian Ulrichsen stating, "Iraqi Christians became caught up in the  overlapping violence and multiple conflicts unleashed after 2003. They became  exposed to the similar patterns of kidnappings, extortion, beheadings, rape and  forced taxation that affected all other communities at the erosion of central  government control left a security vacuum that was exploited by organised and  opportunistic criminality and anti-occupatin resistance groups. In addition to  this, Christians specifically were targeted by Church bombings and assassination  attempts owing to a perceived association witht he aims and intentions of the  occupying forces." Vatican Radio (link has text and audio)  reports that Pope Benedict XVI spoke of the Synod of Bishops for the Middle  East at Sunday morning mass yesterday and, "In a reference to one of the  principle concerns of many church leaders in the Middle East, the exodus of  Christians from the cradle of faith, Pope Benedict reminded all those present  that 'in Jerusalem the first Christians were few. Nobody could have imagined  what was going to take placae. And the Church continues to live on that same  strength which enabled it to begin and to grow,' the strength of the  Pentecost."  Last  week, Michel Martin (Tell Me More, NPR -- link has  text and audio) reported on the fact "that the wetlands in sourthern Iraq"  --  believed by some Biblical scholars, to have been the Garden of Eden -- are  being restored and she discussed the restoration with the Minstry of Water's Dr.  Azzam Alwash.   Michel  Martin: So give us a status report.     Dr. Azzam Alwash: At this point in time, the marshes are  about 35 percent restored. Now, they were about 65 percent restored in 2008. The  last two years were essentially drought years, and the amount of water that came  in was a lot less, so we lost a lot of the areas that was flooded. But what we  have to remember is that this is not the first time this marshes saw drought.  And so it just - it's part of nature. It's part of the natural process that the  areas around the perimeters of the marshes become wet and dry over the seasons.  We just have to work with nature and facilitate the bringing of as much water as  possible. And, you know, the problem right now in Iraq, between Iraq and Turkey,  is the fact that Turkey is building a lot of dams upstream to generate  hydroelectric power to irrigate fields. And so we have solutions. We're working  with the Iraqi government. We're talking to Turkish organizations about creating  solutions for the long-term future. Our models indicate that we can restore up  to 75 percent of the marshes even using only Iraq's limited water resources. I'm  glad to report to you that the Ministry of Water Resources of Iraq has bought  into our plan, and, in fact, is building all the regulators that we have  designed. And by March 2011, all the systems will be in place. What remains is  the political world to dedicate enough water to restore as much of the marshes  as we can.     Dropping back to October 4th : "But the US government 'helps' in  some ways. UPI reported  on Friday that the  Pentagon wants to sell $4.2 billion in weaponry to Iraq. Iraqis make due on a  few hours of electricity a week, they lack potable water but Bobby Gates and  other fools think what the country really needs is some 'air-to-air,  heat-seeking missiles for dogfighting'. And if you're not getting how screwed up  the priorities are (or how alarming that an easy to topple puppet regime would  possess missiles), grasp that they'll be spending $42 billion on weapons but they're begging the IMF for -- and getting --  $741 million to do rebuilding to their infrastructure . That's right,  they'll throw away $42 billion. But they'll insist no infrastructure rebuilding  unless the IMF loans them a tiny fraction of that amount."  James Denselow (Guardian)  observes :   There are numerous dangers in empowering an Iraqi military in the  current national and regional environment. Petraeus adviser David Kilcullen  warned last year that Iraq was witnessing the "classic conditions for a military  coup" – where a venal political elite divorced from the population lives inside  the Green Zone, while the Iraqi military outside the zone's walls grows both  more capable and closer to the people, working with them and trying to address  their concerns. 
 A Rand  report into the US redeployment from Iraq recognised  that "there is a risk Iraq's political and military leaders could be emboldened  by the departure of US forces and their own growing strength to seize  control".     
 The record-breaking hiatus in forming a government will only have  furthered Iraqis' contempt for their politicians and empowered the hand of the  military. 
 Another danger is that while empowering the Iraqi military may  allow for a smoother US exit from the country and provide it with a potential  card to use against Iran, it creates a very real sword of Damocles that  threatens the Kurds. Historically, Baghdad has always looked to make peace with  the Kurds when it is weak and attack them when it is strong, a lesson very much  in the minds of Kurdish politicians today.       Iraqi political and security sources in  Baghdad have spoken of their fears of either a military coup taking place in  Iraq or a militant Shiite militia overthrowing the  government.                        An Iraqi official, speaking to Asharq Al-Awsat from  Baghdad, revealed that "important Iraqi political leaders have strengthened the  security of their headquarters, offices, and homes" adding that they have also  "restricted their movements both inside and outside of Baghdad." The source  claimed that this came "following advice or warnings from Iraqi security and US  [military] commanders in Iraq."
 The Iraqi official, who spoke to Asharq Al-Awsat on  the condition of anonymity, said that "we are not ruling out a military coup  taking place especially as the political history of Iraq is full of military  coups, and in light of the decision of the commander-in-chief of the Iraqi armed  forces, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, to surround Baghdad with military  forces…and to exclude other leaders from positions of direct responsibility of  the movements of the army, as well as the arrest of senior officers in Baghdad,  Mosul, Diyali, Tikrit. This gives rise to fears of a military coup in the event  of al-Maliki not being able to remain as prime minister."
     India  Daily added, "An Iraqi security source has revealed that U.S.  forces have given orders for U.S. officers to join key military units in Baghdad  as advisers due to fears of an attempt to overthrow the government." The talk  followed  Mark Schlachtenhaufen (Edmond  Sun) reported , "Iraq is entering a crucial period, which could  include a coup triggered by disenchantment and frustation with the political  class, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist [Anthony Shadid] said Monday." Shadid  heads the New York Times ' Baghdad Bureau and he spoke earlier this week  at the University of Central Oklahoma.    AFP reports that Nouri made a  little speech today in Baghdad insisting that, "We must . . . turn a new page  with all those who have gone too far and made mistakes. [. . .] We forgive and  turn the page because the country cannot be built on the basis of hatred and  rancour." AFP rightly interprets the  remarks to be aimed as Sunni exiles, Nouri's political opponents.
 The  ones he always lashes out at, remember? A bomb goes off in Baghdad and Nouri's  insisting it is former Ba'athists in Syria. And then he's demanding that Syria  force out all the Sunnis in the country. ('Forgetting' that when he was an  exile, he sought and was provided refuge in Syria.) As Rickie Lee Jones once asked, "What could make a boy  behave this way?"
 
 Let's see, St. Bernadette visited him in a dream? No.  There's been no Nouri transformation. This is the man who actively used  star-crossed lovers Ali al Lami and Ahmed Chalabi and their so-called Justice  and Accountability Commission to purge Sunnis before the March 7th elections,  during the March 7th elections and after the March 7th elections. But the  world's supposed to believe Nouri's had a sudden change of heart?
 
 Nouri  was unable to force Syria to expell the exiles. Now he seems to be banking on  the belief that he's smarter than the exiles and can trick them into returning  which would allow him to seek the retribution his blood lust demands.
 
 As  Nouri's opponents have been repeatedly targeted with assassination in the months  since the elections, as Nouri has expelled Sahwa (largely Sunni fighters, also  known as "Sons Of Iraq" and "Awakenings") from Iraq's security forces despite  pledges to incorporate them into the security forces and the government, he now  wants to show up claiming that Sunni exiles are welcomed in Iraq and he really  expects to be believed?
 
 That's how dumb Nouri is and, let's face it, the  US government has a long record of installing the weak minded and stupid as  puppets throughout the world.
   Would-be puppet Ahmed Chalabi visited DC in an attempt to put a  new spit shine on his questionable reputaion.   As Steven Lee Myers (New York Times) observes, Iraqi  politicians have become the Iraq Globetrotters:
 A leading Shiite cleric, Ammar  al-Hakim, was in Damascus, Syria, on Wednesday, while the Sunni vice president,  Tariq al-Hashimi, flew to Istanbul. And Ayad Allawi, the champion of secular  politics across the Shiite-Sunni divide who is losing ground in his campaign to  be recognized as the rightful prime minister, went to Damascus and Cairo seeking  Arab backing for his quest.
 The  Kurdish region's president, Massoud Barzani, who emerged from the election a  political kingmaker, was in Vienna, while Moktada al-Sadr, the radical cleric  whose followers now wield more political influence than ever, worked the phones  from his exile in Qom, Iran.
 
   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 seven  months and four days and counting.
   Ned Parker (Los Angeles Times) observes, "For  outsiders, it may be difficult to fathom the idea of a political stalemate  crippling a government for most of the year, destabilizing a fragile state and  raising fears of new strife. But Iraq's ruthless history helps explain the  psychodrama behind the seemingly endless negotiations that could drag on until  early next year." Thom Shanker and Steven Lee Myers  (New York Times) report, "The  delay has affected much of the American strategy in Iraq, including trade deals  and talks over what, if any, military role the United States will have after a  deadline to remove the remaining 50,000 American troops by the end of 2011. The  Sadrists vehemently oppose any longtime American military relationship with  Iraq."   Meanwhile Caroline Alexander (Bloomberg News) reports that two  Sunni groups not affiliated with the non-sectarian Iraqiya -- Tawafuq Party and  United Iraq -- which control 10 seats have formed their own coalition and  announced that yesterday. They're attempting to translate their 10 seats into  some sort of influence at the bargaining table.  One Shi'ite group not yet  rushing into Nouri's embrace is the Islamic Supreme Council and their leader  Ammar Al Hakim. Alsumaria TV reports,  "Melkert conveyed the General Assembly and the Security Council interest in Iraq  and their call to make progress in government formation talks. UN Chief  representative stressed the necessity to engage all parties in the new  government."
 Shootings?   In today's violence, Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) reports, "Gunmen  wearing Iraqi army uniforms stormed at least four houses, pulled the residents  outside and shot them -- killing four, police in Baghdad said." Reuters adds that the 4 were Sahwa and that two more were injured. Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) reports that  the assailants attempted to assassinate six; however, after they left, it turned  out that two were still alive and are now "in critical condition."   Reuters notes a Falluja home invasion in which 1 police officer (it was his house  invaded) was killed.   Bombings?   Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) reports a  Baghdad roadside bombing injured four people, another Baghdad sticky bombing  targeted the photographer of Sunni and former Speaker of Parliament Mahmoud  al-Mashhadani -- the former Speaker of Parliament and left the photographer  injured, a Falluja sticky bombing claimed the life of 1 person and wounded the  man's wife, a Falluja roadside bombing which claimed the life of 1 police  officer and left two more wounded, a third Falluja roadside bombing wounded one  police officer and a Kirkuk roadside bombing wounded a doctor and destroyed an  ambulance.  Reuters  notes a Baghdad roadside bombing injured the Ministry of  the Interior's head of evidence Maj Gen Abdul Munim Saeed and his driver, a  Falluja home invasion in which 1 police officer (it was his house invaded) was  killed, a Qaim roadside bombing which injured four police officers, a Kirkuk  roadside bombing which injured one doctor and an Abu Ghraib roadside bombing  which injured eight people (including one Iraqi soldier).   In the US, Gloria Feldt has a new book and is engaging int:   [. . .] an online  discussion about women and power as presented in  Gloria Feldt's new book, No Excuses: 9 Ways  Women Can Change How We Think About Power.   In No  Excuses, Feldt asserts that today nobody is keeping women from parity  -- except themselves. Combining extensive research, her personal  experience as former CEO and president of the Planned Parenthood  Federation, and interviews with dozens of women politicians, business owners,  and activists, Feldt concludes that the doors of opportunity are open; however  at the rate women are leading the way through the doors, it will take 70 years  to reach parity with their male counterparts.   Feldt gives women  9 Ways to  overcome the external and internal barriers keeping them from their own power  and leadership. No Excuses has  nine chapters, each organized around a specific power tool that will help women  change the way they think -- and the way they act -- so they can lead unlimited  lives.  Starting today, October 11,  join Gloria Feldt for 9 Ways in 9  Weeks: a conversation about how you can apply the  power tools in No Excuses to your  own life. Feldt will share interviews with amazing and inspiring women as well  as her thoughts and links to resources. Each week a different power tool will be  posted, topics will be presented, and discussion will take place.       Please visit at http://gloriafeldt.com/9ways  to join the conversation. You can also visit Gloria Feldt's fan page on  Facebook to stay up-to-date on No Excuses and the 9 Ways.  Please contact me if you are interested in reviewing the book, interviewing  Gloria Feldt, or have any additional questions.         I have not read 9 Ways in 9 Weeks.  I'm sure it's a thought provoking read  because Gloria's always been someone to toss things around and come at it from  many different angles.  I look forward to reading the book -- and hope to this  week -- but I need to note that there are systematic barriers to women's  progress.  We certainly saw that in 2008 with the near uniform attacks on  Hillary Clinton -- a time when White men repeatedly urged African-American males  to take pride in bi-racial Barack but attacked women of all races who took pride  in Hillary's run.  Gloria knows that and wrote strongly about that in real  time.  It's also true that we can be our own worst enemies.  We are in the  majority. Why haven't we seized control?  Why do we continue begging for our  rights?  In all the attacks on Hillary, in all that sexism that spewed in 2008  -- sexism that also rendered Cynthia McKinney invisible and allowed for some of  the most vile things in the world to be said about Sarah Palin -- in all the  attempts to badger and batter women into what a bunch of White males thought  should happen, no one bothered to note that we don't have equal rights.  All the  talk about voting and blah blah -- Emma Goldman appears more and more correct  about how little suffrage would actually matter -- concealed the fact that women  do not legally have equality in this country.  The Equal Rights Amendment did  not pass, there's never been a serious effort to restart the drive for it  (immediately after the failure of it, the decision was made to go the route of  the courts).  I don't know that Gloria does or doesn't acknowledge the  systematic oppression in her book -- my guess would be not in any great detail  because that's not what it sounds like her focus is -- but I'm sure it's a book  that will haunt and one worthy of a serious and pro-longed conversation.  I look  forward to reading it and hope to finish it by the end of the week.     |