| Tuesday, October 13, 2010.  Chaos and violence continue, the political  stalemate continues, Iraqiya makes a move to check Nouri, cancer rates remain  high in Iraq, an Iraq War veteran releases videos of Iraqis being harassed in US  custody, and more.   The Tehran Times reports  that as Iraq's  "Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki tries to hang onto his job," he visits Damascus  and speaks with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.  Nouri was hoping for a public  signal of support.  Instead the Syrian president merely noted that his country  supports all Iraiqs.  Alsumaria TV reports that  Islamic Supreme Council head Ammar al-Hakim is in Egypt meeting with President  Husni Mubarak to discuss issues such as "the formation of a new [Iraqi]  government." DPA notes his  visit follows that of Ayad Allawi. al-Hakim's party is part of the Iraqi  National Alliance, however, he has not issued a statement of support for Nouri  the way Moqtada al-Sadr has.
 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 six days and counting.     In a meeting on  Tuesday, the Iraqiya bloc, the Sunni-secular party led by former Prime Minister  Iyad Allawi, held a tumultuous meeting at which Iraqiya decided to throw its  support behind a rival candidate for prime minister, Adel Abdul Mahdi, according  to an Iraqi source who took part in the Iraqiya deliberations. More than seven  months after the March 7 election, Abdul Mahdi and Allawi hope to establish a  coalition to govern Iraq, toppling Maliki, isolating Sadr and bringing the Kurds  into their alignment. Allawi and Abdul Mahdi will travel to the Iraq's Kurdish  region to meet with Masoud Barzani, the Kurdish leader and most important power  broker for the Kurds, to get his support.       I believe  that the Kurds have legitimate concerns that should be addressed.  That said, I  am not pleased with the decision to support al-Maliki over 'Alwai.  I think  'Alawi is the better choice to unify the Iraqis, be they Sunnis, Shi'a or Kurds.  Al-Maliki will simply continue the policies that most Sunnis believe are  exclusionary to them. Unfortunately, the Kurdish support will easily give  al-Maliki the seats he needs to form a new  government.   Francona sees Nouri  making a deal regarding oil-rich Kirkuk and that inflaming the Sunnis and the  Turkmen. He also offers, "Political pundits in Baghdad have referred to  al-Maliki as al-maliki al-irani, 'al-Maliki the Iranian,' and to his office as  'the Persian carpet'."    The stalemate  continues and only the fools place bets.  The violence continues as well . .  .   Bombings?   Laith Hammoudi (McClatchy Newspapers) reports a  Baghdad roadside bombing which injured five police officers, a Baghdad sticky  bombing which injured four people, four Baghdad bombings which injured nine  people (four are police officers) and a Muqdadiyah roadside bombing which  injured 7 Iranian pilgrims "and four of their Iraqi guards." AFP counts  comes up with a total of 28  people reported wounded today. Reuters adds that a North Oil Company employee was  injured in a Kirkuk drive-by.     JUAN GONZALEZ: Patrick,  I'd like to ask you about this whole other issue of the report on -- by Chris  Busby and some other epidemiologists about the situation in Fallujah and the  enormous increases in leukemias and cancers in Fallujah after the US soldiers'  attack on that city. Could you talk about that?     
 PATRICK COCKBURN: Sure. I  think what's significant, very significant, about this study is that it confirms  lots of anecdotal evidence that there had been a serious increase in cancer, in  babies being born deformed, I mean, sometimes with --grotesquely so, babies --  you know, a baby girl born with two heads, you know, people born without limbs,  then a whole range of cancers increased enormously. That this was -- when I was  in Fallujah, doctors would talk about this, but, you know one couldn't -- one  could write about this, but one couldn't really prove it from anecdotal  evidence. Now this is a study, a scientific study, based on interviews with  4,800 people, which gives -- proves that this was in fact happening and is  happening. And, of course, it took -- you know, it has taken place so much later  than the siege of Fallujah, when it was heavily bombarded in 2004 by the US  military, because previously, you know, Fallujah is such a dangerous place to  this day, difficult to carry out a survey, but it's been finally done, and the  results are pretty extraordinary.     
 AMY GOODMAN: What  were the various weapons that were used in the bombing of Fallujah in 2004?     
 PATRICK COCKBURN: Well,  primarily, it was sort of, you know, artillery and bombing. Initially it was  denied that white phosphorus had been used, but later this was confirmed. I  think one shouldn't lose sight of the fact, in this case, that before one thinks  about was depleted uranium used and other things, that just simply the use of  high -- large quantities of high explosives in a city filled with civilians and  people packed into houses -- often you find, you know, whole families living in  one room -- was, in itself, going to create, lead to very, very high civilian  casualties. But that's not what we're talking about here. We're talking about  the increase in cancers and so forth, and the suspicion that maybe depleted  uranium, maybe some other weapon, which we don't know about -- this is not my  speculation, but of one of the professors who carried out the study -- might  have been employed in Fallujah, and that would be an explanation for results  which parallel, in fact exceed, the illnesses subsequently suffered by survivors  of Hiroshima.      The statistics point to the long-term consequences of depleted  uranium contamination. Munitions containing an estimated 300 tonnes of DU were  unleashed by coalition forces in southern Iraq in 1991. A decade after the war,  DU shell holes are still 1,000 times more radioactive than the normal level of  background radiation. The surrounding areas are still 100 times more  radioactive. Experts surmise that fine uranium dust has been spread by the wind,  contaminating swathes of the surrounding region, including Basra, which is some  200 kilometres away from sites where large numbers of DU shells were  fired.      Dr Ahmad Hardan, who served  as a special scientific adviser to the World Health Organization, the United  Nations and the Iraqi Ministry of Health, says that there is scientific evidence  linking depleted uranium to cancer and birth defects. He told Al Jazeera  English [3], "Children with congenital  anomalies are subjected to karyotyping and chromosomal studies with complete  genetic back-grounding and clinical assessment. Family and obstetrical histories  are taken too. These international studies have produced ample evidence to show  that depleted uranium has disastrous consequences."       Iraqi doctors say cancer  cases increased after both the 1991 war and the 2003 invasion. Abdulhaq Al-Ani,  author of "Uranium in Iraq" told Al Jazeera  English [4] that the incubation period for  depleted uranium is five to six years, which is consistent with the spike in  cancer rates in 1996-1997 and  2008-2009.   * Direct killing  during the military invasion operations where civilians were targeted directly.  Additional casualties amongst children have resulted from unexploded ordinances  along military engagement  routes.   * The direct killing  and abuse of children during American troop raids on civilian areas like  Fallujah, Haditha, Mahmodia, Telafer, Anbar, Mosul, and most of the other Iraqi  cities[17]. The Massacre of the children in Haditha in 2005 is a good example of  "collateral damage" among  civilians.   * Daily car bombs  casualties, explosion of buildings and other terrorist attacks on  civilians.   * Detention and torture of Iraqi children in American  and Iraqi governmental prisons. While in detention, the children are being  brutalized, raped, and tortured. American guards videotaped these brutal crimes  in Abu Graib and other prisons. 
 * Poverty due to  economic collapse and corruption caused acute malnutrition among Iraqi children.  As was reported by Oxfam in July 2007, up to eight million Iraqis required  immediate emergency aid, with nearly half the population living in "absolute  poverty".   * Starving whole  cities as collective punishment by blocking the delivery of food, aid, and  sustenance before raiding them increased the suffering of the young children and  added more casualties among  them.   * Microbial pollution  and lack of sanitation including drinking water shortages for up to 70% of the  population caused the death of "one in eight Iraqi children" before their fifth  birthday. Death of young children in Iraq has been attributed to water borne  diseases such as diarrhea, cholera, typhoid, hepatitis, etc  .   * Contaminating and  exposing other heavily populated cities to chemically toxic and radioactive  ammunitions. Weapons like cluster bombs, Napalm, white phosphorous, and Depleted  Uranium all caused drastic increases of cancer incidences, deformations in  children, multiple malignancies and child leukemia. Children in areas like  Basrah, Baghdad, Nasriya, Samawa, Fallujah, Dewania and other cities have been  having multifold increases of such diseases. Over 24% of all children born in  Fallujah in October 2009 had birth defects.The Minister of Environment in Iraq  called upon the international community to help Iraqi authorities in facing the  huge increase of cancer cases in  Iraq.           I thought again of  the Iraqi child, whose parents had a beautiful garden, who showed a friend and I  her drawing book, before the invasion. One picture had an abundance of flowers,  carefully colored, in numerous hues, on the side were American soldiers -  shooting at the flowers. "Why are the soldiers shooting the flowers?" We asked.  "Because Americans hate flowers", she replied solemnly. It was a deeply  saddening moment, that she represented so many children, who saw American as  representing only wrath, fear and deprivation. She knew nothing of those  Americans who had worked tirelessly to reverse the situation. If she has  survived, she will be a young adult. She is unlikely to have changed her  views.   Meanwhile at Michael Moore's site, Iraq War veteran Ethan  McCord posts videos that were shot in Iraq, videos of detainee abuse and he  notes, "I want to point out, first hand, that these soldiers are doing EXACTLY  as they ahve been trained.  I'm not trying to excuse their behavior, but simply  pointing out that this is a systemic problem."  In one of the videos (the second  one posted), two US service members sit on a bench with a bound Iraqi between  them.  The Iraqi male is blinded via goggles.  The whiney voiced US soldier with  no sense of rhythm attempts to start Sublime's "Santeria" off: "I don't practice  Santeria, I ain't got no crystal ball" while the one with "EMERSON" listed on  his uniform touches the prisoner in a 'familiar' manner and rests his hand on  him as he presses his mouth against the Iraqi man's ear and tries to sing the  second line but comes up with, "Oh I had a million dollars but I, I spend it  all."  "EMERSON" then screams loudly in the Iraqi man's ear. ["I'd, I'd spend it  all" is the second line as written by the late Bradley  Nowell.]       
 The political  deadlock in Baghdad, which has prevented the formation of an Iraqi government  more than six months after the parliamentary elections of last March, has not  prevented the lame-duck administration of Nuri Kamal al-Maliki from opening its  southern oilfields to the world's giant corporations. Nor has it stopped the US  Embassy and Commerce Department from reinvigorating the Bush-era program of  selling the country's public assets to corporate buyers. And because Iraqi  unions have organized public opposition to privatization since the start of the  occupation, the Maliki administration is enforcing with a vengeance Saddam  Hussein's prohibition on public-sector unions.     The United States  may have withdrawn its combat brigades, but it is not leaving Iraq. And while  Washington may have scaled back earlier dreams of "nation building," it has not  given up on a key aspect of the economic agenda behind that project: sacrificing  the rights of Iraqi workers and unions to encourage corporate investment.    Unions have been  locked in conflict with the Iraqi government since the occupation began, but in  the last year, that conflict has grown much more intense. In March, after oil  workers protested low pay and their union's illegal status, worksite leaders  were transferred hundreds of miles from home. The oil ministry banned travel  outside Iraq for Hassan Juma'a and Falih Abood, respectively president and  general secretary of the Federation of Oil Employees of Iraq. Both were hauled  into court and threatened with arrest.      "It is our duty as  Iraqi workers to protect the oil installations, since they are the property of  the Iraqi people," Juma'a explained in early 2005, when the U.S. was still  directly governing Iraq. "We are sure that the US and the international  companies came here to put their hands on the country's oil reserves." Juma'a's  union chased Halliburton's subsidiary KBR from southern Iraq in the first year  of the occupation.      The union busting?  It goes to how little has changed at the White House,  to the continuation of policies despite political party.  You can check the  December 2003 issue of The Progressive  for David Bacon's story about  the union busting going on in Iraq and the Bush administration's efforts to  ensure that the unions were crippled -- if not done away with -- for the tag  sale on Iraq's public sector.  You can also read Rebecca  Solnit's 2006 interview with Antonia Juhasz on this topic for  LeftTurn .  (In addition to that interview, Antonia contributed an  article entitled "Ambitions of Empire: The Radical Reconstruction of Iraq's  Economy" to the March-April 2004 issue of LeftTurn .  Neither that nor  David Bacon's Progressive article are available online.)  "If you believe in  fairness," offers Jonathan Capehart (Washington Post), "then you cannot help  but be overjoyed by the worldwide and immediate injunction against enforcement  of the shameful ban on gay men and lesbians serving openly in the military  issued this afternoon by a federal judge in California." He then goes on to note  Congress' unwillingness to act on the issue with a pointed nod to Harry Reid's  failures in the Senate. And let's not forget Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi's  words of discomfort over the dysfunctional leadership in Congress, "With or without Congress, it will happen." And,  lookie there, without Congress it did, Don't Ask, Don't Tell is on hold not  because Congress overturned it, not because Barack issued an executive order --  though either could have done so -- but because a federal judge issued an  injunction.   Bob Egelko (San Francisco Chronicle)  reports, "U.S. District Judge Virginia Phillips of Riverside ruled the 1993  law unconstitutional on Sept. 9, saying it intrudes on service members' personal  lives and freedom of expression and reduces military effectiveness by needlessly  excluding qualified personnel" and yesterday issued an injunction suspending any  discharges under Don't Ask, Don't Tell. The Log Cabin Republicans brought the  lawsuit against Don't Ask, Don't Tell and they issued the following statement  yesterday:
   (Washington, DC) - Log Cabin Republicans  praises United States District Court Judge Virginia Phillips' decision to grant  a world-wide injunction against enforcement of "Don't Ask, Don't  Tell." Barring  a stay by a higher court, the injunction suspends  all investigations and prevents all discharges under the policy. However,  Log Cabin Republicans urges caution by servicemembers considering coming out at  this time, as the Obama administration still has the option to  appeal.              "After finding in Log  Cabin Republicans v. United States that  'Don't Ask, Don't Tell' violates servicemembers' First and Fifth Amendment  rights, a world-wide injunction was the only reasonable solution," said  Christian Berle, Deputy Executive Director of Log Cabin Republicans. "These  soldiers, sailors, airmen, marines and coast guardsmen sacrifice so much in  defense of our nation and our Constitution. It  is imperative that their constitutional freedoms be protected as  well. This  decision is also a victory for all who support a strong national  defense. No  longer will our military be compelled to discharge servicemembers with valuable  skills and experience because of an archaic policy mandating irrational  discrimination. The  United States is stronger because of this injunction, and Log Cabin Republicans  is proud to have brought the case that made it possible."              "We are extremely pleased with Judge  Phillips's decision granting an immediate and permanent injunction barring the  US military from carrying out its 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell' policy. The order  represents a complete and total victory for Log Cabin Republicans and reaffirms  the constitutional rights of gays and lesbians in the military who are fighting  and dying for our country," said Dan Woods, partner with White and Case, and the  lead counsel for Log Cabin Republicans v. the United States.             Log Cabin Republicans  filed suit in federal district court against "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" in  2004. The  case went to trial in Riverside, California in July of 2010, and Judge Virginia  Phillips ruled on September 9, 2010 that the policy violated the First and Fifth  Amendments of the Constitution. Alex Nicholson, executive director of  Servicemembers United and member of Log Cabin Republicans, served as the named  plaintiff in the suit.                Judge Phillips' injunction can be found here.        Legal experts have concurred:  President Obama can permanently end "don't ask, don't tell" today, simply by  ordering the DOJ not to appeal the Log Cabin ruling. This is now the White  House's ideal option for ending "don't ask, don't tell," for no shortage of  reasons. First, DADT is harmful to our  military. Leading DADT expert Nathaniel Frank looked at the history of the  policy, and found the disturbing facts: Far from improving unit cohesion,  performance, and morale, DADT undermines it by encouraging gay and lesbian  service members to be dishonest. It has harmed recruitment by making the  military a discriminatory, anti-gay institution in the eyes of our young people.  And it has cost taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars. Perhaps most  crucially, it has led to the discharges of hundreds of specialists serving in  the very fields -- linguistics, intelligence, and medical services -- in which  recruitment is sorely lacking.   Ending DADT now is not only  good for the military; for the White House, it is also good politics. Nearly  every article about the upcoming election has made note of the vast "enthusiasm  gap" that has Republicans far more excited to vote than Democrats. Much of this  gap can be traced to the failure to accomplish key Democratic priorities. If  Obama's Department of Justice declines to appeal the Log Cabin ruling, he will  not just fulfill a promise he has repeatedly made from the campaign trail to  this year's State of the Union address -- he will awaken his base and their  faith in his leadership.         |