| Monday, November 22, 2010.  Chaos and violence continue, Iraqi Christians  continue to be targeted, the US military announces another death, the puppet  government in Iraq can't get it up, and more.   Friday a roadside  bombing targeted Iraqiya's Mohammed al-Khalidi. John Leland and Khalid D. Ali  (New York Times)  reported  Saturday it was three Members of Parliament who were  targeted (with, as known Friday, one bodyguard killed and two others injured),  that the bombing took place between two military checkpoints and that "police  issued a warrant for two soldiers at the checkpoints, who then fled their post,  heir weapons behind, said Atheel al-Najafi, the governor of Nineveh Province,  who is a brother of the speaker." As violence continued to plauge the country,  Parliament met on Sunday.     Jack Healy and Yasir Ghazi (New York Times) report that this  was "only the fourth time" and it apparently 'accomplished' the feat of grasping  that Iraqi widows, unemployed, etc. will just have to do without money because  it long ago ran out and no new budget has been passed despite Iraq holding  elections over eight months ago.  Lara Jakes (AP) adds  that while Iraq can no  longer pay the benefits to widows and the poor because, according to Parliament  Speaker Osama al-Nujafi, they don't have the money, MPs have each received over  "$100,000 so far this year in salaries and stipends" even though they've only  held four sessions all year.  Gabriel Gatehouse and BBC News live  on their own little cloud  which floats increasingly further away from reality which is how they manage to  insist that the MPs got "down to work" on Sunday.  So little happened that Nouri  wasn't even officially named prime minister-delegate as was expected.  Healy and  Ghazi explain, "Mr. Talabani appeared to have all but done so more than a week  ago, naming Mr. Maliki to a second term a day after the power-sharing deal was  announced." What's going on? We already noted it long ago. To build his support,  Nouri promised several of the same ministries to several different people. Now  he's having difficulty with regards to building his cabinet. So Jalal Talabani  keeps hitting the snooze button with the hopes that Nouri can pull it together.  Jason Ditz (Antiwar.com) observes ,  "Constitutionally, Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki is supposed to announce  a cabinet within 30 days of coming to power, but officials argue that President  Jalal Talabani hasn't officially appointed Maliki as prime minister yet, so the  clock hasn't yet started on this deadline."   Mo Honge (Xinhua) explains , "Talabani's delay  was aimed at giving the prime minister- designate more time to negotiate  ministerial portfolios with parliamentary blocs, as Maliki will have 30 days to  form his cabinet from the date of receiving Talabani's letter, [Nouri's  spokesperson Yassin] Majid said." Asharq al-Awsat interviewed  Jalal Talabani this  weekend.Asharq Al Awsat: When will you officially designate  Al-Maliki to form the government?   Jalal Talabani: After the Id.   Asharq Al Awsat: But the Id is over.   Jalal Talabani: That's true; but we celebrate the Id for four days.  I have written a letter of designation to Al-Maliki. It will be issued after the  Id and the prime minister-designate will begin discussions on the formation of  the government.   Ashar Al Awsat: It took eight months until you agreed to distribut  the responsibilities to the various parties. Do we have to wait for another  eight months for the government to see the light?     Jalal Talabani: We expect the government to see the light within  one month, God willing.  In fact, we did not wait for eight months but for five  months. The first three moenths were spent on the court's ratification of the  legislative elections and other legal measures.  But the reason why it took so  long is because we are determined to form a national partnership government.  We  could have formed a majority government but we insisted on a national unity  government and the Kurdistan Alliance insisted that the Al-Iraqiya List should  be present in the government. That is the formation faltered. Now, however,  there is a consensus among the parties on a national unity government. What  remains is agreeing on the distribution of the ministerial  portfolios.     March 7th, Iraq concluded Parliamentary elections.  The Guardian's editorial board noted in  August, "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. November  10th a power sharing deal resulted in the Parliament meeting for the  second time and voting in a Speaker. And then Iraqiya felt double crossed on the  deal and the bulk of their members stormed out of the Parliament. David Ignatius  (Washington Post) explains, "The fragility of the coalition  was dramatically obvious Thursday as members of the Iraqiya party, which  represents Sunnis, walked out of Parliament, claiming that they were already  being double-crossed by Maliki. Iraqi politics is always an exercise in  brinkmanship, and the compromises unfortunately remain of the save-your-neck  variety, rather than reflecting a deeper accord. " After that, Jalal Talabani  was voted President of Iraq. Talabani then named Nouri as the prime  minister-delegate. If Nouri can meet the conditions outlined in Article 76 of  the Constitution (basically nominate ministers for each council and have  Parliament vote to approve each one with a minimum of 163 votes each time and to  vote for his council program) within thirty days, he becomes the prime minister.  If not, Talabani must name another prime minister-delegate. . In 2005, Iraq  took four months and seven days to pick a prime minister-delegate. It  took eight months and two days to name Nouri as prime minister-delegate. His  first go-round, on April 22, 2006, his thirty day limit kicked in. May 20, 2006, he  announced his cabinet -- sort of. Sort of because he didn't nominate  a Minister of Defense, a Minister of Interior and a Minister of a Natioanl  Security. This was accomplished, John F. Burns wrote in "For Some, a  Last, Best Hope for U.S. Efforts in Iraq" (New York Times),  only with "muscular" assistance from the Bush White House. Nouri declared he  would be the Interior Ministry temporarily. Temporarily lasted until June 8,  2006. This was when the US was able to strong-arm, when they'd knocked out the  other choice for prime minister (Ibrahim al-Jaafari) to install puppet Nouri and  when they had over 100,000 troops on the ground in Iraq. Nouri had no  competition. That's very different from today. The Constitution is very clear  and it is doubtful his opponents -- including within his own alliance -- will  look the other way if he can't fill all the posts in 30 days. As Leila Fadel  (Washington Post) observes, "With the three top slots  resolved, Maliki will now begin to distribute ministries and other top jobs, a  process that has the potential to be as divisive as the initial phase of  government formation." Jane Arraf  (Christian Science Monitor) points out, "Maliki now has 30  days to decide on cabinet posts - some of which will likely go to Iraqiya - and  put together a full government. His governing coalition owes part of its  existence to followers of hard-line cleric Muqtada al Sadr, leading Sunnis and  others to believe that his government will be indebted to Iran." The stalemate  ends when the country has a prime minister. It is now eight months, fifteen days  and  counting.   What are they waiting on?     This is nonsense and the US should not be putting up  with it.  Currently Fat-Clogged Arteries Jalal Talabani is stating he will name  Nouri prime minister-delegate on Thursday -- to give Nouri as much time as  possible.  He's rigging the system for Nouri.  Thursday, the 25th is also the  LAST day he has to name the prime minister-delegate (see Article 76 of the  Constitution).   Yesterday, US military announced:  "BAGHDAD -- A United States Forces -- Iraq Soldier died of wounds sustained from  enemy small arms fire Sunday during advisory operations in Northern Iraq. The  name of the deceased is being withheld pending notification of next of kin and  release by the Department of Defense. The names of service members are announced  through the U.S. Department of Defense official website at  http://www.defenselink.mil/releases/. The announcements are made on the Web site  no earlier than 24 hours after notification of the service member's primary next  of kin. The incident is currently under investigation."  So while Nouri and  Jalal DICK AROUND people are dying, widows and orphans are going without and US  soldiers are dying.      Sunday's New York Times carried a  ridiculous column entitled "What We Must Do for Iraq Now" and the byline only  made more ridiculous: Vice President Joe Biden.  Iraq does not  have, as Joe  insists, a government reflective of the elections.  That's crap.  When the  biggest vote getter isn't getting the prime minister post, don't claim that the  deal reflects anything that the people wanted.  Iraqis risked life and limb to  vote.  And they did so -- as the results demonstrated -- because they were not  pleased with what was going on.  Shi'ites demonstrated that more often by  staying home.  In 2005, the Sunnis stayed home (December 2005), but this year  the Shi'ites felt misled, lied to and hyped and a large percent stayed away from  the polls -- and, yes, that is a vote in and of itself.  Iraqiya supporters  (Sunni, Shi'ites and others) turned out despite the fact that they were under  assault from Nouri.  Jailed, banned, murdered.  It wasn't easy to be  Iraqiya.   Joe Biden needs to face reality and speak reality.   The March 2010 elections did not say: WE THE IRAQI PEOPLE LOVE THE WAY THINGS  ARE GOING!  Therefore, why did the posts not change?  Jalal remains president  because . . . Well because his fat ass wants it.  Nouri schemed and planned to  hold on to the prime minister  post.   The message these 'results' send to the Iraqi people  is that not only are their representatives crooked but the US endorses crooks.   This is an appalling message to send to a country the US government has  repeatedly asserted that it wants to 'give' 'democracy' to.  This is  appalling.   And Joe's column is appalling on those grounds.  It  is even more appalling when you grasp that these puppets, these exiles who  returned when the US made it safe for them to return (and whom the US then  installed into power) won't get their s**t together.     Obviously there's not going to be democracy in  Iraq.  The US government killed it and wrote the coroner's report this year when  they allowed Little Nouri to become the new Saddam.  Jameel Theyabi (Dar Al Hayat) observes:     It is no secret that there are Iraqi political forces accusing  Nouri al-Maliki of sectarianism due to his "unclear" positions toward the  violence that is invading the country. Moreover, the army whose formation he  supervised is accused of being involved in crimes and torture operations --  according to the Wikileaks documents. In the meantime, Al-Maliki is insisting on  remaining in his post and rejecting all the initiatives, which confirms he is  taking orders from other sides and is implementing agendas that do not serve  Iraqi concord. This could cause the thwarting of political stability and the  inauguration of a new Iraqi stage.  Consequently, there is no difference between Saddam Hussein, who  appointed himself as the "sole" leader of Iraq, and Al-Maliki, who is refusing  to give up his post even if this is at the expense of Iraq's interests,  stability and relations with its Arab surrounding.  The corruption that is destroying the state from within, the  oppression that is affecting many factions of society, the bad services, the  weak performance of most of the sectors, the expansion of sectarianism and the  deep disputes between those participating in the political process, all require  a true national and democratic spirit that can allow the best to assume power  and pave the way before the active Iraqi political leaderships that are able to  secure Iraq's interests, security and stability in the face of the problems and  challenges. This would prevent the country from becoming an arena for the  conflict of the agendas that are serving Tehran and Washington and blocking the  way before the Arab interest.    The US government has made quite clear it doesn't  give a damn about Iraqi citizens.  Feisal Amin Rasould al-Istrabadi  (Today) observes, "Seven  months after Iraq's national elections, the United States has publicly denied  taking sides in the wrangling over who will be Prime Minister. Privately,  however, the US is backing the incumbent, Mr Nouri Al Maliki. The US has applied  tremendous diplomatic pressure on Iraq's Arab neighbours to get them to accept  another Maliki term. Most have refused. Initially, the US backed Mr Maliki in  order to keep the Sadrist bloc from gaining a share of power. However, that has  now backfired, since the Sadrists are the only group other than Mr Maliki's  coalition of Shia parties that supports  him."
   Well what about the US citizens?      Another US soldier dies in Iraq and Joe Biden's  flapping his gums about what the US has to do for Iraq?  In what world does that  make sense?   Maybe in the same world where everything he publicly  predicted about Nouri has come true but, being vice president, he has to toe the  line when, if he'd stayed in the Senate, he could take credit for just how right  he was about Nouri.     Once upon a time, not all that long ago, the US  Congress expected Iraq to be wrapped up and for the puppets to get their act  together enough for the US to leave.  Let's drop back to April 2, 2008 and the Senate Committee on Foreign  Relations hearing, that then-Senator Joe Biden chaired, which was entitled "Iraq  After The Surge."  Let's zoom in on US Senator Barbara Boxer speaking to Stephen  Biddle:   Barbara Boxer: Did you just say that Maliki uses the Iraqi security  forces as his militia?  Did you say that?   Biddle: Yes.    Barbara Boxer: If that's true and Maliki uses his military as a  force to bring about peace -- that's scandalous and that we would have paid $20  million to train [it] and someone that we consider an expert says it's a  militia, that's shocking.   She then attempted to question Rosen who attempted to add details.   Details weren't needed and ate into the time needed for Boxer to make the case  she was making.  "I come out with a picture of Iraq today," she explained, "as a  bloody lawless place, run by militias, a place that has undergone ethnic  cleansing and the Shias won that . . . and also that the US presence there is  only putting off the day when the Iraqis will find the way."   Eight months after an election and no government.  Does Barbara Boxer think  that's evidence of the puppets finding the way?  In that hearing, she declared,  "There is no good solution to this nightmare so why not just figure out a way to  tell the Iraqis, 'We've spilled the blood, now it's your turn'."  It's over 2  years later and still the US government isn't sending that message.    Is there any accountability at all?  Does no one but US House Rep Lloyd  Dogget even remember the 18 benchmarks the White House proposed and Nouri signed  off on in 2007?  Dropping back to the September 16, 2008  snapshot  for that day's US House Committee on the Budget hearing on  Iraq's Budget Surplus and this exchange is between US House Rep Lloyd Doggett  and the GAO's Joseph A. Christoff:   Lloyd Dogget: All of us remember, except maybe President Bush, that  in January of 2007, he selected the benchmarks, the guidelines by which to  measure success, by which to measure victory in Iraq and when we sought an  analysis so we would have an objective information instead of just the  propaganda from the administration about whether those benchmarks had been met  the Congress turned to the Government Accountability Office. And my recollection  is that when you came out with your report on August the 30th of last year that  you determined that . . . 11 of the 18 benchmarks that President Bush had set  were not met. Is that correct?      Joseph Christoff: Based on that prior report correct.       Lloyd Doggett: Yes, sir.  And you found that of the 18 benchmarks  the president set himself to measure success in Iraq that only three had been  met as of August 30, 2007. Now this year, a year later, you did some evaluation  again.  You did not evaluate every single benchmark but you really found that  there had been very little progress in the year.  We know that fortunately fewer  Americans are being killed there. But in terms of the objective of the Bush  policy in Iraq, you had a grand amount of success in that they met one more  benchmark than they had the year before, isn't that correct?           Joseph Christoff: Well we didn't go through a benchmark by  benchmark analysis but we did provide a report that talked about progess on the  security front, the legislative front and the economic front in our June report.        Lloyd Doggett: Right and I believe you found one more benchmark met  than the year before.       Joseph Christoff: Again we didn't do a benchmark by benchmark  analysis, sir.      Lloyd Doggett: Well if you look at the -- it may not have been  called a benchmark analysis -- but you looked at some of the same factors you  had the year before.  Just to begin to go through them, on the Constitutional  Review Committee, you found that they'd formed the committee but the committee  hadn't done anything.  Right?           Joseph Christoff: And that's still true.             Lloyd Doggett: Well they hadn't met that.  On enacting and  implementing legislation on de-Baathification you found that they had enacted  the legislation but they hadn't implemented and of it, right?              Joseph Christoff: That's correct.         Lloyd Doggett: Well they hadn't met the second benchmark.  On the  question of enacting the hydrocarbon or oil legislation, you concluded that they  had not met that again this year, did you not?              Joseph Christoff: Correct, and no progess this year either.             Lloyd Doggett: On enacting and implementing legislation on  procedures to form semi-autonomous regions -- that was the fourth benchmark  President Bush had -- you found that that was only partially met.  Again they  passed a law to allow the provinces to act but it hadn't been  implemented.                 Joseph Christoff: Well on that one it will be implemented when  provinces come together to form regions so that's  an open --                  Lloyd Doggett: Right, but we're not there yet.        Joseph Christoff: Well no provinces have voted to form regions  other than the KRG originally.              Lloyd Doggett: On enacting and implementing legislation for an  Independent High Electoral Commission you found only partially meeting it.   Again, they passed a law but hadn't implemented it.       Joseph Christoff: The commission was established.  The provincial  election law -- the date was established for October 1 but the implementing laws  have not been enacted.       Lloyd Doggett: Right. And they won't have the elections they've  been promising us they'd have for a year in October.       Joseph Christoff: October 1, they will not meet that  date.     What was the point of the benchmarks?  The people were told it was to  ensure progress in Iraq and that progress could be measured.  Why present the  benchmarks to Congress, get Nouri to sign off on them and then ignore  them?   It makes no sense and it cheapens the lives lost in this illegal war.     No, we scream in cathedrals Why can't it be so beautiful Why does there  Gotta be a sac-sac-sacrifice  Gotta be a sac-sac-sacrifice -- "iiiee ," written by Tori Amos, first appears on her From  The Choirgirl Hotel      Was Saddam Hussein a man of peace?  Was he the new Ghandi?  No, he wasn't.   Not by any means and it's indicative of just how badly the US government screwed  up everything that the exiles they have put in place, installed into power, have  made things worse for Iraqis.  This is the US-installed regime that's targeting  Iraqi Christians.  Iraqi Christians have been targeted since the start of the  illegal war. The latest wave started on October 31st when assailants attacked  Our Lady of Salvation Church in Baghdad and at least 70 people died with at  least another seventy wounded. Iraqis covered in the press -- in the foreign  press, little coverage on this comes from the domestic press -- would state in  that immediate aftermath that they were thinking of moving to Mosul but a  relative or friend warned them that it wasn't safe there. Mosul was the focus of  a 2008 wave of assaults on Iraqi Christians and, since the siege of the Church  in Baghdad, Mosul's again become a place where Iraqi Christians are targeted.   Over the weekend Sam Eyoboka (Vanguard) reported , "Peeved by the  continued massacre of Christians in Iraq, the umbrella body of Christians in  Nigeria, the Christian Association of Nigeria, CAN, has appealed to the United  Nations, UN, to intervene and save the lives of the Christian hostages in  interest of world peace. Speaking in an interview, the National President of  CAN, Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor also appealed to the Muslim fundamen-talists in that  country to take advantage of the Muslim feast of Eid el Kabir to ensure that  lasting peace reigns in that region." From Nigeria to Rome, Asia News noted , "Card Angelo  Bagnasco, president of the Italian Bishops' Conference (CEI), said that the  Italian Catholic Church was close to all 'those who are victims of violence'. He  made the statement as he promoted a Day of Solidarity with Iraqi Christians, who  are persecuted in their own country. The event includes prayers in all Italian  parishes this Sunday." Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco is quoted stating, "Inviting  everyone to pray for the persecuted Christians of Iraq in all the churches of  our country on the occasion of the Solemnity of Christ the King is a concrete  way to express our faith and show our closeness to all those who are victims of  violence, like the people affected by the 31 October carnage in Baghdad's Our  Lady of Perpetual Help Cathedral."  Catholic News Agency reports , "Pope  Benedict XVI prayed for Christians suffering from persecution and discrimination  throughout the world, especially those in Iraq, during the Angelus on Nov. 21.  The Italian bishops invited the faithful to a day of prayer for the persecuted  and for their persecutors after the Oct. 31 massacre of dozens of Iraqi  Christians celebrating Mass in a Baghdad cathedral. Violence continues to be  directed against the country's Christian minorities. The day of prayer was  promoted as a sign of closeness and solidarity to Iraqi Christians and all those  persecuted for their faith." The targeting continues today.  Jomana Karadsheh (CNN) reports  two Iraqi  Christians, brothers, were at the Mosul welding shop they owned and worked at  when assailants burst in and shot them dead while "an elederly Christian woman  [was] strangled in her home in central Mosul." AFP identifies  the two brothers as  40-year-old Waad Hanna and 43-year-old Saad Hanna. Asia News reports  that "Saad dies  instantly, Hanna, two hours later."  Catholic Culture notes , "After months of  occasional bombings, the targeted attacks on Christians have taken a more  personal turn, with murderers breaking into homes and workplaces to murder the  Christians they have targeted."   Internal and external refugees are created by the violence. Internal?  Asia News reports  that 40 Chrisian  faimilies have left Baghdad for northern Iraq while Randa Habib (AFP) reports  the latest wave has  resulted in many Iraqi Christians seeking safety in Jordan: On Sundays families gather at the Syriac Orthodox  church in Jordan's capital Amman to pray, socialise and mull over the best ways  of securing a visa to enable them emigrate to the United States, Canada,  Australia or Europe. There are always  new faces in the crowd, like Suzanne Jilliani, her husband Hani Daniel and their  year-old baby who fled after the October 31 attack on Baghdad's Syriac Catholic  cathedral that left 46 worshippers dead. The couple, who now live in a furnished flat provided  by the Syriac church in Jordan, dream of joining Jilliani's family in the United  States.  Turning to other reported violence . . .   Bombings?   Laith Hammoudi (McClatchy Newspapers) reports a  Baghdad roadside bombing which left six people injured, a Baghdad bombing which  left three people wounded, a Ramadi roadside bombing claimed the life of Col  Abdul Kareem and injured two of his bodyguards and, dropping back to Sunday, a  Baquba roadside bombing targeted a Sahwa member.     Shootings?     Corpses?     Meanwhile how stupid is Kevin Spak?  The Newser 'writer' cites   Christopher Hitchens as a reliable source.  Impending death has not redeemed  Hitchens shoddy and trashy reporting.  Kevers Spaky wants everyone to know that  Jalal Talabani did something great -- he knows because Chris Hitchens said so --  see, Jalal won't sign the death order on Tariq Aziz!  Tariq Aziz is currently  still scheduled for execution.  That's why Catholic News Agency and Europa  Press report  that Archbishop Louis Sako is calling for Aziz to be  spared.  Belfast Telegraph adds  that his attorney  -- Giovanni Di Stefano -- states they will attempt to get a presidential pardon:  "It's a risky legal move, considering Iraqi President Jalal Talabani has granted  few, if any, pardons in his more than five-year tenure and could be prevented  from doing so in this case."  Like Spak's 'reporting' all the links prior were  stories published today.  But if he'd placed his trust in Leila Fadel  (Washington Post ) instead of the questionable Hitchens, he could have  known reality last week.  November 17th, Fadel reported  Jalal's declaration that he  wouldn't sign the order: "The president's stand did not come as a surprise and  may not prevent the controversial execution. During Talabani's earlier tenure as  president, he never signed off on a death sentence, but Iraqi authorities  nevertheless hanged several senior members of the former government, including  Hussein."  |