| Monday, January 3, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, the US military  announces deaths, Iraqi Christians continue to be targeted, and more.   2 US soldiers were killed in Iraq yesterday. CNN reports  this  morning, "Two U.S. service members were killed in central Iraq on Sunday night  while supporting Operation New Dawn, according to a statement from the U.S.  military in Iraq." AFP quotes  an unnamed military  spokesperson stating, "This was one incident resulting in the death of two US  service members. These are the first deaths of any US service member in 2011."  Ned Parker (Los Angeles Times) explains ,  "The U.S. military declared its formal combat operations over at the end of  August, and the remaining soldiers are largely present to train Iraqi forces.   However, American troops are called in by Iraqi forces on occasion for sensitive  missions."  In other reported violence, Tang Danlu (Xinhua) reports  3 dead and twenty  injured from a Baquba roadside bombing "immediately followed by a suicide car  bombing". Reuters updates  with 28 wounded and  states it was an attack on Iraq's "intelligence services". AFP notes  1 police officer and 1  Iraqi Christian woman (Rafah Toma)were shot dead in Baghdad today -- the woman  in her home.  "I am attached to this place," Moahmmed Tawfeeq (CNN) quotes  Rafah Butros Tomas explaing,  "Every other day I come here [Our Lady of Salvation Church in Baghdad]. I feel  like my soul is in this place with them."  Our Lady of Salvation Church was  attacked October 31st, setting off the latest wave of attacks targeting Iraq  Christians.  CNN spoke with her about her cousin who was among those killed in  the assault on the Church. Ned Parker (Los Angeles Times) quotes   Yonadam Kanna, a Christian MP, stating that al Qaeda is becoming the catch-all  for blame, "Everything is hanged on Al Qaeda.  These people are both criminals  and terrorists."  John Leland (New York Times) reports ,  "Iraq's dwindling Christian minority has been terrorized in recent months by  deadly attacks for which extremist groups have claimed responsibility.  But  police officers said Ms. Toma's killing appeared to be a simple robbery."  First off, al Qaeda in Mespotamia doesn't claim credit.  A splinter group  -- or a thought-to-be splinter group -- has been claiming credit.  If you're  claiming credit -- pay attention, this is PoliSci on terrorism -- you do so in  the immediate aftermath. The act and claiming credit are part of the message  (the act of terrorism) that is supposed to inspire fear.  So you do it within 24  hours in our fast-paced society today.    If you're doing it days afterwards -- as was the case with last week's  Baghdad's bombings -- what may be happening is that no one else is claiming  credit and you see that and think you can pass some attack off as your own.  So  you step forward and say, "It's me!!!!  I'm the one!!! I'm so all  important!!!!"  It's not that different -- and maybe j-schools should be closed  and all reporters should once again have to 'intern' doing the police beat? --  from false confessions to a crime.  The waves of attacks on Iraqi Christians  since the start of the war have not been all al Qaeda in Iraq.  Has this wave  been al Qaeda in Iraq?  Judging by the statements and the actions and their  locations, an educated (but not informed) guess would say a little less than a  third could have been al Qaeda in Iraq.  The Christian MP is correct that you  cry "al Qaeda in Iraq!" and then pretend the problem went away.   That's (A).  (B)?  An elderly woman was robbed.  She was murdered.  She was  robbed in the middle of the night when she would obviously be home.  Her house  was picked out of every other house in Baghdad.  To claim that she wasn't  targeted?  That's insane.  Of course she was targeted.  And that targeting may  have included being targeted for being a Christian.  A neighbor insists she wore  gold and that's why this took place.  Visible gold actually would go a long way  towards identifying her as a religious minority -- as a look at the strata of  Iraqi society would quickly demonstrate.  My point here is the woman was likely  targeted.  That includes the notion that it was fine to rob from her and that it  was fine to kill her -- a possible outcome that was known -- on some level --  when the robber made the decision to enter the house.    To claim she wasn't targeted makes no sense at all when the know facts are  examined.   Joe Smith breaks into same-sex couple Paul and Bill's home, robs  then and kills them it may not just be robbery.  If Joe's selected them over  others, it may be because they are gay and it may be a hate crime.  This  impression that reports are trying to give is false and they need to stop  it. This is not an either/or.      An elderly woman's home was broken into.  She is a Christian.  Saying, "Oh,  well it's robbery because she had this or that on but it wasn't a hate crime,"  is b.s.  She was selected and targeted and that was likely because she was a  Christian.  I think (I could be wrong) that's the point the Christian MP was  making about terrorism and criminal.  A crime took place and the woman was  likely targeted for that crime because she was a Christian.   
 Ned Parker and Raheem Salman  (Los Angeles Times) reported  yesterday on Baghdad priest Father Nadheer Dako who spent December 31st at the  burial for the elderly couple (Janet Mekha and Fawzi Rahim) who died in Thursday's wave of bombings  targeting Christians  in Baghdad. They note, "In 2007, he had played a cat-and-mouse game as he hid  from would-be kidnappers who surrounded his church; that same year he narrowly  escaped a bomb apparently meant for him. He had watched too many Christians  leave the city for safety elsewhere. But he was not going to let himself fall  into depression." While he chooses to stay, some are leaving. Anne Barker (Australia's ABC)  notes , "Many Christians have already fled Baghdad or left the country  altogether." Friday, Rawya Rageh (Al Jazeera) reported  on the mood in  the aftermath of the targeting:     Rawya Rageh: Houses that should have been  adorned with Christmas decorations, pockmarked by violence instead. Iraqi  Christians once again under attack.
 Falah: If they want us to leave, we will leave. If  they want us to sleep on the street, we will sleep on the street If they want us  to join them and be terrorists, we will do.
 
 Rawya Rageh: The most recent round of violence began  in October when gunmen stormed this Cathedral in Baghdad, a siege that  ultimately left more than 40 worshipers dead. Signs of that attack still scar  the site, with no sign of letting up. Just last week, al Qaeda warned of more  attacks during the holidays resulting in what the already dwindling community  described as their grimmest Christmas ever. This is what Christmas Eve mass  looked like at one of Baghdad's largest Churches, celebrations canceled,  congregations decimated. The UN says thousands have fled to northern cities and  neighboring countries. The government had promised increased security and both  the Prime Minister and Church leaders have been urging Christians not to flee.  But some say, it's not that simple.
 
 Father Saad Sirop Hanna of St. Joseph's Church:  Reality imposes itself on people's choices and lives. What the Church had  announced is that we want our community to remain intact in this country but the  reality is much more powerful. Change is minimal and slow.
 
 Rawya Rageh: The Christian community in Iraq is now  facing a difficult choice.
   CNN quotes Kiyour  Kizarab whose Baghdad home was targeted in the bombings, "I am 60 years old and  I gave a lot to this country, but this tough situation is like a message asking  me to leave my country. If these attacks will continue, and the government can't  stop them, then I don't think we will have a future here." Thursday's attack --  and the robbery if the woman was targeted because she was Christian -- signal a  change.  Christian families in Baghdad and Mosul had been keeping their children  out of school during this wave, keeping them at home so that they would be  safe.  However, just as the October 31st attack demonstrated that attacks could  take place anywhere in public, even a church, last week's bombings demonstrated  that even if you are in your own home -- even if you are holed up there -- you  can still be a target.  May Akl (Daily Star) reports  on the latest  underground railroad: The voice at the  other end of the phone line from Beirut suddenly became nervous. "No, no, no,  please!" the panicking nun said. "You cannot mention my real name, you  understand, what we are doing is illegal." This is why I call her Sister Mary. Sister Mary does  not launder money nor trade drugs. Instead, she leads an association that  assists clandestine Christian Iraqi refugees whose plight leads them to travel  to Lebanon by foot. She anticipated  more refugees after the church massacre last October 31, a dark day for Iraq's  Christian community, though the incident received little attention from  international media and policymakers. A terrorist group took the Lady of  Deliverance church in Bagdad by siege, holding the congregation hostage and  killing 46 Chaldean worshipers, including two priests celebrating mass, and  wounding some 67. This was not the first act of violence against Iraq's  dwindling Christian community, but it was by far the most horrific. And it was  not the last act of violence targeting the Christians of the Middle  East. After surviving millennia of  religious and cultural persecutions in its own cradle, Christianity in the  Middle East, could face demise at the hands of this Christian West. In fact,  political alliances sought by Western states and, most importantly, by the  United States leverage existential threats against the remaining Christian  minorities in the Middle East. Rescue is not high on the  agenda. Friday the US State Dept issued the following statement  from Acting Dept Spokesperson Mark C. Toner : "We condemn the violence  against Christians carried out overnight by terrorists in Iraq. President  Talabani, Prime Minister Maliki, and virtually every political bloc and major  religious leader in Iraq have denounced attacks on Christians and stressed the  centrality of Christians in the fabric of Iraqi society. We commend the  Government of Iraq for increasing its security measures to protect Christian  communities since the October 31 suicide bombing attack at Our Lady of Salvation  Church. We call on the Government of Iraq to redouble its efforts to protect  Christians and apprehend the terrorists who are behind these acts."  The Toledo Blade's editorial board  offers , "The attacks have been intense in recent months. They made  Iraqi Christians' observance of Christmas dangerous and thus restrained. With  U.S. withdrawal from Iraq scheduled for this year, it might be time for  President Obama to consider a program that would admit Iraqi Christians to the  United States." Mark Seddon (Independent of London)  observes : Now, Iraq's  remaining Christians want an autonomous Christian province in their ancient  Ninevah Plains homeland in northern Iraq. While Britain or the US may not help  their cause, for obvious reasons, the UN, EU and Commonwealth could add their  not inconsiderable weight. President Talabani of Iraq declared in November that  he had "no objection to a Christian province in Iraq". One Assyrian exile in  Britain, however, told me, "They keep talking, but nothing happens."  There is a widespread view among the  Iraqi Christian diaspora that their government is simply allowing what some now  see as an inevitable and unstoppable exodus of one of the world's most ancient  civilisations. Jalal Talabani is an expert at doing nothing (other  than raising hopes). Since 2003, there has been the promise that the issue of  Kirkuk would be settled. The 2005 Constitution even mandated a referendum be  held in 2007. This was part of the 2007 White House benchmarks that Nouri  al-Maliki signed off on. And yet the census never took place and the referendum  took place and the oil-rich Kirkuk remains a sticky point. Point? The idea that  Iraqi Christians will end up with a province is unlikely. They number less than  1/25 of the country's population and Nouri's not going to let it happen. You  already have Basra wanting to set up their own rule (similar to the KRG), you've  got the unsettled issue of Kirkuk and Nouri's going to okay land (forget an  entire province) being handed over to Iraqi Christians? It seems highly  unlikely. January 8th, there's going to be a summit of religious leaders in  Copenhagen, gathered to address the issue of Iraqi Christians. Currently, not  much is expected from the gathering. If they come out of it insisting that a  province being handed over to Iraqi Christians is the answer, it will most  likely indicate that they're not very serious about the issue.   In other news on the costs of the illegal war, Friday, Martin Chulov (Guardian)  reported : A study  examining the causes of a dramatic spike in birth defects in the Iraqi city of  Falluja has for the first time concluded that genetic damage could have been  caused by weaponry used in US assaults that took place six years  ago. The research, which will be  published next week, confirms earlier estimates revealed by the  Guardian of a major, unexplained rise in cancers and chronic neural-tube,  cardiac and skeletal defects in newborns . The authors found that malformations are close to 11  times higher than normal rates, and rose to unprecedented levels in the first  half of this year – a period that had not been surveyed in earlier  reports. The findings, which will be  published in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public  Health, come prior to a much-anticipated World Health Organisation study of  Falluja's genetic health. They follow two alarming earlier studies, one of which  found a distortion in the sex ratio of newborns since the invasion of Iraq  in 2003 – a 15%  drop in births of boys. Richard Spencer (Telegraph of London) adds
 , "The  research and a forthcoming report by the World Health Organisation on the same  issue will renew international attention on the siege of Fallujah, condemned by  anti-war activists and human rights campaigners as an excessive response to  insurgent activity. Thousands of alleged insurgents and civilians are said to  have been killed. White phosphorous and depleted uranium shells are known to  have been used in large numbers. Depleted uranium in particular has been linked  to high rates of cancer and birth defects."
   When Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki  introduced what he called a national partnership government two weeks ago, he  included allies and adversaries, Arabs and Kurds, Shiite Muslims and Sunnis. One  group, however, was woefully underrepresented. Only one woman was named to Maliki's 42-member  cabinet, sparking an outcry in a country that once was a beacon for women's  rights in the Arab world and adding to an ongoing struggle over the identity of  the new Iraq. Whether this fledgling  nation becomes a liberal democracy or an Islamist-led patriarchy might well be  judged by the place it affords its women. Throughout the illegal  war, Iraqi women have shown the guts and courage to protest but the US hasn't  been at all concerned with supporting them. In January of 2004, Anne Garrels (NPR's All Things Considered) reported  on  Iraqi women protesting as their rights were stripped away by exiles/thugs  appointed by the US. Garrels notes that the women said the change "will split  society" and lead to sectarianism and extremism. And that should have been that.  Paul Bremer could knock it down. But he didn't. And the US didn't apply  pressure, didn't give a damn about Iraqi women. Over a year later, Iraqi Women Gathering was still  organizing protests against this . Where was the US government? Still  celebrating those laughable 2005 elections? Houzan Mahmoud wrote a column which ran in the  Seattle Post Intelligencer's January 30,  2005 edition  and shared her thoughts about the election in her  country: In reality, these elections  are, for Iraq's women, little more than a cruel joke. Amid the suicide attacks,  kidnappings and U.S.-led military assaults since Saddam Hussein's fall, the  little-reported phenomenon is the sharp increase in the persecution of Iraqi  women. Women are the new victims of Islamic groups intent on restoring a  medieval barbarity and of a political establishment that cares little for  women's empowerment. Having for years  enjoyed greater rights than other Middle East women, women in Iraq are losing  even their basic freedoms -- the right to choose their clothes, the right to  love or marry whom they want. Of course women suffered under Saddam. I fled his  cruel regime. I personally witnessed much brutality but the subjugation of women  was never a Baath Party goal. What we are seeing is deeply worrying: a reviled  occupation and an openly reactionary Islamic armed insurrection taking Iraq into  a new dark age. Every day, leaflets  are distributed across the country warning women against going out unveiled,  wearing makeup or mixing with men. Many female university students have given up  their studies to protect themselves against the Islamists. In  August of 2005, Spark  Newspaper reported : July 19 about 200 Iraqi women and a few men took to  the streets in Baghdad to protest parts of a draft of the new constitution,  scheduled to be completed mid-August. The protesters were from women's rights  groups and included secular Iraqi women politicians. The draft of the entire constitution is religious and  sect-based. It gives lip service to equal rights for women – but only as long as  those rights do not violate Shariah or the law based on the Koran. If these  changes are implemented, it would severely set women backwards in important  ways. The women are outraged by  Article 14, which includes a provision that women, regardless of age, would need  their family's permission to marry. Under Shariah, a man could get a divorce  just by expressing his wish three times in front of his wife. Women would also  be denied inheritance rights. Article  14 would replace a personal status law enacted in 1959 and continued up until  the U.S. took over. It is one of the more progressive laws in the Middle East in  acknowledging women's rights. It gives women the right to choose a husband and  requires divorce cases to be decided by a judge. Article 14 would chuck that  body of law and require cases dealing with marriage, divorce and inheritance to  be judged according to law practiced by the family's sect or  religion. The draft appears to deepen  the divide between Sunnis and Shiites, without acknowledging legal rights for  mixed marriages. Women also protested a proposal to phase out a current measure  requiring that one-out-of-four parliamentary seats go to  women. Where's the concern? Where has it ever been? We saw a lot  of grandstanding last month from the likes of Naomi Wolf and others tossing  around this and that but they've never really weighed in, have they, on the  stripping of Iraqi women's rights? When you consider how much the Iraq War lined  Naomi Klein's cage, her silence on the subject is especially chilling.  Naomi Wolf continues her attack on rape victims and is now calling for rape  victims to be named publicly -- presumably only adult ones but who knows with  that crazy woman.  And we're not linking to her latest trash.  For the record,  the accused knows who is accusing in rape cases, the police know, the court  knows.  Naomi is so dishonest.  She's just flat out lying these days.  Her  positions is not new, it being public may be.  But December 12th, Ava and I noted   Wolf was circulating the names of the women who may have been raped by Julian  Assange and included: "In fairness to Naomi Wolf, we should note that she  doesn't feel rape victims deserve to be anonymous to the public."  Bryan Bender (Boston Globe) reports  on  rape in the military today and notes, "At the same time, military officials  estimate that as much as 90 percent of sexual assaults in the ranks go  unreported.  According to the Government Accountability Office, many victims  remain silent because they fear ridicule or believe that no action will be  taken."   They might not be believed?  They might be ridiculed?   Or that might be shamed and trashed by Naomi Wolf and others and it might  get so bad that you have to leave your own country.  That's what we're talking  about here.  Naomi Wolf's an idiot.  And she'd dug her own grave.  She doesn't  have the brains to step out of it.  Two women are said to have been raped by  WikiLeak's Julian Assange.  They may or may not have been raped.  I'm not judge  and jury on Assange -- especially with so little facts known at this point.   Sadly, his groupies can't show the same restraint towards the women and they  have attacked the women with lies, smears and language that has harmed the issue  of rape.  Their language, their notions, are a throwback to a less educated time  and don't think that's by accident.  Amanda Marcotte has weighed in many times  on the damage that is being done (one example here ) but  if you click here , you can listen to her discuss the  issue (link also has text) and to show you Naomi Wolf repeating one rape myth  after another.    Meanwhile David Walsh of World Socialist Web Site writes a hysteric  and shrill attack on Katha Pollitt for?  For calling rape "rape ."  It is not  rape to penetrate someone who is asleep and cannot give consent, it is not rape  to hold a woman down and force yourself on her, according to David Walsh.  Walsh  sees it all as a cabal of women, caught up in "identity politicss" and plotting  a take down.  Which is how he has Katha and Katrina vanden Heuvel on the same  page.  They're not on the same page, they do not coordinate messages, Katha  writes what she wants and always has.  She neither checks with Katrina nor takes  suggestions for it.  But how telling that, in Walsh's view, women are ganging up  against the poor misunderstood man.    Walsh refuses to admit what rape is.  Walsh is often a great writer (not  good, great and even his Katha piece has moments of brilliance) but his column  goes to the limitations so many put on equality: We're for it until our man  might suffer.   At which point, it's time to deny rape -- the same way sexism was denied  throughout the bulk of 2008.  Women are supposed to shut the hell up about their  own persecution and 'work for the man.'  And if you object -- and for many of  us, we remember these days so very well -- you're the bitch who is just thinking  about yourself.  Rape is not about one woman.  And how dare Wright try to pass  himself off as someone who looks at the system as opposed to those 'limited  women' who can't thing big.  Rape exists because of the power structure.  Rape  is a systemic crime.  The one playing "identity politics" on this issue is Walsh  who sees something in Julian (Daddy? Lover?  Big brother?  All three?) and must  deny what rape is in order to defend Assange.     Rape is rape and the allegations against Julian Assange may or may not be  true but the allegations are rape.   In the US, the 112th Congress convenes Wednesday.  Many other mid-term  elections have already resulted in people being sworn in, such as Jean  Quan  who is the new mayor of Oakland.  Mayor Quan is Oakland's first female  mayor and Oakland's first Asian American mayor.  Zennie62 (San Francisco Chronicle)  reports  Quan started the day with a walk from Chinatown through Oakland, and  ending at the Fox Theater, where we are for the inauguration ceremonies.  She  held an inpromptu 'thank you' chat with supporters and onlookers in front of the  Fox, and was joined by Assemblyman Sandre Swanson."       |