| Monday, February 14, 2011. Chaos and violence continue, protests continue,  an Iraqi male apparently sets himself on fire to protest unemployment, the White  House releases their War Budget (money for war, little left for anything else),  Iraq still has no vice presidents, and more.   Al Rafidayn reports young Iraqis  demonstrated in Baghad today as parrt of the "Young February 14" calling for the  government to deliver basic services, address unemployment, stamp out corruption  and for the Sabir al-Issawi, Secretary of Baghdad, to resign. Al Rafidayn notes that the Iraqis  used Facebook to organize. Baghdad has seen demonstrations for weeks now  including Friday and -- in the al Sadr section -- Saturday. (Friday also saw  demonstrations in Basra, Nasiriyah, Mosul and Wasit.) Thaier al-Sudani (Reuters) has a  photograph of some of the women participating in the protest who carried  signs which read "We need electricity power, not ministers' promises" and "Do  not erect a tower, just fix the sewage."  Al Mada notes that there were many demands including  that the government should leave and hand over public buildings which could be  turned into schools or clinics.  Turn them over?  Munther Mahmoud points out  these buildings were taken by over by political parties and their members who  were seeking to take advantage of the 2003 chaos at the start of the war.   BBC  has a Valentine's Day photo essay whose first photo is of protesters in  Baghdad today. Xiong Tong (Xinhua) quotes a protester  stating, "The high salaries of the parliamentarians and the three presidencies  (Presidency office, PM office and parliament presidency office) are not  acceptable, while most of us are living on two dollars a day."   Azzaman notes that the plan for  today's protest in Baghdad is for the protest to continue each day through  February 25th and notes that a protest is taking place in Ramadi as well.  Meanwhile Al Rafidayn reports that, in Najaf,  the leader of the al-Sadr's bloc there has called for demonstrations against the  lack of basic services and also against the continued occupation of Iraq by the  United States. The leader read a statement from Moqtada al-Sadr in which he  noted that these protests would be the voice of "the oppressed against the  oppressor."   Yesterday saw protests as well.  Al  Mada noted that there were reports that Abdul Muni Muhammad  (also billed as Mohammed Abdul Munir  in some press reports) set himself on fire  in Mosul today due to the continued unemployment and that reports note he is a  porter with four children who "resides in a house with four other families."  Citing police sources, Germany's DPA reports the man was  31-years-old and notes, "Thousands of Iraqis have been protesting this month,  demanding better living standards, improved services and less corruption."  Citing hospital sources, AFP reports he died at the  hospital.  Azzaman notes that the family  of the man has been promised "a monthly stipend."  Iraqhurr.org notes the United  Nations places unemployment in Mosul at 17%.   Dar Addustour reports that  "hundreds" protested in Ramadi Sunday against rampant unemployment and a lack of  basic services and protesters are vowing that they will continue demonstrating.  Ahmed al-Hiti (Iraqhurr.org)  reports that they also called for the province's governor and council  chair person to be removed. Worker Ali Jassim declared he and others cannot feed  their families with what they are paid and he started a sit-in.
 
 If you've  forgotten, last weekend, Iraqi officials couldn't stop pledging their fidelity  to the rations system and insisting they would increase the amount and that they  understood the pain the Iraqi people were living under. That was then. David Ali (Al  Mada) reports a new proposal from the Ministry of Education:  Cut the ration cards of those families who have a child drop out of school or  college. In other words, cut the ration cards on the most extreme poor because  that's who's been forced to drop out, the children of families (if they're lucky  not be orphans) who are not making it and who have to take to the streets and  beg for the families unless they're among the very few who find a job. Alsumaria reports that  MP Bahaa Al Aaraji (of the Sadr bloc) has called out the national government and  stated that is unable to serve the people of Iraq.
 
 Dropping back to Friday's snapshot:
  Sunday, Iraq's representatives in Parliament are supposed to vote  on the vice president.  In the past, the country has had two vice presidents.   Three has been expected to be the number this year and all men.  However,  Al Rafidayn  reports that there may be four vice presidents and  that the fourth expected to be a VP is a woman with the Turkmen bloc, Faihaa  Zine El Abidine.  Supposedly, on Monday, Iraqi President Jalal Talabani asked  parliament to allow for four vps and that was to provide a post for "the women  of Iraq."  The Turkmen bloc issued a statement noting that women in Iraq are  maginalized in the current government and that they did not receive any posts  from Nouri to his cabinet ("the center of political decision-making"). How very  telling that the country might have their first female vice president when Nouri  -- his Cabinet still not full -- can't find slots for women.  His Cabinet is so  bad that even the head of the Ministry of Women is a man.   Sunday came and went and they still don't have those vice presidents. Even  after today.    We, as the Iraqi Turkmen Front, as a political organization  defending the legal national rights of the Turkmen nation, thank the President  of Iraq for his request for a fourth vice presidency and for the candidate to be  a Turkmen.  However, we would have wished that the third vice presidency  position be offered to the Turkmen and we would like to take the opportunity to  ask the distinguished Presidenty why the third vice presidency was not offered  to a Turkmen candidate.   The distinguished President could have requested the fourth vice  presidency position and refrained from disclosing the names of the three other  vice presidents and sending them to the Iraqi parliament before this position  was approved. The names of the three vice presidents presented to the Iraqi  Parliament in a single list and a request to the same parliament for a fourth  vice presidency position is just a ruse thrown in front of those who obstruct  the Turkmen and their legal rights.  Those segments have resisted the deputizing  of a Turkmen vice president from the beginning. For this reason, we request that after the fourth vice presidency  is approved, the names of all four vice presidents are presented to the Iraqi  Parliament together.  Otherwise, we must accept that the proposal was not  serious and just an incident targeting the rights and jurisprudence of the  Turkmen. Dr. Sadettin Ergec Leader of Iraqi Turkmen Front      In a desperate attempt to spin, Nouri and the White House are treating  nothing like something. Al Rafidayn reports US Vice  President Joe Biden congratulated Nouri over the fact that Parliament approved 2  ministers for the Ministry of Electricity, two ministers for the Ministry of  Trade and two who will be over food and those pesky basic services. There is  still no Minister of the Defense, no Minister of National Security and no  Minister of Interior. These are the posts responsible for the country's  security. Nouri's holding them, declaring himself the sub for now. For now. Dar Addustour  lists the posts filled as follows:
 Minister of Elecrticity
 Minister of State for Women's Affairs
 Minister of Commerce
 Minister of State for Civil Society  Affairs
 Minister of  State
 Minister of State for Tribal  Affairs
 Minister of  Municipalities.
 
 That's seven, the reports say eight were  confirmed, I don't know what the eighth was. The Parliament refused to confirm  the Minister of Planning. In other news, Al Mada reports that the  meeting between Nouri and Ayad Allawi that KRG President Massoud Barzani was  supposed to mediate has now been called off. But let's grab that 'progress'  stamp and call that 'progress' too. Today Alsumaria TV reports  that Nouri al-Maliki has sworn the electricity crisis in Iraq will be over in  twelve months . . . or 20. He's really not sure. 12 or 20. A year or two.  (Estimates last month were 2014.) Nouri first became prime minister in April  2006. He's had all that time to address this crisis.
     Saturday Salahudin Province was slammed with a suicide bombing. Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) reported,  "At least 38 people were killed and 74 others wounded Saturday when a suicide  bomber stepped onto a bus carrying Shiite pilgrims in Iraq and detonated  himself, police officials said." Al Rafidayn noted that the military  states the suicide bomber's explosive vest had at least 10 kilograms of  explosives (approximately 22 pounds).Lu Hui (Xinhua) added, "The pilgrims were  heading to the shrine city to observe a religious ceremony that marks the death  of Imam Hassan al-Askari at his tomb in the shrine of Ali al-Hadi in the Sunni  dominated city. The shrine of Ali al-Hadi is one of the four most revered Shiite  shrines in Iraq. It contains the tombs of Ali al-Hadi, who died in 868 A.D., and  Hisson Hassan al-Askari who died in 874 A.D." Jack Healy (New York Times) observes, "It was  the second attack in three days against Shiite pilgrims near Samarra, whose  gold-domed shrine was damaged in a 2006 bombing that led to waves of sectarian  killings between Iraq's Sunni and Shiite populations."  Sunday, Reuters noted  that the death toll in the suicide  bombing rose to 48.
 Also Saturday  Al Rafidayn reports, a mass grave  was discovered in Baquba wih 153 corpses -- thought to be part of the 2006 and  2007 blood letting. Supposedly, the police got a confession from someone they  had arrested two weeks ago (this is according to Maj Gen Abdul Hussein  al-Shammari) and that allowed them to find the bodies. Australia's ABC  reminds "it is unclear who is responsible for the deaths."  An Iraqi correspondent for McClatchy  Newspapers (at Inside Iraq)  notes the reports of the mass graves discovered yesterday (over 150  dead) and how the government was claiming that these were victims of al Qaeda  but the burial evidence indicated otherwise. To find out the truth, the  correspondent called a stringer present when the graves were  unearthed:
 
 "I was there. I saw them  myself. It was incredible -- the way they were each buried -- individually,  according to the word of Islamic tradition: their faces towards the Kaaba  (Mekka), the libna (mud brick) under the head, the white shroud -- complete to  the smallest detail.
 "Since when did  al Qaida burry its victims observing such details?? No -- These were Qaida  fighters for sure".
 SO -- I ask: What  benefit would security forces gain by distorting this story? Is it to sow more  hatred for al Qaida? And if this story -- this unashamed statement by a General,  is a lie -- Then what else is a lie? And to what end?
 Is this how the Iraqi security forces hope to gain the  trust of the Iraqi people? And if we can't believe a General -- a chief of  police of a province ….???
 
 
 Turning to today's reported  violence,  Iraqhurr.org reports that  54-year-old Iyad David Solomon, Iraqi Christian, was kidnapped from his Kirkuk  home last night and that the kidnappers are asking for a $30,000 ransom and  threatening to kill him if the ransom is not paid. Alsumaria TV reports on the  kidnapping here.  Reuters notes today the following Sunday  attacks -- an Al-Zab bombing in which four people were injured, a Baghdad  roadside bombing which left two people injured and a Mosul mortar attack which  left two people injured.  Al Mannarah reported Saturday that  rocket and mortar attacks have been increasing on US bases and that Friday the  US military base in Dhi Qar saw "heavy rocket fire." In Basra, Al Mada reports, local groups are concerned about the increase  in violence against women and Basra saw huge numbers of women killed by people  in 2006 and 2007 with the deaths termed 'honor' killings -- and the only alarm  is that some of the deaths were at the hands of "strangers." .
 
   Yesterday, economists Joseph E. Stiglitz and Linda J. Bilmes' column on the  "The true costs of the Iraq war: $3 trillion and  beyond" was published in the Washington Post. The two started off  noting their 2008 cost projection of $3 trillion for the  Iraq War which some felt at the time was too high and how nice they have to  update it because that project "was, if anything, too low. For example, the cost  of diagnosing, treating and compensating disabled veterans has proved higher  than we expected." They argue the war has added a $10 cost per barrel of oil,  they note the federal debt soared as a result of the wars and the high cost of  oil meant more money spent on it and less on purchasing consumer goods which  helped the finacial crisis really take hold.  Trend Poster maintains, "To the US  taxpayer, the cumulative cost since 2001, has been $1,152,218,693,448 (as on  Valentine's Day 14th February 2011).  That's not millions or billions but  trillions. Yes, it's more than one trillion US dollars."    Early this morning, Jim Arkedis (Politico) noted today was  something, the day the federal budget is supposed to be released and he declares  that "it's time Congress put an end to a tricky Pentagon maneuver that has  already cost taxpayers according to my calculations, $200 billion since 2001.  The Defense Department must stop defying 70 years of historical precedent in  military spending."  Meanwhile Andrew Quinn (Reuters) shows more stupidity  than Kenneth Parcell and Joey Tribbani combined as he gushes, "Obama, in his  budget for the 2012 fiscal year, proposed spending just $16 billion in Iraq -- a  significant decrease as U.S. diplomats take over from combat troops under a  security agreement between the two countries."  First off, $16 billion (that's  DoD and State Dept -- we'll get to the breakdown in a moment) is a huge amount  of money.  It also represents -- pay attention, Quinn -- an increase in the  amount awarded to the State Dept for Iraq in 2010.  That's what you're supposed  to be watching, right?  If numbers going up or down?  Third, there's no  "security agreement between the two countries" that requires "US diplomats take  over" -- do you even know what you're writing about?   Fourth, when the hell  ever has the cost of Iraq for any given year been known before the year was well  on its way to over?  This is the supplemental war.  Bush started it that way  and, despite decrying that practice while campaigning, Barack did the same thing  once he got into the White House. On the increase for the State Dept, Mary Beth Sheridan (Washington Post) caught  it, "The biggest increase would be in funding for Iraq, which would nearly  double from the $2.8 billion spent in 2010. The reason for the rise: the State  Department will assume responsiblity for more than 400 activities from US  soldiers".  Christopher Hinton (MarketWatch) notes  that the White House's proposed DoD monies are "about 4% above the 2010  appropriation, not including funding for the conflicts in Iraq and  Afghanistan."  Tony Capaccio (Bloomberg News) explains,  "The new request includes $553 billion in core Department of Defense spending,  including weapons procurement, and $117.8 billion in military spending in Iraq  and Afghanistan, according to the federal budget documents released today." Nathan Hodge (Wall St. Journal) notes  that "military operations" in the land of Iraq in fiscal year 2012 are budgeted  for $11 billion.  "Military operations?" (I'm not questioning Hodge's figure or  his terminology.  Doing so would be as foolish as questioning James Glanz on an  assertion about contractor corruption.)  Of the State Dept's $5.2 billion for  Iraq, Sara Sorcher (National Journal) notes,  "This is in addition to DoD's $11 billion request for Iraq in this year's  budget."  Foreign Policy In Focus analyzes the budget here.  The Senate Veterans Affairs Committee  released the followng this afternoon:
    (Washington, D.C.) – Today, Senate Veterans' Affairs  Committee Chairman, Senator Patty Murray, released the following statement on  the President's 2012 budget request for veterans programs. The President's  budget requests an increase of approximately $2.7 billion for VA health care  over current year VA funding in a very difficult budget year. 
 "When we send servicemembers into harm's way, it is  our non-negotiable duty to take care of them when they come home.  I know that  the President understands that veterans' health care cannot be jeopardized, that  mental health concerns must be treated with the same seriousness as physical  wounds, and that our benefits process needs to be improved. His overall request  for increased funding for VA health care during an exceedingly difficult budget  year appears to reflect that understanding.
 
 "But I will want to hear directly from Secretary  Shinseki and others at the VA about their specific plans to care for our  veterans and make the VA into a 21st century agency capable of meeting the needs  of all of our veterans.  On first glance, it looks like the President's request  is a fair place to start, but the truth will be in the details.
 
 "As we move forward I will be reviewing many of the  specifics in this budget proposal, including how the VA can better use  technology to address a benefits claims backlog that has gone on too long and  must be a top priority for the Committee and the Congress.
 
 "I will also pay close attention to a number of other  concerns, including helping homeless veterans get off the streets, helping  unemployed veterans find job training resources and meaningful careers, and  ensuring that VA is addressing the growing needs of women veterans.
 
 "Providing the best possible care and benefits to  veterans is a cost of war, a cost that must be paid in full. As Chairman of the  Veterans' Affairs Committee, I will continue to work diligently to ensure that  veterans' needs are met."
   Saturday,  Al Mada reported on the  secret talks taking place to extend the Status Of Forces Agreement and cites  Qassim Mohammed Jalal as the source for the extension meetings currently taking  place between Nouri's reps and the US inside the Green Zone. Qassam Mohammed  Jalal is part of the National Coalition. He is a member of Parliament's  Commission on Security and Defense.  Bryann Alexandros (Dissident Voice)  observes:   The Obama promise of "ending the war" must've been a knee-slapping  jest for neo-conservative war planners and think-tanks. The word "Sovereignty"  is a euphemistic term for hand-holding and puppetry by its country's occupiers;  just as a country being "pro-democractic" is a euphemism for any pro-Western  satellite nation that is hopelessly subservient to its  interlopers. But there's much reason to believe that the US won't be retreating  so soon even as the declared pullout date approaches. The US Had invested  billions of dollars to build a complex military infrastructure here, including  the largest embassy in the world that houses more than a thousand personnel to  advise and influence every administrative aspect of Iraq. To dispel the myth of  complete withdrawal, the July 9th Mother Jones highlights the  incredible stake Washington holds here:  "Such a concentration of foreign officialdom in such a gigantic  regional command center -- and no downsizing or withdrawals are yet apparent  there -- certainly signals Washington's larger imperial design: to have  sufficient administrative labor power on hand to ensure that American advisors  remain significantly embedded in Iraqi political decision-making, in its  military, and in the key ministries of its (oil-dominated)  economy." Because of US militaristic interventionism, the unstable,  war-ravaged and ethnically splayed Iraq remains devoid of peace with more than a  million Iraqis dead since the occupation.     Meanwhile, on the politcal right-wing, Robert Herriman (Foreign Policy Examiner)  notes that US House Rep Ron Paul appeared on MSNBC's Morning Joe today "and  said that the Noebel Peace Prizing winning Mr. Obama is a war monger. I know  this must pain many liberal democrats and progressives, but was Rep. Paul  wrong?" He feels not and, on Iraq, notes, "He [Barack] has reduced US military  combat forces in Iraq by 95,000 since taking office. That being said . . . This  can hardly be considered a withdrawal.  There will still be 50,000 combat-ready  troops staying in Iraq to 'train and advise'. Though Washington has said that  the 50,000 were non-combat troops. Retired Colonel David Hunt said in a recent  interview that thousands of Special Operations personnel will be among those  staying in Iraq.  Their duties: the chase around and try to kill terrorists and  other insurgents.  Non-combat?"     John Wilson: In April of last year, two weeks before the general  election, Prime Minister Gordon Brown appeared on The Andrew Marr  Show.  With opinion polls looking bad for New Labour, Brown was there to  face the music in more ways than one.  The other guest on the show was  singer-songwriter PJ  Harvey who performed a new composition, an  apparently prophetic song called "Let England Shake."    PJ Harvey [singing]: To the fountain of death And splash about, swim back and forth and laugh out loud    John Wilson: That song performed live for Mssers Marr and Brown has  become the title track on the new album from PJ Harvey.  One of the  most creative and restless of musicians, Polly Jean Harvey has reinvented her  sound and image many times over the last 15 years or so.  Now a resident in  her native Dorset she spent the last two years reflecting on England and it's  role in various conflicts from the first World War to Afghanistan. When she came  to Front Row, I asked PJ Harvey if she'd set out to create a more  political song cycle.    PJ Harvey: Well I've always been extremely interested in politics,  what's happening in the world.  What I hadn't ever felt was that I had the  degree of skill with language as a writer to start to talk about such things  within the margin of poetry of song that's why I've not really brought that into  my scope as an artist before now. Now I'd gotten to the point in my life -- and  this is where the change came about -- was that I did feel that I could try --  at least try -- this time because of the things that I have learned thus far  coupled with a few other reasons really.  I think, one, becoming more  impassioned as I get older, more frustrated, more sensing a need to try and  voice some opinions about what's going on -- whether it's my voice or adopting  other ways of looking at things.  But just saying things that I couldn't find  being said anywhere. And couple with being so interested in the world we live in  today, what's going on in Iraq, Afghanistan and wondering where the officially  appointed war songwriter was.    PJ Harvey [singing]: These, these, these are the  words The words that maketh murder    PJ Harvey:  Because you've got your poets and your photographers,  the artists.  Artists like Steve McQueen.  And I really relish  the idea of fantasizing in my head that I'd been appointed this official  songwriter.  And so almost took on that challenge myself of, "Okay, how would I  bring the story back?"   PJ Harvey's newest album is Let England Shake, it drops  tomorrow, Kat reviewed it here.     |