| Tuesday, March 15, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, journalists and  activists hold a press conference in Baghdad to draw attention to the abuse and  torture conducted by Iraqi forces, US House Rep Chellie Pingree notes, "I am  deeply concerned that we're going after medical care for both our active duty  personnel and our retirees when I think there are other places to make more  effective cuts" and more.   Kutaiba Hamid (Al Mada) reports that a press  conference was held yesterday by the February Youth Movement (young Iraqi  activists) at the Women's Association Hall in Baghdad to detail the way Iraqi  forces are torturing protesters and journalists. Journalist Ali Abdul-Zahra was  taken by Iraqi forces after covering the protests earlier this month. He and  three youth protesters were taken to the Eight Brigade's Baghdad headquarters  where they were all four tortured with wooden sticks and electrical wires. Hanaa  Edwar noted that if they do not stand up to it now, it will be the normal and it  will effect every Iraqi. Youth protester Shawkat al-Bayati stated that the press  conference was not about demands but about putting into the light these abuses.  He likened the current conduct to that of the previous regime (Saddam  Hussein's). New Sabbah covers  the press  conference and notes that the activists called for an end to silence. Youth  activist and bodybuilder Mohammed Kazem David spoke of how he was pounced upon  by two security forces who stated they were with the intelligence division of  the Ministry of the Interior and they forced him to sign a statement after they  tortured him, doing damage to his leg, to his ear and tearing ligaments in both  of his hands. In another report, Kutaiba Hamid (Al Mada) details  Ali Abdul-Zahra's  statements which note, "Without any charge against me and without any court  order, I was held just for covering the demonstration, being present as a  reporter. At half past noon, I was detained on Saadoun Street and after I had  identified myself and explained I was a journalist, I was informed this would  not help me." Along with others, he was taken to the Eight Brigade-Third  Regiment and then to another regiment. "They beat us and they took photos of us  and a colonel told the soldiers to get the [electric] cables while the soldiers  beat us on the sensitive parts of our bodies and insulted us in vulgar terms,  calling us homosexuals. The Colonel told us, 'You want democracy and freedom,  I'll show you democracy and freedom.'" And the beating continued.   In other Iraq protest news, New Sabah reports  that Grand  Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani declared yesterday he will not meet with any government  official until the demands of the protesters are met. He did meet with a member  of the National Alliance on Friday; however, that visit was supposed to be based  on passing on medical news. Al Mada  adds  that al-Sistani reportedly refused Ibrahim al-Jaafari  (also of the National Alliance and a former prime minister of the country).  Meanwhile Ali Hussein (Al Mada) pens  an opinion piece  warning that Saleh al-Mutlaq (Iraqiya) cannot be trusted and that, basically,  al-Mutlaq offers meaningless crocodile tears for the protesters because he is  part of the problem that created Iraq's current climate. As you read  about the torture of protesters and journalists by Iraqi forces, you may wonder  why the hell the US is still in Iraq? You may wonder it more if you read this article from Al Mada  which explains that Mark  Meevid with the US Embassy in Baghdad has explained on Al Sumaria TV that the US  will do nothing to protect Iraqis from arrests or torture. Why is the US  staying in Iraq? Why are Robert Gates, James Jeffrey, Hillary Clinton and  Barack Obama insisting billions are needed for this year (and for the next ten  -- though the press has trouble reporting that, doesn't it?)? What's the point  of it? Is the US supposed to be propping up a government they know is  guilty of widespread abuse? Are US tax payers supposed to pay for  that?      Kelley B. Vlahos: And like I mentioned earlier, we helped Maliki  basically destroy his political enemies through systematic, sort of ethnic  cleansing and superior fire power. I mean, I remember going and seeing David  Petraeus talk about how we won the surge and basically it was basically  unleashing the mighty forces of superior US firepower on Baghdad, unlike  anything that those people have ever seen and so basically we just pummeled the  crap out of Iraq, out of the Sunnis, out of Sadr City and basically brought all  of Maliki's enemies to heel so that he could basically create a central  government with all the powers that came with and he's become an authoritarian  strongman there. And now we're seeing his real, true colors come to be through  these protests. And one way this is actually a good thing is it basically tears  the veneer off of everything that we've been saying about what we've done over  there and trying to do. It basically shows Maliki for who he really is and  what's been going on there while the media has been ignoring it these past two  years.That's where the money has gone, in protecting the  US-installed  puppet.  And, more bad news, while puppet Nouri has denied  repeatedly the existence of secret prisons, Dar Addustour reports  that members  of Parliament's Commission Human Rights visited a secret prison in the Green  Zone and are calling for it to be closed -- many of the prisoners have been held  for years.  The secret prisons still going on were noted this year by it's Ned Parker , Human Rights Watch  and  Amnesty  International .  Nouri's response to the revelations?  Deny, deny,  deny. The last one I'm aware of was on February 6th, Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) reported , "The Iraqi  government on Sunday denied a human rights organization's allegation that it has  a secret detention center in Baghdad, run by Prime Minister Nur al-Maliki's  security forces." The report then quoted Nouri's spokesperson Ali al-Moussawi  stating, "We don't nkow how such a respectable organization like Human Rights  Watch is able to report such lies."  The secret prisons and secret detentions  helped spark the first protests of 2011 in Iraq,  especially the ones featuring  attorneys in three cities (Baghdad, Basra and Mosul) .    Ned Parker (Los Angeles  Times) broke the story of the secret prisons in Iraq and how  they were run by Nouri's security forces, the Baghdad Brigade -- and how the Brigade was behind the  prison he and the paper exposed in April 2010 .  Today Raheem Salman and Salar Jaffe (Los Angeles  Times) note , "The jail in Baghdad's  high-security Green Zone, called Camp  Honor, fell under the nominal supervision of the Justice Ministry. But it was  actually controlled by two elite security branches affiliated with Prime  Minister Nouri Maliki 's military office, the Baghdad  Brigade and Counter-Terrorism Bureau. [. . .] After a scandal last spring over a  secret prison at another military base, Maliki ordered that Camp Honor should be  opened to detainees' families and lawyers. Instead, the jail remained closed to  visitors and allegations of abuse emerged in late January in reports by the  Times and Human Rights Watch ."  AP reports  that the Minister of  Justice's spokesperson is stating that "Camp Honor" will be shut down. New Sabbah quotes  the spokesperson  stating that the prison runs "contrary to international human rights standards."       Waleed Ibrahim (Reuters) examines  Nouri's 100-days 'till reform pose and speaks with various experts who say the  idea that any serious reform will be done is unbelievable leading Ibrahim to  conclude that Nouri's made a few for-show measures to buy some time and to ditch  some Cabinet ministers: "From the outset, he has said he was not satisfied with  the cabinet, complaining he was forced to acept some ministers to win the  blessing of parliament. The protests effectively give him an opportunity to  revist the coalition agrement, blame ministers for Iraq's woes, and replace  them."  Mayada al-Askari (Gulf News) examines   recent events and finds a country that is in real trouble:   The country is simmering with anger while Al Maliki and his bloc  are playing politics on a two way street. On the one hand, Al Maliki is assuming  all the authority, and on the other, he is pressing all the other blocs'  representatives to come up with solutions related to corruption and  ill-management, a task which he alone controls. Regulatory authorities, the central bank and other vital bodies,  which are supposed to hold the prime minister and his government accountable for  its deeds (or misdeeds if you please) are all under Al Maliki, which seems very  odd in a democracy which has come after 35 years of blood, sweat and  tears. There are also stories of Iraqi prisoners telling human rights'  groups about the existence of secret jails -- something that runs against Iraq's  Constitution. Members of Iraqi Parliament no longer have the power to propose  legislation. Instead, all new laws have to be proposed by the cabinet or the  country's president and then passed on to parliament for a vote. New Sabbah reports that the  Parliament has just discovered 22 billion dinars has vanished in various cities  in various provinces. David Ali (Al  Mada) reports  that bickering plagues Parliament. Zainab Suncor (Al Mada) adds  that the al-Sadr bloc  in Parliament is blocking the move to create three vice presidents. Iraq still  has no official vice presidents. An attempt by Jalal Talabani to create four  positions was blocked by the Parliament (his fourth would have been a female  Turkman). With that shot down, now it appears the three vice presidents plan is  shot down as well. Which may mean that they will stick with naming just two. You  would think this could have been established long ago, during the long, long  political stalemate, for example.   The long, long pattern of violence continues.  Reuters notes  a Baghdad roadside bombing  injured five people, 2 Baghdad roadside bombings (one after the other) injured  seven people, a Kirkuk roadside bombing injured two police officer, a Falluja  bombing targeting police officers (their homes) which left one police officer  and two girls injured, 5 Yazidis were kidnapped in Baaj by assailants wearing  "military uniforms using civilian cars," and, after being injured by Syrian  border guards, 1 man passed away in Mosul.  On the Yazidi kidnapping, Aswat al-Iraq adds  that three cars were  attacked and the men pulled from them but women in the cars were left  alone.  "Today the Subcomittee meets to hear testimony on the Military Health  System and the Defense Health Cost Program for the Fiscal Year 2012," declared  US House Rep Joe Wilson as he brought to order the House Armed Services Military  Personnel Subcomittee hearing this morning.  Subcommittee Chair Wilson noted his  recent trips to Afghanistan and Iraq, his Iraq War veteran son and his Iraq War  veteran nephew.  He then stressed, "Even in this tight fiscal environment, the  Military Health System must continue to provide world class health care to our  beneficiaries. Even in this tight fiscal environment, the Military Health System  must continue to provide world class health care to our beneficiaries and remain  strong and viable in order to maintain that commitment to future beneficiaries."     Must continue to?  When has that ever been a doubt?     Travel back with us to May 19, 2010  when the Senate Veterans Affairs  Committee heard testimony from the VA's Associate Deputy Under Secretary Thomas  J. Pamperin:  Senator Scott Brown: I'm wondering if you could just tell me what  benefits might be at risk at this point and time? Any specific issues that we  need to focus on that we're missing or falling through the cracks?   
 Thomas Pamperin: Benefits that are currently being delivered that might  be taken away?
 
 
 Senator Scott Brown: Right. Things that we -- that  you're saying, "You know what? We got to keep our eye on  this."
                 
 Thomas Pamperin: Uh - uh, we'd be glad to  - to give you a more extensive response in - in the future. Uh . . . My - my  concern is that the nation clearly --
                    
 Senator Scott  Brown: Can I interrupt just for a second?
   As noted in that day's snapshot (in addition Wally covered the hearing at Rebecca's  site ), people needed to hear an answer to the question but before the answer  was provided, Brown was cutting off Pamperin -- intentionally or not, you'd have  to ask Brown -- and America, for a brief moment, may have realized that even  veterans care wasn't safe under the current government.  If they did, they might  have wished (as we did at Third ) that Brown had kept  his mouth closed and allowed Pamperin to finish his statement.  Instead, nearly  a year later we learn that, in Subcommitte Chair Wilson's words:  The proposed TRICARE Prime fee increase for Fiscal Year 2012, while  appearing to be modest, is a 13% increase over the current rate.  The Dept of  Defense proposes increasing the fee in the out years based on an inflation  index.  You suggest 6.2% but it is unclear exactly which index you are using?  You plan to reduce the rate that TRICARE pays Sole Community Hospitals for  inpatient care provided to our active duty, family members and retirees.   Several of these hospitals are located very close to military bases -- in fact,  some are right outside the front gates -- especially important for 24-hour  emergency care.  What analysis have you done to determine whether reducing these  rates will affect access to care for our beneficiaries and in particular the  readiness of our armed forces?  I would also like our witnesses to discuss the  range of efficiency options that were considered but not included in the  President's budget.      There were four witnesses appearing before the Subcommittee: DoD's Cliff  Stanley, Jonathan Woodson, Army Surgeon General Lt Gen Eric Schoomaker, Navy  Surgeon General Vice Adm Adam Robinson and Air Force Surgeon General Lt Gen  Charles Green. In 2003 and 2004, attempts by the Bush adminstration to slash  veterans benefits was big news.  This administration is going after active  duty.  This is the Armed Services Committee, not the Veterans Committee.  These  are the active duty personnel who can be -- and often are -- deployed to the  current wars.  We'll note this exchange near the end of the hearing.   US House Rep Chellie Pingree:  I just want to say again, I  understand how well you are all doing your job and the importance of all of you  looking for cost efficiencies in what you do as we face a difficult time with  the budget deficit and, uh, also where there's a lot of examination of the  military budget and looking for places where we can cut.  And maybe my first  comment is more to my fellow Committee members then to all of you but I might  see more places to cut the fat in the military budget than others of my  colleagues but I am deeply concerned that we're going after medical care for  both our active duty personnel and our retirees when I think there are other  places to make more effective cuts. So I know you have to do your job and look  for those cuts but almost everything that's before us today, either myself or  one of my colleagues has mentioned a concern about, whether it's the changes to  TRICARE, how we're going to deal with some of our Sole Community Hospitals I  have two in my district, there are four in our state of only 1.2 million people,  in a state where we have almost a fifth of our citizens are either active duty  or retired military.  So there's a very big dependance on this system in our  state and I'm worried about that particular program.  So for me, many  of the  efficiencies that you're talking about are going to reduce the level of medical  care to people who have served us to whom we have made a huge promise.  And  there is going to be a -- I think -- a reduction in the services that they  receive so I just -- I know you have to do your job but I don't like it and I  don't think it's all necessarily good.  And the only other program that hasn't  been brought up today that I might ask you to comment on is the pharmacy  co-pay.  I've seen a little bit about that and know that some of the co-pays  will be reduced through using mail order pharmacies.  I have concerns about that  as well because I do believe people get better care when they go directly to a  pharmacist in their community, that's where we catch a lot of redundancies or  problems with the medications that people are taking particularly with  retirees.  So, in my opinion, having to go with mail order to get  your pharmaceutical products is not always good treatment or good service.  And  one of the things I might ask is how much the Department is doing to negotiate  for better prices with the pharmaceutical companies in bringing costs down in  that way as opposed to this other option.  That was my question.  If you've got  any comments about that.    Asst Sec of Defense Jonathan Woodson:  Uh -- we continue to have  efforts to negotiate with pharmaceutical companies. I think that in fact the  mail order advances care because, uh, there's a large percentage of retail  prescriptions that are never picked up and there's breaks in terms of, uh-uh,  the supply of medications. Our proposal not only reduces the cost but it ensures  timely supply of medicines and, of course, linked with our concept of the  patient-centered home, they have a team of health care providers that can  counsel, coach, monitor their medicines.  We have new electronic -- electronic  data bases that highlight, uh, medication, medication interactions and notify,  uh, pracitioners of, uh, medications that may be unsafe. So I think there are a  number of things that we're doing that are, uh, are going to enchance the  quality of care while reduce the costs and provide a better service for the  beneficiaries.     US House Rep Chellie Pingree:  I appreciate your perspective on  that. That's - that's useful information in thinking about the program.  Uh,  back to the question of negotiating, is that an active activity that goes on  today to negotiate for cost-cutting. We-we still continue to pay some of the  highest prices in the world in this country for prescription drugs and I know  the military has done a better job of bringing down the costs but I just I  wonder how engaged we are in the process and I wonder how much resistance there  is to it?   Lt Gen Eric Shoomaker: Ma'am, I'm told that's a commodity that's  managed through the Defense Logistic Agency and the center in Philadelphia and  I'm told that the Dept of Defense has some of the most favorable cost profiles  of any organization in the United States because of our -- because of levarging  and volume.   An issue raised was the Pentagon's hiring of a consultant to conduct a year  long study and US House Rep Walter Jones seemed to speak for many when he noted  the endless studies while people wait and wait and for help.   Walter Jones: My question, in just a moment, will be for you Adm Robinson.  I appreciated the question by Congressman West. I remember 10 years ago, I think  I was briefed by Dr.  [Paul] Harch from LSU about hyperbaric oxygen as a treatment for our head  wounds.  And I know I had a conversation a couple years ago, I cannot remember  the Air Force officer, about where the research is going.  And I appreciate your  statement, Gen Schoomaker, uh, that, uh -- My concern or interest is this Adm  Robinson, I know that -- I want to thank Adm Mullen.  Quite frankly, I brought  this up at a full hearing about a year ago about a hyperbaric chamber down at  Camp Lejeune, we do have one at Camp Lejeune. And I believe that they're in the  process now of preparing to be part of a pilot program to treat Marines down at  Camp Lejeune, which I am very grateful for.  Help me understand when -- and I  understand the need for studies, please understand, I do realize they are very,  very important -- but when would the military get to a point after the study by  the Air Force, maybe the Army, I don't know that, maybe the Navy as well?  When  do you get to the point that the study says -- and I'll tell you why and then  I'm going to let you answer -- I've called numerous Moms and Dads whose sons and  a couple of daughters had been in the hyperbaric chamber or treatment.  One that  really sticks with me -- and I want to use this and then you answer, please sir  -- I called Col [George E.] "Bud" Day -- he's a Marine, won the Medal of Honor  in Vietnam -- called and he told me his grandson had a severe brain injury from  Iraq, I believe, at the time and he was just not satisfied with the treatment  and as his own expense he sent his grandson to LSU to Dr. Harch and, I never  will forget, Col Day said to me, "I'll go anywhere I need to go to testify that  this treatment has given my grandson a quality of life that he would never have  had if he had not had the hyperbaric treatment." So now -- this was the question  I had just a moment ago -- when do we get to the point that we say -- meaning  the Dept of Defense -- that this protocol does help, it does work?   Vice Adm Adam Robinson:  Congressman Jones, thanks for the question.  This  has been for me, as Surgeon General of the Navy, a four year question.  We have  looked at hyperbaric oxygen and Dr. Harsh who has been at  several meetings --  and I've met him many times and looked at his results -- we've invited him to  come through and participate in our double-blinded studies so that we can get  away from the anecdotal results of individual patients, families and other  anecdotal lessons and we can get down to what we have to have from an objective  and definitive way so that we can base clinical practice guidelines both for the  military health system and also for the private section.  We need to base those  therapies on objective clinical data that cannot be influenced by opinions of  people who have benefited but we can't prove that benefit in a scientific way.   So we need to employ a scientific method.  What we have done -- and I can say  that after --in my fourth year as Surgeon General -- we now have studies, we're  now beginning to produce data from-from compentent studies that look at, number  one, hyperbaric oxygen seems to be safe.  So I think that that is a -- that is a  clear improvement in terms of our knowledge.  And now we need to go and look  more deeply at the Air Force study and that study has been completed but the  analysis has not been done. So I think we're very, very close to getting more  data.  I think when we can get some studies on the record that actually look at  the efficacy of hyperbaric oxygen therapy, I think at that point we can say that  is an effective treatment, it is not an effective treatment but it is a  treatment that can be utilized in complimentary medical ways so that the people  who may benefit from it can use it it's certainly not going to harm them.  We  will have an array of answers I think we are literally months away from getting  there but it normally takes -- and this is one of the issues with medicine -- it  normally takes time to get to where we need to be and we have to base it on a  scientific method in order to keep from having everything become a clinical  practice guideline -- things that are not proven.  So the scientific method is  being utilized in this way.        It's encouraging to see the people uprisings abroad and in our own  country.  The Egypt revolt really sparked something, and, on its revolutionary  heels, the workers of Wisconsin came to life and fought Gov. Walker's efforts to  strip them of their rights.  People in other states being subjected to the same  onslaught rose into action, also.  It seems as if we might be on the cusp of  meaningful fightback in the U.S. against the new robber barons who don't give a  damn about you and me but are only interested in swelling their over-bloated  portfolios to even greater obscene proportions.   This is a supremely  opportune time to apply this welcome surge of People  Power to the anti-war movement.  We in the peace  movement who have been conducting our futile struggle for almost 8 years  to prevent, then end the wars in Iraq and  Afghanistan, must grab this moment to  pursue our cause with greater force.  This does not take anything away from the  battle to protect workers rights -- to the contrary, it is a wonderful support.   Bring the troops and the war dollars home, and fix our broken economy.  Remove  all justification that way for cutting benefits and salaries -- then, the greedy  scoundrels would have no rationale for busting the unions. Accordingly, I urge all those within travel distance of New York  City who will not be going to the Washington rally on March 19 to attend  our adjunct protest on the same day, coordinated by the local Chapter 34 of the  Veterans for  Peace and by Grandmothers Against the War.  As we did on Dec. 16 in  support of that day's protest at the White House, we will meet at the Times  Square recruiting station at 5:00 pm.  In December, 131 people were arrested in  D.C. and 11 of us were arrested in New York.  We will again carry out  non-violent civil  disobedience in our continuing efforts to thereby keep the issue alive  and, hopefully, to nudge the sleeping citizenry with the urgent need to end  these immoral and tragic wars. Let's turn out in massive  numbers in Washington and in the Big Apple.  They are doing it in Wisconsin,  Indiana, Ohio, and other locales.  We can, we must, get out on the streets, too,  and finally stop the killing! DATE AND TIME:  5-6 pm, Sat., March 19 PLACE:  Times Square recruiting station, Broadway at  44th St. SPEECHES BY PEACE LEADERS, ENTERTAINMENT AND NON-VIOLENT CIVIL  DISOBEDIENCE  endorsed  by    Big Apple  Coffee Party; Brooklyn For Peace; Catholic  Workers; Chelsea Neighbors United to End the War; Grandmothers Against   the War;  Granny Peace Brigade; Gray  Panthers; Pax Christie of  Metro New  York; Peace Action Bay Ridge Interfaith Peace Coalition; Peace  Action Manhattan; Raging  Grannies; Veterans for Peace Chapter 34 (NYC);   War  Resisters League   
 March 19 is the 8th anniversary of  the invasion and occupation of Iraq. Iraq today remains occupied by 50,000 U.S.  soldiers and tens of thousands of foreign mercenaries.   The war in Afghanistan is raging.  The U.S. is invading and bombing Pakistan. The U.S. is financing endless  atrocities against the people of Palestine, relentlessly threatening Iran and  bringing Korea to the brink of a new war.   While the United States will spend  $1 trillion for war, occupation and weapons in 2011, 30 million people in the  United States remain unemployed or severely underemployed, and cuts in  education, housing and healthcare are imposing a huge toll on the people.   Actions of civil resistance are  spreading.   On Dec. 16, 2010, a veterans-led  civil resistance at the White House played an important role in bringing the  anti-war movement from protest to resistance. Enduring hours of heavy snow, 131  veterans and other anti-war activists lined the White House fence and were  arrested. Some of those arrested will be going to trial, which will be scheduled  soon in Washington, D.C.   Saturday, March 19, 2011, the  anniversary of the invasion of Iraq, will be an international day of action  against the war machine.   Protest and resistance actions  will take place in cities and towns across the United States. Scores of  organizations are coming together. Demonstrations are scheduled for San  Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington, D.C., and more.     We'll cover this  tomorrow.  |