| Tuesday, April 5, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, US war resister Andre  Shepherd is denied refugee status in Germany, Falluja remains an issue in Iraq,  Iraq's Integrity Commission has findings, Republicans (and some Democrats) lodge  objections to the repeal of Don't Ask, Don't Tell, and more.   We last noted 33-year-old Iraq War veteran Andre Shepherd March 30th.  Andre is a US war resister in  Germany. After serving in Iraq, he self-checked out of the military.  James Dao (New York Times) reported this  evening that Andre has been denied asylum: "The German government, in a  statement issued on Monday, said it had rejected his petition because Mr.  Shepherd could not cite concrete examples of war crimes committed during his  first deployment to Iraq. The German government did not say in its statement  whether it would try to deport Mr. Shepherd."  AFP speaks with his attorney Rienhard  Marx who notes Andre is married to a German citizen (Jacqueline Edith) so he  does not feel it is likely Andre will be deported.  Andre is the only war  resister seeking asylum publicly to do so in Germany.      Shepherd said he grew up on East 94th Street in Cleveland, attended  Lakewood High School and studied computer science at Kent State University until  he ran out of money.  He enlisted in 2004 with the hope of flying the Apaches, but was  urged to become a mechanic first.  Scharf said he doubts that Shepherd's expected order to return to  Iraq would, by itself, constitute an unlawful order.  "His best argument would be that Apaches are used to kill  civilians," Scharf said, but he still viewed it as a weak case.           Samantha Haque: As an asylum seeker he is currently in a camp in  Germany with people from places like Afghanistan, Somalia and Iraq. All in a  similar position to him.  The difference is that Andre Shepherd is a US  citizen.  And an Iraq War deserter.  For security reasons, we were not allowed  to film in the camp.  Shepherd has a friend, a peace activist, who lives within  the restricted boundary he's allowed to move in.  He took us  there.   Andre Shepherd: I was working on the Apache helicopter.  Those  Apaches won't fly unless we take care of them.  The Apache helicopter is a  deadly weapon a lot of people call it a flying tank.  What started my doubts was  when I saw the Iraqi people, when they would come and help us, the looks that  they gave us weren't the looks of heroes or people that you know were bringing  freedom. We looked like conquerors and oppressors.  That really bothered me a  lot.  So I started to look into the reasons why we were actually there in Iraq.  I thought that what we were doing was a great thing and a positive thing.  That  we were actually bringing freedom to people and making them happy but what I  found out instead was that we completely destroyed an entire country on a pack  of lies.  It started to weigh very heavily to the point where my actions when I  was a soldier were starting to deteriorate so as this was going on I came to the  conclusion that I wasn't going to back to Iraq.   Samantha Haque: None of the criteria that the US military offered  for discharge were availble to Mr. Shepherd.  To be a conscientious objector in  the US means to be against all wars, something he was not.  While in Germany, he  was faced with a second mission to Iraq.  On April 11, 2007 he went absent  without leave.  Unable to apply for German residency without official military  discharge papers, he decided that applying for asylum was the only way forward.     In terms of US outlets, Andy Eckardt (NBC News)  interviewed Andre in February 2009. Andre told NBC, "When I enlisted  in 2004 and later was sent to Iraq, I believed I was doing the right thing.  But  then, like other comrades around me, I started questioning why we were there and  what we were fighting for. . . . My job was harmless until I factored in the  amount of death and destruction those helicopters caused to civilians every  day.  The government made us believe we would be welcomed as heroes in Iraq, but  we saw nothing but hostility from the Iraqis that came to work for us, they  wanted to kill us."  Last month,  Russia Today reported  on him:        Ekaterina Gracheva: After hiding out for more than a year, Andre  Shepherd surfaced.  He married a German, secured himself support from a number  of human rights organizations and is now officially seeking asylum.  Tucked away  on the border of Germany and Austria, Lake Chiemsee has long been popular with  holiday makers but now the idyllic spot may go down in history as the home of  the first US Iraq War veteran granted political asylum.  To become this first is  not going to be easy though.  Germany is the main staging post for the US  military with around 60,000 US troops stationed there.  Each year, some of those  soldiers go AWOL and get picked up by the police.   Jacqueline Edith: The pressure is very high on Germany and Andre  often said in his speeches he's so sorry about that, you know, putting so much  pressure on the German government.  Also he really loves this country so much.       The judgment comes at an interesting time.  The White House just announced  yesterday their State Dinner for German Chancellor Angela Merkel (June 7th).    Merkel and US President Barack Obama have frequently been on opposite sides --  here and here and here and here, for example.  How interesting that the  decision comes just as a thaw is said to be taking place between the two.     Turning to Iraq, as protests took hold in Baghdad, Nouri al-Malik and  Moqtada al-Sadr joined forces to put up false fronts that would derail public  anger. Among the measures they both pushed was just-give-me 100 days.  Corruption? Lack of adequate public services? Give the government 100 days and  just you wait! For what? They couldn't even settle an election in 100 days.    June 7th the 100 days is up. March 23rd, Al  Mada reported part two of the 'plan,' demand 100 more days!  The latest plan was to declare one hundred days not enough so the government's  going to take 200. That's over half a year. And it's been a year since elections  but Nouri still doesn't have a full Cabinet. Firas Qaisis (Al Mada) reports today that sources are  saying extending the dealine is still being discussed with Nouri seriously  examining it.  State of Law MP Saad Muttalibi denies that any extension is being  considered and, based on his past track record, see that as a confirmation.   Iraqiya's Hani Ashour notes that the 100 days include no criteria for the  evaluate the performance of the government and sees the 100 days as a tool for  procrastination and delay as opposed to a device that will allow for real  reforms to be implemented. By contrast, Ashour believes that Parliament has  acted clearly in its actions, allowing them to be measured and offers examples  such as reducing the salries of the president and two vice presidents as well as  the salaries of members of Parliament.    Over a year after they held elections, they still do not have a full  Cabinet. They have no Minister of the Interior and they have no Minister of  Defense. [. . .] Add in that the violence is up again."   Working itself out, he  said.  On the same day when another US soldier was announced dead? Today Tim Arango (New York Times) notes the 4 recent  deaths in Iraq of US service members including the  2 who were announced dead on  Sunday and 1 announced yesterday. But Bowman saw Iraq working itself out?    On  the same day Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) reported, "Monday was a scary day for  Iraqis living in and around Baghdad, as people weren't even safe in their own  homes." 
   In Iraq, Parliament's Integrity Committee held a press conference Monday.  Dar Addustour reports that among  the findings spoken of was that many "Ministers and agents and ministries and  general managers and senior officers in the army" had taken part in corruption.  They have names for the money wasted buying 'wands' that allegedly detected  bombs (if you held the wand just so and stomped your feet on the ground) but  those names may or may not be made public. The Committee noted that the British  Foreign Office vouched for those wands. (The wands were made by a British  company.) In addition, though the US military always ridiculed the wands (and  were correct to do so), there was an effort on the part of Americans to push  Iraq to buy spare parts for these wands from US companies. Committee member  Edoganp Nassif noted that civilian aircraft was purchased which is "unfit for  flight" and the Committee states this corruption is via the son of an unnamed  official. Al Rafidayn adds that the Committee  is in possesion of 9,003 documents and that the names of 35 officials have been  passed on for further investigation by legal authorities. Enas Tariq (Al Mada) argues that it makes no  difference that it's "a moral crime" or a a misdemeanor, the climate of culture  is so entrenched with so many living parasites sucking the life out of the  system. Tariq argues this leads to further resentment on the part of the  citizenry and continued corruption and that the orruption is now moving into the  media where "material rewards" are exchanged for silences on the part of  reporters who print only what the officials tell them to.  
 If you're optimistic that the Committee's findings might amount to  anything, read Ali Hussein's Al Mada report which notes that  it's not for nothing Iraq has made the list of the most corrupt countires in the  world and that one of the historic decisions was a law providing the prime  minister (Nouri al-Maliki) with the right to decide whether or not corrupt  employees are referred to the judiciary. Meanwhile Al Rafidayn  notes that Nouri has pulled Kahlid al-Obedi's name as nominee for  Minister of Defense (95% of Iraqiya voted against al-Obedi) and is seeking a new  nominee.  In potentially related news, Kholoud Ramzi (Niqash) reports, "The  Iraqi parliament wants to abolish almost 14,000 laws made by both the interim  American rulers and former Iraqi president Saddam Hussein's regime. But critics  fear replacement legislation will take longer."  Iraq's inability, over a year  after elections, to name a Minister of Defense or a Minister of Interior does  not build confidence in their ability to pass new legislation to replace 13,500  orders.  These things they would like to strike and replace also include Bremer  orders issued by L. Paul Bremer:   Not all of the laws that the CPA instituted were considered  negative. Bremer also suspended the death penalty and came up with more liberal  criminal defamation laws, which related to media in Iraq. Civil society  activists have described these as "worthy reforms". However the Allawi interim  government rescinded these too, cancelling the suspension of the death penalty  and re-activating criminal defamation laws. The latter threatens journalists  found guilty of the defamation of a political figure with capital punishment. 
 Additionally some of Bremer's laws still remain in force today. One of  these included legislation that increased the number of expert advisers to each  state ministry from two to seven. Having more Iraqi interest groups represented  among the advisers was supposed to democratize the flow of information to state  decision makers. In reality though, observers say that the advisers, as  representatives of different Iraqi groups, are not impartial and act more like  partisan lobbyists on a government salary.
 
 
 
 Meanwhile Falluja's the topic that just won't leave the news cycle.  Over  the weekend, Al Rafidayn reported the Iraqi  National Alliance had started calling for an investigation into "the crime" that  took place in Falluja which the Iraqi National Alliance is calling a "genocide"  -- Ayad Allawi was prime minister when US forces attacked Falluja -- and it is  being compared to the Halbaja genocide when Saddam Hussein ordred a chemical  attack on the city March 16, 1988 (the Iraqi Parliament declared the Halbaja  assault a genocide in a vote on March 17th). Falluja was twice attcacked by the  US miltiary in 2004.  First, in April 2004 due to the fact that Paul Bremer was  offended by a cartoon of him in a paper.  Then the assault was put on hold until  after the 2004 US elections as which point the major assault on Falluja took  place.      As they had done during the April siege, the military raided and  occupied Fallujah general hospital, cutting it off from the rest of the city. On  8 November 2004 the New York Times reported, "The assault against  Fallujah began here Sunday night as American Special Forces and Iraqi troops  burst into Fallujah General Hospital and seized it within an hour." Of course,  this information was immediately followed by the usual parroting of US military  propaganda, "At 10pm, Iraqi troops clambered off seven-ton trucks, sprinting  with American Special Forces soldiers around the side of the main building of  the hospital, considered a refuge for insurgents and a centre of propaganda  against allied forces, entering the complex to bewildered looks from patients  and employees." Harb al-Mukhtar, my interpreter and driver, arrived at my hotel the  next morning in a sombre mood. "How can we live like this, we are trapped in our  own country. You know Dahr, everyone is praying for God to take revenge on the  Americans. Everyone!" He said even in their private prayers people were praying  for God to take vengeance on the Americans for what they were doing in Fallujah.  "Everyone I've talked to the last couple of nights, 80 or 90 people, have  admitted that they are doing this," he said as I collected my camera and notepad  to prepare to leave. Out on the streets of Baghdad, the anxiety was palpable.  The threat of being kidnapped or car bombed, or simply robbed, relentlessly  played on our minds as Harb and I went about conducting interviews that had been  prearranged. We tried to minimise our time on the streets by returning to my  hotel immediately on completing interviews. The security situation, already  horrible, was deteriorating further with each passing day.     Dahr Jamail: We chose April 9th because according to the US  military and, of course, then repeated by a complicit corporate media -- most of  the corporate media,  April 9th was a ceasefire because of this 'truce  negotiation' was ongoing.  But when we went into the city, we were watching -- I  saw with my own eyes F16s bombing parts of the city, helicopters strafing other  parts.        Media repression during the second siege of Fallujah was intense.  The "100 Orders" penned by former US administrator Bremer included Order 65,  passed on 20 March 2004, which established an Iraqi communications and media  commission. This commission had powers to control the media because it had  complete control over licensing and regulating telecommunications, broadcasting,  information services, and media establishments. On 28 June, when the US handed  over power to a "sovereign" Iraqi interim government, Bremer simply passed on  his authority to Iyad Allawi, who had long-standing ties with the British  intelligence service MI6 and the CIA. The media commission sent out an order  just after the assault on Fallujah commenced ordering news organisations to  "stick to the government line on the US-led offensive in Fallujah or face legal  action". The warning was circulated on Allawi's letterhead. The letter also  asked the media in Iraq to "set aside space in your news coverage to make the  position of the Iraqi government, which expresses the aspirations of most  Iraqis, clear".    Of course, not everyone was barred.  Dexter Filkins wrote "In Falluja, Young Marines Saw the Savagry of an Urban  War" for the New York Times and won a little prize for it.  As we noted the day the piece ran, "The point here  is that the story on today's front page (November 21, 2004) begins with a battle  from November 15th without ever alerting the reader to this fact. An occurence  six days prior is their front page Iraq story."  See, when you have to let the  military vet your copy, you can't make it into print the next day or even the  day after that.  Dexy wrote just what the military wanted him to -- always.  For  example, once, Dexy was off to the meet the resistance.  But -- Dexy couldn't  stop singing his own praises and just knew military brass would be thrilled for  him.  So he goes bragging to them.  He gets a dubious look and Dexy cancels the  meet up.  What the brass wanted done, Dexy did.  May his tombstone include that  notation.  Darh and Jonathan Steele (Guardian) noted of  Falluja II:     This time Washington's allies had been talked to in advance.  Consistent US propaganda about the presence in Falluja of a top al-Qaida figure,  Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, was used to create a climate of acquiescence in the  US-appointed Iraqi government. Shia leaders were told that bringing Falluja  under control was the only way to prevent a Sunni-inspired civil war.   Blair was invited to share responsibility by sending British troops  to block escape routes from Falluja and prevent supplies entering once the siege  began.   Dahr took part in the documentary Fallujah: The Hidden  Massacre which Democracy Now! broadcast in full November 8,  2005.  Falluja I and Falluja II are two big events in the Iraq War.  And  when opponents raised it over the weekend,  New Sabah noted that Ayad Allawi  leveled his own charge: a "coup" has taken place because KRG President Massoud  Barzani has not implemented the 19 terms he agreed to including the creation of  the National Supreme Council which would have been headed by Ayad Allawi. This  is in reference to the deal made in Erbil by State Of Law, the KRG, Iraqi, the  National Alliance, the Sadr bloc and Joe Biden to 'end' the political stalemate  and allow Nouri al-Maliki to continue as prime minister.  The two sides made  charges against one another and who was going to blink first?  It wasn't  Iraqiya.  Yesterday Alsumaria TV reported  that the vote on whether or not Falluja was a massacre has been shot down "due  to rows between the National Alliance and Iraqiya on considering Falluja  incidents as a massacre." Ayas Hossam Acommok (Al Mada) noted that many saw the  proposal as political jockeying and notes that most of the parties in Parliament  were members in 2004 and that such a measure would point the finger at more than  just Ayad Allawi (Allawi was prime minister then). Today New Sabah reports Ayad Allawi is stating that  the ones resonsible for for the mass murder in "Falluja I and Falluja II" are  the ones calling for an investigation into his actions (he was prime minister  when the US assaulted Falluja in 2004). He says those who spoke the accusations  live "in glass houses." He also states that he is ready to go before the Iraqi  people with any accusation of his actions. Alsumaria TV reports, "Iraqiya bloc threatened to  reveal 'massacre' scandals in some Iraqi provinces if leader Iyad Allawd is  summoned over 2004 Fallujah incidents, a source told Alsumaria."  UPI notes that one bloc is objecting to  some of the language being used: "Kurdish lawmakers objected to putting Fallujah  on the same footing [genocide] as the gassing of the Kurds by Saddam Hussein's  forces in Halabja in 1988."   In today's reported violence, Reuters notes a Baghdad sticky bombing  left provincial council member Jasim Mohammed injured, two Baghdad roadside  bombings claimed 2 lives and left six people injured, a Baaj suicide bombing  claimed the life of the bomber and 3 other people while leaving seven injured, a  Mosul attack left 1 person shot dead and the corpse of a kidnap victim was  discovered in Mosul.      Turning to the US, last week Lewis Griswold (Fresno Bee) reported on  26-year-old Petty Officer 2nd Class Derek Morado who was facing a discharge  hearing.  GetEQUAL has this action alert. Ashley Ritchie (KMPH) reported Friday that Morado was not  discharged. While he wasn't discharged, Don't Ask, Don't Tell remains law: "In  fact, a navy spokesperson tells KMPH News, the repeal of the 'Don't Ask, Don't  Tell' policy has to be certified by the Secretary of Defense, Chairman and  President. After that, it will take another 60 days before it goes into effect."  Joseph Neese (RNN) notes Morado isn't the only  one who will face a discharge hearing and Pentagon spokesperson Eileen Lainez  states, "The law commonly known as 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell' remains in effect  until 60 days following certification."  And will it be certified?   Nothing is a done deal until it is, in fact, done. Friday we concentrated  (in the snapshot) on the protests in Iraq  and I had to hold off on a  Congressional hearing.  A DADT hearing took place and there's another this week  so we'll squeeze Friday's into this snapshot.   "It is now essential that the Congress ask some of the questions that were  glossed over during the comprehensive review.  We must get the process for  considering the repeal of Don't Ask, Don't Tell back on track and ensure that  our military is truly prepared to allow the open service of gays and lesbians,"  declared Joe Wilson Chair of the US House Armed Services Subcommittee on  Military Personnel in his opening remarks.  Wilson objected to the fact that  Don't Ask, Don't Tell legislation took place in the lame duck session.  The  Subcommittee heard from the Joint Chiefs of Staff's Vice Adm William Gortney and  DoD's Clifford L. Stanley.    In his questioning Wilson touched on many topics that would appear to  indicate his opposition. "How will you know the troops in the field believe  they're prepared to cope with  the complications that will follow?" he wondered  at one point.  At another, he wanted to know how chaplain's would be protected.   (I'm avoiding a cheap shot there -- feel free to insert your own.) .  US House  Rep Susan Davis is the Ranking Member.  In reply to her questions, Stanley said  that "to date" there had been no visible impact on recruitment. Stanley then  tossed to Gortney for further remarks.   Vice Admiral William Gortney:  Once again, all of the subjective  assessment from the commanders have been that the training has gone well.  None  of the issues that have come up were not things that we were not already aware  of as a result of the survey that was out there that we were then able to tailor  the training to to then answer.  So thus far, no surprises. uh, and we're pretty  pleased with where we are.  And, again, 90% of the force has been  trained.   "Bottom line," Stanley would note after Gortney, "is that the training has  been very effective, and we've been very pleased with what we're seeing but our  antenna our up because this is not a rushed process and we want to be deliberate  and purposeful in doing this."   Ranking Member Susan Davis:  The Army, as I understand it, is going  to be the last to conclude their training and I wonder what timeline you would  expect then, if they do do meet their deadline, what is the timeline that you  would expect the President, the Secretary [of Defense] and the Joint-Chief [of  Staff], that they could actually send that certification to Congress?  Have you  looked at that and what we might be looking at here in terms of a  timeline?   Vice Admiral William Gortney:  Yes, ma'am. As-as the Secretary  said, we anticipate about mid-summer in order to meet the completion of the  preponderance of the force to be trained and the regulations to be in there and  to get the recommendations from the service secretaries and the service chiefs  to the -- to the Chairman.  That deadline is really a function of the Army in  order to get, just because of the size of the force and to include the Reserves  and the National Guard in that, that's really the long goal there.  And it's  just a function of numbers that have to be trained.   Davis (and many other Democrats) spoke in terms of "where are we in the  process"; however, that was not the case with the Republicans.  US House Rep  Mike Coffman objected to the fact that he had requested data "and I think that  that was not provided until about a month after the vote and I want to say for  the record that I think that was intentional." Combat personnel "opposed in  greater numbers" a repeal of Don't Ask, Don't Tell and if his request on the  data had been completed in a timely manner, he believes the discussion would  have been different.  He registered his objection to a repeal and deemed the  findings of the study "a conclusion looking for a study" and objected to repeal  because he believes "this is a political decision made by the Executive  Branch".  In his second round of questioing, he was highly concerned about  sleeping arrangements.   Democrat David Loesbsack appeared to be siding with Republicans.  (General  rule: Watch for those who use "homosexual" and especially when they have a  special way of pronouncing the word.)   Republican Allen West referred to being  gay as "a behavior" -- which, yes, sounds an awful like "a choice" since  behavior can be modified.  He made one of the strangest remarks in the entire  hearing, saying of repeal,  "I'm just very worried that this could be the camel  getting his nose under the tent."  Was that a sexual euphamism?  (No, but it  might make more sense if it were.)   He then brought up the Fort Hood shooter  Nidal Hasan (November 5, 2009) and his "disturbing  behaviors."  Apparently, the repeal of Don't Ask, Don't Tell will leave gays and  lesbians with itchy trigger fingers?  He wondered whether those seeing failures  "in the implementation of this program" were "free to speak up"? He fears "a  witchunt" because of "social engineering" -- apparently unaware that the  witchhunt took place in targeting gays and lesbians to begin with.  As usual, US  House Rep Niki Tsongas attempted to provide a calming and informed voice.     US House Rep Niki Tsongas: But just to reiterate why we moved  to repeal Don't Ask, Don't Tell: Since 1993, more than 14,000 gay service  members have been discharged under the discriminatory Don't Ask, Don't Tell  policy.  And of these discharges, nearly 1,000 were specialists with vital  mission critical skills --  Arab linguists, for example.  We hear those figures  over and over again. I have always believed that this policy actually threatens  the readiness of our military by discharging hundreds of military personnel  critical to our national security and shutting the door to thousands more.  And  it's also unconscionable  to maintain a policy when at least 24 other countries  including allies such as Great Britain, Australia, Canada and Israel already  allow open service by lesbian and gay service members. And  that's why I've always strongly supported repeal of this policy. And I concur  wholeheartedly with Adm Mike Mullen's distinguished leadership about this issue,  his assessment when he stated in his testimony before the Armed Services  Committee last year that this policy "forces young men and women to lie about  who they are in order to defend their fellow citizens." Undermining a basic  tenet of military service which is to be honest.   US House Rep Vicky Hartzler declared, "I'm new, I wasn't here when it  passed."  She's a Republican who deemed repeal "radical" and thought it would  harm "the ability to win wars."  (Real quick, what war does she think the US is  currently winning?  Other than the spending war, of course.)   "I'm new, I  wasn't here when it passed." Put that with the other statements including  Georgia's Austin Scott who was very clearly opposed to repeal and everyone needs  to remember a "done deal" isn't done until it's done. Thursday the Subcomittee  meets again on this issue.   Many comments made Friday by Republicans (and Dems  who appeared not to support repeal) appeared to be trial balloons for future  lines of attack.       
 The deadline for eligible service members, veterans and their  beneficiaries to apply for Retroactive Stop Loss Special Pay (RSLSP) has been  extended to April 8, 2011, allowing personnel more time to apply for the  benefits they've earned under the program guidelines.  The deadline extension is included in the continuing resolution  signed by President Obama Friday, providing funding for federal government  operations through April 8, 2011. Retroactive Stop Loss Special Pay was established to compensate for  the hardships military members encountered when their service was involuntarily  extended under Stop Loss Authority between Sept. 11, 2001, and Sept. 30, 2009.  Eligible members or their beneficiaries may submit a claim to their respective  military service in order to receive the benefit of $500 for each full or  partial month served in a Stop Loss status. When RSLSP began on Oct. 21, 2009, the services estimated 145,000  service members, veterans and beneficiaries were eligible for this benefit.  Because the majority of those eligible had separated from the military, the  services have engaged in extensive and persistent outreach efforts to reach them  and remind them to apply. Outreach efforts including direct mail, engaging  military and veteran service organizations, social networks and media outlets,  will continue through April 8, 2011. To apply for more information, or to gather more information on  RSLSP, including submission requirements and service-specific links, go to  http://www.defense.gov/stoploss. |