| Tuesday, May 10, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, a labor strike takes  place in Basra, a strike takes place in the midst of a social incident, Iraqi  hospitals continue to suffer, and more.   Starting with veterans issues.  Tomorrow morning there will be a major  press conference.  Senator Patty Murray's office issued the following  today:     (Washington, D.C.) -- On Wednesday,  U.S. Senator Patty  Murray, Chairman of the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee, will  hold a press conference with co-sponsors of the bill, veterans struggling to  find work, and veterans service organizations to discuss aggressive new  legislation to address rising unemployment among our nation's veterans. Senator  Murray's bill, the Hiring Heroes Act of 2011, is the first of its kind  to require broad job skills training for all service members returning home  and comes at a time when more than one in four veterans aged 18-24 are  unemployed. In addition to providing new job skills training to all service  members, the bill will also create new direct federal hiring authority so that  more service members have jobs waiting for them the day they leave the military,  and will improve veteran mentorship programs in the working world. For more  information on the bill visit HERE.      WHO:            Senate Veterans'  Affairs Committee Chairman Patty Murray               U.S. Senator Jon  Tester                U.S. Senator Mark  Begich                U.S. Senator Chris Coons   Eric Smith,  Unemployed Iraq War  Veteran, Baltimore, MD                               Also represented at  the event:   Iraq and  Afghanistan Veterans of America (IAVA)   Military Officers  Association of America (MOAA)   Disabled American  Veterans (DAV)                                    Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW)        WHAT:          Press Conference Introducing the  Hiring Heroes  Act of 2011       WHEN:          Wednesday, May 11th,  2011                           11:00 AM EST     WHERE:       Senate Swamp -- Outdoor press area located  on the Senate side of the Capitol Complex across from the East stairs -- SEE MAP  - HERE       Note for press -- there is power access at this  site and the Capitol will be the backdrop.           Matt  McAlvanah   Communications  Director   U.S. Senator Patty  Murray   202-224-2834 - press  office   202--224-0228 - direct   matt_mcalvanah@murray.senate.gov    News  Releases | Economic Resource  Center | E-Mail Updates         Hundreds of workers walked off the job in protest, which rocked the  headquarters of Southern Oil Company in Bab al-Zubayr in the southern city of  Basra. The workers have come from oil fields in Basra; from North and  South Rumaila, Albirjisya, West of Qurna and Majnoon and were led by the General  Federation of Workers Councils and Unions. The workers raised slogans condemning corruption, while trying to  bring all corrupt officers to justice. Among the corrupt officers includes the  deputy director-general's of Southern Oil Company and director of  trade. To confront the demonstrators, the management of the company called  security forces. Sami Hassan (one of the organizers of the demonstration) was  also imprisoned for two hours. The demonstration was part of a series of protests sweeping the  Iraqi and foreign companies operating in the southern region.   Ali Abu Iraq (Iraq Oil Report) reports,  "Hundreds of workers from Iraq's southern oil hub of Basra protested outside  numerous facilities Monday, claiming Oil Ministry officials have ignored  repeated concerns about the use of funds, the allocation of housing, and equal  pay."  Reuters adds , "The demonstrators were  engineers, technicians and workers at the state-run South Oil Co., which has  some 18,000 employees developing some of Iraq's big oil fields.  They protested  for three hours at the company's headquarters in Basra and at another location  near an oil field west of the city." The company's homepage notes :   South oil company one of the major fundamental formations of Iraqi  national oil company (INOC), it's the first nucleus and the basic of national  direct investment projects in the seventies, where the SOC was subsidiary to  national company.  Events and activisites have escalated steadily and rapidly  rising since the beginning of the seventies where investment and development  stages of the north Rumaila field were completed, in three stages lead to rate  production (42) million tons per year, conincided with the expansion of works in  all fields, the expansion began with drilling works, building and expanding  production facilities and implementing investment projects associated with  natural gas field in north and south Rumaila [. . .]      Iraq Oil Report Tweets:       Meanwhile Brendan Barber (Guardian) reports  on  efforts of the Iraqi government to destroy Iraq's unions ("Ministers appoined a  government committee, packed with officials from the Sadrist movement, to take  over the structures and assets of the General Federation of Iraqi Workers (GFIQ)  -- the Iraqi equivalent of the TUC -- and run its upcoming elections"):    We have reports of government officials, flanked by police,  attempting to take over union offices. And it is painfully sectarian. In Basra  last week, the seven officials that demanded the keys to the local union office  were all from the Sadrist party. These followers of Shia cleric Moqtada al-Sadr are a  small, but important, minority in the Iraqi coalition government, and won  control of the labour ministry in the recent carve-up of government portfolios.  In preparation for union elections, these Sadrist officials have been issuing  their own union membership cards, effectively giving them the right to decide  who can vote. In a similar incident last year – and a worrying sign of things to  come – the polling booth for a union election was inside the Sadrist party  offices. These are tactics that Hosni Mubarak would be proud of.   Back to protests, The Great Iraqi Revolution notes  that the Ramadi  sit-in continued yesterday and that "The Young Rebels and the Tribal Shaikhs  have setup a site for a SIT-IN very close by! Haliki [Nouri al-Maliki] and his  goons really can't stop the Iraqi People protesting -- this is our land and this  is our country." Yesterday was day 16 of the continued sit-in. And a woman in  Baghdad, Eaman, says "that they have no men left in their district because  all the men have been detained by the government security forces as a result fo  the 'Secret Informer' system -- she is appealing for help " and states that  "the 'Secret Informer' in Fadhil District in Baghdad  is called Khalid Mihsin Awwad ".  Protesters are being targeted in Iraq.  The Great Iraqi Revolution notes , "The night before last Shaikh Khalil Al  Sabba'awi's home was raided in the Geyara District of Mosul but could not find  him. The next morning, yesterday, they saw his son in the family car and  arrested the son and hijacked the car! Shaikh Khalil was live on air and said  that he will not give up the protests and that soon they will be starting Civil  Disobedience in Mosul. He is the Shaikh who refused Maliki's invitation to go  down to Baghdad and negotiate the demands of the Ahrar Protestors - these  demands are the same as of Tahrir, Baghdad and Tahrir, Ramadi. " And in  Falluja, "We've just heard that Haliki has  setup a checkpoint just at Fallujah's gates and is arresting young men just  because they are young men! I wonder, is he so frightened???? And if he is so  frightened why does he remain???? What is he going to do in a few days'  time????? The citizens in Anbar now are also speaking about a Civil Disobedience  Campaign...... well, let's wait and see..... "   Meanwhile Aswat al-Iraq reports  guests and the  wedding party turned a Mosul social event into a protest as the approximately  500 began shouting for reform, an end to corruption, the release of detainees  and the departure of US forces. Sticking with departure,  The Great Iraqi Revolution passes on , "Dhafir Al Ani has stated that they (meaning the  Iraqiya Block, I suppose) have heard from the Americans that Haliki has in  principle agreed to the extension of the SOFA Agreement!!!!!!! Poor .... Poor...  thing - He needs them for his protection..... "  Aaron C. Davis (Washington Post) quotes   Speaker of Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi stating, "There is no certain time or  certain date to decide on the U.S. military, and we will not be in a hurry to  take a decision."  Davis notes, "If Iraqi leaders decide late in the year to  request that some U.S.  troops or equipment stay, military officials say, it  would entail significantly altering or even reversing the course and could  compound security concerns and costs." Ayub Nuri (Rudaw) maintains  there is anxiety over a  potential withdrawal throughout Iraq but especially in the oil-rich Kirkuk.   Kirkuk police department has issued a statement calling for US forces to remain  on the ground in Kirkuk past 2011; however, The Great Iraqi Revolution explains , "The Political Arab Council in Kirkuk has just  denied the statement issued yesterday by the Kirkuk Police Department. They  categorically stated that they refuse the further stay of the Occupation troops  in Kirkuk. The spokesman said that this refusal is the opinion of all the  parties living in Kirkuk with the exception of the 2 Kurdish Parties. He also  said that the occupation troops did not deal evenhandedly with the citizens in  Kirkuk. He said that they wanted Kirkuk to be the first city from which  occupation troops depart from Iraq. "    Still on departure, we'll note  this from David Elkins  (IPS) : Any extension  of the SOFA is all but a political impossibility in Iraq since, even though  Iraqi government officials, including Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, have  indicated their desire to keep some troops past the deadline, the response from  their constituencies, and from leaders such as Moqtada al-Sadr, strongly opposed  to any prolonged presence, would be disastrous for Iraq's fragile parliamentary  coalition. It's "all but a political impossibility," is it?  Because you say so? Moqtada al-Sadr made the same threats he makes today in 2006  regarding the extension of the UN mandate. Nouri extended it. Moqtada made the  same noises in 2007 regarding the extension onf the UN mandate. Nouri extended  it. In 2008, Nouri didn't extend the UN mandate. But only because the SOFA  replaced it. And, in 2008, Moqtada made the same threats. In all cases,  nothing ever happened but talk from Moqtada which was quickly forgotten. In  2008, when he was threatening, do you remember the concession that was made to  Moqtada? In July 2009, the people of Iraq would get to vote on the SOFA. It's  two months shy of July 2011 and, guess what, there was never a  vote. Moqtada al-Sadr is worshipped by some on the left. In terms of  verbal statements only, he's a lot like US House Rep Dennis Kucinich in that he  makes a lot of promises -- such as he would never, ever vote for ObamaCare --  but then ends up caving. Meanwhile, US intelligence indicates that  Moqtada al-Sadr is at his weakest ever in terms of support and loyalty from his  Iraqi followers. Not only does the US know this but it's also been shared with  Nouri by the US government. So based on US intell and based upon past  pattern, Moqtada al-Sadr's empty words don't mean much at all. You have to be  pretty stupid to claim it's "all but a political impossibility" for Nouri to  keep US forces on the ground in Iraq past 2011 based on what Moqtada might  do. But IPS has a pattern of the stupid. In fact,IPS   readers should be slamming the site with e-mails insiting, "You told us the SOFA  was an end of the war treaty! You told us that it meant the war ended! What is  this talk about extending the US presence! According to over two years of your  'reporting,' that could never happen!" Yeah,IPS  predicted on  the SOFA. Didn't offer a legal analysis. Just smugly asserted it was something  it wasn't and did so for over two years. IPS  should really walk away  from the predictions. Doing so would help deliver us all from the  stupid. March 2010, Iraq held elections. And Nouri wanted to remain prime  minister. And he did. Despite the fact that most Iraqis want the US out of their  country. Despite the fact that most Iraqis wanted a referendum on the SOFA and  Nouri promised one but never held it. Nouri's a thug and a US puppet. But  somehow he's managed to hang on. If he manages past the start of June, when the  100 day deadline he imposed expires -- it will be interesting to see if anything  could dislodge him in the coming months. Not only has he managed to retain  power, but he's also worked on consolidating power and stealing the power. As  prime minister currently, due to his power-grab, he has more control than he's  had in the same post at any time previously. Nouri may or may not choose  to extend the US military presence. That's a prediction. (It's true that if he  doesn't, the current US plan is to shove the forces under the State Dept and  keep many in Iraq that way. A fact that IPS can't seem to find in the latest  article.) But to claim that it's "all but a political impossiblity" shows a  reliance on fantasy, not on the facts.  Meanwhile, Iraqis in charge focused on bit-ticket items and not on  necessities when stocking hospitals.  Stephanie McCrummen (Washington Post)  reports  on gleaming state-of-the-art equipment and machinery which stands  idle (often because no one's been trained on operating it) while the most basic  supplies (such as proper-size IV catheters) are no where to be found leading to  tragic results. From the article:  As security has improved and a semblance of calm has settled over  Iraq, doctors say the biggest menace to patients these days is not so much a  lack of money, basic training or even supplies. Rather, they say, it is the  skewed priorities of a corrupt, often indifferent Health Ministry that has gone  on spending sprees in certain realms while leaving basic health care to  flounder.   The problems are emblematic of the wider dysfunction of the  U.S.-backed Iraqi government as a whole, a bubble of elites for whom ministries  are treated as spoils of bare-knuckled political battles, with key positions  often going to the well connected rather than those with technical expertise. To  some extent, such issues are common to developing nations, which is what Iraq  essentially is, having been plunged backward by years of war.    And the Post  has this photo gallery  which compliments the  article.  In October 2006, Lara Logan (CBS News -- link is text and video)  reported  on how Nouri giving the Sadr bloc control of the Ministry of  Health  allowed Moqtada's Mahdi militia to overrun the hospitals and, the US  military stated, murdering Sunni patients (among other charges).  The minister  was Ali al-Shermani and he would faces these charges in 2007; however, he walked  when those set to testify against him refused to testify in open court.  Having  walked, Ali al-Shermani now ran -- right out of the country.  In July 2010,  Timothy Williams and Yasmine Mousa (New York  Times) reported  that al Qaeda was swiping blood from Iraqi hospitals.    From corruption to violence, today Oxfam International   has released a new report entitled [PDF format warning] "Protection of Civilians in  2010 " and, with regards to Iraq, its findings include that over 4,000  civilians died in Iraq last year, Iraq gets included again when it's time for  displaced people, an estimated 2.8 million people (that section relies on  estimations as well). Karl Allen (Zawya) mines  for gold and comes up  with this: At least 4,000 Iraqi  civilians were killed by insurgent violence in 2010 - the highest number of  civilian fatalities in any of the world's 'conflict zones' - according to an  Oxfam international report published today. The report, "Protection of Civilians in 2010",  examines 18 zones of armed conflict throughout the world and lists the numbers  of civilians reported to have been killed, raped or displaced. Following closely behind Iraq with 3,500 direct  civilian fatalities was Pakistan, then Afghanistan and Somalia where the figures  reached 2,700 and 2,000 respectively.New Sabah  notes the  report here .  In today's  violence, Reuters notes  a Tikrit roadside bombing  which claimed the life of a police officer and left three more injured, a Mosul  sticky bombing injured police Lt Col Zaid al-Omari, a Baghdad roadside bombing  injured one person (bodyguard for a provincial council member), a second Baghdad  roadside bombing injured two people, a Baghdad bombing claimed the life of Salam  Abdullah and, dropping back to last night, a Baghdad roadside bombing injured  one person. Back to the topic of NGOs, Al  Mada reports  UNICEF has a new goodwill ambassador in Iraq:  Kadhim al-Sahir an Iraqi who left the country in 1997 and who is the first Iraqi  to hold the position. Trade  Arabia adds : His  humanitarian work started in 1998 when he performed a song about Iraqi children  stranded in conflict at benefit concerts in the Royal Albert Hall in the UK as  well as to members of the United Nations. "It has been a long and difficult  journey for Iraq's children over the past few decades" said Al-Sahir. "I am  deeply touched and honored to return to Iraq today as Unicef's Ambassador and  will do everything possible to protect the rights and improve the well-being of  Iraq's children," he added.Khalid al-Ansary and Jon Boyle  (Reuters) quote  al-Sahir  stating, "It is the right of the people to work, have a good life, and have a  happy childhood."  The Great Iraqi Revolution adds , "An idea is being floated about that The  Revolutionary Youth invite Kadhim Al Shahir to come to Tahrir so that the Rebels  explain to him the reason for thier protests since Kadhim Al Sahir had stated  earlier that he would not be honoured to sing for such a chaotic mob ..... so do  you support such an idea, particularly since he is now a Goodwill Ambassador as  well as being a world renouned artist. we would welcome your ideas..... "Iraq Tweet of the day from Prashant Rao (AFP):      Turning to radio . . .   You try to be unique But somehow something's wrong Your flower childish vision of life Cannot last for long You're over thirty and underweight Though you call yourself petite And you hang around with all the clowns Who think they're so elite Well I don't expect humility But what about some good old Dishonest modesty -- "Dishonest Modesty," written by Carly Simon , first appears on her album  Another Passenger  Ira Glass is 52-years-old but can't stop trying to sound like a snot-nosed,  five-year-old, little girl.  And his gulping mid-statement isn't being masked by  the microphones and is becoming as annoying as Brenda Vacarro's gasp in those  early 80s Playtex Tampons commercial.  When not living his stunted life outside  the studio, Ira hosts This American Life.  He's popping up throughout  the country these days with a 'best of' hour special for pledge drives at  various NPRs.  It includes his playing clips of Fox News' Bill O'Reilly and his  calling Bill O'Reilly various names -- apparently this how NPR now handles  pledge drives.  He also whines that he's been called biased but he's not, he  insists, biased.        Ira Glass: You'd think if anybody would be out there thanking  President Obama for helping them out these past few years, it would be Wall  Street.  Back when he was running for office, Barack Obama led the Democrats in  supporting President Bush's original bailout of Wall Street and as president he  kept that bail out going. [. . .] are they whining about the Obama  administration?    Really?  That's a measure of what?  You can be a 'good' American and have  no respect for any elected official.  Apparently, Ira woke up on the wrong side  of the gildled lily as did the overly praised Davidson who whined that you could  go into any Wall St. bar and find "someone complaining about the president."   Oh, the horror.  Oh, the novelty.  Surely in this country's 235 years, no one  has ever dared complain about a president before.    It only gets worse.  To prove just how 'hostile' Wall Street is to Barack  (and therefore America because, in their eyes, Barack and the US are one and the  same -- amazing 'logic' in a country where approximately 40% of adult Americans  choose not to vote in presidential elections each cycle), Davidson and Feltes  hit Pound & Pence.   They 'forget' to report on the NYC bar so let's sketch out the detail they  left out.  It's a British pub on Liberty in Manhattan's Financial District. The  upstairs (more of a loft than a second floor) is dominated by a huge pool table.  The downstairs is dominated by the bar.  Along with the Wall Street crowd,  hotels steer a great deal of foot traffic there (such as the Holiday Inn on  Nassau). In such a rush to find 'mean' people who didn't give thanks to Barack,  the 'reporters' forgot to provide the basic set up.  They talk to some drunken  guys (slurring and all) and are surprised that drunken men might say 'bad'  things and might brag about themselves. Really?  Strap on some breasts and  you'll really hear some drunken men say 'bad' things and do some heavy bragging.  Next up, Ira and the gang hit The 40/40 Club on 25th to find out if all the men  claiming to have eight inches really do.     Ira and Adam liken the patrons to the "Ba'athists" in Iraq who were whiners  -- according to Ira and Adam -- and cry babies in 2003 when Adam was there.   Really?  Your country's invaded and you're a cry baby?  You're country's invaded  in an illegal war and you're a cry baby?  Adam also schills for JPMorgan Chase  which -- he appears to forgot -- took $38 billion in bailout money and which, as  US House Rep Bob Filner pointed out in a February 9th Congressional hearing , "broke the  law.  Your bank [JPMorgan Chase] broke the law.  Shouldn't someone go to jail  for that?"    In the pitch during the special, Ira brags that you can get a 'flash drive'  with 35 hours of his program and no one in public radio has ever done that.   Really?  Law and Disorder Radio has offered their past programs in that  format during pledge drives in the past two years now. How nice of Ira to  'discover' something other public radio shows have been doing and claim he's the  first.  But then he's never been accused of possessing any modesty -- dishonest  or otherwise.  Ira and This American Life would do well to grasp that a  US citizen bows to no one.  Nor do pub goers need to celebrate the presidency.   Since it's a British pub, let's quote William Pitt from many centuries ago, "The  poorest man may  in his cottage bid defiance to all the forces of the crown.  It  may be frail -- its roof may shake -- the wind may blow through it -- the storm  may enter -- the rain may enter -- but the Kind of England cannot enter." After  work, at night, drunk off their asses, a few Americans working on Wall Street  refused to show fealty to Barack and this was news to Ira -- indicating that  he's got a great deal still to learn about American life and that he's got his  own system of bias blasting out on public airwaves.   America thought they were electing a president in 2008, Barack thought he  was being elected Miss Manners USA. For example, the CBC reported May 17, 2009  on Barack's call for  civility in the debate over abortion and how the "presumption of good faith to  others" should be extended. August 11, 2009, the Associated Press posted video  of Barack speaking that  day in Portsmouth, New Hampshire calling, yes, for civility. February 4, 2010,  Bruce Nolan (Times-Picayune) reported ,  "President Barack Obama this morning called for a return to civility in the  public arena and an end to invective [. . .]"  The White House posted his May 1, 2010 commencement  speech at the University of Michigan  where he again called for civility and  which included:  The practice of listening to opposing views is essential to  effective citizenship.  It is essential for our democracy.  If we choose to  actively seek out information that challenges our assumptions and our beliefs,  perhaps we can begin to understand where the people who disagree with us are  coming from. We can't expect to solver our problems if all we do is tear each  other down.   I don't issue calls for civility.  I'm not a historical idiot.  I'm  fully aware that this is not the worst or most heated moment in the nation's  discourse in the last forty years or since the nation began.  But Barack's  forever issuing calls for 'civility.'  Yet he never follows them himself, does  he?
   It's not just the 'jokes' two Saturdays ago -- which can be written off as  someone sorely lacking humor being pushed into doing a monologue -- or even just  his easy and, yes, natural attack (no hesitation at all) in 2009 on The Tonight  Show of the Special Olympics.  No, it's things like this statement to 60 Minutes in an interview  which aired Sunday night : "And I think that anyone who would question that  the perpetrator of mass murder on American soil didn't deserve what he got needs  to have their head examined." That's civility?  That's not civility.  The next  time the little priss cries for civility again, the press needs to point out the  reality which is Piss Panties only cares about civility when he's losing the  argument.  When he's being fawned over, he loves to talk trash.    Earlier, in the same interview, he admits that some of his advisers didn't  agree with the plan and were against it.  Will he be firing them?  Will he be  ordering them to seek treatment?  Or will he just order their executions?   I have no idea but I'm tired of a grown adult acting like a little  fussbudget every five minutes crying "civility!" and no one ever pointing out  that the little priss can't heed his own cry.  In the same interview he claims  to have withdrawn 100,000 troops from Iraq.  That is not true.  Approximately  90,000 (special ops aren't included in the count) have left since he entered the  White House.  Some of that was the last remains of the so-called 'surge' which  were transitioning out on Bush's orders given before Barack was sworn in.  But  it's very telling that 60 Minutes didn't question him on that or on  anything else.  See, Ira, the press will show the fealty the people rightly  reject.     When he announced that Osama bin Laden had been killed by a Navy  Seal team in Pakistan, President Barack Obama said, "Justice has been done." Mr.  Obama misused the word "justice" when he made that statement. He should have  said, "Retaliation has been accomplished." A former professor of constitutional  law should know the difference between those two concepts. The word "justice"  implies an act of applying or upholding the law. Targeted assassinations violate well-established principles of  international law. Also called political assassinations, they are extrajudicial  executions. These are unlawful and deliberate killings carried out by order of,  or with the acquisescence of, a government, outside any judicial  framework.   What was done went against the law and those of us who have respect for the  law and object to vigilantism don't need our heads examined but maybe Barack  needs his examined.  In Robert Bolt's A Man For All Seasons, Thomas  More is under pressure from King Henry the XIII to grant the king a divorce and  More refuses explaining, "The law, Roper, the law.  I know what's legal, not  what's right.  And I'll stick to what's legal."  Barack is no Sir Thomas  More.     The Iraq war has become the mistaken war, the one that so many  Americans believe we never should have waged. I have come to realize that,  regardless of my personal beliefs and opinions, this is how the Iraq war will be  remembered - as an unfortunate error increasingly divorced from the country's  valiant fight against terrorism. This, in turn, brings me to question myself, my efforts, and my  worth. How will my and others' achievements and sacrifices in Iraq be  remembered? Will all that we did while serving amount to nothing more than a  mistake? The more I travel and speak about my experiences, the more I sense  that the cultural memory of this war is shifting and devolving over time. Rather  than thanks for helping to keep the country safe from terrorism, I get  appreciation mixed with pity for having fought in an "illegal" war, as many  refer to it.       |