| Tuesday, June 14, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, 2 US soldiers are  announced dead, a hostage situation takes place in Diyala Province, torture and  War Crimes may get investigated in the US, torture and War Crimes may be buried  in a British inquiry, the VA stalls, evades and stonewalls a House  Subcommitteee, are active duty soldiers be giving the time needed to heal, and  more.   CNN and AP both report that the US military has  announced 2 US soldiers were killed yesterday. Other than stating the deaths  took place in southern Iraq, the military had nothing else to say. Were there  any wounded? As we noted yesterday they appear to  be under orders to no longer note when soldiers are injured. The 2 deaths  announced  this morning follow last week's 6 deaths.  5 on Monday ,: Spc Emilio J.  Campo Jr., Spc Michael B. Cook Jr., Spc. Christopher B. Fishbeck, Spc Robert P.  Hartwick and Pfc Michael C. Olivieri.  Wounded?  The military's refused to say  but reports vary from five to fifteen.  The sixth death was last Pfc Michael J.  England on  Wednesday . And though  the military never bothered to inform the citizens of any wounded, thanks to Ryan E. Little (The Ledger)  we know that  Spc Charles Lemon was injured in the same Najaf bombing and "lost both legs and  suffered other injuries including burns to his body."   to note 5 US soldiers died. It'll be interesting  to see if the program makes time to note  the 2 deaths. The Pentagon counts [PDF format warning] 4464  US military deaths from the Iraq War -- that count does  not include today's two deaths.  After DoD identifies the fallen by name in a  news release, the deaths will be added to the count. In other violence,  Xiong Tong (Xinhua) reports , "Car bomb and  gunfire attacks were reported at government compound in Baquba City, the capital  of Iraq's eastern province invasion of the government offices "mirrored a similar March raid claimed  by Al-Qaeda"  and that "dozens of gunmen involved in the attack [today] in Diyala's  provincial capital of Baquba exchanged gunfire with Iraqi security forces,  holding them at bay." AP reports  that there are possibly  as many as 10 assailants in the government compound holding hostages and quotes  Nasreen Bajhat stating, "I am trying to call my colleagues and employees in the  building but all their mobiles are switched off. The situation now is tense." Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) reports  that  when security arrived, assailants took cover in the government building and that  there are thought to be at least twenty-five people injured.Tim Craig and Asaad Majeed (Washington  Post) explain  that after the car bomb, "More than 20  insurgents armed  with assault rifles and rocket-propelled grenads then attacked from both inside  and outside the building, according to security officials.  After four guards  were killed at a back gate, the insurgents raided the building and took a group  of civilian employees hostage, the security officials said."  Aswat al-Iraq reports , " A joint  Iraqi-U.S. force have implemented the operation of cornering the attackers  against Diala Council's building and liberating the persons, taken hostage by  the attackers, who were disguised as uniformed policemen, a Diala police source  said on Tuesday." Jamal Hashim (Xinhua) adds  that "five  suicide bombers attacked the compound of the provincial council [.  . .] killing  three policemen and four suicide bombers, along with wounding 28 people. Fifteen  security members were among the 28 wounded and the rest were eight of the  council employees and five civilians, according to a source from Diyala's  provincial council comound".    Aswat al-Iraq reports , "The Iraqi  Ministery of Interior accused al-Qaeda organization of the attack against  Diala's Provincial Council building today." In other news, Dar Addustour reports  that a man in  Mosul yesterday attempted to set himself on fire before the Nineveh Provincial  government offices but police stopped him -- the man is a security guard, he  used kerosene in his attempt and he stated he attempted to set himself on fire  because he works for the government but someone else got selected ahead of him  to become a permanent staff member. Dar Addustour also  notes
  that Parliament is meeting today and among the items on the  agenda are the second reading of an anti-smoking bill. Really? The country has  no Minister of the Interior, no Minister of Defense and no Minister of National  Security. When Nouri was named prime minister-designate in November, per the  Constitution, he had 30 days to fill his Cabinet or lose the post of prime  minister-designate. Instead of following the Constitution, the Parliament moved  Nouri on over to prime minister. All this time later, Nouri's still not filled  those three Cabinet positions. And, you may have noticed, violence just keeps  increasing in Iraq. Not the best time for all three of your security ministries  to remain without a leader.In other reported violence today, Reuters notes  1 army lieutenant-general  was shot dead in Baghdad, 2 Iraqi soliders were shot dead in Baghdad, "the  manager of the legal department of Baghdad provincial council" was shot dead in  Baghdad, 1 police officer was shot dead in Mosul and, dropping back to  yesterday, 1 military officer was shot dead in Kirkuk."While Congress busies itself about how $2 billion was  illegally diverted to Saddam from the U.N.'s Oil-For-Food Program, it would also  be instructive to find out why it was apparently administration policy to let  Saddam Hussein earn four times that amount through illegal oil shipments.
 "Before Congress gives another $80 billion for the war in Iraq, the American  people would find it instructive for Congress to ask what happened with the  unaccounted-for $9 billion which also came from Iraq oil proceeds.
 "Madam  Speaker, before the war, Iraq was about oil. As the war continues, it is about  billions in unaccounted-for oil revenues which the U.S. had custody of,  responsibility for; and now nobody knows nothing."
 
 Patt Morrison noted that all of this money being shipped over and  transferred and passed around in physical cash seemed strange since, as she  pointed out, you can transfer money to an account with a cell phone.  Bowen  stated that this was a disturbing feature and one he tried to address from the  start because it was so hard to track.  (The late US House Rep Ike Skelton made  a point of holding hearings to highlight the problems with doing this all in  cash and how there was no accounting system that could track it.)  Patt Morrison  noted that "we don't know" in answer to where the money went could not be  comforting to the Iraqi people and Bowen agreed but wanted to make another  point.   US Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction Stuart Bowen:  And this is not a new finding, let me underscore that, Patt.  As I said, our  first audit in 2005 concluded that, a follow up audit of another nine  billion last summer reached similar conclusions and we're now conducting a third  audit following up on the issues raised by our recommendations -- that is the  need to track what we've now identified -- about 6.6 billion. The Pentagon says  it can track about 2.8 billion of that and to see what happened to the other  3.8. Still on the topic of money, Al Rafidayn reports  that yesterday  the Integrity Commission announced that their work had resulted in 479  convictions (out of 627 cases brought) between January of this year to May ( a  217% increase from the total number last year) and that they had seized $49  million. Moving over to the US, Adam Zagorin (Time magazine) reports , "It has  been nearly a decade since Manadel al-Jamadi, an Iraqi prisoner known as 'the  Iceman' -- for the bungled attempt to cool his body and make him look less dead  -- perished in CIA custody at Abu Ghraib. But now there are rumbles in  Washington that the notorious case, as well as other alleged CIA abuses, could  be returning to haunt the agency. TIME has learned that a prosecutor tasked with  probing the CIA -- John Durham, a respected, Republican-appointed U.S. Attorney  from Connecticut -- has begun calling witnesses before a secret federal grand  jury in Alexandria, Va., looking into, among other things, the lurid Nov. 4,  2003, homicide, which was documented  by TIME in  2005." Mark Memmott (NPR's The Two-Way) cites NPR's Carrie Johnson  to note that  "war crimes and torture charges" are being discussed.  The Daily Mail adds , "Much of the attention  surrounding al-Jamadi's death has focused on the actions of interrogator Mark  Swanner, who questioned al-Jamadi in a prison shower room before he died.   Al-Jamadi's head was covered by a hood. His arms were shackled behind his back  and bound to a barred window. That way, he could stand without pain but if he  tried to lower himself, his arms would be painfully stretched above and behind  him. A military autopsy declared al-Jamadi's death a homicide but an internal  CIA investigation found that Swanner never abused al-Jamadi, according to a  former senior intelligence official familiar with the findings."  AFP contacted  the prosecutor's office  and his spokesperson Tom Carson stated, "This is an ongoing investigation." And  therefore, they can't comment. In England, an ongoing investigation into abuse  of Iraqi detainees has been taking place. Murray Wardrop (Telegraph of London)  explains , "The Iraq Historic Allegations Team (IHAT) was established last  year to take statements from around 140 Iraqi civilians who claim they were  abused by British service personnel between 2003 and 2009."  Wardrop notes that  attorney Phil Shriner with Public Interest Lawyers  states that, in all that  time, only one of his many Iraqi clients has been interviewed.   Angus  Crawford (BBC) quotes  Phil Shriner stating, "It's been a complete and utter  shambles, it must have cost the taxpayer millions."     Once again, the Obama administration shirked its  legal and moral responsibility to ensure torture victims are provided an  enforceable remedy when it advised the U.S.  Supreme Court not to hear a case brought by Iraqi detainees tortured by private  military contractors at Abu Ghraib.   The case, Saleh, et al. v. Titan Corporation, et  al., is a civil suit brought by 250 Iraqi detainees for torture by U.S. private  contractors CACI and Titan (now L-3 Services). The two companies were retained  to provide interrogation and interpretation services at Abu Ghraib, the infamous  Iraqi prison that the Department of Defense (DoD) reported was the site of "numerous  incidents of sadistic, blatant, and wanton criminal abuses" of Iraqi prisoners  committed by Americans under the authority of Americans. Army investigations  implicated private contractors in the torture and abuse of detainees held there.  While 11 soldiers were convicted on detainee abuse charges, no contractor was  ever criminally charged.     In September 2009, the D.C. Circuit Court of  Appeals dismissed the civil  case on the ground that contractors involved in combat activities on a  battlefield should be protected from lawsuits. The victims appealed to the U.S.  Supreme Court, and Human Rights First submitted an amicus brief arguing that the  decision by the D.C. Circuit to immunize the criminal conduct of private  military contractors is incompatible with the United States' international legal  obligations, including its obligation under the International Covenant on Civil  and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel,  Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CAT) to provide "enforceable" or  "effective" remedies to victims for acts of torture and serious abuse.   Before deciding whether or not to hear the case,  the Supreme Court asked the U.S. government, which is not a party to the suit,  its opinion or interest. Human Rights First sent a letter to the Acting  Solicitor General urging the government to advise the Court to hear the case and  reverse the decision that denies victims a remedy.   The Acting Solicitor General, however, did the  exact opposite.   
 In the US, jury selection began in Houston yesterday in the case Jamie Leigh Jones  has brought against Halliburton.  Today, attorneys presented opening arguments.  Jones was working as a KBR  contractor in Iraq when she was gang-raped. When she attempted to address the  crime, KBR responded by imprisoning her and it took a member of the US Congress  (Rep Ted Poe) sounding alarms to force KRB to release her. After Jamie Leigh  Jones came forward, other women began coming  forward  noting they had been raped, sexually harassed or sexually  assaulted while working for KBR - Halliburton.  Nathan Koppel (Wall St. Journal's Law  Blog) explains , "Jones was a clerical worker for KBR at a Halliburton  office in Baghdad's fortified Green Zone and claims she was drugged and raped by  several co-workers in her company barracks bedroom. She also alleges she was  placed under armed guard and held in a 'prison-like container' for hours after  reporting the alleged attack."  Joe Consumer (The Pop Tort) notes  some  of the achivements Jones can already take pride in, "But Jamie has achieved even more . "Due in part to Jones' case, federal  lawmakers in 2009 approved a measure prohibiting contractors and subcontractors  that receive $1 million in funds from the Department of Defense from requiring  employees to resolve sexual assault allegations and other claims through  arbitration."  "   Despite these activies and more activies, the US government  continues to give KBR contracts -- cost-plus contracts despite KBR's accounting  'problems.' Last week, the Commission on  Wartime Contracting held a hearing  Commission Co-Chair Michael  Thibault noted that KBR is still not up to date on their billing paperwork and,  as a result, there's been no audit since 2003. The US government has paid KBR -  Haliburton millions and millions over the last 8 years and there's no  accountability and there's no check on the funds. KBR gets to do whatever it  wants, whether it's attempt to cover up rapes or attempts to overcharge the US  tax payer. KBR's infamous burn pits have sickened and killed US troops and US  contractors -- and contaminated Iraq and harmed who knows how many Iraqis -- but  the White House is still signing new contracts with KBR. Of course, if Iraq had  a functioning government with a real prime minister, they could ban KBR  immediately. They could make it a condition that KBR clean up every burn pit  they'd made in the country and pay for the health care and treatment of the  Iraqi population effected by the burn pits. If KBR refused, Iraq could forbid  the company from operating on its soil.  Turning to the US Congress.  We have to hearings but we'll probably only  have room for one today.  So let's drop back to yesterday.  Monday afternoon,  the House Veterans Affairs Subcommittee on Health held a hearing.  On what?   Last week, Ava  reported on some very disturbing developments  discussed in a Senate Veterans Affairs Committee hearing "Sexual assaults at the VA  (Ava) ." As Senate Veterans Affairs Committee Chair Patty Murray  noted, the Government Accountability Office had just released "very disturbing  information about sexual assaults among veterans in in-patient mental health and  other programs."  The veterans she referred to were assaulted within the VA,  while attempting to obtain care and treatment, they were sexually assaulted.   The House Veterans Affairs Subcommittee on Health is Chaired by Ann Marie  Buerkle.  We'll note this from her opening statement at yesterday's  hearing.  Subcommittee Chair Ann Marie Buerkle: As a registered nurse and  domsetic violence counselor, I have seen firsthand the pervasive and damaging  effects sexual assault can have on the lives of those who experience it.  Last  week, the Government Acountability Office released a deeply troubling report  entitled "VA Health Care: Actions Needed to Prevent Sexual Assaults and Other  Safety Incidents."  GAO found that between January 2007 and July 2010, nearly 00  sexual assault incidents including 67 alleged rapes were reported to VA police.   Many of these alleged crimes were not reported to VA leadership officials or the  VA Office of the Inspector General in direct violation of VA policy and federal  regulations.  The findings of the GAO are disturbing for many reason. Foremost,  they represent a betrayal of trust by a system that was designed to treat our  veterans at their most vulnerable time. The gross failure of VA leadership to  protect the safety and security of our veterans and VA staff and systematically  report and respond to sexual assault and safety incidents is a contempt of  justice. It also requires immediate action.  This is not the way to run a health  care system and it is certainly no way to treat the men and women who sacrificed  so much on our nation's behalf.   To telegraph how serious the House VA Committee -- not just the  Subcommittee -- was taking this issue, not only did Subcommittee Chair Buerkle  and House Veterans Affairs Committee Chair Jeff Miller introduce HR 2074, Miller  also attended the hearing (he does not sit on the Subcommittee).  HR 2074 is the  Veterans Sexual Assault Prevention Act.  It was introduced by Buerkle on June  1st and reads: "To amend title 8, United States Code, to require a comprehensive  policy on reporting and tracking sexual assault incidents and other safety  incidents that occur at medical facilities of the Department of Veterans  Affairs."  Click here  to read the bill in full.    Miller noted, "In the past week, some have dismissed these allegations,  comparing the size of the VA system and the number of allegations to the private  sector.  Let me be very clear on this point: There is no comparison.  Just one  assault of this nature, one sexual predator or one veteran's rights being  violated within the VA is one too many and is absolutely unacceptable.  If we  need to do more to protect our veterans and VA employees, we will."  Ranking  Member    VA is doing a very poor job in many areas.  Most of all it is doing a very  poor job when it comes to reporting to Congress, when it comes to appearing  before them.  This really started to become noticeable last year and has only  gotten worse this year.  On the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee, this  unacceptable behavior is most often called out by Senator Richard Burr.  For his  admonishing the VA last week, see Kat 's "Senator  Burr " and you can also search her site for additional  reports on Burr (Kat usually emphasizes him when she reports on the Senate VA  Committee) and you'll see this is not a one hearing problem.  This is a pattern  and it's really unacceptable.  Ranking Member Burr and Committee Chair Murray  have attempted to communicate that to the witnesses before them (and Ranking  Member Burr and former Chair Daniel Akaka attempted to last year as well).  If  the message is getting through to the witnesses, they're not carrying it back to  VA.  That was evident in yesterday's hearing with the first panel.  The panel  was composed of GAO's Randall Williamson, VA's Joseph Sullivan and VA's William  Schoenhard.  We're noting an exchange.  I'm referring to Jeff Miller as "US  House Rep" so that there's no confusion as to who was chairing the Subcommittee  hearing but, as already noted, he is the Chair of the House Veterans Affairs  Committee.    US House Rep Jeff Miller: The [GAO] report covers '07 to July of  2010.  Can you tell me what the statistics are from July of 2010 to today of  sexual assaults that have been reported within the system?   William Schoenhard:  Uh, sir, we do not have that information  available here today but we will provide that to you.   US House Rep Jeff Miller: Would it have been a reasonable  expectation that somebody might be asking that question?   William Schoenhard:  Uh.  We.  Uh.  Had not anticipated that  question but we do have the information.  We can provide that to you in short  order, sir.   US House Rep Jeff Miller: If you would, for the record, so that we  can make sure that all members have the answer to that question.  When can we  expect it?     William Schoenhard: Uh.  We would provide that, sir, within three  weeks.   US House Rep Jeff Miller: Three weeks?   William Schoenhard: Yes, sir. I want to make sure that we have all  the information together in a complete way. We will try to provide it sooner.     US House Rep Jeff Miller: I hope that you have all the information  together and that it won't take you three weeks.      This hearing was specifically called by Subcommittee Chair Ann Marie  Buerkle in response to the GAO report.  The witnesses knew that.  Why in the  world would a question about sexual assaults after the period covered in the  GAO's report throw the VA?  They were not prepared for the hearing unless their  point was to stall.  This is unacceptable.  They do this over and over.  The VA  avoids providing any hard data in these hearings over and over.  Why?  Because  the reporters are present.  If they can provide the figures after the hearing,  the reporters have packed up and moved on.  Which means, if they don't have to  answer it in the hearing, there's a good chance it won't be reported.   If this is an accident, it is a freakish one since a pattern has clearly  emerged.  Miller was clearly surprised to be told that the VA witnesses had  arrived for the hearing without that information.  He was also surprised when he  was told that they had the information, but it would take three weeks to get it  to Congress.  Why?  If they've got the information, it should be delivered to  the Subcomittee within 24 hours.  It's a spreadsheet, you input the numbers.  No  one's asking them to devise a new system of measurement or invent a new graph.   They just have to plug in the numbers.     If you're not getting how much stalling and evasion is taking place, please  note that it was pointed out that money allocated for securing VA properties was  being spent elsewhere.  It was noted by members of the committee.   US House Rep John Runyan:  Mr. Schoenhard, the GAO found a number  of facilities that were understaffed.  Specifically there was one that, by  criteria, there was supposed to be 19 and there was only 9 on hand.  Why have  you not been able to staff these facilities fully?   William Schoenhard: Uh, Congressman, that's a very important  question because we need to be fully staffed with police coverage and that is  part of what I am seeking to understand in, uh, our current survey of our field.  Uh, I want to understand better what the retention and the recruitment  difficulties are with that and see what steps need to be taken to address  those.   US House Rep Jon Runyan: Do you -- that was going to be my next  question.  Do you have an idea of retention problem? Is there a major turnover  within the system?   William Schoenhard: There is turnover which varies, sir, by  facility and uhm that too is what I want to get a better sense of. [. .  .]   He wants to get a better sense of it?  The Deputy Under Secretary for  Health Operations and Management for the VA should have already had a sense of  it before he showed for the hearing.  In addition, the economy's in the tank.   How do you have problems hiring people?  Equally true, from 2008 through 2010,  the House Committee repeatedly asked all VA witnesses if they needed anything,  additional resources, anything.  They were repeatedly told that nothing was  needed.   If a VA is understaffed, the VA, high up in the VA, should be aware of that  and should be addressing it.  If a sexual assault is reported at that VA and it  is under staffed, the VA should have had their own emergency meetings to address  that and should have arrived in Congress with answers.  They didn't provide  answers.  They begged off repeatedly.         Last night Cedric 's "Barry's got plenty of ideas --  always bad ones " and Wally 's "THIS JUST IN! ROUGH  WATERS! " went up.  That was their joint-humor post.  The  non-humor posts last night revolved around a theme: write a book you have and  that you've selected at random: Mike 's "Kiss Kiss Bang  Bang " (Pauline Kael's movie critiques),  Trina 's "Collected  Stories " (Tennessee Williams' Collected Stories ),  Rebecca 's "pigs at the  trough " (Arianna Huffington book),Kat 's  "Rock  Encyclopedia " (the classic text), Ann 's  "4 men, 1 woman " (Gore  Vidal's Perpetual War for Perpetual Peace ), Marcia 's  "Embassytown " (China  Mieville's new novel), Elaine 's "Left Bank and Other  Stories " (short stories by Jean Rhys), Ruth 's  "The Computer Wore Tennis  Shoes " (novelizations of Disney films in an attempt to  increase reading among children -- this is a novelization of a Disney film  starring Kurt Russell), Betty 's "Lorraine Hansberry: The Collected  Plays " (the title says it all but for any who might not place  the name immediately, she is the playwright who wrote A Raisin in the  Sun ) and Stan 's "The Best Democracy Money Can  Buy " (Greg Palast's classic book). We're closing with this  important news from Scott Kimball (Iraq Veterans Against the War ):   If you were to take a trip down Ft. Hood street in Killeen, you  would encounter the same sites of any military town. You would see pawn shops  and title loan businesses. You would come across shady car dealerships and  rent-to-own stores. All of these estabishments are in the business of exploiting  service members. However, the most exploitative establishment in Killeen is not  a for-profit entity. It is the Fort Hood command. Operation Recovery organizers have been talking to Ft. Hood  soldiers and collecting their testimony. One common thread is clear: the Ft.  Hood command has been negligent in upholding soldiers' right to heal. So far we  have collected hundreds of pledges from service members and their families. We  have listened to their stories of their experience with trauma and the lack of  response or concern from the military. Perhaps most concerning is the fact that soldiers have been briefed  not to talk to us. It seems that General Campbell has chosen to ignore our  concerns rather than deal with them. Since he has chosen to not be a partner  with us in correcting these wrongdoings, we must do it ourselves. That is why we  are down here. We will only be able to uphold soldiers' right to heal when we  stand up for ourselves. Each day we become larger and more organized. We are  learning from our mistakes and making small victories. Even if it seems so very  far into the future, our day will soon come. Join us in our fight for the rights of service members and  veterans. When divided, we have no power; when together, we are unstoppable. It  has only been a couple of weeks into our deployment and we are already a force  to be reckoned with.  Join the growing GI rights movement! Stand with us and fight for  change!     |