| Friday, August 12, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, the US Army releases  data on military suicides, Nouri and State Of Law object to something they  previously agreed to (twice0, the AFL-CIO pulls a fake out, and more.     NATO must take all necessary precautions to avoid civilian  casualties during military operations, Amnesty International said today, after  allegations by Libyan officials loyal to Colonel Mu'ammar al-Gaddafi that 85  people were killed during an air strike on Monday night.
The organization  called on NATO to thoroughly investigate allegations of the deaths of unarmed  civilians during the air strike in the area of Majar, south of Zlitan  city.
 Independent journalists taken to the scene reported having been shown  up to 30 body bags, of which the bodies of two women and two children were  revealed
 On Tuesday, NATO military spokesperson Colonel Roland Lavoie said  the "legitimate target" of the strike was several farm buildings taken over by  al-Gaddafi forces and said that he had "no evidence of civilian  casualties."
 "NATO must take all feasible precautions to avoid civilian  casualties, even in those cases where al-Gaddafi forces are using civilian  facilities for military purposes," said Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui of Amnesty  International.
 "NATO continues to stress its commitment to protect civilians.  To that effect, it should thoroughly investigate this and all other recent  incidents in which civilians were reportedly killed in western Libya as a result  of air strikes."
 On 2 August, Amnesty International wrote to NATO Secretary  General Anders Fogh Rasmussen asking for clarification on incidents in June in  which unarmed civilians were reportedly killed and injured in Surman and  Tripoli.
 On 19 June, several civilians were reportedly killed, including two  children and a woman, when a projectile struck their homes in Tripoli.
 A NATO  Spokesperson later said that during the air strike on a missile site, "a  potential weapon system failure occurred and this caused the weapon not to hit  the intended target, and reportedly resulted in a number of civilian  casualties."
 On 20 June, NATO strikes in Surman against what appeared to be  civilian homes in a compound belonging to one of Colonel al-Gaddafi's  associates, Khweildy al-Hamedi, reportedly killed several civilians, including  two children and their mother.
 NATO said that the facility was a legitimate  military target and assured that precautions were taken before conducting the  "strike which minimized any potential risk of causing unnecessary  casualties".
 Since March 2011, Amnesty International has repeatedly requested  access to territories under the control of Colonel Mu'ammar al-Gaddafi in order  to investigate allegations of human rights violations and violations to  international humanitarian law. These included the sites of NATO bombings where  civilian casualties have been reported. The organization received no response.
 On 17 March, as fighting intensified in eastern Libya as well as in  Misratah, the UN Security Council authorized the establishment of a no-fly zone  over Libya and the implementation of all necessary measures, short of foreign  occupation, to protect civilians.
 The international alliance launched its  first military attacks against al-Gaddafi forces on 19 March. NATO took over the  military operation in late March.
 In their attempt to regain territory under  opposition control, al-Gaddafi forces launched indiscriminate attacks and  attacks targeting civilians.
 Such attacks were particularly widespread in  Misratah. Residents faced relentless and indiscriminate rocket attacks from  March to mid-May and sporadic attacks in the summer.
 On 31 July, three  unarmed civilians were killed and another injured when rockets landed in the  residential neighbourhood of Magasaba.
   Whether attacking hospitals or bombing news outlets, NATO has shown a blood  desire to inflict as much destruction and death as possible in what was  originally termed a "humanitarian mission" that would "protect" civilians.  At  the start of the war, it was also asserted it would be a matter of weeks.  That  was six months ago.  Every other week, the media breathlessly announces that the  so-called 'rebels' are advancing. Are they crawling across Libya on their  bellies?     The reality is that they're not advancing in any real sense and that's due  to the fact that the US government has yet again backed exiles -- decades old  exiles -- and just knows that these people who chose to leave the country will  have sway on those who remained behind.  Not very likely.  And that's why NATO  bombs like crazy, more than willing to kill civilians in the hope that the final  result will be Libyans screaming, "I don't care! I don't care! Do whatever you  want! Just stop the bombings!"    This week's talking points was "advancing" and "success" just around that  corner.  But the week ends with Reuters reporting  the so-called 'rebels'  attempting to overthrow the current government suffered 11 deaths "in the past  24 hours" while fighting in Brega.  Meanwhile  the Coalition of the Killing got a little bigger today when  Russia made an announcement.  Xinhua reports , "Russian President  Dmitry Medvedev signed a decree Friday backing the U.N. Security Council  resolution that authorized international military action in Libya, the  presidential press service said. Russia abstained from voting on UNSC Resolution  1973, which imposed a no-fly zone over Libya and tightened sanctions on the  North African country, when the measure was presented in March. According to a  decree posted on the Kremlin's website, Russia has agreed to ban all flights to  Libya in Russian air space with the exception of flights for humanitarian  purposes or for making an emergency landing."  2008 US presidential candidate and former US House Rep Cynthia McKinney is  speaking around the country, truth-telling, about the Libyan War. Press TV notes  today that hundreds turned out in Canada to  hear her speak this week and that tomorrow (August 13th) she will be taking part  in the Millions March in Harlem.   David Hungerford (Fight Back News) notes   hundreds turned out for Cynthia's Newark, New Jersey speak-out and that she  quoted Libyans stating, "This is our land and what lies underneath it belongs  to  us. We aren't going to let anyone take it away. We wiil fight to the last  person and the last bullet." Workers World notes  of her speech to a packed crowd  at Atlanta's Shrine of the Black Madonna last month, "She declared to the  enthusiastic crowd that she would never be a 'team player for war' but was  representing the 'peace team' on her travels around the world'."  June 24th, she spoke in DC  and this is an excerpt  of the speech:    Cynthia McKinney:  I took a rash step because I was so outraged.  I  was outraged that our president would launch yet another illegal,  unconstitutional, immoral war.  And so I also knew that my government was lying.  I knew -- Again, yes, that's right.  I knew also that the press were lying.  After all, in this country we've got at least one court decision that says it's  okay for the press to knowingly lie to the American people and to the  international community. But not only that, we know from just a few years ago  with Iraq that 935 times not only were we lied to but our president, vice  president and Condoleeza Rice but the press readily, zealously printed all of  those lies. And since I'm a student of the counter-intelligence program, I know  that it didn't start with the Iraq War, it started a long time ago.  And the  demonizing, the targeting.  Our own FBI said that they wanted to neutralize  certain leaders who dared to dissent. And while I'm here, I'm staying at the  home of John Judge who has dedicated his life to understanding the nature of  political assassinations that have taken place in our country and so we know  that we have had silent coups and the end of sniper's bullets that have killed  our leaders who have dared to dissent.   Faced with all of that, Brother Akbar  [Muhammad] that is so vitally important. Black Amrica has been extremely  supportive of our president but not in this case. A line has been drawn in the  sand with respect to our president bombing Africa.  And Libya in particular  because of the history of support when the United States was supporting  apartheid in Africa, on the African continent it was the people of Libya and the  leadership of Muammar Gaddafi  who were fighting to eradicate apartheid. And for  those Blacks and people of color inside this countrty who were fighting to  eradicate American style apartheid, the people of Libya and Muammar Gaddafi were  supportive as well. Now I don't know that history but Brother Akbar knows that  history very well. And that is part of the reason why Black America has drawn  this line in the sand because this is something that is a historical  relationship that has context that [. . .] that our President Obama has stepped  across, he has crossed over the threshold. I have been blessed to be able to  travel all over the world and as I have traveled, at one point I was extremely  proud of the fact that Black people in the United States all over the world have  a moral authority because everyone all over the world understands the plight  that we have struggled against and that we continue to have to struggle against.  But unfortunately now, the policies of the Bush administration have been  enuciated and implemented by Black faces from Colin Powell and Condoleeza Rice  and now we have a continuation of those polices through the office of President  Obama. So I am directly impacted negatively by the actions of these Black people  who have decided that they would cast their lot with War Mongerers, War  Criminals and people who peddle in death and destruction.  So I decided that as  a responsible and conscious Black person, I wanted my voice heard against what  these other people were inunciating. And at the same time, I am sick and tired  of war.    Cynthia McKinney's truth-telling tour continues:   A continuing mobilization  against the U.S. war on Libya has taken place in cities across the country.  Packed, standing room only audiences at major meetings have heard former  Congressperson Cynthia McKinney report on her June fact-finding trip to Libya  with the Dignity delegation. In every meeting the message rings out: Stop the  U.S./NATO bombing of Libya.  In the coming ten days Cynthia  McKinney is scheduled to speak at meetings in Boston on Saturday, August 6,  in Los Angeles on Sunday, August 7, in Vancouver on Tuesday, August 9. McKinney  will speak at the Millions March in Harlem of August 13 along with Minister  Farrakhan and other opponents of war and sanctions on Libya and Zimbabwe. She is  scheduled to speak at 2 meetings in North Carolina on Sunday, August 14 hosted  by the Black Workers for Justice in Rocky Mount and later at a historic civil  rights church in Durham. CLICK HERE for FULL  LISTING CLICK HERE TO DONATE FOR TOUR  EXPENSES To see Cynthia speaking at Riverside Church, click here .  The release notes that Cynthia spoke to a  standing-room-only audience at Newark's Abyssinian Baptist Church.   Quoting  from the release:  A Full listing of the current tour follows and is available  at: www.IACenter.org National-tour, now to 19 cities, organized by International  Action Center in coordination with many antiwar and community organizations from July 7 to August 28,  2011.   And we'll note her upcoming events:     August 13, Saturday - NYC with Millions March in Harlem August 14, Sunday - Rocky Mount, and Durham, NC August 19, Friday – St Louis MO August 21, Sunday - Pittsburg, PA August 25, Thursday - Baltimore, MD August 27, Saturday – Detroit, MI August 28, Sunday – Denver CO       Turning to Iraq where Nouri al-Maliki's greed was once only fabled and  whispered of softly, today it's legendary. As he continues to fleece the Iraqi  people, his greed may be the thing that destroys the US-propped up government. 
 Despite the March 7, 2010 election being seen as a rejection of Nouri --  whose slate came in second despite all of the predictions otherwise as well as  Nouri's own abuse of office in an attempt to bring in the votes -- his greed  would not allow for anyone else to be prime minister. As Nouri dug in his heels  following the election, a few wondered what it would take to get Nouri out of  the office he had just lost? Thanks to the US, he didn't have to worry and,  after nine months of Political Stalemate I, he and the political blocs agreed to  follow the Erbil Agreement. Among other things, the Erbil Agreement called for  the creation of a national council on security which would be headed by Ayad  Allawi (Allawi's Iraqiya came in first in the March 2010 elections). Then Nouri  got named prime minister-designate and promptly trashed the agreement. 
 Via a series of summer house parties, Jalal Talabani brought together  the political blocs and, as late as yesterday, there was praise for Jalal's  efforts in the Iraqi press. Political Stalemate II was going to be ended. And  before nine months! The political blocs -- including Nouri -- had agreed to  return to the Erbil Agreement. Yesterday in Parliament, the most vocal opponents  to the creation of the national council were from Nouri's State Of Law. Alsumaria TV reports   today, "Iraq Premier Nouri Al Maliki reiterated that he is not convinced by the  Higher National Strategic Policies Council as the country is heading towards  Ministerial reduction and added that the Council is to be established in order  to please some parties and doesn't have any role in solving the problems of the  political process. During an interview with Alsumaria TV Maliki said he is not  convinced by establishing this council especially that the institutions of the  Iraqi State are currently flaccid. Maliki stressed that the situation will  deteriorate if politics interfered in security."
 Though the body was  supposed to be independent and have actual powers, Al Rafidayn quotes  Nouri stating  that its work would be purely advisory. Nouri's trashing this latest agreement  much sooner than he did at the end of 2010. When State of Law carped and  complained in Parliament yesterday following the reading of the draft law, many  observers knew that they must do so with Nouri's blessing (Nouri is the head of  State of Law). Now the surprise over that has been replaced with puzzlement over  why Nouri is attacking the agreement he just signed off on? Since the only thing  most are aware he got was for others to begin publicly speaking favorably of at  least entertaining the thought of US forces remaining on the ground in Iraq  beyond 2011, that would appear to be all he got from the summer House Parties --  spreading the blame for a continued US presence all around in the government.    On the subject of whether or not US troops remain in Iraq after the start  of the new year,  Robert Naiman (Huffington Post)  observes, "John McCain once said that there's no problem with keeping U.S.  troops in Iraq forever, just like we do in Germany, Japan, and South Korea.  How  liberals mocked him! But that's what the Obama Administration is now trying to  do: keep US troops in Iraq forever. [. . . ] The Pentagon doesn't want you to  notice that at the same time Washington is seized with debt hysteria, and the  nation's mainstream media are demanding cuts to Social Security and Medicare  benefits on the preposterous claim that 'we can no longer afford it,' the  Pentagon is laying plans to keep 10,000 U.S. troops in Iraq forever.  They call  these troops 'trainers,' so we are not supposed to notice. But these 'trainers'  engage in combat: they kill Iraqis, and they get killed by Iraqis."  Naiman is with Just Foreign Policy and they're asking you to tell  Congress no more Iraq War funding after the end of 2011 .  And while  Americans wait for the day that Barack will speak publicly about the efforts of  the US government to extend the US military presence in Iraq, the costs are not  only finanical but also human lives. A memorial in California has been tracking  deaths in the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars.  Has been.  Jonathan Morales (Contra Costa Times) reports  that  the memorial in Lafayette has simply run out of space for any more crosses.  There is no more space to erect additional crosses to note the deaths and yet  the US government wants to continue both wars.   Political intrigue continues in Iraq as well.  For example,  Al  Mada reports  that the Sadr bloc is calling for an  investigation into the alleged fake contracts and alleged theft of funds in the  Ministry of Electricity. Over the weekend, Nouri al-Maliki announced he was  firing the Minister of Electricity due to fake contracts worth billions. There  were two main responses. First, many stated Nouri didn't have the power to do  the firing, only Parliament did. Second, the Minister of Electricity floated  that he had many stories to tell. It has since emerged that these contracts  Nouri claims to be surprised and appalled by carry . . . Nouri's signature.  Nouri and State Of Law's latest move is to note that this member of Nouri's  Cabinet is also a member of Iraqiya. I'm not sure how that assists Nouri since,  over the weekend, Iraqiya was the first to state that they supported the move  Nouri made.  Dr. Nimrod Raphaeli (The Middle East Media Research  Institute) offers  an analysis of what happened:    In July of this year, the Ministry of Electricity signed a contract  with a Canadian company, CAPGENT, for $1.2 billion for the construction of 10  power stations with a production capacity of 100 megawatts each. The company was  registered in Vancouver, Canada. It also signed a second contract with a German  company, Maschinerbrau Halberstadt, for €500 million ($650 million) for the  construction of five power stations with a production capacity of 100 megawatts  each, to be completed within 12 months from the time a line of credit was  extended. It now appears that the two companies are fictitious, and had the  contracts been executed they would have would have constituted a monumental case  of fraud involving senior officials of the Ministry of  Electricity. The two fraudulent cases came to light thanks to the personal  efforts of Jawad Hashim, a former minister of planning in Iraq during the early  Ba'thist regime in the 1960s and early 1970s. In a handwritten letter to Iraqi  Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, datelined Vancouver, Canada, August 2, 2011,  Hashim detailed the fraud.  As a resident of Vancouver, Hashim decided to investigate the  available information on the Canadian company while he asked the former minister  of economy and governor of the Iraqi central bank, Fakhri Yassin Qadduri, who  resides in Germany, to investigate the identity of the German  company. 
David Baines (Vancouver Sun) reports  that Jawad Hashim (the whistleblower) was convicted of "in absentia, of  embezzling more than $50 million from the Arab Monetary Fund" and that Hashim  maintains that the charges are false and were revenge for his defection from  Saddam Hussein's government and his departing Iraq.  Hayder Najm (niqash) questions  whether  the contracts are indeed with fake companies.     
Last Friday, a prison in Hilla saw a riot and a break out. Among the  details that were passed on to the media was that guns with silencers were  stored in the prison -- by guards. Why do you need a silencer in a prison if  you're a guard? That question was never answered.  Laith Hammoudi (McClatchy Newspapers) reports   four prisoners were killed, 1 guard was killed and four guards were injured.  Dar Addustour reports  that the  prison break was addressed in Parliament today. Now might be a good time to note  what's not addresssed: though there was a great deal of grandstanding when  protests were taking place repeatedly throughout Iraq, no salaries were changed.  That's the presidency and the vice presidency, that's the prime minister.    Reuters notes a Baghdad roadside bombing  last night left three people injured and a second one left two Iraqi soldiers  injured (other events from last night noted by Retuers were included in  yesterday's snapshot).     
 "There is no way to fund what we must do as a  nation without bringing our troops home from Iraq and Afghanistan. The  militarization of our foreign policy has proven to be a costly mistake. It is  time to invest at home" - AFL-CIO Executive  Council, Aug. 3, 2011           Tom Hayden found the statement amazing and a sign of a 'progressive'  victory.  This morning, I disagreed . Tom may have indeed  been right.  Because the statement is rather weak and the AFL-CIO has been  calling out the Iraq War for years, click here for one 2007 example  and although the  new statement was approved and passed August 3rd, you can search in favin on the  AFL-CIO's website for it.  You'd think such an important statement might make  the main  page.  Wrong.  But on the main page you will hear about what you can  do for the Democratic Party in next year's elections and about those 'bad'  Republicans.  But you won't find the statement. Because it means nothing to the  AFL-CIO.  If it did, they'd make it their damn banner already.  It's nothing but  an attempt at advertising.  It's nothing but, "We've got to elect Dems!  Who can  connect with liberal voters now that Barack's proven to be the golden calf?  I  know!  The unions!  Get the AFL-CIO to issue a statement and then when they come  to the website we'll lock in their votes for the Democratic Party."  I'm real  damn sick of this illegal war to begin with.  But I'm also sick of the partisn  b.s. that has surrounded it from day one. It's been used to give Republicans  control of Congress (that was the 2002 strategy), it's been used to give  Democrats control of both houses of Congress and it's been used to flip the  White House.  But the Iraq War has not ended.  And if 'progressives' were  serious about ending it today, they'd be talking about the war every time they  were in front of the camera or microphone and, in Congress, Barbara Lee wouldn't  be writing that embarrassing letter.  Instead, she or someone else, would  compose a letter that simply stated: "We will not allow you to continue this  war.  We will stop funding." That's all that needs to be said.  And it's not  even an issue of votes.  A real filibuster could defeat any and every attempt at  continuing to fund the illegal war.   On the main page of US Labor Against the War , the top headline, in huge letters,  is about the AFL-CIO resolution. And if they cared about their own resolution,  that's what the AFL-CIO would have done as well.  Instead it's a 'progressive.'   Meaning, it tricks and decieves, lies and manipulates because all that ever  matters is how you vote every other year in November. That is the true meaning  of progressive as they have repeatedly taught us (so-called progressives) since  2007.  They're fakes.  Many of them are adults who are too scared of their own  shadow to declare they're Socialists.  Matthew Rothschild, for example,  presented as "progressive" and only came out as a Socialist after the 2008  election.  (And no doubt, actual Socialists wish the coward would go back in the  political closet.) If you use the links US Labor Against the War provides, you  suddenly find the 'statement' at the AFL-CIO website .  Remember progressives are fakes?  Tom Hayden, the mother of all  progressives, the one who nursed them with his man boobs, Tom Hayden writes  about this 'amazing' statement, turns it into a Huffignton Post  article.   Is there a bigger fraud than Tom Hayden?   "There is no way to fund what we must do as a nation without bringing our  troops home from Iraq and Afghanistan. The militarization of our foreign policy  has proven to be a costly mistake. It is time to invest at home."  Is that not  just the sweetest little open the heavens and let in the light statement to be  made?   What's the problem with the statement?  It's 42 words.   42 words.  And this 'big statement' that's only 42 words?   It's not really a statement.   If I want to make a statement about the wars, I make a statement about the  wars.  I don't bury two little sentences of 42 words in a, pay attention,  1592.word essay.  That 'statement'?  It's the eighth paragraph of their press  release that should be entitled "Your 2012 Voters' Guide."  19 more paragraphs  follow paragraph eight.  Only paragraph eight -- those two sentences of 42  words, mentions the wars.  And Tom wants to claim it as a progressive victory.   Wants to treat it as major news.  And thought he'd get away with it.  There's  nothing worth praising here.   US Senator Patty Murray is also the Chair of the Senate Veterans Affairs  Committee.  Her office notes this event next week.    (Washington, D.C.) – On Tuesday, August  16th, U.S. Senator Patty Murray, Chairman of the U.S. Senate Committee on  Veterans' Affairs, will hold a listening session to hear from area veterans on  local challenges and to discuss her efforts to improve veterans care and  benefits nationwide. This will be Senator Murray's first discussion with local  veterans as Chairman of the Veterans' Affairs Committee. Senator Murray will use  the struggles, stories, and suggestions she hears on Monday to fight for local  veterans in Washington,  D.C.       WHO:          U.S. Senator Patty  Murray                       Local veterans               WHAT:         Veterans listening session with Senator Murray       WHEN:         Tuesday, August 16th             1:00  PM PT       WHERE:     Ft. Vancouver Artillery  Barracks                                     600 East Hatheway Road                                     Vancouver, WA  98661                        Map         
 MF: What was he like when you  talked to him after he was sent home?
 
 Jeremiah Kirkland: He was just totally depressed. It  all got to him.
 
 MF: Did he  express his frustration with the treatment he was getting?
 
 JK: Yeah, he said all they did was load him up with  drugs.
 
 MF: What was your reaction  when you heard that he had killed himself?
 
 JK: In all honestly, I was not surprised. I mean, Army  mental health care is a joke. You pretty much go there, don't even tell them  anything, and they determine whatever category you're in based on different  factors and that's the treatment you get. My brother got substandard treatment.  The consistently dropped the ball.
 
 MF: Who do you think is responsible for your brother's  death?
 
 JK: This government! If he  hadn't been deployed, for no goddamn reason but corporate greed, he would still  be here.
 
 MF: What do you think  about Derrick being rated a "low risk" for suicide by the Army?
 
 JK: Not surprised, honestly. It's just,  you know, pretty much whatever they can do to save the government dollar on  giving our soldiers actual health care. It just doesn't work.
    The speak-out comes as the US Army delivers the latest monthly results on  suicide.  Youchi J. Dreazen (National Journal)  explains :  "There were 32 Army suicides in July, the highest monthly toll  ever recorded. The grim figure underscores the military's continuing inability  to find ways of preventing troubled soldiers from taking their own lives."  Next week, we'll do two days on the UN report.  I forgot it yesterday and  just don't have the time tonight.  My apologies. |