| Wednesday, August 3, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, US Senators Patty  Murray, Jay Rockefeller, Max Bacus and Robert Casey work to determine how many  veterans are taking their own lives, Jane Arraf demonstrates (without show  boating) why her knowledge of Iraq is second only to the legendary Robert Fisk,  Matthew Rothschild demonstrates that if you're too dishonest to call out Barack  then you're also dishonest enough to try to rewrite facts in order to make your  bad column more 'pleasing,' and more.   Starting with the Libyan War,  Saturday the jounalists of the Libyan  Broadcasting Authority issued the following statement:     In an act of international terrorism and in violation of UNSC   resolutions, NATO targeted the facilities of the Libyan Broadcasting  Authority  in the early hours of this morning. 3 of our colleges were  murdered and 15  injured while performing their professional duty as  Libyan  journalists. NATO admitted the crime sighting "silencing Gaddafi's propaganda  machine" as a justification for such a murderous act. We are the employees of the official Libyan TV. We are not a  military target, we are not commanders in the army and we do not pose a threat   to civilians. We are performing our job as journalists representing what we  wholeheartedly believe is the reality of NATO's aggression and the  violence in  Libya. We have the right to work in a safe environment protected by  national and international law. The fact that we work for the Libyan government   or represent anti-NATO, anti-armed gangs views does not make us a  legitimate  target for NATO's rockets. As journalists, we demand that we get full protection from the   international community and ask our brothers in the profession from all  around  the world to stand against such attacks targeting media   personnel. Foreign journalists in Tripoli, Reporters without Borders and  human  rights organizations: we appeal to you to make your moral and   professional stand clear on this issue. We are hopeful that your media organizations will help us  highlight  this important issue and come out in support of our just  cause. Thank you. Muhammad Ahmed MukhtarAbdelwanis Sulaiman Elsayed
 Abdelwahid  Muhammad Ali
     Kevin Pina: The situation on the ground in Libya continues to heat  up following the killing of Abdul Fatah Younis who was the chief of staff of the  so-called rebels in Libya.  One thing that is being under-reported in the press  here and throughout the world is that NATO actually intervened on behalf of one  of the rebel groups in Benghazi last Friday and over the weekend, we also  understand that NATO bombers also took out three antenna dishes for Libyan  television but also killed three journalists.  Apparently killing journalists is  one way of supporting free speech in Libya today. Here again is our special  correspondent Mahdi Nazamroaya who is on the ground in Tripoli, Libya.  Mahdi,  welcome back to Flashpoints on  Pacifica Radio.    Mahdi Nazemroaya: Thank you for having me.   Kevin Pina:  So let's start of course with what happened in NATO's  intervention which is not reported in the press at all in the internal conflict  among the so-called rebels who appear to now to be tearing each other  apart.   Mahdi Nazemroaya:  Yes.  Just a few days ago in Benghazi riots  broke out as well as protests, separate protests, and armed struggle as well  between different groups. Members of the biggest tribe in Libya, Warfalla, were  attacked during a meeting that they had discussing ways to get rid of the  Transitional Council. The building they were in was attacked.  It's unconfirmed  but it's believed that 160 members of the Warfalla tribe were killed during this  meeting.  There was also armed fighting between Abdul Fatah Younis' tribesmen  who actually opened fire on members of the Transitional Council especially  after the press conference that announced his death, actually murder is the  proper way to put it. So in Benghazi fighting has broken out.  In Tobruk  fighting has broken out.  In Darnah, fighting has broken out.  The Libyan people  there are beginning to take up arms against the Transitional Council. I've been  told that some of them were actually waiting for the right moment and it seems  that the Transitional Council is in a very, very hard place right  now.   Kevin Pina: And that's the voice of Mahdi Nazemroaya, our special  correspondent, speaking to us directly from Tripoli, Libya.  He is also a  research associate at the  Centre for Research on Globalization based in  Montreal, Canada. Now, Mahdi, what we also understand -- it's interesting  because as you're describing all of this internal strife and battle and warfare  among the so-called rebels themselves at the same time the west was making  announcements of advancements and military victories they were making in the  field.   Mahdi Nazemroaya:  Well they've been doing this the  whole time,  this is not unusual, it's not strange, it's not new, but it's not true.  They  have not been making advances.  I was just looking at an article from the  Guardian from last month, how they were saying Tripoli was reached. The  reporter, he wrote this report in Tripoli. I'm looking at the Telegraph  right now from July 6th and it's talking about covert guerilla war in Tripoli  and how Tripoli's about to fall and there's three fronts to the east of the  Libyan capital.  They've been talking about this for a long time, there has been  no gains.  It's the other way around.  The tides are turning. The Transitional  Council is in a very hard spot and this is what's forced NATO and it's coalition  to intervene to help the Transnational Council attack Libyan citizens in the  east.  The Libyan people in the east are trying to throw off the yoke of the  Transitional Council which essentially is NATO.  In fact, Qatari armed vehicles  have been seen in Benghazi and Qatari troops are in Benghazi as well as well as  others from the Gulf Cooperation Council who have been putting down the protests  and the armed struggle that's trying to remove the Transitional Council from  power and bring back the legitimate government of Libya in  Benghazi.   Kevin Pina: Well that might for a lot of our listeners who are  wondering why Al Jazeera is embedded with the rebels, now we hear Qatari troops  are actually fighting against people in the east on behalf of people with the  Transitional Council inside of Libya according to our special correspondent  Mahdi Nazemroaya who is joining us directly from Tripoli, Libya.    At this point Mahdi reads the letter in that we noted at the top and then  the two discuss it. Okay, a friend at KPFA  asked if I'd note something.  I'm going to  but I'm not a fake like Amy Goodman so I'm not going to schill.  First off, we  walked away from Flashpoints Radio  for a reason.  Even now  there are community members who are upset that I'm highlighting it.  I  understand that and I respect their feelings. Why are they upset?  Because they  have not forgotten when Ray McGovern and Dennis Bernstein engaged in attacks on  two women in their effort to promote Julian Assange.  This is disclaimer within  disclaimer.  But since we're on Julian, I know Gareth Peirce and like her.   She's his new attorney.  Unlike the Julian Booster Wagon, we noted in real time  what incredible f**k ups his attorneys were, we noted -- and were the only ones  who did -- the judge's disbelief at the filings and the witnesses Julian's  attorney's provided.  (As stated then, Julian's lousy attorneys were no  reflection on his guilt or innocence.  They were and are incompetent.  The judge  all but stated that in the court room.)  Gareth's long history speaks for itself  and she'll do a wonderful job representing Julian. And starting with her taking  over the case, I'm out of it in terms of commentary unless those two women get  attacked again.  The women may or may not have been raped.  My position here was  we don't know what happened, we weren't there.  And if Ray McGovern, Naomi Wolfe  and others had taken that position, Julian's reputation wouldn't be so bad right  now.  But instead, they chose to insist the women were this and that and every  awful thing in the world.  When Ray, Naomi, et al's claims were demonstrated to  be lies, they not only didn't issue a correction or an apology, they continued  to repeat the lies.  Two women who may or may not have been raped were torn  apart because some little babies had to protect their hero.  That's not what  we're supposed to do on the left.  But because that's what McGovern and Dennis did on Flashpoints , there are people that will not listen to the  show anymore.  And I do understand that and I do respect it.  The reason we  started highlighting it was because when we (Wally , Kat , Ava  and I) were speaking to various groups in the  spring, the Libyan War kept coming up.  We're there to discuss the wars, so that  was fine.  But it was very, very hard for people to find coverage they felt they  could trust.  Al Jazeera, for example, destroyed its reputation with the Libyan  War. (Amy Goodman revealed herself to be a fraud to a number of college students  with her silence on the Libyan War.)  Kevin Pina was guest hosting Flashpoints  Tuesday through Friday and he and Mahdi were  covering Libya Tuesday through Thursday (and doing a great job). That's why we  included the program and that's why I have e-mailed and individual apology and  an explanation to every community member who has complained that we are  highlighting Flashpoints .  KPFA is in  fundraising mode.  I was asked to note that and to note thatFlashpoints  has been the only place on Pacifica  Radio  where you have gotten Libyan War coverage regularly.  (Robert Knight  may be noting it on his show. He's on WBAI and I wasn't asked by any WBAI  friends to make any comments.) Dennis needed a rest and is back from his  vacation with a voice that still sounds sore.  He has publicly thanked and  praised Kevin and Mahdi for their work and he is said to be determined to  continue Flashpoint 's leadership on the Libyan War. If you  appreciate the coverage and you want to donate and can afford to, the number is  1-800-439-5732.  You can also safely contribute online .  You can make a one time donation or you  can make a donation where they charge your credit card X amount every month.  Pacifica  Radio  is public radio and, if you itemize your deductions on your taxes,  your donation is tax deductable.   My own opinion -- feel free to disagree -- Dennis can cross a line when  he's passionate about something.  That does not excuse what happened to those  two women (the on-air trashing) for me.  But it does help me understand it.   When he crosses a line, if someone points that out, he usually gets it.  That  has been the pattern in the past.  So if you're on the fence about donating and  want a reason to, there you go.  I don't think he'd trash the two women today.   (I doubt most would, the backlash was too severe.) Also true, while a huge  number were still playing the sexist and nonsense card of "That awful President  Hillary Clinton . . .," Dennis was pointing out that she is Secretary of State  and responsible for her actions there but if you're unhappy with White House  policies and actions, Barack Obama was actually elected president in 2008 and  you should take your complaint there.  Though that is so basic to this  community, it is something that a large number of lefty males have struggled  with and a large number continue to struggle with it. And male or female, it's  something a number of KPFA  on-airs continue to struggle with.  If you're not going to donate, you're not going to and you don't owe anyone  (including me) an explanation. But whether you donate or not, do remember that,  as Dennis pointed out on air yesterday, Flashpoints  did what Pacifica  Radio  is supposed to.  And let me point out what Dennis didn't because he  was being kind: Flashpoints  did what Pacifica  Radio  is supposed to -- but none of the others did.  (Again, Robert Knight  most likely has covered this with guests and reports on WBAI.) All that air time  to fill.  And we've had talk about TV shows and we've had trivia.  Since when is  Pacifica Radio  broadcasting Entertainment Tonight ?  When all other news outlets are droning on in the same pro-war voice, Pacifica  Radio  is supposed to provide the voice of dissent, the voice of the  silenced. One show did that and if you want to donate to Flashpoints  for that reason, great.  But grasp that one  show did its job while a lot of shows did nothing.  (And if you want to donate  to Flashpoints  but aren't able to while it's airing live,  you can donate at any time and note on the phone -- 1-800-439-5732 -- or in your  online  donation  that you are donating because of the work Flashpoints  has been doing.)  End of pitch.   Each month the Army releases their data on suicides.  The press covers it  and any information released by the other branches as well.  Reading in the  paper (the monthly release is usually just noted in the print media), you can be  left with the impression that these are the military suicides but they are not  the only ones.  Those who have discharged and left the service have become  "veterans" and not "service members."  Veterans deal with many issues like  readjustment to civilian life, attempting to find employment (in a bad economy  and in a climate where young male veterans of the current wars have one of the  worst rates of unemployment in the country), attempting to re-establish  relationships, as well as, for some, other issues such as PTSD.     Veterans taking their own lives because the system failed them (or their  pain from what they experienced while serving is too much to handle) are paying  the costs of war and they are paying it with very few aware because their  numbers are not tracked.     Many have decried this lack of record keeping including Senator Daniel  Akaka when he was Chair of the Veterans Affairs Committee and Senator Patty  Murray back then as well as since she became Chair of the Veterans Affairs  Committee.  Senator Murray and three other senators are attempting to resolve  the 'mystery' around veterans suicides and to get this cost of war out in the  open.  Her office notes:    (Washington, D.C.) – U.S.  Senator Patty Murray (D-WA), Chairman of the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee,  has joined with Senators Jay Rockefeller (D-WV), Max Baucus (D-MT), and Robert  Casey (D-PA) to call on state Governors to begin reporting critical statistics  on suicides among military veterans in their states. The effort, which comes  amid a steadily rising suicide rate among veterans and members of the military,  focuses on pushing 41 states to create a direct link to the VA to communicate  information about veteran suicides. That information is particularly important  for tracking and prevention efforts as many suicides among veterans not enrolled  in the VA often go unrecorded.'  "One of the most significant  obstacles to understanding veteran suicide is the lack of information available  regarding these individuals," the  Senators wrote. "In many cases the Department of Veterans Affairs does not even  know that a veteran has died if that individual was not enrolled in VA health  care."  In addition to the National Governors Association  the letter sent by the Senators also went to the National Association of Medical  Examiners, which is the professional organization for medical examiners and  death investigators who are responsible for investigating deaths that are  violent, suspicious, or otherwise unusual.     The full text of  the Senators' letter is below:       July 20,  2011  The  Honorable Dave Heineman   Chair, National Governors Association    444  North Capitol Street   Suite  267   Washington, DC  20001-1512    As you know, there has been a disturbing rise in  suicide rates among veterans and members of the military.  We are sure you find  this trend as troubling as we do.  As we continue our work to provide all the  needed resources and services to assist servicemembers and veterans with mental  health concerns, we ask for your assistance in this  effort.   One of the most significant obstacles to  understanding veteran suicide is the lack of information available regarding  these individuals.  In many cases the Department of Veterans Affairs does not  even know that a veteran has died if that individual was not enrolled in VA  health care.  This makes it very difficult for researchers and mental health  professionals to study the information and design effective, targeted campaigns  to prevent suicide.   This is a result of the fact that only 16 states  provide information to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National  Violent Death Reporting System.  VA has also been working with the states to  create a direct link between the states and VA to communicate information about  veteran suicide, but so far only nine states have reached such an agreement with  the Department.   Thank you for  your assistance, we look forward to working with you on behalf of the nation's  veterans.    Sincerely, Patty Murray  Chairman   John D. Rockefeller IV Senator   Robert Casey Senator   Max Baucus Senator #####       Turning to the Iraq War, news came late yesterday  that the  Iraq had agreed to launch official negotiations with the US on the US military  staying in Iraq beyond 2011. As Jane Arraf (Christian Science Monitor)  notes , "Long after most reporters had rushed home to beat the 1 a.m. curfew  still in force, Deputy Prime Minister Rosh Nuri Shawis emerged to read a  statement to state-run television saying the attendees recognized the need for  further training of Iraqi military forces."  And as we'll note, curfew or not,  Jane Arraf reported on it yesterday.  As did AP 's Lara Jakes and  Mohammad Ali Harissi for AFP  -- those three's reports were noted in  yesterday's snapshot.      Yang Lina (Xinhua -- link has text and video)  reports, "Iraq's political leaders have given the government the  green light to begin negotiating a deal with the U.S. The deal would keep  American troops beyond the end of 2011 to train Iraqi security forces."  Ned Parker and Raheem Salman  (Los Angeles Times) point  out , "As a candidate, President Obama promised to end the Iraq war,  so the White House has been reluctant to call openly for U.S. troops to  remain." So, yes, that makes the start of acknowledged negotiations major  news. (Even if the New York Times  runs a  paragraph by AP  and refuses to file  their own story on the issue. Talk about caught sleeping on the job -- and, no,  that's not a slam at Tim Arango who is pursuing a different story and doing  follow ups. He is not the only one who could have written the story and when  Mullen went into Iraq, he did so with reporters.)Jane Arraf (Al Jazeera)  observes , "After weeks of wrangling and lots of US pressure it  appears to be a breakthrough. After a five hour meeting in presidential compound  here in Baghdad there was an announcement that a deal has been reached that  presence of US military trainers would be raised in parliament." And as noted  yesterday, Jane Arraf Tweeted about the big meet-up so refer to her Twitter feed  for many more details about what was  discussed by the Iraqi political blocs beyond US troops. And, if you visited her  feed this morning, you saw that the supposed official stated position of the Sadr  bloc  is they're not going to block the move if everyone else goes  along with it (US troops in Iraq beyond 2011) but that she (Arraf) was meeting up with a Sadr  official to find out what their position actually entails . Of  the negotiations, Press TV notes , "The  move, which is opposed by the Iraqi people, comes after a visit to Baghdad by  the outgoing Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Mike Mullen, who  has urged the al-Maliki government to make a decision whether it wants an  extended presence of American forces in Iraq." This week in Baghdad, a petition  calling on US forces to leave Iraq at the end of the year got 2.5 million  signatures. Another number is offered by  Stars & Stripes , "The  U.S. has offered to keep up to 10,000 troops in Iraq beyond the year-end  deadline." AsDar Addustour  notes , the meet-up of the political blocs took place at Jalal  Talabani's home (Talabani is the President of Iraq). Mohammed Tawfeeq and CNN  quote
  the Deputy Prime Minister Ruz Nouri Shawees stating, "After  extensive discussions, the leaders of the political blocs headed by Iraq's  President Jalal Talabani have agreed to let the Iraqi government start  negotiations with the American side only on the issues of training and under the  Strategic Framework Agreement." In an active and functioning media, that  statement alone would result in multiple columns, analysis and discussions. As  it is, it will probably sail right over most heads (the meaning of it). Ed O'Keefe (Washington Post) elaborates   further, "The leaders agreed that any request to keep U.S. military trainers in  Iraq would fall under a general security agreement with the United States and  would not require signing a new accord to keep U.S. troops in the country into  2012, according to Talabani's office. U.S. military and diplomatic officials in  Iraq did not respond to requests for comment Tuesday night." The only  non-Iraqi press outlet I see offering analysis of the news at this point is the  editorial board of the Khaleej  Times :With pressure coming in  from Washington to decide at the earliest if it wants the remaining troops to  stay or leave, Maliki faces a tough task. His tenuously cobbled coalition  government is at a risk of falling apart in case a decision is made in favour of  retaining American forces for longer than the December 2011 deadline. Facing  violent opposition from some of his coalition partners -- concerning further  prolonging of US forces in the country -- Maliki is in a catch-22 position in  trying to choose the lesser of the two evils. For the security in Iraq is far  from stable and is in fact worse than before, according to a recent report  presented before the US Congress. According to the US Special Inspector General  for Iraq Reconstruction, Stuart W. Bowen Junior, the security situation is at an  all time low.Though an earlier  military assessment in May lauded the improvement in security, it was misleading  and based on a comparative assessment of the situation to that in 2007. As a  matter of fact, according to Bowen, Iraq is facing enhanced security threat from  Shia militant factions that have contributed to the spread of violence and  instability. An increase in targeted killings of US soldiers and Iraqi officials  and attacks in Baghdad over the past many months is testament to the fact. In  addition, the Iraqi military capability is as yet not on  track. The start of negotiations is major news.  And it did come  late yesterday.  So some needed to play catch up today.  Understandable.  If  they, in fact, caught up.   There are 20 headlines to stories on The Nation's main page currently, not  one has anything to do with Iraq.  On Democracy Now! , Amy Goodman gave  it two sentences plus a quote from Adm Mike Mullen.  A military officer, grasp  this, had more to say on Democracy Now! about war than did that 'peace loving'  Amy.  (Some may say, "She covered the debt ceiling!"  Finally.  And too damn  little too damn late.  Ava and I documented that in real time she did nothing  "TV: The unexamined (American)  lives " and "TV: The Age of  Fakery ."  She only cared after the fact.  See Elaine's "The Goody Whore " from  last night.) And then there's Matthew.  The Progressive offers a piece by Matthew Rothschild, a weak and inaccurate  piece.  Maybe he shouldn't have written a damn thing?   Mike picked Matty Rothschild as Idiot of the Week  and boy had Matty earned that honor.  A month or so back, Matty was going to get  ripped apart by me over his so-called concern for civil liberties.  If you're  concerned for civil liberties and do a "McCarthy Watch," you do that the same  regardless of who is in the White House.  He can rip Bush apart, he just can't  call out Princess Barack.  Now because Matthew called out the Libyan War and  (rightly) noted it was an impeachable crime, I wrongly thought he had left the  Cult of St. Barack and was more than willng to table the critique of how he does  a McCarthyism Watch when it's Barack and when it's Bush.     Poor Barack, the ultimate victim.  No one listens to him!  The Pentagon  does what it wants!     I'm sick of this crap.  He is president.  People like Matthew Rothschild  lied and whored to get him the Democratic Party nomination.  He's now the  president hold him accountable.  I am so sick of these pathetic little babies  and Matthew is the King of them.     From his embarrassing garbage:    All U.S. troops are supposed to be out of Iraq by the end of this  year. This has not only been Obama's pledge. This is the precise wording  of the security agreement between the Iraqi government and the United  States. But now the Obama administration wants to keep U.S. troops beyond  that date, so the Pentagon's been negotiating with the Iraqis to extend the  American presence there.   Okay, that wasn't Obama's pledge.  That's a damn lie.  Barack would not  have gotten the Democratic Party nomination if he was promising that all troops  will be out of Iraq at the start of 2012, three years after he takes office.   That's a damn lie.   Secondly, after "Obama's pledge," Barack's never responsible again.  It's  not Barack that wants the US to stay in Iraq, it's "the Obama administration."   Matthew Rothschild is such a damn chicken, such a pathetic coward, that he can't  call out Barack Obama.   I don't like Barack.  I didn't vote for him.  I won't vote for him in  2012.  But I'm not the one pretending he's a weakling, I'm not the one  pretending he has no strength or power.  I recognize he's the president of the  United States.  That's something that the Cult of St. Barack that gifted him  with the nomination can't own up to.   The Pentagon is NOT negotiating.     "Brave" Matty can call them out but he's wrong.  Robert Gates, when he was  Secretary of Defense, was required to note the time issue and that it was  passing when speaking to Nouri or Jalal Talabani.  Leon Panetta has infamously  noted the time issue since becoming Secretary of Defense.  Adm Mike Mullen went  to Iraq to convey how serious the government was taking the issue.   Their efforts were to prompt action.  They are not negotiating anything.   James Jeffrey, the US Ambassador to Iraq, is the public face of negotiations (as  Ryan Crocker was when he was the US Ambassador to Iraq).  He is assisted by  State Dept employees the administration has tasked for this issue.   This is not who Hillary Clinton has selected, it's not her issue.  Joe  Biden and Samantha Power are tasked with Iraq on the orders of Barack Obama.   Hillary is not involved.  You see her with her Iraqi counterpart from time to  time, she does receive most visiting Iraqis but she and Nouri are not close and  anyone who can't grasp that can't remember Hillary's public remarks about Nouri  when she was in the Senate.  That's the practical reason Hillary's not over  Iraq.  There are other reasons as well.  Samantha Power is elevated to her  position because, although Joe Biden has a great relationship with many Iraqi  politicians (including the Kurds), he also made comments, when he was a  senator, about Nouri that Nouri has not forgotten.  (Hillary and Joe both  rightly called Nouri a despot at one point or another and it's not forgotten on  Nouri's side.  And they were not one time remarks.  Nor were they unique remarks  in the Senate.  Back then, Baraba Boxer was among the many calling out Nouri as  a Little Saddam.)   If that's news to you, that's still not an excuse for ever thinking that  the Pentagon would be negotiating -- or that they would do so against the wishes  of the president.     Matthew throws caution and facts to the wind in this sentence: "Because  even as Admiral Mullen was making his pitch, U.S. troops along with Iraqi troops  were raiding a village, killing three men, including a tribal elder who was seen  in handcuffs, and wounding five others, including two little girls."   No.  You can't alter facts and keep them as facts.  Mike Mullen arrived in Iraq on Monday .  The incident  Rothschild's referring to took place LAST WEEK.  This appears in Saturday's second entry : "and, dropping back to  Friday night, a "joint U.S.-Iraqi air landing on al-Rifeiat tribe's village in  Balad township of Salahal-Din Province" today resulted in the deaths of 4 Iraqi  civilians (and six being injured),"  Mullen arrived on Monday.  You can't alter  the facts and claim that they're still facts.  Yes, Matthew Rothschild, it does  make the story play better, but it's not fiction and you can't alter the facts.   (And if you're interested in this story, Tim Arango has filed two reports on it  so far -- here  and here .)  What Matthew Rothschild is really doing when he refuses to call out Barack  Obama, when he invents blame for the Pentagon and when he alters time lines to  make the story more 'pleasing,' what he's really doing is demonstrating how  Judith Miller was able to write for The Progressive.  She did.  Long  before her bad reporting helped sell the Iraq War, she was writing for The  Progressive.  And meeting the very low standards required from that  magazine.      While Panhandle Media  can't get the story right  (including that currently the blocs aren't considering impunity -- read  yesterday and today's reports in the Arab media and in some of the English media  as well), Jane Arraf is all over the ins and outs , both in  terms of the agreement to negotiate and what led to it Nouri's promised Ayad  Allawi that Iraqiya can pick the Minister of Defense and that the national  security council promised in the Erbil Agreement will come to be and Allawi will  head it -- as Arraf notes, this mean that there may be "enough support for the  agreement to be passed by parliament, even with the opposition of the Sadrists.   If you're generous, Moqtada's bloc has 40 seats.  There are 325 MPs (though only  around 225 tend to show up at any session).      Violence continued overnight. The Belfast Telegraph notes , "Four  Iraqis have been killed in two successive bomb attacks targeting a shop selling  alcohol in western Baghdad, police and health officials said." AFP adds , "The explosions come  shortly after the beginning of Ramadan, during which Muslims abstain from food,  drink and sex from dawn until dusk. Ramadan began on Monday for Iraq's Sunnis  and a day later for the country's majority Shiites. Also on Tuesday evening,  unknown gunmen shot dead Iraqi army Lieutenant Colonel Azad Mohammed Ahmed in  the Khadra area in the south of Kirkuk while he was driving to his house with  one of his guards." Reuters adds  that last night 2 cab  drivers were shot dead in Hilla, that a bomb went off in a Tikrit car claiming 2  lives and leaving one person injured, that a rocket attack in Baghdad injured  two police officers, two Ramadi bombings claimed 7 lives and left eight people  injured and Reuters updates the death toll for Tuesday's Baghdad bombings  targeting an alcohol store -- the new death toll is 3 police officers (sixteen  people are said to have been injured).        |