| Friday, August 19, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, Leon Panetta should  be dominating the news, Turkey continues to bomb Iraq, and more.     We don't need to know the way home All we want is life beyond Thunderdome   And we didn't need to invent a 'hero.'  We just needed honesty.   Underscored by events of today.    Because so many liars were such pathetic liars, the Iraq War goes on.  And  I'm not talking Judy Miller or George W. Bush.  I'm talking the really pathetic:  Amy Goodman, Tom Hayden, Bill Fletcher, Matthew Rothschild, Barbara Ehrenreich,  Naomi Klein, John Nichols, Naomi Wolf, go down the damn list.  Go down the list  of all the people who swore that Barack Obama would end the Iraq War, that US  troops would no longer occupy Iraq, that US troops would be gone.  They lied and  then they lied again.  Over and over.   Spoiled brats unable to grow the hell up and deal with reality.  Teeny  boppers playing at politics. They dressed Barack as a god and today their false  god appears to have broken the promise that they pimped so hard.   Kevin Baron (Stars & Stripes) notes  that the Iraqi response is that they have not agreed to trainers but US  Secretary of Defense "Leon Panetta  said Friday that Iraq has already said yet  to extending noncombat U.S. forces there beyond 2011, and that the Pentagon is  negotiating that presence [. . . that] there is unanimous consent among key  Iraqi leaders to address U.S. demands. Those demands include that Iraqis begin  negotiating internally what type of U.S. training force they would like, begin a  process to select a defense minister, craft a new Status of Forces Agreement and  increase operations against Iranian-backed militants."  Reid J. Epstein (POLITICO) refers  to a transcript and  quotes Panetta stating, "My view is that they finally did say yes, which is that  as a result of a meeting that Talabani had last week, that all of the, it was  unanimous consent among the key leaders of the country to go ahead and request  that we negotiate on some kind of training, what a training presence would look  like, they did at least put in place a process to try and get a Minister of  Defence decided and we think they're making some progress on that front."  Adam Entous (Wall St. Journal)  adds :    Pentagon spokesman George Little said later that Mr. Panetta was  not predicting the outcome of negotiations with the Iraqi  government. "The secretary was asked if there had been progress in our  discussions with the Iraqi government since his visit six weeks ago," Mr. Little  said. "He made clear that the Iraqis have said yes to discussions about the  strategic relationship beyond 2011, and what that relationship might look  like."     For those who have forgotten (and those who pretend to forgot -- I'm sure  that's going to include a lot of people this weekend), Iraq was a major issue in  2008. Falling back to September 26, 2008, the first debate between GOP  presidential candidate John McCain and Democratic Party presidential candidate  Barack Obama -- independent candidate Ralph Nader and Green Party candidate  Cynthia McKinney were shut out of the debates due to the inability to lie and  pander. PBS NewsHour's Jim Lehrer is the moderator.  From the transcript .    LEHRER: All right. Let's go another subject. Lead question, two  minutes to you, senator McCain. Much has been said about the lessons of Vietnam.  What do you see as the lessons of Iraq?    MCCAIN: I think the lessons of Iraq are very clear that you cannot  have a failed strategy that will then cause you to nearly lose a conflict. Our  initial military success, we went in to Baghdad and everybody celebrated. And  then the war was very badly mishandled. I went to Iraq in 2003 and came back and  said, we've got to change this strategy. This strategy requires additional  troops, it requires a fundamental change in strategy and I fought for it. And  finally, we came up with a great general and a strategy that has succeeded.  This strategy has succeeded. And we are winning in Iraq. And we  will come home with victory and with honor. And that withdrawal is the result of  every counterinsurgency that succeeds. And I want to tell you that now that we  will succeed and our troops will come home, and not in defeat, that we will see  a stable ally in the region and a fledgling democracy. The consequences of  defeat would have been increased Iranian influence. It would have been increase  in sectarian violence. It would have been a wider war, which the United States  of America might have had to come back.  So there was a lot at stake there. And  thanks to this great general, David Petraeus, and the troops who serve under  him, they have succeeded. And we are winning in Iraq, and we will come home. And  we will come home as we have when we have won other wars and not in  defeat.    LEHRER: Two minutes, how you see the lessons of Iraq, Senator  Obama.    OBAMA: Well, this is an area where Senator McCain and I have a  fundamental difference because I think the first question is whether we should  have gone into the war in the first place. Now six years ago, I stood up and  opposed this war at a time when it was politically risky to do so because I said  that not only did we not know how much it was going to cost, what our exit  strategy might be, how it would affect our relationships around the world, and  whether our intelligence was sound, but also because we hadn't finished the job  in Afghanistan.  We hadn't caught bin Laden. We hadn't put al Qaeda to rest, and  as a consequence, I thought that it was going to be a distraction. Now Senator  McCain and President Bush had a very different judgment. And I wish I had been  wrong for the sake of the country and they had been right, but that's not the  case. We've spent over $600 billion so far, soon to be $1 trillion. We have lost  over 4,000 lives. We have seen 30,000 wounded, and most importantly, from a  strategic national security perspective, al Qaeda is resurgent, stronger now  than at any time since 2001. We took our eye off the ball. And not to mention  that we are still spending $10 billion a month, when they have a $79 billion  surplus, at a time when we are in great distress here at home, and we just  talked about the fact that our budget is way overstretched and we are borrowing  money from overseas to try to finance just some of the basic functions of our  government. So I think the lesson to be drawn is that we should never hesitate  to use military force, and I will not, as president, in order to keep the  American people safe. But we have to use our military wisely. And we did not use  our military wisely in Iraq.    LEHRER: Do you agree with that, the lesson of Iraq?    MCCAIN: The next president of the United States is not going to  have to address the issue as to whether we went into Iraq or not. The next  president of the United States is going to have to decide how we leave, when we  leave, and what we leave behind. That's the decision of the next president of  the United States.  Senator Obama said the surge could not work, said it would  increase sectarian violence, said it was doomed to failure. Recently on a  television program, he said it exceed our wildest expectations. But yet, after  conceding that, he still says that he would oppose the surge if he had to decide  that again today. Incredibly, incredibly Senator Obama didn't go to Iraq for 900  days and never asked for a meeting with General Petraeus.    LEHRER: Well, let's go at some of these things ...    MCCAIN: Senator Obama is the chairperson of a committee that  oversights NATO that's in Afghanistan. To this day, he has never had a  hearing.    LEHRER: What about that point?    MCCAIN: I mean, it's remarkable.    LEHRER: All right. What about that point?    OBAMA: Which point? He raised a whole bunch of  them.    LEHRER: I know, OK, let's go to the latter point and we'll back up.  The point about your not having been...    OBAMA: Look, I'm very proud of my vice presidential selection, Joe  Biden, who is the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and as he  explains, and as John well knows, the issues of Afghanistan, the issues of Iraq,  critical issues like that, don't go through my subcommittee because they're done  as a committee as a whole.  But that's Senate inside baseball.  But let's get back to the core issue here. Senator McCain is absolutely right  that the violence has been reduced as a consequence of the extraordinary  sacrifice of our troops and our military families. They have done a brilliant  job, and General Petraeus has done a brilliant job. But understand, that was a  tactic designed to contain the damage of the previous four years of  mismanagement of this war. And so John likes -- John, you like to pretend like  the war started in 2007. You talk about the surge. The war started in 2003, and  at the time when the war started, you said it was going to be quick and easy.  You said we knew where the weapons of mass destruction were. You were wrong. You  said that we were going to be greeted as liberators. You were wrong. You said  that there was no history of violence between Shia and Sunni. And you were  wrong. And so my question is . . . (CROSSTALK)      LEHRER: Senator Obama . . .     OBAMA: . . .  of judgment, of whether or not -- of whether or not  -- if the question is who is best-equipped as the next president to make good  decisions about how we use our military, how we make sure that we are prepared  and ready for the next conflict, then I think we can take a look at our  judgment.    LEHRER: I have got a lot on the plate here...    MCCAIN: I'm afraid Senator Obama doesn't understand the difference  between a tactic and a strategy. But the important -- I'd like to tell you, two  Fourths of July ago I was in Baghdad. General Petraeus invited Senator Lindsey  Graham and me to attend a ceremony where 688 brave young Americans, whose  enlistment had expired, were reenlisting to stay and fight for Iraqi freedom and  American freedom. I was honored to be there. I was honored to speak to those  troops. And you know, afterwards, we spent a lot of time with them. And you know  what they said to us? They said, let us win. They said, let us win. We don't  want our kids coming back here. And this strategy, and this general, they are  winning. Senator Obama refuses to acknowledge that we are winning in  Iraq.    MCCAIN: They just passed an electoral . . . .      MCCAIN: An election law just in the last few days. There is social,  economic progress, and a strategy, a strategy of going into an area, clearing  and holding, and the people of the country then become allied with you. They  inform on the bad guys. And peace comes to the country, and prosperity. That's  what's happening in Iraq, and it wasn't a tactic.      OBAMA: Jim, Jim, this is a big . . .    MCCAIN: It was a stratagem. And that same strategy will be employed  in Afghanistan by this great general. And Senator Obama, who after promising not  to vote to cut off funds for the troops, did the incredible thing of voting to  cut off the funds for the troops in Iraq and Afghanistan.    OBAMA: Jim, there are a whole bunch of things we have got to  answer. First of all, let's talk about this troop funding issue because John  always brings this up. Senator McCain cut -- Senator McCain opposed funding for  troops in legislation that had a timetable, because he didn't believe in a  timetable. I opposed funding a mission that had no timetable, and was open-  ended, giving a blank check to George Bush. We had a difference on the  timetable. We didn't have a difference on whether or not we were going to be  funding troops.     And on and on it went.  We could quote in full.  They aren't done yet.   Because Iraq was a huge issue in 2008.  Democrats used it the same way they used  in 2006 to take back Congress.  They used it and then they ignored it.   And Barack likes to pretend that the Iraq War ended August 31, 2010.   Strange, though, the DoD counts 57 dead since that date.  [PDF format warning,  click here .  Operation New Dawn is the name Barack gave to the  post-August 31, 2010 Iraq 'adventure.'] 57 dead and he wants to pretend the Iraq  War is over and that he kept his campaign promise.  57 dead and today so many whores in this country play footsie with  him.   Much earlier in 2008, Barack Obama was glomming on a remark McCain made.  John McCain made a comment regarding remaining in Iraq for 100 years.  Back in  2008, Brian Montopoli (CBS News -- link has text and video)  reported  on it, noting that McCain had stated in January "Make it a hundred"  to the suggestion that Bush wanted to keep US troops in Iraq for fifty years.  And McCain added, "We've been in Japan for 60 years. We've been in South Korea  for 50 years or so.  That would be fine with me, as long as Americans are not  being injured or harmed or wounded or killed." Montopoli made this call, "McCain  appears to be talking about maintaining a presence in Iraq, not continuing the  type of war America is now fighting." Alone among the left press, Zachary Roth (CJR) noted  Barack's had  lept on the "100 years" and "in doing so, Obama is seriously misleading voters  -- if not outright lying to them -- about exactly what McCain said. And some in  the press are failing to call him on it." Barack, as Roth points out, couldn't  stop weighing in on McCain's remark.  "We are bogged down in a war that John  McCain now suggests might go on for another hundred years," Barack insisted and  at another time, "(McCain) says that he is willing to send our troops into  another hundred years of war in Iraq." And yet again, "We can't afford to stay  in Iraq, like John McCain said, for another hundred years."   As Roth noted,  when called on it, Barack began to stop using the term war.  But he continued to  criticize John McCain for keeping US troops in Iraq . . . the very thing that  Barack will now be doing.    People who voted for Barack thought they were voting to end the Iraq War.   Remember the tent revivals, Barack yelling, "We want to end the war! And we want  to end it now!"  He was so fond of that moment, he used it in commercials in  over 34 states during the 2008 primaries (that number may be higher, I could  only confirm 34 states this evening with a friend who worked on the campaign).     And people might have known better, might have known what a liar Barack  was, if the whores hadn't been out in full force.  2008 was The Year of Living Hormonally .  And let's recall  how that year went down because it's forgotten and unknown history for  some:  Elements of the left were always going to side with Barack early on  because there was a lie -- produced by fringe radicals on the left (hello,  Carl!) -- that Barack was secretly a Socialist. Barack was and is a Corporatist  War Hawk. I also wrongly thought that any elements of the left (other than Carl)  would quickly grasp that reality after the wave of hype susided. I was wrong  there too since this summer found an agitated Philip Maldari floating just that  ['Barack is a Socialist!'] on KPFA thereby proving that only the dumb die  hard.
 In January Goody [Amy Goodman] brought the Black Agenda  Report's Glen Ford on the program to discuss Barack and that was a good  thing because, strangely, there had never been someone publicly critical of  Barack brought on as a guest to the five times a week, hourly program. But while  Barack supporters were all over the show and on solo segments or segments with  other Barack supporters, bringing on Glen Ford required Goody pair him with the  Barack Cultist Michael Eric Dyson. That was strange also due to the fact that,  throughout 2007, Amy Goodman offered a plethora of Hillary Haters who never  required 'balance' and she continued to do so as January began.
 
 In that  month alone, prior to Glen Ford, she'd already offered Robert Parry, apparently  enroute to the padded room he now inhabits, insisting that 'evil' Hillary would  do just what her husband did because wives behave exactly like their husbands.  If, indeed, that's the case, better get the Thorazine ready for Mrs. Parry.  There was never an effort made by Goody to stop the foaming at the mouth Parry  and say, "Hold on a second. You have spent this decade and the bulk of the  nineties writing one article after another in defense of or in praise of Bill  Clinton. Why are you suddenly so scared that your deranged fantasy of Hillary  being just like Bill will come true?"
 
 You don't ask those questions. To  you or me, those questions may seem basic. It's not every day, for instance,  that journalist Robert Parry morphs into nutty Christopher Hitchens. But what  you're forgetting is that adolescence is all about recreation. It's all about  finding another identity. New hair styles are tried, new clothes, new friends,  it's all about reinvention. And who but a sane person would attempt to deny  Bobby Parry his shot at a second adolescence? And there were so many more  important questions to ask.
Is she really  going out with him?
Well, there she is. Let's ask  her.
Betty, is that Jimmy's ring you're wearing?
Mm-hmm
Gee, it must be great riding with  him
Is he picking you up after school today?
Uh-uh
By the way, where'd you meet  him?
I met him at the candy store
He  turned around and smiled at me
You get the picture? (yes,  we see)
That's when I fell for (the leader of the  pack)
 -- "The Leader of the Pack," written by Ellie Greenwich, Jeff  Barry and Shadow Morton
Goody had another Drooling Over Barack  Teeny Booper in January: Allan Nairn. Nairn wanted the whole world to know that,  if asked, he would gladly be pinned by Barack but he would even settle for  Barack's letterman's jacket. Here's the moment that resulted in Allan becoming a  2008 homecoming nominee: 
 [Allan Nairn]: He actually doesn't need to  finance his campaign, to go to the hedge funds, to go to Wall Street. But he  does anyway. And he does, I think, because if he doesn't, they wouldn't trust  him. They might think that he's on the wrong team, and they might start  attacking him. He is someone who, in terms of the money he needs for his  campaign, he could afford to come out for single-payer healthcare, for example,  but he doesn't. He doesn't need money from the health insurance industry, that's  wasting several percentage points of the American GDP in a way that no other  industrial rich country in the world does, yet he chooses not to do that,  because he doesn't want to be attacked by those corporations.
 
 This was  back when everyone (except The New York Times) was lying about Barack  and pretending he was being made by small donors. He was a corporatist even then  and, hopefully for Allan, the blood of East Timor (Barack buddy Dennis  Blair) will wash off the white formal he wore as a  duchess to the Barack Ball.
  Some of you are going to be upset because this is big news and I'm  basically recycling.  About six hours ago, I learned what Panetta said in the  interview.  My rage has not subsided.  Were we speaking face to face, I'd say,  "Let me let it rip, but let me warn you about the language."  At Trina  and Mike 's Iraq War Study Group this evening, my  presentation on this would have made Redd Foxx blush.  Even now what I really  want to say is to all these lying whores of the left who had no ethics at all,  what I want to say is: "May you rot in eternal ___ing hell for what you have  done to the children of Iraq."    And to be very clear for those late to the party, that is not a blanket  attack on Barack supporters.  I am talking about leaders who knew better and  lied, who gamed the system and cheated and whored.  I have friends who didn't  rank Iraq high on their list or even at all and they voted for Barack for other  reasons.  That's fine.  Your vote is you vote.  The people I am talking about,  for example, went on KPFA to provide 'debate analysis' of the debate between  Barack and Hillary and all 'forgot' to reveal on air that they were for Barack.   They enjoyed telling you that Hillary "cackled" because sexism is so needed on  the left, apparantly. They just didn't want to tell you that they had rigged the  'analysis' and 'debate' by only inviting Barack supporters to the program.   Laura Flanders and Tom Hayden and that ugly man with the little prissy girl  voice and all the rest.  They lied, they whored.  And it is the children of Iraq  who suffer for it.  You will note not one of them has yet to apologize for their  actions.   Scott Horton (Harper's, not Antiwar Radio's Scott Horton) was on Law  & Disorder Radio this week pretending he had always known reality about  Barack.  You don't have to take my word for it, go back and read his 2008  ravings, check out his media appearances from that year.  These are the people  with blood on their hands, with the blood of Iraqi children on their hands.  If  they had played fair and stuck to the ethics they espoused, that would be one  thing.  (And some supporters of Barack did in fact do that. I'm not referring to  those supporters or calling them out.)  But that's not what these whores  did.   And you don't want to read me dictating "whore, whore, whore" over and  over.  (We are a work safe site and that is one of the rare curse words we can  use here.)  (I have a very foul mouth and have never pretended otherwise.  We  are work safe so that people can read it at work without getting written  up.)     So I will pick this topic up again but I can't do it right now.  All I've  wanted to do for the last six hours is act out Rebecca De Mornay's amazing scene  as Peyton in The Hand That Rocks The Cradle, where she goes into the  bathroom, grabs the plunger and tears the bathroom up.  That has been my level  of rage for the last six hours.   The Diane Rehm Show (second hour -- link has audio and  transcript options -- both options are free to all visitors at Diane's site)  addressed Iraq today -- and this was before the news of Panetta's remarks.    Joining Diane for the second hour was the New York Times ' Thom Shanker,  McClatchy Nancy A. Youssef (who noted Iraq prior to the excerpt) and the  Washington Post 's David Ignatius.   Diane Rehm: Now, I'd like to move on to Iraq where there has been a  particularly violent week, Thom.
 Thom Shanker: Well, that's certainly  true. I mean, there have been a series of complex attacks. These are not just  sort of individual bombs, individual men with rifles, but series of explosions  to enter compounds followed by, you know, a raiding party, which shows planning,  which shows power, which shows tenacity. I think we do need to recall, though,  that there was a similar spike in attacks exactly a year ago at the Ramadan  period. So this is troubling. It shows the great gaps that remain in the Iraqi  security forces even as America moves to draw down by the end of the year. But  it was just this one individual spike. And except for the month of June, which  was the highest number of American combat deaths in three years, the rate and  pace of attacks has gone down this year.
 
 Diane Rehm: Nancy, what is the  controversy over Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's choice of enacting defense  minister?
 
 Nancy A. Youssef: Well, it's a sustained attack on Nouri  al-Maliki, which is that he is treating the military as an extension of his own  armed militia group and that he isn't taking a nationalist approach to the  security of his country. You know, Monday was the deadliest day in Iraq so far  this year. And I think it's worth pointing out that on August 31 of last year,  the president declared the end of combat operations in Iraq. We've lost 57 U.S.  troops since then. And we're -- as Thom mentioned, we're seeing these complex  attacks. On Monday, they started at 7:00 a.m. and continued until 8:00 p.m. And  I have to say I kept wondering, what was the motive? Is it an effort by Al-Qaida  to keep the United States -- engaging the United States to force the Iraqi  government to ask us to stay to keep the sort of enemy in sight, if you will?  Possibly. Is it Iran's effort to keep us engaged and, some would say, entangled  in Iraq? Possibly. And the reason those two extremes are there is because this  wasn't just an attack on Sunnis or just on Shiite -- albeit the Shiite took a  lot more of the attacks -- but it's suggested that both sides had launched these  coordinated attacks. And I think, for Iraqis, it was reminiscent of those  horrific days at the height of the sectarian war when scores of people would be  killed on any given day.
 
 David Ignatius: You do have an Iraq that's  beset. You have Al-Qaida showing that it's still capable of extreme violence,  still capable of coordinated attacks. You had the chief U.S. military spokesman  in Iraq saying this week that whatever the threat posed by Al-Qaida, the biggest  threat in Iraq are Shiite militias backed by Iran, which he identified as the  critical problem. Everybody, knowing that U.S. troops are on their way out,  wants to take credit for driving the troops out, which is -- you know, it's  sorta like raiding a retreating army I think adding to the bleak picture in Iraq  is the fact that Maliki, on whom the U.S. has surprisingly relied given his  weakness, more than a year after the coalition agreement that got him the prime  ministership in which he promised that the opposition, the Iraqiya Party could  name the defense minister, has not followed through on that. And indeed  appointed an acting defense minister this week, Dulaimi, who was rejected in  effect by Iraqiya. In other words, he's basically welched on the deal and I  think people are really upset about it.
 
 Nancy A. Youssef: Well, he wants  to retain control of the military. He wants it to stay in his hands and not risk  giving it to another rival, another party to lose that control because his  power, particularly with every brigade that comes -- every U.S. brigade that  comes out, rests with the Iraqi military. That's his base, in a way, more than  any other group in Iraq.
 
 Diane Rehm: And at the same time, you had Turkey  attacking Kurdish targets in Northern Iraq.
 
 Thom Shanker: Right. The  Kurdish separatists, you know, have been raiding from their bases in northern  Iraq into Turkey. And so Turkey responded very viciously this week with  counterattacks. We do have to remember, though, that, you know, if you look at  the bigger picture, Turkey remains Iraq's largest trading partner. So while this  is worrisome and it's a problem, it is not really affecting the bilateral  relationships...
 
 Diane Rehm: So what...
 
 Thom Shanker: ...between  the two countries.
 
 Diane Rehm: ...what was the response by  Iraq?
 
 Thom Shanker: Well, Iraq right now is really unable -- its forces  are, you know, incompetent, stretched thin. And even where they're strong, they  are looking at the internal crisis, the Al-Qaida, Mesopotamia, the Shiite  militias that David referred to. And one of the real problems, Diane, with a  stalemate is come the end of December, all the American forces have to be out of  there unless there's some sort of extension or new agreement on the status of  forces. I was talking to a two-star general just yesterday who's in from Iraq  and he said that nobody expects the current SOFA agreement to be extended. It's  too broad --
 
 Diane Rehm: Status of Forces Agreement.
 
 Thom  Shanker: -- exactly, to stay in place. And what the U.S. side is drawing up  options for is a very limited, very narrow sort of deal, 3,000 troops, 10,000  troops to do training. And what the Iraqis really need is intelligence to find  out where the bad guys are and where to go after them. That's what the Iraqis --  they have no intelligence or sustainment.
   Let's grab the topic of the bombing of northern Iraq and move to that.  The  Iraqi Parliament is now in recess. Before going into recess yesterday, Alsumaria TV reportsa ,  there was "a Kurdish request to add the issue of Turkish bombarding on Irbil and  Duhok provinces borders on the session's agenda. Following this request the  speaker called the committee of security and defense to study the issue and to  present a report about the situation after the vacation." The Turkish military  is targeting the PKK. The PKK is one of many Kurdish groups which supports and  fights for a Kurdish homeland. Aaron Hess (International Socialist  Review) described them in 2008 , "The PKK emerged in 1984 as a  major force in response to Turkey's oppression of its Kurdish population. Since  the late 1970s, Turkey has waged a relentless war of attrition that has killed  tens of thousands of Kurds and driven millions from their homes. The Kurds are  the world's largest stateless population -- whose main population concentration  straddles Turkey, Iraq, Iran, and Syria -- and have been the victims of  imperialist wars and manipulation since the colonial period. While Turkey has  granted limited rights to the Kurds in recent years in order to accommodate the  European Union, which it seeks to join, even these are now at risk." The  Kurdistan Regional Government in Iraq has been a concern to Turkey because they  fear that if it ever moves from semi-autonomous to fully independent -- such as  if Iraq was to break up into three regions -- then that would encourage the  Kurdish population in Turkey. For that reason, Turkey is overly interested in  all things Iraq. So much so that they signed an agreement with the US government  in 2007 to share intelligence which the Turkish military has been using when  launching bomb raids. However, this has not prevented the loss of civilian life  in northern Iraq. Back to Aaron Hess, he noted, "The Turkish establishment sees  growing Kurdish power in Iraq as one step down the road to a mass separatist  movement of Kurds within Turkey itself, fighting to unify a greater Kurdistan.  In late October 2007, Turkey's daily newspaper Hurriyet accused the prime  minister of the KRG, Massoud Barzani, of turning the 'Kurdish dream' into a  'Turkish nightmare'." Bloomberg News notes  tensions have risen  "since a general election [in Turkey] June 12, when the courts barred several  pro-Kurdish candidates from entering parliament, culminating in a declaration of  Kurdish autonomy last month."  Todays Zaman notes  threats that  additional "legal action could also be taken against Kurdish politicians [in  Turkey] currently boycotting parliament and accused of close links to the PKK."
 Seyhmus Cakan (Reuters) notes
  the Turkish military  continued air raids last night over northern Iraq and states this wave "marks a  stark escalation of the 27-year-old conflict" between the government of Turkey  and the PKK. AFP notes  Turkish war planes  continue bombing today "for a third straight day." Suzan Fraser (AP) quotes  PKK spokesperson Ahmed  Danis stating, "Our fighters left these bases a while ago and now they are in  constant mobility. Therefore there were no casualties."  Ergun Babahan (Hurriyet Daily News)  offers  the opinion that, "There is no point in calls for peace in an  environment where news of the death of young people arrives every day. The  administration of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, or those who  are managing it eitehr believe that they can overcome Turkey by military  intrusions or they hope that they will have more popular support in an  atmoshphere that becomes more anti-democratic in such a struggle." Rizgar Hemid Sindi (Rudaw) argues :  On the Turkish front, Prime Minister Receb Tayyib Erdogan has started  policy reforms backed by the US and the EU. Under Erdogan's government, Turkish  military generals are living their worst nightmare. Several of those who had  participated in the massacre and torture of Kurds are now in prison. Last month, the country's top army general resigned from his post, saying  he could no longer protect his officers from being thrown in jail. The largest pro-Kurdish party in Turkey, the Peace and Democratic Party  (BDP), won 36 parliamentary seats in the June elections. Several TV channels  have been given permission to broadcast news and other porgrasm in Kurdish.  Erdogan, whose party holds the majority of seats in the Turkish parliament, has  promised to amend the constitution to make it more democratic. The situation shows that participating in municipal and parliamentary  elections is a much better strategy for the Kurds. 
Ivan Watson, Mohammed Tawfeeq and Yesim Comert (CNN)  quote KRG spokesperson Kawa Mahmoud stating, "We always emphasize that  shelling (the) Iraqi border is inconsisten with international conventions and  good neighborly relations, and we consider it as intervention and disregard for  the sovereignty of the Kurdish and Iraqi territory."  Mahmoud also noted that  Turkey's repeated bombings were harming the KRG's infrastructure.  
Meanwhile Aswat al-Iraq reports  US Ambassador  to Iraq James Jeffrey met in the KRG with KRG President Masoud Barzani to  discuss a number of issues. The ongoing air raid assault has prompted only the  mildest of critiques from Nouri al-Maliki. al-Maliki and his State of Law have  had much harsher criticism for Iraq's president Jalal Talabani. Alsumaria TV reports   that State of Law has taken offense to Talabani's statements that Monday's  bombings throughout Iraq partly resulted from Iraq's inability to name people to  the security posts.    Reuters notes that Iraq's violence  included a Kirkuk attack that left a police officer "seriously wounded," 1  person shot dead in Mosul, a Baghdad roadside bombing last night which left  three people injured, 1 corpse discovered in Kirkuk last night, a Kirkuk sticky  bombing last night which injured a police officer and his wife and 1 person shot  dead in Kirkuk.   
 In yesterday's snapshot , we noted Scott Horton -- the good Scott Horton of Antiwar Radio,  not his evil twin from Harper's magazine -- speaking with Antiwar.com's  Jason Ditz  and Scott was noting his belief or hope that Nouri would refuse  to go along with the deal. Nouri's a thug and a puppet so that's not very likely  but I hoped there was at least a tiny chance of it as well.  I also hoped that  with the negotiations having been made public some of the lying whores who now  avoid the topic of Iraq would rush forward to put pressure on their personal  lord and savior Barack Obama.  Alas the Cult of St. Barack never managed to take  on their Christ-child .  How fitting that this would  be the day on which Stephen Lendman offered "RIP: America's Anti-War Movement "  (Indybay ):
According to United for Peace and Justice's (UFPJ)  Michael McPhearson, it's partly partisan politics. Many anti-war protesters were  Democrats. "Once Obama got into office, they kind of demobilized themselves,"  and America's major media provided no momentum to reinvigorate them.  
"Because he's a Democrat," said  McPhearson, "they don't want to oppose him in the same way as they opposed Bush.  The politics of it allows him more breathing room when it comes to the wars."  
Of course, UFPJ also has been less  anti-war active under Obama than Bush, not quiescent, but much less resonant  than through 2008. 
UFPJ "calls for an  immediate withdrawal of US and NATO forces from Afghanistan with a negotiated  just settlement involving international parties, including regional neighbors"  when condemnation is essential. 
Moreover, it says nothing about war and occupation of  Iraq, not enough about Afghanistan, the lawlessness of all US wars, why they're  waged, other illegal wars against Libya, Pakistan, Yemen, and Somalia, support  for Israeli belligerence against Palestinians, as well as denouncing them all as  Washington-sponsored imperial aggression. 
Failure to do so betrays the trust of its member  groups and followers. All US wars are illegal. America is responsible for daily  crimes of war and against humanity in every theater. Exposing and denouncing  them is the first crucial step to arousing public anger enough to stop them. I'm so sick of the liars of United for Peace & Justice. The  day after the 2008 election, they posted their litte 'everything is beautiful,  go home' post and then they want to whine about the state of the movement today  as if they had no part in it. For almost three years now, they have remained  silent and done nothing. Not only have that not staged a convincing protest,  they've failed to support the genuine efforts of people like Cindy Sheehan . They couldn't be  bothered offering even just 'online support' to any of Cindy's actions. In a  column on the financial costs of war, Linda Greene (Bloomington Alternative) writes   about an October event of Cindy's:
Sheehan is the mother of Spc. Casey Sheehan, who was killed in  action in the Iraq war on April 4, 2004. Since then, she has become an activist  for peace and human rights.  Sheehan travels and speaks widely and has returned  recently from France and Japan. The author of five books, she is currently  writing her sixth, on Hugo Chavez, Venezuela and the Bolivarian revolution. She  is also the host of her own radio show, Cindy Sheehan's Soapbox.   For Sheehan, war is also an environmental issue.  "The U.S. military is both the largest polluter in the world and the largest  consumer of fossil fuel," she says. "The current U.S. military missions not only  pollute the world using conventional weaponry, but the war machine's increasing  use of weapons and equipment enhanced with depleted uranium is also  contaminating the planet and further compromising the delicate balance of life."    This will be Sheehan's first visit to Bloomington.   The talk, sponsored by the Bloomington Peace Action  Coalition, the Bloomington branch of the Women's International League for Peace  & Freedom, the 9/11 Working Group of Bloomington, and the Just Peace Task  Force and Green Sanctuary Task Force on Global Climate Change of the Unitarian  Universalist Church of Bloomington, commemorates the 10th anniversary of the  start of the Afghanistan war, Oct. 7.            |