| Thursday, October 20, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, Turkey continues  to attack northern Iraq, US veterans get some good news, and we drop back to  last week to examine a hearing that was nothing but bad news for veterans and  for tax payers.   We'll start with the good news for US veterans.  Senator Patty Murray is  the Chair of the Veterans Affairs Committee.  Her office notes:   FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Murray Press OfficeThursday,  October 20, 2011 (202) 224-2834
 
 Chairman Murray Passes Veterans  Cost-of-Living Increase to Allow Veterans to Share in Critical Benefit Boost for  the First Time in Two Years
 Murray's bill, which passed the Senate yesterday,  would result in more money in the pockets of millions of veterans across the  country
 
 (Washington, D.C.) -- Today, U.S. Senator Patty Murray, Chairman  of the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee, announced that a bill that she  sponsored to provide a Cost-of-Living Adjustment (COLA) for America's veterans  has passed the U.S. Senate. The COLA for veterans will match the 3.6 percent  annual increase provided to Social Security recipients, which on Wednesday was  announced will happen this year for the first time since 2009. The Veterans COLA  would affect several important benefits, including veterans' disability  compensation and dependency and indemnity compensation for surviving spouses and  children. It is projected that over 3.9 million veterans and survivors will  receive compensation benefits in Fiscal Year 2012.
 
 "A cost-of-living  increase for our veterans is long overdue and well deserved," said Senator  Murray. "Particularly in this difficult economy, our veterans deserve a boost in  their benefits to help make ends meet. This is an important step for our  veterans, especially on the heels of news that a COLA will be provided for the  first time since 2009."
 
 The COLA is designed to offset inflation and  other factors that lead to the rising cost of living over time. The COLA rate is  based on the Bureau of Labor Statistics Consumer Price Index.
 
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   Communications  Director   U.S. Senator Patty  Murray   202-224-2834  - press office   202--224-0228  - direct   matt_mcalvanah@murray.senate.gov    News  Releases | Economic Resource  Center | E-Mail Updates     That's good news.  Now we're enterting the bad news for veterans and tax  payers stage.   Reportedly coming off tired and bored yesterday,  US President Barack Obama wrapped up his three day bus tour at the Joint Base  Langley-Eustis in Virginia.  Jennifer Epstein (POLITICO) reports  he declaed,  "Standing up for our veterans is not a Democratic responsibility or a Republican  responsibility. It is an American responsibility."  Would that the panderer in  chief believed in standing up for veterans.  Forget new things Barack wants to  create, how about just doing what was promised?  The VA has been a joke under  Barack Obama and it continues to be.  It's the sick joke that left veterans  scrambling to pay for college and board when the VA program wasn't up and  running -- as VA Secretary Eric Shinseki admitted, in an October 14, 2009 House Veterans Affairs Committee  hearing , he knew there would be problems as far back as January 2009 when it  came to the tuition payments.   Erick Shinseki: A plan was written, very quickly put together, uh,  very short timelines, I'm looking at the certifcates of elegibility uh being  processed on 1 May and  enrollments 6 July, checks having to flow through  August.  A very compressed timeframe. And in order to do that, we essentially  began as I arrived in January, uh, putting together the  plan -- reviewing the  plan that was there and trying to validate it. I'll be frank, when I arrived,  uh, there were a number of people telling me this was simply not executable. It  wasn't going to happen. Three August was going to be here before we could have  everything in place. Uh, to the credit of the folks in uh VA, I, uh, I consulted  an outside consulatant, brought in an independent view, same kind of assessment.   'Unless you do some big things here, this is not possible.'  To the credit of  the folks, the good folks in VBA, they took it on and they went at it hard. We  hired 530 people to do this and had to train them. We had a manual system that  was computer assisted. Not very helpful but that's what they inherited. And we  realized in about May that the 530 were probably a little short so we went and  hired 230 more people. So in excess of 700 people were trained to use the tools  that were coming together even as certificates were being executed.  Uhm, we  were short on the assumption of how many people it would take. We based our  numbers on the Montgomery GI Bill which is about a 15 minute procedure. The uh  chapter thirty-three procedures about an hour on average, maybe an hour and 15  minutes. So right off the bat, we had some issues with assumptions. Uh, we are  still receiving certificates of enrollment. This week alone, we received 36,000  certificates of enrollment coming from schools who are working through the  process and we put them into the execute of providing those checks -- three  checks.   He may have realized "in about May that the 530 were probably a little  short" but "so we went and hired 250 more people" is incorrect in the way he  presented. If you realize "in about May" that you need 250 more people, then you  hire them and do so quickly because they need to be trained --  they especially  need to be trained and on the job by August 3, 2009 when the US Treasury  Department would be releasing the first payments. But as we learned in the June 25, 2009 House Veterans Affairs Subcommittee on  Economic Opportunity hearing  from VA's Keith Wilson,  the 230 would be "on  board by August 31, 2009."  If you knew there was a problem "in about May" and  230 more employees were needed (in fact, many more than that would be needed)  and you gave orders to fill those positions and train the people, you should  have it all done by August 3rd when Treasury began sending out checks.  That did not happen.    The Subcomittee hearing? That day US House Rep Harry Teague filled in for  Subcommittee Chair Stephanie Herseth Sandlin.  Both of them as well as Ranking  Member John Boozman repeatedly asked the VA, in one hearing after another, if  the program would be ready and that they be kept informed of any potential  problems. In that hearing, for example, Teague noted at the start, "It is  important that we continue to provide the VA the opportunities to update the  Subcommittee on their implementation effort for the short-term and long-term  solutions.  This hearing will also give the VA the opportunity to ask for  Congressional assistiance if it is required."  The VA did a sorry job, to put it  mildly, and they also didn't keep Congress informed.  Congress learned of the  problems, after the program started, from the media.  Heads should have roled  over that including the head of the VA, Shinseki.   Panderer-in-Chief Barack needs to start firing some people immediately.   How is Shinseki still over the VA after the scandal at the Miami VA Medical  Center in 2009?  Or the continued problems at the Miami VA Medical Center?  As  was noted at the start of a hearing last week, the Miami facility was in "the  spotlight" two years ago when "endoscopes were not reprocessed correctly,  placing over two thousand veterans at risk of exposure to disease."  The  instruments were used and reused and not steralized from one patient to  another.  In other words, a needle exchange for intravaneous drug users treated  people better and more safely than the Miami VA Medical Center did.  Back in  July, Fred Tasker (Miami Herald) reported  that  5 veterans using the Miami, the Murfreesboro or the Augusta facilities had  "tested positive for HIV, 25 for hepatitis C and eight for hepatitis B."  That was the public safety scandal two years ago.  You might think they'd  get their house in order.  But when you don't have a functioning head of the VA  and you don't have a president who holds Cabinet heads accountable, you get one  problem after another.     Last Wednesday, October 12th, the House Veterans Affairs Committee held a  hearing on the facility and its myriad of problems.  The hearing was scheduled  to begin at 10:00 a.m.  If it started on time, I missed the first 90 minutes (I  was at the Subcommittee on National Security, Homeland Defense  and Foreign Operations hearing ).  Any reference to opening remarks in the  hearing will be the prepared remarks.  I walked in as a tooth-pulling exchange  between the Chair and the director of the facility was taking place.  One that  was apparently characteristic of the hearing as evidenced by US House Rep  Bill Johnson's comment immediately following the exchange that "Are -- I'm just  curious are you -- are you astutely hearing the responses to the questions that  this Committee is asking and some of the answers we're getting?" For those wondering here's part of the exchange immediately before Johnson  spoke.  Committee Chair Jeff Miller is speaking to Mary Berrocal who is the  director of the Miami facility.   Chair Jeff Miller: So would you know if a veteran had come to your  facility with a particular disease return home and then expire the next day?   Would you have anyway of knowing that?   Mary Berrocal: Usually what happens is we -- Any deaths, we do  review and there is -- Where indicated we do peer reviews, where the death is  not expected, peer reviews are done  and we --   Chair Jeff Miller: So there is a way that you would know if a  veteran presented 24 hours prior to their death at your facility but was sent  home?  You would have a way of tracking that?   Mary Berrocal: Every -- every morning, we get a report on, uh, on  anything that is unusual that might have happened, uhm, on the evening before or  the day before. We get a report every single morning.  I meet with my  leadership.  Uh, the staff in the ER presents their information following that,  you know, we stay with the leadership and discuss anything we might need to  follow up on.   Chair Jeff Miller: Is it unusual that a veteran would come to your  facility, be dischaged -- not just discharged, but just be sent home, not  admitted, and would pass away the next day?  Would you consider that unusual?   And if you do consider that unusual, is that something that you would report  then to the VISN that this has occurred?    Mary Berrocal: Uh, we would normally report deaths, uh, unexpected  deaths to the network, yes.    Chair Jeff Miller: So this particular, if an incident like this did  occur, it would have been reported to the VISN?   Mary Berrocal: It would be my expectation that it would be  reported. If it's an unexpected death, there are reports that, uh, that go  forward.   Chair Jeff Miller: Regardless --   Mary Berrocal: Now we don't independently, like in an issue, report  every single death if it's an expected death.    Chair Jeff Miller: Regardless of what the peer review may have  found, you would still report it?   Mary Berrocal: Uh, the peer review's focus, uh, specifically on the  provider to determine whether it was a, uh, uhm, something that didn't go the  way it should go in that direction.    Chair Jeff Miller: If a --   Mary Berrocal: So yes.   Chair Jeff Miller:  If a vet -- Okay, let's go inside the  facility.  Now we have somebody who has been admitted to the facility and is  having surgery.  If there is a death on the operating table, what would prevent  that death from being reported to VISN?    Mary Berrocal: Uh, those, uh, would be reported to the  network.   Chair Jeff Miller: All deaths on an operating table are reported  --   Mary Berrocal: Are reported, should be reported. There's a system  that we put through to report unexpected deaths.   Chair Jeff Miller: All deaths on the operating table are reported  to the VISN?
 Mary Berrocal: Yes, sir.
   Chair Jeff Miller: All deaths?   Mary Berrocal: Unexpected deaths are reported.   Chair Jeff Miller: There's a difference now: Unexpected deaths or  deaths?  If a patient dies on the operating table, is that reported regardless?   Is that reported to the VISN?  And if not, why not?   Mary Berrocal: It would be my expectation that it would be  reported.    Chair Jeff Miller: Is there a root cause analysis on every death on  the operating table?   Mary Berrocal: There, uh, there would be, uh, a root cause  analysis, again, if it's an unexpected death, there would be a root cause  analysis --   Chair Jeff Miller: What would be an expected death on an operating  table?   Mary Berrocal: [Sighs.]   Chair Jeff Miller: I would expect if I went in for surgery, you  wouldn't expect me to die. You'd expect me to recover. Now what is an expected  or an unexpected death?  What is that?    Mary Berrocal: Again, it's, you know, I'm not a  clinician.   Chair Jeff Miller: You're the director of the medical  center.   Mary Berrocal: Correct.    Chair Jeff Miller: For now.   Mary Berrocal: Not a clinician.  I, uh -- I, uh, I am not a  clinician, uh, but, uhm, I, uhm, I would expect that -- I-I would -- Any  unexpected death would be something where, you know, if they, uhm, found  something that they were not expecting to find.  Uh, I, uh-uh, you know, I  believe that, uh, any death would --   Chair Jeff Miller: Who makes the determination as to whether it's  expected or unexpected?   Mary Berrocal: [Long pause while she shakes her head repeatedly]   There are systems in place to, uhm, to report, and we -- [a man hands her a  note] and we've had, we've had a variety of -- of, uhm, of groups come and look  and determine that we have done things appropriately. [Reading from card passed  to her] All deaths are reported and they are investigated but not necesserarily  through, uh, the RCA process. We do investigate, again, we do peer reviews to  determine --   Chair Jeff Miller: Is a peer review punative?   Mary Berrocal: Uh, it could lead to be.  But, uh, not necessarily a  peer review.  There's a group of peers that review to see whether or not the  care that was provided was adequate care.   Chair Jeff Miller: So if everybody just decides that the care was  adequate and that it was an expected death, you may not even report that to the  VISN, right?   Mary Berrocal: Then there's a committee that, uh, reviews after,  there's a, uh, peer review, it goes to a committee and then a deterimination is  made. There is -- There are rankings or scores that are provided determining  whether or not it's a --   Chair Jeff Miller: Who makes the final determination as to whether  or not it is sent to VISN?   Mary Berrocal: They are sent to the VISN. The deaths are reported  to the VISN.   Chair Jeff Miller: All deaths?  All of them? Is there ever a death  that's not reported to the VISN.   Mary Berrocal: Uhm, uh, we have, for example, deaths in the  hospice, these would be expected, you know.   Chair Jeff Miller: I'm talking about on the operating  table.   Mary Berrocal: I would expect --   Chair Jeff Miller: I'll let you think on that.  Mr.  Johnson?     There are a number of developments that are questionable and speak to a  lack of oversight from the VA.  But let's note the scandal from two years ago.   When you give someone AIDS because you are not cleaning your equipment, the head  of the facility needs to go down with everyone else.  That's Mary Berrocal.   Hepatitis is nothing nice to have either but what took place under Berrocal's  watch, grasp this, is going to result in big money pay outs (there's already one  lawsuit seeking approximately 30 million dollars).  And most jurors would vote  (I certainly would) to award the victim the maximum amount of money.  Grasp that  Mary Berrocal is paying a penny in any settlements or law suits or anything.   The screw ups at her facility cost the US tax payer.   People have diseases they caught from Berrocal's facility because Berrocal  didn't know how to supervise a facility.  She shouldn't be running it.  And  grasp that she was removed from her position.  Temporarily.  Fred Tasker (Miami Herald) was reporting   a year ago, "Mary Berrocal, director of the Miami Veterans Administration  Healthcare System who was temporarily reassigned in July during a scandal in  which thousands of South Florida veterans were given colonoscopies with  improperly cleaned equipment, was back on the job Friday. It happened quietly.  The announcement was made internally, without public notice. VA officials at the  local, regional and national levels failed to return phone calls and e-mails  seeking comment."  They brought her back.  And brought her back to leadership.   After people were infected with diseases under her watch, she was put back in  charge.  Where is the leadership at the VA?  And maybe Barack needs to get off his  candy ass and demand Shinseki's resignation.  Maybe then, the VA will realize  that these actions are not acceptable, do not show leadership and are not what  the veteran expects from a medical center or what the US tax payer considers  work worth paying for.     US House Rep Johnson noted a Fred Tasker Miami Herald article from last  month : "Miami Veterans Administration hospital director Mary Berrocal and  her former chief of staff, Dr. John Vara, should be disciplined for 'lack of  oversight' that led to long delays in notifying 79 local veterans that they  might have been infected with HIV or hepatitis through improperly performed  colonoscopies at the hospital, a VA board has concluded."   Johnson noted this  information while questioning William Schoenhard (Deputy Under Secretary for  Health for Operations and Management, Veterans Health Administration, VA).   Johnson pointed out that the information in the article was only obtained via a  Freedom of Information request and . . .  US House Rep Bill Johnson:  In documents submitted to us just last  night, by the VA, only a draft unsigned and undated recommendation for action  war provided and then 30 minutes before today's hearing a notice of admonishment  was provided that was dated December of 2010 with no specific day. Can you  clarify and explain this discrephancy and how that fits into your 'we're going  to hold leadership accountable'? Yeah.   William Schoenhard:  Yes, sir.  The AIB recommended administrative  action.  The one that I conveyned, the national AIB, after the second disclosure  of the veteran who had not been contacted and found that there was reason to  take administrative action against the medical director and the chief of staff.  The way that works in VA then is that I shared that report with Mr. Weaver and  he took the administrative action.  He may want to speak to the process we use  in VA and in government to    US House Rep Bill Johnson: What administrative action was taken?     William Schoenhard: An admonishment was issued against both these  individuals.   US House Rep Bill Johnson: A-a veteran escapes the facility and  dies --   William Schoenhard:  No, sir. This was taken predating this  incident.   US House Rep Bill Johnson: Okay. So this admonishment that came  through the Miami Herald incident from a previous AIB, correct? Have I got this  right?   William Schoenhard: That's correct, sir.   US House Rep Bill Johnson: Then the patient that escaped the center  and subsequently committed suicide happened after that, correct?   William Schoenhard: That's correct, sir.   US House Rep Bill Johnson: Right.  So, do you think the  admonishment worked?   William Schoenhard: I think --   US House Rep Bill Johnson: Next question.  Can you provide to this  Committee, Mr. Schoenhard or Mr. Weaver, a record of disciplinary actions from  the Miami VAMC over the last 24 months? I would specifically like to see -- and  with the Chairman's approval -- I would like to see the incident -- you don't  have to give us names for privacy --  I would like to see the incident and the  action and what level of leadership and management that action was taken  against.  Miss Berrocal, last week, one of your employees was arrested for  selling names of veterans. In the past six years, it's estimated that more than  3,000 veterans' information has been sold. Have you alerted any veterans that  their information may have been compromised and if so how have you done  that?   Mary Berrocal: Actually, this was an investigation that was done by  the IG and it was a covert operation. I learned about it at the time shortly  before they were going to be arresting the individual and at the time what we  knew was there was more than one, there was information on 18 individuals that  was compromised and then, uh, uh, on --   US House Rep Bill Johnson: Have those veterans been  notified?   Mary Berrocal: The, uh, the, uh, --   US House Rep Bill Johnson:  Yes or no, have those veterans been  notified? You talked earlier about a process for making sure that veterans are  notified. I've heard that from various pieces of testimony this morning  --   Mary Berrocal: We-we are in the process now of finding     US House Rep Bill Johnson: So they have not been notified?  When  was the guy arrested?   Mary Berrocal:  Uh, this just happened in the last  --   US House Rep Bill Johnson: And you didn't know anything about the  investigation prior to his arrest?   Mary Berrrocal: I knew that they were doing an investigation and  that they had some concerns  The individual --   US House Rep Bill Johnson: So prudent leadership would be poised  and ready to act if the investigation proved out, right?  That you would  immediately begin to notify those veterans whose information had been  compromised.  And you're saying that as of today, there have still been no  veterans notified?  You're only in the process of?  18 veterans.  How long does  that take? I can make 18 phone calls in 30 minutes.   Mary Berrocal: We have, uh, worked with our privacy officer to make  sure that the, uh, information is done and, uhm, that we communicate to those  veterans as we need to.   US House Rep Bill Johnson: Okay and have they been communicated  with?   Mary Berrocal:  I believe so.  I --   US House Rep Bill Johnson: You believe so?   Mary Berrocal: Yes, sir.   US House Rep Bill Johnson: But you're not certain?   Mary Berrocal:  The 18 have been communicated.  The individual in  the case --   US House Rep Bill Johnson:  A few minutes ago, you told me you were  in the process of notifying them. Now you're saying that they have  been notified?   Mary Berrocal:  We have communicated with the -- with the privacy  officer whose --   US House Rep Bill Johnson: No, no, no. I'm not asking if you  communicated with the privacy officer.  Have the veterans whose information has  been compromised been notified that there information has been compromised and  sold by an employee under your direction?   Mary Berrocal: I will have to get that information for  you.   US House Rep Bill Johnson: Okay. So now you don't know. First it  was you've got a process.  Then 'they have been notified.'  And now you don't  know.  Mr. Schoenhard, if I'm the wing commander, I'm paying real close  attention to these answers.  Mr. Chairman, I yield back.   Chair Jeff Miller: I can answer the question for you.  According to  AIG last night, they have not been contacted.   Miller would go on to ask Berrocal about her decision to cancel the golf  carts that took veterans to the facilities from the parking lot while at the  same time she okayed renovations for her offices at a cost of two-and-a-half  million dollars.  She denied that was the case repeatedly.  We'll make this the  last excerpt but there's so much more (including US House Rep Phil Roe's  questions -- Roe is also a doctor, he had spot on questions about Berrocal's  behaviors and supervision).     Chair Jeff Miller: Did you suspend golf cart service for the  veterans in the parking lot?    Mary Berrocal: Uh, we did, uh, in the parking lot, we did suspend  the, uh, that, uh, service. We, uhm, what we did, uh, was when --   Chair Jeff Miller:  That's all. I just wanted to know if you did.   You did.  Now how did you deterimine that the current office renovations of  approximately a million dollars to your executive suite wasn't sufficient and  that two-and-a-half million dollars was more important than golf cart escorts  for the veterans trying to come into your facility?   Mary Berrocal: S-s-sir, I would have to get back to you on that, uh  --   Chair Jeff Miller: Well what's more important? Your office or golf  carts for the veterans to get to the hospital?   Mary Berrocal: I would always put the veteran first,  sir.   Chair Jeff Miller: But you cancelled the golf cart.   Mary Berrocal: Uh, the golf cart, uh, issue was, uh, cancelled  during this year. I-I would have to look at the information that, uh, that, uh,  you are giving me about the, uh, renovations.  But --   Chair Jeff Miller: Have you renovated your offices?   Mary Berrocal: My office is not renovated.   Chair Jeff Miller: Are you going to be renovating your  offices?   Mary Berrocal:  The-the -- What we've done with the office is we've  painted the -- painted -- I would have to look at the information that you --  that you have on hand.   Chair Jeff Miller: Are you going to be renovating your  offices?   Mary Berrocal: No, sir.   Chair Jeff Miller: Okay. So if I produced a contract, executed,  that said you were, would you change your answer?   Mary Berrocal: I really would need to see what, uh, I really would  need to see what --   Chair Jeff Miller: We'll produce it for you.  We'll show it to  you.  You are.  You've contracted for that to be done. I just think it's  egregious that you would stop golf carts from escorting veterans to the front  door but you would sign a contract -- or somebody would sign a contract -- to  expand the executive offices. Doesn't that sound odd?   Mary Berrocal: Yes, sir.     There is no excuse for this nonsense.  It reflect poorly on the VA, it  reflects poorly on the White House.  But has Barack done a thing?  No.  It's a  failure of leadership and the failure goes to the top of the VA all the way to  the White House.  And Mary Berrocal's excuse for the additional $24,000 spent  (tax payer money) on replacing locks because she's "currently raising a  9-year-old grandson" has to be one of the great howlers of Congressional  testimony.     Yesterday, Turkey entered Iraq with the intent of  assaulting PKK or suspected PKK. Patrick J. McDonnell (Los Angeles Times) reports  "The  Turkish offensive across the Iraqi border included helicopter gunships, ground  commandos and fighter jets, authorities said." Kelly McEvers (NPR's All Things Considered, link has text and  audio) notes , "The conflict that began in 1984 has left tens of  thousands dead. The Turkish government and Kurdish separatists have been going  back and forth between attempts at reconciliation and violence in the past few  years. The most recent spate of attacks escalated over the summer. One roadside  bomb this week killed policemen, civilians and a four-year-old girl." Today's Zaman notes , "Nechirvan  Barzani, the number two of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and a former  prime minister of the Kurdish regional administration in northern Iraq, arrived  in Ankara on Thursday to express solidarity and cooperation with Turkey in its  fight against the terrorist Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK)." Aswat al-Iraq reports :The Kurdish Analyst, Ribin Rassoul, had stated to  Aswat al-Iraq news agency that "the Iraqi government won't have a firm response  towards the Turkish invasion.""The  reason for such position is that the Iraqi government had failed to interact  with the Turkish dossier and its position towards the PKK and the loss of trust  among Iraqi political forces and weakness of the government to take a military  attitude to protect the Iraqi soil," he stressed.On the other hand, Rassoul said that the "Central  government and the Kurdistan Region's government have failed to expel the PKK  forces, even if they wanted to do that.""The Iranians had reached a decision to settle their  problem with the Kurds and reached an agreement with the anti-Tehran PJAK party,  adding that the problem of PKK is a Turkish problem and not an Iraqi problem,  that must settled by Turkey," he said. Hurriyet reports that "10,000 elite  Turkish soldiers" have entered Iraq "backed by fighter jets, helicopters,  gunships and suveillance aircraft."  Justin Vela (Independent) adds , "It was  Turkey's largest such offensive since February 2008, when thousands of ground  forces staged a weeklong offensive into Iraq on snow-covered mountains."  Al Sabaah reports MP Mahmoud Othman  (Head of the Kurdistan Alliance) states that the solution to the issue is not in  Baghdad or Erbil but in Ankara (Turkish capitol) and he also states that the US  has been providing negative encouragement to Turkey which I will say (he's not  saying this) is basically egging them on when they should be providing a calm  voice and addressing the issues. Otherwise, we'll be reading about Turkey and  the PKK for decades. The issue is the disenfranchisement of Kurds within Turkey.  Until that's addressed, nothing's going to change.Al  Mada notes  the Turkish military's months of bombing the  villages in northern Iraq's mountains and the fact that the people there denied  the PKK were present but the bombings continued and women and children were  harmed, farms went up in flames and people were displaced as a result. (The PKK  has base camps in the mountains -- not villages, the Turkish military should  have known -- even without the US intelligence provided -- what was a village  and what was a base camp. The Times  of  London reported on these camps, with photographs -- and visited them --  repeatedly.) Turning to the topic of the US military remaining in Iraq  beyond 2011, Aswat al-Iraq reports  Moqtada  al-Sadr is stating that they should not remain even as trainers. Yes, this is a  reversal from his reported remarks yesterday. Dar Addustour notes  that US Vice  President Joe Biden is supposed to be visiting Iraq shortly for discussions  regarding US troops. Iraqi government spokesperson Naseer al-Ani is cited  stating that the request for trainers will not come with any immunity and that  is the only offer in play. al-Ani denies rumors of a secret pact. Dar Addustour also notes that US Ambassador to  Iraq held discussions in Kirkuk on post-2011 issues. In reported  violence, Aswat al-Iraq notes , "A US Army  patrol has come under an explosive charge blast west of Kut, the center of  southern Iraq Province of Wassit on Wednesday night, but losses were not known,  a Wassit Police source reported on Thursday."   We'll close with this from the office of US Senator Jon Tester: Senator requests information  and better accountability to protect U.S. taxpayers Tuesday, October 18,  2011
  (U.S. SENATE) -- Senator Jon Tester  is raising a red flag about costly and unsustainable reconstruction projects in  Iraq and Afghanistan and demanding more scrutiny over taxpayer-funded  contracting projects in war zones. The Commission on Wartime  Contracting in Iraq and Afghanistan recently found that waste, fraud and abuse  cost taxpayers one-third of the $206 billion spent on contracting in Iraq and  Afghanistan. In a letter to Secretary of State  Hillary Clinton and Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, Tester today requested more  examination, information and "appropriate action" on efforts to protect taxpayer  dollars and to better address the sustainability of reconstruction  projects. "It is clear that U.S. officials  are not closely scrutinizing projects for sustainability," Tester wrote. "Not  only are these projects wasteful, but they complicate our military and  diplomatic efforts and undermine our ability to build trust and goodwill with  locals on the ground." Tester pointed to several examples  of potentially wasted spending -- and how those funds could make a difference in  Montana. For instance, the United States  spent $35 billion to train the Afghan Security Forces. Yet "the VA continues to  lack the resources to reach all of our veterans." Tester also noted that American  taxpayers paid $277 million for a water-treatment plant that remains unused in  Iraq while two vital water infrastructure projects in Montana sit unfinished due  to a lack of funding. "For constituents struggling to  make ends meet, this is a bitter pill to swallow," Tester wrote. "I request that  you examine both completed and current projects for risk of sustainment failure  and take appropriate action on those projects with no credible prospect of being  sustained. It is long past time that we bring real change to the way our  government does business with contractors in Iraq and  Afghanistan." Tester cosponsored legislation to  establish the Wartime Contracting Commission in 2007. At a recent hearing on the  Commission's findings, he pushed for serious  changes in how the United States uses wartime contractors like Xe, formerly  known as Blackwater. Tester also recently called for the  removal of U.S. troops from Iraq by the end of 2011, noting that the war's price  tag is approaching $1 trillion. Tester's letter to Clinton and  Panetta appears online HERE.    |