| Wednesday, November 2, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, moves for  semi-autonomy continues among provinces in Iraq, Camp Ashraf residents fear a  new assault, the US supplies Turkey with military hardware, and more.   Starting with violence, let's look at the past month.  October 1st 6 were reported dead and five  injured; October 2nd 1 was reported dead; October 3rd 6 were dead and eleven injured; October 4th 3 were reported dead and fifteen  injured; October 5th 9 were reported dead and thirty-six  injured; October 6th 1 was reported dead and ten injured;  October 7th 10 were reported dead and  twenty-seven injured; October 8th were reported 2 dead and  16 wounded, October 9th two were reported dead, October 10th 15were reported dead and thirteen  injured; October 11th 4 were reported dead and four  injured; October 12 were 28 reported dead and eighty-three  injured; October 13th 27 dead and forty-five injured; October 14th 3 were reported dead and eight  injured; October 15th 2 were reported dead and one  injured; October 19th 1 was reported dead and four  injured; October 21st 2 were reported dead and fourteen  injured, October 23rd 6 were reported dead and twelve  injured; October 24th  5 were reported dead and  twenty-four injured; October 25th 6 were reported dead and  twenty-eight injured; October 27th  24 were reported dead and  fifty-three injured; October 28th 21 were reported dead and one  injured; October 29th 4 were reported dead and eleven  injured; October 30th 7 were reported dead and eight  injured; and October 31st 5 were reported dead and two  injured.  That's 197 dead and 424 injured. Those were the reported dead and  wounded we caught here.  That's not, by any means, all the dead or wounded. Iraq Body Count 356 Iraqis were killed. Ali al-Saadi (AFP) reports that the  official numbers from the Ministry of Health, Ministry of Interior and Ministry  of Defense was 258 killed.  As usual, the 'official' number is an undercount.   From the start of the month to the end, the number of US military personnel  who died serving in the Iraq War increased by 4.   Violence continued today.  Aref Mohammed (Reuters) reports 3  bombings  "outside three cafes" in Basra today resulted in 8 deaths with dozens  more injured. AFP notes they were all motorcycle  bombings.  Reuters notes a Mosul roadside bombing  claimed 2 lives and a second Mosul roadside bombing left a child injured.  Mazin Yahya (AP) notes a Kirkuk bombing  claimed the lives of a 12-year-old male and the boy's father.   Al Mada reports that negotiations  continue for US military forces to remain in Iraq beyond 2011 and that both the  Iraqi government and the US government agree that some US presence is needed for  training Iraqi forces. The report also notes that 'trainers' could get immunity  via either the arrangement with the State Dept or NATO.
 Eli Lake (The Daily Beast) speaks with Stuart  Bowen, the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction and  reports:
 
 Last month, Prime Minister Nouri  al-Maliki said Iraq was continuing to negotiate the details of the post-2011  U.S. training mission in his country.
 Bowen said the Iraqi army has some important bright  spots. "The military and police are better equipped and trained than they have  ever been before in modern Iraqi history, but they have a significant way to go  before the military is capable of external defense, defending its borders," he  said, singling out Iraq's special operations forces in particular. "They are  among the best in the Middle East, if not the best."
 In the latest report from Bowen's office, released  Friday, Gen. Babakir Zibari said Iraq is not capable of providing for the  country's external defense now, though he added that the country may be able to  suppress internal strife. He also said in an interview published in the report  that Iraq's air force will not be capable defending the country's air space  until 2020.
 "The Iraqi air force is  still at a very rudimentary phase," Bowen said. "They have no jet aircraft --  they rely on rotary wing aircraft."
 
 The last time we corrected  Joel Wing it was not pretty on his end so prepare to cue up Jackson  Browne's "Here Come Those Tears Again."  Wing writes, "The 2008 Status of Forces Agreement  (SOFA) signed between Washington and Baghdad allows for a police training  mission past the December 31, 2011 withdrawal date."
   How did the SOFA get so screwed up in the coverage?  Because people don't  know what the hell they're talking about but continue yapping away. Several  e-mails came in asking if Joel Wing is correct?  Of course not.   Before we get into anything else, let's deal with a basic of contract law.   Remember this and you'll never have to wonder when someone makes an idiotic  statement whether they're right or wrong:  When a contract expires, it expires.   If you sign a contract to star in one film for Paramount and also sign a  contract to star in one film for Universal and you finishing filming the  Paramount picture and begin shooting the Universal one, no one would be stupid  -- hopefully, no one would be stupid enough to say -- "The Paramount contract  allows for ___ to make the film with Universal."  A contract's only good for  what a contract's good for.  And when a contract's done -- as it appears the  SOFA is -- then it's done.  The SOFA appears to expire December 31, 2011.   Something could change tomorrow and the US and Iraq could decide to extend it.   Barring that, the SOFA is set to expire December 31, 2011.   An expired contract is an expired contract.  That's so basic that if you  can't grasp that, you really need to be checking legal issues with others before  writing about them. So now that we've established that the SOFA -- unless it's  renewed or extended -- has no say beyond December 31, 2011 when it is currently  set to expire, what is the governing document?  As we've noted repeatedly, it's  the Strategic Framework Agreement. And we could offer many State Department  officials testifying to Congress on this topic as reported in earlier  snapshots.  But to make it real easy for cry babies, we'll instead link to this State Dept page of the Ambassador Iraq Transition Coordinator  Patricia Haslach, testifying to Congress (link is text and video) on June 1st of  this year and we'll offer this excerpt:   The Strategic Framework Agreement sends a strong signal that our  relationship with Iraq extends far beyond miltary support alone. The agreement  focuses on seven areas of cooperation: political and diplomatic; defense and  security; cultural; economic and energy; health and environment; information  technology and communications; and law enforcement and judicial.  In 2009,  Secretary Clinton hosted Prime Minister Maliki for a Higher Coordinating  Committee meeting to lay out our shared vision for this reinvigorated  partnership.  Ambassador Jeffrey, Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern  Affairs Jeffrey Feltman, and other U.S. officials in Iraq work to implement this  vision on a daily basis.  Our partners in the interagency -- including Commerce,  Energy, Justice, Transporation, and Treasury -- play a crucial role in sharing  expertise.  The SFA is the cornerstone of U.S. diplomatic efforts in Iraq, and  its vision of parternship pervades all of our efforts and steers our future  goals.      I hope we're clear on that now.  It's no sin to be wrong.  We're all wrong  at some point and I'm more wrong than anyone else.  It's a mistake to pretend  you're not wrong.  And while we're talking about the Strategic Framework  Agreement, there's a reason we've emphasized it so much this year and last: We  didn't cover it.   In real time, it's a sentence here, a sentence there.  In November 2008, we  weren't interested.  If you leave out the shoe tossing incident -- that occured  when Bully Boy Bush and Nouri al-Maliki were signing both the Strategic  Framework Agreement and the SOFA -- you'll find very little of it in 2008 or  2009.   And that's my mistake.  I focused on the SOFA because that's what hearings  were held on that's what Senators and Representatives -- of both parties -- were  objecting to.  I never foresaw the possibility that diplomacy would be  militarized and the SFA would be used in any way other than it had been in the  past.  That was my mistake and don't I look like a fool today over that?   Absolutely.  I was wrong, I was stupid and I was foolish.  And copping to all of  that?  Didn't make the sky fall in.  Didn't mean my life ended or I collapsed in  tears.  It's a fact of life, if you're going to try to cover something, you're  going to make mistakes.  When you do, the smartest thing is to admit to  it.   I don't play on the SOFA and the reason for that is because enough lies  were given on that already.  Here we told the truth about the SOFA.  And those  who think the illegal war is really over should grasp that their belief system  needs to include praise that Iraq balked at immunity.  Because the SOFA didn't  mean the war ended ever.  And as we always stated it could expire, it could be  renewed it could be replaced.  If others had bothered to be truthful, the Iraq  War might really be ending or it might have ended a long time ago.  Instead a  number of serial liars provided non-stop spin and declared the Iraq War over.   Leslie Cagan, that means you and the leadership or 'leadership' of United For  Peace & Justice.   By the same token, the same serial liars -- we were dealing Tom Hayden just  yesterday -- are backing spinning again.  They're lying and they need to stop.   A friend at State explains the announcement Barack made last month as giving him  and Nouri a 'victory' for their domestic audiences and then when 'trainers' go  in (the friend believes that the negotiations will be successful and trainers  will go in), Barack and Nouri will both still insist they ended the war and  occupation.  I don't know.  What I do know is that negotiations are ongoing.  What I do know is the Iraqi press is very interested in those negotiations.   What I do know is Moqtada al-Sadr is concerned enough that he's called an  emergency session of Parliament and stated that Nouri needs to call of his visit  to DC next month.   I'm not a psychic. I can't tell you what's going to happen.  I can provide  a list of possibilities. And we did that with the SOFA and we were attacked for  doing that.  People who whore themselves to the Democratic Party were really  interested in attacking us. And now there's a small group -- including this site  -- who are interested in trying to get across that the negotiations have not  ended, that the 'lovely' speech was spin.  Do I get some great thrill in doing  this?    No, I'm damn tired of it and I wish to hell people would start doing the  jobs they say they hold -- whether that's reporter or leader of the left.      Here is what we know about the US and Iraq after December 31, 2011.  1) The  CIA will maintain its presence.  2) Special-Ops will maintain their presence.   3) The Iraqi Air Force is not trained and cannot patrol its own airspace and  really doesn't have the equipment for that at present.  4) The US Embassy in  Baghdad will have Marines (as all US embassies do) and they will have soldiers  as well.  The Iraqi press is concerned with how many.  The American press likes  to keep repeating the 'all' lie.  5) The US Embassy in Baghdad will oversee  'security' contractors. 6) Negotiations are ongoing between DC and Baghdad on  the issue of 'trainers.'  7) Kuwait and others will be used -- as Barack noted  they would in 2007 -- as a staging platform for US troops.   That's what we know.  There are rumors -- the big one in the Iraqi press  today was whispers that Nouri had approved 200 "trainers" -- granted them  immunity. But in terms of what is known, that's not what people think they heard  in the speech.  And on number seven, Lolita C. Baldor (AP) is reporting, "While all  but a small number of U.S. troops will be out of Iraq by the end of the year,  they won't all be home for the holidays as President Barack Obama promised last  month. The Pentagon is poised to move at least 4,000 soldiers from Iraq to  Kuwait at the end of the year, pending a final decision expected soon by  Pentagon and Kuwaiti leaders, U.S. officials said Wednesday." Somewhere Tom  Hayden's clutching the pearls and calling for the smelling salts. 
   If you don't like those seven realities -- and I don't (although I can live  with the Marine half of number four) -- then you need to be objecting now.  Not  in January, not a year from now.  Gallup published a poll today -- they did a  random sample of 992 American adults and the survey has a 4% plus/minus margin  of error.  Asked if they approve of Barack's decision, 75% of "All Americans"  say they approve.  21% say they disapprove.  But do they know what's going on  because the media's done a very poor job of explaining what was going on and  so-called voices of peace like Tom Hayden have ignored reality and, when forced  to address any of the seven realities we noted two paragraphs up, dismiss it as  fantasy.  Well Tom used to take joy in the killing of Palestinians as well, I do  remember.  I'm not really sure he's who we need to go to for ethical  advice.   Joel Wing mentions the Interior Ministry, how the US State Dept will be  helping to strengthen it.  He should do a piece on why?   Why should the US waste their time on the Ministry of Interior?  Or the US  tax payers money?  Nouri was named prime minister-designate in November 2010.   He was supposed to name a Cabinet -- not a partial one, a Cabinet -- in order to  move to prime minister (per the Constitution).  He didn't.  It's now one year  later.     The Ministry of Interior, that the US government is going to spend millions  of tax payer dollars to 'assist' and 'train,' still has no Minister.  An 'acting  minister' isn't a minister.  An acting minister is a puppet.  Without him or her  going through the Constitutional process, they have no protection and serve only  as long as Nouri wants them to.  They are his puppets.  If you've forgotten our  'brilliant' US press assured us as December came to a close that Nouri would  name ministers for Interior, Defense and National Security in a matter of weeks.     He still hasn't.  Does anyone know what March is?  Yeah, it's the  anniversary start of the Iraq War.  But it will also be two years after Iraq  held elections.  Those elections were to determine the national government  (citizens voted on members in the Parliament).  In four months, it will be two  years after those elections and Iraq still doesn't have ministers for the three  security ministries.  But the US government is willing to throw away tax payer  dollars -- during The Great Recession -- on training a department that's so  unimportant to Nouri, he won't even nominate a head for it and take that  nomination to Parliament for a confirmation (or denial). We'll pick up there  tomorrow.  Let's stay with the New Saddam. Nouri's crackdown on 'Ba'athists' has taken a lot of attention off the  continued targeting of Sahwa also known as "Sons Of Iraq" and "Awakenings."  These are largely Sunni fighters who were paid by the US government to stop  attacking US military equipment and US troops. (That's Gen David Petraeus  explanation from April 2008.) Hossam Acommok (Al Mada) speaks with Sahwa leader  Abu Azzam al-Tamimi who states there are 50,000 Sahwa left in Iraq, 30,000 of  which are in Baghdad. (At their height, there were approximately 98,000  according to Petraeus' 2008 Congressional testimony.) When the US turned control  of the Sahwa over to Nouri, there were promises of bringing them into the  process via government jobs. That never really happened and al-Tamimi notes it  is unlikely to happen by year's end when the program is supposed to end. What  happens when these Sahwa, who've struggled for pay and have waited not just for  checks but also for government jobs,  get nothing?  Does that increase security  in Iraq or does dismissing and ignoring one time armed rebels mean that they  rejoin the resistance?
 Nouri's never going to be mistaken for  a smart person.  Back to  his crackdown on  political enemies. Dar Addustour reports politicians  are calling on Nouri to release the over 600 Iraqis he's had arrested recently.  And they report that more were arrested yesterday in Basra -- two journalists  working for Basra radio: Mohammad Matouk and Zia Albzona. Al Rafidayn carries an article on  the "Sons of the General Command of Jihad and Liberation" which is supposedly a  Ba'athist group and supposedly distributing pamphlets throughout Nasiriyah  demanding people joing them in a coup attempt against Dhi Qar Province.  Last  week Reidar Visser (Gulf Analysis) pointed  out, "Suffice to say in this context that the Iraqi constitution actually  offers pro-active protection of former members of the Baath. Article 135-5  explicitly says 'mere membership of the Baath party is not a sufficient basis  for transfer to the court'. Article 7 of the constitution outlaws propagation of  a number of political ideologies where Baathism is mentioned alongside racism,  terrorism and ethnic cleansing, but stipulates the passage of a law by  parliament to codify this more precisely, which has yet to be done. In other  words, there is no basis whatsoever for prosecuting anyone for simply having  been a Baathist member -- and arguably, at the current time, not even for  propagation of Baathism since this is not covered by any specific form of  legislation."
     Dar Addustour also reports that  Sheikh Ali Hatem Suleiman states he was at his office last night when the  government attempted to harm him either by arrest or by killing him. The  government states that they raided his home yesterday and that this was over a  property dispute.
 Moqtada al-Sadr has called for an emergency session of  Parliament to discuss what the US is doing in Iraq and what the plans are. That  session is scheduled for tomorrow. (He's also called for Nouri al-Maliki not to  go to DC next month.) Dar Addustour reports that a  meeting is to be held at Jalal Talabani's home and there's some indication the  meeting may take place today, ahead of the emergency session. It's also noted  that when the meeting does take place the topics will include US Vice President  Joe Biden's scheduled trip to Iraq this month.
   Iran borders Iraq and Iranian dissidents came to Iraq, on the invitation of  Saddam Hussein, after the fall of the Shah of Iran and the rise of the  Ayatollah. Less than 4,000 remain and reside in Camp Ashraf. The US invaded Iraq  in 2003 and entered into negotiations (the government and the military -- more  so the military but the government oversaw those negotiations and could have  stepped in at any minute). In exchange for disarming, certain guarantees were  made and, most importantly, international law kicked in making the resident  "protected persons." At the start of 2009, the US turned responsibilities over  to Nouri al-Maliki who swore the residents would be protected. He has now  ordered two assaults on the Camp. He has announced that the camp will be shut by  year's end. He has floated publicly sending them back to Iran. He and his  government have also spoken of breaking them up and dispersing them throughout  the country -- because Iraq's so very good and safe for minorities apparently. 
 UK Progressive post a transcript of  US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton testifying before the US House Foreign  Affairs Committee. (The transcript focuses solely on her remarks about Camp  Ashraf.) The date of the hearing isn't noted. Presumably this is from her  October 27th appearance before the Committee. But this is a typical exchange and  it also goes to misreporting that some may remember.
 
 Rep. (Judge) Ted Poe (R-TX): Thank you Madam  Secretary, thank you Madam Chair. I will try to make this to the point. Last  time you and I talked in this very room, we talked about the safety of camp  Ashraf. That was in March and then later in April, Iraqi soldiers came in and  killed people in Camp Ashraf. People disagree on how that occurred but people  did that. Right now, on 31st [December] United States is leaving, I am not  discussing that, but also on 31st, Maleki has made it clear that the camp is  going to close. When we were in Iraq this summer, Chairman Rohrabacher, myself  and others on this committee, we met with Maleki on the issue of Camp Ashraf. It  got very heated. We wanted to go see the camp, he refused to let us see it. And  later, we learned when we were flying around in a Black Hawk, that we have been  invited to leave the country based upon that discussion with him. But the number  one thing he said about the way Iraq treated Camp Ashraf was the US designation  of the MEK. He spent all of his time saying this is the reason they are treated  the way they are because you, the United States, have designated them as a  foreign terrorist organization. My concern, first of all, is the safety of the  people in Camp Ashraf when that 31st comes. They are in fear. 85 of those people  some are Americans and the others of that 85 that are there among the 2000, are  permanent residents of the US. So, my question is, what are we doing through the  end to make sure they extend the deadline so the people can do what necessary  through the UN to get out of Iraq and go somewhere in the world. And second, the  long term issue of the MEK designation. I am encouraged by your words last night  that you made regarding that. So, those are my two issues and my two questions  to you Madam Secretary.
 
 Secretary  Clinton: Well, congressman, I can assure you that I am personally very focused  on trying to make sure that we protect the safety of the residents of the camp.  I, and our department and our administration strongly condemned the violence  that led to the deaths. Regardless of how that happened, the fact is, you are  right, 36 residents died because of the violence on April the 8th. We are  monitoring the situation as closely as we can. We see no evidence suggesting that there is any other  imminent attack on Ashraf and we continue to urge the government of Iraq to show  restraint. As I said earlier, we do have written assurances from the government  of Iraq to treat the Ashraf residents humanely, to follow their international  obligations which they have, as long as the residents remain in the country, and  not to transfer anyone to any country where that person could be persecuted as a  result of their political or religious beliefs. And so, we are trying to nail  down as much as we can to provide some protective screen for the residents. We  know that they have approached; that we have also pushed the UNHCR to have even  more of a presence, to do more, to try to move as many of the status  determinations as they can. So this is an area of deep concern to us and we are  moving on many fronts and we are also going to move as expeditiously as possible  to a final resolution on the designation.
 
 
 If you've forgotten  the misreporting, it had the US House members kicked out of Iraq. That was not  what happened. As usual Nouri presented a fake front. He waited until after the  delegation was on its way out of the country to thump his chest and play the big  man for his domestic audience. Poe's remarks are consistent with others on the  trip.
 
 James Morrison (Washington Times) notes claims that  Nouri's forces are gearing up for another assault on the camp. I have no idea  whether that's true or not (nor does Morrison present himself as knowing whether  it's true or not). But what is known is that Nouri gave assurances to both the  previous and the current US Administrations. And he still assaulted the Camp  twice. Certain members of the British Parliament have publicly accused the US  government of complicity in the attacks noting that then-US Secretary of Defense  Robert Gates was on the ground in Iraq both times when the assaults took  place.
 
 Another nation borders Iraq from the north as well, Turkey.  Since August  17th, the latest wave of attacks on northern Iraq by the Turkish military have  taken place.  The military states its targeting PKK -- a group of Kurdish  rebels.  In the process, they are terrorizing the villagers and damaging the  Iraq countryside with their bombing raids.  They could attempt to address the  reason the PKK has power -- injustice to Kurds in Turkey -- but instead they  just 'know' that tomorrow will be peaceful if they just drop enough bombs  today.  And, of course, if they continue to target Kurds and Kurdish  sympathizers within Turkey.  Yeah, that'll work out great.   Sebnem Arsu (New York Times) reports a crackdown  on "pro-Kurdish political activists" in Turkey including over 20 ordered held in  confinement by a court yesterday. This comes as the Turkish military continues  its assault on northern Iraq. And as it tries to tout its own reputation as a  leader in the region. Suppressing freedom domestically won't help its image but  refusing to bring to justice the  police officer who shot 17-year-old Ferhat Gercek four years ago and left him  paralyzed hasn't demonstrated the Turkish government's overly  concerned with how they're seen abroad. Nor will blaming European governments  for their own problems. Anna Reimann (Der Spiegel) reports as Turkish  Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan prepares to meet with German Chancellor  Angela Merkel:
 
 Yet another problem  between the two countries is the PKK conflict, with Turkish politicians  repeatedly attacking the German government and accusing Berlin of indirectly  protecting the Kurdish terrorists. "Twice as many PKK members live in Germany as  in the Qandil mountains in northern Iraq," claimed Cemil Cecik -- speaker of the  Turkish parliament and a party colleague of Erdogan -- according to the  Süddeutsche Zeitung. The prime minister himself has criticized German  foundations and accused them of funding the PKK.
 One thing is certain: As a regional power, Turkey is  starting to flex its muscles. Erdogan was hailed during a visit to the region  following the Arab revolts in Tunisia and Egypt and became the symbolic head of  the freedom movement. The moderate Islamists who were victorious in the recent  Tunisian elections model their Islamic political framework on that of his  governing Justice and Development Party (AKP). Erdogan recently made his  country's opinion of its own power unmistakeably clear: "Our interests range  from the Suez Canal to the Indian Ocean," he said.
 
 One country  rushing in to give the Turkish government a stamp of approval and then some is  the US. Craig Whitlock (Washington Post) reports, "The  Pentagon has agreed to sell three attack helicopters to Turkey and is trying to  persuade Congress to sell highly coveted Predator or Reaper drones to its  increasingly influential ally in the Middle East, defense officials said  Tuesday." Press TV adds, "Turkey's Mynet news  website reported on Tuesday that it has taken a year to build the radar base,  which is totally under US control, according to the Press TV correspondent in  Ankara." AFP notes that the US is selling  Turkey 3 AH-1 Super Cobra helicoptersand that US Secretary of Defense Leon  Panetta met with Turkey's Defense Secretary Ismet Yildiz yesterday for talks on  "maintaining strong security ties."
 
 Iraq War veteran Leroy Torres and his wife Rosie Torres have never stopped  fighting on behalf of veterans exposed to burn pits and contiuned to educate the  nation on the issue. The Torres have a website entitled BURNPITS 360. They are also on Facebook. It's a  personal issue, Capt Leroy Torres was exposed to the burn pit on Balad Airbase.  KZTV 10 reports on their trip to DC "to hopefully gain support  from lawmakers. They're pushing for health care for victims of burn pits, and  asking the government to establish a national registry similar to the Agent  Orange registry from the Vietnam War."  Rosie Torres explains, "This registry  will allow people to start recognizing the association between the toxic  exposure from the burn pits and the illnesses that are surfacing now and have  claimed the lives of many soldiers." The Torres note that a member of Congress  is working hard on the issue.
 
 
 From: The Honorable W. Todd Akin Dear Colleague; Please sign on to be an original cosponsor to legislation that is  important to our veterans.  Numerous veterans have suffered serious health  problems after exposure to open burn pits in Iraq and Afghanistan. This legislation will establish  a registry, similar to the Agent Orange Registry and the Gulf War Syndrome  Registry.  This is the first step toward providing better care for veterans who  have been affected by open burn pits. This bill will also be introduced in a bipartisan/bicameral fashion  with companion legislation being introduced by Senator Tom Udall  (D-NM) This bill is scheduled  to be introduced on November 3rd, so please  contact my office soon to become an original  cosponsor. Sincerely, W. Todd  Akin Member of  Congress      Rep. W. Todd  Akin   Open Burn Pit Registry Act of 2011   Department of Veterans Affairs   Based on recent accounts of health  maladies of veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan and a possible link to  toxic fumes released in  open burn pits it has become necessary to voluntarily track and account for  these individuals.    This registry will ensure that  members of the Armed Forces  who may have been exposed to toxic chemicals and fumes while serving overseas can be better  informed regarding exposure and possible effects. This legislation   is  modeled after legislation that created the Agent Orange Registry and the Gulf  War Syndrome  Registry. As drafted, the purpose of  the   • Establish and maintain an open  burn pit registry for those individuals who  may have been exposed during their  military service; • Include information in this  registry that the Secretary of the VA determines applicable to possible health  effects of this exposure; • Develop a public information  campaign to inform individuals about the  registry; • Periodically notify members of  the registry of significant developments associated with burn pit  exposure. In order to ensure that the Veterans  Administration conducts the registry in the most effective manner, the  legislation: • Requires an assessment and report  to Congress by an independent  scientific  organization; • This report contains an  assessment of the effectiveness of the Secretary   of the VA to collect and maintain  information as well as recommendations  to improve the collection and  maintenance of this information; • The report will also include  recommendations regarding the most effective  means of addressing medical needs  due to exposure; • This report will be due to  Congress no later than 18 months after the date   which the registry is  established. • CBO states that this registry  would cost $2 million over 5 years  (2012-2016) We learned from this country's issues with  Agent Orange that the need to get  ahead of this issue is of paramount  importance.   The establishment of a burn pit registry will  help the VA determine not only to what extent the ramifications  of burn pits may have on service members but can also be of  great use in information dissemination.   If you have any questions please contact Rep.  Akin's office at 5-2561 and speak  Issue and Party list(s).
         |