| Thursday, December 15, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, Morning  Joe brews a new form of sexism: Erasing all US women who served in the Iraq  War, a mayor is kidnapped in Iraq (and killed), Senator Patty Murray calls for a  new outpatient care center for veterans and more.     Celeste Headlee: Ned Parker has covered the war since the beginning  as the former Baghdad bureau chief for the Los Angeles Times  now at  the Council on Foreign Relations. So let me ask you about the future of Iraq.  Obviously, we've gotten comments from American generals who are worried that  this country will descend into chaos.  You heard an Iraqi woman just a moment  ago talking about how she's optimistic although the government is weak.  What --  what do you think?  Is this a country that will remain united?  Where the path  to diplomacy is shaky but-but sure?   Ned Parker: In terms of the country's internal  politics?   Celeste Headlee: Yeah.   Ned Parker: Well -- I -- That's what struck me so much my recent  trip to Iraq. I was in Iraq this summer from May 'till early August. And at that  time I saw many worrying trends in Iraq.  The politics of the country were  becoming very polarized again and very sectarian -- reminiscent of 2003, 2004  and '05 and the build up to civil war.  And also saw a lot of alarming trends  from the government by -- from the prime minister's office of security  forces being used in questionable raids where people were detained and would  disappear into special jails where their families and lawyers could not talk to  them.  Pro-democracy protesters who were trying to have their own equivalent of  an Arab Spring to criticize the corruption among the elite government officials  and the lack of transparency started to be attacked in May and June by plain  clothes government agents and pro-Maliki supporters.  While army looked on,  these men would go around and beat people on one occasion.  And I had been in  Egypt in Tahrir Square in February and had some mobs there attacking  pro-democracy protesters.  And it was the same thing.  So I saw all of that this  summer and when I came back it was the same if not worse.  And Iraqis are in  charge of their destiny and America I don't think in recent years has  effectively used its clout and leverage to try to help promote this process of  national reconciliation or the respect of civil liberties and freedom of  speech.. Particularly I think since 2010 there was an effort of getting a  government in place because there had been [crosstalk] Yeah and with the  deadline  on troops leaving, there was an emphasis on just having a stable  figure in power that America could deal with at the expense of these important  things: rule of law, freedom of speech.  So all of these seems to be going and  that was the case when I went back.     Celeste Headlee:  Well we've got like a minute-and-a-half left so  let me ask you this very complicated question which is Iraq five years from now,  ten years from now, stable?  Peaceful? 
 Ned Parker:  It's uh -- I mean, I wish I had a crystal ball. I sure  hope so.  You know I very much respect Iraqis, I have spent a lot of time  there and I think everyone wants to see Iraq work out for the best but we really  don't know there are so many worrying and different trends there.  As I said,  the politics have become far more sectarian, in the political class there's very  little trust between kind of the Shi'ite elite  and Sunnis. There's talk within  different provinces of creating their own regions because --     Celeste Headlee: Separating off.   Ned Parker:  Right Sunni provinces no longer trust Baghdad so they  want to declare their own region.  With what's happening in Syria that could  also polarize things So it's so complicated. That could lead to more unrest and  an authoritarian regime.  Or perhaps Iraq will have their own Arab Spring that  will lead to responsible government and a process of  reconciliation.   From radio we'll switch to TV but before noting something worth noting will  first note PIG BOY Willie Geist.  Willie is part of the sewer of MSNBC -- the  non-news shows, the yackety-yack where buffoons pass themselves off as informed  -- and today on Morning Joe  he felt the need to weigh in on those US  service members who had lost their lives serving in Iraq.  It's a serious issue  and it's insulting to here people say "4500" -- try getting the actual number  you lazy ass fools (and, yes, I'm aware that would include Barack).  But Willie  did all of them one better, he wanted to talk about the "brothers" who were left  behind because they died there.  The "brothers."  And no one corrected him, not  one damn person -- guest or the huge cast of Morning Joe  -- stopped the  frat boy Bob Somerby  has so rightly and so often criticized to inform  him that US service members who died in the Iraq War were not just men, women  died as well.  In July of 2008, CNN would note  that the number  of female US service members who have died in the Iraq War had already reached  100.  As of September 23, 2011, 111 female US service members had died in the  Iraq War according to Noonie Fortin  -- and 13 US civilian women died in  the Iraq War as well.  Fortin provides a write up on each one of the dead  (including the civilians like DynCorp contractor Deborah Klecker who died at age  51 in June 2005).  The first US female service member to die in Iraq was PFC  Lori Ann Piestewa (also the first Native American to die in the Iraq War) on  March 23, 2003.  And the last so far was August 7, 2010, SPC Faith R. Hinkley of  Colorado.  Here's the link to trash  (only because Ava and I will be  commenting further at Third on Sunday unless Bob Somerby grabs it Friday).     Twelve minutes and 17 seconds into the clip, Willie Boy asks, ". . . what  is the bitter-sweet feeling if that's the way to put it for some of these guys  who are happy to be going home but remembering the brothers left behind?"   111 women dead.  And no guest or cast member of Morning Joe  (it's  not a news show) could bother to object when "Tucker Carlson's boy toy " bothered to render women who have  served in the Iraq War invisible, including those who died while serving.  Maybe  Morning Joe can spend tomorrow apologizing to the loved ones of the 111 women  who died serving in Iraq as well as to the women who served in Iraq and made it  home?  (And the total number of US military personnel killed in the Iraq War?   The Pentagon's official count currently stands at 4487  -- one up from last week.  If you're going to note the  deaths and if you think they matter, you bother to get the number right and not  go with an estimate.)       Richard Engel:  But the biggest change for Iraq may be closer ties  with it's Shi'ite neighbor Iran.  These days Alkadhimiya is full of Iranian tour  groups who come with their own guides with signs in Farsi.  Under Saddam, no  Iranians came to Iraq, Saddam was Iran's enemy.  Today, more than 2 million  Iranians visit Iraq every year. Iraq's new dynamic is on display here every  day.  After nearly nine years, it's Iraq Shi'ites who have benefited the most,  they have won this country.   The United States toppled a dictator who's been  replaced by a Shi'ite government with close ties to Iran.  It's hard to imagine  how that was ever part of the plan.  Across town at Baghdad's famous book  market, Kareem Hanash, himself a Shi'ite, doesn't want US troops to leave. He  says Iran has calculated all of this very well; they want  a Shi'ite Iraq so  they can control the assets, economy and politics.  Fear of Iran's growing  power is sharper still in the Sunni-stronghold of Falljua. Once Iraq's deadliest  war zone, Falluja remains violent.  A bomb killed 3 policemen  here just after  we arrived.  Police say Sunni radicals killed them because they work for the  Shi'ite government. Compared to other parts of Iraq, there's been little  development in Sunni towns like Falluja.  This building was destroyed by US  forces seven years ago and still looks like this.  People here accuse the  government of persecuting them, ignoring them, trying to cut Sunnis out of the  new Iraq. A cloth merchant told me, "You crossed a thousand miles from America.   Why? If you want the oil, take the oil.  If you want our money, take it. But you  have destroyed life, the whole system."     Staying on Falluja, Fadhil al-Badrani, Patrick Markey and Giles  Elgood (Reuters) note  the US military's two major assaults on  Falluja, the first in March 2004, "Hundreds of Iraqis and dozens of U.S. troops  were killed but the insurgency was not quelled. Six months later, the U.S.  Marines went back in. A month-long assault destroyed much of the city, killed an  estimated 1,300 Iraqi fighters and civilians, and wounded thousands more. More  than 100 U.S. troops also died."  Turning to today's violence, Reuters notes  the corpses of 3  government workers were found in Dhuluiya (all were shot dead, all had their  hands bound), the mayor of Jurf al-Sakhar and his son were kidnapped (the mayor  was then killed) and 2 Ramadi bicycle bombings claimed 2 lives and left three  people injured.     Obama won the 2008 election in large measure due to the deep-going  hostility among the American electorate to the wars begun under the Bush  administration. He pledged to end the war in Iraq within 16 months of coming to  office. Once in the White House, however, he retained Bush's secretary of  defense, Robert Gates, and largely ceded policy decisions to the Pentagon  brass. The December 31, 2011 deadline for completing troop withdrawals was  set not by Obama, but was rather part of the Status of Forces Agreement reached  between Bush and the Iraqi regime in 2008. Bush, like Obama, had fully intended  to renegotiate this pact to allow permanent stationing of US troops in the  country. As it is, Washington is doing its best to maintain its grip on  Iraq, replacing uniformed troops with an army of up to 17,000 under the nominal  direction of the US State Department. It is to include a force of 5,500 private  mercenary security contractors, a massive CIA station, and Special Operations  troops operating covertly out of uniform. Tens of thousands of US troops are  being kept in place across Iraq's border in Kuwait and elsewhere in the Persian  Gulf, while the US Navy and the US Air Force remain in control of the country's  coastlines and airspace.   And Nouri remains in control of Iraq because the US government installed  the puppet during the Bush administration and because the Barack administration  wasn't going to allow anyone else to be prime minister, the will of the voters  (expressed in the 2010 elections) be damned.  Dar Addustour reports  that the only  hope for Iraq's government is for the blocs to meet and iron out their  differences. Al Sabaah notes  Parliament wants  Nouri to appear before them next week to answer questions regarding the status  of Iraqi security forces, the withdrawal and the absence of heads for the three  security ministries (Defense, Interior and National Security). (This would be  the questioning that Moqtada al-Sadr called for weeks ago.) Yes, Iraq remains in  Political Stalemate II -- a fact that so much Iraq coverage this week has  ignored repeatedly.   Noting Barack's false claim that the Iraqi government  is inclusive, Warren Olney (To the Point) launched into a discussion  Tuesday about the realities .  A journalist wasn't up to reality (your first  clue was the assertion that "the Americans are leaving" -- which the journalist  stated she told to Iraqis who complained about the ongoing occupation.  No,  17,000 State Dept employees aren't leaving.  Not even all US troops are  leaving.  There's no reason not to know these things or to not know that  violence has increased over the last 17 months.)  So instead of wasting our time  on that nonsense, We'll note the Center for Strategic and International Studies'  Anthony Cordesman from the same broadcast:    Anthony Cordesman: Well I think we need to be concerned more  broadly.  The structure that we created around the Constitution really never  properly defined the role of the Council to the Republic, the legislature. It  attempted to limit the power of the president [prime minister[, but it gave him  authority in ways where whoever drafted it was less concerned with money and  military appointments than theoretical lines of authority.   They've never  really resolved how to manage the provincial and local government structures --  although that has improved over time.  And here we are, nearly two years after  the last election [March 7, 2010], you really don't have a functioning Cabinet.   You don't have a Minister of Interior who is in charge of the internal security  forces.  And the Prime Minister is acting as Minister of Defense in part because  a body which also is not part of the Constitution but was supposed to be a mix  of Sunni and Shi'ite parties with the head or the leading opposition figure  [Ayad] Allawi has never been able to work.  We really need to be extremely  cautious about what is happening there and certainly Maliki has attempted to  centralize power but the problem goes far deeper than Maliki.    Warren Olney: Thank you for calling him "prime minister." I called  him "president" earlier and that is not the office that he holds.  How concerned  are you, Anthony Cordesman, about the sectarian issues?   Anthony Cordseman: Well I think again we need to be very  concerned.  The reason that the US tried to keep troops was the risk of bringing  back Sunni and Shi'ite tension and an insurgency.  But, more than that, the real  fear that clashes in the north between the Kurds and the Arabs could turn into a  significant new form of fighting and that, at best, it needed a buffer so that  it could be resolved peacefully.  We look at the levels of violence and the way  that the US tends to count violence in terms of signficant acts still shows a  relatively high count. But if you look at other ways of counting which are sort  of terrorist and lower levels of violence -- the counts that are used, for  example, by the counter-terrorism center, still show a very high level of  violence inside Iraq. And reports by another US figure indicated that the  pattern of violence was rising as US forces went down.    While so many in the press rush to lie and pretty up things with yet  another wave of Operation Happy Talk, not everyone went surfing. Jack Healy  (New York Times ) did participate in one  of the few honest looks at Nouri al-Maliki this week (click here for Healy, Tim Arango  and Michael D. Schmidt's article on Nouri ) and today he writes  about the  rally denouncing the US in Falluja yesterday:Once an inner ring of Iraq's wartime inferno, Falluja  is only too eager to say goodbye to nearly nine shattering years of raids,  bombings and house-to-house urban combat. At least 200 American troops were  killed in this city. Untold thousands of Iraqis died, civilians and insurgents  who are mourned equally as martyrs.We noted the rally in yesterday's snapshot.  Strangely, Healy was the only  one with an article published this morning (in print, last night online) who  could explore the rally.  Equally strange, the Operation Happy Talk-ers had no  time to mention what  Ann  noted  last night, Press TV  reported :Unknown gunmen have  attacked a US military base in the southern Iraq city of Basra with several  mortar shells, military sources say. Possible casualties or damages are yet to be reported.  The outpost is located in Basra  International Airport, the second largest international airport in Iraq. A lot of waves of Operation Happy Talk crashing up against  reality as they had time to file on Leon Panetta, US Secretary of Defense,  taking part in a "white flag" ceremony in Baghdad today. Meanwhile Dar Addustour speaks  with officials  in Moqtada al-Sadr's political bloc who explain that Iraq has put special forces  on the ground in civilian clothing and, in addition, they note that there are  "foreign" intelligence agents in Iraq (US). And in another article  they  note Moqtada's words about resisting the continuation of US occupation in any  manner are again being noted.Al Mannarah reports  that Saleh  al-Mutlaq, Deputy Prime Minister for Service Affairs, declared on Tuesday that  the Diyala provincial council's decision to move towards semi-autonomy for the  province was "rushed" and would harm Iraq because, with so many US forces  leaving, everyone must work together on security and stability. Dar Addustour notes  that a  delegation from Parliament went to Diyala to discuss the latest issue (the move  towards semi-autonomy). They're also exploring the protests against the move  (protests by residents in Diyala Province) and hearing from Mohammed Hassan,  provincial council chief, that he had nothing to do with it, he didn't know that  this was going to happen, he didn't even know that there was going to be a  request forwarded for semi-autonomy. If he thinks that makes him look good, I'm  at a loss as to how. He's the chief of the council. He should have had some  inkling towards the feelings of the council members on this issue. US  Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta will leave Iraq to go to Turkey (Friday) where  he will discuss, Dar Addustour  notes , $111 million of drone equipment the US will be providing  Turkey.In the US, veterans care is already overwhelming the VA health care system  and that's only going to get worse.  Senator Patty Muarry is the Chair of the  Senate Veterans Affairs Committee and she's calling for a new outpatient clinic  in the state of Washington:     FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Murray Press OfficeThursday,  December 15, 2011 (202) 224-2834
 
 Chairman Murray Urges VA to Establish  New, Full-Time CBOC on North Olympic Peninsula
 
 (Washington, D.C.) --  Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee Chairman Patty Murray has sent a letter to  Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Secretary Eric Shinseki about the critical  need to establish a new, full-time Community Based Outpatient Clinic (CBOC) on  the North Olympic Peninsula. In her letter, which urges the VA to include  funding for a new clinic in the Department's Fiscal Year 2013 budget, Murray  cites the growing need for veterans care in the Northern Peninsula region and  rising enrollment at the current Port Angeles facility. In addition to sending  the letter to Secretary Shinseki, Murray also hand delivered the letter and  discussed this issue with Dr. Robert A. Petzel, the VA's top health official,  yesterday in a meeting in her office.
 
 "For too long, the needs in the  North Olympic Peninsula have outpaced VA's ability to provide veterans in the  region with adequate health care services," said Chairman Murray. "While the  current lease has been extended until the end of fiscal year 2012, I believe  that veterans in the North Olympic Peninsula cannot wait any longer for a new  clinic that has sufficient staff, space and hours to meet the needs of veterans  living in this rural region of Washington state."
 
 Since its establishment  in 2008, the Port Angeles outreach clinic has served more than 14,000 veterans  living on the North Olympic Peninsula. As a result of the strong growth in this  rural area, the Port Angeles outreach clinic has already exceeded maximum  physical capacity and can neither expand services nor accommodate additional  personnel. The need for care is expected to grow, with a 20 percent increase in  enrollment projected over the next 10 years. Currently, the clinic occupies  approximately 1,500 net usable square feet in a building owned by the Olympic  Medical Center. A new CBOC would provide primary care and mental health services  in a much larger space five days a week.
 
 The full text of Chairman  Murray's letter is below:
 
 The Honorable Eric K. Shinseki
 Secretary of  Veterans Affairs
 810 Vermont Avenue, NW
 Washington, DC 20420
 
 Dear  Secretary Shinseki:
 
 As you continue to work toward our shared goal of  increasing veterans' access to VA services and benefits, I write to urge your  support for the establishment of a new, full-time Community Based Outpatient  Clinic (CBOC) on the North Olympic Peninsula.
 
 Since its establishment in  2008, the Port Angeles outreach clinic has served a critical and growing need  for the more than 14,000 veterans living on the North Olympic Peninsula. In FY  2010, the clinic delivered primary care and mental health services to 1,200  veterans (a 6.5 percent increase over FY 2009), and accommodated 4,876 patient  visits (a 5 percent increase over FY 2009). As a result of the strong growth in  this rural area, the Port Angeles outreach clinic has already exceeded maximum  physical capacity and can neither expand services nor accommodate additional  personnel. The need for care is expected to grow, with a 20 percent increase in  enrollment projected over the next 10 years.
 
 When I wrote to you in  August 2010 requesting that the Department examine in earnest a full service  CBOC to serve veterans in the North Olympic Peninsula, you let me know that the  VA Puget Sound Health Care System (VAPSHCS) was working on a lease expansion  proposal to develop a larger outreach clinic when the current lease with Olympic  Medical Center expires at the end of fiscal year 2011 and that VAPSHCS will  request that the outreach clinic be upgraded to a full-time CBOC "as space,  staff and hours of operations are expanded." I believe the time has come for  veterans living on the North Olympic Peninsula to have access to the level of  care and services afforded by a full-time CBOC.
 
 For too long, the needs  in the North Olympic Peninsula have outpaced VA's ability to provide veterans in  the region with adequate health care services. While the current lease has been  extended until the end of fiscal year 2012, I believe that veterans in the North  Olympic Peninsula cannot wait any longer for a new clinic that has sufficient  staff, space and hours to meet the needs of veterans living in this rural region  of Washington state.
 
 As you finalize the Department's Fiscal Year 2013  budget, I urge you to include in your request sufficient funding to establish a  new, full-time CBOC on the North Olympic Peninsula.
 
 I thank you for your  enduring commitment to our nation's veterans and look forward to learning of  your plans.
 
 Sincerely,
 
 Patty  Murray
 Chairman
 
 
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 Meghan Roh   Deputy Press Secretary   Office of U.S. Senator Patty  Murray   @PattyMurray   202-224-2834   Get Updates from Senator Murray           |