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Thursday, December 22, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, Baghdad is 
slammed with bombings, the White House talks Iraq 'progress,' and more. 
  
Bagdad is slammed with bombings and Jay Carney has achieved a rare feat -- 
making people miss the White House spokesperson stylings of Robert Gibbs.  
"Attempts such as this," Carney said at the White House today of the bombings, 
"to derail Iraq's continued progress will fail."  
  
  
  
  
SRSG Martin Kobler: Iraqi leaders should overcome the current 
standstill in the appointment of the security ministries and resolve other 
issues involving the government formation process.  Some of the pressing details 
of yesterday remain the same today.  They are covered in greater detail in the 
report of the Secretary-General and include wealth distribution and power 
sharing, delivery and access to basic services, strained relations between 
communities that have lived together in Iraq for centuries as well as unresolved 
issues between Iraq and Kuwait. 
Someone needs to ask Jay Carney: What progress? 
  
AFP explores 
women's status in Iraq and notes how it has fallen from a high for the region to 
a nightmare (my term) today.  Excerpt: 
  
Safia 
al-Souhail, an MP who ran in March 2010 elections on Prime 
Minister Nuri al-Maliki's State of Law slate but has since defected and is now 
an independent, said US forces made some progress, but did not do enough in the 
immediate aftermath of the invasion. "They were always giving excuses that 
our society would not accept it," she said. "Our society is still wondering why 
the Americans did not support women leaders who were recognised by the Iraqi 
people."
 She lamented that Maliki had completed a recent official visit to 
Washington without a single woman in his delegation, describing it as a "shame 
on Iraq". Indeed, only one woman sits in Maliki's national unity cabinet, 
Ibtihal al-Zaidi, the minister of state for women's affairs.
 But no one in the press wanted to note that, did they?  No one 
in the US press, all giddy like school girls in the audience of The Ed 
Sullivan Show as the Beatles take the stage, wanted to point out that 
reality or how it signified the decling status of women in Iraq.  With very few 
exceptions, they wanted to treat thug Nouri as if he were Nelson Mandela instead 
of Augusto Pinochet reborn. 
  
  
That's laughable.  It's especially laughable that the State Dept finally 
wants to weigh in on women's rights nearly nine years after the Iraq War 
started.  And the key to women's rights, the State Dept appears to believe, is 
in how the Iraqi police are trained.  Couldn't care about women's rights when 
the Iraqi Constitution was being written or when Iraqi women were in the streets 
protesting the attempts to strip them of their legal rights.  But now, when they 
want to spend billions and billions of US tax payer dollars for years and years 
to train the Iraqi police, the US State Dept insists that this program is needed 
and it's needed to advance the rights of women. 
  
Christians around the world prepare to celebrate one of their holy days but 
in Iraq, Catholic News 
Service reports , "Chaldean Catholic officials have canceled traditional 
Christmas Eve midnight Masses because of security risks.  Chaldean Archbishop 
Louis Sako of Kirkuk in northern Iraq told the agency Aid to the Church in Need 
that Christians will spend Christmas in 'great fear' because of the risk of new 
attacks."
  
What progress? 
  
Robert Koehler 
(Newsday) observes, "The war is over, sort of, but the Big Lie 
marches on: that democracy is flowering in Iraq, that America is stronger and 
more secure than ever, that doing what's right is the prime motivator of all our 
military action." 
  
  
Baghdad is slammed with bombings today leaving many dead and injured? 
  
What progress? 
  
Early 
today Ziad Tarek, spokesperson for the Ministry of Health, was telling Alsumaria 
TV, "Baghdad hospitals received this morning bodies of 49 dead and 
167 wounded, following explosions that occurred in different regions of 
Baghdad."  Prashant Rao (AFP) explains in this France 24 video , 
"All over the city, both majority Sunni and majority Shia areas have been 
targeted in mostly bomb attacks [. . .] basically all over Baghdad, we've seen 
multiple attacks."  Charlie D'Agata (The 
Early Show , CBS News) reports, "The first explosion rang out just 
after dawn. Then came another. And another. Iraqi officials counted at least 14 
blasts throughout Baghdad during the morning rush hour. The targets were 
indiscriminate. Roadside bombs and car bombs struck everything from neighborhood 
markets to police stations. A suicide bomber in an ambulance killed 18 people 
alone."  
  
Richard 
Spencer (Telegraph of London) 
notes, "The worst single incident this morning was a suicide attack 
near a government office in which a stolen ambulance packed with explosives was 
detonated by its driver, sending debris into the air and into the grounds of a 
nearby kindergarten. Police said at least 18 people were killed in that bombing 
alone." Al Rafidayn reports  that one Ali 
Abu Nailah, Iraqi Central Bank Consultant, is thought to have been targeted with 
a bombing on his convoy just outside of Baghdad (Nailah survived without injury 
but one of his bodyguards was injured). Sam 
Dagher and Ali Nabhan (Wall St. Journal) 
note , "The latest spasm of violence came one day after Prime Minister 
Nouri al-Maliki warned his coalition partners that any moves to bring down the 
government would unravel the political system and lead to a situation where the 
majority Shiites decide the shape of the government on their own." Qassim 
Abdul-Zahra (AP) offers , "The 
bombings may be linked more to the U.S. withdrawal than the political crisis, 
but all together the developments heighten fears of a new round of sectarian 
bloodshed like the one a few years ago that pushed Iraq to the brink of civil 
war." Sahar 
Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) reports , "The explosions occurred in a 
variety of locations around the Iraqi capital, some Shiite and others Sunni, 
giving no clear indication who was behind it. The casualties were believed to be 
almost entirely civilians."  Dan Morse and Aziz Alwan 
(Washington Post) count  17 bombings, 65 dead and 207 injured while 
Kareem Raheem 
(Reuters) notes  the death toll has risen to 72. 
  
In other violence, Reuters notes  1 
bodyguard shot dead in Baquba, 1 corpse discovered in Mosul, a Mosul sticky 
bombing injured one police officer, a Mosul roadside bombing injured one woman, 
an attack on a Mosul checkpoint left a police officer injured, a Baquba home 
invasion resulted in 5 deaths (parents and three children), 1 corpse discovered 
in Kirkuk, a Jurf al-Sakhar roadside bombing left three people injured and an 
attack on a Mussayab checkpoint left two Sahwa dead.
  
The dead in Baghdad were still being counted when Nouri al-Maliki attempted 
to make political hay out of the tragedy. Xiong 
Tong (Xinhua) reports , "Iraqi 
Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki said that Thursday's series of bomb attacks in 
Baghdad were politically motivated, pledging that the attacks will not pass 
without punishment." US Senator John McCain was already booked on The Early Show (CBS News) to talk about the 
payroll tax and the GOP's presidential nominee race. We'll note this from the 
opening of the segment.Senator John 
McCain: Thank you, good to be with you and before we go on we are paying a very 
heavy price in Baghdad because of our failure to have a residual force there. 
It's unraveling. I'm deeply disturbed about events but not 
surprised.Chris Wragge: Well 
that's what I wanted to ask you about -- we'll talk about the payroll tax in 
just a second but that was the first question I was going to pose to you this 
morning. When you heard about these cooridnated attacks in and around Baghdad 
was this a kind of I-told-you-so moment, did you feel in your 
estimation?Senator John McCain: 
I'm afraid so. I'd hoped not. But it was pretty obvious that if we did not have 
a residual force there that things could unravel very quickly. All of us knew 
that. The president campaigned saying he would bring around the end of the war. 
They've already got propaganda out there called "Promises Kept." And he made 
some very interesting comments about we're leaving behind a stable Iraq which we 
know is obviously not true. We needed the residual force there. It's not there. 
Now things are unraveling tragically.Chris Wragge: How big a mistake do you see this for 
the president?Senator John 
McCain: Well I don't know about the president but I know the Iraqi people may be 
subject to the news reports that you just quoted this morning and it's tragic 
for them. And of course, as you mentioned on the lead-in, we did 4,474 young 
Americans died there. It's really sad the way that they have -- As General 
[John] Keane said, "We won the war and we're losing the peace." I know McCain and I know and like Senator Lindsey Graham.  
The two of them issued a joint-statement on Iraq yesterday:
  
We are alarmed by recent developments in Iraq, 
most recently the warrant issued today by the Maliki government for the arrest 
of Sunni Vice President Tariq al Hashimi. This is a clear sign that the fragile 
political accommodation made possible by the surge of 2007, which ended 
large-scale sectarian violence in Iraq, is now unraveling. This crisis has been 
precipitated in large measure by the failure and unwillingness of the Obama 
Administration to reach an agreement with the Iraqi government for a residual 
presence of U.S. forces in Iraq, thereby depriving Iraq of the stabilizing 
influence of the U.S. military and diminishing the ability of the United States 
to support Iraq.
 
If Iraq slides back into sectarian violence, the consequences will 
be catastrophic for the Iraqi people and U.S. interests in the Middle East, and 
a clear victory for al Qaeda and Iran.  A deterioration of the kind we are now 
witnessing in Iraq was not unforseen, and now the U.S. government must do 
whatever it can to help Iraq stabilize the situation. We call upon the Obama 
Administration and the Iraqi government to reopen negotiations with the goal of 
maintaining an effective residual U.S. military presence in Iraq before the 
situation deteriorates further. 
  
I was asked if we could include that and I said yes because I had no idea 
the two had issued a statement and issued it yesterday.  I would have thought it 
would have received some serious press attention.  It didn't and I'm comfortable 
including it here.  That is not my opinion, it is not this community's opinion.  
We believe the illegal war was wrong from the start and nothing good was ever 
going to come from it.  And we've backed that up repeatedly over the years so 
it's not a threat to us to include a differening opinion.  I do agree with 
Senators John McCain and Lindsey Graham that the administration blew it. 
  
I say they blew it by refusing to immediately end the Iraq War.  Had they 
done that, it wouldn't be Barack's war.  He could say, "I campaigned on ending 
the war and I was elected so that's what the American people wanted.  As a 
result, as I promised on the campaign trail, all US troops will be out of Iraq 
within ten months."  He could and should have said that after he was sworn in.  
(And the withdrawal could have been done in less than 10 months but 10 months 
was the least amount of time he gave on the campaign trail.)  Had he done that, 
it was Bush's war.   
  
But he didn't do that.  He continued the war.  (And unlike McCain and 
Graham, I believe the Iraq War continues.)  And he made promises. To Nouri 
al-Maliki.  He made sure Nouri got what he wanted.  Iraq's LGBT community was 
being targeted, tortured and murdered and the White House never said a word.  
Iraqi Christians and other religious minorities were forgotten by the White 
House.  Resolving the Kirkuk issue was forgotten by the White House.  When Nouri 
al-Maliki wanted something, he got it and that continues to this day.  Let's 
again  note  Trudy 
Rubin (Philadelphia Inquirer via San Jose Mercury 
News) on  the multitude of mistakes by the Bush and Barack 
administrations in her latest column but we'll zoom in on her commentary about 
2010: 
 
  
The White House followed a hands-off policy on Iraqi politics, 
allowing Maliki to slip back into sectarianism and the eager embrace of Iran's 
ayatollahs.  
 
When Maliki cracked down on Sunni candidates before March 2010 
elections, a visiting Vice President Joe Biden gave him a pass. When a Sunni 
coalition called Iraqiya edged out Maliki's party and he used Iraq's politicized 
courts to nullify some Sunni seats, U.S. officials didn't push back. 
 
When Maliki failed to honor a power-sharing deal the United States 
had brokered between his party and Iraqiya, we failed to press him. 
 
 
That was a huge mistake.  There was never a reason to back Nouri.  The 
White House disgraced the country by backing Nouri whom they knew ran secret 
prisons, whom they knew used torture. 
  
McCain and Graham may be right and I may be wrong.  It wouldn't be the 
first time.  But I have thought out my position (as they have their position) 
and I can defend what I'm saying (as they can defend what they're saying).  I'm 
comfortable including their take on this and I'm bothered that their take wasn't 
included by the press yesterday.  I'm bothered that the same servile press that 
bowed to the will of one White House occupant (Bush) now goes out of their way 
to scrape and bow and carry water for President Barack Obama.  (If you're late 
to the party, that's worded that way because I don't use the P-word with Bush.  
A direct quote from someone else? We don't alter it.  But I made it through 
eight years never calling the Supreme Court appointed Bush the p-word and intend 
to make it to my grave.  He was an occupant of the White House nothing 
more.) 
  
I see a press that refuses to explore what's taking place in Iraq and who 
benefits? 
  
An Oval Office occupant (President Obama, in this case) just like an Oval 
Office occupant (Bully Boy Bush) did at an earlier time. But not the public in 
the US or in Iraq. 
  
As somone against the Iraq War before it started, I did not appreciate the 
press shutting out voices raising objections because they only cared about 
toeing the White House line.  I don't have the need to shut anyone else out of 
the public debate.  My position is the popular one now and that's because of a 
number of things including time has provided the evidence needed to call the war 
a disaster.  But nothing's going to change public opinion more (turn back 
towards support for the war) than shutting out opposition views.  John McCain 
and Lindsey Graham know what they're talking about. 
  
They come to different conclusions than I do (and, again, they may be right 
and I may be wrong).  And as long as these issues can be publicly debated, the 
American people can have a strong sense of where they stand.  But when one side 
gets shut out of the conversation, you're creating a future backlash.   
  
Now maybe that's what the press (owners) want because what's the United 
States without perpetual war?  But it's not what I want (more wars is not what I 
want)  and I also don't want to think of John McCain as a stronger supporter of 
free speech than those of us on the left.  Meaning? He is pro-war and pro-Iraq 
War but he still called out Clear Channel's decision to ban the Dixie Chicks 
over statements against the war and he wondered where you draw the line the next 
time you decide to censor?  Today, it appears you draw the line to prevent those 
with views different than the White House from being heard.  Again, it feels lot 
like 2003 press wise and that is not a good thing. 
  
  
Again, Nouri al-Maliki, prime minister and thug of the continued 
occupation, took to the TV airwaves to proclaim the bombings political and to 
promise punishment. Little Saddam never misses a photo op in which he can expose 
his iron fist. Dar Addustour notes  that 
Parliament's Finance Committee states the political crisis is negatively 
impacting the exchange rate of Iraq's currency. Apparently that doesn't worry 
Nouri even though Iraq's seen record inflation.  For recap we'll note this 
from yesterday's NewsHour (PBS -- link 
is video, text and audio)  so we're all on the same page (and to note 
that one network newscast is covering the crisis):HARI SREENIVASAN: Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki 
demanded that Kurdish authorities hand over Iraq's vice president today. Tariq 
al-Hashemi is the highest-ranking Sunni figure in Iraq. He fled to the Kurdish 
north this week to escape an arrest warrant. The Shiite-dominated government 
charges he ran terror squads that targeted government officials. At a news 
conference in Baghdad today, Maliki rejected Hashemi's claim that the charges 
are politically motivated. 
 NOURI AL-MALIKI, Iraqi prime minister (through 
translator): I will not permit myself, others, or the relatives of martyrs to 
politicize this issue. There is only one path that will lead to the objective, 
and that is the path of the judiciary, nothing else. He should appear before 
court, either to be exonerated or to be convicted. The cause of al-Hashemi 
should not enter into political bargaining.
 
 HARI SREENIVASAN: Later, a 
spokesman for the president of the Kurdish region rejected the demand. The 
political fight came as U.S. troops have finished their withdrawal from Iraq. 
Last night, Vice President Biden called Maliki and urged him to resolve the 
crisis.Tony 
Karon (Time magazin) adds
 , 
"Vice President Joe Biden has been on the phone to Baghdad and Erbil this week, 
frantically trying to coax Iraq's main political players back from the brink of 
a new sectarian confrontation  less than a week after the last U.S. 
troops departed. But Iraq's political leaders paid little heed to Washington's 
advice and entreaties when the U.S. had 140,000 troops there; they're even less 
likely to comply now. Biden reportedly sought to persuade Maliki to back away 
from a warrant issued by his government for the arrest of Iraq's most senior 
Sunni politician, Vice President Tareq al-Hashimi, on allegations that he was 
involved in a bomb plot for which members of his security detail have been 
detained. But Iraq's Sunni leadership sees the warrant as part of Maliki's 
authoritarian crackdown against his opponents, with senior Sunni leaders 
systematically targeted for arrest by the Shi'ite-led government in recent 
months." Al Rafidayn quotes  State of Law MP 
Omaima Younis stating that they welcome all input, including the US input, as 
long as it does not have to do with the charges Nouri has brought because that 
will be seen as an attempt to interfere with Iraq's judiciary. 
  
It's not just Joe Biden that's been engaging in dialogue on behalf of the 
US.  CIA Director David Petraeus has already made a trip to Iraq this week and 
now it's the man who followed Petraeus as top US commander in Iraq.  
AFP's Prashant Rao Tweets: 
  
  
  
  
  
State of Law is Nouri's political slate. It came in second in the March 7, 
2010 parliamentary elections, Iraqiya came in first and is headed by Ayad 
Allawi. Al Mada reports  that Allawi 
declares that they are not Nouri's employees and that just because Nouri calls a 
meeting does not mean they have to attend. (Just as Moqtada al-Sadr calling in 
November for Nouri to appear before Parliament and answer questions about US 
forces has not meant that Nouri has appeared.) Allawi states that several 
polical bloc leaders -- including Allawi -- attended a meeting called by KRG 
President Massoud Barzani. In that meeting, it was called for the Erbil 
Agreement to be implemented and for the government go be the partnership it is 
supposed to be. But Nouri cannot call Parliament for this meeting or that 
because MPs are not employees of the authoritarian Nouri al-Maliki. The 
bombings and the political situation were raised in today's US State Dept press 
briefing.  Mark Toner took questions.
  
QUESTION: The Iraq bombing? 
  
MR. TONER: Iraq bombing. Sorry. Well, we did see the -- as you saw, 
the attacks across Baghdad this morning -- desperate attempts by terrorist 
groups to undermine Iraq at this vulnerable juncture in the Iraqi political 
process. And these events, we believe, highlight just how critical it is that 
Iraq's leaders act quickly to resolve their differences and move forward as a 
united and inclusive government in accordance with the Iraqi constitutions and 
laws. So -- 
  
QUESTION: Do you regard this violence as linked in any way to the 
sectarian strife, or at least political discord that has erupted since the 
government issued the arrest warrant for Mr. Hashimi? 
  
MR. TONER: I think we see it as linked clearly to this vulnerable 
period after U.S. forces have withdrawn, and the government is finding its feet 
and moving forward. 
It's impossible to say in terms of coordination and planning -- and 
this appeared to have been a coordinated attack -- how many weeks or months this 
may have been planned in advance. But clearly it was timed for this point in 
time. 
  
QUESTION: What I'm trying to get at -- 
  
MR. TONER: Yeah. 
  
QUESTION: -- and forgive me if I wasn't clear, but I think that 
what is interesting is to try to understand if you think that some faction 
within the Iraqi polity is trying to use violence now because they are angry at 
what has happened in the last week, particularly the targeting of Mr. 
Hashimi. 
  
MR. TONER: Right. And I don't -- again, just -- forgive me if I 
wasn't being clear. The coordinated nature of this attack appears, to us at 
least at first blush, to have been something that was coordinated over a period 
of time and not necessarily tied to the events of the past week. 
  
QUESTION: This week. Got it. 
  
MR. TONER: That said, this is a vulnerable point or juncture in 
Iraq's history, so there's going to be groups that are trying to take advantage 
of it. But we don't know; there's been no claim of responsibility that I'm aware 
of, so we don't know at this point. 
  
QUESTION: Vice President Hashimi, today, told Washington Times, 
that, quote, Iran definitely involved in move to arrest him. Do you have any 
evidence to support that? 
  
MR. TONER: We do not. We continue to call on any legal or judicial 
process that goes forward with respects to Vice President Hashimi to be done in 
full accordance with the rule of law and full transparency. And we do note that 
Prime Minister Maliki did speak about the need to observe rule of law in 
judicial proceedings, and also that he's called for a meeting of the various 
political blocs. That's exactly what we want to see happen. We want to see all 
of the political blocs get together in an effort to -- through dialogue to 
resolve their difference. 
  
  
  
  
Mr. 
al-Hashemi, who is staying in the autonomous Kurdish region 
of northern Iraq, has vehemently 
denied the charges, but he told The Times 
that he believes he could never receive a fair trial from the Iraqi 
judiciary. 
"All Iraqis are very much aware about the nature of our judicial 
system," he said. "It is not transparent, it is not neutral, it is not 
independent. It's become a puppet of the government 
and certainly al-Maliki." 
Mr. 
al-Hashemi said he is willing to face trial before "a 
neutral and more transparent and more professional, independent court, which I 
think is available here" in the Kurdish region. 
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