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Friday, January 20, 2012. Chaos and violence continue, Grand Ayatollah 
Sistani is worried about an outbreak of civil war in Iraq, Nouri orders more 
Iraqiya members arrested, the political crisis continues, and 
more.
 
 
Iraq is a young nation. The years of war and sanctions have ensured that. 
If you never grasped how young it was, understand that it has a CIA estimate of 
roughly 26 million people currently and Aswat al-Iraq reports , 
"The 
Iraqi Education Ministry announced today that about 8 million students of 
primary, intermediate and secondary schools will have their mid year 
examinations tomorrow. " A little less than a third of the population will 
be taking exams in Iraq tomorrow. The CIA figure  for the 
country's median age is 20.9 years -- for Iraqi males it's 20.8 years and for 
Iraq females it's 21 years.
 
Which is why the hatred Nouri al-Maliki fosters is all the sadder. 
Unlike the exile the Americans put in charge, most Iraqis aren't carrying 
decades old grudges. They simply aren't old enough to have done so.
 
 
You've got to be taught
 
To hate and fear 
You've got to be taught 
From year to year 
It's got to be drummed 
In your deaf little ear 
You've got to be carefully taught 
-- "You've Got to be Carefully Taught," written by Rodgers & Hammerstein , first appears in their 
musical South Pacific
 
 
And though he's a failure as a prime minister, Nouri excells at teaching 
hate. 
 
And teaching fear by constantly screaming about "Ba'athists" all around 
just waiting to overthrow the government. Referring to his rivals as "ants" that 
he must apparently crush.
 
Always with the melodrama, like last October when Nouri repeatedly 
commented on the "terrorists" and "Ba'athists" that he was 'forced' to arrest 
because they were plotting an overthrow of the government. His spokesperson 
insisted the information was solid and had come from the newly installed Libyan 
government. Dropping back to the October 27th snapshot : But back to those eyes and ears al-Asadi was 
claiming, Al Mada 
reveals that the government is 
stating their source for the 'tips' about the alleged Ba'athist plot to take 
over Iraq came from the Transitional Government of Libya. The so-called rebels. 
A number of whom were in Iraq killing both Iraqis and US troops and British 
troops, several years ago. And supposedly prepping to rule Libya currently so 
you'd assume they had their hands full.Tim Arango (New 
York Times) maintains that 
"secret intelligence documents" were discovered by the so-called 'rebels' that 
provided a link between Libya's late president Muammar Gaddafi and Ba'ath Party 
members and that Mahmoud Jibril made a trip to Baghdad to turn over the info. 
Jibril was acting prime minister who stepped down October 23rd. (We're back to 
when puppet regimes meet!) One would have assumed he had other things to focus 
on. It's also curious that this 'rebel' would have 'learned' after the fall of 
Tripoli of a plot. Curious because, unlike a number of 'rebel' leaders in Libya, 
Langley didn't ship Jibril in from Virginia, he was Gaddafi's hand picked head 
of the National Economic Development Board (2007 to 2011). One would assume he 
would have been aware of any big plot long before the so-called rebels began the 
US war on Libya.
 Yet January 5th, Al Mada reported  that hundreds of 
those arrested were now being released. And that officials say the government is 
expected to release every one arrested. When the arrests started taking place 
weeks ago, the press estimate was over 500, with some noting over 700 but most 
going with the lower figure. Dar Addustour 
informed  820 Iraqis were arrested in that 
crackdown.. Critics of the arrests noted that it appeared Nouri was 
targeting Sunnis. Of those recent mass arrests, McClatchy Newspapers 
states  "Western diplomats scoff at the idea that the arrests were aimed at 
thwarting a coup" and quotes one unnamed diplomat stating, "This is just 
paranoia." AP notes  that a 
spokesperson for Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani declared that the country 
"cannot bear further tensions among politicians." 
 
The Bush administration was wrong to install him as prime minister in 
2006 (the Iraqi Parliament wanted Ibrahim al-Jaafari) and Barack Obama's 
administration was deadly wrong when they chose to insist that he be given a 
second term in 2010.
 
 
 
He fled Iraq and Saddam Hussein and lived in exiles for years, decades. 
Nursing his hatred, telling himself that some day he had his vengeance. And when 
he got what he wanted, the death of Saddam Hussein, he still couldn't move 
forward. Fahad Abdullah tells Jasim Alsabawi 
(Rudaw) , "Maliki should have used the opportunity after the 
withdrawal of the US forces to begin a new era for the rise of Iraq and embrace 
everyone under one Iraq." There is nothing left in him but the hatred as he 
chases ghosts.
 
It's just the ghost of what you really want 
And it's the ghost of the past that you live in 
And it's the ghost of the furture you're so frightented 
of 
 
 
All he has are the ghosts of the past. He goes after political rivals and 
threatens Iraq's internal safety. Already he's declared Vice President Tareq 
al-Hashemi a terrorist and demanded Deputy Prime Minister Saleh al-Mutlaq be 
stripped of his title. al-Hashemi and al-Mutlaq are both Sunni and members of 
Iraqiya. The Iraqiya aspect goes to the political rivalry (Iraqiya bested State 
of Law in the March 2010 elections -- Ayad Allawi heads Iraqiya, Nouri heads 
State of Law). The Sunni aspect could further the divisions between the sects 
and, some fear, return Iraq to the days of 2006 and 2007 when the sects were in 
an open war against one another. 
 
Ali al-Tuwaijri 
(AFP) reports that Nouri's forces arrested Ghabdan al-Khazraji, the 
Deputy Governor of Investments Diyala Province, and attempted to arrest the 
Deputy Governor of Administrative Affairs Talal al-Juburi.but he's now in the 
Kurdsitan Regional Government. The two are Sunni and they are also members of 
Iraqiya. The arrest follows Wednesday's arrest. Margaret Griffis (Antiwar.com) explained , "Baghdad 
Provincial Council Vice President Riyadh al-Adhadh was arrested  on terrorism charges and stands accused  of 
financing a terrorist group in Abu Ghraib. Adhadh is aSunni doctor  who founded a free clinic in 
Adhamiya and is the focus of an English-language documentary  on 
Iraq. The Iraqi Islamic Party condemned the action and called it an "unprecedented escalation " in the political 
arena." 
 
As the political crisis continues, Roy Gutman, Sahar Issa and Laith Hammoudi (McClatchy 
Newspapers) report :Prime 
Minister Nouri al Maliki's security services have locked up more than 1,000 
members of other political parties over the past several months, detaining many 
of them in secret locations with no access to legal counsel and using "brutal 
torture" to extract confessions, his chief political rival has 
charged.Ayad Allawi, the secular 
Shiite Muslim leader of the mainly Sunni Muslim Iraqiya bloc in parliament, who 
served as prime minister of the first Iraqi government after the Americans 
toppled Saddam Hussein, has laid out his allegations in written submissions to 
Iraq's supreme judicial council. The reporters call the above 
"the second major broadside this week" and note: "London's Guardian newspaper 
reported Monday on an extortion racket involving Iraqi state security officials 
who systematically arrest people on trumped-up charges, torture them and then 
extort bribes from their families for their release." From the Guardian 
article by Ghaith Abdul-Ahad :"Look," he added, "the system now is just like under 
Saddam: walk by the wall, don't go near politics and you can walk with your head 
high and not fear anything. But if you come close to the throne then the wrath 
of Allah will fall on you and we have eyes everywhere."He described the arrest of the Sunni vice-president 
Tariq al-Hashimi's bodyguards who, it was claimed by the Shia-dominated 
government, had been paid by Hashimi to assassinate Shia officials. (Hashimi was 
on a plane heading to Kurdistan when government forces took over the airport, 
preventing him from leaving. After a standoff, he was allowed to fly but his men 
where detained.)"Look what happened 
to the poor bodyguards of Hashimi, they were tortured for a week. They took them 
directly to our unit and they were interrogated severely. Even an old general 
was hanging from the ceiling. Do you know what I mean by 
hanging?"In the constricted space of 
the car he pulled his arms up behind his back."They hang him like this. Sometimes they beat them 
with cables and sticks and sometimes they just leave them hanging from a metal 
fence for three days. They are torturing them trying to get them to confess to 
the bombing of the parliament."Al Mada reported , yes, another 
secret prison run by Nouri. The Human Rights Committee in Parliament declared 
Wednesday that another secret prison ("Briagde 56") exists and it is run by 
Nouri (as were the others). They do not yet know the location of the 
prison.
 
Al Sabaah 
reports that the National Alliance is studying a list of requirements 
President Jalal Talabani has made for the national conference with the apparent 
intent of discussing them in Sunday's pre-national conference meet-up. Al Mada reports  that the 
Sadr bloc is stating Moqtada al-Sadr might -- only might -- attend the national 
conference. Whether he does or not, the Sadr bloc stated Moqtada is following 
all the developments. Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq leader Ammar al-Hakim is 
calling for a return to political parternership and a return to Constitutional 
rule. Aswat al-Iraq 
quotes  Kurdish Alliance MP Shwan Mohammed Taha stating, "If Iraqi 
politicians differ on the venue of the conference, how they will be able [to] 
find the solutions to the present crisis.[. . .] We, as the Kurdish Alliance, 
have no problem withwhere it shall be convened, but we welcomefor it to be held 
in Kurdistan." They also quote  Kurdish 
Alliance MP Ashwaq al-Jaff stating there is a need to "finalize the agenda 
before entering the conference to avoid any surprises, which may lead certain 
bloc to withdraw." 
 
al-Hakim and al-Sadr's groups are part of the National Alliance and Al Mada notes  rumors that 
the National Alliance is calling for Mahmoud al-Mashhadani to become the new 
Deputy Prime Minister. He would replace Saleh al-Mutlaq whom Nouri has insisted 
since December must be stripped of his post. Ibrahim al-Jaafari heads the 
National Alliance and he states that they would be happy for Nouri and al-Mutlaq 
to resolve the matter themselves. If not, al-Jaafari expresses the opinion that 
al-Mutlaq should announce his resignation.  
 
Mahmoud al-Mashhadani was Speaker of Parliament from 2006 until the end 
of 2008. After initially praising him, the Bush administration decided they did 
not care for the Sunni politician and launched a public relations war against 
him (which the New York Times  enlisted in portraying him as depressed 
and hiding in his father's home when he was, in fact, in Jordan on a diplomatic 
trip). The US backed off somewhat after 2007 came to a close and they'd been 
unable to force him out as Speaker of Parliament. Considering the charges 
against some Sunni politicians, it's strange that he'd be accetable. Damien Cave and Richard A. 
Oppel Jr. (New York Times) wrote in June of 2007 , "Iraq's leading 
political blocs agreed yesterday to remove the Sunni speaker of Parliament, 
Mahmoud al-Mashhadani, from his position. The move came after accusations arose 
that his bodyguards assaulated a Shiite lawmaker yesterday as al-Mashhadani 
cursed him and then dragged him to the speaker's office." Despite that 
assertion, al-Mashhadani remained as Speaker of Parliament for the rest of 2007, 
through 2008 and only left in December 2008 by his own choice. 
 
 
 
 
Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki keeps creating tension in the 
bilateral relations between Turkey and Iraq in a systematic way. By pointing to 
Turkey as a target, the Iraqi government ensured the issuance of an arrest 
warrant for Iraqi Vice President Tariq al-Hashemi. 
Maliki has been making offensive statements against Turkey. Most 
recently, the tension was escalated by a new attack on the Turkish Embassy in 
Baghdad on Jan. 18, 2012. In this way, we see there are attempts to ensure the 
artificial tension is replaced by a new crisis. 
Turkey is the only country that did not close its embassy in Iraq 
after 2003. Even though there have been three attacks against the embassy in 
Baghdad. Turkey still remained committed to its work in the country. The Turkish 
Embassy in Baghdad is one of only a few diplomatic missions outside the Green 
Zone which is known for its heightened security and surrounded by tall walls in 
downtwon Baghdad. The protection of the Turkish Embassy, located in the 
al-Wazireya neighborhood, where high-level executives used to live in the city, 
is the responsibility of Iraqi security forces. The Turkish Embassy is visibly 
 
connected to the neighborhood in which it is located; the embassy's 
relationship with nearby residents is such that the embassy supplies electricity 
to them. And the neighborhood also serves as the natural protector of the 
embassy. This is why it won't be too difficult to determine where and how the 
attack was staged. 
 
 
 
On the topic of the continued occupation of Iraq, Dar Addustour 
reports  that Sadr bloc MP Ali al-Tamimi told Alsumaria that the position of 
Moqtada al-Sadr and the bloc is that the presence of the US Embassy on Iraqi 
soil as well as all the contractors staffing the US mission are as threatening 
and dangerous as the military and that these are "occupation forces." Drexel University's 
professor Robert Zaller explains (at The Triangle) , "There will be 
residual forces in Iraq as trainers and advisers, but these will be private 
contractors and black-ops types. We are not leaving behind any potential 
hostages we cannot disavow if necessary. There will also be security for the 
mega-sized embassy -- the world's largest -- we leave behind in Baghdad's Green 
Zone. In addition, the U.S. retains a consulate of 1,320 people, which will 
remain in the port of Basra; a staging base should we ever return; and a 
tripwire for future hostilities with Iran. In short, the American occupation of 
Iraq is not over. As long as that is the case, we cannot say the war is over, 
either."
 
In the US new data on military suicides has been released. Elisabeth Bumiller (New 
York Times) reports , "Suicides among active-duty soldiers hit 
another record high in 2011, Army officials said on Thursday, although there was 
a slight decrease if nonmobilized Reserve and National Guard troops were 
included in the calculation." Bumiller notes, "Asked if he was frustrated by the 
jump last year in suicide by active-duty soldiers, General [Peter] Chiarelli 
said no." That resonse should tag Chiarelli and follow him around for the 
duration of his service. Anna Mulrine (Christian 
Science Monitor) covers  the data and emphasizes what it found on 
self-medicating and the military's assertion that now they can deal with the 
problems (as opposed to looking the other way at other times). It'll be 
interesting to see in a year or so if, indeed, the military is helping service 
members get help or if, as has often been the case, they're just using 
self-medication as an excuse to drum them out of the service. 
 
 
 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 
Friday, January 20, 2010 
Contact: 
 
Statment of Eleanor Smeal On The Decision of Kathleen Sebelius and 
the Obama Administration Not to Broaden the Religious Exemption for 
Contraceptive Coverage 
 
The Feminist Majority Foundation applauds the decision of Kathleen 
Sebelius, Health and Human Services Secretary, and the Obama Administration not 
to broaden the religious exemption for contraceptive coverage under the 
Preventive Care package of the Affordable Care Act. This request, primarily by 
the National Conference of Catholic Bishops, would have denied millions of 
American women contraceptive coverage, including students, teachers, nurses, 
social workers, and other staff (and their families) at religiously-connected or 
associated schools, universities, and hospitals, as well as institutions, such 
as Catholic Charities.  
At last -- concern for women's health trumps pressure from the 
Catholic Bishops. Millions of women who may have been denied access to birth 
control with no co-pays or deductibles will now have full access. I am 
especially pleased that college students at religiously affiliated institutions 
will now have coverage for birth control without co-pays or deductibles under 
their school health plans beginning in Auust 2012. 
Birth control is the number one prescription drug for women ages 18 
to 44 years. Right now, the average woman has to pay $50 per month for 30 years 
for birth control. No wonder many low-income women have had to forgo regular use 
of birth control and half of US pregnancies are unplanned. This decision will 
help millions of women and their families. 
Insurance plans that cover employers and employees must cover 
contraception with no co-pays or deductibles starting August 2012, and 
non-profit religious institutions under this new rule that do not currently 
cover contraception must do so with no co-pays or deductibles beginning August 
2013. Moreover, student insurance plans at religiously affiliated universites 
must cover contraception with no co-pays or deductibles beginning August 212. 
Only women who work directly for a house of worship, such as for a church, 
synagogue, or mosque itself, are exempted from this required 
coverage. 
Women's rights and pro-choice groups, including Feminist Majority 
Foundation, Planned Parenthood Action Fund, the National Women's Law Center, the 
National Council of Jewish Women, the National Organization for Women (NOW), and 
NARAL Pro-Choice America, urged the Obama Administration not to consider the 
broader religious exemption.  
In August, the US Departmentof Health and Human Services (HHS) 
announced new guidelines, developed by the Institute of Medicine, that will 
require private insurance plans under the Preventive Care packageofthe 
Affordable Care Act beginningon or after August 1, 2012 to cover without co-pays 
or deductibles as a variety of services, such as an annual well-woman visit and 
cancer screenings, counseling, such as for domestic and interpersonal violence, 
and testing for HIV and STIs, as well as all FDA-approved contraceptives, 
breastfeeding support, lactation service, and supplies. 
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