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Friday, February 10, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, implications of 
Iraq are noted in a series by the New York Times, Nouri faces rumors of 
involvement with the US CIA, veterans suicides get some attention, banks profit 
off veterans, and more. 
 
 
"Asking what the United States should do in Iraq today is an awful 
question," observes Brookings Institution's Kenneth Pollack.  He took part in 
the New York Times' "Room for Debate" feature yesterday.  We'll note 
four of the participants, two men, two women.  It's an interesting discussion 
and their views are highly similar because it's a range of center to right.  
There are no leftists involved in the "room for debate."  We should probably 
underline that.  In what the New York Times bill as their "room for 
debate," room for actual debate does not include anyone from the left. 
 
 
One of the most prominent right-wing voices on Iraq in the last two months 
has been the Hoover Institution's Kori Schake.  In her piece , she argues the White House made 
various mistakes and Iraq is now splintering, "This is not what Iraqis wanted, 
not what they voted for. The political culture of Iraq waas trending toward 
trust beyond sectarian lines, political leaders seeing electoral benefit in 
reaching across religious communities and emphasizing the achievements of 
governing." Also from the right is Cato Institute's Christopher Preble who offers , "A small group of 
'true believers' who were instrumental in starting the war want to double down 
on that losing wager.  They assert that a large U.S. presence might forestall a 
possible civil war, and counteract Iran's rising influence.  In reality, they 
simply don't know if a U.S. presence would have this effect. But, as before, 
they are willing to risk the lives of U.S. troops, and the fortunes of U.S. 
taxpayers, to cover their high-stakes gamble."  The centerist (some would argue 
right-leaning) Pollack feels  that there are methods the US still 
can utilize, "We still have some capacity to name and shame, although that 
requires Iraqi leaders who are not shameless.  We still have some things -- aid, 
weapons, diplomatic clout -- that the Iraqis want, although that will depend on 
our own willingness to place long-term interests ahead of political expediency 
and so provide them.  And we still have some ability to shape the region in 
which Iraq lives, although that requires an American leadership willing to take 
on the challenges of the Middle East and not flee to East Asia or some other 
easier part of the globe."  
 
The non-partisan Institute for the Study of War's Marisa Cochrane Sullivan argues , "United States 
policy today is focused on maintaining the status quo in Iraq, offering 
unqualified support for Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki in the name of 
stability.  But the status quo is inherently unstable.  Maliki, emboldened by 
this support, feels few contraints on his actions and has little incentive to 
compromise." He has steadily consolidated control over Iraq's security and 
intelligence institutions, and has effectively isolated and fragmented his 
political rivals.  Even in the current political crisis, Maliki has used 
questionable and even unconstitutional tactics to remove rivals without reducing 
American support. At the same time, the Maliki government has committed 
widespread human rights abuses in its crackdown on political dissent in Iraq. 
While the United States may feel Maliki offers the best chance for stability, 
his consolidation of power may make Iraq more unstable as Iraq's rival factions 
seek other means to check him -- either through politics or ultimately through 
force."   And we'll note Schake's simillar observations, "First, we must stop 
turning a blind eye to Prime Minister Maliki's creeping authoritarianism.  
Maliki returned from his White House meeting declaring the end of the war and 
issued an arrest warrant for his vice president. The White House was silent, as 
it has been on Maliki's earlier unconstitutional arrogation of power and 
political machinations, such as arresting hundreds of Sunnis and striking 
candidates from electoral lists.  While it is probably too much to expect the 
Obama administration to vigorously contest what is occuring in Iraq's internal 
politics, we ought at least to bear 
witness." |  
 
It's a serious discussion which would have benefitted from some left voices 
and from some antiwar voices (left, right or center).  In fairness to the paper, 
there aren't a lot of honest discussions about the Iraq War on the left these 
days.  Apparently spines were removed by many to assist with easier ass 
kissing.  Cindy Sheehan (Cindy Sheehan's Soapbox) 
notes  the sad case of cat got your tongue plaguing a large number on the 
left:
 
I, and many others, were in favor of a 
large demo in DC that year [2008], as we always did, but one of the lead 
antiwar(Bush) organizations actually told us, since Democrats were in the 
majority in the House and they were continuing to fund Bush's wars and not 
impeach him, that a demo in DC would, "embarrass the Democrats." 
 
Now that we have had two years of a 
complete Democratic tyranny in DC and almost four years of a Democratic regime 
in the White House, the antiwar movement has continued its tailspin because it 
was mostly populated by "liberal" Democrats, or other Democratic functionaries 
like the Communist Party, USA.  
 
A recent poll commissioned by the 
Washington Post shows, that by a vast majority "Liberal" Democrats favor 
keeping Guantanamo Prison (53%) camp and torture facility open and the drone 
bombing campaigns (77%) that their president has increased by at least 300 
percent over the Bush years. Unbelievably, "liberal" Democrats also are in favor 
of the Presidential Assassination Program where Obama can have any American 
executed by his order, only. Trials? Like John Yoo's Constitution, these 
anachronisms will soon be considered "quaint." 
 
 
 
In Iraq, the political crisis continues. Shihab Hamid (Dar Addustour) offers  that national 
reconciliation is important to the political and social future of Iraq as well 
as to the security and stability of the country and that all Iraqis should be 
able to participate because, otherwise, the price paid with millions dead was 
for nothing. Al 
Mada notes  that Iraqiya has confirmed to them that there are 
various plans being put forward for the national conference and that, at 
Monday's meeting, the National alliance offered a working paper, as did Iraqiya 
and the Kurdistan Alliance. The plan is for the three proposals to be discussed 
at the next meeting which is currently scheduled for Sunday. Yes, another 
meeting to make preparations. President Jalal Talabani and Speaker Osama 
al-Nujaifi have been calling for a national conference since December. It's 
February. Is it going to take eight months of preparation? Or, more likely, in a 
month or two is Nouri just going to say that since they've managed this long 
without one, they really don't need it?
 
When Nouri returned to Iraq, his 
war against Iraqiya and Sunnis became more obvious and he began demanding that 
Deputy Prime Minister Saleh al-Mutlaq be stripped of his position and that Vice 
President Tareq al-Hashemi be arrested on 'terrorism' charges. Al 
Mada notes  that Saleh al-Mutlaq is stating that the problems 
in Iraq remain serious and that he will not return to Cabinet meetings until 
there is a guarantee that the political proces will be fixed and that the 
groundwork for a real partnership is in place. He maintains this needs to take 
place before the Arab Summit which is scheduled to be held in Baghdad currently. 
Al 
Sabaah notes  that the meeting is scheduled for March 29th and 
is part of a series of planned visits by foreigners to Iraq -- a list that's 
said to include UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon visiting.  Aswat al-Iraq notes  al-Mutlaq is going 
on a visit, "An al-Iraqiya Bloc MP described the visit of deputy premier Saleh 
al-Mutlaq's visit to Turkey as personal, not governmental, pointing out that 
Mutlaq 'should solve his problems internally without any external 
intervention'."  But while they acknowledge al-Mutlaq's visit, they say another 
is not taking place, "Al-Iraqiya Bloc's spokesman denied the news of 
vice-president Tariq al-Hashimi travelling to Turkey, stressing he is present in 
Sulaimaniya province, Kurdistan ." 
 
 
 
The much-feared Central Intelligence Agency 
is planning to maintain a large and secretive presence inside both Iraq and 
Afghanistan long after American troops leave those nations, The Washington Post 
reported Wednesday.In Iraq, where most US troops have already left, the 
massive CIA presence in Baghdad has been re-purposed. Once focused chiefly on 
tackling Qaeda in Iraq and other insurgents, the American spies are now 
"monitoring developments in the increasingly antagonistic government."
 In 
many ways thing have come full circle for the CIA, which had a presence on the 
ground spying on the Saddam Hussein regime before the 2003 US invasion. Now, 
having spent the last eight years helping the military prop up the Nurul Maliki 
government, the agency again finds itself there spying.
 
 
It's amazing that foreign outlets can reference the important article but 
in the US we have so much silence over what Miller reported.   Prensa Latina notes , "The CIA's 
stations in Kabul and Baghdad will probably remain the agency´s largest overseas 
outposts for years. According to The Washington Post, this will happen even if 
they shrink from record staffing levels set at the height of American efforts in 
those nations to neutralize insurgency attacks."
Still on the topic of the CIA, Nouri is facing rumors that he's cooperating 
with the CIA or assisting them. Al Mada 
notes  State of Law MP Adnan al-Sarraj has issued a statement 
denying any involvement Nouri has with the CIA -- presumably current involvement 
is being denied since Nouri and the CIA had a pre-existing relationship prior to 
2003 -- and stating that when Nouri met with US President Barack Obama in 
December, Nouri made clear that the CIA wasn't welcome in autonomous Iraq. Al Mada  notes not only Miller's report for 
theWashington Post but also Iraqi 
intelligence sources who have that Iraq's leadership and the CIA have an 
extensive relationship. 
On the issue of violence, Aswat al-Iraq notes , "More than 12 
casualties were caused due to clashes yesterday between the Turkish PKK party 
and the Turkish army in different areas along the Iraqi-Turkish border lines, 
border security forces reported today." And they note  a Falluja sticky bombing claimed the 
life of 1 Sahwa (Sons Of Iraq, "Awakening").
 
 
"What my clients want to know is why -- when they're living at home or 
under supervised care -- their veteran suddenly has to have a VA fiduciary at 
all?" attorney Douglas J. Rosinski asked Congress yesterday.  "My veterans have 
had decades of family members giving them care and handling their benefits 
without VA interruption.  Suddenly, VA appoints a perfect stranger -- perfectly 
unknown to the veteran --  who has never contacted a veteran, who will not 
contact a veteran and is paid money from that veterans account to withhold the 
money from the veteran, to place it in bank accounts that they will not disclose 
to the veteran and they will not even disclose under FOIA [Freedom Of 
Information Act].  They will redact the veterans own information about his own 
money from the files they give out.  My clients want to know why, that if there 
is a need, for a VA-appointed fiduciary, it has to be this stranger.  They want 
to know why this veteran is told to take all of the veterans finances, all of 
his bank accounts and ask questions about his CDs [Certificate of Deposit] and 
whether he owns a boat and what his wife's salary is and where is that salary 
put and then go into the banks and take all of it and not tell them where it 
is.  They want to know why VA not only will not correct that when I've had 
personal discussions with members sitting -- or people sitting -- in this 
hearing today and then they will not fix that problem? They want to know why VA 
defends those practices at every turn, in every court, in every discussion?  
This is not about numbers and procedures and policies.  My clients don't care 
about policies and procedures.  They want to know why they have $100,000 in the 
bank and they cannot afford the medicine that the VA doctors prescribed last 
month?  They want to know why the power company's in the front yard when they 
have $50,000 in the bank?  And it takes an emergency motion to the Veterans 
Court before these people will call the power company and tell them they'll pay 
$178." 
 
Rosinkski was appearing before the House Veterans Subcommittee on Oversight 
and Investigations yesterday as they held a hearing on the VA's fiduciary system 
-- where someone's appointed by the veteran or by the VA to 
manage/oversee/control the veterans benefits.  Rosinski appeared on the second 
panel and noted, "That's what my clients would like to hear today.  And I did 
not hear any of that from the prior panel." 
 
 
The hearing had two panels (and many breaks due to votes on the House 
floor).  The first panel was the VA's Dave McLenachen (with the VA's Diana 
Rubin), the second panel was composed of Katrina Eagle with the Veterans Law 
Office of Michael Wildhaber, Veteran Fiduciary Pam Estes, attorney Rosinski with 
the Law Office of Douglas J. Rosinski, and Vietnam Veterans of America's Rick 
Weidman.  We covered the first panel in yesterday's snapshot .  US House Rep Bill Johnson 
is the Chair of the Subcommittee.  We'll note this exchange.
 
 
Chair Bill Johnson: Ms. Eagle, if VA is paying a fiduciary a 
percentage of a veterans' compensation, only to allow VA to have the final say , 
then why pay a fiduciary in the first place?  
 
Katrina Eagle: I have many veterans and clients who ask that same 
question.  I don't understand it myself. I find it ironic that I have several 
cases where the veteran is paid also [clears throat], excuse me, his Social 
Security benefits and he has no fiduciary managing his Social Security benefits 
but the VA finds that he must be appointed a fidcuiary for his VA benefits which 
also then get sucked into including his Social Security benefits. Moreover, as 
Mr. Weidman was saying, with respect to veterans who try to get out of the 
program, I've seen many instances of retribution, so to speak, in that when the 
veteran applies to get out of the fiduciary program, he is then found perfectly 
fine with his medical condition, the underlying medical condtion be it physical 
or often a psychiatric condition, and therefore he [his benefits] is reduced.  
And that is encouraging the veteran to say nothing, go along and not question or 
cause problems. 
 
Chair Bill Johnson: I want to read this paragraph for everyone's 
attention out of that form we're discussing. It says, "Approval for use of VA 
funds" -- and this is the 21-4703 that we're discussing -- "VA must approve any 
use of a veterans VA funds.  You" -- and I'm presuming that's the fiduciary -- 
"agree to use these funds only as specifically authorized by VA.  You agree to 
request VA approval for all spending of these funds unless VA has previously 
authorized the expenditures.  Any questions regarding authorized expenditures 
should be addressed to the fiduciary activity at the address and phone number on 
the front side of this form."  Ms. Eagle, in your opinion, should VA remove this 
paragraph in question of form 21-4703?  
 
Katrina Eagle: Yes. 
 
Chair Bill Johnson: Okay, thank you.  Ms. Estes, you mentioned that 
you submitted the anual report to VA but have heard nothing since.  When is your 
last date to be informed of the status of this issue?  You said today, 
correct? 
 
Estes: They told me I had 30 days so I'm assuming -- I took 30 days 
from the postmark, that would be today. 
 
Chair Bill Johnson: Okay.  What results good or bad have you 
experienced in the fiduciary program.  Now that's -- that's a big question but . 
. . 
 
Pam Estes: When there is contact, it's fine. They come out and I 
talk to them and we go over the expenditures and stuff. I don't have a problem 
there. It's like a black hole. I don't get any return calls when I leave a 
message. I was afraid to send the accounting because they require originals of 
everything -- original bank statement and stuff like -- and you're not handing 
it, you're mailing it so I suspected something like that might happen so we sent 
it certified and everything.  And I followed up with a phone call saying I did 
this.  I know I'm supposed to have an audit but nobody came out so I'm 
submitting it. And so then we got the letter that said I hadn't submitted it at 
all. 
 
Chair Bill Johnson: So basically, it's miscommunication, lack of 
communication? 
 
Pam Estes:  They were being -- No communication. 
 
Chair Bill Johnson:  No communication. 
 
Pam Estes: It's no communication. 
 
Chair Bill Johnson: Okay.  Ms. Eagle, on the first panel, we 
discussed VA waivers for fiduciaries.  And if I recall the testimony, they were 
not aware of waivers being granted for certification or fiduciary 
qualifications.  Do you have any experience with VA fiduciary requirements being 
waived? 
 
Katrina Eagle: I do.  And what I find and what Mr. McLenachen was 
talking about is a fiduciary for the first time will be reviewed, background 
checks perhaps performed.  What I see happen in all of the cases I have reviewed 
in assisting the veteran is that if that fiduciary has been at all ever in the 
VA system as a fiduciary previously, the background check is waived, criminal 
background checks are waived, etc., etc.  So once he's in, it's good to go. 
 
 
Chair Bill Johnson: Mr. Rosinski, is the issue of a person with a 
criminal background being allowed to serve as a VA fiduciary an isolated 
incident in your view? 
 
 
Doug Rosinski:   Mr. Chairman, there's no way to tell. As Ms. Eagle 
just said, they waive all the background checks I've ever seen. And my 
experience is all they ask is they're asking, 'Check a box, have you ever been 
convicted and served more than one year for a felony, yes or no?'  So I'll leave 
it to you whether a convicted felon is going to answer that yes or no.  That is, 
as far as I know, the background check.  And that is what is waived on top of 
it. 
 
Chair Bill Johnson: Okay. Mr. Rosinski, in your experience and 
clients you've represented, what is your background of some of the VA 
fidcuiaries? Have you -- have you seen incidents where fiduciaries have been 
removed? 
 
Doug Rosinski: The only fiduciary that I know that was removed was 
the daughter who was taking care of her 81-year-old father and was a registered 
nurse and had been taking care of her father full time for two decades, had 
retired from being a nurse to do that.  She took her father to an Alzheimers 
clinic because he has advancing Alzheimers and VA turned around and fired her as 
fiduciary and registered a complaint for misuse of those funds because they were 
not pre-authorized.  I've also -- that's my example of firing.  The issue of 
qualifications, I had the privilege of deposing two actual fiduciaries in the 
state of Texas. One was a cabinet salesman who in 2009 got his first fiduciary 
appointment. In 2011, November 2011, when I deposed him, [he] had 53. He had 
never heard of a fiduciary until someone suggested that this would be a good job 
to have since he had had a heart attack.  The other fiduciary there is the 
full-time, single working mother who said her father had been a VA fiduciary and 
that's how she found out about the program. 
 
Chair Bill Johnson:  Okay. Ms. Eagle, given the 3 to 5% paid to a 
fiduciary for administering a veterans account, what purpose would a fiduciary 
have for hoarding a veteran's money? 
 
Katrina Eagle: I think that the issue of hoarding has nothing to do 
with how much they're being authorized from the veteran's money on a monthly 
basis.  The reason they would be hoarding -- and there's two kinds of 
fiduciaries that I've dealt with.  The hoarding is encouraged by the VA program 
leadership  because they are to save as much money as possible in case of 
certain emergencies. Keep in mind that these are monthly recurring benefits. So 
needing to save $100,000 when the veterans going to get paid $3,000 every month 
until and unless he passes, there's no need to save that much money.  Second of 
all, lots of these fiduciaries are banks. It is in their best interest to keep 
as much money in their accounts as possible.    
 
 
Staying with veterans issues, I've noted my opinion on the national parade 
issue earlier this week (see this snapshot) -- briefly, veterans of the current 
wars will get the nation's attention for only a short time and there would 
appear to be more serious issues to address while the nation is paying 
attention.  (My comments are on a national parade and that's a Congressional 
issue and we covered in January how Congress de-funded the planned parade some 
time ago. I've noted that various people -- including a governor -- can stage a 
local, county or state wide parade.)  We're going to note a few opinons on the 
issue.  Jerry Maza (Salem-News.com) 
offers :
 
  
 
It isn't like starting a war in Iraq on lies, 
that Saddam Hussein had WMD when no one, not even the UN's inspector (referee) 
for nuclear weapons, Hans Blix, could find nary a missile, poison gas, Niger 
yellowcake uranium, or any secret locales for the stash. There were no goal 
posts in Iraq. No fighting from your 20-yard line to the 50 and marching down it 
to a touchdown, a kick for the goal, and your seven points up. The stated 
purpose of the shock and awe of the linemen was bringing democracy to Iraq. You 
might as well bring sea bass to a Thanksgiving dinner. 
 
In fact, the last thing on anybody's mind was 
democracy, given the unilateral and illegal attack on Iraq. Now, who's going to 
march over that shameful premise? Sorry to say, our brave players were sent on a 
fool's mission once again. The field had no markers, no big rectangle broken 
into ten yards ten times. The war was one you had to find, break down doors, 
terrorize families, looking for the man with the ball, the I.E.D. or hidden 
weapon, and knock him to the ground. In frustration for often not finding those 
things, soldiers took it out on innocent viewers of the ongoing chaos. Also, 
soldiers had to watch their buddies go nuts, over the top, at the atrocities 
they often had to commit (albeit much like WWII), but mostly back then there 
were victories and a people were spared from total holocaust. What they learned 
from it seems questionable sometimes. 
 
 
Larry Mendte (Philly Post) calls for a 
parade for Philadelphia's veterans (and for those in surrounding areas -- he's 
in fact calling for every big city to stage a parade): 
 
 
I have put together an online 
petition asking Mayor Michael Nutter for a parade in 
Philadelphia to honor the more than 100,000 men and women from our area who 
served in Iraq. Please sign it and then pass it on through emails, Twitter and 
Facebook. Philadelphia should lead the country on this. The positive national 
media attention will be well worth the cost. More importantly, it is the right 
thing to do. 
 
 
 
While all this arguing is going on, veterans are struggling. In 
this country, an average of 18 veterans commit suicide every 
day. The jobless rate for Iraq and Afghanistan 
veterans is as high as 15 percent. They are trying to find work despite having 
been labeled ticking time bombs, unable to assimilate back into society, plagued 
with post-traumatic stress. 
Later this month, on an evening like any other in America, nearly 
70,000 veterans will spend the night 
on the street while President Obama and the first 
lady host a special White House 
dinner to honor 200 or so hand-picked Iraq veterans 
from a war that produced more than 30,000 wounded in action. Across the country, 
on any given night, nearly 5,000 dinner tables have an empty place where a loved 
one who never came home from the war used to sit. 
 
 
On the issue of suicides, Michael Moran (Global Post) points out , 
"Statistics on Iraq and Afghanistan veterans, obtained in 2011 through a Freedom 
of Information Act request by a San Francisco newspaper, found that more than 
2,200 soldiers died within two years of leaving the service, and about half had 
been undergoing treatment for post-traumatic stress or other combat-induced 
mental disorders at the time."
 
 
 
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