| 
Tuesday, March 6, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, the US Congress 
learns more about how the VA asks for X and then spends X-plus without any 
Congressional authorization, Iraq's LGBT community is again being stalked by 
death squads, and more. 
  
Chair Bill Johnson: The VA clearly indicates in a letter from 
Secretary Gould on November 24,2010 that they automatically go to the two-step 
acquisition process which by definition precludes evaluation of existing lease 
space as an option of lease spaces for all leases greater than 20,000 feet.  
Does VA presume that this authorizes them to bypass the requirements of federal 
acquistion regulations in 38 US Section 8104B. 
  
Robert Neary: No, sir, we do not presume that we've got authority 
to violate title 38 or the federal acquisition regulations. 
  
This afternoon the US House Veterans Subcommittee on Oversight and 
Investigations held a hearing.  Bill Johnson is the Subcommittee Chair, Joe 
Donnelly is the Ranking Member.  Robert Neary is the Acting Executive Director 
of the Office of Constructin & Facilities Management at the Department of 
Veterans Affairs and he was joined by the Dept's George Szwarcman (Director of 
Real Property Services) and Brandi Fate (Director of Capital Asset Management 
and Support).  Robert Neary began his opening remarks before the Subcommittee 
with what he termed an "update" but what are more popularly known as a 
"correction." 
  
Robert Neary:  In response to a series of questions from the 
Subcommittee in December 2011, VA provided an incorrect appraisal for the 
targeted relocated Savannah Outpatient Clinic site.  Instead of referencing a 
46,85 acre site, VA inadvertently referenced a 16.85 acre location.  The 
appraiser failed to identify that the deed of sale and the tax records did not 
reflect the same information.  Since learning of the discrepancy, VA immediately 
requested a revised appraisal and provided an update to the Subcommittee on 
March 2, 2012, acknoledging the error.  VA is contracting for another certified 
appraiser to review the initial appraisal, and provide a determination regarding 
fair market value of VA's preferred site as of Spring, 2010.  Finally, VA is 
also obtaining a new appraisal that reflects the current land value of the 
site.  VA will review all the appraisal reports concerning the targeted parcel 
in Savannah in order to determine what appropriate corrective action may be 
warranted.  I want to emphasize that VA only uses appraisers who maintain 
appropriate licensure and accreditation, in addition to adherence to the Uniform 
Appraisal Standards for Federal Land Acquisitions, which is standard operating 
procedure.  I would like to apologize to the Committee for the delay in 
uncovering the facts and provide assurance that response to future inquiries 
will be more thoroughly investigated. 
  
And before you think, 'At least the VA's being upfront . . .,' no, they are 
not.  They got caught.  I'm not referring to Neary himself -- I have no idea who 
was responsible.  But Ranking Member Joe Donnelly explained what was going 
on: 
  
  
The VA sought Congressional authorization for the Savannah, Georgia 
clinic expansion in its FY 2009 budget submission.  This authority, for a clinic 
with 38,900 net usable square feet at a cost of $3.2 million, was provided in 
October 2008.  Sometime after this authorization, the VA epxanded the project by 
over 45% and is now seeking to lease a clinic with a maximum net usable square 
footage of 55,193.  The VA has not notified Congress or sought additional 
authorization for this expanison.  In addition, although this project was 
authorized in 2008, construction is just now going forward. 
  
Okay, let's review that.  In 2008, the VA had a plan to expand the Savannah 
clinic and presented it to Congress while Congress was working on the 2009 
budget.  Congress examined the proposal and signed off on it with funding of 
$3.2 million.  Four years later, construction is only now beginning.  
Construction was supposed to have already been completed and the expanded 
facility up and running no later than June of last year.  In addition, what VA 
presented and Congress approved was not good enough for someone(s) who took it 
upon themselves to expand the plan by nearly 50% ("over 45%").  Why would you do 
that?  Why would you turn in plans for an expansion, get approval and then 
double what you had planned? 
  
Because you know Congress will foot the bill.  The costs will fall under 
"cost overruns" and Congress isn't going to default on payment to various 
contractors and subcontractors overseeing the work and construction workers 
doing the building.  (Nor am I suggesting that Congress should.  The fault is 
not on the building end, the fault's with VA management and supervision.)  Most 
likely, Mr./Ms. X knew that the Savannah project was going to be a big one. They 
presented Congress with plans for only half the work needed knowing that once 
the project was started, it would be cost overruns and Congress wouldn't pull 
the plug.  What they did wasn't 'creative.'  What they did was most likely 
fraud. 
  
And if that term ("fraud") seems too strong or if someone wants to argue 
it's an accident.  It happens too often to be an accident.   
  
Ranking Member Joe Donnelly: The clinic in Savannah is not the only project 
which the VA has expanded after seeking authorization.  Projects in Atlanta, 
Georgia; Eugene, Oregon; Fayetteville, North Carolina; Grand Rapids, Michigan; 
Green Bay, Wisconsin and Greenville, North Carolina are all slated to be 
substantially larger than authorized by Congress. 
  
Sequestration is very likely this year -- meaning the 2013 Fiscal Year 
budget will face automatic cuts.  The country has a huge deficit which is 
supposedly this huge concern.  So why is VA being allowed -- and it's not just 
VA -- to get away with cost overruns? 
  
Congress needs to have an automatic policy regarding cost overruns.  Again, 
I don't subscribe to denying payment to the various contractors and construction 
workers.  But I do think if you have a cost overrun, you need to be 
responsible.  And by "responsible," I mean out of job.  You're supposed to have 
planned this.  They can make an exception for inflation.  They can even allow a 
15% overrun not resulting in termination.  But when you're project has increased 
over 45% by what Congress approved, you need to be out of a job. 
  
That's because you're either too incompentent to oversee a project in the 
first place or you're not providing the oversight needed.  Either way, the 
taxpayer can't afford you and your mistakes. 
  
There need to be clear consequences here.  We are willing (wrongly, I 
believe) to automatically sentence someone to prison under "three strikes and 
you're out" laws.  But we have no law requiring that those who waste -- 
intentionally or due to incompetence -- taxpayer monies aren't immediately 
fired?  It's past time for departments to start being held accountable.  And 
it's very clear that VA and others will not hold themselves accountable so 
Congress needs to start providing some input. 
  
It is not fair that everyone else from a shoplifter to, yes, even a member 
of Congress faces some form of accountability (Congressional members can be 
kicked out in any election if enough voters don't feel they're doing their jobs) 
but those responsible for cost overruns are never disciplined, never lose a job, 
never lose a night's sleep. 
  
Again, you may think, 'Well it was just a mistake . . .'  No, it wasn't.  
Back to Subcommittee Chair Johnson. 
  
Subcommitee Chair Bill Johnson:  Why did the three annual lease 
status reports reported to Congress since 2009 continue to repeat the original 
authorization amounts when the VA clearly knew their efforts were not consistent 
with the Congressional limits.  
  
Robert Neary:  Sir, I-I -- I think our current process for the past 
several years has been to notify the Congress -- to notify the Committees on 
Veterans Affairs when we, uh, are planning to enter into a lease that exceeds 
the, uh, uh, what was authorized by greater than 10%.  And our practice is to do 
that after we have received market-based pricing based on our procurement.  Now, 
in this case, significant time has passed since the original authorization.  
Uh.  But-but that's the reason that we have not, uh, notified the Committee.  
We're waiting for the, uh, price proposals to receive, uh, through 
competition. 
  
Subcommittee Chair Bill Johnson: Okay, I'd like to point out that 
the Green Bay clinic is a similar scenario the FY '09 budget authority request 
was for 70,600 square feet, two-million-eight-thousand annual rent and 
$3,883,000 initial payment.  Total budget authorized over 20 years was 44  -- 
I'm sorry, 44,043,000.  As recently as the 2012 submission to Congress, the VA 
has indicated in the lease status report that Green Bay lease was not changed 
from FY '09 authorization request, however, SFOVA-101-09-RP-0200, issued 
6-24-2009 was for 161,525 square feet -- 228% higher than authorized. And news 
reports indicate that the Green Bay lease has now been awarded. 
  
Repeating, for the 2009 budget, they claimed they were requesting for 
70,600 square feet.  They knew at least by June of 2009 that they were actually 
going to be dealing with 161,525 feet.  They didn't notify Congress, they stayed 
silent for years.  This was fraud.  When you present that you need X but you 
actually need greater than that amount and you know that once the project's 
started, it will be very hard for Congress to pull the plug, then you're 
engaging in fraud. 
  
You're presenting false numbers -- fraudulent numbers -- to Congress 
because they will get approved while the whole time you're intending to spend 
much more.  You're defrauding the taxpayer.  
  
Chair Bill Johnson:  Uhm, let me ask you another question.  Has the 
VA already paid approximately 100,000 or so for a purchase option on the land in 
Savannah.  
  
Robert Neary:  That's correct, Mr. Chairmn. 
  
Chair Bill Johnson:  Under what authority does VA purchase an 
option to buy real property?  
  
Robert Neary:  I'd like to ask Mr. Szwarcman to answer 
that. 
  
George Szwarcman: . . . [Microphone not on] Oh, thank you, Mr. 
Chairman. 
  
Robert Neary: Okay, it's on. 
  
George Szwarcman: Okay. Uhm . . . [Clears throat]  VA -- According 
to a decision, or an opinion by the Office of General Counsel, VA does, uh, have 
authority to purchase options to purchase real property.  Uh, the only 
distinction I would make in this case is that VA is purchasing an option for -- 
an assignable option -- or I should say -- yeah -- purchases an option to buy 
that property which will be assigned to the eventual developer.  So it is never 
really the intent of VA to acquire a piece of property such as in Savannah for 
VA to own. 
  
  
Chair Bill Johnson: Uhm, you know, I think the operative word here 
is to purchase an option.  The red book makes it clear that agencies need a 
specific statutory authority to purchase an option.  This is a separate 
authority than the authority to buy real property outright.  I can refer you to 
that -- to the red book.  A quick search of VA's authorities do not provide an 
authority for their action.  So I'm a little bit lost with that. There's a 
difference between purchasing an option and purchasing property outright.  Has 
the VA obligated itself to purchase the land? 
  
Robert Neary:  Uh, no, sir, we've not. 
  
Chair Bill Johnson: And if the land is not purchased, will VA get 
any of that money back? 
  
Robert Neary:  No, sir. 
  
Chair Bill Johnson:  So that's taxpayer dollars down the 
drain. 
  
  
Robert Neary: If a decision were made not to acquire that site, 
then the money would be lost, yes. 
  
  
There is so much more from that hearing I would like to cover but there's a 
big story out of Iraq that will be ignored by many -- if 2009 was any indication 
-- and we don't ignore it here so we need to move over to Iraq now. 
  
  
  
The International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission has today 
received reports from Iraq of a wave of targeted killings of individuals who are 
perceived to be gay or lesbian. According to Iraqi human rights activists, in 
early February 2012, an unidentified group posted death threats against "the 
adulterous individuals" in the predominantly Shiite neighborhoods of Baghdad and 
Basra. The threats gave the individuals, whose names and ages were listed, four 
days to stop their behavior or else face the wrath of God, and were to be 
carried out by the Mujahedin. According to sources inside Iraq, as the result of 
this new surge of anti-gay violence close to 40 people have been kidnapped, 
brutally tortured and murdered. The Iraqi authorities have neither responded to 
this targeted violence nor have they publicly denounced it. It is widely 
believed that these atrocities are being committed by a group of the Shiite 
militia. 
  
  
All US aid to Iraq should immediately stop.  For those who are not aware, 
this wave of attacks is only the latest wave.  The White House should have 
addressed it earlier.  They didn't.  And now the same problem all over again.  
April 13, 2009 , Amnesty International issued  the following:
  
  
Amnesty International has written to Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri 
al-Maliki expressing grave concern about a reported spate of killing of young 
men solely because of their sexual orientation and calling for urgent and 
concerted action by the government to bring those responsible to justice and to 
afford effective protection to the gay community in Iraq.    
Over the last few weeks at least 25 boys and men are reported to 
have been killed in Baghdad because theyw ere, or were pereceived to be, gay.  
The killings are said to have been carried out by armed Shi'a militamen as well 
as by members of the tribes and families of the victims.  Certain religious 
leaders, especially in al-Sadr City neighbourhood, are also reported in recent 
weeks to have urged their followers to take action to eradicate homosexuality in 
Iraqi society, in terms which appear effectively to constitute at least an 
implicit, if not explicit, incitement to violence against members of the gay 
community.  Three corpses of gay men are reported to have been found in al-Sadr 
City on 2 and 3 April 2009; two of the bodies are said to have had pieces of 
paper bearing the word "pervert" attached to them, suggetsting that the victims 
had been murdered on account of their sexual identitiy.     
In the letter sent to the Prime Minister Amnesty International 
expressed concern at the government's failure to publicly condemn the killings 
and ensure that they are promptly and effective investigated, and that the 
perpetrators are brought to justice.  The letter also drew attention to reported 
statements by one senior police officer that appear to condone or even encourage 
the targeting of members of the gay community in Baghdad, in gross breach of the 
law and international human rights standards.          
Amnesty International reminded the Iraqi government that it is a 
fundamental principle of international human rights law, including international 
treaties that have been ratified by and are binding on Iraq, that "All human 
beings are equal in dignity and rights" and are entitled to all rights and 
freedom set forth in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, without 
distinction of any kind, such as on grounds of race, sex, religion, political, 
or other status, including sexual orientation and gender identity.  The 
organization called on Prime Minister al-Maliki [to] take immediate and concrete 
steps to address this sitatuion, including to publicly condemn, unreservedly and 
in the strongest terms, all attacks on members of the gay community or others on 
account of their sexual, gender, ethnic or other identity, and to commit to 
ensuring that those responsible for such abuses are identified and brought to 
justice.  Further, police officers or other officials who encourage, condone or 
acquiesce in such attacks must also be held to account and either prosecuted or 
disciplined and removed from office. 
  
  
  
  
This morning AFP 
is reported that signs are going up around the Sadr City 
neighborhood of Baghdad threatening to kill a list of people alleged to be gay. 
The posters are put out by the Brigades of the Righteous and AFP translates the 
posters as stating, "We will punish you, perverts" and "We will get you, 
puppies" has been scrawled on some posters -- "puppies" being slang for gay 
males in Iraq. The Australian carries the AFP report here. Liz Sly and Caesar Ahmed (LAT's 
Babylon & Beyond) report the message on the 
posters included, "If you don't cease your perverted acts, you will get your 
fair punishment."  The reporters also noted that a Sadr City resident saw a 
poster with approximately 15 names (of people who would be killed) written on 
it.  These posters are going up around Sadr City. Where is the United Nations 
condemnation? Where is the White House, where is the US State Dept?  Chris Johnson (Washington Blade) 
notes the only member of the US Congress to condemn the 
targeting of Iraq's LGBT community, US House Rep Jared 
Polis and reports: 
  
["] Noel Clay, a State 
Department spokesperson, said U.S. officials "condemn the persecution of LGBTs 
in Iraq," but he couldn't confirm whether the violence they're facing in Iraq is 
because of their sexual orientation.             Clay noted that while homosexuality is against the law 
in Iraq, the death penalty is not the punishment for homosexual acts.   
["]
 
  
And yet at the start of this month the State Dept's Iraqi Desk 
John Fleming was telling Kilian Melloy 
(The Edge) that, "Homosexuality not a crime in 
Iraq."  He was also stating that same-sex relations were of no conern to Iraqis 
("immaterial").  That is laughable.  Noel Clay has stated that same-sex 
relations have been criminalized in Iraq so unless or until the State Dept 
issues a public clarification, we will operate under the belief that Clay is 
correct.  Attempts by the press to figure this out has been 
stonewalled. 
  
Barack Obama never called it out.  Not once.  In the 80s, Ronald Reagan was 
US President.  The AIDS crisis emerged.  When Reagan died in 2004, his 
non-response to the AIDS crisis was noted.  From Allen White's "Reagan's AIDS Legacy: Silence equals death " 
(San Francisco Chronicle ):
  
As America remembers the life of Ronald Reagan, it must never 
forget his shameful abdication of leadership in the fight against AIDS. History 
may ultimately judge his presidency by the thousands who have and will die of 
AIDS.  
Following discovery of the first cases in 1981, it soon became 
clear a national health crisis was developing. But President Reagan's response 
was "halting and ineffective," according to his biographer Lou Cannon. Those 
infected initially with this mysterious disease -- all gay men -- found 
themselves targeted with an unprecedented level of mean-spirited hostility. 
 
A significant source of Reagan's support came from the newly 
identified religious right and the Moral Majority, a political-action group 
founded by the Rev. Jerry Falwell. AIDS became the tool, and gay men the target, 
for the politics of fear, hate and discrimination. Falwell said "AIDS is the 
wrath of God upon homosexuals." Reagan's communications director Pat Buchanan 
argued that AIDS is "nature's revenge on gay men."  
With each passing month, death and suffering increased at a 
frightening rate. Scientists, researchers and health care professionals at every 
level expressed the need for funding. The response of the Reagan administration 
was indifference.  
 
  
Even during the non-stop death pageantry, the glorification and the 
worship, there was still time for a small bit of reality.  Barack Obama better 
be thinking about his legacy.  His silence as Iraq's LGBT community (as well as 
people merely thought to be LGBT) is targeted and killed is appalling.  There's 
no excuse for it.  And history will not provide one.  History's provided none 
for Ronald Reagan -- Barack's hero , remember?
  
  
Today the Government of Iraq represents a fully sovereign and 
democratic country. As such, it must protect all of its citizens including 
lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people from hate-filled violence and 
death at the hands of armed militias. Vigilantes who perpetuate the targeted 
killing of those perceived to be gay or lesbian must not be tolerated in a new 
Iraq. We have seen these atrocities before. In 2009 vigilantes murdered hundreds 
of Iraqi individuals for their perceived sexual orientation. There are no 
excuses for such heinous human rights violations. We demand that the Iraqi 
Government put a stop to the wanton persecution and killing of gay people, and 
that the perpetrators punished. 
  
  
I had a confirmed report in October 2011 from a gay young man who 
lives in Baghdad, his name is Haider, that al-Mehdi militia are threatening that 
they are coming back and they will kill gays. For some reason some of the 
militia men knew about him being gay because he was told they came looking for 
him, so he fled his home and was hiding.  Last I heard from him was in late 
November but don't know what happened to him.  Many men get kidnanpped and go 
missing all the time.  He also reported that this has been happening to many of 
his friends. 
  
  
For those who missed the 2009 wave of attacks (not the first and not the 
last), the only non-LGBT program on Pacifica Radio to cover the attacks was Lila 
Garrets' Connect the Dots  on KPFK .  LA City 
Council member Bill Rosendahl  raised the issue on her show June 1, 2009  (see that day's snapshot for the exchange -- you 
can contact KPFK about ordering a copy of the show; however, there is no free 
archive of that broadcast available any longer). In terms of big media, the 
leader was the Denver Post.  The New York Times, despite having people over 
there to report on Iraq, had no real interest in the story an only filed one 
story after other outlets were reporting on it.  Their lack of interest was not 
unlike the lack of interest they showed in the 80s when the AIDS crisis 
emerged.  By their patterns of silence, they do reveal themselves.
  
  
If you've forgotten or weren't around during the 2009 coverage, from the 
June 1, 2009 snapshot, we'll note some resources from this site and the media 
coverage of the targeting: 
  
This year, the targeting's been noted here first in more on the 
issue, you can see this snapshot, 
this entry and the 
roundtable Friday night ["Roundtable on Iraq," 
"Roundtabling Iraq," 
"the roundtable," 
"Iraq," "Iraq in the Kitchen," 
"Roundtable on Iraq," 
"Talking Iraq," 
"Iraq," "Talking Iraq roundtable" 
and "Iraq roundtable"] That's 
going back to the start of April and it is not true that the MSM has ignored 
it.  They could do a lot more but they have covered it and where there has been 
no amplification is in Panhandle Media which 
appears to feel it's a 'niche' story to be left to the LGBT media.  In April, 
Wisam Mohammed and Khalid al-Ansary 
(Reuters) and Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN), the 
Dallas Morning News, 
UPI and 
AFP reported on 
it.   Michael Riley (Denver Post) 
covered the story and covered US House Rep Jared Polis' 
work on the issue (which included visiting Iraq), PDF format warning, 
click here for his letter to Patricia A. 
Butenis. Polis is quoted at his website 
stating, "The United States should not tolerate human 
rights violations of nay kind, especially by a government that Americans spend 
billions of taxpayer dollars each year supporting.  Hopefully my trip and 
letters to US and Iraqi officials will help bring international attention and 
investigation to this terrible situation and bring an end to any such 
offenses."   For the New York Times, Timothy Williams and Tareq Maher's 
"Iraq's Newly Open Gays 
Face Scorn and Murder" covered the topic.  BBC News 
offered "Fears over Iraq gay killing 
spate."  The Denver Post offered an editorial 
entitled  "Killing of gay Iraqis shouldn't be ignored: 
We applaud Rep. Jared Polis for his efforts last week to shine the spotlight on 
the killings of homosexuals in Iraq,"  Nigel Morris offered 
"Iraqi leaders attacked over spate of 
homophobic murders" (Independent of London), the Telegraph of London covers the issue 
here. Neal Broverman (The 
Advocate), Jessica Green (UK's Pink News), and 
Doug Ireland covered 
it (here's one report by Ireland at 
GayCityNews -- he's filed more than one report), 
AFP reported on 
it again when signs went up throughout Sadr City with statements such as "We 
will punish you, perverts" and "We will get you, puppies" (puppies is slang for 
gay men in Iraq) and Liz Sly (Los Angeles Times) 
reported on that as well. Chris Johnson offered 
"Polis seeks to aid Iraqis: Says gays 'fear 
for their life and limb' after fact-finding trip to 
Baghdad" (Washington 
Blade), Killian Melloy (The Edge 
-- this is the April 2nd story that contains the State Dept stating it's not 
happening -- the denial) and [PDF formart warning] the April 15th  "Iraq Status Report" by the US State 
Dept notes the killings.  Amnesty International weighed 
in as did the  International Gay and lesiban Human Rights 
Campaign.  Jim Muir (BBC News -- text and video) 
reported on the targeting and the attacks. UK Gay News covered it, last week ABC 
News offered Mazin Faiq's "Tortured and Killed in Iraq for Being 
Gay" Chicago Pride 
and UPI covered the 
latest deaths last week.  And AFP and 
Jessica Green (UK's Pink 
News) covered the public statement from Moqtada 
al-Sadr about how they needed to be "eradicated" for "depravity" and he thinks 
they can be 'taught' not to be gay.  
  
And if you're wondering about the administration's response?  Barack never 
called it out.  Secretary of State Hillary Clinton raised the issue and was the 
highest ranking official to do so publicly.  While this was taking place, the 
State Dept spokesperson never felt the need to note it at the start of a 
briefing or to express sorrow or regret for the deaths -- maybe if they'd been 
known as Shi'ite LGBTs, the State Dept would have given a damn?  And in all the 
press briefings, only once in 2009 was the State Dept ever asked about the issue 
in a press briefing.  And that question?  It came from the BBC.  Of all the 
reporters in the room, day after day, killing time and telling really sad jokes, 
only the BBC ever felt the need to raise the issue of the killing of Iraqi 
LGBTs.  Only the BBC. 
  
  
  
News of the latest atrocities comes 
on the eve of a United Nations panel on queer 
rights to be held in Geneva, Switzerland, on March 7, 
marking the first time the UN's Human Rights Council focuses on sexual 
orientation and gender identity. 
 
The panel is also taking place in the 
midst of opposition by 56 Islamic states in the Organisation of Islamic 
Cooperation (OIC), which refuse to acknowledge gay rights as human 
rights. 
 
  
This isn't a minor issue.  This is a major issue and we're not going to 
ignore it.  Giving the issue and news the due it requires means we don't have 
time for Tareq al-Hashemi and we don't have time for ExxonMobil and many other 
things -- including Lynne Stewart.  We'll pick those up tomorrow.  But this is a 
serious issue and too many walked away and remained silent on this in 2009.  
There's no excuse for it to have ever happened, there is no excuse for alleged 
friend of the LGBT community, 'fiercest advocate for gay rights' (or whatever 
Michelle Obama called him) to have been silent in 2009.  He needs to understand 
that silence on this in an election year will be unacceptable.  The media needs 
to understand that their silence is being followed and registered as well. 
  
  
  |