Oops, excuse us, that’s Barack Obama talking about the “sacred union” of marriage. That’s Barack Obama discussing in Biblical terms why he opposes gay marriage and why he believes marriage is between a man and a woman.
We must have missed the protesting kiss-in disruptions at Obama headquarters from the totalitarian left outraged at invocations of scripture on a public policy matter.
We also must have missed the disruptive protests as Barack Obama and his monstrous campaign apparatus spent great sums of money in 2008 to promote anti-gay African-Americans such as Donnie McClurkin, Mary Mary, Hezekiah Walker and Reverend James Meeks as they displayed themselves on behalf of Barack Obama. But that was when Obama needed black votes more than gay money.
Now of course Barack Obama needs gay money more than the slavish dedication of black voters so he has revolved 180 degrees. It’s all about the gay money this cycle - the Bible along with America, be damned.
The contemporary left of Barack Obama DailyKooks and assorted gay marriage supporters appear not to understand the dangerous, unconstitutional horror of elected officials such as the ballet dancing thug from Chicago and the daft mayor of Boston declaring a jihad against free expression backed by the full coercive power of the state. Well that’s not entirely true, the Barack Obama DailyKooks do indeed understand what they do but like flowers twisting to the sun their tropism is towards totalitarianism. It’s the dictatorship of the proletariat with the DailyKooks hallucinating themselves as the vanguard of the proletariat.
We well know these thugs.
I'm trying to decide between Jill Stein and Roseanne Barr currently -- for my vote. I'm now leaning towards Roseanne and a great deal of that is because she's named Cindy Sheehan her running mate.
I may write about the race for the presidency tomorrow.
Tonight, I'm writing about radio. Community member Billie wrote Ruth and I about a program she loves, "Song Travels with Michael Feinstein." This is an hour long, weekly show that is carried by NPR. She was really excited about the latest broadcast on her local NPR and e-mailed. The guest was Rumer and you can stream it here.
Michael Feinstein is a gifted artist. He is also funny. I met him at a party C.I. was invited to (and if she goes, she generally takes several people with her and I was lucky enough to tag along). It was probably a post-awards show party. But I remember thinking, "Oh, what a funny and cute guy." He plays the piano like no one else except maybe Hoagy Carmichael. (Please don't e-mail, "Hoagy who?" My grandmother ensured we knew these older musicians. We knew Duke Ellington and Sarah Vaughn and so many more. Hoagy Carmichael wrote two of my favorite songs: "The Nearness of You" and "I Get Along Without You Very Well.") (My favorite version of "I Get Along Without You Very Well" is the one Carly Simon does on the "Torch" album.)
Oh, my goodness! I looked up some basics. He is 55-years-old, Michael Feinstein. He looks great. I thought, and remember I was face-to-face with him at a party, he was my age (early 30s). Okay, so he is plays the piano and sings and gives tours that draw in tons of people and he is a very successful recording artist.
Now why to listen to the Rumer episode? Rumer is an amazing singer. I am not sure how to describe her. In America, I know how she'd be described but I'm not sure if they hyphen in England. Her father was from Pakistan (biological father), her mother and father who raised her were British. She discovered her love for music in a variety of ways including old Judy Garland movies. She especially identified with "Easter Parade."
So Michael plays the piano and she sings "Buds Won't Bud" which is a song I have never heard before and I so love. It reminds me of another song (the other song was written much later so it was clearly inspired by it) and they do "Where Or When?" and "That's All." And it's a great hour. You really need to stream this. Rumer is amazing singer.
And what a great guest. She's funny and so open. She talks about Shirley MacLaine with Michael Feinstein and about Judy Garland (of course) and about gas station flowers (you have to hear it). But she's so open about her own life and shares a pretty shattering event that happened when she was 11.
So make a point to stream it.
Thank you, Billie, for e-mailing me about the show. It is a great program. And Ruth is going to blog about the program but a different episode of it so be sure to visit Ruth's site tonight.
"Iraq snapshot" (The Common Ills):
Thursday,
 August 2, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, Nouri fumes as Turkey 
visits Kirkuk, Allawi makes a high profile stop in the region, is the 
Dept of Veterans Affairs violating US law, what is controlling 
ownership, and more.
With the non-stop wars of
 the last years, there are a large number of veterans in the US 
population.  Some of them would like to start their own businesses.  Gordon Block (Watertown Daily Times) reports
 on "soldiers and veterans" who turned out for a seminar on that topic 
that New York Governor Andrew Cuomo was behind.  Those attending were 
able to ineract with "Empire State Development; the Departments of 
State, Labor, and Taxation and Finance; the state Liquor Authority and 
the Workers' Compensation Board." Governor Cuomo's Deputy Secretary for 
Civil Rights, Alphonso B. David, explains, "We want them to understand 
there are these resources."  This week the Deputy Administrator of the 
US Small Business Administration Marie C. Johns explored the topic at The Huffington Post and noted,
 "In fact, over nine percent of veterans start or purchase a business 
once they return home.  And the ripple effect of their entrepreneurial 
spirit is evident in the rate of small business ownership across the 
nation.  Currently, there are over two million veteran entrepreneurs 
employing close to six million people across the nation." 
Veteran
 businesses, Congress was told today, that apply for to be recognized as
 such by the VA suffer from a 60% initial rejection rate and there is a 
40% rejection rate for those who apply a second time. The VA's Leney 
stated that the VA believed, this year alone, 59 businesses had 
fraudulently applied for veteran status and that they had referred those
 59 to the Office of Inspector General.  This is more than double the 
2011 numbers (25 referred) and 2012 is not yet over.
Chair
 Marlin Stutzman: Everyone here knows about the problems VA has had 
implementing the small business provisions  of a series of public laws 
beginning Public Law 109-461 and we'll hear more about it today, I'm 
sure.  While addressing those continuing issues is important, especially
 those that may include criminal activity, the past is not my focus 
today.  I want to know how and -- equally important -- when VA will put 
in place the systems and the policies that will shorten the time, 
decrease the level of effort needed to pass muster to lower the costs 
and finally create a community of veteran owned businesses that is 
reasonably free from unqualified companies.  This is not just a VA 
task.  There are issues we in Congress need to deal with as well. 
"We
 have patiently waited for signs of progress following the installation 
of a new Executive Director of Smll and Veteran Business Programs at the
 VA," declared Chair Bill Johnson this morning.  "And while some 
improvements have  been made, unfortunately the goals established nearly
 a year ago have yet to be achieved.  This Committee has an oversight 
responsibility to the American people to ensure that tax dollars 
administered by the VA are going to legitimate, qualified, veteran owned
 businesses.  I am hopeful that today's hearing will encourage and 
assist the VA in reaching their goals of improving the CVE [Center for 
Veterans Enterprise]  once and for all."
Stutzman
 and Johnson were co-chairing a joint hearing of two House Veterans 
Affairs subcommittees -- the Subcommittee on Economic Opportunity 
(Johnson) and the Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigation 
(Stutzman).  
The first panel was the 
Executive Director of VA's Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business 
Utilization, Thomas Leney.  That's what we're emphasizing today because I
 want it on the record here that the Congress believes the VA is not in 
compliance with the law.  In addition, we're going to note the most 
puzzling and troubling moment of the hearing.  This also took place on 
the first panel.  If you're a veteran wanting to start a small business,
 you may need money.  One way to get money for your business is to bring
 in investors.  But while, in the real world, doing that will not 
penalize you, in the faux world of VA classifications, it turns out many
 veteran owned businesses are not getting recognized as such -- which 
can mean that they are not allowed to bid for VA contracts.  VA is 
operating under a defintion of ownership and control that is unique to 
the world of VA and clearly puzzled the members of   Subcommittees -- 
Democrats and Republicans. 
First up, the issue of the law. Excerpt: 
Chair
 Bill Johnson:  Mr. Leney,  you heard the quote I read just a little bit
 before from the Federal District Judge for the District of Columbia.  
He said "several of the groups cited by the CVE as a basis for denying 
the application for inclusion in the VetBiz VIP database are described 
in such generalized and ambiguous terms that the Court is essentially 
left to guess as to the precise basis for the agency's decision."  So 
what steps has the CVE taken to ensure that decisions for appeals are 
sufficiently reasoned so that,  if the issue does go to court, a judge 
can properly exercise judicial review.
Thomas Leney:  Uh -- sir, I find that, uh, judicial concern, uh, troubling --
Chair
 Bill Johnson: Okay, I know you find it troubling. And we've got a lot 
of witnesses to hear from today.  I don't want to -- I don't want to 
spin our wheels. Have you made any improvements as a result of that 
District Judge's findings and the input that we've given you from this 
Committee -- Subcommittee -- to make sure that appeals are sufficiently 
reasoned to make sure that they can be understood? Has any action been 
taken? 
Thomas
 Leney: Yes, sir. As I mentioned in my oral statement every request for 
reconsideration receives a legal review from our Office of General 
Counsel on the basis of are we prepared to defend it in court?
Chair Bill Johnson: Have you made any changes to your process to make sure that they are --
Thomas Leney: That is the change to the process.  Every one of our requests for  reconsideration receives a legal review.
Chair Bill Johnson:  Okay. And that wasn't being done prior to --
Thomas Leney: That was not being done prior.
Chair
 Bill Johnson:  Does -- does VA possess the necessary expertice in 
making determinations of ownership under their current process?
Thomas Leney:  Yes, sir.
Chair
 Bill Johnson: Okay.  Does -- VA does not allow for affiliatons whereas 
because you testified a few minutes ago that because your processes are 
consistent, your regulations are consistent with SBA regulations if I 
heard you correct.
Thomas Leney: Yes, sir.
Chair
 BIll Johnson:  The VA does not allow for affiliatons whereas 
government-wide rules do allow for affiliatons.  Why is there a 
difference between SBA and VA's interpretation?
Thomas
 Leney:  Sir, in response to engagement with this Committee, we 
undertook a review of our regulation with respect to 13 CFR 125 and 13 
CFR 124 which are the SBA regulations. We found that not only are our 
regulations similar, our interpretations are similar as well.  In fact, 
based on our review to date the SBA regulations routinely reaches 
similar if not identical decisions as the VA.  We have -- We have 
undertaken a review of the regulation.  We're doing that in 
collaboration with the SBA and, in fact, one of the elements, if you 
compare the two regulations, our regulation is much more detailed than 
13 CFR 125.
Chair
 Bill Johnson: What about 13 CFR 121, Mr. Leney, that's also a part of 
this disccusion that describes the intent of the Congress?  How do you 
-- how do you involve 13 CFR 121 in your process?
Thomas Leney: Sir, the 13 CFR 121 is one of the regulations we are now looking at as part of our review of our regulations.  
Chair
 Bill Johnson: But it's been for a long time and we've suggested that 
you include it for a long time.  And you're just now looking at it?
Thomas
 Leney:  Sir, our focus -- my focus has been to implement the 
regulations that the VA utilizes for the verification program.
Chair Bill Johnson:  But shouldn't the regulation be based on the law, Mr. Leney?
Thomas Leney:  The regulation, we believe, is based on the law, sir.
Chair Bill Johnson: But not if you exclude, uhm, 121.
Thomas
 Leney:  Sir, like I say, the Secretary [of the VA Eric Shinseki] has 
directed us to review the regulation.  We are doing so in conjunction 
with the SBA and stakeholders.  I cannot -- I cannot speak to why it was
 not being done previously.  But it is being done now.
Chair Bill Johnson:  How long have you been here, Mr. Leney?
Thomas Leney:  Sir, I've been here a year.
Chair Bill Johnson:  And this is not the first time that you've testified before this Subcommittee.
Thomas Leney:  This is not the first time.  
Chair Bill Johnson:  We've talked about 121 before.
Thomas Leney: Yes, sir.
Chair Bill Johnson: Okay.  So why are you waiting for the Secretary to tell you to do something that the law clearly requires?
Thomas
 Leney:  Sir, as I stated, my focus has been to implement the regulation
 that is in place with the VA. That regulation has been long standing 
and it has been tested.  We are now reviewing that regulation based on 
an extensive series of stakeholder engagements.  And I'll be happy to 
come back and report --
Chair
 Bill Johnson:  You'll get a chance  to come back, Mr. Leney, because 
it's a violation of the law.  121 is part of the process and that's what
 this Subcommittee demands, it's what the American people demand.  
That's why we're losing patience with the process -- because we keep 
making these suggestions and we keep spinning our wheels and chasing 
this same rabbit around the corner over and over again.  So I'm sure 
I'll have more questions but I'm going to go now to Mr. Stutzman for his
 questions.
Chair
 Marlin Stutzman: Thank you, Mr. Chairman.  I believe the VA has a 
fairly robust statistical analysis section.  Is that correct?
Thomas Leney:  Sir, I can't speak to that. I don't know.
Chair Marlin Stutzman: You don't know that --
Thomas Leney:  I don't know the extent of the statistical analysis.
Chair Marlin Stutzman:  You do have -- You do have one?
Thomas Leney:  I can't speak to that.  I do not know. 
Now
 let's move over to issues of ownership and control and, again, we're 
just on the first panel and the one witness, Thomas Leney.
US
 House Reps Jerry McNerney and Phil Roe asked about veterans who are 
turned down despite owning 51% of their company.  They can't get a 
veterans small business contract if they own 51% because that's not 
"control."  Roe explained that if you owned 51% of GM stock, you control
 General Motors.  However, that's not the VA definition.  The VA 
definition is that the owner must have 100% control.  There can be 
partners, but they can't have control or even voting rights because, as 
the VA is interpreting it, even voting rights waters down control.  No, 
that doesn't make any sense at all.
Chair
 Bill Johnson:  You said you're going towards lines of clear 
delineation.  Give us the definition of control.  You ought to be able 
to do that.  You're the Director of this department. Tell this 
Subcommittee right now, tell the people that are listening today what is
 the defintion of control if 51% ownership doesn't qualify.  What is it?
Thomas
 Leney: The definition of 100% control is that you can do anything you 
want with that business, make any decision concerning that business to 
include selling that business for a dollar and no one else in that 
business to include other owners -- other minority owners -- can do 
anything to prevent you from doing so.
Chair
 Bill Johnson: Mr. Leney, do you know of any business in the world that 
has more than one owner where that defintion would qualify?  Can you 
name me one business?  One? 
Thomas Leney: I can name you thousands of businesses
Chair Bill Johnson:  Where that definition qualifies?
Thomas Leney:  Yes, sir. 
Chair Bill Johnson:  Under a court of law?
Thomas Leney:  Yes, sir.
Chair Bill Johnson:  I'd like to see them.  Would you write them down and submit them to this Committee?
Thomas Leney:  Yes, sir.
Chair Bill Johnson:  I'd like you to do that.  I'd like to see that.
Those
 were among the big moments in the hearing today.  Time and space 
permitting, we'll note some other moments from the hearing tomorrow.
Lara Jakes (AP) reports
 that attempts by the US government to have Ali Mussa Daqduq extradited 
to the US to stand trial for his part in "the 20007 killings of five 
American soldiers" has been rebuffed by an Iraqi legal panel composed of
 three judges whose ruling notes, "It is not possible to hand him over 
because the charges were dropped in the same case.  Therefore, the court
 decided to reject the request to hand over the Lebanese defendant Ali 
Mussa Daqduq to the U.S. judicial authorities, and to release him 
immediately."   Back in December, law professor Robert Chesney noted where blame could fall.  The list included:
Blame
 the Maliki administration for intransigence in refusing to let us 
remove Daqduq during the waning days of our presence, and for now 
apparently going forward with comically minor charges.  Blame the Obama 
administration for not somehow overcoming that intransigence.  Blame 
critics of the administration who fiercely objected (for reasons that 
still make little sense to me) to the prospect that Daqduq might be 
brought into the United States for a military commission trial, making a
 fetish out of GTMO as the only permitted geographic location for such 
proceedings.  Blame the Obama administration for refusing to use GTMO in
 the face of such intransigence. 
Back
 in June of 2009, the US began releasing those responsible for the 
deaths of the five American soldiers.  They did so, see the June 9, 2009 snapshot, so that Barack could get a terrorist group to turn over some British corpses.  As noted in that snapshot:
CNN reminds the five US soldiers killed "were:
 Capt. Brian S. Freeman, 31, of Temecula, California; 1st Lt. Jacob N. 
Fritz, 25, of Verdon, Nebraska; Spc. Johnathan B. Chism, 22, of 
Gonzales, Louisiana; Pfc. Shawn P. Falter, 25, of Cortland, New York; 
and Pfc. Johnathon M. Millican, 20, of Trafford, Alabama." Those are the
 five from January 2007 that al-Khazali and his brother Qais al-Khazali 
are supposed to be responsible for the deaths of. Qassim Abdul-Zahra and Robert H. Reid (AP) states
 that Jonathan B. Chism's father Danny Chism is outraged over the 
release and has declared, "They freed them? The American military did? 
Somebody needs to answer for it."
We've gone over this at length, see the July 24th snapshot most recently, 
December 17, 2011, Charlie Savage (New York Times) reported
 on what was termed "a move likely to unleash a political backlash 
inside the United States." What was he reporting on? The White House's 
decision to release Ali Musa Daqduq to the Iraqi government, the man 
"accused of helping to orchestrate a January 2007 raid by Shiite 
militants who wore U.S.-style uniforms and carried forged identity 
cards. They killed five U.S. soldiers -- one immediately and four others
 who were kidnapped and later shot and dumped beside a road." Reporting on it the same day, Matt Apuzzo (AP) noted the reactions of two US   senators.
Senator Mark Kirk (in a letter before the release): "Daqduq's
 Iranian paymasters would like nothing more than to see him transferred 
to Iraqi custody, where they could effectively pressure for his escape 
or release. We truly hope you will not let that happen."
Senator
 Saxby Chambliss (after news broke of the release): "Rather than ensure 
justice for five American soldiers killed by Hezbollah terrorist Ali 
Musa Daqduq, the administration turned him over to Iraq, once again 
completely abdicating its responsibility to hold on to deadly 
terrorists. Given Iraq's history of releasing detainees, I expect it is 
only a matter of time before this terrorist will be back on the 
battlefield."
Liz Sly and Peter Finn (Washington Post) reported
 that US National Security Council spokesperson Tommy Vietor insisted 
that the White House "sought and received assurances that he will be 
tried for his crimes." Some assurances. May 7th,
 Daqduq was cleared of all charges. Senator Kelly Ayotte released a 
statement that day noting that she and 19 other US Senators lodged their
 objection to transferring Daqduq July 21, 2011 in a formal letter which
 "expressed the Senators' concerns that transferring Daqduq to Iraqi 
custody might result in his release and a return to terrorist 
activities." Those concerns were dismissed. When the May 7th verdict 
came down the White House   demanded a "do-over" in Iraqi courts. No 
surprise (except maybe to the White House) the same Iraqi courts cleared
 Daqduq of the charges which led the July 12th fuming from the White House that appeared to be just for show:
AFP reports
 that there was an attack on a police patrol in Taji yesterday which led
 to the deaths of four police officers and that there was an attack on a
 Taji prison in which four other police officers were killed.  Alsumaria reports
 that the attack started with a bombing at the gate and then assailants 
stormed the prison where they clashed with prison guards -- they state 
officials have not released the death tolls -- and they remind something
   similar happened in Baghdad Tuesday when a car bombing outside the 
counter-terrorism center was followed by assailants attempting to storm 
the center leading to five deaths and twenty-seven people being 
injured.  The supposed goal behind the Tuesday attack was to break out 
forty terrorists including leadership.  Of the Tuesday attack, Al Mada notes
 that there were six suicide bombers outside the center who detonated 
before assilants attempted to storm the counter-terrorism center. 
Meanwhile Alsumaria   reports that this morning a Baghdad attack using three bombs have left 4 police officers dead and four more injured.  All Iraq News reports
 there has been an armed attack on the Diyala headquarters of Sahwa 
("Awakening," "Sons of Iraq") which has claimed the life of 1 and left 
four more injured.  AFP notes
 a Baghdad car bombing has left 9 people dead and another thirty-two 
injured, a Kirkuk home invasion left four family members dead (the 
victims were Turkmen -- parents and two daughters -- and their throats 
were all slit), three more Kirkuk attacks resulted in   the deaths of 7 
Iraqi soldiers with eleven more left injured, a Tirkit attack resulted 
in 4 police officers being shot dead, a Tikrit bombing left 3 Sahwa 
dead, 1 soldier was shot dead in Dujail with four more kidnapped and a 
Samarra attack resulted in the death of 1 Sahwa and 1 police officer at 
the hands of unknown assailants. 
As the violence in Iraq refuses to vanish, Ayman Khalil (Global Arab Network) offers a very in depth look at the violence and at the political crisis:
Iraq
 Body Count, an independent tracking database, reports no drop in 
civilian casualties, with an average of about 4,000 killed per year 
since 2009.
The US troop pullout six months ago has taken the wind out of the sails of many armed groups, especially Shia groups, whose raison d'etre was opposing the occupation. But it has also led to a rebalancing of power in which politicians, militias, "terrorists" and countries in the region are vying for influence.
"The main event in Iraq, which was postponed for many years due to the US presence, is the struggle among Iraqis to control the country," argues Michael Knights, a fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, and author of several books on Iraq. Analysts expect the struggle to continue bubbling along for some time to come.
Here are a few of the drivers of conflict in Iraq:
Dysfunctional parliament: Iraqi politics are young - only truly born after the US withdrawal - and its players are still learning how to make democracy work. "The main driver of violence in Iraq is the dysfunctionality of the political process and the polarization between [Prime Minister Nouri] al-Maliki and his opponents," says Joost Hiltermann, Iraq analyst with the International Crisis Group. The Shiite rulers do not know how to absorb minorities into the fold, and many questions around the constitution, federalism and power/resource-sharing remain unanswered. The inability to reach agreement has left the government unable to do much of anything: unable to provide basic services (leading to mounting frustration with the government) and unable to properly run its security forces (who cannot contain the insurgents). Without some kind of political consensus on how to run the country, insurgent groups will keep finding fuel to light the fire. Or as one UN analyst put it: "Iraq will be stuck like this until Iraqi politics become mature enough."
The US troop pullout six months ago has taken the wind out of the sails of many armed groups, especially Shia groups, whose raison d'etre was opposing the occupation. But it has also led to a rebalancing of power in which politicians, militias, "terrorists" and countries in the region are vying for influence.
"The main event in Iraq, which was postponed for many years due to the US presence, is the struggle among Iraqis to control the country," argues Michael Knights, a fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, and author of several books on Iraq. Analysts expect the struggle to continue bubbling along for some time to come.
Here are a few of the drivers of conflict in Iraq:
Dysfunctional parliament: Iraqi politics are young - only truly born after the US withdrawal - and its players are still learning how to make democracy work. "The main driver of violence in Iraq is the dysfunctionality of the political process and the polarization between [Prime Minister Nouri] al-Maliki and his opponents," says Joost Hiltermann, Iraq analyst with the International Crisis Group. The Shiite rulers do not know how to absorb minorities into the fold, and many questions around the constitution, federalism and power/resource-sharing remain unanswered. The inability to reach agreement has left the government unable to do much of anything: unable to provide basic services (leading to mounting frustration with the government) and unable to properly run its security forces (who cannot contain the insurgents). Without some kind of political consensus on how to run the country, insurgent groups will keep finding fuel to light the fire. Or as one UN analyst put it: "Iraq will be stuck like this until Iraqi politics become mature enough."
With
 July now seen as the deadliest month in two years, Nouri's government 
is eager to change the topic and are instead trying to steer the focus 
to oil.  Kadhim Ajrash and Nayla Razzouk (Bloomberg News) report,
 "Iraq's crude exports in July rose for the third consecutive month to 
an average of 2.52 million barrels a day, generating sales of $7.5 
billion, the head of the country's State Oil Marketing Organization 
said."  AFP adds,
 "Iraq's revenues from oil, which account for the lion's share of the 
country's income, were up by about $1 billion in July compared to the 
month before, an oil ministry spokesman said on Wednesday."  The 
announcement will most likely lead   Moqtada al-Sadr's bloc to further 
question the Ministry of Finance's assertion earlier this week that 
there was no oil surplus revenues to distribute among the Iraqi people. 
 UPI notes
 that "independence-minded Kurds seeking their own oil industry and a 
new bombing offensive by al-Qaida, could cripple Baghdad's ambitions to 
become the world's top oil producer." 
Meanwhile Reuters notes
 the KRG is stating they will cease exporting oil if Nouri's government 
"does not make all outstanding payments" owed to the KRG for oil.  Basil el-Dabh (Egypt Daily News) reports, "Baghdad owes the KRG 1.5 million USD in oil revenues needed to pay oil-producing companies in its region." Furthermore, Christopher Helman (Forbes) explores the conflict between Baghdad and the KRG over the issue of oil:
It started late last year with ExxonMobil, then a month ago Chevron joined in, followed this week by Total and now Gazprom.
 That's four of the world's biggest international oil and gas giants 
that have defied Baghdad to sign up for concessions to drill for oil in 
the Kurdistan region of northern Iraq.
Baghdad
 has blacklisted the oil giants from future bidding rounds for southern 
fields, and has condemned the sweet deals that the Kurds have been 
offering as in violation of the Iraqi constitution.
All Iraq News notes Ahmet Davutoglu, Turkey's Foreign Minister, arrived in Erbil yesterday on a regional visit and today he is visting Kirkuk. The outlet states he may visit Baghdad. Al Mada notes that Davutoglu was received yesterday by Kurdish Regional Government, the Minister of the Interior, the Governor of Erbil and other dignataries. Click here for a photo of KRG President Massoud Barzani receving Davutoglu and the KRG press release notes that the two addressed the relationship between their two gvoernments (which has seen increased friendship, the release notes) and discussed economic and energy partnerships as well as the situation in Syria. The Journal of Turkish Weekly adds:
According
 to the written statement released by the Turkish Foreign Ministry, 
Davutoglu and Barzani held productive meetings in Irbil about bilateral 
relations, regional problems and discussed the Syria crisis.
According to the statement, Davutoglu and Barzani clarified their satisfaction over the relations and agreed to expand them in all fields, particularly in the fields of economic development and energy.
According to statement Davutoglu and Barzani discussed the situation in Syria. "They emphasized that the situation in Syria is grave. Syrian people continue to suffer. Loss of life and destruction are at unprecedented levels. They underlined that the actions of the Syrian regime and its policy to provoke sectarian and ethnic conflict within the country will further deteriorate the situation. The developments in Syria also pose a threat to regional security and stability. This situation is unacceptable by all standards," the statement said.
According to the statement, Davutoglu and Barzani clarified their satisfaction over the relations and agreed to expand them in all fields, particularly in the fields of economic development and energy.
According to statement Davutoglu and Barzani discussed the situation in Syria. "They emphasized that the situation in Syria is grave. Syrian people continue to suffer. Loss of life and destruction are at unprecedented levels. They underlined that the actions of the Syrian regime and its policy to provoke sectarian and ethnic conflict within the country will further deteriorate the situation. The developments in Syria also pose a threat to regional security and stability. This situation is unacceptable by all standards," the statement said.
 UPI reports
 that upon seeing Kirkuk, Davutoglu declared, "This is the most 
important day of my life. I am visiting Kirkuk, which was always in my 
dreams. I am happy to be the first Turkish foreign minister to visit 
Kirkuk in 75 years.  Kirkuk will be an eternal city of peace in Iraq 
where our Turkmen, Kurdish and Arab brothers live together."  All that 
peace talk was apparently too much for Baghdad.  UPI notes that the 
visit resulted in "outrage from the Iraqi government."  Basil el-Dabh (Egypt Daily News) also notes, "Iraq's federal government condemned Davuutogulu's visit on Thursday."
Kirkuk is disputed with both Baghdad and the KRG claiming it.  We're dropping back to the July 26, 2011 snapshot for more on this issue:
Of greater interest to us (and something's no one's reported on) is the RAND Corporation's  report entitled "Managing Arab-Kurd Tensions in Northern Iraq After the Withdrawal of U.S. Troops." 
 The 22-page report, authored by Larry Hanauer, Jeffrey Martini and Omar
 al-Shahery, markets "CBMs" -- "confidence-building measures" -- while 
arguing this is the answer.  If it strikes you as dangerously simplistic
 and requiring the the Kurdish region exist in a vacuum where nothing 
else happens, you may have read the already read the report.  CBMs may 
strike some as what the US military was engaged in after the Iraqi 
forces from the central government and the Kurdish peshmerga were 
constantly at one another's throats and the US military entered into a 
patrol program with the two where they acted as buffer   or marriage 
counselor.  (And the report admits CBMs are based on that.)  Sunday Prashant Rao (AFP) reported
 US Col Michael Bowers has announced that, on August 1st, the US 
military will no longer be patrolling in northern Iraq with the Kurdish 
forces and forces controlled by Baghdad. That took years.  And had 
outside actors.  The authors acknowledge:
Continuing
 to contain Arab-Kurd tensions will require a neutral third-party 
arbitrator that can facilitate local CMBs, push for national-level 
negotiations, and prevent armed conflict between Iraqi and Kurdish 
troops.  While U.S. civilian entities could help implement CMBs and 
mediate political talks, the continued presence of U.S. military forces 
within the disputed internal boundaries would be the most effective way 
to prevent violent conflict between Arabs and Kurds.
As
 you read over the report, you may be struck by its failure to state the
 obvious: If the US government really wanted the issue solved, it would 
have been solved in the early years of the illegal war.  They don't want
 it solved.  The Kurds have been the most loyal ally the US has had in 
the country and, due to that, they don't want to upset them.  However, 
they're not going to pay back the loyalty with actual support, not when 
there's so much oil at stake.  So the Kurds were and will continue to be
 told their interests matter but the US will continue to blow the 
Kurdish issues off over and over.  Greed trumps loyalty is the message. 
 (If you doubt it, the Constitution guaranteed a census and referendum 
on Kirkuk by December 31, 2007.  Not only did the US government install 
Nouri al-Maliki as prime minister in 2006, they continued to back him 
for a second term in 2010 despite his failure to follow the   
Constitution.) 
Along
 with avoiding that reality, the report seems rather small-minded or, at
 least, "niche driven."  Again, the authors acknowledge that as well 
noting that they're not presenting a solution to the problems or ways to
 reach a solution, just ways to kick the can further down the road and, 
hopefully, there won't be an explosion that forces the issue any time 
soon. ("Regional and local CBMs have the potential to keep a lid on 
inter-communal tensions that will, without question, boil beneath the 
surface for a long time.  They cannot, however, resolve what is, at its 
heart, a strategic political dispute that must be resolved at the 
national level.") Hopefully? Page nine of the report notes that the 
consensus of US military, officials, analysts, etc. who have worked on 
the issue is that -- "given enough time -- Arab and Kurdish participants
 will eventually have a dispute that leads to violence, which will cause
 the mechanism to degrade   or collapse." 
The
 report notes that, in late 2009, Gen Ray Odierno (top US commander in 
Iraq at that point) had declared the tensions between Arabs and Kurds to
 be "the greatest single driver of instability in Iraq."  It doesn't 
note how the US Ambassador to Iraq when Odierno made those remarks was 
Chris Hill who dismissed talk of tensions as well as the issue of the 
oil rich and disputed Kirkuk.
These issues are all at play.  Further irritating Nouri may be Ayad Allawi's visit.  KUNA reports that he is in Anakara meeting with Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
In other news, President Barzani has a response to Nouri's whisper campaign. Earlier this week, State of Law was whispering to the press that Barzani would be called before Parliament for questioning. Then the Speaker of Parliament's office weighed in noting that no such request had been made. Al Mada reports today that Barzani states he's more than ready to appear before Parliament and answer questions if called. This not only allows Barzani to appear open to the Iraqi people, it also underscores that Nouri's ongoing refusal to appear before Parliament for questioning is in violation of the Constitution.
 
