| 
Wednesday,
 September 19, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, mass arrestes 
continue, the Federal Court says the Electoral Commission needs to add 
members in order to ensure the representation of women, Robert S. 
Beecroft has his confirmation hearing for US Ambassador to Iraq, 
Canadians try to convince Stephen Harper to let Kim Rivera stay in 
Canada as the world watches, and more.  
  
  
It's
 really not about being a veteran or her stance as a war resister.  
Kimberly Rivera is both of those things.  But she's not in the military 
now.  What is she?  A young mother of four children -- the youngest 
being only 18-months old.  And she and her husband have made a home for 
those children in Canada.  She and her husband went to Canada to make a 
home there.  And now she may be forced out.   
  
She's been ordered by the Stephen Harper government to leave Canada by tomorrow.  If she doesn't, she faces deportation. 
  
She
 went to Canada to have a safe home for her family.  That wasn't 
requesting the world, that wasn't asking for the moon and the stars.  
She wants to become a Canadian citizen and has done her part to go 
through that process. 
  
Stephen Harper and Jason
 Kenney would apparently rather kick out a mother, risk separating her 
from her children, than offer the most basic kindness of residency or 
citizenship to this woman who has spent over five years in Canada 
embracing the country she wants to make her own.   Patty Winsa (Toronto Star) reports today :
  
  
A
 Thursday deportation order looms, despite frantic calls from 
supporters, politicians and even a Nobel Peace Prize winner to stay the 
order and allow Rivera and her family, including two Canadian-born 
children, to remain. Rallies were slated at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday in front
 of the Federal Court building and in several other cities from Halifax 
to Vancouver. 
Ottawa, which in the 1960s 
allowed both draft-dodgers and Vietnam deserters to immigrate freely, 
has taken a hard line this time. 
They're 
"not genuine refugees under the internationally accepted meaning of the 
term," Alexis Pavlich, a spokesperson for Immigration Minister Jason 
Kenney, wrote in an email. "These unfounded claims clog up our system 
for genuine refugees who are actually fleeing persecution." 
Rivera
 has applied to stay permanently on humanitarian and compassionate 
grounds. That request continues despite the deportation order that 
followed a negative "pre-removal risk assessment," which is based on 
whether the person's return could result in persecution, torture, cruel 
and unusual punishment, or even loss of life. 
  
  
Does
 Stephen Harper not grasp how cruel he's going to look on the world 
stage if he deports a mother?  That the obvious question in people's 
mind -- or, better, accusation, is going to be, "Oh, that Harper, yeah, 
he'd deport his own mother if he could."  It's not going to look good, 
it's not going to increase his standing.  Offering Kim residency or 
citizenship could change things immediately, could improve his image and
 have the whole world talking -- saying good things -- about him.  But 
maybe he's okay with being considered Little Bush?  John Howard took 
that route and, outside of Australia, most people don't know his name 
but think of him as a min-George W. Bush.  Is that the fate that Harper 
wants?   He could do so much for his own image just by doing something 
so minor to him but so major for Kim, her children and her husband. 
  
The War Resisters Support Campaign  staged rallies throughout Canada today.  CBC notes ,
 "Members of the Hamilton Coalition to Stop the War set up camp in front
 of the Federal Building at 55 Bay St. North on Wednesday in support of 
former American soldier and conscientious objector Kimberly Rivera."  In
 addition, the Canadian Press notes ,
 "A number of people have gathered in downtown Toronto for an 
eleventh-hour protest against the planned deportation of U.S. war 
resister Kimberly Rivera."  Krystalline Kraus (Rabble) reports ,
 "According to Michelle Robidoux, a spokesperson for the War Resisters 
Support Campaign (WRSC). '(Kim) faces a court martial and jail sentence,
 which, based on what other people have gotten, is a harsh jail 
sentence,' Robidoux said. 'She will be separated from her family. Her 
husband suffers from a disability and he's going to have four kids on 
his hands'."
  
Cracks about deporting his own 
mother?  If Stephen Harper deports Kim, people will be saying things 
like, "Forget saying the inn was full, Harper would have denied Mary the
 manger as well!"  Who is advising Stephen Harper, who is telling him, 
"This is the way you, the Prime Minister of Canada, wants to be seen by 
the whole world"?  He's not getting good advice.  
  
Yves Engler (iPolitics.ca) reports
  on Kim and notes what she saw in Iraq: While
 Rivera expected to spend her time unloading equipment at a Colorado 
base she soon found herself guarding a foreign operating base in Iraq. 
It was from this vantage point that she became disillusioned with the 
war. Riviera was troubled by a two-year-old Iraqi girl who came to the 
base with her family to claim compensation after a bombing by U.S. 
forces.
 
"She was just petrified", Rivera explained. 
"She was crying, but there was no sound, just tears flowing out of her 
eyes. She was shaking. I have no idea what had happened in her little 
life. All I know is I wasn't seeing her: I was seeing my own little 
girl. I could imagine my daughter being one of those kids throwing rocks
 at soldiers, because maybe someone she loved had been killed. That 
Iraqi girl haunts my soul." 
  
Deporting Kim will haunt the reputation of a number of Canadian officials.    Archbishop Desmond Tutu calls  for  Kim to remain in Canada.  Erin Criger (City News) notes 
 "Amnesty International, the Canadian Labour Congress and the United 
Church of Canada have all supported Rivera."  In addition, many 
individual Canadians support her as well as organizations such as the United Steelworkers of Canada which issued a statement calling for the government of Canada to let Kim and her family stay   and  Canada's National Union of Public and General Employees which also issued a statement .   She also has the support of the United Church of Canada .  Joining the call today, Luke Stewart observes in his letter to the editor of The Record ,
 "It was guarding the front gate of a forward operating base in Baghdad 
where Rivera's conscience grew with every fatal day. She decided she 
could no longer participate in the war that Kofi Annan, then the UN 
Secretary General, said in 2004 was illegal under the United Nations 
Charter."  Leah Bolger and Gerry Condon of Veterans For Peace note in their open letter ,
 "According to the UN Handbook on Refugees, soldiers who refuse to fight
 in wars that are widely condemned by the international community should
 be considered as refugees. Unfortunately, the Immigration and Refugee 
Board in Canada has yet to grant asylum to a single person who refused 
to kill in the war against Iraq, a war that has most certainly been 
condemned by peoples and nations around the globe."
  
19,739 people have now signed the War Resisters Support Campaign's petition for Kim to stay. 
 It's a new petition, started only a few weeks ago.  There is support 
for Kim.  What is done to her and her children will register -- across 
borders, around the world.  Stephen Harper has a chance to do something 
that will help a family and also enhance his worldwide standing.  Or he 
can deport her and turn himself into a joke.  Again, I have to wonder 
who is advising Harper because the humane thing to do here is also the 
politically smart thing. 
  
  
Maybe 
Harper's advisors are all on drugs?  Meanwhile, in the US, did we all 
just drop acid?  How else to explain the approximately 75 minute 
flashback today?    
  
  
Senator John
 Kerry: Mr. Ambassador, I remember sitting downstairs, we were in this 
building on the ground floor in that big hearing room, when Secretary 
Condolezza Rice testified and I remember her saying to us vividly, 'Well
 we're just a few weeks away from signing an agreement on the oil -- on 
the division of the oil and having an oil agreement -- a global oil 
agreement for Iraq.' I guess we're about five years later now, maybe 
six. I don't remember the precise timing of that [January 11, 2007 was 
the date of one Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing where she 
made that statement], still no agreement, still the problem with the 
Kurds, still the problem with the Sunni majority feeling divorced, 
there's a certain amount of skepticism now about whether or not the 
current government actually intends for the government to be a 
pluralistic, representative government or whether they're moving towards
 some other form of sectarian   division here. 
  
[. . .] 
  
Senator
 Bob Corker:  When Senator [John] Barrasso and I first got here, which 
was five-and-a-half years ago roughly, five years ago for him, we were 
talking about the hydrocarbon discussion at that time.  And I remember 
sitting and interact with [US Ambassador to Iraq Zalmay] Khalilzad as he
 was running back and forth trying to work out some hydrocarbon law at 
that time.  Still nothing's happened.  
  
  
Yes,
 it was all the things we'd heard before.  Restated yet again.  And 
longtime Congressional watchers probably wished US House Rep Llloyd 
Doggett could suddenly emerge and hit hard on those failed benchmarks 
for Iraq that were never achieved, not even now, over five years after 
Nouri signed off on them.  There is still no progress in Iraq and yet we
 are still told that it's just around the corner. 
  
This
 morning, the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee held a hearing on the 
nomination of Robert S. Beecroft to the position of US Ambassador to 
Iraq.  Beecroft is career State Dept.  It's rare that someone is able to
 move up to ambassador -- more often than not these posts are doled out 
based on political favors and financial contributions .  Granted, Iraq is not a glamor post but it is a high profile one. 
  
The
 problem with career diplomats is that they make for lousy witnesses 
until they leave the diplomatic service.  They practice the craft 
they're so good at and you saw that with Robert Beecroft today.  Did he 
spin?  That's really not the word for it.  It's as if he was asked if 
someone had bad breath and he chose to respond by noting their youthful 
skin and not commenting on the breath issue.  He didn't lie, he did 
practice diplomacy.    
  
Charge 
d'Affaires Robert S. Beecroft:  I have spent most of my career working 
on the Middle East, including assignments in Syria and Saudi Arabia and 
as Ambassador to Jordan.  For much of my career, I have been immersed in
 Iraq issues -- from the Iraq Desk in Washington, DC to recently serving
 as Deputy Chief of Mission and now Charge d'Affaires in Baghdad.  I 
stand on the shoulders of the thousands of brave and committed Americans
 who have worked, fought, and died to help the Iraqi people achiever our
 shared goal of a united, federal, and democratic Iraq.  If confirmed, I
 would commit to continuing their work to build a lasting partnership 
with Iraq.  In so doing, I would labor alongside a team of able and 
dedicated personnel who understand the importance of achieving success. 
 While the size and nature of our presence may have changed, our 
interests and commitments remain the same, and Iraq continues to be a   
top priority for the United States.  
  
There
 is nothing shockable in that statement or even eyebrow raising.  It was
 smooth and I'll assume sincere.  However, what was lacking was a point 
of view.   
  
By contrast, campaign donors who usually get nominated to be ambassadors 
 come in with a strong point of view.  If they can learn some diplomatic
 skills, they can be effective as ambassadors.  Their strong point of 
view can clash with an administration's point of view leading to a 
better point of view when all points are debated.  What Beecroft needs 
to work on -- especially if Barack is re-elected in November -- is 
sharpening and expressing his point of view.  If he's moved up to team 
leader, that will require a point of view.
  
The
 hearing  started 12 minutes late and ending well before the 90 minute 
mark.   Senator John Kerry is the Chair of the Committee. 
  
Chair
 John Kerry:  This is not a time for delay.  There's no substitute for 
having a confirmed ambassador in place and ready to hit the ground 
running -- especially at this critical moment in the region.  It's my 
hope to move this nomination as rapidly as we can in the next 48 hours 
because we must have a confirmed ambassador and it would be a 
dereliction of the Congress' responsibility were we to leave here for 
the next 6 weeks and not have done so. 
  
That
 was from his opening remarks.   As we noted last week, there should be 
an ambassador to Iraq.  Right now, there should be.  Both countries need
 for there to be one.   
  
However, no one forced the White House to nominate the insulting Brett McGurk and
 no one forced the White House to wait so long to name a new nominee 
after McGurk's name was withdrawn.  I remember the Attorney General 
nominations of 1993.  That was rough and Republicans were determined to 
defeat the nominees.  Plural. Bill Clinton nominated Zoe Baird for the 
post.  Her nomination was derailed and she withdrew her name January 22,
 1993.  Clinton goes on to announce a new nominee: Kima Wood.  Kimba 
Wood withdraws her name February 5, 1993.  Clinton then nominated Janet 
Reno who was confirmed March 11, 1993 on a 98 to zero vote in the 
Senate.  January 20, 1993, Bill Clinton was sworn in as President of the
 United States.  March 11th, Reno -- his third nominee -- was confirmed 
as   Attorney General. That's moving quickly. By contrast?  June 18th McGurk's name is withdrawn .  Late 
 September 10th word leaks out that Beecroft is Barack's new nominee and
 it's made official with an announcement September 11th .  In less 
than two months, President Bill Clinton names 3 different nominees for 
Attorney General and gets one confirmed.  Eight days shy of three months
 after McGurk's name is withdrawn, President Barack Obama is finally 
able to find someone to nominate for the post (Beecroft, the person 
who's been doing the work all that time).  If Senate Dems want to whine 
that Paul's creating a delay on that nomination, Barack's the one who 
created the delay and dragged his feet. The   average time 
between confirmation hearings and a vote is said to be ten days.  That 
would be September 28th and that's awfully close to when senators facing
 re-election battles have tor return home.  That was also foot dragging 
by the administration which should have planned it much better.
No
 one thinks Beecroft is going to lead to "no" votes, not any significant
 number if even that.  Beecroft has been doing the job he's nominated 
for already -- for several months.  He has many outstanding 
qualifications.  But other issues may lead the vote to be postponed.  If
 that happens, that's on the White House.  Don't wait until September to
 make a nomination and then expect everyone to go along with it.  The 
nomination should have been made months ago.  Beecroft got the 
nomination because (a) he is qualifed and (b) he's already doing the 
job.  There doesn't seem to be any doubts about that or about Beecroft 
from members of the Committee.  It's a shame the White House couldn't 
have nominated him March 26th 
 instead of McGurk.  It's a shame that the White House didn't withdraw 
the nomination   months earlier -- from the start there were problems 
including Iraqiya's opposition to McGurk.  As has been the case since 
the start of the Barack Obama administration, they need to do a better 
job vetting their prospects before nominating them.  Barring that, they 
need to be preparing back up candidates.  Bill Clinton had two nominees 
go down in flames before Janet Reno was confirmed as Attorney General.  
He didn't stumble. He didn't fall down whining.  He named another 
nominee.  And another if that was needed.  That's what a functioning 
administration does.  It doesn't wait three months after their failed 
nominee's name is withdrawn to finally get around to naming another 
nominee. 
  
The hearing had a lot worth noting. 
 We're going to note Chair John Kerry and Senator Marc Rubio today.  
Tomorrow, we'll note Ranking Member Richard Lugar and Senator Bob  
Casey.  Here is Kerry's line of questioning for the nominee. 
  
  
Chair
 John Kerry:  Our Embassy in Baghdad, the Consulates in Erbil and Basra 
and other offices supporting the Embassy and Office of Security 
Cooperation still number about 14,000 people.  And that makes it our 
largest mission in the world.  We are going to need someone with 
Ambassador Beecroft's demonstrated management skills to rightsize the 
mission and to ensure that all the appropriate security measures are in 
place to keep our staff safe and secure.  Iraq's leaders have a rare 
opportunity to consolidate their democracy and build a strong, durable  
institution or set of institutions to hold the country together.  But 
more will be required of the Iraqi government.   Questions remain about 
whether Iraqi leaders -- including the prime minister -- aspire to 
represent a unified Iraq in all of its diversity or rather they seek to 
govern narrowly according to ethnic and sectarian tendencies.  To   
ensure that parliamentary elections in 2014 are free and fair,  Iraq's 
Electoral Commission must be professional, transparent and impartial.  
Iraqi leaders across the political spectrum must also be willing to make
 tough compromises and put national priorities over personal 
ambitions.  It is no secret that we are at a moment of heightened 
sectarian tensions in the Middle East.  Iraqi leaders should understand 
that the best way to insulate themselves from the horrific violence in 
Syria is through meaningful, political compromise in Iraq.  As Iraq's 
leaders work to establish a more stable political order, they need to 
redouble efforts to reach agreement on disputed boundaries, on oil and 
on Kirkuk's final status.  If progress is not made on diffusing 
tensions, the window for peaceful resolution of Kirkuk and other 
disputed territories may well close.  Baghdad and Erbil must resolve 
their   differences on the Kurdish Region's authority to enter into oil 
exploration and production contracts.  To their credit, the Iraqis have 
made efforts to resolve issues related to revenue sharing but the 
country still lacks an overarching, legal framework for its oil 
industry.   Without this agreement, Iraq will be unable to unleash the 
full potential of its oil sector.  For years, Iraq has focused on its 
internal politics but it must now also start to look outwards.  It is 
not surprising that Iraq seeks neighborly relations with Iran but the 
reports of Iran using Iraq airspace to resupply Assad's ruthless regime 
are troubling.  
  
  
 
Chair
 John Kerry:  Can you share with me an answer to the issue I raised 
about the Iranians using American airspace in order to support [Syrian 
President Bashar] Assad?  What are we doing, what have you been doing --
 if anything, to try to limit that use? 
  
Charge
 d'Affaires Robert S. Beecroft: I have personally engaged on this 
repeatedly at the highest levels of Iraqi government.  My colleagues in 
Baghdad have engaged on this.  We're continuing to engage on it.  And 
every single visitor representing the US government from the Senate, 
recently three visitors, to administration officials has raised it with 
the Iraqis and made very clear that we find this unnaceptable and we 
find it unhelpful and detrimental to the region and to Iraq and, of 
course -- first and foremost, to the Syrian people.  It's something that
 needs to stop and we are pressing and will continue to press until it 
does stop. 
  
Chair
 John Kerry: Well, I mean, it may stop when it's too late.  If so many 
people have entreated the government to stop and that doesn't seem to be
 having an impact -- uh,  that sort of alarms me a little bit and seems 
to send a signal to me: Maybe -- Maybe we should make some of our 
assistance or some of our support contingent on some kind of appropriate
 response?  I mean it just seems completely inappropriate that we're 
trying to help build their democracy, support them, put American lives 
on the line, money into the country and they're working against our 
insterest so overtly -- agains their own interests too -- I might add. 
  
Charge
 d'Affaires Robert S. Beecroft:  Senator, Senator, I share your concerns
 100%.  I'll continue to engage.  And, with your permission, I will make
 very clear to the Iraqis what you've said to me today -- and that is 
you find it alarming and that it may put our assistance and our 
cooperation on issues at stake. 
  
Chair
 John Kerry:  Well I think that it would be very hard.  I mean, around 
here, I think right now there's a lot of anxiety about places that seem 
to be trying to have it both ways.  So I wish you would relay that 
obviously and I think that members of the Committee would -- would want 
to do so.  Can you tell us with respect to the safety issues --  
personnel and our citizens there -- are you taking extra steps now?  Are
 there additional initiatives in place as a result of what's happened in
 the last week or two? 
  
Charge
 d'Affaires Robert S. Beecroft: For some time now and all the more so in
 light of recent events we have taken a very cautious and careful look 
at our security on a regular basis.  We have our own security at the 
Embassy.  We think it is sizable.  It is robust.  And we're very 
confident that it's what we need at this time.  At the same time,  we're
 fully engaged with Iraqi officials both poltiical and security 
officials at the most senior levels to make sure that they give us the 
cooperation that we feel we need and so far they have done that.  They 
have pledged to protect us and we're doing everything   to ensure that 
they keep to that pledge and that we meet our part of it by ensuring 
that we're as safe as we can be on our terms.  At the same time, I'd 
comment, we enjoy geographic advantages.  The Embassy is located inside 
the International Zone, the Green Zone, as you know,   and there are a 
number of checkpoints that are closely guarded getting into it.  It's 
not a place where demonstrations usually take place. 
  
Chair John Kerry: What's the reaction of the Iraqi people been to the events of the last weeks? 
  
  
Charge
 d'Affaires Robert S. Beecroft:   So far, compared to other places in 
the region, it's been quite muted.  There have been demonstrations 
throughout the country but they've been low level.  And there's been 
nothing that's specifically threatening.  There have been statements 
highly critical of the film that is at issue and statements by some 
political leaders that they should examine their relationship with the 
United States because of this film.  But on the whole, we get good 
cooperation.  We continue to engage and Iraqi officials are meeting with
 us on regularly and going about business. 
  
Chair
 John Kerry: Increasingly, we are hearing more anecdotal and other 
reports about the increased authoritarianism of the Maliki government 
and of the political system itself perhaps becoming less diplomatic and 
so forth.  Can you share your perceptions of that with us and how you 
see this trendline moving. 
  
Charge
 d'Affaires Robert S. Beecroft:   Uh, Iraq is a democracy.  It does face
 a lot of issues that are challenging to that democracy.  Uhm, it is 
fragile in many ways.  We are working constantly with all sides -- with 
the prime minister, with his party, his bloc, with other blocs and other
 parties across the political spectrum to ensure that democratic 
institutions and the democratic process is strengthened.  And, in short 
what we're doing is pushing them all to engage, to pursue their 
interests  in the legislative process, in an independent reform process 
that they've agreed to.  In other words, use the system to achieve what 
you need rather than look outside the system and make it fall apart. 
  
Chair
 John Kerry:  Mr. Ambassador, I remember sitting downstairs, we were in 
this building on the ground floor in that big hearing room, when 
Secretary Condolezza Rice testified and I remember her saying to us 
vividly, 'Well we're just a few weeks away from signing an agreement on 
the oil -- on the division of the oil and having an oil agreement -- a 
global oil agreement for Iraq.'  I guess we're about five years 
later now, maybe six.  I don't remember the precise timing of that 
[January 11, 2007 was the date of one Senate Foreign Relations Committee
 hearing where she made that statement], still no agreement, still the 
problem with the Kurds, still the problem with the Sunni majority 
feeling divorced, there's a certain amount of skepticism now about 
whether or not the current government actually intends for the 
government to be a pluralistic, representative government or whether 
they're moving towards some other form of   sectarian division here.  I 
think a lot of people are worried about it.  Can you share your 
persepctive about that? 
  
Charge
 d'Affaires Robert S. Beecroft:  Uh, you're right about the hydrocarbons
 law.  There still is no hydrocaborns law.  We think this-this -- next 
ot Iraq's Constitution, is one of the most important laws that could go 
in place in the country.  We're pushing it very aggressively.  Most 
recently, Ambassador Carlos Pascual from the State Department, who looks
 after energy issues there, and a representative from the Dept of Energy
 [Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy and International 
Affairs Jonathan Elkind] came to Iraq, met with Iraqi officials, Deputy 
Bill Burns [] followed up last week with a visit and pushed the same 
issue.  We're pointing out to them this is a way to unite and unify the 
country -- which is what they need to do at this time.  I am pleased to 
say that there has been some subsequent engagement by the Iraqis on oil 
issues and some discussion of restarting negotiations on the   
hydrocarbons law and we're going to continue to push them in that 
direction.  It's a positive trend and a positive sign.  Most recently, 
representatives from the Kurdish Regional Government were in Baghdad 
only a few days ago, meeting with the Minister of Oil there and -- by 
all reports, what we see, what we hear in the press -- they did make 
some progress and they're moving forward on that.  So while it's not  
the hydrocarbons law itself, these are issues we're see in the press, 
they did make some progress and they're moving forward on that.  And so 
while it's not the hydrocarbons law itself, these are issues which 
should smooth relations and allow for the hydrocarbons law to go forward
 in the future. 
  
  
Could aid be cut off or made conditional? 
  
It
 was a Senate Foreign Affairs Committee hearing in 2008 that led to the 
government of Iraq being responsible for paying Sahwa and not American 
tax payers.  From that day's snapshot  -- and "she" is Senator Barbara Boxer:
  
  
 
She
 wanted to know about the training, all the training, that had gone on 
and then on again.  "We've done a lot for the Iraqis just in terms of 
the numbers themselves," Boxer declared.  "I'll tell you what concerns 
me and most of my constituents, you said -- many times -- the gains in 
Iraq are fragile and reversable. . . . So my constituents and I believe 
that" after all the deaths, all the money, "you have to wonder why the 
best that you can say is that the gains are fragile and reversable."  
Noting the lack of military success and Hagel's points, Boxer pointed 
out that nothing was being done diplomatically "and I listened carefully
 to Senator Hagel and Ambassador Crocker -- from the answer you gave 
him, I don't get the" feeling that the White House has given anything, 
it's still "the status quo.  She then turned to the issue of monies and 
the militias, "You are asking us for millions more to pay off the 
militias   and, by the way, I have an article here that says Maliki 
recently told a London paper that he was concerned about half of them" 
and wouldn't put them into the forces because he doubts their loyalty.  
She noted that $182 million a year was being paid, $18 million a month, 
to these "Awakening" Council members and "why don't you ask the Iraqis 
to pay the entire cost of that progam" because as Senator Lugar pointed 
out, "It could be an opportunity" for the Iraqi government "to turn it 
into something more long term."  This is a point, she declared, that she
 intends to bring up when it's time to vote on the next spending 
supplamental. Crocker tried to split hairs. 
  
Boxer:
 I asked you why they couldn't pay for it. . . . I don't want to argue a
 point. . . I'm just asking you why we would object to asking them to 
pay for that entire program giving all that we are giving them in blood 
and everything else? 
  
Crocker declared that he'd take that point back to Iraq when he returned. 
  
  
Apparently
 prior to Senators Boxer and Lugar thinking of it, it had never occurred
 to anyone that maybe the Iraqi government should be paying for the 
Sahwa security forces to secure Iraq.  So possibly John Kerry's message 
will be conveyed and have some effect. 
  
  
Now let's note the exchange with Rubio. 
  
Senator
 Marco Rubio:  Let me touch on three subject.  The first, I know there's
 already been discussion about Iran's influence in Iraq.  In your 
opinion, does that influence extend to the judiciary? And I'm 
particularly concerned in light of obviously the ex-vice president's 
trial.  I guess he's now in Turkey.  But others, as well.  The growing 
evidence that perhaps -- at least allegations -- that the prime minister
 and others have manipulated the judiciary for purposes of pursuing 
their political enemies?  Do we have concern that Iran'sinfluence in 
Iraq has no reached or extended into the judiciary as well? 
  
  
Charge
 d'Affaires Robert S. Beecroft:  Thank you, Senator.  I would -- I would
 say we have concerns across the board that any country -- Iran or 
others --  not play an overbearing or an overly influential role -- 
particularly a negative one -- in Iraq.   We work closely with the 
judiciary in Iraq and the legal community.  We do everything we can to 
ensure that there's support for rule of law programs.  And so far what 
we see is a largely functioning judiciary that, uhm, while not again I 
can't give it 100% endorsement as perfect, no country has a perfect 
judiciary, it is something that , again, continues to function and we'll
 continue to help it function better to the extent we can. 
  
Senator
 Marco Rubio: My second concern is about the well being of the leader of
 Iraq's Democratic Nation Party Mithal Alusi.  Have we expressed our 
concerns about the way he's been treated?  I believe he's now in the 
northern region.  He's been given -- I guess he's been allowed to enter 
and he's living under their protection.  But I've read a series of 
accounts about how different types of protection have been withdrawn, 
his life's been made a miserable mess in Baghdad, apparently promises of
 protection have been withdrawn, his life's been made a miserable mess 
in Baghdad, apparently he's had to leave Baghdad.  Have we expressed our
 concern about his well being and our concern about how he's being 
treated?  
  
  
 [Nouri ran 
Alusi out of Baghdad after he lost the 2010 election to Parliament -- he
 won a seat in 2005.  Losing the election meant losing the security 
guards MPs get.  Nouri refused to allow Alusi's bodyguards to carry 
guns.  Then Nouri refused to renew Alusi and his wife's travel papers to
 enter and exit the Green Zone.  Their home is in the Green Zone.  
They've lived there since 2004 due to repeatedly being targeted for 
assassiantion.  KRG President Massoud Barzani has welcomed Alusi and his
 family to the KRG.] 
  
Charge d'Affaires Robert S. Beecroft:  I'm sorry, Senator, I missed the name. 
  
Senator Marco Rubio:  Mithal Alusi.   He is the leader of the Iraq Democratic Nation Party. 
  
  
Charge
 d'Affaires Robert S. Beecroft:  Let me, excuse me, let me just say that
 first and foremost we have concerns about human rights across the board
 and we will raise those concerns at every opportunity -- as well as 
rule of law concerns -- to make sure everyone is treated fair and 
freely.  On this specific individual, I'm going to have to go back for 
an answer and get back to you as soon as I can. 
  
Senator
 Marco Rubio:  Well just so I can point out, he -- in addition to being 
the leader of the Democratic Nation Party in Iraq -- he has also been a 
staunch ally of the United States in Iraq, courageous in many instances,
 a proponent of a more open society -- basically everything we hope the 
region will become in terms of the things he stood for.  And I encourage
 you to look into his case. It's actually well documented and well known
 and he has now had to leave to the northern region for protection 
because of the way the current government has treated him.  I think it 
sends a terrible message to our friends and to moderate reformers in the
 region when the US is silent to their well being.  And I think it's 
concerning that, quite frankly, there's not more awareness about his 
plight.   But let me just add to that, what is your view of our 
relationship with the regional government in the north, the Kurdish   
Regional Government?   There's been accounts about how well they've 
developed.  Certainly, it's a safer region than the rest of Iraq.  
They've certainly progressed economically quicker than the rest of the 
nation.  How is our relationship with them?  How do you envision our 
relationship with them moving forward as far as their own aspirations, 
etc? 
  
Charge 
d'Affaires Robert S. Beecroft:  Thank you, Senator.  On the first case, I
 will look into the case personally and will get back to you and your 
staff.  Regarding the north, we're very supportive of the autonomous 
region in the north.  And you're absolutely right, it has progressed in 
many ways and in many ways sets an example for not just the country but 
the region and what it can be.  We'll continue to support with them -- 
support them and work with them as part of a unified federal Iraq. And 
we have the best of relations with them and we will continue to have 
those relations. 
  
Senator
 Marco Rubio: I've heard concerns expressed that the closer we get to 
them, the more we risk alienating the prime minister [of Iraq], the less
 cooperative he may be with us.  Do you share that view?  Or? 
Charge
 d'Affaires Robert S. Beecroft:  Uh, we have excellent relations too, 
sir, with the prime minister and we're going to continue to keep those 
and so as long people understand this is part of a unified, 
federal Iraq, our work with the north should not be objectionable and it
 so far has not been objectionable.  
  
Senator
 Marco Rubio:  Right. But what I've heard some commentators say is we've
 got to be careful how we deal with them and not to appear to close to 
them because it may alienate him [Nouri al-Maliki] or make him less 
cooperative with us.  And I think -- I don't want to put words in your 
mouth, but I think what you're saying is that that's something that 
would not necessarily stand in your way in working with them and 
reaching out to them and having a close relationship with them?  You 
don't view it as a zero-sum game.  You think you can have a good 
relationship with both? 
  
Charge d'Affaires Robert S. Beecroft:  That's absolutely right. 
  
  
If
 you remember that awful Chris Hill confirmation hearing of 2009 and 
Chris Hill's hideous answers, you'll understand why Rubio was attempting
 to be sure that Beecroft had a working knowledge of the KRG.  (Hill 
knew nothing.  Couldn't even grasp the issue of Kirkuk.) 
  
The
 ex-vice president Rubio's referring to is Tareq al-Hashemi.  However, 
Rubio's wrong that al-Hashemi's an ex-vice president.  Rubio may know 
the Iraqi Constitution very well and, if so, assume that al-Hashemi is 
an ex-vice president.  The reason being, while he holds office, he's not
 supposed to be put on trial.  But he was -- and he was a victim of 
Nouri's political power-grab. 
  
  
Nouri's mass arrests continued in Iraq today.  Ahlul Bayt News Agency reports  20 people have been arrested in Karbala Province.  That sound like a lot?  That's just one province.  Alsumaria notes 
 26 people were arrested for 'terrorism' in Babil Province.  Iraq's had 
no mass release from the prisons.  But the mass arrests continue.  In a 
country of approximately 30 million people, it would be very interesting
 to get an estimate on the number of people imprisoned.  That can't 
happen   of course because Nouri al-Maliki -- aka Little Saddam -- loves
 his secret prisons. This month alone, you've seen hunger strikes
 in the prisons, people dying in prison (including one who may have died
 because he was denied medical treatment -- the one in Diyala who was 
diabetic) and prisoners rioting when they've taken death row inmates out
 to transfer them to a facility where they can be executed. Add 
in that people remain imprison in Iraq forever.  They disappear into the
 system -- not by accident.  Families only know that their loved ones 
were taken away and they search in vain trying to track them down, 
trying to figure out if they're even still alive.  This passes for 
justice in Nouri's Iraq. An amnesty law could free many.  But 
despite promising it for years now, and restating that promise in 
February 2011, Nouri and his State of Law continue to refuse to allow 
the bill to become law.  Alsumaria reports 
 today that State of Law MP Kamal Saadi is now stating they will support
 the bill . . . provided it excludes thieves, counterfeiters and 
terrorists.  So that leaves the arsonists who've been setting fire to 
the orchards?  Is that it?  The bulk of imprisoned Iraqis are behind 
bars because they're accused of terrorism -- accused, not found guilty 
of.  People wait and wait in prison for a trial to roll around -- a 
trial that never arrives.  And it's interesting whom Nouri labels a 
'terrorist' and whom he doesn't. The Shi'ites who make up the 
League of the Rigtheous can be --   and have been -- released.  (Barack 
released their leader, their leader's brothers and a few other members 
in US military custody -- I'm referring to the members who were in Iraqi
 custody.)  They killed Americans and Brits, yes, but they also killed 
Iraqis.  But that's 'okay' because they're Shia. This is why the
 recent executions -- that have brought the total number of executed in 
Iraq this year to 96 so far -- and the rush to execute more (at least 
200 are pending) have enraged so many.  They see it as political, as an 
attempt to punish Sunnis.
The violence continues as well.All Iraq News reports  1 person was shot down in Mosul.  Press TV adds ,
 "Five members of the security forces, including a one-star general and a
 colonel, have been killed in separate attacks targeting the Iraqi 
police and army."  Alsumaria adds 
 a Baghdad   roadside bombing injured an Iraqi solider, a Ministry of 
Oil employee was shot in Baghdad, a Nineveh Province home invasion 
resulted in 1 death, 2 corpses were discovered in Baaj, 1 Turkman doctor
 was killed in Kirkuk (shot dead),  and 1 corpse was discovered in Wasit
 Province (of a male who was kidnapped three years ago). About 
the only thing that could be passed off as 'progress' this week just 
imploded.  Yesterday, 8 of 9 Independent High Electoral Commission 
commissioners elected.   Alsumaria reported 
 this morning that the Federal Court says the number of commissioners 
must be   increased because women must make up a third of the members.  
(Not one of the eight was a woman -- an oversight Iraqiya called out -- 
the only political bloc to publicly call that out.)  Al Mada notes 
 that Moqtada al-Sadr's bloc was insisting yesterday that if they just 
make the ninth member a Christian, they'll have all their bases 
covered. The judiciary begs to differ.  They're calling on members -- 
not a single seat, multiple seats.  That means that the Parliament 
either gets very focused on this or it is highly likely that an election
 cannot take place in March of 2013.  It's tarting to look a lot like 
fall 2009 in Iraq. 
  
  
  
  
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