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Monday,
 October 1, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, there are US troops in 
Iraq (who knew! -- not the bulk of the US press which keeps lying), the 
Sadr bloc wants the National Alliance to explore replacing Nouri as 
prime minister, the amnesty law was scheduled for a vote today but no 
vote took place, John Kerry is proven right again, and more. 
  
  
  
  
In
 its final act before leaving town earlier this month, Congress passed a
 continuing resolution (CR) that failed to reauthorize the main mission 
of the Office of Security Cooperation in Iraq (OSC-I), despite Pentagon 
warnings that the move could force the military to withdraw hundreds of 
U.S. troops who are still in Baghdad helping to develop the Iraqi 
security forces and working with them on counterterrorism. The authority
 for U.S. forces to train and assist the Iraqi security forces expired 
Sunday.  
  
  
  
  
He damn well should know but he's just one more whore passing themselves off as a reporter (which is why we awarded him "Biggest Damn Liar of the Week " at Third ). 
 Why is so damn difficult for the US media to report the truth?  Are 
they that vested in whoring for Barack Obama?  We've noted the truth 
here and lived to tell.  We've received thank you e-mails from the 
families of US troops still in Iraq, glad that someone, anyone, doesn't 
repeat the lie, doesn't pretend that their loved ones aren't in Iraq.  
Why the hell does the media lie?  
  
  
Most
 Americans have been led to believe that all US forces besides those 
guarding the massive American Embassy in Iraq have been withdrawn since 
the end of last year. But small units of up to 300 troops have remained 
in Baghdad to train Iraqi security forces and provide aid and support, 
allegedly for counter-terrorism operations. 
In
 reality, US troops have been providing this support to elite Iraqi 
forces that report directly to the increasingly authoritarian Prime 
Minister Nouri al-Maliki. They have essentially been used as a secret 
police force for Maliki to attack, detain, and torture his political opponents and crack down harshly on public dissent. 
  
  
  
Last week, Tim Arango (New York Times) reported ,
 "Iraq and the United States are negotiating an agreement that could 
result in the return of small units of American soldiers to Iraq on 
training missions. At the request of the Iraqi government, according to 
General Caslen, a unit of Army Special Operations soldiers was recently 
deployed to Iraq to advise on counterterrorism and help with 
intelligence." 
  
Repeating: How stupid are you,
 Roger Cohen?  And do you even read the paper that pays you a salary?  
You look like an ass in front of the whole world and that's on you 
because you can't even read the coverage from your own paper. 
  
Of course, Roger may not be stupid, he may just enjoy whoring like so many of his peers. 
  
  
Regardless,
 the American people are not being informed by the alleged news media.  
Despite Tim Arango's report, there were no headlines about the 
negotiations for a return, there were no headlines about more 
Special-Ops going into Iraq (Tom Hayden did cover the Special-Ops aspect in a blog post at The Nation  -- no, that doesn't seem like a lot but it's more than The Progressive , Democracy Now! , In These Times , et al did.).
  
So
 much gets ignored including yesterday's attacks which mainly served to 
remind the country of how few US outlets have reporters in Iraq.  Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) notes  Iraq witnesses its second deadliest day of the month on Sunday. (September 9th was the deadliest day ).   BBC (link is text and video) offered ,
 "Civilians were among those killed and injured in the attacks around 
the capital, but the aim of the attackers seems to have been to kill as 
many security personnel as possible, wherever they could reach them, 
says the BBC's Rami Ruhayem in Baghdad."  Jamal Hashim (Xinhua) counted  34 dead and 85 injured while explaining, "In
 and near the Iraqi capital, eight car bomb explosions and gunfire 
attacks killed up to 25 people and wounded 59 others, according to the 
police reports. " Kareem Raheem, Suadad al-Salhy and Sophie Hares (Reuters) added , "Two
 more policemen were killed when a car bomb went off in the town of 
Balad Ruz, 90 km (55 miles) northeast of Baghdad, and bomb planted in a 
parked car in al Qaeda stronghold Mosul killed a civilian. " Most reports floated al Qaeda in Iraq as the culprit.  The Irish Examiner quotes 
 MP Hakim al-Zamili who sits on the Security and Defense Committee 
stating, "Al-Qaida leaders have no intention of leaving this country or 
letting Iraqis live in peace.  Thus, we should expect more attacks in 
the near future. The situation in Iraq is still unstable ... and 
repetition of such attacks shows that our security forces are still 
unqualified to deal with the terrorists." 
  
Today Alsumaria reports 
 that Moqtada al-Sadr's bloc has stated that Nouri's prime 
responsibility as prime minister is to ensure security and that he's 
failed at that.  So in today's press conference they announced the need 
for an emergency metting by the National Alliance to explore Nouri's 
fate.  All Iraq News reports  the Sadr bloc is questioning whether it isn't time to replace Nouri due to the continued   violence.  
  
  
If
 the series of assaults were part of the Islamic State of Iraq's 
Breaking The Walls campaign, they will no doubt claim credit in the next
 few days.    July 22nd ,
 the Islamic State of Iraq released an audio recording announcing a new 
campaign of violence entitled Breaking The Walls which would include 
prison breaks and killing "judges and investigators and their guards ." 
 (They also threatened to attack America on US soil.)  They are only one
 group in Iraq resorting to violence.  On the continued violence, Mohammed Tawfeeq offered 
 this framework, "The violence comes just days after dozens of prisoners
 broke out of a jail in the   northern Iraqi city of Tikrit. Among those
 who got out Thursday were several al Qaeda members on death row, 
according to authorities. The jailbreak occurred when armed men 
detonated two car bombs at the gates of Tasfirat jail. The explosions 
triggered clashes with security forces."
September in Iraq ended with a wave of violence.  Mohammed Tawfeeeq (CNN) reports 
 last month was the deadliest month in Iraq "since August 2010" 
according to figures supplied by the Ministry of the Interior which 
states there were 365 deaths.  AFP adds ,
 "It was the highest monthly toll given by the government since August 
2010, when figures showed 426 people were killed and 838 wounded in 
attacks." All Iraq News notes  the ministry's figures for number injured is 683.
Which outlet tabulating came the closest to the number provided by Iraq's ministries?  The Associated Press counted  "nearly 200 people" and  AFP's tally for the month is  253 killed.  365?  Looks like everyone got it wrong and -- Oh, wait.  Iraq Body Count 's total was 356.  By Price Is Right 
 logic (closest without going over), Iraq Body Count wins.  And if those
 number succeed in demonstrate anything, hopefully, they indicate that 
it's past time for the press to return to citing IBC in their monthly 
look-back pieces.   
  
  
A question 
to ask is why, after a non-stop pattern of undercounting deaths each 
month, the Ministry of the Interior suddenly didn't low ball? Is 
the Ministry under control of Nouri at war with him?  Or, more likely, 
did Nouri okay an accurate number being released?  After months and 
months when the official number from the Iraqi government was 100 or 
more short with each release, what's going on? If I were someone 
who had stated that getting most US troops out of Iraq was a good thing 
and I was in negotiations with the White House to bring some troops back
 in, I think I'd need to make an argument that they were needed.  One 
way I'd do that would be by noting the high fatalities. Maybe that's what's going on, maybe not. But the violence continues today. Alsumaria notes  a Falluja bombing today has claimed the life of 1 soldier and left two more injured, a Diyala Province bombing that claimed the lives of 2 women and 1 man , and a Baghdad armed attack killed 1 person .  All Iraq News identifies  the person killed in Baghdad as the Administrative and Financial Director of the Parks Dept.  and they note a Mosul home invasion in which 1 woman and her daughter were   killed ,  1 Iraqi soldier was injured in a clash near the Syrian border with unknown assailants .  KUNA notes 
 a Baghdad car bombing claimed 1 life and left four people injured and a
 Tikrit bombing claimed 2 lives and left three people injured.  Alsumaria also reports  that a Kirkuk roadside bombing claimed the life of 1 farmer (Mohammed Sawadi) and a Salahuddin Province roadside bombing left two police officers injured .
Today's attacks come as Iraq's still recoiling from yesterday 's attacks which  claimed 34 lives and left at least eighty-five injured.   Al Mada notes 
 that a member of Parliament's Committee on Security and Defense 
declared that the bombings will continue for as long as the political 
crisis does.  Iraq has been a political stalemate for over a year.   
  
  
  
In
 the 2010, campaign, Maliki's party was primarily a sectarian political 
list of Shiite candidates with a few Sunni political figureheads.  In 
contrast, Allawi's political coalition was a cross-sectarian list.  
While Allawi is a Shiite, he headed a party consisting of Sunni 
political leaders from western and northern Iraq and some Shiite 
politicians who believed it was time to move beyond sectarian politics 
if Iraq is to achieve national unity. 
In 
Iraq's short history of free elections, Shiite candidates have a 
demographic advantage.  Shiites are approximately 60% of the population,
 and Iraqis voted almost exclusively along sectarian lines in the 2005 
national elections and the 2009 provincial vote.  Maliki also had a 
media advantage.  The state-run national news network did not accept 
paid campaign advertisements, but freely broadcast extensive reports of 
Maliki's election appearances and campaign speeches in evening news 
bulletins.  On the eve of the vote, state TV broadcast a documentary 
highlighting the Prime Minister's visit to security checkpoints around 
the capital.  Maliki is widely credited with an improvement in the 
day-to-day security in the capital and in the south, but his 
pre-election inspection of the security checkpoints was seen as a long 
campaign ad.  According to domestic media monitorying reports of 
state-runtelevision, Al-Iraqiya,   Maliki's political coalition received
 by far the "highest positive coverage" when compared with all other 
political parties in the campaign.  
When it
 came to the vote, Allawi demonstrated that sectarian voting patterns 
could be broken.  A small percentage of Shiites voted for a party that 
included Sunnis on the ticket which helped deliver the two-seat lead.  
Prime Minister Maliki charged widespread fraud and demanded a recount to
 prevent "a return to violence."  He pointedly noted that he remained 
the commander in chief of the armed forces. 
Was
 Maliki threatening violence?  Was he using the platform of state-run 
media to suggest that his Shiite-dominated government would not 
relinquish power to a Sunni coaltion despite the election results?   
  
Yes,
 that is what he was doing.  And he had the White House's backing.   But
 let's pause for a moment to note that Amos is the author of one of the 
finest books on the Iraq War,  Eclipse of the Sunnis: Power, Exile, and Upheaval in the Middle East .  Too many books supposedly about the Iraq War disappear the Iraqis -- not so with Deborah Amos' book.
  
  
  
  
Following
 the March 2010 elections, there was an 8-month political stalemate when
 Nouri al-Maliki refused to let the winning slate Iraqiya have first 
crack at forming a government (the Constitution gave Iraqiya that 
right).  With the White House's backing, Nouri brought things to a 
standstill.  In November 2010, the US brokered a contract known as the 
Erbil Agreement.  It was a list of concessions by Nouri in exchange for 
getting a second term as prime minister despite his State of Law coming 
in second in the elections.  Leaders of all the political blocs -- 
including Nouri -- signed off on the contract.  Nouri used it to grab a 
second term and then trashed it, insisting that elements would be 
implemented shortly.  By the summer of 2011, Iraqiya, the Kurds and 
Moqtada al-Sadr's bloc were calling for the Erbil Agreement to be 
implemented.  This is the current political stalemate.  It is upgraded 
to a political   crisis in December 2011 when Nouri's previous 
crackdowns on Sunnis and Iraqiya members moves to Baghdad with him 
targeting Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi and Deputy Prime Minister 
Saleh al-Mutlaq.  Worth noting again from last week,  
Washington has little political and no military influence over these developments. As Michael Gordon and Bernard Trainor charge in their ambitious new history of the Iraq war, The Endgame,
 Obama's administration sacrificed political influence by failing in 
2010 to insist that the results of Iraq's first proper election be 
honored: "When the Obama administration acquiesced in the questionable 
judicial opinion that prevented Ayad Allawi's bloc, after it had won the
 most seats in 2010, from the first attempt at forming a new government,
 it   undermined the prospects, however slim, for a compromise that 
might have led to a genuinely inclusive and cross-sectarian government." 
 
  
The White House could have stood by democracy and will of the people but elected not to.
 
 
Dar Addustour notes
 that Parliament met today with four bills on their schedule -- the 
infrastructure bill and the amnesty bill among them. The two were on Thursday 's
 schedule as well, along with the line of credit (not on the schedule 
today). There was a walk out by Iraqiya and the Kurdistan Alliance over 
the infrastructure bill and that ended the session on Thursday. Before 
the session started, Al Mada reported 
 that the infrastructure bill was seen as the most important and that 
the Kurdistan Alliance was stating they had not been persuaded to 
support it.   Alsumaria notes that, first, votes were postponed due to the failuer to meet a quorum  and now the vote on the infrastructure bill has been kicked back to October 9th . All Iraq News adds 
 that State of Law is accusing Speaker of Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi of
 burying the bill, arguing that he could have had a quorum at several 
points in today's session but refused to call for a count when that was 
possible. 
  
  
AKnews becomes the 
latest press outlet to go out of business.  This means even more in Iraq
 where an independent press should be thriving.  The outlet serving the 
Kurdistan region was started in October 2008 and it was a daily outlet. 
 Sunday the General Director of AKnews Bedran Ahmed Habeeb reported ,
 "AKnews will stop boradcasting and at the time of writing these words 
it has already been shut down.  I'm deeply sorry that due to heavy 
financial burden, we had to close down AKnews.  During my carrier I have
 worked in many cultural foundations and established many by myself.  
Among all the foundations I established, I was happy with AKnews.  I 
believe it would, most than all foundations, serve a message which I 
carried since a very young age: rescuing my country from the oppression 
and establishing a prosperous and free   community. At the beginning I 
thought expending money for this high goal should not be measured.  
However, the cost for running this news agency was beyond the capacity 
of Aras Publishers which founded AKnews.  AKnews was a completely 
independent news agency.  In the almost four years of operating, we 
never bent, even slightly, for a political party, unless there was 
something which passed through by mistake."
  
At the end of June 2010, Deborah Amos authored [PDF format warning] "Confusion, Contradiction and Irony: The Iraqi Media in 2010 ,"
 a paper for Harvard's Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics 
and Public Policy.  Amos noted that "nearly 16 million" -- in a country 
of approximately 30 million -- have exposure to the TV news media.  
  
Iraq's
 media landscape had become a mirror of Iraq's political-sectarian 
divisions. This divide had driven the country to devastating violence 
from 2005 to 2007 and now has evolved into a political power struggle 
with satellite television ownership representing the power players.  
There are no neutral outlets.  In a landmark 2007 study, researcher 
Ibrahim Al-Marashi described Iraq's media as powerful sectarian empires"
 coalesced around ethno-political groups in Iraq who have print, radio 
and TV communications at their disposal."  
  
  
In the emerging Iraq, every press voice is needed and necessary.  The closure of AKnews is very sad news. 
  
Very
 sad also describes Victoria Nuland.  The US State Dept spokesperson -- 
Dick Cheney's right-hand during the lead up to and early days of the 
Iraq War (helped with planning, messaging and so much more) -- Victoria Nuland tried to smack down US Senator John Kerry last month . 
 Maybe that's how she got Cheney's attention but all it did with John 
Kerry is prove him wrong and prove her hopelessly out of her league.
  
It starts with a September 20th Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing  on the nomination of Robert S. Beecroft to be US Ambassador to Iraq. We covered that hearing in the Wednesday  and Thursday 
 snapshots. Kerry's questioning is in the Wednesday snapshot. Like 
others on the Committee, he was frustrated with the use of Iraqi air 
space to carry goods into Syria. (The Senate, like the White House, 
believes this is taking place. Nouri al-Maliki's government denies that 
it is.) 
  
  
  
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.  
  
  
  
Kerry and the Committee were in agreement on this.  Victoria Nuland would comment Thursday in the US State Dept press briefing. 
  
  
    
  
QUESTION:
 But you've been protesting all along about this issue. Yesterday, 
Senator Kerry warned Iraq. Are you going to further pressure Iraq and 
warn about the aid to Maliki government?
 
  
  
MS.
 NULAND: Well, Senator Kerry has obviously made his own statements. We 
do not support linking U.S. assistance to Iraq to the issue of the 
Iranian over-flights precisely because our assistance is in part 
directed towards robust security assistance, including helping the 
Iraqis build their capability to defend their airspace. So there's a 
chicken/egg thing here. 
  
What a 
sad and inexperienced State Dept.  This was the only pressure that the 
US had in the diplomatic tool kit.  Kerry was willing to use the tool 
kit, Victoria Nuland was more concerned with appeasing Nouri al-Maliki. 
 As we noted in the September 21st snapshot :
  
    
It's
 a shame she couldn't back up Kerry and it's a shame she couldn't have 
just said she'd get back to them on it. Instead, she had to waive the 
white flag. Always. Reuters reported
 today, "Iraq denied permission to a North Korean plane bound for Syria 
to pass through Iraqi airspace last Saturday because it suspected it 
could be carrying weapons, a senior official said on Friday." On Friday,
 they announce the denial six days prior of a North Korean plane? Why? 
 
Because
 they feel and fear the pressure from the proposal John Kerry and others
 on the Committee floated. So now they're making some sort of effort to 
say, "Well, we're at least doing this." And making it because they want 
the US money. So, Alsumaria reports,
 Nouri told US Vice President Joe Biden on the phone today -- I would 
say whined -- that he was being doubted about his Syrian position by US 
officials and that this wasn't fair. Point being, John Kerry and the 
Committee knew what they were doing. Again, it's a shame that Nuland was
 so quick to raise the white flag at the   State Dept yesterday. 
Already, Kerry and his Committee floating the idea has had impact. It's 
not yet where they want it, but it could get there. If Nuland and 
company would stop undercutting the Senate. There's more here but we'll 
pick it up next week, hopefully on Monday. Nuland doesn't have the sense
 to be embarrassed but if anyone has bragging rights today, it's John 
Kerry and the Senate Foreign Relations Committee which, in less than 48 
hours, have accomplished more than all the talk and talk and talk with 
Nouri that the State Dept's done for months now.  
  
  
Yesterday, Reuters reported ,
 "Iraq will ask Syria-bound Iranian planes passing through its airspace 
to land for random inspections after Washington said they could be 
ferrying arms to Damascus, the Iraqi foreign minister said in an 
interview."  Maybe next time, the State Dept should be a little less 
eager to try to slap down John Kerry?  He's three years shy of the 
thirty year mark for service in the Senate.  Might he know a thing or 
two about diplomacy?  You'd think a Democratic administration would 
grasp that it's not really smart to pick fights with a Democratic 
Senator -- but maybe Victoria Nuland thinks she's still working for Dick
 Cheney?  Who knows.  Yet again, Kerry has been proven correct.  Events 
have demonstrated that he was right to float the notion that US funds   
could be denied.  It would be really big of Nuland to note that Kerry 
was correct in a State Dept press briefing but I won't hold my breath. 
  
  
  
On
 a personal note, we are delinking from Courage to Resist.  Fair or not,
 I've had it with the brother and sister team of Rebecca and David 
Solnit.  When they insulted and trashed two friends of mine and I got 
stuck commenting on their book, I high roaded it and stayed focused on 
that awful book.  In part because of Courage to Resist but in part 
because no one was going to read that damn book.  And no one did.  And 
there have been other things I've overlooked.  But I really have an 
allergy to the freaks who hide in political closets.  I especially have 
an allergy when these freaks -- non-Democrats -- decided they are the 
Democratic Party's enforcers.  No offense, Rebecca, but Democrats don't 
need non-Democrats telling them what to do.  And 360.org may be all the 
craze of American Communists and Socialists who hide in the closet but 
we have no interest in that crap-ass group.  Lambert of Corrente linked to this strong piece at L'Hote by Freddie  which led to people using the links and discovering that Rebecca Solnit's trying to play enforcer for the Democratic Party.
  
Rebecca,
 if she really wanted to help Barack, should probably close her mouth 
and stop speaking.  Though Barack will take any voter's vote gladly, 
Team Obama doesn't really want to be associated with or linked to the 
Red vote -- that's caused them more p.r. problems than anything else, 
you can check with David Axelrod on that. 
  
  
Is
 that really reason to ban her and her brother David?  Actually, it is. 
 Your vote is your vote.  We have stressed this repeatedly.  People like
 Rebecca who long for totalitarian regimes don't respect the people or 
the will of the people so that would be enough all by itself.  But David
 was already on my s**t list.  He got there last week, as did Courage to
 Resist, when they posted something that was not helpful to say the 
least.   
  
There are US war resisters in Canada.  They deserve support.  I'm not really sure how the so-called report on Skyler James that went up helps war resisters in Canada . 
 I'm confused  mainly because it doesn't help them.  Maybe I'm missing 
some subtext not having a Marxist ring to decode Bob Meola's text?   I 
asked a friend who's a centrist military attorney to look at it.  He 
doesn't believe any of Skyler James' charges and accusations.  I then 
shopped it around to three friends in DoD.  I wasn't looking to find out
 if the charges were true or not (I'll take Skyler James at her word), I
 was trying to see what the reaction was to those who don't already 
support war resisters.  And the reaction was no one believed Skyler's 
claims of mistreatment -- which means that the Canadian   government 
most likely won't either.  
  
So when you leave 
her claims of no toilet paper and having trouble catching a ride to the 
mess hall and other things aside, what you're left with is Skyler James 
left Canada, returned to the US and wasn't tortured, wasn't even 
imprisoned.  She was free to roam the base. 
  
If
 you're missing it, that's not how life was for Robin Long.  Nor for 
Clifford Cornell.  It's probably not how life's going to be for Kim 
Rivera.  But it certainly does help the Stephen Harper's government's 
argument that war resisters are not treated unfairly.  "After three and a
 half months of being back in the states," Skyler tells Courage to 
Resist, "and doing paper work to do a Chapter 10 in lieu of a court 
martial, Colerman finally put in the paper for the Chapter 10 discharge 
in lieu of court martial.  About a week later, Adrian Haddad, my 
civilian attorney let me know that it was approved." 
  
How does that help the war resisters in Canada?  It doesn't.  It, in fact, makes Harper's case for him. 
Skyler
 James wasn't your typical war resister.  She was resisting the 
Afghanistan War, for one thing, and not many did that who publicly went 
to Canada.  But most importantly, she is a lesbian.  Because of what she
 was claiming when she went public in Canada, it's very doubtful the US 
military would risk dragging the process through the press.  Skylar was 
victimized in the military because of who she was and that victimization
 is why she was hustled out of the military quickly.  It's a real shame 
Courage to Resist couldn't be bothered with that.
 
  
Instead
 they've written and posted online what can be evidence for the Canadian
 government when they try to to deport the next US war resister.  When 
Alyssa Manning argues to the courts that the war resister will suffer 
harsh treatement, Immigration Minister Jason Kenney can just introduce 
the Courage to Resist article into the record.  I'll tell you how it 
reads to people who don't support war resisters because I heard it from 
everyone I showed the article to.  Skyler James was taken to the base  
Fort Campbell while the military determined what to do.  On the base, 
she was not locked up.  She was not restricted in movement.  She freely 
traveled around the base.  On Memorial Day weekend she partied (and they
 believe she was drugged or she did drugs).  None of that helps war 
resisters in Canada.  I have no idea why the useless article was run by 
an advocay group.  Or a so-called advocacy   group.  And if you're 
wondering why Canadians -- not Courage to Resist -- floating applying 
pressure to Barack to save Kim Rivera, it's because Cowards Don't Resist
 won't stand up to Barack.  I'm tired of the Solnits and their faux 
actions.  They've compromised whatever integrity they did have.  
  
  
  
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