Priceless. I love that comic. Love that we got it the day before the last debate.
"No Apology: Romney Versus Obama International Treachery And Boobery At Florida Debate Fight" (Hillary Is 44):
Obama wants to tar Mitt Romney as a warmonger. That is the tactic Obama thinks will get women back to voting for him after so many women have fled.
Obama is right only about one thing in this “warmonger” smear: tonight’s debate is only about getting votes. Getting votes. Getting votes. Getting votes.
On many issues it will be tough for Romney to gain traction because Big Media has kept necessary information from the American voter. In addition there are so many lies coming from the Obama camp that it is near impossible to untangle the issues in the few minutes Romney will have tonight.
Consider: is there or is there not a post election meeting with Iran when Obama will be more flexible? How many lies have been uttered by Obama on Benhazi and will the Big Media moderator come to the rescue of Obama again?
That is not to say that Romney is paralyzed in discussing these issues. Quite the contrary, but Romney has to remember it’s about getting votes from American voters not a way to resolve international policy or untangle Obama lies. It’s about the voters and getting votes:
Thankfully, tonight was the last debate.
Last night? "666 Park Avenue" on ABC. That was a great episode.
The show is really starting to cook. This even without my daughter's favorite character (Brian) on. So Henry doesn't know the council member who offered him a job was pushed down an elevator shaft (last episode) by Gavin. He just knows the job appears gone. Jane tells him not to worry, that there will be a lot more opportunities and this one just wasn't meant to be.
Olivia (Vanessa Williams) had her broach stolen and now she's very concerned about the Drake thief. She tells Jane to find out who it is, hire a detective do something. We know it's the kid. I don't know her name. I didn't realize she was Black either until this episode. I thought she was from India. But she is the sneak thief. Jane realizes it when she's stolen a doctor's glasses. Jane gets the glasses back and asks the doctor about the young girl? Both of her parents are dead. The doctor doesn't think the grandmother spends enough time with her granddaughter.
Jane and Henry are going to a party. The young girl almost stumbles. She grabs Henry's hand for support. She sees him being shot by a man with a compass tattoo. She grabs Jane and tells her that she needs to keep Henry away from the man with the compass tattoo. He's going to kill Henry.
Jane looks at her like, "What?"
Henry?
His boss thinks he's leaking insider info to Gavin. The feds are watching Gavin. They have pictures of Henry and Gavin together. Henry's got to get a file on Gavin's computer or he's probably losing his job and possibly facing charges.
He goes into Gavin and Olivia's apartment. He copies the files and gets out just as Olivia gets home. But he leaves something behind so Gavin knows that he was there. At the party, Gavin and Olivia walk up to Henry and Jane and Olivia tells them they have a lot of nerve after what Henry's done. Jane is lost because Henry's told her nothing. He fills her in.
Henry decides not to give the files to his boss. He tells his boss he's not getting them.
Back at the Drake? Remember the reporter who writes something and it comes true? And she was held by the killer? She escaped but he killed her editor. Gavin tells her write this story about city corruption and she'll be free.
It's about Henry's boss. She writes the article. Mob influence in city government. Another reporter tells her there will probably be a hit as a result of the article. The reporter goes running to the party.
At the Drake, Tony (Doorman) delivers a package on Henry and Jane's floor. He hears noise and enters their apartment. From the suitcase Jane found, all this dark smoke comes out forming a person. We don't see what happens next.
At the party, Jane sees the man with the tattoo and he's pulling out a gun. She yells at Henry who sees the gun and pushes his boss out of the way.
Henry saves the day but the reporter got hit in the head with a bullet and is dead. Gavin did tell her she wouldn't have to worry after the story was written.
Gavin tells Henry he forgives him. As Jane and Henry sleep, the dark smoke comes out of the suitcase again and forms a person, it's a man.
This was a fast paced episode and when Henry was copying the files from Gavin's computer for his boss, he also copied a file labled "Henry and Jane." So it will be interesting to see if he looks at that file.
"Iraq snapshot" (The Common Ills):
Monday,
 October 22, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, Nouri's targeting of 
the Central Bank brings him some unwanted international attention, an 
Iraqi legend -- one who found international fame as a singer and whose 
lovers reportedly included a prime minister -- passes away, protests 
return to Iraq, Barack mentions Iraq in a new advertisement, is nepotism
 enriching the Biden family, and more. 
The character of Pinocchio first appears at the end of the 19th century in Carlo Collodi's The Adventures of Pinocchio. 
 The wooden puppet who wanted to be a human boy had a nose that grew and
 grew as he told more and more lies.  In 1940, Disney would make the 
film Pinocchio and reach new audiences.  It and similar themed tales -- such as Aesop's The Boy Who Cried Wolf
 -- experience popularity not just because they impart the lesson that 
lying is wrong but also because we want to believe that those who lie 
are made to suffer in some manner for their deceptions.  We want to 
believe that lying has consequences and we want to believe that because,
 when we look around, we rarely see any punishment or even social 
disgrace for lying.  Bully Boy Bush, for example, with the help of a 
compliant press, lied the country into an illegal war.  And did so 
without any apparent suffering.    
The lies about Iraq never end.  Today it's Bernard Whitman (Huffington Post) rushing
 to explain to you that number two on his reasons he thinks you should 
vote for Barack is the Iraq War.  Writing with the sort of engorged 
passion generally reserved for erotica, Whitman wants you to believe, 
"President Obama would not have started the war in Iraq, but he 
certainly delivered on his promise to end it."  He wouldn't have started
 it?  How is that known?  Here's what I know.  Barack
 Obama to the New York Times about how he would have voted in 2002 on 
authorization for the Iraq War --  had he been   in the Senate -- in an 
article published July 26, 2004, "But, I'm not privy to Senate 
intelligence reports.  What would I have done?  I don't know.  What I 
know is that from my vantage point the case was not made."  Again, the 
lies about Iraq never end.
As for his alleged ending of the Iraq War?  Here's Cindy Sheehan (Cindy Sheehan's Soapbox) weighing in on Candy Crowley's nonsense on CNN:
First,
 she claimed that Obama "ended the war in Iraq like he promised during 
the 2008 campaign."  Actually, A: It ended because of an agreement that 
was entered into between the US and the Puppet Government of Iraq before
 George Bush left office; B: the Obama administration did everything it could to NOT have to leave Iraq;
 and, C: the occupation continues to this day with tens of thousands of 
independent contractors and thousands of other civilian employees 
staffing the enormous embassy and consulates around the country.  But 
the above are inconvenient facts that we are supposed to forget so we 
can triumphantly trumpet: "Vote for Obama, he ended the war in Iraq!"
And we should also remember what Tim Arango (New York Times) reported September 26th:
 
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.
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.
Today,
 Barack Obama released an ad proclaiming he ended the Iraq War and that 
Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney would have left 30,000 
troops in Iraq.  James Rainey's writing about it for some reason -- not to fact check --  at the Los Angeles Times.
Were he a functioning journalist, Rainey might want to ask, "Is Barack saying Mitt's a better negotiator?"
The
 ad includes this line, "Mitt Romney would have left 30,000 troops 
there" -- so Barack thinks Mitt would have been able to have done that, 
to have successfully negotiated the agreement that Barack's still 
working on today?
So why Barack's sudden 
interest in Iraq and Afghanistan today?  The last of the three debates 
between Barack and Romney is tonight.  As we pointed out at Third yesterday,
 the same media that loved to cluck about how the candidates weren't 
talking about the wars, that same media that was in charge of the 
debates hasn't been keen to ask questions about the wars.
Possibly because, despite Barack's attempts to brag, there's nothing to praise there.  Dr. Ivan Sascha Sheehan (McClatchy Newspapters) observes,
 "Iraq's Nouri al-Maliki maintains a strong grip on his fledgling 
country but the emerging realization that he is a puppet of the Iranian 
regime has diminished his stature on the world stage and led to 
criticism of his continued leadership by U.S. lawmakers."  Peter Feaver (Foreign Policy) notes:
According to Michael Gordon:
 "Mr. Biden also predicted that the Americans could work out a deal with
 a government led by Mr. Maliki. 'Maliki wants us to stick around 
because he does not see a future in Iraq otherwise,' Mr. Biden said. 
'I'll bet you my vice presidency Maliki will extend the SOFA' he added, 
referring to the Status of Forces Agreement the Obama administration hoped to negotiate." 
Feaver is responding to a critique of his earlier comments -- a critique by F. Gregory Gause III. 
 Feaver actually shouldn't have bothered.  When you're either as stupid 
or as much a liar as Gause, you don't deserve a response. In fact, we're
 only going to include one paragraph.  We were doing three but the 
person I'm dictating this too just told me he's not sure how to clean up
 everything.  (Meaning turn so many curse words into work-safe ones.)  
So we're wiping out everything and emphasizing one tiny sliver only:
In
 the end, Maliki accepted a political deal brokered in Tehran that 
returned him to the prime ministry with the support of Shiite political 
groups closely aligned with Iran, like Muqtada al-Sadr's followers and 
the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq. 
The Erbil Agreement was negotiated by the US, not by Iran.  Iran had nothing to do with the Erbil Agreement.  
And briefly, one more section:
Once
 that coalition was formed, no U.S. diplomatic effort, no matter how 
skillful and concerted, was going to convince Maliki to alter the 
original withdrawal agreement and allow a substantial U.S. force to 
stay. Maliki was not so inclined anyway, but with the backing of Iran so
 central to his return to power, there was no conceivable set of 
inducements Washington could offer Maliki to move him off his position. 
Am
 I doing the Saudi Arabia snapshot?  No.  You can't be an expert on 
everything.  And that's something that the writer might consider.  So 
when he was brushing up on Saudi Arabia for those bad articles he wrote 
during this period, he missed the coverage in the Iraqi press.  Nouri 
was fine with it.  Nouri wanted US troops on the ground.  He'd made that
 clear when he visited DC in the summer of 2009.  
The issue was immunity.  That was the big issue with the SOFA in 2008.  It was the big issue as 2011 drew to a close.  
If you don't know what went down, maybe you should find another topic to address?
We
 may return to this idiot tomorrow when I can hopefully be a little more
 calm on this topic.  But there are neocons who are more factual than 
Gause The Third is.  Again, we embrace the tales like The Boy Who Cried Wolf because we want to believe that those who lie get punished.
On tonight's debate, Ian Wilder (On The Wilder Side) explains:
It's four years later, and here I am back speaking at the public area on the edge of the Hofstra campus before the presidential debate. It saddens me to report that the ills I spoke of in the presidential campaign four years ago remain unchanged. The corporate media still uphold the charade of the so-called Commission on Presidential Debates. The commission is still controlled by the Democratic and Republican Parties. Its' still is funded by large corporations like Anheuser-Busch. The commission still excludes any candidate outside of the Democratic and Republican parties even if the candidate is on enough ballots to win the electoral college. Both the Green Party and Libertarian candidates are on enough ballots to win, but are excluded from the debates. And by the the terms of the Democratic-Republican debate agreement, Debate hosts such as my alma matter Hofstra are even excluded from scheduling other qualified presidential candidates to speak on campus. I am disappointed that my college would sell out the quest for knowledge so cheaply.
Of course, the corporate media 
never reports on these restrictive terms of the agreement.  nor do they 
report that debate sponsor Anheuser-Busch is not an American company. It
 is owned by Belgian-Brazilian conglomerate.  Lastly, the corporate 
media failed to report on the biggest debate stories of the year that 3 
of the 10 sponsors have pulled out of the debates because they realized 
that the debate is not nonpartisan.   The YWCA, Philips Electronics, and
 British advertising firm Bartle Bogle Hegarty have all pulled out of 
sponsorship. The YWCA and Phillips have issued statements that the 
debates are bi-partisan, not nonpartisan.
I
 support one of the candidates wrongfully shut out of the debates, Green
 Party presidential candidate Dr. Jill Stein.  Dr. Stein is on 85% of 
the ballots in the country.  She has called for all qualified candidates
 who could win the electoral college to be in the debate.  She 
understands that the corporate control of the debates and our democracy 
needs to be remedied.  She has consistently supported the reforms called
 for by the occupy movement.  She has chosen anti-poverty crusader Cheri
 Honkala as her running mate. As Green Party candidates, they follow the
 party policy of refusing all corporate donations.
On the topic of the presidential tickets, Barack's running mate and current Vice President Joe Biden is in the news cycle.  Charlie Gasparino (Fox Business) reports that when Hill International's president David Richter was asked about the success of the subsidiary HillStone International:
Richter
 didn't mince words. It really helps, he said, to have "the brother of 
the vice president as a partner," according to a person who was 
present. 
The "brother" Richter was referring to during the meeting is James Biden, the younger brother of Vice President Joe Biden.
Since
 November 2010, James Biden has been the executive vice president of 
Hill International's housing subsidiary despite little if any documented
 work history in residential construction. And if the company's 
projections are accurate, both Hill and Biden are on the verge of a huge
 payday, beneficiaries, some analysts believe, of James Biden's 
connections to the Obama Administration through his older brother.  
Indeed,
 the Iraq project may be the most lucrative single development in Hill's
 history. Since 2011, Hill, located in Marlton, NJ., has been losing 
money; the shares were recently trading at $3.82, down about 28% this 
year on New York Stock Exchange trading.
Turning to Iraq and violence, Al Rafidayn reports
 a Nineveh Province roadside bombing claimed the life of 1 Iraqi soldier
 and left another injured and a Salahuddin Province roadside bombing 
left one police officer injured. Also in Salahuddin Province, All Iraq News notes a Samarr cemetery bombing targeted a mosque but left no one dead or injured.  Alsumaria reports
 a Shirqat bombing targeting a police chief that left his assistant 
injured, 1 Sahwa was shot dead in Azlerarip, 1 woman was killed in 
Wasit, 2 security officers shot dead in Baghdad, and the Turkish 
military continued to shell northern Iraq.
Saturday,  Alsumaria reported
 "hundreds of teachers" had taken to the streets on Friday in Basra to 
protest the lack of advances in education and their living conditions.  
In addition, they demanded the government imporve the public services 
and address the crumbling infrastructure.   That was actually the second
 day in a row of protests in Basra.  Al-Hasany reports
 that Friday, following morning prayers, various social sectors in Basra
 turned out to demonstrate.  Some had signs   and placards with carttons
 calling out the government's corruption and authoritarian nature, 
others decried the ongoing violence, and some called for the United 
Nations to step in and end the unjust rule by a corrupt government.  As 
you look through the pictures that illustrate the article, it's clear 
that "hundreds" turned out on Friday, possibly even "thousands."  The 
protesters are all male but they're of all ages -- including the little 
boy carrying a sign decrying the lack of public services.  In a possible
 response to the teachers, Alsumaria added
 State of Law MP Mohammed Chichod has stated that   basic services can 
wait and that it is more important that the government focus on the 
military and weapons.  (State of Law is Nouri's political slate.)   Dar Addustour reports
 a Maysan Province demonstration on Sunday in which people gathered 
(dozens) to protest the lack of basic services as well as a probelm 
specific to the province, sinking homes. Though the protest was 
peaceful, the people were surprised to see Nouris security forces storm 
in using batons and attacking the people, hurling threats and insults at
 the people, firing into the air and injuring one child who was shot.  
This morning, All Iraq News reports,
 the Maysan Province Council questioned the provincial governor and two 
of his deputies about yesterday's attack and demanded the launch of an 
investigation to determine what took place and that a formal apology be 
made to the family of the child shot on Sunday as well as to the 
families of any other injured children.
For those who remember January 2011, this is how it started in Iraq. Scattered protests building up to the February 25th protests across Iraq, as the cry for improved basic services, jobs and addressing 'the disappeared' in Iraq's 'justice' system. As various governments were threatened in the region and a few brought down, Nouri grew worried. That's when he made his 'promise' that he wouldn't go for a third term (since rescinded by his attorney and many others), insisted that he would fix things in 100 days, begged Iraqis to stop protesting. It was kick the can, what Nouri always does. Stall, distract and hope your opponents are exhausted and just give up. In this case, Nouri's opponents were the Iraqi people.
Now it would appear that the protests are re-starting.
For those who remember January 2011, this is how it started in Iraq. Scattered protests building up to the February 25th protests across Iraq, as the cry for improved basic services, jobs and addressing 'the disappeared' in Iraq's 'justice' system. As various governments were threatened in the region and a few brought down, Nouri grew worried. That's when he made his 'promise' that he wouldn't go for a third term (since rescinded by his attorney and many others), insisted that he would fix things in 100 days, begged Iraqis to stop protesting. It was kick the can, what Nouri always does. Stall, distract and hope your opponents are exhausted and just give up. In this case, Nouri's opponents were the Iraqi people.
Now it would appear that the protests are re-starting.
Dropping back to Saturday,
 " In other scandals, Nouri fired Sinan al-Shabibi as Governor of the 
Central Bank (despite Article 103 of the Constitution making clear that 
he doesn't have that right -- Parliament does).  Since then a warrant's 
been put out for al-Shabibi who is said to be in Europe.  An unnamed MP tells Al Mada
 that Nouri fired al-Shabibi because the man refused to loan Nouri $63 
billion that Nouri said was for the government's budget.  Al Mada notes
 that Moqtada al-Sadr is calling out Nouri's attempts to politicize the 
Central Bank and he also asks where is the reform that Nouri promised in
 early 2011?"  Today Prashant Rao (AFP) reports,
 "The targeting of Iraq's well-respected central bank chief appears to 
be a move by Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki to consolidate power and 
sends a bad message to international investors, experts and diplomats 
say."  Long time Iraq observer Joost Hiltermann of the International 
Crisis Group   tells Rao, "The Maliki government will claim it (the move
 against Shabibi) is part of long-standing efforts to root out 
corruption.  It looks more like a long-standing effort to gain control 
over independent institutions."  Michael Peel (Financial Times of London) adds:
Some analysts see the affairs as more evidence of a growing autocracy established by Mr Maliki, particularly since the withdrawal of US troops in December. The paradox of power in his administration is that, while his coalition grouping controls well under half the parliamentary seats, he has steadily increased his authority over important security and financial institutions. In December, Tareq al-Hashemi, vice president, fled the country after a warrant was issued for his arrest on terrorism charges, claims he says were orchestrated by the premier.
Some analysts see the affairs as more evidence of a growing autocracy established by Mr Maliki, particularly since the withdrawal of US troops in December. The paradox of power in his administration is that, while his coalition grouping controls well under half the parliamentary seats, he has steadily increased his authority over important security and financial institutions. In December, Tareq al-Hashemi, vice president, fled the country after a warrant was issued for his arrest on terrorism charges, claims he says were orchestrated by the premier.
The political crisis continues in Iraq. Ahmed Abdul Murad (Kitabat) reports a delegation of Kurds arrived Sunday in Baghdad to discuss the political crisis. Ayad al-Tamimi (Al Mada) reports they have met with Iraqi President Jalal Talabani and National Alliance leader Ibrahim al-Jaafari. Rudaw explains:
A
 group of intellectuals, academics and political analysts gathered in 
Salahaddin on Oct. 20 to talk about the current political situation in 
Iraq.  At the meeting, Kurdistan Regional President Massoud Barzani 
said, "We welcome constructive talks with Baghdad."
Deputy
 Iraqi Prime Minister Roj Nuri Shaways and Barham Salih, deputy 
secretary general of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), were also 
in attendance.
According
 to the official website of the presidency of the Kurdistan Region, 
those at the meeting "praised the role of the President Barzani in 
building the new Iraq and in creating the new Iraqi government. They 
also informed Barzani that Iraq is deeply upset by the current political
 crisis and that their mission in visiting the Kurdistan Region is to 
take a positive message back to Baghdad in order to end this political 
crisis."
Alsumaria notes
 that today's meet-up was with Nouri who spoke of the need for real 
solutions. Nouri's second term may end before the political crisis is 
resolved.  The crisis is usually pegged to December 2011.  The political
 stalemate pre-dates the crisis.  Political Stalemate I is the eight 
months after March 2010 when Nouri brought the country to a stand still 
as he demanded a second term as prime minister.  The US-brokered Erbil 
Agreement (November 2010) ends Political Stalemate I.  Nouri's trashing 
the contract starts Political Stalemate II.  In the summer of 2011, 
Moqtada al-Sadr,   the Kurds and Iraqiya called for a return to the 
Erbil Agreement so you can see that as the start of Political Stalemate 
II or you can date it back further when Nouri refuses to create an 
independent national security commission headed by Ayad Allawi as 
outlined in the Erbil Agreement. 
Afifa 
Iskandar passed away Sunday. The singer  was not just an Iraqi 
institution, she was acclaimed throughout the region.  She was also an 
actress, knew pretty much everyone, reportedly was the mistress of one 
prime minister, retired to avoid another prime minister, a very 
interesting life.   All Iraq News reports
 she was 91-years-old, born in 1912 to an Iraqi father and a Greek 
Christian mother. The paper explains she began singing at the age of 
five and gave her first concert when she she was 8-years-old (gave the 
concert in Erbil). 
Alsumaria notes
 that she married at the age of 12 and that she began singing in Baghdad
 clubs in 1935. She'd go on to sing at all the leading clubs including 
Cabaret Abdullah and the Paradise. In 1938, she'd travel to Egypt where 
she wowed Cario. The History News Network shares a story of a social get together where Afifa Iskander performed:
To compare any singer to Um Kulthoum was the biggest compliment a singer could receive, especially in the fifties (this is before Arab rock had been invented). Afifa Iskander deserved it, not because of her overpowering voice nor her magnetic presence (factors which had made Um Kulthoum a star) but because of the warmth of her personality and the astonishing way she sang Iraqi ballads and made them her own. She was Iraq's Um Kulthoum because she sang Iraqi songs that spoke to Iraqis everywhere in the same way that Um Kulthoum, despite her great Arab following, sang primarily to Egyptians; and she became a national icon precisely because she was able to sing songs that did not imitate the style of Egyptian or Lebanese chanteuses, but were profoundly, natively Iraqi.
Al Rafidayn notes
 that she will be buried in a Baghdad cemetery near her mother. Her 
mother was a strong influence and played four instruments. Last month, Warvin reports,
 she was admitted to Baghdad Medical City Hospital, suffering from 
intestinal bleeding. Afifa was celebrated for her singing and her beauty.  Jabra Ibrahim Jabra shared a recollection in his posthumous Princesses' Street: Baghdad Memories:
Some
 of the writers were not happy at the Brazilian Cafe unless they sat on 
the front line chairs facing the street, which was always noisy and busy
 with its ever-changing scenes, people, colors, carriages, cars, and 
lottery ticket sellers shouting, "Five thousand dinars! Five thousand 
dinars!"  The din did not ceasue until about midnight, especially 
because next to the cafe was a famous nightclub, in which Afifa Iskandar
 sang.
Desmond Stewart introduced me to 
Afifa Iskandar at her request, for he used to give her private English 
lessons.  To my surprise, I found her to be young, bright, and thirsty 
for knowledge and culture.  Desmond and I used to boast that we were the
 only two men in Baghdad, on going to the nightclub, whom the "artiste" 
would offer a drink and pay for it, not the contrary.  
Another memory is shared in the book Outside In Marginality in the Modern Middle East (Eugene Rogan, editor): 
[Amin]
 Al-Mumayyiz's wedding party in 1940 was a different affair.  By then he
 was a diplomat, and had moved house to al-Salihiya, a leafy suburb.  
The musical entertainmnet started with the chalghi accompanied by 
singing of maqams and pastas by professionals and amateurs.  At 
midnight, the then renowned singer Afifa Iskandar arrived with her takht
 (band) headed by Salih al-Kuwaiti.  They came from the Otel al-Jawahiri
 (which belonged to the Kuwaiti brothers) after the end of their 
peformance there.  Afifa danced and sang and charmed all present with 
her smiles and jokes.  
Skies explains that last year, during Ramadan, the series Baghdad Beauty
 aired -- a series tracing "the life of Affifa Iskandar, one of the 
first Iraqi singers which started to gain her fame in the 50s of the 
last century. [. . .] She sang in the same cabaret in which her father, 
Iskancer, plays the violin. Known personalities attend to the cabaret to
 listen to her. Among them, Naseem, the British, who reprsent what the 
UK wants from Iraq, Bakir Sidqi, an Iraqi Army leader, and lately a Nazi
 German, who offers his country as a new ally to Iraq." 
In 2010, Hadani Ditmars (CounterCurrents) remembered
 a trip he took to Iraq and seeking out a Catholic doctor who as very 
popular in Baghdad, "Young and old, rich and poor, Kurds and Arabs, even
 Afifa Iskander -- the former star of Baghdad's old cabaret scene and 
mistress of Abdul Karim Qassim (the Iraqi leader who flirted with 
Russian Communists and was overthrown in the 1963 CIA-backed Baathist 
coup) -- came in for a visit. She was in her eighties then and being 
treated for dysentery, in a neighourhood that, less than a decade 
earlier, had been middle class." 
General 
Abdul Karim Qassim overthrew the (British installed) Iraqi monarchy in a
 1958 coup and was Prime Minister of Iraq until 1963. For demanding that
 the British and American venture Iraq Petroleum Company share ownership
 and profits with the Iraqi government, Qassim was targeted for 
overthrow by the CIA during the Kennedy administration. When Saddam Hussein came to power, Afifa Iskandar declared her retirment in order to avoid performing for him. As one of Iraq's legendary and most popular singers, she'd performed before the previous prime ministers and the royal family.
The Great Soviet Encyclopedia
 notes that, in the thirties, the "best-known" were "Muhammad Kubbanshi,
 Salima Murad, Afifa Iskandar, and Sabiha Ibrahim." She would perform in
 the film Layla in Iraq (1949) directed by Ahmed Kamal Morsy and an Iraqi film classic, the second film from the Stuiod of Baghdad. From 1930 to 1950, Susannah Tarbush (Saudi Gazette) notes,
 "Saleh Al-Kuwaity was the pre-eminent song writer in Iraq, writing 
songs for stars such as Zakiya George, Munira Al-Hawazwaz, Afifa 
Iskander and Zohour Hussein." In June 2008, Akhbaar notes, Afifa Iskandar was one of the artists honored during a cultural salute in Baghdad.
Among
 her influences was the Iraqi Jewish singer Salima Murad who was famous 
for the song "On The Banks of the Tigris." In the documentary about 
Iraqi music, On The Banks of the Tigris, Afifa Iskandar shared, "Salima Murad was my teacher. She was a real Iraqi!" And many feel that way about Afifa Iskandar. At Alsumaria's Facebook page, already 151 comments have been left at the story on Afifa's passing.
Earlier this year, Kurd Net noted
 a concert that was "reviving the Iraqi folklore song festival performed
 by a group of Iraqi artists in Sweden" and that among the famous and 
beloved Iraqi songs being performed were ones originally presented by 
Afifa Iskandar. Rotanata Radio notes that one of the songs she made famous was "It Burned My Soul."
It burned my soul when we parted
I cried and drowned them in my tears
What did my heart say when we parted
It burned my sould when we parted
As I bid farewell I say how can I forget them
My heart, for God's sake, go with them
I would rather die than us be apart
I want those who left me to come back the journey
I want to give them part of my soul as a keepsake
I've experienced every kind of affliction
 
