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Wednesday, November 7, 2012.  Chaos 
and violence continue, among those attacked today include a dean of a medical 
school, a plurality of Americans back 
torture-Guantanamo-illegal-wars-kill-lists-and-so-much-more, Julian Assange 
calls out the War Mongerer in Chief, Nouri tries to bully the Kurds over the 
Peshmerga, ExxonMobil serves Nouri notice, 20,000 Iraqis are said to be on the 
verge of deportation, and more.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Last night the plurality of US citizens voting on the presidential race 
re-elected Barack Obama president of the United States by a thin margin.  As Isaiah noted this morning  in his 
comic, the second term is where Bill Clinton, Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan 
found out what happens when the love's gone -- Bill almost impeached for lying 
about a blow job, Reagan with the ghost of impeachment hovering over Iran-Contra 
and Richard Nixon with Watergate which really helped to draw attention away from 
the slush fund and so many other crimes. Even Supreme Court selected Bully Boy 
Bush, when he won a term by the votes and not by the Supreme Court, 
struggled.
 
 
 
Already Barack's buddy and former OMB Director Peter The Swinger Orszag, as 
Alexa noted this afternoon at Corrente , 
has taken to Bloomberg Television to proclaim that it's time to cut Social 
Security.  Thank yourselves, Americans, you voted for the bastard -- and, yes, 
that term is linguistically correct when applied to Barack.  The thing with 
Bush's first term, he wasn't elected.  His crimes were appalling, his disregard 
for the Constitution, his Executive Signing Statements, Guantanamo, his illegal 
war, all of it was disgusting and, yes, criminal.  And those of us who are 
citizens of the United States could insist, "The Supreme Court awarded him the 
presidency, he didn't win it."  But then came November 2004 and enough Americans 
went to the polls to say that they were okay with this, tha it was fine and 
dandy to torture and worse.  At that point, when US voters embraced it, it 
became a lot more difficult to say, "Hey, that's him, it's not us."   
 
 
 
The people embraced Bully Boy Bush -- a plurality -- in the 2004 election 
and a plurality embraced Barack Obama yesterday.  Granted the American people 
were uninformed by a media that increasingly is exposed as not incompetent but 
as deliberately deceitful.   
 
 
 
 
Take CBS News (where I have -- or maybe had before this went up -- friends).  Monday Ruth noted Erik Wemple's Washington Post 
piece  about CBS News hiding footage voters should have known about.  
September 12th, Steve Kroft interviewed Barack for 60 Minutes.  He pressed 
Barack on the Bengahzi attack that killed Americans Glen Doherty, Tyrone Woods, 
Sean Smith and Chris Stevens. Barack -- who would go to the UN and talk about 
YouTube videos -- would have to admit to Kroft "it was an attack on Americans."  
As Wemple notes, CBS releasing the video after the second debate would have been 
good for its web 'hits' and it would have raised the issue of accountability.  
It would have forced the media to do their job.  Instead, they sat on it and 
waited until the day before voting to quietly release it online. 
 
 
 
 
 
 That's not how you run a news outlet.  That's not how you inform citizens.  
But Scott Pelley was hired to put you asleep, not to inform you.  And in that 
monotone, as he goes on and on about nothing oh-so-gently, he ensures that 
Americans remain uninformed.  He does his part, I should say.  Despite the fact 
that CBS prime time brings in huge numbers and CBS daytime holds its own, 
CBS Evening News just can't deliver an audience.  So Pelley's impact 
is, like the man himself, rather small.
 
 
 
 
 
 
Like Pelley, Diane Sawyer (ABC's World News), NBC's Brian Williams and 
CNN's multitude of hosts refused to inform their audience that, September 26th, 
the New York Times ' Tim Arango 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. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
As Ava and I noted , that report was 
followed by not one, but three so-called 'presidential debates' ("Days later, October 3rd, Barack 'debated' Mitt Romney .  Again October 16th .  Again October 22nd . Not once did the moderators 
ever raise the issue.")  Every one of them played dumb while Barack talked about 
how he supposedly got the US out of Iraq.  Not one of the high paid 
'journalists' who moderated the debates ever raised the issue.  Candy Crowley 
never said, "Actually, Mr. Obama, you are in negotiations with Iraq to send more 
US troops back into Iraq."
 
 
 
 
 That would have been too much for a suck-up hilariously named "Candy."
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 To get that into the New York Times, Arango had to bury it in 
paragraph fifteen.  If you're not getting what a struggle it was to get that 
reality into print, grasp that when the New York Times 'fact check'ed 
Barack in the debates on Iraq, they avoided mentioning what  Arango had 
reported.  The editorial boad disappeared what was a news outlet exclusive -- an 
exclusive in their own paper -- and they disowned it.
 
 
 
 
 
With little to no amplification, it is true that the American people had 
little hope of hearing of these important news items.  However, they knew 
Bradley Manning was imprisoned.  They may not have known that election day was also his 898th day being locked away  -- still without a 
trial --  but they knew he was locked away. 
 
Monday April 5, 
2010, WikiLeaks released US 
military video  of a July 12, 2007 assault in Iraq. 12 people were 
killed in the assault including two Reuters  journalists Namie Noor-Eldeen and 
Saeed Chmagh. Monday June 7, 
2010 , the US military announced that they had arrested Bradley 
Manning and he stood accused of being the leaker of the video. Leila Fadel 
(Washington Post) reported  in August 2010 that Manning had 
been charged -- "two charges under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. The 
first encompasses four counts of violating Army regulations by transferring 
classified information to his personal computer between November and May and 
adding unauthorized software to a classified computer system. The second 
comprises eight counts of violating federal laws governing the handling of 
classified information." In March, 2011, David S. Cloud 
(Los Angeles Times) reported  
that the military has added 22 additional counts to the charges including one 
that could be seen as "aiding the enemy" which could result in the death penalty 
if convicted. The Article 32 hearing took place in December.  At the start of 
this year, there was an Article 32 hearing and, February 3rd, it was announced 
that the government would be moving forward with a court-martial.  Bradley has 
yet to enter a plea and has neither affirmed that he is the leaker nor denied 
it.  The court-martial was supposed to begin before the election but it was 
postponed until after the election so that Barack wouldn't have to run on a 
record of his actual actions.   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 At Fort Meade, Maryland, during a motion hearing in Pfc. Bradley 
Manning’s court martial, his defense attorney David Coombs told the court 
Manning had submitted a plea notice indicating he would accept general 
responsibility for providing all charged information to WikiLeaks. The notice 
was the beginning of a process that could greatly simplify the upcoming trial 
proceedings in February.
 
Manning did not plead guilty to the charged offenses in the plea 
notice. However, significantly, he did indicate with this notice that he is 
willing to admit to the fact that the act of providing information to WikiLeaks 
did occur or that the government has evidence that would prove he did commit the 
act and so he is willing to plea to it.
 
 
 
 
People who supposedly give a damn about Bradley -- about the torture he's 
been put through -- didn't give enough of a damn to take a stand against Barack 
Obama.  Whores like Daniel Ellsberg even went out trolling for votes for 
Barack.  No whore like an old whore.  And it needs to be made clear to Daniel 
that he's no longer needed as a face for the issue.  You can't urge people to 
vote for the man who has imprisoned Bradley, the man who has pronounced him 
guilty, and still be an advocate for Bradley.
 
 
 
 
 
 In a conversation about alleged WikiLeaks leaker US President 
Barack Obama commented on Pfc. Bradley Manning saying, “He broke the 
law.”
 
The words from Obama’s mouth come as Manning is held in prison 
awaiting further charges and a military trial. Manning has entered no official 
plea and no court proceedings have begun. Yet, the US president dubbed him 
guilty of breaking the law.  
Many argue no truly fair or impartial trial is even possible at 
this point. Some hold there would never be a fair trial since the media had 
already convicted manning in the court of public opinion. Now that the 
Military’s commander-in-chief has spoke on the matter is even more unlikely the 
military trial will be fair and impartial.  
Military officers on a potential jury now know that their commander 
and chief believes Manning to be guilty. To find otherwise would amount to 
undermining his view.  
  
 
 
 Again, Daniel Ellsberg has whored his reputation and needs to find another 
hobby to occupy his final days, he has blown his credibility.
 
 
 
 
There are several unambiguous signs that the US is on track to 
prosecute Assange for his work as a journalist. A grand jury in Alexandria, 
Virginia, empanelled to investigate violations of the Espionage Act – a 
statute that by its very nature targets speech – has subpoenaed Twitter feeds 
regarding Assange and WikiLeaks. An FBI agent, testifying at whistleblower 
Bradley Manning's trial, said that "founders, owners and managers" of WikiLeaks 
are being investigated. And then there is Assange's 42,135-page FBI file – a 
compilation of curious heft if the government is "not interested" in 
investigating its subject. 
In this context, Assange's fears of extradition to and persecution 
in the US, and therefore his plea for asylum, are eminently 
reasonable. 
What's more, Assange is rightly concerned about how he will be 
treated if he is extradited to the US. One need only consider how the US treated 
Bradley Manning, the 
army private who allegedly leaked the cables to WikiLeaks to see why. Manning 
spent close to a year in pre-trial solitary confinement for 23 hours a day, and 
then eight months under conditions designed to pressure him into providing 
evidence to incriminate Assange. During this time, Manning was stripped of his 
clothing and made to stand nude for inspection. Thousands of people, including 
scores of legal scholars and the United Nations special rapporteur on torture, 
have condemned Manning's treatment as inhumane, and state that it may constitute 
torture. There is no reason for Assange to expect he will be treated any 
better. 
Most disturbingly, the US government is more concerned with 
investigating a journalist and publisher than the high-level government 
officials whose alleged war crimes and misdeeds Assange and his cohorts brought 
to light. 
  
  
 
 
 Those are fears Assange has of the government commanded and directed by 
Barack Obama.  The media's certainly done their part to hide Bradley away but 
the American people should have known about him.
 
 
Even so, a plurality said "yes" last night. 
 
 
 
 And that's the problem.  Today people whine about the US being a national 
security state.  Some foolish ones cite Dwight Eisenhower warning against the 
"military industrial complex."  Yes, he did warn against it.  When?  January 17, 
1961.  As he was leaving the White House and John F. Kennedy was coming in.  In 
other words, he stayed silent when it would have mattered.  In the last gasps of 
his presidency, he suddenly wants to alert the American people that there's a 
problem -- one he not only refused to fix but also helped create.  So some 
foolish types today don't get that it's not getting taken down.  Not now, not 
ever.  It's been accepted.  By presidents of both parties, yes, but also by the 
American people.  It's outrageous, it shouldn't continue.
 
 
 
 But that's what voting can do: validate government positions.
 
 
 
 Last night, American voters said, "Yes to Guantanamo! Yes to indefinite 
detentions!  Yes to illegal war -- Libya specifically!  Yes to ignoring acts of 
Congress -- also known as laws -- such as the War Powers Act!  Yes to having a 
kill list of American citizens!"
 
 
 
 They said yes to that and so much more.
 
 
We were just noting Michael Ratner.  He hosts  Law and Disorder 
Radio -- a weekly hour long 
program that airs Monday mornings at 9:00 a.m. EST on WBAI  and around the country throughout 
the week,  with attorneys Heidi Boghosian , 
and Michael S. Smith .  In February, they 
discussed the NDAA with guest Chris Hedges  who was suing the White House.  
Excerpt. 
 
 
 Michael Smith: The National Defense Authorization Act was signed by 
President Obama on December 31st of last year and takes effect this coming 
March.  The act authorizes the military to begin domestic policing.  The 
military can detain indefinitely without trial any US citizen deemed to be a 
terrorist or an accessory to terrorism.  Vague language in the bill such as 
"substantially supported" or "directly supported" or "associated forces" is 
used. We're joined today by returning guest Chris Hedges in his capacity as a 
plantiff in a lawsuit that he's just filed against President Barack Obama with 
respect to the National Defense Authorization Act and its language about 
rounding up even American citizens and salting them away forever.
 
  
 
 Heidi Boghosian: Chris, welcome to Law and Disorder.
 
  
 
 Chris Hedges:  Thank you.
 
  
 
 
 Heidi Boghosian: Can you talk about the significance of codifying 
the NDAA into law   essentially several over-reaching practices that the 
executive has been implementing for awhile now?
 
  
Chris Hedges: That's correct but it's been implementing those 
practices through a radical interpretation of the 2001 law, The Authorization to 
Use Military Force Act. You remember old John Yoo was Bush's legal advisor.  It 
was under the auspices of this act that Jose Padilla who is a US citizen was 
held for three and a half years in a military brig.  Remember, he was supposedly 
one of the other hijackers that never made it to a plane.  Stripped of due 
process.  And it's under that old act that the executive branch, Barack Obama, 
permits himself to serve as judge, jury and executioner and order the 
assassination of a US citizen, the Yemeni cleric Anwar 
al-Awlaki.  
  
 
 Michael Smith: Two weeks later his 16-year-old son.
 
  
 
 
 Chris Hedges: Yes, exactly.  So what this does is it essentially 
codfies this kind of behavior into law. It overturns over 200 years of legal 
precedent so that the military is allowed to engage in domestic policing and 
there are a couple of very disturbing aspects in the creation of this 
legislation.  One of them is that [US Senator] Dianne Feinstein had proposed 
that US citiens be exempt from this piece of legislation and both the Obama 
White House and the Democratic Party rejected that.  Now Obama issued a signing 
statement saying that this will not be used against American citizens but the 
fact is legally it can be used against American citizens.  There was an 
opportunity for them to protect American citizens and to protect due process and 
they chose not to do that.
 
  
 
 Michael Smith: Well he also announced that he was going to close 
Guantanamo.
 
  
 
 Chris Hedges:  Right, so it's very disingenous.
 
  
 
 Heidi Boghosian: And signing statements really carry no legal 
force.
 
  
 
 Chris Hedges. Right. And if they wanted to protect basic civil 
liberties, they certainly had a chance to do so and it was there decision not to 
do that.  I mean, the other thing that's disturbing is that it expands this 
endless war on terror.  So the 2001 act is targeted towards groups that are 
affiliated or part of al Qaeda.  Now it's groups that didn't even exist in 
2001.  There are all sorts of nebulous terms like "associated forces,"  
"substantially supported."  When you look at the criteria by which Americans can 
be investigated by our security and surveillance state, it's amorphus and 
frightening: People who have lost fingers on the hand, people who hoard more 
than seven days worth of food in their house, people who have water-proof 
ammunition.  I mean, I always say I come from rural parts of Maine. That's 
probably most of my family.
 
  
 [Laughter.]
 
  
 
 Chris Hedges: It's a very short step to adding the obstructionist 
tactics of the Occupy movement.
 
  
 
 
 Michael Smith: Well that's what we've wanted to ask you because 
we've thought all along with the beginning of this war on terrorism that 
ultimately these laws stripping us of our Constitutional rights would be used 
against the social protest movements at home and the latest development is 
absolutely chilling and we wanted to ask you about that.
 
  
 
 Chris Hedges: We don't know what the motives are. We do know that 
all the intelligence agencies as well as the Pentagon opposed this legislation.  
Robert Muller, the head of the FBI, actually went before Congress and said that 
if it was passed it would make the FBI's work in terms of investigating 
terrorism harder because it would make it harder to get people to cooperate once 
you hand the military that power. So I think it's interesting, to say the very 
least, that the various agencies that are being pulled into domestic policing -- 
especially the Pentagon -- didn't push for the bill.  I don't know what the 
motives are but I know what the consequences are and that is that it hands to 
the corporate state weapons, the capacity to use the armed forces internally in 
ways that we have not seen for over two centuries.  That is the consequence of 
the bill.  What are the motives?  You know I haven't gone down and reported it 
in Washington.
 
  
Heidi Boghosian: Chris, you know I'm thinking of the Supreme Court Case Humanitarian Law 
Project and the notion "providing material support."  
[Center for Constitutional Rights analysis here -- text and video.]  And in that 
case it was also very vague and things that seemed benign could be construed as 
providing support but it strikes me that under this piece of legislation also 
the notion of associating with others that the government may deem terrorists 
becomes possibly vague. 
  
 
 
 Chris Hedges: Well it is vague. And that's what's so frightening.  
And the lawsuit was proposed by Civil Rights attorneys Carl Mayer and Bruce 
Afran who approached me and said that I needed a credible plantiff.  Now because 
I had been the Middle East bureau chief for the New York Times and 
because I was in the Middle East for seven years I spent considerable time with 
both individuals and organizations that are considered by the US State Dept to 
be either terrorists or terrorist groups. That would include Hamas, Islamic 
Jihad in Gaza, the Kurdistan Workers Party -- or the PKK as it's known in 
southeastern Turkey, northern Iraq.  All of these organizations -- I mean, I 
used to go to Tunis and have dinner with Yasser Arafat [President of the 
Palestinian National Authority from 1996 until his death in 2004] and Abu Jihad 
[the PLO's Khalil al-Wair] when they were branded as international terrorists.  
And there are no exemptions in this piece of legislation for journalists. And 
the attorneys felt that I was a credible plantiff because of that.  We have 
already seen under the 2001 law, a persecution of not only Muslim Americans in 
this country but Muslim American organizations -- in particular charity 
organizations and mostly charity organizations that support the Palestinians.  
And under this legislation, it is certainly conceivable that not only -- many of 
these organizations have been shut down, their bank accounts have been frozen, 
their organizers have been persecuted -- but under this legislation they're 
essentially able to be branded as terrorists, stripped of due process, thrown 
into a military brig and held, in the language of the legislation, until the end 
of hostilities -- whenever that is.
 
 
 
 
 
Last night was a "yes" to that.  The problem with these yes votes?  There 
is the law by word and law by custom and practice.  Bully Boy Bush floated outrageous ideas 
that Barack Obama took further.  Neither man has been prosecuted.  By refusing 
to prosecute, these actions are now custom.  Can someone object?  Yes, you can 
object to anything.  You can also file a lawsuit over anything.  But in 2017 or 
2018 when we suddenly decide we care once again about, for example, habeas 
corpus, a court's going to take into account the fact that two administrations 
-- two consecutive administrations have trashed it.  (They'll also be taking 
into account that they don't wan to open the door for a lawsuit against a former 
president or presidents or, in Bully Boy Bush's case, occupant of the White 
House.)  So lots of luck carrying after everything's over.
 
 
 It'll be a bit like whining today about what Eisenhower oversaw the 
creation of in the fifties.
 
 
 
 We can -- and should -- blame the media for a great deal.  But the blame 
goes beyond the media.
 
 
 
Iraq, the war Barack claimed ended.  Someone forgot to get that message to 
the Middle East.  Iraq Body Count  counts 34 dead from violence so far this month 
through yesterday.  Al Mada reports  that Rashid Flaih survived 
an assassination attempt outside Tikrit yesterday.  He is the Operations 
Commander in Samarra.  All Iraq News notes  today 2 Mosul roadside 
bombings have left four police officers and two city workers injured.  The mass 
arrests continue as well.  Alsumaria also notes  a Nineveh Province bombing 
which left 2 civil defense workers dead and three more injured and Mosul saw a bombing which left 1 person dead and 
injured six (including one journalist), while a Mosul car bombing claimed 1 life 
and left four injured, the Dean of the School of Medicine at Mosul University 
was injured when a sticky bomb was attached to her car, and an attack on Mosul 
Mayor Hussein Ali Hasani left four of his bodyguards injured .  Alsumaria counts  8 'terrorism' suspects arrested 
in Samarra.  And there's a new development in the mass arrests.  15 arrested in 
Kirkuk alone would be news all by itself (except to US and European 'news' 
outlets).  But, as Alsumaria notes , the 15 are "engineers and 
technicians" from Turkey.
 
Staying with the Turks, both AP  and Reuters  report that Turkey's conducting a 
two-day ground operation -- yesterday and today -- in which Turkish forces have 
entered northern Iraq.  AFP observes , "The rare cross-border 
strike hit targets some five kilometres (three miles) inside the border and came 
as part of an air-backed operation that has been going on for two days, 
according to NTV."  The Turkish war planes bombing northern Iraq have been going 
on for years now. Xinhua notes  of the latest, "Two Iraqi 
Kurds were killed and three wounded on Wednesday during an air strike on an 
Iraqi border area, as Turkish warplanes continue attacks against suspected 
Kurdish guerrilla targets inside Iraq, official Kurdish website reported."  Aaron Hess (International 
Socialist Review) described the PKK in 2008 , "The PKK emerged in 
1984 as a major force in response to Turkey's oppression of its Kurdish 
population. Since the late 1970s, Turkey has waged a relentless war of attrition 
that has killed tens of thousands of Kurds and driven millions from their homes. 
The Kurds are the world's largest stateless population -- whose main population 
concentration straddles Turkey, Iraq, Iran, and Syria -- and have been the 
victims of imperialist wars and manipulation since the colonial period. While 
Turkey has granted limited rights to the Kurds in recent years in order to 
accommodate the European Union, which it seeks to join, even these are now at 
risk."  This has been going on forever.  Inclusion could have addressed that 
long ago, many, many deaths ago.  The same is true with regards to Iraq.  
Nouri's actions are setting up a struggle which will last years unless he learns 
to practice inclusion and stop targeting rivals and Sunnis. 
The violence has never ended in Iraq.  Many have fled due to the 
violence.  The Christian population, for example, has been greatly reduced.  
Now, despite the fact that violence is actually worse this year than in 2010, 
comes the news of a country that intends to force Iraqis out of their borders.  
Al Rafidayn states  that diplomatic 
sources say Sweden is preparing to deport 20,000 Iraqi refugees over the next 
few months. 
 
In other news, Al Rafidayn reports  that ExxonMobil  has notified the Baghdad-based 
government in writing of their intent to sell their stake in the West Qurna oil 
field.  Their desire to sell has been public knowledge for some time.  The news 
value is that they have now put their intent in writing.  Dropping back to the 
October 18th 
snapshot :
 
 
 
 
Early this morning, Laura Rozen (The Back Channel) reported, 
"Oil giant Exxon Mobil is expected to soon announce that it is pulling out of 
non-Kurdish Iraq, an energy expert source told Al-Monitor Wednesday on condition 
of anonymity.  The decision would not apply to Exxon's contracts in Kurdish 
Iraq, which has been a source of on-going tension with Baghdad authorities for 
the company, the source said."  Ahmed Rasheed and Patricky Markey (Reuters) state 
the corporation didn't inform "Iraq of its interest in quitting the country's 
West Qurna oilfield project" according to unnamed sources.  Sometimes unnamed 
sources lie.  This may be one of those times.  This is very embarrassing for 
Nouri and his government and feigning surprise may be their effort to play it 
off.  'How could we have stopped it?  We didn't even know it was coming!'   That 
would explain why the 'big surprise' that isn't is being played like it is.  Derek Brower (Petroleum Economist) has been covering 
this story for over 48 hours (including a source that stated ExxonMobil had 
informed the Iraqi government) and he notes that ExxonMobil will be focusing all 
their "efforts on upstream projects in Kurdistan instead."  In addition to the 
claim in Rasheed and Markey's piece about  Iraq having had no meeting on this, 
Brower notes that a meeting took place today at the Ministry of Oil.  It would 
appear Nouri's spinning like crazy in an effort to save his faltering image.  
(Nouri can certainly spend billions -- as he proved last week on his mad 
shopping spree for weapons, he just doesn't seem able to maintain releations 
with those who help Iraq generate large revenues.)  
This Reuters story notes that unnamed US officials 
stated Iraq was informed and it adds the Iraq's Deputy Prime Minister for 
Energy, Hussain al-Shahristani, "told Reuters in an e-mail that Baghdad was 
sticking to its line that all contract signed with the Kurdistan Regional 
Government (KRG) without the approval of Baghdad were illegal."  ExxonMobil has 
long had problems with their deal with Baghdad.  In March,  Emily Knapp (Wall St Cheat Sheet) 
explained, "Foreign oil companies involved in Iraq's oil expansion generally 
prefer to be compensated for capital expenditure and service fees in oil because 
cash payments are more complicated to arrange. Now the parties have reached an 
agreement in which they will be paid in crude. Exxon and Shell spent $910 
million on West Qurna-1 last year, and were repaid $470 million in cash."  Hassan Hafidh (Wall St. Journal) adds 
today, "Exxon's 2010 deal with the Iraqi central government to improve 
production in the West Qurna-1 field was never expected to be lucrative under 
the best circumstances, the person said.  The government had agreed to pay Exxon 
Mobil and its partners $1.90 for each additional barrel of oil they pumped after 
refurbishing the already producing field.  The fees would barely be enough to 
cover the companies' costs." 
Today Ahmed Rasheed (Reuters) explains , "Iraq's 
cabinet also said on Wednesday it was expelling Turkey's state-owned TPAO from 
its exploration block 9 oilfield but denied that the measure was prompted by any 
proposed move by the Turkish company into Kurdistan.  The withdrawal of Exxon 
from a key project in Iraq's south, and doubts about who can replace the U.S. 
giant also raise questions about the country's plans to increase crude 
production to 5-6 million barrels per day from 3.4 million bpd by 2015."  Lance Murray (Dallas Business Journal) 
notes  that the minority party (currently) in the deal ExxonMobil is walking 
out on is Royal Dutch Shell.  Dan Ritter (Wall St. Cheat Sheet) 
observes , "Iraqi officials previously asked President Barack Obama to 
intervene, but there has been no government involvement so far. It’s unclear 
what the President could do, if he decided to step in. At the end of the day, 
Iraq may just be hurting itself by forcing oil companies to choose, and right 
now Kurdistan looks pretty attractive." 
 
In news on the continued political stalemate, Al Mada reports  that the head of the 
National Alliance Ibrahim al-Jaafari is stating that there is conflict within 
Nouri's Cabinet and some ministers are not attending meetings or listening to 
other views and he notes that he is against dissolving Parliament and holding 
early elections.  In other Cabinet news,  Dar Addustour adds  that the Minister of 
Trade Khairallah Babiker, is stating he will withdraw from the Cabinet if the 
federal budget does not make good on the Peshmerga budget.  The Peshmerga are 
Kurdish security forces.  The 2013 federal budget attempts to do away with 
payments for them.  This is similar to Nouri's attempts to do away with the 
Sahwa ("Sons of Iraq," "Awakenings").  He's already illegally amassed control 
over all security forces (military and police) outside of the KRG.  Bassem Francis and Mohammad al-Tamimi 
(Al-Hayat via Al-Monitor) report : 
  
A senior official at the Ministry of Peshmerga in Iraq’s 
Kurdistan region has called the demand of Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki 
to place the Peshmerga forces under the jurisdiction of the federal government 
an “illusion.” He vowed to make an official response in the next week to the 
accusations by Maliki. 
Meanwhile, a Kurdish lawmaker accused the prime minister of 
obstructing the ongoing negotiations between Baghdad and Erbil. 
In an interview with Al Sumaria TV on Monday evening [Nov. 5], 
Maliki declared his willingness to release funding for the Peshmerga forces if 
they place themselves under the jurisdiction of the federal authorities, since 
the constitution prohibits the financing of the Peshmerga, which fall under the 
jurisdiction of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG). 
 
This 
is how Nouri tears apart the country and works to destroy any national 
identity.  Nouri al-Maliki is the puppet Bully Boy Bush installed in 2006 when 
the Iraqi choice for prime minister did not meet with US approval.  It's who 
Barack made his own puppet in 2010 when Barack decided Nouri would remain as 
prime minister -- in spite of the votes of the Iraqi people, in spite of the 
Iraqi Constitution, in spite of a concept known as "democracy."   Once again, 
John Barry's "'The Engame' Is A Well Researched, Highly Critical 
Look at U.S. Policy in Iraq " (Daily 
Beast ):
 
 
 
 Washington has little political and no military influence over 
these developments [in Iraq]. 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."
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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