Thursday, July 07, 2016

Far too many were fakes

I would agree with this Tweet.


  1. Iraqi lives matter to Americans and Brits, but only when their suffering can be used to score political points


Back when Bully Boy Bush was in office, I thought we were all wanting to end the war on the left.

Turned out some were just acting enraged to churn out votes for Democrats.

They only mention it now to slam Bully Boy Bush.

As if Barack didn't continue the Iraq War.

As if Barack didn't overturn the Iraqi voters decision in 2010.

As if Barack's done a thing to help that country.

As if Barack's kept his promise.

If Donald Trump is elected president, I can't wait to see the same Dems that have been quiet for the last 8 years suddenly take to the streets to 'oppose' the Iraq War again.


Not all of us were fakes. 

But far too many were.




"Iraq snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):
Wednesday, July 6, 2016.   Chaos and violence continue, the death toll from the Baghdad weekend bombing increases, the Iraq Inquiry dominates the news, Tony Blair weeps, and much more.



Today, the long delayed Iraq Inquiry report was released.  John Chilcot chaired the inquiry and it's also known as the Chilcot Inquiry.  After many years of delays, the official report has finally been issued.  Steve Cannane (Australia's ABC NEWS) explains it's been seven years since the inquiry began and that the report "is 2.6 million words long."  Griff Witte (WASHINGTON POST) maintains, "The findings offer official validation to the views of the Iraq War’s most ardent critics, forensically eviscerating in the sober language of the British civil service nearly every aspect of the conflict’s conception, planning and execution."

Tim Hume (CNN) notes Chilcot's comments:


The former civil servant said that Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein posed "no imminent threat" when the U.S-led invasion was launched in March 2003, and that while military action against him "might have been necessary at some point," the "strategy of containment" could have continued for some time.
Chilcot said former British Prime Minister Tony Blair was warned of the risks of regional instability and the rise of terrorism before the invasion of Iraq, but pressed on regardless.
The UK failed to appreciate the complexity of governing Iraq, and did not devote enough forces to the task of securing the country in the wake of the invasion, he added.


BBC NEWS highlights the following as the reports main points:

  • The UK chose to join the invasion of Iraq before the peaceful options for disarmament had been exhausted. Military action at that time was not a last resort.
  • Military action might have been necessary later, but in March 2003: There was no imminent threat from Saddam Hussein; The strategy of containment could have been adapted and continued for some time; The majority of the Security Council supported continuing UN inspections and monitoring.
  • Judgements about the severity of threat posed by Iraq's weapons of mass destruction - known as WMD - were presented with a certainty that was not justified.


Nick Clark (Great Britain SOCIALIST WORKER) emphasizes the reports findings regarding the lies used to frighten people into supporting the war:


Tony Blair’s “dodgy” dossier gets an entire chapter in the Chilcot Inquiry’s report into the Iraq war, published today.
Blair’s government published the dossier in September 2002 to back up the case for war with “intelligence” on Iraq’s Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMDs). This intelligence later turned out to be false.
But the dossier is also controversial for having been “sexed up”—sensationalised—by Blair’s director of communications and strategy Alistair Campbell.
It is most infamous for implying that Iraq had WMDs that could be launched against British military bases in Cyprus within 45 minutes.
Despite agreeing that the purpose of the dossier was to “make the case” for action against Iraq, the report remarkably finds that, “There is no evidence that intelligence was improperly included in the dossier or that No.10 improperly influenced the text.”
Yet the chapter on the dossier describes several examples of Campbell suggesting draft changes and asking for rewrites before the dossier was published.
For instance the report describes a meeting on the dossier chaired by Campbell in September 2002.

Quoting a passage from Campbell’s own published diaries, the report says, “Commenting on the meeting, Mr Campbell wrote that the dossier: ‘…had to be revelatory and we needed to show that it was new and informative and part of a bigger case’.”


Also covering the (false) claims used to scare the people is Ben Farmer (TELEGRAPH OF LONDON):

Valuable intelligence” found by MI6 about Saddam Hussein’s alleged nerve gas arsenal may have in fact been stolen from a Sean Connery and Nicholas Cage action film, the Chilcot Inquiry has disclosed.
Intelligence officers circulated a report of deadly nerve toxins being held in glass spheres, until it was noticed it bore a marked similarity to scenes in the 1996 thriller The Rock.


MEDIA LENS notes that the inquiry's report ignores the media (but MEDIA LENS gives an overview of the British media and how it failed to challenge or question the march to illegal war). We'll note this from MEDIA LENS' overview:

John Pilger aside, no mainstream journalist has sought to draw attention to the deep complicity of the media in suppressing the most important facts contradicting the US/UK case for war.  Even radical journalists like Robert Fisk, Greg Palast and George Monibot have failed to discuss the role of the liberal media -- The Guardian, The Observer, The Independent, the Independent on Sunday, and the BBC and ITN news -- in burying these facts and in thereby making war possible.


On DEMOCRACY NOW! today (link is text, audio and video), noted academic and activist Tariq Ali shared his take on the report.


TARIQ ALI: It took seven -- it took seven years because it -- it took seven years because every single person interviewed had to have a chance to see the report, and Blair and his lawyers were looking at the fine print very closely, as were the generals and other people.
The findings of the report, quite honestly, are not very remarkable or original, as Sami has already said. These were things that were being said by all of us before this war started. It was what virtually every speaker said at the million-strong Stop the War demonstration in London. Tony Benn and Jeremy Corbyn, in particular, have been saying all this. So, to have official confirmation that what we were all saying was right is nice, but it’s too little and too late.

And because the report had no desire or was not permitted to discuss the legality of this exercise, it means that while there is evidence in the report for independent lawyers to proceed and file a citizen suit, the report itself doesn’t allow the state to actually prosecute Blair for war crimes. He is a war criminal. He pushed the country into this illegal war. His supporters in Parliament are trying to get rid of Jeremy Corbyn, who was 100 percent right on this war, backed by the bulk of the media. So we’re in a strange situation now. The report, I think, will anger lots of people who, unlike us, were not convinced by the movement that what was taking place was a lie, based on a lie, and it was illegal. What is going to happen now remains to be seen, but I would very much hope that independent groups of lawyers and jurists demand now that Blair is charged and tried. It’s very clear he pushed the war. He forced the intelligence services to prepare dodgy dossiers. He pushed his attorney general to changing his opinions before he was allowed to address the Cabinet. All that, we have in the report. The question is: Is anyone going to answer for it, or is this just designed to be therapeutic?



War Criminal Tony Blair had a response to the report.  RT's headline says it all: "Blair pledges 'no excuses' for Iraq, then spends 2hrs making excuses."  While Tony Blair wept in his press conference, spokesperson John Kirby attempted to avoid the report in today's US State Dept press briefing:


QUESTION: Yeah, just a few questions off the back of the Chilcot conclusions. Is there agreement in this building that the U.S. and the UK went to war before exhausting all peaceful options, all options for disarmament, which is one of the conclusions?

MR KIRBY: I’m not going to speak to the findings of the Chilcot report. That’s really for the Government of the UK to talk to, and I’m certainly not going to relitigate the decisions that led to the Iraq war here from the podium in July of 2016. I’m just not going to do that.


QUESTION: Sure, but could you say whether the report mostly confirmed the U.S. assessment of mistakes made and what went wrong?


MR KIRBY: We’re not examining the report with that in mind, with trying to do the forensics. This is, again, a UK report. We’re going to let UK officials speak to it. What I can tell you is our focus is on trying to get a political transition in Syria, trying to defeat [the Islamic State] in Iraq and in Syria, trying to help Prime Minister Abadi make the necessary political and economic reforms he knows he needs to make in his country. That’s where Secretary Kerry’s head is, and we’re not interested in relitigating the decisions that led to the Iraq War in 2003.


QUESTION: Sure. Just one last question: Do you think this document could be helpful for policymakers here in any way?


MR KIRBY: Again, I don’t – we’re not going to make a judgment one way or the other about this report, and I’ll let British officials speak to the degree to which they intend to derive lessons learned from it. That’s really, again, for them to talk to. We’re not going to go through it, we’re not going to examine it, we’re not going to try to do an analysis of it or make a judgment of the findings one way or the other. Our focus, again, is on the challenges we have in Iraq and Syria right now, and that’s where our focus is.


QUESTION: So you’ve basically moved on, is what you’re saying.


MR KIRBY: Our focus is on what’s going on in Iraq and Syria right now.


QUESTION: So – but you were not really a bystander. You’re saying you’ll let them speak. I mean, you’re a part of this war, right? You are the major part of that war, and this report basically is saying that this war, much as many American lawmakers --


MR KIRBY: I think --

QUESTION: -- and others concluded, that this war was premised on wrong premises. It was conducted in the wrong way; it was handled thereafter – that resulted in the mess that we have today. I mean, that is basically where you need to comment.

MR KIRBY: That’s where I need to comment?

QUESTION: Yeah. I mean, what I’m saying is that – yeah. I mean, this is really a major report by your major ally in the war.

MR KIRBY: And I believe --

QUESTION: The war --



MR KIRBY: I believe that UK officials are taking it seriously and I’m going to let them speak to it, Said. I’m not going to relitigate the decisions that led to the Iraq War here, July 2016. You all have reported on those decisions all these many years. The record is out there for anybody to see and to evaluate on their own. Secretary Kerry is focused on trying to help Prime Minister Abadi do the things he needs to do in Iraq and to defeat [the Islamic State] there and in Syria, and we’re going to stay focused on those goals. That’s where our focus is right now, not on doing the forensics on decisions that were made 13 years ago.




The United Kingdom's branch of Amnesty International issued the following:


In response to today’s publication of the Iraq Inquiry, Sir John Chilcot’s much-awaited report on the UK’s involvement in the 2003 Iraq war, Salil Shetty, Secretary General of Amnesty International said:
“In the lead-up to the invasion, Amnesty International urged that the potentially grave consequences of military action be carefully assessed. And on the eve of the US-led invasion we urged full respect for international human rights law and international humanitarian law.
“Tragically, our fears about the safety of the civilian population were well-founded. Thousands of civilians were killed and injured, including in unlawful attacks; millions of people were forced from their homes; and the whole country was thrown into chaos as the occupation forces failed to fulfil their obligation to maintain security.
“While the Chilcot Report did not strictly focus on human rights, any meaningful assessment of the US-led invasion of Iraq and its aftermath cannot ignore the devastating human rights legacy it has left for millions of Iraqis. The UK and US governments cynically used Saddam Hussein’s appalling human rights record – as documented in Amnesty International reports – to help build public support for going to war. Their conduct during the occupation soon laid bare their hypocrisy in exploiting human rights rhetoric.
“In fact, the subsequent occupation was characterized by widespread human rights violations. Thirteen years on, the invasion’s aftermath has become synonymous with shocking images of torture of detainees at Abu Ghraib, the killing of Baha Mousa in UK custody, spiralling sectarian violence and suicide bombings that have claimed tens of thousands more lives.

“One way of showing that the UK government has tried to learn some of the lessons of Iraq would be for it to ensure that current investigations into allegations of unlawful killing and torture and other ill-treatment at the hands of the UK armed forces in Iraq are truly effective and robust. This must include a proper assessment as to the degree to which human rights violations were systemic and apportion responsibility at all levels, something that has been sorely absent to date.

“Wherever there is sufficient admissible evidence, those suspected of criminal responsibility – no matter their rank or position – must be prosecuted in fair trials, while victims and their families must receive full reparation. The UK must also fully cooperate with the International Criminal Court’s preliminary examination into alleged crimes by UK nationals in Iraq from 2003 to 2008, including murder, torture and other ill-treatment.”



Mohamed el-Saleh (NEW STATESMAN) hopes the report will draw attention to other elements of the Iraq War:


For those looking to understand the legacy of the Iraq War, the huge encampment of 85,000 civilians living on the outskirts of Fallujah is a good place to start.
As British politicians and journalists rush to assess Sir John Chilcot’s verdict on the 2003 invasion – the broken city of Fallujah provides a terrible example of what happens to a country when it is torn apart by conflict.

I am an Iraqi citizen, working for an NGO supporting children affected by the conflict. While I understand the need to look back on the decisions that led to the Iraq War, I need to take this opportunity to urge UK politicians to do more to help those who are still affected by the conflict today. 

Back to the State Dept press briefing today:



QUESTION: Let me stay with – on Iraq. Today there are reports on the Popular Mobilization Committees --


MR KIRBY: On the what?


QUESTION: -- or militias – that they have – the Popular Mobilization – it’s a Shia militia supported by Iran, but there seems to be a split along religious grounds. Some want to give allegiance to Najaf, which is a holy place; others to Qom in Iran and so on. Do you have any reports on this, and do you – are you concerned that this may actually further exacerbate an already very bad internecine kind of conflict there more?


MR KIRBY: Well, a couple of thoughts. I mean, first, we’ve said all along that we don’t want to see any decisions made by anybody in the fight against [the Islamic State] result in inflamed sectarian tensions, period. We’ve said that from the very beginning. We have commended Prime Minister Abadi’s efforts to be inclusive as he goes after this threat in his country, and he’s doing that. And he and other leaders in the Iraqi Government we think have done a commendable job folding in the capabilities of the PMF – Popular Mobilization Forces – into some of these operations. That is an internal matter that they have discussed, that they have decided. We have supported that process. But we don’t want to see anybody by dint of what they’re doing against [the Islamic State] further inflame sectarian tensions in the country; that – that’s counterproductive in our view.

And the PMF have proven helpful in the fight against Fallujah. And I won’t speak to future operations and the role that they’ll play or how they’re going to be factored in, but [the Islamic State] is now not in Fallujah and Iraqi Security Forces fought well, fought bravely, fought competently to get them out. Certainly it was a challenge; we knew that, and there was some support by the coalition. PMF were a part of that effort. But how they’re factored into future operations, again, that’s for Prime Minister Abadi to speak to.



Today, the US Defense Dept announced:



Strikes in Iraq
Fighter, attack, bomber and remotely piloted aircraft conducted 14 strikes in Iraq, coordinated with and in support of Iraq’s government:

-- Near Baghdadi, a strike destroyed an ISIL bunker.

-- Near Huwayjah, three strikes struck an ISIL tactical unit and destroyed an ISIL front-end loader and denied ISIL access to terrain.

-- Near Beiji, a strike destroyed an ISIL command-and-control node.

-- Near Kisik, two strikes struck an ISIL tactical unit and destroyed an ISIL assembly area and suppressed an ISIL rocket firing position.

-- Near Mosul, a strike struck an ISIL vehicle bomb factory.

-- Near Qayyarah, three strikes struck two separate ISIL tactical units and destroyed an ISIL mortar system, an ISIL vehicle, an ISIL rocket system and an ISIL headquarters.

-- Near Ramadi, two strikes struck two separate ISIL tactical units and destroyed 10 ISIL fighting positions, an ISIL artillery piece, an ISIL vehicle, two ISIL rocket-propelled-grenade systems, five ISIL heavy machine guns, an ISIL boat and an ISIL sniper position.

-- Near Waleed, a strike struck an ISIL tactical unit and an ISIL fighting position.


Task force officials define a strike as one or more kinetic events that occur in roughly the same geographic location to produce a single, sometimes cumulative, effect. Therefore, officials explained, a single aircraft delivering a single weapon against a lone ISIL vehicle is one strike, but so is multiple aircraft delivering dozens of weapons against buildings, vehicles and weapon systems in a compound, for example, having the cumulative effect of making those targets harder or impossible for ISIL to use. Accordingly, officials said, they do not report the number or type of aircraft employed in a strike, the number of munitions dropped in each strike, or the number of individual munition impact points against a target. Ground-based artillery fired in counterfire or in fire support to maneuver roles is not classified as a strike.




Also today, the death toll from the weekend Baghdad bombing continued to climb.



Iraqis are requesting an international investigation in the Karrada explosion as death toll exceeds 300
Hashtag:










Some of the victims stories from the Karrada bombing 😓









We'll close with Stan's comments on the bombing:




If I had Facebook or Twitter, I'd be using the Iraqi flag or something similar to show solidarity.


I just have blogspot so I'll note that my prayers go out to all those who lost loved ones in the tragic attack.

I have not forgotten how Iraqi MoonNor27 made a point of using her Twitter account to express solidarity with the victims and families after the Orlando attack.

Her country is torn apart and sees something similar to Orlando every day pretty much.

But she made time and effort to notice the suffering of others and we should be willing and able to do the same here in America.

It was a horrible attack and it has destroyed families and dreams and my heart and prayers go out to the victims and their families and friends.

Sunni, Shia, Kurd, Assyrian, whatever, I am one with the people of Iraq as a member of the human race and I am saddened by the attack and the loss of life as well as the tragedy of those who were wounded and must now try to live in a country that we (the US) bomb from the air as well as a country that faces bombs on the ground along with other violence.








iraq
the socialist worker

Wednesday, July 06, 2016

FBI finds Hillary Clinton is a big fat liar

City College law professor Douglas Cox weighs in on today's big announcement at CNN:


While headlines about FBI Director James Comey's unprecedented announcement Tuesday largely focus on the agency recommending no charges against Hillary Clinton, the director's statement was a stinging public indictment of Clinton, her aides, and even her attorneys. While many had already concluded that charges were unlikely, the FBI investigation revealed new facts that illustrate that the possibility of criminal charges was closer than the public knew.
Indeed, anyone who would conclude that the result is a "victory" for Clinton only heard half the FBI statement. In the same breath that Comey stated the FBI recommended no charges, he noted that the FBI found "evidence of potential violations of the statutes regarding the handling of classified information." 


Exactly.


She should have been charged.


But even Comey's 'clearing' of Hillary resulted in rebuking basically everything she's claimed about her e-mails.


She's just a liar.


Cox notes:




When the controversy over her private email server began, Clinton issued broad and unequivocal assertions that the emails contained on her private server contained no classified information and that she had handed over all federal records to the State Department. While the release of information and emails had slowly whittled away at this defense, Tuesday's statement from the FBI director destroyed its remaining vestiges.
Despite Clinton's repeated references to the FBI investigation as simply a "security review," for example, Comey's statement makes it clear that this was a criminal investigation and that Clinton was one of the targets.




Yeah, she's a liar.


She may not be going to prison (she should go to prison) but she's been revealed as a liar.




At SLATE, Jamelle Bouie notes:


The FBI’s judgment sounds like a victory for Secretary Clinton. It wasn’t. Yes, she escaped indictment, thus crossing one unknown from the list of unknowns that could lead to a Donald Trump victory in November. But Comey’s assessment was harsh. By his measure, Clinton and her team at the State Department were “extremely careless in their handling of very sensitive, highly classified information” and that they “should have known that an unclassified system was no place” for discussing items classified “highly sensitive” or “Top Secret.” What’s more, Comey said, there’s a real chance Clinton’s server was compromised by foreign agents, underscoring the degree to which her behavior was reckless.




Hillary Clinton is a big fat liar.




"Iraq snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):
Tuesday, July 5, 2016.  Chaos and violence continue, Iraq's Interior Minister 'resigns,' the UN calls out the targeting of Sunni civilians in Iraq, the death toll from Baghdad's suicide bombing over the weekend has risen to 250, and much more.



Saturday's snapshot noted a Baghdad suicide bombing that had just taken place (it was Saturday night here in the US, already Sunday in Iraq).  The death toll from that bombing has continued to rise.  BBC News notes, "The death toll from Sunday's suicide bombing in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, has risen to 250, the Iraqi government says, making it the deadliest such attack since the 2003 US-led invasion."



250 lives lost.
250 dreams shattered.
250 empty spaces in bed.
250 martyrs.

Thousands of broken hearts mourning,
awaiting justice.













"They came to buy clothes for Eid, now they are buying coffins"


















"They were looking for human remains. But all they found were some shoes and a pile of black ash."

















One of the 200+ civilians killed in 💔














Mother of the groom-to-be Akram al-Karradi who was martyred in Karrada, she is holding his wedding suit.








Funeral procession of the brothers Ali and Adnan - College students who were martyred in Karrada.









Even with the death toll now rising to 250, the attack does not appear to register across the globe the way other attacks in other countries have -- a point made on Twitter:










Read the caption 😭😭


















Over 200 people just died in Iraq and NOONE seems to care&change their damn profile pics to the iraqi flag or atleast hashtag pray for Iraq











Where are the hashtags? Where are the Iraqi flag avis? Where is the global concern? Nowhere.











Will Facebook respect by giving the users an Iraqi flag to put over their profile pictures like they did for Orlando & Paris?














So will monuments around the world light up with the colors of the Iraqi flag after Baghdad bombings that left hundreds killed, injured?













Where are the hashtags? Where are the Iraqi flag avis? Where is the global concern? Nowhere.












The tragedies in Paris and in Orlando, Florida are real and painful.  So is the tragedy of the suicide bombing in Baghdad.

Maybe in the west, we've grown immune to caring about violence in Iraq or the victims of it?  Maybe we choose to ignore it because there's culpability on our hands?  Whatever the reason, there's no denying that 250 people -- at least -- lost their lives and this is a tragedy and it is an outrage.

On the culpability we in the west share, BBC  NEWS interviews Kadhim Sharif Hassan al-Jabbouri who took part in the 20003 "toppling of the famous statue of Saddam Hussein in central Baghdad"


Kadhim Sharif Hassan al-Jabbouri: Now, when I go past that statue, I feel pain and shame.  I ask myself - why did I topple this statue? I'd like to put it back up, to rebuild it. I'd put it back up but I'm afraid that I'd be killed. 


BBC NEWS: Kadhim Sharif Hassan al-Jabbouri used to repair Saddam Hussein's motorcycles. But then he fell out of favour and was jailed for a year and a half. 


Kadhim Sharif Hassan al-Jabbouri:  More than 14 or 15 people in my own family were executed by Saddam. So I was so happy the day that the Americans came and got rid of Saddam's oppressive regime.  


And we'll stop him there because that's where the distortions and lies start.


Since around 2009, he's been making these statements about wanting Saddam back.  We'll assume that they are true statements since they are consistent.

But he's not accurate after that point.

July 3, 2004, David Zucchino's "Army Stage-Managed Fall of Hussein Statue" was published by THE LOS ANGELES TIMES.  In April of 2008, he discussed the report with Rachel Martin on NPR (link is audio and transcript):


Mr. ZUCCHINO: My impression was that there was a spontaneous rally by Iraqis and they jumped on the statue and basically pulled it down. I knew there was some U.S. soldiers or Marines in the area, but I was not clear on exactly what their role was, whether they were just providing security or were taking part. It was fairly nebulous.


MARTIN: So you dug up more specifics that cast light on those circumstances surrounding the toppling of the statue. Explain what you found out.


Mr. ZUCCHINO: This was part of a five-hundred-and-some page review, or report, by the Army on the entire invasion, what went wrong and what went right. It was sort of an After Action Report, and this was just sort of a one or two page sideline, almost a footnote.
They had interviewed an Army psychological operations' team leader and he described how a Marine colonel - the Marines were in charge of that area and had just come in, and this Marine colonel had been looking for a target of opportunity, and seized on that statue.
And according to this interview with the psy-ops commander, there were Iraqis milling around the statue, and in fact, had been beating it with sledgehammers and apparently thinking about trying to bring it down, but it was a huge statue and they had no way to do that. So the Marines came up with the idea of bringing in a big recovery vehicle, like a wrecker, and trying to bring it down that way.
But the psychological operations commander noticed that the Marines had put an American flag on the statue and he thought that was a terrible idea, because it looked like an occupation and he didn't want - the psychological ops didn't want that, so they replaced it with an Iraqi flag, hooked a cable up to it and started pulling it down.
But somebody had the bright idea of getting a bunch of Iraqis and a lot of kids and pile them on the wrecker to make it look like a spontaneous Iraqi event, rather than, you know, the Marines sort of stage-managing this entire dramatic fall of the statue.


MARTIN: So we can't say that it was the idea of this Marine colonel. He basically was surveying the circumstances, saw that there were Iraqis who were already kind of attacking the statue, and so the U.S. military, according to this report, just facilitated something.



Mr. ZUCCHINO: Correct. They took advantage of an opportunity. As he said, it was a target of opportunity, and they just sort of stage-managed it and made it happen in a way that it would not have happened if the Marines had not intervened. 


Again, we'll grant that Kadhim Sharif Hassan al-Jabbouri's sentiments regarding Saddam Hussein are true since he's repeatedly made them to the press beginning in 2009.  But we're not going to include his fantasy of how the statue came down when that myth was long ago disproven.


Another thing that is true -- though probably just a stunt -- is a resignation.  Saif Hameed and Ahmed Rasheed (REUTERS) report, "Iraq's interior minister resigned on Tuesday and said a deputy would take over his responsibilities, a few days after the deadliest of many car bombings in Baghdad since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion."  Probably just a stunt?  US-installed prime minister of Iraq Haider al-Abadi has yet to accept the resignation.

Mohammed al-Ghabban has long been a source of controversy.  The Shi'ite politician has been accused of misusing the Ministry of the Interior to target Sunni civilians.  He's a member of State of Law, the political slate former prime minister and forever thug Nouri al-Maliki started in 2009.


Haydar Hadi and Sibel Ugurlu (Anadolu Agency) quotes al-Ghabban stating:





"I have tendered my resignation to Prime Minister [Haidar] al-Abadi," he said.


"I can withdraw it again in the event that the security apparatus is adequately reformed," he added.


That's why we're calling it a stunt.

You don't announce you're resigning and then, in the next sentence, that you might withdraw your resignation.  This is a stunt.

Tim Hume, Ben Wedeman and Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) observe:


The government has assured people that ridding Falluja -- about 65 kilometers (40 miles) west of Baghdad -- and the rest of Anbar province of the terror group would deliver improved security to the capital, but it hasn't been the case.


Instead, Baghdad has suffered the deadliest of a string of terror attacks across the world executed or inspired by ISIS during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

Meanwhile the office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein, issued the following statement today:

GENEVA (5 July 2016) – As the death toll after Sunday’s suicide bomb in Baghdad continued to climb to well above 150, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein on Tuesday deplored the terrible loss of innocent lives. The High Commissioner warned that in addition to doing more to protect civilians from ISIL attacks, it is essential the Iraqi authorities step in to halt uncontrolled militias from continuing to take revenge on civilians fleeing towns recaptured from ISIL.
“I utterly condemn this latest horrendous ISIL atrocity, targeting innocent civilians who were celebrating Ramadan in the heart of Baghdad,” Zeid said. “Along with other recent abominations associated with ISIL in Dhaka, Istanbul and Orlando, the sheer unrestrained viciousness of these people defies belief.”
The High Commissioner warned, however, that “acts of revenge and hasty, injudicious policy decisions in reaction to such attacks are simply helping ISIL carry out its strategy to divide societies and promote hatred.”
“ISIL needs to be defeated, and defeated soon,” he said. “But in trying to defeat them, we must be extra careful not to react to their provocations in the way they predict we will react and want us to react. We need not just to be stronger than they are, but cleverer than they are. And in this we are failing badly, not just in Iraq but in a variety of responses all over the world, enabling them to tap into resentments about heavy-handed or unlawful responses to recruit more followers, create more fanatics and suicide bombers.”
“After the loss of Ramadi and Fallujah, with Mosul likely to be the next big battleground, I fear we will see more of these atrocities by ISIL, as they seek to make Iraq implode once more. The way we react, in Iraq and elsewhere, will in many ways decide whether ISIL benefits from its indiscriminate acts of mass murder, or is ultimately destroyed by them,” the UN Human rights Chief said.
Zeid urged the Iraqi authorities to take immediate action to locate and free more than 600 men and boys reportedly abducted by a militia group involved in the recapture of Fallujah from ISIL in June.
On 1 June, according to various witnesses interviewed in Iraq, approximately 8,000 civilians, including some 1,500 men and boys over the age of 14, left their village in Saqlawiyah, near Fallujah.  Nearly all belonged to the Albo Akash clan of the al Mahamda Tribe. In the distance they saw what appeared to be a line of Government forces, who hailed them with loudspeakers, saying the villagers had nothing to fear from them. However, once they reached the line, witnesses said that hidden behind the Iraqi flags they saw the flags of a militia called Kataaib Hezbollah.
The militia fighters immediately separated the men and teenage boys from the women and children, who were transferred to Government-run camps for displaced people near Amiryat al Fallujah. The males were initially taken to warehouses and then moved on successive occasions over the next four days to a number of other sites between Saqaliwah and Fallujah.
Mistreatment began almost immediately. Men were crammed into small rooms or halls, sometimes more than 60 to a room. They were denied water and food, and there was little or no ventilation. When they asked for water or food or air, they were abused by militia members, told that their treatment was ‘revenge for Camp Speicher,’* and beaten with shovels, sticks, and pipes.
A number of witnesses attested that some who asked for water or complained about the air were dragged outside and shot, strangled, or severely beaten. In addition, witnesses stated that at least four men were beheaded. Others were handcuffed and beaten to death, and the bodies of at least two men were set on fire.
On 5 June, they were separated into two groups – one consisting of 605 men and boys, and the other of around 900.  The smaller group was taken to join the women and children in the Government clearance centre in Ameriyat al Fallujah.
“The fate of the larger group is unknown, which is intensely worrying, particularly given the references made to revenge for the Camp Speicher massacre,” Zeid said. “There is a list of the names of 643 missing men and boys, as well as of 49 others believed to have been summarily executed or tortured to death while in the initial custody of Kataaib Hezbollah. Tribal leaders believe there are around 200 more unaccounted for, whose names have not yet been collected.
The High Commissioner noted that “this appears to be the worst – but far from the first – such incident involving unofficial militias fighting alongside Government forces against ISIL”, and urged the Government to take serious action to prevent further occurrences, including bringing those responsible to account.
“These crimes are not only abhorrent,” Zeid said. “They are also wholly counterproductive. They give ISIL a propaganda victory, and push people into their arms. They increase the likelihood of a renewed cycle of full-throttle sectarian violence. The Prime Minister of Iraq has set up an investigation committee into the disappearances, which I obviously support. But I believe the authorities have to take strong and immediate action to locate the missing men or ascertain precisely what happened to them.
“With a massive and prolonged battle for Mosul just around the corner, the potential for episodes like this to stiffen ISIL’s resistance should not be underestimated,” the High Commissioner said.  “There must be an understanding that most of the male inhabitants of these cities are not willing members of ISIL, nor do they necessarily have anything to do with them at all beyond doing what is necessary to stay alive. People who escape from ISIL should be treated with sympathy and respect, not tortured and killed simply on the basis of their gender and where they had the misfortune to be living when ISIL arrived.”
ENDS
*A UN report published in July 2015 concluded that as many as 1,700 cadets were brutally slaughtered by ISIL after Camp Speicher was overrun in June 2014. See: http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=16229&LangID=E
For more information and media requests, please contact please contact Rupert Colville (+41 22 917 9767 / rcolville@ohchr.org) or Cécile Pouilly (+41 22 917 9310 / cpouilly@ohchr.org)



There are a hundred other topics I'd love to cover but this snapshot is already too long.  We have to cover the big news of the day regarding War Hawk Hillary Clinton: the FBI's announcement regarding her e-mails.  Activist and Academy Award winning actress Susan Sarandon's done a great job on Twitter so we'll grab from her:





  1. If you believe Comey's findings, it means Clinton publicly lied on key points on multiple occasions. But whatever.




Lots of people don't have explicit "criminal intent" when they commit crimes, but are prosecuted anyway, for far less severe wrongdoing.




Exactly: if this had been anyone unimportant, they'd have been (unjustly) charged by now, & Clinton would support it




Comey says the FBI found "extremely careless" handling of highly sensitive information by Hillary and her subordinates. Gross negligence.




Comey: people who did what Clinton has done are "often subjected to security or administrative sanctions" - but not prosecuted.




Comey explicitly debunked a talking point Hillary has repeated ad nauseam -- "marked classified at the time..." -- using HRC's own wording




110 Hillary Clinton emails contained classified information at the time they were sent.

8 were TOP SECRET.

Laws were violated.

A mess.






Larry Johnson's a political independent and a national security analyst who is also former CIA.  At his blog NO QUARTER, he shares his thoughts which include:


The facts are compelling and the lies of Hillary totally exposed:

  1. She did mail classified information, including Top Secret information that was part of a Special Access Program, multiple times.
  2. The information was classified when she sent and received the messages–it was not subsequently “up” classified.
  3. Some of the information was marked classified (e.g., SECRET, CONFIDENTIAL).
  4. Clinton and her team failed to turn over email messages completely and in a timely manner.
  5. Hillary’s email servers likely were breached by Foreign Intelligence services.


He offers his take on the FBI announcement today and he also links to an important fact check by the AP.









iraq