Wednesday, February 15, 2017

I feel sorry for him

Justin Raimondo (ANTIWAR.COM) writes:

These leaks are clearly illegal: plenty of civilians have been prosecuted and jailed for much less. But legality is not something that worries the CIA and the national security bureaucracy, because they’re above the law. And you don’t bother with legality when you’re engaged in an attempted coup.
The Flynn resignation is just the beginning. As one Politico writer put it, it won’t stop there. They’ll move on to new targets, and they won’t rest until they’ve bagged their real target: the President of the United States
Hillary Clinton’s main campaign theme – that Trump is essentially a Russian agent, a kind of Manchurian candidate – is being given new life by this latest non-scandal. The anti-Trumpers in the GOP are now uniting with the Democrats in calling for an “investigation,” i.e. a fishing expedition, into Flynn’s “links” to the Kremlin. All that’s missing from this scenario is Sen. Joe McCarthy demanding to know “Are you or have you ever been …?”

While our deranged “liberals” are screaming that we mustn’t “normalize” Trump, the real danger is that we’re normalizing the illegal and unethical methods of his most determined – and powerful – opponents. Until and unless the Trump administration acts quickly and decisively to rid the nation of out-of-control intelligence agencies that are aggressively intervening in our domestic politics, we will soon resemble one of those Third World nations where coups are routine.  


I worry about this country.

We're applauding this nonsense.

We should be calling it out.

Instead, hatred/dislike of Trump justifies anything.

I didn't vote for Trump.

And I'm really mad at the media and the CIA and all that nonsense because I honestly feel sorry for Donald Trump right now.

It's not easy being the president -- look at how gray 'young' Barack Obama is now.

That doesn't mean we don't criticize them or call them out or mock them or whatever.

But when the CIA is actively working against a president?

That's just flat out illegal.

And we need to be appalled -- all Americans -- at what is taking place.




"Iraq snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):
Wednesday, February 15, 2017.   Chaos and violence continues, MEDIA MATTERS remembers the Iraq War, the so-called Center for American Progress becomes as hawkish as John McCain and oh, so much more.

That broken clock MEDIA MATTERS manages to get just a few things right:

As NBC News faces growing questions about moving to the right, the network’s chairman, Andrew Lack, announced that Noah Oppenheim, a Today show producer who was an outspoken supporter of the Iraq War and has a lengthy history with conservative media, will be the new president of NBC News.
During 2003 and into 2004, Oppenheim was a pro-Iraq War pundit on MSNBC. On July 19, 2003, four months after the invasion, Oppenheim appeared on MSNBC Live to respond to a firestorm stemming from President George W. Bush’s false assertion in the 2003 State of the Union address about Iraq’s supposed nuclear weapon capabilities. Oppenheim defended the Bush administration for misleading the public in order to make the case for war by saying that that intelligence business “is not an exact science” and you have to “make educated guesses.” 

It's important to note the piece is written by John Whitenhouse and Timothy Johnson.  I'll state next time you write a piece in 2017 and are note tolls, don't use a piece from 2015 and pretend like you're noting current tolls.  Other than that, they're young and not part of the institutional mess that is MEDIA MATTERS so we'll move on except to note that lovely Eric Boehlert uses Iraq as a political football as we've long noted.  Proof again as his outlet's Iraq article is written by two young men and not old and gray Eric.

Why is MEDIA MATTERS mentioning Iraq?

There's a Republican in the White House!!!!

Barack Obama has left the building and all the Democratic Party house organs can now remember Iraq.

They couldn't when Barack was in office.

They didn't want to offend.

But the so-called Center for American Progress does slap Barack in the face with their recent nonsense entitled "6 Steps the Trump Administration Should Take in Iraq."

Before we get into that piece, remember the claim that electing War Hawk Hillary Clinton would help all women?

Something about a rising tugboat lifting everyone?

That's not how women's rights have ever worked and if you doubt that, Hillary's love slave Neera Tanden is now in charge at the Center for American Progress.  In fact, she's the president!

And yet, please note, their 'think' piece is written by three men.

Three White men.

Where's the diversity at CAP?

War Hawk Neera took her deadly vagina all the way to the top and I don't see any more women at the house organ -- let alone any women writing 'important' think pieces.

Neera is a fraud.

So was Hillary.

And so is the Center for American Progress.

In "Cole's dead wrong," Mike educated a misinformed youth who was saying the Republican Party was to blame for the Iraq War.

This overlooks the Democratic house organs that had supported the war and the many Democratic politicians who had supported it (including four who made it onto the Democratic Party's presidential ticket: John Kerry and John Edwards, Joe Biden and Hillary Clinton).

If people like Cole didn't get the point before they should check out the so-called Center for American Progress' nonsense which includes:



After rectifying his early unforced errors, the single most pressing decision facing President Trump on Iraq is whether to keep U.S. soldiers in the country for a follow-on mission after the defeat of IS. The U.S. military presence in Iraq has expanded incrementally since mid-2014, and now includes more than 6,000 personnel at Al Asad and Taqaddam air bases in Anbar; Qayarrah Air Base near Mosul; and Joint Operations Centers in Baghdad and Erbil.8 The overall mission has also expanded to include close air support, fire support, logistical assistance, high-value targeting, and embedded U.S. forces behind the frontlines.
Even after IS is pushed out from Iraqi cities, much of this U.S. military support will still be needed to help provide enduring security. Two years ago, the Iraqi army suffered the most stunning collapse of any modern military force in recent memory.



You may need to take a second to go back and re-read that excerpt one more time.

First, let's note it's a slap at Barack.

Cowards that they are, they can't repudiate him by name.

But that's what it is.

We slammed Barack all the time here -- but then we're not anyone's house organ.

When Barack was elected, before he was sworn in, it was advocated here -- and Ava and I also advocated it to friends on Barack's transition team: Get out of Iraq now!

Why immediately?

The 2008 vote was a for that.

The longer you stayed, the more your impulse to tinker, the grander your image of yourself and the belief that you could save things.

Announce -- as he campaigned on -- a withdrawal beginning immediately, say the American people have spoken and then whatever happened -- and it was and will be ugly when Iraq's left to stand on its own -- was the responsibility of the Iraqi people.

By keeping a toe in the pool, you took responsibility for it.

And now CAP is taking the right-wing position that Barack should not have pulled US troops.

(He did a drawdown, he didn't do a withdrawal.  Check all DOD statements on the matter.  It was a drawdown.  As Ted Koppel reported in December 2011 -- his first report for NBC and, really his last -- and he also covered it on NPR -- all US troops did not leave Iraq.  In addition, many were moved to Kuwait.  In September 2012, less than a year later, Barack would send more Special Ops into Iraq -- even THE NEW YORK TIMES reported that though all other outlets ignored it.)

Now CAP is calling for eternal war.

How very John McCain of them.

Let's drop back to CNN, 2008:


 This week, Democratic presidential candidates Sen. Hillary Clinton and Sen. Barack Obama both took McCain to task for the comments, saying that if he's elected he would continue what they call President Bush's failed policies in Iraq.
"It's not a matter of how long we're in Iraq, it's if we succeed or not," McCain said to CNN's Larry King.
"And both Sen. Obama and Clinton want to set a date for withdrawal -- that means chaos, that means genocide, that means undoing all the success we've achieved and al Qaeda tells the world they defeated the United States of America.
"I won't let that happen."
[. . .]
 "He said recently he could see having troops in Iraq for 100 years," Clinton said at an Arlington, Virginia, rally last week in a line she's repeated on the campaign trail. "Well, I want them home within 60 days of my becoming president of the United States."
Obama took a similar tack.
"Sen. McCain said the other day that we might be mired for 100 years in Iraq -- which is reason enough not to give him four years in the White House," Obama has said on several occasions. 


The Center for American Progress and John McCain?

Apparently, that's the house organ's new title.

Grasp how low we have sunken on the left and so-called left: A Democratic Party house organ is calling for US troops to stay in Iraq.

Neere, you're strap on war penis is showing.

War, war and more war.

That's apparently a Democratic Party position.

Well it's not a left position.

So we'll reject it.

It's not a Libertarian position so hopefully they'll also reject it.

Hopefully, most sensible people will.

There's no sensibility at CAP.

Just a blind worship of war and a strong desire to lap at the crotch of the military.

One of their talking points for this hideous article is "Treat Iraqis fighting IS with respect and reassure the Iraqi government of continued U.S. commitment."


You can't do that.

If you treat them with respect, you hold them accountable to the law.  Both US law and international law demands the US government pull support from Iraq.

The Iraqi forces are documented abusing civilians, beating them, killing them.

Domestic and international law forbids the US government from supporting the government as a result.

These are not isolated cases (though the law makes no exception based on frequency), this is an established and documented pattern -- documented by human rights organizations and recognized by the US State Dept.

So if we're going to respect them, then we follow the law.

But CAP doesn't mean respect, they mean 'respect.'

The three men wants to lay on their backs and spread their legs or maybe take it doggy style from the Iraqi military whose brute force so turns them on.  Neera, hand out condoms, your boys should always play safe.

As a think tank, they should be condemning War Crimes.

Good little house Nazis, they go right along with the Iraqi government in trying to render this atrocities invisible.


The current unrest in Iraq does not result from the Iraq War.

You can still bash Bully Boy Bush.  But you also need to bash Barack.

Following the BBB surge, violence was down.  Over 100,000 US troops were in Iraq for the surge.  They were there to address the violence.

While they were doing that, Bully Boy Bush was supposed to be doing a diplomatic surge via the State Dept.  The military was to address the violence and provide space for the politicians to work on reconciliation.

Never happened.

The surge was a failure.

(Not because the US military didn't do their job -- they did their job -- but because the US diplomatic corps did not do their job -- or were tasked with a job that was impossible.)

There was no reconciliation.

And things got worse and worse in Iraq.

So in the March 2010 elections, Nouri al-Maliki was defeated in his bid for a second term as prime minister.

Iraqiya -- a mixed political slate attempting to represent all Iraqis -- won.

And they won for a unification message.

The Iraqi people were tired of the fundamentalist zealots.

But Nouri refused to step down.

After eight months of no Iraqi government, Barack caved and gave Nouri a second term.

He had the State Dept negotiate The Erbil Agreement which gave Nouri a second term (and overturned the Iraqi votes).

It was supposed to do more than that but Nouri never lived up to the contract and, after seizing office, declared it unconstitutional.

In his second term, Nouri's persecution of the Iraqi people (mainly Sunnis, but all suffered from his paranoia) intensified.

This is why Iraq is such a mess right now.

The people voted.

Their votes were disrespected.

They then appealed to their elected leaders in Parliament.

These leaders followed the Constitution and drew up a petition for a no-confidence vote to oust Nouri.

The petition had to be presented to Parliament by the President of Iraq.

This was strictly ceremonial.

But the White House, specifically Vice President Joe Biden, pressured President Jalal Talabani not to present it.  And he announced that he wouldn't and fled to Germany under the excuse of life threatening surgery being required.  (A lie.  He had elective knee surgery. And that lie would come back to haunt him at the end of the year when he had a stroke and was then taken to Germany.)

The people had used the ballot box.  It failed.  They had used their leaders.  That failed.

So they took to the streets and protested for over a year -- while the western media largely ignored it.

They ignored it as Nouri attacked the protesters.

They ignored it as Nouri had the protesters killed.


They ignored the April 23, 2013 massacre of a sit-in in Hawija which resulted from  Nouri's federal forces storming in.  Alsumaria noted Kirkuk's Department of Health (Hawija is in Kirkuk)  announced 50 activists have died and 110 were injured in the assault.   AFP reported the death toll eventually (as some wounded died) rose to 53 dead.   UNICEF noted that the dead included 8 children (twelve more were injured).

At the start of 2014, Nouri begins daily bombing residential areas in Falluja -- killing and wounding hundreds of civilians including children.  War Crimes.

Only in the sixth month of these War Crimes does Barack begin to realize that Nouri cannot remain prime minister.  Two months later, the US will install Hayder al-Abadi as prime minister.

Nouri the thug didn't just kill protesters or civilians in Falluja, he had his enemies (and their families) rounded up and disappeared.

His crimes were right there for the world to see but they chose not to, they chose to look the other way.  Which is why he may stand a good chance, in 2018, of again becoming prime minister.

But history will explore Nouri's War Crimes.  They will see him as a tyrant.

Someone who attacked the homes of political rivals with the Iraqi military, someone who intimidated political rivals by having their homes circled by military tanks.

Someone who grew rich as prime minister by stealing from the Iraqi people.

That's on Bully Boy Bush (who selected him in 2006 for prime minister because the CIA analysis on Nouri noted his deep paranoia and how the US could use it to manipulate him -- specifically with regards to keeping US troops in Iraq) and it's on Barack (who overturned the 2010 Iraqi vote and gave Nouri a second term no one wanted).

CAP thinks the divisions can be healed at the local level via local control.

While that might help some, the reality is that's not an answer if a Nouri is back in power.

Nouri did not respect the local level powers -- whether it was governors or whether it was city councils.  Stop thinking in the abstract and start looking at what went down and learn from it.


At the very end of their 'answers,' CAP offers this:


Finally, the administration may need to condition continued U.S. assistance on Iraqi progress on implementing the Iraqi government’s formal reconciliation agenda. To facilitate these efforts, the U.S. Department of State should bolster its presence in Iraq, including through multiple diplomats of ambassadorial rank.

Might they need to do that?

Google "diplomatic toolbox" and "The Common Ills."

You'll get a small idea of how many times -- and how many years -- we've been insisting on that.

And we've done so not as a "finally" or as a "may need to" but as a do it now.

As it should have been done.

Neera's Center for American Progress And John McCain will keep US troops trapped in Iraq forever if they have their way.

A position, please remember, which the Democratic Party denounced in 2008 -- when John McCain was serving it up.



Feb 15 2003 – Over 25 million people in 100+ countries protest Pres George W Bush’s plan to wage war in Iraq.
 
 



That's 14 years ago.

Some of you may have been too young to have participated in a rally around the world.

Some of you might have been sold on the lies the media served up back then.

But a huge number of us did stand up around the world.

I don't know about your groups but I didn't see Democratic politicians at the rally I attended beyond state reps in the assembly.

Didn't see Neera either.  Or Joan Walsh.  Or any of the many useless who self-misrepresent as voices of the left.


Doubt they'll object to Depleted Uranium either.

It was used in Iraq in the early years of the war.  It's one of the reasons for the many birth defects in contaminated areas.  The Russian government has stated that the US has used Depleted Uranium in the bombings in Iraq and in Syria (in the Iraq bombings, they're referring to the ones Barack ordered in August of 2014 that have continued daily ever since -- and continued under Donald Trump).

RUSSIAN NEWS AGENCY TASS quotes US CENTCOM spokesperson Josh Jacques stating, "I can confirm the use of depleted uranium.  The combination of Armored Piercing Incendiary (DU) rounds mixed with High Explosive Incendiary rounds was used to ensure a higher probability of destruction of the truck fleet ISIS was using to transport its illicit oil."


So how long before they admit to using it (again) in Iraq?


It's day 121 of The Mosul Slog.

TRT WORLD notes:

Around 750,000 people are trapped in western Mosul with no means of safe exit ahead of Iraq’s military offensive that could be launched any day, Oxfam warned in its report on Tuesday, calling on the Iraqi-led coalition to prioritise protection of civilians.
Mosul is Iraq's second-largest city which fell to [the Islamic State] in 2014. In October, the Iraqi-led coalition launched a major military offensive to drive out [the Islamic State] from the city.
The report said humanitarian conditions in western Mosul have worsened due to the supply routes being cut off following the recapture of the city’s east in November.
It raised concerns for the families trapped in the city’s west, particularly those living in the narrow streets of the old city which could turn into “death traps” once the military operation begins.
Despite the Iraqi prime minister’s commitment to prioritise civilians safety, around 2,000 civilians were killed or injured in the first three months of the offensive to retake Mosul from [the Islamic State], the report said.
"Over 190,000 people fled their homes, although around 30,000 have now returned," it said.

The international agency urged all the armed forces to avoid use of heavy weapons in the populated areas. It also called for provision of safe exits to avoid civilian casualties.


RELIEF INTERNATIONAL notes:

As thousands of families began fleeing Mosul, Relief International’s medical teams raced toward the crisis.
United Nations officials estimate that up to 200,000 people could flood newly liberated areas, leading to what they predict will be the largest humanitarian crisis in recent months. As many as 1.5 million people ultimately could be affected.

Relief International has been assisting displaced Iraqis since they began escaping from Mosul in July 2016. As one of the organizations best positioned to respond, RI mobilized quickly when the military campaign to retake the northern Iraqi city began in mid-October. RI teams are expanding into newly critical areas to provide individuals with frontline medical services, including first aid and immediate trauma relief.


Please remember, Mosul was seized by the Islamic State in June of 2014.  Hayder became prime minister in August of 2016.

No attempt was made to liberate Mosul until October of 2016.

He had over two years to plan it.

And still civilians are dying and at risk.

The Mosul Slog.


The following community sites -- plus PACIFICA EVENING NEWS -- updated:



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  • The dive?
    13 hours ago 







  • iraq

    Tuesday, February 14, 2017

    They raise 'em dumb at POLITICO

    Hillary's emails were not "leaked" -- the ones that were released came via FOIA. So this tweet makes no sense.






    I was feeling a little sorry for Josh Dawsey.

    I was thinking, poor guy, humiliated in front of everyone.

    I was thinking he was some Hillary fan who probably joined 'the resistance' and was trying to make a difference -- and dumb enough to believe that was possible with 'the resistance.'

    But, here's the thing, he's a reporter!

    For POLITICO.

    He should be humiliated.

    What an idiot.

    POLITICO should be embarrassed as well.



    "Iraq snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):
    Tuesday, February 14, 2017.  Chaos and violence continue, 'liberated' eastern Mosul sure is violent for a 'liberated' area, a US think-tanker proposes splitting up Iraq, United Nations backs call of protesters for reform of the Electoral Commission, and much more.



    Michael Knights is steaming mad.  And he takes his crazy to FOREIGN POLICY:


    On Jan. 21, the newly minted commander in chief raised his oft-repeated mantra that the United States might have offset the costs of the Iraq War by somehow seizing Iraqi oil. Six days later, he signed an executive order banning Iraqi nationals from entering the United States for 90 days and Iraqi refugees from entering for 120 days. The banned persons initially included thousands of translators and other Iraqis who risked their lives by serving alongside U.S. troops in Iraq.





    Thousands?

    No.

    As Trudy Rubin (PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER) explained last week:
    By now you probably know that Trump's claim that a mere 109 visa-holders were affected was nonsense. At least 60,000 U.S. visas were canceled, causing chaos for foreign students, academics, high-tech workers, doctors who serve rural America, family members of U.S. citizens, and tourists. That's beside green-card holders - permanent U.S. residents - who were originally included in the ban (most were eventually permitted to enter).
    What you may not know is that the ban included Iraqis who held Special Immigrant Visas (SIV) issued to interpreters who helped the U.S. military. Thank heavens the Trump administration was shamed (and pressed by the Pentagon) into revising that decision. However, that affected relatively few Iraqis, since the SIV program ended in 2014; only 19 such visas were issued during the last three years, according to the State Department (around 500 cases are still in process).
    And what you probably don't know is that many other Iraqis who risked their lives helping Americans are still excluded by the ban.


    Around 500 cases are still in process.

    Knights goes with "thousands."  And forgets to note that the program ended in 2014 so these 500 cases should have had already been ruled on by the previous administration.

    But what do facts matter when you're wagging your war-on at the country as it drips pre-death?

    Michael writes:

    The good news is that the United States is not swimming against the tide of Iraqi politics. On the contrary, it has aligned itself with the political and religious mainstream. Most Iraqis don’t want their country to be controlled by outsiders. They want sovereignty, choices, and leverage.
    This is not what Iran offers. Iraqi nationalists — whether they are Shiite moderates like Abadi, U.S.-trained special forces soldiers, Sunni Arabs, or even homegrown Shiite radicals like Moqtada al-Sadr — know that it would be curtains for them as soon as the Iranian-backed factions took over Baghdad. Meanwhile, the Shiite religious leadership in Najaf is looking down the barrel of an Iranian gun. When the country’s preeminent Shiite religious authority, the 86-year-old Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, passes away, there will be a fierce scramble for spiritual leadership of Iraqi Shiites, and Iran will play hardball for this ultimate prize.
    The semiautonomous Iraqi Kurds, America’s oldest allies in Iraq, can also look forward to a new confrontation with the Iraqi government if Tehran’s proxies take over Baghdad. Just as the theocracy in Tehran constantly vents its special hatred for Iran’s Kurds, so too will the IRGC try to place Iraqi Kurds under the hammer of an oppressive state.

    The United States has a much less prescriptive vision that’s far more attractive to Iraqis: Brett McGurk, the U.S. special envoy for the anti-Islamic State coalition, has called for “functioning federalism,” power sharing between ethnosectarian blocs, and a negotiated settlement over the future status of Iraqi Kurdistan between Baghdad and the Kurds. At heart, Washington wants a strong and sovereign Iraq so that the United States can reduce its presence without ceding the country to Iran.



    So Brett's calling for what former Vice President Joe Biden called for when he was a member of the US Senate?

    And has Michael Knights forgotten how badly that went over?

    First, it was that the US was trying to destroy Iraq.

    Then you have people of all sects speak out against federalism.

    Federalism may be a good idea -- it may not be.

    But that's something for the Iraqi people to determine -- not Brett McGurk, not Michael Knights.

    Though some Shi'ites were for it, the loudest argument against it came from Shi'ites who, because they are the majority population, don't see the need to split up Iraq or its resources.


    As for aligning itself with the political and religious mainstream?

    When?

    When did the US do that?

    When the US government installed exiles who fled their country for decades and only returned after the foreign invaders ran Saddam Hussein out of Baghdad?

    Those chickens?

    Time and again, the US has backed tryants because, in the words of disgraced US Ambassador to Iraq Chris Hill, "Iraq needs a strongman."

    That's why, when the Iraqi people voted Nouri out as prime minister in 2010, Barack Obama nullified the votes (with The Erbil Agreement) and gave Nouri a second term.

    And, Michael Knights, you know damn well how that turned out.

    Currently, the US has installed Hayder al-Abadi as prime minister (don't we love Iraq's right to self-determination -- in theory, even if we never let them practice it).

    He's not moderate.

    He's ineffectual at best.

    No one listens to him.

    He's a stooge.

    He's not even a benign stooge.

    He's carried out most of Nouri al-Maliki's policies and gets away with it because we don't want honesty on the world stage.

    We want to move on to our favorite lies that demand that we insist the US rescued Iraq, saved it, made it better.

    No.

    That's not what happened.

    It's not what's happening.

    And unless or until the Iraqi people get a say in their government, they have no reason to be vested in it.

    Their Constitution is repeatedly overruled by the US State Department.

    Their leaders don't serve them and hide away in fortresses.

    While the oil revenues bring in billions and billions each year, the bulk of the (young) population of Iraq lives in poverty.

    What the corrupt leaders aren't stealing, technocrats are (Basra's becoming a real hot seat as the corruption there is getting harder and harder to ignore and leading to public protests).

    Iraq should be sitting pretty but instead its leaders have plundered it and now it depends on the IMF to stay afloat.

    Michael Knights insists Iraq is "too big to fail."

    But the US has ensured that it fails and that is has failed.

    It's a failed state.

    Michael knows that.

    But he puts his brave little camper face and pretends he's going to Boy Scout the hell out of Iraq.

    Sorry, it's not happening.

    And it's not going to happen while people delude themselves.

    If that seems harsh, I'm tired of the crap.

    What's Michael calling for?  What is always called for.

    The Trump administration needs to act now to keep this formula going. The first thing it can do is extend the Combined Joint Task Force — Operation Inherent Resolve mission by at least two years. 

    We never call for a diplomatic surge, do we?

    No, it's always keep US forces in or send more.

    The military is forever used as the fixer.

    That's not their job.

    That's not their role.

    Until you can grasp that, you're not helping Iraq or the Iraqi people.  (But, if you notice, once again an article about what the Iraqi people need once again ignores the Iraqi people themselves.)

    Michael Knights ignores the need -- the vital need -- for reform and promises to be kept.

    France's Foreign Ministry, just three days ago, issued a statement on Saturday's violence which ended with:

    France calls on the Iraqi government - to whom we reaffirm our full support - to continue to implement the reforms needed to ensure national reconciliation and promote stability in Iraq. While Iraq is engaged in the battle for Mosul, which could represent a turning point in the fight against [the Islamic State], unity among the Iraqi people is critical.


    That's what should have been the starting point of Michael Knights' piece.

    And the really sad thing is, he knows that.

    But he's not offering honesty, he's trying to 'sell' what he wants.

    The lies just never end.  (No wonder the Iraq War never ends.)

    US President Donald Trump will not have Michael Flynn as his national security advisor.  Flynn had conversations with Russia following the US election (which apparently including talk of sanctions) and he apparently misled the administration about those talks.  He has now resigned.  Lt Gen Joseph Kellogg (Keith Kellogg) is now the acting national security advisor.

    And THE LOS ANGELES TIMES sees that as reason to re-post a December 20, 2003 piece by John Hendren that's nothing but a butterfly kiss to Keith Kellogg's ass.


    THE NATION is also highlighting older material, a 2016 piece by Tim Shorrock:


     Kellogg played a critical role in the disastrous US occupation of Iraq as the director of operations of the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), which ran the country after the 2003 invasion. Since leaving the military, he has been deeply involved in the high-tech, computer-driven style of warfare that has spawned the enormous business complex of contractors and suppliers that ring Washington, DC, from the CIA to the National Security Agency.
    [. . .]
     From 2005 to 2009, Kellogg was a top executive with CACI International, one of the companies that supplied interrogators who abused and tortured Iraqi prisoners at the US military prison at Abu Ghraib.


    At least THE NATION piece qualifies as reporting.  (Slobbering PR is what THE LOS ANGELES TIMES has reposted.)  We'll also note this Tweet from journalist Rajiv Chandrasekaran.


    Acting NSA Kellogg was COO of the disastrous CPA, the 2003-4 US occupation authority in Iraq, whose policies fueled the insurgency







    Meanwhile Lori Mason (AL-FANAR MEDIA) remembers to include some of the people Michael Knights overlooked as she explores how to rebuild higher education in Iraq:

    Over the past two years, universities managed to keep most classes open by creatively drawing on available resources -- including borrowing halls, labs and facilities from neighboring universities at night and on weekends, renting space in hotels for offices and offering some instruction via online class sessions. Now, many universities in recently liberated areas have resumed classes on their home campus; however, large numbers of students and faculty members remain scattered across Iraq as refugees. The process of closing down improvised campuses and shifting back to their home communities, many of which are partially in rubble and lack basic services, is not an easy one.
    Those returning home face demolished buildings, classrooms and infrastructure. Labs, textbooks and equipment were destroyed, and chemicals and other materials were looted by [the Islamic State]. Most student academic records -- kept almost entirely in hard copy on campuses -- were destroyed in shelling or deliberately burned by [the Islamic State], so very limited student records remain.
    Many faculty members are still afraid to return to their home communities. They remember the years when they were directly targeted and know that nearly 500 Iraqi academics were killed between 2003 and 2012. They are keenly aware that [the Islamic State] targeted academics with ties to the United States and other Western countries. And ongoing attacks by remaining cells, such as the recent suicide bombing in Fallujah, exacerbate fears of returning. The absence of refugee faculty members leaves a shortage of qualified instructors.
    While infrastructure projects to restore electricity, water and basic services have begun in some areas, there is a paramount need to support communities in rebuilding and healing.

    The most immediate tangible needs of universities tasked with rebuilding include textbooks and access to academic libraries, since scores of books were burned under [the Islamic State]. Essential classroom equipment and computers, along with field-specific equipment such as microscopes for medical labs, are also vital. And replacement university vehicles for students and staff to commute to campus were stolen so will need replacing.



    120 days.

    We're on The Mosul Slog.

    It's day 120 of the mission to liberate or 'liberate' Mosul.

    And last week's brag that they'd liberated eastern Mosul looks more and more hollow.  Gareth Browne (AL-ARABY AL-JADEED) reports:


    Twin blasts hit a busy market in the Mosul neighbourhood of Al-Zuhoor on Monday afternoon in signs that the Islamic State group’s resistance is far from over in the city’s liberated east.
    The blasts, caused by suicide bombers, came less than half an hour after Iraqi Intelligence Services, the NSS, conducted a raid in a restaurant in the middle of the market.
    [. . .]
    These attacks come just days after several other blasts rocked liberated parts of Mosul.







  • SRSG with President - reform has to be through constitutional and democratic channels in a timely manner ...



    SRSG with President - UN will continue to support in processes ...



    SRSG Kubiš with President Fuad Massoum - discussed recent demonstration, IHEC reform, national reconciliation and relations Baghdad/ KR-I






    On the Tweets above, AFP explains:

    Iraq's parliament should implement the electoral reform called for by protesters, the UN's top envoy said on Tuesday, days after a demonstration pressing those demands turned violent.

    A full turnover of the electoral panel's members and an overhaul of the electoral law were the two main demands of a recent wave of protests led by the movement of populist Shiite Muslim cleric Moqtada Sadr.


    Maher Chmaytelli (REUTERS) has a pretty solid analysis of the political situation.  It opens:

    Bloody protests in Baghdad over the weekend by followers of influential cleric Moqtada al-Sadr signal the resumption of a power struggle between Iraq's Shi'ite leaders which had been put on hold to focus on the war against Islamic State.
    With Iraqi forces all but certain to defeat Islamic State in Mosul this year, Sadr has begun mobilizing his supporters ahead of two elections, for provincial councils in September and the crucial parliamentary vote, by April 2018.
    His main rival is former Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, a pro-Iranian politician who started positioning himself last year as a possible kingmaker or even for a return to the premiership itself.
    The political tussle played out on the streets of central Baghdad on Saturday when five demonstrators and a policeman were killed in clashes between security forces and Sadr followers demanding an overhaul of the state election commission, which the cleric believes favors Maliki.
    A return to power for Maliki would bolster Iranian influence in Baghdad, giving Tehran leverage in any conflict with U.S. President Donald Trump's administration, which put new sanctions on the Islamic Republic following its missile test last month.


    The following community sites -- plus Cindy Sheehan, Tavis Smiley and PACIFICA EVENING NEWS -- updated:









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