Wednesday, April 05, 2017

We don't need another war

Isaiah's THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "Susan Trust-Me Rice" went up last night.

rice



War Hawk.

That's all she was.

Crazy Susan Rice.

War war all around war.

We don't need another war.

We've got war in Iraq, Afghanistan . . .



  Retweeted
Replying to 



They keep trying to sell us war on Syria.


It's disgusting.


We need truth in these dangerous times.

I do not believe that Assad committed the . Please read the link below. Very comprehensive.



We don't need another war.



"Iraq snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):
Wednesday, April 5, 2017.  Chaos and violence continue, The Mosul Slog continues, the Iraqi government continues to tell civilians in Mosul to remain in the city and much more.


In shocking news, Janine Jackson has emerged from her coma.

It's been an 8 year coma which kept her from speaking out on the Iraq War.

She had done so up through 2008.

Then came the coma.

Some say it was self-induced.

Possibly it was.

What is known is that, freed from the desire to look away in order to protect Barack Obama, Janine has finally returned to the topic of Iraq.

And who better to speak to them my BFF Raed Jarrar aka Jar-Jar Blinks.

From their interview:


JJ: Well, if I can put it very crudely, the media assessment, or the assessment that you would take from media in the wake of the Mosul airstrike, is that civilian deaths are sad but unavoidable, especially because of ISIS and their methods. And the takeaway is, we can only hope that in the end it will have been “worth it.” The damage and the harm from attacks like the one that we just saw, in other words, is not ignored, but it stands itself as justification for further attacks. And so one hardly knows how to intervene in that logic loop, if the goal is really to stop the dying.

RJ: I would intercede with two points. The first one is that the level of civilian casualties to US airstrikes, and to those forces supported and aided by the US, might actually reach to the point of war crimes. So we’re not just talking about a tactical difference—you know, we’re offending some groups. The US apparently has changed its rules of engagement in the last few months, and this came after promises by President Trump to take the gloves off against ISIS. And he said that we have been “restrained,” we have to take it all the way. So there is an intention there to start bombing more and to disregard civilian lives.
And under international law, these principles of proportionality and distinction are not optional; it’s not an issue that a president can decide to tweak for political reasons. So that’s my first point, is that the US might have been engaged in war crimes in the last few weeks because of the unprecedented level of civilian casualties in Syria and in Iraq, where hundreds of civilians are being killed by airstrikes by the US, in what seems to be a new pattern of US engagement.
My second point is that I completely disagree with the premise of what’s going on in Mosul. So if you were to listen to mainstream media in the US, or to the US government, what’s going on is supposedly a liberation of Mosul. That’s why any price should be given for this liberation of Mosul from this pure evil group, because at the end of the day, supposedly, we’re getting all of these Iraqi civilians liberated.
And I disagree with this premise, because what’s going on in Mosul is nothing more than a handover between one sectarian and violent militia, called ISIS, to another sectarian and violent militia, called the Iraqi government. Civilians in Mosul are not being liberated; in some cases [there is] worse treatment by the Iraqi government and militias affiliated with the Iraqi government. Human Rights Watch issued a few reports in the last few years. One of them is called “After Liberation Came Destruction,” and in that report, Human Rights Watch documents how Iraqi forces, aided and funded and trained by the US, committed systemic war crimes in areas that they took back from ISIS, including ethnic cleansing and rape and torture and extrajudicial killing. We’re talking about the same level of violations committed by ISIS.

So there is no liberation going on there. Iraq is not getting to a point where we’re opening a new page. What’s going on now is exactly another step, a continuation of the destruction of the country.


Oh, Jar-Jar.

I still have the e-mails, the ones where you swore you'd call out Barack.

Remember those.

But you never did, Jar-Jar.

You were a good little foot whore in the march to deceive the people.

All those years of silence, where did they lead to?

To the very thing you're now appalled by.

It's a damn shame you were nowhere to be found when it mattered.

Oh, he would show up on, say DEMOCRACY NOW!, where he and Amy Goodman would find a way to discuss the Iraq War without ever mentioning Barack.


And during such appearances, he would make clear that he didn't know a damn thing about what was going on in the country.


For one example of that, see "TV: A week of putrid and puerile."


After 8 long years, our prodigal children Janine and Raed return and we're supposed to be grateful?

So tell us, Janine and Raed, can we count on you beyond 2020?

I mean, if Donald Trump gets voted out in the 2020 election and a Democratic becomes president, are you going to whore and lie again?

Of course you are.


That's why can't trust you.

You made that clear for eight years.

It's good that Raed can call out the militias.

But there's the reality that they're acting on the will of the Baghdad-based government.

Yes, we are seeing sectarianism.

But that's a result of the Shi'ite dominated government which has refused reconciliation repeatedly.

Raed doesn't get that what we've done -- and are doing now -- is propping a government that has no legitimacy with the people.

We have chosen sides while pretending that we're defending the Iraqi people.

Tell you what, Raed, you learn to talk about that?  I'll stop bitch slapping you for the last eight years.  Until then . . .


Sounds like a good place for Diana Ross' "Until We Meet Again" (first appears on her album EVERY DAY IS A NEW DAY).






'Liberation' -- the true face of it in Iraq.



American war crimes continue in . Many children and women killed in a new massacre in controlled Tal Afar town..






That's what's taking place.

That's what the US government has backed and condoned and continues to back and condone.



At what point do we speak up?

Mustafa Saadoun (AL-MONITOR) reports:


On March 26, the Iraqi government officially announced it favors the idea of some US forces staying. Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said in a Fox News interview that he supports retaining enough US troops to support Iraqi forces in a post-IS Iraq.
"We are concentrating on training, logistical support, and intelligence cooperation and gathering; these are three important elements for which I think we need some US troops to stay in Iraq to continue the task," he stated.
It appears that parliament's Security and Defense Committee has information that work has already begun on some US bases. Committee member Majid al-Gharawi told Al-Monitor, "The US troops, present in Iraq in rising numbers each day, are meant to stay in Iraq." Gharawi, a political representative of the Sadrist movement, not surprisingly opposes the idea. "American forces in Iraq will be met by resistance at the hand of Iraqis. Any foreign military presence on Iraqi soil will not be tolerated," he said.
Jaafar al-Moussawi, the spokesperson for Sadrist movement leader Muqtada al-Sadr, concurred. He said, "Any continued presence of foreign forces in Iraq, whether they are American or not, without agreement by the Iraqi parliament is considered an occupation. Hence, it will face resistance by the Sadrist movement or the rest of Iraqis, as the movement's stance on a US presence hasn’t changed."


Again, when do we speak out?
After the bases are built and stationed?
Meanwhile, Tikrit is slammed with bombings.  AL JAZEERA reports, "Dozens of people have been killed in a series of attacks in the northern Iraqi city of Tikrit, according to security sources.  The overnight attacks on Wednesday came after several suspected ISIL fighters infiltrated Tikrit, around 170km north of the capital, Baghdad."  AP counts at least 22 dead while REUTERS counts 31 and BBC NEWS offers, "A doctor at the city's hospital told the BBC that 34 people had been killed and 46 others wounded, many of them civilians."
It's day 170 of The Mosul Slog. 
Day 170.
And what's being done?

Iraq's military on Wednesday urged residents to shelter in their homes in jihadist-held areas of Mosul, where its bid to oust the Islamic State group has taken a heavy toll on civilians.
Iraqi forces are battling to recapture west Mosul from IS, killing and wounding hundreds of civilians and pushing more than 200,000 to leave their homes.

The government has encouraged residents not to flee during the fighting -- a policy aimed at easing ease the burden of widespread displacement but which can heighten the risk of injury or death for civilians.


Despite the infamous March 20th strike that left 100s of civilians dead, that's still what they tell Mosul residents?  Don't leave?

They refuse to create a corridor for safe passage to get the civilians out of Mosul.

The Mosul Slog is not about helping Iraqi civilians.

That should be clear by now.


The editorial board of THE KANSAS CITY STAR offers:

Protection of the innocent in war time is a marker of civilization itself — a concept so central to international law and the ancient “just war ethic” our laws and norms grew out of that it has been recognized across the millennia.
So we can hardly be complacent about the unacceptable number of civilian casualties caused by drone strikes under President Barack Obama.
Or about evidence that a growing number of noncombatants have been killed in even more aggressive airstrikes in Iraq and Syria since President Donald Trump was sworn in. There were 1,000 such deaths last month alone, according to the U.K.-based monitoring group Airwars.

Read more here: http://www.kansascity.com/opinion/editorials/article142745594.html#storylink=cpy




Isaiah's THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "Susan Trust-Me Rice" went up last night and the following community sites -- plus BLACK AGENDA REPORT -- updated:










  • Caught
    10 hours ago 













  • Tuesday, April 04, 2017

    Manipulations

    And that's why some of us didn't get on board.

    Black Lives Matter.

    Yes, they do.

    But so do other lives.

    As a Black woman with three children, I certainly believe that my children's lives matter (and that all lives matter -- but I do get more vocal when it comes to children).

    I wanted to applaud them.

    And I was proud of many of the grassroots activists.

    But I didn't trust the higher ups.

    Lawrence Porter and Nancy Hanover (WSWS) have a must read which opens:


    Last summer, the Ford Foundation, one of the most powerful private foundations in the world, announced that it was organizing to channel $100 million to the Black Lives Movement over the next six years.

    “By partnering with Borealis Philanthropy, Movement Strategy Center and Benedict Consulting to found the Black-Led Movement Fund, Ford has made six-year investments in the organizations and networks that compose the Movement for Black Lives,” according to the Ford Foundation web site. In a statement of support, Ford called for the group to grow and prosper. “We want to nurture bold experiments and help the movement build the solid foundation that will enable it to flourish.”
    In the wake of the monetary commitment by the big-business foundation network, Black Lives Matter (BLM) has explicitly embraced black capitalism. It appears the group is now well positioned to cash in on the well-known #BLM Twitter hashtag. Announcing its first “big initiative for 2017,” BLM cofounder Patrisse Cullors stated that it would be partnering with the Fortune 500 New York ad agency J. Walter Thompson (JWT) to create “the biggest and most easily accessible black business database in the country.”
    BLM joins the ranks of prestigious JWT clientele including HSBC Bank, Johnson & Johnson, Microsoft, and Shell Oil. JWT also represents the US Marine Corps. CEO Lynn Power suggested that the BLM partnership would provide the advertising firm with an opportunity to “shape culture positively.” “I am really glad that our partnership with Black Lives Matter is giving us the opportunity to play a truly active role,” she enthused.
    The joint project, Backing Black Business, is a nationwide interactive map of black-owned enterprises. This virtual Google-based directory has nothing to do with opposing police violence, from which Black Lives Matter ostensibly emerged. Cullors nevertheless portrayed the venture as enabling blacks to have “somewhere for us to go and feel seen and safe,” concluding, “In these uncertain times, we need these places more than ever.”

    Such developments may come as a surprise to those who embraced the sentiment that “black lives matter” because they saw it as an oppositional rebuke to the militarization of police and the disproportionate police murder of African Americans. Many did not realize that the political aims and nature of Black Lives Matter were of an entirely different nature.


    I think the last section especially matters but you've got to read to the end because it builds to that.


    And let me note I got some red on my neck this week.

    I downloaded my first country album.  Downloaded it from Amazon.

    Read Kat's "Kat's Korner: A country classic from Luke Bryan."

    I downloaded before it went up, though.

    I called her before it went up and she told me it was a rave and talked up several tracks.  So I said, "Okay, okay, I'm downloading!"  :D

    It really is a great album.


    "Iraq snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):
    Tuesday, April 4, 2017.  Chaos and violence continue but it and everything else has to be put on hold for insipid 'reporting' and commentary ("commentary" is being generous) about Jared Kushner.



    Let's start with what passes for reporting.

    WATCH: Jared Kushner's mission to Iraq; President Trump's adviser and son-in-law meets with Iraqi Prime Minister:
    Video
    See the whole picture with ABC News.
     
     




    Iraq's prime minister Hayder al-Abadi recently visited the US.  Jared Kushner was part of that visit.


    Jared is President Donald Trump's son-in-law.

    Iraqi politicians are distrustful of US politicians.

    If you've missed it, since the start of the year former prime minister Nouri al-Maliki, Ayad Allawi and (just last week) Hayder have all publicly slammed former US president Barack Obama.  They have blamed him for the current issues in Iraq.

    Iraqi politicians -- the exiles -- depend upon their families even more so than the politicians who never fled Iraq.  As exiles looking over their shoulder, they trusted a small inner circle.  This included family members.

    John Kerry and Hillary Clinton were Secretaries of State under Barack Obama.  The Iraqi government did not see either as consistent.  (The non-Kurds loathed Hillary.  Her rightly calling then-prime minister Nouri a thug in public did not help bridge the distance when she became Secretary of State.)

    The exiles got a long better with the Secretary of Defense -- Secretaries of Defense.

    Under Barack, that was Robert Gates . . .

    . . . and Leon Panetta . . .

    . . . and Chuck Hagel . . .

    . . . and Ash Carter.


    Four in eight years.

    That doesn't happen in the Iraqi government.

    Want to now do the US Ambassador to Iraq since Barack was sworn in back in January of 2009?


    Ryan Crocker and . . .

    Chris Hill and . . .

    . . . James Jeffrey and . . .

    Robert S. Beecroft and . . .

    . . . . Stuart Jones.

    Five different ambassadors in eight years -- and don't forget, Barack also tried to make Brett McGruk an ambassador but Brett's dirty dick got him into trouble.

    Now Barack's left office being deemed untrustworthy by all of Iraq's leading politicians -- Shia, Sunni and Kurd.  Bully Boy Bush is celebrated by the Kurds and by Nouri al-Maliki (if Nouri was over the Nobel Peace prizes, Bully Boy Bush would win each year).

    The ABC report provides nothing of the above.


    But it is in this context that Jared's visiting Iraq.

    And Hayder conveyed to Donald on the visit that politicians were worried about the level of the committment from the US.  (How serious Hayder was about that was evident by the statements he immediately made about the reassurances Donald gave him.)

    Jared visiting Iraq was floated during a face-to-face with Donald and Hayder.

    None of that made the report.

    But it took me four calls to find it out.

    You can argue that ABC was just attempting an overview.

    48 hours into the news cycle and that's the best they can offer?

    That's really sad.

    More to the point, an overview would have had to have included inappropriate reactions.

    This next Tweet is garbage and needs to be called out.

    I really don't think sent Jared Kushner to Iraq to get rid of him. He just needed some alone time.
     
     



    Your trashy mind can do whatever it wants.

    But when you Tweet that crap, don't think you get a pass.

    The vile suggestion being made is appalling.

    And how typical that when you lack the maturity and skill to call out a policy that you attack someone's child.

    It reeks of sexism and it needs to be called out.

    People like that need to take a hard look at their actions.


    And then there's the idiots.

    Jared in Iraq? Imagine if Hillary had won and sent Chelsea to Iraq. Think what Republicans would be saying. And rightly so.
     
     



    I have no idea what Republicans might say.

    But I do know what some of us against the war would say:  Hillary votes for the war and her daughter finally goes to Iraq but not in a unit?

    Why didn't Chelsea suit up?

    The child of a president.

    The child of one of the leading proponents of the Iraq War (her mother).

    Why didn't Chelsea suit up?

    She wants a career in politics now.

    Why didn't she suit up?

    Was she against the war?

    Well she didn't speak out.

    I guess she was just a little too rich to have to deal with reality, hmm?

    And note that I took down Chelsea without ever bringing her father's well known rampant sexuality into the criticism.

    Stewie probably didn't ask about those of us against the war because he knows we're on to him.  His polling -- and his conclusions -- were way off.  We have not forgotten.  He's a whore.  A well used whore.



    Meanwhile, at the top of the Twitter feed (still) of Iraq's prime minister?


    PM Al-Abadi receives the US CJCS Gen Dunford and his accompanying delegation
     
     




    It sends a message and that's why the photo remains there.

    Is it the message we want to send?

    That's a debate we should have.

    I'd say, "No."

    I've made that point here repeatedly.

    I can back my point up with Joe Biden's own words.

    What can you do?

    Spell "Colombia" as  "Columbia" -- not a swipe at Debra Messing for a change but at that idiot Rain Wilson who just discovered that "100s" were killed somewhere in Iraq -- he's not sure where in Iraq, or how many or when but he latches onto Iraq to try to make a political point because for Rain Wilson Iraq is nothing but a prop.


    You are vapid and should stop pretending you have anything to offer.

    You don't.

    You're idiots who refuse to do the work required.  So stop dragging Iraq into your b.s. nonsense.

    The Iraq War has dragged on for 14 years now and you're still too uninformed, too stupid, to have an opinion?

    Seriously, hide your ignorance, don't flaunt it.


    Iraq has many problems.

    What did the RAND Corporation identify as the biggest fault line several years ago?

    Kirkuk.


    provincial council voted on to have a referendum to join the KRG or stay under central government.
     
     


    The festering issue of Kirkuk has led to skirmishes between KRG forces and the Baghdad-based government's forces.

    Is it about to be resolved?

    (No.)

    Other issues of real importance that the world should be paying attention to?

    Shi'ite cleric and movement leader Moqtada al-Sadr staged a stunning protest two weekends ago.

    He did not do one last weekend.

    Because he was not out in public -- as a result of death threats that alarmed even his security people.



    IMPORTANT Sadr issued orders preventing his military wing members "peace brigades" from running in provincial & parliamentary elections
     
     
     




    There are real issues here.

    The tawdry and sexist Tweets don't 'cover' Iraq or deal with any reality.

    You look like whiny bitches who carp about everything.  You destroy your own credibility.


    Kat's "Kat's Korner: A country classic from Luke Bryan" went up last night.  New content at THIRD (which finally went up last night):




    The following community sites updated: