 |

Thursday, April 30, 2009
Ron Jacobs has an article at CounterPunch on the National Assembly to End the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars and Occupations. A number of e-mails are coming in on the article and organization. We're not promoting it. When it does something, we'll promote it if we like the activity. But we're taking a wait and see on the organization due to all the many do-nothing and Barack-covering 'peace' organizations. World Can't Wait and A.N.S.W.E.R. we'll promote. In terms of general organizations (membership open to anyone), that's going to be it. On the plus for NAEIAWO, they have a few people high in their ranks who are not apologists, are not Democrats and are not in any political closet. With those, the organization might really have a shot at becoming something. (They also have Dems on their administrative and continuous body.) But if you would have told me a few years ago that UPFJ would become such a suck-up, suck-ass to a Democratic Party president, I would never have believed you. Not with some of their people. I'm not talking Tom who always whores himself out to the Democratic Party or Barry's would-be lover from Democratic Socialists. But they had Communists, for example, on their board. And, granted, most were in the closet, but even so. So I wouldn't have guessed they would make it their life's purpose to enable a War Hawk just because he was a Democrat. (Or maybe just because he was bi-racial.) But that's what they did. They want to pretend -- and they aren't alone in this -- that the economy and other issues are why their donations tanked. Their donations tanked because people walked away. Because people got tired of their crap. You're either for ending the illegal war or you're not. You're either okay with Afghanistan remaining a killing field or you're not. But they ignored it and they whored it and Phyllis Bennis can cry in her pillow about the Palestinians all she wants but she better grasp that they and the people of Afghanistan and Iraq live in danger because she helped whore for Barack. People are sick of Leslie Cagan, they're sick of Phyllis Bennis. Now you can translate that into college students who are furious with these do-nothing 'leaders' who think they can boss the movement around and use the movement. But I'm also talking about people like Elaine. I'm not giving to UPFJ. The only reason I ever did was because it was Elaine's favorite charity. She's done with them, she's done with those liars, and I'm not donating and there's a whole host of us who gave big donations but won't anymore. UPFJ needs to decay. I really don't think it can start over and be worth anything. It betrayed everything it was supposed to stand for. Ron Jacobs is much nicer about UPFJ in his article than some (including me) would be. Hopefully, this new org will amount to something. But the reality is they did nothing in 2008. It's really easy to give a few strong remarks in an interview today. But try calling Barack out in 2008 when whores were pimping him as anti-war. Try telling the truth and see how easy it was then. It's not that easy today but it's because of the very few people who do tell the truth that it gets easier and easier each week. This is honestly like the post-911 period where people just would not criticize Bush. They lived in fear of it. And it took brave people to chip away that nonsense. We don't have royalty in the United States (I believe a little princess who wanted to be a senator found that out the hard way as last year drew to a close). And this nonsense of hero worship needs to stop. It is very dangerous and the sort of the thing we criticize Russia and the USSR for. It needs to stop. It's dangerous to democracy and it's dangerous to the world. Those with any bravery need to be calling Barack out the same way Bush was. There's not a bit of diffference. If it were Bush using the teleprompter (and screwing up with it all the time), there would be a million jokes by now. "Public servant." That's what the president is, that's what the Congress is. They work for us. We don't work for them. They make huge sums of money and we're the ones paying that. They are servants to the people. We don't need to glorfiy them, we don't need to worship them. We do need to treat them like what they are: Workers we are the boss of. And when we can do that, when we can stop begging on our knees and demanding what we want, the Iraq War will end. We can even have universal health care. Real universal health care. But that's never going to happen while we feel like we don't have the right to tell them what to do. Of course we have that right. We hired them. They only serve at our pleasure. When we can trash this notion of hero worship and start expecting the people we hired to work for us, there's no limit on what we could accomplish. It's over, I'm done writing songs about loveThere's a war going onSo I'm holding my gun with a strap and a gloveAnd I'm writing a song about warAnd it goesNa na na na na na naI hate the warNa na na na na na naI hate the warNa na na na na na naI hate the warOh oh oh oh-- "I Hate The War" (written by Greg Goldberg, on The Ballet's Mattachine!) Last Thursday, ICCC's number of US troops killed in Iraq since the start of the illegal war was 4276. Tonight? 4278.The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com. iraqi hate the warthe balletron jacobs
Posted at 08:47 pm by thecommonills
Permalink
Thursday, April 30, 2009. Chaos and violence continue, bombings continue throughout Iraq, Robert Gates wants money, money, money, there is no real improvement in veterans' health care in the US, Thomas E. Ricks respond to someone's Cliff Notes, England is kind-of out of Iraq (kind-of), two US soldiers testify against Steven D. Green in his War Crimes trial, Ryan Crocker says the US may be in Iraq past 2011, and more.
Today Tony Capaccio (Bloomberg News) reported that US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates appeared before the Senate Appropriations Committee -- as did US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton -- and he asked for the 'supplemental' funding of the Iraq War and Afghanistan War (an $83.4 billion request) to be pushed through "as quickly as possible" because by the end of next month, he claims, "we will need to consider options to delay running out of funds" if the 'supplemtnal' is not approved. The money is also needed for Pakistan -- a country the US is not officially at war with but one in which the newly sworn in President Barack Obama bombed as one of his first acts of office. Don't confuse the supplemental with the money the DoD is begging for to carry out wars in fiscal year 2010. That's other money, more money. The US tax payer money which will go down the sinkhole as well. This morning US Senator Carl Levin noted that FY 2010 request at the start of the Senate Armed Services Committee which he chairs, "Most of the changes will no doubt be in the detailed budget for 2010 that we now expect next Thursday and we're also planning on Secretary Gates testifying on that detailed budget the following Thursday which is two weeks ago today." [I left shortly after that to attend a hearing on veterans. Kat has some stuff she intends to note tonight on this hearing which she attended all the way through. Tuesday the snapshot covered the Senate Foreign Relations Committee's hearing on the War Powers Resolution of 1973 and Kat shared her thoughts on the hearing here and here she shared her thoughts on last Thursday's House Armed Services Committee's Subcommittee on Disability Assistance and Memorial Affairs.]
Most likely the DoD will get all the money they have asked for and they will get with little to no oversight. Underfunded is every other area in American life including veterans health care. And the funding is only part of the problems, there is also the refusal on the part of the VA to be accountable and the refusal on the part of Congress to hold the VA accountable. This morning, US House Rep Michael Michaud declared, "We are here today to talk about the VA's progress on meeting the mental health needs of our veterans. Specifically, we will discuss issues of funding and implementation of the Mental Health Strategic Plan and the Uniform Mental Health Services Handbook." He was bringing the US Veterans' Affairs Committee's Subcommittee on Health hearing to order ( click here for his opening statement) and, before the hearing was over, everyone would learn just how little was being accomplished by the VA. The issue of the quality of health care for veterans and those serving was the topic of yesterday morning's House Armed Services Committee's Military Personnel Subcommittee hearing chaired by US House Rep Susan Davis (noted in yesterday's snapshot) as well as yesterday afternoon's US Senate Committee on Armed Services' Personnel Subcommittee hearing. We're going to jump back and forth between this morning's House Subcomittee and yesterday's Senate Subcommittee.
An the morning hearing, Adrian Atizado (Disabled American Veterans) thanked the Veterans' Affairs Subcommitee and the Congress for their "continued support" but then noted, "Nevertheless we believe much still needs to be accomplished to fulfill our obligations to those who have serious mental illness and post-deployment mental health challenges." And you have to wonder why that is?
Yesterday's Senate Armed Subcommittee hearing featured opening remarks by Chair Ben Nelson and Ranking Member Lindsey Graham. Senator Nelson noted that, "We all remember February 18, 2007. The day the first in a series of articles appeared describing problems faced by our wounded warriors receiving care in out patient status. Many of these service members who are wounded or injured in service to our nation were living in substandard facilities, were unaccounted for and were fighting there way through a bungled, adversarial administrative process to rate their disabilities. After they left DoD care, they had to start all over with the VA and many fell through the cracks in the transition. And as a result of these articles and various reports on wounded warriors transition policies and programs, Congress passed the Wounded Warriors Act which was incorporated into the Fiscal Year 2008 National Defense Authorization Act. The Wounded Warrior Act, among many other things, required the Department of Defense and the Department of Veterans Affairs to work jointly to implement a comprehensive set of policies to improve the care, management and transition of recovering, wounded, ill and injured service members."
The February 18, 2007 article Nelson was referring to was Dana Priest and Anne Hull's " The Other Walter Reed" ( Washington Post) -- click here for the Post's Walter Reed articles and Priest, Hull and photographer Michel du Cille won the Pulitzer for their coverage. Senator Graham noted in his opening remarks, "People care a lot. There's a lot of bureaucracy out there that cares a lot, we've just go to get it focused on doing the best job it can." That was only underscored this morning in an exchange during the final panel as US House Rep Jerry Moran asked the VA's Dept Chief Consultant from the Office of Mental Health Services about something that should have been implemented some time ago.
US House Rep Jerry Moran: The question is, it's been nearly two-and-a-half years since the Veterans Benefits, Health Care and Information Technology Act of 2006 was signed into law. The legislation added licensed marriage and family therapists, MFTS, and licensed professional mental health counselors, LPC, to the list of eligible VA health care providers. I thought at the time that they would provide -- this would be a great opportunity for the VA to expand its ability to meet the needs of veterans and have championed this cause but, two-and-a-half years later, I've seen little evidence that the VA has actually implemented the law. Is there an explanation? A justifable explanation for the delay or am I misunderstood -- understand the situation?
Dr. Amptmette Zeiss: Well we welcome the question. We welcome the question. At this point, we have met extensively with the professional organizations that represent both licensed professional counselors and marriage and family therapists through our office in mental health and have been very impressed with the potential to add these professionals to the team that would serve veterans. The -- the issues are with Human Resources. The law also stated very clearly that new titled -- hybrid titled 38 job series needed to be created for each of these, that they were not -- the law did not allow them to enter through the mechanism of other existing series. So there are a number of licensed professional counselors and marriage and family therapists who work in VA under other series and that has continued to increase and we look forward, as you do, to HR reaching the point of having the qualification standards developed and having the hybrid title 38 job series in place so that they can be hired directly under the auspices of their professions.
US House Rep Jerry Moran: So there's no impediment from the health care side of VA? This is what I would describe as the bureaucratic process of bringing these people onto the payroll?
Dr. Amptmette Zeiss: We do not -- yeah, we certainly support this and have tried to be very available to these organizations and to feed forward information to support the process of developing these new hybrid title 38 job series.
US House Rep Jerry Moran: Mr. Chairman, we've been through this numerous times. We've tried to add professional categories to the VA's list of appropriate providers. Chiropractors are one [example]. It is an enormous undertaking apparently and I would welcome anyone on the committee who would like to work with me to see if we can't get the VA to move in a more expeditious manner. I think this is important. While we're sitting her talking about the lack of professionals, there's an opportunity for these services to be provided and yet, because of the nature of the VA and it's credentially and accounting process, it's not happening. And I think it's not only disappointing to me, to the professionals who want to provide the services, but more important it means that there are veterans who could be served but are not because of the bureaucratic nature of the VA's process.
"Every American wants us to get this right. This has got nothing to do with party politics," Senator Graham declared yesterday with Senator Nelson agreeing "there's nothing partisan about the need for care for our men and women and their families who serve our country in so many ways." So why is it that nearly three years after something should have been implemented, it's not? Don't give that crap about Human Resources. Congress might buy it but no one else will. Congress doesn't work in the real world. They're removed from the day-to-day. Anyone working in any remotely corporate or government setting, however, damn well knows that it doesn't take a year to -- or even six months -- to write up a new classification for employees. More importantly, when you're instructed to do so by Congress, it shouldn't even take you three months to do so. Moran was polite and nice to Dr. Zeiss and he shouldn't have been. There was no reason to or to ask her to work with him on this. As the Deputy Chief Consultant, it is her job to ensure that the process is moving along and if and when it's not, she either makes it move along or she screams bloody murder to Congress to let them know it's not working. She certainly doesn't wait two-and-a-half years to bring it up -- and then only because she was asked. That's ridiculous.
But ridiculous was who else was on the panel with her this morning. Yesterday, Senator Graham was rightly noting that we should (he said "would") hold people who are supposed to be providing the care responsible for the level of care they provide. Well then explain how Ira Katz not only sat on the fourth panel but remains employed by the VA?
Exactly one year ago US Senators Daniel Akaka and Patty Murray (who both serve on the Senate Vetarans Affiars Committee, with Akaka being the Chair) were calling for Katz to be fired. Why the hell is he still employed by the VA? For those who've forgotten, you can refer to this original CBS New report, this update and this report by CBS News' Pia Malbran which notes:
For months, CBS News has been trying to obtain veteran suicide and attempted suicide data from the VA. Earlier this year, the agency provided CBS News with data that showed there were a total of 790 suicide attempts in all of 2007 by veterans who were under the VA's care. On February 13, however, Katz sent an e-mail indicating the total number of attempts was much higher. The e-mail was addressed to his top media advisor Everett Chasen and entitled, "Not for the CBS News Interview Request." Katz wrote: "Shh! Our suicide prevention coordinators are identifying about 1000 suicide attempts per month among veterans we see in our medical facilitates." He then asked "is this something we should (carefully) address ourselves in some sort of release before someone stumbles on it?" In another e-mail message, Katz told the VA's Under Secretary for Health, Michael Kussman, that there are "about 18 suicides per day among America's 25 million veterans." This is a figure that the VA has never made public.
And just this week, we got more evidence that the Administration has been covering up the extent of the toll this war has taken on our troops. Internal e-mails that became public in a court hearing show that the VA has vastly downplayed the number of suicides and suicide attempts by veterans in the last several years. Last November, an analysis by CBS News found that over 6,200 veterans had committed suicide in 2005 -- an average of 17 a day.
When confronted, VA officials said the numbers were much lower. But according to the internal e-mails from the VA's head of Mental Health -- Dr. Ira Katz -- 6,570 veterans committed suicide in 2005 -- an average of 18 a day. The e-mails also revealed that VA officials know that another 1,000 veterans -- who are receiving care at VA medical facilities -- attempt suicide each month.
Mr. President, these numbers offer tragic evidence that our nation is failing thousands of veterans a year. And they reflect an Administration that has failed to own up to its responsibilities, and failed even to own up to the true impact of the war on its veterans.
What is most appalling to me is that this is not the first time the VA has covered up the problems facing veterans who sacrificed for our country. Time and again, the VA has told us one thing in public -- while saying something completely different in private. It is outrageous to me that VA officials would put public appearance ahead of people's lives. Yet, Mr. President, it appears that is what has happened again.
When we -- as members of Congress -- sit down to determine the resources to give the VA, we must have a true picture of the needs. And if there's a problem, we have to act. It's our duty -- and the duty of the Administration -- to care for veterans. By covering up the true extent of that problem, the VA has hindered our ability to get those resources to the veterans who need them. That is irresponsible, and it's wrong.
So why is he offering testimony to Congress this morning and why the hell should anyone believe a word he says? April 24, 2008, Senator Murray questioned the VA's deputy chief and explained, "I used to teach preschool, and when you bring up a 3-year-old and tell them they have to stop lying, they understand the consequences. The VA doesn't." And when people like Ira Katz remain in their jobs, they never will understand the consequences. The most embarrassing moment in this morning's hearing -- and there were many -- was when US House Rep Jerry McNerney declared, "Dr. Katz, I certainly want to thank you for your service to our country through our veterans." What world is he living in? In what world has Dr. Katz earned a "thank you" for his "service . . . through our veterans"? He hasn't been and what that indicates is McNerney needs to do a lot more work before showing up at hearings. That is shameful and it is offensive. The man should have been fired. Bad enough that he wasn't. But he certainly hasn't done a damn thing to warrant public praise from the Congress.
US House Rep Vic Snyder: In your statements you make reference to the need to perhaps add other employees to CBOC [Community Based Outpatined Clinic] to handle mental health issues is -- did I read your statement right?
Ira Katz: Well there's been extensive enhancements in VA mental health staffing including staffing in CBOC.
US House Rep Vic Snyder: How do you -- how do you do that when those are private contractors that have got a set amount of overhead? You can't just pick up the phone and say, 'Put on two more people.'
Ira Katz: Some clinical based -- some community based outpatient clinics are contract based. Most are VA owned and operated with federal employees.
US House Rep Vic Snyder: So you don't do that to the ones that are contract based?
Ira Katz: We're committed to enhancing services, ensuring we provide or make available the services that veterans need. Whether we provide them by VA employees, by contract or fee based or other mechanisms.
US House Rep Vic Snyder: May I just add for the record then, why don't you respond to the question: How do you do an enhancement of mental health services at a privately contracted CBOC since they have a contractual arrangement with a set overhead?
Ira Katz: I will have to take that for the record, thank you.
How typical for Ira Katz, unable to answer a question. The Office of Inspector General's Dr. Michael Sheperd (testifying on the third panel) noted, "One of the issues which we cited and which the previous panel cited is, for example, in terms of provisions of evidence based treatments for PTSD. In the absence of knowing who you've provided these treatments to, whether they've done part of these treatments, completed these treatments, whether they've opted not to pursue these treatments -- in the absence of a data system that's able to capture that, you really down the road don't know -- you don't have the structure you need to make outcome judgments in terms of evidence based therapies for PTSD." Considering Ira Katz' history and the VA's history in general on PTSD, it's very difficult to see this problem as anything but an effort to distort the 'help' being given for PTSD and make it appear far more sufficient than it actually is. Dr. Sheperd note, "We think there's a real urgent need for VA to adjust their data [. . .] to allow for what type of services were provided, not just that a service was provided." And it's a real shame that obvious point has to come from outside the VA. Dropping back to yesterday's Senate Subcommittee, many important stories were shared on the first panel which was made up of veterans and the spouses of veterans. We'll note this exchange because it does go to the huge costs that are pushed onto veterans and their families. Kimberly Noss is the wife of Scot Noss. Scot Noss was 29-years-old and serving in Afghanistan when the MH-47Chinook Helicopter he was flying in crashed February 18, 2007. Kimberly Noss was on the first panel.
Senator Kay Hagan: Dr. Noss, I have a question for you. You husband is currently, I think you said, is in Tampa, so he's still in the -- in care?
Kimberly Noss: Yes, he is. He's still in patient in Tampa, the Polytrauma Unit.
Senator Kay Hagan: And what do you -- when he -- will he leave? Will he be sent some place else? What's his long term prognosis of where he might go?
Kimberly Noss: He's going home with me.
Senator Kay Hagan: He'll be able to come home?
Kimberly Noss: Well we're going to make it where he can come home. I don't believe in putting him in a nursing facility for a long term.
Senator Kay Hagan: Well then from the standpoint of any sort of financial help to you at that point and time, what is -- what is the VA established for that?
Kimberly Noss: They do have a benefit package that Scott will receive every month and it is a substantial amount of money; however, the net income will be -- will be small because you have to take into consideration our bills that we will incur in a month. For example, I know of a family who has a quadriplegic -- he's quadriplegic and he's on a vent and because of the 24 hour having power source, the venelator, and his bed -- has a special type of bed that's hooked up to power, they're electric bill is over a thousand dollars a month. And because of that, the special care that Scott's going to have to receive because of his injuries, even though the essential amount of benefit money that will come in per month, what we're going to have to pay for bills is large so the net is going to be small.
Katz will remain in his job, the Noss family and many others will continue to struggle but Robert Gates will get every dime (of American tax payer money) he is requesting. There have been no changes in our national priorities. Bully Boy Bush has been replaced with Bully Boy Barack and any differences between the two are merely cosmetic. Last night Barack held a press conference. Corinne Reilly and Hussein Kadhim (McClatchy Newspapers) note Barack falsely asserted last night that "civilian deaths . . . remain very low compared to what was gong on last year." The reporters explains that "statistics kept by McClatchy show that in Baghdad alone, more than 200 people have been killed in attacks so far this month, compared with 99 last month and 46 in February, according to a McClatchy count. The last time McClatchy recorded more than 200 civilian deaths in one month in the capital was more than a year ago, in March 2008." Sam Dagher and Sudad al-Salhy (New York Times) note that throughout Iraq this month, the number of Iraqis killed thus far comes to "at least 300". Violence has been on the increase in Iraq starting in February after the latest waves of Operation Happy Talk told us January was a turned corner and peace was blooming like daises throughout Iraq. Yesterday's violence, and the pattern of last week's as well, led to a stark discussion on MSNBC Wednesday morning:
Brian Williams: [Speaking over video of the carnage from Wednesday's Baghdad bombings] We are back as part of this day long discussion of the Obama presidency this is an inextricable part of that. 41 people dead. New violence Sadr City this morning. That section of Baghdad that was in the news for so long for good reason. Seventy injuries here. As I said before the break, we are fortunate that our chief foreign correspondent Richard Engel has chosen to spend a little of his home leave with us here in New York before leaving again for Pakistan this coming Saturday. Richard's here with us in the studio. It's interesting watching you back in your home newsroom where we're all forced to communicate with you by telphone and home computer while you're away. People actually get to see you and talk to you. Invariably they say, 'Tell me what do you make of Iraq these days?' And what do you tell them?
Richard Engel: I'm actually very concerned about what's going on in Iraq right now. We could be in the situation where there's the eye of the storm. Where things are quiet but it's starting to brew around the edges and it's starting to take -- to take force. The conflict in Iraq right now is at a very important turning point. It is the transition from a combat role, a war fighting role to a training role.
Brian Williams: What everybody feared.
Richard Engel: And the danger is that it's going to be an unclear mission for US troops. US troops are now confined mostly to their bases. What's going to happen in June is that they will legally be confined to their bases in most Iraqi cities and will only be able to operate with a warrant. Now we're seeing the Iraqi government flexing its muscles and the prime minister of Iraq, Maliki, is threatening to prosecute some American soldiers who were involved in a mission that the Iraqis say resulted in civilian casulities. So we're entering a grey area and I think that is a troubling thing considering that you have more than 100,000 troops on the ground.
On yesterday's violence, Sam Dagher and Sudad al-Salhy (New York Times) review some of the hypotheses floating around Iraq: Ba'athists, al Qaeda in Mesopotami and/or Americans are responsible for yesterday's Sadr City bombings. Ernesto Londoño and Qais Mizher (Washington Post) offer Iraqi MP Ahmed al-Masudi who believes it is "Sunni extremists aided by Western intelligence agencies". Saif Hameed and Liz Sly (Los Angeles Times) quote Adnan Dawood who was wounded in the Sadr City bombings who asks, "How is this possible? There are three entrances to Sadr City and all are overseen by army checkpoints. What is the army dong? Are they there for only oppressing and arresting people?" And they quote eye witness Sabah Mohammed stating, "The army is not playing its role. When the army first came to Sadr City, I was happy, but now all they care about is hitting on girls and women. They don't inspect incoming cars. They only inspect them if there are women inside." Joel Brinkley (McClatchy Newspapers) sees puppet of the occupation Nouri al-Maliki as as bearing the "primary resposibility for the violence" due to the fact that he's done very little for Iraq as a whole but a great deal for his own greedy ass: "His primary golas in office have been to protect the nation's Shiite citizens while also enriching himself and his aides. On his watch, Iraq's government has grown to be one of the two or three most corrupt on Earth." The violence continues today . . .
Bombings?
Shootings?
Corpses?
The plan was to cover Iraqi refugees today. There is no room for it. The topic will be covered in Friday's snapshot, my apologies.
March 12, 2006, Abeer Qassim Hamza al-Janabi, a 14-year-old Iraqi girl, was gang-raped by two US soldiers while a third shot her parents and five-year-old sister dead before joining in the gang-rape and shooting Abeer dead after. This morning, Amy Goodman (Democracy Now!) noted, "The trial of a former soldier accused in the 2006 rape and murder of an Iraqi teenager and the killing of her family has begun. Steven Green is accused of being the ringleader in raping and killing fourteen-year-old Abeer Qassim Hamza al-Janabi and killing her parents and five-year-old sister. Green is being tried in a Kentucky civilian court. Three soldiers have already been sentenced to life in prison in the case." It would have been nice if Goodman could have called them War Crimes because that is what they are. But Goodman covered it. If only a headline, she did cover it and that only brings home how pathetic everyone else has been. KPFA Evening News, Free Speech Radio News and The KPFA Swine Flu Morning Show (seriously, listen to the daily garbage that crap-fest has offered this week) can't be bothered. They are far from alone. At (Democratic) Women's Media Center, you can find a bad piece of fluff written by Melissa Silverstein this week about a rape . . . in movies. (We'll leave it for others to debate whether or not it's rape, I haven't seen the film, I don't see any of Seth Rogan's films for obvious reasons.) Melissa Silverstein wants you to know that this is Sexaul Assault Awareness and Prevention month and what better way for her and Women's Media Center to observe that than by getting all worked up over a film that bombed at the box office? What better way? How about covering the trial?
I'm sorry, did Kentucky outlaw women? Maybe their borders were closed? Something to do with Swine Flu? If so, I'm sure The Morning Show is, or soon will be, on it with a half-hour segment. But a border closing must be why we're getting no news on the case from Women's Media Center. Or from Feminist Wire Daily. And what about our Mud Flap Girls? The ones who put the woah-is-me into 'do-me' feminism? The chicky-baby-boom-booms of Baby Jessica's Feministing have gone all damn week without ever noting the trial. The losers of Feministe? Not a word. And unlike when Sandra Day O'Connor announced her retirement, no one can claim they were too busy posting vaction pictures of themselves in bikinis for two weeks to bother cover it. Feminist Law Professors? Apparently War Crimes don't interest the gals. Melissa McEwan and her posse of useless at Shakesville? Not a damn word. But cat blogging and baby photos they have time for. Being useless they always have time for.
Paul Cortez and James Barker were tried in military courts and entered pleas of guilty. Jesse Spielman was convicted in a military court of mutliple charges (rape, intent to rape, felony murder, etc.). Brian L. Howard entered a guilty plea to being an accessory. Yesterday Anthony Yribe offered testimony. Iran's Press TV reports Yribe stated that Steven Green had bragged of the War Crimes to him not once but twice "hours after the March 12, 2006 attack and again the next day." Press TV notes: "Also on Wednesday, jurors saw photos taken by Yribe hours after the attack. The photos showed a mother, father and small girl lying in pools of blood with shotgun wounds. Other photos showed badly charred and barely recognizable human remains." AFP notes Yribe stated he didn't believe Green at first, "I wanted to know if he was serious or if it was just him talking. He said he was serious. He said he had done it alone. I said, 'You're dead to me, man.' I said that he needed to get out of the army and that if he didn't do it, that I was going to help him." Yribe didn't reveal the War Crimes. Asked why, he replied, "He's one of my brothers. I'm not going to tell on him. I'm half way protecting him and I half way didn't believe him . . . I don't know if I was just being naïve or what." Brett Barrouquere (AP) continues his years of coverage on this story and notes that the jury was shown photos Yribe took (as part of the military investigation) "hours after the attacks" when everyone (except those involved and Yribe) thought 'insurgents' were responsible for the crimes. Barrouquere notes, "Green sat at the defense table, rubbing his eyes, staring at Yribe and looking around the room." Today Jesse Spielman testified. AP notes that his testimony included their use of "ninja suits" and "ski masks" while executing the War Crimes. These were War Crimes and the silence among the faux feminists online goes a long way to explaining so many of the problems with the so-called third wave -- a subset who is happy to write about rape or domestic violence if they can find a film or a celebrity (Rhianna?) but can't manage to move their fat fingers across the keyboard when the victim's not going to be covered by Perez or TMZ.
England has officially ended 'combat operations' in Iraq today. So all the UK troops have been sent home! No. And it's not over for England. They've just drawn down from 4,000 to a lower number and will most likely keep at least 400 UK soldiers stationed in Iraq for five more years. The Telegraph of London notes that 179 UK soldiers died in Iraq since the start of the illegal war (and they list all 179). James Hider (Times of London) reports on the ceremony at Basra Airport today which included the lowering of the British flag and which was attended by the UK Secretary of Defence John Hutton. CNN notes, "While Britain began closing down the combat operations in Basra, Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki was in Britain for a meeting with his counterpart, Gordon Brown. The two discussed opening Iraq up to more investment opportunities." An inquiry into the illegal war has long been promised and postponed in England. The Telegraph of London notes that Conservative MP David Cameron immediately began calling for the inquiry and quotes him stating, "Now after years of foot dragging, I believe it is the time for the Government to announce a proper Franks-style inquiry. Instead of starting in many months' time, it should start right now." The paper's Thomas Harding quotes Liberal Democrat spokesperson Edward Davey dismissing the "threadbare excuses" and declaring, "Minister now owe it to the troops to talk to opposition parties about the remit for the inquiry." The paper's Damien McElroy reveals, "As it was confirmed that the government would hold an inquiry into the circumstances leading up to the war under Tony Blair's leadership, the flag was lowered on the last British combat operation in Basra after commanders handed over to an American brigade with a handshake." McElroy's source is John Hutton. Mark Deen (Bloomberg News) observes Gordon Brown, UK Prime Minister, and Nouri held a joint-press conference today where they praised 'progress' . . . from the safety of London.
And winding down with Iraq in books and speeches. First up, book notes. Thomas E. Ricks is the author of the bestseller The Gamble: General David Petraeus and the American Military Adventure in Iraq 2006-2008. My opinion (expressed here before) it's not only a great book, it's the most important one on the war by a US author thus far. The book has been repeatedly distorted by people who apparently 'read' a book by studying the cover and asking themselves, "What do I think is inside?" Because opening a book and actually reading it is very scary. Oooooohhhh. In the April 22nd snapshot, Vijay Prashad huge distortion of the book was noted (and called out). Today Thomas E. Ricks (at Foreign Policy) notes his reaction to the gross distortions of his book which included contacting Prashad and explaining, "Your statement is flat wrong. I actually say that there is no prospect of victory in Iraq, and that we are stuck there for years to come even to reach a mediocre outcome. In addition, I also conclude that the surge failed. In fact, I don't think your comment could be written by anyone who actually has read the last 100 pages of my book." Prashad replies that his statements were his opinion. No, his opinion is Ricks wrote a good or bad book, Ricks got this or that wrong, Ricks 'wants to say . . . but won't come out and say . . .' Those are opinions. What Prashad did was completely distort the book Ricks wrote, state it concluded this and that when it never made those conclusions. On to speeches. In February, Ryan Crocker stepped down as the US Ambassador to Iraq. Martin Surridge (Walla Walla Union-Bulletin) covered a speech Crocker gave this week ( Stan noted it last night) during the talk, he noted the issue of withdrawal and stated, "We will only be there as long as the Iraqi government wants us there. It's their country, will will not be the ones making their decisions." Surridge notes, "Crocker was careful to avoid long-range predictions, but expects the conflict in Iraq could extend longer than the scheduled withdrawal date, 'Who can say where we will be in 2011?' he asked. 'The landscape could change dramatically'."
|
Posted at 04:46 pm by thecommonills
Permalink
The bombings and the speculation they cause
Brian
Williams: [Speaking over video of the carnage from Wednesday's Baghdad
bombings] We are back as part of this day long discussion of the Obama
presidency this is an inextricable part of that. 41 people dead. New
violence Sadr City this morning. That section of Baghdad that was in
the news for so long for good reason. Seventy injuries here. As I said
before the break, we are fortunate that our chief foreign correspondent
Richard Engel has chosen to spend a little of his home leave with us
here in New York before leaving again for Pakistan this coming
Saturday. Richard's here with us in the studio. It's interesting
watching you back in your home newsroom where we're all forced to
communicate with you by telphone and home computer while you're away.
People actually get to see you and talk to you. Invariably they say,
'Tell me what do you make of Iraq these days?' And what do you tell
them?Richard Engel: I'm
actually very concerned about what's going on in Iraq right now. We
could be in the situation where there's the eye of the storm. Where
things are quiet but it's starting to brew around the edges and it's
starting to take -- to take force. The conflict in Iraq right now is at
a very important turning point. It is the transition from a combat
role, a war fighting role to a training role.Brian Williams: What everybody feared.Richard
Engel: And the danger is that it's going to be an unclear mission for
US troops. US troops are now confined mostly to their bases. What's
going to happen in June is that they will legally be confined to their
bases in most Iraqi cities and will only be able to operate with a
warrant. Now we're seeing the Iraqi government flexing its muscles and
the prime minister of Iraq, Maliki, is threatening to prosecute some
American soldiers who were involved in a mission that the Iraqis say
resulted in civilian casulities. So we're entering a grey area and I
think that is a troubling thing considering that you have more than
100,000 troops on the ground.Brian Williams: Now let me take you to another front entirely, where you're headed this weekend, Pakistan . . .The above is from MSNBC yesterday morning. Yesterday's violence continues the pattern evident since February when January's much trumpeted 'lower violence' began to crumble. Alsumaria reports: Security
officials in the Interior and Defense Ministries affirmed that 46
citizens were killed and around 70 others were wounded in two car bomb
explosions which detonated in short sequence in a crowded market in
Sadr City. Police found as well another car bomb which was disabled. Moreover,
a security official reported that at least five people were killed and
three others were wounded in a bomb explosion targeting a civial
passengers’ bus in southern Baghdad while another car bomb explosion in
western Baghdad wounded five people. Two similar incidents occurred in Diyala and southern Mosul killing a policeman and wounding five civilians. In this morning's New York Times, Sam Dagher and Sudad al-Salhy's " Baghdad Is Shaken by a Series of Bombs"
observe, "So far in April, at least 300 Iraqis have been killed in
bombing attacks, making it the bloodiest month since the start of the
year and reversing the sharp drops in civilian deaths in January and
February." They note the various hypothesis as to who is responsible.
Among those blamed: Ba'athists, al Qaeda in Mesopotami and Americans.
On those hypothesis, Ernesto Londoño and Qais Mizher (Washington Post) offer: Ahmed
al-Masudi, a lawmaker who serves as the Sadr bloc spokesman in
parliament, offered a different theory, saying he suspected the recent
bloodbath is the work of Sunni extremists aided by Western intelligence
agencies that want to create a pretext to delay the U.S. withdrawal."I think they have a hand in this to create reasons to stay," he said in a telephone interview. Saif Hameed and Liz Sly (Los Angeles Times) quote
Adnan Dawood who was wounded in the Sadr City bombings who asks, "How
is this possible? There are three entrances to Sadr City and all are
overseen by army checkpoints. What is the army dong? Are they there for
only oppressing and arresting people?" And they quote eye witness Sabah
Mohammed stating, "The army is not playing its role. When the army
first came to Sadr City, I was happy, but now all they care about is
hitting on girls and women. They don't inspect incoming cars. They only
inspect them if there are women inside." Joel Brinkely aims higher with " Iraqi prime minister should take blame for recent violence" ( McClatchy Newspapers): If
any one person holds primary responsibility for the fresh rush of
carnage in Iraq, it is none other than Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, a
politician who has shown he cares little about the fate of his nation.Consider
the suicide bombers' targets last week: a Shiite Islam shrine and a
gaggle of Iranian travelers coming to Iraq for worship - all direct or
indirect constituents of al-Maliki, the protector of Iraq's Shiite
majority. Al-Maliki had betrayed the perpetrators.Do
you remember the goals behind the so-called surge of American troops
last year: to reduce the level of violence in Baghdad, and to set the
table for national reconciliation? Well, the American troops did their
part. Al-Maliki shirked his.Assyrian International News Agency reports
that a St. Joseph Church's security guard "was severly beaten on
Sunday, April 26 by four people claiming to be Kurds" in northern Iraq.
There is a St. Joseph's in Baghdad. That's not this one. I believe this
is St. Joseph's Chaldean Church in Ainkawa that's being referred to but
there is also a St. Joseph's in Erbil which is also in northern Iraq.
The dateline lists Ainkawa as where the story was filed. On Sunday, 3
Iraqi Christians were killed in Kirkuk with two more seriously wounded. Meanwhile, China's People's Daily Online reports
that Turkey has again bombed northern Iraq as they continued to pursue
the PKK. The bombings started last night and continued today. Hurriyet notes,
"The PKK is listed as a terrorist group by Ankara and much of the
international community, including the EU and the United States."
Iran's Press TV adds,
"The air strikes come a day after nine Turkish soldiers were killed in
a roadside bomb explosion in the southeastern province of Diyarbakir.
The PKK later claimed responsibility for that attack." Already this morning, Reuters reports
three roadside bombings across Iraq which have left at least eight
people wounded. In other news, Mowaffaq Al Rubaie is one of the many
Iraqi 'leaders' who went into exile. He went to England in the 80s and
remained there until the US invaded Iraq in 2003. He's close to CIA
asset Ahmed Chalibi and, since 2006, was Iraq's National Security
Advisor. Today Alsumaria reports:
"Iraq's Ministerial Council affirmed that it has canceled the National
Security Advisor post which was run by Mowaffaq Al Rubaie and has
merged it rights and duties with the General Secretariat of the
ministerial council. A draft resolution is this regard is passed to
Parliament for approval." Lastly Iraq's Foreign Ministry announces " Foreign Minister Meets Japanese Ambassador in Baghdad:" Foreign
Minister Hoshyar Zebari met on Apr. 29th. 2009 with Mr. Shoji Ogawa
Japanese Ambassador in Baghdad. Both sides discussed the ways to
strengthen bilateral relations between the two countries in order to
activate the strategic partnership agreement signed in Baghdad at the
beginning of the year.The
Japanese Ambassador stressed on his country's continued support to Iraq
in the reconstruction process and invited his Excellency Minister
Zebari to visit Tokyo on behalf of his Japanese counterpart in an aim
to strengthen bilateral relations, on his part Foreign Minister Zebari
accepted the invitation and promised to make this visit as soon as
possible. The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com. iraqmsnbcrichard engelbrian williamssam dagherthe new york timessuadad al-salhysaif hameediraqthe washington post qais mizherernesto londonojoel brinkleymcclatchy newspapershurriyetpress tvalsumaria
Posted at 06:53 am by thecommonills
Permalink
Green bragged about the War Crimes twice to Yribe

March 12, 2006, Abeer Qassim Hamza al-Janabi,
a 14-year-old Iraqi girl, was gang-raped by two US soldiers while a
third shot her parents and five-year-old sister dead. The third
soldier, Steven D. Green, then joined the the other two soldiers and
took part in the gang-rape before shooting Abeer dead and then
attempting to set her body on fire.The illustration to the right is
from The Third Estate Sunday Review's " Justice for Abeer and her family?"
and, based on James Barker's court room confession, it shows Barker and
Paul Cortez beginning the gang-rape of Abeer. Steven D. Green had
already been discharged from the US military when the War Crimes came
to light so he is on trial in a Kentucky federal court. Paul
Cortez and James Barker were tried in military courts and entered pleas
of guilty. Jesse Spielman was convicted in a military court of mutliple
charges (rape, intent to rape, felony murder, etc.). Brian L. Howard
entered a guilty plea to being an accessory. Yesterday Anthony
Yribe offered testimony. Iran's Press TV reports Yribe stated that
Steven Green had bragged of the War Crimes to him not once but twice
"hours after the March 12, 2006 attack and again the next day." Press TV notes: Also
on Wednesday, jurors saw photos taken by Yribe hours after the attack.
The photos showed a mother, father and small girl lying in pools of
blood with shotgun wounds. Other photos showed badly charred and barely
recognizable human remains. AFP notes
Yribe stated he didn't believe Green at first, "I wanted to know if he
was serious or if it was just him talking. He said he was serious. He
said he had done it alone. I said, 'You're dead to me, man.' I said
that he needed to get out of the army and that if he didn't do it, that
I was going to help him." Yribe didn't reveal the War Crimes. Asked
why, he replied, "He's one of my brothers. I'm not going to tell on
him. I'm half way protecting him and I half way didn't believe him . .
. I don't know if I was just being naïve or what." Brett Barrouquere (AP) continues
his years of coverage on this story and notes that the jury was shown
photos Yribe took (as part of the military investigation) "hours after
the attacks" when everyone (except those involved and Yribe) thought
'insurgents' were responsible for the crimes. Barrouquere notes, "Green
sat at the defense table, rubbing his eyes, staring at Yribe and
looking around the room." Amy Goodman ( Democracy Now!) includes Steven D. Green's trial in today's headlines. Meanwhile Bully Boy Bush's plans for Iraq continue. Jeff Schogol (Stars and Stripes) reports
James Conway (Marine Corps Commandant General)is stating that Marines
should be departing Iraq in 2010. That was the plan, even when Gen
David Petreaus was the top US commander in Iraq. It was announced. It
was covered repeatedly by the press. Watch many rush to pretend
otherwise and hail this as 'victory'. An e-mailer to the public account
asks that we note this from Robert Dreyfuss' " Is Obama Fiddling While Iraq Burns?" ( The Nation): It's
too early to say that the Iraqi resistance is back, but the recent
increase in violence -- including a series of horrific bomb attacks and
a rise in small-scale attacks -- suggests that Iraq is not exactly a
stable, post-civil war society. The question is: Is President Obama
fiddling while Iraq burns?Flashpoints
include the Arab-Kurdish conflict over Kirkuk and other disputed areas,
along with the still-simmering intra-Shiite conflicts. But the main
fault line remains the divide between the mainly Shiite national
government -- including Prime Minister Maliki's ruling bloc and various
other pro-Iranian Shiite parties -- and the nationalist Sunni forces,
including the now-disintegrating former Awakening (sahwa) movement,
also known as the Sons of Iraq. Is he fiddling? He's fibbing, that's for sure. Corinne Reilly and Hussein Kadhim (McClatcy Newspapers) observe: President
Barack Obama acknowledged Wednesday night that violence has risen in
recent weeks, but he said the levels of violence were still below last
year's.Calling recent
bombings "a legitimate cause for concern," Obama said "civilian deaths
. . . remain very low compared to what was going on last year."But
statistics kept by McClatchy show that in Baghdad alone, more than 200
people have been killed in attacks so far this month, compared with 99
last month and 46 in February, according to a McClatchy count.The
last time McClatchy recorded more than 200 civilian deaths in one month
in the capital was more than a year ago, in March 2008. The following community sites updated last night: The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com. iraqbrett barrouquerejeff schogolrobert dreyfussmcclatchy newspaperscorinne reillyhussein kadhimlike maria said pazkats kornersex and politics and screeds and attitudethe daily jotcedrics big mixmikey likes itruths reportsickofitradlzoh boy it never ends
Posted at 06:51 am by thecommonills
Permalink
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Wednesday,
April 29, 2009. Chaos and violence continue, the Sadr City neighborhood
of Baghdad is rocked with multiple bombings, Congress takes testimony
on TRICARE, the United Nations voices grave concerns for Iraqi women,
an attack leaves a US soldier wounded in Iraq, Steven D. Green's trial
for War Crimes continues, and more. Baghdad was rocked by bombings today. Two ( Los Angeles Times, Reuters and Albawaba) or three ( BBC, UPI, McClatchy, Xinhua, Washington Post) car bombings exploded in Baghdad's Sadr City. CNN reports the death toll from the Sadr City bombings (they say three) is "at least 45 people" with sixty-eight more injued. Xinhua explains,
"The incident occurred in the afternoon when three booby-trapped cars
parked at different popular marketplaces in Sadr City neighborhood in
eastern Baghdad, detonated simultaneously, the source said." BBC notes,
"The BBC's Jim Muir in Baghdad says the attacks are the kind of
provocation, blame on militant Sunni Islamists, which triggered and
fuelled a deadly spiral of sectarian violence in 2006 and 2007." Liz Sly and Saif Hameed (Los Angeles Times) report,
"Survivors of the carnage turned their wrath on the security forces,
hurling bottles and bricks at the police and army troops until the
soldiers fired in the air to disperse the crowd." Ernesto Londono (Washington Post) provides
this context, "The attack was the deadliest in Sadr City since the
Iraqi army wrested control of the impoverished Shiite district from
militias last May." He also notes Iraqi police claim "the defused three
other car bombs shortly after the blasts." Corinne Reilly (McClatchy Newspapers) observes,
"The attacks are the latest sign that security gains here are beginning
to reverse. Large-scale bombings targeting civilians have been on the
rise since March." Reilly points out that over 200 people have died in
Baghdad this month thus far and the last time McClatchy shows that happening was March of last year. In other violence, Sahar Issa and Hussein Kadhim (McClatchy Newspapers) report
a Baghdad car bombing left five people injured and two Baghdad car
bombings which claimed 2 lives and left eight injured (this is in
addition to the Sadr City bombings which they also note), a New Mosul
roadside bombing which wounded two, a grenade attack in Kirkuk on US
forces which resulted in two Iraqi civilians being shot and four more
wounded. CNN cites
US Maj Derrick Cheng stating that the US military had been "working
with local police to provide micro-grants" when the attack took place
and Cheng states 2 "attackers" were dead with two more injured as well,
according to Cheng, one US soldier wounded. Reuters adds
that Diyala Province roadside bombings claimed the lives of 3 Iraqi
soldiers (two also left injured) and 2 Mosul roadside bombings (this is
in addition to the New Mosul one) resulted in the death of 1 police
officer and five Iraqi civilians being injured. Going with CNN's 45
dead in Sadr City, that would mean at least 53 reported deaths in Iraq
today. Caroline Alexander (Bloomberg News) notes 41 is the death toll in Sadr City according to the political party website of Iraqi President Jalal Talabani. Alsumaria quotes
US Brig Gen David Quantock stating that the increase in violence is not
due to the release of Iraqi prisoners from US prisons in Iraq. According
to US Major Cheng, one US soldier was wounded today. We'll use that to
jump over to a US Congressional hearing this morning. "Today, the
Military Personnel Subcommittee will hold a hearing on the organization
of the office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health
Affairs," stated Subcommittee Chair Susan Davis calling the hearing to
order. Of Health Affairs/TRICARE Management Activity, she noted "we are
clearly dealing witha different model than the rest of the
Department. We do not know if that is good-different, bad-different,
or just different. It is therefore important for us to examine this
structure so that we may understand exactly how the organization
operates and how that impacts care for our men and women in uniform and
isn't really that the bottom line here that we're seeking?" ( Click here
for US House Rep Susan Davis' opening statement, non-PDF format -- but
not that I'm quoting her remarks and they're not word for word the
prepared statement.) Joe Wilson is the Ranking Member on the Committee
and his opening remarks included noting, "General George Washington and
the Continental Congress understood the necessity of good medical care
during the fight for our independence. After suffering a sizeable
number of casulities from disease, the Continental Congress established
the medical department of the Army in July 1775. Washington then
appointed the first Director General and Chief Physician of the
Hospital of the Army." That was Dr. Benjamin Church
-- a poor choice who was replaced by Dr. John Morgan. Church was a
poor choice? He was a spy for the British. Wilson didn't go into that
or name Church, I'm just tossing it in as historical trivia and
wouldn't have known it if the office of a Dem House Rep hadn't told me
after the hearing (when I asked about the trivia). Other triva
included that it is "Surgeons General" and not "Surgeon Generals" when
you are dealing with the plural. US House Rep Vic Snyder asked and
established that. Appearing before the
subcommittee were the following: Acting Under Secretary of Defense,
Personnel and Readiness Gail H. McGinn (DoD, -- PDF formart warning -- here for her opening statement), Acting Assistant Secretary of Defense Health Affairs (DOD -- PDF format warning, here), Lt Gen Eric Schoomaker (Army Surgeon General, PDF format warning, here), Vice Admiral Adam Robinson (Navy Surgeon General, PDF format warning, here), Lt Gen James G. Roudebush (Air Force Surgeon General, PDF format warning, here) and Maj Gen Elder Granger (DoD's Deputy Director TRICARE Management Activity, PDF format warning, here).
It was Granger's last appearance before the committee who is retiring.
From the opening statements, we'll note one section that is of interest
and is not in the prepared remarks. Lt
Gen Eric Schoomaker: In a nutshell, the MHS [Military Health System]
exist to support war fighters on the battlefield, the Direct Care
System exist to deliver military readiness, Private Sector Care
supports and fills the gaps in the Direct Care System. If form is to
follow function then the MHS should be optimally organized to suport
the Direct Care System. I don't believe this is always the case. For
example in the budgeting process, Private Sector Care forecasts are
considered must pay while Direct Care System estimates are considered
"unfunded requirements." The Department's priority has been to fund the
Private Sector Care at 100% of projected requirements while many of our
Direct Care System needs are not addressed until year end when
overforecasted PSC funding becomes available for distribution to the
Direct Care System. Since Private Sector Care is often over-programmed
, they return money to the MHS and they're seen as "cost containing."
Our Direct Care System health care bills are always after the fact and
are seen as "cost overruns." This resourcing construct appears to
prioritize Private Sector Care over the Direct Care System. Most
veered from their prepared remarks (Robinson brought up San Antonio,
for example) but Schoomaker's veer went to the issues raised in the
hearing. To cut down on the "gobbledeegook," US House Rep Vic Snyder gave the witnesses examples so they could speak in specifics. US
House Rep Vic Snyder: The first example is a special-needs kid which I
think some of us have talked about before. General Schoomaker, you
talked about supporting our war fighters overseas and I think nothing
creates more heart ache for our folks overseas than if they have a
special-needs kid and the kid is not getting the kind of care that they
think they need while they're at a military facility some place. So
let's take a kid with either insulin-dependant diabetes or autism or
something that requires a fairly intensive amount of help. The second
example might be that I think a lot of us have run into over the last
several years would be a somebody in the reserve component who is
mobolized for active duty for a period of 18 months or so, so there
family then goes into the military health care system but may be
geographically living in a place, not near a base, not near providers
who are used to dealing with TRICARE. So what I would like each of you
to do -- and just tell me if I'm off base. It may be the tensions that
we were talking about, which you all were discussing, have nothing to
do with those examples but how does what you're talking about relate
specifically to our men and women and the care that they give and if
these are a couple of examples where it may -- it may give you an
opportunity to describe how the tension may relate to the actual care
that men and women and their families get? Lt
Gen Eric Schoomaker: Well candidly, sir, from my perspective, both of
the cases -- and I'll be interested in hearing what my colleagues have
to say -- both of those cases I think are not necessarily confounded by
the tensions that we're creating here. In fact, I think that both of
them in many cases are a tribute to the far-sightedness and the vision
of setting up a TRICARE system as we did 15 years or so ago. In the
case of special-needs kids, we have an extraordinary generous benefit
which is fairly uniformly applied and, in fact, I think it's resulted
in -- in the military health care system being one of the elements of a
family's decision with a special-needs child to stay in uniform. So I
would have to say that doesn't necessarily -- I don't see my role in
executing these programs as being interfered with in any way, shape or
form in taking care of special-needs kids. I would have to say the same
about the mobilized reserve component -- National Guard and Reserves --
many of whom come from places in this country where we don't have a
robust Direct Care System: central Idaho, parts of Montanna, Wyoming.
We don't have large, robust medical centers and health services
systems. And so having an effective Purchase Care System and a Managed
Care Support Contractor that is reaching out and providing care to
those families is, I think, that again reflects the far sightedness of
a well executed TRICARE program. I'm not taking away from any of that
part of it. Vice
Admiral Adam Robinson: I would come at this a little differently. I
don't completely disagree with General Schoomaker but I think that the
autism and the insulin-dependent diabetic do come into play in this
regard. Often -- first of all, the private sector care, the network
care and the direct care can both play here. Let's take 29 Palms, I'll
just take a Marine Corps base in southern California, very remote
location. I'm not going to be able to get network care there. It's
going to have to be direct care. It's going to have to be uniform
care. Now when I say "I can't get it," there are people that will go
there but that's very difficult so I have places in this country that
are very difficult to, in fact, get network care. That means I need it
in uniform [care]. However, very often there's also been -- and I
don't want to get caught in the mire of the gobbledeegook -- but
there's also thoughts that very often we on the direct care side and
uniform should be be there for very specialized war fighting activities
that make us incredibly essential for the battle and for the things
that the military system in fact, was built to do. But, in fact, in
2009 we have taken on added responsibilities which include garrison and
family care. So my question then is I need pediatric endocrinologists
as much as I need trauma surgeons but it may be difficult sometimes to,
in fact, get there because of how we have, in fact, looked at what we
think we should get from the war fighting versus the non-war fighting
situations. Now I'm not suggestiong to you that anyone's denying the
Navy or the other services pediatric endocrinologists. I'm just simply
saying that there is a tension that does exist because of some thoughts
and some assumptions made as to how we really should in fact divy up
our uniform versus our network. I'd like to add just one other
thing. I'm not going to comment on the reserve component. I think
that General Schoomaker's answer is -- would be mine also. I'd only
like to say, overseas with our EDIS -- exception developmental
instructional programs and also our exceptional family member programs
this is also the case because overseas we're not able to, in fact,
engage in that war care so if I don't have it -- if I can't either
contract it to bring it or if I don't have it in uniform, it's much
more difficult to get. And those are just challenges that I must look
at. I'm not suggesting that anyone's keeping me from getting there but
these are the challenges from an SG's perspective that I must look at. Lt
Gen James G. Roudebush: Congressman, I think you raise a point that
really brings out the essence of what we're talking about this
morning. There is a role and relationship and it's not "either/or"
it's "and." For us in uniform there are in fact places where we are
going to need to have in uniform speciality capabilities for family
members because family care is mission impact. When our men and women
are in harm's way, if they're not confident their families are fully
cared for, they will not be focused on what's in front of them and
that has mission impact. So family care plays directly into the
mission. For us, TRICARE gives us that wrap-around in those
circumstances where we may not have the capability readily available
for our reserves in areas where we don't have a facility availabe for
example. Or for special-needs youngsters, we may not have that readily
available within the uniform service. TRICARE gives us that wrap-around
capability. And, quite frankly, when you get to speciality care for
our youngsters that is rather expensive to make and sustain in
uniform. And the more cost-effective solution and clinically effective
solution in many circumstances is in fact a contract for that
capability and that care through the private sector TRICARE. So it's
not "either/or," it's "and" and finding the right balance, each of us
within our roles, to get that mission accomplished. So I think you do
raise an intersection that's critically important for us to get right. Subcommittee Chair Susan Davis: Thank you, I'm going to move on. Ms. Tsongas? US
House Rep Niki Tsongas: Thank you. I'm enjoying this testimony and I
have to say much of this as a new member as a relatively new member,
much of it is new to me. I have to say, many years ago as a child of
the Air Force, I needed a very delicate eye surgery and I was in an Air
Force hospital in Langley Air Base and then subsequently at Tachikawa
Air Base. I received remarkable care and, again, I was with
Congressman Wilson in Balad where we did see the remarkable work that
you're doing. But obviously we're in a time and an era when health
care is far more complicated and far more expensive and it's clear that
you're wrestling with both on multiple layers. My question, slightly
different though, is we have representatives of the different services
and you obviously have different cultures, some times very different
needs as a result of the roles you play, and I'm just curious as how
this plays itself out given the different tensions that you all have
described? Is it another layer to it or is it really not particularly
significant? Lt
Gen Eric Schoomaker: Well I'll speak for the Army. I think, ma'am,
it's very significant and I think it's why we -- not for parochialism
or not because we're looking to build duplication or triplication
within -- within the defense health system -- why we insist on
executing our programs in each one of our services. Each one of the
services -- for very good reasons -- has important differences in how
it fights war, in how its military health care uniform members support
the deployed force. And that's not to say that there aren't
commonalities in some large metropolitan areas, like in the national
capitol region or San Antonio, we can't find shared platforms where we
can retain common skills, where we can share the opportunities in the
greater Washington area where we have 36 or 37 different health care
facilities across the three services from Pennsylvania down to Quantico
and as far west as Fort Belvoir. We have plenty of opportunities to
share those platforms for caring for about a half-million
beneficiaries. But when it comes down to ships at sea and brigades in
battle, some of the remote sites that General Roudebush and I in the
Army have to service, the service cultures are very much a part of this
and it's why we, Surgeons General and commanders of our medical forces,
want to have a very firm grasp on the execution of these programs. Vice
Admiral Adam Robinson: Each service has a concept of care. I think
that as the long war has continued in both Iraq and Afghanistan our
concepts of care have actually become much closer together. They've
merged. From the Navy's perspective, I'm not speaking now for the Army
or Air Force but I don't think they're much different, patient and
family-centric care is our concept. It's what we think is important in
order to make sure that we can meet the mission. Both the operational
-- that is the war mission -- as well as the family and the garrison
care mission because we can't separate them out any longer. Since
people on the battlefield, men and women can now e-mail and text
message family members during an intense encounter, it is no longer the
case that I can, in fact not take care of families as I'm also taking
care of men and women on the battlefield. We've moved into another era
of communication, of technology and of the insistence by the people
that -- our beneficiaries that we in fact care for them in a very
organized and meaningful way and that's what I think all three services
do but we all do it differently -- leverging those things that our
service chiefs and the equities of Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine
Corps must have in order to meet their missions and at the same time
making sure that we leave no patient, no family and no member behind. US
House Rep Niki Tsongas: And not to interrupt but do health affairs and
TRICARE management acknowledge this in your relationship or is yet one
more -- one of those things that is a source of tension? Vice
Admiral Adam Robinson: I think that Health Affairs does acknowledge
that. I think that they do in fact understand the differences in the
services and how to meet them. I also think that very often the
concept of what is important from a patient perspective can sometimes
get clouded or get shaded in relationship to the business perspective
of efficiencies and effectiveness. Now that's the world that we live
in so I'm not complaining to you about that because everyone has to
look at costs and has to look at the bottom line that we're trying to
get done. The key here in medicine is that patients usally when
they're coming to you and they need something to save their lives, they
need something that they think is going to be absolutely essential to
their well being are not interested in hearing the business rules
involved in doing that. My job is to, in fact, take that into account
and to balance that out with the needs of the patient. Subcommittee Chair Susan Davis: General, do you want to comment? Lt
Gen: James G. Roudebush: Just very quickly. At times folks will talk
about culture and say, 'Well culture is interesting." I would suggest
to you that culture is a signficant part of what we do. We have an all
volunteer force. Every soldier joins the Army because he or she is
attracted to the mission and the culture. Likewise every sailor and
Marine and Air man joins that service because they are attracted to the
culture and the mission. Their families are wrapped in that culture.
We care for our servicemen within that culture and within that mission
ethos. So culture is a big part and, particularly when these men and
women are injured or ill, that culture wraps around them and supports
them, helps them through that recovery, rehabilitation. And so while
some of the -- many of the clinical activities are certainly the
same in the Army, Navy and Air Force that wrap around, that family,
that team that's caring for them is an important part of the construct
and I think that can't be lost in the discussion. Back to Iraq, a Sunday attack in Kut
continues to make the news. The pre-dawn US raid resulted in two deaths
and condemnation from Nouri al-Maliki. US Col Richard Francey spoke to the BBC earlier this week and today tells Alsumaria that the incident "could have been avoided" and that a joint US-Iraqi investigation has been launched. Alsumaria also reports,
on the legislative front, "Iraq's Parliament voted to proceed with the
secret intelligencer law rejecting the proposal of the legal committee
which called earlier to suspend this law." Meanwhile the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq announces their latest report which finds "the overall human rights istuation in Iraq remains a matter of concern." More to the point: The
report shows that gender-based violence remains one of the key
unaddressed problems throughout Iraq. Numerous murders of women under
the guise of so-called "honour killings" are still being recorded as
suicides, the report shows, while in the Northern Region of Kurdistan
the practice of Female Gential Mutilation (FGM) remains a tolerated
practice. UN High Commissioner for
Human Rights Navi Pillay, whose staff helped compile the report, said
"the situation of Iraqi women is extremely difficult. Violent actions
are taken against them on a daily basis and I urge the authorities to
make it a priority to both improve legislation, and law enforcement in
order to protect them properly." Iraq
is also the largest refugee crisis and women and girls who are internal
or external refugees are at risk and are often victimized via Iraq's
underground sex trade or the sex trade in other countries such as
Syria. The US has done a lousy job providing Iraqi refugees with
asylum. Nina Berman (Mother Jones) explores the conditions for some Iraqi refugees who make it to 'safety': The
United States took in a mere 735 Iraqi refugees between 2003 and 2006.
Criticized for not doing enough, 17,000 are slated to arrive between
September 2008 and September 2009. But the high-minded policy change
seems more like another American broken promise. Recently
arrived refugees interviewed in Dallas wonder how they're supposed to
become self-sufficient on minimal assistance in the worst economy since
the Great Depression. Rather than making new lives, they are facing
unemployment, eviction and isolation. "The
life here is closed," said Lara Yakob, whose husband, an architect in
Mosul, has been out of work since he arrived five months ago. His best
prospect to date: a tryout in a laundry room. "I
think the American government feels that they made bad things for Iraq,
so they bring us here. I don't know why they do that if they don't find
us a job. This life they start for us, is a very bad life, " said Omar
Ibrahim, who arrived in Dallas in 2008 and still is jobless. He
lives in a housing complex on the edge of the city, on a tree-lined
street off the freeway, near Garland. Around 100 refugee families from
Iraq, Myanmar and central Africa share this neighborhood of two-story
apartments around the corner from a gas station -- the site of a recent
police killing -- a Cash America outlet, aging strip malls and
shuttered superstores. His
rent assistance stopped after four months, and to pay the bills he had
to do the unthinkable. "I called my family in Iraq to send me money,"
he said. And they asked him, "You are in America, and you are asking us
for money?" A large number of Iraqi refugees are Christians and we'll note them tomorrow. Turning to legal news, Abeer Qassim Hamza al-Janabi
is the 14-year-old Iraqi girl who was gang-raped by US soldiers in
March of 2006 while her parents and five-year-old sister were murdered
and then Abeer herself was murdered. Steven D. Green is on trial in a
federal court in Kentucky (he was discharged before the War Crimes came
to light) for assorted charges including gang-rape and murder. The
ones who have confessed thus far have all fingered Green as the
ringleader. Time magazine has not ignored the War Crimes. It has covered them here and here. Noting the other trials for these War Crimes so far, Jim Frederick provides a walk-through on what's known going in: Nursing
a hatred of Iraqis stemming from heavy losses their unit had suffered,
and fueled by several bottles of Iraqi whisky, they embarked upon a
premeditated crime of gruesome barbarity. Donning black long underwear
outfits as disguises, even though it was the middle of the day, they
traveled a few hundred meters to an isolated farmhouse where they gang
raped Abeer Qassim Hamza al-Janabi,
a 14-year old Iraqi girl and murdered her, her parents, and her
six-year old sister. The men returned to their checkpoint unnoticed and
for months afterwards, the massacre was considered by the Army and
locals alike to be just another outburst of the frequent Iraqi-on-Iraqi
violence that plagued the area. Time notes:
"Jim Frederick, a former editor at TIME, is writing a book about
Green's unit, entitled Black Hearts: One Platoon's Disintegration in
the Triangle of Death and the American Ordeal in Iraq, which will be
published in Spring, 2010 by Harmony Books." Meanwhile the Washington Observer-Reporter makes the trial the topic of their editorial and they conclude, "But
there are no hardships, military or otherwise, that could excuse an
atrocity like this and you can't blame it on a 'lack of leadership'." AP's Brett Barrouquere has long cover this story (three years in a few more months) and he reports
Col Todd Ebel's testimony yesterday was that the accused, Steven D.
Green wanted to shoot civilians because "the enemy could be dressed as
civilians" and that Lt Col Thomas Kunk began testifying today
(continues this morning) "about the investigation into the deaths."
The hearing continued today and Barrouquere reports
that Lt Col Thomas Kunk was on the witness stand and stated he had
heard rumors that Green wanted to murder "all Iraqis" so he spoke with
him and Green denied that stating that there were 'some' good Iraqis
and he didn't wish to harm them. Meanwhile, as noted in yesterday's snapshot, Iraq War resister Cliff Cornell entered a guilty plea to desertion in his court-martial at Fort Stewart yesterday. UPI notes that Cliff has been sentenced to one year imprisonment and quotes Cliff's civilian attorney, James Branum,
stating, "Cliff is being punished for what he believes, for his
comments to the press. Because he spoke out against the Iraq war,
Cliff's sentence is harsher than the punishment given to 94 percent of
deserters who are not penalized but administratively discharged." Nanaimo Daily News reports Cliff "tearfully read a prepared statement to the judge apologizing for leaving his unit." Across Georgia quotes
him stating, "It was wrong for me to leave my unit and go to Canada. I
was very anxious about whether I might be asked to do things that might
violate my conscience. I felt trapped. I didn't know what to do."
Cliff went to Canada in 2005. He sought asylum there repeatedly and
was rejected. He was to be deported when he left Canada in February
and turned himself in. (Some say he was deported. Due to the order,
we won't split hairs on either interpretation.) Travis Lupick ( The Straight) gives the background story here. Frenchi Jones (Coastal Courier) explains, " Cornell
was stationed at Fort Stewart at the time of his desertion. He was a
soldier with the 1st Battalion, 39th Artillery Regiment, 1st Brigade
Combat Team, and 3rd Infantry Division." Courage to Resist notes
that in addition to the year in prison, "The military judge, Col. Tara
Olson, also ordered Cliff's rank be reduced to private and for him to
receive a bad conduct discharge." It
is more than 100 days since Barack Obama was elected president of the
United States. The "Obama brand" has been named "Advertising Age's
marketer of the year for 2008", easily beating Apple computers. David
Fenton of MoveOn.org describes Obama's election campaign as "an
institutionalised mass-level automated technological community
organising that has never existed before and is a very, very powerful
force". Deploying the internet and a slogan plagiarised from the
Latino union organiser Cesar Chavez -- "Sí, se puede!" or "Yes, we
can" -- the mass-level automated technological community marketed its
brand to victory in a country desperate to be rid of George W
Bush. No one knew what the new brand actually stood for. So
accomplished was the advertising (a record $75m was spent on television
commercials alone) that many Americans actually believed Obama shared
their opposition to Bush's wars. In fact, he had repeatedly backed
Bush's warmongering and its congressional funding. Many Americans also
believed he was the heir to Martin Luther King's legacy of
anti-colonialism. Yet if Obama had a theme at all, apart from the
vacuous "Change you can believe in", it was the renewal of America as a
dominant, avaricious bully. "We will be the most powerful," he often
declared. Perhaps the Obama brand's most effective
advertising was supplied free of charge by those journalists who, as
courtiers of a rapacious system, promote shining knights. They
depoliticised him, spinning his platitudinous speeches as "adroit
literary creations, rich, like those Doric columns, with allusion..."
(Charlotte Higgins in the Guardian). The San Francisco Chronicle
columnist Mark Morford wrote: "Many spiritually advanced people I
know... identify Obama as a Lightworker, that rare kind of attuned
being who... can actually help usher in a new way of being on the
planet." In his first 100 days, Obama has excused
torture, opposed habeas corpus and demanded more secret government. He
has kept Bush's gulag intact and at least 17,000 prisoners beyond the
reach of justice. On 24 April, his lawyers won an appeal that ruled
Guantanamo Bay prisoners were not "persons", and therefore had no right
not to be tortured. His national intelligence director, Admiral Dennis
Blair, says he believes torture works. One of his senior US
intelligence officials in Latin America is accused of covering up the
torture of an American nun in Guatemala in 1989; another is a Pinochet
apologist. As Daniel Ellsberg has pointed out, the US experienced a
military coup under Bush, whose secretary of "defence", Robert Gates,
along with the same warmaking officials, has been retained by Obama. Lastly, ETAN notes: Groups Urge Meaningful Pressure on Jakarta for Papuan RightsContact: Ed McWilliams, WPAT, +1-575-648-2078John M. Miller, ETAN, +1-718-596-7668 April
27 - Two U.S. organizations concerned about human rights in West Papua
today urged the U.S. government "to apply meaningful pressure on the
Indonesian government and its security forces... to address
long-standing Papuan concerns and grievances." The
West Papua Advocacy Team (WPAT) and the East Timor and Indonesia Action
Network (ETAN) called the new Obama administration's approach to West
Papua "hardly fresh." In
testimony before Congress last week, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham
Clinton called for supporting West Papua "in its efforts to have a
degree of autonomy within Indonesia." "Failure
of the U.S. government to think seriously and act responsibly about
West Papua, before Indonesia's July presidential elections, risks
further deterioration of human rights and communal violence," said Ed
McWilliams, a retired U.S. diplomat and spokesperson for
WPAT. "Papuans
have repeatedly rejected 'Special Autonomy' and... have demanded
instead an internationally-facilitated dialogue with the central
government to address key issues, including demilitarization of West
Papua, an end to intimidation, the release of political prisoners, and
the right to self-determination," the groups said. The full statement
is below. The U.S.
government and Congress should "apply meaningful pressure" for such a
dialogue and for "an end to restrictions that prevent the international
community from monitoring human rights developments and the welfare of
Papuans in the region." Pressure should include conditioning
"assistance to the Indonesian military, Brimob, Indonesia's
intelligence agencies on real reform [of the security forces], human
rights accountability and demonstrated respect for people of West
Papua." In
recent weeks, their has been an escalation of both peaceful protest and
violent conflict in West Papua, which Indonesia annexed in 1969. Since
then Papuans have suffered massacres and other systematic human rights
violations, environmental destruction, and marginalization in their own
land. -30-Joint
Statement by West Papua Advocacy Team (WPAT) and East Timor and
Indonesia Action Network (ETAN) on U.S. Policy and West Papua
Appearing last week
before the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Secretary of State Hillary
Rodham Clinton, for the first time as Secretary spoke directly about
the human rights crisis in West Papua. While candidly acknowledging the
"many human rights abuses" in West Papua, Secretary Clinton framed both
its problems and their solutions essentially in the same way that the
Bush Administration had: She emphasized that West Papua was part of a
"sovereign Indonesia," and said West Papua needed support "in its
efforts to have a degree of autonomy within Indonesia." For
nearly eight years the Indonesian government has pursued its "Special
Autonomy" policy for West Papua. This was to have afforded long-denied
fundamental rights to Papuans and ended decades of systematic human
rights violations, environmental destruction and marginalization.
Clearly, the Indonesian government has failed to implement this policy,
instead continuing to rely on a security approach. Indonesia's
military, militarized police (Brimob) and intelligence agencies
continue to terrorize Papuans. These security forces violate
fundamental human rights with impunity and collude with domestic and
international corporations to deprive Papuans of their land. At the
same time, the Indonesian government has drawn a curtain around West
Papua preventing or limiting international monitoring of conditions
there by journalists, international human rights officials, and others.
Recently, it demanded the departure of International Committee of the
Red Cross because its officials had met with Papuan political
prisoners. The
Indonesian government continued denial of essential services health,
education and employment, leaving the Papuans to suffer among the worst
levels of poverty, mortality and education in Asia. Papuans
have repeatedly rejected "Special Autonomy" and -- in massive, peaceful
popular demonstrations -- have demanded instead an
internationally-facilitated dialogue with the central government to
address key issues, including demilitarization of West Papua, an end to
intimidation, the release of political prisoners, and the right to
self-determination. Unfortunately,
the Obama Administration appears to ignore the reality of Papuans'
suffering and the urgent need for fundamental change in West Papua.
Secretary Clinton's call for a "degree of autonomy" for West Papua is
hardly fresh or progressive thinking. Rather than resort to the failed
Bush Administration approach of calling upon Jakarta to afford "a
degree of autonomy," the crisis in West Papua calls for fresh approach
and a genuine commitment to Papuans fundamental rights, including a
right to self-determination. A
decade ago, the U.S. Government similarly failed to understand the
dynamics of the deteriorating human rights environment in East Timor.
During that crisis, the U.S. sought only to press the Indonesian
military to take more seriously its responsibility to protect human
rights in East Timor. Then (and now) the U.S. government failed to
understand that the Indonesian military, (as well as Brimob and
Indonesian intelligence agencies) bore ultimate responsibility for the
death and destruction in surrounding the UN-organized referendum in
1999. Instead
of offering stale policy prescriptions, we urge the U.S. to apply
meaningful pressure on the Indonesian government and its security
forces to press for an internationally-facilitated, senior level
dialogue between the Indonesian Government and Papuans, including
Papuan civil society, to address long-standing Papuan concerns and
grievances. The U.S. government should urge an end to restrictions that
prevent the international community from monitoring human rights
developments and the welfare of Papuans in the region. The U.S.
government should also press for fundamental reform of the Indonesian
security forces which continue to violate human rights, are
unaccountable before Indonesia's flawed judicial system, and are not
fully subordinate to civilian government control. The current
administration and Congress should clearly condition assistance to the
Indonesian military, Brimob, Indonesia's intelligence agencies on real
reform, human rights accountability and demonstrated respect for people
of West Papua. etanetanetanetanetanetanetanetanetanetanetanetanJohn M. Miller Internet: etan@igc.org National Coordinator East Timor & Indonesia Action Network PO Box 21873, Brooklyn, NY 11202-1873 USA Phone: (718)596-7668 Mobile: (917)690-4391 Skype: john.m.miller Web: http://www.etan.org |
Posted at 03:52 pm by thecommonills
Permalink
Cliff Cornell sentenced to one year imprisonment
As noted in yesterday's snapshot, Cliff Cornell was entered a guilty plea to desertion in his court-martial at Fort Stewart yesterday.  Illustration by Kat, Betty's three kids and Wally, and used in Third's " Cliff Cornell faces court-martial on Tuesday." UPI notes that Cliff has been sentenced to one year imprisonment and quotes Cliff's civilian attorney, James Branum,
stating, "Cliff is being punished for what he believes, for his
comments to the press. Because he spoke out against the Iraq war,
Cliff's sentence is harsher than the punishment given to 94 percent of
deserters who are not penalized but administratively discharged." Nanaimo Daily News reports: Cornell
applied to stay in Canada but was deported. In February, he walked
across the border, where he was briefly arrested, then released before
he turned himself in to the military three days later.On
Tuesday, Cornell tearfully read a prepared statement to the judge,
apologizing for leaving his unit. He told the judge that when his
regiment was ordered to Iraq he became anxious about being asked to do
things that go against his conscience.Turning to the topic of Iraqi refugees. Sahar S. Gabriel is an Iraqi media worker for the New York Times who was granted asylum in the US and at the paper's blog, she contributed " America: The Less Violent Side" yesterday: On
March 18, just after my arrival in the United States, four high
schoolers were killed in the state of Michigan. DUI, an expression I
had heard so much in TV shows and movies.Four
lives ended in a reckless accident caused by a moment of irrationality.
A bad decision. This was not a terrorist act or a sectarian killing.
This was what is referred to as "stuff happens," and it happens
everywhere around the world. Nina Berman's " Double Jeopardy: The Harsh Reality for Iraqi Immigrants Trying to Live in America" ( Mother Jones) is a must read about the plight of Iraqi refugees who make it to the US: The
United States took in a mere 735 Iraqi refugees between 2003 and 2006.
Criticized for not doing enough, 17,000 are slated to arrive between
September 2008 and September 2009. But the high-minded policy change
seems more like another American broken promise.Recently
arrived refugees interviewed in Dallas wonder how they're supposed to
become self-sufficient on minimal assistance in the worst economy since
the Great Depression. Rather than making new lives, they are facing
unemployment, eviction and isolation."The
life here is closed," said Lara Yakob, whose husband, an architect in
Mosul, has been out of work since he arrived five months ago. His best
prospect to date: a tryout in a laundry room."I
think the American government feels that they made bad things for Iraq,
so they bring us here. I don't know why they do that if they don't find
us a job. This life they start for us, is a very bad life, " said Omar
Ibrahim, who arrived in Dallas in 2008 and still is jobless.He
lives in a housing complex on the edge of the city, on a tree-lined
street off the freeway, near Garland. Around 100 refugee families from
Iraq, Myanmar and central Africa share this neighborhood of two-story
apartments around the corner from a gas station--the site of a recent
police killing--a Cash America outlet, aging strip malls and shuttered
superstores.His rent
assistance stopped after four months, and to pay the bills he had to do
the unthinkable. "I called my family in Iraq to send me money," he
said. And they asked him, "You are in America, and you are asking us
for money?"NPR's Susan Wilson (KCUR -- link has text and audio) reports on Iraq refugees. Yesterday Human Rights First issued the following press release: Washington,
DC -- Only 4,200 Iraqis with U.S. ties have made it to the United
States since 2003, though at least 20,000 have applied, and the number
of U.S.-affiliated Iraqis may be as high as 146,000, according to a new
report issued today by a leading human rights group. The report, Promises to the Persecuted: The Refugee Crisis in Iraq Act of 2008,
issued by Human Rights First, examines implementation of this critical
legislation. It finds that, despite a Congressional mandate intended to
expedite Iraqi refugee processing times, only a small portion of
eligible Iraqis have been granted a safe haven in the United States.
Based on its findings, Human Rights First urged the Obama
administration to examine this issue and clear remaining bureaucratic
obstacles to fulfilling America’s promise to persecuted Iraqis who
worked with the United States in Iraq, as well as to their families. "Progress
has been made since the enactment of the Refugee Crisis in Iraq Act in
January 2008, but it's not enough. Processing times are unacceptably
long, and Iraqis seeking safety in the United States can wait a year or
more for their applications to move through the system," says Human
Rights First's Ruthie Epstein, who authored the report. "We pin the
delays on two problems – inadequate staffing and inefficient security
clearance procedures. The result is that thousands of U.S.-affiliated
Iraqis are stuck in Iraq and other countries in the region, facing
danger and destitution. The absence of direct access to the U.S.
refugee program in Syria and Turkey, where the need is significant,
exacerbates the problem." According
to the report, U.S. officials successfully established processing for
U.S.-affiliated Iraqis under an administration that was reluctant to
acknowledge the refugee crisis and in the face of significant logistic
and security challenges. But the multi-agency programs are still
plagued with procedural barriers. "In
February at Camp Lejeune, President Obama made a commitment to Iraqi
refugees. He declared, rightly so, that the United States has a
strategic interest and a moral responsibility to act," noted Amelia
Templeton, a refugee policy analyst at Human Rights First. "His
commitment should begin with a comprehensive evaluation and improvement
of the programs designed to provide escape to the very Iraqis who
helped the United States." Human Rights First's recommendations to the U.S. government include: - Reduce
Processing Times: The State Department should increase staffing at the
Embassy in Baghdad and the International Organization of Migration, and
the Department of Homeland Security should increase the frequency and
staffing of circuit rides to the region, so that the refugee
applications of thousands of U.S.-affiliated Iraqis and their families
facing danger can be processed expeditiously; the Embassy should
allocate the space in the building that is necessary for these
increases;
- Improve the Security Clearance Process: The White
House should review and improve the multi-agency security clearance
process required for Iraqi refugee applicants and other immigrants and
refugees so that Iraqis who meet all of the requirements for admission
to the United States do not wait indefinitely for final answers on
their applications;
- Expand Access to Iraqis in Need: The
State Department and the White House should press the governments of
Syria and Turkey at senior levels to permit direct access to the U.S.
refugee program to vulnerable Iraqis in need; and
- Ensure
Post-Arrival Services: Congress should appropriate the necessary
funding to the Department of Health and Human Services to adequately
support post-arrival services for Iraqi refugees and other new refugee
populations to whom the United States has offered safety from
persecution, as well as to the State Department to increase staffing on
programs mandated by the legislation.
Today's
report provides the most reliable public estimate to date of the number
of U.S.-affiliated Iraqis who might be eligible for the programs
mandated by the Refugee Crisis in Iraq Act. Human Rights First has
estimated that there are approximately 146,000 U.S.-affiliated Iraqis -
Embassy direct hires, contractors, and employees of U.S.-based media
and NGOs. This figure does not include spouses and children. The report
says that no more than 4,200 U.S-affiliated Iraqis, including some
family members, have actually made it to the United States. The
Refugee Crisis in Iraq Act was first proposed by Senator Edward Kennedy
(D-MA) and former Senator Gordon Smith (R-OR) in June 2007 to address
the plight of Iraq's refugees. Its mandate included special immigration
visas for Iraqis who worked with the U.S. government, military, or
contractors for at least a year; direct access to the U.S. refugee
resettlement programs for Iraqis who worked with the U.S. government,
military, contractors, or U.S.-based media or nongovernmental
organizations, and certain minority groups; and refugee processing
inside Iraq. To read Human Rights First’s report and its complete recommendations to the U.S. government, visit http://www.humanrightsfirst.org/pdf/090428-RP-iraqi-progress.pdf. A large number of the external refugees are Christians due to the targeting of them in Iraq. Yesterday Vatican Radio reported on the Iraqi Christians murdered in Kirkuk Sunday. Also yesterday, Azzaman offered an editorial
on the murders which noted, "The killing of five Christians in the
oil-rich city of Kirkuk has sent shivers of fear in the Christian
minority in the volatile northern city of Mosul. A few months ago more
than a dozen Christians were killed in Mosul, forcing a big Christian
exodus to surrounding villages and towns. Mosul, Iraq’s second most
populous city is under the control of insurgents fighting U.S. and
Iraqi troops. Observers believe the city has emerged as a bastion for
al-Qaeda in Iraq. Many of Mosul Christians have returned but some say
they now fear for their lives." Eric Young (Christian Post Reporter) reminds,
"Since 2003, hundreds of thousands of Iraqi Christians have fled to
neighboring countries and some 750 Christians have been killed in Iraq,
according to Archbishop Louis Sako, the Chaldean Catholic Archbishop of
Kirkuk." World Magazine reports
on the three funerals held in Kirkuk yesterday which were attended by
the province's governor Mustafa Abdulraham and presided over by
Archbishop Sako whose church the three had attended: "Besides crowds of
mourners, Christian clergy from across the city as well as government
officials attended the service in the ethnically mixed city, which has
repeatedly been forced to delay a referendum on whether it will join
the Kurdish government to the north or remain part of the Baghdad
administration to the south. A U.N. commission has just completed a
report on the region, which sits atop most of Iraq’s oil reserves. It
calls for a negotiated settlement that leaves the province intact. The
outcome of the dispute will go a long way toward determining whether
Iraq will continue with a strong centralized government in Baghdad once
U.S. forces begin their departure. Many believe the attacks are aimed
at undoing current negotiations." Meanwhile niqash's " kirkuk petition stokes tensions" reports on other tensions in the oil-rich Kirkuk: A petition campaign collecting signatures supporting a Kurdish Kirkuk has provoked Arab and Turkmen anger.In
April 2009 a number of non-governmental organizations (NGOs), close to
Kurdish groups, launched for a campaign to demonstrate that the
majority of Kirkuk's residents want the city to be annexed to the
autonomous Kurdish Region. The petition’s first sentence read: “We, the
people of Kirkuk, the undersigned, demand the annexation of Kirkuk to
the Kurdish Region."Those
running the campaign say that they want to review the names and
signatures and submit the petition to the UN, the Iraqi Parliament and
the Independent High Electoral Commission (IHEC).Rizkar
Haji Hama, one of the campaign’s organizers, and an official spokesman
for the Kirkuk Centre of Democratic Organizations of the Patriotic
Union of Kurdistan, told Niqash that “the campaign was organized by a
number of Kurdish, Arab, Turkmen and Assyrian organizations and around
80,000 signatures have been collected. The aim is to reflect the
opinion of Kirkuk’s residents on this issue.”The
campaign provoked anger among Arab and Turkmen members of the
provincial council (representing 15 out of the council’s 41 seats).
They condemned it as a “terror and intimidation” campaign planned and
organized by Kurdish security forces, known as Asayish, maintained by
both the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of
Kurdistan (PUK). They called on Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to ban
these organizations from conducting any activity in Kirkuk city.The Kurdistan Regional Government notes: President Barzani opens Iraq's first post-war International Sports Conference  | Erbil,
Kurdistan – Iraq (KRG.org) - Kurdistan Region President Masoud Barzani
yesterday opened Iraq’s first post-war international sports conference
hosted in Erbil, stating how important the role of sport is to bring
people together, create an environment of friendship and build a strong
healthy region. Welcoming international delegates from
countries including Iran, Sweden, England and Wales, President Barzani
said: "The Kurdistan region will benefit from our guests’ experiences
and we will give them the chance to see the current level of sport in
the Kurdistan region." Underlining the importance of sport for
all citizens, President Barzani, said: “Sports should be available for
all people, girls and boys - not just boys – because exercise is a
necessity for every human being.” The two-day conference, being
hosted in Erbil by the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), has drawn
together international athletes and experts in sports policy to support
the implementation of the KRG’s inclusive ‘sports for all’ policy. In January 2009, the KRG announced a Roadmap for Sport setting out their vision for what sport can achieve across the region. Speaking
at the two-day conference yesterday, Taha Barwary, the KRG Minister of
Sports and Youth, said: “Sport is an incredibly powerful tool that
helps us unite communities, support a healthy population and empower
individuals with a sense of achievement. “This conference will
help us take the vital next steps in developing a culture of sports
that celebrates the involvement of women, youth and the disabled, and
an infrastructure to ensure talented athletes excel to become
formidable competitors at an international level.” The
conference was attended by the Iraqi Deputy Minister for Youth and
Sports Isam Al-Diwan, from Iran by Faiza Hashemi Rafsanjani , President
of the Islamic Federation for Women’s Sport, and Basha Mustafa, Deputy
Head of the Iraqi Oympic Committee. Huw Jones , Chief Executive
of the Sports Council Wales, said, "It is clear that the Kurdistan
Regional Government, Ministry for Sports and Youth is committed to
creating a clear vision for sport in Kurdistan and we give them our
full support." Also among the international delegates were
British Olympic medal-winner Kate Allenby, British Paralympian Sophie
Hancock, and representatives from the English Youth Sport Trust, the
Welsh Football Trust and the English Federation of Disability Sport. The
conference has been enthusiastically welcomed by the UN Special Adviser
on Sport for Development and Peace, Mr Wilfried Lemke, who said, "The
issues and goals to be discussed at the conference will serve as an
excellent opportunity to find effective ways to help the Iraqi people
recover from the extensive conflict they have faced." For more information please see the conference website www.mosy-conference.infoAnd Iraq's Foreign Ministry announces " German Ambassador in Baghdad Gives lecture to Students of Diplomatic Course 26:" Mr. Christopher File Ambassador of Republic of Germany to Iraq gave a lecture to the students of the diplomatic course 26. The
lecture dealt with bilateral relations between the two countries and
the contribution of Germany to rebuild infrastructure and train Iraqi
army and police and cultural assistance to Iraq in addition to Iraq's
willingness to assist the staff of the Foreign Ministry. At the end
of the lecture a discussion between the Ambassador and the attendees
took place on the possibility of developing bilateral relations. The
meeting was attended by the Ambassador Ziad Khaled, Dean of the Foreign
Service Institute in addition to several ministry officials. The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com. iraqcliff cornelljames branumnanamio daily newsupisahar s. gabrielthe new york timesnina bermansusan wilsonkcureric young
Posted at 06:35 am by thecommonills
Permalink
Three
previous trials have established this much: on March 12, 2006, a small
group of junior soldiers slipped away unnoticed from a lightly defended
traffic checkpoint just outside the insurgent-infested town of
Yusufiyah 20 miles south of Baghdad. Nursing a hatred of Iraqis
stemming from heavy losses their unit had suffered, and fueled by
several bottles of Iraqi whisky, they embarked upon a premeditated
crime of gruesome barbarity. Donning black long underwear outfits as
disguises, even though it was the middle of the day, they traveled a
few hundred meters to an isolated farmhouse where they gang raped Abeer Qassim Hamza al-Janabi,
a 14-year old Iraqi girl and murdered her, her parents, and her
six-year old sister. The men returned to their checkpoint unnoticed and
for months afterwards, the massacre was considered by the Army and
locals alike to be just another outburst of the frequent Iraqi-on-Iraqi
violence that plagued the area. Three soldiers from that murderous
expedition have already been tried by court martial for their roles in
the crime. All were found guilty and all were sentenced to jail terms
of 90 years or longer. But because Green, whom the three other soldiers
have described as both the plot's mastermind and trigger man, was
discharged before the full extent of the crime was discovered, he is
being tried in a civilian court, where federal prosecutors are seeking
the death penalty. He faces 17 counts of conspiracy, rape, murder,
unlawful use of a weapon and obstruction of justice. (See TIME's story on the killings in Haditha.) The above is from Jim Frederick's " Civilian Trial Begins for Ex-Soldier Accused of Iraq Atrocities" ( Time
magazine) and note this at the end of the article: "Jim Frederick, a
former editor at TIME, is writing a book about Green's unit, entitled
Black Hearts: One Platoon's Disintegration in the Triangle of Death and
the American Ordeal in Iraq, which will be published in Spring, 2010 by
Harmony Books." Yeah, this story's not going away and it's going to be
really interesting ten, fifteen, twenty years from now as various
researchers (student and professional) start combing the archives of
various news outlets attempting to get information on the trial. "Let's
try the New York Times!
Surely the paper of record has something on it, someone covering it."
Nope. No one. They could cover it in August 2006 and did try to (with
Robert Worth and Carolyn Marshall's embarrassing story fed to them by
the defense attorneys -- a detail the 'reporters' left out of the
article) but they can't cover the trial. They've never, pay attention
to this, mentioned Abeer's name in print. Never. They have rendered her
invisible and nameless. The worst known War Crime of the Iraq War and
why do you think it is the New York Times refuses to cover it? I sure
am glad I didn't make a name co-writing a book about sexual harassment
and go on to work in management at the New York Times
because apparently that requires that you turn in to a trashy sell-out
who can't defend women. Now you're still happy to take your bows for
what you did over two decades ago, but you refuse to use your own power
at the paper to demand that the gang-rape and murder of a 14-year-old
girl by US soldiers get covered in the 'paper of record.' Time magazine covers it. Years from now, researchers may stumble across the Washington Observer-Reporter's " No excuses for this"
which concludes, "But there are no hardships, military or otherwise,
that could excuse an atrocity like this and you can't blame it on a
'lack of leadership'." They'll note that the AP
kept Brett Barrouquere on this story for nearly three years and they
should note the strong record he's done on it. His most recent article
is entitled " Ex-soldier said he wanted to shoot civilians, jury told"
which addresses Col Todd Ebel's testimony yesterday that, in December
2005, Green told Ebel that he wanted to shoot civilians because "the
enemy could be dressed as civilians" and that Lt Col Thomas Kunk began
testifying today (continues this morning) "about the investigation into
the deaths." Though the US based staff of the Times ignore the trial and anything to do with Iraq, Sam Dagher and Atheer Kakan file " Iraqi Premier Says Leader in Insurgency Is in Custody" from Iraq and we'll note this from it: Mr.
Maliki, who spoke out Tuesday on the arrest for the first time, has
increased his anti-Baathist language in recent weeks and has resisted
American pressure to reconcile with more approachable members of the
party. Many analysts say they believe that he is under pressure from
his Shiite partners in the government, some of them allied with Iran. "This
terrorist had deep ties with the former regime and created with its
followers a devil's pact reflected in bloody scenes of carnage
involving innocent children and women and the elderly," Mr. Maliki said. His statement coincided with the birthday of Mr. Hussein, who would have turned 72 and was executed in 2006.The reports note his interview Monday with the BBC where crazed al-Maliki continued his anti-Baathist rants. (Pair this article with Dagher's Sunday report " Iraq Resists Please by U.S. To Placate Hussein's Party.")
The reporters omit al-Maliki's absurd claim in the interview that the
female bombers are all mental patients. The article notes al-Maliki's
claims that Abu Omar al Baghdadi was captured last Thursday. Corinne
Reilly also covers this in " Iraqi government says it captured al Qaida leader" ( McClatchy Newspapers): Iraqi
officials claim that Baghdadi is responsible for countless attacks that
helped fuel the country's sectarian war. They said he uses a fake name
and that he's an Iraqi.Even
if he's who the Iraqis say he is, he may be easily replaced, however,
as a long line of alleged al Qaida in Iraq leaders appear to have been.In
an interview with al Arabiya television, Iraq's top government
spokesman, Ali al Dabbagh, said he expects al Qaida to step up attacks
in retaliation for Baghdadi's arrest. At the same time, Dabbagh said,
his capture has severely diminished the group's strength.As
if the paper's 'feminist' in management doesn't disgrace the label
enough, guess what whack job shows up writing this garbage: And
may we please look in the mirror, for the sake of our own moral health?
How many Americans spoke up when it was chic to thrill to the sadistic
soundbite of "take the gloves off"? How many watched 24 without a
murmur when the mass consensus was that it was OK - no, patriotic - to
waterboard a bit? How many of us (as in civilised societies everywhere
when a wind of barbarism is set free) actually thrilled to the sadistic
(and sometimes sexually sadistic) soundbites that came out of the Bush
communications office: the "special sauce", the "belly slap", the
phrase "we have our methods"? Did you guess
porn-feminist Naomi Wolf? You were correct. Naomi, if you could stop
admiring yourself in the mirror, you might want to take accountability.
Not just for who you pimped and lied for in the presidential race but
for what he's done since becoming president. It's real cute to watch
Naomi blame various people (including the entire US Congress) but never
remembers to blame Barack. She works in Bush, Cheney and Nancy Pelosi
and Hillary Clinton by name but 'feminist' Naomi can't call out her
Dream Lover Barry Obama. 'Feminist' Naomi also can't cover Abeer.
Silence is all she can manage unless someone wants to talk porn and
then she's all excited. Go back to the Crazy Farm, Naomi Wolf, Naomi
Wolf. The following community websites updated last night: The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com. iraqjim frederickbrett barrouqueremcclatchy newspaperscorinne reillyiraqatheer kakanlike maria said pazkats kornersex and politics and screeds and attitudethomas friedman is a great mantrinas kitchenthe daily jotcedrics big mixmikey likes itruths reportsickofitradlzoh boy it never ends
Posted at 06:31 am by thecommonills
Permalink
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Tuesday,
April 28, 2009. Chaos and violence continue, the Senate discusses
proposed changes to the War Powers Resolution of 1973, James Baker
thought it was a Costume Ball and showed up as Titus Semple, talk of
overthrowing Nouri al-Maliki who is more focused on demanding an
apology, Steven D. Green's 'nutty' defense, and more. Starting
with war resistance, Iraq War resister Cliff Cornell faced a
court-martial this afternoon at Fort Stewart in Georgia where he
entered a guilty plea to desertion. Today the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee held a hearing on declaring war and
the biggest concern appeared to be whether or not the creation of a
joint-committee might usurp their own committee. While the turf war
raged, Senator Russ Feingold appeared to be the only one who'd read the
proposal in terms of how it might actually impact the issue of going to
war. Appearing before the committee as
witnesses were BFFs James Baker and Lee Hamilton, packing enough
'bi-partisan' scandals between themselves to rock a Jackie Collins look
at DC. The panel was rounded out by Warren Christopher whose service
can be traced back to the LBJ years. Senator John Kerry chairs the
committee and he called it to order and skipped any messy realities
about the three to instead note that "they are here to discuss one of
the most vital questions that comes before our democracy: The question
of how America goes to war?" Kerry noted that
the reason for the hearing was the "fundamental tension in how America
goes to war. The president is commander-in-chief of the Armed Forces
while Congress has the power to declare war." Hamilton, Baker and
Christopher sat on the National War Powers Commission. No, no election
was held to elevate those three to a commission on such an important
issue. No, their tinkering around with the law -- and, yes, with the
Constitution, is not how things are supposed to be changed per the
Constitution. But if DC didn't have cronyism, no one ever be seated
for a meal at Marcel's. So three elderly men -- at 78, Lee Hamilton's
the baby in the trio -- that few would trust with a bank deposit slip
have been put in charge of recommending changes in war powers. As Phil
Ochs once sang, "It's always the old to lead us to the war, always the
young to fall" ("I Ain't Marching Anymore") and the LiverSpots Trio
demonstrated that and then some. If there was
anything more distressing than the absence of senators -- this was a
full committee hearing even though the full committee elected to skip
it -- it was most likely the huge absence of the press. If changes are
being made in how the United States goes to war shouldn't the press be
present? Where were they? And while the Real Press was largely
absent, where were the beggars of Panhandle Media? Possibly encamped
on the White House lawn hoping to get a shot of Bo doing his business. Their
own business apparently did not include fact checking the chair. John
Kerry declared in his opening remarks, "What is clear to all is that
the 1973 War Powers Resolution has simply not functioned as intended?"
Really? Is that what's going on? No, Congress has refused to do what
the War Powers Resolution gives them the power to. Equally true is
that some aspects have been skirted by presidents. Kerry's starting
from a false premise and begging the panel to snow job him. What
Baker, Christopher and Hamilton are proposing is repealing the War
Powers Act of 1973 and replacing it with something different. This
would be a major change and, again, where was the press? Baker noted in his opening remarks [PDF format warning, click here],
"Two years ago, Chris [Warren Christopher] and I were approached by the
Miller Center at the University of Virginia to co-chair an independent
bi-partisan commission to consider an issue that has bedeviled legal
experts and government officials since the Constitution was framed --
the question of how our nation makes a decision to go to war." If
Baker is an example of those "experts" and "officials," no wonder
they're "bedeviled." The Constitution is very clear that Congress, and
only Congress, can declare war. Warren
Christopher followed and he gulped water throughout the hearing which
appeared to be taxing him. A sure sign that he shouldn't have
co-chaired the panel, let alone served on it. He tried to open with a
joke but it flopped. Of Baker he declared, "Without going on about it,
let me just say that it is a lot more fun working with Secretary Baker
than working against him." Again, the joke flopped. He then almost
immediately made a case for Kerry to bring down the gavel and end the
hearing. Christopher was speaking of the tension between the executive
and legislative branches [PDF format warning, click here] and
the issue over declaring war when he stated, "Only a Constitutional
amendment or decisive Supreme Court opinion will resolve the debate;
neither is likely forthcoming anytime soon, and courts have turned down
war powers cases filed by as many as 100 members of Congress." The
response to that should be: "Well if only a Constitutional amendment or
a Supreme Court verdict can decide the issue then why the hell are we
listening to you?" And that is the thing. What
they're proposing resolves nothing. It does, however, weaken Congress'
powers. On the plus side, as John Kerry pointed out, it's better to
address this now than in the lead-up to a war, "While the nation's
attention is not focused on this issue today and while the kleig lights
and the hot breath of the media is not as intense here at this moment,
everybody in this room and particularly at the table understand the
implications and how important it is to be here now trying to figure
out the best path through this rather than the middle of a crisis."
We're going to zoom in on the most pertinent discussion which took
place shortly after Senator Russ Feingold joined the hearing and as he
began speaking. Senator
Russ Feingold: I'd like to use some of my time to make a statement and
then ask a couple of questions. As we continue to grapple with the
profound costs of rushing into a misguided war, it is essential that we
review how Congress' War Powers have been weakened over the last few
decades and how they can be restored. The war in Iraq has led to the
deaths of thousands of Americans and the wounding of tens of thousands
and will likely end up costing us a trillion dollars. What if we had
had more open and honest debate before going to war? What if all the
questions about the administration's assertions had
been fully and, to the extent appropriate, been publicly aired? So
clearly any reforms of the War Powers Resolution must incorporate these
lessons and foster more deliberations and more open and honest public
dialogue before any decision to go to war. I
appreciate that attention is being drawn to this critically important
issue which, of course, goes to the core of our Constitutional
structure, its' a conversation that we need to continue to have. But I
am concerned that the proposals made by the Baker - Christopher
commission cede too much authority to the executive branch in the
decision to go to war. Under the Constitution, Congress has the power
"to declare war." It is not ambiguous in any way. The 1973 War
Powers Resolution is an imperfect solution; however, it does retain
Congress' critical role in this decision making process. The
commission's proposal on the other hand would require Congress to pass
a resolution of disapproval by a veto proof margin if it were unhappy
with the president's decision to send our troops into hostilities.
That means in effect that the president would need only one-third of
the members plus one additional member of either house to continue a
war that was started unilaterally by the president. Now that cannot be
what the framers intended when they gave the Congress the power to
declare war. Since the War Powers Resolution was enacted, several
presidents have introduced troops into battle without obtaining the
prior approval of the Congress. Campaigns in Grenada and Panama are a
few examples. None of these cases involved eminent threats to the
United States that justified the use of military force without the
prior approval of Congress. A simple solution to this problem would be
for the president to honor the Constitution and seek the prior approval
of Congress in such scenarios in the future. And while the
consultation required by the War Powers Resolution is far from perfect,
I think it is preferable to the commission's proposal to establish a
consultation committee. If this bill had been in place before the war
in Iraq, President Bush could have begun the war after consulting with
a gang of 12 members of Congress thereby depriving most of the senators
in this room of the ability to participate in those
consultations as we did in the run up to the Iraq War. The decision
to go to war is perhaps the most profound ever made by our government.
Our Constitutional system rightly places this decision in the branch of
government that most closely reflects the will of the people. History
teaches that we must have the support of the American people if we are
to successfully prosecute our military operations. The requirement of
prior Congressional authorization helps to ensure that such public
debate occurs and tempers the potential for rash judgment. Congress
failed to live up to its responsibility with respect to the decision to
go to war in Iraq. And we should be taking steps to ensure it does not
make this mistake again. We should be restoring this Constitutional
system not further undermining it. Mr Baker, part of the premise of
the commission's finding, is that several presidents have refused to
acknowledge the Constitutionality of the War Powers Resolution, I know
that of course in practice, most do honor the Resolution. In your
view, does the president's commander-in-chief authority give him the
authority to ignore duly enacted statutes? James
Baker: Duly enacted statues? Not in -- not in my view. On the other
hand, there have been -- you said most presidents, Senator Feingold,
all presidents have refused to acknowledge the -- all presidents have
questioned the Constitutionality of the War Powers Resolution. Russ Feingold: Right. James Baker: Both Democrat and Republican. Russ Feingold: Right. I simply said several presidents. James Baker: Right. Russ Feingold: But most have honored the resolution in practice. James
Baker: Well that's really not quite accurate, sir. They send -- they
file reports "in keeping with," the language is "in keeping with," but
never has one president filed a report "pursuant to" the War Powers
Resolution. Russ
Feingold: Well, nonetheless, I appreciate your answer to the basic
question. It seems to me that much of the ambiguity you attribute to
the War Powers Resolution would be resolved if future presidents simply
abided by the Resolution -- that would help solve the ambiguity. Mr.
Hamilton, before the Iraq War, every senator had the opportunity to at
least review the intelligence assessments on Iraq -- particularly the
October 2002 NIE. I concluded that there was insufficient evidence to
justify the decision to go to war Under your bill, wouldn't the full
Congress have even less access to the intelligence supporting the
decision to go to war ? Wouldn't that intelligence be limited to the
gang of members on the consultation committee? Lee
Hamilton: With the consultative committee, I think you expand the
number of members that would be brought into the discussions involving
the highest level of intelligence. In other words, you'd have more
members involved under our proposal than you do now. Because you -- Russ
Feingold: I was a relatively middle - junior member of the Foreign
Relations Committee. I was not at that time a member of the
Intelligence Committee. At some point I was afforded the opportunity
to go down to a secure room and to hear directly from the CIA people
whether they felt the same thing we were hearing publicly. And I got
to tell you, their tone when they were trying to express these
arguments the president was making was rather tepid and it gave me a
feeling that something was wrong here. And I would apparently, under
this scenario, not have been a part of that process. I'm not saying my
role was critical but I did end up being one of the people who went to
the floor immediately and said 'I'm not buying this al Qaeda
connection, I'm not buying the notion that Saddam Hussein is likely or
ready to attack the United States.' It appears that somehow somebody
in my situation would not necessarily be able to be a part of that
pre-military operation process. Mr. Hamilton? Lee
Hamilton: Well I think under the law today the president doesn't even
have to consult with members of Congress before he takes you into war
because the provisions in the War Powers Resolution are very vague with
regard to consultation. We expand greatly the number of members who
would be involved in that consultative process here. Russ
Feingold: It appeared though in this circumstance of Iraq that this was
part of the consultative process. That our access to the people from
the president's CIA was pursuant to a discussion that led to a vote of
the full Senate -- Lee Hamilton: Well the --- Russ
Fiengold: how the process worked. All members -- well perhaps not
all. But at least members of the Foreign Relations Committee were
given the opportunity to participate in that kind of a set up -- Lee Hamilton: And the proposal that we're putting before you, members of Congress are required to vote on it. John Kerry: Senator -- Lee Hamilton:You don't have that requirement under present law. John
Kerry: There is no requirement. under present law. What happened is we
did it under the prerogatives of each of the committees because the
committee chairs and ranking members understood that this was part of
the responsibilities Nothing in here -- and we discussed this before
you [Feingold] came here -- about this consultative component in
fulfillment of the requirement that the president let us know what he's
thinking about doing so that those Committees, that's why they're part
of it. The Intelligence Committee, the Armed Services Committee, the
Foreign Relations Committee, would then go about their normal business
involving all of their members. I mean, but there's no statute that
required that for you either. Russ
Feingold: I'd like to believe that, Mr Chairman, but it strikes me that
this provides an opportunity, that the president doesn't currently
have, to say, "Look. I went through this consultative process that's
provided by this new statute so I have even less a need to go through a
formal vote which, as we just talked about, most presidents have
decided -- President [George H.W.] Bush on the first Gulf War, even
though he may not have taken the view that he had to do it, he went
ahead and did it. I think this creates a process that could end run
the feeling on the part of a president that he needs to go through a
process that would actually involve participation but I'm not saying
that this doesn't literally require it -- James Baker: Senator -- Russ Feingold: Yes, Mr. Baker? James
Baker: We require a vote within 30 days so the president is going to be
facing a vote of the Congress. If the vote is a resolution
disapproval, that is going to very adverse impacts on the president's
ability to Russ Feingold: But in the case of Iraq of course [shrugs, throws up hands] James Baker: Well that of course -- I mean Russ Feingold: 30 days after wouldn't have been not too helpful. James
Baker: That's -- that's true. But the president -- both presidents
went to the Congress to get approval and actually obtained approval.
Back to . Back to the point you made about the c-- about the
observance a statute duly enacted and whether a president can question
it's Constitutionality. There's all -- there's always been the ability
of presidents to question Constitutionality and in this area it has
consistently been questioned by both Democratic and Republican
presidents. Presidents have sent troops abroad, Mr. Feingold, 264
times -- during which period the Congress has declared war 5 times. So
faced with the situation, we expressly -- I think before you arrived,
we made it -- we had a dialogue here about the fact that we have
expressly preserved the rights of Congress to make the argument that I
think you are making and the right of the president to make the
argument presidents have made since the War Powers Resolution was
passed that the Constitution gives either (A) the Congress or (B) the
president the authority. Expressly reserve those Constitutional
arguments, put them to the side, they are not going to be solved in the
absence of a Constitutional amendment or a Supreme Court opinion. So
we don't prejudice either branch. What we're trying to do is find a
workable solution here that will improve the relationship and the
consultation that takes place between the president and Congress when
the nation's going to war. Russ
Feingold: I respect the effort and I respect the intent and it may
well work that way. My concern -- and I know my time's up, Mr.
Chairman John Kerry: No, take [more] time, no problem. Russ
Feingold: Is that I witnessed as a non-senator the excellent debate
that was held on the floor of the United States Senate prior to the
first Gulf War, I also was involved in the truncated and unfortunately
weak debate prior to the Iraq War. But any process that could make a
president feel that he somehow did not need to go through that process
prior to such a major action would trouble me. So that's how I need to
review this. Could this lead to that practical effect as opposed to
the literal effort you have made to avoid such a consequence. These
are my concerns. James
Baker: I don't think so. Let me just quickly answer. I don't believe
so because the president has the power today. So we're not -- this
effort -- I don't see this as giving the president something he doesn't
have today. Russ Feingold: Thank you, Mr. Chairman. John
Kerry: Thank you Senator Feingold. Those are important inquiries and I
think worth examining the sort of Iraq experience in terms of the vote
up front versus late. Kerry
entered the commission's entire report into the record at the start of
the hearing and noted, at the end of the hearing, that the record would
remain open for a week to include any additional responses from the
panel. Before Feingold joined the hearing,
there were no strong objections from Democrats. In fact, Kerry and
others accepted premises that they probably shouuldn't do without
speaking to their constituents if they want to at least pretend to
represent anyone other than the beltway. For example, there are many
people (put my name on the list) who do not believe that pre-emptive
war and pre-emtive attacks are illegal (and it is illegal by the
doctrine of just wars) so it was really something to hear John Kerry,
who damn well knows better, accept the committee's working premise that
the president had the right to do those without Congressional
authority. For those confused, international bodies say those actions
are wrong. Who the hell were these three crooked thieves bouncing
between commerce and politics to accept as legal things that are still
open to debate? That and eliminating
Congressional authority for war -- currently written into the
Constitution -- seemed the main purpose of the Baker-Christopher
commission. Some might say, "Well the Court would rule against it if
it's wrong!" The Supreme Court is going to decide that Congress
shouldn't have surrendered a contested power? No. They've
consistently refused to rule on this terrain and were Congress to adopt
this craziness the Court would either ignore it or rule that Congress
didn't have the power stripped from them, they voted to give it away.
This is a very serious issue and Russ Feingold was the only one who
appeared to grasp that. Baker kept talking
about "bi-partisanship" and he looked so oily throughout that only two
words captured him: Titus Semple. You found yourself longing for Lane
Bellamy to show up and explain what they did to out of control
elephants in the circus. At one point, he sprayed himself with snake
oil and did his best Eddie Haskell grin while declaring the problem was
with two political parties, it was between branches of government. "The
problem" James Baker sees is in reality the checks and balances set up
in the Constitution and if he has a problem with those maybe he should
take his autum years to another damn country. This is not someone who
doesn't know better, this is a mad elephant on a rampage, determined to
trample everything in his path. As Lane says in Flamingo Road,
"You know sheriff, we had an elephant in our carnival with a memory
like that. He went after a keep that he'd held a grudge against for
almost 15 years. Had to be shot. You just wouldn't believe how much
trouble it is to dispose of a dead elephant." Richard
Lugar's the ranking member. We'll quote in when he manages to finish a
sentence as opposed to pretending to ask a question that's nothing but
multiple half-sentences strung together for over six minutes.
Somewhere in his tape reel of Libyia, the evening news, Ronald Reagan
and more he declared "what all you people in Congress need to
understand . . ." Who was he speaking to? Presumably every senator on
the panel understood their duties. While Edward Kaufman is new (the
only one persent who is), Kaufman's run Joe Biden's Senate office for
decades. Somewhere around the six minute mark, Lugar finally came up
for air. Or as Warren Christopher put it in one
of the panel's most honest responses, "Senator Lugar talked quite a
lot". He then went into Section 4a of the statute (committee
recomendation) and rushed to assure that "we certainly don't mean to
pre-empt the jurisdiction of this committee or other committees."
Kerry wanted to know about 3c and how it speaks of the consultation
committee make up. Was it an ongoing committee? Baker said Congress
could determine that. The back and forth was pointless. Senator
Edward Kaufman compared the War Powers Act to a game of ruby football,
noting how it's "been kicked around" and he stated he would feel
derelict in his duty if he didn't raise the issue of Declaration of
War. Warren Christopher dismissed it as no longer used so nothing to
worry about ("The Congress has decided apparently to go the route of
authorization . . ."). Kaufman should have pursued that further but,
in fairness to him, there was no support for it among his fellow
senators (Feingold was not yet present) and the panel played dumb.
Kaufman was right to raise the issue and just because Congress uses one
tool today or even in the last few decades does not mean it surrenders
another one for all time. Slimy Jim Baker
wanted to grin while telling Feingold he missed things discussed
earlier. No, he didn't. It wasn't discussed. But he did miss out on
Warren Christopher saying the proposals were to help the president
"speak to all the members of Congress" and Lee Hamilton adding that 535
members of Congress is just too much and "presidents today do not know
with whom to consult." Hamilton explained this would limit who the
president spoke to in Congress to a small number which would then
spread out the word and, as a result, no member of either house could
"complain, 'I wasn't consulted'." Actually, they could. Their remarks
were exactly what they would deny when Feingold pursued his line of
questioning. They had already established that the committee would be
the one to address it and that the members not on that committee would
need to get info from the committee (Hamilton: "This provides a
president with a focal point for consultation.") On
the Republican side, Bob Corker was the only Republican senator other
than Richard Lugar. Corker actually had a few points to make and
pointed out that the proposal really doesn't resolve any of the
limitations with the War Powers Resolution. Baker agreed but said
you'd need a Constitutional amendment or a Supreme Court decision for
that. So can someone explain why the Congress should nullify the War
Powers Resolution and put in its place something that resolves nothing
(but limits Congress' power and scope)? Corker labeled the proposal
nothing but a "sort of . . . code of conduct. . . . It's really not
going to have the effect of law." Baker shot back, "Oh, it would have
the effect of law." Pause. "I think." Corker also disputed some of
the exceptions the proposals recommend such as "the safety of the
troops." Corker said that out would be there in any action, allowing
the president to overrule Congress, because once troops are deployed
"the safety of our troops would always be an issue." Baker agreed.
("That's correct. I think that's correct.") This hearing should have
had a ton of reporters present. If anything is changed, if the War
Powers Resolution is trashed, it will have longterm effects. For the
record, the War Powers Resolution? Covered by NPR, Pacifica and all
three broadcast networks back in the day. It's amazing that anyone wants to listen to James Baker regarding war. But others are rehabilitated all the time. Betty noted Bob Somerby calling out non-journalist Rachel Maddow's latest on-air clowning: But on last Friday's program, Maddow's interview with Lawrence Wilkerson was, in our view, much worse. Who
the heck is Larry Wilkerson? As Maddow explained in her introduction,
he was "chief of staff to Secretary of State Colin Powell from 2002 to
2005." As such, he played a key role in the way the United States went
to war in Iraq. In particular, Wilkerson was in charge of the
preparation of Powell's UN presentation in February 2003--the
presentation which sealed elite opinion in favor of war. [. . .] According
to Wilkerson, he and Powell were babes in the woods, thumb-sucking
innocents who managed to get themselves "snowed" and "used" by others.
Powell had even complained to David Frost about the fact that those in
the know never came to him with the truth: "What really upset me more
than anything else was that there were people in the intelligence
community that had doubts about some of this sourcing, but those doubts
never surfaced up to us." No one came to
Powell with the facts! Quite correctly, Tim Russert was ridiculed when
he made a similar, keister-covering statement to Bill Moyers. And yet,
when Wilkerson grandly presented himself on our "progressive" news
program last Friday, he received no questions of any kind about this
crucial episode. You see, he was willing to call Dick Cheney names! For
that reason, he was allowed to gild his own lily and, by extension,
Powell's. Increasingly, this seems to be the peculiar function of Maddow's "progressive" program. Rachel
Maddow was a War Hawk throughout 2004 and 2005. Only when public
opinion hugely shifted did she ever stop saying the US had to stay in
Iraq. Listeners of Unfiltered damn well remember her
constant praise of Colin Powell and her repeatedly getting it wrong
about the Pottery Barn analogy -- the Pottery Barn does not have a
policy of you-broke-it-you-bought-it. Rachel would drool on air over
Colin back in those days. People have this idea that because she's a
lesbian she's somehow hugely progressive. She's not. She's a centrist
and, most importantly, she will and has sold out everyone to get where
she is today -- on basic cable with, as Rebecca pointed out,
very few viewers. She's a media created 'star.' Like a plethora of
Vanity Fair cover boys and girls in the 90s who were movie 'stars'
because Van Fair told you they were. The box office loudly
disagreed. (When's the last time you spotted 'star' Julia Ormond?)
Rachel Maddow gets soft and easy press for a number of reasons -- one
she uses her friends who are in the closet (hey, she protected her closet case friend who wrote the Ann Coulter Time magazine cover story
-- Liar Rachel refused to discuss that story -- a big left story -- or
call out Time or the writer and she refused to tell listeners of her
show that she was friends with the author); MSNBC needs a female face
and 'jock' like Rachel isn't too 'girly' so she doesn't threaten
anyone; and, most importantly, she doesn't threaten the power
structure. She is a little suck-up who sucks up like crazy. But if
those MSNBC ratings keep dropping, this isn't Air America. Her father
leading a 'save-Rachel's job!' campaign won't work and will get her
laughed off the chat & chew circuit. Rachel worships Colin Powell
and will never ask him a tough question and she'll never ask his little
buddy one either. In Iraq, a Sunday attack in Kut continues to make the news. The pre-dawn raid resulted in two deaths and condemnation from Nouri al-Maliki. Caroline Alexander (Bloomberg News) reports
that the Iraqi Council of Ministers is stating that the assault was "an
unnaceptable breach of the withdrawal of forces agreement between the
parties" which would be the thing more popularly known as the Status of
Forces Agreement and that it was breached by a military operation being
carried out without a warrant or without Iraqi consent (allegedly
without Iraqi consent). No alleged on the warrant because if there was
a warrant, the US would have waived it around by now. Instead you have
US Col Richard Francey running to the BBC to express US forces are "deeply saddened" by the "terrible tragedy." That did not appease the Iraqi government. Waleed Ibrahim (Reuters) reports they are demanding "an official apology". The SOFA was never carved in stone despite all the bad reports insisting it was. Amy Goodman (Democratcy Now!) noted that the US is now planning to stay in some Iraqi cities beyond June 30th. Of the treaty masquerading as a SOFA, Jeremey Scahill (at CounterPunch) notes: Of
course, the celebrations were and remain unwarranted. Obama's Iraq plan
is virtually identical to the one on Bush's table on January 19, 2009.
Obama has just rebranded the occupation, sold it to liberals and
dropped the term "Global War on Terror" while, for all practical
purposes, continuing the Bush era policy (that's why leading
Republicans praised Obama's plan). In the real world, US military
commanders have said they are preparing for an Iraq presence for
another 15-20 years, the US embassy is the size of Vatican City, there
is no official plan for the withdrawal of contractors and new corporate
mercenary contracts are being awarded. The SoFA Agreement between the
US and Iraq gives the US the right to extend the occupation
indefinitely and to continue intervening militarily in Iraq ad
infinitum. All it takes is for the puppets in Baghdad to ask nicely… Make
no mistake about it - there is a war on. The floodgates of hell have
once again been opened, largely as the result of US unwillingness to
pressure the Maliki government to back off its ongoing attacks against
the US-created Sahwa, which have led to the Sahwa walking off their
security posts in many areas, which has been a green light for al-Qaeda
to resume its operations in Iraq. In addition, many of the Sahwa
forces, weary of not being paid promised wages from the government, as
well as broken promises by the occupiers of their country, have resumed
attacks against US forces. Again, there doesn't appear to be anything
in the short term to indicate these trends will stop. Is
it reaching out to former Sunni insurgents such as Abu Azzam in the
true spirit of "national reconciliation," or in hopes of splintering
the movement? And will the government's campaign against men such
as Abu Maarouf succeed in snuffing out potential rivals? Or is it
planting seeds for a long-term Sunni revolt? The crackdown also
points to a significant change in the U.S. forces' onetime policy of
nurturing and protecting the Sons of Iraq. As the Iraqi government has
arrested some of the movement's leaders, forced others into exile and
failed to deliver jobs for rank-and-file fighters, the Americans have
regularly deferred to Baghdad's wishes as they hand over responsibility
for the country's security. Don't
expect answer to any questions from al-Maliki's government, however
they are insisting upon one thing: They captured Abu Omar al Baghdadi.
Corinne Reilly (McClatchy Newspapers) notes,
"Iraqi officials have touted the arrest of Baghdadi several time
before, and each time the claims have turned out to be false. But they
said this time was different." When originally trumpeting this arrest
last Thursday, the officials were saying they'd have DNA proof. They
still fail to mention DNA. Reilly observes, "Officials may be using
the arrest to try to bolster confidence in Iraq's security forces ahead
of an upcoming drawdown in U.S. troops here. There's widespread fear
among Iraqis that violence will increase when Americans leave Iraqi
cities at the end of June, a timeline mandated by an agreement signed
last year between Washington and Baghdad." While Baghdad insists it's
the 'terrorist,' the US has refused to say so since Thursday. AFP reports the US Defense Dept sticks to asseting they can't confirm it. Sam Dagher and Atheer Kakan (New York Times) note,
"The government has not provided proof of his capture since announcing
the arrest on Thursday, beyond showing a photograph of a man with a
trimmed beard wearing a black T-shirt." al-Maliki might try paying
attention to other things. Liz Sly (LAT's Bablyon & Beyond) reports
Sheik Ali Hatem Sulaiman "has been trying to rally the support of
tribes across Iraq for a tribal conference whose goal, he says, will be
to replace the government of Prime Minister Nouri Maliki unless
certain, as yet unspecified demands are met." Turning to legal news, Abeer Qassim Hamza al-Janabi is the 14-year-old Iraqi girl who was gang-raped and murdered March 12, 2006. James Barker is among those who confessed. The Guardian of London summarized Barker's written testimony,
". . . Green dragged the father, mother and younger sister into a
bedroom, while Abeer was left in the living room. . . . Barker said
[Paul] Cortez appeared to rape the girl [Abeer], and he followed. He
said he heard gunshots and Mr. Green came out of the bedroom, saying he
had killed the family, before raping the girl and shooting her with an
AK-47." That's what Barker confessed to, Cortez' confession
matched it. No need to say "alleged" with regards to them. No need to
say it with regards to Steven D. Green. His attorneys are not disputing
the statements that he was the ringleader, that he murdered four
people, that he took part in the gang-rape or any of it. They're
arguing 'yes, but not guilty'. He's being tried in a Kentucky federal
court and his trial began yesterday.
The ambulance chasing public defenders representing Green are the
Keystone Cops of the legal field as they make one offensive argument
after another. The case they presented yesterday was, "Yes, he did it,
but think about what he went through and think about the fact that some
US service members died in Iraq and think about . . ." Think
about this, that's as offensive as the argument the judge disallowed.
The judge's refused to allow Green's attorneys to argue to the federal
court jury, the civilian jury, that they can't judge Green because they
weren't in Iraq. The defense offered yesterday is as offensive because
it continues one of the threads which is: "This is normal behavior." It
is not normal behavior. Were it normal behavior, every US soldier in
Iraq would be doing what Green did. The defense is arguing that this is
normal behavior and a normal response and it's not and that insults
everyone who's served in Iraq or any other war zone. The defense
argues it was a normal response (murder and gang-rape) and that Steven
D. Green is the victim here because he had problems. No question he had
problems. He joined the military because he'd been arrested AGAIN. He
joined the military to get out of being tossed into prison. He joined
the military from jail. He couldn't get it together, no question. But
when you don't dispute the charges and when the charges are multiple
murders and gang-rape, when your client could get the death penalty,
you don't argue "normal" reaction. You argue that your client is
mentally ill and was exhibiting those signs early on. Green was
unfit for entry in the military. There's no question of that. To get
him, he required a 'moral' waiver. That's your case. When the
defense starts asking the jury to feel sorry for Green because it's
"normal," they're running off the jury. The argument for this line of
defense should be, "Yes, he did this. He did it because he's got huge
problems and that's why you need to sentence him to a medical
institution." But when the defense wants to claim this is
'normal,' it's offensive. It's offensive to the society we live in.
It's offensive to the military. And it also says, "Put him to death."
That's what the defense is accidently arguing. If they're arguing this
is 'normal' -- and it's not -- the jury's looking at Green and
thinking, "Normal for him." Meaning it's incumbent upon them to ensure
that he never has the option of doing anything like that again. Does
Green qualify for an insanity plea? I don't personally know. But that's
all the defense has to argue because everyone else involved confessed
to his actions and their own, because he was observed leering at Abeer
and stroking her face and doing other things that made her
uncomfortable (he was at a checkpoint in her neighborhood and harassed
her repeatedly when she would have to pass through). If you're going
for the insanity plea, you're asking the jury to consider your client
out of control. If you're client's 'out of control' is also, you
argue, 'normal' then don't be surprised if a jury decides they're
dealing with a rabid dog that needs to be put down. It is very
doubtful Green looks sympathetic or will come off as such. The
strongest defense is that Green is f**ked up and that this was ignored
by every institution and outlet he came before, repeatedly ignored so
the jury is the last chance for him to receive help. That might get him
institutionalized as opposed to put to death. But the arguments the
defense is making currently or more likely to piss of the jury because,
again, they're not disputing the charges. Andrew Wolfson (Louisville Courier-Journal) reports
Abeer's cousin Abu Farras testified that seeing the corpses, "I thought
it had to be terrorists. This was a massacre, not a crime. I thought
no American would do such a thing." Abeer's brother Mohammed al-Janabi
also testified stating he was coming home when he saw the smoke and had
no idea it was his home. (From when Abeer's body was set on fire.) Alsumaria reports,
"A relative of the victim's family in Baghdad, Rashid Hamza, said that
two family members attended the trial in the United States. He wished
the US solider accused of this atrocity be executed." AFP provides this context: 3 soldiers are serving life sentences for their actions and a fourth "was sentenced to 27 months in jail." Steven Robrahn (Reuters) quotes
one of Green's attorneys, Patrick Bouldin, telling the jury, "You have
to understand the background that leads up to this perfect storm of
insanity." AP's Brett Barrouquere has covered this story for almost three years now. He reports on yesterday's proceedings and notes
Brian Skaret, one of the prosecutors, explaining that Green and the
others had a card game and whiskey, talked about sex and Abeer's name
came up, they invaded her home, Green shot her sister and and parents,
took part in the gang-rape and then "Steven Green went over to the wall
and picked up a gun and he shot her in the face again and again." Lastly on Iraq, Deborah Haynes ( Times
of London) did some outstanding reporting the last years in Baghdad.
We called her out here once (a blog post about riding in a jeep) and
we're not here to award gold stars. Translation, criticized once (or
twenty times in one year) is nothing. Haynes did an outstanding job
and uncovered many stories (hospitals, pregnancies, exclusive interview
with Gen Ray Odierno) that no one else managed to. She's posted her last blog post at her paper's Inside Iraq and notes what she'll miss about Baghdad and what she won't. She also files a brief report on Camp Cropper (US prison in Iraq) and notes that over 12,350 prisoners remain there currently. |
Posted at 03:37 pm by thecommonills
Permalink
Cliff Cornell's court-martial is today
GI Rights Lawyer issues " Media Advisory: Cliff Cornell to face Court-Martial Plea & Sentencing Hearing at Fort Stewart, Tuesday, April 28, 2009:" WHO:
PFC Cliff Cornell, a native of Mountain Home, Arkansas, who was
recently deported from Canada after having fled there to avoid the
illegal war in IraqWHAT:
The U.S. Army has prosecuted PFC Cornell under a General Court-Martial.
A hearing will be held to accept PCF Cornell’s guilty plea and to argue
over what the sentence should be.WHEN: April 28, 2009, 2:15 p.m.WHERE: Fort Stewart Courthouse, near Hinesville, GAFOR MORE INFORMATION: Civilian attorney James M. Branum
will be available for interviews following the trial by telephone at
405-476-5620 or 1-866-933-ARMY. (we anticipate this will be in the
evening)News about the ongoing campaign to free PFC Cornell from being unjustly imprisoned for his beliefs can be found soon at www.couragetoresist.org.The court-martial takes place today.  Illustration by Kat, Betty's three kids and Wally, and used in Third's " Cliff Cornell faces court-martial on Tuesday" yesterday. Saturday the US military announced:
"TIKRIT, Iraq -- A Multi-National Division – North Soldier died from
injuries sustained following an attack on a patrol in the Kirkuk
Province of northern Iraq, April 25. The name of the deceased is being
withheld pending notification of next of kin and release by the
Department of Defense." The announcement brings to 4278
the number of US service members killed in Iraq since the start of the
illegal war. This is the fourth death of a US service member announced
this week and the 15th for the month thus far -- already putting
April's death toll ahead of March's. The Department of Defense identified
the fallen yesterday, "The Department of Defense announced today the
death of a soldier who was supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom. Staff
Sgt. Leroy O. Webster, 28, of Sioux Falls, S.D., died April 25 near
Kirkuk, Iraq, after being shot while on a dismounted patrol. He was
assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 82nd Field Artillery Regiment, 2nd
Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division, Fort Hood, Texas." Tim Gallagher (Sioux City Journal) reports: Webster,
the son of Don and Crystal Webster of Hartley, leaves behind wife
Jessica, the former Jessica Rieck of Hartley, and their three young
children. Jessica moved back to Hartley two months ago. The family had
been living in Texas, where Leroy was stationed.Hartley-Melvin-Sanborn
High School instructor Jim Thomas said the news about Webster's death
was shared Sunday morning during services at Hartley United Methodist
Church."There was a lot of
gasping, people were stunned," said Thomas, a high school teacher there
for the past 16 years. "It hits a small community like ours hard."William Petroski (Des Moines Register) adds,
"Webster was a 1999 graduate of Hartley-Melvin-Sanborn High School,
where he wrestled and played on the golf and baseball teams. He leaves
behind a wife, Jessica, who was his high school sweetheart, and three
young daughters, Natasha, Kaydence and Jadyn." Petroski also quotes the
family's statement: "Leroy was a wonderful husband and a terric dad to
his three beautiful daughters. He was proud to serve in the United
States Army. He will forever be deeply missed by his family and
friends." The Daily Globe also notes the family's statement. Ben Dunsmoor (KEOLAND.com -- link has text and video) speaks
with Leroy Webster's high school teacher Ron Hengeveld who remembers
Leroy and states of the death, "It happens in all small towns it seems
like, you hear about it too often." Friday the US military announced:
"TIKRIT, Iraq -- A Multi-National Division - North Soldier died in a
non-combat related incident in Salah ad Din province April 24. The name
of the deceased is being withheld pending notification of next of kin
and release by the Department of Defense. The incident is under
investigation." Friday the Dept of Defense announced:
"The Department of Defense announced today the death of a soldier who
was supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom. CSM Benjamin Moore, Jr., 43, of
Waycross, Ga., died Apr 24 at Contingency Operating Base Speicher,
Iraq, of injuries sustained in a non-combat related incident. He was
assigned to the 2d Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment, 3d Brigade Combat
Team, 25th Infantry Division, Schofield Barracks, Hawaii. The
circumstances surrounding the incident are under investigation." Teresa Stepzinski (Florida Times-Union) reports,
"A 1983 Waycross High School graduate, Moore was assigned to the 2nd
Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 25th
Infantry Division, Schofield Barracks, Hawaii." William Cole (Honolulu Advertiser) notes
that Benjamin Moore had ten "sisters and five brothers" and quotes
Teresa Brakes saying of her brother, "He's the glue that held the
family together when we used to go through crises and sutff. He was the
one that we went to and he would sit down and put it to us in a way we
could understand, and just give us good advice. And the advice that he
gave us, it was usually the right thing to do." The New York Times
has no story filed from Iraq. They ignore the Steven D. Green case.
They have a poll which we may or may not cover in the snapshot. Ned
Parker's " Iraq's Awakening: Two tales illustrate force's birth and slow death" ( Los Angeles Times) apparently carries the heavy weight for all outlets: The
story of Abu Maarouf and Abu Azzam offers a rare window into the birth
and slow death of the Sons of Iraq, the U.S.-backed corps of Sunni
fighters who helped end the country's civil war.Today,
Abu Maarouf is on the run, hunted by the Iraqi army and the group Al
Qaeda in Iraq. Afraid of midnight raids and ambushes, he sleeps some
nights in irrigation ditches. Many say it's a miracle he's still alive.His
old cohort Abu Azzam spends his days inside the blast walls of the
hermetic Green Zone in meetings with officials from Prime Minister
Nouri Maliki's office.The
divergent fates of these two former Sunni insurgents highlight the
major unknown about the intentions of Iraq's Shiite-led government: Is
it reaching out to former Sunni insurgents such as Abu Azzam in the
true spirit of "national reconciliation," or in hopes of splintering
the movement?And will the
government's campaign against men such as Abu Maarouf succeed in
snuffing out potential rivals? Or is it planting seeds for a long-term
Sunni revolt?The crackdown
also points to a significant change in the U.S. forces' onetime policy
of nurturing and protecting the Sons of Iraq. As the Iraqi government
has arrested some of the movement's leaders, forced others into exile
and failed to deliver jobs for rank-and-file fighters, the Americans
have regularly deferred to Baghdad's wishes as they hand over
responsibility for the country's security.Mia notes Chris Hedges' " Obama Has Missed His Moment" ( Information Clearing House): Barack
Obama has squandered his presidency. He had a fleeting moment to
challenge the casino capitalism and financial recklessness of our
economic and political elite. He could have orchestrated a state
socialism that would have provided a safety net for tens of millions of
Americans faced with dislocation and misery. The sums he has doled out
to Wall Street could have been used to force companies to keep workers
on the job or create new banks to open up credit. But he lacked the
foresight and the courage to challenge entrenched power. And now we are
headed down one of two frightening roads-massive deflation or
hyperinflation. Neither will be pleasant.Hyman
Minsky-an economist largely ignored during his lifetime and now held up
as something of a prophet-argued that speculative bubbles, and the
financial collapses that follow them, are an inevitable consequence of
unregulated capitalism. Minsky, an economics professor at Washington
University in St. Louis who died in 1996, warned: "The normal
functioning of our economy leads to financial trauma and crises,
inflation, currency depreciations, unemployment and poverty in the
middle of what could be virtually universal affluence-in short ...
financially complex capitalism is inherently flawed." He called for
socialized banking and stimulus packages to protect workers.Our
Minsky moment, however, has passed. Obama did not introduce radical
measures to change our financial structures. And the outlook, even from
Obama's chief financial advisers, is very gloomy. The U.S. economy will
continue to contract "for some time to come," said Lawrence Summers,
director of the White House National Economic Council. "I expect the
economy will continue to decline," with "sharp declines in employment
for quite some time this year," Summers said Sunday on "Fox News
Sunday."In the public e-mail account, a visitor asks if we can note libertarian columnist Steven McDuffie's " Barck Obama: The Mendacity of Hope, Pt. II" ( Nolan Chart): In
2008, then-Senator Obama was pushed to the forefront of the passel of
potential Democratic nominees due in no small part to his apparent
status as the peace
candidate. During the presidential campaign, Obama constantly reminded
supporters of his 16 month plan for withdrawal from Iraq--except when he claimed to have an eleven and a half month plan.
I clearly recall warning my liberal friends and family members that
they were very likely going to be sorely disappointed with Obama.My
pessimism about Obama wasn't based on some prophetic ability on my
part, or even a pretty good guess. My first clue that Candidate Obama
might be a wolf in sheep's clothing is when he received praise from arch-neocon Robert Kagan. Two years later, President Obama is still receiving praise from Kagan.
Many of my friends on the left--fellow anti-war activists--voted for
Obama because they thought he would "bring the troops home". I assured
them that, in all likelihood, there would still be tens of thousands of
US troops in Iraq come 2012, and indeed, Obama has since all but promised exactly that.
Of course, this cannot be surprising when one considers that, though
Obama argued against the Iraq War as a senatorial candidate, once
elected he rejected all timetables for withdrawal and backed every bill
to fund the war, never once casting a single vote that could
legitimately be regarded as being in opposition to the war.That's the opening. Use the link to read in full. And lastly, ETAN notes: Groups Urge Meaningful Pressure on Jakarta for Papuan RightsContact: Ed McWilliams, WPAT, +1-575-648-2078John M. Miller, ETAN, +1-718-596-7668April
27 - Two U.S. organizations concerned about human rights in West Papua
today urged the U.S. government "to apply meaningful pressure on the
Indonesian government and its security forces... to address
long-standing Papuan concerns and grievances."The
West Papua Advocacy Team (WPAT) and the East Timor and Indonesia Action
Network (ETAN) called the new Obama administration's approach to West
Papua "hardly fresh."In
testimony before Congress last week, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham
Clinton called for supporting West Papua "in its efforts to have a
degree of autonomy within Indonesia.""Failure
of the U.S. government to think seriously and act responsibly about
West Papua, before Indonesia's July presidential elections, risks
further deterioration of human rights and communal violence," said Ed
McWilliams, a retired U.S. diplomat and spokesperson for WPAT."Papuans
have repeatedly rejected 'Special Autonomy' and... have demanded
instead an internationally-facilitated dialogue with the central
government to address key issues, including demilitarization of West
Papua, an end to intimidation, the release of political prisoners, and
the right to self-determination," the groups said. The full statement
is below.The U.S.
government and Congress should "apply meaningful pressure" for such a
dialogue and for "an end to restrictions that prevent the international
community from monitoring human rights developments and the welfare of
Papuans in the region." Pressure should include conditioning
"assistance to the Indonesian military, Brimob, Indonesia's
intelligence agencies on real reform [of the security forces], human
rights accountability and demonstrated respect for people of West
Papua."In recent weeks,
their has been an escalation of both peaceful protest and violent
conflict in West Papua, which Indonesia annexed in 1969. Since then
Papuans have suffered massacres and other systematic human rights
violations, environmental destruction, and marginalization in their own
land.-30-Joint
Statement by West Papua Advocacy Team (WPAT) and East Timor and
Indonesia Action Network (ETAN) on U.S. Policy and West PapuaAppearing
last week before the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Secretary of
State Hillary Rodham Clinton, for the first time as Secretary spoke
directly about the human rights crisis in West Papua. While candidly
acknowledging the "many human rights abuses" in West Papua, Secretary
Clinton framed both its problems and their solutions essentially in the
same way that the Bush Administration had: She emphasized that West
Papua was part of a "sovereign Indonesia," and said West Papua needed
support "in its efforts to have a degree of autonomy within Indonesia."For
nearly eight years the Indonesian government has pursued its "Special
Autonomy" policy for West Papua. This was to have afforded long-denied
fundamental rights to Papuans and ended decades of systematic human
rights violations, environmental destruction and marginalization.
Clearly, the Indonesian government has failed to implement this policy,
instead continuing to rely on a security approach. Indonesia's
military, militarized police (Brimob) and intelligence agencies
continue to terrorize Papuans. These security forces violate
fundamental human rights with impunity and collude with domestic and
international corporations to deprive Papuans of their land. At the
same time, the Indonesian government has drawn a curtain around West
Papua preventing or limiting international monitoring of conditions
there by journalists, international human rights officials, and others.
Recently, it demanded the departure of International Committee of the
Red Cross because its officials had met with Papuan political prisoners.The
Indonesian government continued denial of essential services health,
education and employment, leaving the Papuans to suffer among the worst
levels of poverty, mortality and education in Asia.Papuans
have repeatedly rejected "Special Autonomy" and -- in massive, peaceful
popular demonstrations -- have demanded instead an
internationally-facilitated dialogue with the central government to
address key issues, including demilitarization of West Papua, an end to
intimidation, the release of political prisoners, and the right to
self-determination.Unfortunately,
the Obama Administration appears to ignore the reality of Papuans'
suffering and the urgent need for fundamental change in West Papua.
Secretary Clinton's call for a "degree of autonomy" for West Papua is
hardly fresh or progressive thinking. Rather than resort to the failed
Bush Administration approach of calling upon Jakarta to afford "a
degree of autonomy," the crisis in West Papua calls for fresh approach
and a genuine commitment to Papuans fundamental rights, including a
right to self-determination.A
decade ago, the U.S. Government similarly failed to understand the
dynamics of the deteriorating human rights environment in East Timor.
During that crisis, the U.S. sought only to press the Indonesian
military to take more seriously its responsibility to protect human
rights in East Timor. Then (and now) the U.S. government failed to
understand that the Indonesian military, (as well as Brimob and
Indonesian intelligence agencies) bore ultimate responsibility for the
death and destruction in surrounding the UN-organized referendum in
1999.Instead of
offering stale policy prescriptions, we urge the U.S. to apply
meaningful pressure on the Indonesian government and its security
forces to press for an internationally-facilitated, senior level
dialogue between the Indonesian Government and Papuans, including
Papuan civil society, to address long-standing Papuan concerns and
grievances. The U.S. government should urge an end to restrictions that
prevent the international community from monitoring human rights
developments and the welfare of Papuans in the region. The U.S.
government should also press for fundamental reform of the Indonesian
security forces which continue to violate human rights, are
unaccountable before Indonesia's flawed judicial system, and are not
fully subordinate to civilian government control. The current
administration and Congress should clearly condition assistance to the
Indonesian military, Brimob, Indonesia's intelligence agencies on real
reform, human rights accountability and demonstrated respect for people
of West Papua.etanetanetanetanetanetanetanetanetanetanetanetanJohn M. Miller Internet: etan@igc.orgNational CoordinatorEast Timor & Indonesia Action NetworkPO Box 21873, Brooklyn, NY 11202-1873 USAPhone: (718)596-7668 Mobile: (917)690-4391Skype: john.m.miller Web: http://www.etan.orgThe e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com. iraqtim gallagherwilliam petroskiben dunsmoorthe los angeles timesned parkerchris hedgesteresa stepzinskiwilliam coleetansteven mcduffiecliff cornelljames branum
Posted at 06:46 am by thecommonills
Permalink
Abeer Qassim Hamza al-Janabi

Abeer Qassim Hamza al-Janabi
is the 14-year-old Iraqi girl who was gang-raped and murdered March 12,
2006. The illustration to the right is from The Third Estate Sunday
Review's " Justice for Abeer and her family?"
and the illustration is of James Barker and Paul Cortez beginning the
gang-rape of Abeer while Steven D. Green was in the other room
murdering Abeer's five-year-old sister and her parents. For that
article, we based the illustrations on Barker's confession in court. At
the time, the Guardian of London summarized Barker's written testimony,
". . . Green dragged the father, mother and younger sister into a
bedroom, while Abeer was left in the living room. . . . Barker said
Cortez appeared to rape the girl [Abeer], and he followed. He said he
heard gunshots and Mr. Green came out of the bedroom, saying he had
killed the family, before raping the girl and shooting her with an
AK-47." That's what Barker confessed to, Cortez' confession
matched it. No need to say "alleged" with regards to them. No need to
say it with regards to Steven D. Green. His attorneys are not disputing
the statements that he was the ringleader, that he murdered four
people, that he took part in the gang-rape or any of it. He's being tried in a Kentucky federal court and his trial began yesterday.
The ambulance chasing public defenders representing Green are the
Keystone Cops of the legal field as they make one offensive argument
after another. The case they presented yesterday was, "Yes, he did it,
but think about what he went through and think about the fact that some
US service members died in Iraq and think about . . ." Think
about this, that's as offensive as the argument the judge disallowed.
The judge's refused to allow Green's attorneys to argue to the federal
court jury, the civilian jury, that they can't judge Green because they
weren't in Iraq. The defense offered yesterday is as offensive because
it continues one of the threads which is: "This is normal behavior." It
is not normal behavior. Were it normal behavior, every US soldier in
Iraq would be doing what Green did. The defense is arguing that this is
normal behavior and a normal response and it's not and that insults
everyone who's served in Iraq or any other war zone. The defense
argues it was a normal response (murder and gang-rape) and that Steven
D. Green is the victim here because he had problems. No question he had
problems. He joined the military because he'd been arrested AGAIN. He
joined the military to get out of being tossed into prison. He joined
the military from jail. He couldn't get it together, no question. But
when you don't dispute the charges and when the charges are multiple
murders and gang-rape, when your client could get the death penalty,
you don't argue "normal" reaction. You argue that your client is
mentally ill and was exhibiting those signs early on. Green was
unfit for entry in the military. There's no question of that. To get
him, he required a 'moral' waiver. That's your case. When the
defense starts asking the jury to feel sorry for Green because it's
"normal," they're running off the jury. The argument for this line of
defense should be, "Yes, he did this. He did it because he's got huge
problems and that's why you need to sentence him to a medical
institution." But when the defense wants to claim this is
'normal,' it's offensive. It's offensive to the society we live in.
It's offensive to the military. And it also says, "Put him to death."
That's what the defense is accidently arguing. If they're arguing this
is 'normal' -- and it's not -- the jury's looking at Green and
thinking, "Normal for him." Meaning it's incumbent upon them to ensure
that he never has the option of doing anything like that again. Steven D. Green's defense is a joke. Does
Green qualify for an insanity plea? I don't personally know. But that's
all the defense has to argue because everyone else involved confessed
to his actions and their own, because he was observed leering at Abeer
and stroking her face and doing other things that made her
uncomfortable (he was at a checkpoint in her neighborhood and harassed
her repeatedly when she would have to pass through). If you're going
for the insanity plea, you're asking the jury to consider your client
out of control. If you're client's 'out of control' is also, you
argue, 'normal' then don't be surprised if a jury decides they're
dealing with a rabid dog that needs to be put down. It is very
doubtful Green looks sympathetic or will come off as such. The
strongest defense is that Green is f**ked up and that this was ignored
by every institution and outlet he came before, repeatedly ignored so
the jury is the last chance for him to receive help. That might get him
institutionalized as opposed to put to death. But the arguments the
defense is making currently or more likely to piss of the jury because,
again, they're not disputing the charges. Andrew Wolfson's " Trial opens for ex-soldier in Iraqi family's deaths" ( Louisville Courier-Journal) is probably the strongest article this morning: A
cousin who found the burning bodies of rape victim Abeer Al-Janabi and
her slain family south of Bagdad in March 2006 testified yesterday that
he never suspected American soldiers were responsible."I
thought it had to be terrorists," Abu Farras testified in U.S. District
Court on the first day of the capital murder trial of former Army
soldier Steven Dale Green. "This was a massacre, not a crime. I thought
no American would do such a thing."Abeer's
brother, 15-year-old Mohammed Al-Janabi, who was left an orphan by the
murders, testified that when he came home from school on March 12,
2006, he didn't know the smoke coming from his family's home was from
his sister's body, which had been set ablaze.That's the opening of his article. Where's the New York Times?
They were happy to join the cover up -- Robert Worth and Carolyn
Marshall -- and advance it. So why the hell, after it blew up in their
faces, does the New York Times
believe they can avoid covering this trial? These are War Crimes and,
again, no need for "alleged" with Green. His attorneys are not
disputing the charges. Alsumaria reports,
"A relative of the victim’s family in Baghdad, Rashid Hamza, said that
two family members attended the trial in the United States. He wished
the US solider accused of this atrocity be executed." AFP provides this context: Three
other soldiers were given life sentences in the March 2006 atrocity
which was allegedly devised over whiskey and a game of cards at a
traffic check point in Mahmudiyah, south of Baghdad. A fourth soldier who acted as a lookout was sentenced to 27 months in jail. Steven Robrahn (Reuters) quotes
one of Green's attorneys, Patrick Bouldin, telling the jury, "You have
to understand the background that leads up to this perfect storm of
insanity." Billie notes the Dallas Morning News carries an AP brief on the story. Where are the beggars of Panhandle Media? Why isn't Free Speech Radio News
present? As everyone gas bags over non-topics and non-stories today on
various Pacifica outlets (Amy Goodman actually has a good show on Democracy Now!
today so she's left out of the critique for a change), remind yourself
that in the 60s and 70s and 80s, on far less money, Pacifica Radio was
there for the stories that mattered. The following community sites updated last night: The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com. iraqandrew wolfsonsteve robrahndemocracy nowlike maria said pazkats kornersex and politics and screeds and attitudethomas friedman is a great mantrinas kitchenthe daily jotcedrics big mixmikey likes itruths reportsickofitradlzoh boy it never endsthe third estate sunday review
Posted at 06:39 am by thecommonills
Permalink
|
 |
|
|
|
|