The Common Ills


Saturday, August 04, 2007
Ruth's Report

Ruth's Report

Ruth: I followed the weeks in California with a family vacation and this was noted in places at different community sites as well as this one but for those visitors who missed it, I am "still around."

In terms of radio, two programs stand out the most from last week.

Friday on Uprising, which airs on KPFK at 8:00 am PST, a conversation took place that I give credit to both the host, Sonali Kolhatkar, and the guest, Stephen Zunes, for having. I might need to say, "Especially in light of the previous Friday's broadcast"?

The previous Friday, Ms. Kolhatkar was speaking with a scholar when it was time for Glen Ford's Black Agenda Report radio commentary. After that, Ms. Kolhtkar asked the scholar to speak of Mr. Ford's points. The scholar was off in Hillary Clinton Is The Devil Land. Which was rather strange because Mr. Ford's commentary was "Barack Obama's Game: Erase the 'Black Problem'." The issues Mr. Ford raised related to Senator Obama were shoved aside as the scholar rushed to list all of Senator's Clinton's negatives.

Yesterday, Ms. Kolhatkar specifically raised the issue of Senators Clinton and Obama to Professor Zunes who was able to address the issues she raised. He did not feel either was that different from the other though Senator Obama's imperialism came with a happy stamp. While it was amazing that a real conversation of the two Senators could take place, it should be noted that I have never heard Professor Zunes stammer or hesitate so much in any interview. By his answers, he had obviously given considerable thought to the issue so I will chalk his nervousness down to the fact that there is a strong push to deny reality when it comes to Senator Obama.

Reality about Senator Obama is that he was against the illegal war before it began, and before he was a member of the U.S. Senate. Reality is also that, by the time he began campaigning for the U.S. Senate, he was publicly against withdrawal from the war he was against. Reality is also that, as former U.S. Senator Mike Gravel pointed out in the Democratic Presidential Candidates YouTube discussion, Senator Obama is funded by corporations. Reality even includes the New York Times explaining a few weeks back that Senator Obama's alleged "small donors" are not donating monies to his campaign. Those small amounts are actually no more than concession sales from his rallies. As the Times explained, and small media ignored, every t-shirt, every bumper sticker, every $4.95 for a key chain is chalked up as a "donation." No, that is not the Howard Dean phenomenon. As the paper pointed out, no other campaign is known to do that or to have ever done that.

Hopefully Friday's discussion is a sign that if we must have non-stop 2008 election coverage, we can at least have reality in the discussion. For that to take place, it will probably be helpful to remove the likes of Patricia J. Williams whose Obama campaigning, passed off as a KPFA interview, included her not only snarling at at a caller with a Mid-Eastern accent and correcting the caller who was, in fact correct, but it also included Professor Patti flying her elitist flag as she gushed repeatedly over the thought that someone who was president of the Harvard Law Review could run for president.

The second program that stood out most strongly was WBAI's Law and Disorder which aired last Monday. C.I. has written about it here and here and Mike has written about it here. The hosts Michael Ratner, Michael Smith and Dalia Hashad used the hour to examine resistance and spoke with Iraq Veterans Against the War's Adam Kokesh, his attorney, and CO and war resister Camilo Mejia who has recently published his account in Road from Ar Ramaid: The Private Rebellion of Staff Sergeant Mejia.

Sgt. Kokesh,

Posted at 08:15 pm by thecommonills
 

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Today the US military announced: "A Marine assigned to Multi National Force-West died August 2 while conducting combat operations in Al Anbar Province."

Laith Hammoudi (McClatchy Newspapers) reports three Baghdad mortar attacks that wounded six, a Baghdad bombing that killed 1 person (three more wounded), two people wounded in a Kirkuk shooting, three wounded in two Kirkuk bombings, and one corpse discovered in Kirkuk. Reuters notes 1 person shot dead in Haswa on Friday, an Iraqi soldier wounded in Hawija by gunfire, one Iraqi soldier and one civilian wounded by gunfire in Jbela on Friday.

In the latest on the war crimes in March 2006, when Abeer Qassim al-Janabiat was gang-raped and murdered by US soldiers after her parents and five-year-old sister were murdered, Reuters reports Jesse Spielman was found to have "participated in the planning of the attack as the soldiers drunk whiskey and played cards, and acted as a lookout. He was found guilty of four counts of murder, of rape, conspiracy to commit rape, housebreaking with the intent to commit rape, and conspiracy to commit rape. At the start of the hearing, he pleaded guilty to wrongful touching of a corpse, arson, obstructing justice and violating rules against drinking alcohol in a war zone." James P. Barker and Paul Cortez have already been convicted for their actions (which included partipating in the gang rape). Steven D. Green, who maintains he is innocent, has been fingered as the ringleader.

Iraq Veterans Against the War Nate Lewis and Liam Madden have no charges against them. Durinv IVAW's bus tour the two attempted to ask about the policy for entry at Fort Benning.
From Bob Audette's "Ex-Marine's court date for trespassing cancelled" (Brattleboro Refomer):

Madden told the Reformer Tuesday that it wasn't his intention to get arrested at Fort Benning, but added "I don't have a problem taking risks and getting arrested is certainly a risk I would be willing to take.
"The tour was a success," said Madden by telephone from his home in Boston. "We generated a lot of momentum for Iraq Veterans Against the War," including the addition of 21 new members to the group.
Making it difficult to reach out to active duty members were military officials who were hostile to IVAW's message.
"It was apparent that the military started to realize we were coming and was willing to take measures to insure that we didn't talk to any active duty troops," said Madden.
As a way of countering the tactics the military is using, said Madden, future bus tours will spend more time at bases, giving active duty members more opportunity to talk to the anti-war veterans.


Highlights? I'm not in the mood for sports. I'm not in the mood for the useless. I see why Rebecca did a short post last night. A lot of cowards, a lot of gasbags, a lot of election junkies pretending it's 2008 and that we all go to the polls tomorrow. Dave Lindorff is always worth reading and KeShawn notes his "Sad Day? How About a Sad Six-and-a-Half Years" (OpEdNews):

What was Sen. Russ Feingold (D-WI) thinking when he told Senate colleagues it was a "sad day" when that body started taking its marching orders from an outsider (the president and the director of national security), in passing a new version of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) that gives the president a free hand to spy on communications of Americans without a judicial review?
Is he implying that this is the first time the Senate has done this? Isn't that exactly what the Senate (and the House) did when they passed the so-called USA PATRIOT Act in October 2001? Isn't that what they did in overturning the Posse Comitatus Act and in altering the Insurrection Act last fall? Isn't it what they did in approving the Military Commissions Act last year, which retroactively okayed the use of torture on captives?
The truth is that the Senate and House have both become little more than rubber stamps for Administration power grabs ever since 9-11. Indeed, since that date, the members of Congress have been willing sell-outs of their own institution, which today bears no resemblance to what the Founders described in Article I of the Constitution--a document which the members have effectively destroyed.
For the past six-and-a-half years we have watched as a group of political midgets have destroyed what hundreds of thousands of our ancestors put their lives on the line to create and defend--a government system that was founded on the concept of individual rights and liberties, and that was structured to limit the power of the executive. Much has been made of a conversation at the White House a few years ago, in which Bush is reported to have told a few Republican members of the House that the Constitution is "just a goddamned piece of paper." In fact, that is what the members of Congress have also decided by their actions--and by their continued inaction.
Prior to 2006, it was primarily the Republicans in Congress who were trashing the Constitution, the Bill of Rights and the concept of separation of powers, though with significant Democratic backing. Now, it is the Democrats who are the wrecking crew. Make no mistake: the Democrats did not have to pass this latest piece of legislation, loosing the NSA spies on us all. They had the power to kill that bill in its tracks. Instead, they succumbed to the President's empty threat to label them all "soft on terror" if they didn't give him what he wanted: a blank check.
They caved, just as they did when they had the power to end the war in Iraq last April by cutting off funding for it, and instead, voted to fund it in full.


Rachel notes two programs coming up on WBAI:

Sunday, August 5, 11am-noon
THE NEXT HOUR
Downtown radio artists Andrew Andrew and guest, Russian artist Andrey
Bartenev.


Monday, August 6, 2-3pm
CAT RADIO CAFE
Political satirist Will Durst on his New York opening in "The All-American Sport of Bi-Partisan Bashing"; historian Mike Flynn and Peace Granny Joan Wile talk about "On the Edge," a John Jay College symposium on transgressive art; and poet/editor/essayist Geoffrey O'Brien on his new piece on "The Sopranos " in The New York Review of Books. Hosted by Janet Coleman and David Dozer

Will Durst is one of Wally's favorite comics. If you're only familiar with his writings in The Progressive, make a point to listen. (Make a point regardless, if you can.)

The following community sites have updated since yesterday morning:

Rebecca's Sex and Politics and Screeds and Attitude;
Cedric's Cedric's Big Mix;
Kat's Kat's Korner;
Betty's Thomas Friedman is a Great Man;
Mike's Mikey Likes It!;
Elaine's Like Maria Said Paz;
Wally's The Daily Jot;
and Trina's Trina's Kitchen

The only one doing any real work in the MSM, as Martha points out, today is Sudarsan Raghavan. This is from Raghavan's "In Iraq, a Perilous Alliance With Former Enemies" (Washington Post):

Inside a brightly lit room, the walls adorned with memorials to 23 dead American soldiers, Lt. Col. Robert Balcavage stared at the three Sunni tribal leaders he wanted to recruit.
Their fighters had battled U.S. troops. Balcavage suspected they might have attacked some of his own men. The trio accused another sheik of having links to the Sunni insurgent group al-Qaeda in Iraq. That sheik, four days earlier, had promised the U.S. military to fight al-Qaeda in Iraq and protect a strategic road."Who do you trust? Who do you not trust?" said Balcavage, commander of the 1st Battalion, 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment of the 82nd Airborne Division, his voice dipping out of earshot.
An hour later, he signed up some of America's newest allies.
U.S. commanders are offering large sums to enlist, at breakneck pace, their former enemies, handing them broad security powers in a risky effort to tame this fractious area south of Baghdad in Babil province and, literally, buy time for national reconciliation.
American generals insist they are not creating militias. In contracts with the U.S. military, the sheiks are referred to as "security contractors." Each of their "guards" will receive 70 percent of an Iraqi policeman's salary. U.S. commanders call them "concerned citizens," evoking suburban neighborhood watch groups.


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Posted at 08:13 pm by thecommonills
 

Friday, August 03, 2007
Iraq snapshot

Iraq snapshot

Friday, August 3, 2007.  Chaos and violence continue, the US military announces more deaths, the puppet tries not to notice the government collapsing around him, the National Lawyers Guild issues a report by Heidi Boghosian on the state of rights in the United States, and more.


Starting with war resistance.  Cindy Chan (Epoch Times) reports on the creation of the War Resisters Support Campaign "launched shortly after an American deserter from the Iraq War named Jeremy Hinzman arrived in Canada seeking asylum that January" in 2004 and how it was quickly realized that both a legal and a political effort would be needed and that's certainly true with both war resisters Hinzman and Brandon Hughey's case now being appealed to Canada's Supreme Court following the Federal Court of Appeal's decision that "rights of conscience" could be applied to "a refugee claimant [who] is a high-level policy-maker or planner of the military conflict" but not "a mere foot soldier".  So apparently Henry Kissinger, for instance, could get refugee status for his war crimes in Canada but Canada will not give asylum to war resisters.  As Chan notes, that was not always the case.  During Vietnam, the Canadian government stood up but that's when they had a prime minister who wasn't a lackey of the United States.  Chan notes that Hughey and  Hinzman are expected to hear this month or next whether the Supreme Court will hear their case.

Just as during Vietnam, war resistance is on the rise.  "I think something similar is beginning to happen now because those same unities coming together to oppose the war say, 'No, we're not going to continue fighting in this war.'  We have the organization I belong to, Iraq Veterans Against the War, we have up to  500 members, the majority of whom have served in Iraq and Afghanistan and who are saying, 'No, we're not going to continue to fighting this war.' And you know by the Pentagon's own estimates we have since the war started  8 to 10,000 troops who have decided not to go back to  the war. To put it in perspective, that's a division size element that's been wiped by desertion and AWOL," explains war resister and CO Camilo Mejia on this week's Progressive Radio, Matthew Rothschild interviewed  Mejia who has told his story in the recently released Road from Ar Ramaid: The Private Rebellion of Staff Sergeant Mejia (The New Press).


Matthew Rothschild: Did you get a lot of negative feedback from either people who saw you on the media or from soldiers or former soldiers?

Camilo Mejia: Definitely there was some negative feedback but by and large the feedback was very positive partiicularly when it came from the members of the military.  People in the army, or in the armed services, don't really feel that they have the right to go public with their views and opinions . . . but secretly in a more private way a lot of people came up to me and said they agreed with me although they didn't feel they could do so publicy.  The feedback was very positive.

Mejia described the things he saw at the POW camps for Iraqis and Rothschild asked if he realized then that the Geneva Conventions were being violated?  Mejia replied that he didn't realize it at that point, "It just felt wrong."  Mejia explained that the events "on a daily basis" in Iraq didn't allow him much time for reflection but he had that time while he was on leave back in the US.  He and Rothschild discussed the bond (socialization) within the military and how that can effect choices made.  Mejia stated the people need to "realize that there's a greater tragedy in Iraq . . . The people of Iraq, 90% of the people who are dying are civilians, you know children, unarmed men, women, the elderly, the entire life being destroyed, the infrastructure is being destroyed so we have got to step outside our own fears and our own interests and our own feelings to look at the bigger picture and realize that saying that we're fighting for one another is no reason enough for participating in this criminal war."


There is a growing movement of resistance within the US military which includes Robert Weiss, Phil McDowell, Steve Yoczik, Ross Spears, Zamesha Dominique, Jared Hood, James Burmeister, Eli Israel, Joshua Key, Ehren Watada, Terri Johnson, Luke Kamunen, Leif Kamunen, Leo Kamunen, Camilo Mejia, Kimberly Rivera, Dean Walcott, Linjamin Mull, Agustin Aguayo, Justin Colby, Marc Train, Robert Zabala, Darrell Anderson, Kyle Snyder, Corey Glass, Jeremy Hinzman, Kevin Lee, Joshua Key, Mark Wilkerson, Patrick Hart, Ricky Clousing, Ivan Brobeck, Aidan Delgado, Pablo Paredes, Carl Webb, Jeremy Hinzman, Stephen Funk, Clifton Hicks, David Sanders, Dan Felushko, Brandon Hughey, Clifford Cornell, Joshua Despain, Joshua Casteel, Katherine Jashinski, Chris Teske, Matt Lowell, Jimmy Massey, Chris Capps, Tim Richard, Hart Viges, Michael Blake, Christopher Mogwai, Christian Kjar, Kyle Huwer, Vincent La Volpa, DeShawn Reed and Kevin Benderman. In total, forty-one US war resisters in Canada have applied for asylum.


Information on war resistance within the military can be found at The Objector, The G.I. Rights Hotline, Iraq Veterans Against the War and the War Resisters Support Campaign. Courage to Resist offers information on all public war resisters. Tom Joad maintains a list of known war resisters. IVAW and others will be joining Veterans For Peace's conference in St. Louis, Missouri August 15th to 19th.


Mejia was interviewed on Monday on WBAI's Law and Disorder as was  Adam Kokesh spoke with hosts Dalia Hashad, Michael Ratner and Michael Smith (Heidi Boghosian, the fourth host was not part of this broadcast, but we'll cover Boghosian in a moment).  Kokesh is a member of Iraq Veterans Against the War and he discussed the military brass' efforts to suppress his freedom of his speech.  Kokesh wore his fatigues (without markings or name tags) in Operation First Casualty in DC (and elsewhere but DC was the one that led to retaliation) which is street theater meant to convey for Americans what life is like for Iraqis during the illegal war. 

"The media stories that  we've read haven't captured this accurately," Dalia Hashad noted.  Kokesh explained that, after the DC action, he got an e-mail which he didn't know what to make of -- was it for real? -- and he discussed it with Tina Richards (Grassroots of America) who explained that her son Cloy Richards had received similar e-mails from people in (or claiming to be) the military and out of it.  So Kokesh replied to the e-mail and the brass response was "which is completely unprecedented" because he had already been honorably discharged by the military and placed in the IRR Kokesh described it as a kick in the stomach and a surprise, "They can't do this, legally there's no grounds for this.  You know it says Article II of the UCMJ  it doesn't apply to the IRR it says in my enlistment contract".  Dalia Hashad asked to explain about the IRR and Kokesh offered that "when you're in the IRR you're only responsibilites are to maintain  a valid address and to show up if called back to active duty."

Michael Smith asked about wearing "a uniform" in street theater?  Kokesh explained that a JAG attorney was activated from the reserves, Jeremy Sibert, for the prosecution team.  Sibert is the Criminal Division Assistant US Attorney in the Del Rio Office [Texas} for the Department of Justice.  Attorney Mike Lebowitz spoke on the program as well and (as requested by Eddie) we'll one more time go over that what Adam Kokesh and others do in street theater is not an issue the military has any say in.  Daniel Jay Schacht took part in street theater during Vietnam.  He and others staged it outside a military recruitment center.  At that point in time, the military thought they had rights that they didn't.  Schacht was arrested for wearing a military uniform in the production.  The military's reasoning was that it gave the armed forces a bad name -- the play, the performance, whatever.  At that point, the military would allow or disallow theater productions the 'right' to utilize uniforms or not.  In 1970, Schacht v. United States was heard by the Supreme Court.  The Court found in Schacht's favor noting that the military had been granting permission to some.  By denying permission to others, this was now a free speech issue.  The US military, the Court determined, had no say in theater productions -- if some could use the uniforms, all could.  The military had no say over what Schacht or anyone said in a theater production when they wore a uniform and they had no say over whether the uniform could be worn.   This was true of all productions, including street theater.  Justice Hugo Black wrote:

Certainly theatrical productions need not always be performed in buildings or even on a defined area such as a conventional stage. Nor need they be performed by professional actors or be heavily financed or elaborately produced. Since time immemorial, outdoor theatrical performances, often performed by amateurs, have played an important part in the entertainment and the education of the people of the world.


Kokesh is appealing and, due to the Supreme Court's 1970 verdict, it should be an easy win; however, Schacht v. United States should have ensured that the matter never went as far as did.


"The idea that citizens are free to dissent is ingrained in the American mythos, a concept even older than the Declaration of Independence itself.  Equally important in this value system is the conviction that no nation state can survive as a democracy unless it safeguards political expression and activity," so writes Heidi Boghosian in Punishing Protest.  And yet, Kevin Egler has a pre-trial date August 9th in the Portage County Municipal Court in Kent, Ohio.  His crime, as David O'Brien (The Record Courier via Common Dreams) explains, placing an "IMPEACH" sign on public party.  And yet, Matthew Rothschild (The Progressive) reported last month on the White House's policy of keeping people out of tax payer events -- something clearly taking place throughout the 2004 campaign but the White House put it in writing.  In the United States, the Los Angeles Times reports a record $1 million settlement by the District of Columbia due to the police round ups of demonstrators against the illegal war in 2002.  Amy Goodman (Democracy Now!)  notes that the monies will go "to more than one hundred demonstrators" and that "D.C. previously agreed to pay more than $640,000 to fourteen other demonstrators.  A larger class-action suit covering more than four hundred people awaits trial."  The money involved in the DC payout may seem great but does it really cover the cost of violating people's First Amendment rights?   And many other attacks on free speech and the right to assembly go under the radar.  The National Lawyers Guild has just released Punishing Protest written by Heidi Boghosian (available online in PDF format for free and avaible in book format for $3 at the National Lawyers Guild website).


We're going to zoom in on one section (from page six) and just to provide background (by me, take it up with me, not Boghosian) 2004 was a presidential election.  Though some voices, such as Naomi Klein, sounded alarms about the peace movement allowing itself to be subverted into a get-out-the-vote drive for a candidate who was not calling for an end to the illegal war (Democratic nominee John Kerry), most went along with it.  One of the biggest peace demonstrations took place in NYC during the GOP convention.  In the lead up to the rally and march, the Bloomberg administration denied (wrongly) Central Park access and along with attempting to fight that ban, the peace movement also had to deal with the middle age panice so many (such as Toad) were in the grip of -- alleged lefties who were saying that protesters shouldn't come to NYC or swearing they were leaving NYC for the entire convention.  With that background in mind, on page six Boghosian addresses the importance of the media in providing a light and in demonizing and silencing:

For example, the New York print media engaged in hyperbolic coverage months before the 2004 Republican National Convention.  The cover of the May 17, 2004 issue of New York magazine promoted companion articles, accompanied by a photograph of a protester wrapped in a U.S. flag.  One headline taunted: "Cops to Protesters: Bring It On."  The other read: "The Circus is Coming to Town: A Bush-hating nation of freaks, flash-mobbers, and civil-disobedients is gathering to spoil the GOP's party."  Nearly the entire front page of the July 12, 2004 edition of the New York Daily News contained an exaggerated proclamation: "ANARCHY THREAT TO CITY Cops fear hard-core lunatics plotting convention chaos."  Inside the paper, a two-page headline announced: "FURY AT ANARCHIST CONVENTION THREAT. 'These hard-core groups are looking to take us on.  They have increased their level of violence.' -- Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly."  The Daily News reported how "Kelly and company have to combat a shadowy, loose-knit band of traveling troublemakers who spread their guides to disruption ovre the Internet."
Although the New York Daily News is a tabloid, and prone to sensational headlines, it has the largest circulation and readership in the New York market.

Boghosian then quotes Mara Verheyden-Hillard (NLG's co-chair of Mass Defense Committee) explaining, "Such misleading news coverage is part of an effort to get the activists and the legal community to buy into the police line that there are 'good protestors' and 'bad protestors' and therefore agree that there is a real threat that then necessitates police response to protest.  Take action against the
fictional bad protestors but don't trample on the rights of the 'good' kind of response, which diverts from those who are the real violent actors over and over -- the police."  Also on the press coverage, Boghosian notes a study that found "college newspapers are generally doing a better job reporting on local antiwar events than other local newspapers" while the corporate (alleged grown up) press "fail to research accurate attendance numbers, or fail to mention estimates entirely".  Boghosian covers the varying fees applied to some groups but not to others, police pre-demonstration raids on the premises where activists are staying  (that harrassment also takes place in Canada, as Naomi Klein explains in Fences & Windows) and may 'find' or invent "a housing violation as a pretext to close down the premises."  On page 27, Boghosian addresses the appalling "free speech zones"  in Boston during the DNC convention, the containment pens endorsed by the Bloomberg administration which are a saftey hazard for demonstrators as well as a violation of free speech, the issues of bail, illegal spying, infiltration, court room shenanigans and more.  The report, to be clear, is not focused on the peace movement.  The report is about the erosion of rights in a democracy (or possibly, in an alleged democracy the way things are currently going) and also addresses the war on environmentalists, on Critical Mass and other cyclists.  Among the points Boghosian sums up in her conclusion is this:

Decades ago, government spying, infiltration and disruption tactics of the FBI and CIA against domestic political groups (Counter Intelligence Program, or COINTELPRO) led to the establishment of guidelines limited federal investigative power.  Under the Bush Administration many of those guidelines are being loosened or abandoned altogether as the government engages in the same surveillance and infiltration activities through advancing a policy of preemptive "warfare."  And once again, the executive office, working in close coordination with all levels of federal and local law enforcement, is engaging in what Justice Powell called "dragnet techniques" to both intimidate and silence its critics, the very practice that led to the Fourth Amendment and its protections against overreaching government searches and seizures.
By characterizing those who speak out as 'enemies' or 'terrorists,' as the government is increasingly doing, those charged with upholding the constitution are defying it in a cowardly fashion.

Again, the PDF format of the report is available online -- 89 pages -- and it can be purchased for $3.00 at the National Lawyers Guild.

In Iraq realities are captured at Inside Iraq where an Iraqi journalist working for McClatchy Newspapers offers a post that really needs to be read in full but will excerpt from the end:

All these good-doers, thousands of them, in four years, what have they presented to the poor Iraqi Man that they all wish to serve?
Thousands of reconstruction contracts have been awarded -- and the projects said to be implemented.
What are they?
Where are they?  Where are they?
Wouldn't a sinking government jump at the chance to show such accomplishments -- had there been any?
Wouldn't an accused occupier jump at the chance to show some
succesful, truly fundamental infrastructure developments and shout them from the roof tops?
Do we have sanitary drinking water?
Do we have electricity?
Do we have medical services or basic neighbourhood services?
Thank you, but no thank you.
But you see . . . no one asked me.

Great Britain's Socialist Worker notes Oxfam's report and judges it "a daming report on the state of Iraq four years into the occupation" while also noting that Iraqi children "are the biggest losers in the occupation, with 28 percent malnourished, compared to 19 percent before the invasion, while nine out of ten children suffer learning difficulties."  The Oxfam report also found that 70% of Iraqis do not have "access to adequate water supplies."  This as CBS and AP report: "Much of the Iraqi capital was without running water and had been for at least 24 hours, compounding the urban misery in a war zone and the blistering heat at the height of the Baghdad summer. Residents and city officials said Thursday large sections in the west of the capital had been virtually dry for six days because the already strained electricity grid cannot provide sufficient power to run water purification and pumping stations. Baghdad routinely suffers from periodic water outages, but this one is described by residents as one of the most extended and widespread in recent memory. The problem highlights the larger difficulties in a capital beset by violence, crumbling infrastructure, rampant crime and too little electricity to keep cool in the sweltering weather more than four years after the U.S.-led invasion."  They note 52-year-old Jamil Hussein who has two children with "severe diarrhea" due to the water and that he and they will have to continue drinking it.  That's criminal, the potable water is still a longed for dream all this time after the illegal war began is criminal.

In some of the rare reporting on today's violence (the soccer team returned -- or parts of it -- so it's time for everyone in the press to don a jock strap and go into fluff mode) . . .


 
Shootings?
 
KUNA reports 3 prisoners killed in "Badoush detention camp" by "the Multi-National Force" (US forces) who used "tear gas, live ammunition and rubber bullets to put down the riots."  Molly Hennessy-Fiske (Los Angeles Times) reports: "A spokesman for Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, Iraq's leading Shiite cleric, said an aide to the cleric was shot and killed Thursday by gunmen in Najaf.  Less than two weeks before, another Sistani aide was stabbed and killed near the cleric's office in Najaf, and another aide was killed a month before in a drive-by shooting."
 
Corpses?
 
Jenan Hussein (McClatchy Newspapers) reports 13 corpses discovered in Baghdad today.

Today the US military announced: "Three Multi-National Division - Baghdad Soldiers were killed and 11 others wounded when an improvised explosive device detonated near their patrol during combat operations in an eastern section of the Iraqi capital August 2. Four of the injured were treated for minor injuries and were returned to duty." This brings the August total to 5 US service members killed in Iraq and the total since the start of the illegal war to 3665.

In news of the attempts by the US administration (and elements in the US Congress) to steal Iraqi oil for the benefit of corporations, Amy Goodman (Democracy Now!) reported today, "Support is growing in the U.S. for Iraqi oil workers striking against the U.S.-backed oil law under debate in Iraq.  The main union representing American oil workers is calling on Congress to stop pressuring Iraq to pass the law and to shift support to the Iraqi oil workers' demands.  In a letter to House and Senate leaders, United Steelworkers President Leo Gerard says: 'The oil privatization law now under consideration by Iraq's government is designed to benefit the multinational oil companies; not the Iraqi people'."  And the Iraqi parliament, like the US Congress, is now off on a month long vacation.  Jonathan Steel (Guardian of London) observes, "Glad tidings from Baghdad at last.  The Iraqi parliament has gone into summer recess without passing the oil law that Washington was pressing it to adopt.  For the Bush administration this is irritating, since passage of the law was billed as a 'benchmark' in its battle to get Congress not to set a timetable for US troop withdrawal. . . .  Just as General David Petraues, the current US commander, is due to give his report on military progress next month, George Bush is supposed to tell Congress in mid-September how the Maliki government is moving forward on reform."

Earlier this week the Iraqi Accordance Front withdrew from the puppet government.  Sudarsan Raghavan (Washington Post) reports that "Iraqi and Western observers say Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and his inner circle appear increasingly unable to pull the government out of its paralysis.  At times consumed by conspiracy theories, Maliki and his Dawa party elite operate much as they did when they plotted to overthrow Saddam Hussein -- covertly and concerned more about their community's survival than with building consensus among Iraq's warring groups, say Iraqi politicians and analysts and Western diplomats."   Ali al-Fadhily (IPS) reports, "Withdrawals from the government by individual ministers and by political groups was the first sign of the end of al-Maliki's political life, but the U.S. government has remained insistent on keeping al-Maliki at the top of Iraq's leadership" and notes, "Security, basic services, and all measurable levels of Iraq's infrastructure are worse now than under the rule of Saddam Hussein. Nevertheless, the U.S., Britain and Iran all continue to support this government."



Posted at 03:52 pm by thecommonills
 

Other Items

Other Items

In war resistance news, Matthew Rothschild interviews Camilo Mejia on this week's Progressive Radio. The interview and Iraq Veterans Against the War's Adam Kokesh's interview on WBAI's Law and Disorder this week will be noted in the snapshot later today.


In the New York Times, John F. Burns remains locked with Saddam Hussein, apparently forever, even in death. No confirmation to the rumors that as Burns left the grave he muttered "Rosebud." Key detail may be the fact that Burns has enough contact with the 'insurgency' to set up safe passage. That's not a slam on Burns (that's not), but it is rather surprising that safe passage can be set up but the Times really can't cover them. (The US government has been in talks with various elements of the resistance for well over a year now.)

Lloyd notes Sudarsan Raghavan's "Maliki's Impact Blunted By Own Party's Fears" (Washington Post) which examines the break as well as the puppet of the occupation:

As the U.S. military attempts to pacify Iraq so its leaders can pursue political reconciliation, Iraqi and Western observers say Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and his inner circle appear increasingly unable to pull the government out of its paralysis.
At times consumed by conspiracy theories, Maliki and his Dawa party elite operate much as they did when they plotted to overthrow Saddam Hussein -- covertly and concerned more about their community's survival than with building consensus among Iraq's warring groups, say Iraqi politicians and analysts and Western diplomats.
In recent weeks, those suspicions have deepened as U.S. military commanders have begun to work with Sunni insurgents, longtime foes of the Shiite-led government, who have agreed to battle the group al-Qaeda in Iraq.

Repeating from yesterday, NOW with David Brancaccio this week:

A strong blow to the Bush Administration's detainee policy, and the military lawyer who dealt it. On Friday, August 3 at 8:30 pm (check local listings), David Brancaccio talks with Lieutenant Commander Charles Swift, whose Supreme Court victory on behalf of his client, a Guantanamo Bay detainee, successfully challenged the Bush administration's detainee policy. It also laid the foundations for the current Congressional debate over how to try those accused of terrorism. Will this development in the war on terror deliver swifter justice or false hope? The NOW website at www.pbs.org/now will offer special insight into detainee treatment through the perspectives of a former prisoner and an army interrogator.

The program begins in airing in most markets tonight.

Peter Spiegel and Alexandra Zavis' "'Depth of misturst' in Iraq unforseen" (Los Angeles Times)
addresses US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates' comments yesterday regarding "Gee whiz, who knew?" The reporters observe:

The Pentagon's chief's remarks Thursday were his closest yet to acknowledging that the Bush administration's top political goals for Iraq may not materialize during the buildup, even if it is extended into next spring, the latest the military could sustain the increase. He also is the top Bush administration official to express such concerns publicly.

As the fig leaf of supposed support within Iraq is ripped away from Nouri al-Maliki, AP reports he will be in Turkey on Tuesday and in Iran on Wednesday. Meanwhile, in "A Nail in Maliki Government's Coffin?," Ali al-Fadhily (IPS) reports that the defections "underscore a continuing decomposition of Iraq's U.S.-backed government" and observes:

Security, basic services, and all measurable levels of Iraq's infrastructure are worse now than under the rule of Saddam Hussein. Nevertheless, the U.S., Britain and Iran all continue to support this government.
[. . .]
Withdrawals from the government by individual ministers and by political groups was the first sign of the end of al-Maliki's political life, but the U.S. government has remained insistent on keeping al-Maliki at the top of Iraq's leadership.

Kimberly Wilder (On the Wilder Side) is getting the word out on the Green Party's attempt "to bring in bloggers to our convention" She refers to this node and more information on the Green Party can be found at its website (as well as Wilder's site).

The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.

Posted at 03:49 pm by thecommonills
 

US military announces 3 more deaths

US military announces 3 more deaths

Today the US military announced: "Three Multi-National Division - Baghdad Soldiers were killed and 11 others wounded when an improvised explosive device detonated near their patrol during combat operations in an eastern section of the Iraqi capital August 2. Four of the injured were treated for minor injuries and were returned to duty." This brings the August total to 5 US service members killed in Iraq and the total since the start of the illegal war to 3665.

On some of yesterday's violence, Martha highlights this from Megan Greenwell's "Suicide Bomber Kills 13 at Iraqi Police Post" (Washington Post):

On Thursday night, police said, mortar shells hit the Baghdad offices of the Iraqi Accordance Front, the country's largest Sunni political group. The attack came a day after the group announced it would withdraw five of its six ministers from the government in protest against Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's policies. In a public statement Thursday, Maliki formally asked the Accordance Front to reconsider its decision.
Meanwhile, police in the northern city of Kirkuk announced that they had found a young boy crying next to the corpses of his five adult brothers. The five were apparently killed in sectarian violence after they and the boy were abducted Wednesday as they drove south out of the city, police said.
News that a child had apparently been present during the killings created nationwide outrage. Newscasters on Arabic-language television stations spoke at length about the incident, and several prominent politicians and religious leaders condemned the kidnappers.


Reuters notes, on the death of the brothers, "Reuters pictures showed an uncle of one of the men, turbaned and wearing white traditional Arab robes, weeping and curled up next to a wooden coffin, the body of his nephew wrapped in a thick patterned blanket.
A cousin of the men said four of them, all day labourers, had gone to help their brother paint the local hospital in al-Rashaad district, about 40 km southwest of Kirkuk." The kidnapping took place as they were headed home and the murders after the family was unable to pay a ransom.
Greenwell also notes that the US military's announcements brought to 80 the announced deaths of US service members for July (since filing, the count has risen to 81). Don't search the New York Times too hard for the same information unless you have time to waste this morning. Reuters notes: "The July death toll, initially put at 74, was welcomed by U.S. commanders as a possible sign that the military build-up was bearing fruit. But by Friday the toll had climbed to 81 on the icasualties.org Web site, on a par with February and March. Including corpses in the count, yesterday McClatchy Newspapers and Reuters combined reported at least 67 deaths in Iraq.

In the Times, you will find the footless and dateline free Paul von Zielbauer's "Marine Is Guilty of Unpremeditated Murder of an Iraqi Man" in which PvZ improves on many of his mainstream peers by actually naming the dead: Hashim Ibrahim Awad. In the Times of Los Angeles, Faye Fiore looks at what happens when the military knocks on a family's door to deliver bad news and focuses on Joane Sutton, wife of the late Greg Sutton.

Olive highlights Edmund Tadros' report in the Sydney Morning Herald which reports 5 Australian soldiers were injured on Thursday and, unlike other reports, does not mention a roadside bomb but states the event is under investigation.

In the United States, the Los Angeles Times reports a record $1 million settlement by the District of Columbia due to the police round ups of demonstrators against the illegal war in 2002.

And Paul Majendie (Reuters) reports on a study in the UK that has found British soldiers were more likely to suffer from PTSD if they were deployed for over "13 months or more in a three-year period."

The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.




Posted at 03:47 pm by thecommonills
 

Thursday, August 02, 2007
And the war drags on . . .

And the war drags on . . .

Unbelievably, the Democratic leadership in Congress seems about to cave in to Bush and grant him, of all things, more power to spy on Americans.
This, even as Alberto Gonzales continues to dissemble about the spying that has already been going on.
But whenever Bush lights the scare fluid, the Democrats jump back in fear.
In his Saturday radio address, Bush said, "Congress needs to act immediately to pass this bill, so that our national security professionals can close intelligence gaps and provide critical warning time for our country."
Bush also said that "FISA was passed nearly 30 years ago, and FISA has not kept up with new technological developments."
He conveniently failed to note that FISA has been updated 50 times over those last 30 years, and 20 times since 9/11,
as the ACLU notes.

The above is from Matthew Rothschild's "Dems Complicit in Bush Power Grab" (The Progressive). Hold on a second, it's noted by Sherry and Rebecca. Rebecca just finished posting at her site when she found an e-mail from Sherry highlighting Rothschild's piece. She called and wondered if there was any way to note it here? Yes, because it goes to straight to not only how we ended up with the unconstitutional Patriot Act, it goes to how we ended up with the illegal war. Democrats won't stand up. They're afraid and some of them are honestly authoritarians who have more than a bit of the Bully Boy in them. No one twisted their arms to vote for what Bully Boy turned into an authorization of illegal war. No one twisted their arms to make them decide to hop on board Bully Boy's attack on Americans's right to privacy (Rothschild notes the Russ Feingold came out strongly against this measure). But how would it look? What if there's another attack? Will we look weak!!!!!

If there's another attack, as the so-called Homeland Security Dept. seems to be telegraphing more and more (often based on the precision detection system known as Michael Chertoff's gut -- let's hope he doesn't eat spicey food anytime soon) who looks bad? The Bully Boy.

He can spin it and sell it anyway he wants but the reality is he identified Osama bin Laden as being responsible for the attacks and he said ObL would be captured dead or alive . . . six years ago. The FBI has taken him off their most wanted. That this took place under the Bully Boy also goes to him. He has had six years to do something, anything, but all he's done is attack the rights of the American people (with Congress' permission). Another attack isn't an indictment of Democratic leadership (other things -- such as the continued illegal war -- may be), it's an indictment of the Bully Boy and a testament to his failures in office. It's that simple. He's had six years to address the problem he's campaigned on repeatedly and another attack will only (yet again) demonstrate that he has never been up to any job other than booze hound.

Many elected Democrats and former members of Congress went along with the illegal war. Some are War Hawks. Some wanted it. It was a plan that began during the Clinton era and many, including Joe Lieberman and Bob Kerrey (now an Air America Radio host -- 'progress'!) were all on board. Bill Clinton himself laid the steps for Bully Boy's illegal war.

Could some of the elected Democrats have risen up in 2002 or before the illegal war started in March 2003? Yes, they could have but few of them did. Some were scared, some were for it, and some were unable to go against the grain. When the Democrats took control of Congress in the November 2006 election, they had the power to end the illegal war. Forget the nonsense about one Senator's sick and the Dems Senate majority is just a sliver. They have the power in the Senate, they have the power in the House. They've refused to excercise it. Mike Gravel has offered many examples of how the Congress could end the illegal war. They've refused the advice.

The other day Yawn Emmanuel, whom David Swanson's pointed out has publicly spoken of how good the illegal war will be for the Dems in the 2008 elections, was boasting of the need to force votes -- meaningless ones -- to put pressure on Republicans. Pressure to get them to end the illegal war? No the real 'pressure" is exposure and the hopes that, once exposed, voters will turn against him and go rushing into the arms of Democrats. Yawn Emmanuel is a bit like a man who terrorizes a woman in order to frighten her so she'll fall into his arms our of fear. In fact, it's as though the nation has been cast in the role of Ingrid Bergman in this remake of Gaslight.



They're just there to try and make the people free,
But the way that they're doing it, it don't seem like that to me.
Just more blood-letting and misery and tears
That this poor country's known for the last twenty years,
And the war drags on.

-- words and lyrics by Mick Softly (available on Donovan's Fairytale)

Last Thursday, ICCC's number of US troops killed in Iraq since the start of the illegal war was 3645. Tonight? 3662. Before we go futher on the topic of the deaths, Tori notes a highlight and asks what is the point of the column? For an exploration of that, read on after the highlight. This is from Norman Solomon's "Media Blitz for War: The Big Guns of August" (Common Dreams):

The media maneuvers of recent days are eerily similar to scams that worked so well for the Bush administration during the agenda-setting for the invasion. Vice President Cheney and his top underlings kept leaking disinformation about purported Iraqi weapons of mass destruction and links to Al Qaeda -- while the New York Times and other key media outlets breathlessly reported the falsehoods as virtual facts. Then Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Condoleezza Rice and other practitioners of warcraft quickly went in front of TV cameras and microphones to cite the "reporting" in the Times and elsewhere that they had rigged in the first place.
Last Monday, the ink was scarcely dry on the piece by O'Hanlon and Pollack before the savants were making the rounds of TV studios and other media outlets -- doing their best to perpetuate a war that they'd helped to deceive the country into in the first place.
The next day, Cheney picked up the tag-team baton. Tuesday night, on CNN's "Larry King Live," he declared that the U.S. military "made significant progress now into the course of the summer. … Don't take it from me. Look at the piece that appeared yesterday in the New York Times, not exactly a friendly publication -- but a piece by Mr. O'Hanlon and Mr. Pollack on the situation in Iraq. They're just back from visiting over there. They both have been strong critics of the war."
On Wednesday, the U.S. News & World Report website noted: "The news that the U.S. death toll in Iraq for July, at 73, is the lowest in eight months spurred several news organizations to present a somewhat optimistic view of the situation in Iraq. The consensus in the coverage appears to be that things are improving militarily, even as the political side of the equation remains troubling."
Such media coverage is a foreshadowing of what's in store big-time this fall when the propaganda machinery of the warfare state goes into high gear. The media echo chamber will reverberate with endless claims that the military situation is improving, American casualties will be dropping and Iraqi forces will be shouldering more of the burden.


Yeah, but that really doesn't excuse the fact that you're refusing to note (a) that July 2007 was the deadliest July for US troops and (b) 73 was a laughable figure on Wednesday. Norman Solomon wants everyone to understand that the illegal war will be switching to air war mode more and more and when that happens US deaths will most likely go down (as during Vietnam) and some pressure may then be off the administration.

That really doesn't excuse publishing a piece at some point on Wednesday (if not today) where the MSM and military lie of 73 is repeated. By Wednesday evening, 80 was already the announced deaths in Iraq. By today, it's risen to 81. The talking point imploded and before a 'war critic' does anything else it is his or her responsibility to note that.

As to the death count that will most likely go down (on the US side) when the air war is in full assault, what do you want, Norman? Seriously, what do you want?

You're a genius, no question, I have tremendous respect for you, but do you really think these scolds are helpful? They aren't. You're tired of the death count (as are we all). And?

Phyllis Bennis (whom I also have tremendous respect for) wants to shoot down Alexander Cockburn on the issue of finding out about the resistance. Now this was actually raised by Tom Hayden months ago and he was mocked (hopefully that was unintentional) on air for it. The host was reading something from the show's blog asking if this was a proposal to start a pen-pal list? Is Cockburn right? (Cockburn and Hayden before he was publicly humiliated, Hayden really hasn't touched on the topic since in any great detail.) So that's not going to be a focus.

Where is the focus going to be? How, Norman, are we going to translate the illegal war? We certainly can't depend upon a mainstream media holed up inside the Green Zone. More marches in DC (brief marches at that -- when Congress isn't in session)?

If the death count for US service members drops to one a month, we'll still note it here. If there was a reliable count on Iraqis (there actually is but no one's forcing the US government to release it -- or even trying to force them to) we'd note it. Instead we note that it is now approximately one million based on The Lancet Study published last October which found over 655,000 Iraqis had died.

The fact of the matter is that the US administration put the breaks on the death announcements, the military was derelict in their duty and went along with it, and the mainstream press -- in fact all the press! -- played dumb. We didn't here, as Tori notes in her e-mail. We didn't suddenly notice this week (or last) that the US military was delaying death announcements by as much as four days. We noted that all month long. We're not a media outlet. But find a media outlet that did -- big or small. Find anyone who prepared their audiences by informing them what was going on?

No one did. Reality, the US military was issued clamp down orders on the death announcements, told to slow them. Reality, military brass, under orders from the White House, began selling the talking point that deaths were down and this would be the lowest month in terms of US military deaths since last year. Reality, their talking imploded. Reality, they knew it would but hoped by delaying the truth, all the print editions would have run, all the gas bags would have moved on to another talking point.

On August 1st, as papers and networks repeatedly ran stories claiming it was the lowest death count since last year, the US military knew damn well that wasn't true (as did the White House) and they didn't correct the record. They announced a few more July deaths later in the first day of August, they announced again today.

That's reality and that's not addressed in Norman Solomon's column. Nor is it addressed exactly what we are to focus on? The deaths? Well, speaking for myself (but I'm sure it applies to others outside the community and I damn well know it applies to community members), we follow the deaths of Iraqis. What is it that the masses aren't doing, Norman?

Now I fully grasp the natural demand of a column that you have an opinion and to express it strongly but what I don't grasp is what's the take-away from your column?

The air war? I believe most are already noting that now (online). Don't focus on the deaths? Is that the edict because it won't fly here. We will note the deaths we can. The very nature of the illegal war? Find an entry here where we've ever called it anything but an "illegal war". Your column doesn't do that. At one point, in one sentence, you refer to the illegal war as "illegitimate and fundamentally wrong". It's illegal. In this community, we've grasped that for some time.

Now if you're getting at the disappointing coverage in small media, use an example other than Frank Rich. But in terms of what most reading your piece are going to take away, it's another scold. You're too good for that and you're too smart for that. Instead of using terms like "the media" and naming Frank Rich, why not go after the real roadblocks? The Nation magazine would be a perfect starting point. What sort of journalistic institution has "dozens" of photos of abuses and refuses to run any? What sort of journalistic insitution of the left hides behind centrists veterans and refuses to cover (in print) the ones who speak out against the illegal war because it is illegal and the ones who refuse to serve in an illegal war?

Norman Solomon wants to again tell readers that it's wrong to focus on the numbers of the dead. That's not because he doesn't care about everyone who dies in Iraq (on all sides -- which he does care very much about), that's because he's fully aware that an air war means US fatalities (the only thing tracked and often the only thing US audiences care about) will most likely go down. He's right. But to steal from Brando (in A Streetcar Named Desire, or Diane Keaton impersonating him for a scene in Sleeper), "And do you know what I say? Ha ha! Do you hear me? Ha ha ha!" First of all, the US administration and military have been caught in a lie that he takes a pass on. Second of all, the mainstream media is guilty of reporting a falsehood -- one they and small media should have known better about. But so what?

What is it that we should be focusing on? Hiding behind centrists? Turning the peace movement over to a pedophile? Attacking war resisters? More actions revolving around DC?
What is it? I've read the column, in full, twelve times and can't figure that out. If I can't, and I will always bend over backwards to see any point Solomon raises, I doubt many others can?

Funding the war is killing the troops, as Tina Richards and Iraq Veterans Against the War note. Funding the illegal war is killing everyone. It's an illegal war, not an "illegitimate" one -- it has many fathers true, but they are known -- and not just "fundamentally wrong" -- it's illegal. "Fundamentally wrong" makes it sound as though Bully Boy meant to pick up fries at McDonalds but got chicken nuggets instead. Illegal.

Brandon notes Amy Goodman's "The Uncounted Casualties of War" (Truthdig) and we'll go out on that (Goodman's points are very clear):

U.S. Marine Lance Cpl. Jeffrey Lucey is not counted among the Iraq war dead. But he did die, when he came home. He committed suicide. His parents are suing the Department of Veterans Affairs and R. James Nicholson, the secretary of veterans affairs, for wrongful death, medical malpractice and other damages.
Kevin and Joyce Lucey saw their son's rapid descent after he returned from combat in Iraq in June 2003. Kevin said: "Hallucinations started with the visual, the audio, tactile. He would talk about hearing camel spiders in his room at night, and he actually had a flashlight under his bed, which he could use to search for the camel spiders. His whole life was falling apart."
Jeffrey told his family that he was ordered to execute two Iraqi prisoners of war. After he killed the two men, Jeffrey took their dog tags and wore them until Christmas Eve 2003, when he threw them at his sister, calling himself a murderer. A military investigation concluded the story is without merit, but Kevin Lucey says: "An agency investigating itself, I have a lot of problems with that. We fully believe our son." Joyce Lucey added: "It really, to us, didn't make a difference what caused Jeffrey's PTSD [post-traumatic stress disorder]. We know that he came back different, so something happened to him over there."
Jeffrey got worse, secluding himself in his room, watching TV and drinking heavily. Jeffrey was reluctant to seek care, fearing the stigma that he felt accompanied mental-health treatment. Finally, on May 28, 2004, the Luceys had Jeffrey involuntarily committed. The Veterans Affairs hospital released him after three days.
On June 5, 2004, Jeffrey had deteriorated significantly. His sisters and grandfather brought him back to the VA. Joyce said the VA "decided that he wasn't saying what he needed to say to get involuntarily committed. Later we were to find out that they never called a psychiatrist or anybody that could have evaluated him. And they have this all on the record. It said that the grandfather was pleading for his grandson to be admitted."


The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.









Posted at 11:43 pm by thecommonills
 

Iraq snapshot

Iraq snapshot

Thursday, August 2, 2007.  Chaos and violence continue, a talking point falls apart (to only the MSM's suprise), the US military announces more deaths, convcitions in a war crime case are announced, Baghdad goes without running water, Robert Gates attempts to (yet again) shift the blame for the puppet government off on the Iraqi people and more.
 
 
Starting with the talking point that imploded.  By making July about the slow trickle in announcements, the US military repeatedly misled on the number of US service members dying.  The press didn't want to call it out.  They'd pretend multiple deaths on a Sunday being announced on a Thursday was perfectly normal (and in their print editions this morning, include a late announcement but refer to it as taking place "Tuesday" and not in "July" which is the height of dishonesty having all run with the "July" "count" the day prior). A week ago, what was already noticeable was underscored when Lt. Gen Raymond T. Odierno was selling to the press that after April, May and June all saw US troop fatalities climb past 100 each month, the figures were down for July (he ignored the reality that the air war had been beefed up -- a time tested manner for the US to reduce deaths somewhat) and even though the slow trickle of announcements was known, everyone played dumb in their reports and ran with the talking point despite the fact that hours after Odierno's Thursday spin the US military would announce 7 more deaths with none of them taking place that day -- all "backlogged" and on the slow trickle.  The US miiltary was back to the old tricks used in 2003 and 2004 and for much of 2005: hold off on death announcements in light of the first day of the month when outlets would run with their "looking back on the month" pieces.  They dropped that stunt  in 2005 in part because they were caught doing it once too often but also because many outlets were already bored with the illegal war and no longer interested in filing the obligatory monthly piece.  Odierno puts the US military's official stamp on the talking point and suddenly all the outlets are back to doing monthly pieces and all are stressing on August 1st that July deaths were down, that July deaths were the lowest of the year.  Some went with 72, some went with 74.  The count was incomplete (as would be demonstrated throughout that day) but qualifiers were in short supply.  The lowest number of deaths for 2007! was the talking point and all ran with it.  July 2007 was also the deadliest July of the illegal war for US service members (and for Iraqis the death rate tripled) but it was sell-sell-sell that this was some 'good news'.  One of the few exceptions was Stephen Farrell (New York Times) who did note a qualifier in a piece that ran on the morning of August 1st:
"Estimates of the death toll varied, but Iraq Coalition Casualty Count put the July total so far at 74, down from 101 in June and the lowest number since November 2006. Some casualties in late July may be reported after the beginning of August, so the count is not yet definitive for the month."   But even Farrell forgot to consider past Julys when touting the 'progress' that wasn't really there.  Today, ICCC reports that the number for US service members' announced deaths in July has risen to 81.Those who are confused can check out ICCC's period details but, remember, you were supposed to be confused.  That was the point of the slow trickle of announcements.  (In the period details, you can also note that all but four announced deaths -- there may be more coming -- for July have already had their names announced by the Defense Department.)  81, for those who've forgotten or never paid attention, is the number of announced deaths in February and March.  July, despite the burst of press enthusiasm and stupidty, was not the lowest of the month of the year for US fatalities nor was it the lowest since 2006 (November of 2006 saw 70 deaths announced).  Who will run the corrections?  Reporters aren't responsible for writing headlines; however, the headlines have all been seen by readers yesterday proclaiming that July was 'good news' or, as the New York Times worded it, "U.S. Death Toll In Iraq in July Expected to Be Lowest in '07."  By whom was never said but only a fool "expected" that to happen and only the fools are attempting to cover themselves now in embarrassment because JULY IS NOT THE LOWEST IN '07.
 
The talking point has imploded but we'll all supposed to pretend otherwise.It was nothing but another wave of Operation Happy Talk in the same way that a nothing soccer match was repeatedly treated as some sort of sign of 'progress' in an illegal war with many alleged reporters writing allegedly of Iraqi response but focusing only on the men (who ripped their shirts off, fired their guns in the air and generally must have given the boys in the press a heady dose of homo-eroticism to sniff). A better indicator was Oxfam's "Rising to the Humanitarian Challenge in Iraq," released this week, but it addressed reality and didn't jibe with the latest waves of Operation Happy Talk so it was largely ignored.
 
While the boys of the press beat themselves excitedly in frenzy over some Iraqi males shirtless, Oxfam provided less of a sexual high as they noted, "Forty-three per cent of Iraqis suffer from 'absolute poverty'. According to some estimates, over half the population are now without work. Children are hit the hardest by the decline in living standards. Child malnutrition rates have risen from 19 per cent before the US-led invasion in 2003 to 28 per cent now." Hard to get your jollies on that so the press elected to under report or ignore the realities of what the illegal war had really brought.
 
Throught the reporters of Jock Boy High's jock boy high, bombs were exploding and mass fatalities were taking place, but that fact was more or less ignored in the push for: "It's soccer!"  Today CBS and AP note that "at least" 142 Iraqis died yesterday but look through this morning's paper to find that headline.  You won't because when it's time to sell-sell-sell the illegal war again, realities have to drop out of the picture.  In this case, 142 Iraqis dying is judged unimportant.  For the New York Times, the big news, the front page piece, is Mark Mazzetti pondering fantasy at length in the latest push to sell the illegal war. Elisabeth Bumiller's "White House Letters" had nothing on Mazzetti (and her "letters" didn't run on the front page).   Leila Fadel (McClatchy Newspapers) points out the ugly reality: "The death toll from the car bombings was the highest for Baghdad since February, when the United States began increasing the number of troops in the capital in an effort to cut violence."  No change in US military deaths, no change in Iraqi deaths.  The realities of the Bully Boy's escalation which he initiated over the strong objections of the US public and over the 'symbolic' rejection of the Democratically controlled US Congress. Despite these realities, CBS and AP report that the administration is claiming "security is improving".
 
 
Repeating, the announced deaths for July thus far have now reached 81 making it not the lowest of the year nor the lowest since 2006.  Do not expect to see any outlets run corrections to their earlier (false) coverage. As Aimee Allison and David Solnit point out in their book Army Of None, "Corporate media's steady stream of lies, distortions, and repetition of the United States government 'war on terror' rhetoric was essential in propagating the pretense for the invasion of Iraq and is key to maintaining some level of public support for the war and occupation" (p. 155).
 
Turning to war resistance, David Zieger (director of the amazing Sir! No Sir!) observes of an earlier illegal war, "Like the Vietnam War itself, the GI Antiwar Movement started small and within a few years had exploded into a force that altered history.  And like the times from which it grew, the movement involved organized actions and spontaneous resistance, political groups and cultural upheaval.  Between 1966 and 1975, groups of soldiers -- some small and some numbering in the thousands -- emerged to challenge the war and racism in the military.  Group action and individual defiance, from the 500,000 GIs who deserted over the course of the war to the untold numbers who wore peace signes, defied military discipline and avoided combat, created a 'F**k the Army" counter culture that threatened the entire military culture of the time and changed the course of the war."  That also can be found in Allison and Solnit's Army Of None (p. 146), the new book published by Seven Stories Press and available for purchase ($14.95) at Courage to Resist.  Though little attention has been given to the matter, Eli Israel recently became the first service member to publicly refuse to serve in the illegal war while stationed in Iraq. Little attention has also been given to the military's investigative team that locates self-checkouts (or tries) and then tips off the police after their hours of surfing the net and, in one instance, crawling through MySpace pages.  Despite the fact that the US military crossed the Canadian border and posed as Canadian police while attempting to shake down Canadian citizen Winnie Ng at her home in their attempts to locate war resister Joshua Key, little attention has been given to that either or the US military ordering the arrest of Kyle Snyder, by Canadian police, on his wedding day.  It was a way to screw with Snyder (charges had to be dropped and Snyder released because it's not a crime in Canada to resist the US military) and a way to postpone the wedding, even for a few days, because Snyder would be marrying a Canadian citizen (and he did) putting him out of the reach of any efforts to deport him or refuse him citizenship in Canada.
 
In a really bad but overly praised recent article in The Nation, the magazine continued their long standing practice of ignoring war resisters (and added censorship to their list of tools by annoucing, in the article, that the magazine was in possession of "dozens" of photos of abuses but the magazine refused to print any).  They could speak to members of a centrist organization, they could speak to members of a White House front committee and readers were supposed to be thrilled that at least a few members of Iraq Veterans Against the War  got included.  Or that Camilo Mejia was included.  The term "war resister" wasn't applied to Mejia, despite the fact that he freely uses it; however, the magazine could label him a deserter.  Someone save us from the faux left and those who fancy themselves 'celebrities' as opposed to journalistic editors and publishers.  As Mejia himself explained on  WBAI's Law and Disorder this week, "Let me start by saying that when I allegedly went AWOL, I didn't really go AWOL because when we received orders to go to Iraq I had pretty much come to the end of my eight year service. So what happened was that I was extended from the year 2003 to the year 2031 by this thing that they called 'stop loss'."  It's an important point -- and was to US Senator Bill Nelson when Mejia was in Iraq and his contract was ending -- but one lost on The Nation.
 
Also lost to The Nation was the War Resisters Support Campaign which the magazine's overly praised article pointedly ignored.  The War Resisters Support Campaign is a Canadian organization helping and raising awareness of war resisters who go to Canada.  Meet Christian Kjar (who was wrongly billed as "Christian Care" by many -- including myself, my apologies).  War Resisters Support Campaign informs, "Christian Kjar, 21, is originally from California. Christian joined the US Marine Corps in 2004. It was not long before he found that, despite the motto of 'Honour, courage, commitment' posted on the recruiting office wall 'this was not the place to go if you value human dignity.'  While posted in North Carolina Christian decided he could not participate in the Iraq war. He arrived in Canada in October 2005, and currently lives in Toronto."  Canadian Mennonite reported that the Santa Barbara raised Kjar
began questioning his decision to enlist in boot camp quoting Kjar stating, "I knew it was stupid and foolish and wrong. This was not the place to go if you value human dignity. Instead, it was an extremely violent atmosphere where they train you to change a human being into an object by using phrases like 'communist bastards' and singing about stamping on Iraqi children. It's very difficult to go against the grain in that setting because it's a group thing. So I kept trying to reassure myself that I could be a warrior. But I couldn't let go of the fact that the intent was taking the life of a living breathing human being. When I was posted to Cherry Point [a Marine Corps base in North Carolina, in preparation for deployment to Iraq], it was eating me inside that I couldn't express how I felt to others. Prayer and meditation were very important to me at that time. During a four-day grace period [before deployment], I had time to really reflect and come to grips with what my conscience was telling me. One day I opened the Bible at Deuteronomy 5 and read, 'Thou shalt not kill.'
'After that I was honest with myself. I now knew what I didn't want to be. Also, the just war thing didn't work for me…. I knew there is no justice to be complicit in the suffering of people of differing faiths and origins, and was convinced that the U.S. government has failed utterly and miserably in preserving the dignity of human life in Iraq, where thousands of people have died."  Irene Kuan (The Eyeopener) reported that after learning of the War Resisters Support Campaign and speaking with attorney Jeffrey House, Kjar began the trip to Canada via Buffalo after saying goodbye to his girlfriend who remained in the military.  Audio and video of Kjar speaking can be found here.
 
War resister Agustin Aguayo, like Mejia and many others, attempted to get CO status but was repeatedly (and wrongly) denied (even in civilian courts) and he's now speaking out about his experiences in Iraq, his court-martial and more.  Joan Trossman Bien (Ventura County Reporter) covers a speaking engagement from last week where Aguayo discussed his introduction to military life in Iraq via a speech delivered upon arrival, "They said to us, if you guys think as medics that you have to follow the Geneva Conventions, you're very wrong, This is Iraq. This is the real thing."  And people wonder how Abu Ghraib or the gang-rape and muder of Abeer happens?  Aguayo reflected, "It was so sad. We would harass civilians for no reason, cursing at teenagers for no reason, taking stuff from Iraqi homes for no reason. We have found the most immoral thing that could possibly be done to these people who have done nothing to us. So the message then is, these people are not like us. It's OK to hurt them."  
 
 
There is a growing movement of resistance within the US military which includes Robert Weiss, Phil McDowell, Steve Yoczik, Ross Spears, Zamesha Dominique, Jared Hood, James Burmeister, Eli Israel, Joshua Key, Ehren Watada, Terri Johnson, Luke Kamunen, Leif Kamunen, Leo Kamunen, Camilo Mejia, Kimberly Rivera, Dean Walcott, Linjamin Mull, Agustin Aguayo, Justin Colby, Marc Train, Robert Zabala, Darrell Anderson, Kyle Snyder, Corey Glass, Jeremy Hinzman, Kevin Lee, Joshua Key, Mark Wilkerson, Patrick Hart, Ricky Clousing, Ivan Brobeck, Aidan Delgado, Pablo Paredes, Carl Webb, Jeremy Hinzman, Stephen Funk, Clifton Hicks, David Sanders, Dan Felushko, Brandon Hughey, Clifford Cornell, Joshua Despain, Joshua Casteel, Katherine Jashinski, Chris Teske, Matt Lowell, Jimmy Massey, Chris Capps, Tim Richard, Hart Viges, Michael Blake, Christopher Mogwai, Christian Kjar, Kyle Huwer, Vincent La Volpa, DeShawn Reed and Kevin Benderman. In total, forty-one US war resisters in Canada have applied for asylum.


Information on war resistance within the military can be found at The Objector, The G.I. Rights Hotline, Iraq Veterans Against the War and the War Resisters Support Campaign. Courage to Resist offers information on all public war resisters. Tom Joad maintains a list of known war resisters.
 
In Iraq, the US installed puppet government is falling apart.  US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates tries to go philosophical and spread the blame beyond the US by declaring, as AP reported, "In some ways we probably all underestimated the depth of the mistrust and how difficult it would be for these guys to come together on legislation. The kinds of legislation they're talking about will establish the framework of Iraq for the future so it's almost like our constitutional convention ... And the difficulty in coming to grips with those, we may all have underestimated six or eight months ago."  As for the puppet of the occupation, Nouri al-Maliki, Stephen Farrell (New York Times) notes  he has "reacted cautiously to the Sunni walkout".  The walkout, noted yesterday, refers to the Sunni Accordance Front's decision to leave the posts of Deputy Prime Minister and the heads of five ministry.  Megan Greenwell (Washington Post) observed it was "the latest indication of growing Sunni frustration with Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.  Ned Parker (Los Angeles Times) reported, on the withdrawal,
"The pullout reduces Iraq's Shiite-dominated government to little more than caretaker status. Barring a major political realignment, it also makes it less likely that Prime Minister Nouri Maliki's regime will be able to reach significant compromises on legislative benchmarks sought by the Bush administration to help quell sectarian strife. Tawafiq member Tariq Hashimi retains his post as one of Iraq's vice presidents.The bloc's pullout cast the gravest challenge yet to Maliki's tenure as prime minister. His government has been burdened for months by talk of conspiracies, most prominently featuring former interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi."  Some of the conspiracy talk has come repeatedly from al-Maliki who, while under siege by his puppet masters, probably shouldn't have regularly held press conferences where he declared every plot (real and imagined) he has detected to oust him.  Parker notes that along with former CIA asset Allawi, Ibrahim Jafari and Adel Abdul Mehdi are also being mentioned as potential replacements (both are Shi'ite) and that "At least one plan for an alternative government to Maliki's has been submitted to the U.S. Embassy by Iraqi political leaders."  Nancy A. Youssef (McClathy Newspapers) reports six may be about to become seven as Tariq al Hashemi, Iraq's Sunni vice president, has informed "he also is on the verge of resigning" and that he's already informed Ryan Crocker, US Ambassador to Iraq, of that possibility.  Speaking of a possible resignation, al Hashemi explained, "We need these major political moves to tell everybody that what is happening is in no way tolerable. Nobody on earth or in Iraq is happy with the performance of the government."  Nor is it in any way a legitimate government.  CBS and AP do a head count and not that "only two Sunnis in the 40-member Cabinet" are left.
 
 
Meanwhile the chaos and violence caused by the illegal war continues.
 
Bombings?
 
Hussein Kadhim (McClatchy Newspapers) reports a Baghdad roadside bombing that claimed 1 life and left another person wounded, a Hashiimiyat car bombing that claimed the lives of 4 police officers and four civilians ("including the head of Hibhib communications department with some members of his family"), three people wounded in a Kirkuk explosion "inside a shop for making military uniforms," a Mosul mortar attack that claimed 1 life and left four more wounded, a roadside bombing outside Kirkuk that claimed the life of 1 Iraqi soldier, and a Basra mortar attack that wounded a police officer.  Reuters notes the death toll of the bombing attack in HIbhib on the police station has risen to 13 dead, that a Balad moratar attack claimed the life of "one girl and wounded five other children," that a Balji mortar attack claimed 3 lives and that a Baghdad mortar attack claimed 3 lives.
 
 
Hussein Kadhim (McClatchy Newspapers) reports the Baghdad shooting death of the general managr "of the ministry of industry" and three police officers injured in a shooting in Kirkuk.  Rueters notes: "Three people were killed and two wounded in clashes between a tribe and insurgents in the town of Jbela 65 km (40 miles) south of Baghdad. An Iraqi army patrol responding to the incident was hit by a roadside bomb that wounded two soldiers, police said."
 
 Hussein Kadhim (McClatchy Newspapers) reports 24 corpses were discovered in Baghdad and 14 corpses discovered in Hibhib.  Reuters notes that the corpses of five brothers were discovered to the south of Kirkuk.
 
 
Turning to legal news.  Starting with Abeer.  CBS and AP report, "A soldier in prison for conspiring to rape an Iraqi girl and kill her and her family has left military prosecutors at Fort Campbell, Kentucky, struggling to recover after his testimony. Specialist James Barker admitted yesterday that he previously made false statements implicating a comrade. Barker testified he deliberately misled prosecutors depending on how they posed their questions, and had allowed investigators to draft sworn statements for him that implicated Private First Class Jesse Spielman of Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, in the crime."  Steven D. Green, who maintains his innocence, has been fingered as the ringleader of the war crimes by Barker, Paul Cortez and others involved.  No doubt his attorneys will have a field day with Barker's admission. (And for any slapping their heads and proclaiming "Spielman was innocent!" -- no, he is not.  He has already confessed to his role in some of the crimes.  Largely at stake now is what he knew and when he knew it.)
 
In other legal news, Tony Parry (Los Angeles Times) reports that a military jury made up "of five officers and four enlisted personnel" reached a conviction on Sgt. Lawrence Hutchins,  Reuters notes that he was found guilty of "murder and larceny, made false official statements and participated in conspiracy in the crime."   Neither report names the victim or notes that he was a grandfather.  In fact, details of what took place take a second seat to courtroom details -- as though the whole issue had to do with presentation and not an actual murder. For that reality, news consumers had to turn to Democracy Now! today where Amy Goodman noted another conviction in the same case, "Corporal Marshall Magincalda has been found guilty of conspiracy to murder, larceny and housebreaking but acquitted of pre-meditated murder. The victim, Hashim Ibrahim Awad, was dragged from his home, shot, and then planted with a weapon to make it appear he was planning an attack. Six other service-members have been convicted in the case."  No victim (named), no crime, is that the MSM way of handling these court cases?  Can you picture domestic coverage of a US murder trial that didn't name the victim?  The planted weapon was to make it appear that the grandfather and former police officer was an 'insurgent'.  In addition to planting the rifle, they also planted a shovel by the body to make it appear that he was on a mission to dig a hole and plant a roadside bomb.  These were war crimes but search the Los Angeles Times or Reuters for any indication that an innocent man was pulled from his home in the middle of night (actually early morning hours) and made to look like an 'insurgent' to justify the kill.
 
AP reports that Hutchins "was convicted Thursday of unpremeditated murder in the killing of an Iraqi man in the town of Hamdania during a frustrated search for an insurgent. Sgt. Lawrence G. Hutchins III, 23, had been charged with premeditated murder but premeditation was stricken from the verdict that was returned by a military jury. Hutchins was also convicted of conspiracy to commit murder, making a false official statement and larceny. He was acquitted of kidnapping, assault and housebreaking." They also note "no mandatory minmum sentence for unpremeditated murder" which could mean Huthins walks the same way Trent Thomas did after a jury convicted him in the same incident but a military judge decided Iraqi life was so unimportant, murder didn't require prison time.  For more on that travesty, see Monica Benderman's "Facing the Truth" (CounterPunch).
 
In other criminal news, Steven R. Hurst (AP) reports, "Much of the Iraqi capital was without running water Thursday and had been for at least 24 hours, compounding the urban misery in a war zone and the blistering heat at the height of the Baghdad summer."  With temperatures regularly topping well over 100 degrees (F) and with the US administration repeatedly citing water 'progress' this is criminal.
 
In other news, Carl Hulse (International Herald Tribune) reports that by a 229 to 194 vote, the US House of Representatives voted on a measure that would "limit how quickly American troops can be sent back to Iraq after serving a rotation there" allowing the troops the rest that
Bully Boy has denied them as he has altered and ignored policies and requirements throughout his illegal war of choice.  The Dems are in back-patting mode but Hulse notes the measure may not pass the Senate and it should also be noted that guaranteeing US troops the vacation time they are promised is hardly 'brave' but probably necessary as the US Congress prepares to embark (Friday) on their own month long vacations.  The measure was noted included or pursued by Democratic leadership in the Democratically controlled House during Nancy Pelosi's fabled first 100 days.  In the same article, Hulse mentions a possible withdrawal measure that could come before the House prior to their vacation beginning and quotes War Hawk Steny Hoyer explaining it would be something to add "to the debate but it is not a major policy document."  No need to rush, eh, Steny?
 
 

Posted at 08:43 pm by thecommonills
 

Other Items

Other Items

Today, the US military announced: "A 13th SC(E) Soldier was killed and two others were wounded when an improvised explosive device detonated near their vehicle while conducting a combat logistics patrol in the vicinity of Al Basrah, Iraq August 1." And they announced: "Two Task Force Marne Soldiers were killed and 10 were wounded in an indirect fire attack Tuesday." The latter brought to 80 the number of announced deaths in July. The former is the first death announced in August. The total of announced US military deaths in Iraq since the start of the illegal war now stands at 3660. Mike noted the count rising to 80 for July last night. To repeat, that's one death less than in February and March and there may be more announcements but find the retractions or corrections if you can. (You won't in the New York Times.) Also find anyone pointing out that adding almost 30,000 troops to reduce deaths by one is not a sign of "progress."

We had a very early speaking thing this morning and I started the entry and then dictated the rest. It's only gone up a short while ago because my friend killed himself trying to insert links. They are in a pain in the butt and I didn't mean for any past entries to be noted. If you show up late the party, you may get a brief recap but no one's going to walk you through every event that took place. I appreciate the work that went into locating the links to the entries but my own attitude is visitors who want to complain should honestly take some responsibility for not knowing about something all this time later.

I'd thought with that lengthy entry, I could postpone "Other Items" until Dona, Ava and I were done speaking. Since it took so long to post, the e-mails flooded in wondering if there were computer problems of it today was a day off. (On the latter, I wish.)

Marcia found an article but guessed it wasn't linkable. It's not for the reasons Marcia noted including the fact that The Nation's overly praised article is a bit like Dexy's "award" winning one in that it doesn't tell the full story (not limited to the fact that the article says "dozens" of photos were handed over of abuse to the magazine and the magazine obviously decided that their readers couldn't handle them and that censorship was the 'brave' thing to do). I will note that the publication was Marxist and it's distressing when even a Marxist publication rushes to prop up the timid piece by The Nation. Apparently no one will call it out. (Or note that to make it into a program, Amy Goodman and Juan Gonzalez had to add their own taped interviews with war resisters. The article can't stand its own.) If you're wondering why it was pimped so heavy, The Nation thinks they'll get a national magazine award off it. And considering how NO ONE wants to call them out for the fact that they didn't print photos they were given, they just might. But the US government had no right (and still has no right) to shield the American people from the photos of the abuse and torture at Abu Ghraib and The Nation has no right to shield their readers from documentary proof of abuses they have. But the magazine's run by a 'celebrity' (I saw that, Lucy, and I laughed too, we may work that into something on Sunday).

We will note NOW with David Brancaccio this week (PBS stations determine the time and day programs are aired, the earliest this will air is Friday, check your local listings) features:

A strong blow to the Bush Administration's detainee policy, and the military lawyer who dealt it. On Friday, August 3 at 8:30 pm (check local listings), David Brancaccio talks with Lieutenant Commander Charles Swift, whose Supreme Court victory on behalf of his client, a Guantanamo Bay detainee, successfully challenged the Bush administration's detainee policy. It also laid the foundations for the current Congressional debate over how to try those accused of terrorism. Will this development in the war on terror deliver swifter justice or false hope? The NOW website at www.pbs.org/now will offer special insight into detainee treatment through the perspectives of a former prisoner and an army interrogator.

Martha notes this from Megan Greenwell's "Sunnis Quit Cabinet Posts; Bombs Kill 75 in Baghdad" (Washington Post):

Iraq's largest Sunni political group partially withdrew from the Shiite-dominated government Wednesday, the latest indication of growing Sunni frustration with Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.
The announcement by the Iraqi Accordance Front came on an especially violent day in Baghdad, as three car bombs killed at least 75 people in the capital. Meanwhile, the
U.S. military announced the deaths of four U.S. troops, bringing the total number of Americans killed in July to 78, the lowest monthly figure since November.

I wish I'd seen that early this morning. (Martha had sent it by then.) The news analysis didn't even go over it -- in the Times, didn't go over the political situation of the puppet government. We noted that withdrawal yestereday in the snapshot but this morning I was just trying to get something together quickly (and the Washington Post isn't available where we're speaking).

Here's Ned Parker (Los Angeles Times) on the withdrawal:

The pullout reduces Iraq's Shiite-dominated government to little more than caretaker status. Barring a major political realignment, it also makes it less likely that Prime Minister Nouri Maliki's regime will be able to reach significant compromises on legislative benchmarks sought by the Bush administration to help quell sectarian strife.
Tawafiq member Tariq Hashimi retains his post as one of Iraq's vice presidents.The bloc's pullout cast the gravest challenge yet to Maliki's tenure as prime minister. His government has been burdened for months by talk of conspiracies, most prominently featuring former interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi.
Scenarios included tapping Maliki's immediate predecessor, Ibrahim Jafari, also with the Shiite fundamentalist Islamic Dawa Party. Jafari recently traveled to Iraqi Kurdistan in an apparent attempt to curry favor there.
A Kurdish official told The Times last month that Jafari was now preferable to Maliki, despite the fact that Jafari had been vetoed for a second term last year after failing to win the backing of any of the main sectarian or ethnic blocs.
The prospect of Iraq's other vice president, Shiite Adel Abdul Mehdi, being tapped for Maliki's job also has surfaced. At least one plan for an alternative government to Maliki's has been submitted to the U.S. Embassy by Iraqi political leaders.

Stephen Farrell (New York Times) notes puppet of the occupation al-Maliki "reacted cautiously to the Sunni walkout". AP quotes US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates on the matter, "In some ways we probably all underestimated the depth of the mistrust and how difficult it would be for these guys to come together on legislation. The kinds of legislation they're talking about will establish the framework of Iraq for the future so it's almost like our constitutional convention ... And the difficulty in coming to grips with those, we may all have underestimated six or eight months ago." Or maybe it's that you can't install a puppet government? Or maybe that it's you can't force through a constitution without support and with the promises that it will be 'adapted' and never address the problems you said would be addressed? Or maybe it's that those free and full elections still haven't taken place? Or maybe it's that illegal war destroys a country but can't remake one? Only the people of a country can make their own country and they can't do so at gun point.

CBS and AP note that "at least" 142 Iraqis died yesterday.

A visitor notes Gabriele Zamparini's "Phyllis Bennis and the Post-Modern Anti-War Movement" (Dissident Voices):

It's official. Phyllis Bennis, the spokesperson of the US peace movement, stated, "the U.S. peace movement doesn't embrace the Iraqi resistance. Right."
Bennis wrote,
"I never supported Saddam Hussein, who was 'resisting' the U.S. during the sanctions years, and I didn't -- and don't -- support what is called 'the Iraqi resistance' today."
Note that "what is called." One could try stop for a second and reflect why so many people use that "what is called" when addressing what is called the anti-war movement Bennis now has become the official spokesperson for.


The visitor is wrong that "you won't link to it." The visitor is correct that I won't offer my take on Bannis' remarks. Not because I'm "afraid," as he suggest, but because I haven't read it. If it appears elsewhere, I may. But I've taken out the link to Bennis' article. You're late to the party. We don't link to that site. We have no respect for that site. Two years ago a fourteen-year-old boy was bullied and intimidated by two so-called 'professionals' at that site, writing from their e-mail accounts provided by their jobs. The kid didn't need to apologize for a joke to begin with. But he did. And that wasn't good enough for the bullies. They wanted him to grovel. They threatened him with never covering his four favorite sites (this was one, Rebecca's was another and two sites that are not community sites). He groveled. His e-mail was this long apology. For a joke that needed no apology. He replied to them and also sent to every one of the four sites. That's where we come in. We delinked from that site and will never link to it again. If it were the only site in the world, I wouldn't visit it. That was my attitude before Gina and Krista ran the full exchange of e-mails between the two assholes and the kid in the gina & krista round-robin. After that ran, Eddie and others shared their e-mails. No one knew West (the 14-year-old) and, for instance, Eddie thought it was strange that Evan was writing him to get dirt on someone he'd never heard about. But when the exchange ran and Eddie read them and realized "West" was was the one Evan had tried to pump him for information on, Eddie was among those sharing their e-mails. That's really sick. It's sick that they thought (they is Matthew and Even -- I believe Matthew is the name of the bald or balding man), they could bully a little kid because they didn't like his joke. (Their e-mails still, to this day, outrage West's parents.) It's even more sick that an allegedly left site would go around trying to get dirt on a 14-year-old kid. If they'd do all that, what wouldn't they do?

They've never apologized to West or his parents (who used to support the site). They're quite aware that everyone knows what happens. After I noted it here, without noting the site, they delinked from this site the following day. (No loss.) They're cowards, they're abusers and they aren't professional. This community was enraged by what happened to a 14-year-old kid. That site doesn't exist. We don't support those behaviors in the White House and we certainly don't support them when they're done by an allegedly 'left' website.

So I have no idea what Phyllis Bennis is writing about. If it doesn't appear elsewhere, I never will. I can live with that. We don't link to that site and I would never go to it. We've covered this in full before. You're late to the party and spilling things on the rug. Try to be a little more careful.

The article by GZ is interesting (GZ because I'm attempting to finish this, I've got about five minutes and I don't want to mispell a name here and have that seen as a slam) and raises some interesting points. I'm not offended by it. One thing I will add, to GZ's article, is that the resistance, in any form, isn't and hasn't been covered so anyone who says they don't support it needs to grasp, anyone not just Bennis, that they're weighing in on something they probably know very little about. I like Phyllis Bennis and am tempted to add an "in fairness" statement but I haven't read her piece and won't at that site, so I won't comment in any way on what's excerpted. I will say that I hope she doesn't, as another did while rushing to reject Alexander Cockburn, make comments that are demeaning to Muslim women. I don't think she would but I'm still reeling from that other nonsense which really offended some Arab feminists. (And if I hear that friends of mine once again felt insulted, I will comment on it and confine myself to that reaction only unless the article's made available elsewhere.)

That's all the time. The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.







Posted at 08:41 pm by thecommonills
 

NYT still selling the illegal war

NYT still selling the illegal war

On the front page of the New York Times, Mark Mazzetti's "Iraq Snapshots Give 2 Views" can be found. First, I think the the "Iraq snapshot" gives more than two views. I think we have consistently, Monday through Friday, offered a look at war resisters, at the daily violence reported, at activism in the US, at reactions in other countries. I'm not sure which of our "Iraq snapshots" (there are probably over 300 by this point), Mazzetti is referring to but I'm sure we've given more than "2 Views."

No, Mazzetti's not talking about the "Iraq snapshots" that run here which is a bad thing because if he were he might actually have something to write about as opposed to his usual junk.

Mazzetti wants to talk partisans and how they use things to prop up their own arguments. So you can read it as the paper's self-confession.

They are the paper that lied us into illegal war. That was Judith Miller's faulty reporting, yes. But she wasn't alone. Michael Gordon's finally gotten attention for his own part in lying. Of course the non-existent link between Iraq and 9-11 was pushed on the front page in October of 2001 by Chris Hedges and another writer when they were tricked/fooled into believing two "defectors" were telling them the truth about terrorist training camps in Iraq, sanctioned by Saddam Hussein, were teaching people how to hijack planes.

That 'report' also aired on PBS in cooperation with the New York Times. The 'defectors' were liars using phony names. (And the State Dept. backed up the article though they aren't an on the record source.) And the paper, as of last year, still hadn't run a correction on it. I don't remember seeing any correction since, but if Mazzetti knows of one, drop a line. PBS corrected it on their website but the Times appears to still stand by those lies. The 'defectors' gave phony names. They told pleasing tales. And how they were brought to the Times is one of the aspects of the story that no one still wants to talk about. Just like they don't want to talk about the State Dept. involvement in that article. Just like they want to pretend like Mother Jones exposing one of the 'defectors' as a fraud mitigates the fact that everyone dummies up about the fact that the article quoted two 'defectors' and only one has been revealed to the public (and by Mother Jones, again the New York Times is in mute mode).

Now the lies didn't end after US forces hit the ground in Iraq.

Telling the truth was really a problem for the New York Times. John F. Burns wanted Saddam Hussein's head on a pole and was happy to say whatever helped that before the illegal war started and continued all the way through the execution. Saddam Hussein is dead. Hopefully, John F. Burns has finally found peace.

His Go-Go Boy in the Green Zone fellow lied repeatedly. Dexy Filkins, early on in the illegal war, was giddy over his planned interview with a group of fighters opposing US forces. Like many a Go-Go Boy Gone Wild, he couldn't stop shooting his mouth off about it. The proposed story, as a fellow journalist revealed publicly, got cancelled when the US military wasn't pleased with the idea.

That was only the beginning of Dexy self-censoring to please the US military. It would reach its lowest point when he 'reported' on the November 2004 slaughter of Falluja.

He was there, embedded with the troops. He was supposedly providing an eye witness account. But it was funny what he saw and what he didn't see. Using Dexy as the 'expert,' the paper would deny it when Amy Goodman and Democracy Now! addressed the use of white phosphorus one week. On Democracy Now!, the Pentagon would admit that white phosphorus was used and Scott Shane would be sent out with the big mop to clean it up.

Dexy's rah-rah reporting from Fallujah would win an award. The piece was entitled "In Faulluja, Young Marines Saw the Savagery of an Urban War" and ran November 21, 2004.

The same day, Edward Wong's more realistic article was reduced to inside the paper while Dexy's ran on the front page.

November 21st and Dexy had a "Nov. 18" dateline. We called it out and further pointed out that the dateline was wrong because the events Dexy was 'reporting' on took place November 15th. That's six days to make it into print. That's why the rumors about Dexy allowing the military to vet his copy became so popular to journalists in Iraq.

By the time his Iraq 'tenure' was over, Dexy's "Warrior King" would have exploded as a reliable source to anything and Dexy himself would be the Sob-Sister of the Embeds.

Terry Gross and New York Observer magazine would prop up Dexy and treat him like he was a real reporter. He wasn't. And when Thomas E. Ricks (Washington Post) put into print what everyone already knew (the US military saw Dexy as their go-to-guy whenever they had a rumor they needed to get into print) a lot of journalists thought he'd finally be widely called out. Didn't happen. Because back then the lie was that Judith Miller single handedly lead a nation into illegal war. Apparently, she not only 'reported,' she edited her articles, she edited the paper, she delivered it to your house, she told the networks and cable outlets what stories to run with, she ran the news division at every outlets and she was the power behind the Bully Boy.

The all powerful Judith Miller. When she left the paper, you might have thought others at the paper would finally get the attention their behaviors had called for. Didn't happen. In fact, if Michael Gordon hadn't attempted to sell war with Iran with his unsourced pillow whispers, he probably would have gotten away with his own journalistic crimes. But he was selling war with Iran and suddenly the gas bags (of all stripes) remembered, "Woops! Judith had a partner on some of those stories."

Media 'criticism' had been reduced to Bash the Bitch and Judith Miller was the God of All Things Media. And would have stayed that had Gordo not started beating the drum beats for Iran.

So it takes a special sort of uselessness for Mark Mazzeti to show up on the front page today claiming that 'partisans' shade the news for their own means.

The reality is that the news, at all outlets, is always shaded. It's shaded in the choices of what to tell and what not to tell. Some events will stand out to some people and they'll zoom in on that. Other events won't get the coverage they need.

Considering the New York Times' Iraq reporting in whole, they are the last to ever speak of 'partisans' because they've been war boosters all along.

Here we've said since at least January 2005, if Judith Miller got us over there (she helped, she was not alone, nor was the paper the only outlet selling the illegal war), it was the Dexys that kept us there. They lied, they told big lies, they told little lies. They holed up inside the Green Zone even when they could have been out and about reporting without the military because, yes, there was a brief time when that was possible. But they hunkered down with their team of bodyguards in their pricey Green Zone villa, rewrote military press releases, were rude to the stringers (the stringers were among the first to complain to this site about the paper's coverage) and thought because they were so high on the illegal war, they were making journalistic names for themselves.

(And it needs to be noted, when selecting what to emphasize each day, the 'stars' and the stringers were in frequent disagreement.)

They were the joke of the Green Zone with other domestic outlets as they paraded around the Green Zone and spoke loudly over drinks (thinking they were holding court when all they were doing was proving Americans can be drunken bores in any land).

We could get into the laughable idea of 'fidelity' at a time when the paper, domestically, was pushing the 'values voters' myth. We could go into the firing and how the Guild had to get involved and how things got a little uncomfortable.

But that's the personal business that their unprofessional behavior made public news.

Their real crime all that time was never telling readers that they weren't leaving the Green Zone unless as an embed. Never noting the stringers until they started dying. Creating laughable end credits when most of the reporting was done by stringers who were not given bylines. I've disclosed this before but I've done uncredited (and unpaid for) stringer work for friends and family in the press before. With the exception of the Los Angeles Times, no one ever offered payment. Nor did I expect or want any. (I sent back LAT's check. And that was a long, long time ago. Before the days of online.*) I grew up in the press, I know what a stringer does. What the Times' stringers were then doing was actually reporting but they got no credit for that.

That's, at best, bad behavior. But in terms of the readers, it was far worse because the situation would quickly change on the ground to the Times being holed up in the Green Zone because it was so comfy into the Times being holed up there because it wasn't safe to leave. For months and months, for years, the paper refused to tell readers that. When Sabrina Tavernise began getting bylines that would change and she and others would note from time to time that they weren't able to travel about Iraq safely. Had readers known that earlier, they would have realized the illegal war was lost.

So it's a bit late in the game for Mazzetti to be finger pointing at others in an alleged "News Analysis."

He opens his nonsense with "July ended with a monthly death toll for American troops in Iraq that was the lowest this year." What was the toll?

I'm sorry to be the one to explain journalistic basics to Mazzetti (who presumably didn't grow up with them drilled into his head at the dinner table) but apparently someone has to. When you open by mentioning the death toll was the lowest, the next logical thing is to include the number. He never does.

Readers of the paper might flash back to yesterday and feel they know the toll. They might wrongly assume they're informed by reading the paper. Yesterday, Stephen Farrell's "U.S. Death Toll In Iraq in July Expected to Be Lowest in'07" ran on A8 and they may remember that number and feel they are informed. That number the paper ran was "74." The number for announced deaths in July currently?

80.

Mazzetti's lede is "July ended with a monthly death toll for American troops in Iraq that was the lowest this year." 80 was the lowest? What was the next low? 81. That was the number in February and in March. Now July's totals may or may not be complete (Farrell, to his credit, noted that possibility when using the 74 number yesterday.)

The escalation, all the added troops have, if no more deaths are announced, resulted in one less death than in February and one less than in March. That negates (actually destroys) Mazzetti's lede and if the paper had real editors he'd be asked about it.

July 2007 had two ways to go when it came to the coverage. The paper went with "lowest death toll." Mazzetti wants to write (apparently with a straight face, but maybe he's stoned the entire time?) that "The war's staunchest supporters have seized on the reduced death toll in July for American troops as a sign that an influx of troops is dampening sectarian violence in the country."

That may be the closest to a confession (admittedly, an unintended one) the paper makes. Because there was always another detail about the July count. We began making it here last week. July 2007 was the highest US military death toll of any July. There were two ways to go there. One was to push the lie that the escalation had reduced the violence (it hadn't) and base that false claim on the spin that the death toll was down. The other was to note it was the deadliest July for US service members since the illegal war began. Who is shaping for their own gain here, Mazetti?

Mazzetti tells you that the "staunchest supporters" (which, by his definition, includes his paper) "seized" on that. That's a lie. They were fed it. See "Rewriting Ned Parker on the death toll" from last Friday and you'll see that this talking point didn't come out of whole cloth, it was fed by the US military. And, like the Times today, the general had to avoid the actual number of dead the Thursday he promoted the talking point to reporters.

A news analysis that can't note the actual death toll isn't much of a news analysis but Mazzetti's not much of a reporter. Or an analyst. Inside the paper, he does note that Michael O'Hanlon and Kenny Pollack are "occasional critics of the Bush administration's war strategy" but neglects to note that they are supporters of the illegal war. You can't push the illegal war before it begins and be anything but a supporter of the illegal war. They have only been concerned with strategy (and the guilt by association of the lost war). Now not including the detail that they regularly pushed the illegal war before it began was a choice Mazzetti made.

So he's really the last who should be fretting over what gets included and what gets excluded. His 'analysis' goes beyond merely personal choices made to choices made that convey an unrealistic picture of the illegal war.

He gets it wrong when he talks about Iraqi body counts. That's factually wrong. It's an error.
He writes that after the lies of the body counts during Vietnam, the Pentagon stopped keeping them "but over the past four years in Iraq, military commanders have often used their numbers for insurgents killed when detailing the success of a particular operation." The Pentagon still keeps numbers. We noted that here when no one wanted to. In July of 2006, Nancy Youssef wrote about it for Knight-Ridder (it was about to change titles to McClatchy Newspapers-Ridder but when her story was published it was Knight-Ridder). At that point, with on the record military source, she wrote about how the count had been kept for over a year but the US military refused to release the count to the press (and, by proxy, to the American people). That's pretty big news but it got drowned out. (Little media was off on the elections in Mexico, I forget where big media was.) Earlier, Sabrina Tavernise had co-written an article on a similar topic but Youssef's was the one that was concrete.

That an analyst is unaware of that factual reality would suggest that the analyst isn't up to the job. More than likely, Mazzetti is aware of it and just made the 'choice' not to include the detail.

He quotes a war source who states that the illegal war can't be judged.

That's hilarious. The four year mark was passed in March but we're all supposed to pretend the jury's still out on what was sold as a cakewalk, what has claimed approximately one million Iraqi lives, what has torn apart the country (I mean Iraq, but it's certainly divided this country as well -- news to Nancy Pelosi who claims impeachment would divide the country), what has fostered and created civil wars and sectarian divides, what has made Iraq worse in every measurable way whether it's basic services, malnutrition, employment or any factor you want to use.

Oxfam released a report this week. Damien Cave covered it inside the paper. He did a few paragraphs at the top of his article on it before moving on to other topics. By contrast, the paper repeatedly covered the soccer games. One day, they covered the soccer games at length and made a whopping paragraph -- one paragraph -- available to note that 50 people had been killed by bombings (see "Oh look, it's universal . . . for some men"). That was a personal choice, apparently. It certainly wasn't a journalist choice because the paper isn't called Sports Illustrated, it's called the New York Times. And sports isn't hard news. There seems to be some confusion there today. Soft news is the arts, cooking, sports, etc. But the Times ignored the bombings (one paragraph, buried in the soccer feature, is ignoring) and went with soft news. Feel good news. That's how you sell an illegal war, how you keep selling it.

Oxfam? Search in vain for a mention of their report in Mazzetti's alleged 'analysis.' You can find a lot of war hawks quoted. You'll never get peace activists, but you can always find the war hawks.

Mazzetti rewrites history as well pinning the benchmarks on Congress. The benchmark talk began with the report by the James Baker Circle Jerk and was seized on by the administration. Maybe Mazzetti's trying to be kind and give the Democrats in Congress credit for something, anything -- goodness knows, they haven't done much since taking control of both houses. But the reality is the administration pushed 'benchmarks.' He notes the administration doesn't favor them today but forgets the whole point about how they did favor them, about how Bully Boy used 'benchmarks' as a talking point when addressing the escalation that he called a 'surge'.

It's a funny kind of half-informed analysis that Mazzetti offers so considering that and the paper's own history (just during this illegal war, but we could go way back), he truly is the last to note that various people will emphasize what stands out to them.

What the 'analysis' should be remembered for is that on August 2, 2007 he offered a news analysis whose chief talking point was that the jury's still out on the success or failure of the illegal war. When the illegal war is ended (it's already lost) and people look back, they largely won't remember that. You'll have little bits from each year and most likely 2007 will be remembered as the year approximately 70% of Americans were against the illegal war. That, long after the public turned against it in such huge numbers, Mark Mazzetti offered what was billed as "News Analysis" which offered it was too soon to tell how the illegal war was going will be forgotten. It shouldn't be because that's how illegal wars are sold before the start and how they continue to be sold after they started.

The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.






[*For newcomers who need their disclosures of things already noted, I also wrote an overly praised film review when the reviewer and I went out for Chinese and then to see the movie. We were both sick from the food about 15 minutes into the film. There was a deadline and I was the less sick. I wrote a postcard piece -- focusing on scenery because I had no idea what the plot was. I didn't claim that then and don't claim it now. But it demonstrates how stupid the press can be that it actually got singled out when it was nothing but scenery and "How many more words are needed?" I had no interest in being part of the press. Then or now. But then and now, I did and do help friends when they're trying to get someone to talk to and, in a pinch, I'll be a sounding board.]

Posted at 08:37 pm by thecommonills
 

Wednesday, August 01, 2007
Iraq snapshot

Iraq snapshot

Wednesday, August 1, 2007.  Chaos and violence continue, over 100 Iraqis are dead or reported dead today, the press tries to sell the illegal war some more despite reality, the July death toll for US service members rises again, and a pig attempts to book his own title match: Pedophile vs. the Peace Mom (with everyone rooting for Cindy).


Starting with war resistance.  In June of 2006, Ehren Watada became the first commissioned officer to publicly refuse to deploy to Iraq (after months of working privately with his military superiors, offering to resign, offering to serve in Afghanistan, etc.).  In violation of the Constitution's double-jeopardy clause, he faces a second court-martial  October 9th  following last February's court-martial which ended just as he was about to take the stand in his own defense only to find Judge Toilet (aka John Head) rule a mistrial over defense objection.  The October 9th date is considered iffy at this point by his civilian attorneys due to the appeals process that will address issues such as double-jeopardy and whether or not Judge Toilet should recuse himself.  Thus far those (and other issues) have not been addressed.  (Judge Toilet ruling that his own actions do not violate the Constitution or ruling that he's fit to serve on another court-martial does not make for objective rulings.)  Watada's bravery has inspired many and that's not limited to the military.  Melissa Regennitter (Muscatine Journal) reports on Ashley Casale and Michael Israel's March for Peace which began May 1st in San Francisco and is headed for DC and added a third person, Antonio Kies, on Sunday and a fourth, Isabelle Salmon, on Monday.  Asked why she was joining the march, Isabelle Salmon explained she'd just completed college, wanted to take part in an action to end the illegal war and "I'd have to say inspiration comes from Lt. Watada and my belief in world peace."  And exploring the connections between art and activism, Jen Angel (Boise Weekly) recounts, "This past January I spent a week in a chilly warehouse in Tacoma, Wash., making puppets with 20 other activists to support Army 1st Lt. Ehren Watada, the first commissioned officer to public refuse deployment to Iraq.  We were creating a play to perform on Feb. 5 at the vigil outside the gates of Fort Lewis, Wash., where his court-martial -- which would end in a mistrial -- was being held.  We spent hours painting, taping, cutting, gluing, eating and talking.  For the characters in our play, we created a 15-foot-tall judge with a sculpted cardboard head and papier-mache hands, jurors and witnesses, and, for our finale, doves and suns to end with a vision of a beautiful future."

Watada and others inspire action with the stories of the courage as does Iraq Veterans Against the War.  On June 19th, when Eli Israel decided he couldn't serve in the illegal war, while stationed in Iraq, the response was swift from the military and equally swift was the response of support he received.  Last week, Courage to Resist filed an update noting, "Last month Army Spc Eleonai 'Eli' Israel, while stationed at Camp Victory in Baghdad with JVB Bravo Company, 1-149 Infantry of the Kentucky Army National Guard announced that he would refuse any combat role in Iraq.  Afterwards, Eli noted 'It would have been a lot "easier" for me to simply keep doing combat missions for a couple more weeks, and be done with things.  Moral convictions are not based on timing or convenience.'  He is scheduled to be released today [July 26th] from the Theater Field Confinement Facility at Camp Arifjan, Kuwait where he served a 30 day sentence.  Eli pleaded guilty to five counts of disobeying orders at a summary court martial.  He expects to receive an Other Than Honorable discharge and to be flown to Mississippi within a couple of weeks.  After he's out, he plans on fighting for a discharge upgrade as the officer who sentenced him ignored his application for discharge as a conscientious objector or take into account his prior service."


There is a growing movement of resistance within the US military which includes Robert Weiss, Phil McDowell, Steve Yoczik, Ross Spears, Zamesha Dominique, Jared Hood, James Burmeister, Eli Israel, Joshua Key, Ehren Watada, Terri Johnson, Luke Kamunen, Leif Kamunen, Leo Kamunen, Camilo Mejia, Kimberly Rivera, Dean Walcott, Linjamin Mull, Agustin Aguayo, Justin Colby, Marc Train, Robert Zabala, Darrell Anderson, Kyle Snyder, Corey Glass, Jeremy Hinzman, Kevin Lee, Joshua Key, Mark Wilkerson, Patrick Hart, Ricky Clousing, Ivan Brobeck, Aidan Delgado, Pablo Paredes, Carl Webb, Jeremy Hinzman, Stephen Funk, Clifton Hicks, David Sanders, Dan Felushko, Brandon Hughey, Clifford Cornell, Joshua Despain, Joshua Casteel, Katherine Jashinski, Chris Teske, Matt Lowell, Jimmy Massey, Chris Capps, Tim Richard, Hart Viges, Michael Blake, Christopher Mogwai, Christian Care, Kyle Huwer, Vincent La Volpa, DeShawn Reed and Kevin Benderman. In total, forty-one US war resisters in Canada have applied for asylum.


Information on war resistance within the military can be found at The Objector, The G.I. Rights Hotline, Iraq Veterans Against the War and the War Resisters Support Campaign. Courage to Resist offers information on all public war resisters. Tom Joad maintains a list of known war resisters.

 
In Iraq today everything was falling apart.  Lebanon's Daily Star reports that today saw the Sunni Accordance Front resigned today which "pushed the government into a new crisis undermining its efforts to reconcile Iraqis and end sectarian strife." Mairam Karouny and Peter Graff (Reuters) identify the withdrawal as being the heads of "the ministers of culture, women, planning, and higher education, and the junior foreign affairs minister" as well as Deputy Prime Minister Salam al-Zobaie.  And, as The Daily Star also reports, there's the issue of the Baghdad bombings.

Now those who live and breathe by their Operation Happy Talk talking points should take a deep breath because that 'turned corner' just got drop kicked out of the narrative.

Several bombs in Baghdad led to mass deaths.  Al Jazeera notes the "fuel tanker rigged with explosives" and BBC describes the bombing near "a popular ice-cream parlour" using a parked car.  AFP says there were 3 "large bombs" in all and notes: "Iraqi forces sealed off the area, as residents and ambulances ferried the dead and dying to city hospitals.  Tens of bodies were taken to Ibn Nafees hospital following the explosion".  CBS and AP note, "An Associated Press reporter at the scene said the explosion ripped a hole one yard deep and one and a half yards wide in the asphalt.  Three minibuses and six cars were damaged by flames and flying debris.  Blood pooled in the street."

Al Jazeera and Reuters figures for the dead are at least 70.  Laith Hammoudi (McClatchy Newspapers) offers more detailed figures noting 20 dead from the parked car bombing near the ice cream shop, 50 dead from the fuel tank bombing and 3 dead from a parked car bombing in Doura (that's the third of the three being reported on by most outlets) and notes 105 were reported wounded from the three bombings.

The numbers will likely rise as the rubble is cleared and bodies are discovered, as some on the wounded list do not pull through.  But it may be a big shock for some Americas buying into the latest waves of Operation Happy Talk.  It's, as Robert Parry (Consortium News) has dubbed it, New Pro-War Propaganda":
"No need to wait until September.  It's already obvious how George W. Bush and his still-influential supporters in Washington will sell an open-ended U.S. military occupation of Iraq -- just the way they always have: the war finally has turned the corner and withdrawal now would betray the troops by snatching defeat from the jaws of victory.  At one time, the Iraq story line was how many schoolrooms had been painted or how well the government security forces were doing.  Now there are new silver linings being detected that will justify a positive progress report in September -- and the U.S. news media is again ready to play its credulous part."
.
And hasn't it been glorious?  Sell-sell-sell.  Ignore realities about the US death counts (see below after corpses), ignore reality period. 

Turned corner?  Alexandra Zavis and Ned Parker (Los Angeles Times) report, "The number of Iraqi civilians killed in violenc rose to 1,753 in July.  The toll in June was 1,227.  The number of bodies found in and around Baghdad also climbed in July, to 619, compared with 540 in June."  Lebanon's The Daily Star crunches the figures to note, "New goverment figures also showed civilian deaths in the country rose by a third last month, dealing a further blow to a five-month-old security plan designed to stabilize Baghdad and allow for reconciliation."  A blow?  Yes.  The Daily Star, not a US outlet.  Who knows how the New York Times and others will rush to spin it tomorrow (only their military handlers know for sure?)  But it's a huge blow.  And the escalation which was supposed to bring security for Iraqis?  Deaths rose a third.  Repeating, deaths rose a third.

73 dead from 3 Baghdad bombings and those weren't the only bombings in Baghdad, nor the only violence.


Bombings?

Laith Hammoudi (McClatchy Newspapers) reports "Iraqi police said that 4 people were wounded when US army helicopters bombed Zafaraniyah neighborhood southest Baghdad at 4:00 am" in Baghdad,  two US Humvees and one US tank were destroyed or damaged in Baghdad by explosions, a downtown Baghdad car bombing claimed 3 lives (six more wounded), a Baghdad IED exploding claimed the life of 1 police officer (seven more wounded), a Baghdad mortar attack claimed 2 lives, and a Falluja bombing claimed the lives of 2 police officers.  Reuters notes the bombing of a building in Madaen that claimed 4 lives (six more injured) and an Iskandariya roadside bombing that claimed the life of 1 Iraqi solider (three more injured).  That's 20 reported dead.  Add the 73 from the other bombings and that's 93 reported dead.


Shootings?

Laith Hammoudi (McClatchy Newspapers) reports Major Gen. Mahir Nori was shot dead in Baghdad and 2 "men working for the anti terror directorate were killed by gunmen in Saidiyah neighborhood south Baghdad".  96 is now the total reported dead today.


Corpses?

Laith Hammoudi (McClatchy Newspapers) reports
25 corpses discovered in Baghdad.  Counting corpses discovered it's 121 reported dead today.



Today the US military announced: "Three Multi-National Division - Baghdad Soldiers were killed and six others wounded when an explosively formed penetrator detonated near their patrol during combat operations in an eastern section of the Iraqi capital July 31."  And they announced: "A Multi-National Division-Baghdad Soldier was killed by small arms fire during combat operations in an eastern section of the Iraqi capital July 31."

This brings the ICCC totals for number of US service members killed in the illegal war since it started in March 2003 to 3657 and the number of announced deaths for the months of July thus far to 78 making July 2007 the deadliest July for US
troops since the start of the illegal war. The first July (2003) saw the deaths of 43 US troops, July 2004 saw 54, July 2005 also saw 54 and July 2006 saw 43. With 77 announced deaths thus far, this was the deadliest July of the illegal war for US troops. 

Which we repeat because Big Media largely missed that pointAmy Goodman (Democracy Now!) shared reality this morning, "U.S. commanders meanwhile are touting last month's US death toll as a sign of progress on the ground.  Seventy-seven servicemembers were killed in July, the lowest monthly total since November.  But the July total is also the highest over the five Julys since the U.S. invasion.  The July death toll one year ago was forty-three."

Are there more July deaths to be announced? Last week we saw deaths announced as late as four days later. It happened this week and, in fact, for the month, the standout feature about deaths was how slowly MNF announced them.
The July announced deaths is now at 78.  And the press wants to run with the nonsense that this is an improvement?  Are they serving Lt. Gen. Raymond T. Odierno?  Last Thursday, he gave the Operation Happy Talk point that the deaths were "falling" and cited the July totals as good news.  It's not.  Nor is it a sign that the escalation is working.  But notice how many outlets grabbed that talking point and repeated it today. 

Today the UK Ministry of Defence announced: "It is with much sadness that the Ministry of Defence must confirm the death of a British soldier from the 2nd Royal Tank Regiment in Basra City, southern Iraq last night, Tuesday 31 July 2007.  The soldier died as a result of injuries sustained by an Improvised Explosive Device attack which targeted a British Forces Warrior vehicle patrol that was carrying out routine duties in the Mustashfa district of Basra City."  This death brings to 8 the number of British soldiers who died in Iraq last month and brings to 164 the total number killed in the illegal war since it started.

Thank goodness we have an independent press. Thank goodness we have a press that doesn't just run with whatever talking point they are fed.

In other news, the pig who should probably be behind bars is squealing again.  Not booked on The Nation cruise -- indicating that perhaps Katrina vanden Heuvel's fine with promoting his work but doesn't wasn't associate with known pedophiles -- he kicks up his own feces at Truth Dig today.  (Link goes to Truth Dig's main page.  We do not link to that pig.) 

Looking at the comments, you will see people are shocked and outraged by the Pedophile's latest nonsense (sliming Cindy Sheehan, suggesting a National Nazi Program -- that's all his suggestion of 'national service' is, etc.).  Where the shock really should be is with those who have felt the need to promote the Pedophile.  It's a long list of people (and include Sy Hersh who went on a truck and bus tour with him repeatedly).  Whatever analysis the Pig had to offer were of no use after the illegal war started.  (Yes, he's repeatedly stated that the US will go to war with Iran -- in fact, he's offered predictions of specific time frames . . . which have all have passed.  There's your first clue about his 'analytical' abilities.)  As I stated last week, not having promoted a known pedophile, I have no blood of my hands. 


Maybe those leaving outraged comments now wouldn't be shocked by the latest nonsense if they grasped that we are talking about someone who the MSM reported was twice arrested for attempting sexual set ups with underage females?  Maybe if they made sure everyone grasped that when he was asked directly about it on CNN, he refused to discuss it and lied claiming he couldn't because the records were sealed (as the defendant, he could speak in this matter, sealed or unsealed records).  So the MSM washed their hands of him (rightly) and that had nothing to do with Judith Miller, it had to do with the fact that someone twice arrested for attempting sexual relations with underage females -- a CRIME -- isn't someone to shore up or go rushing to.  But small media picked him up, propped him up and acted as though existing reports of the two arrests didn't exist.  Which makes you question their committment to their own audiences?

So the Pedophile wants to explain that Cindy Sheehan's a distraction, David Swanson's a distraction, Hurricane Katrina is a distraction . . . everything's a distraction.  Except himself.  And John Conyers!  Conyers is "one of the strongest antiwar advocates in the U.S. Congress".  Well no wonder the country's in trouble!  John Conyers isn't an advocate for anything these days.  He is hemmed in and allows himself to be hemmed in.  (I don't expect the pedophile to know Congress.  Most members refuse to meet him.)  He gets in the sexist slame that Sheehan lacks "grace".  What does he know about grace?  Or is he confusing grace with the leniancy he was shown in his pedophile busts?



When the pig first took his attacks on Sheehan public, we called it out (over a year ago) and noted that he wants to turn to the peace movement into the military with himself as commander.  In fact, he earned his own special spot in "2006: The Year of Living Dumbly" (he really earned it):

Another low happened when The Nation, Democracy Now! and about every left and 'left' outlet decided to continue to give a platform to the man they portray as a Cassandra but whom the mainstream media has noted was twice arrested in stings to capture sexual predators. As Chrissie Hynde once sang in "How Much Did You Get For Your Soul," "How much did you, How much did you, How much did you get?" He went around the country with Seymour Hersh slamming the peace movement (and wanting to turn it into the military -- presumably with himself as commander), he ridiculed and mocked Cindy Sheehan in an independent weekly, and despite that, despite the mainstream media's reports of two busts for seeking out sex with underage girls online, he was given a platform repeatedly.

He's a moron and disgusting trash.  And he's selling "mandatory national service" like a good little Nazi today much to the shock of many commenting.  They should be more shocked that a KNOWN PEDOPHILE can get away with penning statements about what "legally, morally and structurally binds our nation together" becuase, if the MSM coverage is to be believed, were it not for backdoor deals (that led to some firings), the Pedophile would be behind bars where his CRIMINAL ASS belongs.  The Pedophile calls Cindy Sheehan's actions "self-destructive".  That's rich -- a pedophile wants to speak of destruction.  Reality is that the trash should have been carried to the curb.  Reality is that the MSM did.  It's independent media that's decided a PEDOPHILE is just, apparently, what the world needs now. 

And it's time to start demanding accountability from small media.  I don't tolerate pedophiles, I have no idea why The Nation, Truthdig and others are welcome to give them a 'pass.'  I doubt they'd give the same pass to Mark Folely but the objects of his affection were male.  (And it should be noted, Folely does not appear to have attempted anything with anyone under 18 which means he is not a pedophile.)  With the Pig, apparently Small Media is saying that it's perfectly understandable for those things to happen.  Two busts being reported and the perv refusing to respond to the reports is okay.  It's not okay.

But it allows him to trash Cindy Sheehan yet again.  And laugh as the twice busted pedophile wants to warn Sheehan's about to destroy "whatever vestige of credibility is left to her as a mainstream activist."  This from the Pedophile who has no mainstream outlet because -- unlike Small Media -- MSM was firm in refusing to air the opinions of a Pedophile. 

He's never liked Sheehan  -- though he pretends today he liked the summer 2005 actions when the reality is he was trashing her at the start of 2006 and trashing the same actions he now pretends to like.  Pedophile could never like the Peace Mom.  She is a "mom."  She's a mother.  A wounded mother grieving over her child.  Pedophiles need to divorce their victims from any sort of relations other than objects for the pedophile's perversion.  Mothers are very scary to pedophiles.

He's a pedophile, he's a right-winger and he can't shut up about "anti-war."  He's trashed Cindy Sheehan repeatedly.  Why the left wants to embrace him is anyone's guess.  But we don't embrace pedophiles.  A good question to ask now is why others on the left continue to give him an outlet?  Non Credo's remarks stand out among the ones read to me over the phone.  From the opening of Non Credo's comments: "How dare ____ smear Sheehan as a 'narcissist.'  ____  wants to pose in contrast as the 'manly man'.  It's sexist and crass.  It's ____ who's preening here, in his pretty uniform.  And ___, this idea is nuts.  If Bush had us all in his army, we'd all have to shut up, the way he shuts up anybody now serving, on the excuse of military necessity."

Avoid the Pedophile.  But call him out if you see him around children -- especially girls.

Finally, as Amy Goodman (Democracy Now!) noted today, the Oil Ministry in Iraq has put in a place a ban on anyone dealing with the oil unions in Iraq who went on strike in opposition to the theft of Iraqi oil.


Posted at 06:15 pm by thecommonills
 


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