So the year's ending and we've got a party going on but I broke away to just offer a year-end thought or two.
I want you to think about how we entered 2009? In 2008, the fall actually, we learned the economy was entering the depression. And we were told that TARP (which Barack supported and strong-armed the Congressional Black Caucus into supporting) would help fix it. And to stay hopeful. 2009 started and things were worse than ever.
Now 2009 is ending and we're again being told that the economy's going to get better.
Going to.
We heard going to all year long. It never did.
But there was always money to bail out Big Business. And Barack could ignore veterans issues and a hundred other things to get Congress to turn us all into customers for Big Insurance -- and if we're not we'll be fined.
He was real good about forking our money over to Big Business. He just didn't do a damn thing to help the average American.
When someone tells you the economy is "going to improve," just treat it as a punch line and laugh. You'll be much happier.
This is C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot" for Thursday:
| Thursday, December 31, 2009.  Chaos and violence continue, questions are  being raised in Iran and England about the release of a British hostage,  questions in the US seemingly don't exist, can you be commander in chief while  sending the message that you don't take seriously the loss of US troops, a new  poll finds the bulk of Americans see no improvement in Iraq in the coming year,  and more. Peter Moore is alive.  Alan McMenemy's status is unknown. The same as it  was during yesterday's snapshot.  May 29, 2007, the two men  were kidnapped at the Ministry of Finance in Baghdad along with three other  British citizens: Jason Crewswell, Jason Swindlehurst and Alec Maclachlan.  The  League of Righteous staged the kidnapping using official vehicles of the Baghdad  security forces and using official uniforms of the Baghdad security forces.   Moore was released yesterday, Alan McMenemy's status remains unknown and the  other three men are dead.   July 29th, the families and loved ones of the five held a press  conference.  The bodies of the two Jasons had been turned over and there were  rumors that Alan and Alec were dead as well.   Haley Williams:  These reports are the worst possible news for us  but we continue to hope that they cannot be true.  But whatever Alec's  condition, he no longer should remain in Iraq.  We appeal to those holding him  to please send him home to us.  I speak to you as the mother of Alec's son.  We  are not the people holding your men but I do understand your feelings cause  you're going through the same pain we are going through. If we had any influence  over the release of your men, we would release them to you  but we don't. Please  send him home because as a family we can't cope with this  anymore. That is what Haley Williams stated.  But, as noted in the July 29th snapshot, American audiences didn't get  to hear all of Haley's statement.  Most outlets ignored it and CNN cesnored it,  stripping out this section: "We are not the people holding your men but I do  understand your feelings cause you're going through the same pain we are going  through.  If we had any influence over the release of your men, we would release  them to you but we don't."  American audiences couldn't be told that the five  British citizens were being used as barganining chips by the League of  Righteousness.  [See Deborah Haynes (Times of  London link has text and also has video of the press conference)  report for the families statements.]  Now that's really important.  And it's important to what's happening right  now and it's important to understanding how the whole thing played out.  The  British government never wanted publicity.  They told the families -- they LIED  to the families -- that going public would risk the lives of the five.  They  weren't trying to save the five.  They never managed to, in fact.  If Alan's  alive and they save him, he'll be the first one they saved. The British government was inept and it may have been criminally  negligent.  The kidnapping was high profile and the British government --  already being run out of parts of southern Iraq with their base destroyed and  used as lumber by the Iraqi resistance -- had enough embarrassments on its  hands.  The government's request for a media blackout was never about the five  men, never about saving them.  It was always about saving Tony Blair and Gordon  Brown from any further embarrassments.  That's why Gordon Brown, current prime  minister of England, could grand stand yesterday and speak of "Peter" yet only  weeks before he refused to meet with Peter Moore's father.  They never wanted to talk about it to the media or to the families but when  they think they have a photo op Brown and his administration are all over the  press bragging and self-congratulating.  For what?  They didn't accomplish a  damn thing and shouldn't be allowed to use Peter Moore as a shield to hide  behind.  Three British citizens are dead and on one knows Alan's state. When the families held their press conference at the end of July, they did  so over the objections of the British government.  Why CNN elected to censor  what was said is a question that everyone needs to be asking and part of the  answer goes to the fact that few want to talk about how Peter Moore and three  corpses were released. From the June 9th  snapshot: This morning the New York Times' Alissa J. Rubin and  Michael Gordon offered "U.S. Frees Suspect in  Killing of 5 G.I.'s." Martin Chulov  (Guardian) covered the same story,  Kim Gamel (AP)  reported on it, BBC offered "Kidnap hope after Shia's  handover" and Deborah Haynes contributed  "Hope for British hostages  in Iraq after release of Shia militant" (Times  of London). The basics of the story are this. 5 British citizens have been  hostages since May 29, 2007. The US military had in their custody Laith  al-Khazali. He is a member of Asa'ib al-Haq. He is also accused of murdering  five US troops. The US military released him and allegedly did so because his  organization was not going to release any of the five British hostages until he  was released. This is a big story and the US military is attempting to state  this is just diplomacy, has nothing to do with the British hostages and,  besides, they just released him to Iraq. Sami al-askari told the New York Times,  "This is a very sensitive topic because you know the position that the Iraqi  government, the U.S. and British governments, and all the governments do not  accept the idea of exchanging hostages for prisoners. So we put it in another  format, and we told them that if they want to participate in the political  process they cannot do so while they are holding hostages. And we mentioned to  the American side that they cannot join the political process and release their  hostages while their leaders are behind bars or imprisoned." In other words, a  prisoner was traded for hostages and they attempted to not only make the trade  but to lie to people about it. At the US State Dept, the tired and bored  reporters were unable to even broach the subject. Poor declawed tabbies.  Pentagon reporters did press the issue and got the standard line from the  department's spokesperson, Bryan Whitman, that the US handed the prisoner to  Iraq, the US didn't hand him over to any organization -- terrorist or otherwise.  What Iraq did, Whitman wanted the press to know, was what Iraq did. A complete  lie that really insults the intelligence of the American people. CNN reminds the five US  soldiers killed "were: Capt. Brian S. Freeman, 31,  of Temecula, California; 1st Lt. Jacob N. Fritz, 25, of Verdon, Nebraska; Spc.  Johnathan B. Chism, 22, of Gonzales, Louisiana; Pfc. Shawn P. Falter, 25, of  Cortland, New York; and Pfc. Johnathon M. Millican, 20, of Trafford, Alabama."  Those are the five from January 2007 that al-Khazali and his brother Qais  al-Khazali are supposed to be responsible for the deaths of. Qassim Abdul-Zahra and Robert H. Reid  (AP) states that Jonathan B. Chism's father Danny  Chism is outraged over the release and has declared, "They freed them? The  American military did? Somebody needs to answer for it." The League of Righteous conveyed to the British government (which should be  asked about those 'channels' of communication) that as long as their leader, his  brother and other members of the League of Righteous were held in US-run prisons  in Iraq, the five British hostages would remain hostages.  That was their  demand, that was the kidnapper's ransom.  It's awfully silly for CNN to leave  that out when the families of the kidnapped are making an appeal to the  kidnappers.  It explains to CNN viewers what the kidnappers want.  But it got  censored right out of the story at the request of the White House.  CNN needs to  explain that.  They need to explain, first of all, why they're allowing the  White House or any government body to determine what they broadcast when the  First Amendment exists to make sure that doesn't happen. Then they need to  explain specifically why they were told they couldn't air any reference to  release of prisoners? In ten years, you'll probably read the whys to both in a New York  Times column because that's how CNN works.  The British government never  wanted press coverage of the kidnappings (until the poll challenged Gordon Brown  could hide behind Peter Moore like he did yesterday) and the US government  didn't want coverage after Barack Obama became president.  The Bush White House  never gave 'notes' to CNN on this story.  Not when the kidnapping took place,  not any time after.  But CNN took notes from the Obama White House including  from Barack himself.  Anyone going to get honest about that? For the British, it was an embarrassment.  Under Bush, the following was  conveyed to the British government (through various channels including the State  Dept and the White House itself): US forces will patrol and look, special forces  can be deployed for search missions, but NO Iraqi prisoners will be traded for  the British hostages.  That was the policy under Bush.  And the weak and inept  British government couldn't do a thing to save their own citizens.  With Barack,  who fancies himself President of the World and not President of the United  States, an appeal was made. The appeals started before Barack was sworn in and there's confusion as to  the dead.  It's thought, in retrospect, that when the talks began that only one  was known/assumed dead (although two on Barack transition team state it may have  been known/assumed that two were dead) but before the June release of prisoners,  it was known that three were dead and a fourth was assumed.  Before the US  released the prisoners in June, it was known that only Peter Moore might be  alive. Peter Moore is a British citizen.  It was the responsibility of the British  government to work to secure his release.  That can include asking other  governments for help.  In Barack's case?  The prisoners were responsible for a  raid on a US base and the deaths of 5 US service members.  The Iraq War had not  ended nor had the Afghansitan War.  Meaning, you still have boots on the ground,  you're still sending people over there.  As President of the United States, his  first duty was to the American people.  That includes the five US service  members who died and it includes their families and their friends.  It also  includes all of the men and women he is deploying to war zones.   Barack Obama's actions spit on the military.  There's no way to pretty that  up.  The scheme/scam never should have been entered into.  George W. Bush was,  by no means, the brightest bulb in the lamp, but even he grasped the issues on  this. Barack Obama is commander of chief of the US military.  The military's  commander made 2009 about saying that the lives of US troops do not matter.  The  actions he took state that 1 British citizen is more important than 5 dead  Americans.  He was elected to be president of the United States, it was a job he  wanted and it was a job he said he was up for.  He's clearly failed throughout  2009 at his job.  But how do you, as commander in chief, now ask any other  service member to deploy? How do you do it?  You've just 1 British life trumps five American  soldiers. How do you do it?  How you earn their trust now?  How do you tell him  the crap about fight with honor when everyone knows that the US military held  the ringleader of the attack on the US base in prison and you ordered his  release?  In the US, the media's largely avoided the story.  Despite this, when we  speak to the military or military families about the Iraq War, since July, this  topic has regularly been raised by them.  This under-reported issue of the US  release is known and discussed. Barack Obama has falsely accused the left of spitting on soldiers after  Vietnam.  Barack has a habit of accusing others of what he does.  It's called  projection and this habit became obvious during the 2008 primary campaign.   While he was making that statement this year, he had already engaged in spitting  on the troops.   Last night, Alice Fordham's "Peter Moore freed after US hands  over Iraqi insurgent" (Times of London)  reported: The British hostage Peter Moore was dramatically set free yesterday after the United States handed over an Iraqi insurgent suspected of planning the deaths of five American servicemen. Mr Moore, an IT consultant, was freed by League of the Righteous, or Asaib al-Haq (AAH) -- an extremist Shia group allied to Iran -- after 31 months and spent his first night of freedom at the British Embassy in Baghdad. He is expected to fly home today. David Miliband, the Foreign Secretary, said that officials had worked tirelessly to secure his release but strongly denied that the British Government had given ground to his captors. He said: "There were no concessions in this case. There was no -- quote, unquote -- deal." Foreign and Commonwealth Office sources confirmed, however, that the transfer from US custody a few days ago of Qais al-Khazali, a cleric and commander of AAH, helped to pave the way for Mr Moore's release. They also admitted that British diplomats had been pressing the US to hand over al-Khazali to the Iraqi administration. Today Suadad al-Salhy, Mohammed Abbas, Khalid al-Ansary, Missy Ryan, Mohammed Abbas and David Stamp (Reuters) report, "Iraq said on Thursday its judges could soon free the leader of a Shi'ite group believed to be behind the 2007 kidnapping of Briton Peter Moore if they found no criminal evidence, only a day after the hostage was released." Mona Mahmood, Maggie O'Kane and Guy Grandjean (Guardian) report: The men -- including Peter Moore, who was released yesterday after more than two years in captivity -- were taken to Iran within a day of their kidnapping from a government ministry building in Baghdad in 2007, several senior sources in Iraq and Iran have told the Guardian. They were held in prisons run by al-Quds Force, a Revolutionary Guard unit that specialises in foreign operations on behalf of the Iranian government. [.  . .]     One of the kidnappers told the Guardian that three of the Britons –  Jason Creswell, Jason Swindlehurst and Alec Maclachlan – were killed after the  British government refused to take ransom demands seriously. Part of the deal leading to the release of Moore involved the handing over of the young Shia cleric Qais al-Khazali, a leading figure in the Righteous League. Let's zoom in on the Iranian issue. First, some question the Guardian story. BBC News' Fred Gardner (link has text and video) offers, "The findings in the Guardian's year-long investigation into alleged Iranian involvement in kidnapping Britons in Iraq are being disputed by both British and Iraqi government officials. A senior Foreign Office official said that while it was 'not impossible' that the British hostages had, at some stage, been taken across the border into Iran, that did not mean the Iranian authorities themselves were behind the kidnapping. The British government view remains that there is no firm evidence to suggest Iranian government involvement." Second, whether or not the Iranian government was involved, it shouldn't be used to push for war on Iran from the US. Though war on Iran is wanted by the White House, the reality is that the Obama administration was not forced into the deal. This deal has nothing to do with the United States until Barack made the call to release the prisoners. That decision was idiotic and stupid. But he wasn't forced into it and it's not a reflection on Iran or a reason for war with them. That's why we're stressing the White House deal right now and stressing it firmly. What was a few remarks in passing to many has now become a steady drip and as more and more talk about the deal, some in the press will report it and some factions will seize upon it saying, "We must go to war with Iran!" No, that's not what it says. Iran had nothing to blackmail the US with, had nothing to force the US. Barack made the decision to release the prisoners. Don't mistake his weak actions for an attack on the US by Iran. While the government of England and Iran are in denial about what took place, notice that in the US no one's even forcing the White House to go on record. Meanwhile the world gets ready for a new year and that's true in Iraq as  well.  Jamal Hashim (Xinhua) notes wishes of  some Iraqs such as school teacher Ali Abbas, "I wish the new year will bring  peace and security improvement to my people, and I wish that all Iraqis will  take part in the vital parliamentary election which we hope it will draw better  future. I wish my people will elect the right people for the coming parliament  because we have suffered enough by the existing politicians.  The ball is in my  people's field, hopefully we will have for better future."  That wish could be  heard in any country.  Ali Abbas isn't an enemy of anyone.  The US government  declared war on Iraq and it's the Iraqis who suffer.  And the American  citizens.  The US government doesn't really suffer, now does it?  Yesterday on   KPFA's Flashpoints  Radio Nora Barrows-Friedman spoke with the program's Iraq  correspondent Ahmed Habib and we'll note a section of that (this broadcast is  archived at  KPFA and Flashpoints  Radio). Ahmed Habib: The bombings, the violence, that we witnessed today,  of course, is another chapter in the destruction of Iraq for the last seven  years.  We've seen over one million people die. Five million people have become  refugees in a record time. We see that the infrastructure of the country has not  only not been rebuilt but in fact been destroyed. The systematic theft of  Iraq by American military contractors, by a corrupt government, has really left  the Iraqi people in a situation where survival is their upmost priority.  And of  course, in contrast to that, we see an Iraqi government that seems adament at  trying to project itself as a democratic institution. We just now, of course  in  the last few months of the year the Iraqi Parliament was able to get itself  together  and pass an election law and really these elections, what they're  going to translate in terms of reality and people's lives in Iraq is that  there's going to be an increase in violence.  The way that politics under --  sort of unfolds itself in Iraq -- as perhaps not what our listeners in the  United States are used to, you know, in terms of expensive television  commercials or boring debates.  But in Iraq, unfortunately, these sort of  differences are dealt with through violence, bombings, car bombings.  And, you  know, in the last few months of the year, we saw bombings that ripped through  the heart of Baghdad and I think that's a real sign that  the election campaign  in Iraq is under way. And the Iraqi Parliament? Last week there was a session  held in the Iraqi Parliament that was going to discuss the budget for Iraq in  2010 and a whopping number of 12 members of Parliament showed up so I think it's  really indicative of how serious the Iraqi government is about governing Iraq.  Again the most important indicators of success in Iraq unfortunately are ones  perhaps that aren't found only in the number of people killed but acts of  violence are also buried in the chronic failure of the Iraqi govenrment to  provide for its people. In the city of Baghdad, the capitol city of Iraq, the  city of five million people, there is still a shortage of electricity, some  areas of the city get only up to five or six hours a day of power, there is a  complete lack of health care in a country that has already been destroyed by  over a decade of genocidal sanctions that killed over one million people. And  the lack of basic services and education and of course we've seen that Iraqi  youths wander the streets of Baghdad searching for bread crumbs, searching for  dignity and employment. And those are the real indicators that we should be  looking at -- not election dates, not how many members of Parliament are running  for which party.  That is the kind of language and discourse that the Iraqi  government, in conjunction with their American occupiers, are very busy trying  to push but the people of Iraq are very cognitive  of what the reality on the  ground is. It's corruption, it's killing, it's chaos. And although people that  have been reporting from outside of Baghdad are sort of trying to portray, have  been trying to portray, an image of relative calm and improvement in the  situation with security -- and that might be the case compared to the horrifying  conditions that Iraqis lived in at the peak of the so-called sectarin violence  in 2007 but that is not a reason or  an accurate descrition that should lead us  into a state of complacency thinking things in Iraq are heading in the right  direction.  The Constitution, which is sectarian in its most fundamental  ethos, is still at the heart of the decisions in the way that political power is  being divided.  We seethe sell off of Iraq resources in the absence of legal  mechanism to measure the transparnacye of such decision is now really being  highlighted with the dozens of oil contracts that have either been signed or  about to be signed . And I think that it important for people in the west,  particularly to our  listeners in the United States to hold their government  accountable for their war profiteering and the destruction of Iraqi society that  we're seeing. And, of course,the way to look at Iraq is not to look at it in a  vaccum but to look at it within the context of Israeli apartheid, within the  context of the occupation of Afghanistan, within the contest of the war  mongering -- the beating of the war drums with countries we're seeing like Iran,  with countries like Yemen.  And I think it's important to look at it as another  tragic episode in this so-called war on terror which is really a war of terror  itself. Nora Barrows-Friedman: That's the voice of our special  correspondent Ahmed Habib speaking to us from Doha. Ahmed, let's talk more about  the Obama administration's agendas over the past year. Obama inherited this  occupation and has only sought to expand the war budget, continue the  occupation, continue the policies of his predecessor, hire more private  contractors.  What are your biggest concerns and also what are your wildest  dreams for your country, for Iraq, as 2009 draws to a close? Talk about the  concept of revolution in a time of great suffering and deep despair in your  country.  Talk about that. Ahmed Habib: There is no doubt that the Iraqi people have a great  tradition and history of revolution. And the people of Iraq hold an immense  ability to be resisting in the face of this violence and brutality that has gone  hand-in-hand with the American occupation -- an extension, of course, of the  kind of genocide Iraqis experienced under the sanctions and of course an  extension of the genocide that they experienced under the American-sponsored  dictorship of Saddam Huseein as well. So there is no doubt that the Iraqi people  will be able to overcome these conditions and will talk later about some of the  tremendous things that are happening in Iraqi communities and the diaspora. But  I think it's important for our listeners to sort of dispell many of the myths  that had been promoted by the Obama adminstration with regards to their attempts  to "end the war in Iraq."  The Obama administration has not only inherented many  of the same policies that were adopted by the Bush administration and we saw  early on in the year the Obama administration's refusal to publish images of  people that had been tortured and de-humanized and bases that had become prisons  throughout Iraq and of course in Afghanistan as well.  But we also saw the  emergence and sort of the truth unveiled about the Status Of Force Agreement --  known as SOFA in the American media. And this agreement was, of course, was  supposed to be the agreement that would embody the withdraw of American troops  from Iraq and subsequently lead to the end the occupation. What many people  didn't know is that within this agreement there are clauses that will not only  keep permanent military bases in Iraq but will give the America the ability to  conduct military operations without the permission of the Iraqi government,  that America will control air space above a certain altitude in Iraq, and, of  course, America's political strangle-hold on the Iraqi government through, as  you were mentioning, the ascent of thousands of military contractors in Iraq,  through the privatization of the most fundamental sectors of Iraqi economy are  the real elements of the American occupation here. We see, for example in Iraq,  fundamental sectors such as agriculture and education -- ironically in a country  that invented both agriculture and education -- now being sold off to American  corporations under the guise of of American occupation.  We also heard early on  in 2003, Colin Powell speak about how NGOs are part of the American occupation  and, in fact, on the front line.  And this has become very true in Iraq as well.  And the American occupation of Iraq is perhaps no longer constituted by American  soldiers on the ground raping, killing and maiming Iraqi civilians but now has  really taken on a much scarier and more longterm identity in terms of the  strangle-hold it has on many of Iraq in terms of all the things I have mentioned  but also in terms of how Iraqi politics and the day to day running of the  government also unfolds.  Meanwhile a new Associated Press-GfK poll [PDF format warning, click here] found that 65% of respondents rate  the Iraq War as "extremely/ver important" -- the same number who stated they  oppose the Iraq War.  (5% said the illegal war was "not at all important"), only  49% approve of Barack's handling of the Iraq War (40% disapprove).  Asked if  they thought conditions in Iraq would improve in 2010, get worse or stay the  same, 53% stated things would stay the same. In other news, 5 Blackwater mercenaries received news today that  there would be no prosecutions for the September 16, 2007 massacre in Baghdad.   BBC News reports that Judge Ricardo Urbina reviewed the  evidence submitted by the prosecution and found it was built around statements  the five made to US State Dept staffers -- despite the five being told that any  statements to the State Dept would not be used against them.  There will be a  lot of disgust over Urbina's decision; however, Urbina's not the problem.  If  that was the agreement with the State Dept and that's what the prosecution  relied upon, the charges had to be tossed aside (and, like it or not, it was  fair).  The problem has to do with the decision to grant immunity to begin with  -- a decision that was called out in real time. So Donald Ball, Dustin Heard,  Evan Liberty, Nick Slatten and Paul Slough walk.  And the judge's decision was a  fair and accurate one.  After blaming Condi and others at the top of State in  2007, the blame should then go to the current Justice Dept which damn well  should have known not to use those statements.  Ball, Heard, Liberty, Slatten  and Slough start the new year with this legally behind them. | 
 
