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I love Carly Simon's music as well, so I'm happy to note it. I assume this album will be available in many locations and that may include Starbucks. I thought Carly signed with Hear Music (Starbucks label) for two albums so this would be the second.
I'm really eager to hear the album. Kat did a run down of the tracks a week or two back but I'm blanking on what the album includes. August 28th, just found it:
Now to Carly Simon who has an album coming out shortly. It's titled Never Been Gone and Carly's redoing "Never Been Gone" (which originally appeared on 1979's Spy album). That's not the only song she's redoing. She'll also redo her number one hit "You're So Vain," her Oscar, Grammy and Golden Globe winning "Let The River Run," her first hit "That's The Way I've Always Heard It Should Be," the hit she penned with Doobie Bro. Michael McDonald "You Belong To Me," her comeback hit "Coming Around Again," the rock classic "Anticipation," No Secrets' hit "The Right Thing To Do" ("You're So Vain" appears on that album as well), a Tori Amos favorite "Boys In The Trees" (title track to Carly's 1978 album) and "It Happens Every Day." I love the last song. I love all those songs. But I love the last song from 1983's Hello Big Man and am not talking about it here because we're talking about doing a Carly Simon roundtable at Third and, if so, I want to make my point during that. In addition to those songs, Carly is recording "No Freedom" and "Songbird" (the latter of which has a beat that's just staying with me -- it's not a fast song, by the way).
So that's the track list. And I'm really excited by the line up. Including "Let The River Run."
Barack's bad speech last night seems to have trouble convincing anyone judging by conversations I had today. My father found an article at WSWS by Barry Grey and I'm highlighting a section of it:
The speech was delivered under conditions of mounting popular opposition to his administration’s health care plan. An Associated Press-GfK poll released earlier on Wednesday showed 52 percent disapproving of Obama’s handling of health care, and only 42 percent approving. The same poll showed Obama’s overall approval rating dropping to 50 percent, an extraordinarily low level by historical standards for a president at this stage of his tenure.
Obama sought to counter this trend by presenting a distorted and dishonest picture of his health care plan. He stressed that it would prohibit insurance companies from denying coverage for pre-existing conditions or dropping coverage for people who became ill. He claimed it would provide government subsidies to enable most of the 47 million uninsured in the US to purchase insurance on government-established insurance exchanges.
However, he failed to mention that only families earning less than $66,000 would be eligible for these subsidies, and even with the subsidies those buying plans from private insurers on the exchanges would have to pay thousands of dollars for bare-bones plans. Tens of millions of people without insurance would get no subsidies at all under the Obama scheme.
However, they would be legally required to buy insurance. Obama demonstratively endorsed this so-called “individual mandate,” a proposal he had opposed when it was advanced during the Democratic presidential primaries by Hillary Clinton.
This is a reactionary measure. It places the onus for the health care crisis on ordinary people, rather than on the insurance companies and the government. The insurance companies—along with the pharmaceutical giants and hospital chains—are generally backing the Obama plan because it would create a huge new market and increase their revenues, while limiting their payouts by allowing them to sell inferior coverage.
Mr. Grey, Barack's plan back in early 2008 had a mandate and maybe if the press -- including the Socialists of WSWS -- had done their job, people would have grasped that. Hillary said as much to him in his last debate with her before his coward streak forced him to bow out of any more debates. She pointed out that his plan had a mandate as well and he tried to sidestep the issue, and thanks to a press that mistook itself for his fan club, he was able to.This is C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot" for Thursday:
| Thursday, September 10, 2009.  Chaos and violence continue, US Ambassador  to Iraq Chris Hill appears before Congress, election fears sprout in Iraq,  Iraq's LGBT community continues to be targeted, and more. US Ambassador Chris Hill appeared before Congress today.  He last appeared before the Senate Foreign Affairs  Committee on March 25th, back when Committee Chair John Kerry was explaining  that, if confirmed as ambassador, he would depart for Iraq "within a day of his  Senate confirmation.  Tuesday April 21st, Hill was confirmed by the  Senate.  Three days later he showed up in Baghdad.  Baby  Hill's first broken promise since becoming  ambassador. This morning, Chris Hill appeared before the House Foreign Affairs  Committee and there wasn't a great deal to that hearing.  Hill insisted that  there was joy and wonder in Iraq because Sunnis and Shia had no "risen to the  bait" of sectarian warfare.  He avoided the issue of mounting tensions between  Kurds and Arabs -- surprising when you grasp that outside observers and the top  US commander in Iraq, Gen Ray Odierno, have identified that mounting tension as  among the most pressing problems facing Iraq today.  In fact, "Analysts say tensions between Arabs and Kurds in  northern Iraq is the major threat to the country's stability and security as the  U.S. troops, which have mediated between the two sides, are prepare to withdraw  from Iraq by 2012."  That's Xinhua, we'll come back to that after  discussing the hearing. He acknowledged that "there is a risk of escalation in tensions between  Arabs and Kurds around the disputed areas in nothern Iraq."  A risk?  It's  taking place.  Hill came off like an uninformed fool in March when attempting to  speak on the issue of Kirkuk.  He was no more convincing today discussing "the  thorny dispute in Kirkuk."  What is he doing on that issue? Apparently nothing  but, he insisted, "The UN has an important role here."  Then why are you  appearing before Congress?   "There has been some good news," insisted Hill.  "Iraq statged two rounds  of successful elecitons this year -- the provincial council elections in 14 of  Iraq's 18 provinces in January, and elections for the Kurdistan Regional  Government in July."  Yes, he is that stupid.  The KRG elections allowed for 3  more provinces to vote.  And?  What of Kirkuk?  The oil-rich Kirkuk has not had  its referendum -- promised in Iraq's Constitution ratified in 2005.  There has  been no promised census.  There is no progress. And that needs to be stated clearly.  In 2007, a series of benchmarks were  created by the Bush White House to measure 'progress' in Iraq.  These were not  'longterm' benchmarks.  These were benchmarks Iraq was supposed to meet within a  year.  And never did.  And even now, as 2009 winds down, the benchmarks haven't  been met. Hill should not be allowed to cite 'progress' without defining it.  He  found time to slam the Iraqis comfort level with a Socialist economy, to preach  the marekt economy as the only way for Iraq to find stability, to prep for a  coming war with Iran (including climbing the drama cross about an Iranian rocket  landing "in the front yard of my house") and more.  James Morrison (Washington Times) reported this morning  that Hillmight face questions today regarding why he more or less ignored  ("downplayed") a letter from over "500 members of the British Parliament"  warning that Camp Ashraf residents were in danger (the residents were assaulted  July 28th).  The issue was raised by the House  Committee and Hill embarrassed himself and the country of the United States.   The assulat resulted in 11 dead, many injured and at least 36  kidnapped/imprisoned.  (Camp Ashraf residents call the 36 hostages.)  Hill  declared that Nouri has assured him the 36 won't be sent to Iran.  The MEK are  Iranian dissidents who have been in Iraq for decades now.  Saddam Hussein  welcomed them into the country. Following the US invasion in 2003, the US  protected the MEK.  Hill stated that they won't be sent back to Iran and seemed  pleased with his statement.  That's an ambassador?  When Joe Wilson was  Ambassador to Iraq, he stood up to the ruler.  Hill's couldn't have been more  ineffectual if he'd added, "Nouri and I text and i.m. all the time.  And Hoshie  Zebari is so dreamy!"  He insisted that Nouri knew the US was interested in "the  preservation of their human rights" but that appears only to apply to "Don't  send them back to Iran!"  Imprison them?  Hey, fine and dandy with Chris  Hill. Due to the differences in time limits, we'll focus on the Senate  committee.  Individuals members of the committee have more time to ask questions  on the Senate Committee.  Equally true, Hill appeared fully awake for the  afternoon session.  His hair was in disarray and he had a food stain on his  shirt (he is the Pig-Pen Ambassador), but he was awake. We'll note a lengthy section of John Kerry's opening statement: If the Iraqi public rejects the  agreement, then I believe we have no choice but to withdraw all of our forces as  quickly as we can.  This would complicate our redeployment and severely curtail  our ability to assist the Iraqi security forces and government.  But at this  point, I'm not sure how we justify asking our soldiers to stay one day longer  than necessary after being formally disinvited by the Iraqi  people.                       In a sense, the security agreement  that the Bush Administration negotiated with Prime Minister Maliki made moot the  old "should we stay or should we go" policy debate.  But even so, Iraq remains a  Rorschach test for pundits and policymakers:   On the one hand, a person can look  at the security gains since 2006 -- when sectarian violence threatened to tear  Iraqi society apart -- and conclude that Iraqis have stepped back from the  brink.  And it's true that, since the worst days of 2006 and 2007, violence has  dropped by 85 percent, even with the recent mass-casualty attacks.  American  fatalities are at their lowest rate of the war.  Al-Qaeda in Iraq, while still  deadly, is only a shadow of its former self.           There has been political progress,  as well.  In the January elections, unlike in 2005, sectarian and ethnic  identification is unlikely to be the sole organizing principle of Iraqi  politics.  The leader of the Anbar Awakening, a group that evolved out of the  Sunni Arab insurgency, has been talking openly about a political alliance with  the Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.  Such an announcement would have been  unthinkable just eighteen months ago.  Other Sunni factions are exploring a  coalition with the Kurds.  Electricity production, which had long been stalled,  quietly increased by forty percent in the last year.     That is the optimistic view.  But  one can look at the same set of facts on the ground and come to a more  pessimistic conclusion:  namely, that removing an American presence that has  been the lynchpin of the security improvements of the last few years would lead  Iraq back into a downward spiral of communal violence.       It's too soon to know whether the  rise in violence since American forces withdrew from Iraqi cities in June is an  uptick or an upswing.  Whether it is a blip or a trend, recent violence has been  troubling.  August was the deadliest month for Iraqis in more than a year. And  the devastating "Black Wednesday" bombings against the Iraqi Foreign and Finance  Ministries last month were a stark reminder that forces opposed to  reconciliation remain capable of devastating attacks that could alter the  country's direction.  The attacks were also a blow to the Iraqi people's  confidence in their security forces.  And of course, Iraq's problems don't end  there: Arab -- Kurdish tensions remain unresolved, corruption is rampant;  millions of Iraqi refugees and internally displaced persons remain far from  home, waiting to be resettled; and Iraq's relations with its neighbors are  volatile.  These are a few of the many challenges Iraq will face in the coming  years.      So which is it?  Is Iraq beginning  to unravel again, or are these just the inevitable bumps on the road toward  returning responsibility for Iraq to Iraqis?  What will happen after we leave?    We don't have definitive answers to these questions.    Ranking Member Richard Luger stated they didn't need Hill to use a crystal  ball and tell them about what would take place in 2011, that instead they need  "your best sense of how things are progressing towards that date."  And then the  floor went to Chris Hill. In the midst of reading his prepared statement -- the same prepared  statement Senator John Kerry asked him to summarize and not read in full so that  there could be more time for questions -- Hill looked around (so many rumors of  meds, so many rumors) and asked, "Is that my phone or someone else's?  Good, it's not mine."  Good.  And did  anyone else hear the ringing?  Hill returned to reading his statement.   Repeating, John Kerry told him the statement would be put into the record "as if  you read it in full" and instructed him to summarize it so there would be more  time for a discussion.  Hill just doesn't grasp events around him.  Maybe all  those ringing cell phones he hears distracts him?  Over three minutes into his  word-for-word reading of the prepared statment, Hill was greeted by a loud  throat clearing on the part of Senator Kerry.  No, he didn't take a hint.  Four  minutes in, Kerry was visibly irritated.  No, Hill didn't notice but went on  about "we need to work closely with Iraq" . . . Some might think Hill was so  dependent upon his prepared remarks because he stammers and stumbles when  speaking without prepared text.  Possibly.  But he manages to screw up even his  word-for-word reading.  And, it needs to be noted, the prepared remarks he gave  in the afternoon were pretty much the same ones he gave in the morning to the  House committee.  Kirkuk was "the thorny dispute" in both because they were the  same damn statement.  Four minutes later, Senator Kerry was again loudly  clearing his throat and Hill was continuing to speak about "a very important  day, more important than many . . ."  Over ten minutes after he was asked to  summarize and not read his statement, Hill finished reading it. Senator Kerry noted Hill "mentioned in your testimony a strengthend  civilian effort.  What do you mean by that?  We have one of the largest  embassies in the world."  Hill agreed that was true and then stated that the  embassy "will need to get smaller."  If you're confused, the committee appeared  to be so as well as Hill began speaking of having to rent apartments in Baghdad  for some staff members and putting in a partition/dry wall in one when the two  people were not married.  "But I want to assure mr chairman I want to see that  embassy smaller," he declared firmly to the puzzled stares of the committee.  Is  Hill planning to rent out the embassy conference room for small parties?  Sign  lease agreements with some of the Subway sandwich shops losing spots on bases.  [Marc Santora reported on bases yesterday, it was an article of interest but  there was no room for it in the snapshot.  Click here to read his article.] Senator Russ Feingold asked whether the US military should provide security  for embassies in war zone considering recent contractor scandals?  "Incidents do  happen," stated Hill, "everywhere."  Thanks for that explanation, Chris.  But,  "I would rather not task the military with another mission."  The US marines are  the ones who are supposed to be protecting US embassies staff in foreign  countries.  If Hill's aware of that, he gave no indication.   In replying to  Senator Feingold, Hill fell back repeatedly on some variation of, "Maybe I can  take the question and get back to you."  Even for something as basic as his own  role as supervisor as US troops draw-down.  It was rather sad. And what of 'progress'?  Senator Kerry observed, "We've been sitting on  this committee listening to this talk -- I can remember Senator Rice [. . .]  testifying to us three or four years ago, saying the oil law is almost done."   And it wasn't and it isn't.   "I went out there with the expectations that we would move on it," Hill  declared of the oil law while painting himself as Hill of Arabia.   But  now?  The issue's so much more complicated than he knew.  (Over his head?)  The  law has many parts: "revenue sharing, institution building".  And no luck on  it.  "We have tried to break it down," Hill shrugged.  " I think that getting  the economy there operating [. . .] is eseentital to the future of that country  and frankly we cannot be funding things that should be funded by the Iraqis and  would be funded" if the oil law was in place.  Senator Corker wanted to know  "how long as a country that we are supporting Iraq financially?" Hill agreed,  "They should be able to pay their own bills.  There's no question that they  should pay their own bills."  But? They need financial support, Hill said, and pinned it on pre-Saddam era,  going back to the British occupation (which he named and fingered) and Iraqis  'fear' of turning over assets "to foreigners  to development.  So they've got to  get over that."  Oh do they?  They have to get over that.  Hill said that Iraqis  have to get over that?  And he's the ambassador to Iraq? The oil draft law (aka Theft Of Iraqi Oil)?  "I think realistically  speaking," Hill said indicating he had offered something other than realistic  speaking to the committee previously, "it will probably not get done before the  January elections.  So our concern is that we cannot have Iraq's future held up  or held hostage by this one particular issue." The Ambassador to Iraq made statements blaming Syria and that may have been  the most interesting of all.  "They have rightly called for their return"  declared Hill of former Ba'athists now living in Syria.  Wow.  What a difference  from mere days ago.  September 1st he appeared on WBUR's On Point with Tom Ashbrook (see Sept. 2nd snapshot for transcript of his  remarks).  From that broadcast: Jacki Lyden: We are going to take a few calls here in just a moment  but Ambassador, I would like to ask you, based on your intelligence, who do you  think is responsible for the August 19th bombings which was the worst in a very  long time?                    Chris Hill: Well I you know the investigations are very much  continuing I'm not sure I want to sort of give you a running tab of an ongoing  investigation but there are certain usual suspects here that we are  obviously looking at very closely and one of course is this al Qaeda in Iraq --  so-called AQI. Now the government has some theories that it's more complex that  you have possible ex-Ba'athist elements  You know these are also Sunni who feel  disenfranchised from the system but they're not sort of these extreme Wahhabists  Sunnis that al Qaeda draws its ranks from.  Yet there is you know talk in the  analytical community whether they're Ba'athist in al Qaeda or AQI -- I want to  stress this is al Qaeda in Iraq, a sort of franchised operation.  And there's a  lot of you know talk that perhaps they have some know -- tactical putting, you  know, putting this thing together. It's really hard to say.  What is clear  though is that for many people in this country when those terrible bombings took  place out came the fingers and pointing at each other.  And to be sure there's a  time for finger pointing, there's certainly a time to investigate and see what  failures there were in the system.  But there's also a times, as the United  States, as we know  very well in the wake of 9-11.  There is a time to come  together and one hope that that call will be better heard in Iraq. Because, uh,  it's a very rough political climate here. Again, his tune changed and he sang it repeatedly, always off-key, today.   But he found it "rather ironic" that the day before the August 19th bombings,  Nouri al-Maliki was in Syria and they had "signed a number of agreements".   That's "ironic"?  Does Chris Hill know the definition of "irony"?  Hill places  tremendous faith in Nouri's assessment of Syria and Syrian involvement because,  Hill explained, Nouri spent "18 years of his life in Syria." The issue of the Status Of Forces Agreement was raised -- Kerry raised it  first in his opening remarks -- and what would happen if it was changed in some  manner or a new agreement was done?  Hill felt he wasn't qualified to answer and  stated he would defer to the State Dept attorneys but he was of the non-legal  opinion that "we would not engage in changing the security agreement without  official consulation" with Congress. We may return to the hearing tomorrow.  If so, we'll address the nonsense  Hill offered on refugees. It was as irritating as Hill's mincing efforts to be  cute such as replying to John Kerry's question about a power grab on Nouri's  part with a rambling answer that began "In the privacy of this hearing  room". In terms of immediate concerns, it was pointed out that the elections are  scheduled for January and that Barack Obama has stated his delay (broken  campaign promise) in terms of drawing down troops is to keep troops on the  ground for that.  Hill declared, "I worry about developing the political rules  of the game and what I don't want to see is an election that resutls in six  months of government formation during which there is a loss of some of the  progress made."  He fears that following the election it will take some time  time to set up a new government.  That's not the only election fear being  expressed currently.  Catholic News Agency  reports that Father Shlemon Warduni, Auxiliary Bishop of Baghdad, is stating  the 2010 elections in Iraq have Iraqi Christians fearful of even more violence  and noted of Zakho and Amadhiya, "The lack of work is noticeable and is made  worse by the fact that many lands have been occupied by people who have come  from other areas in search of refuge. The streets are not secure and neither are  they in good condition, thus making it difficult for the people who need to find  work or to transport the infirm to move about." He could have grounded that fear in facts but, being Chris Hill, knew  none.  In the spring of 2006, when the US nixed the Iraqi's first choice for  prime minister and Nouri was proposed as the accepted candidate instead, Nouri  promised to quickly assemble his cabinet.  He didn't do that.  He was boasting  that he would do so before the official deadline and gave himself a new  deadline, an earlier one.  He missed both.  Hill was offering some nonsense  during the hearing (re: power grab) about how Nouri's cabinet is people forced  on him and blah, blah, blah.  Nouri assembled his cabinet.  Chris Hill seems as  unaware of that as he is of every other Iraq-related fact. During the Senate hearing, there were eight Camp Ashraf supporters (wearing  yellow shirts) on the row behind him -- to the left of him (his left) -- with  two on the right side of him.  Kat, Ava and Wally have a piece on the Camp Ashraf supporters  which will run in tomorrow morning's gina & krista  round-robin. In Iraq today, a village outside of Mosul was targeted.  Gina Chon (Wall St. Journal) reports the attack was a  suicide truck bombing that took place "after midnight" in Wardek village.  Hannah Allam (McClatchy Newspapers) adds, "The  bombing Thursday flattened 15 houses and damaged 40 others, trapping families  under the rubble, police said. By late afternoon, authorities said they'd  rescued all those pinned down by debris." 25 dead and forty-three wounded  says Marc Santora (New York Times) who  explains, "Wardak is a tiny village, with only about 300 houses, made mostly  of mud with wood ceilings.  Three sides of the village are protected by sand  berms, with a shallow river providing a fourth barrier.  Nevertheless, two  sucide bombers drove through the river under the cover of night, arriving  shortly after midnight, local officials said." The second suicide bomber was  shot dead by the Kurdish peshmerga.  AFP notes, "Police Captain Mohammed  Jalal said a second blast was foiled when Iraqi security forces killed a truck  driver before he could detonate explosives."  Omar Hayali and Ned Parker (Los Angeles  Times) quote wounded Hama Kaki stating, "This is the first time this  has happened in our village and we do not know why, because we are far from  areas of violence but I think that the political tensions in Mosul are the  reason.  It is the settling of accounts among the political entities, but at our  expense."  BBC observes of Mosul, "The city is also  characterized by communal strife between Kurds and Arabs and violence targeting  religious minorities.  In late 2008, the UN refugee agency reported that 13,000  Christians had been driven out of the city by violence and intimidation."  Jamal Hashim (Xinhua) offers, "The bomb  seems to be well-designed to foment up already existing tensions between Kurds  and Arabs, who are vying for land and resources. Nineveh province remains one of  Iraq's most volatile area despite the dramatic drop of violence in Iraq over the  past two years. Analysts say tensions between Arabs and Kurds in northern Iraq  is the major threat to the country's stability and security as the U.S. troops,  which have mediated between the two sides, are prepare to withdraw from Iraq by  2012." In other reported violence . . .  Bombings? Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers)  reports 2 Baghdad roadside bombings which claimed 4 lives and left  twenty-nine wounded, another Baghdad roadside bombing which targeted a police  patrol and left two of them injured (and also injured six civilians) and a  Baghdad roadside bombing aimed at a US forces convoy (no reports of any deaths  or wounded). Kidnappings? Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers)  reports Wafa Natiqu was kidnapped on her Baquba college campus today and  that she's the "daughter of the press liaison in the local government of  Baquba". Shooting? Dropping back to yesterday,  Reuters reports 2  Mosul shootings (one claimed the life of 1 civilian, the other left an Iraqi  police officer injured and the police responded shooting dead two of the  assailants). Staying with violence, yesterday's snapshot included this: "Reuters notes 1 man shot dead in Mosul, the US and  Iraqi military killed 2 males in a Baghdad 'pre-dawn raid' while 2 people were  also killed by the US and Iraqi military in another Baghdad 'operation'."  Today  Ned Parker and Usama Redha (Los Angeles Times) attempt to make sense  of the shooting deaths of Iraqis by US and Iraqi forces yeterday during a  Baghdad raid and explain, "Relatives and neighors said troops set off explosives  that knocked down the gates and doors to a home, where they detained an Iraqi  military intelligence officer and killed two civilians.  Their bodies were  discovered with dog bites and gunshot wounds on a kitchen floor, which was  streaked with blood, the witness said."  Simply shooting someone dead doesn't  generally result in a floor streaked with blood. Noticeably absent from Hill's testimony today was any acknowledgement of  the targeting of Iraq's LGBT community. At Foreign Policy, Human Rights  Watch's Rasha Moumneh covers the issue Hill couldn't or wouldn't: When my colleague and I sat down last April with Hamid, an Iraqi  man from Baghdad, his trauma-induced stutter said as much as the words he spoke.  Huddled inconspicuously in a dingy restaurant, Hamid recounted how militia  members killed his partner along with three other men, two kidnapped from their  Baghdad homes, two slaughtered in the streets. The next day, Hamid said, "they  came for me. They came into my house and they saw my mother, and one of them  said, 'Where's your fa**ot son?' My mother called me after they left, in tears.  ... I can't go home."    As the world hails Iraq's supposed return to normality, the  country's militias -- the same ones that spent years waging a sectarian civil  war -- have found a new, less apparent target: men suspected of being gay. The  systematic killings, which began earlier this year, reveal the cracks behind  Iraq's fragile calm. Iraq's leaders may talk of security and democracy from  behind barbed wire in the Green Zone, but the surge of murders against gay men  is a stark sign of how far Iraqi society still has to go.                    During a 10-day Human Rights Watch research trip to Iraq in April,  we heard harrowing stories of torture, abductions, kidnappings, extortion, and  murder. We listened to dozens of men who had faced violence at the hands of  armed militias, attacked by youths with guns for violating the unwritten codes  of Iraqi masculinity. A number of signs might implicate one as being not "manly"  enough, from neighborhood gossip that a man is gay to looking somehow effeminate  or foreign in the wrong people's eyes: wearing one's hair too long or one's  jeans too tight, for example. There is no count available for the number of  deaths since the killings began earlier this year, but one U.N. worker told us  that the victims could number in the hundreds.            As noted in the hearings today, Iraq and Syria have been in conflict as  Nouri al-Maliki's made one charge after another following August 19th's Baghdad  bombings and demanding that Syria turn over two people to Iraq (Syria says there  is no credible evidence of the two's involvement in the bombings). Yesterday at  the Arab League meeting, the issue led to charges and counter-charges. But Xinhua reports: Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem said on Wednesday that he reached an agreement with his Iraqi counterpart Hoshyar Zebari to stop media campaigns between Syria and Iraq, speed up returning ambassadors and form security committees. Al-Moallem told a joint press conference with Arab League (AL) Secretary General Amr Moussa in Arab League headquarters that he reached this agreement during a quadrilateral meeting included Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu and Moussa. The Press Trust of India adds Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa mediated the media and that he stated, "The league will maintain its good offices in coordination with all parties concerned, mainly the Turkish mediation, in order to contain this crisis." Bashar al Assa, president of Syria, will meet with Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey's prime minister, next week and the issue is expected to be addressed then. There are also rumors that Jalal Talabani, president of Iraq, will travel to Ankara for the meeting as well. We'll close with this from the Berkeley Daily Planet, World Can't  Wait's Kenneth J. Theisen calling out counter-insurgency (attacks on a  native people): One reason that Obama is likely to approve an additional troop  request is that the "successful" implementation of COIN strategy requires the  introduction of many more U.S. troops into Afghanistan. COIN strategy is troop  intensive as is indicated by the Army's new COIN manual, written in large part  by General David Petraeus. To quote the manual: "No predetermined, fixed ratio  of friendly troops to enemy combatants ensures success in COIN. The conditions  of the operational environment and the approaches insurgents use vary too  widely. A better force requirement gauge is troop density, the ratio of security  forces (including the host nation's military and police forces as well as  foreign counterinsurgents) to inhabitants. Most density recommendations fall  within a range of 20 to 25 counterinsurgents for every 1000 residents in an AO.  Twenty counterinsurgents per 1000 residents is often considered the minimum  troop density required for effective COIN operations; however as with any fixed  ratio, such calculations remain very dependent upon the situation." In 2003 the U.N estimated the Afghan population at nearly 24 million. At 20 troops per 1000 Afghan residents that would require 480,000 allied troops to meet the minimum density recommendation of the COIN manual. At 25 troops it would take 600,000 troops. Obviously to reach these numbers would require a massive troop escalation. Just like in Vietnam the rhetoric may claim the U.S. is "winning hearts and minds, but the reality is that the U.S. war of terror is killing and terrorizing people from Iraq, to Afghanistan, to Pakistan. In Vietnam 2-3 million Vietnamese died. Already there have been a million Iraqi deaths as a result of the 2003 U.S. invasion. Thousands more have died in Afghanistan since the October 2001 invasion. When do we say enough? What will you do to stop the U.S. wars? To see what you can do, please go to worldcantwait.org. | 
 
