The explanation is to be  found not in the "razor thin" majority that the Democrats have in Congress --  that never stopped the Republican Party from forcing through its right-wing  agenda when it held the leadership -- but in the class nature of the Democratic  Party and the character of the war itself.   
 It's the craven nature that allows elected Democrats to think they can  continue to fool their constituents into thinking they any any way stand for  peace and/or rationality.  It's what allows the always embarrassing Nancy Pelosi  and Barbara Boxer to do what they did today.  No, not the hair.  But please,  please, let's get a rule in place.  If you're not an entainer and you're over  70-years-old, you wear you real hair in public, not bad wigs that you hope make  you look '40-ish.'  And Barbara, after we can all agree on that, let's do  something about the racoon eye-liner you favor, okay?  Members of Congress  should look age-appropriate, not as though they're aging sex pot left over from  a 60s Matt Helm film.  There is something truly sad about supposedly powerful,  supposedly mature women who turn themselves into objects of scorn and ridicule  in the mistaken belief that they can shave multiple years off.  That  self-deciption is probably in part why 
Carla Marinucci (San Francsico Chronicle)  can report that Babsie and Nance came out today in favor of the  unconstitutional attack on Libya -- it is an attack on Libya, not on the leader,  get real, those bombs fall on people. As 
John V. Walsh (Antiwar.com) notes today,  "Partisan considerations should not impede the move to impeach Barack Obama.   When George W. Bush was president, many on the Democratic Party Left called for  his impeachment.  They must do the same for President Obama who has more clearly  violated the Constitution than President Bush since he did not even seek the  dubious Congressional 'authorization' which George W. Bush asked for and  received.  If the Left cannot do this, its credibility will be in shambles, and  quite deservedly so.  On the other side clearly there is reason  to 
indict Bush, and some on the Left are calling for that as are  certain authorities in European countries where the former President dare not  go.  But at the moment Barack Obama is in charge and capable of greater damage  if he is not stopped by impeachment.  Impeachment of Barack Obama can no longer  be avoided."  Unless you're Katrina vanden Heuvel, a hopeless hypocrite who is  unable to call out the continued Iraq War.  Falls silent on the topic even on  the 8th anniversary.  Shameful.
 
   On this day last year, Spc. Derrick Kirkland, who I served on a tour in  Iraq with, hanged himself in his barracks room. He was found dead on March  20th.
This date also marks the date of the brutal invasion and occupation  of Iraq by the United States. These two dates now mark two specific but not  isolated atrocities committed by this government.
Derrick Kirkland was  killed by this government -- for sending him to a war we had no reason to fight,  then neglecting him when he asked for help.
He was in Iraq on his second  tour and was sent home early because the pains of PTSD and other issues were to  much to bear alone. Kirkland had tried three times before to kill himself.  Despite 3 suicide attempts, Army psychologists labeled him a "low" risk for  suicide. He was ridiculed and mocked by his chain of command, who then placed  him in a barracks room by himself. He was there only 3 days before he took his  life.
As someone who has battled though the Army medical system, I can  tell you that it is not designed to help anybody. In fact, it sets up barricades  to ensure soldiers stay in the military, despite seeking help. There are only a  fraction of the number of psychiatrists that are needed. Appointments are months  apart and treatment is reduced to nothing more than "checking boxes" to make  soldiers legally ready for another deployment. Kirkland is not an isolated  incident. In 2009 and 2010, more soldiers killed themselves than were killed in  combat in Iraq and Afghanistan. Soldiers are killing themselves on an average of  one per day.
If you want to know how much our chain of command cares  about us, just look at what our executive officer Major Keith Markham, in memos  he sends to other officers: "We can accomplish anything we put our minds to ...  with an endless amount of expendable labor." The "expendable labor" this officer  is speaking about is Derrick Kirkland, and every other soldier who has lost  their life to suicide, and in combat.
Officers build their careers off of  the backs of enlisted soldiers. Officers like Major Markham, General Petraeus,  and everyone in the Pentagon, don't care about its soldiers -- our friends,  loved ones, husbands, daughters, sons and wives. If this government does not  care about its own soldiers then why would we even begin to think it cares about  "liberating" peoples of another nation? This is why we say 'this is not our war'  and service members have an absolute right to refuse orders to Afghanistan and  Iraq!
We can stop these wars, but we need each other to do it. Those of  us who mourned Kirkland's death, those of us who were sent to die in these wars,  we know that this government cares nothing about us; we're just the cannon  fodder in their wars for the rich. Those experiences have woken us up, and we  are fighting back, and we will fight back until we stop these criminal wars!  
   
 
 It's a shame that the all the real leaders are outside of Congress. But  apparently it's an unwritten law that Congressional critters must be de-spined  before taking their oath of office.
 While they pretend otherwise, Iraq faces many problems as a result of the  ongoing war.  
This month's Iowa Insights podcast  offers a look at life for Iraqi Sabah Hussein Enayah who is attending the  University of Iowa's graduate program.  Excerpt:
 
 Iowa Insights:  Sabah Hussein Enayah dreams of a safer,  healthier future for her war torn country.  That's why the thirty-one year old  boarded a plane and traveled more than six thousand miles from Iraq to Iowa. [.  . .]  Enayah is one of the first five Iraqi students who arrived in the fall of  2010 on the University of Iowa campus. She is part of an estimated 80 Iraqi  students nation wide participating in an educational initiative funded by the  Iraqi government.  Enayah heard about the program from a friend while working as  a lecturer at Thi Qar University [in Dhi Qar]. She lived with her husband and  two sons in Dhi Qar City, Basra, a region in southern near the Iraq Iraq-Kuwait  border with spotty internet access. It took Enayah a dozen tries to apply for  the program. Then she traveled five hours by car twice for an English test and  an interview
  
 Sabah Hussein Enayah: I went to Baghdad to-to interview. I go to  interview because my husband, official, and he can't come withme .And my kids  stay home. Baghdad very dangerous, explosions, risk. I can't take my kids with  me. I went alone. [. . .] I met interview in Baghdad Thursday.  And go back to  my city after two days.
  
 Iowa Insights: Enayah waited and wondered for months. She became  pregnant with her third child.  And finally, the good news had arrived. She had  been selected. She arrived on the UI campus in August along with four male  students from Iraq. They have become good friends although none of them had met  before arrving in Iowa.  The students received scholarships from the Iraqi  government which covers tuition, room and board, medical insurance and benefits.  They were selected through a highly competitive, merit based process.  The  process ensured representation across ethnic, regional, religious and gender  lines. No easy task in a country that has long been divided along these  demographics.  Enayah and her colleagues were conditionally accepted into  different graduate programs.  [. . .]  This pilot program is designed to  cultivate the next generation of Iraqi leaders to help stabilize the country and  address the pressing issues facing Iraqis. In particular, Iraqis in the region  where Enayah lives experience high rates of cancer.  She'd like to use her  expertise in histology, the study of the microscopic anatomy of cell tissues to  change this.
  
 Sabah Hussein Enayah: I hope to improve our situation in Iraq. I  want to open the lab, special lab, to make the test of hormones, of blood, of  anything to help my population in my city because in my city we have [. . .]   suffering from cancer. We have every day some suffering from cancer. Each  organ. Liver, and heart, lung, breast.  
  
   
 Scott Horton:  This is a very hard hitting piece there in the  American Conservative magazine which is the flagship magazine of the anti-war  right in this country and often times it's worth reading in depth but this  article was really great and especially timely since it's now the 8th  anniversary of the invasion of Iraq.  And primarily this article is concerned  with the pollution of various kinds and the disastorous effects that this  pollution has had for the people of Iraq.  So that, I think as you even say in  the piece, "Even though the American people would prefer to just pretend the  Iraq War is ancient history or something, it's still going on for the people  there." Can you tell us a little bit about the consequences and maybe some of  the likely causes that we're talking about here?   
  
  
 Kelley B. Vlahos: Sure.  I mean I -- I basically would call this if  you're going to look at something that crystalized the US invasion of Iraq, I  would say this is the greatest, you know, singular example of the tragedy of our  invasion of Iraq -- if not the thirty year relationship we've had, the US has  had with Iraq. This was a very difficult piece to write. But just to drill down  a bit, basically it talks about the impact of, like you said, the pollution --  the impact of 30 years, really of war in Iraq beginning with the Iran and Iraq  war in which we supplied monetarily and with weapons Saddam Hussein in the Iraq  war  and against Iran in which thousands and thousands of pounds of munitions  were dropped, tanks and chemical weapons.  Then you fast forward to the Persian  Gulf War, another anniversary that was reached this week, the end of the Persian  Gulf War 1991in which, again, we used heavy artillery and tanks notably with  depleted uranium that still sits out in the deserts of Iraq.  And then the more  recent US invasion of Iraq and the last 8 years. So the impact of that on the  landscape of Iraq has been devestating.  And the greatest example we have right  now is the increase of birth defects in places like Falluja, for example, and  Basra which were very, very heavily hit -- both in this war, specifically  Falluja, and in the Persian Gulf War, Basra.  And what they're finding in a  recent study that I -- that I mention in the piece, in Falluja they, scientists,  have determined a 15% incident rate of birth defects among babies born in their  General Hospital in 2010.  And to sort of bring this into perspective, you know,  an estimated 3% of every live birth in the US is effected -- is effected by  birth defects and 6% worldwide.  So we're talking a huge, auspicious number  here.  We're talking birth defects --  
  
 
Scott Horton: Well hold on a second, Kelley.  I was going to  say if -- if people have young kids riding along in the back of the minivan  right now, you might want to turn it to music before Kelley starts describing  some of the birth defects we're talking about being found at the Falluja General  Hospital.  
  
  
 Kelley B. Vlahos: Oh, yeah.  I mean, as a mother, this is a  particular difficult story for me to do because every time that I went to do  research, Googling "birth defects Falluja" I would indiscriminately get  photographs of these babies that were born and we're talking everything from  congenital heart defects to what you would call skeletal malformations which  could be pieces of the skull missing, missing eyes, missing limbs, additional  limbs where there shouldn't be limbs, babies who are just lying there lifeless  and limp because their heads are three, four times the size they should  be. Things that you don't even want to see or ever hope to see, that will give  you nightmares at night. And there are pictures and pictures and examples upon  examples on the internet that, you know, I think most of us would probably --  not ignore, but never see unless we were investigating it ourselves.  And this  is sad because the evidence is there and we have basically, like you said  earlier, have decided that the war is over but this is occuring.  And they're  looking for help and their own government isn't giving them help and we  certainly aren't doing it.  Now what are the causes?  This is -- this is the big  investigation that's going on.  There's been -- There's many theories.  One  being that depleted uranium that I had mentioned earlier. Our depleted uranium  basically is -- is a dense heavy metal that is used in both an armored plating  on our tanks as well as in our munitions.  Now the extent of how much we've used  in this war is pretty much a secret because the military knows it's  controversial.  It's been controversial since the Persian Gulf War when it was  used and our own soldiers were being exposed to it in friendly fire fights with  tank battles. And they came home and complained of all sorts of illnesses but  also birth defects in the babies that their wives were having.  There had been  many studies and many surveys done but the Department of Defense -- surprise,  surprise -- has denied that depleted uranium has anything to do with incidents,  increased incidents, of cancer birth defects among our soldiers so you can  imagine that they don't want anything to do with anything that's happened among  Iraqis. But anyway, so the use of depleted uranium is controversial but they're  still using.  The Air Force uses it, the Army, the Marines.  And in places like  Falluja which had been unbelievably pounded by US air power during 2004 and 2005  if you can remember, this was a big hot bed of Sunni resistance.  They were the  ones that hung the Blackwater contractors off the bridge, the Sunnis in  Falluja.  And so the Marines went in there and basically tried to basically  restore order there, to take it out of control of the insurgents' hands.  They  managed to do that.  They put -- They put the security in the hands of local  uh-uh Fallujans and left and then they had to come back after George Bush -- the  minute George Bush was re-elected in 2004.  He -- He started another air  campaign.  So we're basically talking about large areas of the city just  leveled.  We're talking about GPS guided bombs just like plucking buildings out,  plucking insurgents out.  You know strafing going on.  I mean, just -- you can  imagine.  Looking at pictures of Falluja today, it's a wasteland. But they  managed to "pacify" them in the end.  But anyway, so what's left there? And we  can only imagine.  So the babies that are being born today are, like I said, 15%  of them in 2010 were being born with these birth defects.  Is it the depleted  uranium?  Is it the fact that there's no sewage or clean water in Falluja? All  sorts of -- I mean, the burning of the trash on the forward operating base, a  little bit about that in the article. So we basically destroyed the ecology  of Iraq.  But we need to find out exactly what's causing the birth defects and  also the high levels of cancer among Fallujans as well as the people in Basra  which I mentioned earlier was also heavily hit too.  The studies are there but  they need the help not only to bring it to light and to do something about it.   And we are-are so far ignoring the plight of these people.  For all obvious  reasons. It is -- It is an embarrassment and a humiliation.  And it is anathema  to everything we were told: we went into Iraq to save and to liberate these  people.
  
   
 The much celebrated withdrawal of the last  U.S. "combat" forces from Iraq has come and gone and yet 50,000 U.S. soldiers  remain. It defies common sense to define elite units of Special Forces soldiers  as "non-combat," but that's not stopping the Pentagon or White  House.
Many of the departed soldiers  have been replaced by private contractors and the cost of our occupation is  shifting from the Pentagon to the State Department. The U.S. embassy is the same  size as Vatican City and rivals any palace estate of the previous regime. It is  our own unique symbol of power.
The  Iraqi government we protect has recently turned to violence to put down  protesters trying to exercise the political freedom that we claim our very  presence provides. As they say in Iraq, same donkey, different  saddle.
 Meanwhile 
Raman Brosk (Zawya) reports, "The  National Coalition (NC) said Wednesday that the delay in voting for the deputies  of the president was due to political necessities that emerged from the previous  stage, while the Iraqiya list headed by Allawi assure that it didn't cause any  delay in voting for the deputies. The Iraqi parliament postponed last month  voting for the deputies of the president of the Republic because of the dispute  over Khudair al-Khuzaie who was nominated for the post by Maliki's coalition."  The Constitution of Iraq is very clear that, should something happen to the  President, the vice president (the Constitution allows for two vice  presidents) replaces the president and Parliament then elects a new president  within 30 days.  If there's no vice president, the Speaker of Parliament becomes  president while waiting for Parliament to elect one in thirty days.  Thirty days  appears to be the most Constitution waits for an office to be filled. That's  Article 75.  Article 138, Second, section A makes clear that the vice presidents  are supposed to elected at the same time as the President.  
November 11, 2010, Parliament elected Talabani  for another term as president.  Four months and thirteen days later, they still  haven't elected a vice president.  Do you wonder why Iraqis are upset with their  do-nothing government?  And Iraqis voted March 7, 2010.  It is one year and 17  days after the elections and their country still has no vice presidents.   Meanwhile Jalal's 77-years-old, has serious heart problems (and has had heart  surgery), regularly stops in at the Mayo Clinic to have his arteries 'cleaned'  while binging on saturated fat rich foods at every meal.   You think the country  doesn't need vice presidents?
 
 In Cabinet news, 
Dar Addoustour reports that Iraqi  List MP Nahida Daini states Khalid al-Obeidi will be the nominee for Minister of  Defense.
 Al  Mada reports that the National Council appears dead. This was  the body that Joe Biden and the Kurds pushed in an attempt to end the political  stalemate. Ayad Allawi, whose political slate won the most votes in the March 7,  2010 elections, would be put in charge of the newly created security body in  exchange for Nouri al-Maliki being allowed to continue as prime minister.  Apparently everyone was willing to play stupid or else they honestly didn't  suspect Nouri might not live up to his word. Allawi walked out of Parliament the  day the deal was formally announced and was right to. When Nouri refused to  address the National Council immediately, it was clear (check the achives) that  he was not going to create the body. And so he hasn't.
Allwai washed his  hands of it weeks ago and announced he would not seek to head the non-existent  body. He's now been angling for the post of Arab League president. 
Tim Arango (New York Times) notes that the  rotating presidency of the Arab League will go to Iraq and that has some in  government excited about the mark Baghdad might leave. Arango observes, "Iraq,  with a democracy imposed by American force, is still a volatile tableau from  which to draw lessons about how to establish a democracy in the Middle East.  Insurgent attacks occur daily. Its prime minister, Nuri Kamal al-Maliki, has  raised alarms recently with moves to consolidate power over the judiciary and  the security forces. Transparency International ranked Iraq as the fourth most  corrupt country in the world last year, just ahead of Afghanistan, Myanmar and  Somalia. Iraq is still more violent for civilians than Afghanistan, and American  soldiers still die here, as one did Sunday from a roadside bomb in the  south."
 
  
 Al Mada reports the announcement  that militia groups will lay down their weapons. The announcement comes as a  wave of assassination attempts plague Iraq and, the paper notes, as Moqtada  al-Sadr's bloc attempts to install Ahmed Chalabi as Minister of the Interior.  Which militia groups? It's not being announced. 
Alsumaria TV adds,  "Representatives of armed factions who held an extended meeting with government  representatives at the National Reconciliation Ministry affirmed that the reason  for handing arms is the commitment to the agreement with the US that stipulates  mainly the withdrawal of US Forces from Iraq. Iraq's National Reconciliation  Ministry declined to name the armed groups for security reasons. None of these  factions is related to the defunct Baath Party, the ministry said." 
BNO notes, "A number of armed  groups inside Iraq, in its capital of Baghdad and other provinces of Salahaddin,  Kirkuk, Diala and Mosul, have decided to throw their arms. They exceed five  groups, which did not attack Iraqi citizens." 
Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) quotes Amer  Khuzaie, the Minister of State for National Reconciliation, "The national  reconciliation is only with armed groups who carried weapons against the  occupiers and not against Iraqi people." So there you have it: Groups have laid  down arms. We can't know which groups. It would endanger them. But take the  Iraqi government's word for it, progress is being made. No doubt just like in  2007 when Nouri was claiming huge progress was being made on providing  electricity. 
Al Rafidayn notes criticism that  claims this is an agreement between Dawa (Nouri's political parties) and the  Ba'ath Party.
   There's much more to note -- I'll try to grab religious issues tomorrow --  but I want to note an upcoming radio program and we're trying to note one  announcement every day until April 7th.  First radio.  
Peace Mom Cindy Sheehan  notes that she will interview US House Rep Dennis Kucinich on her  radio program 
Cindy  Sheehan's Soapbox this Sunday:
I gave up on Robber  Class politics a long time ago and I think that most politicians are motivated  by cynicism and greed, and many of my supporters and comrades will tell me that  Dennis is a shill to keep the antiwar segment of the Democratic Party tied to  the party -- and I think they could be correct -- but Dennis will stand up for  peace and against blatant power grabs no matter who is president. In fact, he  and Ron Paul of Texas and Walter Jones of North Carolina (both R's) just  co-sponsored a bill to have the troops out of Afghanistan by the end of this  year -- it failed, but it got 28 more votes than last time. It might all just be  a charade, but I also know that there is no great movement of civil society  pushing hard to make Congress defund the wars to end them -- it's just not  there. We are failing, too. 
 
 
 Of course, I would be  thrilled if Dennis would leave the Democratic Party and become a Green, or  Independent, like Bernie Sanders of Vermont, but we need his voice where it is,  for now. 
 
 
 LISTEN TO THE SHOW SUNDAY AT 2PM (PDST), BESIDES  DENNIS, MY GUEST ALSO WILL BE HISTORIAN, THADDEUS RUSSELL, WHO WROTE A  FASCINATING BOOK CALLED: A RENEGADE HISTORY OF THE US.  THAD ALSO GOES OFF ON OBAMA'S INSANE POWER GRAB. 
    
 The deadline for eligible service members, veterans and their  beneficiaries to apply for Retroactive Stop Loss Special Pay (RSLSP) has been  extended to April 8, 2011, allowing personnel more time to apply for the  benefits they've earned under the program guidelines.  The deadline extension is included in the continuing resolution  signed by President Obama Friday, providing funding for federal government  operations through April 8, 2011.
 Retroactive Stop Loss Special Pay was established to compensate for  the hardships military members encountered when their service was involuntarily  extended under Stop Loss Authority between Sept. 11, 2001, and Sept. 30, 2009.  Eligible members or their beneficiaries may submit a claim to their respective  military service in order to receive the benefit of $500 for each full or  partial month served in a Stop Loss status.
 When RSLSP began on Oct. 21, 2009, the services estimated 145,000  service members, veterans and beneficiaries were eligible for this benefit.  Because the majority of those eligible had separated from the military, the  services have engaged in extensive and persistent outreach efforts to reach them  and remind them to apply. Outreach efforts including direct mail, engaging  military and veteran service organizations, social networks and media outlets,  will continue through April 8, 2011.
 To apply for more information, or to gather more information on  RSLSP, including submission requirements and service-specific links, go to  http://www.defense.gov/stoploss.