| Friday, May 27, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, Memorial Day leads an  outlet to hop a high horse (a high horse that maybe needs to be shot), Bradley  Manning is back in the news, protests take place in Baghdad, the canonization of  Ali al-Lami continues, and more.     Today Michele Martin hops a high horse at NPR --  Memorial Day must be approaching.  Although she writes of  "two wars our nation  is fighting right now," she herself has trouble mentioning the Iraq War and it  doesn't pop up until a quote from Capt Vernice Armour and then again from  journalist Brian Palmer.  It takes nine paragraphs before Martin can mention the  Iraq War herself -- typical NPR nonsense of late.  (Writes?  Audio won't be  available until Memorial Day -- her written column is up now.)   NPR can't find  Iraq and hasn't been able to in some time.  The Diane Rehm Show used to carve  out seven or so minutes each Friday, during the second hour of the program, for  the topic.  Not anymore.  Not since January, in fact.  The Iraq War ended -- at  least Diane Rehm's interest in it did.  What is Kelly McEvers?  Why she's NPR's  Baghdad bureau chief.  And NPR's moved her to where?  Syria.  Syria.  Where US  troops aren't on the ground.  Syria.  And you wonder why you get no reports on  Iraq these days from your NPR station -- your NPR station that just got done  using Iraq in its fundraiser, insisting during its pledge drive that it provided  coverage of Iraq, coverage you couldn't get elsehwere.  Apparently they meant on  their blog The Two-Way?  (Click here.)   Memorial Day is Monday,  a day when the sacrifices of those in uniform are  supposed to be acknowledged but NPR can't even make time to acknowledge an  ongoing war.  'Oh, but it's so hard, after 8 years, to find a new way to talk  about it.'  That whine -- and I'm burning a bridge here -- came from a friend  with Diane Rehm's show.  I note that today that they had time to discuss Israel  and Palestine. That conversation predates The Diane Rehm Show -- and since no  one's really serious about solving the issue, it will likely still be discussed  constantly on NPR (constantly, if unfairly) long after Diane Rehm and I am both  dead and gone.  It's not that they can't find new ways to discuss it, it's that  the war doesn't get enough press attention for Diane and her gaggle of gas bags  to breeze through a quick brush up to get informed on the topic in less than ten  minutes.  (That is what they do.  Select the topics and all go online before  they go to live to find their talking points.  Woops, am I spilling trade  secrets?)  NPR's Michele Martin might not be standing on quick sand if her peers  did their job.  Instead, Michele's hopped a high horse with a lame leg and it's  not going anywhere.   Memorial Day will come again this year, the US will still have troops  stationed on the ground in Afghanistan and Iraq, troops still in combat --  despite the lies of the White House as evidenced by the continued attacks on US  troops in Iraq and the continued deaths.  May 30, 2010 -- the day before Memorial Day -- the US  military death toll in Iraq stood at 4400.  Last night the count stood at 4457.  That's 57 deaths that  really haven't registered.  That's [PDF format warning] 36  deaths, according to the Defense Dept, since the 'end' of combat operations  announced by Barack Obama on August 31, 2010.   Michele Martin's not aware of those facts.  She's not aware of a lot.  She  should be aware that her own NPR program -- Tell Me More -- can't find Iraq.   That war that takes her nine paragraphs to mention herself doesn't show up on  her show.  That would be the same show that 'informs' us of such important and  life shattering stories as "O Magazine Staff Excited About Oprah Winfrey's  Future," "O Magazine To Evolve, Collaborate With Oprah Winfrey Network" and "The  Ups, Downs Between Iyania Vanzant And Oprah Winfrey" -- all of those 'reports'  aired on Tell Me More's Wednesday broadcast. We'll be kind  and call those "advertorials" -- they certainly weren't reporting.  Prior to  that 'reporting,' this week saw Suze Orman singing Oprah's praises for six of  Tell me More's minutes while Dr. Phil was given over 12 minutes by the program  to sing Oprah's praises.   I'm sorry, what war did Oprah die in?  Battle of the Bulge?  Charge of the  TVQs?  Memorial Day is one day in the year.  And Michele Martin thought she  could get on high horse for that.  After a week of wasting her time and listners  time over a faded TV personality (check the ratings, check O's circulation)  packing it in before the ratings dropped further.  Oprah's departure to cable  was treated as more important than the country's ongoing wars and something  requiring daily coverage and updates.  Michele Martin and NPR owe the listeners  a huge apology.     Lance Cpl Tim Horton: I have worked hard to ensure my injuries and  other people's perceptions of them do not define my way of life or limit what I  am able to accomplish.  Receiving timely and quality prosthetics care is  instrumental to maintaining my activity level.  The quality of care I have  received through the Oklahoma City VA Medical Center is outstanding.  VA  contracts with a number of prosthetic specialists who are familiar with cutting  edge prosthetic technology and are able to outfit me with the devices I need to  maintain a high level of physical activity. Most importantly, my prosthetics  provider has really taken the time to understand who I am as a whole person --  not just a wounded warrior -- and how that shapes my medical needs.  So while  the quality of care I am receiving is very good, the process of going through  the VA to receive those benefits takes far too long.  When I need adjustments or  replacement equipment, I must schedule an appointment with the medical center to  be seen by a member of tehir prosthetics team who will then write the  prescription to the provider, further delaying my ability to get an appointment  and ultimately receive the adjustments or equipment I need.  Why is this the  case?  I know other veterans who live in close proximity to Walter Reed who are  able to walk in and out with the services and equipment they need within the  same day, all without ever needing to go through their local VA.  It would make  sense to me if I were able to see my prosethetics specialist first, who could  then communicate with VA about what I need and get the authorization,  eliminating the wait time for an appointment. While waiting weeks for an  appointment might seem like a minor inconvenicence, for a warrior like myself,  spending weeks without the necessary prostehtics equipment, or sometimes even  worse equipment that causes extreme discomfort and other medical issues, can be  sholly disruptive to our daily lives.  The timeliness and consistency of care  should not be a function of where warriors happen to live.  The most important  thing I have learned in navigating my own transition and helping my peers  through their own journey is that you must act as your own advocate.  There are  so many programs and benefits available to assist us, yet often we are never  informed of these programs or the information is delivered in a time and place  that is not conducive for wounded warriors to absorb it.  We receive so much  information at the time when we are newly injured.  When I was brought to  Behtesda, I was completely reliant on my mother as my caregiver.  It took me two  and a half months to regain the ability to feed myself.  My sole focus was on my  physical recovery.  It was impossible for me to take in the vast amount of  information coming at me during that time, I understand that since I have been  injured the Federal Recovery Coordination Program has been put into place for  severely wounded warriors to assist with this challenge.  This is not a program  I benefited from, nor did I know of its existence before preparing for my  testimony here today.  What I do know is that warriors need real help in  discovering what benefits exist and how to utilize them so that they can thrive  in their lives post-injury.  Other veterans are out there spreading the word,  but no one from VA is reaching out.  That needs to change.  I have spent the  last several years sharing the knowledge I've gained through my own recovery and  plan to continue that work as an outreach worker with the Wounded Warrior Project, but there must be a more  systematic VA effort.  My hope is that -- by coming before you today and  testifying to some of my issues in navigating through the system -- things will  continue to improve for the warriors coming behind me.     Iraq War veteran Tim Horton was testifying before the Senate Veterans  Affairs Committee hearing Wednesday.  We noted the hearing yesterday and are doing so  today.  Horton spoke of the assistance he received not from DoD or VA employees,  but from Vietnam veterans who helped him navigate the system.  This despite the  fact that the US government pays for federal care coordinators, as Ava addressed in "Scott Brown, John Kerry, veterans  clearing house" last night at Trina's site.  As Ava reported,  Senators Bernie Sanders and Johnny Isakson were among those wondering why there  wasn't a national hotline, a clearing house, for wounded veterans to call and  get help with their care?     The release continued: "In coordination with the Department of Defense and  the Department of Health and Human Services, the joint Federal Recovery  Coordinator Program is designed to cut across bureaucratic lines and reach into  the private sector as necessary to identify services needed for seriously  wounded and ill service members, veterans and their families. A key  recommendation of a presidential commission chaired by former Sen. Bob Dole and  former Health and Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala, the recovery  coordinators do not directly provide care, but coordinates federal health care  teams and private community resources to achieve the personal and professional  goals of an indvidiualized 'life map' or recovery plan developed with the  service members or veterans who qualify for the federal recovery coordinator  program."   Yet neither Tim Horton nor Afghanistan War veteran Steven Bohn were  provided with federal care coordinator.  Ranking Member Richard Burr asked,  "Steve, were you ever offered a federal care coordinator?"  Bohn replied,  "Negative.  Me and my family -- I've never even heard of that unitl a couple of  days ago."  In last night's "Senate Veterans Affairs  Committee," Kat reported on Burr's statements  regarding DoD's refusal to submit their prepared (written) remarks in a timely  manner.  In his opening remarks, Burr wondered, "How much is enough time to  prepare testimony before this committee?"  He noted DoD was informed of this  hearing on May 11th, yet 24 hours prior to the hearing, DoD still hadn't  submitted -- as required -- their prepared remarks.  There seems to be a great  deal of problems with providing information.  Maybe one answer is to, let's just  take the federal care coordinators, for the federal government to post how many  there are and how many veterans are utilizing them?  In last night's "Senate Veterans Affairs Committee  (Wally)," Wally gathers several strands from the  hearing to make a strong case that the VA, DoD, etc are very happy to announce  programs and get patted on the back but to actually provide these services to  the veterans who need them seems to be another story.  If, for example, the  federal care coordinator program was required to be publicly posted -- how many  are there, how many veterans are utilizing them, etc. -- maybe there would be  more of a push by department heads to ensure that these programs are utilized?   But this information, like so much other information, is difficult even for the  Senate Veterans Affairs Committee to get.  (VA estimates that they have assisted  1,300 veterans since the program started in 2008 and that there are around 660  veterans currently being assisted by their 22 federal care coordiantors.)   As Kat noted, Burr asked the DoD witness George Taylor (Deputy Assistant  Secretary of Defense) why his prepared remarks were not submitted to the  Committee on time (prepared remarks are supposed to be submitted to the  Committee or Subcomittee 48 hours in advance) and Taylor said he'd have to  follow up on that.  As Senator Bernie Sanders observed, "I think the pity is we  spend a fortune and sometimes at the end of the road the care is excellent if  people can get to it. And yet I suspect that there are thousands of young men  and women who've returned to who don't even know what they're entitled to, what  is available to them, how to access it."  Again, Sanders went on to recommend  that a 24-hour hotline be created for wounded veterans to call and speak to  someone who could tell them of the services that are available.  From the  hearing:     Senator Johnny Isakson: It's my understanding, I know we've got  well over 100,000 people deployed in the Middle East right now and we have 22  federal coordinators -- federal care coordinators, is that right? [Lorraine  nods] That's 22 coordinators and we've got people coming home every day with the  same needs that Tim and Steve have talked about.   Moving to the second panel, VA and DoD staff, the Committee was told that  DoD has "approximately 150" federal care coordinators.  Senator Patty Murray is  the Chair of the Committee and she asked if there were enough federal care  coordinators and the reply was that they've just hired more and "there are 28 in  class today".  When the Chair asked specifically, "Do we have more soldiers  coming home than the infrastructure is prepared for?," DoD replied that they  believed the infrastructure was in place.  The VA's Deborah Amdur would state  she was "extremely disturbed" to hear Horton and Bohn's testimony; however, she  offered no apology to either.  (Senator Burr made a point to apologize to Bohn  for the treatment he experienced, noting that someone should have apologized on  behalf  to Bohn a long time ago.)     Committee Chair Patty Murray:  I want to turn to an issue that I am  deeply concerned about and that is the issue of suicide.  The number of service  members and new veterans we have lost to suicide is now on par with the number  of those who've been killed in combat.  That should be disturbing to everyone in  this room. Last week, at this hearing, we talked about the very high rate of  suicides among those participating in the Joint Disability Evaluation process.   Those service members are actually under constant supervision of the Department  and that occurred.  We do know that there is progress being made in suicide  prevention and mental health treatement.  Dr. Kemp, your program has been  outstanding, I've heard a lot of good reviews about that.  But there is a lot of  work that remains to be done.  And I want to ask this Committee what do we need  to do to address this problem?   Dr. Janet Kemp:  Yeah.  Uh, first Chairman Murray, I want to say  the numbers are appalling. And we know that and recognize that and no one who  serves their country and comes back alive should die by suicide ever.  Uhm, and  I think that we, uhm, have worked very hard in the past two years to put  programs into place   One of the things you mentioned earlier was the crisis  line which we have opened up now to service members and families and friends of  service members and continue to get calls from that population.  But we need to  continue to communicate its availability, we need to make sure that people know  that there is someone there 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.  We need to work more  closely with our DoD partners and we are in the process of doing this, to be  able to communicate to our suicide prevention coordinators in the VA, sooner and  earlier that someone may be released and someone needs services and we need to  start that care ahead of time. We also need to do more work, and this is also in  progress, in the area of training all providers and the people who do these  disability examines to do screenings, to ask the right questions -- that just  because someone's being evaluated for physical injury, we have to ask the  emotional --   Committee Chair Patty Murray: How long will that take to train all  the providers?   Dr. Janet Kemp: We've started the process with the providers who do  the examines in the VA and we will start the process --   Committee Chair Patty Murray: At every facility across the  country?   Dr. Janet Kemp: Yes. Yes. And we've also started training all of  our primary care providers across the country to really work with emotional  issues as well as regular mental issues. I anticipate that this is something we  can do rather quickly and I will make a promise to you to, uhm, move that  process along.    Committee Chair Patty Murray:  Okay, we'll be following that and I  want to know when those people have been trained.   Dr. Janet Kemp: Exactly.     Committee Chair Patty Murray: I -- You know, the data released at  the end of April showed that the number of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans who are  now utilizing VA care for mental health needs is more than half of all Iraq and  Afghanistan veterans who are using the VA care. In a way that's a more positive  sign that more veterans are willing to come forward and ask for care.  But I  want to know if the system's adequately equipped now to handle those rising  numbers and meet the criteria that we set out?   Antonette Zeiss:  We are resourced to provide that care in mental  health. Certainly, I can defer to other staff members here for some of the other  physical health concerns that are also very much a part of what they bring to  us. But, in terms of mental health, in 2004, VA recognized that there were gaps  in staffing and services, developed a comprehensive mental health strategic  plan, began to implement that in 2005 and, really, with a stronger pace in 2006.  Since then, we have increased our staffing for mental health services to over  21,000 -- it's an increase of over 40% percent in our core mental health staff.   As we track the number of veterans who are receiving mental health services,  those also have increased during that time period but have not increased to the  same proportion as the percent of staff that we have added and we think that's  the right balance because, as I said, we had gaps when we started. So we've been  able to fill gaps for those patients who were seeking VA care and intensive VA  care earlier in this decade and to enhance our status in such that we can  continue in a proactive way to meet the needs of returning service members who  come to us as veterans while sustaining care for those veterans who are with us  throughout their lifetimes. We will continue to track that very closely, of  course, because we don't know when there may be significant numbers of  additional service members returning.  We look forward to working with you and  keeping pace in terms of the data on are we adequeately resourced to provide  care.   This was the second of a two-part hearing.  The first-part of this series  of hearings was held May 18th and for more on that you can refer to that day's snapshot as  well as  Ava's "Scott Brown questions DoD's  concept of streamlining,"  Kat's  "DoD embarrasses at Senate  hearing" and Wally's  "VA can't answer a basic service  question."  In addition,  you can stream the hearing at the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee's hearing page  or, if you're having problems with that page, you can stream audio of the  hearing from this CSpan page.  [For the second  panel of Wednesday's hearing, I relied on the stream because I left to attend  the House Foreign Affairs Committee -- see Wednesday's  snapshot and Ava's report "Ron Paul (Ava)" (at Trina's  site).]  To stay on veterans issues for two more topics.  At the airport today,  we were talking about this hearing and a veteran approached.  He's a Gulf War  veteran and he wanted to note a problem with VA care that isn't covered in  hearings.  It's when a veteran needs care and is not taken to a VA facility.  He  had collapsed from the heat earlier in the week, an ambulance was called and  instead of being taken to the nearest VA, he was taken to a for-profit  hospital.  He later learned that the VA hospital was just a mile away. He stated  he was talking and able to sit up in the ambulance but they insisted that the VA  hospital was too late.  The care he received at the for-profit hospital was  grossly inadequate.  He arrived at noon.  They gave him liquids three hours  later.  (Three hours later.)  Prior to that he was sitting and waiting.  He  repeatedly had to provide an inventory of his medical history and any allergies  (at the VA his records would have been on file).  After he was given fluids, he  was ignored for many hours.  Finally at ten p.m. he was told he was being  discharged.  He complained about thirst and hunger (he'd been there since noon)  and was told there were snack machines in the lobby.  He won't be footing the  bill, the VA will pick it up.  But he argues (I think rightly) that the service  was inadequate and that, at best, the for-profit hospital should be paid for an  hour's care.  (He suspects the VA will be charged for the entire duration and  considers it an example of fraud and waste.)  Second, Senate Veterans Affairs  Committee Chair Patty Murray will be touring the Portland VA Medical Center this  coming Tuesday to hear from veterans and review the process at that VA:       (Washington, D.C.) – On Tuesday, U.S.  Senator Patty  Murray, Chairman of the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee, will  tour the Portland VA Medical  Center and discuss her priorities as Chair of that critical committee  charged with protecting the health care and benefits of our nation's veterans.  The tour comes at a critical time for local veterans as more Iraq and  Afghanistan veterans enter the VA in the Portland region. During the tour, press  will get the opportunity to see the Portland VA's prosthetic and limb loss  facility, including a demonstration of that facility's technology. There will  also be a demonstration of adaptive vehicles used for disabled veterans and a  tour of the women's veterans facility.   Following the tour, Senator  Murray will discuss her priorities as Chair of the Veterans  Committee including improving employment opportunities, health care  coordination, and secure housing opportunities for homeless veterans.      WHO:             U.S. Senator Patty  Murray, Chairman Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee       WHAT:          Tour of Portland VA  Medical Center and Press Availability       WHEN:          Tuesday, May 31st,  2011                            2:00 PM PST       WHERE:       Portland VA  Medical Center   3710 SW  U.S. Veterans Hospital  Rd.Portland,  OR
                          Map It   ###               Matt  McAlvanah   Communications  Director   U.S. Senator Patty  Murray   202-224-2834  - press office   202--224-0228 - direct   matt_mcalvanah@murray.senate.gov    News  Releases | Economic Resource Center | E-Mail Updates       Monday is Memorial Day.  There may not be a snapshot that day.  It will  depend upon the news coming out of Iraq.     Turning to Iraq, where so much of the US press has rushed to canonize Ali  al-Lami.  Let's drop back to the January 22, 2010 New York Times'  editorial "Sunnis and Iraq's Election"    The accountability commission is the  successor to the destructive de-Baathification commission that sought to keep  anyone with ties to Mr. Hussein out of government. Its chief, Ali Faisal  al-Lami, is hardly an impartial judge. He is a candidate on the slate led by the  Shiite leader Ahmed Chalabi, a relentlessly ambitious force in Iraqi politics  who lured the Bush administration into the 2003 invasion and wants to be prime  minister.Both the accountability and the election commissions are part of  Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki's government, and he issued a statement  supporting their decisions. But American officials say Mr. Chalabi is the main  manipulator. Mr. Chalabi's absurd charge that the United States wants to return  the Baath Party to power is typical of his divisive and destructive brand of  politics.
   Ali al-Lami's destructive decisions cannot be taken away or wiped away.   They helped create and foster an undemocratic enviornment going into the  elections.  There is no excuse for what he did, no justification.  He was a  petty tyrant abusing an office and hurting Iraq in the process.  Please note,  the New York Times and McClatchy Newspapers are two US outlets who have  refused to white wash Ali al-Lami.  That's in stark contrast to Ned Parker (Los Angeles Times) carefully  asserting, "Lami, who lived in Sadr City, was a symbol of the battle  against the former Baath Party."  In real time (August 28, 2008), AP noted, "The military says the  suspect is believed to be behind a June bombing in Baghdad that killed four  Americans and six Iraqis, and that he is believed to be a senior leader of  "special groups" — Iranian-backed rogue militiamen in Iraq." He was part of the  League of Rightous -- admittedly part of it. When the mini-thug was released  from the US prison, Rod Nordland and Sam Dagher  (New York Times, August 17, 2009)  reported, "Mr. Lami said his release was part of a government deal  with the League, though he described himself as a 'supporter' of the group  rather than a member." The League used their barganing skills to secure the  release of their most important assets only. Lami was among the select few whose  release they secured. He was more than a supporter.  From the February 16, 2010  snapshot, here'sthe then-top US commander in Iraq, Gen  Ray Odierno:
 al-Lami is a Sadrist by  trade. He was arrested after an operation in Sadr City where both Iraqi security  forces, U.S. civilians, and U.S. soldiers were leaving a meeting that they had  with the local government in Sadr City, and their vehicles were attacked with  IEDs as they left the meeting. There were some accusations. We had some  intelligence that said that al-Lami was the one who directed these attacks on  these individuals. He was released in August of '09 as part of the drawdown of  our detention facilities because we did not have the actual prosecutorial  evidence in order to bring him in front of a court of law in Iraq. All we had  was intelligence that linked him to this attack. So, as we had some others, we  had to release him. He has been involved in very nefarious activities in Iraq  for some time. It is disappointing that somebody like him was in fact put in  charge or has been able to run this commission inside of Iraq, in my  opinion.
 He is -- him and Chalabi  clearly are influenced by Iran. We have direct intelligence that tells us that.  They've had several meetings in Iran, meeting with a man named Mohandas, which  is an ex-council representative member -- still is a council representative  member -- who was on the terrorist watch list for a bombing in Kuwait in the  1980s. They are tied to him. He sits at the right-hand side of the Quds Force  commandant, Qassem Soleimani. And we believe they're absolutely involved in  influencing the outcome of the election. And it's concerning that they've been  able to do that over time.
 
 
 Ali al-Lami was released as part  of a deal that the White House authorized and, yes, oversaw. Ali al-Lami made it clear in his  statements to the New York Times why he  was being released. The deal was with the League of Righteous and it  was supposed to mean that the five British hostages the League had were  released. As part of that "special relationship," with England, Barack  entered into negotiations with the League of Righteous to figure out what they  wanted in order to release the British citizens they had kidnapped. From the June 9, 2009  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."
 
         They hang saints in Iraq, they lynch them at an early age, they  penetrate their insides with words...and words become swords, daggers,  knives...slashing, beheading, tiny anonymous faces with no names...the slaying  of Saints...of little Saints...She was found thrown away in one of the  streets of Baghdad...her name is Rita, like Saint Rita, the Saint who answers  your prayers...
 She was abandoned in the streets of Baghdad, with her name  written on a cardboard, attached to her neck like a dog who was once owned. A  three years old dog, puppy, girl, blind...Rita is blind. Totally blind. You  bastards, call it in your politically correct jargon - visually impaired -  because you are so f[***]ing sensitive arent'you ?!
 Well Rita is blind, and  she is 3. She is not only blind, she has a severely deformed face, a cleft lip  that goes up all the way to her nose...split in the middle, a mirror reflection  of how you split us in the middle...in all ways. A small mirror of your own  deformities, your soul deformities...
 She was feeling her way around, blind,  with a cardboard sign around her neck - my name is Rita.
 The local police  took her to a hospital, the doctors did not know what to do with Rita...the  little Saint Rita...she was left in the corridors of a hospital, a hospital that  looks and feels like a public toilet, because your whores stole the money, the  money for the little Saints...
 
 We really don't have room for the  essay but we have to make room because it's important.  As a result we'll pick  up other things on Tuesday (or possibly Monday, if there's a snapshot that  day).   New Sabah reports Iraqiya's Ayad  Allawi is calling for the issue of US troops staying in Iraq past 2011 to be  discussed openly in an emergency and public meeting of Parliament. Allawi  announced his call at a news conference and noted that they didn't know if an  agreement had already been made with the US by Nouri. Allawi declared the issue  needed to be put under the light. Aswat al-Iraq quotes National Alliance  MP Fuad Al-Douraki stating that Allawi's call is "unrealistic."  Al  Mada reports that there is continued pressure on the political  blocs to extend the agreement for US troops to remain in Iraq. They also quote  Hussain al-Shahristani, Deputy Prime Minister for Energy, stating that there  will be no extension and that Iraqi forces are sufficient to maintain the  country's security. Dar Addustour reports that the  study on the Iraqi military and its capabilities is due to be released shortly.
 
 
 Lastly the topic of  Bradley Manning.  Monday April  5th, WikiLeaks released US  military video of a July 12, 2007 assault in Iraq. 12 people were  killed in the assault including two Reuters journalists Namie Noor-Eldeen and  Saeed Chmagh. Monday June  7th, the US military announced that they had arrested Bradley Manning  and he stood accused of being the leaker of the video. Leila Fadel  (Washington Post) reported in August that Manning had been  charged -- "two charges under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. The first  encompasses four counts of violating Army regulations by transferring classified  information to his personal computer between November and May and adding  unauthorized software to a classified computer system. The second comprises  eight counts of violating federal laws governing the handling of classified  information." Manning has been convicted in the public square despite the fact  that he's been convicted in no state and has made no public statements --  despite any claims otherwise, he has made no public statements. Manning has been  at Quantico in Virginia, under military lock and key, for months. In March, David S. Cloud (Los Angeles Times) reported that  the military has added 22 additional counts to the charges including one that  could be seen as "aiding the enemy" which could result in the death penalty if  convicted. David E. Coombs is  Bradley's attorney and he provided a walk through on Article 104.       Bradley Manning is innocent.  He is innocent because he has not been found  guilty of anything.  When a trial does take place -- supposedly a court-martial  will take place this summer and a trial in the fall -- the defense will enter a  plea.  No plea has been entered at present.  The defense will not be able to  argue he didn't do it but if he did that's okay.  They will have to argue one  way or the other.  He did it or he didn't do it.  (They can argue that he did it  but argue that what he did was legal.)     The idiots who think they help Bradley have been idiots for some time.  In  this space, we have screamed and yelled that they needed to stop saying Bradley  was guilty.  I noted, several times, that in the 70s we didn't say, "Angela  Davis did it! Leave her alone!"  We argued Angela was innocent.  We also didn't  jump to a 'she did it' when she had not said she had.   After repeated screaming in this place and elsewhere, the 'supporters'  finally grasped that they were hurting Bradley and prejudicing news consumers to  believe that he had released materials -- at a time when he has not acknowledged  doing that.  So they started adding in their 'if he did this' b.s.  The link  goes to audio that's a joke.  There are two speakers who make sense.  Only  two.   When a speaker says she turned "to my partner" in bed and told him that "We  need our Daniel Ellsberg," not only has she given us too much information (we  don't need to know your sex habits or possibly sex role play), she's getting at  the problem and why she is the problem.  Your need for a new Daniel Ellsberg  does not trump Bradley Manning's right to have a fair trial.  The same woman  plans to be a teacher some day and shares that it's her "hope to invoke  Bradley Manning" with Daniel Ellsberg some day.   Her hopes don't mean a damn thing.  She needs to  let go of her comfy life  and grasp that Bradley Manning -- whether he pleades innocence or guilt -- is  looking at very serious charges.    Kevin Zeese hails Bradley as a hero at one point and then wants to whine  that Barack Obama has influenced the case by saying Bradley "broke the law."   While Barack has more power and may have sunk any chances of Bradley receiving a  fair trial (see Third's "Barack finds a way to cut  costs!!!!" for some of our coverage of that in this  community), we can object to what others do but we can control what we do.  It's  really a bit hypocrital for Kat's BFF Kevin Zeese to call out Barack for saying  Bradley released materials when Kevin makes the case that Bradley did in every  other statement.   The defense of Bradley until or unless he enters a plea of guilty is very  basic: Bradley is innocent.  He's been held for over a year.  The government has  not moved quickly.  Bradley should be released.  He is not a threat to the  community.  There is no good reason to imprison him prior to trial.  The  inability to move forward with charges speaks poorly of any potential case or  evidence the government has against Bradley.  The comments made by Barack Obama  prejudice all potential jury pools.  Bradley should not only be released,  charges against him should be dropped.    It's that basic.  Instead, the 'supporters' are now working overtime to  portray him as a wounded bird who entered the military. Are we trying to get him  placed on suicide watch again?  He was a functioning adult.  He entered the  military.  Quit victiimizing, quit infantilizing him, quit proclaiming his guilt  while you insist you're trying to help.   |