| Monday, May 23, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, the US military  announces deaths, the British military officially leaves Iraq, David Miliband  weighs in on the Iraq War,  a meet-up in Erbil offers little for Nouri to spin,  and more.   In the United States, unemployment among young veterans of the Iraq and  Afghanistan Wars is a critical issue.  May 11th, US Senator Patty Murray, the  Chair of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee, held a news conference to note    Hiring Heroes Act of  2011 . and she also noted that one out of every four young  veterans is unemployed.  From the news conference.   Senate Veterans Affairs Committee Chair Patty Murray:   We have an unemployment rate of over 27% among young veterans coming  home from Iraq and Afghanistan.  That is 1 in 5 of our nation's heroes who  cannot find a job to support their families, they don't have income to provide  stability and they don't have work that provides them with the self-esteem and  pride that is so critical to their transition home. All too often, we read about  the results of veterans who come home, often with the invisible wounds of war,  who can't find the dignity and security that work provides.  We read about it in  the sky rocketing suicide statistics, problems at home, substance abuse and even  in the rising homelessness among our returning veterans.  But I've also heard a  lot about it first hand from the veterans that we have failed to provide better  job support to. I've had veterans tell me that they no longer write on their  resume that they are a veteran because they fear the stigma they  believe employers attach to the invisible wounds of war.  I've heard from medics  who return home from treating battlefield wounds for days on end, in incredible  conditions, who cannot get certification to be an EMT or even a ambuldance  driver.  I've talked to veteran after veteran who's said they didn't have to go  through the military's jobs skills training program or that they were never  taught how to use the venacular of the business world to describe the job and  experience they did when they come home.  These stories are heart breaking and  they are frustrating.  But more than anything, they are a reminder that we have  to act now.    While we're on the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee, let's quickly note  the following from Senator Murray's office:      In  second of two major hearings, Chairman Murray will hear directly from veterans  and top VA and Pentagon officials about challenges that remain in the care  for amputees, rising suicide rates, poor coordination between the agencies, and  delays in disability evaluations   (Washington, D.C.) – Wednesday,  U.S. Senate Veterans' Affairs  Committee Chairman Patty  Murray will hear first-hand accounts from veterans who have faced  challenges because of the lack of collaboration between the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)  and the Department of Defense  (DoD). The hearing will focus on DoD and VA's joint disability evaluation  process, military and veteran suicides, the lack of cooperation in certain areas  between the two agencies, and the quality of care at the two Departments for  amputees. During the hearing, Chairman Murray will also question VA's top  mental health administrator about the recent 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruling  finding the mental health care offered by the VA to be so poor that it's  unconstitutional.      WHO:             Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee  Chairman Patty Murray               Tim Horton, Iraq Veteran who was wounded and lost his leg  to an  IED attack in Iraq   Steve Bohn, Iraq Veteran,  representing Wounded Warrior Project   Janet E. "Jan" Kemp, VA National Suicide Prevention  Coordinator              Antonette Zeiss, Acting Deputy Chief Officer Mental Health Services, Office of  Patient Care Services, Department of  Veterans Affairs  Jim Lorraine, Lt. Col. ASAF (Ret.),  Executive Director, Wounded Warrior Care Project  George Peach Taylor, Jr., MD, MPH, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Force Health  Protection and Readiness     WHAT:          Senate  Veterans' Affairs Committee Hearing on the State of VA/DoD Collaborations  and the Challenges those Agencies Face in Caring for  Veterans  WHEN:          Wednesday, May 25th, 2011                         10:00 AM EST/7:00 AM  PST                            WHERE:       Russell 418     WEBCAST: http://veterans.senate.gov/        Back to unemployment.  "We have to act now."  And Murray and senators on  the Senate Committee -- Democrats and Republicans -- appear focused on the  issue.  In the House of Representatives, it's another story.  Tomorrow morning,  the House of Representatives' Veterans Affairs Committee was supposed to hold  "Putting Veterans Back to Work."  This hearing has been postponed.  "Putting  Veterans Back to Work" and "Postponed" -- pair the two up for the message (which  I am sure is unintentional) that's being sent.  This would have been only the  second, only the second, hearing the House Veterans Affairs Committee had held  on employment.  The other hearing was March 3rd.  Is it a crisis or is not  one?   The figures say it's a crisis.  The treatment of it by the Senate Veterans  Affairs Committee telegraphs it's a crisis. But in the House Comittee the issue  gets little attention and when it's finally supposed to get attention, it's  "postponed."  It sends a message.  And, no, this wouldn't have happened under  Bob Filner's leadership.  But hopefully it's not an issue of political party.   US House Rep Bob Filner is a Democrat and, until January, was the Chair of the  House Veterans Affairs Committee. The current Chair is Jeff Miller who is a  Republican.  Hopefully, it's more an issue of someone new to being a chair  failing to grasp the message being sent and also still stumbling with leadership  issues.   Though addressing the needs of veterans can be ignored and postponed, the  wars they serve in don't get put on hold -- or apparently end these days.      Yesterday 2 US soldiers were killed while serving in Iraq.  AP notes  all the US military shares is  that the two died "conducting operations in central Iraq" and AP also notes they  were the first US soldiers to die in Iraq this month.  Their deaths were part of a wave of violence across Iraq yesterday.  Ned Parker and Raheem Salman  (Los Angeles Times) reported   on the two deaths and the deaths of multiple Iraqis, observing, "The bloodshed  highlighted the tenuous situation around Baghdad, where assassinations and other  attacks still occur almost daily. It also drew attention to Sunni Arab and  Shiite militants' continuing efforts to kill American troops, who are scheduled  to leave at the end of the year. There has been an increase in the shelling  around U.S. military bases within Baghdad's airport grounds as well as the  American Embassy compound in the fortified Green Zone enclave." Tim Craig (Washington Post) added , "Most of  the explosions were directed at Iraqi police officers and government officials,  who have become targets of terrorism in recent months. Security officials  estimate that at least 21 people were killed and more than 80 injured during a  succession of attacks that came from 8 a.m. to 9:30 a.m." Michael S. Schmidt (New York Times) counts  eighty  injured today and explains, "There were bombings in both Shiite and Sunni  neighborhoods, including two in Sadr City, the stronghold of the radical cleric  Moktada al-Sadr, but it was unclear whether they were coordinated. Insurgents  have often attacked both groups simultaneously, in an attempt to incite  sectarian strife and further destabilize the country."  It was a day that began,  Al  Sabaah reports , with prime minister and puppet of the  occupation Nouri al-Maliki declaring this is the best time (ever) for businesses  to invest in Iraq and that he made this declaration yesterday morning at a  ribbon cutting ceremony at the opening of the al-Jihad housing complex.  Of the  violence, Laith  Hammoudi (McClatchy Newspapers) notes , "It raises again the question of  whether a complete withdrawal of U.S. troops at the end of 2011 will open the  way for a vast increase in extremist violence. Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki  has called for a national debate on whether to ask some U.S combat to remain  after December 31."Al Sabaah  reports that Nouri al-Maliki has stated that Iraq's political  blocs are unclear about an extension. He has called for them to use the next  weeks to figure out where they stand. The paper states that he's accused the  political blocs of using the issue to attack one another and that he's asking  them to come to an understanding before the issue goes to his Cabinet or to the  Parliament. He also stated a need for US trainers. US troops were thought to be  leaving by the end of the year. Some may, some may not. What the US  administration wants is an extension of the SOFA or a new  agreement. Barring that, they will go with their back up plan of keeping  "hundreds" (possibly "thousands") of US soldiers in Iraq but switching them from  the DoD umbrella to the State Dept one. This in addition to the Marines who will  guard the US Embassy in Baghdad -- as they guard embassies around the world --  and in addition to the contractors which will also be under State Dept control.  As Congress continues to resist turning over billions to the State Dept for  "Iraq operations," the back up plan becomes less and less attractive and the  White House pushes harder for an extension of the SOFA. Back to Al Sabaah  which quotes Kurdish MP Hamid Adel  stating that the depature would leave Iraq an easy target for regional  countries. Adel states that they need from Nouri an update on the Iraqi military  including whether the army can protect its borders and whether the air force can  protect the skies. Since Nouri and the military have long ago stated that Iraq  will be unable to protect its borders and since the Iraqi air force is not up  and running, it's doubtful an update would provide any new  information.Al Rafidayn  reports  Jabbar Yawar, Secretary-General of the Ministry of the  Pesmerga, declared in an Erbil press conference yesterday that, "We welcome the  move to extend presence of US forces in Iraq." He stated that the army continues  to need weapons, the air force continues to need training and that the country  needs US military support.   Violence continued today.  Aswat  al-Iraq reports  Ayad Ali Akbar, with the Ministry of Defense, was  assassinated in Baghdad.   UPI reports , a  Kirkuk car bombing has claimed at least 7 lives (five were police officers). AFP notes  that  the 2 others killed were soldiers -- peshmerga or Iraqi is not noted. Aswat al-Iraq  reports  a Baghdad bombing has claimed 1 life and left nine people  injured.  Jamal  Hashim (XInhua) reports , "Near Baghdad, a member of Awakening  Council group of the town of Abu Ghraib, just west of Baghdad, was killed when a  sticky bomb attached to his car detonated around midday as he was passing a  security checkpoint in al-Shuhadaa neighborhood in central the town, a local  police source told Xinhua on condition of anonymity." Hashim also notes 1 police  officer was shot dead in Anbar Province.  Marwan  Ibrahim (AFP) adds , "Also Monday, a taxi driver was killed and his  passenger wounded when a magnetic "sticky bomb" attached to their vehicle blew  up in Ghazaliyah, west Baghdad, an Interior Ministry official said."      
Jane Arraf: 18,000 concrete walls down and 62,000 more to go.  They  are meant to protect people and buildings from car bombs  Some officials  estimate hundreds of miles of the walls have been put up since 2003 -- most of  them by the US military.  The government says, apart from the Green Zone and  government buildings, they'll all come down by the end of the  year.   Bagdhad Security spokesperson Qassim al- Atta:  General security is  developing and progressing and there's no need now for barriers and street  closings.   Jane Arraf: The last time authorities tried to dismantle the blast  walls two years ago, suicide truck bombs detonated outside the Foreign and  Finance Ministries killing more than 80 people.  On Palestine Street, where a  lot of walls were taken down a few weeks ago, some are afraid it will happen  again.   Shop owner Ali Hassan Abdul Jabar: After they removed the blast  walls, the next day a bomb was planted and killed two steet cleaners.  The poor  people, it blew up right in their faces.   Jane Arraf: In some parts of Baghdad, the walls have become  concrete canvases for Iraqi artists.  But no matter how you dress them up,  they've still closed off major parts of the city.  And during the sectarian  violence, they sprung up to divide Sunni and Shia neighborhoods.    The walls divided the city, sectioned off.  And now they come down?  At a  time when violence has been increasing and when the bulk of US forces could  leave at the end of the year, most wouldn't be taking down the walls.  In fact,  the only strong reason to do so now would be if you were attempting to nudge the  results on stay-or-go over to "US military stay!" by increasing the likelihood  of violence.   Whether the bulk of US troops stay or go, Saturday  Jack Healy (New York  Times) noted  the following Americans remain missing in Iraq:  Jeffrey Ake, Aban Elias, Abbas Kareem Naama, Neenus Khoshaba, Bob Hamze, Dean  Sadek, Hussain al-Zurufi and Staff Sgt. Ahmed Altaie."Over the weekend, Al Sabaah  reported  Nouri was insisting that it's time to push national  reconciliation (after, please note, he's bullied his way into getting everything  he wanted) and that the statements came as he prepared to for Monday's big  meet-up.  Dar Addustour  noted  the big meet-up  in Erbil thismroning between the political  blocs with the goal of ironing out the many problems (which result from Nouri's  failure to live up to the Erbil Agreement).  Alsumaria  TV reports , "Al Iraqiya List led by Iyad Allawi stressed that it insists on  implementing Arbil agreements fully noting that the party is keen on national  partnership, a source told Alsumaria. Renouncing national partnership is a way  of disclaiming the political process, it argued."  In related news, Aswat  al-Iraq reports  Iraqiya's spokesperson Shaker Kattab has issued a  denial of any knowledge that Iraqiya plans to nominate him for Minister of  Defense.  Iraq still has no Minister of Defense, Minister of Interior and  Minister of National Security.  Alsumaria  TV notes , "Iraqi Vice President Tarek Al Hashemi urged security officials to  introduce immediate amendments to the security plan in light of mounting  security violations.  Al Hashemi called for an urgent stand to accelerate the  appointment of security ministers, a source told Alsumaria."           Despite its inevitable collapse, the United States strongly  supports Iraq's unity government, praising it as a mature step forward. The  U.S.-brokered settlement "reflects the results of those elections," wrote Vice  President Joseph Biden at the time, and "does not exclude or marginalize  anyone." Yet, the deal secured Nouri al-Maliki another term as prime minister,  despite his bloc's second-place finish in the elections. The cornerstone of the  accord was the foolhardy establishment of a National Council for Higher  Policies. The council was intended to hold "executive" and "binding"  authorities to check Maliki's power, and was to integrate former Prime Minister  Iyad Allawi into the government as its first chairman. But today, little  American leverage remains to compel Maliki to cede any of his powers, especially  to a committed rival. At best, the council stands to be largely an advisory body  with no significant clout.  In idly sponsoring a national partnership, the U.S. endorsed a  false promise for Iraq's future. The concept represented a gross misreading of  Iraqi politics. Since the Sunni boycott of the 2005 elections, misconstrued  Western biases have supported such a framework as a way of advancing national  unity. But in reality, there are no broadly-shared ideological or overarching  visions to sustain such a government. The practice of "governing by consensus"  is not indigenous to Iraqi political culture. The experiment today is viewed as  an American venture, and Iraqis perceive its foundations as a formula for  dividing the spoils, not sharing power. Moreover, the national partnership has reinforced Iraq's  dysfunctional polity. To house a gargantuan government, some positions were  arbitrarily created to satisfy Iraqi personalities. The new officialdom embraces  42 ministries, three deputy prime ministers, and three vice presidents. Many  roles are ill-defined, and in some cases lack a constitutional basis. But unlike  titles, governing power has become a zero-sum game: as a rule of thumb, no  sharing agreement, however creative, will satisfy all of Iraq's major  players.   That position is actually similar to Nouri's.  Over the weekend,  New Sabah  quoted  Nouri stating that "There is no minority that can control  Iraq." Al Rafidayn  reported  that Nouri made the statement while speaking with Salahuddin  Province tribal sheikhs and, with his statements regarding sections and  factions, he may also be laying the groundwork for an all State Of Law Cabinet  -- or possibly just a Shi'ite one.  In the background of all of Nouri's statements is what happens come June  7th. In an attempt to defuse Iraqi outrage, Nouri announced a 100 day period  during which corruption would be dealt with.  The 100 days comes to an end June  7th and Nouri has very little to show for it.  He may have hoped for good news  out of the Erbil meet-up but that appears to have gone the way it always does  (stalemate).  He needs something to distract from no end to corruption and  Friday's prison break.From Friday's snapshot :Alsumaria TV  reports, "An Iraqi informed security  source revealed on Friday that five chiefs of the Mehdi Army managed to escape  from Taji prison, north of Baghdad. Three detainees were reported missing while  transferring them to Karkh central prison, the Justice Ministry said. A special  force from Prime Minister's office headed on Thursday night to Taji Prison,  nothern Baghdad, to transfer detainees to one of the capital's prisons, the  source told Alsumarianews. Five chiefs of the Mehdi Army including senior leader  Saad Sowar managed to escape during the transfer, the source said." New Sabah  states that 182 detainees were being  transferred when the escape took place.Dar Addustour  reported  Saturday that the Justice Ministry has announced it  is signing a contract with the US to install devices that will allow them to jam  cell phones within prisons. Al Mada added   that the Taji prison escape has resulted in numerous "conflicting statements"  about the prison break. But the announcement regarding jamming cell phones  appears to be a response to (if not an acknowledgment of) the veracity of the  rumors that the prisoners used cell phones to stay in contact with helpers  outside the prison. Cell phones may have also been used to organize and execute  a prison riot which provided some cover for the prison break.     ANDREW MARR: Right now our last forces are pulling out of Iraq and  forces will start to pull out of Afghanistan in the not too distant future. So  it's a moment of reflection, I suppose, about our engagement across the whole  region. At that moment, tell us what you think now about Iraq?      DAVID MILIBAND: I think you think, first of all, of the people that  we've lost. You think, secondly, that while there have been gains, the list of  negatives is long - longer than the list of gains. But you also think, thirdly,  that there is still history to be made in Iraq and the possibility of a  multi-confessional, multi-denominational political system in Iraq that is more  or less democratic, can send out a message to the rest of the Arab world that is  consonant with the sort of changes that you've been discussing in Egypt and  elsewhere. Iraq obviously divided not just our country, but divided the whole  world really. It proved how much easier it is to win wars than to win the peace,  and I think that that is the sort of lesson that we've got to learn.       ANDREW MARR: And when you say the list of negatives is longer than  the list of gains - that's what you mean, is it: that what followed the war was  so horrific?      DAVID MILIBAND: Yes, exactly. I mean six, seven, even eight months  after the fall of Saddam Hussein, the sort of Sunni-Shia conflict that came to  mark the Iraq episode - hundreds of thousands of deaths - hadn't really started.  It was still in the balance. I'm afraid the failure of the Western forces to  develop a proper strategy for peace, not a strategy for war, has held back the  country. Now it's still to play for despite the loss of blood and treasure, but  I think that that is the key lesson.      As disclosed before, I know David Miliband.  On Law and Disorder Radio  this week ( WBAI  had a two hour  fundraising live broadcast of Law and Disorder Radio today, but on this week's  actual hour long program which broadcasts around the country throughout the  week), Michael Ratner, Heidi Boghosian and Michael S. Smith are joined  by attorney Abdeen Jabara (American-Arab  Anti-Discrimination Committee ) to discuss events in Egypt and by journalists  Arun Gupta.  Also, commenting on last week's speech, Isaiah 's The  World Today Just Nuts  "Little  Man " went up Sunday.  
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