| Wednesday, May 25, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, US Secretary of  Defense Robert Gates states in a speech that he wants the US military to remain  in Iraq, the US and Iraq are supposedly in secret talks to extend the SOFA,  US  House Rep Brad Sherman speaks out on the issues facing the country and the press  (outlets, not reporters) ignores it and more,       US House Rep Lynn Woolsey writes a column for The  Hill noting that the 60 day requirement of the 1973 War Powers Act  requiring the president to receive a mandate from Congress to continue any  unauthorized conflict which continues past 60 days has been ignored by the White  House and that the House is debating altering the Constitutional -- as well as  spitting on the founding fathers' intent -- in order to shirk their  responsibility under the law to be the only body in the federal government who  can delcare law.  Woolsey notes:     I've had enough over the last decade of this state of permanent  warfare. I have five grandchildren and not one of them knows what it's like to  live in a country that's not at war with someone and killing someone else's  grandchildren. It's time to put the brakes on. It's time for Congress to draw some  clear lines, and Libya is the perfect place to do so. That's why I am supporting  Rep. John Conyers' (D-Mich.) amendment to the defense authorization bill  specifically prohibiting the deployment of ground troops in  Libya.  We cannot afford any further expansion of this engagement. We owe  it to the American people who are footing the bill – and of course to our  servicemen and women who are already fighting on two fronts – to keep this  mission from mushrooming into a full-blown ground war and military  occupation.     There were two major hearings today -- one in the Senate, one in the  House.  I'd planned on noting the Senate one today but we'll try to fit it in  tomorrow's snapshot and, hopefully, touch on a number of veterans issues then.   Instead we'll focus on the House hearing addressing issues Rep Woolsey noted in  her column (to be clear, Woolsey is addressing HR 1540 and that legislation was  not addressed in the hearing, the hearing was about war powers).  The  Constitution is explicit on who has the power to declare war: the Congress.   Article One, Section Eight of the Constitution: "Congress shall have the power .  . .  To declare War, grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal, and make Rules  concerning Caputres on Land and Water; To raise and support Armies, bot no  Appropriation of Money to that Use shall be for a longer Term than two Years; To  provide and maintain a Navy; To Make Rules for the Government and Regulation of  the land and naval Forces; To provide for calling forth the Militia to execute  the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions . . ."   This morning the House Foreign Affairs Committee held a hearing where the  witnesses were all US House Representatives who had proposed legislation  regarding war.  The witnesses were US House Rep Justin Amash, US House Rep  Christopher Gibson and US House Rep Thomas Rooney -- all three are Republicans.   As is the Chair of the Committee, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen.  Democrat Howard Berman  is the Ranking Member on the Committee.  I missed opening statements -- and am  told Ros-Lehtinen had an ab-lib joke about Rooney (both are from Florida) -- so  this is from the Chair and the Ranking Member's prepared opening remarks (which  may differ from how they were delivered).   Chair Illean Ros-Lehtinen: We meet today as part of our continuing  oversight of the United States involvement in Libya, to hear from our  non-Committee colleagues who have introduced legislation on War Powers and on  authorities relating to the use of force to address the situation in Libya.  The  Committee will continue our efforts tomorrow morning at the House-wide Members  briefing with legal experts.  That briefing had to be rescheduled from May 12th,  due to House floor votes. [. . .]  The Administration has claimed that  Congressional approval was not constitutionally required, and that the use of  force in Libya was Constitutional because the President "could reasonably  determine that such use of force was in the national interest" -- an extremely  broad claim of war-making power.  Even some who regard the President's actions  as legal are concerned that the endorsement by the Arab League, the United  Nations, and NATO seem to figure more prominently in his stated justifications  than do clearly identified U.S. national security interests. [. . .]  Mr.  Rooney's resolution (H.Con.Res. 32) expresses the Sense of Congress that the  President should obtain statutory authorization for the use of force pursuant to  the War Powers Resolution.  The bill introduced by Mr. Amash (H.R. 1212) would  cut off funding for the use of force in Libya until it is authorized by  Congress.  And Mr. Gibson's bill (H.R. 1609) would revise the text of the War  Powers Resolution replacing its current Congressional procedures with a shorter  provision tied more directly to Congress's power of the purse."     US House Rep Howard Berman was apparently elected in order to serve Barack  Obama because nothing in his minimizing and justifying statements acknowledged  Berman had sworn an oath to the Constitution or that he is elected from a very  small district that does not include Barack Obama as an inhabitant.   Ranking Member Howard Berman: I believe the efforts to either  terminate funding for this effort or force an immediate withdrawal of forces  would reverse, to disastrous effect, the very meaningful progress already made  in Libya.  It's time to end this stalemate, decisively.  And that cannot be done  by stopping now.  I'd like to give the President limited time to pursue this  mission.  [. . .]  Underlying this debate is a central legal question: the War  Powers Resolution acknowledges the President may introduce forces into  hostilities -- unilaterally -- for a period of up to 60 days.  This may not be  what the Constitution originally envisioned or consistent with a strict reading  of congressional authority, but it quite clearly what Congress in 1973  presumed.   Berman went on to insist that "we can't argue theory here" -- as if the  Constitution is mere theory?  As if laws are mere theory?  Let's see someone  accused of murder explain, in a court of law, that the laws broken are "mere  theory."  US House Rep Donald Manzullo noted that "boots on the ground" weren't  the test and that drones are assistance -- that a day after US Secretary of  State Hillary Clinton noted that the US would not supply Libya's so-called  'rebels' with weapons, Barack announced that the US would be using drones to  attack Libya.  Manzullo was very clear that drones are assistance and are  participation. Via a friend's note (reporter), I'll note Democrat Brad Sherman's  remarks in full (again, these are not my notes and I have no hard copy of  Sherman's prepared remarks) because he refused to play partisan politics and  stuck to the issues.  (My comment is in reference to Howard Berman.)   US House Rep Brad Sherman:  The State Dept is working hard to bring  the blessings of democracy and the rule of law to every country . . . except  ours. Rome was built with legislative decision making.  Rome declined and fell  under an imperial executive. We probably should authorize some action with  regard to Libya -- although I've got a lot of questions the administration  doesn't need to answer because they view us as irrelevant. But any authorization  should be limited as to time and scope so that we can then pass additional  resolutions with further review. Any authorization should be conditioned on the  Libyan rebels expelling from their midst those with American blood on their  hands, those who fought us in Afghanistan and Iraq and particularly the Libyan  Islamic Fighting Group.  And, finally, I would want to see any resolution  require that this mission be funded by the assets that Ghadaffi was stupid  enough to leave in the United States which have been seized by the US Treasury.   The Administration takes the extremist view that the Executive can deploy any  amount of American force anywhere, anytime for any purpose, for any duration,  with any effect, with only the most cursory discussions with only a few members  of Congress.  Worse than that, they won't even articulate that view.  They won't  even acknowledge the 60th day and the day on which they began violating that  law.  But as the Ranking Member points out, the fault is also here with  Congress.  So many of us would like to evade the tough decisions.  Democrats and  Republicans know how to vote on contentious issues because we come from Democrat  and Republican districts.  But this is one that crosses party lines, this is one  that divides every one of our districts and a lot of people would just as soon  duck the issue.  That's not our job.  We should put in every appropriations bill  that the expenditure of funds in violation of the War Powers Act constitutes a  theft of tax payer money.  I tried with a few to get Congressional approval of  both parties to put in the CR that no money could be spent in violation of the  War Powers Act. We got no response. It's time for Congress to step forward. It's  time to stop shredding the US Constitution in a presumed effort to bring  democracy and constitutional law to Libya.   If the above doesn't flow, this section was actually what the snapshot  originally ended with.  But the friend who passed on Sherman's remarks didn't  think their outlet would run with them.  That is the case.  So since some of  those remarks were included in a version of a report but an outlet refused to  include it (supposedly they weren't 'pertinent' to the hearing itself), we've  moved it up to the opening and we'll also close the snapshot with US House Rep  Brad Sherman's remarks.    I arrived at the hearing as Howard Berman was finishing his line of  questioning to represent the 26th district of Israel and Howard's  constitutents  should know he had their interests -- Oops.  Israel has no  district in the US Congress.  Berman's from the 26th district of California and  it's amazing that he continues to make Israel his foremost issue -- whether it's  related to the main points or not -- and the 26th district -- which has a small  Jewish population -- continues to elect him (since redistricting).  It's past  time Howard Berman learned to serve his constitutents but if they're not going  to hold him accountable, no one can.  We'll note this exchange between US House  Rep Renee Ellmers and the witnesses.  US House Rep Renee Ellmers: This is a very important exchange of  information on an issue that I would consider gray.  I do want to ask you  directly though -- I know we've talked about the Libyan situation and we've  talked about other situations where the War Powers Act has been put forth, do  you believe that the President had the authority to do what he did in Libya?   And I'll ask both of you that question. Do you believe that the Libyan situation  basically adhered to the War Act?   US House Rep Christopher Gibson:  No, I do not. Not only on the  front end but even now. Let's look at the specific language from Public Law  93148 which is the War Powers Act.  It says this, because this is a matter of  fine point precision, we're talking sixty days here.  This is what Section B --  Section 5 B says, "Within sixty calendar days after report is  submitted or is required to be submitted pursuant to section 1543 (a) (1) of  this title, whichever is earlier, the President shall terminate any use of  United States Armed Forces with respect to which such report was submitted (or  required to be submitted), unless the Congress (1) had declared war or has  enacted a specifiic authorization for such use of the United States Armed  Forces, (2) has extended by law such sixty-day periord, or (3) is physically  unable to meet as a result of an armed attack upon the United  States."  Okay.  So it's not so much that the president  came here on the sixtieth day, according to the letter of the law, if we don't  act within 60 days, the president is to cease operations and we're not in  compliance.   US House Rep Renee Ellmers:  And we've already -- We've met that 60  day marker right now and yet we have nothing going forward.  Is that  right?   US House Rep Christopher Gibson: We have surpassed the sixty days  and Congress has taken no action to authorize the force. To be in compliance  with the War Powers Act, we would have to cease operations.  Now if the  president requests, we can then provide stipulations on that withdrawal, we can  actually give 30, 60 -- We can authorize how many days we think are prudent to  make an orderly withdrawal.  Let me also just conclude by saying that this is  the current law.  I think we should move -- I think we should delete these  portions.  I think we should either have authorization -- the president either  has authority to move or he doesn't.  And if he doesn't have authority to move,  he comes here if he thinks it's that important.  He comes here and the American  people give their blessing with stipulations that the Congress may see fit and  then we go forward.   But to not do so really leaves open this ambiguity.  This  is what Mr. Connelly is referring to -- that the current War Powers Act -- as  written -- really provides so much ambiguity as to expand the powers of the  president and that's why we need the reform act is to bring balance back to this  situation in line with the way the founders intended for the legislative and the  executive branch to interact on these solemn manners.   US House Rep Renee Ellmers:  Thank you, Mr. Gibson.  Mr.  Rooney?   US House Rep Thomas Rooney:  I too and am apprehensive of thinking  that Libya was justifiable.  But according to my resolution, I can be convinced  that it was the greatest resolution in the world. But the problem is that we've  never had the debate.   US House Rep Renee Ellmers: Right.    US House Rep Thomas Rooney:  And the president and the  administration needs to come here and say more than just we welcome your  support.  So my predisiposition is no. But I'm open to suggestion.  But, you're  right, the 60 days has come and gone and just to add on [gestures to Gibson] in  the past, there have been members of Congress who have sued, gone to federal  court to say 'you're in violation of the War Powers Resolution and the  Constitution.'  And it's made its way to the Supreme Court without being heard   directly on point -- that we, or those members that did sue, lack standing.  So  that adds to your idea that we're operating in a world of gray and, you know,  possibly legislation like Mr. Gibson's would clarify that.  But all I'm saying  is that if he really thought that Libya was important and he would have come  here within the War Powers framework of sixty days, he may very well have gotten  the support of the Congress, but he didn't do that.     US House Rep Renee Ellmers:  Thank you very much.  Yes, please, Mr.  Gibson?
 US House Rep Christopher Gibson: Thank you for the opportunity to  just to follow up.  I just want to agree with my colleague here that it's  certainly an arguable point, the one that I made.  I mean, that's my read of the  current law. It has been debated in other places and there have been opinions  and some court cases related to this.  That is one of the reasons why I'm not  asking today that we take sanctions against the president. I think it's our  responsibility to fix this.  The ambiguity that exists has been exploited by  presidents on both sides of the political aisle.  And in a time when we need to  create jobs, balance the budget and protect freedoms, now is not the time to be  diverting into other matters. Other matters in terms of any other proceedings on  whether the president is in concert with the law -- that is not my purpose here  today.  What I want to do is fix this going forward so we don't end up back here  at this very same place spot.
   Actually, if a president -- any president -- is in violation, that is the  issue.  That is always the issue.  He or she is the people's servant, not a  king, not a queen.  As the servant to the public, he is bound by the laws.  The  Courts and the law have made quite clear that no one is above the law.   Ava 's covering some of Ron Paul's remarks at Trina's site  tonight.        They can't even be trusted with "Key findings."  Declaring, "The Iraqi  Security Forces will not be able to defend Iraq's sovereignty, maintain its  independence from Iran, or ensure Iraq's internal stability without American  assistance, including some ground forces in Iraq, for a number of years," is not  a "key finding."  It is a regurgitation of the remarks Nouri al-Maliki and  others have been making to the press for over a year now.  That's a bit like AEI  'scholars' camping out in fron of The Weather Channel for three hours and then  releasing a "key finding" that the eastern seaboard may see rain this  weekend.   Later on in the 'findings,' it argues the US has to extend the SOFA and  Iraq has to agree in order for Iraq to survive.  Those actually are "findings"  but they're not really supported by any work in the paper.  In fact, backing  things up is apparently one of those 'extras' the bad economy has forced AEI to  cut back on.  The unsupported conclusion insists:   If Maliki allows the United States to leave Iraq, he is effectively  declaring his intent to fall in line with Tehran's wishes, to subordinate Iraq's  foreign policy to the Persians, and, possibly, to consolidate his own power as a  sort of modern Persian satrap in Baghdad. If Iraq's leaders allow themselves to  be daunted by fear of Maliki or Iran, they will be betraying their people, who  have shed so much blood to establish a safe, independent, multiethnic,  multisectarian, unitary Iraqi state with representative institutions of  government.       When has post-invasion Iraq ever been "safe, independent, multiethnic,  multisectarian" or unitary?  Never.  If Frederick Kagan and the others who  pimped this war had any brains, they never would have pimped illegal war to  begin.  But if they had even the smallest ability to learn or think on their  feet, they'd keep their mouths shut right now.  Their plan was a disaster.  It  was always going to be a disaster (you cannot make or enforce democracy on  another group of people).  The last eight years have demonstrated the plan to be  a disaster.  Continuing it under Barack will only further underscore what a  disaster is.  The smart thing for the War Pimps is to just keep their mouths  shut, let the US military leave Iraq (no, that's really not happening, I know)  and lay low for a year or two, then emerge beating their chests and insisting  'victory' had almost been reached but Barack Obama stole it from them by  refusing to stand up.  It's not all that differnt from the revisionary history  on Vietnam, for example.     But War Pimps are not known for their brains and they tend cry and rage at  the thought of the plug being pulled on illegal wars.  Far more interesting than  the report is the "About The Author" on the last page which notes Frederick  Kagan prefers to be called Freddie, has owned seven cats -- all of which ran  away from home, states, if he had his life to do all over again, he would do so  in angora and dreams of one day being asked to do the Vanity Fair  Proust Questionnaire.     Okay, truth, "About The Author" doesn't actually say that (or even imply  it), but wouldn't it have made the report more interesting if it had?  Rezgar (Kurdish Aspect) ponders  the prospects of the  US pulling out all forces from Iraq:    Will the US honor that  agreement? It is easier said than done, particularly after having exhausted  billions of dollars in Iraq war so far. Cogitating that it the US will so simply  bid farewell to Iraq for good is a pure misperception. The US has never had any  such plans to dump Iraqi largest oil reserves in the hand of any other imperial  major power, nor consent to the hostile Iran to bolster its hegemony in the  majority Shiite populated Iraq. There might be another substantial reduction of  troops in Southern and Central parts of Iraq to win over anti-American Shiite  clerics such as Muqtada al-Sadr, but in its place, the US will reposition its  troops to the North, mainly Kurdistan, where US Troops are much hailed. 
 Hundreds of CIA operatives  have already spread out throughout the North (Kurdistan), monitoring neighboring  Iranian military activities and accumulating intelligence, opening clandestine  bureaus in building complexes such as Zakaria Apartment Complex. Kurdish officials have long  appealed to the US administration to maintain permanent military bases in  Kurdistan. Masood Barzani, Kurdistan Government President, held talks with James  F. Jeffrey US ambassador, US Ambassador to Iraq, and Frank Helmick, Deputy  Commanding General of US Forces in Iraq  General to put  this vital blueprint  into motion. Maintaining the level of current stability in Kurdistan is mutually  par for the course for the US administration.
   Dar Addustour notes today that  sources say a coalition is emerging among Nouri's supporters and others in  Parliament to push for an extension and an MP for the Liberal Party states that  they will resist these efforts to keep US forces on the ground in Iraq.  This  follows Dar Addustour reporting  yesterday  that the US State Dept's Deputy for Democracy and Global Affairs Maria Otero  arrived Monday in Baghdad and a Kurdish MP says there is movement towards  extending the SOFA and keeping US forces in Iraq past 2011. Ayas Hossam Acommok (Al Mada) also reported  that "a high  political level" unnamed source with State Of Law (Nouri's political slate) was  stating that the Iraqi government has decided to extend the current agreement  and not seek a new one. The source states that between 20,000 and 25,000 US  troops will remain in Iraq and that Iraq will declare they need 13,000 to help  with logistics and training while at least 5,000 will be said to be needed by  the US Embassy. These particulars, the source stated, will be reviewed with the  political blocs over the next ten days.  All this while, Aswat al-Iraq reported , Muzhir  Hassan, Anbar Province Council member, became the latest official to call for  the US military to remain on the ground in Iraq beyond 2011.  Hassan stated  that "the extension of the U.S. troops presence in Iraq" was necessary because  otherwise "a security vacuum" will emerge.  At  Press TV, Anthony Gregory observes : 
 Last year 559 American troops died  in Iraq and Afghanistan . This is considerably more than the 469 during Bush's  last year in office. There has also been an increase in the presence of  contractors in both wars, as well as their casualties. Contractors can obscure  the true extent of the wars. When Obama has gone on record touting the reduction  in U.S. fatalities, he neglects to mention "the contractor personnel now dying  in their place," says professor Steven Schooner of George Washington University  Law School . In the first half of 2010, 250 civilian contractors died in Iraq  and Afghanistan-more than the 235 soldiers who fell during the same period.    Obama ran on cutting money from the war  budget, but overall the U.S. spends almost as much, deploys nearly as many  troops, and is losing as many lives as when Obama took over. Last year's defense  budget, at over $700 billion, was the largest ever. In fiscal year 2012 the  defense budget will be at least $671 billion, far higher than the budgets under  Bush, and much too high given the country's financial problems.    Overall, the U.S. is as belligerent under  Obama as it was under Bush. Obama has widened the war into Pakistan . Drone  attacks have multiplied, killing ten civilians for every militant, according to  Daniel L. Byman at the Brookings Institution. Moreover, Obama has bombed Yemen  and Somalia , as well as started a war with Libya without congressional  approval.       Meanwhile, on the political front, Alsumaria TV reports ,  "A source close to Iraqiya leader Iyad Allawi revealed on Tuesday that certain  political leaders some of which are present in southern councils will join on  Thursday Iraqiya's coalition during a meeting of members to renew support to  Allawi." But the big political news, New Sabah reports , is Nouri  al-Maliki's assertion that Iraq's legislative branch, the Parliament, has no  power to make laws. He is quoted, from a speech, stating that "the House of  Representatives has no right to initiate legislation [. . . -- their edit, not  mine] the legislation, the laws must come from the Council of Ministers or the  Presidency exclusively." The Council is Nouri's Council and it and the  presidency are part of the executive branch. For those who need a review, Iraq  -- like the US -- has three branches of government, the judiciary, the  legislative and the executive. As Peter Lorre explains, while hurling  knives in 1947's My Favorite Brunette   (starring Bob Hope and Dorothy Lamour), "The three branches of our government  are? Hmm? The legislative, the executive and the judicial. What does the  legislative branch of our government do? Hmm? Huh? It makes the laws. What does  the executive branch of our government do? It carries out the  laws." Somehow that's too much for Nouri to grasp. And this is not just  who the US government -- both the Bush administration and the Barack one -- has  backed but the puppet they want US forces to remain in Iraq past 2011 in order  to back.  That's who AEI and the War Pimps have backed as well.  Hint to AEI,  next time you need a people's support to hail something as a success, try  backing the people and not a puppet (though that does go against AEI's nature, I  know).  But who supports the people?  Each Friday, protests take place across  Iraq.  And the US press ignores them.  Yet no one can stop trying to do a roll  out for Moqtada al-Sadr, apparently.  Maybe Karl Rove's freelancing for  Moqtada?  Tim Craig and Asaad Majeed (Washington Post)  become the latest  to 'report' on an event that hasn't taken place.  Moqtada  wants protests tomorrow in Iraq.  This week alone, his desire for a protest has  gotten more US press attention than all the protests of the people in Iraq that  have taken place this month and last combined.  What does that tell you?    Kurdistan regional government officials and security forces are  carrying out a growing assault on the freedom of journalists to work in Iraqi  Kurdistan, Human Rights Watch said today. Regional officials should stop  repressing journalists through libel suits, beatings, detentions, and death  threats, Human Rights Watch said.
 Kurdistan authorities have repeatedly  tried to silence Livin Magazine, one of Iraqi Kurdistan's leading  independent publications, and other media. The international community should  end its silence and condemn these widening attacks, Human Rights Watch  said.
 
 "The Kurdistan Regional Government promised a new era of freedom  for Iraqi Kurds, but it seems no more respectful of Kurdish rights to free  speech than the government that preceded it," said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle  East director at Human Rights Watch. "In a time when the Middle East is erupting  in demands to end repression, the Kurdish authorities are trying to stifle and  intimidate critical journalism."
 
 On May 17, 2011, the Kurdistan  Democratic Party (KDP) of regional president Massud Barzani brought a defamation  lawsuit against the Livin editor-in-chief, Ahmed Mira, for publishing  an article about an alleged plot by the KDP and its ruling alliance partner, the  Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), to assassinate opposition leaders. According  to court documents obtained by Human Rights Watch, the KDP is seeking total  damages of one billion dinars (US$864,000) and an order to shut down the  magazine by revoking its license.
 
 The court documents say the party is  suing Mira because the Livin article "not only has no basis in truth  but is a threat to national security [and] a violation to the dignity and glory  and the great achievements" of Iraqi Kurdistan.
 
 Earlier in May, the Iraqi  president, Jalal Talabani, the PUK leader, filed his own lawsuit over the same  article. Mira told Human Rights Watch that, as a result, police detained him and  a Livin reporter, Zhyar Mohammed, for five hours on May 5.
 
 "Such  libel suits by Kurdistan government officials are nothing more than a  thinly-veiled effort to punish critics and create an atmosphere of fear and  self-censorship," Whitson said. "The attacks by Barzani and his colleagues on  independent journalists do more to undermine Kurdish 'dignity' and 'glory' than  anything in the media reports."
 
 A Livin reporter told Human  Rights Watch that when he called Sheikh Jaffar Mustafa, Minister of Peshmerga  (Kurdistan security forces), on April 24, Mustafa threatened Livin's  editor, Mira, with death. The reporter had called Mustafa and taped the  conversation because he wanted to get an official comment on an unrelated  matter. The reporter said that Mustafa was upset over an unflattering article in  the magazine that compared Mustafa to the Israeli defense minister, Ehud Barak.  Mira said he decided to report the threat to the regional government's prime  minister rather than make it public or go to the police, which he believed would  be ineffectual and put him at further risk.
     Turning to the topic of violence, Al Rafidayn notes  that police chief  Msderfi Anfjarabbop was killed in Kirkuk today and one of his bodyguards and a  police officer were injured in a bombing. In related news.  Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) notes , "There has been longstanding  sectarian tension among Kurdish, Arab and Turkmen people in Kirkuk.  Namat is  Kurdish, but there was no immediate information on whether the bombing was tied  to ethnic hostilities."   Reuters notes  a Baghdad sticky bombing  injured one police officer, a Baghdad shooting injured an Interior Ministry  colonel, 5 Baghdad construction workers were shot and wounded, a Baghdad car  bombing injured five people, a police officer in Kirkuk was wounded in an attack  and, dropping back to Tuesday for both of the last items, 1 corpse was  discovered in Kirkuk and Baghdad's car bombing yesterday resulted in 3 deaths  and fifteen people injured.
 Turning to the US,  a verdict was reached in Fort Stewart court-martial  today.  England's Daily Mail reported   earlier this  month on the court-martial taking place in Georgia with Army Sgt Joseph  Bozicevich accused of killing two US soldiers -- Staff Sgt Darris Dawson and Sgt  Wesley Durbin -- in cold blood while he claims self-defense. It was agreed that  he was being criticized for his performance (though the accused questions the  accuracy of the criticism) and after that? The Associated Press added  that the  accused was stating he was threatened by "The Black Masons," that the deceased  admitted they were masons and claimed they could get away with killing him as a  result. The defense offered Dr. Thomas Greiger as a witness to speak about the  accused's delusions.  Mary Hashemi (WSAV) reports  that, "A military  jury found Bozicevich guilty on two counts Wednesday of premeditated murder.   Bozicevich faces a life sentence.  Sentencing will begin on Thursday to decide  whether the punishment is with or without parole." One more time from today's House Foreign Affairs Committee hearing, here  are Brad Sherman's opening remarks:    US House Rep Brad Sherman:  The State Dept is working hard to bring  the blessings of democracy and the rule of law to every country . . . except  ours. Rome was built with legislative decision making.  Rome declined and fell  under an imperial executive. We probably should authorize some action with  regard to Libya -- although I've got a lot of questions the administration  doesn't need to answer because they view us as irrelevant. But any authorization  should be limited as to time and scope so that we can then pass additional  resolutions with further review. Any authorization should be conditioned on the  Libyan rebels expelling from their midst those with American blood on their  hands, those who fought us in Afghanistan and Iraq and particularly the Libyan  Islamic Fighting Group.  And, finally, I would want to see any resolution  require that this mission be funded by the assets that Ghadaffi was stupid  enough to leave in the United States which have been seized by the US Treasury.   The Administration takes the extremist view that the Executive can deploy any  amount of American force anywhere, anytime for any purpose, for any duration,  with any effect, with only the most cursory discussions with only a few members  of Congress.  Worse than that, they won't even articulate that view.  They won't  even acknowledge the 60th day and the day on which they began violating that  law.  But as the Ranking Member points out, the fault is also here with  Congress.  So many of us would like to evade the tough decisions.  Democrats and  Republicans know how to vote on contentious issues because we come from Democrat  and Republican districts.  But this is one that crosses party lines, this is one  that divides every one of our districts and a lot of people would just as soon  duck the issue.  That's not our job.  We should put in every appropriations bill  that the expenditure of funds in violation of the War Powers Act constitutes a  theft of tax payer money.  I tried with a few to get Congressional approval of  both parties to put in the CR that no money could be spent in violation of the  War Powers Act. We got no response. It's time for Congress to step forward. It's  time to stop shredding the US Constitution in a presumed effort to bring  democracy and constitutional law to Libya.       |