|     | Wednesday, June 29, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, talk of Iraq  developing a Sunni region is shot down, officials are repeatedly targeted in  today's violence, Iraq is discussed in the US at a Senate Subcommittee, and  more.   Starting with this on veterans employment from Senator Patty Murray's  office:   Chairman Murray Applauds Committee Passage of Landmark Veterans  Employment Legislation Having unanimously passed the Senate Veterans' Affairs  Committee, the bill will now go to the full Senate for  consideration  (Washington, D.C.) -- Today, U.S.  Senator Patty Murray (D-WA), Chairman of the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee,  applauded the unanimous passage of her landmark veterans employment bill, the  Hiring Heroes Act of 2011 (S.  951) through the Senate Committee on Veterans'  Affairs. Chairman Murray's bill is the first of its kind to require broad job  skills training for all service members returning home and comes at a time when  more than one in four veterans aged 20-24 are unemployed. In addition to  providing new job skills training to all service members, the bill will also  create new direct federal hiring authority so that more service members have  jobs waiting for them the day they leave the military, and will improve veteran  mentorship programs in the working world.  Having unanimously passed the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee,  the bill will now go to the full Senate for consideration. Read Senator Murray's statement about the passage  below: "With today's passage, this critical legislation moves one step  closer to providing veterans with the broad job skills training and support they  need to break down barriers to employment. For the first time, this  comprehensive bill will require service members to learn how to translate the  skills they learned in the military into the working world. It will also ensure  that more veterans have jobs waiting for them when they leave the military by  streamlining the path to private and federal employment. "Our veterans sacrificed greatly to fight for our freedoms and  they shouldn't have to fight for jobs when they return home. I'm hopeful that  this legislation will quickly make its way before the full Senate, and I look  forward to fighting for it when it does."    Senator Murray has long championed veterans and her bill should be passed  quickly by the full Senate.    Turning now to the wars that produce the veterans (the wars also produce  the fallen).       Cynthia McKinney: Congress must exercise its authority and reign in  this president. [Applause.] If this president proceeds -- now we already know  that this president is guilty of committing war crimes. [Applause.]  We know  that.  Now if having oral sex is an impeachable crime certainly war crimes and  crimes against humanity are also impeachable crimes.  [Applause.] Ignoring the  War Powers Act and the Constitution is an impeachable crime. If President Obama  refuses to heed public opinion in the United States -- 60% of which is against  the involvement against Libya -- if he is determined to violate the Constitution  and violate the War Powers Act and defy Congress, I'm hoping that we will bring  enough pressure to bear on our members of Congress that they will follow the  House and, in the Senate, also vote to cut off the funding for this NATO  operation.  [Applause.]  Because of what NATO is doing in Libya, what we're  seeing is the Israel-ization of NATO policy against the people of Libya.   Whether it's collective punishment -- NATO now is refusing to allow food, fuel  and medicine to come in as they bomb people and hurt people, NATO is refusing to  allow Libya to import the necessary medicine. That too is against international  law. That makes our president's actions also criminal in the collective  punishment that is being visited on the Libyan people.  They can't even fish in  their own territorial waters because NATO is stopping that.  Sounds a lot like  Gaza, doesn't it?         Michael S. Smith: Michael, Heidi, there's been a lot of ink spilled  over Obama overstepping legal authority with the war in Libya.  And Michael,  you've litigated this question on the War Powers Act.  What's your take on  it?   Michael Ratner: We should first say that, as hosts, we're against  this war to begin with, apart from the legality, that this is just another US  imperialistic war in the Middle East.  I mean, whatever we think about that.   But, in addition, what's come out lately is that it's flatly illegal and the  administration is fighting an illegal war.  I  wrote an op-ed on this way back at the end of March that this was an  unconstitutional war because it was attacking another country and under the  Constitution you have to get the consent of Congress. He  didn't.  Since then, of course, the War Powers Resolution  has clicked in. That's the resolution that was passed in the wake of the Vietnam  War.  And it was passed for a particular reason: Congress was afraid that  presidents would continue to go to war without their consent and so they built  an automatic trigger into the War Powers Resoultion saying that 60 days  after the president initiated a war, for whatever reason, whatever basis, if it  didn't have explicit Congressional consent, the troops had to automatically be  withdrawn. I say that again: automatically be withdrawn within 30 days after the  60-day time clock expires. So that's 90 days.  There shouldn't be any attack on  Libya going on that the United States is involved in at all -- not involved in  coordination, not involved in helping with the radar, not involved in helping  send its own missiles -- which it's still doing, not involved in bombing --  which it's still doing.  So the 90 days are over.  The war started over 90 days  ago.  And there's now been a big debate in the administration with Obama saying,  'I'm not violating the War Powers Resolution.  There's no hostilities. We  haven't entered into hostilities.'  I mean, it doesn't pass the straight-face  test.  I mean, it's ridiculous.  It's a total lie. And what's sad about it, of  course, is that he got advice from the administration official lawyers at the  Office of Legal Counsel --   Michael S. Smith: And the Pentagon.   Michael Ratner: And the Pentagon which -- the OLC actually is  authoritative on the law with the president.  Yes, he can override it, but it's  authoritative. Very rarely over-ridden.  Then he went to some other people at  the State Dept and elsewhere -- including Harold Koh -- who I used to work with very  closely.  And they give him the opposite opinion.  They said, 'Oh, no.  There's  no violation of the War Powers Resoultion here.' And Obama, to the American  people, with a straight face, has the nerve to say, "We're not violating the War  Powers Resolution." So now you see them scrambling around in Congress -- you  know, [Dennis] Kuccinich and some Republicans -- saying 'let's cut off all the  funding for this war.'  They never actually funded the war.  That's another  interesting point. Obama took the money from some raw defense dept budget. He  didn't even use specific funding for the war.   Michael S. Smith:   That's utterly unconstitutional.  The  Constitution [says the Congress] is supposed to have the power of purse and  since war is so important they're supposed to fund them or not fund them.     Michael Ratner: Right and I was asked this morning, about how do  you compare Obama and Bush on the war?  Well whatever you thought of the  resolution authorizing -- 'authorizing' -- the war in Afghanistan or the war in  Iraq, there was at least resolutions.  I mean there isn't one for Libya.  And  now you see the great scene is to see [John] Kerry, our former presidential  candidate who, you'll recall, when he ran for president saluted the Democratic  Convention saying, "Reporting for duty" to show that even though he was against  the Vietnam War after the fact, that he was still a figher.  Well he proved he's  still a fighter. He's now joined by [John] McCain at the hip to say, 'Now let's  pass a resolution authorizing the war.'  So here you go, the president does an  unconstitutional war, he violates the War Powers Resolution and then, of course,  exactly what the problem was in Vietnam, you're seeing with a war going on,  Congress is saying, 'Well we can't abandon our troops in the field, we can't  abandon our troops in the air, our credibility is at stake if we abandon NATO.   The same BS we've heard forever.  So underneath it, and it's the only analysis  that counts, is this is one of a half-dozen imperial wars the US is fighting.   And, as someone once said to me, "If you only have a hammer, everything looks  like a nail." In the US, the world looks like a bunch of nails that it can just  hit around when it gets into a problem.    Michael S. Smith: I think the other point is whether it's Bush or  whether it's Obama, whether it's a Republican, whether it's a Democrat, that  certain necessities of empire that these guys follow regardless of what party  they're in or what promises they make when they're running for office.     Michael Ratner: I think that's right. I mean, you always tell me  about there's two capitalist parties --    Michael S. Smith:  One party with two wings.   Michael Ratner:  Right, so this is, you know, we have one War Party  really, the question is are there even two wings?    We'll stop there but I do love what Ratner says next. From the illegal  Libyan War to the never-ending Afghanistan War, Bill Van Auken (WSWS) observes Barack and Richard  Nixon:    In our response to the Obama speech, the World  Socialist Web Site stated: "The plan announced by Obama will spell an  escalation rather than a reduction in the bloodshed in Afghanistan. The aim is  to carry out a military offensive over this summer and the next in an attempt to  militarily crush the popular opposition to US occupation. To the extent that the  withdrawal affects firepower available to US commanders, it will inevitably lead  to the use of more air strikes and drone missile attacks and, as a result, an  even greater number of civilian casualties." The opinion piece drafted by Rose provides added confirmation to  this assessment. Both the author of this piece and the publication that he edits are  worth examining. Foreign Affairs, the organ of the Council on Foreign  Relations, has long served as a public forum for debating foreign policy issues  within the US political establishment. It is the same magazine where Henry  Kissinger, then a private citizen, first advanced views on Vietnam that would  subsequently be embraced by Nixon after his 1969 inauguration. As for Rose, he is described by the magazine as an expert on  international conflict, terrorism and economic sanctions. He was a Middle East  advisor on the National Security Council during the Clinton administration,  helping craft the sanctions regime against Iraq estimated to have claimed the  lives of over half a million Iraqi children.   And if Barack's Tricky Dick, Tom Hayden's Rose Mary Woods because his revisionary and  'creative' interpretation of Barack's speech creates its own highly edited  response and we long to see him demonstrate the Rose Mary Wood stretch.  David Walsh (WSWS) observes, "Hayden makes entirely  unwarranted claims about the so-called withdrawal plan and then attributes the  'de-escalation' to pressure from a 'peace movement' that is largely the product  of his imagination." Ivan Eland (Antiwar.com) also sees  Richard Nixon when he looks at Barack:    Richard Nixon faced the same dilemma presiding over the lost  Vietnam War. In 1971, he wanted to withdraw U.S. forces from South Vietnam until  Henry Kissinger reminded him that the place would likely fall apart in 1972, the  year Nixon was up for reelection. To avoid this scenario, Nixon unconscionably  delayed a peace settlement until 1973, thus trading more wasted American lives  for his reelection. Obama appears to be up to the same thing. A phased withdrawal of  33,000 U.S. troops before the election will push back at Republican candidates'  demands for more rapid withdrawal and signal to the conflict-fatigued American  public that he is solving the problem, while leaving 70,000 forces to make sure  the country doesn't collapse before that election. Again, American lives will be  needlessly lost so that a slick politician can look his best at election time.     WTVB reports on a new  report from Brown University on the financial costs of the Iraq and Afghanistan  Wars and the drone war in Pakistan which finds that $2.3 trillion dollars have  already been spent in the last ten years on these wars. Reuters explains that the three  wars have resulted in "between 224,475 and 257,655 deaths."  Alex Sundby (CBS News) adds, "However, one of the project's  co-directors told Reuters that the Pentagon's tally of troops who died from the  wars should include those who come home and commit suicide or die in car  accidents."  And Tim Mak (POLITICO) offers that "the  report asserts that conflict in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan will continue  through the decade, adding to both financial and human costs."   John Glaser (Antiwar.com) provides  another aspect of these costs, the return:   |    It's also worth contemplating what the return on the investment  was. It has been helpful to the expansion of the American Empire and has put  dough in the pockets of the military industry, but the notion that Iraq,  Afghanistan, and Pakistan are more stable countries than they were ten years ago  is almost laughable. Iraq's "government, economy, legal systems,  and basic services like electricity and water remain  unstable," corruption is widespread, sectarian and  insurgency-based violence is again on the  rise, and governance there is slipping towards  dictatorship with the Maliki government harassing  media outlets who speak ill of him, harsh repression and crackdowns of Arab  Spring protesters, and a closed political system. Afghanistan is in ruins: it is  one of the poorest, most  corrupt nations in the world, nation building efforts  are failing, violence and civilian deaths  keep  hitting record-setting highs, and the U.S. is in an  unending and dangerous  quagmire there. Pakistan is increasingly unstable  with rife poverty and corruption, pockets of extremists in the autonomous tribal  regions are very strong, well over 1,000  civilians, and possibly  a few thousand have been  killed by Predator drones, and the dictatorial  government relies on U.S. aid in the billions to even function at  all.   With those kind of numbers, you might think people would be wisely pulling  up and pulling out of these costly and deadly wars; however, Xinhua (link has text and audio)  reports 55 soldiers from Fiji are being deployed to Iraq, increasing  their total number in Iraq to 278. The Fiji  Times cites a statement from the Ministry of Information  stating that the deployment was made at the request of the United  Nations.
 Eight years after the start of the illegal war and the  installation of exiles into a puppet government in occupied Iraq, there's little  that can pass for 'progress' and "political stagnation" has become the  watchword. Will US troops remain in Iraq? The issue, Al  Mada reports, is little more than a "political pressure card"  within Iraq used by various blocs in various ways. A political scientist at  Baghdad University tells Al Mada that he fears that politicians are not  factoring in what's best for Iraq but how to posture on the issue. Aswat al-Iraq adds that US  Ambassador to Iraq James Jeffrey and Iraqi President Jalal Talabani met and  Talabani's office issued a statement which includes: "The bilateral relations  between the Republic of Iraq and the United States were discussed in the  meeting, and necessity for their expansion and development, especially the  bilateral future cooperation, within the Strategic Agreement, concluded between  the two friendly countries."
 
 What the White House wants is an extension of the SOFA or a new agreement  which would allow US troops to stay on the ground in Iraq beyond 2011 and under  the US Defense Dept.  If that is not possible, the plan is to take the troops  remaining in Iraq and slide them under the umbrella of the US State Dept in  which case their presence is covered under the Strategic Framework Agreement of  2008.   Ed O'Keefe does the "Federal Eye" beat for the Washington  Post.  For the next several weeks, he is in Iraq.  This morning, he  Tweeted:     In his article on this issue he explained that the  Bureau of Diplomatic Security, in a GAO Office report, "acknowledged it is not  designed to assume the military's mission in Iraq and will have to rely on its  own resources and the assistance of the host country to protect the U.S. mission  in the absence of the funding, personnel, equipment, and protection formerly  provided by the U.S. military." He was referring to the report entitled [PDF  format warning] "Expanded Missions and Inadequate Facilities Pose Critical  Challenges to Training Efforts."  The report stood as prepared remarks by  GAO's Jess Ford as he appeared this afternoon before the Senate's Homeland  Security Subcommittee on Oversight of Government Management, Federal Workforce  and DC.  Senator Daniel Akaka is the Subcomittee Chair.  He noted, "This  Subcommittee held a hearing in 2009 to examine staffing and management  challenges at the State Dept's Diplomatic Security Bureau which protects State  Dept employees and property worldwide.  Today's hearing will build on the  previous hearing, as well as examine the results of a Government Accountability  Office (GAO) review of Diplomatic Security training challenges."    There were two panels.  Ford was on the first panel with the State Dept's  Eric J. Boswell.  The second panel was Susan R. Johnson of the American Foreign  Service Association.  We'll excerpt this from the first panel.   Subcommittee Chair Daniel Akaka: My question to you, what planning  is underway to make sure DS [State Dept's Diplomatic Security] will be able to  be prepared to protect diplomats and  US civilian personnel in Iraq and  Afghanistan as the military withdraws?    Ambassador Eric Boswell: Mr. Chairman, thank you for that  question.  We are engaged -- we the Dept of State and DS -- are engaged in a  marathon of planning.  I think that's the right way to describe it.  It's  probably -- The planning for the transition in Iraq is probably the most complex  planning effort ever undertaken by the State Dept and perhaps one of the most  complicated civilian planning efforts ever undertaken by the US government.   We've been working on it for years.  We think we have a very good planning  strategy and we think we have a good plan and the short answer to your question,  sir, is that I think that we will be able to be in a position  to provide the  security for our people in Iraq after December 31st of this year when all US  troops will be gone from the country.  Having said that, as I said, it's a very,  very complex and difficult task.  We are going to be dramatically increasing the  number of security personnel at post in Iraq.   And we will be increasing also  the use of contractors in part for some of the things you mentioned and Mr. Ford  mentioned, certain functions and activities that are not mainstream State Dept  functions and were we are taking over functions now provided by the US military.  We think we've got the structure in place to do it. I'l -- I-I-I should make the  point that combat operations in Iraq ceased over a year ago, US military combat  operations in Iraq ceased over a year ago.  We have been providing security to  our very large US embassy in Baghdad for over a year without any assistance from  the military beyond certain very specialized funtions and we expect to be able  to continue to do so.  You asked about Afghanistan also, sir.  Obviously, we are  not there yet, there is not a transition yet.  The president has just announced  the  beginning of a drawdown in Afghanistan but I can assure you that we have  learned a lot in the planning process for Iraq and we will apply those lessons  in Afghanistan.     Subcommittee Chair Daniel Akaka:  Thank you.  Ambassador, as the  military withdraws from Iraq and Afghanistan -- later Afghanistan -- DS will  provide certain security and protective services that the military is performing  now such as downed aircraft recovery and explosive ordinance disposal; however,  the military provides many services such as intelligence collection and  providing a visible deterrence in ways that DS cannot. How will the loss of  these important capabilities effect the way DS provides security in Iraq and  Afghanistan?  And is DS equipped to handle all of the functions it will be asked  to assume?    Ambassador Eric Boswell: Uhm, senator, Mr. Chairman, I was in Iraq  several years ago and the security situation in Iraq now, I think it's fair to  say, is infinitely better then it was at the worst of times: 2005 to 2007.  You  are right, sir, in saying that certain key functions of the US military will be  absent.  They can't be replaced by DS -- notably, uh -uh, counter-rocket fire.   We are not an offensive unit in DS.  Some intelligence functions as well. We are  going -- As Iraq normalizes as a nation, we are going to rely as we do in most  countries on the Iraqi forces and the Iraqi police for these functions to the  maximum extent that we can.    Subcommittee Chair Daniel Akaka: Well, Mr. Ford, in 2009, GAO  recommended that State conduct a security review of diplomatic security's  mission, budget and personnel as part of State's  Quadrennial Diplomacy and  Development Review.  While State agreed with the recommendation,  the QDDR did  not include this strategic review.  Will you please discuss how inadequate the  stategic planning may effect DS operations?   Jess Ford: Uh, yeah, Mr. Chairman, let me respond to that.  First  of all, I can say that we were disappointed that the QDDR did not take a more  strategic look at DS operations. Our 2009 report suggested that DS has been  required to expand a number of missions that it's asked to support by the Dept  overall and that they're often put into what I would characterize as a  reactionary posture which we don't think is good from a planning point of view  and our goal of that 2009 was that the Dept would take a longer look at  DS and  come up with a more strategic way of asessing needs, resources and  requirements.  I think I can say that our current report which is focused on the  training parts of DS suggests that there still seems in my mind to be a gap  here.     Asked about the use of security contractors, Boswell insisted this was a  must, that multiple studies demonstrated this and he cited his 2007 visit as  somehow proof.  He then suggested that at some point, as Iraq becomes more  'stable,' they might be able to replace the foreign security contractors with  "nationals" (Iraqis) and stated that they currently use "nationals" in Erbil. He  also claimed "about eighty"  DS employees would be providing contract oversight  to ensure that contractors were behaving properly (in his opening remarks,  Subcommittee Chair Daniel Akaka noted the Nassar Square slaughter in September  2007 by Blackwater mercenaries guarding the State Dept).  He noted there were  two kinds of security contractors: contract guards and the bodyguards --  contract guards = static guards; bodyguards = protective security details, "the  movement people who travel in the motorcades and who run the motorcades."   Meanwhile Iraq has a Kurdish region, some want it to now have a Sunni  region. And, no, we're not talking about US Vice President Joe Biden. (Biden  favored a federation system for Iraq made up of a Shi'ite region, a Sunni region  and a Kurdish region.) Al  Mada reports that while Osama al-Nujaifi (Speaker of  Parliament) has long supported (that's their call, I have no idea whether he's  long supporter it or not) a centralized Iraq, he's now begun talking about a  Sunni region. The Secretary-General of the Justice and Reform Movement, Abdul  Hamidi al-Yawar, finds the idea distressing and claims it will add to the  tensions. Aswat al-Iraq quotes Hussein  al-Muayad stating, "The Iraqi people, with all their fraternal components,  strongly reject any step to ignore the national principles, mainly the unity of  Iraq. Sunnis in Iraq understand well that their real and active existence can't  be achieved through projects of secession and division, but through cohesion  towards Iraq's unity." Alsumaria TV carries  the response from Iraqiya:
 "Al Iraqiya  stands firmly against any attempt to strip down Iraq through despicable  sectarian motives", Iraqiya official spokeswoman Maysoun Al Damlouji said in a  statement which Alsumarianews obtained a copy of.
 "Marginalizing citizens is  not restricted to a specified province. Bad services, unemployment and poverty  affect all people while the only beneficiaries of Iraq's wealth are a group that  does not represent a sect or a rite", she said.
 
 Aswat al-Iraq quotes the Iraqi  Republican Gathering stating that this talk is "a dangerous turn that will open  regional and international greed."   Rawya Rageh: Sheikh Osama al-Tamimi  recalls a time when he  couldn't pray freely here.  The Shi'ite cleric was imprisoned under Saddam for  fourteen months for leading worshippers in this Baghdad shrine.  But today the  Sheikh calls the mosque named after a revered 8th Century Shi'ite figure has  emerged into the light.  He says thousands of visitors come here to pay their  respect to an Imam whose life story exemplifies the suppression of  Shia Islam  with numbers swelling during an annual festival marking his  death.   Sheikh Osama al-Tamimi: We found the freedom to hold our religious  rites and rituals and, year on year, there's more creativity and development in  commemorating these religious occasions.   Rawya Rageh: Scene like there would have ben unimaginable under  Saddam Hussein.  Iraq's Shia have been experiencing a renaissance that's enabled  them to  express their identity openly and proudly and has created a whole new  political landscape. For the first time in modern history, Shia have come to  power in an Arab country.  Their various competing political parties have been  predominantly shaping Iraqi politics differences between them at times advancing  democracy, other times deadlock.      Turning to today's violence, Reuters notes a military officer with  the Ministry of Interior was left wounded in a Baghdad shooting, an employee of  the Hajj Commission was injured in a Baghdad shooting, Lt Col Mohammed Abdul  Ridha with the Ministry of Defense was injured in a Baghdad shooting, a Baghdad  roadside bombing claimed the life of 1 police officer and left seven people  injured, a Baghdad bombing injured two people and Ali al-Lami's brother Jamal  Faisal was shot dead.      In the US, an Iraq War veteran is facing legal trouble.   26-year-old  Elisha Leo Dawkins, Susannah Nesmith (New York Times) reported last week,  has been "in federal lockup" for a month with the government planning to deport  him because of a passport application and his apparently not being a citizen.  His attorney explains that Elisha was raised in this country and led to believe  he was a citizen. He was never informed he wasn't. The US military considered  him a US citizen and gave him a very high security clearance. The State Dept  issued him a passport. Kyle Munzenrieder (Miami New Times) added, "Dawkins  applied for a passport in order to serve in Guantánamo. A question on the form  asked if he'd ever applied for a passport before. He checked no. That wasn't  entirely true. He had begun an application for a passport before deploying to  Iraq but never finished the process. That single check on a box is why he now  sits behind bars." Carol Rosenberg (Miami Herald) explained, " His  lawyer says he grew up fatherless and estranged from his mother, staying with  relatives in Miami, believing he was a U.S. citizen. He even obtained a Florida  Birth Certificate to get a passport to travel to war as a soldier, with neither  the Navy, the Army nor the state of Florida apparently aware of a two-decade-old  immigration service removal order issued when he was 8 years old."  Today Susannah Nesmith (New York Times) reported that an  offer was on the table:  Elisha takes an offer of probation and completes the  probation, he can then apply for citizenship.  (A felony conviction would  interfere with the citizenship process.  Probation would allow him to avoid a  felony conviction.) The judge, Judge Cecilia M. Altonaga, thinks it's a strong  offer. Marc Caputo (Miami Herald -- link is text  and video) reports US Senator Bill Nelson raised the issue on the Senate  floor today and his remarks included:    A federal indictment says the serviceman failed to acknowledge  he'd once applied for a passport when filling out a new application - something  prosceutors call passport fraud; something his public defender calls an innocent  oversight. Mr. Dawkins now faces up to 10 years in prison, if he's  convicted. All John Dillinger served in prison was 8 ½ years on a  conviction for assault and battery with intent to rob and conspiracy to commit a  felony. According to his lawyer, he came to this country from the  Bahamas when he was just a kid.  His mother brought him here.  And he's still  not a U.S. citizen.... Mr. President, some have wonder whether passage of the Dream  Act might have prevented something like this from happening in the first place.   That legislation would grant legal status to some undocumented young people who  came to the U.S. as children and who join the military.   Let's finally pass  it. 
 
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