| Thursday, June 23, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, Baghdad is slammed  with bombings, Nouri wants to stop the Electoral Commission, Nouri wants to  complain about Parliament, Osama al-Nujaifi meets with the White House, a US  civilian dies in Iraq today, the  War Hawk Barack's bad speech, talks between  the US and Iraq on the US military staying continue, and more.   Last night US President Barack Obama gave a speech. (We covered the speech  in yesterday's snapshot .)  The reaction outside of  the Cult of St. Barack has not been pretty. Jason Ditz (Antiwar.com) observes, "On the  ground in Afghanistan, however, it doesn't seem like a drawdown, and the troops  aren't expecting any major change. Rather, they are expecting long  deployings and a long occupation in an already decade-old war ." Speaking this morning on The Takeaway, John  Hockenberry shared , "I guess what escapes me from the speech last night is a  real strategy. I mean, people may call it a strategy, but I don't see a strategy  here." Yesterday on the Pacifica  Evening News  (KPFA and KPFK), anchor John Hamliton discussed  Barack's speech with Phyllis Bennis. Excerpt: John Hamilton: We've just heard the president promise  troop reductions by the fall of 2012. interestingly, just in time for elections.  Of course, we should remember that the much ballyhooed surge of 30,000 troops  that Obama ordered into the country in December of 2009 was actually the second  major increase in troop levels. On taking office, he immediately ordered an  increase of 17,000 soldiers. With that in mind is it fair to call this the  beginning of the end of the Afghanistan War? Phyllis Bennis: No, it made clear that the  continuation of a huge number of US troops, NATO troops and US-paid mercenaries  is going to continue for an indefinite period. This announcement of what amounts  to a really token withdrawal leaves in place a huge component of the current  250,000 US and allied military forces. This is not going to change that. The  fact that 33 [33,000 by September 2012] out of 250,000 military forces are going  to be pulled out in the course of a year and a half is hardly the beginning of  an end. John Hamilton: And of  course, in the past when we've seen troops removed from Afghanistan, we've often  seen them a concurrent escalation in the number of contractors sometimes by a  ratio of 2:1 or even higher -- Phyllis Bennis: It's very unlikely we're going to see  that now. Most [audio goes out . . .] Already 100,000 private contractors in  Afghanistan. I don't know that they can even absorb significantly more than  that. John Hamilton: Well Phyllis  Bennis, as the old song goes, "One-two-three-four, what are we fighting for? " In the case of Afghanistan, that remains a difficult  question to answer. Phyllis  Bennis: It remains a very difficult question and what we're seeing is that there  is no strategy that's been determined here. There's no definition of a military  victory. The announcement had been made at the very moment just after President  Obama had first been inaugurated, when he first sent 21,000 additional troops to  Afghanistan, he said, 'We're going to send these troops and then we'll decide on  a strategy.' Rather backwards logic but nonetheless what didn't happen was any  decision about a strategy. We've heard lots of discussions about  counter-insurgency versus counter-terrorism, boots on the ground versus small  groups but none of that has been a real strategy for what everybody agrees will  never be a military solution to this conflict in Afghanistan but will have to  have political solutions. That political solution remains as far away tonight as  it has ever been. Noting some other reactions, US Senator Patty Murray, Chair of the Senate  Veterans Affairs Committee:   "Tonight President Obama took a step in the right direction by  outlining a drawdown of American troops from Afghanistan over the coming year. I  have called for a sizeable and sustainable drawdown because I believe the human,  economic and military resources we are spending in Afghanistan are  unsustainable. The President's announcement is a step forward, but I will  continue to push the President to bring this war to a close and redeploy troops  out of Afghanistan while providing the support they and their families  deserve. "Our brave men and women in uniform have done everything we've  asked of them -- including finding Osama Bin Laden. But we need to make sure  our military operations are targeted to meet the threats of  today. "Our terrorist enemies are not bound by lines on a map. Leaving  tens of thousands of troops in Afghanistan is not the best use  of our resources --especially as we work to tackle our debt and deficit. It's  time to redeploy, rebuild our military and refocus on the broader war on  terror. I was glad to see President Obama take a step in that direction  today.  "But as Chairman of the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee, I know  that the costs don't end when our men and women leave the battlefield -- for so  many troops and their caregivers, that is just the beginning. This must be a  consideration for the President and our entire nation whenever we make strategic  military decisions. I will continue to push to make sure our veterans and  military families are one of the foremost concerns during this drawdown and that  they get the care they need and deserve."   US Senator Bernie Sanders's office issued a statement as well:   This country has a $14.5 trillion national debt, in part owing to  two wars that have not been paid for.  We have been at war in Afghanistan for  the last 10 years and paid a high price both in terms of casualties and national  treasure.  This year alone, we will spend about $100 billion on that war. In my  view, it is time for the people of Afghanistan to take full responsibility for  waging the war against the Taliban. While we cannot withdraw all of our troops  immediately, we must bring them home as soon as possible. I appreciate the  president's announcement, but I believe that the withdrawal should occur at  significantly faster speed and greater scope.     Senator Tom Harkin's statement notes thanks to those who have and are  serving in the Afghanistan War, the death of Osama bin Laden and the disruption  of the Taliban before noting that a real withdrawal is needed:   We cannot justify the continued loss of life when we have already  lost thousands of men and women in our military, including 71 Iowans since 9/11;  we also can't sustain the nearly $10 billion we are spending each month in  Afghanistan this year. The President is taking the right action in redeploying troops from  Afghanistan, but as I and several other senators urged him earlier this month,  there should be more troops coming home sooner.   Not all senators had something worth saying.  At the Senate Foreign  Relations hearing this morning, for example, Senator Barbara Boxer (one of my  two senators) made a point, while questioning Hillary Clinton to giggle -- yes,  giggle -- about Afghanistan.  If she thinks death and dying is funny, she ought  to check out her eye make up in a hand mirror, that should really have her  howling.  Having giggled, she then declared that her role, as a US senator, "we  have to be humble if we don't agree."  I'm sorry, I missed that 'humble'  attitude when Bush was in the White House. Barbara Boxer's a fool and her tired  and embarrasing self needs to be out of the Senate.   From the Senate to the House, US House Rep Mike Honda's office has sent out  this statement from theh Congressional Caucus Peace and Security Taskforce  (which he co-chairs with Barbara Lee and Lynn Woolsey) and from the  Congressional Progressive Caucus (which he co-chairs with Raul Grijalva):   The Co-Chairs of the Congressional Progressive Caucus Peace and  Security Taskforce call on Congress and the President to immediately end our war  in Libya.  The US has been engaged in hostilities for over 90 days without  congressional approval, which undermines not only the powers of the legislative  branch but also the legal checks and balances put in place nearly 40 years ago  to avoid abuse by any single branch of government.We call on our colleagues  in Congress to exercise their legitimate authority and oversight and immediately  block any funding for this war. Before the Executive branch further weakens the  War Powers Resolution, and before we attack another country in the name of our  "responsibility to protect," we must recommit ourselves to our Constitutional  duty and obligation to hold the purse strings and the right to declare war.  For  decades, the House recognized the need for appropriate checks and balances  before another war was waged. We must do the same.
 We call on Congress to  exhibit similar foresight by promptly ending this war and pledging to uphold the  laws that characterize America's commitment to democratic  governance.
   US House Rep and Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi issued a statement which  included, "It has been the hope of many in Congress and across the country that  the full drawdown of U.S. forces would happen sooner than the President laid out  -- and we will continue to press for a better outcome."  In 2004, when everyone  was taken in by Barack, Matthew Rothschild (The Progressive ) saw  through that hideous DNC speech.  He should have been primed, in 2008, to see  through more nonsense.  He missed all that but does regain his footing with a firm  critique of yesterday's speech  which includes:   The president's rhetoric, overall, was hideous. "The tide of war is  receding," he said, and he repeated the "tide" metaphor a little later on. But  war is not a fact of nature, like an ocean. It is a rash act of  rulers. Obama all but claimed to be clairvoyant, saying, "The light of a  secure peace can be seen in the distance." I'm not sure what telescope he's  using, but I wouldn't rely on that, either in Iraq or in  Afghanistan. Then, when he decided to draw the lessons of Iraq and Afghanistan,  Obama fed the American superiority complex. "We must embrace America's singular  role in the course of human events," he said. He told us not to succumb to  isolationism -- a spiel that echoed George W. Bush. The only difference was that  Obama stressed the need to be "pragmatic" about the way the United States  responds, arguing that often "we need not deploy large armies overseas" or act  alone.   While Barack 'saw' progress, reality has begged to differ.  Tom Engelhardt (CounterPunch) : "Here's the funny  thing though: a report on Afghan reconstruction recently released by the Senate  Foreign Relations Committee's Democratic majority staff suggests that the  military and foreign "developmental funds that have poured into the country, and  which account for 97% of its gross domestic product, have played a major role in  encouraging corruption.  To find a peacetime equivalent, imagine firemen rushing  to a blaze only to pour gasoline on it and then last out at the building's  dwellers as arsonists."  I'm sorry that I don't have time for lengthy statements and am editing down  some of the releases sent.  This is from the national Libertarian Party:    WASHINGTON - Libertarian Party Chair Mark Hinkle responded to  President Obama's June 22 speech with the following comments  today: "President Obama's speech was disappointing, but not surprising.  The withdrawals he announced are painfully inadequate. Obama's withdrawals, even  if they are carried out as he described, will still leave about 70,000 American  troops in Afghanistan, probably for years to come. The president is  commander-in-chief of the military. He has the power to end the war now, and  withdraw all American troops, and that's what he should do. "The U.S. has no business fighting a war in Afghanistan. Nearly  three years ago, our Libertarian National Committee adopted a resolution calling for the  withdrawal of our armed forces from Afghanistan. We are saddened and angry that  there are now more troops there than ever. "Obama talked about 'ending the war responsibly.' I think the word  'responsibly' is a weaselly escape hatch in case Obama doesn't want to withdraw  more troops later. He will just say, 'That would be irresponsible -- I need to  keep the war going strong.' "This war causes the Afghan people to justifiably feel a greater  hatred toward America. It makes American taxpayers poorer. And it emboldens  other would-be aggressors, who can point to American intervention in Afghanistan  whenever they feel like doing the same elsewhere. "There are two big winners from the continuation of this war: Our  military-industrial complex, which seems to have the president in its back  pocket, and the Afghan government, which continues to enjoy tremendous benefits  at the expense of the American taxpayer. "If anything, Republican reactions to the president's speech were  even more ridiculous than the speech itself. Republican Senator John McCain  fretted that this withdrawal was not 'modest' enough. Republican presidential  candidate Mitt Romney, feeling the need to criticize Obama despite the fact that  they basically agree on everything, complained of an 'arbitrary timetable.'  Republican House Speaker John Boehner worried about losing our 'gains' in  Afghanistan. All these comments show an inability to comprehend an intelligent,  modest foreign policy, as well as a serious lack of respect for American  taxpayers."   Though the Green Party didn't e-mail a statement, I did check to see if  they had one.  As has been the case so frequently since Bush departed the White  House, when the Green Party should have been speaking out, they elected to be  silent.  Their silence is duly noted and if they're not a real political party,  it's not my job to note or cover their candidate for president in 2012.  For  more on the nonsense of the Green Party, please visit Trina 's site tonight for a guest post.  In  this community,Elaine  weighed in on the speech with "The lousy  speech " and Stan  weighed in with "That awful  speech. "  The most amazing thing about today was to watch who  whored.  Among the saddest was Tom Hayden who keeps insisting this is a  'victory' for the peace movement. At some point, you really need to consider  seeking help. Truly. The thing that should have been done today was to take  Barack's 'promises' on Afghainstan and put them through the Iraq prism.  For  example, in 2014, Barack 'promised' last night, all US troops will be out of  Afghanistan. And that lie should have cause reflection on the Iraq War.  Barack  said 16 months and 16 months came and went. He didn't keep that promise.  He  swore all US troops would be out of Iraq in his first term.  And yet the White  House is attempting to extend the SOFA and to also keep US troops in Iraq by  moving them from Defense Dept to State Dept.  Instead of whoring like Tom Hayden did, real leaders would have been  stepping up and saying, "He told America ___ last night and yet when you look at  his promises on Iraq versus what he has actually done . . ."  We don't have a  lot of real leaders.  We've got a lot of liars.  We've got a lot of cowards.   And we saw that today as so many tried to spin this into good news.  What it  felt like to me?  It felt like the moment the peace movement knew they couldn't  trust LBJ -- that no lie or spin or promise out of his mouth would secure the  votes needed for re-election.  Ameen Izzadeen (Daily Mirror) weighs in :  Righting the wrong is part of civilized behaviour. But it is not  known whether the Nobel committee believes in this norm. If it does, it should  request United States President Barack Obama to return the 2009 Nobel Peace  Prize and the prize money.  The call to strip Obama of his Nobel peace prize is as old as the  decision to award him the prize. At that time, the president, just eight-month  in office, had hardly proved his peace credentials except for rhetoric. But the  committee in its defence said Obama's speeches had revived the hope for peace in  a conflict-ridden world. It cited Obama's "extraordinary efforts to strengthen  international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples".  Far from being so, in retrospect, it appears that the committee has  only given a veneer of legitimacy to the United States' wars in Afghanistan and  Iraq. Moreover it has given a licence to the Obama administration to launch wars  in Libya and if necessary in other places where the US interests are in jeopardy  or where resources, especially oil, gas and minerals, make US capitalists  salivate.  When Obama decided to join the war on Libya in March this year,  Bolivia's socialists President Evo Morales asked: "How is it possible that a  Nobel Peace Prize winner leads a gang to attack and invade? This is not a  defence of human rights or self-determination."  Morales was right, the decision to attack Libya was taken well  before the peaceful means of conflict resolution were fully exhausted.           Rawya Rageh: Three explosions took place roughly around 7:00 pm  time here, in a crowded market using three carts, shopping carts -- wooden carts  that are often used here to haul around merchandise in markets in Baghdad.  The  three carts were placed at the entrance of the market -- two of those -- and one  at the heart of the market. The market was quite crowded actually.  This is  Thursday evening preceding the Muslim weekend here.   Rageh counts over one hundred injured.  Suadad al-Salhy (Reuters) quotes  local  teenager Sijad stating, "I was on my way to the market when the first bomb blew  up.  People ran to see what was going on and the second one blew up.  Suddenly  there were bodies everywhere around me, most of them women and children, and  their things were scattered everywhere."  Ned Parker quotes  survivor Ahmed Dandar stating,  "I was drinking juice from a shop together with some of my friends when the  first explosion happened. It was near mosque as worshippers were entering.  We  saw a ball of fire and people started to run."       The United States condemns a terrorist attack in Baghdad today that  claimed the life of international development and finance expert Dr. Stephen  Everhart and wounded three others. Dr. Everhart was an American citizen who was  working in Iraq for an implementing partner of the United States Agency for  International Development's Mission in Iraq. He was killed while working on a  project to introduce a new business curriculum to a Baghdad university in a  program supported by the Iraqi Ministry of Higher Education. His support of  efforts to advance a modern and efficient financial sector has benefited the  people and business enterprises of Iraq and his lifelong dedication to public  service has improved the lives of countless people around the  world. We are saddened by this tragedy and extend our thoughts and prayers  to Dr. Everhart's family and loved ones, and to the three other injured victims  and their families.     In addition, Reuters notes  a Mosul roadside bombing  claimed the lives of 2 Iraqi security forces, 1 person was shot outside his  Mosul home, a Kirkuk sticky bombing injured one person and an al-Zab flashlight  bombing injured an Iraqi soldier.   Today Al Sabaah reports  that a "tentative  deal" has been reached on keeping US soldiers ("a limited number") in Iraq  beyond 2011 according to an unnamed "senior" US source. This was addressed,  according to the source, by President Jalal Talabani and US Ambassador to Iraq  James Jeffrey and would cover only the US military forces being shoved under the  State Dept umbrella. As addressed here many times before, they would still have  the same duties. But they would be under the State Dept and not the Defense  Dept. Their presence would be covered by the Strategic Framework Agreement and  would not need an extension of the SOFA or a new treaty. The article notes that  Jeffrey is also meeting with MPs to press for an extension of the SOFA. If  that's confusing, the State Dept umbrella is choice 2. The preferred choice of  the White House is an extension of the SOFA. But either way, US forces are not  leaving Iraq. On the preferred choice, Hossam Acommok (Al Mada) reports  that a member of  Parliament's Committee on Defense and Security has told the paper that "lack of  readiness" on the part of Iraqi forces will be used to explain the SOFA being  extended. The article cites numerous press reports (Arabic press, the US press  has ignored these reports) on the talks and secret meetings that have taken  place over extending the US military's stay in Iraq. The Dialogue Front is said  to be a firm supporter of extending the US military presence while Ayad Allawi  (leader of Iraqiya) is said to be playing it close to the vest and insisting he  must have answers from DC before he makes a decision. The article runs through  the other players. (As noted here before, the Kurdish officials want the US  military to stay.) While these discussions continue (some say a deal has  already been reached on extending the SOFA), Alsumaria TV reports ,  "Basra provincial council voted on a decision to prevent US Forces from entering  the province, Al Sadr Front's Ahrar Bloc said on Wednesday. Basra provincial  council called to withdraw US Forces from Basra International Airport and  affirmed that the council's decision stipulates compensating damaged citizens  from US military operations."  Meanwhile Walter Pincus (Washington Post) speaks   with US Lt Gen Frank G. Helmick.  I trust Pincus, I don't trust a word from  Helmick.  He's either out of the loop or he's lying.  Not only is he wrong about  forces (and that may be intentional -- the article may be directed towards Iraqi  politicians, an attempt to force them to make a move), he's wrong about  discussions and his comments regarding Iraq's airspace and radar, while  accurate, conflict with something that happened in Iraq yesterday.  I was begged  to note and I said we don't include Operation Happy Talk.  I'm surprised other  outlets didn't notice it.  But Iraq and air and the US had a little announcement  yesterday.  It was pure spin but that's never stopped the press from running  with it before and since the US military was pimping that story, it's difficult  to grasp why a general wouldn't also be promoting it to Pincus. The Iraqi  political scene is one of stalemate and foot dragging. A story that best  telegraphs that? Al  Mada reports  reports that journalists were not allowed access  to the day's hearing due to the fact that a dog was 'out sick.' (Actually, the  contract with the security company had expired.) The dog detects bombs. Dar  Addustour covers the story here . This  morning the Iraqi press is full of reports that Ayad Allawi is not ill -- Al  Mada here , Dar Addustour here  and Alsumaria TV  are only  three examples. Dar Addustour not only notes the denial that Allawi is ill but  also quotes Iraqiya insisting the rumors are attempts to disempower Iraqiya and  to disrupt life on the Iraq street -- to discredit the political slate in the  eyes of the people. Dar Addustour  also  notes that State Of Law has already broken an agreement to cease attacks in the  press (see yesterday's snapshot   for more on that). Nouri attempts another power grab in the meantime. Al Rafidayn reports  that Nouri has  ordered the Electoral Commission to leave the Kurdistan region and walk out on  UNHCR. The Electoral Commission has said no and responds that only Parliament  has the authority to stop UNHCR work.  Nouri has repeatedly attempt to gut the  rights of the Parliament and he's making another attempt today.  Aswat al-Iraq reports  that Nouri "has  criticized on Thursday the process of legislating the laws by the Parliament,  saying that 'they had been slow and weak,' demanding putting a time ceiling for  the legislation of laws."   That's really something.  Nouri criticizing others  as being slow?  That's really something.  On the day when Iraq sees non-stop  violence and multiple deaths, Nouri criticizes the Parliament as slow -- the  same Nouri who was supposed to appoint a Minister of Defense, a Minister of the  Interiror and a Minister of National Security back in November when he was made  prime minister-desigante.  It's June now, getting close to July, and he's still  failed at that basic duty.  Someone who cannot make appointments doesn't need to  be prime minister.   And maybe he won't be. There are rumors that he's on the  outs with the Iranian govenment (which is eyeing another Shi'ite) and his  relationship with the US government is currently strained.  If both backers dump  him, another prime minister may emerge.  Possibly with the last name Hakeem.  Ahlul Bayt News Agency reports  that Supreme Iraqi  Islamic Council leader Ammar al-Hakeem delivered a speech yesterday to SIIC's  Cultural Forum stressing the need for all political blocs to continue  conversations.Still on Iraqi politicians, one was in DC yesterday. The White House issued  the  following yesterday:
 Vice President Biden met today with  Iraqi Council of Representatives Speaker Osama al-Nujaifi. The Vice President  praised the Speaker's stewardship of Iraq's legislature and offered continued  support for the development of Iraq's democratic institutions, including a  national partnership government. The Vice President also thanked the Speaker for  his work to secure approval for a $400 million compensation package for American  victims of the Saddam Hussein regime. The Vice President and the Speaker  discussed our shared interest in an enduring partnership between the United  States and Iraq, across a range of sectors, under the Strategic Framework  Agreement.
 
 
 Despite the fact that al-Nujaifi made public and clear before he left Iraq  that he intended to press the White House on the missing $17 billion, the White  House statement made no mention of it. Briefly, money (Iraqi money) from the  oil-for-food program is missing. How much can not be determined as yet due to  the refusal of the Federal Reserve to share information with the Special  Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction (SIGIR) which the US Congress mandated  to provide oversight in Iraq. Aswat al-Iraq quotes from Speaker  of Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi's statement:
 
 "Nujeify has conferred during his current  visit to the United States, with U.S.Vice-President, Joe Biden, demanding  him to "open an official investigation about the fate of Iraqi Fund, estimated  at US$17.5 billions (b), withdrawn from Iraq's Development Fund in 2003-2004 and  after that, without the appearance of any documents showing the reason for the  withdrawal," the statement said, adding that Nujeify "had asked the United  States to help in achieving that mission."
 He said that "there are efforts,  exerted by the financial observation bodies in both Iraq and the United States,  to gather information and uncover the details of the said  issue."
 
 
 al-Nujaifi's statments were carried by the Iraqi press and throughout the  Arabic press. They were also covered by many US outlets. AP offers this morning , "But US  officials trying to trace the funds say the Iraqi government is not cooperating  and has so far not allowed them access to bank records they need to determine  whether any of the money was misused." The editorial board of Gulf News observes , "The US had a  duty to safeguard this cash and not being able to answer to the Iraqis is simply  unacceptable. It is hoped that a serious investigation is started so Iraq can  recover its money."  |