| Tuesday, June 7, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, the Commission on  Wartime Contracting is surprised by the State Dept's decision to use contractors  who already have problems with record keeping, the 100 Days end, and more.   Nathan Hodge (Wall St. Journal) reports, "The  State Department is preparing to spend close to $3 billion to hire a security  force to protect diplomats in Iraq after the U.S. pulls its last troops out of  the country by year's end." Hodge is referring to what it emerged in the  Commission for Wartime Contracting hearing yesterday.  The hearing was entitled  "State Department contracting, response to CWC  recommendations, and transition effort in Iraq and Afghanistan ."  If video  of the hearing goes up, it will be there.  (Currently there's no video and the  page merely has a link to prepared remarks.) The Commission is comprised of  co-chairs Christopher Shays and Michael Thibault and Commissioners Clark Kent  Ervin, Grant Green, Robert Henke, Katherine Schinasi, Charles Tiefer and Dov S.  Zakheim.  The Commission heard from one witnesse, the State Dept's Under  Secretary for Management Patrick F. Kennedy. From Kennedy's opening  remarks:   All US personnel and contractors in Iraq will be under Chief of  Mission authority and secruity arrangements have been worked out between State  and DoD. [In written statement but not read outloud: "However, security will be  a shared responsibility, with the State Department's Bureau of Diplomatic  Security (DS) responsible for all State Department sites and DoD responsible for  the Office of Security Cooperation-Iraq (OSC-I) personnel. As such, DoD will be  staffing and funding its security operations. At those locations where OSC-I is  collocated with State, DS and DoD security will closely coordinate movement  security, but DS will have sole responsibility for facilities security."] On  September 29, 2010, State announced the award of a base contract for Worldwide  Protective Services  to eight companies.  Task order are being competed among  base contract awardees and awarded on a best value basis thanks to  the assistance of this Commission.  Awarding to multiple companies allows for  increased competition for each task order, thereby controlling costs and  providing for increased capacity to perform crucial security services in  contingency environments. It also gives the US Government timely options in the  event of a company failing to perform.   Kennedy went on to note that DoD would be "loaning" Biometirc Input  Equipment (BATS) to State by DoD and this would be used to "vet prospective  employees."  And to verify current ones but is this all that it will be used  for? The US Army's Program Executive Office Enterprise  Information Systems has a page on DoD's Biometrics  which does note:  "Biometric Identification System for Access (BISA) is a Force Protection  initiative that collects multi-modal (fingerprint, facial and iris) biometric  and biographical information to produce a smartcard or PIN badge to control  local and third-country nationals, coalition forces, and a limited number of US  Persons accessing US controlled facilities in Iraq."  And, in his written  statement (not out loud), he noted they would use the BISA database.  But he  said BATS and BATS is in the written testimony.  This is what the US Army's PEOE  notes of BATS:  BAT: Biometrics Automated Toolset  (BAT) is a tactical, multi-modal biometric system that collects and fuses  biometric (fingerprints, iris images, and facial photographs) and biographical  information on persons of DOD interest.   BAT is used globally to support a wide range of tactical,  operational, and strategic military operations, such as interrogations,  combatant/detainee enrollment and management, local hire screening, population  management, checkpoint maintenance, and base access control. This capability  provides U.S. forces with an unprecedented capability to positively identify,  track, and further exploit terrorists, recidivist combatants, detainees,  criminals, locally employed persons, and other persons of  interest.   If there is no extension of the SOFA or a new SOFA-type agreement, the  White House's plan is to shift the US military under the State Dept umbrella  (and having it legally allowed, therefore, under the terms of the Strategic  Framework Agreement).  The US military that remains will be doing the same tasks  they are doing currently.  And if BATS is being used, it needs to be noted that  the US military has compiled a ton of biometric data on Iraqis.  All Iraqis who  have been imprisoned by the US military and all the residents of Falluja, for  example, have biometrics that the US military has kept on file.  Will the State  Dept be using or accessing that already compiled information and, if so, for  what purpose?   That question wasn't answered and Kennedy was a hostile witness who  probably wouldn't have answered it straight forward if he'd been asked.  How  hostile?  "Can I finish my answer to your question, sir," he snapped at  Commissioner Charles Tiefer as he (Kennedy) droned on about Indonesia (even  though Tiefer hadn't asked about it and pointed out, "I didn't ask about  Indonesia").  Kennedy repeatedly attempted to eat up time and play beat the  clock with the commissioners in their eight-minute rounds. Co-Chair Thibault had  to repeatedly stop him in the first series of questioning alone and even had to  declare, "You're chewing up my time.") During Co-Chair Shays second line of  questioning, Kennedy let out a loud, exasperated sigh while Shays was speaking  (and disagreeing with Kennedy).    Nathan Hodge has a strong report so I'm really not going to focus on  what he's covered, read it for what he's covering.  But what stood out to me at  the hearing yesterday isn't in his report.  It may be due to the fact that he's  familiar with LOGCAP, for example.  In 2006, when we started attending and  reporting on these hearings, I had to learn what all those acronyms were and  what they actually did. LOGCAP is the Logistics Civil Augmentation Program.  And  it popped up in many hearings.  Usually, as with Rick Lamberth's November 6, 2009  testimony before the Democratic  Policy Committee, it wasn't good. Lamberth was a LOGCAP Operations Manager and  he noted, "When I tried to report violations, I was told by the head of KBR's  Health Safety and Environment division to shut up and keep it to myself.  At one  point, KBR management threatened to sue me for slander if I spoke out about  these violations."  March 29, 2010 , the Commission on Wartime  Contracting held a hearing and the Commissioners were noting, especially Henke  and Schinasi, that $193 million was wasted because of a LOGCAP program manager  failing to follow up on auditing suggestions and what was the company?  KBR.  Schinasi was very clear that all the government had done was to write KBR, they  didn't penalize KBR, they didn't enforce the contract or anything.  As she  noted, "You're not being pro-active enough, you're not taking the initiative"  and that they weren't being penalized.  In fact, let's note that aspect of the  exchange from a year ago.    Commissioner Robert Henke: I-I-I appreciate that entirely but  you're telling me that AMC has a comprehensive plan to drawdown contracts and  contractos and the single biggest contractor in theater is KBR with 15,000  direct hires and 30,000 other peopl. I would think if an auditor would tell you,  "There's a chance to save $193 million" that someone in the system would feel  compelled to respond. I'm disappointed that the Army has not. We had the LOGCAP  program manager up here before the Commission in December, asked him his  response -- the report was just out -- so this is not new material. In fact, the  point of the audit is that the savings are going, going gone. If the army had  acted the savings could have been achieved but since the Army or the DoD hasn't  responded, the savings are effectively gone. So my question to you, sir, is who  is responsible for cost efficiency, for cost awarenss of expensive contracts in  theater.   Lt Gen James Pillsbury: The Army Material Command leadership is as  you well know.  The contract oversight, we depend on our partners at DCMA and  DCAA.      [. . . . ]     Commissioner Katherine Schinasi:  And have you withheld award fee  for that purpose? Because they have not done that?   James Loehr: Uhm.  Yes. I think if you go back and look at the  award fee evaluation, you'll find that K -- KBR, I don't think, has ever -- very  rarely -- gets 100% in that category.   Commissioner Katherine Schinasi: Close to 100%?   James Loehr: Uhm. I think -- I'd have to get back to you for that  specifically but they are generally in that-that high-very good, though,  excellent range that category.     There are many, many other examples we could provide.  But, as a result,  when  today, someone in the State Dept is praising LOGCAP and KBR, it sticks out  for me. Now let's note this exchange from today's hearing.   Co-Chair Michael Thibault: My point that I'm trying to make here  is-is, are you aware that DCAA, the last year -- You know, all of the costs that  are going to flow through you now and do flow through you are audited by DCAA  and it's critical on two things. Do they get an adequate submission and do they  do the audits timely?  And are you aware that in the case of DynCorp -- and I  picked three because . . . I picked three, the last year that DCAA completed in  an audit was 2004.  Are you aware that at KBR, LOGCAP, the last year that they  completed an audit was 2003? Are you aware that Triple Canopy, that they have  yet -- to use their words -- complete a year of incurred costs?  Now, yes or  no?   Under Secretary for Management Patrick Kennedy: We -- I am  certainly aware that DCAA has-has not uh executed --   Co-Chair Michael Thibault: Okay, okay.   Under Secretary for Management Patrick Kennedy: -- every request on  a timely basis.   Co-Chair Michael Thibault: Okay. I know you're working with them,  you said that. But then I would say, are you aware that picking those same three  contractors, I picked DynCorps first, that DynCorps has submitted -- so they've  done their part according to DCAA -- adequate submissions that have been  accepted by DCAA for those years that are open? You know we're talking '05, '06,  '07, '08' '09, 10.  A lot of open years with billions and billions of dollars  that historically there have been audit results. But I would say then, are you  aware that KBR recently -- They had their certifcations on hand, and they were  on paper or on DCAA's view, adequate submissions but they've withdrawn 2006,  2007, 2008, 2009 because in their words they want to relook at billed expenses  and cost accounting practices.  But in their quote, the company's quote to DCAA,  they need to amend previous expense, allowability and allocability assumptions.   Now those are a lot of words but to an auditor they mean that they have  unallocable and unallowable within their claims, they've pulled them back  because the certification is by a senior executive in the company and they don't  want to be responsible for it. Now we can explore that some more, but my concern  is that -- and in the case with Triple Canopy, a similar case exists where they  didn't submit adequate submissions and they're feverishly working on it.  The  entire point on that is that it's of the highest risk possible and in my second  round I'll be exploring some more of that.      At a time when the White House continually lectures about the need to cut  money here and there and accountability, why in the world would companies who  are known to have problems filing basic documents related to monies be used  again?  And are these cost-plus contracts? (I'm sure they are but I didn't hear  that mentioned.)  After the DPC established all the problems that the US  government had with KBR's cost-plus contracts, it's appalling that it's still  being used. And maybe Congress needs to hold a hearing on this and, if so, call  former US Senator Byron Dorgan to offer testimony because he was Chair of the  DPC and is very familiar with these issues.    Commissioner Schinasi questioned the model the State Dept was using --  noting there was nothing like Iraq in terms of the State Dept's current  consulates. She noted that the State Dept was saying they would need $3 billion  for diplomatic and consular programs in Iraq next year, that there would be  4,500 to 5,000 security contractors added and that the State Dept's Iraq mission  is "going from 8 to 17,000 civilians in a couple of years."  The estimates of  how much the State Dept needs is not clear under the best of circumstances but  the reality is they are guess-timating with very little basis in reality and,  honestly, the plan is to ask for X, hopefully get X and when the costs go over  X, come back to Congress and whine about unforseeables with the realization (or  guess, if you prefer) that Congress won't pull the plug and will instead toss  out more money. This is insanity at the best of financial times.  In the current  economy, the United States cannot afford it.  Whether or not Congress will stand  up to them, I have no idea.     Henke noted that Kennedy had approximately 250 supervisory positions but  that Kennedy only had two of those postions in acquisitions.  The idea that  oversight is in place or exists within the State Dept on this issue is  laughable.  This was probably the most important hearing of the Commission on  Wartime Contracting because they Commission wasn't coming in after X took place  to explore how it happened.  Instead, they were looking at prospective issues  before anything started.  The questions raised by the Commission need to be paid  attention to.   Hodge reports Co-Chair Chris Shays questioned assertions, by Kennedy on  behalf of the State Dept, that a State Dept employee in Iraq being injured and  under fire needing to be given medical treatment and taken to the embassy, that  these tasks would not be "an inherently governmental function"? And Kennedy  insisted that it wasn't and that "we rely on contingency contracting, but we  believe we have instituted a sound foundation to carry us forward."  Again,  Hodge's report stands on its own but a question needs to be asked in terms of  contracting.  Maybe Congress will ask it.  Are contractors being used to meet  quotas -- meaning is the State Dept limited to X number of US service members  and, as a result of that limitation, are they taking on contractors for that  reason and not because it's cost-effective as Kennedy and others have repeatedly  insisted?  If that's the reason for the contracting, my guess is that Senator  Lindsey Graham's objections to the State Dept taking over the Iraqi mission are  going to get a whole lot louder.  (Especially since, as Shays pointed out, it  would be breaking the law -- "not a criminal law".)   Moving over to Congress, tomorrow a US senator will receive an award:       (Washington, D.C.) -- Tomorrow,  Wednesday, June 8th, U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA) will receive the  2011 "Outstanding Legislator Award" from the Association of the  United States Army (AUSA). The AUSA is honoring Senator  Murray with this award for her work on veterans' employment issues and  her continuing support for service members and their  families.     WHO:              U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA)       WHAT:           Association of the United States Army Outstanding Legislator Award  reception       WHEN:           Tomorrow -- Wednesday, June 8, 2011   Presentation at 12:00 PM ET                             WHERE:        Dirksen Senate Office Building, Room G11       ###   Evan  Miller   Specialty Media Director   U.S.  Senator Patty Murray   202-224-2834     The award ceremony will be part of a busy day for Senator Patt Murray.  In  addition, there's a Veterans Affairs Committee hearing:   (Washington, D.C.) -- Tomorrow, Wednesday, June 8th,  U.S. Senator Patty  Murray, Chairman of the Senate Veterans'  Affairs Committee, will hold a hearing on pending legislation. During the  hearing, Chairman Murray will discuss the next steps for her Hiring Heroes  Act, and will hear from the Administration and  veterans service organizations regarding their views on this critical veterans  employment legislation.    WHO:             U.S. Senator Patty  Murray, Chairman Senate  Veterans' Affairs Committee   Michael Cardarelli, Principal Deputy  Under Secretary for Benefits, Veterans Benefits  Administration, Department of  Veterans Affairs   Robert L. Jesse, MD, PhD, Principal  Deputy Under Secretary for Health, Veterans Health Administration, Department of  Veterans Affairs   Jeff Steele, Assistant Legislative  Director, The American  Legion   Joseph A. Violante, National  Legislative Director, Disabled American  Veterans   Raymond Kelley, Director, National  Legislative Service, Veterans of Foreign Wars   Jerry Ensminger, MSgt USMC  (Ret.)   J. David Cox, RN, National  Secretary-Treasurer, American Federation of Government Employees    WHAT:          Steps forward for  the Hiring Heroes Act and other pending legislation.         WHEN:          TOMORROW -  Wednesday, June 8th, 2011                            9:30 AM ET       WHERE:       Russell  Senate Office BuildingRoom 418
 Washington, D.C.            ###             Evan  Miller   Specialty Media Director   U.S.  Senator Patty Murray   202-224-2834         Let's move to the White House.  In yesterday's snapshot , I quoted Press Secretary  Jay Carney.  We were (Kat  and I -- she shared her impressions  of the press briefing here ) at the White House and we briefly poked our  heads into the press conference.  I didn't take notes.  We were there to visit a  friend.  This morning one of my first calls was a complaint from a friend at the  White House (not the one we'd gone to visit though we did also say "hi" to him  yesterday) that I'd distorted Jay Carney's "nervousness" (his word, not mine)  and doubled the amount of "uh"s Carney uttered. I said I would check into that.   I have.  The White House doesn't post the video.  Click here for CSpan page with yesterday's press  conference .   Did I double it?  No.  I've taken out two "uh"s and added one to it.  So I  had one extra "uh" overall.  In what follows "# and uh#" is one addition, "[$2  uhs removes$]" notes two "uh"s were removed. In addition, "*uh*" indicates that  I have moved the "*uh" one word over.  In other words "to their uh families" was  actually "to their families uh". (There are two of those where I've moved an  "uh" one word over after streaming the video today.)  That happens twice. The  quote did not double the amount of "uh"s Jay Carney uttered. We had one extra  "uh."  Here's what he said.   Jay Carney:  I have nothing new for you on that.  First of all, I  would like to say that we are obviously aware of the fact that we lost US  servicemen today and uh and uh #and uh# and we express condolences to  their families *uh* once notifications have been made and-and [$2 uhs  removed$] it's a stark reminder that those who serve in *uh* Iraq do so uh-uh in  a way that continues to place them at risk despite the enormous progress that  has been made there uh and uh [then] on your question, I have nothing new to  announce.  The process, as you know, is simply that #uh# we are abiding by the  Status Of Forces Agreement that will have us withdrawing the remainder of our  troops by the end of this year. I and others have said that we'll entertain  requests by the Iraqi government if uh [we will] entertain in terms of discuss  possible requests for uh-uh some sort of new Status Of Forces Agreement that  would be obviously uh-uh quite different from the one we have now.  But as of  now we fully intend to fulfill our obligation under that SOFA and withdraw all  our remaining forces.   I will not be checking "uh"s again.  Again, I wasn't writing down the  statement while it was being said and waited until we were in an office to make  notes.  I could have very well have made a mistake -- wouldn't be the first time  -- but I did not double the "uh"s and the quote's actually fine.  And  stands.     "I think if there is going to be a deal, it's going to be a very  last-minute thing," he said. The U.S. needs about two months to complete a total withdrawal of  bases and equipment, Mansoor estimated. By the end of October, if no request has  come, he said, "then I think we're into the final stages of the termination of  the mission." Convincing Iraqis to let Americans stay, he said, may require the  U.S. to complete the pullout, then wait for Iraqis to realize they need  additional security assistance, before asking Americans to return in limited  roles.   Michael S. Schmidt (New York Times)  reports a return of the  fork-over-your-lunch-money-to-the-bully-in-the-playground that Gen David  Petraeus and then-US Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker endorsed and praised  repeatedly to Congress in April 2008:   So commaners have fashioned an exit strategy which borrows a key  element from the Awakening Movement, a successful tactical program carried out  in 2006, just as the violence was peaking.  The American exit strategy calls for  the military to give cash payments of $10,000 a month to 10 tribal  leaders. Officially, the money is paid to have Iraqis clean the crucial  roadway of debris, an apparent pretense because an Iraqi-American agreement bars  outright payments for security.  The sheiks keep some of the cash and use the  rest to hire 35 workers each who clear the road of trash.  The work does make it  harder for militants to hide bombs.     5 US troops were killed in Baghdad yesterday.  As noted in "The Garbage, The Stink, The  Network News " this morning, the coverage of it yesterday evening was  pretty sad.  ABC World News managed to do many things but failed to inform  viewers about the 5 deaths.  They made time for a lot of nonsense.  But 5 US  soldiers dying in the Iraq War they just couldn't squeeze in there. Just as  awful was The NewsHour  (PBS) three brief sentences in their headlines  -- and not even the lead headline (the lead was on Syria).  As Stan pointed out  last night, "PBS is becoming a  cesspool ."  That's because they had time for a 'sex' scandal.   A whole segment on that.  But 5 US soldiers die in a war?  Headline for PBS (for  their HOUR long news show) and not even mentioned on World News Tonight.  NBC Nightly News  did address the issue and did so  seriously.  Six minutes in, Brian Williams declared, "We turn to overseas in  Iraq today. We haven't had news like this for awhile, 5 Americans were killed in  a rocket attack in Baghdad. It's the deadliest day for the US there since '09  and today, of course, 5 American families got the worst possible news." And then  he discussed it (and Afghanistan) with NBC correspondent Richard  Engel.Brian Williams: Of course this news from Iraq today, as I said, the  kind of news we're not used to hearing and so many Americans in so many  positions of potential harm.   Richard Engel:  Well there's till 100,000 troops in Afghanistan and  about 50,000 --  just under 50,000 -- in Iraq and those troops are effectively  waiting to go home and it's a terrible situation, they were on their basis in  Eastern Baghdad today, rocket attacks came in and, according to the US military,  these 5 American troops were killed and it's Shi'ite militias that are in Iraq  that want to give the impression that they are winning this war.  They want the  last American soldier to leave Iraq to be a dead soldier so that they can say  that they drove American forces out.  And it's going to be -- there's going to  be a power vacuum as American troops leave these Shi'ite militias that are  asserting themselves once again, trying to show that they're strong, are going  to probably continue to try and demonstrate their power.   They did a strong job as did the CBS Evening News with Scott  Pelley.The deaths were noted in the teaser over the theme music and  Pelley opened with, "Good evening. We start tonight with the wars in Afghanistan  and Iraq. This has been a day of US casualties in Iraq and it is also a day [. .  .]" Like Williams and Engel, CBS mixed discussions of the two wars together.  There were reports from Afghanistan and Lara Logan providing an analysis of  Afghanistan.Scott Pelley: In the war in  Iraq, this was the worst day for US troops in two years. 5 American soldiers  were killed when their base in Baghdad was hit by rocket fire. This year, 29  Americans have been killed in Iraq. In Afghanistan, at least 159 US service  members have been killed. What's next for both countries? Now to David Martin at  the Pentagon, David, the five US soldiers that were killed in Iraq today, what  happened there.David Martin:  Scott, this was a rocket attack on a compound in Baghdad where US forces were  training Iraqi police. The insurgents got lucky and scored a direct hit on the  area where the Americans lived but this is part of a trend of increasing attacks  against US forces which Pentagon officials believe is the work of Shi'ite  militias who want to see all US troops out of Iraq by the end of this  year.Scott Pelley: Remind us how  many US forces remain in Iraq and what's the plan for them?David Martin: Well there are currently 48,000 US  troops in Iraq. Under an agreement signed at the end of the Bush administration,  they all have to be out by December 31st unless the Iraqi government asks them  to stay. Defense Secretary Gates have offered to keep some troops there to help  with things lik intelligence and logistics but so far the Iraqi government has  not accepted the offer and time is running out because the drawdown will begin  in earnest at the end of July.On MSNBC yesterday afternoon,  Andrea Mitchell addressed the news with Stephen Hadley on Andrea Mitchell Reports  (1:00 pm to 2:00 pm  EST).   Andrea Mitchell:  We begin today with the wars overseas, the  president and his national security team now meeting to discuss the way out of  Afghanistan while the US suffers its deadliest day in Iraq in two years. Stephen  Hadley served as President Bush's National Security Advisor and is now a senior  advisor with the US Institute of Peace.  Thank you so much. First to Iraq, just  more tragedy there.  This -- While there is a behind the scenes conversation  with the US and Iraq about whether we should stay longer as military trainers  and advisors, this does make the point that perhaps Iraq is not ready to defend  itself.    Stephen Hadley:  Well that is, uh -- Some people are concerned that  that is actually the motivations behind these attacks: To show that the Iraqi  security forces can't do it.  Our military is quite pleased with what the Iraqi  security forces have been -- have accomplished, but this kind of thing, this  kind of indirect fire attack, which it appears to be, does continue to go on.   And the Iraqi authorities are going to have to decide whether they are willing  -- really ready to have all US forces go at the end of this year or whether they  want some kind of small five to ten thousand man train and equip mission to stay  to help the Iraqi security forces really get to the point where they can handle  what is still a dramatically reduced al Qaeda presence and insurgency.     Andrea Mitchell:  But it does create a real political problem for  the Maliki government to be in the position of asking.  And they have to ask the  US to stay beyond December. They've said repeatedly that they want all the  troops out but, as you point out, there's a Sunni concern that they are not  really strong enough to defend themselves.   Stephen Hadley:  It's a problem for Maliki. The Sadrists, which are  part of the government, clearly want the troops to go by the end of the year.  That's been a hard element of their position.  And overwhelmingly, I think,  Iraqi opinion does as well. So it's a difficult issue for Maliki. The problem is  for them to stay past December 31, there needs to be additional protections --  legal protections -- for our troops.  That requires some approval from the  Parliament.  And that's the-the difficult challenge for Maliki.  Could he get  Parliament to, uh, approve something that would allow a train-and-equip mission  to stay past December.     Laith Hammoudi (McClatchy Newspapers) reports 1  person wants US troops out right now: Ahmed Chalabi.  Chalabi who helped start  the Iraq War wants the US out. Chalabi who wouldn't go into Iraq until the US  forces were present wants the US out.  Hammoudi reminds, "To date, only the  followers of Shiite Muslim cleric Muqtada al Sadr had come out publicly opposed  to extending the American stay, with most Iraqi politicians remaining mum on the  topic. Whether Chalibi's formal opposition will matter is unclear. Although he's  a member of Iraq's parliament from the largest political bloc, he doesn't lead  that bloc."     The 100 Days is over. Al Rafidayn reports  Nouri's press  conference yesterday in Baghdad found Nouri expressing his hope that "the  citizens will treat us kindly in the measuring our accomplishments and that they  will be objective." He announced that meetings would take place today on  evaluations. New Sabah quotes  State Of Law's  Khaled al-Asadi stating that Nouri will make assessments through tonight and  that the 100 Days was in order to evaluate the performances and that "no sane  person would assume a government only four years old could accomplish  improvement in one hundred days." Oh,how they try to lower the expectations now.  The 100 Days?  Al Jazeera gets it right , "Maliki gave his  cabinet a 100-day deadline to improve basic services after a string of  anti-government protests across Iraq in February.  He promised to assess their  progress at the end of that period, and warned that 'changes will be made' at  failing ministries.  That deadline expired on Tuesday -- and Maliki largely  retreated from his threat, instead asking for patience and more time to solve  problems." Fakhri Karim (Al Mada) observes  that the 100 Days  has done little to instill strength in the belief that Nouri has the "ability to  manage the Cabinet" and the duties of the office of prime minister. Karim notes  that Nouri's inability to govern, his failure at it, led to the protests and  that they were for the basic services which are "the most basic necessities" of  our time. Alsumaria TV notes , "Starting today, meetings  will be held in front of the people. Discussions will cover all fields one by  one. We will go over three headlines or three ministers. We must realize the  framework upon which we will carry on with the second 100 day deadline, Maliki  said." Ali Issa (Indypendent) explains :June 7 has been called 'The Day of Retribution' by Iraqi grassroots  organizers. Nation-wide protests and sit-ins are planed against the US  occupation as well as Nouri al-Maliki's regime, coinciding with the Prime  Minister's own deadline, set exactly 100 days ago, to address Iraq's protest  movement's demands. "Changes will be made in light of the evaluation results,"  Maliki said in a statement in late February, referring to his cabinet members  and their performance.  
 In response, a recently released call to action by the grassroots  organization 'Popular Movement to Save Iraq' expresses a broadly held sentiment  among Iraqis: the government's promises are not to be trusted. "We admit that we  weren't really waiting, and didn't hold out during this time. We were organizing  actions with other organizations before and during the countdown to June 7th."  Seeing the date as a marker to draw more dissatisfied Iraqis into the protest  movement, the statement continues: "But the end of the 100 day period, [with the  government] having achieved nothing whatsoever, was the fuse we were waiting  for, for those that were giving al-Maliki a chance, and were waiting for reforms  from him, his government and corrupt parliament, to come out and demonstrate  with us."     Reuters notes a Baghdad sticky bombing  which injured three people, a Baghdad home invasion which left the Ministry of  the Interior's Col Mussab Kamil and his wife injured and claimed the life of  their son, a Ramadi sticky bombing claimed the life of 1 police officer, 2  police officers were shot dead in Baghdad, 1 corpse was discovered in Hilla and  a Mosul roadside bombing claimed 3 lives.     Saturday, Adam Kokesh 's  Thomas Jefferson Memorial Dance Party was held. People came to DC from various  states -- including California and South Carolina -- to dance for liberty and  there were no arrests or incidents of police violence. The Dance Party was in  response to what took place Memorial Day weekend when five people were arrested  -- including Adam who was lifted into the air and then hurled onto the marble  floor by a police officer with the officer than placing Adam in a choke hold --  for the 'crime' of dancing.      Adam Kokesh: This past weekend, I returned to the Jefferson  Memorial to stare down the police state once again.  The police apparently  accepted my challenge to a dance off and were out in force.  But, thanks to you,  all of you who made phone calls to the Park Police to get me released last week,  and all of you who reminded the men in blue costumes with guns to keep things  nonviolent, and to all of our wonderful backup dancers, we were victorious.  Whether this means or not that you effectively have control of your own body on  government property is yet to be seen but -- Wait.  What am I talking about? The  government still thinks it owns you.  It also still thinks it can crap on the  Jefferson Memorial.  Literally.  Check this out.   Adam, outside the Memorial, on Saturday: I want to point out the  police officers showed up.  We had the Four Horseman of the Apocalypse, two  here, two over there [gestures to police on horseback].  And one of the excuses  given for body slamming and choking and kneeing me in the ribs last week was  that the Park Police really need to maintain a calm and tranquil, respectful  environment at the Jefferson Memorial.  As you can see behind me, there is a  giant pile of horse crap.  So the government who wants to body slam and arrest  people for dancing as a disturbance at the Jefferson Memorial feel that it is  okay to crap on the Memorial.  But you can't dance on it.    Adam Kokesh: Yeah, there you have it.  And yet I continue to be  astounded by the amount of credibility the American people give our government  -- full of hacks and liars -- every day.  Anyway, last week, we did a segment on  all the Dance Parties around the nation and the world in support of our civil  disobedience here.  But our list was grossly incomplete.  Now we didn't miss too  many of the American Dance Parties as you can see here [map with people standing  on various states] but our international list was very incomplete.  And while we  threw down hard at TJ's place here in DC -- no body slamming puns intended --  and around the country, the appeal of liberty remains global and dance parties  were also reported in Australia, Brazil, Chile, Estonia, Finland, France,  Germany, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Israel, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Korea, Kyrgyzstan,  Lithuania, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Scotland, Singapore, Spain, Sweden, the  UK, Vietnam and there were over a dozen reported to have taken place in  America's favorite hat, Canada.  So if any of you rebels out there have footage  of your own dance parties from last weekend post them to our Facebook page or  e-mail them to me adam@adamvstheman.com  and we'll make sure the revolution will be televised, perhaps even that  television will be revolutionized.  To the US Park Police and, more importantly,  to Judge Bates, I'd like to remind you of Thomas Jefferson's thoughts that might  be relevant the next time you have the urge to surpress someone's First  Amendment rights for the sake of convenience, "The will of the people is the  only legitimate foundation of any government, and to protect its free expression  should be our first object."  But the police on Saturday were still up to their  regular anti-freedom shenanigans, closing the memorial just before we got  started, keeping hundreds of would-be dancers from joining us.  Their excuse?  A  suspicious package.  I hope they weren't referring to . . . [Adam looks down at  his crotch.]  Anyway. There was a drug sniffing dog sent out just for the  occasion and lots of motorcyle cops and horse crap. They were even  actively  curtailing the freedom of the press, kicking out journalists and citizen  journalists alike as the dance wound down. So we still have a lot of work to do.  And I hope you are inspired to engage in your own acts of resistance in peaceful  civil disobedience.  However.   Adam Kokesh on Saturday, outside the Memorial with a bullhorn: And  as for this whole life thing? Well if you're not having fun, you're not doing it  right. [Cheers and applause.]  So let's dance!     |