| Tuesday, September 13, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, the Kurds  threats move beyond publishing the Erbil Agreement, Turkey wants predator drones  to attack northern Iraq with, Tim Arango's Camp Ashraf article is called out  (and Tim Arango gets an apology from me), and more.   We're going to start in the US and with veterans issues, specifically what  they've been promised.  By way of introduction, we'll note Nicole Brodeur (Seattle Times) has an  important column  about how veterans and their issues are vanishing from the  press while their numbers are inreasing.   She notes:Part of the  problem is that veterans have fallen out of public focus, now centered on the  economy. Foreclosures. Paychecks.The New York Times used to publish a weekly list of the casualties  in Iraq and Afghanistan. I haven't seen it in months.   She's correct.  But a veterans issue that should have been news last week  wasn't.  Ava and I covered it Sunday at  Third .  Leon Panetta, US Secretary of Defense, appeared on The  Charlie Rose Show  (PBS and Bloomberg) and was asked a specific question  about veterans benefits and he responded.  It should have been news.  Here's the  exchange:   Charlie Rose: So are you saying you draw  the line at changing retirement benefits for members of the armed  services?
 Leon Panetta: You know,  having been OMB director and Chairman of the Budget Committee in the Congress,  uh, I have always approached, uh, these issues by saying, 'We've got to put  everything on the table. We've got to look at everything.' I think that's the  way to do it.
 
 Charlie Rose: From  retirement benefits to weapons systems, to weapons systems --
 
 Leon Panetta: To weapon systems  --
 
 Charlie Rose: -- to making sure  that your priority is having mine resistant vehicles, especially  --
 
 Leon Panetta: I  --
 
 Charlie Rose: -- something that  service men --
 
 Leon Panetta: I  --
 
 Charlie Rose: -- have been  talking about for years.
 
 Leon  Panetta: You have to look -- you have to look -- you have to look at everything.  You've got to be able to talk it through, you've got to look at those systems.  You've got to decide what's important to keep, what's not, you know, important,  what reforms can be made. Uh, you know, when you're facing a $400 billion  reduction over 12 years, if you're going to do it right, you've got to look at  every area.
 
 
 
 As we note, he would then appear to backtrack on his comments above by  making comments about promises made.  He did not speak (above) briefly.  He  never took back what he said above.  If the US Secretary of Defense goes on  national televsion and declares that veterans retirement benefits are on the  table, it should be news.     Moving over to today's lesson for pundits?  You need to read, you need to  read widely.  So many of you are making one mistake after another and revealing  yourself to be very limited in your reading.  I can't imagine that you made it  through college single-sourcing claims so I have no idea why you now think  that's good enough when you're posing as experts on the world stage?   Micah Zenoko, you get credit for writing about Iraq repeatedly and not just  when it's a momentary hot topic of the day.  We don't even hold your opinions or  the fact that you're with the Council on Foreign Relations against you.  But we  will hold the following against you :  Last month, Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta was asked if the  Iraqi government would request that U.S. troops stay in country beyond the  mutually-agreed upon withdrawal date of December 31, 2011. Panetta replied: "My view is that they  finally did say, 'Yes.' " Soon after, Ali al-Moussawi, adviser to Prime Minister  Nuri al-Maliki, corrected Panetta's statement  and affirmed that there would be no discussion of extending U.S. troop presence  in Iraq beyond year's end.     Kevin Baron (Stars  & Stripes) notes that the Iraqi response is  that they have not agreed to trainers but US Secretary of Defense "Leon Panetta   said Friday that Iraq has already said yet to extending noncombat U.S. forces  there beyond 2011, and that the Pentagon is negotiating that presence [. . .  that] there is unanimous consent among key Iraqi leaders to address U.S.  demands. Those demands include that Iraqis begin negotiating internally what  type of U.S. training force they would like, begin a process to select a defense  minister, craft a new Status of Forces Agreement and increase operations against  Iranian-backed militants."  Reid J. Epstein (POLITICO)  refers to a transcript and quotes Panetta stating,  "My view is that they finally did say yes, which is that as a result of a  meeting that Talabani had last week, that all of the, it was unanimous consent  among the key leaders of the country to go ahead and request that we negotiate  on some kind of training, what a training presence would look like, they did at  least put in place a process to try and get a Minister of Defence decided and we  think they're making some progress on that front."   When there was Iraqi objection to the claim, we opened with, noted it  before the claim.  But that story didn't end on the 19th.  More importantly,  that spokes person isn't Nouri's pre-approved spokesperson.  Ali al-Dabbagh is  and those who follow Iraq closely will remember when Nouri gave out a short list  of who could and could not speak for the government earlier this year.  Ali  al-Dabbagh's name was on that list.     As we noted Saturday, Al  Mada reports on Panetta's remarks and on  Nouri's spokesperson Ali al-Dabbagh denying an agreement has already been made.  But while denying it, Ali al-Dabbagh also stated that when "the polical blocs  met, they approved the need to train security forces and the Iraqi military"  which would be Panetta's point that it was now a done deal. So despite his  denial, Ali al-Dabbagh's actual remarks back up what Panetta said. Dar Addustour also  offers Ali al-Dabbagh's quote and, in addition, they  report that the only perplexing issue in the negotiations is how many US troops  remain.  As we noted in Third's "Editorial: US will be in  Iraq beyond 2011, Panetta and Iraqi government  explain," Ali al-Dabbagh may claim he's refuting  Panetta, but his remarks are backing up everything Panetta said Friday.  Both  agree that a deal's been agreed to in order to extend the US presence in Iraq  beyond 2011 and both agree that the number of US service members that will  remain in Iraq has yet to be determined.   Panetta and al-Dabbagh both agreed that the Iraqi government was in  negotiations and that the only issue to be resolved was numbers.     Last week, we again learned about the ongoing neogitations. And Zenko  quickly moves to that . . . without ever seeing a contradiction in the claim  "that there would be no discussion of extending U.S. troop presence in Iraq  beyond year's end."  It's also not clear whether Zenko's aware that "Iraq" is  Nouri.  The decision was made that Nouri would be the negotiator (and he quickly  accepted).  Nor that Nouri has since decreed an agreement would not need to be  signed off by Parliament. Jason Ditz (Antiwar.com ) has long covered and noted  that.  Al Mada most recently noted it on September  9th  when they yet again explained Nouri's view that in the event of an  agreement on trainers between the Iraqi government and the US, this agreement  would be under the jurisdiction of the Council of Ministers [Cabinet], only the  agreement on combat troops would require the House of Representatives's  agreement.  Again, you're going to need more than single-sourced claims.  You're going  to need to do some actual reading.  Whether I agree with him or not, Micah  Zenko's usually done the work required.  Not today.  And there are, as we noted at Third Sunday , already too many  pundits in need of dunce caps currently.    It's not a minor point.  If Parliament has to vote, it takes much longer.   The US Embassy and White House in 2008 spent over a month strong arming, bribing  and persuading for the November 2008 vote. If it's just the Council, a Council  Nouri wants to reduce and which he has two 'acting' ministers serving on (not  approved by Parliament and subject to firing by Nouri at any moment), this can  go through as quickly as Nouri's renewals of the UN mandates at the end of 2006  and 2007.  (Yes, there was a reason we've repeatedly provided the remedial on  those.)      The Department of State warns U.S.  citizens against all but essential travel to Iraq given the dangerous security  situation. Civilian air and road travel within Iraq remains dangerous. This  Travel Warning replaces the Travel Warning dated April 12, 2011, to update  information and to remind U.S. citizens of ongoing security concerns for U.S.  citizens in Iraq, including kidnapping and terrorist violence.   [. . .] Some regions within Iraq have  experienced fewer violent incidents than others in recent years, in particular  the Iraqi Kurdistan Region (IKR). However, violence and threats against U.S.  citizens persist and no region should be considered safe from dangerous  conditions. Attacks against military and civilian targets throughout Iraq  continue, including in the International (or "Green") Zone (IZ). Methods of  attack have included magnetic bombs placed on vehicles; roadside improvised  explosive devices (IEDs); mortars and rockets; human- and vehicle-borne IEDs,  including Explosively Formed Penetrators (EFPs); mines placed on or concealed  near roads; suicide attacks; and shootings. Numerous insurgent groups remain  active throughout Iraq. Although Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) operations against  these groups continue, attacks against the ISF and U.S. forces persist in many  areas of the country. U.S. citizens in Iraq remain at a high risk for  kidnapping.   While sectarian and terrorist violence  occurs at levels lower than in previous years, it occurs often, particularly in  the provinces of Baghdad, Ninewa, Salah ad Din, Anbar, and Diyala.   The security situation in the Iraqi  Kurdistan Region (IKR), which includes the provinces of Sulymaniya, Erbil, and  Dohuk, has been more stable relative to the rest of Iraq in recent years, but  threats remain. U.S. government personnel in northern Iraq are required to be  accompanied by a protective security detail when traveling outside secure  facilities. Although there have been significantly fewer terrorist attacks and  lower levels of insurgent violence in the IKR than in other parts of Iraq, the  security situation throughout the country remains dangerous. Increasingly, many  U.S. and third country business people travel throughout much of Iraq; however,  they do so under restricted movement conditions and almost always with security  advisors and teams.     And staying with the topic of the Kurdistan Regional Government, Mohammad Akef Jamal (Gulf News)  observes , "Border areas in Iraqi Kurdistan are being shelled almost daily.   Turkish and Iranian forces also carry out other land and air offensives, as  though Iraq were a country without sovereignty.  As a result of these military  operations, many villages adjacent to the Iranian and Turkish borders have been  destroyed and their inhabitants forced to flee, leaving everything behind."  Despite widespread protests in Iraq against the bombings of northern Iraq by the  Turkish and Iranian armies (last week saw protests against the bombings in,  among other places, the KRG, Baghdad and Falluja), Reuters reports  the Turkish  government feels what's needed is to 'beef up' the attack via ground attacks  which are already in the planning stages. Today's Zaman adds , "Interior  Minister İdris Naim Şahin said in response to questions from reporters as to  whether Turkey is pondering a ground operation in northern Iraq that talks with  the Kurdish regional administration in northern Iraq are still under way and  that a cross-border ground offensive could be launched at any time just like  aerial strikes." Hurriyet quotes  Turkish Minister of the  Interior Idris Naim Sahin stating, "An evaluation [for a cross-border operation]  is still in the works.  But our operations continue to battle crime and  criminals on land, as well as maintaining control.  A cross-border incursion may  be conducted depending on talks with the neighboring countries."  August 17th,  the Turkish military began the latest assault on northern Iraq. They like to  claim a certain number of killed terrorists (they're referring to the PKK) while  the PKK disputes that number. What is known is that the real victims of the  Turkish warplanes are the farmers and shepherds who have been forced to flee  their homes or killed by the bombings. The Turkish government is outraged by an  attack over the weekend and are trying to p.r. the attack by referring to the  dead as "people" -- it was an attack on Turkish forces (a PKK atack). Having  faced condemnation from around the world for the way their bombings are  effecting Iraq's civilian population, Turkey's now trying to present attacks on  their forces as attacks on civilians. (Yes, security forces are people. The  point is that in the past the Turkish government has repeatedly identified these  forces as forces -- police officers, soldiers, etc. -- but they're now trying to  manage public opinion and are using "people." You will see that in multiple  reports because this is a wave of p.r. that they are just commencing.) Suzan Fraser (AP) reports  the Turkish  government is saying the dead include 3 civilians.  Turkish media will have to  resolve the latest change in the story. The PKK is a Kurdish group that fights  for Kurdish independence. (Iran is targeting another Kurdish rebel group, PJAK.)  Over the weekend, Craig Whitlock (Washington Post) reported  that the  Turkish government has requested "a fleet of Predator drones" from the White  House, drones they would use on northern Iraq. If such a request is honored (and  done so publicly), Barack may see a backlash from the US Kurdish population. The  PKK is one of many Kurdish groups which supports and fights for a Kurdish  homeland. Aaron Hess (International  Socialist Review) described them in 2008 , "The PKK emerged in  1984 as a major force in response to Turkey's oppression of its Kurdish  population. Since the late 1970s, Turkey has waged a relentless war of attrition  that has killed tens of thousands of Kurds and driven millions from their homes.  The Kurds are the world's largest stateless population -- whose main population  concentration straddles Turkey, Iraq, Iran, and Syria -- and have been the  victims of imperialist wars and manipulation since the colonial period. While  Turkey has granted limited rights to the Kurds in recent years in order to  accommodate the European Union, which it seeks to join, even these are now at  risk." The Kurdistan Regional Government in Iraq has been a concern to Turkey  because they fear that if it ever moves from semi-autonomous to fully  independent -- such as if Iraq was to break up into three regions -- then that  would encourage the Kurdish population in Turkey. Mohammad Akef Jamal (Gulf News) points  out  "Both Turkey and Iran are against the Kurdish project which proved to be  successful in Iraq, where the Kurds set up their regional and federal entity  inside the country. The success of the Iraqi Kurdish model has become an  inspiration to the Kurds in other countries in the region.  Kurds in Turkey and  Iraq make up the second-largest ethnic group while they are the third-largest  ethnic group in Iran."MeanwhileDar Addustour reports  that the  conflict between the Kurds and Nouri's State of Law is increasing. Already upset  over the oil proposal Nouri and his Cabinet have made, attempts at meeting to  discuss theproposed law have been brushed aside by Nouri. This conflict has  already led the Kurds to threaten publishing the Erbil Agreement. Meanwhile Alsumaria TV reports ,  "Kurdistan leader Massoud Barazani and head of Al Iraqiya list Iyad Allawi,  discussed in Arbil the situation in Iraq and obstacles hindering the political  process, Kurdistan Presidency announced. Both parties called to resolve all  pending issues in favor of Iraqis' interest, the presidency added." Citing an  unnamed source, Aswat al-Iraq adds  that the two  "discussed the differences between Arbil and Baghdad, and the impacts of the  Iranian and Turkish bombardment of the border areas in Kurdistan Region."  In  addition, Aswat al-Iraq notes  yesterday there was  a meet up of KRG President Masoud Barzani, KRG Premier Barham Saleh "and other  Kurdish leaders" to address "the differences between Arbil and Baghdad, and the  impacts of the Iranian and Turkish bombardment of the border areas in Kurdistan  Region." Regional analyst Reibin Rasould tells the outlet   that members of the Kurdish Alliance in Parliament feel they are being undercut  on issues such as the oil and gas law and Article 140 (hold on to Article 140,  we'll be coming back to that) and that they are conveying to leaders within the  KRG the problems they are facing and KRG leaders are "seriously studying the  calls of the political public to pple Malki's government and support Iyad Allawi  in the coming era." Rasould states this is why Allawi has been present in the  KRG and meeting with various leaders over the last days. The spokesman for the  Kurdish Alliance, Mu'aid al-Tayib today declared  that if the Erbil  Agreement "is not implemented," "the Kurds will adopt another stance."   How serious are they?  Asharq al-Awsat interviews  Ayad Allawi  (Iraiqya leader who's been meeting with the Kurdish leaders -- Iraqiya won the  March 7, 2010 elections) and their first question for him is about his recent  comments that there was a need for early elections and a need for a vote of no  confidence on Nouri al-Maliki, has his opinion changed?  He replies that nothing  has changed and unless the Erbil Agreement is followed, as KRG President Barzani  is insisting, then early elections need to be held.  He states that they should  be transparent and follow the election laws. (They put it is either/or.  Allawi  rejects that in his first answer and again near the end of the interview when he  explains that first you do the vote of no-confidence in the current government  and then you move to early elections.)    Asked if he doesn't find it strange  that 8 years after the end of Saddam Hussein's regime, Iraqi decisions are still  spoken of in light of what the US wants or what Iran wants,  Allawi replies that  it is clear the government (Nouri) was negotiating with Iran on how to form a  government -- down to the smallest details.  He states that when he met with  Bashar al-Assad, president of Syria [presumably in 2010], al-Assad stated he  would be speaking with Iranian officials and what was the response to Adel Abdul  al-Mahdi being prime minister.  The point is to indicate that Iran was being  catered to.  (I'm sure the US was as well, however, Allawi focuses on Iran.)   Adel Abdul al-Mahdi was, until recently, one of Iraq's two vice presidents.   He's a member of the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council.  Big Oil supported him in  2006 for prime minister and they also wanted him in 2010.  His announcement that  he was resigning as vice president earlier this year may have been setting up  another run for prime minister.   Allawi states that the Erbil Agreement needs to be implemented, that the  meet-up in Erbil and the agreement itself took place in a spirit to work  together for Iraq and build something sincere but now "the other party" [the  unnamed is Nouri] repeatedly finds excuses not to implement.  Asked if the  problem is the agreement, Allawi clearly states that the problem is "the other  party" and that the agreement is clear.  He rejects the notion of one-party rule  and specifically names Nouri when rejecting it, stating that this is a private  scheme of "Maliki" and not something with wide support even within Dawa (Dawa is  Nouri's political party, State of Law is the slate Nouri ran with).    Let's return now to Article 140 of the Iraq Constitution.  The Constitution  was written and passed in 2005. And Nouri becomes prime minister (for his first  term) in 2006.  Article 140 revolves around the disputed and oil-rich region of  Kirkuk.  Will it be part of the KRG or part of the centeral government out of  Baghdad?  Article 140 mandates that a census and refendum be held on the issue  by the end of 2007.  Guess what never happened?  Remember who was in charge  (Nouri).  As Political Stalemate I (the eight months-plus following the March 7,  2010 elections) was drawing to a close, one thing that helped him seal the deal  was promising that the census would finally take place.  At the end of 2010 it  had two dates.  It was supposed to have been held October 24, 2010 but Nouri  kicked it back -- not "Iraq's government" as was falsely reported.  Iraq's  government was Nouri at that time, determined to hold onto the post of prime  minsiter despite the fact that his term had long expired.  (Again, the United  Nations should have appointed a caretaker government.)  But he needed support if  he was going to continue as prime minister so he announced that the census would  take place December 5th. After he was named prime minister-designate (unofficially November 11th , officially November 25th ), he called off the  December 5th census (November 31st is when he called it off ).  Nouri being Nouri,  he most likely knew he wouldn't keep the bargain, the Erbil Agreement (November 10th ).  Knowing that and willing to do  anything to hang on to the post of prime minister, could he have promised the  KRG more than just a census and a referendum?  The Kurdish law makers appear to feel there's something he's hiding from  the public that's in the Erbil Agreement.  It can't be the issue of the  indpedent security council that was supposed to be created (and then headed by  Allawi) that was never created, can it?  That was known back in November.   Again, the Kurdish lawmakers are threatening to make the Erbil Agreement  public.  What is it in that agreement -- that most Iraqis probably feel they  already know all about -- that they think will embarrass Nouri?   Nouri doesn't embarrass easily.  For example, Yochi J. Dreazen (National Journal)  reports  today on all the (failed and forgotten) promises Nouri made about  the Green Zone when the US handed control over it to Iraq, how it would have  "new hotels, office towers and high-end apartment complexes" -- none of which  has taken place 2 years and 9 months later -- and how it would be "open to the  Iraqi public" but "Nearly three years later, ordinary Iraqis have less access to  the Iraqi-controlled Green Zone than during the U.S. occupation, a troubling  reminder of the vast gulf separating the Iraqi public from the rulers ostensibly  elected to serve them."   In today's violence, Reuters notes  a Ramadi house raid (by  Iraqi soldiers) in which 1 man present was killed, a Mosul grenade attack left  four people injured, a second Mosul grenade attack left two people injured, a  third Mosul grenade attack left four people injured, a Baghdad sticky bombing  claimed the life of 1 Sahwa and a Taji suicide bombing claimed the life of the  bomber, 1 civilian, 1 Sahwa and left nine people injured.Thursday journalists  and activist Haid al-Mehdi was assassinated in the kitchen of his apartment. UNESCO issued  the  following yesterday: The head of the  United Nations agency tasked with defending press freedom today condemned the  killing of one of the most prominent and outspoken radio journalists in Iraq.    The body of Hadi al-Mahdi, the 44-year-old host of  a popular talk show on Baghdad's Radio Demozy, was found on 8 September after he  was shot dead in his home in the capital, according to a statement from the UN  Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). Mr. al-Mahdi's show was renowned for being  uninhibited for its discussions of many subjects, including corruption in Iraq,  and the statement noted that, according to the non-governmental organization  (NGO) Reporters without Borders, the journalist had received threats before his  death.   "Hadi al-Mahdi and other fearless journalists and  commentators are the very soul of democratic debate," said UNESCO  Director-General Irina Bokova as she called for an investigation into the  killing.   "They practise the fundamental human right of  freedom of expression for the benefit of us all. Those who kill journalists must  be brought to justice, lest fear paralyze both the media and the ordinary people  who rely on professional journalists for the news and analysis that inform their  political choice."       Last week also saw the British inquiry into the torture and murder of Iraqi  Baha Mousa at the hands of British forces issue a finding, a whitewash. Chris Marsden covers it for  WSWS  and observes, "The official inquiry into the death of  hotel worker Baha Mousa continues efforts to minimise and apologise for abuses  by UK troops in Iraq." Steven McLaughlin (Yorkshire Post)  explains , "Baha Mousa wasn't a terrorist, an insurgent, an enemy or a  troublemaker of any sort. He was a young, healthy, honest and hardworking family  man with his whole life ahead of him. And we took it away from him for nothing.  Shame on us."  Robert Fisk (Independent via Gulf Today) rejects   the 'few bad apples' whitewash the inquiry provided and notes the chain of  command is facing no charges.  He also notes specifically the way Baha was  tortured to death:  Baha Mousa's nose was broken. There was blood above the corpse's  mouth. The skin had been ripped off his wrists. According to his friend, Baha  had been crying and pleading for his life from beneath his hood. "They gave us  the names of footballers and cursed us with them as they attacked us," he said. The Brits did the same in Northern Ireland, I remember. Catholics would  often tell me they were given the names of footballers before the beatings  began.
 A bit systematic, perhaps? "They were kick-boxing us in the chest and  between the legs and in the back..." Baha's friend said. "He kept asking them to  take the bag off and said he was suffocating. But they laughed at him and kicked  him more."
 
 
          British Forces News  reported today the police Col Daoud Mousa, Baha's father, would be  holding "a press conference in London."  Metro reports  Col Mousa today declared  he wanted murder charges brought against those who tortured his son to death  stating, "I also want to see those responsible for these actions brought to  justice." BBC News quotes  the family's attorney Phil Shriner  stating:   Justice for Baha Mousa and his family obviously requires that the  large number of soldiers and others in command who are responsible for Baha  Mousa's death are held criminally responsible. I am instructed to refer a number  of individuals, including those in positions of command, to the Director of  Public Prosecutions for the prosecution of various offences of war crimes and  other domestic criminal law offences. I am also instructed to refer a number of  individuals, including those in positions of command, to the Director of Service  Prosecutions for various service offences including those of negligent  performances of duties."      Senior commanders were apparently ignorant of a ban imposed in 1972  on the use of five torture techniques, including hooding, stress positions and  sleep deprivation. While highly critical of the evidence of a number of soldiers, and  of the lies told about the Iraqis' detention, Gage ruled that there was no  cover-up of Baha's death. After Baha's killing, the government claimed that hooding of  prisoners had stopped, which it hadn't, and that it wasn't used for  interrogations, which it was. The report says that while the Ministry of Defence (MoD) had  provided inaccurate information, neither it, the civil service, nor ministers  had intended to mislead. Instead the inquiry condemns the "corporate failure" of  the MoD. This included then armed forces minister Adam Ingram's claim that  he was "not aware of any incidents in which UK interrogators are alleged to have  used hooding as an interrogation technique". But Ingram had been sent a memo explaining what had happened to  Baha Mousa. Ingram claimed, "It certainly would not have been within my power to  remember everything that I had been informed." The report also notes the memory loss of then Labour defence  secretary Geoff Hoon. It says, "His answers suggested that he had not perhaps  fully grasped the respect in which his response turned out to have been  inaccurate." The report provides evidence that soldiers were trained in what are  essentially torture techniques. This, combined with a culture of racism and  violence, explains why torture was so commonplace.   
       The US press response has generally  been bitchy. Tim Arango (New York Times)  picked up the baton last week to continue that  tradition with a one-sided look at the group, offering a selective history and  apparently an exchange by the even bitchier Lawrence Butler that was supposed to  recall the great cat fights between Krystal and Alexis in the  eighties:
 **Now they are  unwelcome in Iraq but believe they should be given protection in the United  States -- even though their group, known as the People's Mujahedeen of Iran,  remains on the State Department's list of terrorist organizations.
 "You probably have in mind Hawaii,"  said Ambassador Lawrence E. Butler, the American diplomat who has been  negotiating with the group in recent sessions here.
 "I suspect you don't want to go to Guantanamo," he  added.**
 
 Arango's not an expert on many things and that  includes international law. Presumably British MP Tarsem King is aware of  international law and he notes, "The U.S., which recognised the residents of  Ashraf as "protected persons" under the Fourth Geneva Convention in 2004, is  morally and legally obligated to protect the residents. But, in the broader  context, it should realise that abandoning Ashraf is tantamount to giving the  Iranian regime an upper hand in Iraq."
 
 I know Wesley Clark. That's never  stopped me from calling him out if I thought it was warranted. I've also  defended him when I thought he was treated unfairly. (And if you're looking for  examples of either, you're more likely to find it in the TV pieces Ava and I do for Third than here.) I  have held off noting Arango's article because I still can't grasp how it made it  into print. This includes Butler smearing Wesley with the statement, "How much  was he paid" [to speak out on the behalf of Camp Ashraf residents]? And Butler  adding, "He doesn't get out of bed for less than $25,000." Arango does speak to  Clark who is quoted . . . for three words. Wesley's never been an expert in  bitchy. If he were fluent in it, no doubt, Arango would have quoted him at  length.
 
 I do love the yellow journalism of the New York Times. Whenever you might forget just  how biased they are, they always pop to remind you. (For any who wonder, I have  never received a penny on anything related to Camp Ashraf. We covered it here  due to the fact that the residents were being ridiculed by the press. I had no  clue about them and called up a friend at the UN and said, "Walk me through who  these people are." As bad as Arango's article is, three or four years ago, it  would have been considered a valentine to Camp Ashraf. Reporters felt no need to  even pretend to be objective and openly ridiculed the residents, their beliefs  and anything else they could get their hands on. Had that not happened, we  wouldn't have started covering Camp Ashraf.)
   Tim Arango can do strong and solid reporting  -- even exceptional reporting.  That article was beneath him. Today the paper's  public editor Arthur S. Brisbane weighs in on the controversy  over the article.  Tim Arango never identified himself as a reporter while  speaking to the residents of Camp Ashraf.  I'm going to offer my take on these  issue.  Not identifying himself to residents?  No problem.  My opinion.  Camp  Ashraf residents state that he was identified as a member of the State Dept.   Arango states he never heard it and the State Dept denies it happened -- they  would deny it, wouldn't they?  He went in with the State Dept, he was not  identified as a reporter and he wasn't wearing a military uniform.  Whether the  State Dept said "He's with us" or anything similar, the impression would be that  Tim Arango was with the State Dept unless he was identified as something else.   I don't think that necessarily matters in terms of meeting people as he goes  through Camp Ashraf and speaking to them.  I do think it matters when he sits in  on negotiations between the State Dept and Camp Ashraf.  The residents involved  in negotiations had a right to know that they were speaking in front of a  reporter who was there to do a report.  They were not informed of that.  That  was not fair.   Arango and another employee decided they'd  cut out the Ashraf half of the negotiations due to the fact that they hadn't  informed them, cut it out of the story.  No, that is not realistic.  You should  have known that the minute you've written a story and go back and cut out one  side, you are no longer being fair.  He embedded with the US government -- and  broke Iraqi guidelines in the process (journalists aren't allowed in Camp Ashraf  per Nouri) -- and he ended up with a one-sided 'report' that gave all the  emphasis -- even in the attacks on American citizens such as Howard Dean and  Wesley Clark -- to the US government representative.  There's no excuse for that  article and that flares didn't go up the minute the embed process was  contemplated (flares such as: How can I convey to Camp Ashraf that the meeting  is going to be reported on?) and that they didn't is very disturbing.  (And I do  believe Tim Arango that he didn't hear the State Dept present him as one of  them.  I do not believe the State Dept's claim that they didn't. In a meeting  like that, it would be standard practice to explain who was present. Especially  during ongoing negotiations when a new face suddenly pops in.)  Brisbane's conclusions can be read here and he  ends with:   However, given that the resulting  story detailed the pointed perspective of Mr. Butler, it was incumbent on The  Times to present a much more thorough version of the MEK's perspective. It could  be argued that this would have been very hard to do in a story constructed like  this one -- one in which the reader is treated to numerous quotes captured  during a live negotiating session. With the American presence in Iraq possibly close to ending, it  would be ideal if The Times made another attempt soon to report on Camp Ashraf,  this time taking pains to detail the MEK's point of view.     And on the subject of Tim Arango and my  critiques of him, I try to be very clear in them as possible.  Some have taken  that to mean I fret over another e-mail from him.  I don't really care (no  offense to him, I'm sure he's a wonderful person but I'm sure he's got more  important things to do than read this website).  What I do care about is being  fair.  By my standards, I wasn't in April when I criticized him.   As readers of Third will know, when David  Corn bailed on The Nation and went to Mother Jones, Chris Hayes was  suddenly elevated (promoted) to a new position.  We had criticized Chris before  without any problems.  But this was not a planned promotion and my feelings were  (and this is all over Third), he's in a new position I don't want to criticize  him.  (This was before he was kind enough to write up IVAW's Winter Soldier  hearing at The Nation.  The only person who promised they would that  indeed followed up on it.  I have not forgotten that and I will always praise  him for writing about it and for keeping his word on that.  I can provide a long  list of lefty writers who were supposed to cover it at lefty publications and  did not.  In the MSM, all that promised they would cover it did.  By contrast in  the so-called independent media they promised like crazy and, of course, all  failed to keep their word except for Chris Hayes.)  I did not realize when I  wrote the April critique of Tim Arango that he was the Baghdad chief.  That only  came out months later while talking to a friend at the paper.  Since becoming  aware of that, I try to be very specific when criticizing Tim Arango because, by  my standards, he didn't get a fair shake from me.  If I'd known he was also the  Baghdad chief and not just another reporter working under one, I would have cut  him slack that I didn't.  (That's before you get into the fact that he comes  from something other than hard news.) He has many strong qualities.  We'll  continue to call out the bad ones when they pop up.  But I will say here, "Tim  Arango, you have my apology for my April criticism because had I know you were  wearing two hats and new to the higher position, I would have cut you a great  deal more slack."       |