| Thursday, September 15, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, Nouri is still  out to get his political opponents, more on NPR's  blame-the-public-for-us-not-covering-the-wars, John Walsh and Mike Ferner  exchange words, Iraqi women remain under attack, the UN is concerned about  outsourcing to contractors, and more.     John Walsh has a set of ethics that he sticks to.  Good for him.  And  because of that we're opening the snapshot with him.  Yesterday's snapshot  included an excerpt from his report  about the Veterans for Peace  resolution on impeachment and praising the grassroots while calling out  leadership. Leadership now wants to attack Walsh.  Mike Ferner responds to Walsh  here  and Walsh has the first two replies in the  comments. Here's John Walsh replying to Fener's attack (I'm using the term  "attack" and that's what it was):    Let us look at them one at a time. Ferner's first contention is  that the resolution passed in 2004 was not aimed at Bush but the incoming  president whoever he might be. Thus the impeachment rally at which Ferner spoke  in 2005, he implies, might have been an Impeach Kerry rally. But we will never  know that since Kerry, who was like Obama pro-war, did not get elected. We do  know that when a Democrat, Obama, was elected, the Board of VFP opposed an  impeachment resolution in 2009 and 2010 until the rank and file rebellion was  successful in 2011. So for Ferner to say "We owe no allegiance to party --  none," does not fit the facts -- unless the allegiance is to Obama and not the  Dems in general. But it amounts to the same thing. To imply that he and others  were as enthusiastic about an impeachment resolution aimed at Obama as one aimed  at Bush is disingenuous at best. In a similar vein, Ferner points out that he  did not speak on the floor of the convention against the resolution in 2011 but  he neglects to mention that he opposed such a resolution for over two years. And  he does not even make clear where he stands on it now. Are you for it now or  against it, Mike? And why do you neglect to state your position?  
 That's the section I want to focus on in order to add a bit too.  To me,  the thing that stands out is Mike Ferner's lack of honesty regarding 2004 and  today.  If you're not familiar with what was voted on, click here for Mike Ferner's 2004 piece at Antiwar.com .   You'll see that the resolution passed demanded "the next president announce,  within 10 days of taking office, that he will withdraw all U.S. troops from Iraq  within 60 days" -- excuse me, did Barack do that?  No, he didn't.  Did VFP do  anything about it?  No.  And I believe that the "within 60 days" was a national  resolution passed and remains a standing national resolution for VFP.  So  leadership failed to carry out the resolution membership passed.  How did that  happen?    It happened because VFP national leadership wanted to play footsie with the  Obama White House.  And they still want to.  John Walsh is right to question the  issue of allegiance especially when today at Antiwar.com Ferner writes:   But more importantly, what he made no mention of was the spirited  debate, before and at the convention, about why to vote yes or no. It cannot be  simplified into a debate between principled members who campaigned to "do the  right thing" and those who didn't want to offend Democrats or were afraid of  looking like racists. It was this: in order to live up to our Statement of  Purpose, how can we strategically join forces with those most likely to be our  natural allies so we can gain the political power needed to stop war? Viewed in  that light, the story of this resolution looks a little  different.   First off, Ferner himself writes he "was not present for the debate"  earlier in his attack.  So if he wasn't present, he probably shouldn't be  characterizing it as "spirited" or not.  Second, those against war do not  "strategically join forces" with anyone not willing to end wars.  Ferner's  justifying playing footsie.  If you're an anti-war group, the one thing you  can't compromise on, the one thing you can't 'finesse' is your anti-war stance.   If you do so, you're no longer an anti-war group.  It was an issue, indeed, of  doing the right thing or the wrong thing as defined by the stated goal of the  movement: Ending the war.  To pretend otherwise is to indulge in lying and  expecting everyone to humor you.     Finally, Phil Restino, who submitted the impeachment resolution,  has also written thus to me about the history of the votes on impeachment which  provides some insight into the thinking and behavior of the leadership: "As far  as I know personally, the only member of Veterans For Peace's national  leadership during the 2009, 2010 and 2011 votes on the impeachment of Obama  resolution to vote in favor of it was current national president Elliott Adams  who told me on the telephone a couple-few months ago that he voted for the  resolution at the 2010 convention but would vote against the resolution at the  2011 convention out of concern that VFP's passage of an impeach Obama resolution  would risk VFP being labeled as racists. If there were any others in the  national leadership who voted in favor of the impeachment resolution in any of  those years, then Mike Ferner himself would have to be asked to tell you that  information."Instead of nitpicking, Ferner should be proud of his  organization for taking a step that others have not. There are many "leaders" in  the peace movement who have been similarly hypocritical when it comes to Bush  versus Obama. Ferner should simply admit his error and say he has changed -- if  indeed he has. And if so, he should express gratitude to the rank and file who  have saved him from continued hypocrisy and dragged him into a principled  position on Obama's impeachment. That is better than trying to weasel out of a  two-year record of hypocrisy. Again as I said in the article in praise of VFP,  "much to its credit VFP has led the way" -- out of a swamp of blindness when it  comes to war making by Obama and the Dems.
   That really says it all.  Moving from one denial to another, today the US  embassy offers its official response to an item in Wednesday's news cycle. Yesterday , we  noted: The big story in Iraqi newspapers  today is on the US withdrawal or 'withdrawal.' Supposedly all US forces would  leave Iraq at the end of December 2011. Al Rafidayn is one of the papers  reporting  that a meeting at the  United Nations Mission in Baghdad a few days prior found the UN being informed  by Iraqis and the US (James Jeffrey, US Ambassador to Iraq, is said to have  represented the American side) that the US would pull soldiers due to leave Iraq  because their tour of duty was up but that was it and it was a "formality"  because, in fact, the US and Iraq had entered an agreement allowing US forces to  remain in Iraq. This alleged agreement is a temporary one that would allow the  US and Iraq more time to negotiate the details of a US presence beyond 2011. It  would last six months. Dar Addustour also reports  on this alleged temporary agreement that's been  made. Dar Addustour reports
  that a denial  was issued by the US Embassy in Baghdad's spokesperson Micahel McClellan who  denies the existence of an agreement and notes that discussions are ongoing. Aswat al-Iraq also quotes  from the  statement and they note, "Different Iraqi political forces have not expressed  clear positions towards the said cause, but some politicians have expressed  support for the presence of some American troops, till the completion of the  potential of the Iraqi security forces for few more years."  As negotiations  continue, the US government's backup plan is the weaponization of diplomacy,  shoving any remaining soldiers and contractors (remaining and new) under the  State Dept umbrella. Yesterday the Chair-Rapporteur of the UN  Working Group, Faiza Patel, declared that reliance on contracting security tasks  puts human rights at risk : The  three countries present different aspects of the problem, with Iraq a major  theatre of operations by private military and security companies; South Africa a  major source of people with extensive military skills and experience unwilling  or unable to find jobs since the end of apartheid in 1994; and Equatorial Guinea  the scene of a 2004 coup attempt involving mercenaries. The panel, whose full  title is the Working Group on the use of mercenaries as a means of violating  human rights and impeding the exercise of the right of peoples to  self-determination, noted in its report on Iraq that incidents involving private  military and security companies there had dropped since the killing of 17  civilians and wounding of 20 others in Nissour Square in Baghdad by employees of  the United States security company Blackwater in 2007. The  immunity issue (immunity granted) also continues to present problems. At Dar Addustour's home  page  currently there is a poll regarding US troops and immunity.   Greta Van Susteren (On The Record with Greta Van Susteren , Fox News) anticipates a White House announcement noting US  troops are leaving Iraq with a small number remaining and imagines this  receiving applause :  While he draws down the  troops…he is, per the AP, ADDING 8000  PRIVATE SECURITY CONTRACTORS to do the job done that would be done by our  leaving military. Do you have any idea how much  MORE EXPENSIVE it is to send private security contractors than to have our  troops do the job?  If the President thinks we need 8000 people there to provide  continued security, why not use our military (cheaper) instead of hiring private  contractors? You and I both know why… When the President makes his  announcement about troop withdrawal, listen very carefully to see if he tells  you the whole story and that  includes how many contractors doing security work (military) are already there,  how much it costs, how many more we are sending with the drawdown and that  cost.    In Iraq today, diplomats, military officials, and Washington  busybodies are involved in a complex game of maneuvering into place American  troops meant to remain in Iraq long past the previously 12/31/2011 negotiated  deadline for full withdrawal. Iraq will eventually agree, probably in some  semi-passive way, such as calling them trainers, or visiting students, or temps.  There will be endless argument over numbers -- should it be 3000 soldiers or  10,000? The debate over whether troops should stay on, or how many should stay,  begs the real question: What will all those soldiers do in Iraq?   Will the White House be forced to provide real answers at any point or will  silly fools like  continue to run interference for them allowing them to be left  off the hook? Not everyone gives War Criminals and their enablers a pass.  Linda Greene interviews Cindy Sheehan for the  Bloomington Alternative  ahead  of Cindy 's visit to speak, October  5th, 7 p.m., at the First United Church in Bloomington. We'll note this  section: BA: What were your politics like  before you got involved in peace and justice activities? CS: If you had asked me this before my son was killed,  I would have said that I was very liberal, very left-wing, but that's just  because of the community I live in, where being a Democrat is thought of as  liberal and left-wing. I always voted Democrat because I believed that was the  right thing to do. After my son was killed and after these Democratic  politicians in Congress betrayed the antiwar movement, betrayed the working  people over and over and over again, and even though I was uninformed and  undereducated about these things before Casey was killed, I realized the  two-party system really is just a fraud, and people invest all their time,  energy and money where we the people have the least amount of effects. It's the  corporations, it's the lobbyists, it's the robber class that really control  politics in this country, and we can actually have a political system in this  country that's responsible to the people. We have to start from the bottom up,  not the top down.   On this week's Cindy Sheehan Soapbox radio program , Cindy spoke with  Iraqi-American activist Dr. Dahlia Wasfi.  They caught up at the start of the  interview with Cindy noting Dahlia had gotten married since they'd last seen  each other and Dahlia observed that "in the midst of all this madness, I found a  soul mate who has the same conviction that I try to have."  And Cindy noting she  now had three grandkids (a fourth was born over the weekend).      Dahlia Wasfi:  This is the same thing I observed with my  family overseas in Iraq is that this is what -- they -they continue to live  their lives.  If they waited for things to get better, to move on, they would  never stop waiting. And so the next generation is being born and they do the  best they can for their families and they as well trying to make a better future  for those kids. That's what comes to mind as you talk about sort-of rebuilding  your own life.   Cindy Sheehan: Well also it is the anniversary, the tenth  anniversary of 9-11, I'm like fed up to my eyebrows with how the US was attacked  on 9-11 and we were attacked because the terrorists hate our freedom and our  democracy and our way of life and they want to attack our way of life. Well, you  know, if that was true, they did a really good job.  There's very little talk  about the people outside the US whose lives have been destroyed by whatever  happened on 9-11and you don't hear their stories and how needlessly and  tragically their lives have been effected by what happened on that day so that's  why I wanted to invite you on because you're a very eloquent critic of US policy  but you're also very eloquent in describing your Iraqi roots and what's  happening to the people in that country so I just want you to today talk about  that.  Talk about the connection between 9-11 and Iraq and what the US did  ostensibly there but what really happened there and what's still happening. Iraq  has basically fallen off the face of the earth.  It might as well not even exist  because we don't talk about it at all.      Cindy Sheehan: And Dick Cheney said it's better, it's a better  place, you know, they have a democray now and blah, blah, blah.  And you know, I  wish I believed in hell so I would know that Dick Cheney was going there soon  but, you know, I don't think that's happening. So Dahlia, give us the Iraqi  perspective on this.    Dahlia Wasfi:  Well I so appreciate, I too, I really, I  promise I'm not going to forget what's happening on Sunday, I'm not going to  forget the anniversary, I don't need any more reminders, but I know more are  coming.  But, absolutely, I can tell from my personal experience.  And I was  born in New York, we lived in Iraq when I was little and then we left when I was  five-years-old. So except for a few years in there, I'm born and raised here, I  don't even speak Arabic. I know from the few months I spent with my family what  they have to endure on a daily basis which is really something that I could not  consistently deal with.  They're much stronger than I think I'll ever dream to  be.  But what happened on September 11, 2001, once it was clear sort of what was  being built up and I knew no matter who was responsible that Arabs and Muslims  were going to be blamed in this country because that's just par for the course.   It happened after the Oklahoma City bombing and pretty much anytime.  It  happened recently with what happened in Norway, that the first suspect was and  must be a Muslim suspect.  This is -- we're the go to people.  And while there  still needs to be  a genuine investigation [into 9-11] as far I'm concerned and  many others -- we still don't know exactly what happened that day -- I knew that  the next hits coming were going to be racists.  And I certainly didn't face what  others faced in this country.  I mean a lot of people, a lot of people died in  this country after 9-11 because they were seen to be, they looked Muslim, they  looked Arab. And then what came afterwards was our assault on Afghanistan the  people of Afghanistan had nothing to do with September 11th.  And the assault on  Iraq which started -- the planning for that began on September 13, 2011  --     Dahlia Wasfi:  2001!  Thank you.  Two days after 9-11, 2001.  And this was, it's very clear. I think the number is 965 times the Bush  administration lied about numerous things including supposed ties between Iraq  and 9-11.  And the outcome today for Iraqis is their lives will never be the  same.  There's over a million people dead. Over five and a half million  refugees.  And that's 20% of Iraq's 27 million population.  From what my cousins  have told me, there is no one who has been untouched.  Everybody knows somebody  who has been killed -- either a victim of the violence that we brought to Iraq  or a victim of the destruction of the infrastructure and the health care  system.  And then, on top of all of that, which returning veterans are suffering  the consequences from as well, is our use of depleted uranium which is --  basically it's radioactive metal that vaporizes into dust and this contaminates  the air and the sand and the water supply for Iraqis and it's in the air that  occupying forces are breathing in so this is a gift of cancer for the next four  and a half billion years. And still with that knowledge, in spite of being  keenly aware of the weapons we've used and the effects on the future generations  which is most vividly being demonstrated in the city of Falluja after two major  seiges in 2004, Iraqis, they continue forward.  Again, like, you know trying to  do day to day things, put their lives back together.  But what the sense that I  get to this day is that they want an end to the occupation.  It's very  simple.     They were discussing the radiation and Aswat al-Iraq reported  September 11th,  "A woman has given birth of a 'distorted' child, with one eye and no nose in a  Karbala hospital coming from district, where several cancer cases were register,  the Director of Women and Delivery Hospital in Karbala city said on Saturday."  Reuters notes  a Falluja car bombing  claimed 1 life and, dropping back to last night, a Baghdad sticky bombing  claimed the life of a police officer.      ELEANOR HALL: Just how fragile is  Iraq?
 LYDIA KHALIL: Iraq is fragile right  now. It's not as unstable as it was in 2006 and 2007 but its government, the  Maliki coalition, is really being held by a string. The situation is very  tenuous, there's opposition parties in parliament who are opposed to Maliki and  right now it's very difficult to get legislation past, major legislation is  needed in order to move the country forward. So the Iraqi government can't  really handle a series of major attacks like we saw in August.
       When a middle-aged mother took a taxi alone from Baghdad to  Nasiriyah, about 300 kilometres south earlier this year, her 20-year-old driver  stopped on the way, pulled her to the side of the road and raped her. And that  began a telling legal struggle."She is not a simple case," says Hanaa Edwar,  head of the Iraqi rights-based Al-Amal Association, established in Baghdad after  the U.S.-led invasion in 2003.
 "She came from an affluent family, held a  professional job, and told her family about the rape. They had the police arrest  the driver," Edwar says. "Then she came to us for legal help. She said, 'I want  my rights back, and what he has done to me, he will do to others. I want this  perpetrator punished'."
 The rape victim lost her case. "The judge had a male  mentality. They think you should not make a scandal, but be silent. He prompted  the accused with questions like, 'You did this when you were drunk -- yes?' This  is how they intimidate," Edwar said. "Now we are making an appeal."
 The  Al-Amal Association is one of a handful of women's advocates in Iraq fighting  for female equality in marriage and divorce, and opposing a draconian penal code  that favours perpetrators of domestic abuse and of honour killings within  households.
 
   And Iraq continues to face serious problems regarding government -- not  that you'd know it from listening to NPR which can condemn listeners for not  knowing what's happening in Iraq but can't actually provide coverage from Iraq  these days (see yesterday's snapshot). Al Mada reports  on the  continued tensions between Nouri al-Maliki and Ayad Allawi with Nouri going on  Alsumaria TV to repeat his charge that Allawi is not fit to be part of the  government process. State of Law then parrots their leader (Nouri) and asserts  claims that Nouri, as commander of the armed forces (that's what they cite), can  determine who and who is not fit to serve in the government. It's a bit like the  purges in the name of de-Ba'athification done by the Justice and Accountability  Commission on Nouri's behalf in 2010 to knock out Nouri's political opponents  only this time Nouri's claiming (and State of Law's agreeing) that he has the  right himself to ban whomever he wants.  Alsumaria TV quotes  Nouri stating, "Head of Al  Iraiqya list is no longer a tolerated participant in the political process."   Stop for a moment and grasp that Ayad Allawi represents Iraqiya and that  Iraqiya, not State of Law, came in first in the March 2010 elections, that  Iraqiya (not State of Law) should have had first crack at the prime minister  post.  And now Nouri's saying the leader of the most popular (judging by votes  in the most recent election) party's leader can't be part of the political  process. Next up, he may start banning Kurds. Al Rafidayn reports  that the Kurds  continue to object to the oil and draft bill he's proposing and to the refusal  to follow the Erbil Agreement. They've now declared that they won't even send a  delegation to Baghdad for discussions until he indicates that they will be  received well and participants in the Kurdish meeting state that the meeting was  to send a message to Nouri about the need to implement the Erbil Agreement. Today's Zaman runs  an unsigned and  unsourced article about an article another Turkish paper (Taraf )  ran which claims the KRG has granted approval to the Turkish government "for a  cross-border operation" and states this follows meeting where "Kurdish officials  gathered with US and British officials, as well as with the PKK."  I am neither  fluent nor functional in Kurdish so I asked a friend who is and she notes that  Today's Zaman  article is much, much longer than the "article" in Taraf  which she states is a single paragraph of nine sentences. She also notes that  details in Today's Zaman which are implied to be in the Taraf article are not in  the Taraf article "including the assertion about helicopters being used."  And as a reminder of how bad things remain in Iraq, Dar Addustour reports  the country's  Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari wants the Arab Summit to be held in Baghdad. And  though that stated desire may distract a few, for most it will just remind that  the Arab League was supposed to hold their summit in Iraq last year and did not.  Due to the lack of safety. Despite Zebari claiming it would take place. Despite  Zebari insisting it was just postponed.Meanwhile Aseel Kami (Reuters) reported  yesterday on the  stop-gap measures Nouri al-Maliki used over the summer to give the appearance  that issues were being addressed. The measures are described as "short term  fixes" and scapegoats with the fired Minister of Electricity being an example of  the latter. Tomorrow Iraq's First Lady Moqtada al-Sadr is scheduled to hold his  pro-government stroke-fest. Dar Addustour reminds  that Moqtada  wants you to support the demands of government. It's good to know that Moqtada's  no longer wasting his time on the people and now focused solely on his man Nouri  al-Maliki. Now come on, is it going to take a pregnancy scare to get these two  love birds properly hitched?  During Nouri al-Maliki's first term as prime minister, his deputy prime  minister was Dr. Rozh Shaways (also spelled Ruz Nuri Shawis and Roz Nuri  Shawis). The Kurdish politician remains his deputy prime minister today. This  may change. Dar Addustour reports  US State Dept  cable from June 2005 released by WikiLeaks reveal that the brother of hte deputy  prime minister joined with Iraqi business people in smuggling hundreds of  millions of dollars out of Iraq and into Jordan. Al Rafidayn reports on it at  length here . Eight  years after the fall of Saddam, Iraq has yet to pass a hydrocarbons law, let  alone come up with a coherent spending plan for its oil wealth. Meanwhile  neoliberal Todd Moss writes at The Huffington Post : So how could Iraq manage its oil? One idea (and  readers of this blog will be shocked to hear) is a universal dividend paid to  all Iraqis. Colleagues Nancy Birdsall and Arvind Subramanian proposed just this  idea back in 2004 as a way to try to create accountability. The idea of an  Alaska-style dividend for Iraq was starting to catch on, for example, this NY  Times oped by Steven Clemons, proposals from Senators Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) and  Mary Landrieu (D-LA), and even former Alaskan governor and dividend godfather  Jay Hammond tried to export his grand experiment to Baghdad. Given the political  and security climate of the time, the idea was thought too radical. Is it  time to think again about an Iraqi dividend? In a new CGD working paper, "Iraq's  Last Window: Diffusing the Risks of a Petro-State," Johnny West asks precisely  this question. West, a longtime journalist in the Middle East and founder of  OpenOil, identifies a new opportunity for direct distribution of Iraqi oil rents  in the planned production expansion over the next five years: [blah, blah,  blah] You know what, Todd? Iraqis have had oil longer than you've  dreamed up ways to steal it. So why you don't you sit your tired ass down and  let the Iraqi people decide what they want to do? It's not your right to decide  for them. If you find a proposal that Iraqis are making and want to champion it,  go for it. But otherwise take your big nose back to American business and quit  trying to 'suggest' (tell) Iraqis what they need to do. It's their oil. It's not  your oil. Your wants and hopes don't really mean a thing and it's a real shame  that you and your Center for Global Development (a neoliberal lab of rape and  theft) have been wrongly encouraged to believe anyone needs your 'help.' Why is  Todd so 'concerned' and 'helpful'? Because the theft of Iraqi oil hasn't  happened yet. And Todd knows his proposal of throwing a few pennies at a  population in crisis might sell better now than earlier. Al Rafidayn notes  that the White  House has warned big oil to hold off on bidding currently as a result of  "ambiguity" in Iraq's oil policies. All of those stories and so  many more and none of them aired on NPR.  But, as noted in yesterday's snapshot , All Things Considered managed to blame  Americans for the lack of Iraq coverage .  We're dropping back to it (a) for  transition to another topic and (b) because I was limited yesterday as I rushed  to dictate the snapshot before the report aired.  In addition to yesterday's  criticism, we'll note these problems with the report or 'report.'  Jackie  Northam, at the top, declares, "Andrew Kohut, president of the Pew Research  Center, says support for the invasion of Afghanistan was sky-high, around 90  percent, and developments were closely followed by a large number of people.  Kohut says since then, the public has been slowly disengaging from the war."   And he offers some figures and says it's the same with Iraq.  Since when has news ever been what the public supports?  The public didn't  support BP's Gulf Oil Disaster but it was news.  It doesn't matter whether the  public supports a war or not, it's news.  I've never supported the Iraq War but  we manage to cover it every day, don't we?  At the top, Pew and Northam are  blaming the lack of coverage on the fact that Americans don't support the war.   Wow.  If that were the basis for the judgment, I don't believe the world would  know the names Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein.  Outside of a mental case like  G. Gordon Liddy, who in the world would support Watergate?   Apparently Jackie and Pew have confused "popularity" and "hot topics" with  what is actually news and that may be the saddest thing about Northam's  report.   Then she moves on to West Point's Army Col Matthew Moten who insists "that  the public has other issues on its mind" such as the economy, the federal  deficit, etc.  You mean the issues on the public's mind are the ones -- novel  concept here -- that the news media actually reports on?     Then CATO's Christopher Preble declares that there's no "heroic victory" to  the current wars and there's no "skin in the game" -- really?  The United States  is billions and billions of dollars in debt.  Largely due to these wars.  I  think there's plenty of "skin in the game" -- but Jackie Northam ignores that in  her report, never mentions it.   As for the media -- the ones actually responsible for what the public can  follow and can't?  Jackie gives them a single sentence in the last seconds of  her report: "Many cash-strapped news agencies have pulled back on their  coverage."  Really, Jackie?   Have they?  Didn't ABC News shut down their Iraq operation at the end of  2008?  Didn't other networks follow suit?  Wasn't the claim that they were going  to focus on Afghanistan?     One single sentence notes that the public has less reports on Iraq because  the "news agencies have pulled back on their coverage."  Jackie Northam should  be ashamed of herself.  And we're not done.   CATO's Christopher Preble is brought on because -- well ask Jackie.  A  pollster, a right-wing (CATO) and a military historian at West Point.  I'm not  seeing anybody for peace in this report and maybe that's the point.   It's not that the war became "unpopular," is it, NPR?  It's that the peace  movement was winning.  And when you couldn't whore and Steve Inskeep couldn't  puff out his chest with on air bravado nobody really gave a damn about the wars  that they whored so hard to sell.  Isn't that the actual closer to the reality  of why the wars vanished from the coverage?   In her report or 'report,' Jackie Northam declares after that single  sentence on the media, "And the two conflicts barely cause a ripple on the  campaign trail, especially among Republican presidential candidates, says the  CATO's Preble."   As opposed to who, Jackie?  Democratic presidential candidates?     And the reality is that the GOP candidates do talk about the war.  They're  not asked about it very often by reporters and certainly not by moderators in  debates.  Again, that's a media issue.        I think we need to try to move our men and women home as soon as we  can. Not just in Afghanistan, but in Iraq as well. And we've got to continually  reassess our objectives. We need to make strategic decisions based on  consultation with our military leaders on the ground, rather than just some  arbitrary political promises. Our objective should be clear. We've got to support the Afghan  national security forces as they transition into the role of being the stable  and appropriate force to sustain that country. Our overall objective has to be  to serve that process and to drive out those who would do harm to our country. I  think we've done that in Iraq and Afghanistan. We have substantial ways to  continue to put the pressure on the bad guys, if you will, and I don't think  keeping a large force of United States uniform military in Afghanistan for a  long period of time is particularly in the interest of the U.S., or for that  matter, in Afghani interest.   |