| Thursday, October 13, 2011.   Chaos and violence continue, negotiations  continue to keep US troops in Iraq, how many troops Gen Lloyd Austin wanted is  "classified," will Dennis Kucinich be the only Democratic member of Congress to  seriously address the Iraq War, the US military announces another death, three  US soldiers are wounded, Sadr City is bombed, and more.   Houston Chronicle reports, "Cheif  Warrant Officer James B. Wilke, 38, of Ione, Calif died Oct. 10" in Operation  New Dawn.  David Burge (El Paso Times) speaks  to  his wife of fifteen years, Moia Wilke, who states, "We don't know for sure what  happened. [. . .] There are no words to explain the love we had. It was way too  good to be true. He was the love of my life and I was the love of his, soul  mates. We always thought we would be together. Now, nothing makes sense."    Independent Online News reports, "A  rocket attack on a United States military base in Iraq's southern Maysan  province wounded three American soldiers on Wednesday, a US military  spokesperson and an Iraqi security official said." Press TV adds , "According to the reports, emergency  vehicles were sent to the military base and helicopters flew overhead. [. . .]  The rocket attack comes as two Iraqi soldiers were gunned down at an army  checkpoint in the northern city of Mosul late on Wednesday."      For the second day in a row, Baghdad was slammed with bombings.  Reuters reports , "Two bomb blasts killed  at least 16 people in a mainly Shi'ite Baghdad district on Thursday in the  latest in a series of large attacks to hit Iraq's capital in less than a week."   It was the Sadr City section of Baghdad, Moqtada al-Sadr's power base.  Sameer N. Yacoub (AP) quotes  barber  Hassan Rahim stating, "We rushed outside the shop and we saw fire and smoke near  the houses. I saw dead people on the ground and several burning cars.  We helped  take the wounded to the hospital until the arrival of the ambulances." Salam Faraj (AFP) adds  Iraqi officials  state, "women and children were among the casualties, while the interior  ministry official said six policemen and three soldiers were among the  wounded."  Laith Hammoudi (McClatchy Newspapers) updates  the  death toll to 18 (forty injured) and quotes Sadrist MP Hakim al-Zamili stating,  "The security officials don't really care about people and their lives because  they live in the heavy protected green zone and they never feel the  danger."  Again, this follow's yesterday's Baghdad bombings.  Sahar Issa (McClatchy  Newspapers) covers them in "If you think Iraq's secure, read this about  Wednesday's violence " in which she notes at least 22 people died and another  seventy-four were injured in Baghdad alone.  A security official tells Issa,  "Amred groups are choosing their targets very carefully.  They are targeting  members of the security forces and government officials. It is not as random as  it used to be.  And the way they were able to coordinate so many targets all  over the capital indicates one of two things: either they are much more  organized than they used to be, with the high possibility of having inside help.  Or our security forces are sleeping.  And in either case that Maliki has failed  to provide security for the people."  In other violence today, Reuters notes  a Falluja roadside bombing  claimed 2 lives and left five people injured, a Shirqat shootout led to 1  suspect being shot dead, a Shirqat roadside bombing claiming the life of 1 Iraqi  soldier and, last night, 1 police officer was shot dead in Baghdad.     With the deadline for the withdrawal all U.S. troops from Iraq less  than 100 days away, nobody seems to know whether troops will be allowed to stay,  how many, and under what conditions. Even the basic parameters of a possible  Iraqi request for a follow-on U.S. military training presence remain largely  unknown and caught in the labyrinth of local politics. This uncertainty is  snarling planning efforts and has certainly irked Defense Secretary Leon  Panetta, who famously exhorted Iraq's political leaders to "dammit, make a decision"  during his first trip to Baghdad this summer.  Why exactly is a troop decision taking so long? It is certainly a  highly sensitive matter, but the deadline was set in 2008 and has hardly sneaked  up on anyone.       Why is it taking so long?  That's one question.  Another is why the  American people are kept in the dark on it.  Yesterday's snapshot noted a  Congressional hearing that was pretty well attended by the press for a  Subcommittee hearing.  I really haven't seen any reporting on that outside of  this community. It was a pretty important hearing with State and Defense  represented and the focus being on Iraq (for the last 20 or so minutes, the  focus shifted to Iran -- the hearing lasted about one hour and nine minutes). We  covered the hearing in yesterday's snapshot   and last night Wally  covered it in "US House Rep Jason Chaffetz  (Wally) " (at Rebecca 's  site), Kat  with "House Subcommittee on National  Security, Homeland Defense and Foreign Operations " and Ava , at Trina 's site, with "DoD says it can't talk about Iraq  in an open session ."  And on the topic of the American people being  kept in the dark, we'll note this exchange, US House Rep Jason Chaffetz is the  Subcomittee Chair and Alexander Vershbos is with the Defense Dept.    Chair Jason Chaffetz: Ambassador Vershbos,  let's talk about the number of US troops, what the Iraqis are requesting or  authorizing. How many is the president authorizing?
 
 Ambassador Alexander Vershbos: Mr. Chairman, no  decisions have been made, uh. Discussions are still ongoing, uh. On the nature  of the relationship from which would be derived any --
 
 
 Chair Jason Chaffetz: So the number of 3,000 to 4,000  troops that we here, is that accurate or inaccurate?
 
 Ambassador Alexander Vershbos: As I said, there's a  lot of things going on in these discussions which predate the announcement of  October 4 when the Iraqi leaders took the position they're taking regarding no  immunities so obviously the discussions now have taken on a different dimension  so beyond-beyond that I really can't say because nothing's been decided. The  shape of the relationship will be determined in part by how this issue of status  protection is-is addressed. So it's a work in progress. Even as we speak  discussions are taking place between our ambassador [James Jeffrey], uh, the  commander General Austin, and Iraqi leaders. So it's really difficult to give  you more than that today.
 
 
 Chair Jason Chaffetz: Now there was a report that  General Austin had asked for between fourteen and eighteen thousand troops. Is  that true?
 
 Ambassador Alexander  Vershbos: Again, I-I can't comment on internal deliberations. A lot of different  ideas have been
 
 Chair Jason  Chaffetz: Wait a second, wait a second --
 
 Ambassador Alexander Vershbos: --tossed around in the  last few
 
 Chair Jason Chaffetz: --  do you know what the actual request was?
 
 Ambassador Alexander Vershbos: Uh -- the military  leadership was asked to provide a range of options and they've done that and  that was the basis on which we engaged the Iraqis and now the discu  --
 
 Chair Jason Chaffetz: Do you  know what General Austin requested?
 
 Ambassador Alexander Vershbos: I can't talk about that  in an open session, Mr. Chairman. It's classified.
 
 
 As Ava observed, "The number that Lloyd Austin, the top US commander in  Iraq, wanted is classified? Classified is supposed to be something that would  endanger national security."  The American people aren't even allowed to know  the numbers tossed around.  The White House is completely unresponsive and were  the useless gasbags on my side (the left) paying attention at all, they'd be  calling out the White House.     Barack got the nomination lying to the American people.  He was never the  anti-war candidate or even the anti-Iraq War candidate.  He was a trashy  operator in a boy's style suit to give him a child-like innocence that the  current gray hair won't let pull off next year.  And because he was such a  little boy in grown up clothes, the press couldn't ask him hard questions, like,  "Hey, Wet Behind The Ears, why don't you tell us, if you're against the Iraq  War, why didn't you ever vote against in the Senate?"  He didn't vote against it  because before he got to the Senate, he'd decided that the US had to stay.  He  said that to Elaine  and I at a fundraiser when he was  running for the Democratic Party nomination.  But the press fawned over him --  treating him not unlike Joe Biden's infamous remark that was greeted with such  shock and disdain. At what point does the liar get held accountable?  "We want  to end the war and we want to end it now!" he hollered at one tent revival after  another in 2008 to the wild applause of the Cult of St. Barack.  He misled the  public and not only has he not ended the Iraq War as they believed he promised  to do, now he's working to expand it.  At what point does he get pressed on  that?  With the Iraqi press, it's a rare day that you can't find articles in  several papers about the possibilty of the US extending its military stay.  But  in the US, the press distracts non-stop.    Again to Sean Kane:    The final area of complexity on the troop extension relates to the  main schism in Iraqi domestic politics, that is the competition between Prime  Minister Maliki's Shiite National Alliance and former Prime Minister Ayad  Allawi's mainly Sunni Iraqiyya coalition. Virtually every major government and  legislative action is now filtered through the prism of which man gains and  which loses, including the decision on a U.S. military presence. Such zero-sum  politics make compromise difficult, nuanced public discourse based on national  interests unlikely, and a major legislative accomplishment such as parliamentary  endorsement of a new security cooperation agreement even more challenging  (especially since the Parliament just went into recess for six weeks).   This is important because U.S. officials have concluded that  parliamentary approval is legally required under the Iraqi constitution for  privileges and immunities to be conferred upon any U.S. soldiers acting as  trainers.  That's an interesting interpretation (the Nouri and Allawi aspect);  however, that second part about parliament?  Uh, no.  US officials have not  concluded that.  Defense and State are not in agreement on whether or not a memo  of understanding, for instance, signed by Nouri and Barack, would require  Parliament's approval.  And that's even before you get into the debate about  powers as written or powers by custom.
 
 But that's not why we went back to Kane's article.  We went back to it  because of the very premise of the article.  Can you summarize it?  "Why won't  Iraq agree right away to US troops on their soil?"   That's the standard question and the way the US press reports it.  Why  isn't the question, "Why is the White House insisting US troops stay on the  ground in Iraq?"    If Bush were in the White House, the press could argue (as they're so fond  of doing) that reporters don't take positions and they could pretend that was  somehow opinion journalism.  But Bush isn't in the White House.  Barack is.   Barack who ran pretending to be against the Iraq War.  Barack who pretended he  would bring home all US troops from Iraq.     It's not opinion journalism to ask why the candidate is not living up to  his promise on the issue that generated so much support for his campaign.   The US press has ignored the White House efforts to extend the US military  presence in Iraq as much as it could.  When forced to cover it, they will with  an article that tosses the question to the Iraqi side when what needs to be  asked is:   1) Why is the campaign promise being broken?   2) If it was a "dumb war," why has President Barack Obama continued it for  years now?   3) At what point are the American people and their desires going to be  factored into any decision on Iraq?   4) How is the US secured by US soldiers remaining in Iraq?   The US press had a million and one excuses for their coverage that sold the  war.  They swore it would be better someday.  We're still waiting for an adult  press to emerge in the United States when it comes to Iraq.         US House Rep Dennis Kucinich:  Hi. I'm Congressman Dennis Kucinich,  To my brothers and sisters with Occupy Wall Street and around the nation who are  fighting for economic justice, let's not forget the wars.  Nine years ago, the  House of Representatives authorized the war on Iraq based on lies.  Those who  would rewrite history today would have us believe that we were fooled into  thinking that Saddam Hussein was a threat and had something to do with 9-11.   That's not true. We were not fooled.  We were lied to.  Lied to by those who  wanted the war for their own personal financial gains.  Nine years ago, I  analyzed the authorization for military force in Iraq and it was obvious based  on information freely available that it was based on lies.  I'll put a link to that analysis below.  We  were not fooled.  We were lied to.  It's now obvious to even the most fervent  war profiteer that the war in Iraq was a mistake.  Iraq was not pursuing Weapons  of Mass Destruction, had nothing to do with 9-11, was not a threat to the United  States, so why have we stayed in Iraq so long when we know it's a lie? Why did  we see an estimated a million Iraqi civilians die?  We know war profits have  soared.  Wall Street favorites like Haliburton, KBR, Bechtel, DynCorp, Northrup  Grumman, General Electric and General Dynamics do very well when we spend money  on war. Halliburton's stock price rose 600% between October 7, 2002 and June 30,  2008, the end of the quarter before the financial crisis. The war in Iraq may  end up costing as much as $5 trillion dollars, and we have sacrificed the lives  of 4,473 brave Americans and tens of thousands of our troops have been injured.  The money spent for war could have spent on education, creating green jobs and  rebuilding our infrastructure. It's time to end these wars.  It's time we got  some of our money back. We should implement an excise tax on the profiteers who  have gained so much from a war based on lies.  Keep Occupying Wall Street and I  will keep occupying Congress.     With all the money wasted, with all the US lives wasted, with all the  Iraqis murdered, and with no functioning government and Little Nouri as the new  Saddam, exactly why should US tax payers support another day of this illegal  war?   At what point does that question get asked?  Maybe if Helen Thomas  were still in the White House pool  but, of course, the whole point of running her out of the pool was to avoid  those important questions and instead to banter with the White House like, this  week, when Jay Carney apologizes for showing well after the  press-conference-in-two-minutes, he declares something came up and the alleged  best and brightest in DC quickly shout out 'jokes' about was it his lunch they  came up?  It's good to know that while they fail to inform the American people and  while the US is still engaged in endless war, the DC press corps does find time  to get their yucks on.   The Palm Beach Post pretends to ask the  important questions about the US military remaining in Iraq. Pretends  because their 'on the one hand' for staying is that if Iran takes over Iraq, "it  would be bad for him [Barack] politically --  not to mention any actual  increased risk of global terror."  Yes, those are the stakes, Barack's image. In  that case, let's kill another one million Iraqis (is it up to two million yet?)  and send another nearly 5,000 US troops to their death because what really  matters is not what Barack does, but how he looks.  That really is why the  United States was created, right?  To ensure that one day Barack's image would  be protected.  The paper's readers are smarter than the journalists who work for  the paper as evidenced by the poll   -- 80% say no to US troops staying in  Iraq.  Yes, it's a small poll but maybe the paper doesn't have a lot of  readers?     More than 550,000 children in some of the most vulnerable districts  of Iraq will benefit from a United Nations-backed school feeding programme that  seeks not only to improve their nutrition but also to encourage poor families to  send their children to school in the first place.    The joint programme launched by the UN World Food Programme  (WFP) and the Iraqi education ministry  will provide a fortified midday snack to primary schoolchildren at some 1,800  schools in 24 districts over the 2011-2012 academic  year.   Yes, that is good on the part of the UN.  Good for the UN!  Yea, for them.   But what about Iraq?  The press office notes that nearly 8 million Iraqis live  below the poverty line.   What's the current government scandal in Iraq?
 Jalal Talabani's  visit to New York to speak at the UN and how it cost the Iraqi government $2  million dollars.  If they've got two million dollars (and they do) to spend on  Jalal's visit, then they should have enough money to feed all the children in  Iraq without help from the UN (which would allow the UN to focus their resources  on other countries -- countries that aren't awash in oil billions each  year).
   That's how corrupt the government is.  They will spend $2 million dollars  for the ceremonial president to travel to NYC and back but when it comes to  feeding their own, they want the UN to provide assistance.  Everyone's  benefitting from the Iraqi oil billions . . . except the Iraqi people.       In the US, Senator Patty Murray is the Chair of the Senate Veterans Affairs  Committee and her office issues the following: FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Murray  Press OfficeWednesday, October 12, 2011 (202) 224-2834     Chairman Murray's Statement on Passage of House Veterans  Employment Bill     (Washington, D.C.)  – Today, U.S. Senator Patty Murray, Chairman of the Senate Veterans' Affairs  Committee, released the following statement on House passage of the VOW Act, a  bill to address veterans unemployment sponsored by House Veterans' Affairs  Committee Chairman, Rep. Jeff Miller. Chairman Murray first introduced  legislation in this Congress to help put veterans to work with the Hiring Heroes  Act, which passed Senator Murray's Committee unanimously on  June 29th and is awaiting action on the Senate floor.     "I look forward  to working with Chairman Miller to build around both of our efforts to start  putting veterans to work. This is an issue that should transcend partisanship  and remind us that doing right by our veterans always comes first. We have made  tremendous investments in training and supporting those in uniform and simply  patting them on the back for their service and sending them into the working  world alone isn't good enough. We must improve the opportunities and resources  available to our veterans to help them find the dignity and financial security  that a job helps provide."     ###       Matt McAlvanah   Communications  Director   U.S. Senator Patty  Murray   202-224-2834 - press office   202--224-0228 - direct   matt_mcalvanah@murray.senate.gov   News Releases | Economic Resource Center | E-Mail Updates     |