| Monday, October 31, 2011. Chaos and violence continue, one year ago today  Our Lady of Salvation Church in Baghdad was attacked, US plans to use Kuwait as  a stating area finally get serious attention from the US mainstream media,  Nouri's screaming "Ba'athists!" again, and more.  
 
 Today Mark Thompson (Time magazine)  observers , "Just like clockwork, the Administration lets the New York Times  know that it's planning to leave a big force  in Iraq's 'hood to keep an eye on troublemakers in Tehran, Baghdad and  elsewhere." What's he referring to? Saturday (online, Sunday in print) Thom  Shanker and Steven Lee Myers (New York  Times) reported , "The Obama administration plans to bolster  the American military presence in the Persian Gulf after it withdraws the  remaining troops from Iraq this year, according to officials and diplomats. That  repositioning could include new combat forces in Kuwait able to respond to a  collapse of security in Iraq or a military confrontation with Iran." Good for  them for noting it, but why didn't anyone note it two Fridays ago (or the  Saturday after) when covering Barack's assertions about 'all' troops coming  'home'? As Shanker and Myers note, this has been known for "months." We noted  it two Fridays ago . And while it has been known for months, it's  funny how so many outlets ignored it that day (the day Barack gave his speech)  and in all the days that followed. When criticism got too much for the  administration, as Mark Thompson notes, they ran to the New  York Times  which only then 'found' the story. (See Third's editorial, "Editorial: US press doesn't give a damn about  Iraq .") Dar  Addustour reports  that DC is in negotiations to boost US troops  in Kuwait to use it as a staging platform as well beef up its presence in Saudi  Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar and the UAE. Al Mada  notes  Kuwait has been discussed for months but now has "urgency" as  the year ends and might end without the US securing 'trainers' in Iraq. The  paper notes that this is among the alternative solutions being sought. Mark Thompson explains , "The betting here is  that thousands of U.S. troops in Kuwait and elsewhere around the Gulf will keep  the lid on any Iraq explosion -- at least until after next year's U.S.  presidential eleciton."Presidential candidate and US  Senator Barack Obama who is perceived as an 'anti-war' candidate by some  announced that he would not commit to a withdrawal, declared that he was  comfortable sending US troops back into Iraq after a withdrawal started and  lacked clarity on exactly what a withdrawal under a President Obama would  mean.Declaring that "there are  no good options in Iraq," Senator Obama went on to explain that even with his 16  month plan for withdrawal, he would continue to keep US troops in Iraq, agreeing  that he would "leave behind residual force" even after what he is billing as a  "troop withdrawal."
 "Even something as simple as protecting our embassy is  going to be dependent on what is the security environment in Baghdad. If there  is some sense of security, then that means one level of force. If you continue  to have significant sectarian conflict, that means another, but this is an area  where Senator Clinton and I do have a significant contrast," Senator Obama  offered contrasting himself with his chief opponent for the Democratic  presidential nomination. "I do think it is important for us not only to protect  our embassy, but also to engage in counter-terrorism activities. We've seen  progress against AQI [Al Qaeda in Iraq], but they are a resilient group and  there's the possibility that they might try to set up new bases. I think that we  should have some strike capability. But that is a very narrow mission, that we  get in the business of counter terrorism as opposed to counter insurgency and  even on the training and logistics front, what I have said is, if we have not  seen progress politically, then our training approach should be greatly  circumscribed or eliminated."The Senator insisted, "I want to be absolutely clear about this,  because this has come up in a series of debates: I will remove all our combat  troops, we will have troops there to protect our embassies and our civilian  forces and we will engage in counter terrorism activities. How large that force  is, whether it's located inside Iraq or as an over the horizon force is going to  depend on what our military situation is."
 That's pretty clear.  We wrote it at Third using the transcript of the interview conducted by Michael  Gordon and Jeff Zeleny . As we pointed out in the November 2, 2007 snapshot :On the subject of Iran, Barack  Obama appears on the front page of this morning's New York Times. War pornographer Michael  Gordon and Jeff Zeleny who lied in  print (click here,  here  and here --  the paper finally retracted Zeleny's falsehood that should have never appeared)  present a view of Barack Obama that's hardly  pleasing. Among the many problems  with the article is Obama as portrayed in the article -- and his campaign has  issued no statement clarifying. The Times has the transcript  online and from it, Barack Obama does  mildly push the unproven claim that the Iranian government is supporting  resistance in Iraq. Gordo's pushed that unproven claim repeatedly for over a  year now. But Obama's remarks appear more of a reply and partial points in  lengthy sentences -- not the sort of thing a functioning hard news reporter  would lead with in an opening paragraph, touch on again in the third paragraph,  in the fourth paragraph, in . . . But though this isn't the main emphasis of  Obama's statements (at any time -- to be clear, when it pops up, it is a  fleeting statement in an overly long, multi-sentenced paragraphs), it does go to  the fact that Obama is once again reinforcing unproven claims of the right wing.  In the transcript, he comes off as obsessed with Hillary Clinton. After her, he  attempts to get a few jabs in at John Edwards and one in at Bill Richardson.  Here is what real reporters should have made the lede of the front page:  "Presidential candidate and US Senator Barack Obama who is perceived as an  'anti-war' candidate by some announced that he would not commit to a withdrawal,  declared that he was comfortable sending US troops back into Iraq after a  withdrawal started and lacked clarity on exactly what a withdrawal under a  President Obama would mean." That is what the transcript reveals. Gordo really  needs to let go of his blood lust for war with Iran.
 The New  York Times  could have published a story on this issue in 2007 but didn't.  They did publish an expurgated transcript to the interview (that's what we used  as source material for the piece at Third -- and all quotes in the Third article  were from that transcript). It's a shame scribes for the Times are unaware what's in their own archives but it's a  greater shame that when they had a real story in 2007, they pulled their punches  and refused to inform readers the story they really had about 'anti-war'  candidate Barack.
 Simon Tisdall (Guardian)  ponders the staging area plan, "Exactly what the Pentagon might do with its  expanded Kuwait and Gulf-based forces, should Iraq implode again at some future  date or become destabilised by the unrest in Syria, is unclear. A second  invasion would not command much public support, to put it mildly. If, on the  other hand, the new American deployments are primarily about containing,  intimidating or potentially attacking Iran, the emerging picture becomes more  comprehensible, although not more reassuring." Lara Jakes (AP) reports   Ali Akbar Salehi, Foreign Minister of Iran, sees this as an attempt "to meddle"  in Iraq's "internal affairs." Jakes notes US Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta's  remarks that approximately 40,000 US troops will be stationed in the region.  Coming home? Leaving the region? Another blow to Barack's big 'withdrawal'  speech.  
 
 "The crackdown on ex-Ba'athists started earlier this  month," Kelly  McEvers observed today on Morning  Edition (NPR -- link is audio and text) . And the crackdown  sees a response from the provinces. Thursday , Salahuddin Province's council voted  to go semi-autonomous. Iraq has 18 provinces. Three make up the semi-autonomous  Kurdish Regional Government. Salahuddin Province's vote was to move towards that  sort of relationship. (A form of federalism once advocated by Joe Biden when he  was in the Senate.) The next step would be a referendum (that Nouri al-Maliki's  government out of Baghdad would have to pay for) and, were the popular vote to  back up the council and were the rules followed (always a big if with Nouri as  prime minister), Baghdad would control only 14 provinces (of the 18). Though  some outside the province are attempting to dispute that the council had the  right to vote on the issue, the measure's apparently very positive with the  residents (which would explain the 20 to zero vote on the council -- eight  members were not present for the vote). Over the weekend, Al Mada reported  that people turned  out throughout Salahuddin Province (including in Tirkrit, Samarra, Dhuluyia and  Sharqat) on Friday to take to the streets after morning prayers and demonstrate  in support of the council's vote. Ahmed Abdul-Jabbar Karim, Deputy Governor of  the Province, is quoted stating that this decision is something that the  officials will not retreat from and that it was backed by the voice of the  people. Various State of Law members are quoted offering varying reasons why the  vote was wrong or doesn't matter. State of Law is Nouri's political slate. Friday , residents of Anbar Province took to  the streets advocating for their province to follow Salahuddin's lead. Saturday Nouri al-Maliki  issued his own response. What does Nouri do when he's unhappy? Accuse them of  being Ba'athists. So it's no surprise that Ahmed  Rasheed (Reuters) quoted  a  statement from Nouri declaring, "The Baath Party aims to use Salahuddin as a  safe haven for Baathists and this will not happen thanks to the awareness of  people in the province. Federalism is a constitutional issue and Salahuddin  provincial council has no right to decide this issue." Nouri, of course, sees Ba'athists everywhere.  Al Mada noted  that the campaign  against so-called Ba'athists allegedly plotting a coup continues with at least  560 Iraqis arrested by his forces, on his orders in the last week. The article  notes Ayad Allawi (leader of Iraqiya) has called the arrests illegal while MP  Mahmoud Othman has stated these arrests are not helping to build cohesion or a  strong government. Rebecca  Santana (AP) noted  615  arrests and observed, "Sunnis say that Baghdad sometimes uses crackdowns on  Baathists as a tool to exert political pressure." Al Mada states  Nouri's threatening  to cut off water to the province. Laith  Hammoudi (McClatchy Newspapers) explained , "Salahuddin officials said  the timing of the vote was spurred by the recent firing of more than 100  professors at Tikrit University for alleged Baath Party connections, and by a  nationwide roundup of Baathists in the course of this week." Hammoudi also  counters Nouri's claims that he and the Parliament must okay any decision by a  province to become semi-autonomous, "In actual fact, article 119 of the Iraqi  constitution requires only that a referendum be held in a province following a  request for regional status by one-third of the members of the provincial  council, or one-tenth of the population." Aswat al-Iraq adds , "The chairman  of the Higher Electoral Commission declared that any requests to form a region  should be submitted to the Cabinet, underlining that some media organs are  reporting inaccurate information with regards to this matter." Who is right?  According to the Constitution, Laith Hammoudi's report is correct. From the  Iraqi Constitution: Article 119:One or more  governorates shall have the right to organize into a region based on a request  to be voted on in a referendum submitted in one of the following two  methods:First: A request by one-third of the council members of each  governorate intending to form a region.Second: A request by one-tenth of the  voters in each of the governorates intending to form a region.
 That's the Constitution on  the matter, there are no articles or sub-clauses on the issue. Per the  Constitution, Salahuddin Province has already met step one. Step two shouldn't  be too hard since only 10% of the voters are required to sign off on the  request.Aswat  al-Iraq reports, "A conference on federalism was convened today  in Basra, aiming to press the central government to expedite the formalities to  declare the province a region. Kareem al-Jabiri, an organizer, said that the  people of Basra wanted the federal option in the province, whose people suffer  of negligence despite its enormous resources." An Iraqi woman explained to NPR how the  crackdown works, "They searched our houses, tossed our furniture. Some of the  men on the arrest list are more than 70 years old. You think they're planning to  overthrow the country?"Dar  Addustour notes  that Parliament's Committee of the Regions is  exploring amendments to the the Constitution's Article 119. Faraj al-Haidari, of  the Independent High Electoral Committee, continues to insist that there's a  governing law that requires provinces to seek permission from the Cabinet. There  is no such law in the Constitution. But this may be an indication that when  Nouri attempted his seizure of the IHEC last January, he had managed to managed  to muzzle them. Al Mada  reports  Nouri told Salahuddin officials yesterday that their move  towards semi-autonomy was destroying national unity. (Saturday he was screaming  they were Ba'athists so his latest whine could be seen as an improvement.) Alsumaria TV notes  Salhauddin  Province's Sabhan Mulla Jiyad responding, "Maliki's assertion that the  ministerial council will refuse to declare Salahuddin as an autonomous region is  strange and possibly rushed. The Constitution grants us the right to establish a  region." In related news, Dar  Addustour reports  Iraqi President Jalal Talabani that the  borders of some governorates need to be changed/fixed. He most likely is  referring to Dahuk, Erbil and Sulaymaniyah which are part of the KRG. 
 Reuters notes a Khan Bani  Saad home invasion that resulted in the death of 1 Sahwa and his brother, and,  dropping back to Sunday for the rest, an attack on a Baquba military checkpoint  in which 1 Iraqi soldier was killed and when other soldiers responded a bomb  went off claiming the lives of 2, and an attack on the Bakuba Patriotic Union of  Kurdistan left two guards injured.  And on any hopes for democracy? Don't bet your savings  just yet. Mvelase Peppetta (Memeburn)  reports  alarm that the government of Syria has "internaet censorship  equipment." It's illegal, according to US law, for it to have this Blue Coat  Systems 'filter.' How did it get it? Apparently from Iraq. The US government  okayed the sale of web censorship equipment to Iraq. Did the US government  bother to run that past either the Iraqi people or the American people? No. Nor  did it publicize the sale.A year ago, Our Lady of Salvation Church in Baghdad  was assaulted. Aidan Clay  (International Christian Concern)  reports :Today marks the anniversary of last  year's four-hour siege on a Syriac Catholic church in Baghdad that ended with  al-Qaida linked militants massacring 58 worshippers. The attack was the worst  against Iraqi Christians since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003 and enticed many of  the already dwindling Christian population in Baghdad to leave the city  permanently. "We've had enough now. Leaving Iraq has become a must," Jamal Habo  Korges, a Christian mechanic and father of three, told the United Nation's  humanitarian news outlet IRIN. "We've been suffering since 2003 and we can't  take it anymore. The latest carnage is the final warning." Father Douglas  al-Bazi, who was kidnapped and tortured four years earlier, told The Christian  Science Monitor after the attack that his Chaldean parish in Baghdad had  dwindled from 2,500 families in the 1990s to less than 300."Of course I  cannot ask anyone to stay," he said. "Everyone tells me 'Father, I am sorry - I  will leave.' I tell them, 'Don't be sorry, okay? No one is pushing you to die,  what's the benefit of dying?'"Iraq's Christian population prior to  2003 was estimated at one million or more. Today, fewer than 400,000 remain.  Those who leave either become internally displaced - most toing to the less  violent Kurdish north - or flee the country altogether. NOW Lebanon reports, "Maronite  Patriarch Bechara Boutros al-Rai on Monday headed to Iraq for an official  visit." Lebanon's Daily Star adds  he'll be performing  the Mass at the Church on the first anniversary of the attack: 
 The delegation, scheduled to leave  Beirut airport shortly before midday Monday, includes Bishop Camille Zaidan and  Environment Minister Nazem al-Khoury, on behalf of President Michel  Sleiman.
 [. . .]
 Rai is expected to hold talks with a number of Iraqi  officials before his return home Wednesday evening.
 
 
 In the  year since the attack, Nouri al-Maliki's accomplished nothing to help Iraq's  Christian population. Not at all surprising when the official government  response in the week after the attack was to turn around and attack France which  offered medical care to the wounded. France opened the door and took the wounded  in, airlifted them in at no cost to Iraq, provided them with medical treatment  at no cost to anyone and the response to that humanitarian gesture was for  Nouri's government to condemn France's kindness.
 Alan Holdren (Catholic News  Agency) notes the dead from the attack included "three children, two  priests and a pregnant woman" and that they were remembered today at Rome's  Santa Maria in Mass. Father Mukhlis Shisha remembers, "Father Thair Sa'adallah  was just beginning his homily after having read the Gospel. When he saw the  terrorists enter, he took the Gospel in hand and held it up, saying, 'In the  name of the Gospel, leave them and take me. Me for them!'" He also remembers  Father Wasseem Sabb'ieh was able to get two families out of the church and,  "Before he closed the door, one of the people he helped said to him, 'Father,  leave them and come with us and you will be saved.' He answered, 'I won't leave  them like this' and he locked the door." Amelie Herenstein (AFP)  reports  Iraqi Christians ("hundreds") were at the Church today including  Nofal Sabah who has a brother who "was wounded and was being treated in Lyon,  Franche, while another 'has psychological problems because he saw everything'."  He reports his family is attempting to leave Iraq but are unable to get visas.  (The AFP  article has an uncredited photo of women in the  church lighting candles.) In the Kurdistan Regional Government, where many Iraqi Christians  have resettled, you have efforts between the KRG and various religious bodies to  build churches -- a Baptist Church, a Catholic Church, etc. The KRG has been  much more responsive to the issue of religious persecution than has Iraq. From  the October 21st snapshot : John Pontifex (Scottish Catholic  Observer) reported earlier this  month on the increase in Ankawa's Christian population noting that "1500 have  arrived within the last year alone" and that "Christians arriving in Ankawa have  fled not only from the Iraqi capital but from all across the country -- Mosul in  the north, Kirkuk in the north-east, and even Basra, hundreds of miles away in  the extreme south." Rob Kerby (Belief Net)  notes that the Kurdistan Regional  Government is offering Iraqi Christians "plots of land as well as $10,000 per  family to settle in the village of Se Ganian, whose population was murdered by  poison gas during Saddam's campaign against the Kurds." Joni B. Hannigan (Florida  Baptist Witness via Asia News) adds, "The Grace Baptist Cultural Center in Dohuk [Province, in the  Kurdistan Regional Government] -- a partnership between Iraqi, Jordan,  Brazilian, American and Lebanese Baptists -- is being built with the blessing of  Iraqi Kurdistan's Regional Government, who donated the $2 million properly. The  land is in the same village, Simele, where in 1933 an estimated 6,000 Assyrians  and Chaldeans were slaughtered by the Iraqi government following the withdrawal  of British troops from the region after a treaty granting Iraq's independence in  1930."
Where did Iraq's  Christian population go? Over 1.5 million before the start of the war, down to  less than 500,000 today. Internally, it shifted from throughout Iraq to the KRG.  But many more elected to leave the country becoming part of Iraq's refugee  population -- the largest refugee population in the region since 1948. If you  think the US has opened the doors, you may be remembering campaign promises from  Barack. Those promises were long ago set aside and no one in the press appears  to care. There were target goals for admitting Iraqis to this country. They are  fiscal year targets. October 1st the new fiscal year started. No one pressed the  White House or State Dept for those figures (they haven't been pressed since the  fall of 2009). No one notes that they don't meet the established numbers. It's not often James Dao comes  off foolish but it does happen. It happened today at the New York  Times' blog  when Dao elected to write about a white wash 'study' on  burn pits which finds they aren't at all responsible for breathing problems or  other problems. Dao foolishly writes that, "The report by the Institute of  Medicine, an independent policy organization, [. . .]" That may be the but "the  Institute of Medicine" did not write the report -- individuals did. For example,  John R. Balmes who, as the end notes to the report (Appendix A ) explain, has his  research "funded by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention." Or  David J. Tollerud 'forgets' to note that's he's working on a Jefferson County  children's study currently -- "the largest government-funded long-term  study ." It's funny how he 'forgot' that. Any reporter should grasp that  there are rewards to be grabbed in scientific America by insisting the burn pits  weren't harmful and that those on the government dole would have incentive to be  less than forthcoming. (And, yes, we can continue the government funding  connections with nearly everyone listed who took part in the 'study.' Most, like  Tollerud, 'forget' to note their government funding connections -- disclosures  of conflicts of interest apparently having gone out of fashion.) 
  Staying with the topic of burn pits. Burn pits have  resulted in many service members and contractors being exposed to chemicals and  toxins that have seriously harmed their bodies. The Senate Democratic Policy  Committee held hearings on this issue when Byron Dorgan was the Chair of the  DPC. Click here to go to the  hearing archives page . A registry is something that Leroy and Rosita  Lopez-Torres are now working on. It should be noted that were it not for US  Senator Jim Webb, the nation would already have such a registery. In October 21,  2009, then-Senator Evan Bayh appeared before the US Senate Veterans Affairs  Committee explaining the bill for a registry he was sponsoring, advocating for  it. 
 I am here today to testify about a tragedy that took place  in 2003 on the outskirts of Basra in Iraq. I am here on behalf of Lt Col James  Gentry and the brave men and women who served under his command in the First  Battalion, 152nd Infantry of the Indiana National Guard. I spoke with Lt Col  Gentry by phone just this last week. Unfortunately, he is at home with his wife,  Luanne, waging a vliant fight against terminal cancer. The Lt Col was a healthy  man when he left for Iraq. Today, he is fighting for his life. Tragically, many  of his men are facing their own bleak prognosis as a result of their exposure to  sodium dichromate, one of the most lethal carcinogens in existence. The chemical  is used as an anti-corrosive for pipes. It was strewn all over the water  treatment facility guarded by the 152nd Infantry. More than 600 soldiers from  Indiana, Oregon, West Virginia and South Carolina were exposed. One Indiana  Guardsman has already died from lung disease and the Army has classified it as a  service-related death. Dozens of the others have come forward with a range of  serious-respiratory symptoms. [. . .] Mr. Chairman, today I would like to tell  this Committee about S1779. It is legislation that I have written to ensure that  we provide full and timely medical care to soldiers exposed to hazardous  chemicals during wartime military service like those on the outskirts of Basra.  The Health Care for Veterans Exposed to Chemical Hazards Act of 2009 is  bipartisan legislation that has already been co-sponsored by Senators Lugar,  Dorgan, Rockefeller, Byrd, Wyden and Merkley. With a CBO score of just $10  million, it is a bill with a modest cost but a critical objective: To enusre  that we do right by America's soldiers exposed to toxic chemicals while  defending our country. This bill is modeled after similar legislation that  Congress approved in 1978 following the Agent Orange exposure in the Vietnam  conflict.
 An important bill but  one that never got out of Committee. Iraq War veteran Leroy Torres and his wife  Rosie Torres have continued to battle on behalf of veterans exposed to burn pits  and contiuned to educate the nation on the issue. The Torres have a website  entitled BURNPITS 360 . They are also on  Facebook . It's a personal issue, Capt Leroy Torres was exposed to the  burn pit on Balad Airbase. They note that a member of Congress is working on the  issue.From: The Honorable W. Todd Akin Dear  Colleague; Please  sign on to be an original cosponsor to legislation that is important to our  veterans.  Numerous veterans have suffered serious health problems after  exposure to open burn pits in Iraq and Afghanistan. This legislation will  establish a registry, similar to the Agent Orange Registry and the Gulf War  Syndrome Registry.  This is the first step toward providing better care for  veterans who have been affected by open burn pits. This bill will also be introduced in a bipartisan/bicameral fashion  with companion legislation being introduced by Senator Tom Udall  (D-NM) This bill is scheduled  to be introduced on November 3rd, so please  contact my office soon to become an original  cosponsor. Sincerely, W. Todd  Akin Member of  Congress     Rep. W. Todd  Akin  Open Burn Pit Registry Act of 2011   Department of Veterans Affairs   Based on recent accounts of health maladies of  veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan and a possible link to  toxic fumes released in  open burn pits it has become necessary to voluntarily track and account for  these individuals.   This registry will ensure that members of the  Armed Forces who may have  been exposed to toxic chemicals and fumes while serving overseas can be better  informed regarding exposure and possible effects. This legislation   is modeled after  legislation that created the Agent Orange Registry and the Gulf War Syndrome  Registry. As drafted, the purpose of the   • Establish and maintain an open  burn pit registry for those individuals who  may have been exposed during their  military service; • Include information in this  registry that the Secretary of the VA determines applicable to possible health  effects of this exposure; • Develop a public information  campaign to inform individuals about the  registry; • Periodically notify members of  the registry of significant developments associated with burn pit  exposure. In order to ensure that the Veterans  Administration conducts the registry in the most effective manner, the  legislation: • Requires an assessment and report  to Congress by an independent  scientific  organization; • This report contains an  assessment of the effectiveness of the Secretary   of the VA to collect and maintain  information as well as recommendations  to improve the collection and  maintenance of this information; • The report will also include  recommendations regarding the most effective  means of addressing medical needs  due to exposure; • This report will be due to  Congress no later than 18 months after the date   which the registry is  established. • CBO states that this registry  would cost $2 million over 5 years  (2012-2016) We learned from this country's issues with  Agent Orange that the need to get  ahead of this issue is of paramount  importance.   The establishment of a burn pit registry will  help the VA determine not only to what extent the ramifications  of burn pits may have on service members but can also be of  great use in information dissemination.   If you have any questions please contact Rep.  Akin's office at 5-2561 and speak  Issue and Party list(s). 
 
 
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