|    | Tuesday, February 7, 2012. Chaos and violence  continue, rumors abound that the State Dept is cutting the size of the Iraq  Mission. supposedly the US Ambassador to Iraq will change, Iraqiya resumed  attending Cabinet hearings, Jill Stein wins a primary, and  more. 
 
 Today Tim Arango (New York Times) reports that  the US officials in DC and Baghdad were reconsidering the size of the US  'diplomatic' mission in Iraq and that "the Americans have been frustrated by  what they see as Iraqi obstructionism and are now largely confined to the  embassy because of security concerns, unable to interact enough with ordinary  Iraqis to justify the $6 billion annual price tag." Jeremy Herb (The Hill) adds, "The size  of the State Department's presence at the US embasy in Iraq, the largest in the  world, was intended to maintain U.S. influence within the government of Iraq, as  well as to counter outside influences like Iran."
 
 
 
 The US State  Dept is not the only foreign 'force' in Iraq. Or even the only American one.  With the CIA, the FBI and Special Ops still in Iraq, with Marines guarding the  US Embassy (meaning they are in Iraq still) and the US military 'trainers'  (which Nouri has declared publicly is 700 more US soldiers), with 17,000 'State  Dept' workers still in Iraq, the occupation continues.
 
 
 So do the  risks. Ted Koppel reported on Iraq in December for Rock Center with Brian Williams (NBC). Excerpt.
 
 Ted Koppel: If those Iranian backed militias were to  launch a full scale attack on this consulate, would the US calvary ride to the  rescue?
 
 
 US Ambassador James Jeffrey: We depend upon the Iraqis  and if we need security support, we will turn to them and we will tell them,  "I've got a problem in Basra and you need to help us.
 
 
 Ted Koppel:  The question is will they?
 
 
 US  Ambassador James Jeffrey: I believe they will.
 
 
 Ted Koppel:  That's what an ambassador has to say about his hosts. This is the man who might  actually have to deal with that nightmare, Lt Gen Robert Caslan. General, how  are you going to get 1320 people out of there? I mean if you've 24 hours notice  that something like this was going to happen, you're telling me the Iraqi  government would evacuate immediately? Would get them all out of  there?
 
 
 
 Lt Gen Robert Caslan: I would argue that we do have,  in theater, whether it's in Kuwait or elsewhere in theater, that we fall under  the central command, Centcom, and I feel confident that Centcom has the  necessary assets to take whatever measures they need to to counter that  attack.
 
 
 
 
 Aswat al-Iraq reported what US  outlets wouldn't last month: "Shiite leader Muqtada al-Sadr clled his  'resistance' followers to be prepared to face the US Embassy in Baghdad, if they  did not stop their breaches. In response to a question made to his followers,  received by Aswat al-Iraq, he expressed rejection that US officials walk in  Baghdad streets with their weapons."
 
 
 Now since then, a US helicopter  emergency landed in Baghdad (with another transporting the Americans away),  reports of F-16 jets flying overhead are coming from the Iraqi Parliament and  there is the drone issue which enraged Iraqis last week. Today,Hossam Acommok (Al Mada) reports that the US is  stating that they are only flying planes and drones and helicopters in Iraq  airspace to provide protection for the US Embassy in Baghdad (and its various  consulates throughout the country). Parliaments Security and Defense wants  answers as to exactly what the US is doing in Iraq's skies.
 
 
 In this  climate, a decision may (or may not have) been made. Equally true, we were  informed last week that the US and Iraq were back in negotiations regarding the  US military presence. If a pull out of diplomatic 'forces' is going to happen,  at present, the American people have no idea whether this is happening on its  own or as part of the negotiation process for US troops in Iraq. The issue was a large portion of the US State Dept press briefing  today that spokesperson Victoria Nuland handled (link is transcript with video  options).
 
 
 
 QUESTION: The New York Times is reporting  that -- quoting U.S. officials as saying that the State Department is  considering slashing the number of staff at the U.S. Embassy in Iraq from what  it says is about 16,000, including contractors, by as much as a half. Is that  true?
 
 MS. NULAND: Well, we saw this  reporting just as we were preparing to come down today. First, let me say that  with regard to our diplomatic presence, there is no consideration being given to  slashing our diplomats by half. What we are doing -- and Deputy Secretary Nides  is leading this process -- is looking at how we can right-size our Embassy in  Iraq and particularly how we can do more for that mission through the hiring of  local employees rather than having to be as dependent as we've been in the past  on very expensive contractors. So we're trying to do our best to save the  American taxpayer money in the way we support our diplomatic personnel. We're  also looking to acquire more of the supporting things for the Embassy, including  food supplies, et cetera, from the local economy, so trying to do more locally  with local Iraqis and on the local economy and save the taxpayer money. So what  ultimate numbers will result from this in reductions in contractors, we don't  know yet. This process has just begun, but we are trying to ensure that it is  rigorous and that it gets us to a much more normal embassy, like some of our big  embassies around the world.
 
 QUESTION:  So just talking about the diplomats for a moment, so you're not considering  slashing their numbers by a half?
 
 MS.  NULAND: Correct.
 
 QUESTION: Are you  considering slashing their numbers by 40 percent, by 30 percent, by 20 percent,  by 2 percent, by zero? I mean --
 
 MS.  NULAND: Again, if we can find efficiencies, we will. Obviously we're still  working with the Iraqis on some of the programming that these diplomats are  charged with managing. So with regard to whether we may be able to reduce some  of the diplomatic staff, we will look at that. But I just wanted to make clear  that we have a lot to do in Iraq, so some of these reportings about the level of  diplomats is -- were  exaggerated.
 
 
 QUESTION:  Okay. And then the number of contractors – are you looking to slash those by as  much as a half?
 
 MS. NULAND: We're  looking to save the taxpayer money and do the same work as efficiently as we  can. I can't predict where this review will come out, but obviously we will  brief you fully on it when we get to the end of  it.
 
 
 QUESTION: I  can't predict where the review will come out either, but the report is that  you're looking to cut the number of contractors by as much as a half. I mean, is  that right?
 
 
 MS.  NULAND: Again, we --
 
 QUESTION: That  would save the U.S. Government a lot of money. It would cut the amount  presumably you're paying for contractors in half.
 
 MS.  NULAND: We want to save as much money as we can without sacrificing the quality  of the work or our support for our people. So that's what Deputy Secretary Nides  is looking at now. It's going to be a bottom-up review. And I can't tell you  where it's going to come out, because it's really just started,  okay?
 
 
 QUESTION: Is  it not -- does the fact that you are considering this not suggest that the U.S.  Government grossly overestimated how many people it would need in  Iraq?
 
 
 MS. NULAND:  Again, I think what we have here is an embassy structure that was built for a  different time and that relied a lot on expensive contracting for a whole range  of reasons, some of them historic, some of them security-related. Our judgment  now is that we can adapt that for today's Iraq, do our diplomatic business just  as well and just as rigorously, but far more efficiently. So that's the task  that Deputy Secretary Nides has been tasked with. I don't want to get ahead of  what he's going to conclude as he looks at this and as he works with our mission  out there.
 
 
 QUESTION: You're talking about a  different time, but the Embassy only opened, I think, in early 2009 or at the --  maybe it was 2008. It's not that long ago. It's only three years  ago.
 
 
 MS. NULAND:  Well, we've had a diplomatic presence in Iraq all the way through, and it's  waxed and waned. But our view is that it is currently too dependent on  contractors. We can do more with Iraqi staff. We can do more on the local  economy, and it'll make it  cheaper.
 
 QUESTION: When did this  start?
 
 MS. NULAND: Deputy Secretary  Nides has been working on it informally for a number of months, but he's now put  together a real bottom-up review team in the last couple of  weeks.
 
 QUESTION: Okay. And then when  did the magic light bulb go off of somebody's head that 16,000 contractors might  be a few too many?
 
 MS. NULAND: Well,  we've been working on rightsizing this mission all the way through as we looked  at the transition. Obviously, this is a time of transition for us  too.
 
 
 QUESTION:  Where -- do you know where the half figure that Arshad kept alluding to, which  is actually in the headline of the Times story but never appears in the body of  the story -- where would that have come from, if you  know?
 
 MS. NULAND: Sounds like a  question for The New York Times, not for  me.
 
 QUESTION: Well, no. But  --
 
 QUESTION: Toria, it's in the lead of  the story, also.
 
 QUESTION: Well, it's  nowhere --
 
 
 MS.  NULAND: Guys, I'm going to leave you to dispute this with the  Times.
 
 QUESTION: The lead is part of  the story.
 
 QUESTION: No, no, no, no.  It's not about that. It's just that it came from somewhere. It's not -- but it's  not mentioned again. I mean, is it -- is that the  optimal?
 
 MS. NULAND: Again, I think  I've spoken to this for about the last 10 minutes. We don't know yet where this  is going to go on the contractor  side.
 
 QUESTION: All right. And then  --
 
 QUESTION: Different  topic.
 
 
 QUESTION:  One simple one on this. How do you tell the American people that you weren't  grossly mistaken here?
 
 MS. NULAND: We  have been in the process of transitioning this Embassy from a civilian staff  that worked within the context of an entire American footprint that included a  very large military footprint, which has been going down. So at a certain point  in time, we had diplomatic staff out in many, many parts of Iraq, co-located  with our military staff. We have, over the last few months -- as you know very  well, Arshad -- been pulling this staff back to consulates. They continue to  cover all of Iraq, but they do it in a different lay down than we did it before.  The military has traditionally been dependent on a lot of contractor support,  some of which stayed to work with us as we move to a civilian structure. So now  in the context of getting ourselves to a purely embassy and consulate structure,  we are able to take that next step, which is to look at whether contracting is  still as  necessary.
 
 
 QUESTION:  It's not as if this was a great surprise to you that the number of military was  going down. I mean, President Obama campaigned on  it.
 
 
 MS. NULAND:  That's right. And this process of looking at the right size of our civilian  presence has been going on for many months and this is the stage that we're at  right  now.
 Said?
 
 
 QUESTION:  Quick clarification on this. You said that you want to cut down in the  contractors. Many of these contractors provide protection and security and so  on. And you say that you want to hire local. So would you rely on Iraqis to  provide security for the U.S. Embassy? Is that what you're  saying?
 
 
 MS.  NULAND: I'm not going to get into, in advance of Deputy Secretary Nides's review  and his recommendations to the Secretary, what functions might be able to be  done locally. But we're looking at the whole thing.In the  back.
 
 
 QUESTION:  Hold on.
 
 MS. NULAND: Is it still  Iraq?
 
 QUESTION: Thank you. It's  different topic. It's about the Summit of the  Americas.
 
 MS. NULAND: Hold on one  second. Let me just finish Iraq. I hope finish  Iraq.
 
 QUESTION: So, in the story that  they're talking about the examples of hardship faced by people at the Embassy  included dwindling lettuce at the salad bar, the cafeteria, and the lack of  Splenda sweetener for their coffee. Does the State Department consider not  enough arugula to be a hardship in  Iraq?
 
 MS. NULAND: Frankly, I saw that  story, and it was -- looked like some, some wingeing that was inappropriate.  Let's put it that way.
 
 QUESTION:  Inappropriate on the part of who? Embassy  employees?
 
 MS. NULAND: On the part of  Embassy employees, with regard to the quality of the salad  bar.
 
 QUESTION: Does -- okay. Thank  you.
 
 MS. NULAND: Thank  you.
 
 
 
 In addition, Laura Rozen (The Envoy) reports US  Ambassador to Iraq James Jeffrey is out of a post and that he may be replaced  with Robert Ford who had been the US Ambassador to Syria ("on American and two  Iraqi sources told Yahoo News that the Obama administration is considering  tapping Ford as Washington's next envoy to Iraq"). This issue was also raised  today at the State Dept press briefing.
 
 QUESTION: Can I ask about  Ambassador Jeffrey? The same article mentions that Ambassador Jeffrey is going  to be stepping down in a couple of weeks. Has he communicated that intent to the  Secretary?
 
 MS. NULAND: Ambassador  Jeffrey is on a regular diplomatic assignment. It was of a particular duration.  Frankly, I don't have at my fingertips here when his assignment is completed.  But obviously in the context of regular rotation of ambassadors, when his tour  is completed or in the context of his tour being completed, the President will  nominate a new ambassador for Iraq, who will have to have the consent of the  Senate. So we're not at that stage yet. The President hasn't put forward a  nominee yet, and I can't actually tell you what the end of tour date for Jim  Jeffrey is. But this is normal and in keeping with the commitment that he made  when he took the job.
 
 And the political crisis continues in  Iraq. Al-Manar reports that Iraqiya  Ministers are attending Council of Ministers hearings again. That doesn't end  the crisis. Iraqiya agreeing to attend Parliament sessions didn't end the  crisis. Nouri started the political crisis by refusing to honor the Erbil  Agreement which ended the political stalemate that lasted eight months following  the March 2010 elections when Nouri didn't want to let go of the post of prime  minister despite the fact that his State of Law came in second to Iraqiya. The  US brokered a deal, the Erbil Agreement, which allowed Nouri to remain prime  minister in exchange for other trade-offs that would benefit the other political  blocs. Since this summer, Kurds have been calling for Nouri to honor the  agreement. Nouri insists that its unconstitutional -- a claim he didn't make  when he used the Erbil Agreement to stay on as prime minister.
 
 Though  Parliament attempted to be in session yesterday, there wasn't a quorum. Dar Addustour notes that Kurdish MP  Mahmoud Othman is stating that this was shameful and that he believes some of  the MPs who were not present were deliberately attempting to keep the session  from taking place.
 
 Iraqi President Jalal Talabani and Speaker of  Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi have been saying since December that the way to end  the political crisis is to hold a national conference. Al  Sabaah notes that participants are stating yesterday's  planning session for the national conference -- only the second meeting -- went  well and that they agreed to stand united against terrorism and militias, that  the process outlined in the Constitution is how disputes should be resolved,  that all elementsof Iraqi society must be represented in the political process  and that the Iraqi judiciary is a separate and independent body. In a sign of  just how much nonsense this whole thing is, Dar Addustour reports that it was  again asserted yesterday that Nouri al-Maliki can be prime minister for a third  term. For those who've forgotten, this was supposed to be Nouri's second and  last term. And, in February of last year, as unrest rocked the region, Nouri  declared he would not run for a third term. Since then -- and the distraction of  his failed 100 days of 'reform,' his attorney has asserted that Nouri isn't  bound by any promise and that no law prevents him from seeking a third term.  Little Saddam is well on his way towards lifetime rule.
 
 Meanwhile Aswat al-Iraq reports that Sajida  Saleh Hassan was assassinated in Baghdad today. She had been Director of  Kazimiya Women's Prison. Her driver was injured in the attack. They also note a mortar  attck in Baquba has left twelve people injured. Reuters adds, a Baghdad roadside bombing  left two police officers injured, a second Baghdad roadside bombing claimed 1  life and left three more injured, a Baghdad attack on an amry officer's home  killed his wife and 1 corpse (police officer) was discovered in  Hilla.
 
 
 We're now going to turn to veterans issues. And there are real  veterans issues. There's health care, there's recovering the fallen and so much  more. But there's veterans issues and then there's an attitude of entitlement.  Grasp real damn quick that the public only cares for so long. About the time  they're bored with the politicians using veterans to wrap themselves in the  flag, they're bored with the whole damn issue. When that happens significant  ground is lost.
 
 And that's not key to this war, it's true of all wars.  And politicians know that, especially White House occupants, which is why  veterans of every US war or combat deployment have complained and/or protested  their treatment by the government. (Click here for the example of President Herbert  Hoover's relationship with veterans.) So how about this group of veterans be  a smart group of veterans?
 
 The best way to do that is to grasp that your  moment in the spotlight is limited and brief outside the Fourth of July and  Veterans Day and to realize that's the way it has always been and always will  be. That predates the creation of the United States and goes all the way back to  the ancient Greeks. It is not a plot against you. It's the simple reality that  you've bought into the empty praise politicians have given you. You are not gods  because you served, you're not even heroes because you served. You may have done  something heroic while you served and been decorated as a result (or not) but  service alone doesn't make you a hero and that reality was grasped by past  veterans. What you are is a veteran. As such, you are owed certain things that  were promised to you. You're not going to get them all because, pay attention,  no group of veterans in this country ever has. Which is why this group needs to  be smart.
 
 Paul Reickhoff can't shut up about a parade.  Apparently having grown up singing along with every sixties musical Barbra  Streisand ever made, Paul loves a parade. And he ridiculously showed up last  week in a variety of outlets (here for Huffington Post) with a bad  column whining that, after the Superbowl, the Giants or the Patriots would get a  parade.
 
 Let me take a moment here to cloud up and rain on Paul's parade:  a sports competition produces a winner and a loser. The winners often get  parades.
 
 I'm sorry that Paul can't grasp the obvious, there was nothing  won in Iraq. Thank goodness so many Americans made it out alive. But there was  nothing won in that illegal war. If a parade were to have taken place, the best  time would have been after the fall of Baghdad. Had Bush pulled all the troops  out of Iraq then and returned them to the US, the spring of 2003 could have seen  a parade.
 
 But there's no win in Iraq. And you have to incredibly  uninformed as to the rising violence and the political crisis and so much more  to not grasp that Iraq can't be seen as a "win." There's no end zone dance for  you to do, Paul Reickhoff. (68NamVet has the best reply to Paul.)
 
 Now  you can continue to insist upon a national parade and maybe even get one. (NPR's Talk of the Nation offers a bad  program on the topic today -- not every veteran is calling for a parade and  some are stating that it is not needed.) But don't think you're going to be  applauded around the country for that. The country's in a huge recession and  while Barack Obama may try to spend 8.3% official unemployment rate as 'good  news,' it's anything but. And the American people are suffering and have been  suffering and are about to suffer even more because basic groceries are going up  which kicks the price of everything up (that's how the cycle of inflation  works). And with people barely holding on the idea that the country needs to  spend millions for a parade is not going to go over universally well.
 
 It  will go a long, long way towards putting most Americans in the attitude of,  "What do they want now?" Even more so than in past wars because there wasn't a  draft. As those of us who spoke up for war resisters repeatedly know, the  attitude is out there: 'There was no draft, you signed up and you were paid for  it.' (In fact, I believe that's what Paul Rieckhoff dismissively said about Lt  Ehren Watada.) And now veterans are coming back and a small number are making  public fools of themselves. There's Paul prepping for the tugboat scene in  Funny Girl as he demands his parade. There's also Darcy Kempa who  demonstrates that Richard Daley didn't teach style or substance to his  underlings. Kempa writes at PolicyMic that Veterans  are having a difficult time getting jobs today because of the "ignorance and  arrogance among many Americans."
 
 Notice how I used "some" to describe a  tiny number of cry babies who've fallen to the floor and are now throwing  tantrums whereas Darcy Kempa believes you describe most Americans as 'ignorant  and arrogant' and that's the way to get what you want from them. No, you idiot,  that's how you piss the general population. If that's how stupid you are, you  have nothing to share in public. Every word out of your mouth hurts veterans  because no one ever taught you how to speak persuasively and you think you can  snarl and hiss like Richard Daley but seem unaware that nepotism explains  Richard's rise, not his personality.
 
 Having called "many" Americans  ignorant and arrogant, Darcy Kempa (a man, by the way, maybe having a Jane  Austen character's first name has left Darcy feeling he has to be overbearing to  prove something), wants to further insult the American people: "There is also  the arrogance, or overbearing self-importance, that some civilians hold against  veterans."
 
 Wow.
 
 Don't look for Darcy to start a charm school  anytime soon and only an idiot at this point would want to take part in any  action with Darcy because he is off-putting, he insults the American people and  doesn't even have the good form to say it's just "some" or "a small number," he  says "many."
 
 When then-Senator Evan Bayh proposed a burn pit registry, we  supported it -- check the archives. I still support. But what we noted about  when Bayh was championing it was how long it took to get that for victims of  Agent Orange. And we pointed out that right now is the best chance for a burn  pit registry. That once the wars wind down, the limited attention they and those  who served in them receive, dwindles. And it's a lot harder to fight for a  registry afterwards. We noted then that health issues need to be covered --  beyond burn pit issues -- and that this needs to be addressed now.
 
 There  is no time to waste -- in the limited amount of time that veterans will receive  from the public -- to be embracing a bunch of nonsense. Veterans groups need to  be talking to their members and figuring out what the most important things are  to membership and pressing for those now. Two years from now, people aren't  going to care. They will have moved on with their lives and the attitude will be  (as it with each group of veterans), "Are they ever going to stop begging?"  Politicans count on that attitude. A number are relieved when that attitude sets  in among the public. Because then they don't have to do a damn thing.
 
 Paul Reikoff doesn't know a thing. The VFW actually has members who can  talk about this at length (and some of them would favor a parade -- if they felt  veterans needs and a parade could both take place, that would be their vote, I'm  sure). But in three years, Paul's lonely little column's going to run in less  outlets. And, at the rate we're going, we may have a new group of veterans in a  new group of wars. And especially when that comes, forget about getting your  needs met. Senator Richard Burr fights a lonely battle trying repeatedly every  year to bring attention to long standing issues and the media really doesn't  care. He continues to fight and good for him. But even when Republicans  controlled the Senate (Burr is a Republican) his own colleagues couldn't get it  together to support him. The Senate Veterans Affairs Committee has done heroic  and amazing things during the last nine years. That's chiefly due to members  like Burr and leadership at the start of that time from Senator Daniel Akaka and  now Senator Patty Murray. But look at the Hire Heroes Act that Murray and the  entire Veterans Affairs Committee championed and still it needed a push and a  push there to get it through the Senate. And that's while the Iraq War and the  Afghanistan War were semi on the public's mind.
 
 This is your fifteen  minutes of fame to put it most crudely. You need to be prepared to make the  demands you want right now. So if that's academic pursuit, better benefits in  terms of retirement (medical or otherwise), medical treatment, etc., this is the  time to make them. If a national parade is the most important thing to veterans  of the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars, then that's what they should be going for. But  before they make that decision, someone needs to explain very clearly that  Christmas won't come every year. The nation will be Santa Claus once and only  once and then they'll move onto something else. And that's not out of  "arrogance" or "hatred" or anything else. That is the human condition and it has  been the human condition.
 
 And once the public moves on to other issues,  you'll quickly realize how rare a Patty Murray or Richard Burr in the Senate  actually is. When there's no more strong applause for politicians using today's  veterans to campaign off of, watch how quickly they instead rush to another  topic that's currently getting media attention. (And, no, the answer isn't  "Elect veterans!" Senator Jim Webb is the reason there is no burn pit registry.  He felt it would cost the government to much money to assume responsibility for  the illnesses. Just as he publicly attacked VA Secretary Eric Shinseki for  expanding the number of people recognized as suffering from Agent  Orange.)
 
 Across the country, teachers are suffering, schools are being  closed down. If you really think this is the climate to insist on a national  parade, go for it. But make sure you realize that the next request veterans  attempt to make as a unified group may be the one that Americans respond to with  a sigh and, "Didn't we just give them a parade? What more do they  want?"
 
 and i know what this means
 me and  jesus a few years back
 used to hang
 and  he said "it's your choice babe
 just  remember
 i don't think you'll be back
 in  3 days time so you choose well"
 -- "Me and a Gun," written by Tori Amos, first  appears on her Little Earthquakes
 
 
 
 In the real world,  there are real issues and real suffering. A father says, "All we're asking for  is: Bring him home." A mother says, "Five years we have been waiting patiently.  Patiently waiting for the Air Force and everyone over there to do their  business. Find our son." Ronnie and Kaye Gilbert's son was killed in Iraq in  2006 when Maj Troy Gilbert flew overhead assistning US service members on the  ground under fire ("credited with saving about 20 American commandos") and flew  dangerously low so that not only was he protecting the US service members but to  avoid injuring nearby Iraqi civilians. He died in the plane crash and Jim Douglas (WFAA -- link is text and video)  reports on how they buried a small, tiny amount of tissue that was in the  plane after the enemies carted off Troy Gilbert's body -- a body that they used  a year later in a video. The US government has taken the attitude that there's  no body to find. They say the tissue allows them to classify Troy Gilbert as  "body accounted for." And his parents have to plead with the US Defense Dept  later this month to change the classification.
 
 
 
 
 Just last  month, in the State of the Union address, Barack declared, "Those of us who've been sent  here to serve can learn from the service of our troops. When you put on that  uniform, it doesn't matter if you're black or white; Asian or Latino;  conservative or liberal; rich or poor; gay or straight. When you're marching  into battle, you look out for the person next to you, or the mission fails. When  you're in the thick of the fight, you rise or fall as one unit, serving one  Nation, leaving no one behind." See, politicians love to say words like that.  It's their way of absorbing some of the glory of others. But even while Barack  was saying it, the Defense Dept was fine with leaving Troy Gilbert's body  behind. Don't ever be tricked by the pretty words of politicians. Most care  about you only if caring about you at that moment helps them get  re-elected.
 
 The Gilbert family's suffering is real and the government  needs to address it. Rosie and LeRoy Torres are up to their necks in reality. Patricia Kime (Marine Corp News)  reports:
 
 
 Army Reserve wife  Rosie Torres, 38, stood in line Jan. 19 at a Texas Health and Human Services  office to apply for assistance with her mortgage, bills and  groceries.
 Mounting debt related to  her husband's medical bills has pushed the couple into arrears; between  insurance deductibles, house payments and overages, they owe more than  $55,000.
 LeRoy Torres, 39, a Reserve  captain and former Texas state trooper, was assigned to Joint Base Balad, Iraq,  in 2008 and believes exposure to the camp's open-air burn pits left him with  debilitating respiratory problems. He can't walk long distances, perform daily  tasks or even roughhouse with his kids.
 But although he can't work full time, between his  drill pay and Rosie's part-time pay, they make too much to qualify for a  grant.
 
 Rosie Torres is with BurnPits 360  which addresses the issues of exposure to burn pits and, next week, the first  ever Burn Pit Symposium takes place:
 
 
 1st Annual Scientific  Symposium on
 Lung Health after Deplyoment to Iraq &  Afghanistan
 February 13,  2012
 
 
 sponsored by
 Office of Continuing Medical  Education
 School of Medicine
 Stony Brook  University
 
 
 Location
 Health  Sciences Center, Level 3, Lecture Hall  5
 
 Anthony M. Szema, M.D., Program  Chair
 Stony  Brook
 University
 Medical  Center
 
 
 
 This program is made  possible by support from the Sergeant Thomas  Joseph Sullivan Center, Washington, D.C.
 
 
 
 2 WAYS TO REGISTER FOR THE  CONFERENCE
 
 * Register with your credit card online at:  http://www.stonybrookmedicalcenter.org/education/cme.cfm
 
 *  Download the registration form from:
 http://www.stonybrookmedicalcenter.org/education/cme.cfm  and
 fax form to (631)  638-1211
 
 
 For Information Email:  cmeoffice@stonybrook.edu
 
 
 
 1st  Annual Scientific Symposium on
 Lung Health after Deployment  to Iraq & Afghanistan
 Monday, February 13,  2012
 Health Sciences Center
 Level 3,  Lecture Hall 5
 
 
 Program Objective:  Upon completion, participants should be able to recognize new-onset of lung  disease after deployment to Iraq and  Afghanistan.
 
 
 8:00 - 9:00 a.m.  Registration & Continental Breakfast (Honored Guest, Congressman
 Tim  Bishop
 
 
 9:00 - 9:30 Peter Sullivan,  J.D., Father of Marine from The Sergeant Thomas  Joseph
 Sullivan Center, Washington,  D.C.
 
 
 9:40 - 10:10 Overview of  Exposures in Iraq, Anthony Szema, M.D., (Assistant
 Professor of Medicine and Surgery, Stony Brook  University)
 
 
 10:10 - 10:40  Constrictive Bronchiolitis among Soldiers after Deployment,  Matt
 King, M.D. (Assistant Professor of Medicine, Meharry  Medical College,
 Nashville,  TN)
 
 
 10:40 - 11:10  BREAK
 
 
 11:10 - 11:40 Denver Working  Group Recommendations and Spirometry Study  in
 Iraq/Afghanistan, Richard Meehan, M.D., (Chief of  Rheumatology and
 Professor of Medicine, National Jewish  Health, Denver, CO)
 
 
 11:40 a.m. -  Microbiological Analyses of Dust from Iraq and Afghanistan, Captain Mark
 
 12:10 p.m. Lyles, D.M.D., Ph. D., (Vice Admiral Joel T.  Boone Endowed Chair of
 Health and Security Studies, U.S.  Naval War College, Newport,  RI)
 
 
 12:10 - 12:20 Health Care  Resource Utilization among Deployed Veterans at the White
 River Junction VA, James Geiling, M.D., (Professor and  Chief of Medicine,
 Dartmouth Medical School, VA White River  Junction, VT)
 
 
 12:20 - 1:20 LUNCH  AND EXHIBITS
 Graduate students Millicent Schmidt and Andrea  Harrington (Stony Brook
 University) present Posters from  Lung Studies Analyzed for Spatial
 Resolution of Metals at  Brookhaven National Laboratory's National
 Synchrotron Light  Source
 
 
 1:20 - 1:40 Epidemiologic  Survey Instrument on Exposures in Iraq and  Afghanistan,
 Joseph Abraham, Sc.D., Ph.D., (U.S. Army Public  Health Command,
 Aberdeen Proving Ground,  MD)
 
 
 1:40 - 2:10 Overview of the  Issue Raised during Roundtable on Pulmonary Issues
 and  Deployment, Coleen Baird, M.D., M.P.H., (Program Manager
 Environmental Medicine, U.S. Army Public Health  Command)
 
 
 2:10 - 2: 40 Reactive  Oxygen Species from Iraqi Dust, Martin Schoonen, Ph.D.
 (Director Sustainability Studies and Professor of  Geochemistry, Stony
 Brook  University)
 
 
 2:40 - 2:50  BREAK
 
 
 2:50 - 3:15 Dust Wind Tunnel  Studies, Terrence Sobecki, Ph.D. (Chief Environmental
 Studies Branch, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Cold Regions  Research
 and Engineering Laboratory, Manchester,  NH)
 
 
 3:15 - 3:45 Toxicologically  Relevant Characteristics of Desert Dust and Other
 Atmospheric Particulate Matter, Geoffrey S. Plumlee, Ph.D.  (Research
 Geochemist, U.S. Geological Survey, Denver,  CO)
 
 
 3:44 - 4:15 In-situ Mineralogy  of the Lung and Lymph Nodes, Gregory Meeker, M.S.
 (Research  Geochemist, U.S. Geological Survey, Denver,  CO)
 
 
 
 
 Continuing  Medical Education Credits
 
 
 The  school of Medicine, State University of New York at Stony Brook, is accredited  by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education to provide  continuing medical education for  physicians.
 
 The School of Medicine,  State University of New York at Stony Brooke designates this live activity for a  maximum of 6 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)TM. Physicians should only claim the  credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in  the activity.
 
 
 Turning to the political race for president.  It is primary season and Ian Wilder (On The Wilder Side) reports  on an important primary in Ohio last Saturday, the Green Party's primary.Ian  notes there were four candidates in that race, Roseanne Barr, Kent Mesplay, Harley Mikkelson and Jill Stein and  that "Stein scored a very big win [. . .] winning 90% of the vote in a four-way  race in presidential balloting." Of those online in this community, Jess and Ann are both Greens. And they discussed the Green  Party and the race, along with Trina who supported Stein's recent campaign for  governor and Ruth who's supporting Roseanne's run, in Sunday's roundtable. We do try to note third  party and independent candidates here because I don't believe less choices is  the answer ever. We need a vibrant democracy and you won't get that from  two-party rule. But thinking back to 2008, I remember how difficult it was to  note independents and third party because sometimes they had nothing and that  meant you were accused of ignoring them and blah blah blah. So it's good to know  that we have someone we can ignore. As with many important realizations and  discoveries in 2011, this one comes via John V. Walsh  (Antiwar.com). I wasn't taken in by the Rocky Anderson fad when  Bush was in office. Walsh documents a War Hawk Rocky Anderson. Anderson praises  Samantha Power. That alone is enough to make him dead to this community.  Samantha Power is a War Hawk. She uses human rights to justify her war lust. She  has no respect for other countries or their sovereignty. And she's Rocky  Anderson's ideal. As Walsh establishes through a series of e-mails, there is  nothing antiwar about Rocky Anderson.
 
 
 iraq
 in these times
 rebecca burns
 the st. louis  post-dispatch
 doug  moore
 aswat  al-iraq
 al mada
 dar addustour
 al rafidayn
 al sabaah
 al-manar
 wfaa
 jim douglas
 burn pits
 marine corps news
 patricia kime
 john v. walsh
 rock center with brian  williams
 nbc news
 ted koppel
 
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