Isaiah's 
The World Today Just Nuts  "
Ms. Troll Goes Shopping" from last night

Like Robin Morgan, our economy still hasn't fixed itself.
On the radio today (NPR), every hour on the hour, was the news that Sony will be laying off at least 10,000 employees.  They haven't made their official announcement yet -- that's expected later in the week.  And the market drooped as a result of that bad jobs report.  As
 Business Week explains, "The country added 120,000 jobs in March, about half the pace from December through February.  Markets were closed Friday, so Monday was investors' first chance to respond."
A consistent at this website since I started it back when Bully Boy Bush occupied the White House is that we need universal, single-payer health care. I have opposed a mandate to purchase insurance because I know how that helped nothing because Mitt Romney was my governor.  Yes, before it was ObamaCare, it was RomneyCare.  And it didn't help at all. 
Chris Hedges' latest column is ObamaCare:
Obamacare will, according     to figures compiled by Physicians for a National Health Plan (PNHP),     leave at least 23 million people without insurance, a figure that     translates into an estimated 23,000 unnecessary deaths a year among     people who cannot afford care. Costs will continue to climb. There     are no caps on premiums, including for people with “pre-existing     conditions.” The elderly can be charged three times the rates     provided to the young. Companies with predominantly female     workforces can be charged higher gender-based rates. Most of us will     soon be paying about 10 percent of our annual incomes to buy     commercial health insurance, although this coverage will pay for     only about 70 percent of our medical expenses. And those of us who     become seriously ill, lose our incomes and cannot pay the     skyrocketing premiums are likely to be denied coverage. The dizzying     array of loopholes in the law—written in by insurance and     pharmaceutical lobbyists—means, in essence, that the healthy will     receive insurance while the sick and chronically ill will be priced     out of the market.
    Medical bills already lead     to 62 percent of personal bankruptcies, and nearly 80 percent of     those declaring personal bankruptcy because of medical costs had     insurance. The U.S. spends twice as much per capita on health care     as other industrialized nations, $8,160. Private insurance     bureaucracy and paperwork consume 31 percent of every health care     dollar. Streamlining payment through a single, nonprofit payer would     save more than $400 billion per year, enough, the PNHP estimates, to     provide comprehensive, high-quality coverage for all Americans.
    But as long as corporations     determine policy, as long as they can use their money to determine     who gets elected and what legislation gets passed, we remain     hostages. It matters little in our corporate state that nearly     two-thirds of the public wants single payer and that it is backed by     59 percent of doctors. Public debates on the Obama health care     reform, controlled by corporate dollars, ruthlessly silence those     who support single payer. The Senate Finance Committee, chaired by     Max Baucus, a politician who gets more than 80 percent of his     campaign contributions from outside his home state of Montana,     locked out of the Affordable Care Act hearing a number of public     health care advocates including Dr. Flowers and Dr. Paris; the two     physicians and six other activists were arrested and taken away.     Baucus had invited 41 people to testify. None backed single payer.     Those who testified included contributors who had given a total of     more than $3 million to committee members for their political     campaigns.
Again, the country does not need ObamaCare.
This is C.I.'s "
Iraq snapshot" for Monday:
 
        Monday,  April 9, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, Ayad Allawi calls out the  direction Iraq's headed in, Iraqis begin to voice displeasure over the  White House's indifference to their plight, it's 9 years since the US  military pulled down the statue of Saddam Hussein, and more.
  
 Nine years ago today, 
Gulf News' Mayada al-Askari observes, was "the toppling of Saddam Hussain's statue by the Americans at Al Firdaus Square in Iraq." In 2004, 
David Zucchino (Los Angeles Times) reported  that the April 9, 2003 toppling of the statue was a psyops operation.   Before we go further, we should note that the US government is not  allowed to use psyop operations on the American people.  In fact, that  sort of propaganda is why Voice of America is legally prevented from  broadcasting in the United States.  It's very telling that the Congress  refused to investigate what the 
Los Angeles Times exposed. 
Iraqi  civilians didn't topple the statue, the US military did: "And it was a  quick-thinking Army psychological operations team that made it appear to  be a spontaneous Iraqi undertaking." 
  
   
 Sadly  enough, in the almost two years since I left Iraq, little has happened  that challenges my belief that we failed in the reconstruction and,  through that failure, lost the war.
 The Iraq of today is an extension of the Iraq I saw and described.  The recent Arab League summit  in Baghdad, hailed by some as a watershed event, was little more than a  stage-managed wrinkle in that timeline, a lot like all those  purple-fingered elections the U.S. sponsored in Iraq throughout the  Occupation. If you deploy enough police and soldiers -- for the summit,  Baghdad was shut down for a week, the cell phone network turned off, and  a "public holiday" proclaimed to keep the streets free of humanity --  you can temporarily tame any place, at least within camera view. More  than $500 million was spent, in part planting flowers along the route  dignitaries took in and out of the heavily fortified International Zone  at the heart of the capital (known in my days as the Green  Zone).   Somebody in Iraq must have googled "Potemkin Village."  Beyond  the temporary showmanship, the Iraq we created via our war is a mean  place, unsafe and unstable.  Of course, life goes on there (with the  usual lack of electricity and potable water), but as the news shows, to  an angry symphony of suicide bombers and targeted killings. While the  American public may have changed the channel to more exciting shows in  Libya, now Syria, or maybe just to "American Idol," the Iraqi people are  trapped in amber, replaying the scenes I saw in 2009-2010, living  reminders of all the good we failed to do. 
  
  
 This weekend, 
Heath Druzin (Stars and Stripes) offered,  "Iraq experts say that recent developments in Iraq and a growing  Iranian influence are signs that America's hopes are dimming for Iraq to  become the 'beacon of hope' that President George W. Bush had  envisioned in a 2005 speech."  
Felicity Arbutnot (Global Research) evaluates  the 'progress' in Iraq the illegal war has brought: "Also since the  invasion, the terrorization, whether for relgious reasons or ransom  money, score settling or the unfathomable, in a country were people have  co-existed for countless generations, has been bewildering.  Overnight  (literally) Iraq changed from a land where, broadly, the streets of  towns and cities could be  walked alone, safely, late at night, to a  country which awoke to find while families in morgues bearing wounds  indicating unimaginable torture. It woke to beheaded bodies chucked on  rubbish dumps -- and beheaded fathers and sons dumped on door steps or  in front gardens. Iraq also woke to ransom kidnappings, extortion,  destruction of homes, premises, businesses -- or their takeover by  force." 
 
 In Iraq, the political crisis continues. 
Liz Sly (Washington Post) observes  that "the appearance of calm that has endured for four months has come  at a price, many Iraqis say, in the form of Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri  al-Maliki's 
increasingly authoritarian  behavior." And she notes, "Sunnis and Kurds, angered by what they see  as Maliki's efforts to exclude them from power, accuse the United States  of doing little or nothing to restrain his excesses or to press him to  implement agreements under which he planned to share power."  That  latter specifically refers to the Erbil Agreement.  So let's provide the   recap.
 
  
 
Nouri's State of Law  came in second in the March 7, 2010 elections and Iraqiya came in first  -- despite the efforts by Nouri to demonize Iraqiya and use the Justice  and Accountability Committee to outlaw various Iraqiya candidates weeks  prior to the election. Nouri refused to let go of the post of prime  minister and, since he had the backing of Barack's White House, he was  able to dig in his heels for over months (Political Stalemate I). The  gridlock was only ended when all parties signed off on the US-brokered  Erbil Agreement. Nouri used the agreement to get a second term as prime  minister and trashed the rest of it. That is the beginning of Political  Stalemate II (December 2010) which is the country's current crisis.  Since last summer, the Kurds have been calling for the Erbil Agreement  to be honored. Iraqiya has joined that call as has Moqtada al-Sadr.
 Last  week, on Thursday, there was supposed to be a meeting, a National  Conference.  Since December 21st, Iraqi President Jalal Talabani and  Speaker of Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi have been calling for the  conference to address the political crisis.  Less than 24 hours before  the scheduled National Conference was to take place, al-Nujaifi  announced that it was not taking place. 
  
  
 Liz Sly notes that some Iraqis are seeing US indiference to whatever Nouri might do. She also notes:
   
 Sunni  concerns have crystallized in recent weeks around Obama's nomination of  Brett McGurk, 38, a lawyer who has frequently advised the U.S. Embassy  but is not a diplomat to be the new ambassador to Iraq.  As the chief  adviser to Ambassador James F. Jeffrey and former ambassador Christopher  R. Hill, McGurk is closely associated with the United States'  controversial 2010 decision to support Maliki's candidacy as the better  hope for future stability over that of Ayad Allawi, the head of the  Iraqiya bloc, which narrowly won the most seats in parliament. 
  
 We'll get to Allawi in just a moment.  But let's deal with Brett McGurk first.
  
 *  McGurk is Barack's third nominee for Ambassador to Iraq.  Why have all  three been men?  Iraq -- not just Iraqi women and girls, all of Iraq --  would strongly benefit from the US putting a woman in that post.  When 
Ava  and I argued that to members of then President-Elect Barack's  transition team we were shot down with the issue of qualfications.  No  one on the transition team could think of a single woman in the State  Dept or out of the State Dept who was qualified -- in their opinion --  to be Ambassador to Iraq. (So don't give me any of that s**t about  Barack being a friend to women. He's not.  Press whores and idiots  repeat that crap.  Those of who have dealt with the administration damn  well know better.) 
 
 * Three nominees and all of  the men.  McGurk has no qualifications.  He's been a coffee fetcher and  little else for men who've been in the post.  He only graduated colled  (as an undergraduate) in 1999.  Not only is the lie that they can't find  a qualified woman offensive, so is their desire to put a COMPLETELY  UNQUALIFIED PERSON in charge of the mission that they plan to spend at  least $6 billion dollars on each year through 2016.  It is the most  expensive State Dept assignment.  How in the world do you justify  wet-behind-his-ears McGurk as qualified for that position.  He's been in  no leadership position, he's got little-to-no-experience in oversight  or economics and he hasn't even been a mid-level manager.  He is  completely and totally unqualified.
  
 *  Unqualified was Chris Hill.  We established that when we reported on his  confirmation hearing.  He backed it up with his bizarre behavior in  Baghdad.  (Naps under his desk?  Pray those were only rumors, pray.)   Because of the Idiot Hill, Barack had to nominate a grown up -- James  Jeffrey.  Jeffrey's friends are talking all over DC about how Jeffrey  does not feel he's gotten the support he needed from the White House  that he spends hours trying to explain to the administration that the  sky is blue and they keep asking, "Are you sure it's not a little bit  green, are you sure?"  McGurk may be pliable but he's not qualified.  If  Jeffrey is not replaced with an adult, Iraq will likely slide towards  authoritarianism even faster.
  
 * Barack Obama was  not against the Iraq War.  That was a stupid little press lie to sell  you a War Hawk.  To appease voters in Chicago (when he was in the state  legislature) he gave a 2002 speech -- a dumb speech.  By the time he ran  for the US Senate, he wasn't against the Iraq War.  (He told 
Elaine  and I that the US was over in Iraq now so it didn't matter.  That's not  "anti-war.")  But the anti-war vote and sentiment took him to the White  House.  Why the hell has the Cult of St. Barack allowed him to appoint  one pro-Iraq War person after another?  McGurk is only the latest  example of 'anti-war' Barack giving a plum assignment to someone who was  pushing the Iraq War in 2002. 
 
 Brett McGurk  lacks experience, was wrong about the war, is too immature to be put  over a $6 billion a year project and Iraqiya -- the political slate that  got the most votes -- doesn't want him.  If there was a functioning  left -- as opposed to the Cult of St. Barack -- McGurk would be  announcing right now that he's withdrawing his nomination to spend more  time with his family of hamsters.
  
   
 It  has been nine years since U.S. forces removed a brutal tyrant in Iraq  at a huge cost in lives and treasure, but already the country is  slipping back into the clutches of a dangerous new one-man rule, which  inevitably will lead to full dictatorship, and already it is dashing  hopes for a prosperous, stable, federal and democratic Iraq.  Exploiting  the unconditional support of Tehran and the indifference of Washington,  Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has violated the constitution to  consoldiate his own power by using security and military forces to  intimidate and oppress political rivals and, indeed, the general  population, as manifested in his suppression of peaceful demonstrations  in Iraq.
  
 And that's just the opening paragraph.  
Al Hayat reports  that Iraqiya has revealed it is in talks with other blocs about  withdrawing confidence in Nouri al-Maliki. The Islamic Supreme Council  of Iraq denies that they have engaged in discussions on replacing Nouri.  Speaking for the Moqtada al-Sadr bloc, MP Jawad Hasnawi allows that  they have serious problems with Nouri but thinks that talk of replacing  him is premature. That said, if requested to, Hasnawi says Moqtada would  be willing to step in as a prime minister. At the end of 
this Al Hayat article,  KRG President Massoud Barzani offers his concerns that  there are  serious attempts by the current government in Baghdad to restore Iraq to  a dictatorship.
 
 Alsumaria reports  that State of Law MP Mohammed Chihod declared today that those seeking a  no-confidence vote on Prime Minister and Thug of the Occupation Nouri  al-Maliki are "conspirators." He makes other charges; however, that one  alone should be seen as disturbing in a country where the likes of  Chihod (Nouri's goons) regularly demonize political rivals as  "Ba'athists" and "terrorists." It's in that landscape that  "conspirators" emerges. A vote of no confidence is not a conspiracy,  it's an approved measure with a process outlined in the Constitution.
Chihod  shows more  ignorance of the Constitution he allegedly took an oath to  when he declares the KRG is in violation of the Constitution for  refusing to hand Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi over to Baghdad. There  is nothing in the Constitution about that. The Constitution does cover  immunity for office holders, however. Demonstrating that his ignorance  is not limited to the Constitution, Chihod then accuses KRG President  Massoud Barzani of visiting the US last week in order to lead on a  no-confidence vote in Nouri. A no-confidence vote would take place in  the Iraqi Parliament. While it's true that many MPs live outside of  Iraq, they're not living in the US.
Meanwhile 
Al Rafidayn reports  on State of Law's whisper campaign against Barzani in which they hurl  everything at the wall  hoping something will stick. This includes the  claim that Barzani's a failure because he wanted the Arab League Summit  in Erbil and it was held in Baghdad. Apparently State of Law's inability  to govern resulted in a heightened sense of awareness as compensation  thereby allowing them to read minds. Barzani's made no comment regarding  the Arab League Summit being held in Erbil. It was scheduled for  Baghdad and scheduled to be held there in 2011. It was finally held  there in 2012. He has called for the national conference (to resolve the  political crisis) to be held in Erbil. State of Law brings up the  allegations of smuggling oil to Iran and insist these are true and that  Barzani is behind the smuggling (the way they go on, we're apparently  supposed to picture Massoud Barzani with a hose and gasoline can,  stopping beside an oil tanker, ready to siphon the tank). Barzani's trip  to the US is called a failure (no reason for that judgment call is  given). The  whispers also include that Barzani's made a deal with Ahmad  Chalabi wherein Ahmad will replace Nouri.
   
 Al Mada reports  on an interview Barzani gave in DC after meeting with US Vice President  Joe Biden. In it, Barzani noted that Nouri refused a meeting to put all  the issues on the table. He cites Nouri as the reason the National  Conference failed (it was set for last Thursday but one day prior it was  announced the conference was off). He says Iraq is suffering from a  real -- not manufactured -- crisis.
Trend News Agency reports  that Barzani appeared on Al Arabiya TV and stated Nouri is leading Iraq  "to the dicatorship" and that, "If all parties fail to agree on   specific changes, then the Kurdish autonomy will no longer regard  al-Maliki as Iraqi prime minister". 
Wladimir van Wilgenburg (Rudaw) adds:
After  increased tensions between the Iraqi and the Kurdish governments,  Kurdistan Region President Massoud Barzani told Alhurra TV last Thursday  that Baghdad is considering the use of F-16 fighter planes against the  Kurds.In the interview,  Barzani says the issue with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki is not  personal, but it is about his dictatorial policies. "I still consider  him a brother and a friend," he said. According to Barzani, division  commanders in the Iraqi army are supposed to be approved by parliament,  but this hasn't happened.Barzani  told Alhurra that he has confronted the Iraqi PM many times and been  told by Maliki that he will act, but he hasn't, and suggested there is  talk of a "military solution" to confront the Kurds in Baghdad. Barzani  said that in an official meeting with Iraqi military commanders, it was  stated that they should wait for F-16s to arrive to help push back the  Kurds.
Aswat al-Iraq notes,  "Shiite Sadrist leader Muqtada al-Sadr said that 'some want to build a  dictatorship under the so-called new false reconciliation,' according to  the Media Center of his Trend. He did not mention names."
   
 Yesterday, Erbil saw a bombing --
 Dar Addustour says  it was the first sticky bombing in Erbil -- a sticky bombing is when an  explosive device is attached to something, generally with adhesive --  one person was injured in the bombing. In other violence 
Chen Zhi (Xinhua) reports  an armed Tuz_Khurmato attack which left Sahwa leader Sheikh Hussein  Awad Khalifa and his bodyguard dead and a Baghdad suicide car bombing  claimed the life of 1 bystander and left four more injured.
 
  
 Yesterday was also Easter.  
Garibov Konstantin (Voice of Russia) points out, "The US-British invasion destroyed the Christian community in Iraq".  
The Associated  Press notes  Pope Benedict XVI's remarks Sunday in St. Peter's Basilica were a call  "for peace in Iraq, Syria and elswhere in the Middle East [. . .]  Sectarian violence in Iraq, often aimed at Christians, has prompted an  exodus over the last years of many from the sizeable Christian community  there."  
Dar Addustour notes Iraqi Christians in Baghdad celebrated Easter under tight security. 
EuroNews says that "members of the congregation underwent security checks."  
Rami Ruhayem  (BBC News) adds  that St. Joseph's Chaldean Church in Baghdad was "surrounded by army  checkpoints, and concrete barriers block cars from approaching the  entrance."  Sanaa Nimr is a pharmacist and she tells Ruhayem, "It's like  entering a military camp, not a church."  Ruhayem reports,  "Alcohol-shop owners and women who did not confirm to Islamic dress  codes had suffered intimidation, [MP Yonadem Kanna] added.  Mrs Nimr  said some Christian schoolchildren had been instructed by teachers to  recite verses from the Koran."  Nimr explains, "They don't like anyone  who is different from them.  They cannot tolerate the other -- Muslim or  Christian or atheist or whatever."  
BBC News offers a photo essay of Easter celebrated around the world and the second photo is of a mass at the Armenian Church in Baghdad.  
Jane Arraf (Christian Science Monitor) reported from Karamiles where, at the St. Addaie the Messenger Church, Christians celebrated Easter:
 
 Like  other Christian communities in the disputed areas, a steady stream of  families have departed either legally or illegally to Europe and the  United States. Despite its own violent upheaval, Syria still serves as a  way station for Iraqi refugees hoping for a better life in the West.
The  community has been neglected by both the Kurdish and Iraqi governments,  says Monsignor Yousif. Water is sometimes cut off for days. There are  almost no jobs.
Over the years, some townspeople have made their homes within the crumbling stone walls of the remains of centuries-old homes.
  
  
 Dar Addustour also notes  Kirkuk Governor Najim al-Din Omar Karem maintains Christians in Kirkuk  were able to celebrate Easter more publicly and he offered his  congratulations to the Cathedral of Kirkuk. 
Luiza Oleszczuk (Christian Post) reminds,  "In Iraq, hundreds of thousands of Christians (even as many as one  million, according to some estimates) left the country due to an  eruption of sectarian violence that had seen religious minorities  targeted, following the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of the country." 
Ed West (Telegraph of London) calls for England to take in Iraqi Christians and offers this overview:
   
 Christianity  in Iraq has a rich past and confusing present. Tradition has it that  the faith was brought to Mesopotamia by the Apostles Thomas and  Thaddeus, and by the second century the Syriac-speaking people of the  region had a thriving church, whose members went on to convert much of  Asia. After the Arab conquests, Syriac Christians played a pivotal role  in Islamic civilisation's high point; of 60 scholars who preserved the  works of the ancients by translating them into Arabic, 58 were Christian  (of the other two, one was Jewish and the other a Sabaean).
 Today  there are six Christian denominations (not including tiny numbers of  Protestants), the largest of which is the Chaldean Catholic Church,  which came into communion with Rome in the 16th century, followed in  size by two Assyrian Orthodox churches. Assyrians speak neo-Aramaic (a  modern form of Syriac) and identify as a distinct Semitic ethnic group;  and although the term Chaldo-Assyrian is often used to emphasise the  unity of Iraqi Christians, some Chaldeans identify simply as Christian  Arabs. Others, especially those who hail from southern Turkey, call  themselves Syriacs or Arameans and doubt the validity of the term  "Assyrian", which only dates as a modern ethnic term to the 19th  century, but nonetheless consider themselves to be one people.
  
 Last month, the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom released [PDF format warning] their 
2012 Annual Report of the "worst religious freedom violators" which includes Iraq on the list.  The Commission found:
 
 The  Iraqi government continues to tolerate systematic, ongoing, and  egregious religious freedom violations.  In the past year, religious  sites and worshippers were targeted in violent attacks, often with  impunity, and businesses viewed as "un-Islamic" were vandalized.  The  most deadly such attacks during this period were against Shi'a pilgrims.  While the Iraqi government has made welcome efforts to increase  security, it continues to fall short in investigating attacks and  bringing perpetrators to justice. It also took actions against political  rivals in late 2011 that escalated Sunni-Shi'a sectarian tensions.   Large percentages of the country's smallest religious minorities --  which include Chaldo-Assyrian and other Christians, Sabean Mandaeans,  and Yazidis -- have fled the country in recent years, threatening these  ancient communities' very existence in Iraq; the diminished numbers that  remain face official discrimination,  marginalization, and neglect,  particularly in areas of northern Iraq over which the Iraqi government  and the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) dispute control. Religious  freedom abuses of women and individuals who do not conform to strict  interpretations of religious norms also remain a concern.
 Based  on these concerns, USCIRF again recommends in 2012 that Iraq be  designated as a "country of particular concern," or CPC.  USCIRF has  recommended CPC status for Iraq since 2008, and placed Iraq on its Watch  List in 2007.
 Although the Iraqi government  has increased security and reportedly prevented several bombings,  Muslim and Christian religious sites and worshippers still experienced  violent attacks in 2011 - 2012.  Four individuals were convicted and  sentenced for the high-profile October 2010 attack on a Catholic church  in Baghdad, but there appeared to be little progress in investigating  and prosecuting perpetrators of other attacks.  Sunni -Shi'a sectarian  tensions increased significantly in late 2011 after the Shi'a-led  government sought to arrest or fire senior Sunni officials. Christian  and Yazidi businesses deemed "un-Islamic," such as liquor stores, were  vandalized in Baghdad and the KRG region during 2011.  Non-Muslims and  ethnic minorities in disputed areas continued to report abuses against  women, girls, and secular Iraqis. Violence against Iraqi civilians  continued in 2011 at approximately the same level as in 2010. Large  numbers  of Iraqis, many of whom fled religious persecution, remain  displaced internally or outside the country, including in Syria where  the security situation is increasingly dire.
  
  
 Since  the start of the illegal war, Iraq has had an ongoing exodus.  The  professional class was the first to leave ("the brain drain").  As each  year of the war and occupation started up, more and more Iraqis were  leaving.  By 2008, Iraq was the largest refugee crisis in the Middle  East since 1948.  Most do not get passage to Europe or the US and  instead head for a neighboring country such as Jordan and Lebanon (and  Syria until recently).From there some have received aslyum in other  countries and others have entered Europe through a non-official  process.  
  
   
 During  my recent stay in Iraq I visited a refugee camp for Iranian Kurds about  an hour by car from Hawler (Erbil) while the Kurdish New Years  festivity Newroz was being celebrated.  Established 18 years ago roughly  400 people live in this camp of small concrete buildings, dust and  surrounding fences.  The people had to flee Iran due to alleged ties to  groups opposing the central government in Tehran.  
 The  camp was constructed with some help by the KRG (Kurdish Regional  Government) and external donors, but the main work was done by the  refugees themselves. Currently the children living in the camp, most of  whom were born there, can attend a nearby school.  But the situation is  still dire -- as the adults are only allowed to work one week a year.  A  small store the refugees had set up on a street just outside of the  camp to sell merchandise to passersby was closed down by the KRG as they  had no official license. Their only regular income is a support payment  by the Iranian-Kurdish Party: 20,000 Iraq Dinar a month -- around 17  Dollars.
  
  
 Over the weekend,  Iraq's oil was in the news -- specifically in terms of the disputes  between the Baghdad-based central-government and the Kurdistan Regional  Government.  All last week,  Baghdad insisted that ExxonMobil had  cancelled its contract with the Kurds.  
As Reuters noted, the Kurds have stated the deal made in October is still on. 
Aabha Rathee (Wall St. Cheat Sheet) reported,  "A statement on the Kurdish president Masoud Barzani's website said  Exxon chief executive officer Rex Tillerson has reaffirmed the company's  commitment. "Rex  Tillerson renewed the commitment of his company's  signed contracts with Kurdistan and Iraq and expressed the readiness of  Exxon Mobil to continue its work in Kurdistan," the statement said." 
The Kurdish Globe also noted the story. The 
Trefis Team (Forbes) offers this background:
Exploration  companies have been lured to sign contracts with the KRG as it has  offered attractive production sharing contracts while the central  government has given out service contracts that compensate players based  on a production  linked fee. [1] The better security environment in  Kurdistan also makes the region more lucrative to companies intending to  set up local operations. However, despite these advantages, most oil  majors have stayed clear of pursuing deals with the KRG to avoid  antagonizing the central government, which does not recognize the  validity of such regional contracts.ExxonMobil is not the only issue of difference between the Nouri's government and the Kurdistan Regional Government. 
Pierre Betran (International Business Times) noted  KRG President Massoud Barzani's visit to DC this week and points out,  "At the heart of the Kurdish-Arab dispute is a constitutional provision  that Kurdish President Massoud Barzani said last week hasn't been  implemented by Baghdad. Speaking in  Washington, he said the provision  is designed to set governing and power-sharing agreements between the  two governments. The law would also repatriate strategic oil-rich parts  of Iraq to Kurdistan."
 
  
 And back to the US for  this from Emma Cape's "
Mark the second anniversary of Collateral Murder: help us free Bradley Manning" (Bradley Manning Org):
On April 5, 2010, WikiLeaks released the Collateral Murder  video, depicting the killing of civilians and Reuters journalists, and  the severe wounding of two children by a U.S. apache helicopter in Iraq.  The Reuters news organization had unsuccessfully filed a Freedom of  Information Request after the incident to obtain the video. However, it  was the WikiLeaks whistle-blower, allegedly PFC Bradley Manning, who  took action to  expose the horror that took place that day. Since then, WikiLeaks has become well known worldwide, and Bradley Manning has been nominated twice for the Nobel Peace Prize.  
To  honor the second anniversary of the video's release, we ask that you  gather your friends and neighbors sometime during the week of April  15-21 to show them the video and start a discussion about why Bradley  Manning deserves to be freed.  
Below  are links to a downloadable version of Collateral Murder and an  interview with soldier Ethan McCord, seen rescuing children out of the  van in the video. You can share the videos with your guests to start the  discussion about advocating for Bradley.  
  - How are you feeling after watching this video?  
- Have  you seen the video in the news or have you heard friends talk about it?  How do you think the release of the video has impacted your community?  
- In  his supposed Instant Messaging conversation with Adrian Lamo, the  hacker who reported Bradley to the authorities, Bradley states the  information should be in the public domain because "without information,  you cannot make informed decisions as a public." Do you agree?
 Bradley Manning was arrested one month after this video was made public. 
          alsumariatrend news agencyrudawwladimir van wilgenburgaswat al-iraqthe voice of russiagaribov konstantinal madaal rafidayndar addustour