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Tuesday,
 July 17, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, a rumor circulates about 
Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, the Iraqi government screams "mine!," 
Nouri decides to sue over allegations against him, Nouri hurls 
allegations at others, and more.  
  
Starting in 
the US where there's major news on the legislative front.  Senator Patty
 Murray is the Chair of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee.  Her 
office issued the following today: 
  
FOR PLANNING PURPOSES 
Tuesday, July 17, 2012 
CONTACT: Murray Press Office 
(202) 224-2834 
  
  
TOMORROW: Murray to Call on Senate to Pass Veterans Omnibus Legislation 
  
Murray will ask for immediate passage of the Honoring America's Veterans and Caring for Camp Lejeune Families Act of 2012 
  
(Washington, D.C.) -- Tomorrow, Wednesday, July 18th, U.S. Senator Patty Murray will give a speech on the Senate floor calling for unanimous consent on the Honoring America's Veterans and Caring for Camp Lejeune Families Act of 2012,
 bipartisan, bicameral, and comprehensive legislation that combines 
provisions of the Veterans Programs Improvement Act of 2011 (S. 914, Report No. 112-088) and Honoring American Veterans Act of 2011 (H.R. 1627, Report No. 112-084 Part   1),
 as well as provisions from other Senate and House legislation. This 
comprehensive package would extend health care to veterans and their 
families who lived at Camp Lejeune, expand critical health programs, 
improve housing programs for severely disabled veterans, enhance 
programs for homeless veterans, and make needed improvements to the 
disability claims system.  
  
  
WHO: U.S. Senator Patty Murray    
   
WHAT: Senator Murray will seek unanimous consent on the passage of important veterans omnibus legislation.    
   
WHEN: TOMORROW: Wednesday, July 18, 2012    
11:00 AM ET/ 8:00 AM PST    
   
WHERE: Senate Floor    
   
  
  
### 
Kathryn RobertsonSpecialty Media Coordinator
 
Office of U.S. Senator Patty Murray    
448 Russell Senate Office Building    
Washington D.C. 20510    
202-224-2834    
     
   
   
   
     
     
Camp
 Lejeune is a North Caroline Marine Corps base which was considered to 
be one of "the biggest water-contimination case[s] in history, with more
 than a million people potentially exposed to carcinogens such as TCE 
and benzene from the 1950s to 1985, when the poisoned wells were shut 
down" (Mike Manager of GovExec ).  Franco Ordonez (McClatchy Newspapers) observes ,
 "Up to 750,000 people at Camp Lejeune may have been exposed to water 
that was poisoned with trichloroethylene, tetrachloroethylene, benzene 
and vinyl chloride. Some medical experts have linked the contamination 
to birth defects,   childhood leukemia and a variety of other cancers."   
     
Senator Richard Burr, Ranking Member on the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee, has long championed this issue.  Last month, Kat reported 
 on a Senate Veterans Affairs Committeee hearing and  how there appeared
 to be movement on this issue and she quoted Chair Murry stating:   
     
     
     
This will be a historic and long awaited moment for the many families of Camp Lejeune.    
     
     
Iraq is considered the cradle of cvilization due to its long and historical importance.   
  
Oh, Baghdad 
Center of the world 
City of ashes 
With its great mosques 
Erupting from the mouth of god 
Rising from the ashes like 
a speckled bird 
Splayed against the mosaic sky 
Oh, clouds around 
We created the zero 
But we mean nothing to you 
You would believe 
That we are just some mystical tale 
We are just a swollen belly 
That give birth Sinbad, Scheherazade 
We gave birth 
Oh, oh, to the zero 
The perfect number 
We invented the zero  
  
  
For all of its glory and history the Baghdad-based government  currently attempts to hold onto the history of  another people.  AFP reported 
 at the end of last month that Nouri al-Maliki's Baghdad government had 
made the decision to cut archaeological ties with the United States over
 Jewish archives.  Nouri's government insisted the Jewish archives 
belonged to Iraq.  The same government that refused to protect the Jews 
in Iraq now wants to lay claim to the documents: "The archives, which 
were found in the flooded basement of the intelligence headquarters in 
Baghdad in 2003, include Torah scrolls, Jewish law and children's books,
 Arabic-language documents produced for Iraqi Jews and government 
reports about the Jewish community."
  
The only 
thing Nouri's government can lay claim to is the government reports.  
They can lay claim to that because Nouri is the New Saddam.  And, as 
such, he can claim the property of a people as surely as Saddam Hussein 
would be insisting, if these were Shi'ite papers, that they belonged to 
the Iraqi government.    A people own their own documents and that is 
especially true when you're dealing with an oppressed people -- the 
Shi'ites under Saddam or the Jews in modern-day Baghdad where all but a 
handful have been run out of their homes and out of the country.  Shame 
on the government for attempting to lay claim to that which it is not 
entitled to.   Xinhua noted 
 this week, "Iraq rejected an offer made by the United States to bring 
back half of the Iraqi Jewish Archive previously transferred from 
Baghdad to the US   after 2003, insisting that Iraq should restore the 
whole Archive, an Iraqi official newspaper reported on Sunday."  
  
While
 Nouri's government uses a great deal of time and energy trying to grab 
that which it is not entitled to, it refuses to maintain Iraq's historic
 treasures.   Dropping back to the May 29th snapshot:
  
Last week Aseel Kami (Reuters) reported
 on the State Board of Heritage and Antiquities' Mariam Omran Musa who 
is suing Iraq's Ministry of Oil over a pipline through Babylon which 
threatens the existence of the historical Hanging Gardens.  Musa 
declared, "Oil and antiquities are both national wealth, but I have an 
opinion: when the oil is gone, we will still have antiquities."  The Travel Channel notes that the Hanging Gardens were considered to be one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.  RT adds:
 
 The
 magnificent gardens allegedly built for a king's homesick wife in the 
6th century BC were one of the Ancient World's seven wonders. Some 
historians doubt they existed, but they were described in many written 
sources and were said to have been destroyed by earthquakes.
 The 
remains of the ancient city of Babylon are situated near present-day Al 
Hillah in Iraq's Babylon Province south of Baghdad. The country has long
 been trying to get UNESCO to add the site to its World Heritage list, 
but chances appear to be fading away as authorities plan to lay an oil 
pipeline there.
 Iraq's Oil Ministry plans to extend a strategic route
 to export oil through six provinces at the center and south of the 
country.Two pipelines carrying oil products and liquid gas from Basra in
 the south to   Baghdad were built under the ancient site in the late 
1970s and early 80s.
 
 
  
"The
 pipeline crosses the perimeter of the archaeological site but outside 
the walls, beneath the so-called outer city," said Véronique Dauge, 
chief of the Arab States Unit at the Unesco World Heritage Centre. "But 
even if it doesn't cross the centre of the ancient city, it is in an 
area that has never been excavated." The site covers approximately 850 
hectares, most of which is virgin territory for archaeologists. A 
spokesman from the Iraqi oil ministry quoted by AFP reported that the 
land dug up revealed no archaeological remains.   
"No one can say right now if the oil pipeline has caused damage," said Lisa Ackerman, executive vice-president of the World Monuments Fund
 (WMF), a New York-based foundation for preserving architectural 
heritage, who works on the site with the Iraqi authorities. "But I think
 it's very likely that it crosses sensitive archaeological zones." 
 
  
Meanwhile AFP reports,
 "Teams of Iraqi archaeologists have discussed 40 ancient sites in the 
country's south from the Sumerian, Akkadian and Babylonian periods, an 
Iraqi antiquities offical said on Monday."  And hopefully the fate of 
those sites will be better than the currently threatened Hanging Gardens
 or other threatened sites in Iraq.  Mohamad Ali Harissi (Middle East Online) reports
 that historical sites discovered near Najaf's airport -- including "the
 remains of the celebrated ancient Christian city of Hira" -- are at 
risk, "unexplored and unkempt," due to a lack of excavation funding.  
One of   the people who led historical digs upon the discovery and in 
2009 and 2010 is Shakir Abdulzahra Jabari who states, "The area has 
historical importance, because it is rich in antiquities, including 
especially the remains of churches, abbeys and palaces.  But now the 
antiquities have been neglected for a year, and they do not receive any 
attention, despite the fact that many Western countries are interested 
in Hira's history as the main gateway of Christianity into Iraq."  
  
One
 of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World and the Hanging Gardens 
remain in jeopardy in Iraq today.  They're not the only historical 
marvel at risk.  There is also the famous Abbasi Bridge in Zahko.  Abdul-Khaleq Dosky (Niqash) reports  on the bridge and notes the many origin stories told about the ancient marvel:
  
One
 of the oldest revolves around a young man in the Abbasside era - the 
Abbaside dynasty ruled for almost two centuries from the year 750 - who 
fell in love with a girl living in the village on the opposite side of 
the river; he built the bridge so he could be with her.  
Another
 story focuses on a Turkish architect who came to Zakho, which lies near
 the border of Iraq and Turkey, in the Middle Ages. A nearby Turkish 
governor had amputated one of his hands and as a kind of challenge to 
him, the architect decided to build a bridge. 
Legend
 has it that the architect built the bridge by constructing both ends 
and then having it join in the middle. Using this method, the bridge was
 in danger of collapse many times. So the architect consulted a medium 
who told him that he should kill the first person to cross the river and
 bury the body in the centre of the bridge. Unhappily for her, the next 
day his son's wife, a woman called Dalal, came across the river to bring
 him his breakfast. And apparently that is why to this day the locals 
know the crossing as the Dalal bridge. 
  
  
Iraq
 has so much worth preserving and so much in need of preserving.   It 
certainly is telling that Iran's Press TV can run -- and has run, here  and here 
 for examples -- multiple pieces on the Jewish archives and interview 
biased Americans but when it comes to Iraq's historical treasures Press 
TV has nothing to say.  That's your first indication that this isn't 
about history, just another pissing match and the world's certainly seen
 more than enough of those. 
  
  
  
  
Although
 it might not be at the top of your vacation destinations, let's not 
forget that Iraq is the home of the first city that was ever recorded, 
Sumerian, that was built over 6000 years ago so why diminish the 
importance of visiting such a pillar of civilization? We are not talking
 about an apple mac support London
 from the corner of the street here. True it has its own significance 
but what about a city that was built thousands of years ago and which is
 known to be the place where the first book was ever written. Here in 
Iraq between the rivers of Euphrates and Tigris once stood the great and
 famous Mesopotamia, a region where the first form of writing was 
developed, where the first signs of irrigations systems were found and 
where people had already discovered the wheel. 
  
  
  
 -- not the Hanging Gardens, not the Ctesiphon Arch, nothing.   
Nouri
 says he wants to build up the travel industry in Iraq.  Yet here's a 
bridge that's already bringing in approximately 150,000 tourists each 
year and Nouri's refusing to use any of the large piles of government 
money he sits on to ensure that the the bridge remains standing and 
doesn't fall apart.   
  
  
Dropping back to yesterday's snapshot :Al Rafidayn reports
 that Nouri met with US Central Command General James Mattis on Sunday. 
 Why?  To ask the US to speed upt he delivery of weapons.  All Iraq News also covers the meeting and includes a photo of the two.  AFP adds,
 "The Iraqi premier also pointedly said during a meeting with General 
James Mattis, the   visiting head of US Central Command, that only the 
central government would decide which arms purchases would be made, in 
an apparent swipe at Kurdish complaints over the acquisition of F-16 
warplanes."  Defense World adds,
 "Iraq has agreed to acquire American military equipment worth more than
 $10 billion, including 36 F-16 warplanes, tanks, artillery, helicopters
 and patrol boats which are not delivered for years to the Iraq." KUNA notes ,
 "Baghdad Monday urged neighboring countries to respect sovereignty of 
Iraq and warned against violating its airspace.  Prime Minister Nouri 
Al-Maliki, addressing a graduation ceremony of police   officers, said 
the Iraqi airspace has been breached by aircraft of neighboring 
countries, which he did not name, on a daily basis."  Kitabat notes 
 that Nouri's spokesperson Ali al-Dabbagh declared today that Turkey has
 breached Iraq's airspace with "warplanes" repeatedly and that they 
intended to complain to the United Nations Security Council. Reuters answers  the immediate question -- breach? do they mean the raids on northern   Iraq?  Yes, Reuters 
 reveals, that's apparently what they mean.  That's strange that 
Baghdad's not previously said one word publicly, in all these years, 
that could qualify as a complaint about these bombs.  In fact, they've 
told the United Nations previously that they were cooperating with 
Turkey and cited this as an example of how they fight terrorism and 
insisted it was proof of the stability they were bringing to the region 
and reaon enough for the UN to remove the Chapter VII classification 
imposed on them as a result of the attack on Kuwait. Oh, well, maybe the accusations will cover Nouri's latest embarrassment. The Journal of Turkish Weekly was already reporting 
 this morning that Iraq's radar system was down due to "the power cut in
 Iraq."   Nouri has been   on a holy tear of late, hurling one 
allegation after another.  Rudaw reports ,
 "At Iraq's Council of Ministers meeting last week, Prime Minister Nuri 
al-Maliki accused the Kurdistan Region of 'smuggling oil.'  The 
accusation caused a stir and Maliki's Kurdish deputy Dr. Roj Nuri 
Shawais, issued a strong reply."  Nouri loves to blame so much that 
facts rarely matter to him.  Back on  May 30th we noted 
 Nouri was blaming Arab countries yet again while saying nothing about 
Iran and, when the issue is water, that's not realistic.  Today Al Mada  and Kitabat both
 report on findings from London's Institute of  Development Studies 
which has predicted a 70% decrease in fresh water in Iraq as a result of
 Iran's actions with regards to the Tigris River.   While the Arab 
neighbors also have an impact, the report finds Iran a greater culprit 
(causing Al Mada  to note Iran and the "environemental disaster" 
its caused in their headline). If the issue isn't addressed, Iraq's 
drinking water and agricultural sector will dwindle.  Al Arabiya adds :
  
The
 IDS report, obtained by Al Arabiya, stated that Iran stopped the flow 
of Alwand River, which runs from western Iran to eastern Iraq, for the 
past four years. This caused the damage of around 10% of arable land and rendered the residents of several villages around the river homeless.
 
 
  
The
 production of several crops has also been greatly affected whether 
through quantity with a loss that amounted to 80% in some years or 
through quality that has witnessed a remarkable drop. Iran, the 
report added, has also been pumping drainage water into several Iraqi 
rivers, which led to a rise in their salinity levels and in turn 
inflicted a substantial damage on marine life, basically demonstrated in
 the death of several fish species.
 This also caused the migration 
of birds that lived in the area and the emergence of snakes which attack
 crops and kill livestock.
 
  
Last 
week, Nouri was trying to improve his image -- and a press eager to sell
 war on Syria was happy to oblige.  All this led to days of Nouri the 
brave, offering the Syrian Ambassador to Iraq asylum.  Those days are 
gone.  Tariq Alhomayed (Asharq al-Awsat) notes ,
 "The Syrian Ambassador to Iraq's defection was not only a slap in the 
face for the tyrant of Damascus; it also came as a blow to Nuri 
al-Maliki's government."  Nouri's not happy about what Nawaf Fares is 
saying.  When Nouri's unhappy, what does he do?  That's right: Sue.  And
 BBC News notes  that Nouri's spokesperson today announced that there would be a lawsuit against Fares:
  
In interviews since defecting, Mr Fares said Syria formed an alliance with al-Qaeda to disrupt US forces in Iraq. 
Mr Fares has accused Mr Maliki of being complicit in attacks in Iraq because of "his alliance" with Damascus.  
The
 BBC's Rami Ruhayem in Baghdad says Mr Fares has a few stories to tell 
about his former Syrian masters and, since arriving in Qatar from 
Baghdad, he hasn't been holding back.  
  
Kitabat reports
 that Iraqi Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi has written to the 
Parliament urging them to investigate whether Nouri has had any 
involvement with terrorism.   
  
On violence,  Al Rafidayn reports 
 that 1 intelligence officer for the Ministry of the Interior was 
assassinated today in Baghdad by unknown assailantes suing guns with 
silencers.  In addition,All Iraq News notes 
 that a police officer's home in Salahuddin Province was bombed -- the 
police officer was outside his home at the time and not wounded.   In 
other news of violence, Nouri continues the mass arrests.  If you are 
ever unclear on how people (inclucing innocents) can disappear into the 
maze that passes for the Iraqi 'legal' system, you just have to follow 
the mass arrests.  Alsumaria reports 
 32 arrested in Kirkuk today.  The suspects were arrested based on 
'intelligence.'  But Nouri has no real intelligence capability and 
that's one of the things the State Dept was supposed to be helping him 
with but he spurned that.  We're not done.  Alsumaria also   reports 
 mass arrests in Babylon today: 60 arrests.  In related news, Khalid 
al-Alwani is a member of Iraqiya and serves on Parliament's Integrity 
Committee.  All Iraq News notes 
 that he attended the funeral of Saddam Batawi who died in prison and 
that he's calling for the end of torture in Iraqi prisons and detention 
centers.
  
  
Meanwhile Fars News Agency reports ,
 "Spokesman of the office of Iraq's most revered Shiite Cleric and top 
religious authority, Grand Ayatollah Ali Hosseini al-Sistani, 
categorically denied media reports about and assassination attempt on 
Ayatollah Sistani's life." 
  
  
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