
We could have had Hillary Clinton as president if it weren't for people like Naomi Wolf. Never forget that.
And don't forget that Carly Simon's latest album, Never Been Gone, is released tomorrow. I'll be downloading as soon as I get done with my morning run.
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1538 20th Street, Santa Monica CA 90404
This is the opening of Cooper Davis' "Classic Arly Simon, It's Never Been Gone:"
Even when filtered through telephone lines, Carly Simon’s voice is distinctive; those warm, husky tones laid over bright backgrounds cause a listener to leap immediately to her songs, her albums — you know that voice.
It is the voice that propelled her to fame and fortune, and the same voice that is now filling hospital rooms and children’s wards through her newly launched Carly Simon Music Therapy Initiative. And it is the same voice that graces the 12 songs on her latest album, Never Been Gone, a reworking of many of her classic hits, to be released on Oct. 27. Never Been Gone is at once a reflection by the singer on the thoughts and dreams of her younger self, and in many ways, a tribute to the Island that has long been the wellspring of her creative process.
The new album comes on the heels of a difficult legal dispute with the Starbucks label, Hear Music, which underwent a major corporate restructuring just as Ms. Simon’s previous album, the Brazilian-tinged This Kind of Love, was released.
“I was caught in an uncomfortable situation. Starbucks pulled out of the distribution four days before the album was launched. They dismantled their music arm, Hear Music, and so there was no guts behind the work, no promotion. They shunted the album over to Concord Records, who are great people, but they didn’t quite get it because they weren’t there from the beginning. So I didn’t really have a home, and on top of it, I was still legally bound to Starbucks for one year,” she said.
The dispute remains unresolved.
But there was a silver lining: Ms. Simon suddenly had a lot of down time as she waited out her contract. Her son, Ben Taylor, an accomplished musician in his own right and co-owner of the label Iris Records, called his mother and urged her to join him on a new project, which eventually became Never Been Gone.
Let's talk Third. Latest edition? Dallas and the following worked on it:The Third Estate Sunday Review's Jim, Dona, Ty, Jess, and Ava,
Rebecca of Sex and Politics and Screeds and Attitude,
Betty of Thomas Friedman Is a Great Man,
C.I. of The Common Ills and The Third Estate Sunday Review,
Kat of Kat's Korner (of The Common Ills),
Cedric of Cedric's Big Mix,
Mike of Mikey Likes It!,
Elaine of Like Maria Said Paz),
Trina of Trina's Kitchen,
Ruth of Ruth's Report,
Wally of The Daily Jot,
Marcia of SICKOFITRDLZ,
Stan of Oh Boy It Never Ends
and Ann of Ann's Mega Dub.
And here's what we came up with:
- Truest  statement of the week
- This was Bob Somerby. Well earned.
- Truest statement of the week II
- This was Cindy Sheehan, also well earned for the writing but I'm not real crazy about the essay being 'disappeared.'
- A note to our readers
- Jim breaks down the edition.
- Editorial: When all the lies are exposed
- I've got to call Ty about this. There's a sentence missing from the editorial. I'll call him after I finish posting. (It won't be late. When it's 11:00 pm here, it's 8:00 pm out in California.) I like this editorial. I think it's got a punch to it (even with a sentence missing).
- TV: Hank Tanks
- I really like this. Ava and C.I. put it down (they wrote it) but I really liked it. It's funny and it captures all that sucks about the show. I really think ABC should just cancel it (Hank) because there's just not any real hope that it can be improved.
- The Carly Roundtable
- Carly Simon. This thing was so long. The only thing I regret is that C.I. pulled a section. She doesn't usually do that but it was long and Jim was complaining about typing and C.I. had done this whole thing about Carly's bridges (musical bridges) and she was talking notes (like sharps and flats) and she said, "Well pull that. It's probably too technical and I'm sure I went on forever." I wish that had stayed in.
- The Idiot Barack (Ava and C.I.)
- Barack's repeating right-wing myths about Vietnam. And no one's calling him out on it. Well, Ava and C.I. called him out. But they are the warrior women. They take no prisoners.
- The gas bag journals
- This was pretty cool. We did a survey piece on political opinion journals and we cover: The Nation, National Review, Dissent, Reason, Mother Jones, The New Republic, Harper's, Extra!, Newsmax and ISR so that's a pretty interesting mix. It was interesting to look at what each was focused on.
- Iraq
- In his note, Jim forgot this.  The link's there but he forgot to write about it.  I'm not surprised, they were so tired. 
- You can judge a book by its cover
- I liked this a lot too. This just ended up being a total surprise and just a lot of fun to write.
- And people keep saying we don't do enough on books so here we offered this.
- Highlights
- Wally, Cedrics, Stan, Marcia, Ann, Ruth, Kat, Rebecca, Betty, Elaine and I wrote this.
| Monday, October 26, 2009. Chaos and violence continue, Iraq's death toll  from yesterday's massive bombings rises and includes children, finger-pointing  becomes the favorite past-time, a US 'helper' and his ties to an oil company are  explored, a US Iraq War resister seeks sanctuary in a Canadian church, and  more. Sunday Baghdad saw bombings resulting in a higher death total than Black  Wednesday, Bloody Wednesday, Gory Wednesday August 19th.  Eleanor Hall (Australia's ABC's The World Today -- link  has text and audio) explained, "Twin suicide bombers targeted the Iraqi  Ministry of Justice all but destroying the government department's headquarters,  which are just outside the high-security 'green zone' in the centre of  Baghdad."  Shane McLeod added, "The sound of the second blast was captured by a  mobile phone video camera being used to survey the aftermath of the first.  Targeted was the headquarters of the Ministry of Justice, just a few hundred  metres from the fortified green zone in Baghdad." Sahar Issa and Hannah Allam (McClatchy Newspapers)  report that Iraqi government figures are stating that "a water tanker and a  refrigerated food truck" were used in the attacks. This morning, Jack Kimball and Michael Christie (Reuters) report that the death toll has  climbed and is currently at 155 with over five hundred left injured.  Rod Nordland (New York Times) observes  that "an uncertain number of children" are among the dead. CBS News and AP add that 24 "children  who were killed were on a bus leaving a daycare center near the Justice Ministry  when the attack occurred".  Ned Parker and Caesar Ahmed (Los Angeles Times) sketch out yesterday's  assault, "Cars clogges the road as tehy approached the traffic circle in front  of the Justice Ministry, with its statue of modern Iraq's first ruler, King  Faisal, mounted on a horse. An old white pickup truck had broken down by the  traffic circle and its driver approached a policeman and started yelling. [. .  .] It was then that the first of two car bombs exploded on opposite ends of the  block." Xinhua adds, "Xinhua correspondent at  the scene said that he saw ponds of blood and parts of human bodies scattered  close to the blast site near the Mansour Hotel where the wreckage of dozens of  civilian cars could be seen near the site." Martin Chulov (Guardian) offers,  "Witnesses described body parts sprawled across the area. Mohammed Falah, was  caught in the blast: 'There was a woman's leg next to me. I picked it up and  gave it to the ambulance'."   Sharif Abdel Kouddous (Democracy Now! --  link has text, video and audio) asked Rick Rowley for his take on the  bombings today: Well, first of all, the first thing to say is that, you know, there  is no peace in Iraq, that these bombings, first of all, put the lie once again  to the three myths that we've been pushed about the war in Iraq: first, the  story that the war is over; second, that we won the war; and third, that the  lessons of this victory can be applied to Afghanistan. The fact is that what  passes for calm in Iraq today isn't peace at all; it's a fragile, fraying truce  after a brutal sectarian civil war, and it's a truce without reconciliation that  -- because it's put in place a system that is a continuing engine for violence,  and tragedies like these are a legacy of the American occupation and will remain  one for years to come. So, bombings like these today -- or on Sunday were  attempts -- I mean, you know, they're being blamed on al-Qaeda in Iraq, and it  seems likely that it was a group like al-Qaeda in Iraq that carried them out.  And there are attempts by those extreme elements inside the Sunni insurgency to  target the Shiite-led government, which they see as their sectarian enemy, but  also to try to draw the Shiite militias back into an all-out civil war that  could unite the Shiites again in their resistance. I mean, bombings like the  ones on Sunday are remarkable for their massive scale, the carnage they cause,  but there are multiple bombings in Iraq every single week. [. . .]  And yeah, absolutely, I mean, the government in Baghdad is seen by  al-Qaeda in Iraq and by the extremists inside the Sunni resistance as a proxy,  as an Iranian proxy, dominated by the Supreme Council and by the Dawa Party,  both parties that were -- well, I mean, the Supreme Council was formed in Iran,  and Dawa, you know, spent most of its existence in Iran. And, you know, these  parties were put by the US in mid-2004, were put in charge of the government,  and their militias were turned into the core of the Iraqi security structure.  So, as the civil war kicked off, the main protagonists in the civil war were  militias inside the police force that were -- came from these parties and, you  know, versus Sunni insurgents on the outside who were doing bombings and these  kinds of soft-target attacks on civilians. So, you know, clearly, I mean,  institutions and ministries that are controlled by ISCI, the Supreme Council,  and by Dawa are definitely seen as sectarian enemies. I mean, the Ministry of  Justice, as well, you know, it's -- the police and the court system have been  seen in the -- I mean, not so much the court system. The police and the prison  system in Iraq have been seen as one of the tools in the sectarian fight that  the Shiite militias have used from the very beginning. Gina Chon (Wall St. Journal) noted  yesterday that the charge of "al Qaeda in Iraq" was instantly being made by some  including Nouri al-Maliki, US-installed thug of the occupation. Mohammed al Dulaimy and Hannah Allam (McClatchy  Newspapers -- link has text and video) add, "Maliki, a Shiite Muslim,  released a statement blaming elements of Saddam Hussein's predominantly Sunni  Baath Party and militants from al Qaida in Iraq for the attack. As of late  Sunday, no group had claimed responsibility." Yes, Maliki couldn't wait to start  (yet again) blaming former Ba'athists. ELEANOR HALL: Given the number of people killed though in these two  recent attacks and the outrage from the public that we are already hearing, I  mean what is this attack and the August one likely to mean for the elections in  January?    SAM PARKER: Well, clearly it undercuts Prime Minister Maliki's main narrative which is Iraq was chaos and he brought it back from the brink. It definitely hurts him and certainly if you look at what has followed the August bombings there has been a lot of that, a lot of finger pointing and a lot of people saying your claims are bogus. That Iraq is just as unsafe as it has always been and that generally is not true.I mean, yes you can point to these like high-profile mass casualty attacks and as tragic as they are, overall death counts in Iraq are still, even despite these attacks, are still much lower than they have been at any period except for right after the invasions. So for the entire war, we are still at the lowest points and so these large scale attacks largely had propaganda value to them. Liz Sly and Usama Redha (Los Angeles Times)  explain, "It is Maliki who stands to lose the most from a security  breakdown, because he is campaigning on his record as the leader who helped  restore a good measure of security after the sectarian warfare that raged after  the U.S.-led invasion. Overall, violence is down 90% since the peak in 2006,  U.S. commanders say." Anthony Shadid (Washington Post) adds,  "The attacks came at a precarious moment in Iraqi politics. Parliament has yet  to agree on legislation to organize the planned Jan. 16 vote, despite warnings  by the United States and the United Nations that time will probably run out by  next weekend. Critics have also complained that some of the key officials  charged with security -- Maliki and Interior Minister Jawad Bolani -- are more  engaged in the election than in running the country." Kurdish MP Mahmoud Othman tells Al Jazeera, "This  sends two messages, one of them is to the investment conference in Washington  held just a few days ago as if to tell investors not to come to Iraq . . . At  the same time I think it may be a message to the meeting today of the political  council of national security." Baghdad governor Salah Abdel Razaq tells Elizabeth  Palmer (CBS News), "The bodies I have seen -- these innocent people, what  have they done? To have this destiny, it is very terrible."  Timothy Williams (New York Times) explains, "In large part,  Mr. Maliki's popularity has rested on the belief that he has kept the country  reasonably safe. But the bombings at four high-profile, well-protected  government buildings within a two-month span led some Iraqis to say Sunday that  they were reconsidering their support for Mr. Maliki." It should be noted that  "Mr. Maliki's popularity" -- like Ashlee Simpson's talent -- is something that's  been assumed but never verified.  Jane Arraf (Christian Science Monitor) provides a  voice for people on the streets such as vendor Abbas Fadhil who states, "This is  all from the political parties -- they want to gain seats in the election." Um  Ali tells Arraf, "There had to be someone with official backing behind this --  how could they get through the checkpoints? Why are our children, our sisters  still being killed? For 20 years we've been fighting."  Gina Chon (Wall St.  Journal) puts the bombings into the larger instability landscape that  is Iraq: "The timing of the Sunday bombings coincided with plans by Iraq's top  political body, the Political Council for National Security, comprising top  political leaders and cabinet ministers, to consider ways to end a stalemate  over a crucial election law needed to begin work ahead of the vote. The  legislation has stalled over disagreements between factions over how the vote  will be conducted in Kirkuk, an oil-rich region in the north torn by sectarian  and ethnic tensions among the area's Kurds, Arabs and Turkomen."  Ranj Alaaldin (Guardian) offers his take  on the bombings: A broad analysis suggests complicity on the part of the Sunni-Arab  world: keep Iraq unstable and you stop the country from becoming an effective  Iranian client state when the US withdraws; or, at the very least, facilitate  terrorist attacks in the country and you have some form of a counter-measure to  Iran's unmatched influence. Alternatively, the attacks on Kurdish-run and  Shia-run ministries may have sought to encourage incorporation of the  Sunnis, specifically the Sons of Iraq fighters, into the Shia-led government,  which has so far been slow in doing so. The objectives are not necessarily  independent of each other. A more straightforward analysis suggests prime minister Nouri  al-Maliki as the prime target of all this: destabilise Iraq in the run-up to  January's parliamentary elections and you hurt Maliki's chances of success, as  he will be campaigning on the same security platform that won him this year's  provincial elections. Indeed, things are not looking too rosy for the premier  now that he has lost his security card. Iraqis will struggle to list his  achievements in recent times and find the country no closer to better services  and increased employment levels. As far as observations go, James Denselow (Guardian) is on stronger  ground than anyone when he observes: It takes a certain death toll for Iraq to  make it back on to the headlines. Despite the presence of some 120,000 US troops  (and 100 or so British naval trainers who were recently let back into the  country) Iraq appears to be old news. In many people's minds it is yesterday's  conflict; the surge was a success and the prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, is a  democratically mandated strongman who is bringing economic success to the  country -- or so the narrative goes. And as the instability thrives, Nouri depends upon US forces to prop him  up. Mohammed al Dulaimy and Hannah Allam (McClatchy Newspapers) explain, "U.S.  Marines arrived at the scene of Sunday's attack with Iraqi forces, in accordance  with a U.S.-Iraq security pact that requires American forces to coordinate with  their Iraqi counterparts before getting involved in combat or other operations.  Americans at the scene asked Iraqi security guards for surveillance videos from  buildings in the area, and investigators took soil samples and carted off pieces  of twisted metal." The US government has attempted to call the assault a  "terrorist" attack -- it's a war.  All sides could be labled "terrorists."  That  would inclue the US which bombed and raided Iraq for the last six years and  counting. It was an attack, it was an assault.  It was not "terrorism."  It was  an attack which took place in an ongoing war and was most likely aimed at a  government installed by foreigners and made up of Iraqi exiles who spent most of  the last decade living abroad.  Wamith al-Kassab (MideastYouth) ponders the  bombings: what just happened? Cause I watch the news every day ,and I saw  Hilary Clinton give a speech on Iraq-American conference in Washington and she  was promising the Iraqi displace families that there will be efforts to return  them to Iraq as security improved , Almalky said in his speech in the same  conference that security in Iraq has improved and today Iraqi people can go  outside at night and drive safely to visit the holly shrines in Najaf ( Iraqi  leaders measure security by the times when people get killed visiting holly  shrines and days when people can go safely ,which brings us to bigger question ,  is security in Iraq related to shiaa visits to shrines or it is a whole state  security?)             yes , the Iraq I left after working for 7 years in medical camps  for refugees ,was a safe place ,I mean it was not totally safe , cause there is  few nasty bad boys who usually beats the hell of journalists in the middle of  the streets ,and threats to kill you cause you post some bloges on human rights  every now and then , and yes ,if I return today my chances is zero to go out of  Baghdad airport alive ,but come on ,I am only 1 person and this is small  terrorist attacks that should not effect the magnificent large picture of  security change in Iraq ,we had 600,000 Iraqi soldiers most of them trained in  Jordan ,Kurdistan ,few went to USA ,all of them were train by Americans ,we had  security companies( they work to protect the VIP only ,but any way we had ones)  ,we bought armed cars ,we bought weapons ,we had police forces ,the support  forces from Sunni ( waking councils) ,we had beshmerka ( Kurdish army which  sometimes goverment say they are militia ,others time they are official army)  ,we had small armies for each party in Iraq ,we had many people who carry guns  and I do not know why ,just I know you do not whanna mess with them.               So we had allot of people who formed check points with metal and  weapons and explosive detectors devices ,we had concrete walls all over Baghdad  and we had traffic jam because of the check points has to check each car to  prevent terrorist from attacking the innocent Jane Arraf (Christian Science Monitor) reports, "On  Monday, streets around the devastated buildings remained closed to traffic. The  blasts sheared the front off the Justice and Municipality ministry buildings,  leaving floors caving under collapsed ceilings." Gina Chon (Wall St. Journal)  adds that  "Iraqi police and soldiers were carrying out intense searches at checkpoints"  today. Violence continued today in Iraq. Bombings? Laith Hammoudi (McClatchy Newspapers)  reports a Karbala suicide car bombing which claimed the life of the driver  and 4 civilians leaving fourteen more people injured, a Mosul sticky bombing  which wounded one person and a Falluja roadside bombing which injured four  people. Shootings?  Laith Hammoudi (McClatchy Newspapers)  reports  1 Turkoman shot dead in Mosul. Reuters drops back to Sunday to note that 2 people were shot  dead (two more injured) in Mosul. Kidnappings? Laith Hammoudi (McClatchy Newspapers)  reports  1 "young boy" kidnapped in Kirkuk. Corpses? Laith Hammoudi (McClatchy Newspapers)  reports  1 corpse was discovered in Kirkuk  (man who had been kidnapped Saturday). We'll move over to Canada to note, as requested, Krystalline Kraus (Rabble) reporting on US  War Resister Rodney Watson: The latest flashpoint in the battle to keep war resisters in Canada  has been the case of Rodney Watson who on Monday October 19, 2009, decided  to seek  sanctuary in a B.C. [British Columbia] church rather than face  deporation to the United States to face desertion charges.  Watson, who is originally from Kansas City,  Kansas, enlisted  in the US Army in 2004 for a three-year contract with the intentions of becoming  a cook since he wanted to serve the troops in a non-combat  capactiy. In 2005, he was deployed to Iraq just north of Mosul, where he was  put in  charge of searching vehicles and Iraqi civilians for explosives,  contraband and weapons before they entered the base. He was also expected to "keep  the peace" by monitoring Iraqi civilians who worked on  the base and fire his weapon at Iraqi children who approached the perimeter. When he was informed he was being deported, Rodney sought asylum at the  church. Earlier this month, Stig Nielsen (Metro  Vancouver) reported: Rodney Watson of Kansas City had just returned from a deployment in Iraq in 2006 when the U.S. army extended his contract for three years. Watson said he felt he had served his time and that he wasn't about to go back to a war he doesn't agree with. "The main thing was the disrespect for the people -- some guys would have a bad day and they would just beat up on some Iraqi civilians," Watson said. He deserted three years ago and crossed the border into Canada, where he fell in love and became a father. The 31-year-old is at First United Church on Hastings Street in Vancouver where he's been granted asylum since September. Camille Bains (Canadian Press) reported that he was ordered deported September 11th: Ric Matthews, lead minister of First United Church in Vancouver, said the board and the congregation support Watson. Matthews said he met Watson at a rally organized on his behalf by the War Resisters Support Campaign and that Watson later approached him about staying at the church. "There will be an effort to try and help create the momentum for something constructive to come out of this," he said. "I think the United Church in general, beyond just us, would now be working through some of our people who have experience in working with refugee claims and in engaging with government in conversation." Matthews said Watson's fiancee and son often visit him at the church, which provides daily meals for people in need. Back to Iraq. On the latest installment of Inside Iraq (Al  Jazeera) which began broadcasting Friday (streams online as well), Jasim  al-Azzawi explored the conflict of 'help' and enrichment by examining the  apparent conflicts of interests which have ensnared  Peter Galbraith. Jasim al-Azzawi: When Norway's most respected financial newspaper,  Dagens Noeringsliv, covered the activities of a small, Norwegian oil  company called DNO operating in northern Iraq, no one expected  subsequent investigations to implicate the former US politician Peter Galbraith.  Ambassador Galbraith is now suing DNO for a quarter of a billion dollars because  the Kurdistan Regional Government has squeezed him out of his 5% stake in the  company. What is more devastating for Iraq is the role Mr. Galbraith played as a  political consultant to the KRG writing Iraq's Constitution in a way that can  only be described as a potential ticking time bomb. This story has all the marks  of dual loyalty, betrayal and international intrigue. [. . .] I am now joined  from Oslo by Terje Erikstad, a financial news editor at Dagens Naeringsliv and  from London by Sabah al-Mukhtar, president of Arab Layers Association in London.  And we were also supposed to be joined by Mohammad Ihsan, Minister for  Extra-Regional Affairs of the KRG but unfortunately we were informed at the last  minute that he fell sick and cannot join the program. Sabah and Terje, welcome  to Inside Iraq. Terje, let me start with you.  Were you surprised to discover  that the name of Mr. Peter Galbraith, former US Ambassador to Croatia and a  leading figure in Washington, he had a 5% stake in the DNO?  Terje Erikstad: Yes, indeed we were very much surprised because it  all started with a Norwegian company being fined by the Oslo stock exchange. And  we started working on this case as an ordinary conflict between a company on the  stock exchange and the stock exchange.  And it ended up with Peter Galbraith  owning oil interests or having oil interests in Kurdistan. That was very  surprising for us indeed.  Jasim al-Azzawi: Sabah, who is Peter Galbraith? Set the situation  for us. Sabah al-Mukhtar: Galbraith is a professor of international  politics in the USA. He was an ambassador in a variety of capacities -- in  Croatia and Afghanistan. He was advisor to the US government. He was a man who  was being paid a salary by the government of the United States of America. He  was at the same time being paid a salary by the Kurdish government as an  advisor. And at the same time, he was taking money from a company which is going  to apply for oil in Iraq. He has been instrumental in assisting the Americans  and the Kurds to produce a Constitution for Iraq which is a designer made  country, which is a failed state, to install a government and a regime there  that has been looking after the interests of-of Mr. Galbraith. And this reminds  us and reminds the listeners and the viewers that this is again history  repeating itself. In the past, there was a Mr. [Calouste] Gulbenkian -- Mr. 5%  -- during the Ottoman Empire who had five-percent of the oil of Iraq and now we  have this man having a 5% interest in the Kurdish area -- in Tawke field in  particular -- but now they seem to have turned the table on him. That's why he's  on an arbitration course with them.   Jasim al-Azzawi: If that is the case, Terje, explain to me how come  in a very lengthy explanation and justification by the Minister of Natural  Resources of the KRG, Mr. Ashti Hara, at the website of the KRG.org, he  mentioned what happened, the genesis of the story of DNO and its operations in  Kurdistan for almost five, six pages and yet the name of Peter Galbraith has not  been mentioned even once.  How do you explain that?    Terje Erikstad: Because Peter Galbraith was a secret partner with  the Norwegian company you mentioned, DNO International, and this company had two  secret partners in their exploration in Kurdistan. The interest of Mr. Galbraith  was hidden behind the company name -- behind the company named Porcupine and  this Porcupine is incorporated in one of the states in the USA, Deleware, and it  was very difficult to know about his identity. We found it through the company  registry and it was all hidden, it was -- He is in a conflict with the DNO  because the Kurdish government did not recognize his interests when the new oil  law was applied to this field, the Tawke field in Kurdistan. And he is now in an  arbitration process with DNO. And it was all kept secret until we found out  the-the identity of the company in this arbitration process and the man behind  it, Mr. Galbraith. The Kurdish government say that they know nothing about this  but that is very difficult to understand. Jasim al-Azzawi: Indeed it is very difficult to understand. Sabah  al-Mukhtar, if you were Peter Galbraith, here's a man who spent the better part  of almost four years consulting and advising the KRG.  He shepparded them  through the lengthy process of the Constitution writing. He insterted some very  important clauses to the benefit of the KRG regarding the relationship between  Baghdad and Irbil, regarding the oil law, regarding the peshmerga, regarding  their territorial authorization.  And yet, at the very last minute, they  squeezed him out and they crossed him and the five-percent that he was banking  on never materialized.  Sabah al-Mukhtar:  Well I think this is a -- when you have, when  you have a dispute between the forty thieves of Baghdad that's what you end up  with. You end up with disclosures that I think this is going to run a little  more. Galbraith at the present moment has a problem with the KRG but I think  within the KRG itself there are a variety of individuals who may have interests  vested interests, who may have conflict of interests and that is part of the  problem. But to go back to what Galbraith did, in the Constitution, he's the one  who instigated the idea that a federation is set up in Iraq, but based on  ethnicity which is not the concept of federal government He has encouraged the  Kurds and insisted on having the local government -- the local government having  priority over the federal government. He has given the local government the  final say. He's given the oil rights to the regional government rather than the  federal government. He has assisted them in drafting the Constitution which by  any stretch of imagination could not be accepted as a proper Constitution to the  extent that there is Article 142 of the Constitution which called for a revision  and review of that Constitution within four months which -- until now -- they  have failed to do.  He then -- he assisted them in working on the idea, what's  called "the land grab" -- i.e. taking areas which were not within the regional  government of Kurdistan to be part of Kurdistan so that he can have the oil. He  has encouraged them to have the -- the type of contract that he signed with them  but then subsequently the problem with the federal government and the regional  government stopped that contract from going on and I think, for reasons I don't  know, there is, they have fallen out. Having paved the way for them to set up  this arrangement, he now stands to lose the money but I think he's a man who has  been working on conflict of interests on a variety of levels from the USA to  Iraq, to the politics, to the Kurdish government and at the same time working  for a company which is going to contract with the Kurdish government and this is  an extreme case of conflict of interest which I think amounts to an illegal act  but I think this is a matter for the US to deal with.  Picking back up on "in a very lengthy explanation and justification by the  Minister of Natural Resources of the KRG, Mr. Ashti Hara, at the website of the  KRG.org, he mentioned what happened, the genesis of the story of DNO and its  operations in Kurdistan for almost five, six pages and yet the name of Peter  Galbraith has not been mentioned even once"?  Jasim al-Azzawi appears to be  referring to the letter from Dr. Ashti Hawrami to DNO ("Subject: Causing Serious  Harm to KRG Reputation") that the KRG posted -- in PDF format -- September 21st.  The KRG has now removed the letter from their website. You can find a copy of it  (PDF format warning) here. The letter was quoted from in the September 22nd snapshot. We'll note this from Sherwood Ross' "U.S. FORCIBLY DEPORTED ISLANDERS AND GASSED THEIR  DOGS TO MAKE WAY FOR DIEGO GARCIA MILITARY BASE" (Veterans Today): In order to convert the sleepy, Indian Ocean island of Diego Garcia into a dominating military base, the U.S. forcibly transported its 2,000 Chagossian inhabitants into exile and gassed their dogs. By banning journalists from the area, the U.S. Navy was able to perpetrate this with virtually no press coverage, says David Vine, an assistant professor of anthropology at American University and author of "Island of Shame: the Secret History of the U.S. Military on Diego Garcia (Princeton University Press)." "The Chagossians were put on a boat and taken to Mauritius and the Seychelles, 1,200 miles away, where they were left on the docks, with no money and no housing, to fend for themselves," Vine said on the interview show ""Books Of Our Time," sponsored by the Massachusetts School of Law at Andover. "They were promised jobs that never materialized. They had been living on an island with schools, hospitals, and full employment, sort of like a French coastal village, and they were consigned to a life of abject poverty in exile, unemployment, health problems, and were the poorest of the poor," Vine told interview host Lawrence Velvel, dean of the law school. Their pet dogs were rounded up and gassed, and their bodies burned, before the very eyes of their traumatized owners, Vine said. "They were moved because they were few in number and not white," Vine added. The U.S. government circulated the fiction the Chagossians were transient contract workers that had taken up residence only recently but, in fact, they had been living on Diego Garcia since about the time of the American Revolution. Merchants had imported them to work on the coconut and copra plantations. Vine said the U.S. government induced The Washington Post not to break a story spelling out events on the island. "Through Diego Garcia," Vine pointed out, "the U.S. can project its power throughout the Middle East, and from East Africa to India, Australia and Indonesia. With Guam, the island is the most important American base outside the U.S." He said U.S. bases now number around 1,000, including 287 in Germany, 130 in Japan and Okinawa, and 57 in Italy. | 







 
