SECRETARY CLINTON: Good morning. Good morning, everyone. Well, today is a very positive day for Northern Ireland. Northern Ireland has taken another important step toward a full and lasting peace. Its political leaders have agreed on a roadmap and timeline for the devolution of policing and justice powers, and they’ve taken other productive steps as well. The accord they announced today will help consolidate the hard-won gains of the past decade.
Now, this has not been an easy road. There were plenty of bumps along the way. I have been in regular contact with the parties during the past year and, especially since my trip to Belfast in October, and I know that the way forward was far from clear. So I really want to applaud all of the parties for ultimately choosing negotiations over confrontation. In finalizing this deal, Peter Robinson and Martin McGuinness and their teams displayed the kind of leadership that the people of Northern Ireland deserve.
I want to recognize the leadership and the patient resolve of Prime Minister Brown and Taoiseach Cowen, as well as Northern Ireland Secretary Shaun Woodward and Irish Foreign Minister Micheal Martin. They have resolutely focused on moving this process forward, forging common ground, and reaching an outcome that will keep Northern Ireland on the path of peace and stability.
Now, this is not the end of the journey. So far, the devolution process has enabled Northern Ireland’s leaders to enact a range of needed reforms, from health to housing to environmental safety. Now they have even greater authority, and with that authority comes greater responsibility. They must continue to lead. The people of Northern Ireland are poised to build a thriving society on this stronger foundation – a country where neighbors can live free from fear and all people have the potential to fulfill their God-given rights.
This is a dream nurtured for so long in the hearts of people across Northern Ireland. It is also a dream that lives far beyond its borders, in countries and communities where ethnic and religious conflicts persist. This latest success in Northern Ireland points the way forward – and not only for this conflict. Northern Ireland gives us hope that, despite entrenched opposition and innumerable setbacks, diligent diplomacy and committed leadership can overcome generations of suspicion and hostility.
So, now we join the world in looking to the leaders of Northern Ireland to build upon their efforts by promoting a new spirit of cooperation among all of the parties. As they do, the United States will help. Our Economic Envoy, Declan Kelly, will continue working to help Northern Ireland reap the dividends of peace, including economic growth, international investment, and other new opportunities. In the near future, Declan and I will host First Minister Robinson and Deputy First Minister McGuinness here in Washington to discuss further investment in Northern Ireland and ways to build on this agreement.
I spoke very, very late in the evening in Northern Ireland with both Sean and Micheal and congratulated them, thanked them for their efforts. I spoke early this morning with both Peter and Martin and did the same, and also pledged our continuing support for their efforts.
So today, we salute this achievement. We recognize that a new chapter of partnership among Northern Ireland’s political leadership and people can now begin. And I am confident that the people of Northern Ireland will make the most of this moment. I want to reaffirm the commitment of the United States, and my personal commitment to support them in every way we can as they continue on this very positive path into the future.
So there's Ireland and I'm Irish-American so I do care about the issue and I also supported Hillary due to the work she and Bill did in Ireland. But somehow liars like Laura Flanders wanted to rob Hillary of her credit so I'll not the above and pay attention because that's Hillary's work. When the lying Flanders tries to rob her of her credit earned, remember you heard the truth when it was taking place.
I really hate Laura Flanders more and more each day. I think about how she just destroyed Hillary Clinton to pimp Barack and I think about how she's a Socialist and shouldn't have even stuck her damn British nose into our primary to begin with.
I will never forget that and I will never forgive those people.
Barack will probably declare war on Iran and when that happens watch the Flanders try to justify and excuse that as well. You know they will.
They're just liars. Just cheap ass liars.
I keep thinking about listening to that awful program of Flanders and hearing the back-in-the-closet lesbian acting shocked that Scott Brown, in college, posed for a magazine where he wasn't fully exposed. No one saw his penis, Laura, no one saw his nuts. If they had it would still be no big deal but Laura wants to act shocked by it, appalled. What a stupid self-loathing lesbian she is.
I'm so sick of her lies. I'm so sick of all of their lies. This is from Martin Finucane's Boston Globe article:
Republican Senator Scott Brown won't be distracted from the issues by negative attacks, a spokesman said today, a day after Representative Patrick Kennedy reportedly described Brown's candidacy as a "joke."
Maybe Patrick Kennedy is as obsessed with Scott Brown's penis as Laura Flanders is?You know what, how about you give him a chance to see what he's going to do? I remember that despite the fact that Barack was killing Pakistanis on his first day in office, everyone was saying, "Give him a chance! He hasn't had a chance!" But they want to rip apart Brown who was just sworn in yesterday?
Hey, Paddy, whether he's good or bad, Brown earned his seat. Unlike you. You used a family name and you really didn't manage much with that name, did you?
Brown may end up a nightmare but Ted Kennedy was as well. He loved to give his fiery speeches and then . . . do . . . nothing.
Oh, sure, sometimes he was active. Teaming up with Bush to give us the education killing No Child Left Behind.
If Brown is the devil reborn, he'll still be an improvement over Ted Kennedy and until Scott Brown kills a woman, he'll still be a better person than Ted Kennedy.
Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"
| Friday, February 5, 2010. Chaos and violence continue, Iraq is slammed  again with bombings resulting in mass fatalities, election chaos continues, was  Tuesday all a Democratic photo op, and more. Today, Iraq is again slammed with bombings resulting in mass fatalities. Fang Yang (Xinhua) reports, "Two car bombs went  off at the same time on a bridge named Wadil- Salam which is located east of  Karbala, 80 km south of Baghdad, an Iraqi interior ministry source told Xinhua.  The two cars loaded with heavy explosives were parked at the two ends of the  bridge respectively, said the source who refused to give his name." AFP  states it was a mortar bomb. Chelsea J. Carter (AP) reports it was a suicide car bombing  immediately followed by the mortar attack. CNN goes with two car bombings. The  Washington Post's Ernesto Londono (at the Financial Times of  London) explains, "Investigators were trying to determine whether there had  been one or two explosions." Skipping the specifics of the bombing types, Al Jazeera notes, "Al Jazeera has learned that  three Iraqi army vehicles were also destroyed in the attack."  This morning AP counted 27 dead thus far and at least  sixty injured. Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) also counted 27 dead  but 131 injured while noting that the numbers would likely rise throughout the  day -- which they did.  Muhanad Mohammed, Sami al-Jumaili, Michael Christie and Jon  Boyle (Reuters) report  the death toll has now reached "at least 40  people [dead] and wounded 145 others" according to "health officials". The US State Dept released the following statement from Secretary  of State Hillary Clinton: The United States condemns the series of bombing attacks against  Shi'a pilgrims in Iraq over the past week. Our thoughts and prayers are with the  victims and their families. Attacking men, women and children engaged in  religious pilgrimage is reprehensible and exposes the cynical immorality of the  terrorists who seek to replace Iraq's hard-won progress with violence and  intimidation. They will not succeed in breaking the will of the Iraqi people.  Iraqis are committed to realizing the promise of their democracy. There is no  better rebuke to those who traffic in terror. BBC News (link has text and a clip of the aftermath of the  bombings) offers, "The BBC's Gabriel Gatehouse in Baghdad says that the  stakes are high; a peaceful and credible election would allow the country to  draw a line underneath the bloodshed and turbulence of recent years, he says.  But, he adds, these recent bombings have raised fears of a return to sectarian  violence, just as American forces prepare to withdraw." Jane Arraf (Christian Science Monitor)  and Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) explain, "The  bombings play to the worst fears of Iraqi and US officials that attacks could  re-ignite the kind of sectarian violence that plunged this country into civil  war three years ago. They sparked anger even among security officers." Anthony Shadid (New  York Times) observes, "There was a sense of fatalism to the attacks,  one of dozens this week on pilgrims that the Shiite-led government had girmly  predicted but was powerless to stop.  The killings have underlined the very  meaning of the pilgrimage: a religious ritual to commemorate Imam Hussein, the  grandson of the prophet Mohammed whose death in the battlefield in Karbala in  A.D. 680 gave Shiite Muslims an ethos of suffering, martyrdom and resistance."   Sayed Mahdi al-Modaressi (The New Statesman)  explains:  For Shias, Hussein is the ultimate moral exemplar: a man who  refused to bow in the face of tyranny and despotism. Shias see his martyrdom as  the greatest victory of good over evil, right over wrong, truth over falsehood.  In the words of the Urdu poet Muhammad Iqbal: "Imam Hussein uprooted despotism  for ever till the Day of Resurrection. He watered the dry garden of freedom with  the surging wave of his blood, and indeed he awakened the sleeping Muslim nation  . . . Hussein weltered in blood and dust for the sake of truth." But why would all these people walk for hundreds of miles to  remember a painful event that took place over 13 centuries ago? Visitors to the  shrine of Hussein and his brother Abbas in Karbala are not driven by emotion  alone. They cry because they make a conscious decision to be reminded of the  atrocious nature of the loss and, in doing so, they reaffirm their pledge to  everything that is virtuous and holy.            The first thing that pilgrims do on facing his shrine is recite the  Ziyara, a sacred text addressing Hussein with due respect for his  status, position and lineage. In it, the Shia imams who followed him after the  massacre in Karbala instruct their followers to begin the address by calling  Hussein the "inheritor" and "heir" of Adam, Noah, Abraham, Moses and Jesus.  There is something profound in making this proclamation. It shows that Hussein's message of truth and freedom is viewed as an inseparable extension of that list of divinely appointed prophets. Pilgrims go to Karbala not to admire its physical beauty, or to shop, or to be entertained, or to visit ancient historical sites. They go there to cry. They go to mourn. They go to join the angels in their grief. They enter the sacred shrine weeping and lamenting. Liz Sly and Caesar Ahmed (Los Angeles Times) provide this context, "Overall, there have been eight suicide bombings in Iraq the past 11 days, targeting hotels and government buildings as well as pilgrims, in a sign that the Sunni extremist insurgency appears to be regrouping in an attempt to destabilize the country ahead of the March 7 election." In other reported violence . . . Bombings? Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) reports  a Baghdad  roadise bombing which claimed the life of 1 pilgrim and left fifteen more  injured. Shootings? Reuters notes 1 pilgrim was injured by a  Baghdad sniper shooting and that 2 police officers were shot dead in  Mosul. Kidnappings? Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) reports  Interior  Ministry employee Brig Gen Ali Ghalib was kidnapped last night in Baghdad. Corpses? Reuters notes 1 corpse was discovered in  Mosul ("kidnapping victim riddled with bullets").  The war that never ends. Jake Armstrong (Pasadena Weekly) notes  that Tuesday, February 2nd was the 2,405 day of the Iraq War and, using DoD  figures, notes 4,378 deaths of US service members in Iraq since the start of the  Iraq War. The elections and violence were discussed today on the second hour of  The Diane Rehm Show (NPR -- which is  archived and you can also podcast) when Diane spoke with Bryan Bender  (Boston Globe), Youchi Dreazen (Wall St. Journal) and Elise  Labott (CNN).  Diane Rehm: And now let's talk about Iraq and it's election  commison which has delayed start of campaigning for Parliamentary elections.   How come, Elise? Elise Labott: Well an Iraqi appeals court this week overturned an  effort to bar hundreds of candidates from upcoming elections. Many of these were  aligned with Saddam Hussein's former Ba'ath Party. Many of them were members of  Parliament to begin with, in previous elections [post-invasion, previous  elections] and they had already been vetted. But the ban, you know, really  threatened to disenfranchise Sunnis once again and open up possible sectarian  tensions that we've seen over the last few years. The court overturned this ban.  Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki had said, you know, no, that's fine, it's a  Constitutional -- it's unconstitutional to overturn the ban. And so now they've  postponed the elections [she means the start of campaigning for the  elections]. Diane Rehm: So what's that going to mean for the whole government,  Youchi? Youchi Dreazen: There's that wonderful line in [Francis  Ford Coppola's] The Godfather III where Al Pacino  says, "Every time I think I'm out, they pull me back in."  And the US, we've  thought that the war is over, that the violence has stopped, the sectarian  tensions are gone, Maliki's a strong leader, we can focus on something else and  pull our troops out. And what's been made clear over the last few weeks -- both  politically as Elise talked about but much more horrifically in terms of suicide  bombings, one of which destroyed our office -- the [Wall St.] Journal offices  and, of course, much worse, many human lives at the Hamra hotel in Baghdad where  I lived myself for close to two years. Diane Rehm: Really. Youchi Dreazen: The violence is back in force and what you're  seeing is the kind of syncronized attacks throughout Baghdad that you saw in the  worst days of '06, '07.  So this belief that we won was resting, basically, on  two pillars.  One, violence was gone. Two, sectarian tensions are gone. What  we're seeing now is that both are still back.  Bryan Bender: I think the seriousness with which these recent  developments are viewed in Washington was evident by the fact that Vice  President Joe Biden was sent to Iraq a couple of weeks ago in the wake of this  decision to bar these candidates because there's some real concern that the  longer the elections are delayed, the more this friction is there -- and the  violence increase, that you could see things unravel there.   On the elections, Leila Fadel and Aziz Alwan (Washington Post) report that the ruling --  which didn't clear the 500-plus candidates of charges, only stated the charges  would be evaluated after the election -- is questioned by the electoral  commission, will result in Little Nouri meeting with "the Presidency Council,  the parliamentary speaker and the top judge on the supreme court" and, if  needed, with Parliament Sunday. As Nada Bakri (New York  Times) points out, already the conflicting back and forth means that  election campaigning is now scheduled to start February 12th  and Bakri  observes: "The latest escalation in the dispute over who is permitted to run in  the elections has unsettled the political landscape. Iraqi law remains untested  and perhaps bereft of mechanisms to reach a solution just a month before the  vote."  Anne Barker (Australia's ABC) covers the issue here. Mu Xuequan (Xinhua) reports that the potential  Parliament meeting on Sunday is "an extra-ordinary session" Little Nouri is  calling and that, meanwhile, other avenues are being stopped such as yesterday  when "the seven-judge appeals panel postponed the review of the demands  submitted by some of the banned politicians to check their charges till after  the March 7 elections, giving a green light to the banned politicians to run in  the elections." Should Little Nouri succeed with the supreme court or the  Saturday meeting of the Sunday meeting, the banned candidates will once again  have to scramble in an attempt to run for office via appeals -- appeals which  have currently been stopped. Pakistan's The News reports  Iraq's Sunni Vice President Tariq al-Hashimi stated in DC yesterday, "The  decision taken by the appeal committee should be espected by all parties.  Hopefully, it will be debated in the parliament but at the end of the day I  think nobody (has) the right to block the decision taken by the committee."   Alsumaria TV breaks the news that Nouri's decrying the  decision as foreign interference and "State of Law Coalition political committee  held on Thursday an urgent meeting attended by head of Party Nuri Al Maliki. The  meeting discussed the appeals panel decision and political pressure and  interference in this regard."  The New York Times editorial  board offers the suggestion that Iraq 'get on' with the March 7th  election: Right now, Mr. Maliki and the Parliament should get on with the campaign. Instead of trying to keep competitors off the ballot, Iraq's leaders should be debating their country's many serious problems and telling voters how they will fix them. For Iraq to be stable and to thrive -- and for American troops to safely go home -- the candidate list, and the next Iraqi government, must represent all of Iraq's people. Following a request by the Iraqi Election Commission (IHEC), UNHCR  stands ready to facilitate the participation of Iraqi refugees living in the  countries neighbouring Iraq in the forthcoming elections. The 7 March elections  are considered to be a major opportunity to consolidate national  reconciliation.           As of December 2009, UNHCR had on its records some 300,000 Iraqis  who are believed to still be present in the region (including over 210,000 in  Syria), of whom close to 190,000 are of voting age. Based on host government  sources, the total number of Iraqis in the region is much higher, as hundreds of  thousands of Iraqis do not register with UNHCR for a variety of  reasons.                      In close cooperation with the competent Iraqi authorities and the  host governments, UNHCR's assistance will be limited to providing demographic  data on the registered Iraqis, informing them of their rights to participate in  the elections, and providing logistical support that may be needed for a smooth  and orderly election process.            Lachlan Carmichael (AFP): Just a quick reaction on the  charges against the 10 Americans in Haiti. And also if I may add, is the United  States studying the idea of withholding recognition of the Iraqi elections in  March if the 500 Sunni candidates are excluded?  The reason I ask is Vice  President Hashimi told a few of us State Department reporters last night that  that was the case. He raised it with you and he heard that you're stdying  it. US Secreaty of State Hillary Clinton: Well, first, Lachlan, on the  10 American citizens detained and now charged in Haiti, we are providing  consular services. We have full access to them. The American ambassador is  speaking with his counterparts in the Haitian Government. Obviously, this is a  matter for the Haitian judicial system. We're going to continue to provide  support, as we do in every instance like this, to American citizens who have  been charged, and hope that this matter can be resolved in an expeditious way.  But it is something that a sovereign nation is pursuing, based on the evidence  that it presented when charges were announced. With respect to Iraq, we were  heartened by the decision earlier this week to reverse the deletion of the 500  names from the election lists for the upcoming election. We care very deeply  that this election be free and fair and viewed by -- legitimate by all of the  communities within Iraq and by the neighbors. This is an extraordinary  opportunity for Iraqis to consolidate their democracy. We have not made any  decision about reacting to events that might occur within the context of the  elections, but we certainly were heartened by the court decision  earlier.  In a follow up, Clinton refused to speculate on what the position would be  if the 500-plus candidates were again banned and reiterated the support for the  appeals court decision  allowing all the candidates to run.  James Hider (Times of London) offers  this in terms of the mood and prospects: The stand-off does not bode well for a country where the security  gains of recent years are seen by a deeply traumatised population as fragile and  reversible. The streets are filled with heavily armed security forces but  suicide bombers manage to negotiate multiple checkpoints with  ease.                  Many analysts are unsure as to who will emerge victorious from the  elections, some touting the pro-Western former Prime Minister Ayad Allawi,  others believing that Mr al-Maliki may be able to pull together enough backing  for a second term. Waiting in the wings are the Shia Islamist blocs the Islamic  Supreme Council of Iraq and the Sadrists, with the former hoping that they can  clinch the prime minister's office. Meanwhile Josh Rogin (Foreign Policy) speaks to  the State Dept's Deputy Secretary Jack Lew who tells him the Dept will be  increasing their role in Iraq and a FY2010 supplemental request for $2.1 billion  has been made to raise the level of State Dept positions in that country to 664  by September 2010.  Speaking to the Senate Armed Services Committee on Tuesday  (this is me, not Rogin) and the House Armed Services Committee on Wednesday, US  Secretary of Defense Robert Gates repeated that State Dept was beefing up their  role in Iraq and, asked in the House why the Defense costs in Iraq have not come  down, he stated that the hand-over with the State Dept as well as handing things  over to Iraqis has resulted in the still large expenditures but that (for the  Defense Dept) they would decrease in FY2011. Yesterday's snapshot noted the US House Veterans  Affairs Committee hearing.    Wally, filling in for  Rebecca, noted Chair Bob Filner's joke to the Ranking Member  ("A hearing, a joke, a non-starting  election") and Trina provided an overview and critique of the hearing  ("The budget, our dollars"). Kat ("Collen Murphy wants the truth about daughter's  death") noted Staff Sgt Amy Seyboth Tirador died November 4th while  serving in Iraq. Jessica M. Pasko (Troy Record) reports that Colleen Murphy  believes "the military is covering up the real cause" of her daughter's death  and that the military is in the midst of 'creating' and 'amplifying' minor  issues in order to make the death appear a suicide. Collen Murphy stated, "No  one that knew Amy would believe that she'd ever commit suicide. In my opinion,  it was a set-up. It was premeditated, and it was the perfect set-up." Also in the news this week has been Don't Ask, Don't Tell which garnered a  great deal of media attention following Tuesday's Senate Armed Services  hearing.  For coverage, see Tuesday's "Iraq snapshot," Trina's "Senate Armed Services Committee DADT,"  Wally's "Armed Services Committee, Heroes," Kat's "Barack pretends to care about Don't Ask Don't Tell," Marica's "Not doing cartwheels right now," Betty's "Barack tries to trick big donors" and Marcia's "And they wonder why American voters are cyncial." Yesterday, James Hohmann (Politico) reported that US Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi is saying that actual voting on repeal of Don't Ask Don't Tell probably won't take place until November 2010 at the earliest -- doing little to dispell the critique that the whole thing was a song and dance effort by Democrats to trick Big Donors who have decided to Just Say No while the policy is Don't Ask, Don't Tell into donating again -- just in time for the mid-term fundraising. While Nancy and others may have time for fun and games, there are people's lives at stake here -- people who've put their lives on hold, people who dream of getting back into the military and people who fear being outed and kicked out of the military. NPR's Ina Jaffee (Morning Edition, link has audio and text) tells the stories of veterans like Julianne Sohn who was a ramine until she was kicked out under the Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy and she says, "Serving my country was a huge honor, and I was willing to sacrifice my personal life to go into the Marine Corps. [. . .] I was out to some of my close friends . . . these are lieutenants and captains . . . but a lot of them didn't care. All that really matters is getting the job done." In London, the Iraq Inquiry resumes public hearings Monday when they are  scheduled to hear from Gen John McColl followed by (in a return appearance) Jack  Straw. Hearings concluded for the week on Wednesday but might as well have stopped on Tuesday after Clare Short's testimony to judge by  the media's focus (that would be non-US media since US media has largely ignored  the hearings).  Last Friday, Tony Blair testified and those not  talking about just Clare Short were often also talking about Tony Blair. Peter Biles (BBC News) covers Short's Tuesday testimony today,  "She swept into the QEII Centre on the arm of one of the officials, but the  former international development secretary needed no help. She had come, not for  her day in court exactly, but to place on record an outpouring of anger that has  been festering for the past seven years."  Alan Cowell (New York Times) offers a  column on Blair's testimony. Unlike Cowell, Dan Milmo (Guardian) notes today how  Blair was heckled last week. Blair's inane testimony was called out by Short  (called out and corrected by Short) and there's been other developments this  week. As noted in Wednesday's snapshot: ". . . Elfyn Llwyd on Clare  Short's assertion that Blair was frantic to support the US.  Tomas Livingstone (Wales News) reports  MP Elfyn Llwyd has stated that the the 2002 Crawford ranch meeting  is where  Blair and Bush agreed to go to war -- no hesistations, no  ifs, just to go to  war.  He tells Livingstone that a memo exists noting this agreement and that he  will gladly testify before the Inquiry eitehr in private or in person." Today BBC News reports:  The leader of Plaid Cymru's MPs has said he has a memo showing Tony Blair and George Bush struck a secret deal to invade Iraq a year before the 2003 war. Elfyn Llwyd told the BBC's Straight Talk he had written to Iraq  Inquiry chair Sir John Chilcot to say he would be prepared to hand the document  over.    He said the memo, which is marked "Top Secret and Confidential"  contradicted statements made by Mr Blair.    TV notes. NOW on PBS begins airing Friday on most PBS  stations (check local listings): Has the Democratic Party abandoned support of reproductive rights? Next on NOW. To gain their historic control of Congress, Democrats fielded moderate candidates who didn't always follow the party line, especially when it came to abortion. Now that the Democratic Party has the legislative upper hand, are they willing to negotiate away reproductive rights for other political gains? On Friday, February 5 at 8:30 pm (check local listings), NOW goes to Allentown, Pennsylvania to ask: Are abortion rights now in jeopardy at the very hands of the party that has historically protected them? Among those interviewed are pro-life Democratic U.S. Representative Bart Stupak and former DNC Chairman Howard Dean. "If there was a bill on the floor to reverse Roe vs Wade, and says 'life begins at conception,' I would vote for it." Congressman Stupak tells NOW. Jen Boulanger, director of the often-protested Allentown Women's Center, says, "I would expect more from the Democratic Party, to stick to their ideals, not just throw us to the curb." Has the Democratic Party traded principles for power? Next on NOW. Staying with TV notes, Washington Week begins airing on many PBS stations tonight (and throughout the weekend, check local listings) and joining Gwen are Jackie Calmes (New York Times), Michael Duffy (Time magazine), Martha Raddatz (ABC News) and Pete Williams (NBC News) . Meanwhile Bonnie Erbe will sit down with Andrea Pennington, Tara Setmayer and Patricia Sosa to discuss the week's events on PBS' To The Contrary. Check local listings, on many stations, it begins airing tonight. And turning to broadcast TV, Sunday CBS' 60 Minutes doesn't air this Sunday but returns February 14th. | 
 
