| Monday, July 26, 2010.   Chaos and violence continue, Iraq is slammed by bombings. London is slammed by  the truth as a government official explains how he was censored before the Iraqi  Inquiry, Wikileaks refuses to censor reality and does another document release,  a peace conference is held over the weekend in the US, WBAI's Taking Aim  prepares to devote the hour (tomorrow, 5:00 p.m. EST) to the case of political  prisoner Lynne Stewart, and more.     Iraq is slammed by violence today proving that Democratic  Governors are Democratic Liars. Splash a wave of Operation Happy Talk and  prepare to get punked. So the fools today are Governor Jim  Douglas, Governor Deval Patrick (aka Governor Who?), Governor Tim Pawlenty,  Governor Jay Nixon and Governor Mike Rounds. Those fools, some of  whom are up for re-election, honestly thought Iraq would be stable enough for  their photo-ops. CNN reports a suicide  car bombing in Baghdad today targeting al-Arabiya TV. Al Jazeera notes,  "Initial reports said six people were killed in the attack in Baghdad's western  Harithya area, but the channel's report put the death toll  at four - three security guards and a cleaning lady. A Bangladeshi office  assistant was also missing." If you're wondering about the numbers or the Saudi  backed network, AFP covers what the others are  missing, "Al-Arabiya closed its Baghdad office in June citing government  warnings of a threat of insurgent attack." Aseel Kami, Suadad al-Salhy, Rania El Gamal  and Mark Heinrich (Reuters)  report that the mini-van exploded "close to the entrance of Arabiya's  office" and that ten people were injured.  Make no mistake that the attack on a  TV station -- in Baghdad, no less -- is bad enough.  But it didn't end there,  does it ever? 
 BBC News reports twin car bombings in Karbala have claimed at  least 20 lives. Reuters adds that fifty-four were  injured. AFP notes 21 dead and sources that to  Karbala's health directorate Salim Kadhim who states, "Most of the killed and  wounded are policemen and civilians."   March 7th, Iraq concluded Parliamentary elections. Three  months and two days later, still no government. 163 seats are needed to form the  executive government (prime minister and council of ministers). When no single  slate wins 163 seats (or possibly higher -- 163 is the number today but the  Parliament added seats this election and, in four more years, they may add more  which could increase the number of seats needed to form the executive  government), power-sharing coalitions must be formed with other slates, parties  and/or individual candidates. (Eight Parliament seats were awarded, for example,  to minority candidates who represent various religious minorities in Iraq.) Ayad  Allawi is the head of Iraqiya which won 91 seats in the Parliament making it the  biggest seat holder. Second place went to State Of Law which Nouri al-Maliki,  the current prime minister, heads. They won 89 seats. Nouri made a big show of  lodging complaints and issuing allegations to distract and delay the  certification of the initial results while he formed a power-sharing coalition  with third place winner Iraqi National Alliance -- this coalition still does not  give them 163 seats. They are claiming they have the right to form the  government. It's four months and five days and, in 2005, Iraq took four months  and seven days to pick a prime minister. It's now 4 months and 19  days. No government. This is what the 5 governors tried to sell as 'success.'  They should be forced to explain the 'success' they saw and list all  prescription medicines they are currently taking.  Sunday,Arwa Damon (CNN)  quotes Ayad Allawi calling for Nouri al-Maliki to step down: "I think  he should acknowledge also that the transformation, the transfer of power, is  very important in this country -- the peaceful transfer of power. It is only  fair for our people to stick to the procedures of the elections and the results  of the elections."  Allawi's call for Nouri to step down follows Senator John  Kerry's publicly expressed concern last week (see the July 21st "Iraq  snapshot," ) that Nouri may have no  intention of stepping down.  Over the weekend,  Andrew Lee Butters (Time  magazine) weighed in on the statemate:
 
 Instead, Maliki and Allawi are playing factional  politics, negotiating with avowedly sectarian or ethnically oriented groups in  search of a majority coalition. Maliki has united with the conservative Islamist  Shi'ite parties that favor more autonomy for Shi'ite majority southern Iraq,  though he still doesn't have enough votes to form a government because radical  cleric Muqtada al Sadr, who controls the largest faction within the Shi'ite  coalition, refuses to accept Maliki staying on as prime minister. For his part,  Allawi is flirting not only with Sadr (on Monday, the two men met in Damascus  and called for Maliki to step aside) but also the Kurds. This is surprising  because Allawi and the Kurds were major rivals during the election and remain  ideological opposites. (Allawi favors centralization in Baghdad, while the Kurds  want more autonomy for Kurdish northern Iraq.)
 
 
   On the most recent Inside Iraq (Al Jazeera,  began airing Friday), Jasim Azawi spoke with Iraqiya's Saleh al-Mutlaz and  one-time fly-over jounralist to Iraq Patrick Cockburn of the Independent of  London -- professional groupie whose face appears to indicate -- I'm not joking  -- he needs to see a doctor for a full check up.  He can do that or not, I don't  give a damn, but I did toss it out.  Early on, Jasim noted the targeting of  Iraqiya which has led to the deaths of at least 2 Iraqiys members of Parliament  and many other candidates and party members.     Saleh al-Mutlaz:  Well to decide who's killing these people because until now the government has  not found or given any evidences on who is killing those people so we have to go  to the objectives of those people. Who has the objective to create chaos and  instability in Iraq and who has the objectives to ban people from going to the  election -- either by killing them or by isolating them.  You will find out that  the only country who is doing that is Iran.  And if you want an explanation for  that,  -- we will -- we will go on and explaining why we think it is  Iran.   Jasim Azawi: So  you point to the figure of Iran.  Let me see, first of all, if Patrick will  accept that explanation or he has a different reasoning for that. Go ahead,  Patrick.   Patrick Cockburn:  I think it's very doubtful that it's Iran behind it.  One can never be sure in  Iraq, obviously.  I think it's much more likely that it's al Qaeda in Iraq.   They opposed the election, they assassinate people, they have a motive here.  I  don't see why the Iranians should want to eliminate uh-uh members of Iraqiya.  So, you know, you can never be certain in Iraq because such is the level of  violence but I think it's much more likely that al Qaeda is behind these  killngs.   Jasim Azawi:  Before I go back to Dr. Saleh al-Mutlaz, let me ask you then, if it is al Qaeda  behind these assassinations and assassination attempts, how come it is somehow  limited to the Iraqiya list?  Definitely they cannot reach Kurdistan, there is  nothing against the Kurds, but also, for instance, the State of Law or the  National Iraqi Alliance have not been assassinated.  Why al-Iraqiya per  se?   Patrick Cockburn:   Well, it's easier, I think, in Sunni areas for them to kill them. You know it  could be difficult for al Qaeda to go and kill somebody in Nasiriya or in  Basra.  That's one of the reasons for thinking it's al Qaeda who's doing it.   Likewise, you know, attacks in Mosul, it's unlikely that the Iranians will be  able to do that there or have proxies able to do that for them  there.   Jasim Azawi: You  pointed the finger at Iran, Saleh al-Mutlaz.  Now it's your chance to explain,  perhaps at length, what you mean by that.     Saleh al-Mutlaz:  Well what's happening in Iraq is definitely an external agent. So who has the  benefit from that?  Let us name those who have the agenda in Iraq and they are  external.  One is the United States. Two is the Arab countries.  Third is  Turkey.  Fourth is Israel.  Fifth is Iran.  The United States has no interest  now to create chaos and instability in Iraq because they want to leave and they  want stable Iraq before they leave. The Arab countries, historically they  benefitted a lot from a stable Iraq. Turkey has always benefitted from a strong  and stable Iraq and they had huge amount of money delivered to Iran through the  good relations between a stable Iraq and Turkey. You go to Israel, Israel has  already done -- has already done what they wanted. They removed the regime, they  made a weak Iraq which doesn't show any danger to them. So I think they had done  in Iraq more than they wanted and they have stated that many times. The only one  which is left is Iran. Iran has objectives to destabilize Iraq for many reasons.  Historically, they have the revenge on Iraq. If you go to the -- also the  benefit from that to the Iranian side, they want a weak Iraq because they are  demanding compensations for what happened during the war. And they can only get  that through a weak Iraq. When Iraqi is strong, they cannot get what they came  for. And if you look also at the targets, the victims, who are they? They are  the previous pilots who fought Iran, they are the previous politicians and the  previous mililtary.  They are the one who has a national trend and they want to  have a country which is led by a non-sectarian government.  Iran's always wanted  a sectarian government in Iraq and they want a weak Iraq.  To answer Mr.  Patrick, about al Qaeda, I agree with him, it is al Qaeda.  But who is  supporting al Qaeda? The support of al Qaeda?  We have evidences that the  training is being done in Iran and also if you look at the weapons, the  explosives that are being used in Iraq --    And we'll stop  there. (Jasim tossed to Cockburn at that point anyway.)  Cockburn's convinced  that al Qaeda in Iraq is the solution-answer to everything, isn't he?  But if  Sahwa can be targeted throughout the region -- with the press forever blaming al  Qaeda in Mesopotamia -- why can Iraqiya?  It makes no sense.  Nor does  pretending motive doesn't matter.  It's a good think Cockburn works in the world  of fiction because he'd never make it anywhere that didn't require a huge  suspension of disbelief.  ("Fiction" is writing that a woman who was stoned to  death was, for example, "hanged.") We're repeatedly told -- including by  Cockburn before Nouri taught him the meaning of that last name -- that al Qaeda  in Mesopotomia is a rag-tag, tiny faction.  And yet it allegedly does all this  damage repeatedly.  So which is it?  Or do conflicting storylines not bother  Paddy Cockburn who appears to suffer from some mistaken belief that he's writing  the show bible for EastEnders?  That's not fair -- EastEnders' plot  lines are far more believable than Patrick Cockburn's writings.  Sultan al-Qassemi (Lebanon's Daily  Star) writes of his belief that the political  stalemate is a dire portent for Arabs: "Maliki has displayed tendencies usually  associated with Arab dictators. Even before his refusal to give up power, Maliki  is said to have appointed senior military and intelligence officials without  going through the parliamentary approval process one normally associates with a  democracy. Prior to the Iraqi elections, The Times of London reported that  Maliki had taken a series of measures to consolidate even more power in his  hands. Maliki's lack of popularity in the Gulf is an open secret. Unlike the  popular Iraqi President Jalal Talabani and a host of other Iraqi politicians, he  has never been invited to Riyadh. Last November Maliki, confusing person with  state, declared on his website that 'all the signals confirm that the Saudi  position is negative regarding Iraqi affairs,' before adding, 'we have used up  [all] initiatives from our side'."  Meanwhile Sami Moubayed (Gulf News) explores  Moqtada al-Sadr's possible role as kingmaker, "The only leader able to tip the  balance in favour of either Allawi or Al Maliki is Al Sadr, who controls 40  seats in parliament. If he puts his weight behind Al Maliki's 89 MPs and the 30  MPs of the Iraqi National Alliance (INA), who are already his allies, the  incumbent premier would have 159 votes in parliament -- bringing him very close  to the majority of 163 required. If Al Sadr threw his weight behind Allawi, the  former prime minister would have 131 seats. With Sunni backing in parliament, he  too could get closer to the 163-seat majority required."     Iraq's rocked by violence and Iraq waves are felt around the  world.  Let's hop over to England where BBC News reports, "The Foreign Office (FO) has declined to comment on claims by a former  diplomat that it blocked key parts of his testimony to the Iraq Inquiry.  Carne  Ross, the UK's Iraq expert at the uN from 1997-2002, said the FO withheld  documents he requested, and warned him not to refer to a key memo."  Yesterday, Carne Ross' column  ran in the Observer and  we'll treat it as public testimony:
 
 After I was invited to testify, I was contacted by the  Foreign Office, from which I had resigned after giving testimony to the Butler  inquiry in 2004, to offer its support for my appearance. I asked for access to  all the documents I had worked on as Britain's Iraq "expert" at the UN Security  Council, including intelligence assessments, records of discussions with the US,  and the long paper trail on the WMD dossier.
 Large files were sent to me to peruse  at the UK mission to the UN. However, long hours spent reviewing the files  revealed that most of the key documents I had asked for were not  there.
 In my  testimony I had planned to detail how the UK government failed to consider, let  alone implement, available alternatives to military action. To support this I  had asked for specific records relating to the UK's failure to deal with the  so-called Syrian pipeline, through which Iraq illegally exported oil, thereby  sustaining the Saddam regime. I was told that specific documents, such as the  records of prime minister Tony Blair's visit to Syria, could not be found. This  is simply not plausible.
 I had also asked for all the Joint Intelligence  Committee assessments on Iraq, some of which I helped prepare. Of dozens of  these documents, only three were provided to me -- 40 minutes before I was due  to appear before the Chilcot panel.
 Playing by the rules, I had submitted my written  testimony to Chilcot before my appearance. In the hours before my appearance,  invited to visit the Foreign Office to see further documents (mostly  irrelevant), an official repeatedly sought to persuade me to delete references  to certain documents in my testimony.
 He told me that the Cabinet Office wanted the removal  of a critical reference in my evidence to a memo from a senior Foreign Office  official to the foreign secretary's special adviser, in which the official  pointed out, with mandarin understatement, that the paper sent that week to the  Parliamentary Labour Party dramatically -- and inaccurately -- altered the UK's  assessment of Iraq's nuclear threat.
 In a clear example of the  exaggeration of Iraq's military capabilities, that paper claimed that if Iraq's  programmes remained unchecked, it could develop a nuclear device within five  years.
 
 Carne Ross testified to the Iraq Inquiry  Monday, July  12th. Of the latest developments, Jamie Doward (Guardian) explains,  "Ross claims he was told his evidence must not refer to a memo from a senior  Foreign Office official. The memo, to the special adviser to the then foreign  secretary, Jack Straw, expressed concern that a briefing paper for the  parliamentary Labour party had 'dramatically' altered the assessment of Iraq's  nuclear threat. Ross says the 'paper claimed that if Iraq's programmes remained  unchecked, it could develop a workable nuclear device within five years. The  official's memo pointed out that this was not in fact the UK assessment, which  was more or less the opposite: that the UK believed that Iraq's nuclear  programme had been effectively checked by sanctions'." Ross writes Chris Ames (Iraq Inquiry  Digest) that the official response to his column  misses two key points: "- that I requested particular documents (including those  I wrote myself) and these were not provided me; - and that officials (from the  FCO but, they said, acting on behalf of the Cabinet Office) attempted to stop me  mentioning certain other documents, including the most damaging;". Henry Porter (Guardian) notes the  need for New Labour to purge itself of its Iraq War crimes:
    They believe they can finesse the  record, yet some things are so serious they cannot be forgotten or ignored –  Iraq, for example. Who doubts the truth of what Nick Clegg said when he classed the Iraq  invasion as illegal, while being needled by Jack Straw  as he stood in for David Cameron at prime minister's questions? Straw was at the  heart of the decision to go to war and it seems mildly surprising that he showed  his unembarrassed features in the Commons to confront Clegg just a day after the  former head of MI5, Dame Eliza  Manningham-Buller, gave her damning evidence to the Chilcot  inquiry.                    For an administration that made so  much of its intelligence about Saddam's threat to Britain, it is astonishing how  Blair's people ignored, or simply did not ask for, the advice of the head of  MI5, who stated that there was a very limited and containable threat from Iraq  and that there was "no credible intelligence that demonstrates that Iraq was  implicated in planning the 11 September attacks". Lady Manningham-Buller's  evidence was certainly useful but Carne Ross, the UK's expert on Iraq at the UN,  claims in his article today that documents are being held back from Chilcot by  the civil service and that the panel is in any case inept at cross-examination.  This is deeply troubling and seems to suggest that New Labour's corruption  entered, and apparently still remains, in Whitehall.   Forget slippery Jack. He is  irredeemable. But on Iraq the four younger men aiming for the leadership surely  could do more than shuffle their feet, mimic Blair's evasions and say they  weren't sitting members, or in the cabinet at the time. One or more needs to  come out with it and say what went wrong and why New Labour practised the great  deceit on the British public, causing untold damage in Iraq and, as Lady  Manningham-Buller suggested, to our relations with Islam. Was it merely contempt  for the public? Or was it something buried deeper in the psyche of the Blair  generation, an exaltation in power – their own and that of others – which  allowed a few ministers to be impressed by America's might rather than by what  was right and reasonable? Again, I exclude Diane Abbott, a constant critic of  the war.                        UN weapons inspector Hans Blix is scheduled to testify to the  Inquiry tomorrow. Do you know what would be really embarrassing about the above  news if you were a writer in the US?  Insisting that Iraq was no longer an issue  in England.  Ah, poor stupid Amitabh Pal, always the loser, always the fool.  In  the US, the big news is the latest release of documents from a whistle blowing  organization?  Which one?  The only game in town.  Backstory,  Monday April  5th, WikiLeaks released US  military video of a July 12, 2007 assault in Iraq. 12 people were  killed in the assault including two Reuters journalists Namie Noor-Eldeen and  Saeed Chmagh. Monday June 7th, the  US military announced that they had arrested Bradley Manning and he stood  accused of being the leaker of the video. Philip Shenon (Daily  Beast) reported last month that the US government is attempting  to track down WikiLeaks' Julian Assange. Last week, the military charged  Manning. Leila Fadel (Washington  Post) reported earlier this month that he had been charged --  "two charges under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. The first encompasses  four counts of violating Army regulations by transferring classified information  to his personal computer between November and May and adding unauthorized  software to a classified computer system. The second comprises eight counts of  violating federal laws governing the handling of classified information."  Manning has been convicted enough and has made no public statements -- despite  any claims otherwise, he has made no public statements.  Over the weekend at the  National Peace Conference, a measure of support for WikiLeaks  and for Bradley -- if he is the whistleblower (and the statement notes that he  may or may not be) was passed. and signed by Veterans for Peace's Mike Ferner,  War Is A Crime's David Swanson and World Can't Wait's Elaine Brower and Debra  Sweet -- click here to read the measure at World Can't  Wait.  Space permitting we'll come back to the Conference later in the e-mail  but we also need to cover Lynne Stewart and a few other topics.  Sunday,  WikiLeaks released more documents, this time on Afghanistan.  Newsweek explains:     Two sources familiar with material currently in the  hands of Wikileaks, who asked for anonymity when discussing sensitive  information, said on Monday that the next subject to be featured in media  revelations based on documents leaked to Wikileaks was likely to be U.S. conduct  of the Iraq War. The sources indicated the type of material likely to be the  basis of anticipated forthcoming exposes would be similar to the military  reports -- many of them from U.S. military units operating in the field -- which  began to surface on Monday in reports published by The New York  Times, The Guardian newspaper of  London and the German newsmagazine Der  Spiegel regarding U.S. military  operations in Afghanistan and related dealings with authorities in Pakistan.    Due to the sensitivity of the material, the sources declined to discuss any  of the still-to-be-revealed documents about Iraq in detail. However, one of the  sources characterised the material as describing the involvement of U.S. forces  in a "bloodbath."
 
     The White House went into damage control yesterday and the  whole thing seemed like a throwback to the days of Tricky Dick. In fact, the  only thing missing might have been G. Gordon Liddy.  Today, he emerges.   George Stephanopoulos (ABC News -- link  has text and video) interviews him today and he condemns  the leak.  Of course, these days, his name is Adrian Lamo but a convicted felon  who tries to restyle as an uber-patriot will always be a G. Gordon Liddy and can  ABC News please explain since when a convicted felon -- with no national  security experience, please note, has any standing on this topic?  (That's  right, he doesn't.)  Wait!  Convicted felon?  Oh, I can't leave it at that.  Convicted felon and pervert.  If Adrian's going to continue whisper campaign --  and he did it again today to two reporters -- about Bradley Manning (floating  various supposed sexual revelations but doing so 'off the record' as Lamo  continues his efforts to poison the press against Bradley), then let's be very  clear that you don't get much more perverted than Adrian Lamo and, in fact, ABC  News should issue a warning to get children out of the room before they ever  show Lamo on the TV screens.  To 'cover' the WikiLeaks story, little Ezra Klein (Washington Post)  links to his cock-knocking buddy Spency Ackerman.  If  you gave as much verbal head to get ahead as Ezra did, you'd think you'd have  gotten further, don't you?  Like a male actor sleeping with Joel Schumacher who  then pulls strings to get the actor on the cover of Vanity Fair and  leaves the world pondering over a decade later how ___ became a so-called  'star,' Ezra's 'fame' (low-watt as it is) is all about the circle-jerk and he  was damn lucky that the Columbia School of Journalism has no ethics or morals  and refused to police their own.  So Ezra hopped in a hot tub with ___ and Ezra  became a CJR star, rewarded with lavish public praise and with multiple  links. (We're not implying sex, Ezra's too frightening to trade on sex.) That's  how a whore becomes a name -- even when it's just such a tiny name.  And that  whoring is what Ezra does today at the Washington Post whose reputation he  trashes in order to do a reach-around on his boy pal Spency.  Remember that --  at the Washington Post now, it's not about reporting.  It's about lying to  readers so that you can link to your friends who will then link back to you and  Ezra just knows no one will ever be the wiser.  Considering that Ezra's  Journolist was used to map out strategies and narratives, the Washington Post  should not be allowing him to link to his circle jerk buds.  But Spency has to  pay the bills!  And he's new to Wired!  And despite public statements, Wired  management is now nervous about Spencer due to the Journolist. See, whether or  not the strategy was implemented (it appears to have been implemented),  Spencer's suggesting that the way to shut down coverage of a story was to scream  "RACIST!" at people doesn't play well.  And Ezra decision to link-f**k Spency?  Even if doing so risks the repuation of the Washington Post which, for the  record, is not in the business of stifling debate by screaming "RACIST!" at  those it disagrees with. [Late to the party on Journolist?  See Hillary Is 44's   "Hillary Was  Smeared First - DailyCaller, Race-baiting JournoList, And DailyKos DailyKooks -  The Big Media/Big Blog Cartel," "'Call Them  Racists' - The New Racism And The Political Importance of JournoList JournoGate;  JournoLister Ben Smith's Delusions; And Scooter Libby" and "The  Barack Obama Campaign Started "Call Them Racist" - JournoList Followed - And A  Shocking 'Hooray For Tucker Carlson'!") and this week's edition of Third.     While Marcy [Winograd] provided the progressive  candidate's view of the media, Wendell Potter gave that of a former corporate  hack and a current whistleblower, Cohen that of a former television talking head  and current media critic and university professor, and the always brilliant John  Nichols laid out in concise detail the documented dying of the old media and the  lack of any birth, as of yet, of a new media that can replace it.  Here's Cohen:  Also on Saturday, we shared  notes in regional groupings, and I took part in the Southern one, where energy  was high and planning eager.  Southern progressives are on the move and planning a regional  conference, possibly in Atlanta.
 
 Sunday morning, we split up  along other lines, joining one or more of PDA's six Issue Organizing Teams:
 • End War and Occupation IOT: Norman  Solomon and Steve Carlson, table leaders
 • Healthcare for  All/Single-payer IOT: Donna Smith and Chuck Pennacchio, table leaders
 • Stop  Global Warming/Environmental IOT: Laura Bonham, table leader
 • Accountability  and Justice IOT: Susan Harman and David Swanson, table leaders
 • Amend to  Suspend Action Group  (opposing corporate personhood): Dave Keeler, table leader
 • Immigration  Reform Action Group: Dan O'Neal, table leader
 
 PDA is a major participant  in immigrant rights struggles in Arizona and wants everyone to watch for big  actions there on Thursday, July 29th.  Through the combination of two groups  into a single meeting, and by running down the hall, I was able to take part in  three of the meetings.  Each group laid plans for the coming months, assigned  roles, and jumped to work, including taking on this week's expected House vote  on war escalation funding.  At the same time, some of PDA's key anti-war leaders  were attending and playing a leading role in a huge and hugely successful  national peace  conference in Albany, NY.  The peace  movement is joining forces with the labor and civil rights  movements this fall, and PDA is in the thick of that.  George Korn from  Rainbow PUSH was at the PDA Conference planning a campaign for Jobs, Justice,  and Peace with the United Auto Workers and  others.
 
  If those links don't work, go to his site.  In the e-mail they  were sent in, they're open (not closed) tags and I've had to log on to edit them  myself as we try to slim down the snapshot which is way too long.  But we're  including Lynne.  David has a note in his piece about PDA and I'm not trying to  spit on him by noting that I don't believe the answer comes from new members of  Congress.  They've tried that strategy over and over.  After giving his word  Dennis Kucinich -- the PDA poster boy -- still caved and stuck America with that  horrid ObamaCare -- which is not universal, single-payer and doesn't have the  weak-ass public option that little Harry Reid wanted to tell Nutroots Nation  this weekend they might get if they worked really hard.  Golly, Harry weren't  you the one elected, aren't you the member of the Senate, aren't you  the Majority Leader, shouldn't your candy ass be working instead of tossing your  responsibilites onto the voters?  Nutroots got covered, Swanson's gathering  didn't.  For that reason, we're including and if we had more space, we'd include  more of it.  But as repeatedly noted, I do not think that we do the same thing  over and over.  (And if Marcy Winograd ever actually wants to win a seat in  Congress, someone might try walking her through that.  She could have won this  year but she and her campaign did everything wrong.  To defeat Jane Harman,  Marcy needs to grasp, would mean losing a lot of pork Jane can provide via her  seniority.  Marcy needs to make clear to the voters how Marcy in Congress means  money for the district.  That was among the campaign's biggest mistakes. If she  runs in 2012, she and her campaign need to rectify that.)     Now for Lynne. Michael Steven Smith writes  "The Sentencing of Lynne  Stewart" at the Center for Constitutional  Rights:
 Lynne Stewart is a friend. She  used to practice law in New York City. I still do. I was in the courtroom with  my wife Debby the afternoon of July 19th for her re-sentencing. Judge John  Koeltl buried her alive.
 
 We should have seen it coming when he told her to take  all the time she needed at the start when she spoke before the sentence was  read. It didn't matter what she said. He had already written his decision, which  he read out loud to a courtroom packed with supporters. It was well crafted.  Bulletproof on appeal. He is smart and cautious.
 
 After about an hour into his  pronouncement, he came to the buried alive part. He prefaced it by citing the  unprecedented 400 letters of support people had sent him, all of which he said  he read. He noted Lynne's three decades of service to the poor and the outcast.  He stressed that she is a seventy-year-old breast cancer survivor with high  blood pressure and other serious health problems. And then he laid it on her:  120 months.
 
 Everyone in the courthouse divided 120 by 12. He had  given her a death sentence, we all thought. She'll never get out. He almost  quadrupled the 28 month sentence he had originally pronounced. She had told him  that 28 months was a horizon, that she had hope. But no more.
 
 Lynne's granddaughter gasped.  Then started sobbing. She kept crying even as Judge John Koeltl kept reading.  And reading. And reading. It was awful. The sentence was pitiless and cruel. How  to understand it?
 
 Lynne's lawyer Jill Shellow Levine rose after the  judge finished. She asked him why. He was candid. He was told to do it by his  supervisors, the judges on the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. This  court is an institution of the elite. It is considered the second highest court  in America next to the Supreme Court because it presides over the financial  center of the empire, not its capital, that is in D.C., but its real capital.  This court makes policy and Lynne Stewart was to be made an example of in "the  war against terrorism" just as a half a century before, in the same court, Ethel  and Julius Rosenberg were condemned to death in the war against communism, told  that they had caused the deaths of 50,000 U.S. soldiers in the Korean War, and  found guilty of the ridiculous charge of "stealing the secret" of the atomic  bomb, when there was no secret, it was only a matter of technology. The  sentencing Judge Kaufman knew they would leave behind two orphan children,  Robert and Michael, ages six and three.
 
 There's more,  use the  link. Michael Smith is a co-host -- with Michael Ratner  and Heidi Boghosian -- of Law &  Disorder (airs on WBAI Mondays and elsewhere around the country  throughout the week) which this week speaks with Vinie Burrows about the Lynne  Stewart case. Ralph Poynter is Lynne's husband. He made the following statement  last week.
 
 Ralph Poynter: Just a brief statement on Lynne  Stewart's sentencing. It's perjury, thy name is the United States government.  The president-elect begins lying when announcing candidacy only to reneg on  every promise. War, health care, Social Security, economy, etc. To excuse the  president, it is quoted, he must perjure him or herself to become president. It  is an understood and unstated American way, accepted perjury. When taking the  oath of office, the president swears to uphold the Constitution and then  proceeds to support the dismantling of the Constitution: The Patriot Act,  hypocritical perjury. In office, the president employs signing -- that is, after  signing a bill, signing a statement saying he will not abide by the bill.  Pre-meditated perjury. There's more perjury gone on in this administration in  these few years than all of the Bush administration. When Lynne Stewart was  attacked by the government for making a press release on the Sheik's behalf it  was revealed that other attorneys had made press releases as she did. The New  York federal prosecutor said they didn't know about them. The national federal  prosecutor said other lawyers should be charged and arrested. The Second Circuit  of Appeals said it was selective prosecution but they would not deal with it and  that Lynne Stewart should be further prosecuted and given a harsher sentence.  Prosecutorial perjury. Is there anyone on the planet who does not know that the  landmark [stage?] was hatched and planned for by the U.S. government with an  Egyptian operative named Emad Salem? Is there anyone on this planet who does not  know that the F.B.I. directed every step of the plot while promising unemployed,  hapless hangers on money to be involved this so-called plot? It was staged,  financed and filmed by the covert operative Emad Salem with constant oversight  by the F.B.I. They desired to credit the blind Sheik. The F.B.I. charged the  Sheik for not reporting the F.B.I. operative to the F.B.I. The blind Sheik  merely said, "I don't think this would be good for Islam and go pick another  target" -- never acquiesing to a plan of Emad Salem's. National security  perjury. The judge first rejected this case against Lynne Stewart as being  vague. The judge reversed himself and allowed the case to proceed. The judge  allowed Osama bin Laden in the case while saying it had only to do with the  state of mind of a third defendant. He allowed the massacre of Luxor in the case  -- I guess for dramatic effect -- although having nothing to do with the case.  Finally, I want to talk about the perjury on the part of the part of the  so-called progressive people who leap to embrace any and every petty accusation  made about Lynne Stewart. She is arrogant. She would like to think she would  support and defend the First Amendment, speech. She would like to think she  would defend the right for people to have an attorney. She is not remorseful.  And have people forgotten, have we forgotten bravery, courage, Patrick Henry,  John Brown, Harriet Tubman, Fannie Lou Hamer? Have we forgotten the principles  of Lynne Stewart -- the principles that she stood by for 50 years? Have we  forgotten who we claim to be? Progressive people, whose side are we on, brothers  and sisters? Let us remember John Paul Jones: We have not yet begun to fight.  Join us. Join Lynne. Join the struggle, the view of America that is inclusive  and the view that we think America should have and should  become.
 
 Ruth transcribed  that. And, as she noted, WBAI's Taking Aim this Tuesday (5:00  p.m. EST) is planning on using the full hour to discuss the case of Lynne Stewart (and Ralph's comment  can be heard on last week's Taking Aim, already archived).
     |