|     | Friday, August 6, 2010.  Chaos and violence continue, the political  stalemate continues, 2 US service members died Monday but no one wanted to  'cramp' Barack's style by announcing it, and more.   Jaimee Lynn Fletcher (Orange County  Register) reports 300 soldiers with the California National Guard's  1-140th Aviation (Air Assault) Battalion deploy to Iraq this weekend.  "Air  Assault" -- doesn't sound like non-combat forces.  And they're "also known as  Task Force Long Knife." B-b-but, Monday , Barack Obama, President of the United States, stood up  in front of cameras and creation in Atlanta, Georgia and insisted that no combat  troops would be in Iraq after the end of this month.  Are those California  National Guard soldiers deploying for a few weeks and then flying back to the  US?     And about that 'wowie' speech . . .  |    Elise Labott: Well he said that the US would maintain a longterm  cariment -- commitment to Iraq in terms of the ever growing civilian presence on  there but he spoke about bringing the war in Iraq to a responsible end and he's  saying that the August 31st deadline for the military to bring their troops down  to 50,000 is the closing of a chapter and that the US is going to be  transitioning towards a more normal relationship with Iraqis as it does with  many other countries. I mean, this is really for the US kind-of signaling the  end of so-called occupation .  But you -- What you have right now is a  five-month deadlock on the government forming up, you have the drawdown of US  troops and a lot of the, you know, instability in the country.  You've seen a  lot more violence. al Qaeda is doing a lot more recruiting to try and fill this  void right now that the government isn't meeting because it's very much  deadlocked.  And the US is concerned that it's going to be leaving the country  as there's more instability in the country. And you even saw Tariq Aziz, the  Deputy to Saddam Hussein, say, "Don't leave Iraq right now! You're leaving them  to the wolves!" So it kind of signals that the US is growing increasingly  worried that the government won't be in place before all of these troops come  out and America's clout diminishes further.    Susan Page: But you know in a way there was no news in President  Obama's speech? He's simply reaffirming what he said before. So why -- why give  the speech?   Jonathan S. Landay: Oh, I think there was -- I'm going to be really  cynical about this.  You're facing -- he's facing these Congressional elections  coming up in Novmeber in which his party has got an uphill battle -- basically  an uphill battle. And at the same time, he sent an additional at least 52,000  more American troops to a place called Afghanistan. The other thing that I feel  when I look at this in a cyncical way is the fact that he's meeting requirements  that were actually negotiated with Iraq by the Bush administration. And it seems  the deadline for getting American troops -- combat troops out, the deadline for  getting all American troops out, the fact is that he seemed to be trying to take  credit.  He used -- he used the expression all American combat [clears throat].  Excuse me.  American combat troops will be out by the end of this month "as  promised and on schedule."  As if he's the guy who's fulfilling this promises  when, indeed, these are required under an agreement that the Bush administration  negotiated with the Iraqi government.    That's Susan Page filling in for Diane Rehm on today's The Diane  Rehm Show  (second hour) where she was joined by Jonathan S. Landay  (McClatchy Newspapers), Elise Labott (CNN) and James Kitfield (National  Journal ).  Cynical?    How could anyone be more cynical than the White House was.  As Barack Obama  was still boning up on his speech, the number of US service members killed in  the Iraq War stood at 4413.  However, last night Reuters reported  2 US soldiers killed on Monday --  and we only learn now. USF/MNF has nothing posted . When on Monday did  they die?. Barack began speaking in Atlanta a little after 11:30 a.m. EST. That  would have been 6:30 p.m. in Baghdad. Were they already dead by then? The  White House knew while spinning all day Monday and continuing on Tuesday that  two US service members were dead, killed by a bombing (a third wounded). But  they didn't want you to know because it would interfere with Barack's messaging.  It would hurt Brand Obama. Thursday, Ari Shapiro (All  Things Considered, NPR) reported , "The White House has been on a good  news streak this week, accentuating the positive every day in areas ranging from  Iraq to the BP oil well to the auto industry." But it's easy to have a 'good  news' streak if you control what information gets out and what information  doesn't. Barack Obama grand-standed on the backs of 3 US service members  -- two dead, one wounded. That announcement, which USF should have made on  Monday, was killed because Barack needed some sweet-ass headlines. First  order of business for the White House, finding a fall guy or gal to blame the  decision to bury the news of the 2 deaths Monday. Tony Karon (Time magazine) notes :  Major U.S. combat operations in Iraq were first declared to have  ended in March 2003, in President Bush's infamous "Mission Accomplished" address  aboard the U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln. Seven years and many thousands of  casualties later, President Barack Obama made a similar announcement this week.  But it remains to be seen whether his note of finality has any more traction  than that of his predecessor.    JAY: And weren't they also committed to  having all troops out, and not just combat, by, what is it, the end of 2011?     PORTER: They are in fact committed not just  by a policy, but by the US-Iraq withdrawal agreement, which was signed in  November 2008, to getting all US troops out of Iraq by the end of 2011. That's  now a treaty commitment, or at least a formal international commitment, if not a  treaty.  
 JAY: Of course, unless Maliki, their guy,  happens to say, well, you can stay longer.    PORTER: Well, that's right. And of course  we know that US military leaders have been saying, since even before that treaty  or that agreement was signed in November 2008, they wanted to keep US troops  there long, long beyond, way beyond 2011. We know that even after Obama was  elected, the month of the signature of this agreement, November 2008, that  General Odierno, the commander of US troops in Iraq, told Tom Ricks of the  The Washington Post, when he was asked what kind of US military presence  do you foresee in 2014-2015 (that's four years after the supposed event of US  military presence under the agreement), his answer was: I foresee, and what I  would like to see, is 30,000, 35,000 US troops remaining, and that they would  still be on combat mission.      Back sometime after the Nobel Laureate was installed on top of the  IDH, the mission that killed my son was renamed: "Operation New Dawn." So every  single one of our troops and Iraqis that have been killed since Obama's reign  have been killed in something that resembles dish-washing detergent and most  certainly the selling of it. "Operation New Dawn: New and Improved with more  Lemony Freshness -- and, boy, does it cut through grease!" Grease is the only  thing that Operation New Dawn cuts through, though -- since many of my fellow  USAians want to believe that Obama is the "New and Improved" George  Bush.                    Now, Obama has taken back a promise to have "Combat Troops" out of  Iraq by September 1st of this year and now has pledged to have them out by the  end of 2011 -- but of course, he has again redefined the mission and the troops  are now on a "support and train" mission instead of a combat mission, so the  Bots will believe that there is a new "Mission Accomplished." There will be some  troops movement and more empty rhetoric about this as the next presidential  season is rapidly coming to assault us with more Madison Avenue Trickery. And  people on the so-called left and so-called antiwar movement were upset with John  McCain when he said that troops would be in Iraq for "100 years?" Well, that is  upsetting to me, also, but troops will be in Iraq for 100 years because WE only  come out to fight when a Republican is in office and it is apparent that The  Empire can tenaciously hang in there until the next cycle when a Democrat takes  the "con" of The Empire and neutralizes the "Left" for another four to eight  years.         Since I camped in Crawford, Texas beginning August 6th, 2005  --there has been little to celebrate and virtually no progress in a progressive  direction regarding any policy.                                        Bush's troop "surge" in Iraq that was bought and paid for by  Pelosi's Democratic Congress only "worked" because just about everybody that  could be killed or displaced in or out of Iraq has been. In 2003, Iraq had a  population of roughly 25 million and about 5 million of those have been killed  or displaced -- that's 1/5 of the population. Devastating figures -- that would  be comparable to 60 million USAians being killed or displaced! Significant and  tragic figures that mean very little to most daily consumers of what passes for  news here in the U.S.       Casey Sheehan died serving in Iraq.  Some Iraq and Afghanistan War veterans  (as well as some in the military who have not deployed) are dying at their own  hands.     
 "They gave me a gun" he said                   "They gave me a mission                     For the power and the glory                  Propaganda piss on 'em                There's a war zone inside me                    I can feel things exploding                    I can't even hear the f**king music playing                    For the beat of, the beat of black wings"                 [. . .]   "They want you they need you           They train you to kill                 To be a pin on some map                Some vicarious thrill                The old hate the young        That's the whole heartless thing            The old pick the wars                 We die in 'em  To the beat of, the beat of black wings"                     -- "The Beat Of Black Wings," written by Joni Mitchell, first  appears on her Chalk Mark In a Rainstorm               As noted in yesterday's snapshot , the Marines released their  suicide data and have classified 28 this year as suicides.  Last year they saw  52 suicides and the Army saw 160.  Today Juan Gonzalez (Democracy Now!) noted   that "another 146 [Army in 2009] died by other violent means, such as murder,  drug abuse or reckless driving while drunk; another 1,700 attempted suicide."   He and Amy Goodman spoke with Gregg Keesling, the father of SPC Chancellor  Keesling who was in Iraq on his second deployment when he saw no other solution  but to take his own life on June 19, 2009, and with Joyce and Kevin Lucey, the  parents of Iraq War veteran and Marine Jeffrey Lucey who received no help from  the VA while repeatedly struggling to find some solution other than taking his  own life and finally did that June 22, 2004.  Excerpt (and remember DN!   is watch, listen or read -- video, audio and text formats):    KEVIN LUCEY: I think when we decided to try to bring him to the  hospital, we had been trying to negotiate with him for over a month. We had  actually hired a therapist to be able to help us get them into the hospital. On  Friday, May 28th, 2004, the beginning of the Memorial Day weekend, Jeff finally  went to the hospital. He had no intention of staying. And they did say that he  needed to stay. And so, finally, we did an involuntary commitment. It took about  six hours to do it.  During the three-and-a-half days that he spent there, we  thought that he was being assessed, assessed for PTSD and assessed for  treatment, but regretfully, they didn't assess him. What they stated was that he  had to be detoxed, and they were just trying to detox him. And then he was going  to have to stay sober, completely substance-free, for a period of three to six  months. And I looked at him, and, in this age of dual diagnosis, I couldn't  understand how they could even say that, because I went with the naive belief  that the VA were the experts in regards to PTSD.Despite Jeff divulging how  he had bought a hose to kill himself, that he had plans, what happened is that  they ended up discharging Jeff three-and-a-half days later. Two days after that,  Jeff got into a single car accident, totaled our family car. He was unscathed.  And he saved the two coffees that he went to get for his mother and for himself.  And then, that weekend, we tried to bring him back, because it had gotten much  more severe. And the VA, they didn't even bother calling a person who had the  authority to enter him involuntarily. And he just came back home. And at that  point, I was furious. I lost faith in the VA.
 
 JOYCE LUCEY: And I'd like to say that my dad did go along with  Jeffrey on that second time, along with my daughters, and that he begged. He  begged the VA to do something to help his grandson. My dad lost his brother in  World War II at twenty-two years old, and he was now seeing his grandson going  downhill right before his eyes. And nobody was there to help. So, to me, that --  that's heartbreaking. It really is.  
 JUAN GONZALEZ: And you, obviously, had no doubt from the beginning  that the changes in his behavior, in his activities, his destructive activities,  were as a result of being in the war, that he was -- he had been fine before he  enlisted and went to Iraq?  
 JOYCE LUCEY: Absolutely, absolutely. His girlfriend said that, a  year prior to this, he would never, never have thought about taking his life. I  mean, that wasn't Jeffrey. That wasn't Jeffrey at all. And to listen to him when  he came back and to sit on the deck -- and I remember sitting there going, "Who  is this person? This isn't my son." I didn't understand what he was saying. It  just seemed like it was my son's body, but the person was no longer my child. He  was totally changed, and he was lost. He was in his own world, of everything  going through his head, not really looking at me, just kind of staring out and  reliving things, you know, saying things in fragments, so that you never really  got the whole story. But you knew whatever he had gone through was horrific to  him.    The Department of Veterans Affairs Suicide Prevention Hot Line is  1-800-273-TALK.  Talk is something you can apparently do easier in foreign  media.  The Hindu minces no words when analyzing   'Barry ends the war':  Thirdly, Washington's talk of reduction covers only combat troops  and conceals the fact that the U.S. will maintain a network of gigantic bases in  Iraq. The one at Balad, about 100 km north of Baghdad, can house 20,000  personnel; it covers 40 sq km and has an internal bus service and the usual  American facilities. Inside, U.S. law applies and staff need not even set foot  outside. The Al Asad base, 160 km west of Baghdad, holds 17,000 troops; one of  its runways is 4.26 km long. The base is to be connected to the national  electricity grid. Other U.S. stations in Iraq include Camp Falcon-al-Sarq at  Baghdad, and Camp Victory near Baghdad International Airport,  which can take 14,000 troops. The plan is apparently to maintain 70,000  troops and 200,000 contractors, or mercenaries by any other name, in Iraq.   The terms "enduring bases" and "permanent access" do more than  evade the Congressional ban on permanent bases in foreign countries. The  creation of such huge outposts in Iraq is entirely consistent with the  Quadrennial Defense Review and the National Defense Strategy, both of which in  effect put U.S. interests above the sovereignty or independence of other  states.   In Iraq, a letter's been delivered.  Not just any letter.  Barbara Slavin (Foreign Policy) reports   the letter is to Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani and is from Barack and it calls on  al-Sistanit "to prevail upon Iraq's squabbling politicians to finally form a new  government".  The timeline on the letter?  After Biden's visit at the start of  last month -- "shortly after."  Which would appear to indicate that nothing came  of it.  Ranj Alaaldin (Guardian) offers , "The  letter from Obama to Sistani should simply be seen as the US pulling out all the  stops for an Iraqi government. However, should it fail in its objective, which  is quite likely, then it could be yet another depressing sign of Washington's  diminishing influence in the country."  However, Press TV reports , "Sadr City's Friday Prayers Leader  Seyyed Muhammad al-Musawi accused the US of trying to portray the Iraqi  government and security forces as weak and incapable of providing security for  the Iraqis in order to justify the country's occupation. "  March 7th, Iraq concluded  Parliamentary elections. 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. In 2005, Iraq  took four months and seven days to pick a prime minister. It's now 4  months and 28 days.  Reuters notes a Baghdad roadside bombing  left two people injured, another left fifteen wounded (and may have claimed 2  lives -- according to a "police source"), a third one claimed the life of 1  police officer (five people injured), a fourth left six people injured and one  late yesterday left two people wounded.      Iraq remained a committed partner in counterterrorism efforts. As a  result of the U.S.-Iraq Security Agreement, Iraqi security forces assumed  primary responsibility for the security and stability of Iraq, with support from  Multi-National Forces-Iraq. Together, U.S. and Iraqi security forces continued  to make progress in combating al-Qa'ida in Iraq (AQI) and affiliated Sunni  terrorist organizations, as well as Shiite militia elements engaged in  terrorism. A significant reduction in the number of security incidents  throughout much of Iraq, beginning in the last half of 2007, continued through  2009, with a steady downward trend in numbers of civilian casualties, enemy  attacks, and improvised explosive device (IED) attacks. Still, terrorist organizations and insurgent groups continued their  attacks on Iraqi security forces, civilians, and government officials using  IEDs, including vehicle-borne improvised explosive devices (VBIEDs), and suicide  bombers. Although a scattering of small scale attacks continued to hamper the  country's progress toward broad-based security, terrorist elements focused their  efforts on high-profile and deadly attacks in Baghdad, as demonstrated by  attacks on August 19, October 25, and December 8. The three sets of attacks  targeted Iraqi government buildings with simultaneous, multiple suicide and/or  remote-detonated VBIEDs in Baghdad. While AQI claimed responsibility for the  violence, some Iraqi government officials publicly blamed Syrian-based  individuals with alleged ties to the former Baath Party. U.S. forces conducted full spectrum operations with the Iraqi  forces to defeat the evolving threats employed by AQI. Their efforts to defeat  AQI cells, in addition to an increasingly violence-weary Iraqi public, forced  AQI elements to consolidate in Ninewa and Diyala provinces. Despite being  limited to smaller bases of operation within Iraq, AQI retained networks in and  around Baghdad and in eastern Anbar. In Ninewa, U.S. and Iraqi security forces  focused efforts against AQI and other Sunni extremists through operations  targeting warranted individuals and judicial detentions of senior leaders, and  targeted the terrorists' operational support systems. AQI, whose apparent goal  in 2009 was to discredit the Iraqi government and erode its security and  governance capabilities, targeted primarily the Iraqi security forces,  government infrastructure, Sons of Iraq (SOI) groups, and tribal awakening  movement members. Despite the improved security environment, AQI, fueled in part  by former detainees, still possessed the capacity to launch high-profile attacks  against Iraqi civilians and infrastructure. In addition to reducing the strength of AQI and Sunni extremists,  Iraq made progress in containing other terrorist groups with differing motives,  such as Jaysh Rijal al-Tariqah al-Naqshabandiyah (a Sunni nationalist insurgent  group with links to the former Baath Party that advocates the removal of  occupation forces from Iraq) and Kata'ib Hizballah (a Shia militant group with  ideological ties to the militant wing of Hizballah). The flow of foreign terrorists from North Africa and other Middle  Eastern countries greatly diminished, although they continued to enter Iraq,  predominantly through Syria. AQI and its Sunni extremist partners mainly used  Iraqi nationals, including some females, as suicide bombers. Terrorist groups  receiving weapons and training from Iran continued to endanger the security and  stability of Iraq; however, incidents of such violence were lower than in  previous years. Many of the groups receiving ideological and logistical support  from Iran were based in Shia communities in central and southern  Iraq. Iraq, Turkey, and the United States continued their formal  trilateral security dialogue as one element of ongoing cooperative efforts to  counter the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK). Iraqi leaders, including those from  the Kurdistan Regional Government, continued to publicly state that the PKK was  a terrorist organization and would not be allowed a safe haven in Iraq. The  trilateral discussions and other efforts continued through the end of the year,  with a ministerial in late December. The Iraqi government increased its efforts to garner regional and  international support against terrorism. The Expanded Neighbors Process  continued to provide a forum for Iraq and its neighbors to address Iraq's  political and security challenges in a regional context. In October, the Iraqi  government sent representatives to Egypt to participate in the sixth Neighbors  Process working group on border security, in which the group sought ways to  enhance and integrate border security systems in preparation for Iraq's 2010  parliamentary elections. Iraq also became a more active voice at the UN in  2009. The Iraqi government pressed senior Iranian leaders to end support  for lethal aid to Iraqi militias, and the Iraqi army carried out operations  against extremists trained and equipped by Iran in Basra, Baghdad, and other  areas. Although attacks by militants have sharply decreased, concerns remain  that Iranian-supported Shia groups may be stockpiling weapons to influence the  elections or the subsequent government formation. Shia militant groups' ties to  Iran remained a diplomatic and security challenge and a threat to Iraq's  long-term stability. National unity efforts to involve Iraqi Shia groups with  Iranian ties, such as Asaib ahl al Haq (League of Righteousness) in the  political process, decreased Shia-linked violence. The Iraqi government faced internal and external pressure to  relocate the Mujahadeen-e Khalq (MEK) organization, a U.S. designated foreign  terrorist organization, from the group's current location in eastern Iraq. The  Iraqi government committed to act with respect for human rights in any efforts  to relocate the group, and UN and international observers monitored the  situation. The Iraqi government attributed security gains to Iraqi security  force capability and proficiency, as well as to increasing popular support for  Iraqi government actions against AQI and other extremist groups. SOI and other  groups provided U.S. and Iraqi forces with valuable information that helped  disrupt terrorist operations and exposed large weapons caches. The SOI began  integration into Iraqi security forces in 2008, and many more transitioned to  non-security ministries throughout 2009. Sunni tribal awakening movements  continued alliances with U.S. forces against AQI and extremist groups. AQI  targeting of Christian and other minority churches, schools, and institutions  indicated that AQI pursued strategies that required the least resources and  yielded the highest payoff in the media and minds of Iraq's citizens. Despite  this, ethno-sectarian violence continued to decline. On June 30, U.S. combat troops pulled out of cities, villages, and  localities, in accordance with the U.S.-Iraq Security  Agreement, and after that conducted all kinetic operations in  partnership with Iraqi security forces. The focus of U.S. operations moved from  urban to rural areas where international support will remain critical for the  Iraqi government to build its capacity to fight terrorist organizations. All  U.S. military operations are conducted with the agreement of and in partnership  with Iraqi authorities. Iraq's intelligence services continued to improve in both  competency and confidence but will require ongoing support and legislative  authority before they will be able to adequately identify and respond to  internal and external terrorist threats.      Meanwhile an Iraq War veteran remains imprisoned in Iraq. Danny Fitzsimons  served in the British military for eight years and was stationed in Afghanistan  and Kosovo as well as Iraq. He returned to Iraq last fall as a British  contractor, or mercenary, accused of being the shooter in a Sunday, August 9th  Green Zone incident  in which 1 British contractor, Paul McGuigan, and 1  Australian contractor, Darren Hoare, died and one Iraqi, Arkhan Madhi, was  injured. From yesterday's snapshot :PA quotes Danny stating, "I'm making a direct plea to Mr  Cameron asking him, telling him that it's a disgrace that I'm here. I served  nine years for Queen and Country and I served another five years serving big  British business in Iraq, you know. So, in a way that's five years serving the  country as well. [. . .] I should be in hospital in Britian, in a mental  hospital getting the treatment that I need. You know, I shouldn't be in a  dungeon in Baghdad. Worst case scenario is guilty and death by hanging. I don't  want to die. I don't want to end it here." Chris Jones, Peter Devine and Sunday Mirror  reporters (Manchester Evening News) quotes Danny's step-mother Liz Fitzsimons stating, "Eric is  on anti-depressants because of the terrible conditions Danny is behind held in,  and it has all been a very, very stressful situation with no end in sight. Danny  feels like he has been abandoned by the military. Some of the people who have  been held in Iraqi prisons, and whom we have spokenw ith, have said they would  rather face the death penalty than serve a life sentence in those conditions.  Mentally, it must be a very, very tough for Danny because he is not being  allowed outside, not getting adequate food and water and he is sharing a cell  with 17 others who don't speak English, and we are very concerned. He is  suffering from post traumatic stress disorder."Amnesty International issued  the following  yesterday:Responding to a new televised  appeal to David Cameron made by Danny Fitzsimons, the British security  contractor detained in Iraq and awaiting trial for murder, Amnesty International  UK Campaigns Director Tim Hancock said:"It's obviously right that private military and  security contractors are made fully responsible for any alleged wrongdoing when  they're working in places like Iraq, but we're very concerned about this  case."Iraq has an appalling record of  unfair capital trials and there's a definite danger of Danny Fitzsimons being  sentenced to death after a shoddy judicial process."David Cameron should certainly seek assurances from  the Iraqi authorities that Mr Fitzsimons will receive a fair trial and that the  death penalty will be ruled out from the beginning."Iraq is one of the biggest users of the death penalty  in the world. Last year Iraq executed at least 120 people, the third highest of  any country in the world. Approximately 1,000 prisoners are currently on death  row, many reportedly close to execution.  TV notes. On PBS' Washington Week, Joan Biskupic (USA Today),  Gloria Borger (CNN) and Eamon Javers (CNBC) join Gwen around the table. Gwen now  has a weekly column at Washington Week and the current one is "What's to Celebrate, Mr. President?"  This week, Bonnie  Erbe will sit down with a number of female  panelist on the latest broadcast of PBS' To The  Contrary to discuss the week's events. Need To Know is PBS' new program covering current  events. This week's hour long broadcast (Fridays on most PBS stations -- but  check local listings) features a discussion on WikiLeaks, the Gulf Disaster,  prison reform and more. And turning to broadcast TV, Sunday CBS' 60 Minutes  offers:
 
 
 The Cost of DyingMany Americans spend their last days in an  intensive care unit, subjected to uncomfortable machines or surgeries to prolong  their lives at enormous cost. Steve Kroft reports. | Watch Video
 
 The PatriarchEcumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, the leader of  the 300 million-member Orthodox Christian Church, feels "crucified" living in  Turkey under a government he says would like to see his nearly 2,000-year-old  Patriarchate die out. Bob Simon reports. | Watch Video
 
 Chef Jose AndresPioneering Chef Jose Andres takes Anderson  Cooper's taste buds on a savory tour of his culinary laboratory, featuring his  avant-garde cooking technique, molecular gastronomy. | Watch Video
 
 60 Minutes, Sunday, August 8, at 7 p.m. ET/PT.    |