|     |     | Monday, January 31, 2011. Chaos and  violence continue, the death toll in Iraq for January is double what it was in  December, Nouri al-Maliki attempts to defend his power grab, some rush to again  defend Julian Assange while ignoring attacks on Bradley Manning, a new US report  finds things are very shaky in Iraq, and more. 
 We'll start with Julian  Assange just because I'm sick of the nonsense. We've said for sometime that  Assange is not a journalist and he's not. He might, many months back, have been  comparable to a book publisher and qualified as a journalist by that route. But  he's not and has never been a journalist. Apologies to Jim because we toyed with writing about this subject  at Third but couldn't pull it together. I'm grabbing it now.  David  Swanson (War Is A Crime) is outraged by a CBS profile on Julian Assange which aired Sunday.  Among David's many complaints, "The CBS program 60 Minutes has just  published video of an interview with Wikileaks' Julian Assange -- with the video  focused, of course, on Assange himself, with almost no substantive content  related to the massive crimes and abuses that have made news around the globe."  For the record, 60 Minutes is a TV show; therefore, it "airs" reports,  it does not "publish" them. The report aired Sunday night. First off, the  profile on Julian Assange was billed as just that. Drop back to Friday's  snapshot where we noted the upcoming broadcast and included their description of  the segment: "Julian Assange, the controversial founder of WikiLeaks, speaks to  Steve Kroft about the U.S. attempt to indict him on criminal charges and the  torrent of criticism aimed at him for publishing classified documents. (This is  a double-length segment.)" Expressing shock today over what aired *Sunday* is a  bit like going to one of Bruce Willis' shoot-em-up-bang-bang movies and leaving  the theater complaining that you had no idea there would be violence in the  film.
 
 
 
 The segment was as advertised. David's also unhappy with  Steve Kroft's style. That's fine, call it out. But to read David's long piece is  to get that it's not really about Kroft. Take the criticism about Kroft not  providing "substantive coverage" of WikiLeaks' 'exposures.' David never wrote  the same about Amy Goodman. But Goody spent an hour (she called it an hour -- more  like 45 minutes) with Assange on July 28th and she dealt far less with  WikiLeaks' exposures. She wasted time, for example, asking Assange about the  damage that might come from the Congress passing a law -- she asked Australian  citizen Julian Assange about the US Congress passing a law. A topic he was  clearly not qualified to speak on and no one should be surprised by that fact.  It takes a real idiot (or maybe a xenophobe who assumes the whole world knows  and follows the US Congress and how it makes a law and how . . .). She provided  a lot of gossip. Steve Kroft -- we can cover this at Third where we can lay it  out all side by side -- covered more of the exposures than did Goodman and where  was David's angry article about Amy Goodman putting the BS in Panhandle Media?  No where to be found.
 
 
 
 The problem isn't 60 Minutes and  it's not Steve Kroft. That's not to say either is above criticism. That is to  say, Julian Assange agreed to a celebrity profile and that's what he got. It can  be argued that at any point with Kroft (or with Goodman), Assange could have  been raising exposures but didn't do that.
 
 
 
 The problem is Julian  Assange is emerging and he's not conforming with his fan base. Here, we called  out the CNN 'reporter' who blew an interview with Assange. We called it out  because the segment was supposed to be about the exposures but she made it  instead about Assange. I have never had as much pressure from CNN friends to  correct something. We haven't corrected it, that entry's still up. But as they  argued for their reporter, they repeatedly told stories about Assange. He is not  the man his fan boy base thinks he is. That's why we began to note immediately  after that Julian Assange is the public face of WikiLeaks but he is not  WikiLeaks. At this point, that may no longer be true due to the fact that so  many have now jumped ship.
 
 
 
 CNN refused to go into business with  Assange for a reason. Other outlets were happy to go along with the source.  Those include Der Spiegel, the Guardian and the New York  Times. And fan boys like David Swanson never called that out. That went  against WikiLeaks entire reason for being. WikiLeaks was where the people would  find information, information that others tried to hide. Suddenly, the  information was being filtered. A filter was completely against WikiLeak's  reason for being. (Some have attacked WikiLeaks over not censoring names in an  early document release. We didn't attack them for that and I defended them here  over that noting that they are not supposed to be altering the documents in any  way, they are supposed to be providing sunlight.) As the releases continued to  be coordinated with the press, WikiLeaks stopped putting it online. Oh, they'd  do so in a week or a few weeks or maybe a month . . .
 
 
 
 No, that's  not the mission statement or purpose of WikiLeaks. That's when people start  leaving. Not because they're jealous of Julian Assange but because WikiLeaks is  not living it up to its stated purpose. Julian Assange doesn't believe in the  power of the internet. That's why he went to old media. He could have cut in a  website -- The Huffington Post, for example. He didn't. He spat on new media and  it's so amazing to watch as those spat upon rush to defend  repeatedly.
 
 
 
 Julian Assange is not a journalist. What he has done  is be a source. And outlets have been far too kind to his whims. And maybe if  John F. Burns (and his co-writer, but to the world, it is now John F. Burns'  article) had been honest enough about what was going on, he could have written  an honest article instead of one that read like an attack because it was an  attack. Julian Assange isn't a journalist. He chases  celebrity.
 
 
 
 That's why he agreed to the CBS interview to begin  with. Assange has no plans to come to the US. So why is he granting an interview  to CBS? To promote WikiLeaks? If so, look at his own answers because Kroft's  bringing up more specifics on revelations that Julian Assange  does.
 
 
 
 In Marcel Rosenbach and Holger Stark's "An Inside Look at  Difficult Negotiaions with Julian Assange,"  portrays the source's ego mania in  a lengthy article and the most disturbing paragraph for Assange (and his  groupies) would probably be this one where, having decided the Der SpiegelNew York Times is no longer 'in the loop,'  Assange is confronting the Guardian and  Der Spiegel in a meeting to find out if  the Times has copies of the latest  cables and how they got hold of them:
 
 
 The mood  was tense. "Does the New York Times have a copy?" Assange wanted to know. He  repeated the question, and it sliced through the room, which by now was very  still. "And if so, where did it get a copy?" Assange mentioned the written  agreement he had signed with the Guardian in the summer, which stipulated that  WikiLeaks was merely providing the Guardian with the embassy cables for its  review, and that publication or duplication was only permissible with the  consent of WikiLeaks. Assange felt that a breach of contract had taken place,  which is why he had brought along his attorneys.
 
 
 Check out the  ego mania of Assange and how ridiculous he sounds insisting that the US  government cables (which deserved to see the light of day, no question) must not  be shared witout his consent and if they were shared with another paper this  would be a violation of the written agreement? There's not a big difference  between Assange's attacks and postures and those of the US State Dept. And, as  the paragraph demonstrates, WikiLeaks was no longer WikiLeaks. It was about  making Julian Assange a celebrity. That's what's destroyed the organization and  why a number of people have left it and are setting up a new version which will  adhere to the beliefs WikiLeaks once espoused. Note this paragraph and, Mascolo  is Georg Mascolo, editor-in-chief of the  Guardian.
 
 
 Assange was using terms like "theft" and "criminal  activities," against which he said he would take legal action, because the copy  was, as he claimed, "illegal." At that moment, he was apparently unaware of the  dual meaning of what he had just said. Mascolo replied: "There are nothing but  illegal copies of this material."
 
 
 
 Assange sounds like an  idiot, granted. But grasp that someone risked their job (at the very least) to  provide WikiLeaks with the material and instead of releasing it -- the WikiLeaks  motto be damned, apparently -- Assange is having a freak-fest over the fact that  it may get released.
 
 
 
 None of these documents should have ever  gone through the MSM to begin with. The Collateral Murder video got substantial  attention and coverage after WikiLeaks published it online. And that's not just  my argument, that's also the argument that took place inside WikiLeaks. The  question was why, with no announcement (let alone discussion), WikiLeaks was  transforming from a conduit of information directly to the people to one now  using a filter (the MSM) and refusing to post the documents  online?
 
 
 
 Bill Keller had a lengthy article (like the Der  Spiegel article, Keller's is actually part of a new book) in the New York  Times' Sunday Magazine recounting the paper's interactions with Julian  Assange:
 
 
 
 Three months  later, with the French daily Le Monde added to the group, we published Round 2,  the Iraq War  Logs, including articles on how the United States  turned a blind eye to the torture of  prisoners by Iraqi forces working with the U.S., how  Iraq spawned an extraordinary American military reliance on private  contractors and how extensively Iran had meddled in the  conflict.
 By this time, The  Times's relationship with our source had gone from wary to hostile. I talked to  Assange by phone a few times and heard out his complaints. He was angry that we  declined to link our online  coverage of the War Logs to the WikiLeaks Web site,  a decision we made because we feared -- rightly, as it turned out -- that its  trove would contain the names of low-level informants and make them Taliban  targets. "Where's the respect?" he demanded. "Where's the respect?" Another time  he called to tell me how much he disliked our profile of Bradley  Manning, the Army private  suspected of being the source of WikiLeaks's most startling revelations. The  article traced Manning's childhood as an outsider and his distress as a gay man  in the military. Assange complained that we "psychologicalized" Manning and gave  short shrift to his "political awakening."
 The final straw  was a front-page  profile of Assange by John Burns and Ravi Somaiya,  published Oct. 24, that revealed fractures within WikiLeaks, attributed by  Assange's critics to his imperious management style. Assange denounced the  article to me, and in various public forums, as "a smear."
 Assange was transformed by his outlaw celebrity. The  derelict with the backpack and the sagging socks now wore his hair dyed and  styled, and he favored fashionably skinny suits and ties. He became a kind of  cult figure for the European young and leftish and was evidently a magnet for  women. Two Swedish women filed police complaints claiming that Assange insisted  on having sex without a condom; Sweden's strict laws on nonconsensual sex  categorize such behavior as rape, and a prosecutor issued a warrant to question  Assange, who initially described it as a plot concocted to silence or discredit  WikiLeaks.
 I came to think of Julian Assange as a character  from a Stieg  Larsson thriller -- a man who could figure either as  hero or villain in one of the megaselling Swedish novels that mix hacker  counterculture, high-level conspiracy and sex as both recreation and violation.
 
 
 
 Bill Keller has not attacked Assange. But complexities  escape the fan boys. (Doyle McManus has a commentary I haven't read yet  but a friend at the Los Angeles Times asked for a link to it. Doyle's  generally making several astute points and I'm sure someone in the community  will end up quoting from it at their site tonight.) At the end of the day, has  Assange been good or bad for WikiLeaks? They have had revelations make big  splashes in MSM and that's a plus. Would they have had big splashes if they'd  continued to follow the model they preached? No one knows but the fact that they  morphed into something in complete opposition to what they preached is a minus.  Assange became the story because Assange wanted to be the story. That's why he  agreed to the celebrity profile. He is not and never has been Daniel Ellsberg.  He is not a whistle blower. That would be the people who supplied WikiLeaks with  information. Information which Julian Assange now sits on -- grasp that -- and  claims he will release if there are any deaths.
 
 
 
 Uhm, I kind of  think people who risked (at the very least) their jobs to provide WikiLeaks with  information did so because they wanted the information to be out there in the  public, not because they wanted to provide Julian Assange with a bargaining chip  he could use to whip up even more press attention.
 
 
 
 Greg Palast  has warned about Julian Assange but the fan boy base wanted to ignore Palast.  That's very strange considering I can't think of another time when the fan boy  base has shut Palast out. But what Palast saw was an ever increasing gulf  between what WikiLeaks stated it was doing and what it actually did. And by that  measure, the current WikiLeaks is a failure. Hopefully, those who have left the  organization to start OpenLeaks will fair better with the failure of WikiLeaks as an  example. Jim, Dona, Ava and I came up  with an outline a few weeks back on what we'd cover if we wrote a piece on  WikiLeaks. I have deliberately ignored some of the points Jim and Dona raised so  those aspects can be picked up at Third if they want.
 
 
 
 But David  Swanson has written a lengthy piece about Julian Assange today and about how  poor Julian has been mistreated and yet again we're not focusing on real issues  as a result. It's really past time that the fan boys stop rushing to defend  their hero. He has clay feet, he's far from perfect and they need to let go of  the illusions they hold of him and grow up. They have confused the best of  WikiLeaks with Julian Assange and have taken to attacking facts because facts  don't fit into their scheme. Here's a fact for you, the late and great Jaqueline  Susann did more interviews than Julian Assange could ever dream of and, once she  became a novelist, in every one of them, she ensured her books would be  mentioned by mentioning her books. She plugged her books relentlessly. If she  couldn't get on the program -- Johnny Carson had banned her from NBC's Tonight  Show, for example -- she'd find another way to get her book mentioned (guest  Bette Davis in Johnny's case). If Julian Assange wanted the revelations talked  about in the interview with CBS, he would have ensured that they were talked  about. Or are his fan boys admitting that Jacqueline Susann was far smarter than  he is?
 
 
 
 David Swanson picked Steve Kroft to go after and the real  question there is why he's yet to defend Bradley Manning from the hatchet job  Nancy A. Youssef did on him -- excuse me, the most recent hatchet job she's done  on him. Who is Bradley Manning? 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. Leila Fadel  (Washington Post) reported in August that Manning 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 in the public square despite the fact  that he's been convicted in no state and has made no public statements --  despite any claims otherwise, he has made no public statements. Manning is now  at Quantico in Virginia, under military lock and key and still not allowed to  speak to the press. Paul Courson (CNN)  notes Bradley is a suspect and, "He has not admitted guilt in either  incident, his supporters say." If the accusations are true, he's the hero  everyone should be worrying about (not Julian Assange). If the accusations ar  false (and they're false until proven in court), then an innocent person is  being railroaded. In either case, Nancy A. Youssef did a hatchet job in print  last week. Maybe people can be forgiven for missing all of her attacks on  Bradley when she's been a guest on The Diane Rehm Show. However, when she  attacks in print and many other outlets pick up on her smears and attacks, maybe  David Swanson should set Julian Assange aside long enough to try defending  Bradley? For those late to the party, we spent four paragraphs in Friday's snapshot calling out Youssef's attack on  Bradley:
 
 
 
 
 It means  we don't link to Nancy A. Youssef's article for McClatchy Newspapers. Why not?  Go through our archives, do a search of this site with "The Diane Rehm Show" and  "Nancy A. Youssef" and "Bradley Manning" as key terms. Nancy has been on a  one-woman witch hunt with regards to Bradley. She has repeatedly convicted him  on air on The Diane Rehm Show -- not just once, not just twice, not  just three times. She has done this over and over and over. (Though a guest on  today's show, she didn't discuss Bradley -- they were obsessed with Egypt --  which had already been an hour long topic on Thursday's Diane Rehm Show but  still became the thrust of today's international hour.) Nancy is also very close  to Secretary of Defense Robert Gates.
 
 A  number of outlets are putting the claims in Nancy's bad article out there and  treating them as fact. Let's review it. (If you must read it, the title is  "Probe: Army ignored warnings over soldier" and you can Google that.) Nancy  knows about an Army report -- how? Her friends she leaves unnamed. (But I can  name them.) This report is the result of an investigation, she says, and it  found unflattering things about Bradley. She says. And she can say so, she says,  because she has "two military officials familiar with investigation" (but not  the report?) who talked to her. Once upon a time, you had to have three sources.  Always wonder about unsourced claims with two sources. Though she hasn't seen  the report, Nancy yacks on and on about the report -- when not -- FOR NO NATURAL  REASON -- bringing in Major Nidal Hasan. That's your clue that Nancy's gone  skinny dipping in a cesspool she wants to pass off as journalism. Hasan shot  dead many at Fort Hood. So Nance just wants to bring him into the article for .  . . local color? Extra seasoning? She knows what she's doing and she knows it's  not journalism.
 
 You've been repeatedly  warned about McClatchy of late and about Nancy in particular who is sending off  alarms at McClatchy. What she's done is write a smear-job, she has not reported.  For her friends in the Defense Dept, she has attacked Bradley in an unsourced  article that doesn't pass the smell test. There is a term for it, "yellow  journalism." She should be ashamed of herself and everyone running with the  claims she's making in this article needs to ask how they think they're helping  Bradley?
 
 They also should note that  Nancy made no effort to get a comment from Bradley's attorney.  While painting Bradley in an unflattering light throughout her article, she  never tries for a quote, she only repeats what her Defense 'chums' and . . .  tell her. She's becoming the new Judith Miller and that's her fault but also the  fault of a lot of people who should have been calling her out months ago but let  her slide and slide.
 
 
 
 
 Innocent or guilty of leaking,  Bradley needs defenders. He's not traipsing around an English  manor.
 
 
 
 Today the Office of the Special Inspector General for Iraq  Reconstruction issued a 156-page [PDF format warning] "Quarterly Reports To Congress." Walter Pincus (Washington Post) notes,  "In recent months, the Interior Ministry has reported the assassinations of  'nearly 240' Iraqi Security Forces and intelligence personnel and about 120  civilian government employees, according to the report." It's these attacks as  well as economic issues that lead to conclusions that the government set up in  Iraq is not very sturdy. AP's lede on this story is: "Without more help --  and quickly -- Iraqi security forces may not be able to protect the fragile  nation from insurgents and invaders after American troops leave at the end of  the year, according to a U.S. report released Sunday." And that's offering the  sunny side of a report -- ignoring the institutions that are so lacking in Iraq.  The UK's Morning Star is much more upfront about  the report than AP, "US fears that a popular uprising will overwhelm Iraq's  shaky security forces were exposed today in a report by the occupation's special  inspector general for reconstruction. It warned that legal systems were still  unstable and access to basic services such as water, sewage disposal and  electricity could be flashpoints for mass unrest among ordinary people - "more  so than political or sectarian disagreements." The people. The Iraqi people who  have had this government imposed upon them by outsiders.
 
 
 
 Basic  services result in protests all the time in Iraq, the vast majority of them go  unreported -- even when they take place in Baghdad. Yesterday, Ayas Hossam Acommock (Al Mada) reported on a Sunday  demonstration held in Firdous Square with "intellectuals and the media"  participating to show their solidarity with Arab people in Egypt. In addition,  the participants called for the elimination of restrictions on freedoms in Iraq  and called for basic services to be provided. Speakers spoke of "the long  revolution" as Arabs have fought against dictatorships. Again, these protests  are nothing new. And the lack of reliable public services are among the reasons  that Kirkuk's brief decision to cut off electricity to Baghdad was so popular  throughout the country.
 
 
 
 
 Staying with the issue of the press,  Josh Halliday (Guardian) reported in the middle of  this month that the Guardian had, on appeal, won in the libel case brought  against them by Nouri al-Maliki's Iraqi National Intelligence Service over this article.  Meanwhile al Furat reports that Kata Rikabi,  secretary to Nouri al-Maliki, is suing the Euphrates newspaper and the paper's  editor Hussein Khoshnaw over articles al Furat  published. Established a month after the start of the Iraq War, Al-Furat was previously (2007) targeted with a  bomb threat at their Sydney offices.
 
 
 Meanwhile Ayad Allawi appears to  have lost any remaining bits of trust in Nouri al-Maliki. Al Rafidayn reports that he has  requested Massoud Barzani, President of the KRG, be present for a mediation  between Allawi and al-Maliki. Despite promising Allawi he would head the  National [Security] Council, it has still not been created. Earlier this month,  a meeting was held with Ibrahim al-Jaafari attending and that moved no mountain.  Al Mada reports that Iraqiya is accusing Nouri of working against the agreements  formed to allow him to continue as prime minister and they accuse him of  preventing the formation of the National Council. An unnamed source with the  Iraqi National Alliance tells Al Mada that no National Council issues will be  resolved until Nouri has named the security posts that remain empty in his  Cabinet and the source expects that will take at least two weeks. Ayad Allawi's  Iraqiya slate was the winner in the March 7th elections. After nearly nine  months of no progress, he entered into an arrangement with Nouri al-Maliki to  allow al-Maliki to be prime minister. The trade-off for Nouri being prime  minister included clearing the names of several Sunni politicians and making  Allawi head of the National Council -- a new body that would be created. Allawi  objected in the first meeting of Parliament after the arrangment had been made  because the aspects of the deal involving Iraqiya were being set aside for a  later date. He walked out of the session. He was right to worry because it's  over a month later and there's still no creation of the National Council. Nouri  got what he wanted and may or may not live up to the bargain he  made.
 
 
 In the past, Nouri has rarely lived up to the deals he  brokered. Had the Parliament and political parties known, when the arrangement  was made, that Nouri had gone to the Supreme Court (December 18th) to have  powers pulled from independent outsiders and placed under the prime minister, it  is doubtful he would have become Prime Minister December 25th (the thirty days  prior to that he was prime minister-designate). The power-grab only became known  last week. AFP reports that Nouri al-Maliki  defended his power-grab Sunday insisting that his appeal to the Supreme Court to  have the central bank, the electoral commission, the human rights commmission  and the anti-corruption body placed under his control was forthe good of Iraq.  AFP notes:
 
 Several of the agencies affected have themselves  criticised the supreme court ruling, saying it harmed their non-partisan  reputation, while opponents of the decision have called it a move by Maliki to  consolidate power.
 Maliki, who formed  his cabinet last December after political bickering that left Iraq without a  government for more than nine months, also said there was still was no agreement  on the four key defence, intelligence, security and interior ministry  portfolios, which remain vacant.
 
 Fadi al-Issa (Zawya) reports Nouri was not the  only one addressing his power-grab yesterday:
 
 The adviser of the Iraqi Central BankIraqi Central  Bank (ICB) warned on Sunday of the repercussions of the Federal Court's recent  ruling that links the bank directly to the council of ministers in exposing  Iraqi funds to risks.
 Muzher Mohammed  Saleh told AKnews today that the international financial environment is risky  and instead of referring the Central Bank to a judicial power, there is need to  make diversity in the management of foreign financial reserves in the countries  to escape any legal proceedings affecting the debt of the Iraqi government that  are protected under resolution 1483 of the international security council.
 
 Saif Tawfeeq (Reuters) reports that  Nouri insisted today that the bodies would continue to be autonomous ones  despite his control of them. Alsumaria TV adds, "Iraq's  Parliament is due to host on Tuesday heads of the independent commissions to  discuss the ruling of placing certain institutions under ministerial control.  The Parliament is expected to receive head of the Integrity Commission Rahim Al  Ukaili, the High Electoral Commission Chairman Faraj Al Haidair and Central Bank  Chief Sanan Al Shabibi, a source from the Parliament speaking on condition of  anonymity told Alsumaria News."
 
 
 
 
 In news of violence, Saad Abdul-Kadir (AP) reports four Baghdad bombings  have left seven people wounded and that 1 employee of the Ministry of  Electricity was shot dead. Reuters reports eight were wounded  including police Brig Gen Adday Mahmoud and they note 1 security contractor was  shot dead in Baghdad yesterday and a Baghdad sticky bombing yesterday injured a  cleric. That's 2 people dead and nine wounded and there was no violence reporting on Sunday (even  Reuters was obsessed with other stories in other countries). Excuse me,  today IBC reports that 4 security forces were killed in Baghdad and  1 PUK in Kirkuk on Sunday. That's 7 dead and nine wounded. So let's add the  numbers. From The Third Estate Sunday Review's "Editorial: The  silences on  Iraq:"
 
 
 
 Let's  review. January  1st, 1 person was reported dead and nine injured.  January  2nd, 9 people were reported dead and six wounded.  January  3rd, 5 were reported dead and twenty-eight wounded.  January  4th, 3 were reported dead and five wounded.  January  5th, 2 were reported dead and eleven injured.  January  6th, one person was reported injured. January  7th, 5 were reported dead. January  8th, 9 were reported dead and eight injured.  January  9th, 1 person was reported dead and another reported  wounded. January  10th, 4 were reported dead and sixteen injured.  January  11th, 4 were reported dead and nineteen injured.  January  12th, 4 were reported dead and four were injured.  January  13th, 3 were reported dead and fourteen injured.  January  14th, 2 people were reported dead. January  15th, six people were reported injured. January  16th, six people were reported wounded. January  17th, 1 person was reported dead and nine injured.  January  18th, 60 people were reported dead and one hundred  and sixty four injured. January  19th, 25 people were reported dead and forty-two  injured. January  20th, 68 were reported dead and one hundred and  sixty injured. January  21st, no reports of deaths or injured. January  22nd, no reports of deaths or wounded. January  23rd, 8 people were reported dead and thirty-seven  wounded. January  24th, 34 people were reported dead and one hundred  and fifty-six people were reported wounded. January  25th, seven people were reported wounded.  January  26th, 6 were reported dead and one injured.  January  27th, sixty-three people were reported dead and one  hundred and four injured. January  28th, 2 were reported dead and eight injured.  January 29th, five were reported dead. Through Saturday, at least 320 people  have been reported dead and eight hundred and three injured. In addition, 6 US  service members have died in Iraq so far this month.
 
 
 Today  reports of 7 dead and nine wounded. At least 327 people were reported dead in  January with at least 805 reported wounded. (As always, check that math.) The  always laughable Iraq Coalition Casualty Count lists 210 dead  (that's 11 ISF with 199 "Civ" -- deaths are deaths and I believe after the SIGR  report people should pay a lot more attention to 'security' deaths than they  have been). Last week, Ammar Karim  (AFP) noted December's death toll was 151. It's a dramatic  increase. Especially when you consider that just last week, US President Barack  Obama stood before the American people, delivering his State of the Union  address, and claiming 'progress' in Iraq. Historians Against the War offer this reply to the State  of the Union Address:
 
 
 The peace  movement is critical of Mr. Obama's desire to maintain a significant military  presence in Iraq, despite his earlier advocacy of complete withdrawal of our  fighting forces from that country. We need to bring a complete end to our unjust  intervention in Iraq. Although 60 percent of the U.S. public now believes that  the war in Afghanistan is "not worth fighting," the administration's December  2010 review of Afghanistan policy led to dubious claims of successes, which the  president repeated in his State of the Union address, and to a decision to  continue the war for four more years. The choice to continue a policy which the  government's own National Intelligence Estimate makes clear is failing is a  grave error. How many more people must die before the forces in conflict sit  around a table to negotiate an end to an unwinnable war? With the government  making use of private corporations to carry out its military enterprise and  warfare, military expenditures have continued to grow under Mr. Obama, reaching  over one trillion dollars in 2010 alone. How can the government meet the needs  of the people of the United States when military expenditures are at such a  level?
 Peace forces are also troubled  by the administration's human rights record, by its failure to close the  Guantánamo prison as promised, by the opening of military trials of detainees in  defiance of international human rights standards, by the many deaths of  civilians in Afghanistan and Pakistan in attacks that amount to war crimes, by  continuing interventions against left-wing governments in Latin America, by the  recent FBI raids against peace activists, and by the U.S.'s failure to pressure  Israel to end its denial of Palestinian rights. Although peace and justice  activists support the repeal of "don't ask, don't tell," we do not agree that  democratic reform should be used to promote further militarization of our  society as Mr. Obama did with his call to universities to open their doors to  the ROTC and military recruiters. Our university graduates are needed in fields  that meet people's needs and that develop the country's infrastructure rather  than in staffing an overextended empire.
 The human cost to the civilians in societies where we  are intervening and to our own and other combatants is tragic and unsustainable.  Continuing down the path of spending almost as much on the military as all other  countries put together is bankrupting the country, failing to achieve the  control our government seeks, and making us less  safe.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 iraq
 david swanson
 the associated press
 the washington post
 walter pincus
 60  minutes
 cbs news
 al mada
 ayas hossam acommok
 the guardian
 josh halliday
 al furat
 al rafidayn
 historians against the  war
 
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