| Tuesday, February 1, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, the Senate Foreign  Affairs Committee gets played (and few members are even awake), withdrawal or  'withdrawal' gets attention at the hearing and in the press, Nouri's secret  prisons continue (despite denials) as does his power grab, Steven Lee Myers  responds to New York Times readers and more.     This will be one of the most important and potentially divisive  issues of the coming months. I wouldn't blame anyone for being confounded by the  statements of various officials and observers, many of them contradictory. The  fact is that neither the Obama administration nor Mr. Malik's government has so  far decided, at least publicly, what role the American military will have in  Iraq in the future, if any. The leaders' own advisers seem divided on the  matter.  The security agreement President George W. Bush negotiated with Mr.  Maliki over 2008 set a deadline to withdraw all American troops from Iraq's  cities by June 30, 2009, and from the country entirely by Dec. 31, 2011. The  withdrawal from the cities happened on schedule -- with a little fudging on  municipal boundaries to allow bases in Mosul, Kirkuk and Baghdad, for example --  and American officials and commanders say the final withdrawal will also happen  on schedule.  The schedule for withdrawing the remaining troops has not yet been  made public, but it is expected to begin in the spring and be in full swing by  August, with as few as 25,000 troops left by August, as I heard recently. In the  State of the Union address, Mr. Obama again stated that the remainder of the  troops would withdraw as planned, which would seem to rule out a future role for  the American military, but not entirely. My colleagues and I recently outlined some possibilities and the  political difficulties  both he and Mr. Maliki face as they grapple with the  2011 deadline. Iraq's security forces, while larger and increasingly confident,  still require significant training and equipping, as many officials have noted.  Keeping any significant number of American troops in Iraq to do that -- even in  a purely advisory capacity -- will require an extension of the current security  agreement, the negotiation a new agreement of some sort, or some more fudging.  How that unfolds will be a major story this year.   Last week, we quoted from Steven Lee Myers and Alissa J. Rubin's analysis  of the State of the Union address and noted Myers would be answering questions  left at that analysis.  Today, his responses are online.  We'll go out, at the  end of the snapshot, with another section from his replies but the issue of  withdrawal or not withdrawal is where we start.  Steven Lee Myers also reports on a US military  release that the military quickly retracted today:     "This was an internal staff action in the eventuality of the Iraqi  government approving the sale," a spokesman here, Col. Barry A. Johnson, said in  a statement. "It was not intended for distribution. Approval of the sale has  NOT/NOT occurred and notification of any approval will first be made by the  government of Iraq." Mistakes happen in the fog of war, but what was telling was the  specificity of the news release, dated Jan. 31. It included the number of aircraft, the date of delivery in 2013,  the fact that 10 Iraqi pilots were already training in the United States and the  implication that Americans would continue to train the Iraqi security forces  well after a deadline for a complete withdrawal by the end of  2011.       The US Ambassador to Iraq, James Jeffrey, and the top US commander in Iraq,  Gen Lloyd James Austin, appeared in DC this morning before the Senate Foreign  Relations Committee.  The hearing came,  Salam Faraj (AFP), "[. ..] two days after a US  watchdog said shortfalls in the capabilities of Iraq's security forces could  undo security gains after American troops leave at the end of the year. The  Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction (SIGIR) noted that while  Baghdad's forces had made major improvements, they suffered from poor logistics  capabilities, and that corruption within the police and army had hampered their  development." And as Mark Landler (New York Times) reports this  morning on a Senate Foreign Relations Committee report to be released later  today which states that US diplomats will be left unprotected in Iraq if the US  announced plan for withdrawal or 'withdrawal' is followed: "Without thousands of  additional soldiers -- a prospect that seems untenable, given political  pressures in both countries -- the report recommends rethinking the American  civilian presence, which is projected to number 17,000 diplomats, contractors  and others in 15 sites in Iraq."
 This was the Foreign Relations Committee's "first hearing of the new  Congress," as Chair John Kerry noted at the start.  He welcomed "five  new members" to the Committee, Senators Marco Rubio, Mike Lee, Tom Udall and  Dick Durbin   While that was Committee business and may be excused as such, his  many, many words about Egypt?  Including plugging his own guest column in the  New York Times?  As he went on and on -- still in his opening statement -- about  Egypt and its importance to the US, you saw people looking around and appearing  to wonder, "Is this hearing about Iraq or not?"  Finally, he hailed the  "success" and, with that lie, everyone knew he had found his way back to the  topic of the hearing.  (FYI, his office passed on this from Kerry on Egypt.  He had no news release  on Iraq -- no news release on the subject of the hearing he chaired this  morning.)  A woman next to me leaned in and asked, "Did he just say 'We are also  here today?'"  Yes, he did.  He said "we are also here today" to discuss Iraq.   Also?  Iraq, he declared, "because of successes has moved off of the front  burner, so to speak."  Really?  Seems it moved off the front burner of the  hearing Kerry chaired because John Kerry was more interested in being a dog  chasing a Hot Topic Ambulance down the street than in addressing the topic the  hearing was called for.  "In accordance with the 2008 bilateral agreements that  were signed and negotiated by the Bush administration, American troops must  leave the country by the end of the year," Kerry declared before adding "but  these agreements also acknowledge -- and it's important for people to focus on  this -- they also acknowledge the need for continued military cooperation."  If  that seems strange, strange was the hallmark of the hearing.   It was a very strange John Kerry, one who badly needed a hair cut (unless  he's trying to ape Ben Nelson's look) and he was hunched over and, most  importantly, shifty-eyed in a way that brought to mind his one-time nemesis  Richard Nixon.  Did anyone ever think he would end the Iraq War if elected?  (I  actually did.  I can be wrong and often am.  I was certainly wrong about John.)  Whatever happened to the young man who publicly wondered,, "How do you ask a man  to be the last man to die in Vietnam?"  The current War Hark John Kerry  obviously killed him and, judging from the excess pounds Kerry is packing, ate  him as well.   Kerry, still yammering away in his never-ending opening statement,  declared, "In the coming weeks I will explore the possibility of a multi-year  authorization package for Iraq that would include the operational costs of the  mission as well as the security and the economic assistance programs.  This  package could serve as a road map for the American public so that our effort in  Iraq will end better than it began." Politicians can get into a trap -- not just  them, Naomi Wolf's there currently -- where they paint themselves into a corner  and instead of owning up to a mistake, risk a lot of money and a lot of lives.   It's past time that the United States government got as honest as the American  people: The Iraq War is a failure.  Billions of tax payer dollars have been  thrown at the 'problem' and it never made it right and it never will because  when you start an illegal war, you can never rewrite the beginning.  At the very  root, this war that has cost countless Iraqi, US, British, etc lives, this war  was corrupt.  In England, they've had several inquiries into the Iraq War.  Not  in the US.  In the US, our leaders will not admit the war was a mistake.     You might say, "Wait, Kerry's made remarks about it being one and so has  Barack Obam and so has . . ."  Those remarks were made when a Republican was in  the White House. These days we get lies from John Kerry and Barack Obama about  what a "success" Iraq is.  If Barack had a brain, he would have, immediately  upon being sworn in, withdrawan all of the troops from Iraq and stated the war  was wrong.  Then it wouldn't have been his war and anyone pointing to post-Iraq  problems would have to deal with the fact that George W. Bush started it.  (And  for those who whine that Barack would have been breaking the SOFA, no, he  wouldn't have been.  The SOFA was never signed off on by the US Senate.  Check  the Constitution.  And Barack and Joe Biden realized that when they were running  for office and actively called out the SOFA and stated they would oppose it . .  . until they got elected.)     Not only have billions been wasted on the illegal war, John Kerry now wants  to waste more tax payer dollars when the US does not have them to waste.  This  was always the problem with setting up an illegitimate puppet government.  When  you do that, you can't leave.  You have to stay in there in some form or another  or accept the risk that the puppet government will topple as the people demand  self-rule (as they should).  John Kerry today is as scary as John McCain talking about a US presence in Iraq for a  hundred years in 2008.   Ranking Member Richard Lugar, in his opening statements, knew what hearing  he was at.  No talk of Egypt and what the US 'must do.'  Lugar noted, "As our  military presence in Iraq diminishes, our civilian presence is being enhanced by  thousands of personnel engaged in diplomacy, development and security  cooperation of nearly one thousand Defense Dept personnel is planned to mentor  the Iraqi military.  Despite progress in Iraq, violence continues.  The most  recent erport on the security of Iraq by the Depts of State and Defense cites  improved conditions but labels the situation in the country as 'still fragile.'  Although the United States should continue preparations for winding down the  military mission, withdrawal from Iraq cannot be the sole driver of our policy  there.  We have significant interests in Iraq and it is important that our  government is exploring ways to further those interests in the absence of  significant US military power in the country."     No, it doesn't sound like the US is leaving Iraq and that's what happens  when an alleged peace movement turns itself into a 527 for a Corporatist War  Hawk.  Thank you, Leslie Cagan for whoring the movement.  You are far from alone  but no one sought the limelight more than you when Iraq was the media hot  topic.  And certainly, you surrendered on behalf of the peace movement with the  idiotic message you posted the day after the 2008 election hailing Caeser, er,  Barack, and folding up tent and going home.     At some point, a real reporter needs to press these 'strategic interests in  Iraq' types like John Kerry on what those interests are because as they blather  on endlessly about 'strategic interests' all they really telegraph is that this  was a war about oil.  If a reporter would press for that answer, they might get  the truth or hear the ridiculous response Jeffrey offered the Committee:   US Ambassador to Iraq James Jeffrey:  Iraq's strategic importance  is based on a number of factors.  Iraq plays a central role in the Arab and  Muslim worlds and hosts Shi'a Islam's holiest sites. Iraq has a diverse,  multi-sectarian and multi-ethnic population.  Geographically, Iraq is  strategically positioned between major regional players, including Jordan,  Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Iran and Syria.  Iraq represents the frontier  between the Arab and Persian worlds.  And because it is endowed with a  significant portion of the world's oil reserves, Iraq will play an increasingly  influential role in the global economy.   So for those not stupid enough to believe the US government is really  concerned about the the "Shi'a Islam's holiest sites," we're left with the issue  of oil.  And, oh, but Jeffrey didn't offer that to the Committee verbally.  It  was in his written statement, one he referred to and credited to himself and the  general.  (And the State Dept foolishly posted the written statement here.) For his spoken statements, he wanted to warn everyone  that "a Charlie Wilson's War" could take place in Iraq.  And as domestic box  office demonstrated, no one wants that bomb stinking up the cineplexes  again.   If there's ever been a more dishonest hearing on Iraq that we've attended  in the last five years, I'm failing to remember it.       NCCI: When was the last time that you were in Iraq?  Did you notice any  changes in women's status in the country at that  time?             Manal  Omar: The last time I was in Iraq was  December 2010.  Unfortunately, during my trip there was the announcement of the  new government ministries.  It was very sad to see that Iraqi women were not  part of the list of ministries at all.  Many of the women's organizations I have  worked with for the last seven years called me and were in shock to see how  Iraqi women continue to lose rights rather than gain them!  After the previous  elections, there were 6 female ministers; now there are none.  Even the Ministry  for Women's Affairs has an interim male Minister.  This highlights that the  challenge facing women is stronger than ever.     Even the Ministry for Women's Affairs has a man as Minister.  And Austin  wants to brag about how inclusive the government is?  That's a shameful lie.   And a sign of just how much people will spin to continue the Iraq War.  When  someone reveals either that much stupidity or that much duplicity, we're done  with them and their opening one-liners.     Senator Ben Cardin asked about the refugee returns and Jeffrey noted that  "the overaching reason why people don't return is concerns about security."   But, happy talk time, he was convinced that people will return after they have  seen that the security is there.  Really?  After two weeks of massive bombings,  Jeffrey wants to appear before the Committee and happy talk security?   Senator Ben Cardin: On that same side, the chairman's talked about  a long term committment to Iraq, I think we all understand we're going to be  there from the point of view of helping to rebuild the country.  What can you  tell us is being put in place to make sure that the US funds are being used in  the most cost-effective way, that we have protections against US funds being  used to help finance corruption -- local corruption -- in the country, how do we  avoid that and what are we doing for promoting US values including gender equity  issues, making sure that we continue to make progress?  Do we have -- Do you  have an accountability system in place that gives confidence that we should be  considering a more permanent, longterm, committment to Iraq?   US Ambassador James Jeffrey: Yes, sir, on all of those  accounts,Senator. First of all, this is an important priority for us and it's an  important priority for this administration and the last administration.  In  fact, a unique institution, uh, the Special uh Inspector General for Iraq,  SIGIR, has been set up and they have a very active uh program, they have dozens  of uh people stationed or with us TDI either out in the field in Iraq.  We also  have the State Dept and other IGs but SIGR in particular has been very active  in looking into assistance programs and how effective and how efficient they are  and, uh, to what extent there is corruption.  Uh, I, uh, meet with the head of  it, with [Stuart] Bowen, with his deputy and with other members frequently.  In  addtition, uh, uh, since the time of [former US Ambassador to Iraq] Ryan  Crocker, we've organized the embassy in a unique way: where normally we have the  ambassador and then a deputy chief of mission  But for the economic and  assistance elements of it -- we've created essentially a second, uh, deputy  chief of mission -- the assistant chief of mission, currently Ambassador Peter  Bodde who looks into that and focuses directly on the issues of "Are we getting  our bang for the buck?,"  uh, "Are we looking into corruption?," uh, and these  kind of issues.  Uh, a good deal of our assistance goes -- and a good deal of  our political relationships with Iraqis and our engagement with them goes to  issues such as gender equality, minorities, the refugee issue.  We have a very,  very broad dialogue with them.  We played a role behind the scenes on some of  the decisions taken in the Iraqi Constitution on -- under equality -- for  example, 25% of the Parliament has to be uh, uh female. Uh, now there are  problems with this at times.  For example, uh Iraqis -- both men and women --  were unhappy with the makeup of the Cabinet. Uh, the prime minister then decided  that he would have to hold off on completion of the Cabinet until he could find  more female candidates and that process is ongoing.   That is so blatantly false.  It was only after Nouri named his (incomplete)  Cabinet that women -- including Iraqi President Jalal Talabani's niece -- voiced  their outrage over the lack of women in the Cabinet.  But remember that because,  according to the lie, we're going to see Nouri filling the remainder of his  Cabinet with women.  There are ten positions left.  In terms of SIGR, they do  strong work.  It's also after-the-fact work.  Meaning, they are auditing  programs that are often completed or the money is all spent.  In other words,  after the money (or the bulk of it) has been mispent.  In addition, how dare an  employee of the US State Dept claim responsibility for SIGIR which was created,  in 2004, by an act of Congress.  'What are you doing' was the question Jeffrey  was asked.  The answer is: Not real damn much.  It would have been great if at  some point -- maybe during Austin's non-stop praise for Iraqi security forces --  the targeting of Iraq's LGBT population -- by security forces -- had been  raised.  But that never happened.   For a scheduled hearing, there was surprisingly very little awareness of  the issues effecting Iraq.  It was equally surprising how little concern there  was about money.  At a time when Barack keeps saying everyone will have to cut  back, Jeffrey estimated that they will need between $3 billion and $3 and a  half-billion just for 2011.  Only Senator Robert Menendez appeared concerned  about the costs (as evidenced by his citing all the money the US has already  spent on training and reconstruction).    Senator Robert Menendez:  We will be watching it closely as well  because after 58 billion dollars when we were told that Iraqi oil would fund the  full cost of our invasion in Iraq and  the cost of it, obviously, it's tough to  see, here in America, the challenges that we have, the lack of investment that  we have on critical issues and spending 58 billion dollars in Iraq and a  continuum of anywhere from three and three-and-a-half billion dollars a year is  -- is something that I think is going to be increasingly under a  microscope.   After Menendez spoke, the Committee suddenly appeared to be interested in  money.  (An issue they'd mentioned prior only in terms of 'how much can we give  you' and 'do you need helicopters' and other spending sprees).  Jeffrey declared  that it will cost over a billion dollars in the next fiscal years and hundreds  of millions of operating costs. Chair John Kerry asked why the US was laying out  two billion to maintain its presence and Jeffrey never had an answer.   While the ambassador and the general were spinning to the Committee (which  largely accepted the spin gladly), Human Rights Watch was noting more abuse in  Iraq.  Last week,  Ned Parker (Los Angeles  Times) reported that Nouri's Baghdad Brigade "is holding  detainees in miserable conditions for months at a time" at Camp Honor. Khalid Walid (Iraqhurr.org)  reported that the Deupty Minister of Justice, Busho  Ibrahim, continues to deny the charges of abuse and mistreatment including  during an interview with Radio Free Iraq. He insists they are being dealt with a  timely and fair manner and that their families and attorneys can visit them in  the prison within the Green Zone but Walid noted that just to get into the Green  Zone you have to have special identification and this can prevent many from  entering which has led human rights activists such as Hassan Shaaban to argue  that the prison needs to be moved outside the Green Zone.  Today Human Rights Watch notes:     Elite security forces controlled by the military office of Prime  Minister Nuri al-Maliki of Iraq are operating a secret detention site in  Baghdad, Human Rights Watch said today. The elite forces are also torturing  detainees with impunity at a different facility in Baghdad, Human Rights Watch  said. Beginning on November 23, 2010, and continuing over the next three  to four days, Iraqi authorities transferred more than 280 detainees to a secret  site within Camp Justice, a sprawling military base in northwest Baghdad,  interviews and classified government documents obtained by Human Rights Watch  reveal. The Army's 56th Brigade, also known as the Baghdad Brigade, and the  Counter-Terrorism Service, both under the authority of the prime minister's  office, control this secret site. The hurried transfers took place just days  before an international inspection team was to examine conditions at the  detainees' previous location at Camp Honor in the Green Zone. Human Rights Watch  has also obtained a list of more than 300 detainees held at Camp Honor just  before the transfer to Camp Justice. Almost all were accused of  terrorism. "Revelations of secret jails in the heart of Baghdad completely  undermine the Iraqi government's promises to respect the rule of law," said Joe  Stork, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. "The government needs  to close these places or move them under control of the justice system, improve  conditions for detainees, and make sure that anyone responsible for torture is  punished." The Iraqi government should immediately close the facilities or  regularize their position and make them open for inspections and visits, Human  Rights Watch said.     Jane Arraf (Christian Science Monitor)  explains, "The international rights group says it obtained classified  documents that describe a secret site within a military camp called Camp  Justice, in Baghdad's Kathamiya neighborhood. It's run by the Iraqi Army's 56th  Brigade and the counterterrorism service. Both outfits are under the authority  of the prime minister."  Liz Sly (Washington Post) adds, "One of  the sites is at a military base where U.S. forces maintain an advisory team, the  U.S. military confirmed.  Former prisoners at another of the facilities, a  military base in the Green Zone that was vacated by U.S. troops last summer,  have told Human Rights Watch researchers that detainees there were regularly  abused, by being hung upside down, beaten and given electric shocks to various  body parts, including the genitals,"  Michael S. Schmidt (New York Times)  notes, "Mr. Maliki created the brigades in 2008 and they have been a  longstanding issue with Sunnis and others who have accused Mr. Maliki, a Shiite,  of using the security forces as his personal militia. Those fears have been  stoked by the fact that many detainees who have been held by the forces he  commanded appear to be Sunnis."  Geraldine Baum (Los Angeles Times) provides  this context:   Under pressure from government ministers, Maliki had ordered that  facility closed and had promised prison reform and a crackdown on those  responsible. But in an article last month, The Times again revealed allegations  of abuse by members of the Baghdad Brigade, this time at Camp Honor. The Times  reported that families and lawyers had been barred access to detainees,  including some who had been held for two years. Maliki also had said last year, at the time of the prison scandal,  that Camp Honor was being handed over to Iraq's Justice Ministry, which is in  charge of prisons, but Human Rights Watch obtained documents indicating that  this facility and others remain under control of units that report directly to  the military office under Maliki. Officials from both Iraq's Defense and Interior ministries  complained to Human Rights Watch that soldiers in these elite units and members  of the Counter-Terrorism bureau routinely make mass arrests and detentions  without notifying proper authorities in the security ministries.     The US government installed Nouri al-Maliki and he'snow in the midst of a  power-grab.  Background, as November wound down, an arrangement was reached that  allowed Nouri al-Maliki to be named prime minister-designate and have 30 days to  put together a Cabinet. (Actually, that was in the middle of November but Jalal  Talabani waited on 'officially' declaring Nouri prime minister-designate in  order to give Nouri a lot more time to put together a Cabinet. Not that it  helped any. Even now, he still doesn't have a full Cabinet.) So knowing that he  was prime minister-designate and, most likely, prime minister, Nouri filed  (December 18th) with the Supreme Court in order to have independent bodies the  central bank, the electoral commission, the human rights commmission and the  anti-corruption body placed under his control. He did this without notifying  anyone in Parliament. When news leaked out last week, outrage was expressed with  many referring to it as a "coup." From yesterday's  snapshot:
 
 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."
 
 Nouri has been insisting that the Parliament has  no say and shouldn't even attempt to address the issue. Hisham Rikabi (Al Mada) reminds that Nouri went on  state television Saturday night to insist that the court decision is binding and  cannot be appealed before adding that any attempt to do so would "destroy the  country." This is the thug the US installed -- twice. The US government  installed him twice.
 
 The idiot pontificator Tareq Harb is trotted out (as  usual) to provide cover for Nouri as he's done for years now. Harb is not a  legal expert, he's a legal idiot. And his refusal to stay with the law (the law  doesn't predict, for example, why Biden visits Iraq though 'legal expert' Harb  has used his 'legal expertise' to 'tell' why Biden has visited) should have long  ago exposed him as the useless gasbag he is. But today he gets Al  Sabaah treating him as though he knows something. He declares  today that the Parliament cannot overturn the decision. Actually, per the  Constitution they can and if Harb's brain wasn't up Nouri's ass, he might know  that. Parliament is over the funding of those bodies. Parliament can kill the  bodies tomorrow and vote to recreate new ones. Parliament can do any number of  things and a real "legal expert" would not only know the Constitution of Iraq,  he or she would know what it meant in practice.  As for the United Nations? Al  Mada reports that the United Nation's top official in Iraq, Ad  Melkert, can't do a damn thing or won't. He weighs in to sa that the court's  decision must be respected but so must Parliament. Way to choose a side, United  Nations. It gets worse. Ad Melkert doesn't feel the issue is at all important  (this is how Saddam Hussein's happen, pay attention). What is important? "The  next stage requires a focus on the recovery of the Iraqi economy," he is quoted  stating.
 
 As noted in yesterday's snapshot, the death toll for January  was twice that of December.
 Xiong Tong (Xinhua) reports, "The death toll  from violence in January climbed to highest level since September late year as  several massive terrorist attacks killed and wounded hundreds of people,  including security members and Shiite pilgrims, Iraqi authorities said on  Tuesday."  Lara Jakes and Donna Cassata (AP)  report, "At least 159 Iraqi citizens and 100 police and soldiers were killed  in insurgent attacks in January -- the deadliest month for Iraq since September,  according to data released Tuesday by security and health ministry officials in  Baghdad. An Associated Press count of Iraqis killed in attacks over two weeks  alone puts the death toll at more than 200."
   Alberto B. Martinez got away with murder. Not the Alberto Martinez who --  along with Jacob Burgoyne and Douglas Woodcoff -- murdered Richard Davids July  14, 2003. This Alberto Martinez walked free after murdering Lou Allen and  Phillip Esposito while the three were serving in Iraq on June 7, 2005. He used a  Claymore mine to kill Phillip Esposito and wound Lou Allen and then tossed three  grenades in an attempt to cover his actions. When he walked, after being  aquitted December 4, 2008, Lou Allen's widow Barbara Allen exclaimed, as the  verdict was announced, "He slaughtered our husbands, and  that's it? You murdered my husband!"
 February 21, 2009,  the New York Times ran Paul von  Zielbauer's "G.I. Offered to Plead Guilty,  Then Went Free in Iraq Deaths" on the front page, detailing that  Martinez plea agreement that got tossed aside: "This offer to plea originated  with me. No person has made any attempt to force or coerce me into making this  offer." The agreement was also signed by the same two attorneys who represented  Martinez. Barbara Allen was quoted by von Zielbauer stating, "They had a  conviction handed to them and chose not to take it." The plea would have meant  life in prison. Georgetown law professor and former Marine judge Gary D. Solis  told von Zielbauer, "The only reason you should turn this down is if you have an  absolutely bulletproof case. I can't imagine why they didn't take it. You've got  life in prison in hand."
 
 Drew Brooks (Fayetteville Observer) reports that Siobhan  Esposito is suing to obtain a full transcript of the court martial of Martinez  -- a court martial that was open to the public and at which reporters were  present but a court martial that the military refuses to provide a full  transcript for. From Brooks' report:
 
 According to Siobhan Esposito, that transcript was  redacted to exclude information that was stated in open court, such as the names  of lawyers, the military judge and witnesses and the names of some bases in  Iraq.
 "I was outraged. It was a  shock," she said of the redacted transcript. "I believe the law gives me the  right to those records."
 Siobhan  Esposito's lawyer, Eugene Fidell, said the redactions were baffling. He teaches  military law at Yale Law School.
 "The  notion that someone would take the time to do this . there's a serious problem  in the way the Army views the records related to a court-martial," he  said.
 
 How petty is the US military brass? Not only has the woman  lost her husband but she saw his killer walk free because the military  prosecution set aside a plea agreement because they just knew they could win it  in court. And after all of that, they want to deny her a full transcript to what  was an open hearing?
 
   Thanks to everyone who wrote, especially Jimmy from Dallas who  asked if those of us working here "realize you are read." We do, even if Iraq  has receded so far from the center of public attention in the United States --  as I noted about President  Obama's State of the Union address --  that it can  sometimes feel as if it has been forgotten, overshadowed by economic troubles at  home, the renewed focus on Afghanistan and all the turmoil elsewhere in the  world.  I have been struck more than once when I am home -- in Washington  -- by how little Iraq comes up in day-to-day conversations anymore, when it once  devoured so much. So it's nice to know there are many who care deeply about  Iraq's fate and pay attention --  whatever the rationale for the war, which  continues to be contentious, as several questions/comments made very  clear.   |