| Tuesday, May 17, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, a lengthy Basra  protest gets some results, the Kurds want the US to stay in Iraq, Tom Bowman  wants to half-inform you in his half-assed way, Senator Patty Murray gears up  for an important Senate hearing, and more.   Al Sabaah reports Iraq's  political blocs have agreed to address whether or not to extend the US military  presence in Iraq. This reconsideration is at Nouri's request. Wednesday , Nouri  al-Maliki raised the issue and said if 70% of the political players agreed to  extend the US presence, then that's what would happen.  As we've repeatedly  noted, that's not an impossible to reach number.  The Kurds would want them to  stay -- and our statement on that is backed up by Fars News which reports today , "The Kurdistan  Patriotic Union issued a statement on Sunday, asking the US military troops to  extend their mission in Iraq."  That's roughly a third of the Parliament right  there.  Aswat al-Iraq adds , "Most of political  blocs in Kurdistan believed that the US withdrawal at the end of this year is  unsuitable that will tense the security situation in the country and return of  violence. Spokesman of the National Kurdistan Party, headed by President Jalal  Talabani, Azad Jindiyani said to Aswat al-Iraq that 'the US withdrawal is  unsuitable due to the delay in building up Iraqi forces and the existence of  political problems in the country'."        The uninformed and deluded will continue to insist that Moqtada al-Sadr has  power (Shi'ite leader of the small Sadr bloc).  Let's provide the context they  keep missing by dropping back to two reports on Moqtada's last attempt to stop  US troops from staying, November 22, 2008.  This is from Mary Beth Sheridan's  "Sadr Followers Rally Against U.S.  Accord " (Washington Post ):  Thousands of followers of radical Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr  demonstrated Friday against an agreement that would extend the U.S. military  presence in Iraq, shouting "America out!" and burning an effigy of President  Bush.The rally was held in Baghdad's Firdaus Square, where U.S. soldiers  toppled a statue of President Saddam Hussein in an iconic moment of the 2003  invasion. Friday's demonstration followed two days of boisterous protests by  Sadr's loyalists in parliament, which is scheduled to vote next week on the  agreement.
 The Sadrists do not appear to have the strength to derail the  bilateral accord, which would allow American troops to stay in Iraq for three  more years. The group has only 30 seats in the 275-seat parliament. Friday's  protest drew thousands of people but was smaller than a massive demonstration  held by Sadr loyalists in the same central Baghdad plaza in 2005.
     
   In Firdos Square, protesters sat in rows of 50 stretching back  more than half a mile. They filled Sadoun Street, beside the Palestine Hotel and  in front of the colonnaded traffic circle where five years ago American troops  pulled down the dictator's statue in scenes televised around the world.
 While  the rally was billed as a cross-community effort, to be attended by Shiite and  Sunni clerics, the vast majority of those in attendance were Sadrists. Many had  come from Mr. Sadr's stronghold of Sadr City, and the chants the crowd took up  were "Moktada, Moktada," "No, no to America," and "No, no to the  agreement."
 Sadrist officials said they opposed the security agreement  because they did not believe assurances that the Americans would ever leave.  They depicted the pact as a successor to colonial-era treaties with Western  powers in the last century that, they said, had "sold the Arab and the Muslim  lands into occupation."
     
 Despite the protests, days later the SOFA would pass Parliament. If Moqtada  had the power so many are convinced he had, the SOFA never would have gone  through.  And, in 2008, Moqtada was a lot more influential than he is today when  he's concerned that many of his lieutenants are eager to lead and not follow.     One US view for staying? Today  Jane Arraf (Christian Science Monitor)  quotes  ("former executive officer to Gen. David Petraeus and a professor of  military history at Ohio State University") Peter Mansoor stating, "Let's be  clear -- the reason we should stay is to keep the Iraqis from fighting each  other, particularly the Kurds and the Arabs.  We can couch it in whatever terms  we want to but . . . they need us to protect them from themselves."  To be  clear, this site has always supported, and continues to, immediate and full  withdrawal of US forces from Iraq. The US staying? November 27, 2008 , the Iraqi Parliament voted on  the Status Of Forces Agreement (or those who bothered to show up -- many skipped  the vote, for the record, 149 MPs voted in favor of the SOFA -- Parliament then  had 275 members). As soon as it passed the Iraqi Parliament, the White House finally released a version of the  SOFA .  Prior to the SOFA, each year the US and Iraq had to request that the UN  mandate be renewed for the US military to legally operate on Iraqi soil. (This  is the occupation. No UN mandate provided for the war itself.) The SOFA replaced  the UN mandate. The UN mandate covered a variety of countries (including England  and Australia) but it also put Iraq in a type of protective receivership. Nouri  was prevented from gaining access to certain funds (among other things). This is  why Nouri didn't want the UN mandate renewed.
 When it was decided that  the UN mandate would be ditched, every country that planned to stay in Iraq  needed to negotiate their own contract (bilateral agreement) with Iraq. The US  went with the SOFA.
 
 The SOFA could run for three years, if neither side  exercised their 'out clause.'  Article 30 of the SOFA covers this noting in  section one: "This Agreement shall be effective for a period of three years,  unless terminated sooner by either Party pursuant to paragraph 3 of this  Article."  Either side could terminate the SOFA at any point but there was no  immediate termination.  Section 3 of Article 30 covered this: "This Agreement  shall terminate one year after a Party provides written notification to the  other Party to that effect."
   Lies were told from the beginning.  For instance, in an attempt to clamp  down on outrage and ensure it passed the Parliament, Nouri al-Maliki insisted  the people would get a say in this.  In fact, a referendum would be held in July  2009!  That referendum never took place.   It really didn't matter in terms of  ending the SOFA right away.  If it had taken place and the vote had been to end  the SOFA and Nouri had immediately notified the US that Iraq was breaking the  SOFA, the SOFA would end . . . one year after Nouri gave official notification.     The SOFA is a contract. Like any contract, it can expire, be renewed and it  can be replaced. Expire?  It would run through Decemeber 2011 and not be renewed  (or replaced).  Replaced?  A new bilateral agreement could be agreed to by the  US and Iraqi governments.  Renewed (or extended)?  That's Article 30, Section  2.  We have repeatedly opposed efforts for the US Congress to praise the SOFA  with meaningless 'honorary' bills.  While Iraq's Parliament was able to vote on  the SOFA, the US Congress had no say.  The Bush White House yet again  circumvented the US Constitution -- specifically the section on treaties (treaty  clause), Article 22, Section 2, Clause 2 which requires the Senate's advise and  consent on all treaties the US enters into with other countries.  Barack Obama  was 'outraged' that the Senate was being bypassed . . . until he became  president-elect.  At which point Barack (and Joe Biden) dropped their objection  to the US Constitution being circumvented -- this despite Barack being one of  the 13 co-sponsors of Hillary Clinton's Senate bill insisting the SOFA come  before the Congress.    After it was a done deal, why did it matter?   Because (A) the Constitution is the supreme law of the land in the US.   Violating it is no minor thing.  (B) It sets a precedent.  (C) The SOFA can be  extended.   And how is it extended?  Article 30, Section 2, "This Agreement shall be  amended only with the official agreement of the Parties in writing and in  accordance with the constitutional procedures in effect in both countries."      What does that mean?   It means that the precedent is Nouri's Cabinet and the Parliament have to  sign off in Iraq while, in the US, only the White House has to want it.   I don't know how to make that any clearer.  Offering that very basic legal  analysis was controversial in 2008; however, events have backed up what we've  said. It's only the most idiotic that can't grasp it today. Enter Tom  Bowman (NPR). Today on Morning  Edition, he reports  on one of two plans. But gets many things  wrong. First, he's unaware -- or unwilling to pass on --that this is one of two  plans currently. What he's covering is plan B for the US administration. It's  their back up plan, not their preferred plan. The preferred plan is  extending the SOFA. If that doesn't happen, US forces that remain in Iraq -- and  some will though Tom Bowman 'forgets' to include that aspect in his report --  will be under the State Dept's control. In addition, as Bowman report, there  will be many contractors brought in (who will also be under the State Dept's  control).   Throughout his report, Bowman repeatedly states as fact that all US troops  leave Iraq at the end of this year. First off, they don't. Even under plan B  (Bowman's topic), some remain in Iraq. (Bowman might need to attend  Congressional hearings on this subject. If he had, he'd be well versed in this  topic instead of flying blind.  Here are two hearing you can refer to, the February 1st Senate Foreign Affairs Committee hearing  and the  February 3rd Senate Armed Services Committee  hearing .) Second, facts are what has happened. US troops have NOT left Iraq.  Some may leave at the end of 2011, some may not. And with Iraqi blocs agreeing  to discuss the issue, you'd think NPR would be concerned about their reporters  getting the facts correct.Bowman insists, "On the ground, it's the same story.  American soldiers and  Marines will leave."  Marines will leave?  What kind of a moron is Tom  Bowman?   Who the hell does he think protects US Embassies around the world?     And it wouldn't be just three or five Marine guards under the Embassy in  Baghdad's control.  At this late date, you'd think a journalist would know what  came before.  For example, in February the Senate Foreign Relations Committee  released a 20 page report entitled [PDF format warning] "IRAQ: THE TRANSITION FROM A  MILITARY MISSION TO A CIVILIAN-LED EFFORT ."  This section should be  rather clear:   The State Department is scheduled to assume full security  responsibilities in a still dangerous and unpredictable environment and must  strike a difficult balance between maintaining a robust presence and providing  sufficient level of security.  In almost any scenario, the United States will  continue to have military personnel stationed at the American embassy in a  non-combat role under the Office of Security Cooperation. As in many countries  around the world, these troops will be responsible for enhancing the bilateral  defense relationship by facilitating security assistance.  But the size, scope,  and structure of this presence remain undetermined, even at this late date.   Perhaps most significantly, it is unclear what kind of security relationship the  incoming Iraqi Government would like with the United States.     "In almost any scenario, the United States will continue to have military  personnel stationed at the American embassay in a non-combat role under the  Office of Security Cooperation.  As in many countries around the world, these  troops will be responsible for enhancing the bilateral defense relationship by  facilitating security assistance." Clear enough?  The report offers the  following three scenarios:  1) All US troops leave at the end of 2011 ("except  for a limited Office of Secuirty Cooperation housed within the embassy") which  would require the State Dept scale back their current plans.  2) Many US troops  leave at the end of 2011 but the Office of Security Cooperation is expanded with  "military forces" who will "provide logistical support for the Iraqi army, shore  up administrative gaps within the Ministry of Defense, and prove 'behind the  wire' capabilities". 3) A new security agreement is negotiated to allow the US  military to continue in Iraq. ("This approach should only be considered if it  comes at Iraq's request".)        Jane Arraf counts "about 150 marines" in Iraq  after 2011 (if no extension takes place).  I have no idea where she's getting  her numbers (I'm not questioning her numbers) because when the US Ambassador to  Iraq James Jeffrey and various heads of military and Robert Gates have publicly  raised the issue to Congress, they haven't had a number.  Carl Levin, in his  role as Chair of the Armed Services Committee, has repeatedly noted that. Again,  I don't question Jane Arraf's numbers but find it interesting that someone in  the US military or (more likely) with the US Embassy in Baghdad is providing her  with numbers when they've refused to do the same to the House or Senate Armed  Services Committee or the Senate Foreign Affairs Committe (the chair of the  latter, John Kerry, has also pursued this).  Without an answer to that question,  the Senate Foreign Relations Committee estimated the State Dept would need  between $25 to 30 billion over the next five years for Iraq alone.  Though the  State Dept was quite happy to send Secretary of Defense Robert Gates to Congress  to fight their battle (and he was stupid enough to do it -- no head of any  department is caught up enough in their own work to take on the work of another  department), as they continued to insist they needed more money.  As Mary Beth Sheridan (Washington Post)  reported  last February, the reality for the 2012 budget would be "about $10  billion" on Iraq alone -- as opposed to the $5.2 billion the State Dept tosses around  to  the press and public.    At a time when -- supposedly -- we're all having to make sacrifices, the  State Dept wants a huge increase in funding and can't even provide solid  numbers.  The Iraq War has been a financial sink hole exactly because it was  pay-as-you-go.  That started under Bush.  Though Barack promised there would be  no more supplementals for war spending, they have continued.  And when a  Department asks for money but will not provide the details of how many US  military forces and how many contractors it would cover, you have the recipe for  further cost overruns -- at a time when the United States supposedly cannot  afford it.   Equally important, Barack was supposed to usher in a new age of  transparency in government -- his promise, take it up with him and that's not  happening when the State Dept continues to conceal the very basic numbers  involved from the citizens of the United States. Not only is there no  transparency, there's an attitude of 'we don't answer to the American people.'   While some of that attitude -- which needs to be dropped immediately -- can be  pinned on the national security types who will be pulling the strings, that's no  excuse and the State Dept needs to get its act together and remember it works  for the American people.    More true than ever as Behrouz Saba (New American Media) reports  today,  "Three countries which have received billions in U.S. foreign aid -- Iraq,  Afghanistan and Pakistan -- made the top ten list of the world's failed states,  in a survey conducted by Foreign Policy magazine. Moreover, Transparency  International reports that Iraq and Afghanistan are just about the most corrupt  countries in the world -- edged out only by Myanmar and Somalia -- among the 178  nations rated. Pakistan ranks 143, just slightly better than Haiti and  Iran."  Now let's go back to the SOFA because there are a few more points to be  made but we'll stick to one.  Iraq did not force the US on this treaty.  Nouri  al-Maliki knew then (and knows today) that he is in danger of losing his post  (prime minister) if US forces aren't present to 'maintain' the 'democracy.'   This was stated outright to Nouri in 2008.  Despite that, some claim that the US  was forced into concessions.  Noam Chomsky, in fact, made that claim in Syracuse last week .   He's not the only one who's done so. An idiot that Elaine rightly slammed last night  buys into  that claim for her own vanity (doing so means her time wasn't 'wasted').   What  appears to confuse some people is that (A) they don't realize how long the  process was and (B) they don't realize that the US was more than happy to have  Iraq focus and obssess over certain details while ignoring others -- especially  since the clock was ticking.  On (A), negotiations began in 2007.  Article 25 of  the SOFA notes that Condi Rice notified the UN that the mandate would not be  renewed on December 7, 2007.  On (B), articles like Deborah Haynes (Times of London) in June  of   2008  mean nothing in terms of the SOFA.  The US wanted what it wanted  and knows how to play the game.  Meaning on things minor to them, they'll  happily play along but they will get what they want in the end.  The non-English  press was filled with these reports by October of 2008.  The English language  press largely ignored it.  One foreign outlet in English that covered it was Iran's Press TV with their  November 28, 2008 report entitled "Jannait: Iraq passed US deal out of  force :  "Washington echelons  repeatedly threatened to overthrow the Iraqi government if they continued their  opposition to the security deal," said Tehran's interim Friday prayers leader  Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati.
 Iraq's al-Morsad reported on Oct. 10  that US Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte had warned that Iraqi Prime  Minister Nouri al-Maliki would be 'ousted' unless he signed the US-proposed  security pact.
 
 Iraqi Vice President Tariq al-Hashimi has also claimed  that the Bush administration had threatened to cut off vital services to Baghdad  if it further delayed the accord, saying the threats were akin to 'political  blackmail'.
 
 "It was really shocking for us…Many people are looking to  this attitude as a matter of blackmailing," al-Hashimi said on Oct. 26.
     Why is any of the above important -- and so important that we had to walk  slowly through it?    If, in 2008, the press (including NPR) had done their jobs and told the  truth (instead of swearing the Iraq War was now over -- a prediction, not a  fact), attempts to encourage the American people to ignore Iraq and to stop  working to end the war would not have been as successful as they were.  In less  than seven months, we'll find out what happens in Iraq (whether US troops get  switched to State Dept supervision or whether a new agreement allows them to  remain on the ground and under the Defense Dept).  It is very important that  accurate information is provided to the American people at this point.   Those who want the Iraq War to continue (and there are probably at least  28% of Americans who do want that) have every right to know what is going on so  they can weigh in and lobby their representatives.  Those opposed to the Iraq  War have the same rights. The press has whored enough.  We don't need more  whoring from Tom Bowman.  Tell the truth or do like Diane Rehm and just pretend  that Iraq fell of the map.   Seriously, your lies did enough damange over the  last three years.  If lies are all you intend to offer over the next seven  months, do the country a favor and take a vow of silence.  You're not helping  anyone.   Iraqis continue to in their efforts to help themselves out of a puppet  government and into something more responsive.  The Great Iraqi Revolution notes , "With the Sologan  ALL OF ANBAR IS TAHRIR: The Youth of Anbar will be starting a new SIT-IN very  shortly since their SIT-IN was ended by force."  In addition Revolution of Iraq notes  that there will be an  11:00 am demonstration outside the Iraqi Embassay in Cairo this Friday.  Free Iraq Uprising offers  video from Mosul  yesterday and notes, "Government repression did not stop young people."   Meanwhile an oil workers strike in Basra paid off.  Ben Lando (Iraq Oil Report) notes  that  the Ministry of Interior has created "3,300 new full-time positions for the  Iraqi Oil Police" in response to the ongoing protests.  Turning to today's violence, Reuters notes  a college employee was  shot dead in Mosul, 1 corpse was discovered in Kirkuk, a Kirkuk roadside bombing  left two employees of North Oil Company injured and the Interior Ministry's Col  Jasim Mohammed was shot dead in Baghdad.  AFP adds  that 21 corpses have been  discovered in Falluja "in body-bags with Latin letters and numbers on them" and  that Falluja mayor Adnan Hussein is stating they were killed in 2004 by the US  military and that "the black body-bags and the manner in which they were buried  proves this." Aswat al-Iraq notes  a bombing attack on  US forces in Wassit Province which left a woman and her daughter injured (no US  injuries reported) and a Baghdad bombing killed 1 person and left three more  injured .  Meanwhile Alison Matheson (Christian Post) reports  on Ashur  Issa Yaqub whose body was found yesterday  in Kirkuk.  The Iraqi Christian, who appears to have been tortured before he was killed, was  kidnapped and the ransom was $100,000 which his family was unable to meet. The  number of Christians in Iraq has fallen drastically throughout the Iraq War as  they have been the focus of one wave of targeting after another. The latest wave  began October 31st with the assault on  Our Lady of Salvation Church in Baghdad .  Spero News adds  that Ashur had three  children and that "horrific marks of torture" were on his corpse (including his  "head had been cut off and the eyes gauged out of their socket"). Iraqi  Christians are targeted.  We do cover the issue.  There's a report in the  Guardian  we aren't interested.  Andrew White is a liar.  We do not  cover him, we certainly do not glorify him.  He's lied too many times publicly.   But we had our fill of it when he gave testimony about the Jewish population in  Iraq and said they were all gone.  He apparently thought he was providing closed  testimony.  Too bad for him, it was public.  The Jewish population was not all  gone and when confronted by a reporter, he threw a snit fit and insisted that  his testimony (which was false, understand that, grasp it) could not be reported  on.  Andrew White is a liar. He's actually much worse than a liar and should he  ever stop visiting Iraq (he doesn't live there), we can go into exactly what  he's done.  But we'll bite our tongues while he continues to do his lay overs in  Baghdad.  At times in Iraq, it seems everyone except the exiles the US put into power  are being targeted. Hasan Kanbolat (Todays Zaman) reports there's a new  wave of targeting Turkman:
 One week after  the new political restructuring of the ITC, on the morning of May 12, Erşat  Salihi's Kirkuk home was attacked. Despite the fact that his house was guarded,  the attacker succeeded in tossing explosives into his house and planting mines  around the outside of the home. And thus, the first large-scale attack on a  Turkmen leader in Iraq took place. Luckily, no one was hurt during these events,  even though Salihi and his family were at home during the attack. But the fact  that the convoy of Kirkuk Police Chief Cemal Tahir was attacked as Tahir and his  team returned from inspecting the evidence at Salihi's home shows that whoever  carried out these attacks was very organized and resolute in their  actions.
 Also on the rise, Rebecca Santana (AP) reports , are  attacks on US service members "in southern Iraq, where Shiite militias trying to  claim they are driving out the U.S. occupiers have stepped up attacks against  bases and troops. The uptick in violence serves as a warning about what American  forces could face if U.S. and Iraqi officials come to an agreement about keeping  more U.S. troops in the country past Dec. 31."     In the United States, the first of two major veterans hearings takes  place.  Senator Patty Murray's office notes:   (Washington, D.C.) -- Tomorrow, U.S. Senate  Veterans' Affairs Committee Chairman Patty  Murray will question the Deputy Secretaries of both the Department of  Defense (DoD) and the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) on  major problems confronting those agencies in caring for veterans with the  visible and invisible wounds of war. Murray will focus on DoD and VA's joint  disability evaluation process, military and veteran suicides, the lack of  cooperation in certain areas between the two agencies, and care for  amputees.   The hearing is the first of two that  Chairman Murray has scheduled as part of her efforts to prevent service members  and veterans from falling through the cracks of the VA/DoD system. The second  hearing on these issues is scheduled for next Wednesday (5/25) and will feature  first-hand accounts from veterans.       WHO:            Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee Chairman  Patty Murray              The Honorable  W. Scott Gould, Deputy Secretary of Veterans  Affairs              The Honorable William J. Lynn III, Deputy Secretary  of Defense     WHAT:          Senate Veterans'  Affairs Committee Hearing on the State of VA/DoD  Collaborations and the  Challenges those Agencies Face in Caring for  Veterans   WHEN:          TOMORROW: Wednesday, May 18th,  2011                           10:00 AM EST/7:00 AM PST                             WHERE:       Russell 418       WEBCAST: http://veterans.senate.gov/           |