| Monday, July 25, 2011. Chaos and violence continue, Political Stalemate II  continues, Iraq might get a Minister of Defence, Harry Reid wants to pretend  with the American people that the US leaves Iraq in 2011, the same old  complaints (charges) against Iran by the US military surface again, and  more.   Starting with violence, Xinhua reports  a Muqdadiya motorcycle  bombing today claimed 3 lives and left twelve injured. AP cites  police Maj Ghalib al-Karkhi  stating it was a remote control bombing.  Reuters adds  a Hawija car bombing went  of inside a suspect's home ("killing him").  Aswat al-Iraq reports , " An  explosive charge blew off against a U.S. Army patrol in southern Iraq's City of  Basra on Sunday night, but losses were not known, whilst police forces arrested  six wanted men, One of them wanted for terrorist acts, a Basra police source  reported on Monday." In addition, they note , "An Iraqi  soldier has been injured in an explosive charge blast west of Mosul, the center  of Ninewa Province, on Monday, a Ninewa security source reported."  AP reports Sidkan Mayor Ahmed Qadir  states 2 Iraqis were killed last night with another three left injured from Iran  shelling the area in their continued assaults on PJAK (Kurdish group). Over the  weekend, AFP quoted  the International  Committee of the Red Cross, "The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)  has provided humanitarian assistance to over 800 internally displaced people in  northern Iraq, all of whom have been driven from their homes by the recent  shelling in the mountains of Qandil. Having left behind all their belongings,  the majority of these people are now living under makeshift shelters, tents, or  sharing crowded houses with relatives and friends, while a few families could  afford renting very basic accomodation." This morning IRIN notes , "Nearly 200 families  have been displaced in Iraq's self-ruled northern Kurdish region due to Iranian  shelling since mid-July of Iranian Kurdish rebels based inside Iraq, say  officials." Meanwhile the Iranian government is claiming complete support  from Baghdad for the assault that's displacing (and killing) Iraqis. The Tehran  Times reports : The  Iranian ambassador to Baghdad has said that the Iraqi officials are serious in  dealing with the terrorist group PJAK (the Party for a Free Life in Kurdistan),  emphasizing they regard Iran's action against terrorists as justified. Iraq  regards this group as a terrorist one and believes that Iran has the right to  take action against the group, Ambassador Hassan Danaiifar told reporters on  Sunday. Though a large number of exiles now in power in Baghad  have strong ties to Iran, it's equally true that the Iraqi people as a whole are  more likely to remember the Iran-Iraq War -- especially those taught about it in  school -- of the eighties. As Iraqis are killed and displaced while Iran  violates Iraq's sovereignty in its pursuit of PJAK, don't be surprised if  Nouri's image collapses even more. All he really had going for him was the  (false) claim that he could provide security. As the last months have  demonstrated, he can't provide it internally and he's now allowing Iraq to be  invaded by another country.   Still on Iran,  Michael R. Gordon partnered with Judith Miller on many of  the notorius stories the New York Times published in the lead up to the  war.  Whereas Judith Miller's 'reporting' just revealed someone who no longer  knew how to be skeptical (and was too desperate to fit in with her sources),  Gordon's 'reporting' demonstrated a War Lust.  So after the Iraq War started,  what did Gordo become famous for?     After the 2003 invasion and the failure of the Bush administration  to find the unconventional weapons it said was a reason for the war, the  subsequent claims by the American military that Iran was supplying weapons and  training to Shiite militias to attack American forces were met with abundant  skepticism by the American public and other countries.       Nima Shirazi: It seems that every few  years if not every few months the news media basically, because of specific  orders from government officials, goes on and on and on about how the Iranian  government is funneling weapons across the Iran-Iraq border to pro-Iran,  pro-Shia militias in Iraq, and that these weapons are responsible for killing US  soldiers who are occupying Iraq. So what winds up happening when these reports  surface as they have again and again and again for years there's kind of a  renewed public sense of this Iranian threat, this Iranian menace, you know,  'They can't even stay in their own country! They have to go into one of the ones  we're occupying and then kill us there!'  You know, that-that kind of fear  mongering.  And as is consistently reported after these reports come out --  usually by someone like Gareth Porter who I think you interview a lot -- he  consistently debunks all of these myths about these Iranian weapons saying,  'Actually, despite what the US military says, the findings actually show that  the majority of the weapons come from China or from Russia or, you know, even if  they are in theory from Iran, the Iranian government has no role in this which  actually would then be a very important distinction to make if there is a black  market weapons trade in that area which undoubtedly there is.  Who's  "responsible" for it? And when you say Iran is funneling weapons into Iraq to  kill US troops, what are you actually saying?  So there's a new push with it  this summer.  It seems like every time the nuclear issue kind of recedes because  of new reports or because, you know, the dog days of summer and people want to  talk about something new, instead of something new, people just regurgitate  something from the past that seems new to kind of get that hype up  again.     Scott Horton: Right.  Well you know it  really was amazing back in 2007 and 2008 when it really was just like that.  You  know, they would switch off back and forth between whether we were supposed to  fear the open, declared, above-board, inspected nuclear electricity program or  whether we were supposed to fear some secret program that 'must' exist, that we  have to bomb even though we have no idea where any of it is because it's so  secret and that's how we know it's there and all of that kind of thing. And then  all of the sudden, they just drop the nuclear issue and even pretty much -- I  would say before the NIE came out that had pretty much gone on the back burner.   And they spent most -- certainly 2007 and the dawn of the surge accusing Iran --  Basically, they just wanted to switch from fighting the Sunni based insurgency  to fighting Moqtada al-Sadr's guys at the same time that they were really  fighting to put him in power, they were preferring the same guys that Iran  preferred at the time, the Supreme Islamic Council, the more professional, upper  middle class Hakim clan and there was no sensical reason that made any sense  whatsoever why the Iranian government would want to arm up Moqtada al-Sadr more  than the Badr Brigade, the one that we were fighting for and with and kicking  the last of the Sunni Arabs out of Baghdad.  And the whole thing was not just a  lie, a pile of assertions unproven, but it made no sense on its face.  The whole  thing was a giant joke and it went on for a year and a half or something.  Now  here they are again.  They never even have to prove it, do they?  They just say  it five times.  "Oh, a bomb went off, it must have been Iran." And then that's  it.     Staying with the US-Iraq topic, the Washington Post's Ed O'Keefe  Tweets:    On the  no-confidence vote, a few things to remember. If Nouri hasn't already made an  agreement with the US (some reports exist he has an he's merely waiting to  unveil it), a no-confidence vote could cause US troops to leave Iraq. It took  nine months for Political Stalemate I to end, nine months after the election.  Since the Constitution wasn't followed by Nouri, another prime  minister-designate could ignore the 30 day deadline (to name a full Cabinet and  have all posts voted on by Parliament). Iraq could even struggle on for several  months without a prime minister. (If that happened again, many believe the UN  would be forced to do its job and set up a caretaker government. During  Political Stalemate I, the UN shirked their responsibilities and allowed to  Nouri to remain in office even though his term had expired.) A no-confidence  vote could toss the entire stay-or-go up in the air because, for the appearance  of legitimacy, a would-be prime minister might not want to go against the Iraqi  people (who overwhelmingly favor all US troops out of Iraq  now). Sunday Prashant Rao (AFP) reported  US Col Michael Bowers  has announced that, on August 1st, the US military will no longer be patrolling  in northern Iraq with the Kurdish forces and forces controlled by Baghdad. For  those who have forgotten,the two were at each other's throats not all that long  ago. I guess that was "trainers" in action, huh? It wasn't combat, right?  Patrolling couldn't be combat because Barack Obama declared an end to all combat  operations August 31st. They don't do anything in Iraq, they just sit around  now, right?  The same day Aswat al-Iraq  reported : "The U.S. Air  Force had carried out a landing early Saturday in Fudeiliya village, 15 km to  the east of Nassirya, the center of Thi-Qar Province. The force detained 7  persons, charged with having carried out attacks against American forces in the  area," the security source told Aswat al-Iraq news agency. The security  source said that the detainees were "a municipality employee in Fudeiliya  village and three of his sons, along with a member of the Province's Emergency  Battalion, who were all moved outside the Province." And in more  combat operations that aren't supposed to be happening, Alsumaria TV reported ,  "US Forces increased military patrols in the regions surrounding its military  bases in Babel, Diwaniya and Waset, the US military said. These measures aim to  protect US military bases in these regions and around Iraq against attacks by  Iran-supported groups, the US military noted." Securing the perimeter? Some  might argue that sounds like a combat operation. Still in related  news : Southern Iraq Missan  Province's Governor, Ali Dawai, has said on Friday that a special parliamentary  committee was formed to "investigate violations by the American troops in Amara,  the center of Missan Province last Monday and Tuesday. "A special committee was formed to investigate the  U.S. air raids on Amara city by live ammunition," Missan Governor Ali Dawai  said, adding that the committee would arrive in Missan in few days to carry out  its investigation.    US Senator Patty  Murray chairs the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee which will hold a hearing on  longterm costs:   The hearing will feature the views of  budget experts from the Congressional Budget Office and the Government  Accountability Office on the long-term costs associated with providing mental  and physical health care, supporting caregivers, maintaining prosthetics, and  providing benefits. Crystal Nicely, the wife of Marine Corporal Todd Nicely,  a quadruple amputee veteran of the War in Afghanistan, will also testify about  the lifetime of support her and her husband will require and about the red tape  she has already faced in her daily struggle to provide Todd with the care he  needs.     (Washington,  D.C.) – Next Wednesday, July 27th, U.S. Senator Patty Murray,  Chairman of the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee, will hold a hearing to  examine the real human and financial costs of the Wars in Iraq and  Afghanistan  and how as a nation we need to plan to keep our promise to these veterans for  the rest of their lives.  WHO:     Senate  Veterans' Affairs Committee Chairman Patty Murray                            Crystal Nicely, Wife of Injured  Veteran, Marine Corporal Todd Nicely   Paul Rieckhoff, Executive  Director, Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America   Heidi Golding, Principal Analyst, National  Security Division, Congressional Budget  Office   James  Hosek, PhD, Senior Economist, RAND Corporation Lorelei St. James, Director, Physical  Infrastructure, Government Accountability Office WHAT:    Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee  Hearing: Examining the Lifetime Costs  of Care for the Newest Generation of Veterans   WHEN:          Wednesday, July 27, 201110:00 AM EST/7:00 AM  PST
     WHERE:        Dirksen 562 (NOTE this hearing  will not be held in the normal Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee hearing  room)   |