| Tuesday, July 12, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, Iran and Iraq have  'issues,' withdrawing the withdrawal, caregivers continue to struggle in the VA  system, Iraq gets its first new church in 8 years, and more.    Debbie Schulz: Steven's life has changed since his injury and, of  course, my life has too.  I had been working as a special education teacher when  he was injured.  My husband and I, 51 and 49 [years-old], were preparing to  become empty nesters.  Instead, I became Steven's primary caregiver, advocate,  lifeskills coach, chauffer, secretary, bookkeeper, teacher, drill instructor,  medical assistant, physical-occupational-speech therapist and on and on.   Leaving the workforce has created a financial hardship and our world and that of  our then-18-year-old daughter and 15-year-old son has changed  profoundly.    Debbie Schulz is the mother of Steven K. Schulz who was serving in Iraq  when he was severely injured in a Falluja attack on April 19, 2005.  She was  testifying to the House Veterans Subcommittee on yesterday afternoon.   "Four months ago today, this Subcommittee held our first hearing of the  year to discuss why the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) had failed to  implement the caregiver assistance program as required by Public Law 111-163,"  declared Subcommittee Chair Ann Marie Buerkle yesterday afternoon. "At that  hearing, it was clear to me that VA must go back and address serious  deficiencies with the Department's initial implementation plan, particularly the  strict eligibility requirements, and get this important program up and  running."  The Subcommittee heard from three panels, Debbie Shulz was the first  panel, Wounded Warrior Project's Anna Freese and VA Caregiver Support  Coordinators Cheryl Cox and Mary Fullerton made up the second panel while the  third was composed of the VA's Deborah Amdur with Keith A. Welsh.   As Ranking Member Michael Michaud explained, the hearing was a follow up to  the March 11th hearing  by the Subcommittee.  On the  Senate side, the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee March 2nd hearing (covered in  that day's snapshot   and  Kat covered it in "Burr promises VA 'one hell of a  fight' " and Ava  covered it at Trina's site with "The VA still can't get it  together ").  What both Senate and House Committees learned in  the two March hearings was that they had passed legislation that was very  different from what the VA was implementing.  Senator Patty Murray, Chair of the  Senate Veterans Affairs Committee, noted, "VA's plan on the caregivers issue was  overdue and once submitted it hardly resembled the billt hat unanimously cleared  this Congress.  Three weeks ago, my Committee staff requested information on how  that plan was developed and to date no information has been provided.  Rather  than following the law, the administration set forth some overly stringent  rules, bureaucratic hurdles, that would essentially deny help to  caregivers."   Schulz explained she was now rated by the VA for providing 40 hours a week  of caregiving.  She probably does a great deal more than that but it's not  recognized.  She did want it understood that when a wounded veteran returns,  there's nothing so simple as 40 hours a week of care.  She reviewed how, in her  case, a great deal of time was taken with reorienting and dealing with confusing  on the part of her son as to where he was and what was going on. There were  sleep and other issues that had to be addressed including bathroom issues and  the first weeks contained a great deal of work on reorientation.  It's an  important point but it's sad that she had to underscore it. A veteran with no  apparent disabilities or challenges will need time to reorient themselves and  they may require help on that.  That a wounded veteran would need it should have  been obvious to the VA with no caregiver having to point it out.     "I couldn't understand that," Debbie Schulz told the Subcommittee of  disparities for caregivers and gave an example of "another caregiver" in Texas  who cares for her son suffering from TBI with a spinal cord injury and unable to  transfer himself out of his wheel chair is judged of doing only 25 hours of care  a week.  "How can that be right?" Schultz wondered.   Part of the determination of how much care is being provided is  supposedly based upon a home visit (it's not clear whether that's the case or  not and that's a failure on the VA's part -- it is supposed to be part of the  determination).   Ranking Member Michael Michaud:  You mentioned that the home visit  wasn't what you expected it to be. What did you expect the home visit to be?   And why -- is there anything that stuck out that they did that they should not  have done?   Debbie Schulz: Well my understanding of the home visit was to make  sure that the home was appropriate and to also assess my needs as well as  Steven's needs.  And being a social worker in another life, I know sort of how  assessments should go so that may have jaded me.  But he came in and didn't know  who the veteran was.  He thought I was the veteran at first. And I was like,  "No, Steven."  So he had not read the chart which was sort of a red flag to me.   The second thing was after he's doing, going through making sure I know about  infection control, nutrition, all these things that I've been doing for six  years now, and Steven has obviously been healthy and happy and at a good weight  -- not overweight or underweight, then he asks me if I know about catheter  care?  And Steven has never been at home with a catheter. Now for some veterans,  that's an issue and I would need to know that.  But I would like the VA to  realize that those home visits are a real chance to come out and see what the  needs of the veteran and the caregiver are.  That's what I was  expecting.   [. . .]   Ranking Member Michael Michaud:  My last question, if you had to  make one change within the system what would be the change that you would  suggest?   Debbie Schulz: One change? You're going to limit me.  I think I  would really tighten up those disparities so that that artifical cap of hours  because there are a lot of veterans that need more than 40 hours and what are we  doing for them and how can you -- I mean that disparity is so discouraging.  And  so really working on that rule to get that right. So that it's not an artificial  and so it's right across the country.   Chair Buerkle asked Wounded Warriors Project 's Anna Frese, "What if  you could change one thing with this program, where do you see a deficiancy or  something that needs to be changed?"    Anna Frese: I think one of the issues is one that Debbie -- Ms.  Schulz mentioned previously in dealing with the determination of the stipend and  the range of hours.  So I won't be redundant on that but I think that's  something that attention definitately needs to be brought to.  I think the  second thing is the elegibility, the mental health elegibility criteria.  The  IFR [interim final rule] sets a much higher standard for elegibility with the  current GAF score [a measure to assess functioning] in cases involving  psychological trauma or other mental health conditions  then for any other  condition and there seems to be a disparity in the needs for a mental health  compared to the different physical disabilities that others may be having.  The  amount of hours the family caregivers are providing regardless of either a  physical disability or a mental health condition remain the same.  There is a  need there. I also here from others because seeing that GAF score and  eligibility criteria, it has dissuaded many from applying -- just not  understanding that they still might be eligible -- and it also can create a  misunderstanding with some of the VA professionals that they work with.  The  education with that eligiblity criteria would be greatly helpful for the family  members applying but also for some of the VA personnel that come into contact  with the families where there is a need and they would benefit from this  program.   We could highlight more of Frese with no problem but I'm not interested in  the VA witnesses.  I couldn't tell whether US House Rep Dan Benishek grasped  that their very, very smiley face presentation or whether he bought into it.   But when family members are telling you there's a problem and the VA's insisting  that there's not, it may not be an issue of problems in one area of the country,  it may be that the VA is putting a happy stamp on what's actually going  on.   I found it appalling that Cheryl Cox and Mary Fullerton were asked about  anyone being turned down but were not expected to explain why they were turned  down -- either those specific unnamed people or families in general and in  abstract.  Cox spoke of one family that was turned down.  And they were fine  with it, she swore.  Really?  Can you think of anything you've ever applied for  -- be it a loan, a college, a job, whatever -- that you were turned down for and  you were happy?  Fullerton apparently has had many more turn downs -- no one  thought to ask her for a number but she was speaking in plural terms -- and if  they wanted to appeal, she insisted, they knew she would be happy to help  them.   If they wanted to appeal the person they chiefly interacted with before  would be in charge of the appeal?  How fair does that seem?  Would you waste  your time appealing in such a case?  I don't think most people would unless they  had the time to really fight.   I'm not interested in the garbage the VA spewed and, not being a member of  the Subcomittee, I don't have to pretend to be.  I thought the Chair and the  Ranking Member did a strong job.  Other than that, the only bright spot was  when US House Rep Phil Roe (also a medical doctor) showed up and asked  questions near the end of the second panel. Still on veterans issues, Senator  Patty Murray's office notes the following:     VETERANS: Murray to Hold Hearing to Discuss Closing the Gaps in  VA's Mental Health Care(Washington, D.C.) --Thursday,  July 14th, U.S. Senator Patty Murray, Chairman of the Senate Veterans' Affairs  Committee, will hold a hearing to discuss access to mental health care services,  including waiting times and staffing levels, outreach to veterans, integration  of mental health care into primary care, suicide prevention and problems  identified by VAOIG at mental health residential rehabilitation treatment  programs. During the hearing, the committee will question professionals from the  VA's various mental health programs, a Veterans Council Representative for the  National Alliance for the Mentally Ill, the caregiver and spouse of U.S. Army  Sgt. Loyd Sawyer, the Assistant Inspector General for Health Care, and the head  of a private sector health care delivery system. A full list of witnesses is  available HERE.
 
 WHO: U.S.  Senator Patty Murray, Chairman Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee
 
 WHAT:  Hearing to discuss VA's mental health care services
 
 WHEN: Thursday, July  14th, 2011
 10:00 AM ET
 
 WHERE: Russell Senate Office Building
 Room  418
 Washington, D.C.
       The editorial board of the Intelligencer and Wheeling News-Register notes  US  President Barack Obama's claims that combat operations ended August 31, 2010 in  Iraq and that all troops will be out of Iraq at the end of this year, "None of  it is true. Fifty thousand U.S. troops remain in Iraq. Combat deaths, including  that of an Elm Grove native in late June, continue to occur regularly. And U.S.  officials have said they are willing to keep combat troops in Iraq after the  Jan. 31 withdrawal 'deadline,' if the government in Baghdad approves. But even  if all troops are pulled out, the U.S. military role in Iraq will continue for  years, perhaps decades, under an Obama administration plan." And the editorial  board becomes one of the first in the country to explain the backup plan if Iraq  doesn't agree to extend the US presence in Iraq under a SOFA or similar  arrangement. They do so by using the public hearings in which the State Dept  testifies. This isn't a secret, why so much of the media has treated it as such  is a question to ask. But the editorial board walks you through how the war  continues. Chris Toensing (Foreign Policy In Focus via  Antiwar.com) notes  that while extension "is a burning political  issue" in Iraq, "there's precious little debate in Washington on the date for  withdrawal.  Even though President Barack Obama campaigned on a pledge to leave  Iraq, his administration isn't telling Maliki that the troops are decamping come  what may."  Toensing offers his take on what the US government was hoping for  and what Nouri al-Maliki was hoping for back in 2008 (in the final days of the  Bush administration) when both signed off on the SOFA:  Washington wagered that Maliki would widen his coalition to embrace  enough political opponents that his government would be stable without an  American prop.  The Iraqi premier gambled that, with U.S. funding and training,  his security forces would grow strong enough to defeat his domestic foes by the  end of 2011.   Both bets were foolish, but Washinton's was more so.  Maliki and  his circle have no serious record of concilatory politics, and indeed have  played upon and exacerbated the country's sectarian, ethnic, and ideological  divides to remain in office. In such partisan maneuvers, they have felt secure  in the knowledge that tens of thousands of heavily armed Americans are their  formidable first line of defense.How might an extenions go over  within the US?  Timothy Monroe Bledsoe writes the  Augusta Chronicle to share his thoughts  on such an outcome , "Now, the overpaid, underworked and clueless  government officials in Washington, D.C., are continuing to force tens of  thousands of American Troops into harm's way for absolutely no good reason! It  is well past time for our so-called government officials to stop being  war-mongers and bring all our troops home to safety and to their families, where  they all belong." However, the US government has a different focus.   Al Mada reports  that Iraqi  government sources confirm US Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta's visit to Iraq  was about extending the presence of US troops in the country. Al Mada reports he  was told that at Iraqi President Jalal Talabani's house last Saturday, political  blocs signed onto an agreement to provide an answer as to whether or not to  request the US military to stay beyond 2011 and to provide that answer within  two weeks. MP Ibrahim Rikabi tells the paper that Panetta was most focused on  what number of US troops would remain in Iraq and that other concerns included  "Iranian extremists in Iraq." The article also references the memorandum between  the US and Iraqi governments which Al Mada reported on yesterday -- a working  memo which would allow US forces to remain in Iraq through the end of 2016. The World Tribune  notes  the two week deal but says Nouri has stated it will be August  before any request is or is not made. Of the two-week arrangement, Laith Hammoudi, Roy Gutman and  Nancy A. Youssef (McClatchy Newspapers) report , "Yet Iraq's political  impasse appeared no closer to resolution after Panetta met Prime Minister Nouri  al Maliki and other Iraqi leaders. Over the weekend, during heated, top-level  talks that lasted about four hours on Saturday, Maliki was unable to secure the  agreement of Ayad Allawi, his key political rival, for a decision on whether to  ask the U.S. to keep any of the 46,000 troops still in the country — all of whom  are due to depart by Dec. 31 under a security agreement. Instead, the Iraqi  leaders agreed only to meet again in two weeks and hold lower level talks in the  meantime." Mohammed A. Salih (Rudaw) reports on the mood in  Kirkuk : Kirkuk officials are  divided over whether US troops should remain stationed in Iraq's disputed areas,  a key concern as US President Barack Obama's administration presses Baghdad to  decide whether they want a limited American military presence in Iraq in  2012. Rakan al-Jibburi, an Arab member of Kirkuk's Provincial Council, is one  official opposed to keeping US troops in his oil-rich province, which is claimed  by Arabs, Turkmen and Kurds. If they stay, US troops are likely to be stationed  in Kirkuk and other disputed areas. Some Iraqi and Kurdish officials argue  that the presence of US troops in the disputed territories will guarantee  stability, but Jibburi told Rudaw that the presence of US troops only worsens  the situation. Turning to the ongoing violence in Iraq, Reuters reports  a rocket attack on the  Green Zone, a Mussayab roadside bombing injured a Sahwa and last night an Abu  Ghraib car bombingclaimed the lives of 2 Sawha and left four more injured.  On  the rocket attack, Al Jazeera's Rawya Rageh Tweeted:      Meanwhile the residents of Camp Ashraf (known as the MEK, Mojahedin-e-Khalq  Organization, MKO and People's Mujahedin) remain in limbo.  Saddam Hussein  granted the Iranian dissidents asylum in Iraq.  They lived there with no known  hardships to Iraq or Iraqis.  In 2003, the US-led illegal war began and the US  military told Camp Ashraf to disarm, promising them protection if they did so.   Protection was granted more or less until 2009.  The Barack Obama administration  does not appear to feel they are bound by the agreement made earlier -- nor do  they seem aware that they are bound by the Geneva Conventions to provide  protection to the residents.  The White House has looked the other way as Nouri  al-Maliki has repeatedly ordered attacks on Camp Ashraf.  A US Congressional  delegation in June angered some Iraqi politicians when US House Rep Dana  Rohrabacher noted that an investigation was needed into the April 8th assault on  Camp Ashraf (by Nouri's forces).    Shi'ite politicians in Iraq with close ties to Iran seem especially upset  when anyone infers that the residents of Camp Ashraf are in fact human beings  and should be treated as such.  That subgroup of Shi'ite politicians also work  overtime to attack Iraqiya politicians and they especially enjoy attacking  Iraq's Sunni vice president.  Which brings us to the Tehran Times which reports , "The remarks made by  Iraqi Vice President Tariq Al-Hashimi about the terrorist Mojahedin-e-Khalq  Organization are illogical, Iranian ambassador to Iraq Hassan Danaeefar has  said. Al-Hashimi has recently said that MKO members should be officially  recognized."  But Iran's not just bothered by al-Hashimi or the residents of  Camp Ashraf.        Over the weekend, Jalal Talabani got Punk'd and  Ashton Kutcher was no where in  sight.  Al  Mada reported that Iraq's president presided  over a terrorism conference. At the conference -- the paper says it's the first  calling for a boycott on terrorism in the entire world -- Jalal insisted that,  "We in Iraq have suffered the most terorrism." Apparently, Talabani's never  heard of Gaza, Pinochet's Chile or assorted other examples. He spoke of the  People's Mujahedeen Organization (Iranian dissidents in Iraq at Camp Ashraf) and  stupidly claimed they were trying to destabilize Iraq. Even the Iranian  government hasn't made that ridiculous claim. But it's part of Talabani's  efforts to close the camp. Possibly Talabani's looking for an internal enemy to  blame for Iraq's problems in an attempt to divert the Iraqi people? If so, Camp  Ashraf is closely guarded and the approximately 3,000 residents are confined to  that area.
 How seriously a conference on terrorism will be taken around the  world is further thrown into doubt when the conference takes place in Iran. It's  cute too that the PKK didn't come up in Jala's speech. The PKK is a group that  advocates -- with violence -- for a Kurdish state. Some say the Kurds are said  to be the only people in the world without their own homeland. (Again, have  these people never heard of the Palestinians?) They regularly attack Turkey from  the northern mountains of Iraq where they set up bases -- and have allowed many  reporters to tour and report on those bases -- from which to launch their  attacks. Northern Iraq is the KRG -- Kurdish Regional Government. Jalal Talabani  is a Kurd. Possibly calling out a Kurdish group labeled as a "terrorist" group  by not just Turkey and the US but also by the Iraqi govenrment is too  much?   Talabani thundered about the MEK (and also lied that the International Red  Cross was working with the Iraqi and Iranian governments on relocating the  residents of Camp Ashraf -- the International Red Cross quickly clarified the  public record noting that they were doing no such thing).  Kuridsh groups are  now a sore spot for Iran and Iran considers them to be terrorist groups.   Mitra Amiri and Tim Pearce (Reuters)  report , "Iran threatened Monday to take military action against the  Iraq-based Kurdish rebel group PJAK, saying the head of Iraq's Kurdistan region  had handed the group land without telling the government in Baghdad."  They note  PJAK (Party of Free life of Kurdistan) is "an offshoot of the Turkey-based  Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) which took up arms in 1984 for an ethnic homeland  in southeat Turkey and northwest Iran."    Still on relations between Iraq and Iran, today the Iranian Student News Agency notes ,  "Iraqi ambassador to Iran Mohammed Majid al-Sheikh said on Tuesday 70 percent of  Iraq-Iran shared land borders have been specified."  However, Sunday AFP reported  on "dozens of Iraqi  farmers" who were preventing Iranian pilgrims from entering Iraqi "in protest at  its diversion of a river which helps irrigate one of their country's main  agricultural regions."  Also on Sunday Asia News reported , "A new Chaldaen  parish church was inaugurated yesterday in Sikanayan, a village some 10  kilometres from Kirkuk. It bears the name of Saint Paul the Apostle because the  village's Kurdish name means 'Three Fountains', like the Three Fountains Church  in Rome built on the site where the apostle was martyred. The small settlement  has about 200 homes, some still under construction. [. . .]  Provincial leaders  as well as sheikhs and imams attended yesterday's official inauguration. The  choir sang hyms and psalms. A joint prayer was read by an Arab Muslim sheikh, a  Kurd and a Turkmen."  Catholic Culture notes  that the Church  "was built with the help of government support as well as private donations."   DPA notes  it is the first Christian  church built in Kirkuk "in eight years" and quotes Fawziya Hanna, "This church,  and our presence here to celebrate its birth, is the strongest message that we  are staying in our land. We do not want to be strangers in our own world, and  the forces of extremism are the ones which must change their approach and stop  targeting us." Archbishop Louis Sako notes that among the donations to build the  church was $10,000 from Iraqi President Jalal Talabani. Marwan Ibrahim (AFP) notes , "The new  Kirkuk church serves a housing community of about 200 Christian families who  fled to Kirkuk and nearby regions from other parts of the country, Sako  said."
   Terrorism fears in the United States are all but halting visas for  Iraqis, even those who risked their lives aiding the American war effort, making  them especially vulnerable ahead of the planned American military withdrawal.   [. . .] Advocates say that the administration is ignoring a directive from  Congress to draft a contingency plan to expedite visas should those Iraqis who  worked for the United States government, especially interpreters for the  military, come under increased threat after American forces are drawn down at  the end of the year.    We'll note the article again tomorrow and address the topic of refugees.   We're including it now as a favor to a friend with the paper who praised the  article through the roof.  (It is a good article.)      "Madam Speaker, in April 2004 my staff gave  me a memo, asking if I wanted to give a special order speech on some  long-forgotten issue.  My answer was no, I didn't want to speak on that issue.   But I did want to deliver a speech, that day and every other day we were in  session -- to express my opposition to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and my  belief that there is a smarter way to achieve our national security goals.    "And so since that day, I've stood here in  this spot to say over and over again that these wars are eroding our spiritual  core; bankrupting us morally and fiscally; teaching our children that warfare is  'the new normal.'   "I have delivered these speeches as a  member of the majority and the minority…when the President was a member of my  party and when he was not.  And today, I am doing it for the  400th time.    "When I began, we were just one year  removed from the invasion of Iraq.  The war was still quite popular, as was the  president who launched it.  But we spoke out anyway, refusing to bend on  principle. My colleagues Barbara Lee, Maxine Waters and I --'the Triad', we  called ourselves -- started the Out of Iraq Caucus, and we forced the first  House vote to bring our troops home.  Along the way, I visited Iraq, a trip that  confirmed my feelings about the war, even as it increased my admiration for our  troops.   "Gradually, the tide of public opinion  turned.  President Bush lost the confidence of the American people and  eventually had to start winding down the war.  I don't believe that would have  happened unless a few lonely voices had dared to be heard in those early days.    "I'm proud of what we've accomplished, but  I'm also frustrated.  Because nearly a decade after the first American boots hit  the ground in Afghanistan…here we are.  Still at war.  Still occupying sovereign  countries, on missions that aren't making us safer or advancing our interests.     "The cost has been devastating.  Over 6,100  Americans are dead.  Thousands more civilians have died for the cause of their  so-called liberation.  Thousands of U.S. servicemembers have come home alive but  may never be the same, either because of physical wounds or mental health  trauma, which can destroy lives just as well.    "In addition to the staggering $3.2  trillion price tag that has piled up over the last 10 years, I don't think we've  even come to grips with the resources the V.A. will need for the next 50 years  to meet the responsibility we have to our veterans as a result of these wars.    "I'm not suggesting we abandon the people  of Afghanistan or Iraq.  Anti-war doesn't mean anti-engagement or  anti-security.  The underlying principle behind my 400 speeches has been that we  need a completely different approach to protecting America, one that emphasizes  diplomacy, reconciliation and peaceful conflict resolution.    "From the beginning, I've been pushing my  own solution called Smart Security-- fighting terrorism with better intelligence  and multilateral cooperation; with a stronger nuclear nonproliferation program;  with humanitarian and economic aid that will give hope to people around the  world; with less spending on weapons systems and more on homeland security,  human rights monitoring and energy independence.   "Most importantly, Smart Security insists  that war be an absolute last resort.  Because, for the sake of the future of the  human race, we must – and we can – figure out a way to resolve our differences  without resorting to violence and warfare.   "I will continue to do this for my  remaining year and a half in Congress, giving as many of these speeches as I  can.  Madam Speaker, I will not rest until we finally bring all our troops home  and we adopt a Smart Security approach to preventing war and preserving peace."      
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