| Thursday, July 14, 2011. Chaos and violence continue, Tim Arango reveals  that Nouri's made clear he wants the US military to remain in Iraq, the US  Congress hears about a veteran with a gun in his mouth having to wait and  struggle for mental care (after that incident as well as before it), a caregiver  explains she gave up her teaching career when her principal told her she could  work on getting her husband better or she could teach but she couldn't do both,  and more.
 
 
 
 Kevin Pina: Well there is a lot going on in the news. We hear of  abuses by the so-called rebels against the population which is finally reaching  the press. Italy today unfortunately we hear has also come out again in support  of the NATO war although officially they've withdrawn from it and Secretary of  State Hillary Clinton says that Muammar Gaddafi's days are numbered. Give us an  update. What's going on on the ground, Mahdi? 
 
 Mahdi Nazemroaya: Well Italy's statement is  disheartening personally for me but people here don't see it as -- I don't think  they see it as important compared to Italy's withdrawal. In regards to Hillary  Clinton's statements, I was aware of that and people here are aware of that too  and they just believe that's the USA trying to muscle in and trying to pull this  coalition together and to keep the momentum of the war going. In regards to her  statement and the Human Rights [Watch] statement, they've been on Libyan TV and  I've been watching Libyan TV and they've been talking about the Human Rights  Watch report about the rebels and the abuses towards civilians and the  infrastructure and that has been on TV all day.
 
 Kevin Pina: Now, of course, Human Rights Watch qualified that  report by saying that although you had to remember that the Gaddafi regime was  responsible for far more human rights violations.
 
 
 Mahdi Nazemroaya: There has been fighting on both sides and  there have been people caught in the middle of the fighting but what the news  here is saying, their TV, it's being broadcast over and over is the angle of  Human Rights Watch that talks about the rebels. Now we've got to remember and  focus on that almost the entire world and corporate media has been focused on  the atrocities that they say that the Libyan government has been committing and  most of them are not accurate or true but nobody's really been focusing on what  the rebels have been doing such as the reports about child soldiers -- which I  was just reading about -- or about Italy and France's involvement in taking  children out of Misrata, there been reports -- actually the Social Affairs  Minister of Libya, Ibrahim al-Sherif came up, he launched an investigation  actually into the disappearance of 52 boys and 53 girls -- a total of 105  orphans from Misrata. And they caught somebody from the rebel side -- a doctor,  a medic who said that they were taken to Italy or France. And that reminds me of  of what happened in Chad in about 2007 when they tried to take kids out of Chad  illegally.
 Kevin Pina: And you're listening to Flashpoints on Pacifica Radio and  that is the voice of Mahdi Nazemroaya coming to us directly from Tripoli, on the  ground in Libya. We're discussing the situation there as NATO bombs continue to  drop and as the international community through NATO rally to try to take down  the regime of Muammar Gaddafi. So tell me what would these kids be used for?  What are we talking about here? Are we talking about kids that would be taken  into slavery, that are kidnapped basically, taken away from their families? What  are we talking about here?
 Mahdi Nazemroaya: The investigation is ongoing. The individual  that they caught from the rebel side? Originally they weren't sure. The  witnesses said they were taken on either a Turkish or an Italian or a French  ship. But they caught someone from the rebel side who was either a doctor or a  medic who says that they were taken to Italy or France for adoption. And these  children, they don't know -- they cannot be taken out of here. The Libyan  government has demanded that if they're gone, they be returned and there's an  investigation. And this is making the news here. This is something that is on  the news as well as the Human Rights Watch report.
 That's an excerpt. The broadcast covered other wars as well. And it  broadcasts live from 5:00 to 6:00 pm, Monday through Friday on KPFA and other  stations. There was an Iraqi media report, there was a discussion with Raed  Jarrar about the US possibly staying in Iraq and Gareth Porter addressed the  Afghanistan War. In an ideal world, we'd have the space to note all of that but  we don't have that space.
 Daniel Williams: I was deployed to Iraq in '03, was deployed  with the 4th infantry division out of Fort Hood, Texas. During that combat  deployment, I suffered mental and physical injuries that will forever be part of  my life. I was exposed to an improvised explosive device. I injured my body, my  brain and my mind. I received a Traumatic Brain Injury, TBI, but I believe that  almost as severe as my injury is the Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, PTSD, an  invisible injury that no one else can see but it haunts my every move. From the  moment I got injured until the time that I was honorably discharged, I received  very little help from the Army or even acknowledgement of my state. I went to  the base clinic at Fort Hood, Texas where I was told that I was having anxiety  disorder and readjustment issues but I would need to wait six months before I  could get an appointment with a psychiatrist, just an initial appointment to be  looked at. In the winter of 2004, after receiving no help or any hope of help, I  attempted -- I attempted suicide by putting a 45 caliber pistol in my mouth  while I was locked in a bathroom. My wife begged me to let her in but I wouldn't  agree. She called the police and when the police arrived, I argued with them.  Then they kicked down the drawer and at that time I pulled the trigger. By the  grace of God the weapon did not go off. The officer handcuffed me and put me in  the seat in the back of his police car. One of the officers attempted to clear  the weapon but at that moment the weapon went off. The same round that refused  to kill me went off perfectly for him. Thankfully no one was injured. I was  admitted to the psychiatric ward of the base hospital and remained at in patient  for two weeks. At this time I was diagnosed with readjustment issues and anxiety  disorder but the physicians also acknowledged that I had PTSD. I was told by the  doctors that the treatment record would be kept confidential and it was not. It  took me over a year to be able to be put out of the military service because of  my mental illness.
 
 
 Daniel Williams went on to outline problems within the VA which included  that health care givers -- doctors -- tasked with helping treat his PTSD were  unaware that noises and crowds were, at best, off-putting and, at worst, harmful  to his treatment. Another VA doctor thought shock treatment was the way to go  with PTSD. When not dealing with those extremes, he had to deal with just the  hassles of getting an appointment. He had one appointment, for example,  scheduled today. Clearly, he did not make that appointment. When he explained he  couldn't make it because he was going to be appearing before the US Congress, he  was told, no problem, they can reschedule him for four months from now. That was  the earliest they could fit him in, they said. 
 "Good morning and welcome to today's hearing on how we can close the gaps  in mental health care for our nation's veterans," declared Senator Patty Murray  today as she brought the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee hearing to order. "We  all know that going to war has a profound impact on those who serve. And after  more than eight years of war, in which many of our troops have been called up  for deployments again and again, it is very clear that the fighting overseas has  taken a tremendous toll that will be with us for years to come. More than  one-third of veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan who have enrolled in  VA care have post-traumatic stress disorder. An average of 18 veterans kill  themselves every day. In fact the difficult truth is that somewhere in this  country, while we hold this hearing, it is likely that a veteran will take his  or her own life." The Senate Veterans Affairs Committee heard from two panels this  morning. The first was composed of Iraq War veteran Daniel Williams (who is now  with NAMI), caregiver Andrea Sawyer, Dave Underriner (Chief Executive of  Providence Health & Services, Oregon Region) and the Assistant Inspector  General for Healthcare Inspections for the Office of the Inspector General  covering the VA Dr. John Daigh. The second panel was the VA's William  Schoenhard.
 Andrea Sawyer is married to Iraq War veteran Sgt Loyd Sawyer. He was  part of the Army Mortuary Affairs team. While serving with them in Iraq, "he  began exhibiting signs of mental distress."
 Andrea Sawyer: Upon his return, I tried for eleven months to  get him help. Ultimately, I sat in a room with an Army psychiatrist and my  husband and watched Loyd pull a knife out of his pocket and describe his plan of  slitting his throat. Multiple episodes of hospitalization and intensive  treatment followed before he was permanently medically retired from the Army due  to severe PTSD and major -- major depression. Loyd immediately enrolled in care  at the Richmond polytrauma center. In October 2008, he received a 100% permanent  and total disability rating from the VA. Given his urgent need for extensive  help, we tried to get him into the PTSD clinic in Richmond. But the first  available appointment required a two month wait. When he was finally seen, we  were told that the only thing available in the clinic would be a quarterly  medication management session and a once-every-six-weeks therapy appointment.  Knowing that his depression was spiraling and his PTSD symptoms were worsening,  we elected to use his TRICARE. He began treatment with a civilian counselor. He  was able to see him once or twice a week. But over the next six months, I became  increasingly concerned about the imminent possibility of suicide. Despite  getting little help from our local VA, but thanks very much to our Federal  Recovery Coordinator, Loyd was able to enroll in an inpatient PTSD program at  the VA Medical Center in Martinsburg, West Virginia. We had high hopes for this  hospitalization but it turned out to be a nightmare. The program delivered on  none of its promises. His counselors and doctors there never coordinated with  his local VA mental health clinician, his civilian counselor or his Federal  Recovery Coordinator. He was placed on medication that made him physically and  verbally aggressive despite having been taken off that same medication for the  same reason while on active duty. Over the course of this 90 day program, Loyd  had fewer than five individual therapy sessions and on returning home promptly  discontinued all of his medication which was a step bacward as he had been  completely meds compliant for eighteen months leading up to hospitalization. In  calling the Richmond PTSD clinic for help, I was told it would be four weeks  before they could see him. I tried to have his primary care manager intervene  but was told that I and his FRC were wasting the time of his primary care  manager. Eventually, again with help from our Federal Recovery Coordinator, I  was able to get Loyd an appointment within a week with a VA psychiatrist outside  of the PTSD clinic. She suggested that he attend the weekly thearpy group that  met with the clinician inside the Richmond PTSD clinic. Feeling rather hopeless,  he decided to try the therapy group and actually found great solace in being  able to relate with others you were experiencing the same symptoms he was.  Unfortunately, four months later, and without consultation of the patients, the  medical center staff announced that the VAMC was changing its treatment model  and would be disbanding the group by year's end. For those wishing to continue  in a group setting, the VA would be turning them over to an untested VA program  without a clinician. Despite the veterans petitioning to remain in a VA clinical  program, their year long effort has been unsuccessful except to temporarily the  clinician. The 40 member group has withered to an average of five to seven  because now, as a support group located off the VA campus, veterans cannot take  sick leave to attend their meeting. My husband is a veteran with well  documented, severe, chronic PTSD who gets treatment at one of VA's major VA  polytrauma centers. We have all the advantages that should guarantee him good  treatment -- an excellent, caring Federal Recovery Coordinator, the priority  associated with a 100% service-connected disability rating, a fabulous OIF case  manager and the assistance of a super VSO. If a veteran with all these  advantages cannot access timely, consistent, appropriate veteran-centered care  in this system dedicated to the care of veterans, what confidence can this  Committee have that a newly enrolled veteran who has recently returned from the  war zone will have a greater success?
 She noted, rightly, that VA "is failing." I have no idea why the White  House is coasting. I have no idea how they get away with it. Andrea Sawyer had a  set of statistics that you hear over and over, year after year, if you sit  through these hearings. One statistic that was new to me was that approximately  20% of veterans who are diagnosed by the VA with PTSD do not get a follow up  visit within 12 months of their initial diagnosis. Sawyer called it a veterans  mental health care crisis and it's pretty hard to dispute that if you're paying  attention to what's actually going on. Excerpt from first panel  questioning.
 
 Chair Patty Murray: Thank you very much for your testimony. And,  Dr. Daigh, let me start with you. You heard the testimony. The stories that  we've heard before the Committee today are not unique. I hear them everywhere I  go and Congress has been listening to this. We have responded with the  resources, with legislation, new programs. The IG [Inspector General] has  provided the oversight. Yet here we are and these stories are still here and  they're relevant again today. You mentioned a little bit in your testimony some  things you thought, coordination of care, those kinds of things. I heard you  talk about Altanta. They needed the clinicians but it's not that they didn't  try, you said, it's just that they weren't there. Is that lack of people  available to hire, is it lack of resources, is it lack of -- Tell us what we  need to be doing in order to make sure that the VA has what it needs or to be  telling the VA what it needs to do. 
 Dr. John Daigh: I think that there -- from my understanding of the  situation in Atlanta and looking at the data, there was a tremendous growth in  the demand for mental health services over a relatively short period of time.  I'm not -- And-and-and some of the assumptions that they made about how they  would provide care, their inpatient ward for example, they thought it would be  functional and it wasn't. So they had to adjust. And I think they could have  made better decisions about how they adjusted. And our report says that we think  they could have made better decisions about how they adjusted. But part of the  problem is that if you have pre-arranged relationships with universities or  private practices or clinics of specialists that you know you need and can  easily call on them as opposed to fee basis where you say, "I can't meet your  demand, here's a chit, go get care," if you have an organized way, the records  are shared, they expect to see patients -- 
 Chair Patty Murray: Which goes to the closed system that I  think Mrs. Sawyer was referring to, is that correct?
 
 Dr. John Daigh: I think it was -- I think it was along the  lines of what she was saying where she was able to go outside the system and get  some help that was [turned head from microphone as he continued talking and was  inaudbile]. Okay, sorry.
 
 Chair Patty Murray: Mrs. Sawyer, tell me what your experience  was.
 
 Andrea Sawyer: We actually were not able to use the fee-based  system in the VA because my husband is medically retired. We have TRICARE and so  we just simply chose to exercise the TRICARE benefit. It was not in conjunction  with the VA. Even requesting fee based at Richmond, even for physical or mental  care is a labor intensive process. It takes months, it's not easy to get done,  it's really kind of a broken system. So it's -- Even though there has been a  directive that people should be able to use fee-basis care in times of wait, you  still have to get it approved and it almost takes, pardon the pun, an act of  Congress to get it done. 
 Chair Patty Murray: Well Mrs. Sawyer, in your testimony, let's talk  about that. You just told us time and time again you were fighting everything to  get appointments, to get attention. Dr. Daigh mentioned needing a "captain of  the team." Did you ever feel like there was a captain of the  team? 
 Andrea Sawyer: Quite honestly, I feel like I'm the captain of  the team. I feel that I monitor symptoms, I see the increase in symptoms, the  decrease in his quality of life and at that time I activate the chain as it is.  I call the FRC, I call the clinic, I call the OIF case manager. I do everything  I can. The problem is, with the VA, we have found is time and time again I have  gone in and said, "We are seeing this civilian counselor." I've said it to the  neuro-psychiatrist, I've said it to the person he was seeing in the PTSD clinic,  I've said it to his OIF case manager. It's in his records. And yet again and  again, I get comments from the PTSD clinic, "We didn't know he was seeing anyone  else." I'm sorry. You can Google it and find that he was seeing someone else. We  haven't stayed quiet about it. And we just can't get them -- I hand the number  over, I ask them to call his counselor, I am his health care power of attorney.  Also there's a flag on his chart, I'm supposed to coordinate his medical  information because of the cognitive processing disorder. I constantly say,  "Please call his counselor." And they don't.
 
 Chair Patty Murray: This is a full time, 24-7 job for  you.
 
 Andrea Sawyer: Yes, ma'am. I gave up my job.  In order to keep him alive, that's what I had to do.
 
 Chair Patty Murray: I hear that all the time and it has to have  a huge impact on you. Tremendous amount of courage and I think about all the men  and women out there who don't have Mrs. Sawyer as the captain of their teams. So  I appreciate what you've been doing.
 
 Andrea Sawyer: Thank you.
 
 Chair Patty Murray: Mr. Williams, again, thank you for your  service and all of what you're talking about is echoed in many other stories as  well. You mentioned getting a hard time to get an appointment. I was curious  from you whether any of the mental health care you receive is after hours or on  weekends? That's another thing I hear from a lot of people who are trying to  have a job, do other things and can't get the care because of lack of after  hours or weekend services. Is that something that you've been able to access or  see a need for?
 
 Daniel Williams: There needs to be a larger amount of this care,  yes. The access -- The only access I have to this is the vet center which is not  communicating with the VA actual facility. This is a center where they do after  hours counseling, they do marriage counseling. They're really not communicating,  to be honest with you. They have no idea what's going on. There needs to be more  of it, needs to be more advertised that there is this after hours care that can  be used when you have -- You get off at six o'clock? Well have sessions at  seven, eight o'clock at night. Uhm, you know, the family members need this care  too because the family members have the same or gain the same PTSD or whatever  the diagnosis may be as the veteran does. I know as Ms. Sawyer said, she gave up  her -- pretty much her life to help her husband. And this is what happens not  only to her but I think just about every family. Either the spouse leaves or the  spouse stands behind them. And I know if it wasn't for the woman behind me, I  would not have any care that I have today because she has given up her job too  to take care of me. And there does need to be some more after hours. I know  NAMI is partnering with the VA to do  Family-Family. Family-Family is a program that helps the service member's family  understand why they're doing the things that they're doing, why they're trying  to get an adrenaline rush, why they're doing these little quirks that may not  make sense to the family.  
 Chair Patty Murray: This may be a rhetorical question but it  seems to me like people like both of you know this system really well, you're  families have really borne the burden of this silent disorder of Post Traumatic  Stess Disorder and Traumatic Brain Injury. We have a country that says "We're  there for our soldiers" but you alone have borne this. Does the country  understand PTSD? Do your neighbors and employers and people in the community  know what you're going through or do you feel pretty alone? Either  one?
 
 Daniel Williams: To be honest with you, I feel very alone. The only  other people that understand is my family. And when I say "my family," I mean my  wife and other soldiers or other veterans. They're the only ones that understand  the actual pain, the invisible pain I live with every day. And it's very, very  hard to try to express to the nation. We get condolences, "thank you for your  service" -- we hear that very often. But when was the last time someone actually  said, "Alright, we need to make a change in the VA center. You need more  services." That's the type thanks that I believe -- I take more to heart action  than I do words. Because like I said, it's not only my suffering. I suffer from  my Traumatic Brain Injury, my wife has to go through it, my kids have to go  through it. So this is a never-ending cycle. My kids will have PTSD because of  my actions. And if we could put peers together, family members like Ms. Sawyer  and my wife together, more times the support for one another, not only for  themselves but for us, it would be a stronger VA system. They've got to start  looking at family oriented stuff. It's just the veteran [currently] and half the  time the veteran can't even get stuff done. I mean it literally takes my wife  getting to the point of getting arrested by the VA police to be able to see my  psychiatric doctor because people are sitting on their phones, talking on their  cell phones during business hours, telling me to hold on a minute, and I'm  having a crisis where I'm fixing to honestly have a breakdown. And it takes  people, like these two women, to have that. And not every veteran has that. Not  everyone is fortunate enough. And I think that needs to somehow be a mentorship  to veterans that don't have the support system.  
 Chair Patty Murray: Mrs. Sawyer, want to add  anything?
 
 Andrea Sawyer: Truly, I don't feel that the community  understands. We spend a lot of time at the VA going to the VA is never just "go  for an hour for an appointment." It's you go, you sit, you have a nine o'clock  appointment and you might get seen by eleven. And then the doctor says, "Oh,  we're only running two hours late today. That means we're on time." Then we sit  for an hour. Sometimes it's not a good appointment then it takes hours for him  to wind down. And get home and the neighbors say, "What do you do all day?" I  talk to a lot of other caregivers who are in my situation and I've attempted to  mentor some of the other caregivers because I do have a lot of time to deal with  caregivers that I've met through Wounded Warrior Project who are at  different stages in their recovery. And I've been privileged that they trust me  to call and ask: "Okay, we're stuck. What do we do?" We've built our own strong  network outside of the VA and that's really what I use to survive. We have a  community kind of all to ourselves. We've kind of been ostracized from the  community. I left my job teaching. I had great scores, you know for the  be-all-to-end-all test at the end of the year that all teachers are judged by  whether we say they are or not, great scores. But I had missed a lot of work. It  was my fourth year, my tenure year, and it was Loyd's first year after he was  retired. We were spending a lot of time at the VA which meant I was spending a  lot of time out of the classroom and the principal came to me and told me I had  to choose between getting my husband better and teaching. So I left.  So, no, the community does not understand.
 Chair Patty Murray: Well thank you very much for sharing that  with us and, Mr. Williams, I know your wife is sitting directly behind you, we  want to thank her for being here as well and all she does for you.
 We're going back to Daniel Williams because in his remarks before  questioning, he was summarizing his prepared remarks. Like Senator John Kerry,  I'm not big on people (mainly government officials) coming in and reading word  for word their statements. Beside it being dull, they end up with a false end  because the time runs out and they just have to stop or quickly come up with a  conclusion in the middle of their statement. Both Daniel Williams and Andrea  Sawyer summed up their remarks and did not read their prepared statements. In  his oral opening statement (noted above), he noted that his medical conditions  and treatment were disclosed to others without his permission. In his written  statement, he went into detail on that. I think that's an important issue and  understand he had to condense but wanted to include his details on that from the  written testimony (prepared remarks):
 I was admitted to the psychiatric ward of the base hospital and  remained at in patient for two weeks. At this time I was diagnosed with  readjustment issues and anxiety disorder but the physicians also acknowledged  that I had PTSD. I was told by the doctors that my treatment records would be  kept confidential. However, my platoon sergeant was notified and she then  proceeded to tell my fellow soldiers which in turn caused much heartache and  turmoil for these guys with whom I had gone through war and had shed blood,  sweat and tears. They began to look down on me, because in their eyes, I was  weak and they thought that I would not be able to do my job, nor could they  trust me to go back to war with them if we were called to do so. I think that  there needs to be more punishment for non-commissioned officers or any other  soldier who has access to soldier's private mental health records and does not  keep that information confidential. As in the past and still today, if a soldier  has a mental health issue and fellow soldiers learn about it, then confidence is  borken and military careers unquestionably are harmed. It took over a year for  me to receive my medical evaluation board decision, and during the entire period  I felt the effects of almost daily ridicule from members of my unit, a great  pressure that affected my PTSD. I felt I let my soldiers down -- that I was of  no use to them anymore. I had lost my brotherhood.
 No one should have their medical confidientiality violated and it's an  important issue so I wanted to include that. At his site, Mike  will be covering another aspect of the hearing  and Ava  will be at Trina 's site later tonight ("much later" she says --  we just finished the round-table for the gina & krista round-robin   before I started dictating the snapshot) to report on Senator Scott Brown as she  usually does. I've got a call in to Kat  to see if she wants me to write at her site since  she usually covers Ranking Member Richard Burr (Kat's in Hawaii). Tuesday's snapshot  covered the first two panels  of Monday's House VA Subcommittee on Health hearing and Mike covered the third  panel that night with "House Veterans Affairs  Subcommittee on Health hearing ." 
 Today Tim Arango (New York Times) reports , "The  government of Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki is privately telling American  officials that it wants their army to stay here after this year." In an analysis  piece, Arango reviews some possibilities should the US military stay on the  ground in Iraq beyond 2011. Arango notes the increase in attacks on US soldiers  (which have resulted in at least 17 deaths in six weeks, possibly 18 and which  include wounded and attacks in which no one is injured or killed) and sees it as  a possible portent, he notes the belief that Shi'ite militias are being armed by  "Iran" (an element in Iran or the Iranian government) and that Nouri al-Maliki  seems unable/unwilling to take on the militias ("Recently, the Iraqi Army  conducted an operation against the militias in the southern part of the country,  the Shiite heartland. But the campaign fizzled with no major arrests, and no  significant impact on the militant networks."). Arango notes the disparity in  the treatment of Sunni insurgents versus Shi'ite insurgents which includes their  treatment in the Iraqi 'justice' system. Arango cites 3 members of Moqtada  al-Sadr's Promised Day Brigades being caught by the US military attempting to  set a roadside bomb. When the three men appeared before the judge, the judge  barred testimony from any of the Americans and found the three not guilty.  Arango explains that the White House wants an agreement passed by Parliament --  insisting that's the only way US soldiers would have legal protections. This  isn't in Aragno's article, this is me speaking, that's incorrect. The UN  mandate, for example, previously governed the US military presence in Iraq and  it was not passed by Parliament. There are a variety of options that can be  legally pursued. I'm not going to list them because it's not my job to assist  the White House in VIOLATING THE CONSTITUTION . What the White  House is in the process of doing is negotiating a treaty. They know that. And  Joe Biden and Barack Obama called it that when the Bush administration  negotiated and pushed through the SOFA. Prior to the 2008 November election,  Barack and Joe both called the SOFA a violation, both objected to it and both  insisted it would have to go to the Senate for a vote. Within days of winning  the 2008 election, they stopped objecting and removed their objections from  their offiicial campaign site. Arango doesn't deal with the US Congress. That's  not a liability or error. He's based in Baghdad. I wouldn't expect his article  to address the Congressional issue. But the White House is attempting to push  through a new treaty and the plan is to circumvent the Senate -- ignoring the  Advice and Consent clause in the Constitution (Article II, Section 2, Clause 2)  -- just as the previous administration did. But, to be clear, the assertion by  the US government that the Parliament must sign off on the treaty is incorrect  as evidenced by the UN mandate. (Nouri renewed it twice after becoming prime  minister, both times without the Parliament's approval, both times the  Parliaments moaned and griped -- but it didn't make the UN mandate illegal.)  Back to Arango who concludes his article on a new treaty extending the US  military stay with this paragraph:To make this palatable to the citizens of Iraq and the United  States, the public relations game is to draft language that is politically  acceptable yet obscures the reality that American soldiers will continue to face  an enemy, will need to defend themselves and will almost certainly continue to  die.
 
 On the topic of withdrawal, Al  Mada reports  today that a component of the Sadr bloc in  Parliament is insisting that although Moqtada al-Sadr said he was freezing the  Mahdi Army (due to corruption and an inability to trust them, he said), he's not  doing that. He's only, they insist, freezing the activities in relation to US  troops and that this is not intended to suggest that they support an extended US  presence in Iraq. They are collecting signatures, in Parliament, to oppose the  extension of the US military presence in Iraq. Al  Mada also reports  that that Sami al-Sakari al-Mahdi has stated  that the Mahdi militia is in disarray and that State of Law agrees with the  decision to dissolve the Mahdi militia because "any military action outside the  framework of the Iraqi forces is act outside the law." Dar Addustour reports  that a "joint  security committee" has been created to determine whether or not the US military  should stay beyond 2011 and that the committee is led by Nouri al-Maliki and . .  . US Gen Lloyd Austin. They state this joint security committee was formed after  the meet-up of political blocs at Iraqi President Jalal Talabani's home on  Saturday. The Post-Journal editorial board  explains  plan-B (shoving the military under the State Dept umbrella  to keep it in Iraq) and asks some key questions: Why is this force - one strong enough to defeat the  armies of some small countries - needed? To guard U.S. diplomats, [Under  Secretary of State Patrick] Kennedy told members of Congress. To get an idea of  how much protection the State Department personnel will need in Iraq, consider  that the agency requires only about 1,800 security employees for all the rest of  its posts throughout the world. Kennedy admitted to lawmakers the security force will  be used for military-type operations under State Department  orders. That doesn't sound much like  the U.S. combat role in Iraq ended last fall. Clearly, President Obama has found  a way to claim he has kept his pledge to pull troops out of Iraq while not  really keeping it.Today was an important day for Iraq historically and we'll note it via  Tweets. The Washington Post's Ed O'Keefe notes:
 
 
 Al Jazeera's Rawya Rageh adds that the revolution led to the  establishment of the Iraqi republic.
   
 The new US Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta made a number of  gaffes -- unless he's trying to come off as the crazed loose cannon -- on his  visit to Iraq. That would include his claim that the Iraq War has a connection  to 9-11 other than the lies the Bush White House told to sell it and the way  they (falsely) linked the two. (Leon Panetta, who knows better, made the same  false link while speaking to US soldiers serving in Iraq.) One thing wasn't a  gaffe and NPR's Kelly McEvers Tweeted on it today.
 She is correct that, as Panetta spoke, "unilateral" response to  attacks would be "force protection." Turning to violence today, Reuters notes  1 man was shot dead in  Kirkuk while 2 women were shot dead in Mosul (with "a shop owner standing  nearby" left injured). Fang Yang (Xinhua) reports  a Sadiyah  roadside bombing left six people injured and an al-Abbarh roadside bombing left  an "orchard owner and his son" injured. |