| Tuesday, July 26, 2011. Chaos and violence continue, RAND publishes a book  and gets attention, RAND publishes a study stating violence comes to Iraq (one  way or the other) and the press miss that one, Iran and PJAK appear to be  creating exactly the situation RAND was warning against, and more.   The RAND Corporation is in the news cycle.  AP reports  their new book (The Long  Shadow of 9/11: America's Response to Terrorism) finds that the United States  government made many mistakes including "launching a war in Iraq that did little  to weaken al-Qaeda" presumably weaken them in the world since al-Qaeda had no  Iraq presence until after the start of the Iraq War and other mistakes include  "actions that helped militant groups recruit more followers, like the detainee  abuse committed at Abu Ghraib prison outside Baghdad."   Of greater interest to us (and something's no one's reported on) is the  RAND Corporation's  report entitled "Managing Arab-Kurd Tensions in Northern Iraq After the Withdrawal  of U.S. Troops ."  The 22-page report, authored by Larry Hanauer, Jeffrey  Martini and Omar al-Shahery, markets "CBMs" -- "confidence-building measures" --  while arguing this is the answer.  If it strikes you as dangerously simplistic  and requiring the the Kurdish region exist in a vacuum where nothing else  happens, you may have read the already read the report.  CBMs may strike some as  what the US military was engaged in after the Iraqi forces from the central  government and the Kurdish peshmerga were constantly at one another's throats  and the US military entered into a patrol program with the two where they acted  as buffer or marriage counselor.  (And the report admits CBMs are based on  that.)  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. That  took years.  And had outside actors.  The authors acknowledge:  Continuing to contain Arab-Kurd tensions will require a neutral  third-party arbitrator that can facilitate local CMBs, push for national-level  negotiations, and prevent armed conflict between Iraqi and Kurdish troops.   While U.S. civilian entities could help implement CMBs and mediate political  talks, the continued presence of U.S. military forces within the disputed  internal boundaries would be the most effective way to prevent violent conflict  between Arabs and Kurds.   As you read over the report, you may be struck by its failure to state the  obvious: If the US government really wanted the issue solved, it would have been  solved in the early years of the illegal war.  They don't want it solved.  The  Kurds have been the most loyal ally the US has had in the country and, due to  that, they don't want to upset them.  However, they're not going to pay back the  loyalty with actual support, not when there's so much oil at stake.  So the  Kurds were and will continue to be told their interests matter but the US will  continue to blow the Kurdish issues off over and over.  Greed trumps loyalty is  the message.  (If you doubt it, the Constitution guaranteed a census and  referendum on Kirkuk by December 31, 2007.  Not only did the US government  install Nouri al-Maliki as prime minister in 2006, they continued to back him  for a second term in 2010 despite his failure to follow the Constitution.)     Along with avoiding that reality, the report seems rather small-minded or,  at least, "niche driven."  Again, the authors acknowledge that as well noting  that they're not presenting a solution to the problems or ways to reach a  solution, just ways to kick the can further down the road and, hopefully, there  won't be an explosion that forces the issue any time soon. ("Regional and local  CBMs have the potential to keep a lid on inter-communal tensions that will,  without question, boil beneath the surface for a long time.  They cannot,  however, resolve what is, at its heart, a strategic political dispute that must  be resolved at the national level.") Hopefully? Page nine of the report notes  that the consensus of US military, officials, analysts, etc. who have worked on  the issue is that -- "given enough time -- Arab and Kurdish participants will  eventually have a dispute that leads to violence, which will cause the mechanism  to degrade or collapse."    The report notes that, in late 2009, Gen Ray Odierno (top US commander in  Iraq at that point) had declared the tensions between Arabs and Kurds to be "the  greatest single driver of instability in Iraq."  It doesn't note how the US  Ambassador to Iraq when Odierno made those remarks was Chris Hill who dismissed  talk of tensions as well as the issue of the oil rich and disputed Kirkuk.   The authors argue that the unresolved issues could still be solved (and  "civil war is not imminent") but that "the window is quickly closing".  So  what's the problem?  The authors explain:   The issues that divide Arabs, Kurds, Turkmen, and other minorities  in northern Iraq mirror the nation's most complex and contentious political  challenges: disputed internal boundaries (which must be settled in order to  determine the territorial boundaires of the Kurdistan region), the lack of  clarity regarding control over Iraq's hydrocarbons, and the need to  professionalize and integrate Iraq's military and police.  More locally,  Arab-Kurd disputes extend to the sharing of power on local governing bodies, the  ethnic composition of local police, rights to previously seized or abandoned  property, the jurisidiction and condut of Kurdish security and intelligence  services, and protections for minority rights.   If the US military leaves can the US State Dept fill the role?  While the  authors note that the State Dept is interested in doing that and might be able  to grab some roles, "U.S. diplomats would be ill-suited to join Kurdish and  Iraqi security forces on armed patrols or at checkpoints, where disagreements on  operations and tactics are more likely to lead to violence." The authors think  the United Nations might be able to play a role in the CBMs but acknowledges  that in June of 2009, UNAMI was uanble to please either side.   The report really ends there though the authors continue on -- including  offering some ridiculous 'soutions.'  Reality, if the US wanted to make an  impact on the issue, the time to do so was long, long ago.  It's an Iraqi  decision and they'll have to decide it.  And they'll most likely do so in a  violent manner.  The report notes, "Kurdish leaders hope that favorable  demographic trends will strengthen their position over time, as will revenues  from whatever energy contracts they are able to conclude themselves.  For its  part, Baghdad seems to believe that improvements to Iraqi Army capabilities will  deter armed conflict and prevent the KRG from seceding."    Again, in the report the KRG exists in a vacuum.  That's not the real  world.  Currently, Kurds are under attack in Iraq and it's a development the  RAND Corporation study didn't even factor in.  The Great Iraqi Revolution notes  today, "Monday 25th  July, 2011 -- 22 injured and killed yesterday and 1,200 families have now  forcibly moved because of Iranian shelling in the North."  Al Jazeera's Rawya  Rageh Tweets on the subject:  The Iranian government has been shelling northern Iraq -- and possibly  entering northern Iraq though the US State Dept claims borders are in dispute --  for weeks now.  The Iranian government maintains that Kurdish rebels (PJAK) are  a threat to Iran and that Iran is defending itself.  James Calderwood (The National)  explains , "The Kurdish villagers have been caught up in an Iranian military  offensive that began on July 16 against Pjak, the Party for a Free Life in  Kurdistan.  The organisation demands autonomy for Iranian Kurds and uses the  isolated mountain range as a base to strike at military targets in Iraq."  Rudaw adds :  Kurdistan has deployed 12,000 forces to an area along the  Iran-Iraq border as ongoing fighting between Kurdish rebels and the Iranian  military has killed civilians and raised concerns that Iranian troops are  crossing into Iraqi territory.   Salah Dilmani, a high-ranking Peshmarga officer,  told Rudaw that the Kurdistan Region has sent around 12,000 Peshmargas  or Kurdish military forces, to the Pishdar border district where Iranian forces  have reportedly launched ground attacks on the rebel fighters of the Party of  Free Life of Kurdistan (PJAK) over the past two weeks.   "We will confront any forces that may attempt to cross the  borders of Kurdistan," Dilmani said.       Hurriyet Daily News adds, "The Iranian  army has launched a powerful operation against the Party for Free Life in  Kurdistan, or PJAK, in Iran, reportedly crossing the Iraqi border as it  intensified its efforts in recent days to reach the group's headquarters in the  Kandil Mountains of northern Iraq."  The Tehran Times states , "During a skirmish in Sardasht,  West Azarbaijan, on Monday night, Basij members surrounded and killed a number  of PJAK members but the rest of the criminals escaped.  Earlier, Press TV  reported that 35 PJAK terrorists were killed during the clash. According to the  report, several PJAK members were also captured by the IRGC." Press TV also notes , "Iran recently deployed 5,000 military  forces in the northwest of the country along the border with Iraq's Kurdistan.  Military maneuvers are being held with the aim of stabilizing the border area."  Today's Zaman observes , "Iranian  authorities have called for the support of the international community in its  fight against the Free Life Party of Kurdistan (PJAK) as the country has  recently engaged in another round of deadly clashes with the terrorist group on  the border it shares with Iraq's northern region ruled by semi-autonomous  Kurdish administration."  They may already have reason to believe they have the  US government's support.  Rudaw   William Anderson, professor of political science at Wright State  University in Dayton Ohio believes that the Obama administration has taken a  very soft approach toward Iran compared to the Bush  administration. "Since Obama came to power, the US policies towards Iran have  changed," Anderson told Rudaw. "His administration has branded PJAK as  a terrorist organization; therefore, it is unlikely that Obama would say  anything about the fight between PJAK and  Iran."         Alsumaria TV reports that as early as July 2nd,  KRG President Massoud Barzani has been calling on the Iranian government to  utilize a dialogue and stop their bombings.  They also note, "Kurdistan Alliance  senior official Mahmoud Othman criticized on the other hand the 'silence' of  Baghdad central government and Kurdistan regional government towards  Iranian-Turkish ongoing shelling on Kurdistan."  (Turkey is shelling northern  Iraq in pursuit of PKK -- another Kurdish independence group.  Turkey does so  with the approval of Nouri al-Maliki.)  Now that's violence going on right now  and if you're not getting what we're talking about when we point out that the  RAND Corporation report presumes the KRG exists in a vacuum, this violence  towards Iraqi Kurds is stirring up discontent within Iraq.  Aswat al-Iraq reports , "Hundreds of  civil activsts have launched a demonstration in front of Iran's Consulate in  Arbil on Tuesday, condemning the continued Iranian bombardment of the border  villages in Iraqi Kurdistan, criticzing the Iraqi government's silence towards  violations against human rights, a Kurdish activist said."   Does the anger build for a few more weeks in silence and then boil over or  are there any adults in the region who can address it? This is exactly the issue  the RAND Corporation paper should have anticipated.   Staying on the topic of violence, Reuters notes  1 Shi'ite gynaecologist  was shot dead in her Mosul clinic, 1 corpse of a man (signs of torture) was  handed over to the Mosul morgue, 1 Sahwa was shot dead in Kirkuk, a Kirkuk  roadside bombing injured a police officer, a roadside bombing in a village  outside Baquba claimed the life of the mayor of the village while injuring "his  wife and daughter," 1 student was injured in a Baquba shooting and they update  the motorcycle bombing Monday in Muqdadiya by noting that the death tolld has  climbed from 2 to 5.  The Great Iraqi Revolution adds , "American occupation  troops kill 3 citizens in Maysan Province."     As the U.S. war in Iraq winds down, we are entering a familiar  phase, the season of forgetting -- forgetting the harsh realities of the war.  Mostly we forget the victims of the war, the Iraqi civilians whose lives and  society have been devastated by eight years of armed conflict. The act of  forgetting is a social and political act, abetted by the American news media.  Throughout the war, but especially now, the minimal news we get from Iraq  consistently devalues the death toll of Iraqi civilians.Why? A number of  reasons are at work in this persistent evasion of reality. But forgetting has  consequences, especially as it braces the obstinate right-wing narrative of  "victory" in the Iraq war. If we forget, we learn nothing.
 
 I've puzzled over this habit of reaching for the lowest possible  estimates of the number of Iraqis who died unnecessarily since March 2003. The  habit is now deeply entrenched. Over a period of about two weeks in May, I  encountered in major news media three separate references to the number of  people who had died in the Iraq war. Anderson Cooper, on his CNN show, Steven  Lee Myers in the New York Times Magazine and Brian MacQuarrie in the Boston  Globe all pegged the number in the tens of thousands, sometimes adding "at  least." But the number that sticks is this "tens of thousands." Cooper, Myers and MacQuarrie -- all skillful reporters -- are  scarcely alone. It's very rare to hear anything approximating the likely death  toll, which is well into the hundreds of thousands, possibly more than one  million. It's a textbook case of how opinion gatekeepers reinforce each other's  caution. Because the number of civilians killed in a U.S. war is so morally  fraught, the news media, academics and political leaders tend to gravitate  toward the figure (if mentioned at all) that is least disturbing.     Scott Horton: Well and that's not all just shot by American  soldiers.  That's the excess deaths so that includes people who couldn't get to  the hospital for all the checkpoints and road blocks --   John Tirman:  That's right.   Scott Horton: Or died from an easily curable disease in a normal  time.   John Tirman: All Iraqis.  Yeah.  Not just civilians.  But the point  is is that war creates havoc in lots of ways.  It's not just direct violence,  it's also what we call structural violence as you were just describing and I  think they need to be counted as well. And also in Iraq, the idea of who's a  civilian and who's not a civilian sometimes gets a little bit fuzzy, this line.   And so I think it's better just to count all Iraqis rather than try to  differentiate whose a bystander and who isn't.   Scott Horton:  Right. In essence, what we're talking about is  comparing the death rate from before [the war] and after --   John Tirman:  That's right.   Scott Horton:  -- and saying, "This is how much it increased."   That kine of thing.    John Tirman:  That's right.   Scott Horton:  So now so onto Anderson Cooper.  I have a theory why  Anderson Cooper would only say "tens of thousands" as you point out in your  story here. My theory is, he doesn't know the first thing about it.  He doesn't  sit around and read Antiwar.com.  [. . .] He's heard once, out loud, someone  told him 'it's about tens of thousands.'  And so that's all he knows. So he goes  on TV and tells and that's what the rest of  America thinks too then.  What do  you think about my awesome theory?   John Tirman:  Well I don't know specifically about him but I think  the problem generally with the news media is that they have not really looked at  it carefully, that I think is true.  A few editors, a few reporters took up the  John Hopkins survey which is the one that I commissioned in 2006 -- and others  but have not really engaged in why these are done the way they're done. Are they   more plausible than the simple counts from English language new media stories  and so on?  And so they kind of throw up their hands and say, "Okay, we'll give  the bottom line here, the lowest number because that's the safest thing to  do."      New Sabah reports that the US  Defense Dept and White House want to know "immediately" whether or not US troops  are wanted in Iraq beyond 2011 and quickly emphasizes statements by Gen Ray  Odierno and the State Dept's Alan Stevens. Al  Sabah reports  that Iraqi President Jalal Talabani met with US  Ambassador to Iraq James Jeffrey. A source close to Talabani tells the paper  that political blocs have prevented the discussion thus far of extending the US  presence in Iraq. It's also noted that Nouri's official spokesperson Ali  al-Dabbagh has stated he sees a chance that US combat troops will remain in  Iraq. The issue was supposed to have been addressed yesterday after  Talabani and the blocs failed to address it this weekend. But Al  Sabah notes  that did not take place at the meeting and that  not only could they not reach an agreement on extending (or not) the US military  presence in Iraq, they also could not work out an agreement regarding whether  the political blocs could return to the Erbil Agreement. The Erbil Agreement  ended Political Stalemate I (March 7, 2010 through November of 2010 when the  Erbil Agreement allows them to move forward). Political Stalemate II begins in  December 2010 when, after becoming prime minister-designate, Nouri begins  disregarding the Erbil Agreement. Political Stalemate I was Nouri's  refusal to accept the results of the election (Iraqiya beat Nouris State Of Law)  and Nouri using his post as prime minister to ensure there would be no progress.  Hossam Acommok (Al Mada) reports  that Iraqiya  floating the threat of early elections has State of Law in a tizzy and they're  rushing to insist such statements are the equivalents of bombs (making Iraqiya  terrorists). Nouri really needs to curb State of Law. That crap will play with  his partisans but it just demonstrates to the world what a little trashy thug he  truly is.   Turning to the US, the debt remains a conversation topic.  DC is unwilling  to save money by ending all the wars, but that is the approach favored by the  people.  Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has tried some smoke & mirrors  claiming that his plan saves money by including the 'savings' by presuming the  Iraq and Afghanistan Wars will not continue another decade.  From yesterday's  snapshot :Staying on Iraq and  the US, Sam Stein (Huffington  Post) foolishly insists , "In the end, the debt ceiling could  come down to a simple accounting question. Should the money saved from drawing  down the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan count as part of a deficit reduction  package?" At least he wasn't stupid enough to say "ending." Lori Montgomery (Washington  Post) notes  this is seen "as a budget gimmick." But that's what  Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid wants to do. John Eggerton (Broadcasting  & Cable) explains , "Reid gets $1 trillion of his total  savings by winding down the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan." Judson Berger (Fox News)  notes  that this "might not satisfy ratings agencies" but that it is  something "that has been used by both parties." And while he means they've both  attempted to include this as a saving, more to the point they've both been  stupid. Reality comes via Kristina Peterson (Dow  Jones) : "One caveat in this case is the unpredictability of war  -- new developments in Afghanistan, for instance, could scuttle the intended  timetable to withdraw troops." Did that thought really not occur to anyone else?  Was Peterson alone at the grown ups table?Set a place at the table for Josh Rogin (Foreign  Policy) who notes  of the CBO estimates Harry Reid's claiming  will not be needed: In other words, the  CBO number, which puts the cost of the wars at $1.7 trillion over the next ten  years, was the projection if the U.S. kept the current number of troops in Iraq  and Afghanistan until 2020. However, nobody ever thought that was the plan. The  CBO was required to do the math that way, as they do with all such  projections. The reality is that it is impossible to estimate the costs of  the wars, because fundamental questions about U.S. policy toward both countries  remain unanswered. For example, will the Afghanistan drawdown be complete by  2014, and what will be the pace of the drawdown? Will all U.S. troops be out of  Iraq by the end of the year? The CBO also put out numbers for war costs that  assumed a gradual drawdown of troops. In fact, they put out two numbers, based  on two different possible policy options. If U.S. policymakers decided to  drawdown to 45,000 troops in both countries by 2015, the CBO projected that the  cost of the wars would be $624 billion over 10 years. A steeper drawdown to  30,000 troops by 2013 would make the projection $422 billion over the next  decade. The San Francisco Chronicle and Bloomberg  News quote  former CBO director and Urban Institute fellow Rudolph  Penner stating of Reid's move, "It's just one more thing that makes you cynical  about what's going on in Washington."   Actress, activist, author Jane Fonda  was judged too controversial for QVC .  But people who value free  exchanges and Jane's body of work and activism can see and hear her August 17th, 7:30 p.m. at the First  Congregational Church of Berkeley ($15 per ticket in advance, $18 at the door --  tickets are moving briskly and if they all sell out in advance, there will be  none to purchase at the event, you've been given a heads up ). The topic of  the evening will be life, the same as the topic of her incredible new book (due  out August 9th) Prime Time, Making the Most of Your Life .  I  look at the cancellation as a badge of honor in a "banned in Boston" way.   Jane's written of her shock over it and I'm sorry about that.  Jane being Jane,  she's found a way to find the positive in it all (click  here ) -- and click here for her addressing Vietnam last week .  My take on  it: Those who are uninformed because they want to be (and want to wallow in  hate) thought they were accomplishing something with their lobbying of QVC.   They accomplished nothing.  It got the book more publicity, it took Jane off the  network (no offense to friends who go on it, but QVC really is tacky) and it  ended up -- because she got pro-active -- allowing her to connect  with friends and  supporters  as well as to take down a barrier that prevented communication with  some people .  The Wednesday, August 17th event is a KPFA benefit and  Kris Welch is the host .  It will no doubt be a very memorable event.    |