| Tuesday, August 16, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, Public Vagrants  Hillary Clinton and Leon Panetta team up to beg for tax payer money, Iraq  finally gets a Minister of Defense . . . sort-of, a War Criminal has his appeal  denied, the media shuts out Ron Paul and much more.   One of the insitutional 'victims' of the Iraq War has been the US State  Dept.US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and various supporters are lamenting  in public but not for what's been done to the State Dept, not for how it's been  harmed, just to try to squeeze a few bucks out of the system.  It's very  disgusting, it's very tacky.  But that's hallmark of Barack's administration,  now isn't?  Walter Pincus (Washington Post) reports   late today, "With insurgent violence continuing in the country  and  all U.S. combat forces still scheduled to leave by  the end of the year , State has taken over a $230 million Army contact with  L-3 Communications to allow intelligence services to continue through the end of  May 2012, five months after military personnel are expected to leave."    Ooh this could get messy But you don't seem to mind Ooh don't go telling everybody And overlook this supposed crime     State will now be over military intelligence.  Jane Harman, Anne The Pig  Face Marie Slaughter and all the others don't give a damn about what that  means.  Rightly or wrongly, in other countries the US State Dept is often seen  as a cover for CIA operatives.  That belief has justified a great deal of  violence against the US State Dept over the years.  Now idiots and lunkheads  have decided to spray paint a big bulls eye on the back of all State Dept  employees.  Thank you, Barak Obama.   Michele Kelemen (NPR's All Things  Considered) reports that Hillary went to the National  Defense University with Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta so both could whine in  public like little beggars. Hillary and Robert Gates (former Secretary of  Defense) pulled that little stunt before too. Under the Bush administration,  State was sidelined and its influence was chipped away at to build up Defense.   State will not be restored to its proper position by playing hand maiden to the  Defense Dept nor by taking on Defense tasks and roles.  If State is to be  restored to its previous position -- a supposed goal of Hillary's -- this is not  how you make it happen.  Hillary and Leon wanted to boo-hoo from the script  which says, "We'll say it's making us look bad internationally! This inability  of Congress to come to terms on economic matters!"  No, it make it appear you  don't know your damn place or  your damn role.     Jane Harman is now a private citizen and she can self-embarrass all she  wants -- we've all seen the hair, right? Panetta and Clinton are not private  citizens.  (A) If their concerns were real, airing them in public doesn't help  the situation.  (B) Their concerns aren't real (or they wouldn't be airing them)  but an attempt to manipulate the American people.  Hillary's remarks are  laughable, she's become the Beggar Woman of DC or possibly the capitol's Little  Match Girl, "Spare change for coffee? I've almost got bus fair, could I get a  dollar?"   "We have an opportunity," she declared today, "right now in the Middle East  and North Africa that I'm not sure we are going to be able to meet, because we  don't have the resources to invest in the new democracies in Egypt and Tunisia,  to help the transition in Libya, to see what happens in Syria and so much  else."  It doesn't cost a dime to "see what happens" anywhere as a spectator.   The US "opportunity" in Libya does not appear to be the "opportunity" the people  of Libya want as evidenced by the fact that the little CIA-staged and backed  uprising that was going to last a few weeks is now over five months old.  Most  of all, don't talk about opportunities for the State Dept -- which is supposed  to be about diplomacy -- when what you're doing is trying to sell a military  budget for the State Dept in Iraq.  Fortunately Barack Obama doesn't have the  votes necessary in the Senate or House still.  That's what this is all  about.   Plan B to continue the Iraq War.  Though it's been discussed publicly, the  press has largely ignored it.  Should the White House and Nouri be unable to  come to an agreement to keep US forces on the ground in Iraq beyond December 31,  2011, troops and contractors get moved from the umbrella of Defense to the  umbrella of State and the switch puts them under the Strategic Framework  Agreement which makes it 'legal' and means it requires no additional agreements  or treaties.  It's the militarization of diplomacy and the brain child of  Samantha Power who discovered and promoted the loophole in the transition period  between the 2008 election and Barack being sworn in January 2009.   Someone needs to remind Leon Panetta that the rate of military suicide, the  rate of military sexual assault and so much more that Robert Gates was always  'working on' never improved under Gates and if he's got time to plead for State  Dept money, he damn well better have solved the many problems of the Defense  Dept.  If not, he needs to sit his ass down and get to work doing the damn job  he said he wanted.  If Congress had any real desire for progress on those  issues, they'd start setting deadlines for these jabbering figureheads, such as,  "We want to see a 10% reduction in military suicides in six months, a 25%  reduction in a year.  We expect you to meet that reduction or to teder your  resignation, Mr. Panetta."     Clinton said Americans should understand that in addition to  preserving military strength, it is in the nation's security interests to  maintain the State Department's role in diplomacy and development. She suggested  that the political stalemate over spending cuts has put that in  jeopardy.     Appointed officials should understand their role.  You're a public servant,  save the lectures and especially the fear tactics.  Learn your place and learn  it damn quick.  If you want to preserve "diplomacy" you don't militarize it.   We're not stupid children, we're the citizens of the United States and you are  and will remain answerable to us while you are our public servants.  Quit your  bitching, quit your whining and get to work.  Your break's over.  You want  Americans to make do with so much less while still wanting your inflated  budget.  No, not going to happen.  Get to work,shut your mouths, stop your scare  tactics.  You're not appointed to offer a running commentary on Congress.  If  you have time to do that, you need to tender your resignation because you  clearly are MISUSING GOVERMENT RESOURCES.  You do understand that's a crime,  right?  So just stop your whining, do your damn job and stop trying to scare the  American people.   Let's stay with 'withdrawal' and move over to the White House's preferred  plan: A new agreement with Iraq that keeps US forces on the ground in Iraq  beyond 2011. Press TV (link has text and video) spoke  with Iraqi Democrats  Against Occupation's Sabah Jawad about the US government's efforts to continue  to occupy Iraq:  Press TV: Every time there is talk of Americans leaving Iraq, we  are witnessed to a new wave of violence, do you see any links here? 
 Jawad: Yes, I mean it is definitely there is a link that makes Americans  desperate to stay in Iraq, and especially since the expiry of their stay in Iraq  is fast approaching, through the end of the year, and they want to stay and they  want to put pressure on the Iraqi government and the Iraqi government they can't  decide it because of the political process and possibly have completing  statements by governments and participants of the political process regarding  the stay of the American troops. Most of them actually support the extension of  troops particularly the Kurdish parties and some other parties and the  government and we see now these atrocities that they are committing and ongoing  actually as we approach the final few weeks of the deadline and this is very  clearly the policy of United States.  They want to show that the Iraqi forces,  security forces are not capable of maintaining law and order. Therefore they  need the American presence there. They're proposing that the 20,000 American  troops remain in Iraq and this is on top of the 16,000 stuff, and the biggest  embassy in the world in Baghdad, and also for the foreseeable future there would  be in control of the Iraqi air space. They will be based in seven to nine  military bases which are near airports in Iraq.  Therefore they will call the  shots regarding the air space as well. They don't want to leave, particularly at  this moment; they see a lot of popular uprisings against Arab regimes. They want  to be there to keep an eye on the situation and so on. So they are desperate not  to leave but the Iraqi people are determined actually, they have a popular  resentment against the Americans, and I just remind you that one foreman at  defense secretary in United States has said that the Iraqi people hate us and  they could read the situation very proper. The Iraqi people hate the occupations  and they will not stay silent until the last American soldiers leave Iraq.
 
 Press TV: Why is it that the US wants to stay in Iraq despite, as you  mentioned as well, the growing opposition from the people of Iraq themselves?
 
 Jawad: Well, America as you know it's facing a huge crisis political and  military crisis and financial crisis in the United States. They want to remain  in Iraq because they invested millions and billions of dollars to prolong the  occupation to maintain the occupation and to support their so called moderate  regime in the Arab world they don't want to sacrifice that. In fact one of the  closest which has been exposed as one of the negotiating points with the Iraqi  government are the military bases they are going to have in Iraq beyond 2011.   There will be seven or nine huge military bases between 40 and 275 acres each  and these they will rent from the Iraqi government with the sum of less than one  dollar a year and that would show they actually want the Iraqi government to pay  for the continuous occupation of their land, before the Americans used to pay  for their forces to stay in Iraq.
     Al  Sabaah speaks with an unnamed Iraqi government source who  feels that there will be "long negotiations" and that then Iraq will keep the US  military in Iraq as "trainers." MP Zuhair Araji goes on the record for the paper  and states his belief that Iraq needs "trainers" and that this "need must be  recognized" and states that Iraq lacks experience with protecting and patrolling  the airspace, with radar equpiment and that the Iraqi Navy also needs addition  help. He calls 20,000 US forces remaining too many and unreasonable. While so  many US outlets ignore what's taking place (now publicly taking place), the  Philadelphia Inquirer runs Patrick Kestra's "Iraq war hasn't faded as an issue  for everyone :"      When was the last time you spared a  thought -- any thought, good or ill --  for the war in Iraq?
It isn't  actually over, the war, though it is easy to forget that, given the paucity of  U.S. news coverage. Insurgents struck three Iraqi cities only yesterday, killing  at least 60 in what analysts think was an attempt to ratchet up the terror level  as the U.S. and Iraqi governments discuss a continued American presence in the  country past 2011.
 That's right: Odds are that U.S. troops will still be in  Iraq in 2012, two years after the ballyhooed 2010 withdrawal of the last combat  brigade.
 And yet, for most of us, the Iraq war is so 2004.
 
   Lt Gen Gennady Yevstafyev: Sunnis want Americans to get out  completely because they could recover their influence in the country.  Shiah  groups, including the group of the present Prime Minister Maliki, are so  dependent on the American military presence that they would be very much  interested to retain it as long as possible. Each side is trying to play its  strong card and I am afraid the card which is played involves all this  explosions.   Dan Murphy (Christian Science Monitor)  observes, "What's needed is for Maliki and his allies to find a political  answer to the still significant numbers of Iraqis who feel the country's current  order is hostile to them. That's an answer that Iraq – and the US, with spending  of nearly $800  billion the conflict so far  and the loss of more than 4,000 soldiers' lives  – has been groping toward for almost a decade now."  From Susan Sontag's  Regarding the Pain of Others : 
Awareness of the suffering that accumulates in a select number  of wars happening elsewhere is something constructed. Principally in the form  that is registered by cameras, it flares up, is shared by many people, and fades  from view.
   Yesterday Iraq was  slammed by bombings. It was violence on a massive scale and it might seem that,  in the days that followed, little else out of Iraq could appall. That would be a  mistaken belief as Hamid Ahmed (AP) proves  with his report of armed  assailants storming a Sunni mosque in Youssifiyah late yesterday "during evening  prayers," grabbing seven people and dragging them out of the mosque only to  murder them "execution-style." All seven assassinated were men and Sahwa  ("Awakenings," "Sons Of Iraq"). Michale S. Schmidt (New York Times) recounts  the  assault, "Around 8 p.m., gunmen dressed in military uniforms stormed into a  mosque in the city of Yusufiya, just south of Baghdad. The gunmen read off the  names of seven people who had been loyal to the United States and joined the  Awakening movement, took them outside the mosque and executed them. After the  execution, the gunmen told the people gathered in the mosque that they were from  Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia and then left." Annie Gowen and Asaad Majeed  (Washington Post) differ on the last  sentence and offer  instead, "The assailants left a note saying the  killings were carried out by the Islamic State of Iraq, a Sunni extremist group  affiliated with al-Qaeda."
 As noted in yesterday's snapshot ,  a church in Kirkuk was bombed, no houses of worship were shown any respect. Alsumaria TV notes ,  "Kirkuk police imposed intensified security measures around churches in Iraq on  account of targeting Saint Ephrem's Church in central the city on Monday. A  security source told Alsumarianews that the intensified measures were taken on  account of information warning of armed groups' attacks against Kirkuk's  churches especially that three churches were targeted in the last two weeks." 
 Aswat al-Iraq speaks
  with MP  Younadim Kanna who states, "The weakness of the security bodies, especially the  intelligence ones, and the postponement of the settlement of the dossier of the  Security Cabinet Ministers, had been one of the main reasons for the security  violation that took place on Monday." John Pontifex with Aid to the Church in Need  explains :
 ANOTHER church in  the Iraqi city of Kirkuk has been bombed bringing the tally to three within less  than two weeks.
 Nobody was hurt in  the explosion which took place today (Monday, 15 August 2011) at 1.30am local  time.
 Parish priest Father Gewargis  Elias was lucky to escape with his life when security staff spotted a vehicle  carrying suspicious devices and ordered him out of St Ephrem's Syrian Orthodox  Church just minutes before the blast.
 Reporting the incident, Archbishop Louis Sako of  Kirkuk told Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need: "Today they attacked the  church. Who knows if tomorrow they will attack the clergy or the people?" 
 The archbishop was speaking after St  Ephrem's became the third church in Kirkuk to be attacked so far this month. 
 Almost exactly two weeks earlier,  again early in the morning, car bombs exploded at Holy Family Syrian Catholic  Church and the nearby Evangelical church.
 At least 13 people in homes close to Holy Family  Church were injured -- mostly slightly.
Al Rafidayn counts  307 "killed and  wounded." That manner of counting is common in Iraq and seems to treat both the  dead and wounded seriously as opposed to US accounts which often --  intentionally or not -- send a message of 'only wounded' in the coverage. Michael S. Schmidt and Yasir  Ghazi's report carried by the Boston  Globe opens  with, "Insurgents across Iraq launched their most  significant and wide-ranging attacks in months yesterday, killing 89 people and  wounding at least 315 in the most violent day in Iraq this year." In his own paper (New York Times), that fact is relegated to  paragraph three .
 With violence on the rise and Iraq seeing  its worst day of violence, Nouri al-Maliki is desperate to change the  narrative.  AFP reports  today that his 'media  advisor' Ali Mussawi declared today tha Nouri had just "appointed Saadun  al-Dulaimi as interim minister of defence."  Because during all this violence,  Iraq has had no Minister of Defense.  Nouri was supposed to name one and  Parliament approve one.  He never did.  He was also supposed to name a Minister  of National Security and a Minister of Interior.  Those are the three security  ministries.  But Nouri never has named them. He gave the posts to himself  instead.  And he's done a bang-up job . . . if increased violence was the goal.      Whether or not Nouri can make some interim Minister of Defense or not is  debatable.  Nothing in the Constitution allows for it.  With Parliament pushing  back on his attempt to fire the Minister of Electricity (they maintained that  such a firing would be their job, not Nouri's), it will be interesting to see if  they pursue this.  As the hot months began in 2010, Nouri did fire the Minister  of Electricity and decree that the Minister of Oil would fill both posts;  however, not Parliament wasn't meeting. They are now and make take on Nouri's  move.  Per the Constitution, Nouri can only nominate.  The Parliament can  confirm or deny any nominee.   The spokesperson lies that Iraqiya submitted no suggestions to Nouri.   Attempts to blame Iraqiya for Nouri's inability to govern are rather weak but,  in fact, Iraqiya did float a name for that post: Tareq al-Hashemi.  Someone who  should be easily confirmable since he's currently the vice president of Iraq.   Though al-Hashemi was receptive to the idea and made noises about stepping down  as v.p. if he became Minister of Defense, State of Law wouldn't have him in the  post and the idea was killed.   Legal or not, Nouri's appointment is hardly one that will inspire  confidence that Iraq is now on focus in terms of Defense.  AFP explains  Saadun al-Dulaimi will serve in his new 'interim' post and may or may not remain  in his current post Minister of Culture.   Reuters notes today's violence includes  a Mosul roadside bombing which injured two Iraqi soldiers, a Mosul roadside  bombing which claimed the life of 1 police officer with three more injured and,  dropping back to Monday night, a Mussayab mortar attack injured eight police  officers.     A number of Iraqi 'leaders'are breathing a little easier today. That's  because the issue of dual nationalities was raised in Parliament and, Al  Mada reports , efforts to decree that you could not serve in  the Iraqi government if you held dual citizenship were rejected by the political  blocs with the Sadr bloc leading the way. Presumably an admission that Moqtada  al-Sadr now holds both Iraqi and Iranian citizenship. Were the murder charges --  still on record -- ever pushed and the arrest warrant -- which still exists --  ever exercised, Moqtada would have more security in Iran from Iraq if he held  Iranian citizenship. It's one thing to ask a country to extradite a non-citizen  but there are many more extradition barriers when a country is asked to turn  over one of their own. If Moqtada does indeed hold dual citizenship (there's no  proof that he does but the Sadr bloc leading the objection on this issue raises  suspicions), he would not be the only Iraqi political figure who does. Most  outlandish in the 2010 elections may have been the American citizen who ran for  office. Ayad Allawi, Nouri al-Maliki, Ahmed Chalabi and many of the other  one-time exiles who returned to Iraq after the US-invasionin 2003 hold dual  citizenship -- or more than just Iraqi citizenship. (Chalabi's rumored to hold  more than just "dual" citizenship.)
 While the leaders can all agree they  don't want to give up their pledged loyalties to other countries, they can't  come together on the national council. That's a security body. It does not  exist. The US pushed for its creation. Why? It was to be a consolation prize for  Ayad Allawi. His Iraqiya won the March 7, 2010 elections but the US was never  going to allow him to be prime minister. Nouri had already given his promise to  keep US forces in Iraq beyond 2011 and he was the US puppet the White House  wanted to keep. That's why they threw up road blocks when the UN delicately and  gingerly proposed the creation of a temporary body to oversee Iraq. In February  2010, Parliament was dead. Nouri as prime minister was dead. Jalal Talabani and  the two vice presidents were dead. All of them saw their terms expire. A  caretaking government was the answer. But a caretaking government would not have  allowed Nouri the opportunities to influence the election both before and after  the voting and a caretaking government (temporary) would not allow Nouri to hold  Iraq hostage for nine months until everyone agreed he could remain as prime  minister.
 Iraqiya won the election. The US came up with -- and Vice  President Joe Biden promoted -- the national council. It doesn't exist in the  Constitution and it would require Parliament passing laws and the  Nouri-controlled Supreme Court might still render a decision saying it was  illegal.
 But in the early days of November, the political blocs met in  the KRG and signed off on the Erbil Agreement which allowed Nouri to become  prime minister-designate and called for the creation of the national council.  Nouri was named prime minister-designate (but not officially by Jalal Talabani  who wanted to screw with the Constitution and give Nouri additional time to form  a Cabinet -- once the president names you prime minister-designate, per the  Constitution, the clock begins ticking and you have 30 days to form a Cabinet;  failure to do so means someone else will be named prime minister-designate).  Nouri immediately trashed the Erbil Agreement. Jalal Talabani hosted a series of  house parties this summer and one last month found the parties all agreeing to  return to the Erbil Agreement.
 No sooner was this announced -- and while  Jalal was still taking public bows -- then State of Law (Nouri's political  slate) began lodging objections in Parliament to the national council. Al  Mada reports  that while KRG President Massoud Barzani is  praising the prospect of a national council, State of Law is launching  accusations that Ayad Allawi wants it to create a "private government" within  Iraq.   Turning to the US, convicted War Criminal Steven D. Green is back in the  news. Green was convicted  May 7, 2009  of the  gang-rape of 14-year-old Iraqi Abeer Qassim  Hamza al-Janabi , her murder, the murder of her five-year-old sister  and the murders of both of her parents.  The War Crimes took place in Iraq where  Green was serving with the US military.  Green was the ringleader and part of  the plan was to blame the War Crimes on 'insurgents.' By the time the War Crimes  were discovered, Green had already been discharged.  The War Criminal was  sentenced to life in prison only after the civilian jury appeared split on  whether or not to sentence him to the death penalty.  Many would breathe a sigh  of relief that they didn't receive the death penalty, especially when they  couldn't refute the rape or murder charges due to eye witness testimony from  other participants.  Green even admitted to them in his statements asking for a  lesser sentence as he whimpered at the mercy of the court:  What I am about to say is completely my  own. No one told me what to say. No one wrote this for me. Not my lawyers, not  the government, not anybody.
My  feelings of remorse are directed solely towards the victims, and towards the  family of the victims, who I do not deny are victims themselves.
 I am truly sorry for what I did in Iraq and I am sorry  for the pain my actions, and the actions of my co-defendants, have caused you  and your family. I imagine it is a pain that I cannot fully comprehend or  appreciate. I helped to destroy a family and end the lives of four of my fellow  human beings, and I wish that I could take it back, but I cannot. And, as  inadequate as this apology is, it is all I can give you.
 I know you wish I was dead, and I do not hold that  against you. If I was in your place, I am convinced beyond any doubt that I  would feel the same way. And, if I thought it would change anything, or if it  would bring these people back to life, I would do everything I could to make  them execute me. I also know that you think I am evil, and I understand that as  well, and even though I do not think that you want to hear this, I have to tell  you that despite the evil that I have done, I am not an evil  person.
 Before I was  in the Army, I never thought I would kill anyone, and even after I was in the  Army, but before I went to Iraq, I never thought I would intentionally kill a  civilian. When I was in Iraq, something happened to me that I can only explain  by saying that I lost my mind. At some point while I was in Iraq, I stopped  seeing Iraqis as good and bad, as men, women, and children. I started seeing  them all as one, and evil, and less than human. When that happened, any natural,  learned, or religious morality, that normally would have stopped this, was  gone.
 But I see now that I  was wrong, and that Iraqis are human beings, and that despite differences of  race, religion, culture, and language, they are still human. And that at their  core, they have the same feelings, emotions, and needs as Americans. It was  wrong to kill Iraqis, just like it was wrong to kill Americans, just like it is  wrong to kill anyone, and I am very sorry.
 Most of all I am sorry for the deceased, but aside  from them, I am the most sorry for the boys whose family are gone. I know what  we did left a hole in their lives, and scars on their minds, and that there is  no making up for that. I only hope for them that they can somehow, and I don't  know how, move forward, and have a good future despite the nightmare in their  past that I helped create. They have my apologies and my prayers, as meaningless  as they must seem.
 The  Government is not going to execute me, as I am sure you wish they would, but  there is really no chance that I will step foot outside of prison for as long as  I live. I know that if I live one more year or fifty more years that they will  be years that Fahkriya, Kassem, Abeer, and Hadeel won't have not matter where I  am. And even though I did not learn their names until long after their deaths,  they are never far from my mind. But in the end, whether in one year or fifty, I  will die, and when I die I will be in God's hands. In the Kingdom of God where  there will be justice, and whatever I deserve, I will get. On the day of  judgment, God will repay everyone according to his works, and affliction and  distress will come upon every human being who does evil. I know that I have done  evil, and I fear that the wrath of the Lord will come upon me on that day. But,  I hope that you and your family at least can find some comfort in God's  justice.
 I see  now that war is intrinsically evil, because killing is intrinsically evil. And,  I am sorry I ever had anything to do with either.
 And, I cannot say this enough times, whether or not  you can ever forgive me, and I don't see how you could, I am and will always be  sorry for what I did.
 
He was allegedly sorry for  raping a young girl, for murdering her, for murdering her five-year-old sister  and for murdering the girls' parents.  But not so sorry that he thought he  deserved a prison sentence.  As he read his little  please-have-mercy-and-give-me-a-brief-prison-sentence plea,  Abeer's family  wasn't buying his little act.  Renee Murphy reported on the  events in the court room for WHAS11 :   Renee Murphy: I mean, they came face to  face with the killer. Once again, the only thing different about this time was  that they were able to speak with him and they had an exchange of dialogue and  the family is here from Iraq and they got to ask Steven Green all the questions  they wanted answered. They looked each other in the eye. Green appeared calm and  casual in court. The victims' family, though, outraged, emotional and  distraught. Now cameras were not allowed in the courtroom so we can't show video  of today's hearing but here's an account of what happened. [Video begins] This  is a cousin of a 14-year-old Iraqi girl raped and killed by Steven Green. He and  other family members in this SUV were able to confront Green in federal court  this morning. Their words were stinging and came from sheer grief. Former Fort  Campbell soldier Steven Green was convicted of killing an Iraqi mother, father  and their young daughter. He then raped their 14-year-old daughter, shot her in  the head and set her body on fire. Today the victim's family was able to give an  impact statement at the federal court house the young sons of the victims asked  Green why he killed their father. an aunt told the court that "wounds are still  eating at our heart" and probably the most compelling statements were from the  girls' grandmother who sobbed from the stand and demanded an explanation from  Green. Green apologized to the family saying that he did evil things but he is  not an evil person. He says that he was drunk the night of the crimes in 2006  and he was following the orders of his commanding officers. In his statement,  Green said if it would bring these people back to life I would do everything I  could to make them execute me. His statement goes on to say, "Before I went to  Iraq, I never thought I would intentionally kill a civilian. When I was in Iraq,  something happened to me that I can only explain by saying I lost my mind. I  stopped seeing Iraqis as good and bad, as men, women and children. I started  seeing them all as one, and evil, and less than human." Green didn't act alone.  His codefendants were court-martialed and received lesser sentences. Green will  be formally sentenced to life in prison in September. [End of videotape.] The  answers that Green gave were not good enough for some of the family members. at  one point today, the grandmother of the young girls who were killed left the  podium and started walking towards Green as he sat at the defendant's table  shouting "Why!" She was forcibly then escorted to the back of the court room by  US Marshalls. She then fell to the ground and buried her face in her hands and  began to cry again. The family pleaded with the court for the death sentence for  Green. but you can see Green's entire  statement to the court on our website whas11.com  and coming up tonight at six o'clock, we're going to  hear from Green's attorneys.   Repeating, he could have been sentenced to death.  The jury split on that.   Instead, he got a prison sentence.  Demonstrating that he was not at all  remorseful for the rape or murders, he immediately began preparing an appeal.   Today AFP reports  that War Criminal Steven  Dale Green's appeal has been denied.  AP quotes  from Judge Boyce F. Martin  Jr.'s opinion, "Green's claim that the district court lacked jurisdiction over  him fails because his discharge from the Army was valid."  Let's hope War  Criminal Green thinks about his actions before his next appeal.  He stalked a  young girl prior to breaking into her home to rape her and to kill her, to kill  her sisters and to kill her parents.  He murdered four people.  He raped  14-year-old Abeer.  Nothing, not his his courtroom demeanor, not his statements  in court or to the press have conveyed remorse or even basic awareness of his  crimes and how awful they were.    Turning to campaigns, the Ames Iowa Straw Poll (Republican poll determining  momentary attitudes towards would be candidates a year before the presidential  election) was Saturday, Michele Bachmann came in first, Ron Paul second.  Ron  Paul is the only declared candidate at present of any party who is calling for  an end to the wars.  Ava and I tackled PBS' obsession  with the poll Sunday . Both Mark Shields and Gwen Ifill included Ron Paul  in  their gas baggery (20 minutes and 50 seconds on Friday's show about a poll that  hadn't even been taken -- the poll would be Saturday).  As Ava and I noted of  the Ron Paul inclusion, "For those who mistake that as progress, let's note  reality. Judy Woodruff interviewed  Ron Paul for The NewsHour last  month . For over a week, that interview was the most popular  feature at The NewsHour  website each  day. They have never seen numbers like that before. So, yes, they will give Ron  Paul his token mention now."  Other outlets, as Adam Kokesh documented on Adam vs The Man  last night , did not feel the need to include Paul.  Part of Adam's segment  included a small clip from CNN's Reliable Sources .  
 Roger Simon: He lost to Michele Bachman by 9/10s of 1 percentage  point.  In a straw poll that doesn't -- isn't supposed to pick winners but is  supposed to tell us which way he wind is blowing, that's a good as a win.  So we  had a tie for first.  But where is he on the morning shows this morning?  Where  are all the stories analyzing what it means that Ron Paul essentially tied for  first place at Ames?    Howard Kurtz: And what the reason that he's essentially being  ignored is?   Roger Simon: The media doesn't believe that Ron Paul has a hoot in  hell's chance of winning the Iowa caucuses, winning the Republican nomination or  winning the presidency, so we're going to ignore him.     To stream the full segment of CNN's Reliable Sources with Howard  Kurtz, click here.  Monday, Roger Simon explored the topic further in his POLITICO  column noting, "Bachmann appeared on five Sunday shows following Ames. Paul  appeared on none. POLITICO's Kasie Hunt was one of the few reporters to do a separate story on  Paul's showing at the straw poll, but to most of the media he remained an  exotic, unworthy of attention."  Keach Hagey (POLITICO) quoted Ron Paul's campaign  manager Jesse Benton stating, "We were turned down by all the Sunday talk shows,  including 'Fox News Sunday,' which promised us an interview. And we were turned  down by all the shows today."  (For any wondering, Adam's commentary isn't  included because much of it depends upon what was flashed onscreen behind him  while he spoke.  So I'd have to do a transcript and explain what was going on.   If you can stream it, click here.) 
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