| Monday, November 14, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, an Iraq War  veteran serving in Iraq as a contractor dies, the US gives Turkey drones,  mercenaries needed for Iraqi skies. the State Dept continues to believe it  doesn't have to explain to the American people how it spends their money, and  more.   Is this the moment America begins to start tracking the death of US  contractors in Iraq? Lewis Griswold (Fresno Bee) reports ,  "Sean Ferguson of Visalia, who earned two Purple Hearts for his military service  in Iraq, died there Saturday of natural causes, a friend of his family said  today. Ferguson, 29, is the son of Tulare County Superior Court Judge Darryl  Ferguson."  KMPH notes , "He joined the U.S. Army in August  2001 and retired eight years later as a Staff Sergeant after he was hurt in  combat.  He returned to Baghdad to work for Triple Canopy, a private contractor  that provides security and mission support services to government agencies and  other organizations. [. . .] A memorial service will be held at the Church of  Jesus of Latter-day Saints chapel located at the corner of Caldwell Ave. and  Chinowth St. in Visalia on Saturday, November 19, at 10 a.m." Lemor Abrams (KMPH) offers a video report  here .  1st Lt Dustin Vincent was the most recent US military fatality in the Iraq  War. Amber Fischer (The 33 News, CW33)  reported  Saturday evening that the 25-year-old had been laid to rest  earlier that day at Dallas-Fort Worth National Cemetery and she quoted his  friend Jared Griggs stating, "He and I talked a lot. He's part of the reason I  joined the army myself. You couldn't be mad, you couldn't be sad around Dustin.  You couldn't even really be serious around Dustin. There was only two things  that he was really serious about, and that was the Lord and serving his  country." Vallari Gupte (University of  Texas at Arlington's Shorthorn)  noted :Vincent, who graduated  from UTA in 2009, was from Mesquite. Vincent, a 1st Lieutenant, was assigned to  the 1st Battalion, 5th Field Artillery of the 1st Infantry Division in Fort  Riley, Kan. Vincent leaves behind a wife and daughter.Kinesiology senior Christopher Harris was a freshman  when he met Vincent in UTA's ROTC program. Harris was a cadet and Vincent was an  officer of that year's battalion."He  was my leader," Harris said. "He would teach me some stuff and I would  learn."When Harris learned about  Vincent's death, he grieved."It is  hard to feel anything else right now. Just grief," he said.Cynthia Vega and Steve Stoler  (WFAA -- link has text and video) report  that Dustin Vincent was on  his first deployment to Iraq and "just six months into his deployment when the  enemy threw a deadly grenade at his convoy." Yesterday, Mohammed Tawfeeq and Chelsea J.  Carter (CNN) reported  that 3 soldiers serving with Dustin Vincent  testified in an Iraqi court Sunday: The November 3 shooting of 1st Lt. Dustin D.  Vincent -- one of the last U.S. casualties in the more-than-eight-year Iraq war  -- was chronicled by insurgents who captured the sniper shooting on video and  posted it online.Inside a crowded courthouse, one of the soldiers  who were with the 25-year-old Vincent the day he was killed told the  investigative judge that a "few days later a video was posted that claimed the  killing of the 1st lieutenant, and it shows the same location we were that day."      In other news, Al  Mada reports  that US President Barack Obama is saying the Iraq  War is "about over" and that the US government is down playing the concerns of  the Sadr bloc over the decision to use Kuwait as a staging platform for US  forces. This will be in addition to the forces under the US State Dept's  control. Spencer Ackerman (Wired) reports :The State Department has already requisitioned an  army, part of the roughly 5,000 private security  contractors State is hiring to protect diplomats stationed in Iraq.  Now, State is hiring someone to provide a little help from the air: an "Aviation  Advisor" responsible for "Search and Rescue (SAR), medical  evacuations (ME), transporting Quick Reaction Forces (QRF) to respond to  incidents, and provid[ing] air transportation for Chief of Mission  personnel." It's not a familiar job for the diplomatic corps, which  is why State is seeking to bring in someone from the outside.   The State Department put out this notice on Nov. 4.  That's 58 days before the withdrawal of U.S. troops. Fifty-eight days before  State has the skies over Iraq to itself.     In related news, Dylan Welch (Sydney Morning Herald)  reports  the Australian government is surprised that security costs for their  embassies and staff in Iraq and Afghanistan "has quadrupled in less than 12  months to almost $40 million a year" and they are now "paying two private  security companies a total of $82 million for the two years to 2012."  How is it  related?  Cost overruns happen very frequently.  Presumably the Australian  government properly budgeted for their mission and unexpected details led to  such a huge increase.  In the US, please remember, that the State Dept refuses  to share concrete information with the Congress or with the office of the  Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction or with the Government  Accountability Office.  In fact, the GAO's last report on the State Dept's  contracts in Iraq and Afghanistan was entitled what? [PDF format warning] "Iraq  and Afghanistan: DOD, State, and USAID Cannot Fully Account for Contracts,  Assistance, Instruments, and Associated Personnel ."  So if the US cost  overruns mirror those of Australia, who's going to be held responsible?  The White House? Don't make me laugh.   And their fall guy will be gone  because Hillary Clinton has stated she is a one-term Secretary of State.  So the  US tax payers will be screwed and who's going to be held accountable?   And it's time to get very real about something.  The Senator Al Frankens  with their "thank you for your service"?  It's past time they greeted every tax  payer with, "Thank you for your dollars."  This country has gone into debt for  an illegal war and not only do we see the debt today but future generations will  as well.  And clearly Congress doesn't give a damn since they refuse to scream  bloody murder over the State Dept requesting money for Iraq (and Afghanistan)  and being unable and unwilling to provide an accounting of how that money will  be spent. Last June, Peter Van Buren wrote a piece  for Le  Monde  in which he noted:   In its post-"withdrawal" plans, the State Department expects to  have 17,000 personnel in Iraq at some 15 sites. If those plans go as expected,  5,500 of them will be mercenaries, hired to shoot-to-kill Iraqis as needed, to  maintain security. Of the remaining 11,500, most will be in support roles of one  sort or another, with only a couple of hundred in traditional diplomatic jobs.  This is not unusual in wartime situations. The military, for example, typically  fields about seen support soldiers for every "shooter." In other words, the  occupation run by a heavily militarized State Department will simply continue in  a new, truncated form -- unless Congress refuses to pay for it.   Unless Congress refuses to pay for it?  At present, that seems highly  unlikely.  PeterR.S. Kalha explores the realities of the relationship between  the governments of Iraq and the US in "Is America Finally Withdrawing  From Iraq? -- Analysis " (Eurasia  Review ):Having spent at least  about US$ 3 trillion, taken thousands as casualties both dead and wounded, the  Americans are not going to give up that easily. The Shiite Iraqi PM Nourie  al-Maliki is slated to visit the White House on December 12, 2011, just a few  days before the deadline runs out. If he changes his mind and signs the status  of forces agreement with the US, it will certainly not be out of character and  in tune with the Iraqi political temperament. Nevertheless, the Americans are  not taking any chances and have already made alternative plans.The US Embassy in Baghdad is going to be strengthened  and will have about 17,000 personnel on its rolls. Situated in the 'Green Zone'  on a 104 acre plot with its own electricity, water and sewage, it is one of the  most expensive and largest US Embassies in the world and its entire requirements  are supplied from Kuwait under armed guard. US Consulates exist in Basra, Mosul  and Kirkuk, each about 1,000 strong with its own security personnel. The US  Embassy also has an 'Office for Security Co-operation' under which will come all  US army trainers, private contractors and assorted military personnel -- all  under the cover of diplomatic immunity. Presently about $ 10 billion worth of  arms deals are under negotiations. Once the negotiations are completed,  additional US military personnel will arrive to train and 'co-ordinate' with  their Iraqi counterparts. These large numbers of 'trainers' will also be under  US Embassy cover.Presently the Iraqi  air force is non-existent. This means that the air space over Iraq will be  controlled by the US for the foreseeable future. The US will continue to fly  drones over Iraq targeting any potential enemy. It also means that the US can  reinforce its residual troops under the 'cover' of the US Embassy as and when it  is required without any serious hindrance. It also means that the Shiite-led  Iraqi government cannot move its troops without US concurrence since they would  have no air cover. And to make it absolutely certain that matters do not go out  of hand, the present day Iraqi forces are commanded by a Kurdish officer General  Zebari. The Americans have made an assessment and quite rightly so that of the  three communities in Iraq, the Kurds will remain the most loyal. In any case the  Kurdish dominated areas of Iraq are outside the political control of the Iraqi  government and even the Kirkuk question remains unresolved.Thus President Obama has very skilfully reaped the  political benefits of ordering a 'technical' withdrawal and ending the US  mission there, whilst not only retaining the substance of the US posture and  presence but immeasurably strengthening it. Meanwhile Aswat al-Iraq notes , "The  Legislature of the so-called White al-Iraqiya Bloc in the Iraqi Parliament,  Aliya Nuseif, has demanded the Iraqi government to carry out a complete account  for security contractors, in charge of protecting the American Embassy in  Baghdad."  And we're back to Peter Van Buren who, at his blog, notes  the move  and asks, his voice dripping with sarcasm, "So really, what are 16,000 people  going to do everyday in Iraq on behalf of the US government?"  Peter Van Buren  is the author of the new book We Meant  Well: How I Helped Lose the Battle for the Hearts and Minds of the Iraqi People  (American Empire Project) .  Bob Kustra (Idaho Statesman) reviews  the  book and notes, "Van Buren has served with the Foreign Service for more than 23  years. Before arriving in Baghdad, his response was not new to him, but war was.  [. . .] There are few bright spots in this painful and gripping story of  mismanagement. The first account of our blunders from a State Department  inisder, 'We Meant Well' is thought-provoking and hard to put down." Also  reviewing the book is Dan Simpson (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette) who concludes ,  "The book is short, very readable and has humor as well as profound points in  it." In other news, Chen Zhi (Xinhua) reports  General Babker  Zebari, Chief of Staff of the Iraqi Joint Forces, headed an Iraqi delegation to  Tehran where they met " with the commander of Islamic Revolution Guards Corps  (IRGC) Ground Forces Brigadier General Mohammad Pakpour." The Tehran Times adds , "In a meeting in  Tehran on Sunday, Iraqi Chief of Staff General Babakr Zibari and IRGC Ground  Forces Commander Mohammad Pakpour stressed the need for closer ties between  Tehran and Baghdad. Commander Pakpour, who hosted General Zibari and his  accompanying delegation, hoped the trip will help strengthen bilateral ties.  Pakpur said the Iraqi people have endured many problems and difficulties over  the past ten years, however, a gradual withdrawal of foreign forces from Iraq  has created an opportunity in which Iraqi people and officials can directly  govern their country." Fars News  Agency continues :The general expressed the hope that Iraq and its armed  forces could gain increasing success after the end of the 8-year-long occupation  which he described as a hard and cumbersome era for the Iraqis.The IRGC Ground Force commander further noted the  profound political and cultural commonalities of Iran and Iraq as two Muslim and  friendly neighboring nations, and stressed, "We hope that the existing  commonalities pave the ground for cooperation, coordination and expansion of  all-out relations." There is (and has been) alarm and concern by  some US officials (military and civilian) over what happens between Iran and  Iraq? David S. Cloud's piece for the  Los Angeles Times  is part of  that: In Iraq and other trouble spots, Iran is  handing out money and weapons, often in secret, in an effort to expand its clout  and stay ahead of the political changes sweeping the region since the start of  the "Arab Spring," U.S. officials say.The Islamic Republic still faces severe challenges,  however. If opposition forces in Syria manage to topple President Bashar Assad,  Iran could lose its closest ally in the region.
 
 It's cute the way  Cloud rushes to draw a line between the Pentagon and the White House. Cloud's  missed all of Barack Obama, Joe Biden and Hillary Clinton's recent remarks about  Iran?
 
 No one knows what will happen. If there's concern on the part of  the White House (and their comments last week indicate there is), then they  shouldn't have backed Nouri al-Maliki for a second term (which meant they  overruled Iraqi voters when they did). Setting Nouri aside, the others involved  wouldn't necessarily rush to embrace a partnership with Iran that was more of a  partnership than what they have with their other neighbors. There's some concern  in the administration over clerics. That's a possibility. But so are turf wars.  An Iraqi cleric embracing Tehran is one reducing their own sphere of  influence.
 
   CNN's Wolf Blitzer is among those convinced  Iran's getting a boost in Iraq.  He notes that 18 countries recently voted to  put Syria on suspension from the Arab League but that Iraq didn't vote:   Despite the enormous sacrifie of U.S. blood and treasure, in  liberating Iraq from Saddam Hussein, the Shiite-led government in Baghdad din't  have the guts to stand with the overwhelming majority in the Arab world and side  against the Damascucs regime of Bashar al-Assad. The Iraqi government is still apparently most concerned about  overly upsetting its friends in Iraq, which has strongly sided with the Syrian  government.    He may be right.  I may be wrong.  Some fear a war with Iran is in the  making.  It's a good time to look at the weak ass.  George McGovern's a sad man  who will never live down 2008 which only brought forth the scars of sexism  regarding his campaign in Miami back in 1972.  Now our 'antiwar voice' can be  found saying what?  Kristi Eaton (AP) reports  he declared  today that the US should think twice about going-it-alone on Iran and needs to  instead build international support.  For those who don't remeber, that's the  actual garbage George McGovern offered ahead of the Iraq. War.  He's always  loved to strut and pose and pretend. But you don't have to take my word for it  or check the archives.  Eaton quotes McGovern explaining, "We invaded Iraq with  very little support in the rest of the world." Yes, that was his 'anti-war'  stand.  As it is today.  For those who can't get it, NO WAR ON IRAN! is an anti-war statement.  "Hey  everybody, let's build a coalition for war!" is not an anti-war statement. On  the move towards war on Iran, here's Justin Raimondo (Antiwar.com) :        Back to Iraq, AFP reports  John Kirby declared at the  Pentagon today that the US was deploying some of the predator drones in Iraq to  Turkey to give "support to the Turkish military to deal with the specific threat  posed by the PKK on their southern border." Reuters adds  that the program "involves four US  predator unmanned aircraft". Greg Jaffe (Washington Post) observes ,  "Moving them to Turkey could strengthen the diplomatic alliance with the United  States, but it also risks putting the United States in the middle of a regional  conflict between Turkey and Iraq, two putative allies. Pentagon officials  declined to say whether the four Predator drones being flown out of Incirlik Air  Base, a joint U.S. - Turkish military installation, would be allowed to cross  into Iraqi air space." And how is Iraq going to feel knowing Turkey has a spy  view on them?  Not the US which is bad enough.  But Turkey's a neighbor.   There's really no chance Turkey won't use the drones to their own advantage?  John Reed (Military.com News) adds , "In  what could be an effort to head off the popular discontent seen in other  countries that have hosted U.S. drones, Davotugu claimed that the American UAV  missions would be overseen by the Turkish military."   In Iraq yesterday, northern Iraq was again attacked by the Turkish  military. Reuters reports  that the PKK's  spokesperson Dozdar Hamo stated the bombing lasted for about an hour. Since  August 17th, the latest waves of attacks have been taking place. The back and  forth between the PKK and the Turkish government has been going on forever and,  in fact, the Turkish government's oppression of the Kurdish minority in Turkey  bred and spawned the PKK. The issue of Turkey's military attacks was raised last  when Amar C. Bakshi (CNN -- link has  text and video) interviewed KRG Prime Minister Barham  Salih :Amar C. Bakshi: Let's switch gears to Turkey -- an important  regional neighbor that over the past few months has intervened in northern Iraq  to go after Kurdish nationalist forces who have used terror to kill Turkish  soldiers, numerous civilians. Now is the Kurdistan Regional Government  cooperating with Turkey in its interventions into northern Iraq? 
 
 Prime Minister Barham Salih: These issues cannot be solved  by military means, these issues cannot be solved by violence. There has to be a  political track. This initiative that the Turkish government has started, the  democratization process, needs to be enhanced, deepened, in order to ensure that  this long-standing conflict is resolved in a different way.
 
 TodayAFP reports , "Iraq's top Kurdish leaders are  mediating between Turkey and Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) separatists with  bases in northern Iraq to bring their conflict to an end, an official said.  Iraq's president Jalal Talabani and Iraqi Kurdistan regional president Massoud  Barzani 'Are leading mediation efforts between the Turkish government and the  PKK, to end the battles in the border area between Iran, Turkey and Kurdistan,'  said a spokesperson for Talabani's Patriotic Union of Kurdistan." Lale Kemal (Today's Zaman) stateswonders    , "Turkey is understood to have warned Barzani that 'if the PKK continues its  violent attacks, your region [northern Iraq] will also be affected,' and asked  him to tell the number two of the separatist organization that it should declare  a ceasefire and ask its terrorists to lay down their arms."  Meanwhile Al Rafidayn notes  the continued  disputes over Exxon's contract with the KRG and how the government out of  Baghdad remains upset over it. Hurriyet Daily News adds , "The  regional administration in northern Iraq is urging the country's central  government for a quick resolution to the dispute over rights to natural  resources, the nation's biggest wealth source, as it insists on implementing  deals undersigned earlier. The regional administration confirmed yesterday it  had already signed a long-debated deal with U.S.-based oil major Exxon Mobil on  Oct. 18 for six exploration blocks within its area of control." Reuters adds , "Iraq's central  government, which has long-running disputes with the Kurdish region over oil and  land, has said Baghdad would consider a deal between Exxon and the KRG illegal  and a violation of the company's contract to develop Iraq's 8.7-billion-barrel  West Qurna Phase One oilfield in the south."  Stuart Kemp (Hollywood Reporter)  reports, "The Kurdistan region in Iraq is to launch its first British film  festival in partnership with representative from the U.K. movie industry.  Organizers said a program of films would unspool in the region's capital city of  Erbil later this month. [. . .] During this festival, the U.K.'s National Film and Television School (NFTS)   is planning to run a series of workshops for young Kurdish filmmakers wanting to  tell their stories." Andreas Wiseman (Screen Daily) adds  that  the festival is to run from November 26th through November 28th, "The event is  expected to host around 15 films, screening in an Erbil conference centre.   Admission will be free for the general public. The final programme has yet to be  announced." British counsul-general in Erbil Chris Bowers states, "It's  fascinating to note that many of the films we are programming have strong female  role models (The Queen , Pride and Prejudice , Made in  Dagenham ), or that tackle social stereotypes (Billy Elliot ) or  discuss the Holocaust (The Boy in Striped Pyjamas ).  The Kurdistan  Region is on a dash for modernity and that comes through in the type of films  that people want to see here in Erbil." Wiseman notes that films were popular in  the KRG before the wars and that "at least two large cinema complexes are due to  oepn in Erbil". London's Bankside Films  is co-sponsoring the festival.   Turning to some of today's reported violence, Reuters notes  a Baghdad sticky bombing  injured a government worker, a Baghdad roadside bombing left one person injured,  a second Baghdad roadside bombing leaving two police officers injured, 1 corpse  was discovered in Mosul (killed by a bullet to the head), a Mosul roadside  bombing claimed 1 life and left three more men injured, an Iskandariya rocket  attack on the US Kalsu base left two people injured (Iraqi civilians), a third  Baghdad roadside bombing left two people injured, 1 'suspect' was shot dead by  the Iraqi military in Baghdad, two police officers were injured in a Baghdad  shooting, a fourth Baghdad roadside bombing left two people injured and "Omar  al-Dulaimi, the head of a journalists' association in Diyala province" was shot  in Baquba and seriously injured.      And he Tweeted:   johnfdrake While last week was very quiet in , militants appear to have  been making up for things over the past two days.        Of course, part of the quiet -- not noted in a Tweet -- was there really no  press in Iraq.  Who notes violence?  What outlet that issues reports in English  notes violence?  That would be Reuters.  And they really didn't do  FactBoxes last week.  If you checked Aswat al-Iraq, you saw that violence  continued.  Aswat al-Iraq was doing three and four news items (violence  and other) a day.  That was it.   That was more than Al Mada, Al  Rafidayn, Dar Addustour, Al Sabbah, etc. were doing.   They all shut down for the holiday.  Aswat al-Iraq reduced its coverage  for the holiday.  With actual press coverage, would have been so 'quiet'?   That's an important question to ask.   |