| Wednesday, November 30, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, Nouri announces  he's fine with US troops being 'trainers,' Joe Biden, continuing his Iraq visit,  rushes to say that they can do that and more, a video of an Iraqi woman being  tortured by police emerges, Parliament was attacked by a suicide bomber on  Monday, the Senate decided yesterday not to end the Iraq War, realities for  women living in Iraq, and more.   In what will hopefully be a front page piece on tomorrow's New York  Times , Mark Landler reports  that Nouri announced today  that "he was open to the eventual return of American troops as trainers."  That,  of course, is not new.  It's long been noted by the Iraqi press, you've  had people with State of Law explaining that Nouri needed to be able to say he  got all the troops out (and we've noted that Barack needed to pretend on that  point as well).  So welcome to the party, the appetizers and salad are gone, we  just finished the entrees but maybe we can re-slice the dessert for your late  arrival?  Mark Landler's piece will be an important one in tomorrow's paper and I  applaud him for it but if it just doesn't feel all that amazing to me it's  because we've been going over this now for almost two months while others have  been silent or lied.  Or while others have offered fantasies of Barack Obama.      One of the few not serving up fantasies of rainbows and lollypops was  Spencer Ackerman.  He writes for Wired and my thoughts on Wired are known but he gets credit for what he did.  He gets a link today because  a friend called in a favor.  He's covering  what Nouri said and also what Joe Biden, US vice  president, said. And offering, "If Biden gets his way, then U.S. troops  returning to Iraq next year won't just be training their Iraqi counterparts,  even if that's how Maliki sells it to a skeptical Iraqi populace."   US troops going back in should remind you of something.  It reminds me of  filling in for Kat last night   and noting, "What AFP doesn't tell you is that Rand Paul's measure  would have ended the Iraq War, key point coming up, which means if Barack wanted  to send US troops back into Iraq, he would need to get permission from the  Congress." What was that about?  Senator Rand Paul's bill to end the Iraq War  finally had a vote on the Senate floor yesterday.  Donna Cassata (AP)  noted , "The Senate also rejected an amendment by Sen. Rand Paul,  R-Ky., that would have ended the authority for using force in Iraq. The vote was  67-30."AFP reported :  Senator Carl Levin voted against it and insisted, "I just am unwilling to take  this risk during the critical transition period."  What risk?  Hadn't Barack  declared the Iraq War over?  What does Carl mean about "transition  period"?  He means (a) it's not a withdrawal, (b) negotiations continue and (c)  Barack might send troops back in.  Rand Paul's measure would have ended the Iraq  War which meant that if Barack wanted to send US troops back into Iraq, he would  need to get permission from the Congress.  30 senators voted for Rand Paul's  bill, 67 voted against it.  Here are the ones who voted in  favor of the bill :
 
 Baucus (D-MT)Bingaman (D-NM)
 Boxer (D-CA)
 Brown  (D-OH)
 Cantwell (D-WA)
 Cardin (D-MD)
 DeMint (R-SC)
 Durbin  (D-IL)
 Feinstein (D-CA)
 Franken (D-MN)
 Gillibrand (D-NY)
 Harkin  (D-IA)
 Heller (R-NV)
 Klobuchar (D-MN)
 Lautenberg (D-NJ)
 Leahy  (D-VT)
 Manchin (D-WV)
 McCaskill (D-MO)
 Menendez (D-NJ)
 Merkley  (D-OR)
 Murray (D-WA)
 Nelson (D-NE)
 Paul (R-KY)
 Rockefeller  (D-WV)
 Sanders (I-VT)
 Snowe (R-ME)
 Tester (D-MT)
 Udall  (D-CO)
 Udall (D-NM)
 Wyden (D-OR)
 
 
 25 Democrats, 4 Republicans and 1 independent (Socialist Bernie Sanders).   If  you've forgotten, in 2007, candidate Barack stated that he was comfortable,  after withdrawal, sending US troops back into Iraq if Iraq wasn't 'stable.' For  more on that refer to the November 2, 2007 snapshot  and this piece by Third .  So passing Senator  Paul's end the war bill would have been highly problematic for the  administration.  After the vote, Paul declared , "This year we have seen the President commit  our armed forces to combat, while Congress has been ignored or remained silent.   No present or future administration should be given an indefinite blank check to  conduct military operations in Iraq by Congress.  Congress must reclaim its  constitutional authority over the decision to go to war, or to end a war -- is  it one of the body's most important powers."   Let's move over to the violence reported today.  Reuters notes  a Balad Ruz car bombing  left seven people injured, a Mosul roadside bombing claimed 1 life, 1 corpse was  discovered in Mosul (a person "kidnapped in 2008"), a Kirkuk sticky bombing  claimed 1 life and, dropping back to last night for the rest, a Udhaim roadside  bombing injured a shepherd and a Samarra home invasion resulted in the deaths of  "a fortune teller, his wife, sone and two guests."   In major news on violence today, Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers  via the San Francisco Chronicle)  reports  that the Monday  attack on  Parliament was a suicide car bomber and Issa observes, "The admission that a  suicide car bomber had penetrated the fortified Green Zone, the first suicide  attack there since April 2007, sent a wave of concern across the capital about  the abilities, and loyalties, of Iraq's security agencies." As Sheikah (Dar Addustour) notes  the questions  about the attack in terms of how heavily protected the Green Zone is and how a  "strange car with unknown identities" was able to penetrate the Green Zone. Al Rafidayn notes  the need for  permits to carry explosives in the Green Zone and indicates that some aspect of  the attack was caught on cameras "deployed" in the area. This is major news and  has been treated as such in the Iraqi press for two news cycles. As part of  Monday's violence, it was noted as an aside in the small number of US outlets  that cover Iraq. And a large number of that small number treated the notion that  it could be a suicide bomber as some sort of Iraqi delusion. But it was a  suicide bomber (not a mortar or a rocket) and the US press is strangely silent.    The answer why can be found in CNN's write-up :  "Violence in Iraq remains at its lowest overall level since 2003, according to  the White House."   Of course, the press isn't supposed to run with a party line.  The press is  supposed to be independent and skeptical.  It's supposed to be a watchdog  forever questioning official pronouncements.  But it doesn't do that. As noted this morning , in reply to visitors who felt their  favorite news outlet had been treated harshly by me in yesterday's snapshot  with regards to the coverage  of Joe Biden's visit to Iraq, I was more than kind.  Read those articles again,  but do so after you go to  Time   magazine. and read Mark Halperin's "Surprise Visit ."  You'll note all  the details you thought the press had hunted down on their own were in fact  spoon fed by the White House.  While the White House pretends violence is at a record low, earlier this  week  Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers)  reported  violence was on the rise in Iraq with over 100 recorded  deaths this month in Baghdad alone.  Who was telling the truth?  Sahar Issa who  doesn't need to worry about how the truth will effect personal polling or an  upcoming election.    On Biden's visit, Al Rafidayn reports  that "hundreds"  of Moqtada al-Sadr's followers protested Biden's visit by taking to the streets  of Najaf and Basra. In Basra, they chanted slogans such as "No, no, to America!  No to colonization!" and "Death to America! Death to Israel!" while carrying  banners with statements such as "We demand the Iraqi government expel the  Zionist Biden from Iraq." Aswat al-Iraq report  that Biden's  scheduled to visit Erbil today. Erbil is in the KRG and the Kurdistan Regional  Government is in the news today for another reason. Al Rafidayn is reporting  a  crackdown is taking place with the arrest of approximately 2636 people -- a list  that includes journalists and activists.  Still on Biden's visit, we're about to present a press release from the  White House and do so without comment.  Without comment? I agreed to run it  before I knew how long it was (and also after an administration friend insisted  that they "really don't get to have a say here" -- whatever).  This is the White  House's official statement and we still have to address the topic of Iraqi women  so we don't have time to dispute or reply to it.     For Immediate Release  November 30, 2011  
 Joint Statement by The United States of America and The  Republic of Iraq Higher Coordinating CommitteeThe United States of America and the Republic of Iraq are committed  to forging a strong partnership based on mutual interests that will continue to  grow for years to come.  Our two nations are entering a new phase in our  relationship.  We have a historic opportunity to strengthen our ties beyond  security and build a multi-faceted relationship through trade, education,  culture, law enforcement, environment, energy, and other important  areas. Three years ago, our nations signed the Strategic Framework  Agreement (SFA), affirming both sides' desire to establish long-term bonds of  cooperation and friendship.  The SFA is a lasting agreement, and one that serves  as the foundation on which we are building a durable and mutually beneficial  relationship.  Today, we gather again in Baghdad to reaffirm our commitment to  this important partnership and to the principles of cooperation, sovereignty,  and mutual respect articulated in the SFA.  Vice President Joe Biden and Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki convened  the SFA's Higher Coordinating Committee on November 30.  Together, they affirmed  the significant accomplishments under the SFA thus far and charted a course for  further joint efforts.  Cultural and Education Cooperation The Republic of Iraq seeks the cooperation of the United States in  its efforts to build a stronger higher education system, expanding English  language programs, and preserving Iraq's rich cultural heritage, especially  through assistance in conserving archeological sites such as the Babylon  historical site, which the United States has helped preserve, and through  support to the Iraqi Institute for Conservation of Antiquities and  Heritage.  Energy Cooperation The United States is committed to supporting the Republic of Iraq  in its efforts to develop the energy sector. Together, we are exploring ways to  help boost Iraq's oil production, including through better protection for  critical infrastructure. The U.S. also supports Iraq through training in  operations and maintenance, the provision of spare parts, and the development of  the Government of Iraq's Electricity Master Plan, which will guide Iraq's  electricity sector development over the next 30 years.  Law Enforcement and Judicial Cooperation The United States and the Iraq believe that an independent judicial  system is an essential component of a stable, democratic Iraq.  The United  States has provided assistance and professional support to develop and  professionalize the Iraqi corrections system through judicial training programs  for Iraqis through the Judicial Development Institute.  Under the Police  Development Program, the United States will continue providing advisory and  technical assistance to the Iraqi police, including an exchange program that  will bring groups of Iraqi police to the United States for leadership  development over the next three years.    Political and Diplomatic Cooperation The United States will continue to cooperate closely with Iraq in  international fora in pursuit of shared interests.  The United States also  reaffirms its support for efforts aimed at resolving all remaining Chapter VII  issues.  In December 2010, the U.S. chaired a special session of the United  Nations Security Council to bring closure to several Chapter VII issues dating  to the time of the former regime in Iraq.  Services, Technology, Environment, and Transportation  Cooperation The United States is committed to supporting the Iraqi government's  plans to improve services, develop its system of roads and bridges, and bring  its airports up to international standards.  We will improve agriculture and  irrigation, support trade, and generate export opportunities through exchange  programs between U.S. and Iraqi businessmen.  The United States is providing  Iraq the expertise it needs to design and implement an advanced banking system  that will meet Iraq's current and future needs.  The United States pledges to  support Iraq in developing its health care services, improving public health,  and health awareness campaigns. Trade and Finance Cooperation The United States and Iraq will continue their efforts to reinforce  their financial and trade cooperation and to strengthen ties between our  nations' business communities.  For the first time since 1988, the U.S.  participated in the recent Baghdad International Trade Fair, showcasing 85  American businesses and organizations and building on the success of the  Business and Investment Conference held in Washington, D.C. in 2009.  The United  States is supporting the Government of Iraq's efforts in the financial sector by  providing the technical expertise needed to develop private banks and  microfinance institutions.  In this context, the United States is developing new  lending products for small and medium enterprises, in addition to the roughly  $50 million set aside for such loans.  Our governments are looking forward to  the next meeting and recommendations of the U.S.-Iraq Business Dialogue, a forum  of Iraqi and U.S. companies that promises to strengthen commercial ties between  our countries.  Security and Defense Cooperation The United States and Iraq recognize the importance of working  closely together in the area of security and defense to strengthen our two  countries' security and stability.  Through the Strategic Framework Agreement,  we have committed ourselves to continuing and strengthening our cooperation,  guided by our common interests and shared goals.  At the dawn of a new chapter  in our relationship, the United States and Iraq stand shoulder to shoulder in  increasing our efforts to build a better future for our two  nations   I'd argue the purpose of the never-ending press release is to distract from  the 'trainer' remarks by Nouri and Joe today.   In yesterday's snapshot ,  we noted that Minority  Rights Group International had issued a new report by Preti Taneja entitled [PDF  format warning] "Iraq's Minorities: Participation  in Public Life " and it notes that female minorities are especially at  risk of abuse and that "Minority women are subject to fiolence and  discrimination both because of their sex and their minority affiliation." Pages  23 through 28 deal specifically with women.  UNAMI's "16 Days Campaign" at the end of 2010 to raise awareness about  violence against women is noted as are these statistics from the campaign:   It was said that domestic violence is a major problem in the  country with one in five women reporting that they have suffered physical  violence at the hands of their husbands. Fourteen per cent of these were  pregnant at the time.  Thirty-three per cent said they have suffered emotional  violence and 83 per cent have been subject to emotional abuse by their  husbands.  The report also highlighted the other specific problems women face --  including early marriage, trafficking, female genital mutilation, a lack of  access to care and justice, and a lack of awareness about their  rights.     SCEME's founder and director Iman Abou-Atta explains in the report's  foreword, "When I heard of women trafficking in the Middle East, I simply never  believed it.  Being an Arab female, I never witnessed any talk or a history of  women-trafficking within the Arab world and to find out that this was happening  in Iraq, made me want to discover the facts.  I started two years ago and as  someone who has lived under occupation and suffered attacks due to their  ethnicity, I was inspired by those who searched for truth and justice and was  determined to find out the reality of this awful sitatuion. What I came across  was closed doors, shame, the unwillingness of authorities in Syria and Jordan  and the quietness of civil society on this issue.  Questions were met with  aggression from authorities, letters of dismissal from British Ministers and the  unwillingness of families and women to talk about what happened."     The KRG and the Baghdad-based central government both have done little to  address the issue of sex trafficking.  The report sketches out the reality the  Iraq War has provided women:   The occupation; its resulting chaos; the absence of the rule of  law; corruption amongst government authorities; the rise of religious extremism;  economic strife; as well as familial pressures, have all been identified as  contributing to the rise in transnational trafficking. [. . .] The human rights  violations taking place against women have been exacerbated by war, moving them  into a new dimension in which young women and girls are trafficked, no longer  primarily within state borders, but internationally, to countries including  Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Kuwait, UAE, Turkey, Iran and Yemen.  Children are  especially vulnerable to being trafficked because they are often poorly  educated, easy to overpower and easy to convince that they must do what an adult  tells them to do. As witnessed in the case of Iraq, children may also be sold  and trafficked across state boundaries by family members to support their  families.       There's also the Baghdad sex-trade, "Brothels (some of which have been  established purely to meet the demand created by United States service  personnel), restaurants, beauty salons and places of entertainment are used for  the purposes of exploiting women and girls; as well as night clubs, legal in the  capital since 2009, which constitute a major supplier of young girls who have  been exploited into the sex industry."    The report finds that young girls and women targeted within Iraq are  targeted by professional sex traffickers -- often women, sometimes men.  They  use methods such as kidnapping, misleading a young girl or woman into believing  they are in love and want to elope, etc.  Cab drivers and female sex workers are  often used to lure the girls and women.  Throughout the report are personal  stories such as this one about Farrah exploited by a health worker:   Following the death of her father in 2003, Farrah was taken to a  Baghdad orphanage. Befriended by a nurse who offered to adopt her in order to  protect her from the death she faced over the shame she had put upon her family;  Farrah was lured to leave the orphanage whereupon she was kidnapped by the nurse  and tortured for three weeks, while negotiations were made over her price with a  bidder in Dubai.  With the help of a local boy, Farrah managed to escape and her  captor was arrested.  Farrah and her captor shared the same prison for the  following 6 months, before Safah was released back to the orphanage.     There's Salma's story of being exploited by her own  family:
 Salma was forced by her father into a mut'a marriage with  her cousin at age 15. After 48 hours, upon sexually exploiting her, he abandoned  her.  Her father refused to take her back; instead insisting that he take her to  Syria to find her mother.  At the border, her father left, selling her to a  stranger who subjected her to a series of rapes and forced her into sex work in  a Damascus nightclub for 2 years.  Upon becoming pregnant, she was once again  abandoned to the streets of Damascus.
     Last week, Andrew E. Kramer (New York Times) noted   that "across Iraq women now outnumber men." And that was a huge step for the  paper that's fallen back to its habit of ignoring women.  Under the go-go boys  Dexy Filkins and Johnny Burns, NYT  wasn't interested in Iraqi women, it  took real reporters to start covering women but in the last year or so women  again vanished from the paper's coverage of Iraq.  It's interesting to note that  when a strong reporter who happened to be a woman, I'm thinking of Sabrina  Tavernise, was assigned to Iraq, women suddenly began to appear in the  coverage.  And while other strong reporters who were women -- Alissa J. Rubin,  Erica Goode and Cara Buckley being three examples -- were part of the team  providing covergae, Iraqi women were covered.  But when it became a frat boy  atmosphere in the last year or so -- when it again became a frat boy atmosphere  -- the first thing that happened was women vanished.  That it happened is  appalling, that it happened when the New York Times  is, for the first  time ever, headed by a woman, when the executive-editor is a woman, is beyond  sad. But while Kramer took a huge step in focusing on Iraqi women (and hopefully  indicating a change in the paper's coverage of Iraq), he seemed completely  unaware of divorced women in Iraq and the ways in which they are victimized (he  wrongly stated that the term "female head of household" was used to denote a  widow in Iraq -- no, that's only one of the many designations).  Salma was  forced into a marriage and then tossed aside.  She's far from the only Iraqi  women to experience that are something similar.   For example, Charlotte Ashton (BBC's The World Tonight) spoke  with Iraqi  women this month to determine how they see their lives since the start of the  war. Note the mother in the report, lamenting how divorce changed the way her  daughter was seen:Mariam, who is 38, has  six children and has lived in Sadr City all her life. We find the family  watching cartoons on a massive TV screen in the corner of their spacious living  room. She says their lives have changed for the better since the US-led  invasion. "We have democracy now,  freedom of expression. People can breathe and the economy has improved, so it's  good for us." But Mariam has one big  worry. Her 19-year-old daughter got married last year but divorced shortly  afterwards."My daughter used to be a  star in the neighbourhood but now people look down on her. They never blame the  man. Only the woman. They say she must have done something wrong."  For most women in Baghdad the  democracy the US and her allies delivered has not brought more freedom. In fact,  Lubna says women's rights have deteriorated. "Women used to behave in a more liberal way under  Saddam. And I hate to say that, because I hate Saddam so much, but women were  freer under Saddam." In 2006, Nouri became prime minister.  He's  now had a longer run -- five years and counting -- than any of the post-invasion  prime ministers.  But Iraqi women have seen no improvement in their lives as a  result of Nouri's 'leadership.'  Over the weekend, however, Nouri wanted to  grandstand.  Aswat al-Iraq reported :"We need laws to be activated , as well  as education, enlighten and reform to prevent violence against women", he  [Nouri] confirmed.
 He praised Iraqi  women role in the society, particularly in scientific, cultural, media and  security spheres.
   And Nouri exclaimed that 100 women were currently in the police  academy. Yet he failed to point out that when building his cabinet -- November  to December 2010 -- he managed to ignore women. Not one minister was a woman. It  took extreme pressure on Nouri to even get a woman in the post of the Minister  of State for Women's Rights. Mohammed  Sawaf (AFP) quoted  that minister, Ibtihal al-Zaidi, declaring  today, "One-fifth of Iraqi women are subjected to two types of violence,  physical and psychological, constituting a very serious danger to the family and  society. The most dangerous violence against woman is family violence, from the  father, the brother, the husband or even the son."  Women in violence were in the news cycle today as Al Mada reported  on a video recording that was  spreading across Baghdad like wildfire and one which captured a blindfolded  woman in a police station who was tortured mentally and physically.  It's being  stated that the woman is from Wasit Province and the officials there insist that  this video, which was spread via cell phones, is going to be investigated.   Deputy Haider Mohammed states that while the woman is from the area, the torture  took place somewhere else. Back to Social Change through Education in the Middle  East 's [PDF format warning] "Karamatuna: An investigation into the sex trafficking  of Iraqi women and girls " which explains, "IMC monitors noted that it is not  unusual to see women abused by officials at all levels, from police and security  men, to those who work for politicians or state officials, or who have close  ties with religious parties or who have personal bodyguards. Such people operate  in a climate of impunity, protected by their status and material wealth." Rape  has increased in Iraq.  In some communities, the actual numbers are not known.   The Mandaean community notes 11 rapes since the start of the Iraq War; however,  that number is thought to be higher but the stigma attached to rape keeps some  families from discussing what's taken place.  The Mandaeans do note that 33  females of their community, since 2003, were "forced to convert to Islam."   That's usually due to abduction and forced marriage.  On that topic:  Yezidi activists have reported that, since 2003, there have been  around 30 known cases of Yezidi women being abducted and forced to marry members  of the Kurdish security force Asayish.  Yezidi families are threatened with  reprisals if women and girls refuse marriage with militia members.  Such  marriages not only condemn women to a life with a man who has proven himself to  be capable of violence and abuse, they also effectively seal off these women  from their families and communities.  Both the Yezidi and Mandaean faiths  prohibit marriage outside the religion, and those who undertake such vows  thereby renounce their faith.    These threats and others limit women's mobility in Iraq and increase the  stress and fears that they have to live with.  Christian women report pressure  to wear Muslim dress, such as the hijab, Sabean-Mandaeans report pressure not  only to convert to Islam but also to cover their heads while they are out in  public.  57% of respondents basically state that they cannot be who they are and  must pretend to be something else: "Fifty-seven per cent of respondents to the  IMC survey said that they believed that women needed to hide their religious  affiliation, either by not wearing their religious symbols or traditional  makeup, by covering their heads even if they are secular or non-Muslims, or by  not speaking in their traditional languages".      |