| Tuesday, February 14, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, Nouri's  accusations are noted by those he accused, Iraqiya calls for those imprisoned  who have not been convicted to be released, US Senator Patty Murray talks with  veterans in a new format, and more.       Wally: Who determines what diseae's or ailment's is agent orange. I  have several health issues and when i get a agent orange exam they tell me it is  not on the list, yet I know there are other vets witht he same problems. I know  the doctor I see at the exam does not record the symtoms. Why can't we see  someone who monitors the health issue to verify it might be agent orange  related.  I was told the way health issues make the list is when the population  of all viet nam vets have a higher number of health issues than the regular  population. I know I was sprayed with agent orange why should my health issues  be diluted with vets that were not exposed?   Senator Patty Murray: We worked hard last year to defeat an  amendment in the Senate that would have changed the VA standard for determining  presumptions for Agent Orange because some wanted to just "save money" I knew  that was wrong and we beat that amendment.  We will have to remain vigilant this  year as well.  Research is going on as we speak and hopefully we will be able to  better help you and many more in the future.   That was Senator Patty Murray conversing with veterans last week and we'll  come back to that in just a moment.  First, if you need to know how ugly the  Agent Orange issue got on the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee, you can refer  to the September 23, 2010 snapshot  reporting on that  day's hearing when Senator Jim Webb had his little hissy, when Senator Roland  Burris insisted that "budget shortfalls" do not mean you cut needed health  benefits for veterans and, as Senator Burris said that, Senator Jon Testor, with  an angry look on his face, rose and stormed out of the hearing.  Earlier Testor  had been backing up Webb who was furious that VA Secretary Eric Shinseki was  attempting to see to it that the victims of Agent Orange got the help they  needed.     WAVY reports (link has  text and video) that victims of Agent Orange  (specifically Vietnam era veterans) could recieve addition beneifts for B-Cell  Leukemia, Parkinson's disease and coronary heart disease.  Could?  A US Senator  is objecting to the proposed changes by VA.  Jim Webb has written VA Secretary  Eric Shinseki that ". . . this single executive decision is estimated to cost  a minimum of $42.2 billion over the next ten years. A regulatory action of this  magnitude requires proper Congressional review and oversight."  Besides, Webb  wrote, "Heart disease is a common phenomenon regardless of potential exposure to  Agent Orange." That is really embarrasing and especially embarrassing for the  Democratic Party (Webb is a Democrat today, having converted from a Reagan  Republican).  It also goes a long way towards explaining Webb's refusal to get  on board with Senator Evan Bayh's bill to create a national registry that would  allow those Iraq and Afghanistan War veterans to be able to receive treatment  for their exposures without having to jump through hoops repeatedly.     Veteran Jim Webb did everything he could to prevent victims of Agent Orange  and Burn Pits from receiving the medical treatment they needed.  That's why he  can't run for re-election.  Veterans in Virginia pulled their support in 2010  over the Agent Orange issue.  His decision not to seek re-election has to do  with the fact that he doesn't have the votes to win.  And he shouldn't after  what he did.  There's an important lesson there: A veteran isn't necessarily the  one to elect to Congress if you're concerned about veterans issues.   Back to Senator Patty Murray's remarks.  She made them last Thursday at a  Town Hall.  It was the first of its kind for veterans, being able to speak with  the Chair of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee and from their home or work  or library.  It was a Virtual Town Hall which Disabled American Veterans  sponsored. A full  transcript of the exchange can be found here .  Face to face contact is always best, yes.  And that's  why Murray takes part in Town Halls frequently.  But the Virtual Town Hall  allowed her and veterans from around the country to meet up online and that was  especially helpful to veterans who may have issues with mobility.  Many issues  were raised, from VA charging for services that they are supposed to provide for  free, the need for better transitioning of Wounded Warriors, the long wait time  for medical appointments for mental treatment.  One question dealt with an issue  on many veterans minds.    Jeremy K.: We have about 2 million combat veterans who are going to  be coming back, or are already back, from Iraq and Afghanistan.  Too many of  them are sick and injured and will need VA.  Given the government's debt, is VA  going to have the money and people to meet those needs while continuing to serve  5-6 million older veterans?     Senator Patty Murray: There is no doubt that we as a nation must  address the issue of our national debt.  However we send our men and women into  combat and should never allow our budgets to be an excuse for not providing them  with the care that has been promised.  We will be getting the Presidents budget  next week, and I will be looking at it very carefully to make sure we are  meeting the needs of our nation's veterans.     Veterans exposed to burn pits in Iraq and Afghanistan have health needs. Martin C. Evans (Newsday) is apparently  the only  reporter at a major daily newspaper to cover yesterday's Burn Pits Symposium at  Stony Brook College. Evans reports that the Army sent Veronique Hauschild from  their "Public Health Command" to speak and she insisted that the military needs  to do its own studies and added, "I don't want to say there's not a problem  because I believe there is." But that "I" is herself and not the official  position of the Army.  Her presence is encouraging, however. It attests to the  reality that the Pentagon can no longer outright dismiss the very real damage of  burn pits. If the government study (a bunch of subsidized scientists refusing to  disclose their government funding as they posed as independent) from last fall  had been a success, the Pentagon would not have felt the need to send someone to  the conference. But the pushback on that non-scientific nonsense and the  increased public awareness of the damage from burn pits was so great that the  paper is pretty much dead and rebuked.Evans notes a study Dr. Anthony Szema did "published in the September issue  of the Journal of Occupational and  Environmental Medicine , area soldiers who served combat tours in Iraq and  Afghanistan were found to be about seven times more likely to display signs of  damaged lungs than enlistees who never served there."  Last week,  Kelley B. Vlahos (Antiwar.com) explained : We've been following the issue of toxic  environmental exposure of U.S. servicemen and women here at Antiwar.com since 2009. Mounting  evidence strongly suggests that the unregulated open-air burn pits used to  incinerate everything from medical waste to batteries and rubber tires, has  contributed to the fine particulate matter found carried in the dust, including  metals and bacteria, and has something to do with the dramatically changed  health of returning veterans."What makes healthy individuals who have never had  asthma end up in wheelchairs on oxygen, or a 34-year-old non-smoker who has  near-normal [physical fitness tests] but is short of breath and has lungs that  are totally destroyed? These are the problems we are trying to solve," exclaimed  Dr. Anthony Szema, Stony Brook University Medical Center Assist Professor of  Surgery, in a recent interview for the Army Times.   Szema recently wrote about a soldier serving both  in Iraq and Kuwait who has lung tissue riddled with fine particles of titanium,  iron and copper. He published his findings recently in the Journal of  Occupational and Environmental Medicine. It is part of his ongoing study of  soldiers suffering from unexplained illnesses.   This particular soldier, according to the report,  is suffering from nonspecific interstitial pneumonitis, a rare and dangerous  type of pneumonia that afflicts people for no known reason, cannot be treated  and is 60 percent fatal within the first six months of diagnosis, according to Wikipedia. What we  know about the soldier is where he was stationed, and that he came into contact  with "the laundry facility, improvised explosive device blasts, sandstorms, burn  pits and the occasional cigar."           In Iraq violence continues,  AP notes  a Baghdad bombing has  claimed 1 life and left six other people injured. In addition, Reuters notes  1 Asaish was shot  dead in Kirkuk and, dropping back to Monday, the corpse of 1 woman was  discovered in Baquba (strangled),  2 corpses were discovered elsewhere in Baquba  (the two are thought to have been killed in 2006).  Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) reports  military General Aziz Hamzah  was shot dead in Baghdad, a second Baghdad bombing left two peple injured and a  Mosul bombing claimed 3 lives and left nineteen people injured.Violence includes the targeting of various groups in Iraq with threats of  violence or with actual violence.  The Secretary of the South Asia Council for  Minorities Navaid Hamid (Two Circles) notes  the  targeting of Iraqi Chrisitans:  After a month of the withdrawal of the Allied forces from Iraq and  its becoming a sovereign state, one of the serving US Military Archbishop  Timothy P. Broglio admitted in an interview to CNA in Rome, "Yes, you can say in  a certain sense that the invasion of Iraq did provoke this tremendous diminution  of the Christian population in that country. And what the future holds, that  still remains to be seen," Archbishop Timothy believes that the collapse of  Iraq's Christian population is among the legacies of America's invasion in 2003  and he is perfectly correct. [. . .] While announcing the withdrawal of American forces from Iraq,  President Obama had confidently thundered on 15th December 2011, "they were  leaving behind a "sovereign, stable and self-reliant," country and just 10 days  after his pronouncement the Christian community in Iraq was under such  tremendous pressure that fear of an attack forced Christians during Chrism to  cancel the Chaldean Catholics' midnight Christmas celebrations. Services were  moved to the daytime, and Christians were warned by community leaders not to  display decorations outside their homes. I wonders whom to blame for the decimation of the patriotic Iraqi  Christians from Iraq, invading Allied forces under US command or Al  Qaida?   Last week, Aswat al-Iraq noted  "that Italy granted  Iraq a loan of half a billion Euros (approximately $660,000 in US dollars) to  support Iraqi infrastructures and human development" with the provision that 10%  of the loan "be allocated to support the Iraqi Chrisitans."  Also last week , the Vactian Ambassador to  Baghdad, Archbishop Giorgio Lingua, met with Yousif al-Shukri, the Minister of  Planning in Iraq, to discuss the Iraqi Christians "and the difficulties theya re  facing" and to note that, in 1977, Christians made up 5% of the population in  Iraq; however, that number has fallen to "less than 1 percent." While al-Shukri  noted that all segments of Iraq are under attack, the Archbiship noted that  Iraqi Christians are fleeing due to violence.  We'll note three reports on Iraqi Christians who left Iraq and relocated.   Farid Farid (The Conversion) observes   that Iraqi Christians make up over "40% of forced migrants and refugees" and he  notes the Iraqi Christians who have migrated to Australie:It is  important to understand that the pain, indiginity and humiliation of war still  resides deep within Iraqi hearts, minds and bodies.As Aghnar Niazi, an award winning visual artist residing in Sydney,  has said, "if you look at my paintings you will see the internal expressions  what we as Iraqi have been going through -- sadness, joy and exhuastion . . . we  are an open book  for the world to see."   Her words and her paintings are a testament to a new chapter in  Iraq's future which hopefully will be less bloody.    Nicole E. Smith (Rock Hill Herald)  reports on Mazen Asaqa whose father expressed that he "couldn't have asked  for a better son" the day before the father was kidnapped in Mosul for being a  Christian.  The father's corpse turned up within the week. In 2009, Mazen Asaqa  was able to join "his mother, Awitif, and sisters Maha, 28, and Rand, 27" in  Detroit.  With the Presbyterian Peacemaking progam, he has been speaking in  South Carolina about his and other Iraqis experiences including the phone call  his father got in 2006, ordering him to pay $20,000 and shut down the church,  "He told me, 'I've been therre 40 years, and I'm not closing it now. I could not  go to sleep thinking how the money went to weapons, explosives and killing more  innocent people'."  Steve Schmidt (San Diego Union-Tribune)  reports  on a group of Iraqi Christians who have resettled in El Cajon,  California and are hoping to continue their card games throughout they year in  spite of a new ordinance banning them.  The vice president of the Chaldean  American Association, Noori Bakra states, "People drink tea and they play and  they play. It has nothing to do with gambling. For you, a card is for gambling.  For us, a card is for fun. I wouldn't put myself in a gambling place."  El Cajon  is home to at least 30,000 Chaldeans.    Some believe that when things calm down, Iraqi Christians will return to  Iraq.  That might happen if the violence were reduced.  It might not.  In  Detroit or El Cajon, for example, where large populations have established homes  and lives, asking them ten years down the road to uproot themselves and return  to Iraq might be expecting too much.  They will have made lives here.  They will  have met friends here.  That will include Chaldeans who, back in Iraq, might  live several towns over.  They will raise children here.  All these issues  complicate the simplistic view that some day the Iraqi Christians who were  threatened and forced to flee their homes go skipping back into Iraq.      Though it's still not safe, Iraq did open an oil sea port, you may  remember.  It was the site for a big photo op on Sunday.  See yesterday's  snapshot, this was going to be Nouri's prestige lifter.  It's not lifting all  that well currently.  Al Forat News reports  that "dozens" of  residents took to the streets of Basra to protest againt Royal Dutch Shell.   They are calling for the oil corporation to provide jobs in the area.  Turning to the political crisis caused by Nouri's refusal to honor the  Erbil Agreement that allowed him to (circumvent the Constitution and) remain  prime minister.  Things remain tense and  Al  Mada reports  there is still disagreements over exactly what's  being proposed for the national conference with State of Law insisting that the  issues around Deputy Prime Minister Saleh al-Mutlaq and Vice President Tareq  al-Hashemi would not be addressed and the Kurdistan Alliance insisting that  Iraqiya is not asking for those issues to be addressed. Alsumaria TV notes  that al-Hashemi declared  Friday, "Human Rights status is deteriorating to sad levels in Iraq which  requires the International Community's interference on a large scale. We totally  understand fears behind Human Rights Watch's report and conclusions it reached  aout Iraqi tribunals that accept testimonies, evidence and confressions acquired  by force."   Al Mada reports  that Iraqiya  spokesperson Maysoun al-Damlouji referenced Nouri's remarks Saturday on the  anniversary of the Dawa Party and how his remarks were "provocative" (they were  insulting and threatening). She states that they escalate the situation in Iraq,  not help it.    The remarks by Nouri were made Saturday.  The same Nouri who insists that  no one must accuse him of anything and laments that various political actors air  problems in the press.  That Nouri al-Maliki insisted Saturday that his  political rivals in Iraqiya were following orders from "other countries.  Al  Mada reported  that he made this charge -- one that he'd sue  over if it were aimed at him -- while 'celebrating' Dawa in his hometown of  Touirij.  (Dawa is Nouri's political party, State of Law is his political  slate.  Iraqiya bested State of Law in the March 2010 elections.)   As Sheikh (Dar Addustour) observes that "the  differences are over the details." Alsumaria TV notes   that the Turkmen will provide their written proposals today and are calling for  the studying of political blocs among other things.  Alsumaria TV speaks  with former MP Mithal  al-Alusi who declares the political  process to be a failure and who insists  Iraq will emerge from Nouri al-Maliki's control.  He also states that US  President Barack Obama sold out Iraq to Iran.                                                            Fiscal  year 2012 started October 1, 2011. And Iraq still has no 2012 budget. Muhammad Abdul-Jabbar (Al Sabaah) writes  that this  terrifies him and he is not pleased by the words of Parliament's Financial  Committee about there not being a specific target date to pass one still. He  states that the citizens are kept in the dark. Repeating, Fiscal Year 2012  started October 1, 2011. It's now February 14, 2012. Iraq still hasn't passed  their 2012 budget. In other budgetary news, remember last year, the  February 25th protest in Baghdad's Tahrir Square and how it had Nouri promising  that (a) he would reduce his (unknown) salary in half (didn't happen), (b)  address corruption in 100 days (didn't happen), (c) eliminate positions in his  cabinet (he didn't unless you consider his refusal to name a Minister of  National Security, Minister of Interior and a Minister of Defense as  eliminating). But now Al  Mada reports  an unnamed source "close to" Nouri declares that  he will be announcing the expansion of support staff for members of his Cabinet.  Let's remember this sort of thing is why Vice President Adel Abdul-Mahdi  resigned last summer, in protest of this sort of nonsense. He considered the  government a failure and also felt the government needed to save money (his  salary was supposed to be at least US $100,000 annually.)Al  Mada notes  the judiciary's insistence that it is independent.  Al  Sabaah notes  MPs in Parliament state that and independent  judiciary is one of the strongest indicators of a democratic state. Alsumaria TV notes   Kurdish Alliance MP Mahmoud Othman states that the Parliament is forming a  committee to study the disturbing requests by the judiciary to lift immunity on  certain MPs and deputies. Iraqiya has called these requests politically  motivated. Alsumaria also speaks   with Iraqiya's spokesperson Haider Mulla that this is an attempt to "muzzle"  discussion and opponents, an attempt to gag the Parliament and prevent them from  conducting their oversight role.  In related news, Al Forat News reports  that Iraqiya is  calling for an end to "random arrest" and for the many prisoners arrested on  policital grounds.  Iraqiya notes all the blather of a coup and how that was  used to arrest political rivals. Aswat al-Iraq notes  that this is taking  in place in Basra as well where "a number of MPs from Basra's al-Iraqiya Bloc  today demanded the release of detained Basra citizens who had not been  convicted."     Jane Arraf covers Iraq for Al Jazeera and the Christan Science  Monitor.  She Tweets:    janearraf  getting serious re  curbs on Western security contractors - checking badges at green zone checkpoint  to look for several banned firms.           Deputy Secretary Thomas Nides: Twenty-three  percent of the budget is spent on the frontline states -- Iraq, Afghanistan, and  Pakistan. Twenty-eight percent of our budget goes to preventing conflicts,  supporting our allies and partners through direct assistance and multilateral  contributions, among other things. Another 28 percent is also spent on human and  economic security. And the remaining 20 percent -- or 21 percent supports our  people, embassies, and global presence.  Now, the specific numbers. First, the 23 percent or one -- or $11.9  billion of requests goes in defending our now security interests in the  frontline states of Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan. Our Civilian Overseas  Contingency Operations budget, better known for OCO, funds the temporary  extraordinary cost associated with these missions. Using the same methodology  from the last year's request, we've asked for $8.2 billion in OCO, and $3.7  billion in our base budget for a total of $11.9 billion for the frontline  states. And let me now just break it down to you specifically. In Iraq, we're requesting $4.8 billion for next year, which is  about 10 percent less than last year. The transition is already saving American  taxpayers a great deal of money. With now -- with State in the lead, and with  the troops no longer on the ground, the government is spending $40 billion less  this year than last. And as discussed during last week's press briefing, we're  continuing to be thoughtful about the rightsizing of our presence in Iraq,  hiring more local staff, procuring more goods locally, which should further  reduce our spending. In Afghanistan, we're requesting $4.6 billion. Civilians are vital  to our efforts and they are securing our gains against the Taliban. They're  helping us take Afghans lead responsibility for their own security and they're  laying the groundwork for what comes next: sustainable economic growth, national  reconciliation, and the long-term civilian partnership, all of which helps us  ensure that Afghanistan never again becomes the safe haven for  terrorists.       Consul Thomas Yazdgerdi presided over a ceremony at the Kirkuk Library on Februay 6, 2012, where he  presented the library with 41 books sent by American school children from Hilo,  Hawaii.   The children raised about $740.00, and with guidance from former  PRT Kirkuk members, they selected a few dozen children's picture books, and  adult picture and reference books about Hawaii from a local bookseller.  When  the Kirkuk PRT mission ended, the Consulate Public Affairs Officer corresponded  with the schoo, arranged shipment, and organized the presentation ceremony.    The Kirkuk Library just underwent a $450 million renovation funded  by the U.S. military.  The book donation reaffirmed U.S. commitment to the  Strategic Framework Agreement in the area of Cultural Cooperation.  During the  ceremony, Consul Yazdgerdi stated, "connections as we have here today between  Americans and Kirkukis will continue to forge strong, long lasting bonds of  friendship and mutal respect."          |