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Wednesday,
 August 22, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, Iraq's fugitive 
president remains out of the country, the Minister of Oil is accused of 
hiring a thousand of his own relatives, Camp Liberty's a nightmare 
according to a former UN human rights workers, a new petition calls on 
Women's Media Center and Ms. magazine, and more. 
  
  
President Obama's Tuesday kill list is responsible for the assassination of a 16-year-old boy from Denver, Medea Benjamin of CodePink
 said here today. Describing the US program of targeted assassinations 
using drones, the CIA out of control, and the US Congress refusing to 
act, Benjamin said it is time for US citizens to show the world they do 
not support US drone assassinations in Pakistan and elsewhere.Benjamin
 called for citizens in Tucson to join the march with Pakistanis in 
northern Pakistan, during the week of September 21, and show the world 
that the people of the US seek global peace and understanding, and do 
not support US drone killings.
 
  
Now
 we'll move over to Iraq where the political crisis continues to grip 
the country.   What does it say about a country when the president is 
out of the country for over two months?  Back on June 16th, I wrote :
  
As Iraq explodes, President Jalal Talabani continues to shrink.  Alsumaria reports
 that he's written an indignant letter to Speaker of Parliament Osama 
al-Nujaifi, Iraqiya head Ayad Allawi and KRG President Massoud Barazni 
in which he belittles Moqtada al-Sadr and in which he insists he'd 
rather resign than change his opinion and forward the petition with 176 
signatures to Parliament (the petition calls for a no-confidence vote on
 Nouri).  Poor overweight Jalal.  Last month, he'd pictured himself 
getting his arteries cleaned in the US and the pigging out   on Philly 
Cheesesteaks.   Now his image is in tatters, his political party PUK has
 asked him to lower his profile (his weakness is hurting the party) and 
he's been told not to leave the country.  Back on April 28th, he talked 
big to Moqtada, Allawi and Barzani.  He swore that he could remove Nouri
 as prime minister all by his lonesome.  Then Nouri did a little 
pressue, the US did a little pressure, and like a cheap belt, Jalal 
buckled.  Next year the KRG holds provincial elections.  The PUK is 
furious with Jalal for his decision not to forward the petition.  It's 
made Massoud Barzani even more popular in the KRG, it's made him look 
even more like a leader and Jalal look even weaker and more 
ineffectual.  (The two main parties in the KRG are the Jalal's PUK and 
Barzani's KDP.  In the last years, Goran has emerged as a third party.  
PUK officials fear that they are losing power not to Barzani's KDP   but
 to the emerging Goran as a result of Jalal's embarrassing moves.) 
  
And
 I was wrong because I thought when you're told not to leave the 
country, you don't leave the country.  But the very next day, June 17th ,
 we were noting, "He's not very popular of late.  Not even with his own 
political party.  So it probably wasn't smart of him to head for Germany
 today, as Alsumaria reports .  Especially after he'd been instructed not to leave the country until the political crisis was settled." 
  
It
 is August 22nd and Jalal's still not made it back to Iraq.  People talk
 about Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi being a fugitive, but Jalal 
appears to be the one.  For those who've forgotten, as Jalal was being 
mocked for leaving the country, his office wanted Iraq to know that he 
had to leave because he needed a life altering surgery, he was at risk. 
 Apparently of tipping over because that 'important' surgery turned out 
to be knee surgery.  He had elective surgery.  It could have waited.   
  
But
 he used it to bail on Iraq.  In 2011, Iraq had three vice presidents 
and one president-- and all were in the country.  Right now it has one 
vice president in the country and that's it.  Jalal really thinks this 
is how to be president?  Hiding out in Germany? 
  
  
The very optimistic Iraq Updates insists 
 today that Jalal "will return home soon and first meet with Kurdistan 
President Massoud Barzani [. . .]"  For those who've forgotten how Jalal
 ticked off a large portion of Iraqis, it was when he stabbed his 
colleagues in the back.  Jalal was present at the end of April meeting 
with Moqtada al-Sadr, Iraqiya's Ayad Allawi, Massoud Barzani and others 
and Jalal was on board for the no-confidence vote in Parliament on 
Nouri.  Signatures were collected.  More than enough.  But Jalal began 
disallowing signatures at the last minute and declared that they weren't
 valid and the vote couldn't go forward.  Yes, they were valid.  
  
And Jalal stuck his own big ass further in the fire this month when, attempting to shine his tawdry image, he spoke to Nakhel News 
 about why he halted the no-confidence vote.  Jalal gave five reasons.  
None had to do with signatures.  He never even raised the issue of 
signatures.  His reasons included not wanting to go against the Shi'ites
 (and feeling Moqtada was but one voice) and assurances he'd personally 
received regarding the Erbil Agreement.  He's begun to make another call
 for a national conference to address the nation's political crisis.  
(He and Speaker of Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi began making the call 
December 21st.)  Buratha News notes  he wants all the political blocs to take part.  Jalal's   renewed call takes place as Fryad Mohammed (AKnews) reports  that the Kurdistan Islamic Union's Najib Abdullah is stating that the ground work for such a meeting has still not been done 
  
From the failing president to the corruption, Rebin Hassan (AKnews) reports 
 that Parliament's Oil and Gas Committe has discovered that, since 2003,
 $27 billion (in US dollars) "have been spent on the electricity sector 
in Iraq" and his with no progress to show for it leading MP Qasim 
Mohammed to declare, "There is huge corruption in the electricity sector
 in Iraq."  With all the money spent, Iraqis still do not have 
dependable electricity and most make do with 6 or so hours a day.  
Minister of Electricity is a post with a huge turnover rate.  Let's just
 note the last two years.  In June of 2010, CNN was reporting  on the resignation of Karim Waheed as a result of protests.  Aseel Kami (Reuters) reported 
 in August of 2011 on the resignation of Raad Shallal's resignation -- 
he was the Minister of Electricity who stepped down due to what were 
called fake contracts.  Buratha News reports 
 that social media rumors (and documents) attest to the current Minister
 Abdul Karim Aftan hiring 1,000 relatives to work for the Ministry.  All Iraq News adds 
 that a member of Moqtada al-Sadr's bloc in Parliament is stating that 
the Minister will be questioned before Parliament shortly.
  
  
  
  
Though the election law for next year's provincial elections still hasn't been settled, AKnews reports  that Diyala Province plans to elect a governor next Saturday.  This is due to the death of the previous governor.  Saturday Alsumaria reported  that Diyala Province Govenor Hashim Hayali  has died in what was called a traffic accident in Baquba. All Iraq News reported 
 that his wife also died in the accident and noted that he had 
previously survived an April 21st assassination attempt.  He had been 
governor for less than a year.  AFP says  his wife and two daughters are injured while his son died.  All Iraq News notes  he had been governor for five months and was a member of the National Accord Front which is part of the Iraqiya slate.
  
  
US General Martin Dempsey visited Iraq yesterday.  The US Embassy in Baghdad issued the following statement on the visit: 
The
 Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Martin E. Dempsey visited
 Baghdad on August 21, 2012.  He met with Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki
 and other Iraqi officials to discuss regional and security issues, 
including the situation in Syria.  General Dempsey also met with U.S. 
Embassy officials, including Charge d'Affaires Stephen Beecroft and 
members of the Embassy's Office of Security Cooperation in Iraq.General
 Dempsey's visit is part of the United States' efforts under the 
Strategic Framework Agreement to support Iraq's continued development as
 a strategic partner that contributes to peace and security as a leader 
in the region.  Dempsey did not meet with the the US Ambassador to Iraq because there is no US Ambassador to Iraq.  All Iraq News notes  that Dempsey's visit is the highest ranking official visit of 2012.  Of the US Office of Security Cooperation in Iraq, RTT reports ,
 "More than 225 U.S. troops, seven Defense Department civilians, 530 
security assistance team members and more than 4,000 contracted 
personnel are currently in the office at the Iraqi government's 
invitation."  
  
  
Ashish Kumar Sen (Washington Times) reports 
 on the assertions by the former human rights chief for UNAMI that 
conditions at Camp Liberty are as bad as the residents have been saying. Camp
 Liberty is a former US military base (often referred to in the press as
 Camp Hurriyah).  Nouri and the US want Iranian dissidents from Camp 
Ashraf relocated there. Approximately 3,400 people were at Camp 
Ashraf when the US invaded Iraq in 2003.  They were Iranian dissidents 
who were given asylum by Saddam Hussein decades ago.  The US government 
authorized the US military to negotiate with the residents.  The US 
military was able to get the residents to agree to disarm and they 
became protected persons under Geneva and under international law. Despite
   that legal status and the the legal obligation on the part of the US 
government to protect the residents, since Barack Obama has been sworn 
in as US president, Nouri has ordered not one but two attacks on Camp 
Ashraf resulting in multiple deaths.  Let's recap.  July 28, 2009 
 Nouri launched an attack (while then-US Secretary of Defense Robert 
Gates was on the ground in Iraq). In a report released this summer 
entitled "Iraqi government must respect and protect rights of Camp Ashraf residents ,"
 Amnesty International described this assault, "Barely a month later, on
 28-29 July 2009, Iraqi security forces stormed into the   camp; at 
least nine residents were killed and many more were injured. Thirty-six 
residents who were detained were allegedly tortured and beaten. They 
were eventually released on 7 October 2009; by then they were in poor 
health after going on hunger strike." April 8, 2011 ,
 Nouri again ordered an assault on Camp Ashraf (then-US Secretary of 
Defense Robert Gates was again on the ground in Iraq when the assault 
took place). Amnesty International described the assault this way ,
 "Earlier this year, on 8 April, Iraqi troops took up positions within 
the camp using excessive, including lethal, force against residents who 
tried to   resist them. Troops used live ammunition and by the end of 
the operation some 36 residents, including eight women, were dead and 
more than 300 others had been wounded. Following international and other
 protests, the Iraqi government announced that it had appointed a 
committee to investigate the attack and the killings; however, as on 
other occasions when the government has announced investigations into 
allegations of serious human rights violations by its forces, the 
authorities have yet to disclose the outcome, prompting questions 
whether any investigation was, in fact, carried out." Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) observes 
 that "since 2004, the United States has considered the residents of 
Camp Ashraf 'noncombatants' and 'protected persons' under the Geneva 
Conventions." For months, the claims of Camp Liberty not being 
fit to be a   refugee center have been dismissed in the press.  Bomedra 
is stating that he resigned from his post after he grasped that UNAMI's 
purpose was to provide cover for Camp Liberty.  He states that Nouri had
 no respect for international human rights standards and that raising 
that reality to the UN Secretary-General's Special Enovy in Iraq Martin 
Kobler resulted in ridicule.  He also states Kobler "misled [the U.N.] 
headquarters in New York" regarding Camp Liberty. Kobler most recently provided public testimony to the United Nations Security Council on July 19th.  This is what he said on the topic of Camp Ashraf : 
  
UN
 Special Envoy Martin Kobler:  Finally, Mr. President, I still remain 
very concerned by the lack of progress in resolving the issue of Camp 
Ashraf. 2,000 residents of Camp Ashraf have relocated to Camp Hurriyah 
[Liberty] in the last months.  Approximately 1,200 remain in Camp 
Ashraf.  The several deadlines set by the government of Iraq have been 
extended. I thank the government of Iraq for their flexibility in this 
regard and I appeal to the Iraqi authorities to continue the process to 
resolve the relocation peacefully. Our committment is strictly 
humanitarian, to facilitate a voluntary, temporary relocation of 
residents to Camp Hurriyah as the first step of resettlement to 
countries outside of Iraq; however, the success of a facilitator depends
 at least on good will. Their can be no facilitation without 
constructive and practical dialogue.  We are faced with three main 
challenges.  First, recent weeks have   witnessed difficulties in 
maintaining dialogue between UNAMI and the residents and between the 
residents and the government of Iraq reinforcing a perception that the 
residents lack genuine will to participate in the process faciliated by 
UNAMI.  Second, responsiblity also falls on the many international 
supporters.  It is of great importance that they contribute to 
positively influence the residents' position.  And third, to  date 
almost no memeber-state has stepped forward to offer resettlement to 
eligible, former Ashraf residents.  There must be a way out of Hurriyah 
in the foreseeable future.  Without prospect for resettlement, the 
ongoing process runs the risk of collapsing.  The tempoary transit 
location at Camp Hurriyah has the capacity to accomodate the remaining 
1,200 residents and meets acceptable humanitarian standards.  Both UNAMI
 and UNHCR [United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees] have   
devoted substantial energy and resources to resolving this issue.  More 
than 100 staff are dedicated to the project in the meantime.  I appeal 
to the government of Iraq to be generous -- particularly in terms of 
humanitarian needs like water and electricity and to avoid violence 
under any circumstances.  I also appeal to camp residents to abide by 
Iraqi laws and avoid provocation and violence.  Time is running out to 
find a sustainable solution.  The government's patience is wearing thin.
 I would therefore like to echo the Secretary-General and urge Camp 
Ashraf residents to cooperate with the Iraqi authorities and to relocate
 from Camp Ashraf to Camp Hurriyah.  It is also imperative that third 
countries step forward to accept eligible residents for resettlement as 
soon as possible without which there can be no durable solution.   
 
 
Both tickets have gotten some mainstream press.  Know what they haven't received? 
  
Attention from Ms. magazine's blog (or 'magazine') or Women's Media Center. 
  
Now
 in 2008, we used the snapshot and space at Third and Ava and I worked 
the phones and between all that and the work of other women as well, we 
were finally able to guilt WMC into doing one article on Cynthia 
McKinney.  That was their 'gift' to women.  One article.  Cynthia was 
running for president on the Green Party ticket and her running mate was
 Rosa Clemente.  And WMC could only do one article on Cynthia.  (None on Rosa.)  As lousy as that is, it's one more than Ms. or it's Feminist Wire Daily managed.   
  
  
Every
 day it's about how can they advance the Democratic Party.  It's not 
about informing, it's not about reporting, it's not about journalism. 
  
It's
 whoring.  They're very good whores.  It's a shame they don't want to be
 something more than a whore but I guess their own self-images are so 
poor that when casting themselves in the story of their lives, they 
decided the whore was the only role they'd be believable in. 
  
Here's
 a little hint for them both: Fundraisers only have worked in the past 
because women have believed you're about women.  When you've got 
feminists like Roseanne and Jill and they're both running to be 
president of the United States and you're not covering it, you make it 
so very easy for all of us to stop donating to you. 
So maybe this is how Ms. 
 magazine finally dies?  Revealed to be nothing now but a shallow and 
whore for the patriarchy, the magazine finally goes down?  If so, it's 
no great loss.  It was supposed to be a monthly and for obvious reasons 
couldn't pull that off.  (Obvious reasons do not include lack of 
stories.  Obvious reasons does include a failure to cover the feminist 
movement out of fear of upsetting some men.)  If you missed our "No, really, who is Gloria? " (byline "This was written by Ava, C.I., Ann , Elaine , Betty , Ruth  and Marcia ." ) and the counter-argument "The accomplishments of Gloria Steinem? "
 (Ava and myself) at Third Sunday, I'm not in the damn mood for any of 
this crap anymore.  You either start covering women or admit that you're
 not feminists.  When two women are running for president and you're not
 covering it, you're not a feminist press.  You can lie -- and we know 
you can whore -- all you want, you're not a feminist press.  Elaine  argued last night "Real feminists go third party "
 and that's a valid point.  But I don't care who you endorse or if you 
endorse.  My point is that women who have their own outlet for women but
 don't cover Jill and Roseanne ought to be ashamed of themselves.  
You're disgusting and drowning in your own self-hatred -- sadly, not 
drowing quick enough so we all have to suffer from your craving for male
 approval. 
  
Again, I'm not in the damn mood. If you're also tired of the crap? This petition  is calling for the two outlets to cover the two runs. Rebecca  started it.  Thank you, Rebecca.
  
  
  
Despite
 my initial prejudices, it took just one read through Stein's "Green New
 Deal for America" to flip me into a wholehearted endorser. That's how 
this turned from a hatchet job into a mash note -- probably one of the 
only Jill Stein puff pieces you'll ever read. But hell, it's 
necessary -- someone has to call attention to how Stein stands apart 
from the pack. While big-tent sleazeballs gorge on loot from predatory 
lenders, for example, she calls for restoring the Glass-Steagall 
separation of commercial and investment banks. As for extra bona fides, 
the doctor has experience hitting Mitt Romney, having run against him 
for governor of Massachusetts 10 years ago. Sure, she lost, badly -- but
 not before she used her debate platform to condemn "tax loopholes for 
the wealthiest five percent," and to contend that financiers have no 
place in public office. In other   words: Stein has spent the past 
decade hammering inequities that the increasingly broke public claims it
 wants corrected. 
Presidentially
 speaking, Stein is no joke. She's a highly intelligent and experienced 
organizer, not to mention a Harvard alum, like her big-party opponents. 
Among other sensible ideas, Stein wants to abolish the Electoral 
College, repeal the Patriot Act, and cut military spending in half -- 
ideas that so-called progressives seem to wholeheartedly embrace in 
non-election years only. With that in mind, here's a conscience call to 
anyone who has enough courage to put their ballot -- and perhaps their 
volunteer time -- where their mouth is. 
  
  
  
KEVIN
 GOSZTOLA, The Dissenter: Let's begin with you talking a bit about your 
background and, specifically, I'd like you to talk about your work as an
 activist, because I think that is something unique or exceptional that 
you bring to the presidential race. 
JILL 
STEIN, Green Party Presidential Candidate: The American people are 
clearly clamoring for something real out there in this political system 
that has become so disconnected from what real everyday Americans are 
struggling with and the solutions we are clamoring. So, I think the fact
 that our campaign is not bought and paid for by Wall Street, the fact 
that we are every day real people who struggle on behalf on those things
 that are critical to the American public is why we are getting the 
resonance that we are. 
My background—I'm 
trained as a medical doctor and I became active, both from my 
perspective as a health care provider but from my perspective as a 
mother, looking at generations of young people struggling with chronic 
diseases they shouldn't have. This epidemic of asthma, learning 
disabilities, obesity, diabetes, cancer, autism—you name it. I said to 
myself, our genes didn't change overnight. These were new diseases 
twenty years ago in young people. And I said, our genes didn't change. 
Something's going on at the level of our communities, and I became tired
 of pushing pills on people and sending them back out to the very same 
things that were making them sick, so I became involved in community 
efforts to make our communities healthy and to take them back and make 
them work for the people who live there, not the multinational 
corporations who profit from them and exploit them. And I began to work 
to close down our polluting   incinerators and to create jobs through 
recycling programs or to clean up and implode our coal plants and create
 jobs in weatherization, conservation and renewable energy. 
I
 thought, well surely if our legislators knew we could save lives, money
 and create jobs they would throw their support behind this kind of 
thing. As your typical activist, it took me about ten years to see this 
was just a game we play to keep the discontented busy spinning their 
wheels while the relentless exploitive economy continues to turn its 
wheels. In fact, we've only been accelerating in the wrong direction. 
I
 should mention that I became involved then in getting the money out of 
politics, thinking that seemed to be the problem. Let's get the money 
out that bribes our elected officials legally to do the wrong thing. 
And, I joined a large coalition here in Massachusetts to pass public 
financing for elections. We passed it in a referendum by a two-to-one 
margin and the nearly solidly Democratic legislature -- about 
eighty-five percent Democratic -- promptly began to fight the law and 
within a year or so had repealed it. At that point, it became clear to 
me if we want the jobs we need or the health care we deserve and all the
 rest, we need to change the sick political system in order to fix 
everything else that ails us. So now I say I am practicing political 
medicine, when people ask me what I am doing, because it is the mother 
of all illnesses and we got to fix this one in order to fix everything 
else that is literally and figuratively killing   us. And I don't just 
mean our health but our economy, our jobs, our civil liberties, our 
democracy, our health care system. 
That's
 basically a long way of saying I'm here as a mother, above all, really 
concerned about the direction that we have taken under this predatory 
political system that is bought and paid for by Wall Street. And in my 
own experience, I found if we're going to change it, it's not just 
changing one law. It's not just simply finding a nice person within a 
sick system that will prevent them from doing the right thing, even if 
they wanted to, but we really need fundamental system change. So, that's
 why I am working with the Green Party. 
  
  
  
  
For immediate release  
August 22, 2012 
Sacramento, CA 
 
Contact: 
Cres Vellucci 
Press Secretary for Barr/Sheehan 2012 
  
According
 to a piece in NBCNEWS.com titled: "'No one really cares': US deaths in 
Afghanistan hit 2,000 in forgotten war," the death toll of US troops in 
Afghanistan has now surpassed 2000 under the watch of President Barack 
Obama and 80,000 troops still languish in the quagmire. 
The
 presidential ticket for the Peace and Freedom Party, Roseanne Barr and 
Cindy Sheehan, wishes to express deep condolences to the families of the
 needlessly killed troops and the people of the Af/Pak region that have 
been devastated by almost 12 years of war. 
"It's
 not true that 'no one cares,' we passionately care about ending US 
military involvement overseas to bring the world to peace," said VP 
candidate Cindy Sheehan, from her home in Vacaville, California.  
Sheehan continued, "I am the only candidate in this race that personally
 knows the tragedy of war . . . the never-ending mourning for a son that
 won't return and while Roseanne and I agree the economy is a pressing 
issue, ending the money-pit of US empire will also bring a boon to our 
national economic stagnation." 
  
The
 presidential ticket of Barr/Sheehan has been greatly encouraged that 
campaign events have been packed by people who also see immediate peace 
as an imperative issue in the 2012 presidential race even though the two
 capitalist war paries are trying to avoid the issue of the endless wars
 at all cost. 
  
The Platform of the Peace and Freedom Party includes a very aggressive plank for world peace: 
  
Peace and International Justice
 
 The
 drive for greater profits by multi-national corporations which direct 
U.S. foreign policy is a major cause of war. We stand for peace between 
nations and the right of all peoples to self-determination. We support 
an ongoing socialist transformation everywhere. We therefore call for:
 
  
The
 U.S. to renounce nuclear first strike, and take the initiative toward 
global disarmament by eliminating all of its nuclear, chemical and 
biological weapons.No
 U.S. intervention anywhere. End all support and aid to repressive 
regimes and all military and police training aid everywhere. End efforts
 to destabilize foreign governments. End U.S.-directed economic warfare 
against other countries. Abolish the CIA, NSA, AID and other agencies 
for interference inother countries' internal affairs. Withdraw all U.S. 
troops and weapons from all other countries.Stop all U.S. arms exports and trade.Dissolve all military pacts.Convert from military to peaceful production; reallocate the resulting "peace dividend" for social benefit.Abolish the Selective Service System.No weapons in space. 
 
  
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