Probably not.
Okay so now what? We got Barack telling the UN today that the Middle East is having "a season of progress."
What is he smoking?
Is he back on the doobies?
Progress?
Would that be in Iraq? Which is falling apart as Nouri al-Maliki becomes the new Saddam Hussein. Would that be Iran? We're practically at war with Iran already. Would that be Libya? Where our consulate was just attacked this month and four Americans killed? Maybe he means Egypt which is, at best, 'struggling' currently.
Progress?
Barry, whatever you're smoking, roll one for me.
On Libya, Bill Van Auken of WSWS reports:
According to the New York Times, at least half of the nearly two dozen US personnel evacuated from the eastern Libyan city of Benghazi following the fatal attack on the US consulate and a secret “annex” were “CIA operatives and contractors.”
“It’s a catastrophic intelligence loss,” a US official who had been stationed in Libya told the Times. “We got our eyes poked out.”
The Times report describes the mission of the CIA station in Benghazi as one of “conducting surveillance and collecting information on an array of armed militant groups in and around the city,” including Ansar al-Sharia, an Islamist militia that has been linked by some to the September 11 attack, and Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, or AQIM.
It further states that the CIA “began building a meaningful but covert presence in Benghazi” within months of the February 2011 revolt in Benghazi that seized the city from forces loyal to the government of Colonel Muammar Gaddafi. Stevens himself was sent into the city in April of that year as the American envoy to the so-called “rebels” organized in the Benghazi-based National Transitional Council (NTC).
So that's that. The reason they didn't bother to secure the consulate after the attack (CNN was able to visit the damaged consulate and just pick up the diary of the ambassador -- I'm not slamming CNN for that, good for them, because it's their job and it could have ended up in hands that would not see that the family gets it) was they were too focused on securing their CIA staff.
So that tells you about their priorities. Tells you pretty much all you need to know about their priorities. They screwed those up but they screw up everything.
Maybe they couldn't run for government on a major party ticket if they didn't screw so much up?
I'm really tried of American politics. I mean to the point where I groan when someone starts trying to tell me about the great poll that they just saw where ___'s ahead and isn't it so exciting?
No, it's a circus. They avoid issues and they just bore the hell out of you. The exception being third party candidates like Jill Stein (Green Party) or Gary Johnson (Libertarian Party).
It's left to the third party candidates to talk about the issues that mater. Jill Stein talks about poverty in America, Barack ignores it. Jill Stein talks about doing away with student loan debt, Barack ignores it.
Over and over, Jill Stein shows up Barack.
And yet no one ever rushes up to me to say, "Did you see where Jill is in the polling!"
She runs a serious campaign -- so does Gary Johnson -- and the thanks for that? Being ignored by the media.
Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"
| 
Tuesday,
 September 25, 2012. Chaos and violence continue, Barack offers pretty 
lies to the UN, security officials are targeted in Iraq today, State of 
Law announces provincial elections have been postponed, there's a Jill 
Stein contest, and more. 
Fars News Agency reports,
 "The US consulate in Iraq's Northern city of Kirkuk was targeted by 
rocket attacks, a source in Kirkuk police announced on Tuesday." In the 
post-September 11, 2012 era of diplomacy, that attack may actually get 
noticed. The attack on the US Consulate in Libya resulted in the deaths 
of four Americans. Maybe Barack will just call today's attacks more "bumps in the road"?
 More than likely, he and the White House will just avoid mentioning it 
entirely. Maybe the White House will follow the State Dept's lead and 
just refuse to hold daily press breifings? There was no press briefing 
by the State Dept yesterday, there's none today. Is there something 
confusing about the term "daily press briefing"? Do they really think 
that   Philippe Reines' nasty e-mails to Michael Hastings won't be a 
topic when they finally hold a press briefing? (For news of those 
e-mails, refer to Lucy Madison's report for CBS News which is work safe.) 
Glen
 Doherty, Christopher Stevens, Sean Smith and Tyrone Woods died 
September 12th due to the attack on the US Consulate in Libya. Two weeks
 later, when another US consulate is attacked with rockets, you don't 
think that warrants a public response from the US State Dept? Other than
 both being attacked with rockets, there's nothing similar and, 
fortunately, no one was hurt in the attack today. But you don't think a 
rocket attack on a US Consulate merits a word or two from the State 
Dept? 
Apparently not.  
Four
 Americans died. Four. Each one was valued. They are devalued when you 
name the ambassador and render the others invisible. US President Barack
 Obama did that today at the United Nations.  
That
 is outrageous. 18 sentences about the ambassador and Glen Doherty, Sean
 Smith and Tyrone Woods are reduced, by Barack, to "three of his 
colleagues." Is someone confused about the job they hold? Barack's not 
head of the US State Dept, he's President of the United States. Four 
Americans died, each life had value, each life had meaning, how dare he 
ramble on for 16 sentences about the ambassador and not even name the 
other three who died, not even name them.  
This
 wasn't about honoring Chris Stevens, this was about creating a media 
moment, something that you knew would grab attention. The office of the 
President of the United States is supposed to be above media moments. Is
 there not one damn grown up in the administration? 
Apparently not because Matt Compton's White House post
 is all about how "President Obama remembered Ambassador Chris Stevens" 
and how Stevens "was slain earlier this month in an attack" -- Compton 
never even does the insulting "three of his colleagues." 
This
 is outrageous and insulting to the memories of Glen Doherty, Sean Smith
 and Tyrone Woods. These were prepared remarks. It was intended that 
Barack would name Chris Stevens and go on about him for 16 sentences. 
And that wouldn't be a problem if the other three had been so honored 
but they weren't. They were ignored. Not even named. 
Only
 14 days after the four died while serving the United States and three 
are disappeared, not even named, in a prepared speech? Where are the 
grown ups? What an insult to everyone who works for a US embassy or 
consulate -- which does include guarding one.  
What an insult. 
Unlike
 Doherty, Smith and Tyrone, Stevens has been the focal point of massive 
media accounts and that's the only reason his name was used in the 
speech, the hope that it would create a media moment for Barack to look 
caring and concerned. If you're caring and concerned, (a) you don't need
 to create that impression (people know) and (b) you don't render three 
of the dead in the same attack invisible. 
All those pretty lies, pretty lies 
When you gonna realize they're only pretty lies 
Only pretty lies 
Just pretty lies  
-- "The Last Time I Saw Richard," written by Joni Mitchell, first appears on her album Blue 
In the speech today, Barack noted the Arab Spring: 
It
 has been less than two years since a vendor in Tunisia set himself on 
fire to protest the oppressive corruption in his country, and sparked 
what became known as the Arab Spring. And since then, the world has been
 captivated by the transformation that's taken place, and the United 
States has supported the forces of change. 
We
 were inspired by the Tunisian protests that toppled a dictator, because
 we recognized our own beliefs in the aspiration of men and women who 
took to the streets. 
We insisted on change in Egypt, because our support for democracy ultimately put us on the side of the people.  
We
 supported a transition of leadership in Yemen, because the interests of
 the people were no longer being served by a corrupt status quo. 
We
 intervened in Libya alongside a broad coalition, and with the mandate 
of the United Nations Security Council, because we had the ability to 
stop the slaughter of innocents, and because we believed that the 
aspirations of the people were more powerful than a tyrant. 
I'm
 sure some will emerge to point out that the toppled Tunisian, Yemen and
 Egyptian regimes were all supported by DC. I hope a few will point out 
that the Libyan War was illegal. But who will point out the obvious: 
Iraq. 
Iraqis 
weren't supported. Iraqis took the street in January 2011 before the 
Arab Spring kicked off. They were protesting their loved ones 
disappearing into the 'justice' system. They weren't all young people so
 it didn't have the glossy blow and, of course, it wasn't in the KRG or 
in Baghdad when it kicked off so you didn't have the US and other 
foreign press around to cover it. But it did come to Baghdad and it did 
come to the Iraqi youth. And the US government -- which still had many 
troops in Iraq -- didn't help the Iraqi people. When Little Saddam Nouri
 al-Maliki began having his forces attack the protesters, the White 
House, the State Dept, the entire Barack Obama administration didn't say
 one damn word publicly.  
Let's drop back to the February 28, 2011 snapshot and this will be a long excerpt but it's needed for the record: 
Over the weekend, protesting continued in Iraq as it did on Friday's Day Of Rage. Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) reported
 that protests continued Saturday with Samarra protesters defying a 
"curfew to attend the funerals of two people killed during protests" on 
Friday and that Iraqi forces opened fire on the protesters/mourners 
leaving eight injured while Basra also saw a funeral for a protester 
killed on Friday. On Sunday, BNO News   reports, protests continued in Iraq with 27 protesters left wounded in Amara City by Iraqi forces. Today, at Baghdad's Tahrir Square, Alsumaria TV reports Iraqis turned out to demonstrate again. 
Saturday, Wael Grace and Adam Youssef (Al Mada) reported
 the disturbing news that after Friday's Baghdad demonstration, four 
journalists who had been reporting on the protests were eating lunch 
when Iraqi security forces rushed into the restaurant and arrested them 
with eye witnesses noting that they brutal attacked the journalists 
inside the restaurant, cursing the journalists as they beat   them with 
their rifle handles. One of the journalists was Hossam Serail who says 
that they left Tahrir Square with colleagues including journalists, 
writers intellectuals, filmmakers. They went into the restaurant where 
the Iraqi military barged in, beat and kicked them, hit them in the face
 and head with the handles of their rifles, cursed the press and 
journalists, put him the trunk of a Hummer. This is Nouri al-Maliki's 
Iraq -- the Iraq the US forces prop up at the command of the Barack 
Obama. Stephanie McCrummen (Washington Post) added
 that the journalists stated "they were handcuffed, blindfolded, beaten 
and threatened with execution by soldiers from an army intelligence 
unit" and quotes Hossam Serail (spelled Hussam   al-Ssairi) stating, "It
 was like they were dealing with a bunch of al-Qaeda operatives, not a 
group of journalists. Yesterday was like a test, like a picture of the 
new democracy in Iraq."  
In addition, Alsumaria TV adds,
 "Iraqi security forces released on Friday Alsumaria reporters Sanan 
Adnan and Idris Jawad in addition to cameraman Safaa' Hatem. Alsumaria 
reporters were arrested while covering the protests of Baghdad's Tahrir 
Square. Security forces attacked as well Alsumaria employees Ali Hamed 
and Muhannad Abdul Sattar who managed to escape." Stephanie McCrummen (Washington Post) reported
 Sunday, "Iraqi security forces detained about 300 people, including 
prominent journalists, artists and lawyers who took part   in nationwide
 demonstrations Friday, in what some of them described as an operation 
to intimidate Baghdad intellectuals who hold sway over popular opinion."
 The Committee to Protect Journalists notes the above and other crackdowns on the press in Iraq (as well as in Yemen and Libya): 
["]Security
 forces prohibited cameras from entering Baghdad's Tahrir Square, where 
there were thousands of people protesting, according to news reports and
 local journalists. Police confiscated tapes that reporters managed to 
shoot in the square, according to Al-Jazeera.  
[. . .] 
Anti-riot
 forces also raided the offices of Al-Diyar satellite TV station in 
Baghdad and detained 10 of its staff members for three hours, according 
to Al-Diyar's website.
 In the afternoon, anti-riot police stormed the office for a second 
time, prohibited the staff from entering the building, and detained at 
least three more employees.  
Niyaz
 Abdulla, a correspondent for Radio Nawa and a volunteer for Metro 
Center, a local press freedom group, was assaulted today while covering 
demonstrations in Erbil. "I was on the air when a plainclothes security 
officer came and started threatening me," she told CPJ. The officer 
threatened to call over men to attack her, alluding to a potential 
sexual assault. "I stayed calm but it was very disturbing," Abdulla 
said. She added that two of her colleagues had their cameras confiscated
 while they were covering the demonstration.    
In
 Karbala, anti-riot forces attacked Afaq and Al-Salam satellite channels
 crews, according to news reports. "They were beaten and cursed at while
 they were covering the march in Karbala," Jihad Jaafar, a correspondent
 for Afaq channel told Noun news website. He added that the tapes of the crews were confiscated. ["]    
In
 addition, CPJ's Deputy Director Robert Mahoney is quoted stating, "We 
are particularly disturbed that a democratically elected government such
 as that of Iraq would attempt to quash coverage of political protests. 
We call on Baghdad to honor its commitments to respect media freedom."  
Over
 the weekend, a number of journalists were detained during and after 
their coverage of the mass demonstrations that took place in central 
Baghdad's al-Tahrir Square. Simone Vecchiator (International Press Institute) notes: ["]During a news conference held on Sunday, four journalists -- Hussam Saraie of Al-Sabah Al-Jadid newspaper, Ali Abdul Sada of the Al-Mada daily, Ali al-Mussawi of Sabah newspaper and Hadi al-Mehdi of Demozee radio -- reported being handcuffed, blindfolded, beaten and threatened by security forces. They also claimed they were held in custody for nine hours and forced to sign a document, the contents of which were not revealed to them. Aswat al Iraq news agency reported that the journalists will file a court case against the executive authority in response to the alleged violations of their civil rights. This episode is the latest in a series of repressive measures adopted by security forces in order to stifle media reports about the current political and social unrest.["] 
Meanwhile Nasiriyah reports
 that Maj Gen Qassim Atta, the spokesperson for Baghdad Operations 
Command is insisting he has no idea about targeting of the media, 
specifically four journalists being arrested on Friday, and insists 
there will be an investigation. He's calling on witnesses to come 
forward . . . so they can be disappeared? This morning Kelly McEvers (NPR's Morning Edition) reported
 on the attacks on journalists and focused on Hadi Al Mahdi whose "leg 
is really swollen" and who was one of the four noted above stopped 
Friday afternoon while "eating lunch with other journalists when 
soldiers pulled up,   blindfolded them, and whisked them away. Mahdi was
 beaten in the leg, eyes, and head. A solider tried to get him to admit 
he was being paid to topple the regime." 
You may not know it because Iraq, by then, received so little coverage, but journalist Hadi al-Mahdi? He was assassinated September 8, 2011.
 He had been threatened and harassed by Nouri's goons. Though security 
tape from outside his apartment should have revealed the killer or 
killers, that tape vanished. And, of course, no one was ever punished. I
 don't doubt for a moment that Hadi was killed on the orders of Nouri 
al-Maliki. Assassinated in his own home. 
The
 US government didn't encourage or support the Iraqi people. The US 
government did not condemn the attacks on the protesters. The US 
government did ask several news outlets not to cover the ongoing 
protests -- which lasted months. Those who ignored the request risked 
not only US government ire but also physical assault because not even 
Western reporters were safe covering the protests as summer 2011 rolled 
around. 
Who was doing the attacking? Nouri's 
forces and Nouri's supporters. And they weren't called out. Some outlets
 were very helpful to the US government. The New York Times, 
for example, ignored most of the protests and cast aspertions on the 
protesters in their Saturday, February 26th report of the first massive 
Friday protest across Iraq. I suppose it's a shame that those working 
for both the New York Times and the US government were able to collect only one pay check. 
The
 US government said nothing publicly when Hadi was murdered -- murdered 
because he believed in core human values and he acted on his beliefs. 
But the Barack Obama administration never wants to offend Nouri 
al-Maliki. 
Last 
week, when Senator John Kerry rightly noted that the US has the ability 
to tie conditions to all the US taxpayer money that flows to Nouri, the 
State Dept, via Victoria Nuland, immediately shot down the idea. They 
never want to offend Little Saddam. They stroke Little Sadam, they 
encourage him, they encourage his efforts to snuff out freedom. Last Friday morning, we noted that the proposal by Senator John Kerry and others on the Senate Foreign Service Committee was correct. By Friday evening, you could already see some results from what John floated. In Monday's paper, the New York Times editorial board   would observe,
 "[. . .] Senator John Kerry, chairman of the Foreign Relations 
Committee, was right to warn last week that American aid could be 
reconsidered if Iraq failed to change course." 
This morning, John Barry's "'The Engame' Is A Well Researched, Highly Critical Look at U.S. Policy in Iraq" went up at The Daily Beast: Washington has little political and no military influence over these developments. As Michael Gordon and Bernard Trainor charge in their ambitious new history of the Iraq war, The Endgame, Obama's administration sacrificed political influence by failing in 2010 to insist that the results of Iraq's first proper election be honored: "When the Obama administration acquiesced in the questionable judicial opinion that prevented Ayad Allawi's bloc, after it had won the most seats in 2010, from the first attempt at forming a new government, it undermined the prospects, however slim, for a compromise that might have led to a genuinely inclusive and cross-sectarian government." 
Could
 we discuss the above? Judging by the comments left on the article, no. 
You have Bush-supporters blaming Barack and Barack-supporters blaming 
Bush. No one wants to allow their own personal savior might have led 
them astray. 
Here's
 a little reality for those leaving comments. You who love Barack and 
swear by him, stop saying the SOFA was the end. (It became the end.  
Didn't have to be.)  Why did your beloved Barack try to renegotiate it 
if it was "a legally binding agreement to withdraw"? It was only legally
 binding if it wasn't replaced with a new contract. It could have also 
been extended and remained "legally binding." The problem is that far 
too many who are far too ignorant of the law choose to weigh in. In 
November 2008, we explained the SOFA -- Thanksgiving day. We even 
published it in full. Thanksgiving day. And maybe the press can be 
forgiven for some of their bad reporting due to the holiday but there's 
no excuse for the fact that they got it wrong over and over and over. 
Most US troops are out of Iraq and that's because of the Status Of 
Forces Agreement that the Bush administration negotiated. 
Barack
 was not elected to pull most troops out of Iraq by the end of 2011. He 
was not elected to follow the policies of the Bully Boy administration. 
He made the decision to do that. The only way Barack wouldn't 'own' the 
Iraq War (true of the Afghanistan War as well) is if he immediately, 
upon being sworn in, began withdrawing troops. (You may remember, that 
was his promise -- one he did not keep.) Doing that would have made it 
Bush's war only. He could have had all the troops out within three 
months. Yes, it was possible. Bill Richards knew it was, George McGovern
 knew it was, many people knew it. George knew it because he planned, if
 elected president in 1972, to pull US troops out of Vietnam -- a larger
 number of troops, at a faster timeline than what Barack was proposing. 
It's Barack's war as well. And billions of US taxpayer dollars continue to flow to Iraq.  
"It
 wasn't America's to lose," huffs Harmlessdrudge and others in the 
comments. Oh, you're so very wise to make that point today. Golly, 
jolly, gee, I wish we had made that point. Oh, that's right, we did in 
December 2, 2004's "Should This Marriage Be Saved?"
 And we paid attention and are aware that the Barack Obama 
administration repeatedly backed Nouri over the people of Iraq, over the
 democratic process, over the ballot box, over the will of the people, 
over the Iraqi Constitution. 
"It
 wasn't America's to lose" only works if the White House isn't trying to
 install their choice for leader instead of the people's choice. Do you 
grasp that or are you really that stupid? 
Let's not John Barry's "'The Engame' Is A Well Researched, Highly Critical Look at U.S. Policy in Iraq" (Daily Beast) because I'm not sure it's sinking in: Washington has little political and no military influence over these developments. As Michael Gordon and Bernard Trainor charge in their ambitious new history of the Iraq war, The Endgame, Obama's administration sacrificed political influence by failing in 2010 to insist that the results of Iraq's first proper election be honored: "When the Obama administration acquiesced in the questionable judicial opinion that prevented Ayad Allawi's bloc, after it had won the most seats in 2010, from the first attempt at forming a new government, it undermined the prospects, however slim, for a compromise that might have led to a genuinely inclusive and cross-sectarian government." 
I'm
 not sure it's sinking in because, in real time, we were the only ones 
calling it out. In real time, we were the only ones talking about what a
 slap in the face this was to the Iraqis who risked violence and had 
hardships just getting to the polls due to all the security checkpoints 
they had to pass through. While we were calling it out, Twitter faves 
like Nir Rosen were blogging at Foreign Policy about how great it would be if -- how did Trashy Nir put it? Oh, that's right, "Frankly this is a rare case where I hope Maliki violates the constitution, acts in some kind of authoritarian way --" You got your wish, Nir, are you happy? 
And,
 at this late date, and after all the US blood and money poured into 
Iraq, shame on you if you don't know what happened but think you need to
 weigh in. The time to point out that the US need to back off was when 
the Barack Obama administration decided, despite the 2010 election 
results, that Nouri al-Maliki would get a second term as prime minister.
 The time to cry foul was when the US government brokered the Erbil 
Agreement to get Nouri that second term and when they promised the Kurds
 and other blocs that the Erbil Agreement was legally binding and that 
the it had the US support and approval. It had that long enough for 
Nouri to get his second term. He got that and trashed the contract, 
refusing to deliver on any of the concessions he promised -- in the 
Erbil Agreement -- to make.  
And
 the White House played dumb. Iraqiya (who came in first), Moqtada 
al-Sadr and the Kurds began publicly insisting that the Erbil Agreement 
be returned to in the summer fo 2011. A year later, it still hasn't and 
the US government can't seem to figure out where they stand on a 
contract they negotiated, where they stand on a contract they gave their
 word on. 
To ignore all that and pretend is to be a willful idiot and apparently there is a grave need to be that in America these days. 
We
 have called out Bully Boy Bush. We've also paid attention to what's 
taken place in Iraq since January 2009 and you better believe that 
requires calling out. But some lazy minds seem to believe Iraq goes into
 suspended animation because they don't think about it or it's not on 
their TV screens. That's not reality. Reality is that when a US 
president overrules the votes of a people, that's disgusting. Reality is
 that Barack did just that and all the crotch sniffing and offerings 
from the Cult of St. Barack won't change that one damn bit. 
We
 have not argued for US troops to remain in Iraq (though they do -- 
let's note that because it's very offensive to the families with loved 
ones still in Iraq when the press repeatedly insists all troops left) 
but Senator John Barrasso pointed out on CNN today (link is text and video),
 "What we now know is that his military advisors said leave people in 
Iraq, 15,000. He wasn't able to accomplish that." And he wasn't able to.
 He failed at negotiations though they were supposed to be ongoing. (And
 though some in the administration believe that if he wins re-election 
this November, that the first thing that will happen with Iraq is new 
negotiations to put US troops on the ground there.) (To finish out 
Barrasso's point, his Iraq comments in full, "When he talks about 
pulling out of Iraq. What we now know is that   his military advisors 
said leave people in Iraq, 15,000. He wasn't able to accomplish that. So
 right now Iran is flying supplies to Syria over Iraqi airspace. It 
shouldn't be happening, but it's being done to supply Syrians who are 
massacring their people. This president has failed on foreign policy.") 
Turning to the never ending violence which has at least 9 dead and 26 injured so far today. Alsumaria reports
 that a Falluja roadside bombing has claimed the life of Mohammed Saleh,
 an adviser with the Ministry of Electricity, a Falluja car bombing left
 nine people (eight police officers) injured and a roadside bombing 
targeted the city's mayor (he surived) while claiming the life of a 2nd 
grade student and injuring six more. They also note a roadside bombing just outside of Falluja left an alderman and his brother injured. In addition, Alsumaria notes a Mosul armed attack which left 1 police officer dead. Trend News Agency   adds
 Brig Gen Falih Kareem is dead from a Baghdad shooting, an assault on a 
Baghdad chceckpoint left 2 police officers dead (three more injured), 1 
soldier was shot dead in Baghdad (with another left injured) and an 
armed assault on a Tarmiyah police station left 1 police officer dead 
and two more injured. AFP states
 the Tarmiyah assualt involved car bombs, rifles and rockets and that 1 
police officer was shot dead in Baquba with three more left injured. 
Through yesterday, Iraq Body Count notes 265 deaths from violence in Iraq for the month so far. In equally disturbing news, Mohammad Sabah (Al Mada) reports that State of Law has announced provincial elections have been postponed. State of Law is thug and prime minister Nouri al-Maliki's political slate. Thursday, July 19th, the United Nations Security Council held a hearing on Iraq. Offering testimony was Martin Kolber, the UN Secretary-General's Special Envoy to Iraq. Martin Kobler: Mr. President, there is no democracy without elections and there are no credible elections without a strong and truly independent election commission. As we speak, my political deputy, Mr. [Gyorgy Busztin], is engaged in facilitation efforts to bring about the formation of a new, Independent High Election Commission which is representative of the main components of Iraq -- including women and children and minorities. The urgent selection of the commissioners is essential for ensuring that the provincial council elections due to take place in March 2013 can be conducted on time. I'm concerned that the ongoing political stalemate is hindering the process however. In recent days, I have discussed with political leaders -- including Prime Minister al-Maliki -- the need for a swfit conclusion of this political process and the need for an adequate representation of women and minorities in the commission. Today, I would like to re-iterate my appeal to all political blocs to expedite the selection of professional commissioners. Now the March elections are postponed. Are we grasping that Nouri al-Malki cannot oversee a functioning government? The March 2010 parliamentary elections? They were supposed to take place in 2009. Among the things delaying them? Nouri's group refusing to properaly recognize refugees (who had voting rights). You may remember that the March 2010 elections were followed by an eight month political stalemate (ended only by the US-brokered Erbil Agreement which Nouri used to grab a second term as prime minister and then trashed, creating the current and ongoing political stalemate). Iraq is not 'progressing.' The repeated inability to hold scheduled elections on time is more than disturbing. These are not oh-no-an-attack-on-the-Green-Zone-we-didn't-anticipate-that. These are planned events, known ahead of time. With years to plan, there's no excuse for being able to pull this off. This is a known. This is something UNAMI's been prodding on all year long and before the start of this year. Now it's announced that Nouri's failed government can't even manage to pull off scheduled elections? That they have to postpone yet another scheduled election? 
These are the basics of governance and Nouri repeatedly fails. Over and over. 
The Independent High Election Commission? What IHEC? 
The
 current commission has had their term extended and extended and 
extended. And then finally there was the announcement that Iraq had 9 
new IHEC commissioners. 
Well . . . 8. But they'd get that ninth one. Probably a Turkman. 
No one noticed, only in Nouri's Iraq, the problem with the 8. From the September 18th snapshot: Yesterday came news that 8 people had been voted onto the Independent High Electoral Commission. A vote on the 9th member was blocked by Christian MPs who felt they were not being represented. Alaa Sabbagh (Kitabat) wonders if this commission is going to promote democracy or embrace a dictatorship in Iraq? All Iraq News reports that the Sadr bloc has announced they support a Christian member for the Commission and declare that they are a "respectable part of the country." Kitabat notes that the 8 voted on do not represent minorities. This includes women. Not one woman was voted onto the commission yesterday. 
Only
 in Nouri's Iraq can 8 people be voted in and it not be noticed during 
the voting that, oops, there's not even one woman. Back to the September
 18th snapshot: 
Wafaa Zangana (AK News) reports
 Christian MP Yonadam Yousef Kanna is calling for the number of seats on
 the commission to be increased since there is now "only one seat for 
minorities, while the women, Turkmen and Christians were not represented
 [in the new commission]. The law of the Federal Court stresses the need
 to represent all parties in the electoral commission, but the 
presidency of the Council of Representatives violated this law." In 
related news, an Iraqiya MP tells All Iraq News
 that there is a conpiracy taking place to ensure that women will not be
 members of the next Parliament (parliamentary elections are supposed to
 take place in 2014) and she is calling for   a woman to be appointed to
 the electoral commission so that women's rights will be protected. She 
notes women make up 65% of the Iraqi population but are barely 
represented in the Parliament and, at present, not even on the new IHEC. 
Only
 Iraqiya (Ayad Allawi's political slate -- the one that came in first in
 the 2010 elections and should have been able to form a government but 
the White House backed Nouri over the choice of the Iraqi people) 
objected. It wasn't just important because of a belief that the IHEC 
needs to be representative, it was important because of the law. From 
the September 19th snapshot: About the only thing that could be passed off as 'progress' this week just imploded. Yesterday, 8 of 9 Independent High Electoral Commission commissioners elected. Alsumaria reported this morning that the Federal Court says the number of commissioners must be increased because women must make up a third of the members. (Not one of the eight was a woman -- an oversight Iraqiya called out -- the only political bloc to publicly call that out.) Al Mada notes that Moqtada al-Sadr's bloc was insisting yesterday that if they just make the ninth member a Christian, they'll have all their bases covered. The judiciary begs to differ. They're calling on members -- not a single seat, multiple seats. That means that the Parliament either gets very focused on this or it is highly likely that an election cannot take place in March of 2013. It's tarting to look a lot like fall 2009 in Iraq. 
And that should have been
 that. The law states women must make up a third of the members. That's 
not something you can 'massage.' Yet Alsumaria reports
 the issue is still 'can we get a Turkman on the IHEC?' as opposed to 
dealing with what the law requires. Is math difficult for the Iraqi 
government? Is the concept of 1/3 of the members of the IHEC being women
 a word problem that's difficult to solve? 
Back
 in July, when Kobler addressed the UN Security Council, it was already 
past time for the IHEC members to have been selected. Two months later 
all they have to show for it is 8 members and they fail to include women
 so the court says they're going to need more than 9 commissioners? 
We'll note Kobler's lastest remarks tomorrow. As we were noting yesterday regarding Glenn Glenn and The Three Faces of Eve, when you can't make your case on the facts, you resort to insinuation. Iran's Press TV and Kevin Zeese try to make the case on the MEK and doe so with 'facts' like this one from Kat's BFF Kevin Zeese,
 "The MEK was defined as a terrorist group by the Bush administration 
because it was --" Okay, wipe the foam from your mouth -- that is foam, 
right? -- Kevin. The Clinton administration put the MEK on the terrorist
 list. Know your facts before you speak. And here's another though. 
While it may be good to go on   Iranian television to present a face of 
America other than the government, it's really not smart to go on 
Iranian television and speak the Iranian government's party line. Just 
not smart. It'll keep you on that network, yes. It won't allow you to be
 seen as a voice of peace. I'm also confused why an alleged voice of 
peace would appear on Iran's state television considering the 
government's attitude towards gays and lesbians -- Iranian President 
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad had quite a bit to say on that subject -- none of it
 educated, enlightened or aware -- while speaking to Piers Morgan (CNN).
 Since Kevin Zeese makes the decision to go on Iranian state TV and 
repeat and endorse the Iranain government's outlooks and since Kevin 
can't condemn the targeting of the LGBT community in Iraq -- never had 
time   for it -- we know why he's so comfortable being cozy with the 
Iranian government. Thanks, Kevie.  | 
Let's stay on the topic of mindless idiots. Can you tell I'm pissed? At the alleged Moderate Voice, Walter Brasch wants to whine about Republicans:
And
 now the Republicans have blocked the Veterans Job Corps bill in the 
Senate. That bill would have provided $1 billion over five years to hire
 20,000 recent veterans by giving them priority in jobs as first 
responders. It would also have provided career advisers for the 
veterans. That bill would have helped not just veterans, but all 
Americans by strengthening fire, police, and first aid/paramedic 
assistance.
The vote in the senate was 
58–40 to pass that bill. But, typical of Republican obstructionism, it 
failed. Although there was a clear majority, the bill failed because the
 Republicans used a technicality in Senate rules to force a higher 
standard–requiring 60 votes, not a simple majority, to pass the 
appropriation.
He [Harry Reid] whined on the Senate floor yesterday about the potential delay
 (but strangely avoided Rand Paul as he went after Mitch McConnell). He 
wasn't concerned with the nomination of Beecroft, he was talking about a
 delay in the Veterans Jobs Corps Act of 2012. The bill was introduced 
by Bill Nelson and co-sponsored by Patty Murray. We support the bill and
 have noted it many times here. If it's so important to Harry Reid, 
maybe it should have come up a lot sooner. In other words, if this bill 
that Harry Reid is now whining about -- whining that it could be delayed
 -- was so important, maybe they shouldn't have waited until July 24th to   introduce a bill? According to the White House blog, to a blog post by Matt Compton,
 Barack gave a speech on the need for a veterans jobs corps act February
 3rd. Who was draffing their feet? Who was delaying? February 3rd, 
Barack's calling for one and no Democrat in the Senate bothers to pick 
up the ball until July 24th? 
Walter
 Brasch wants to thunder -- at the so-called Moderate Voice -- about 
Republicans blocking this so-important bill. If it was so damn 
important, then it should have been introduced before July 24th. We are 
aware -- maybe we're not, maybe we're all idiots like Walter Brasch -- 
that August saw senators out of DC as they returned their home states, 
right? Are we aware that the Senate didn't return until September 10th? 
The schedule was proposed in 2011. The schedule was known when Bill 
Nelson introduced the bill. If it was important to Democrats -- and not 
just something to bitch, moan and whine about -- they would have 
introduced it earlier. Are you aware that Senator Richard Burr -- a 
Republican -- worked years and years before finally, in August,
 the Senate passed and the President signed into law the Honoring   
America's Veterans and Caring for Camp Lejeune Families Act?
What
 was controversial about providing needed assistance to service members 
and their families who became sick due to exposure on a base the US 
government had sent them to? But it took years. Meaning if you really 
want a bill passed -- and you better believe Bill Nelson and Patty 
Murray know this -- you don't wait until the last minute to introduce 
it. When you introduce at the last minute, you're usually doing so 
because you don't want it to pass and you're hoping to use it against 
the other side.
My 
political party is Democrat, not Hypocrite, so I can't join in this 
reindeer game where we throw facts out the window and pretend like the 
Republicans are hideous, mean and awful just because they wouldn't be 
rushed into a bill. I'd add further that the Democrats better hope the 
Republicans don't get pissed off. If they do, they need to go the House 
Veterans Committee and ask, "What did you learn this year in your 
hearings?" Because some of the veterans legislation that Dems pushed and
 Dems passed didn't work out quite the way it was supposed to and 
there's been no rush to fix it.
Those
 things happen and I'm not going to pretend that there was malice 
towards anyone or disrespect of veterans intended by Democrats. It's 
part of the process and if you're half-way intelligent (even I can make 
that low-level mark), you know these things happen. By the same token, 
if you're half-way intelligent, you know a big bill needs a lot of 
selling and a lot of prep work so the Dems really shouldn't be attacking
 Republicans over this vote. 
Jill Stein is the Green Party's presidential candidate and her campaign notes:
Time
 Magazine columnist Joel Stein is offering a unique opportunity for Jill
 Stein supporters near southern California. He wants to share and pay 
for (!) lunch with someone who rejects the politics of fear in favor of 
the politics of courage - in other words - someone who plans to vote for Jill Stein. 
To enter this contest all you need to do is make a minimum donation of $3
 to the campaign and write a few sentences about why you think you 
should be the winner. The best response will win the contest. And just 
so you know, Joel will write about his lunch experience in his Time 
magazine column and may even use a quote from you.
To enter the contest, just donate $3 or more by Friday 9/28 at midnight PST. Click here to donate.
There's no doubt this lunch will be memorable and hilarious as Joel is one of the wittiest writers of this generation. Good luck!
Here's his pitch . . .
There's no doubt this lunch will be memorable and hilarious as Joel is one of the wittiest writers of this generation. Good luck!
Here's his pitch . . .
Dear Person Who Cares Deeply About Others,
Both
 Barack Obama and Mitt Romney's campaigns have raffled off dinner with a
 celebrity to encourage contributions to their campaigns. The 
Republicans offered dinner with Donald Trump, while the Democrats had 
dinners with George Clooney, Sarah Jessica Parker, Anna Wintour and 
Michael Jordan.   
Jill
 Stein has decided to offer an even more exciting experience: Lunch with
 me. Joel Stein. A Time magazine columnist. Who promises to listen to 
you ranting on and on about the corrupt American political system 
without interrupting you. And I'll even write a column about it in Time 
magazine. With your name in it. And maybe a shortened quote of one of 
your rants.   
Better 
still, when you tell your fellow Green friends about it, and you say my 
name quickly enough, they will think you had lunch with Jill Stein.   
I
 will take you and a guest for the most expensive lunch in Los Angeles 
you can think of, since I know that you will probably just order the 
salad and dessert.   
Just
 like for the Obama and Romney raffles, "a donation of $3 or whatever 
you're able to give today will automatically enter you for the chance" 
to have lunch with me.   
Good luck. See you at Café Gratitude,   
Joel Stein   
 
