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Tuesday,
 November 6, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, Taji is slammed with a 
bombing, Nouri (at present) can't get the support he needs to form a 
majority-government, Moqtada al-Sadr continues to present as a leader, 
Nouri and his Cabinet attempt to gut the food ration card system, the 
European press appears to miss that the cards have more than one use, 
Ayad Allawi says Nouri will appear before Parliament, Massoud Barzani 
finishes up a tour of the region, and more. 
  
  
However, both candidates are neglecting to mention a few things about America's 'total withdrawal'. 
Privatisation of occupation 
There are also consulates in Basra, Mosul and Kirkuk, each with upwards of 1000 employees. 
These
 figures include more than just the bureaucrats and diplomats that 
immediately spring to mind – the embassy also houses CIA officers, 
intelligence analysts, defence attaches and upwards of 5,000 security 
contractors. 
They do everything from peeling potatoes to providing diplomats and businessmen with armed security details. 
Exact figures and details of precise activities are hard to come by, but the latest report from US Central Command details 7,336 contractors working for the Pentagon in Iraq. 
It's not just the Pentagon
 outsourcing its boots on the ground – when other government agencies 
(such as the US State Department) are factored in the numbers become 
closer to 13,500. 
While Obama and Romney 
cross verbal swords over the withdrawal of troops and how it took place,
 the privatisation of America's significant and ongoing presence in Iraq
 does not rate a mention. 
  
Also noting the US election is Wael Grace (Al Mada) who points out 
 that Barack's 'withdrawal' has left behind US military as "trainers" 
and Marines guarding the US diplomatic staff as well as contractors. 
  
Taji has been slammed by a bombing which has left many dead and many injured. Reuters quotes  police
 officer Ahmed Khalef stating, "There were army trainees leaving the 
base and small buses were waiting for them when the explosion took 
place.  We immediately started to rescue the wounded.  You could smell 
charred bodies."   Earlier today, Adam Schreck (AP) reported  27 dead (and possibly a suicide bomber) and over forty injured.  Hours later, Schreck updated  to 33 dead and fifty-six injured.  The Frontier Post notes  the suicide car bombing was "at the entrance to an Iraqi army base" where recruits were lining up.  AFP adds ,
 "The explosion appears to have occurred as they left the base at 
lunchtime. But sources told the AFP news agency there had also been a 
recruitment event on Tuesday to welcome potential new soldiers. Such 
events have been targeted by militants in the past."  Yesterday Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) reported  a Taji car bombing as well -- one that claimed 1 life and left seven injured.
  
Yasir Ghazi (New York Times) quotes
 Mohamed Talal who was hoping to enlist, "I was heading to the place 
near the parking lot to check my name when all of sudden a strong 
explosion happened where people were gathering.  I turned and started to
 run, and I began to feel shrapnel in my back and I fell to the ground." 
  
Jane Arraf (Al Jazeera) states, "Our police source said that the attack was a parked car bomb, and not a suicide blast." Reuters notes 
 that the death toll has risen,  "A suicide bomber rammed his 
explosive-filled car into soldiers outside an army base near Baghdad on 
Tuesday, killing 31 people and injuring tens more in one of the worst 
attacks this year on the country's military." 
  
  
Also on violence, All Iraq News notes 
 that today Iraqiya MP Hamid al-Mutlaq called for Iraqi Prime Minister 
Nouri al-Maliki and President Jalal Talabani to hold responsible 
whomever killed Diyala Province's Mohammed Jassim al-Mikdadi and strung 
the man's body up on an electric pole afterwards. 
  
  
For
 more than two decades, Iraq has been running what the World Food 
Program (WFP) has called "the largest public food program operating in 
the world today". The system dates back to August 1990, when President 
Saddam Hussein's army invaded Kuwait. In response, the UN Security 
Council adopted Resolution 661, imposing sanctions and blocking 
virtually all trade with the country. The government of Iraq quickly 
established a PDS to provide food and other basic necessities to all 
Iraqis. Little did they know the system would remain in place for more 
than 20 years. Because sanctions hampered Iraq's ability to sell oil
 or buy food, hardship intensified in the years following the 1991 Gulf 
War that ousted Iraqi troops from Kuwait. In 1995, Security Council 
Resolution 986 created the UN Oil-for-Food Program, and the PDS was 
expanded. But, through the sanctions period and during the almost nine 
years of occupation that followed the 2003 US   invasion of Iraq, a 
significant portion of the population remained vulnerable to hunger.
 
  
  
  
Are
 we not supposed to think? I'm sorry, I thought humans were the thinking
 animal.  I thought we processed.  I thought we did more than just 
offered he-said, she-said.  Seems to me if Nouri's killing off the 
ration card system, you ask a few questions, you make a few 
observations. 
  
And I'm real sorry but it's not just about the food or has the press been sleeping for the last years?   
  
Pretend
 I am an Iraqi.  I want to vote in the provincial elections scheduled 
for early next year.  And I want to vote in the parliamentary elections 
which are supposed to take place in 2014.  How do I do that? 
  
Currently -- pay attention AFP
 -- I would do as I have done since the US invasion.  I would display a 
food ration card.  This is the identification system that's used. 
  
  
  
And
 a move away from the card system?  With an election coming up and one 
supposed to follow within 12 months after the provincial elections?  I 
think it's safe to argue it's a pretty damn stupid time to drop the food
 ration cards.  Nouri can't even pull off a census.  We're supposed to 
believe he can handle voter registration? 
  
Immediately
 someone wearing a dunce cap insists, "Well they can end the program and
 just use the cards."  Yes, they can.  If no new voters are coming into 
the process.  Good thing Iraq's got a population that rends old, right? 
 Good thing -- Oh, wait.  Iraq's median age is 20-years.  Iraq has an 
incredibly young population and the percentage that will be coming of 
age for the parliamentary election is a significant proportion of Iraq's
 estimated 30 million people.   
  
So what are 
you telling us?  The ration card system is ending but you're still going
 to issue cards for the next two years to take care of the voting issue? 
  
We've
 talked about what is.  Let's note what this may be based on past 
history: Yet another attempt by Nouri to skew the elections in his own 
favor.  
  
For those who've forgotten, Iraq is in
 the midst of a political crisis -- one caused by Nouri al-Maliki.  
Unhappy that his State of Law did not come in first in the 2010 
parliamentary elections, Nouri dugs his heels in for 8 months while the 
US government backed him and figured out a way to disregard the Iraq 
Constitution, the will of the people and the vote.  The White House 
decided a contract could sidestep all the issues.  So the 8 month 
political stalemate ended in November 2010 with Nouri and the leaders of
 the other political blocs signing the Erbil Agreement.  The contract 
had concessions from Nouri (such as the formation of an independent 
national security commission, Article 140 of the Constitution finally be
 implemented, and more) and, in return, the blocs agreed to let Nouri 
have a second term as prime minister.  Nouri used it to get that second 
term and then trashed the contract, refused to honor it.  By the   
summer of 2011, it was obvious that Nouri didn't -- as the US State 
Department repeatedly lied -- just need more time.  No, Nouri wasn't 
going to follow the contract.  That's when Moqtada al-Sadr, the Kurds 
and Iraqiya began demanding that the Erbil Agreement be honored.  
Nouri's failure to honor the contract started political stalemate II.  
His desire to target Sunnis and Iraqiya led to the political crisis.   
  
Mohammed Sabah (Al Mada) reports
 today that Nouri's wish to further disregard the votes, the voters and 
the other parties (including Iraqiya which won the parliamentary 
election) has been stymied for while he still wants to form a 
"majority-government" (he would block out political rivals), he's 
worried that both Iraqiya and the Kurds would prevent him from forming 
that if he dissolved the current government.  It's a sign of just howed 
cowed and cowardly the White House is that Nouri's trying to form a 
majority-State of Law-government and they're not saying a word.  The 
runner up in the 2010 election is trying to seize   total control of the
 government and the White House is too chicken to speak up publicly.  Al Rafidayn reports 
 that not only is the National Alliance (Shi'ite party led by Ibrahim 
al-Jaafari) split on Nouri's plan for a majority government but the Sadr
 bloc has also made clear that they oppose it.  Let's again note, as we 
have since 2010, Moqtada al-Sadr wants to be the next prime minister of 
Iraq.  In the last years, he's gone out of his way to make moves and 
take positions that are seen as inclusive of all Iraqis.  And reportedly
 (this is what the US government was told), one of the reasons Moqtada 
finally agreed to back Nouri on the second term in 2010 was because the 
Iranian government told Moqtada, come 2014, they would back him.  A 
little while ago, when oil rich Iraq, according to Nouri, had   no oil 
surplus funds to share with the people, Moqtada cried foul.  He's 
refused to leave that issue alone and Nouri's been forced to admit that 
there are funds.  Moqtada's still not leaving it alone.  All Iraq News reports 
 that a delegation from the Sadr bloc met today with Minister of 
Finance Rafie al-Issawi to discuss this issue and find out what the 
progess was on it.  The bloc issued a statement noting they will 
continue to stay focused on this and ensure that the country and its 
children benefit from the oil. 
  
  
Moqtada
 is positioning himself to be Iraq's future prime minister.  There's no 
reason he shouldn't but he is, to the White House, "Iraq's radical 
cleric."  If they wanted to stop Moqtada (and they do), the easiest way 
would have been to back Iraqiya in 2010 when it won the parliamentary 
elections.  Then Ayad Allawi would be prime minister (most likely it 
would have been him, he is the head of Iraqiya) and if Iraqis were even 
just a little bit better off, he'd be sailing into another term in 
2014.  Instead, the White-House-dreaded Moqtada may be the one.  Al Mada reports 
 that Allawi declared yesterday that the political crisis has led to 
serious differences and that Nouri must appear before Parliament as has 
been requested.  If the work is too much for Nouri, Allawi says, then 
Nouri can leave the work to others because many would be happy to take 
on Nouri's job.
  
  
Another person 
unafraid to tell Nouri "enough" is KRG President Massoud Barzani.  (When
 Iraqi Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi was in the KRG and Nouri was 
demanding that the KRG hand al-Hashemi over to Baghdad, President Jalal 
Talabani buckled and al-Hashemi had to get the support of Barzani who, 
unlike Talabani, doesn't stick a finger in the air to determine what way
 the wind is blowing before making a decision.)  Barzani has just 
wrapped up a regional tour.   Yesterday,
 Barzani met with  Abdullah Bin Hamad al-Attiyah, the Deputy Prime 
Minister in Qatar, and, while in Qatar for several days, he met with 
other government officials to discuss relations between the two 
countries and common sides .  Today, he
 met with the Emir of   Qatar, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani to 
discuss economic opportunties and investments between Qatar and the KRG .  And Barzani returned to the KRG late this evening .
  
Al Mada reports
 that Baghdad made third dirtiest capital on the United Nations 
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization's ranking as a result 
of environmental pollution. Meanwhile  All Iraq News reports  Iraq's Ministry of the Environment is noting the waste in the Khasa River water in Kirkuk -- oil and construction materials.  
  
  
Turning to England, as noted at War Criminal Tony Blair's online office ,
 he decided to kick off the work week with another speech, this one to 
the Iraq Britain Business Council's 4th London Conference.  To them, he 
declared  "So these are all compelling reasons for Britain and British 
investment to be part of Iraq's future. But, naturally, in addition, to 
the economic and industrial reasons, British forces helped liberate Iraq
 from Saddam and for years with much heroism and sacrifice helped Basrah
 survive the sectarian aftermath. They should be proud of what they 
achieved. " Many hearing his remarks probably thought of the news
 in June about efforts in the UK to ensure that those who tortured 
Iraqis not be legally punished.  From Russia Today : In
 2003, dozens of men were allegedly hooded, stripped and beaten in 
secret camps across Iraq. One innocent civilian has reportedly died 
aboard a Royal Air Force helicopter, and a group of 63 others are still 
considered missing after being taken to another secret prison located in
 an oil pump station.The shocking revelation is worsened by 
the fact that these events – which, if proven true, are clear violations
 of international law – were apparently sanctioned by top lawyers in the
 British Ministry of Defense, and kept secret from the Army's lawyer on 
the ground in Iraq. Lieutenant Colonel Nicholas Mercer, the 
chief British Army lawyer in Iraq during the 2003 invasion, told the 
Mail on Sunday that what went on in this secret prison network amounted 
to "war crimes."
 As news was breaking of the War Criminal and former British   Prime Minister's speech was breaking,  Kitbat already had filed a story about that attempted cover up in June . 
 Meanwhile Iraq's a real mess.  If you haven't figured that out, a 
British official rushes to make it clear today that the fault lies with 
the United States, not with England.  Charles Maggs (Politics UK) reports :
  
  
Peter
 Mandelson has admitted Tony Blair made a mistake invading Iraq, as he 
did not foresee the prolonged violence that was to engulf the country.In
 an interview with Esquire magazine, the former king of spin said Blair 
had been expecting a "short, sharp success" rather than eight years of 
sectarian killing.
 "He expected it, obviously, not to be a walk in the park but to be a short, sweet success with the downfall of Saddam," he said.
 "But
 it didn't turn out like that, which was more the Americans' fault than 
his, but I think he should have gone into it with his eyes wider open."
 
  
Sorry,
 Mandelson, Tony didn't go to war with Iraq inspite of the US, in went 
to war in partnership with the US.  That means if the US is 'at fault,' 
so is War Criminal Tony.  We are judged by who we hop in bed with.  As Stop The War Coalition notes , that wasn't War Criminal Tony's only public event this month:
  
Protest Tuesday 13 November 11amWar criminals & arms dealers out of our universities
 Main Entrance, University College London WC1E 6BT
Tony Blair, John Reid and Michael Gove are among the speakers at the inaugural conference of the UCL Institute for Security & Resilience Studies.  
Join
 Stop the War to protest against war criminals like Tony Blair and his 
friends speaking at a conference to promote the interests of arms 
dealers in our universities. 
  
  
  
ON TUESDAY 13 NOVEMBER, Tony Blair will be the headline speaker for the inaugural conference of University College London's Institute for Security & Resilience Studies (ISRS). 
If you would like to attend Building an ethos of Resilience – A new Manifesto for Business, it costs just £714 a ticket -- or £354 at the "not for profit"rate. 
This
 is a departure from Mr Blair's recent public engagements, which have 
focused more on the religious community. It is, however, perhaps more in
 tune with his employment by the government of Kazakhstan, who currently
 pay him £8 million a year to whitewash their human rights record. 
The
 ISRS was founded in 2008 by former MP John Reid. Reid was a key Blair 
ally in the run-up to the Iraq war and an 'enforcer' within the Labour 
Party. He was appointed Home Secretary following Robin Cook's 
resignation to ensure few others would follow suit.  
Reid
 was known in Whitehall as 'Minister for Newsnight' for his skill in 
pushing the Bush/Blair line in media appearances. The invasion of Iraq 
may well be remembered as 'Blair's war', and not without some 
justification. But there are many people who bear a great deal of 
responsibility for that criminal act. John Reid is one of them. 
  
  
Maybe the November 13th appearance will see someone attempt to Arrest Blair .  The website notes it's already paid out money to several who made attempts to Arrest Blair:
  
Amount in the pot at 28.08.12: £7,262.67
First payment to Grace McCann: £2,619.67Second payment to David Cronin: £2,801.98
 Third payment to Kate O'Sullivan: £3,129.02
 Forth payment to Tom Grundy: £2,420.89
 
  
  
  
  
Yet no matter who wins on Tuesday, much of what goes on in Washington won't be all that different.That's because there are significant limits on what a president can do without a compliant Congress. And forecasters expect the House to remain in Republican hands and the Senate to remain in Democratic hands.
 That sets the stage for the same Congressional gridlock we've seen over
 the past four years, when Congress' approval rating has hovered around 10 percent. And
 let's say that Mr. Obama wins the election and the House also,   
improbably, ends up in Democratic hands. Even if Democrats hold the 
Senate, they still almost certainly won't have the 60 votes necessary to
 overcome a filibuster, which will make it easy for Republicans to block
 many of their policy goals. On the flip side, let's say Romney wins
 and Republicans take control of the Senate and hang onto the House. 
Republicans also wouldn't have 60 Senate votes, and while either party 
could use a maneuver called "reconciliation" to circumvent the 
filibuster on certain budget matters - this is what Republicans want to 
use to block the health care law from going into effect - the minority 
would still have significant power to stymie the majority.
 
  
  
  
  
  
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