Brian Montopoli (CBS News) reports:
A vote to ratify the U.N. Convention on the Rights of Persons With Disabilities fell short in the Senate Tuesday, with the measure receiving 61 votes, six less than the 67 needed for ratification. Thirty-eight Republicans voted no.
The treaty promotes equal rights for disabled people around the world, including those with physical disabilities such as blindness. If the Senate had voted for ratification, the United States would have joined 126 other countries that are party to the treaty, which was modeled on the Americans with Disabilities Act. Ratifying the treaty would have given the United States greater standing to push other nations to pass measures similar to that 1990 law.
The Republicans who voted it against the measure should be embarrassed. Not all voted against it. Here's the people who voted yes:
Grouped By Vote Position
| YEAs ---61 | ||
| Akaka (D-HI) Ayotte (R-NH) Barrasso (R-WY) Baucus (D-MT) Begich (D-AK) Bennet (D-CO) Bingaman (D-NM) Blumenthal (D-CT) Boxer (D-CA) Brown (D-OH) Brown (R-MA) Cantwell (D-WA) Cardin (D-MD) Carper (D-DE) Casey (D-PA) Collins (R-ME) Conrad (D-ND) Coons (D-DE) Durbin (D-IL) Feinstein (D-CA) Franken (D-MN) | Gillibrand (D-NY) Hagan (D-NC) Harkin (D-IA) Inouye (D-HI) Johnson (D-SD) Kerry (D-MA) Klobuchar (D-MN) Kohl (D-WI) Landrieu (D-LA) Lautenberg (D-NJ) Leahy (D-VT) Levin (D-MI) Lieberman (ID-CT) Lugar (R-IN) Manchin (D-WV) McCain (R-AZ) McCaskill (D-MO) Menendez (D-NJ) Merkley (D-OR) Mikulski (D-MD) Murkowski (R-AK) | Murray (D-WA) Nelson (D-FL) Nelson (D-NE) Pryor (D-AR) Reed (D-RI) Reid (D-NV) Rockefeller (D-WV) Sanders (I-VT) Schumer (D-NY) Shaheen (D-NH) Snowe (R-ME) Stabenow (D-MI) Tester (D-MT) Udall (D-CO) Udall (D-NM) Warner (D-VA) Webb (D-VA) Whitehouse (D-RI) Wyden (D-OR) | 
Bobby Caina Calvan (Bost Globe) reports, "Rhonda Neuhaus, who was born without legs, wept as the vote was tallied. “I’m angry, and I’m very sad,” said Neuhaus, who attended Brandeis University and is now a policy analyst at the Washington-based Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund. "
Again, that's really sad.
Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"
Tuesday,
 December 4, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, tensions continue 
between Baghdad and Erbil with various officials flying back and forth, 
but Baghdad won't let Turkey land in the KRG, Iraq tops a list (it's not
 a list a country wants to top), Iraqiya and the Sadr bloc call out 
attempts to censor the internet, and more.
Yesterday
 evening there was a Bradley Manning Support Network's DC event or, as 
it turned out, No Gold Star Left Behind.  Everyone gets a prize just for
 participating.  Before we get to that, Monday April 5, 2010, WikiLeaks released US military video of a July 12, 2007 assault in Iraq. 12 people were killed in the assault including two Reuters journalists Namie Noor-Eldeen and Saeed Chmagh. Monday June 7, 2010, the US military announced that they had arrested Bradley Manning and he stood accused of being the   leaker of the video. Leila Fadel (Washington Post) reported
 in August 2010 that Manning had been charged -- "two charges under the 
Uniform Code of Military Justice. The first encompasses four counts of 
violating Army regulations by transferring classified information to his
 personal computer between November and May and adding unauthorized 
software to a classified computer system. The second comprises eight 
counts of violating federal laws governing the handling of classified 
information." In March, 2011, David S. Cloud (Los Angeles Times) reported
 that the military has added 22   additional counts to the charges 
including one that could be seen as "aiding the enemy" which could 
result in the death penalty if convicted. The Article 32 hearing took 
place in December. At the start of this year, there was an Article 32 
hearing and, February 3rd, it was announced that the government would be
 moving forward with a court-martial. Bradley has yet to enter a plea 
and has neither affirmed that he is the leaker nor denied it. The 
court-martial was supposed to begin before the election but it was 
postponed until after the election so that Barack wouldn't have to run 
on a record of his actual actions. 
Some notes.  I attended with a National Lawyers Guild friend.  I'm sure we weren't the only ones rolling our eyes as various 'political prisoners' got name checked and Lynne Stewart
 was ignored.  We didn't attend expecting to hear Lynne's name but when 
you've got time to name check others, you've got time for Lynne.  
Lynne's always had time for everyone else and, yes, you owe Lynne 
Stewart.  You might also have included her on the 'great attorneys' of 
the past list -- but, of course, no women made that list either.
There
 was time to thank reporters, time to mention them by name, time to 
applaud them, time to weigh in on Subway and working lunches.   As that 
speech was finally winding down, my friend pointed out, "Now we know why
 they can't make a credible argument for Assange."  Indeed.  Does no one
 organize before speaking to an audience?  You're not there to tell the 
history of time.  You choose a few key points.  You make those points, 
you're done. It appears presentation has confused with filibuster.
At
 last came David Coombs, Bradley Manning's attorney, and I wrongly 
thought (yet again), "Okay, get ready to take notes."  Wrong.  Key 
moment from the speech?
Probably when Coombs 
was climbing the cross to praise himself -- the first time.  Now 
attorneys tend to have oversized egos, that's not surprising.  But what 
was surprising was hearing someone self-aggrandize to a packed room 
about how great they were because they turn down all interview 
requests.  ("I also avoid any interviews with the media.")  That's not 
great at all.  
You're in a media war, David 
Coombs, you need to be taking every interview request and then some.  
Your failure to do so goes a long, long way towards explaining how 
Bradley has disappeared from the radar so often.
The
 failure to grasp that this was a press event and not an ABA convention 
further hurt Bradley.  Going on about how the pre-trial motions blah 
blah blah, Coombs suddenly declares, "I'm enjoying my opportunity to 
cross-examine those who had Bradley Manning in those conditions for so 
many months."  And like dutiful idiots, many of those applauded that 
crap.
Well, hey, then, let's let this trial go
 on for 30 years.  For those of us who are actually outraged that the US
 government has refused to provide Bradley Manning with a fair and 
speedy trial, the 'enjoyment' of the defense attorney really isn't our 
concern.
Here's another tip: "Those people."  
No one gives a damn about some free floating, nebulous menace.  Even the
 idiot Bully Boy Bush knew he had to paint a face on what he dubbed the 
"axis of evil."  But there was Coombs pontificating endlessly about 
"those people" who knew Bradley was being wronged but did nothing, could
 see with their own eyes that Bradley was being wronged but did 
nothing.  Who are these people?  Do you mean guards?  If so, why can't 
you say that?
"Change"?  Unless you're talking
 coins, stop using that empty phrase -- especially as a noun.  The 2008 
election drained it of all value.  At one point, Coombs wanted to liken 
Bradley to Daniel Ellsberg.  I'm sorry but I was at rallies for Daniel 
Ellsberg -- actual rallies -- and this 'presentation' was more 
self-congratulatory then anything we had for Ellsberg.  Everything is 
not an applause line and people need to stop applauding themselves.  
It's not only immodest, it's counterproductive.  A real discussion could
 have taken place if everyone hadn't decided that self-suck was more 
important than addressing reality.  After three solid minutes of various
 thanks (with no end in sight), my friend leaned over and asked if he 
did "the E-Z checks plan, will they give me my PBS mug so we can leave 
already?"
I've noted before that Jane Fonda
 is one of our country's great speakers.  She truly is.  We can all 
learn and borrow from her.  One of the things she's always been very 
good at is conveying some nervousness about speaking and growing 
stronger in her presentation so that the subtext is: This made me 
stronger.  She embodies that.  She does not stand there yammering on 
about 'I'm scared but now I'm stronger and blah blah blah.'  If Jane 
were to put that into words instead of making it the subtext, it 
wouldn't work.  And Coombs' bad attempt to steal Jane's signature move 
sank as he verbalized (in a hundred and one words) what she embodies 
with a gesture, a head tilt and the growing passion in her voice.
David
 Coombs loves the judge, loves the military system, loves the legal 
system, loves to hear his own voice.  We learned about that and so many 
more things about David Coombs.  Bradley?  Not so much.  What should 
have been the strongest moment quickly sank.
David
 Coombs:  Last Tuesday, the President of the United States signed into 
law The Whistleblower Protection Enhancement Act.  As President Obama 
was signing this bill into law, Brad and I were in a court room for the 
start of his unlawful pre-trial motion.  How can you reconcile the two? 
 
Is it possible for Coombs to speak 
plainly?  "Unlawful pre-trial motion."  Is that a soundbyte outside of a
 legal journal?  I don't think so.  Nor do I think "Brad and I were in a
 court room" is appropriate.  Bradley is the targeted one, not David 
Coombs.  
What followed were 'questions' that 
were written out ahead of time on index cards.  It was as though we were
 sitting through the press conference Bully Boy Bush held right before 
starting the Iraq War.  
As we were leaving, a
 reporter I knew stopped us and asked how fair were the questions?  "Off
 the record," I said, "the whole thing was bulls**t.  Where do we get 
off on the left refusing to take questions?  Doing pre-screened -- 
excuse me, 'pre-approved' questions?  I thought the heart of this case 
was about the need for information to be out there.  Freedom of 
information died here, somebody call the time of death."  My friend 
summed it up better, however, "I support Manning 100% but what went on 
in there was a cross between an Amway convention and a Nuremberg 
Rally."  
My comments above are on the first 
half of the presentation only.  (In part because I had to step outside 
to return a few calls including one about last night's snapshot
 -- it was too long when it was typed up and we had to edit it.)  I was 
present for the entire presentation and 'question' and answer session 
with Coombs.  I stepped out right after that.
Don't want to be standing here
And I don't want to be talking here
And I don't really care who's to blame
'Cause if love won't fly on its own free will
It's gonna catch that outbound plane
-- "Outbound Plane," written by Nanci Griffith and Tom Russell, first appears on her Little Love Affairs 
It's going to catch that outbound plane but where will it land?  Presumably not in northern Iraq.  Kitabat reports
 Taner Yildiz, Ministry of Energy for Turkey, was unable to land today 
at the Erbil airport because the Civil Aviation Authority in Baghdad 
would not grant permission.  Al Jazeera notes
 that he was to attend an energy conference in the KRG but instead "was 
forced to land in Turkey's Kayseri, southeast of the capital Ankara." 
And apparently this was   not the only flight that Baghdad refused to 
allow to land.  Reuters quotes
 Nasser Bandar (who is charge of the Civil Aviation Authority in 
Baghdad) stating, "The UAE, Jordan and Turkey forwarded their demand to 
get permission for private flights, and we refused the three requests as
 they were not going along with Iraqi laws and regulations."  Ivan Watson (CNN) quotes
 an official with Turkey's Ministry of Foreign Affairs stating, "We had 
applied for flight permits.  We were issued one, and the plane was on 
the move. But in the meantime we were notified by the Iraqis that they 
have banned all VIP flights to Northern   Iraq."   
This was not supposed to be the big airplane story out of Iraq today.  As Aviation Canada notes, Iraq received their first  Airbus A330 from Canada. And early in the day, All Iraq News adds,
 Speaker of Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi met with the Canadian Ambassador
 to Iraq, Mark Gwozdecky,  in what was hoped to be an assurance that 
Iraq was stable and business-friendly.  Gwozdecky
 went on to meet with the head of the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq's 
Ammar al-Hakim who attempted to hard-sell the ambassador on the 
'progress' in Iraq. (And, for the record, Mark Gwozdecky is Canada's
 Ambassador to both Iraq and Jordan.)   The Canadian Ambassador's visit 
was drowned out in the shock over the refused landing.
Turkey
 is importing oil from Iraq's Kurdistan region without Baghdad's 
agreement and despite repeated statements from the Iraqi government 
stressing that all oil contracts in the country, including in the 
Kurdish region, must go through the central government. 
Ankara-Baghdad relations turned sour last year after Ankara expressed support for fugitive Iraqi Vice President Tariq al-Hashemi, who faces terrorist charges in his country and is sentenced to death, and gave him refuge.
The two countries are also at odds over the Syrian unrest.
Ankara-Baghdad relations turned sour last year after Ankara expressed support for fugitive Iraqi Vice President Tariq al-Hashemi, who faces terrorist charges in his country and is sentenced to death, and gave him refuge.
The two countries are also at odds over the Syrian unrest.
Hey,
 remember when Nouri al-Maliki was wanted for terrorism in Iraq and he 
escaped and hid out in Iran?  Press TV never appears to.  But that did 
happen.  Tareq al-Hashemi was not given a fair trial, witnesses were 
tortured (including one potential witness who was tortured to death), 
his defense wasn't allowed to call witnesses and there is never a fair 
trial when judges hold a press conference to announce the accused is 
guilty -- hold a press conference to make that announcement before the 
trial even starts.  That's not even getting into the Baghdad judge who, 
at that press conference, declared that Tareq had tried to kill him.  
This was not a fair trial, it was Nouri's kangaroo court.  And though 
Press TV and other outlets keep talking about al-Hashemi being in 
Turkey, Arabic outlets had him going to Qatar over a week ago.
At
 any rate, leave it to Press TV to get stuck in the past as they attempt
 to avoid the present.   They kind of left out the tensions between 
Baghdad and Erbil, right?  That tension is what makes the photograph Ako Rasheed (Reuters) took of the Peshmerga encircling Kirkuk news.
And it's this crisis that led to Iraq actually being raised in the State Dept's press briefing today presided over by State Dept spokesperson Mark Toner. 
MR. TONER: Yeah. Go ahead.
QUESTION:
 What is your update on the U.S. mediation to defuse the military 
tensions between the Iraqi Government and Kurdistan Regional Government 
in North Iraq? Do you have anything new?
MR.
 TONER: Well, I mean, I think I would just say at the outset this is 
obviously an Iraqi process. We're doing what we can, obviously, to 
encourage dialogue, and discussions are ongoing. I would refer you to 
the Government of Iraq for any details, but ultimately improving 
security in Iraq is in the interests of all parties in Iraq and will 
benefit all Iraqis. So we want to see this dialogue continue and want to
 see a resolution.
QUESTION: Okay. Mark, on this point --
MR. TONER: Yeah. Sure.
QUESTION:
 -- a few weeks ago, there was a delegation, a delegation, that went and
 met with the Ministry of Interior and Armed Forces in Iraq. Are you – 
did anyone share with you the results of that meeting and --
MR. TONER: I don't, Said. I can take the question and see what came out of that --
QUESTION: Okay. Sure.
MR. TONER: -- specific meeting.
What
 the above doesn't convey is that spokesperson Mark Toner read his 
answer.  He had a series of typed notes (on typing paper, stapled 
together) and he flipped to the Iraq section and barely looked up as he 
read, word for word, from his notes.  
KUNA reports,
 "Iraqi Parliament Speaker Osama al-Nujaifi arrived here [Erbil] Tuesday
 evening in yet another mission to break the stalemate between Iraq's 
Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and Iraq's federal government over 
Kirkuk region."  This morning, Alsumaria reported al-Nujaifi stated the Baghdad versus Erbil crisis is now so large that there is the threat of military confrontation.  Wael Grace (Al Mada) reports
 several MPs spoke yesterday -- MPs of various political parties -- 
noting that Nouri was acting without any input or consultation of the 
Parliament and its committees.  While Najafi headed to Erbil, Al Mada reports that Iraqi President Jalal Talabani arrived in Baghdad for talks last night.
All Iraq News reports Moqtada al-Sadr is calling out the remarks Nouri al-Maliki made on Saturday, noting that Nouri's threats were a dangerous error and should not happen again. Kitabat notes that Moqtada called out the Russian arms deal as well as stating that any weapons Iraq purchased should be for the defense of the country, not to oppress Iraqis. Alsumaria notes he called on corruption to be investigated.
Dar Addustour reports that it is said Nouri al-Maliki has been getting legal opinions on state-of-emergency and is planning (toying with?) declaring a state of emergency, ordering the arrests of various political rivals and demonstrating to everyone what happens when the US governments installs and backs tyrants. Second, the air space. Nouri whines that he can't control the air space when it comes to Iranian flights to Syria and yet Kitabat reports Taner Yildiz, Ministry of Energy for Turkey, was unable to land today at the Erbil airport because the Civil Aviation Authority in Baghdad would not grant permission.
All Iraq News reports Moqtada al-Sadr is calling out the remarks Nouri al-Maliki made on Saturday, noting that Nouri's threats were a dangerous error and should not happen again. Kitabat notes that Moqtada called out the Russian arms deal as well as stating that any weapons Iraq purchased should be for the defense of the country, not to oppress Iraqis. Alsumaria notes he called on corruption to be investigated.
Dar Addustour reports that it is said Nouri al-Maliki has been getting legal opinions on state-of-emergency and is planning (toying with?) declaring a state of emergency, ordering the arrests of various political rivals and demonstrating to everyone what happens when the US governments installs and backs tyrants. Second, the air space. Nouri whines that he can't control the air space when it comes to Iranian flights to Syria and yet Kitabat reports Taner Yildiz, Ministry of Energy for Turkey, was unable to land today at the Erbil airport because the Civil Aviation Authority in Baghdad would not grant permission.
How scared is Nouri's State of Law of the Iraqi people? Alsumaria reports that yet another flunky with State of Law has made idiotic comments. Iraqiya leader Ayad Allawi should be silent, insists State of Law. He has no right to speak. Check the Iraqi Constitution and you'll find Allawi, like every other Iraqi, has the right to speak whenever he wants. More importantly, he should be speaking right now. He is the popular leader of Iraq. State of Law came in second to Iraqiya. If the Constitution had been followed, Allawi or someone else from Iraqiya would be prime minister right now. But Barack wanted the Bush-installed Nouri to have a second term.
From John Barry's "'The Engame' Is A Well Researched, Highly Critical Look at U.S. Policy in Iraq" (Daily Beast):
Washington has little political and no military influence over these developments [in Iraq]. 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."
Surveying the events of late, Tim Arango and Duraid Adnan (New York Times) observe that "[. . .] Iraq finds itself in a familiar position: full-blown crisis mode, this time with two standing armies, one loyal to the central government in Baghdad and the other commanded by the Kurdish regional government in the north, staring at each other through gun sights, as officials in Baghdad, including American diplomats and an American general, try to mediate."
It's Barack Obama's Iraq, it's Nouri al-Maliki's Iraq. And how proud they must both be today as Iraq beat out 157 other countries to be declared number one.
Before Nouri preens for the cameras, we should point out that the list topped is the Global Terrorism Index.  Iraq
 had 1228 incidents between 2002 and 2011 that were classified as 
terrorism and this lead to 1798 deahts and to 4905 more people being 
injured.  This allowed Iraq to remain number one.  Of the index, The Economist notes,
 "It [Iraq] has suffered from the most attacks, including 11 of the 
world's worst 20.  Indeed, Iraqis comprised one third of deaths from 
terrorism between 2002 and 2011." 
Nouri's Iraq is also an Iraq where people struggle for the basics. This includes food. Yesterday the United Nations made a brief announcement. It was spin, pure and simple, opening with the assertion that the last five years had seen a decrease -- 250,000 less Iraqis facing food insecurity. That sounds so much better than noting 1.9 million Iraqis continue to face food insecurity (the 2007 number was 2.2 million). The UN did acknowledge, "The report points to the Public Distribution System (PDS) as an important element that has helped to ensure food security and decent living standards for the poorest of households." That's the food-ration card system. If you take that away, you don't just add the 250,000 back into the total, you add a great deal more. The food-ration card system is the only thing keeping many Iraqis afloat. You may remember Nouri tried to end it. The people and Parliament fought him on that and they won.
Nouri's Iraq is also an Iraq where people struggle for the basics. This includes food. Yesterday the United Nations made a brief announcement. It was spin, pure and simple, opening with the assertion that the last five years had seen a decrease -- 250,000 less Iraqis facing food insecurity. That sounds so much better than noting 1.9 million Iraqis continue to face food insecurity (the 2007 number was 2.2 million). The UN did acknowledge, "The report points to the Public Distribution System (PDS) as an important element that has helped to ensure food security and decent living standards for the poorest of households." That's the food-ration card system. If you take that away, you don't just add the 250,000 back into the total, you add a great deal more. The food-ration card system is the only thing keeping many Iraqis afloat. You may remember Nouri tried to end it. The people and Parliament fought him on that and they won.
Al Mada reports
 a fight went down in Parliament yesterday as well.  Iraqiya and the 
Kurdistan Alliance walked out of the session to protest an aspect of 
the proposed Information and Telecommunications Law.  They say it goes 
to far and curbs basic freedoms and that a red line must be drawn, a 
line you do not cross, that ensures internet freedom.  Nothing, the 
politicians argued, not even the threat of porn, is enough to restrict 
the freedoms.  Article 12 of the proposed law would allow the government
 to control access   and content.  They are demanding that Article 12 be
 striken from the bill.
Saturday, Nouri 
threatened to arrest members of Parliament who spoke publicly about the 
abuse Iraqi women are suffering in prisons.  The BRussels Tribunal has a very important article on this torture. 
 We're going to highlight a little from their report each snapshot this 
week and hopefully include the entire thing that way.  Yesterday, we 
noted the arrest.  Here's the next step.
This
 is the second stage of the unfair arrest journey. The female detainee 
will be sent either to Shaab Stadium Prison or the notorious Al-Muthanna
 Airport Prison. A group of the worst psychopaths in the government is 
supervising these prisons, a corrupt committee of criminals of the 
Military Intelligence, the Intelligence services of the Ministry of 
Interior, and an Intelligence and Security Representative from the Chief
 Commander's Office. This management is appointed by the Iraqi 
Correction Office through the Ministry of Justice. 45% of its employees 
are Al-Mahdi Militia members, 30% from the Badr Organisation. The other 
25%  is divided among the other criminal parties of the government.
This
 phase is considered as the most barbaric. The security forces, prison 
guards and members of the prison management practice the most terrible 
ways of torture, humiliation, profanation, deprivation, blackmailing the
 prisoners, ethnic and sectarian and political discrimination, and 
raping men and women without exception. Female prisoners are detained 
for very long periods, without legitimate accusations or investigating 
their case. In criminal Maliki's jails, there are many women who were 
imprisoned for periods between one year and six years, without any legal
 representation or procedures regarding their case.
There
 are many examples of the immoral and brutal practices being committed 
against female and male prisoners in Al-Tasfeerat Prisons. Some officers
 from the Ministries of Interior and Defense, the Office of the Chief of
 Command, and some partisan and criminal militia leaders visit these 
prisons, and choose some detainees to be tortured for hours and raping 
them for sectarian reasons. Some of the prisoners die as a result of 
this brutal torture. Between 2008-2012 Al-Rasafah Tasfeerat Prison 
recorded the death of more than 250 prisoners, among them 17 women. 
During the same period Al-Muthanna Airport Prison recorded the death of 
125 prisoners, among them three women.
And 
these torture practices do not only take place in Al-Tasfeerat Prisons, 
but in all the prisons supervised by the Ministry of Justice, especially
 the Juveniles Prison, Al-Kadimiyah Women Prison, the notorious 
Abu-Ghraib Prison, in addition to the secret prisons of Al-Maliki where 
no accurate records are available about the male and female detainees 
who died because of the brutal torture they faced there.
It's
 worth mentioning that under Al Maliki's rule, some notorious high risk 
level prisoners - men and women alike-  were released or secretly 
smuggled out Al-Tasfeerat Prisons, after destroying all the documents 
and papers related to their cases, on the orders of Ministers and VIPs 
in the Ministries of Interior and Defense, and the Commanding Chief's 
Office. Here are some of prisoners who were "released":
- Radiyah Kadum Muhsin : she was one of the prominent leaders of the Dawa Party, and was released after an order from Al-Maliki himself, and under the supervision of his Intelligence and Security Consultant. She was accused of leading one of the biggest human trafficking criminal gangs that kidnap children and sell them, in addition to prostitution, seducing some officers and government officials, and blackmailing them with their own pornographic photos, or even eliminating them. She was also accused of drug dealing, and forging official documents.
- Adnan Abdulzahra Al-Aaraji: he is one of the prominent leaders of the Mahdi Militia, and the head of one of the most notorious gangs known in Iraqi history in terms of sadism, criminality and discrimination. He was arrested by the Americans while he was trying to smuggle 5000 corpses of his victims to Iran during the sectarian wars in 2006. Those corpses were sent to Iran in three cooled vehicles for the sake of human organs trade. He was accused of smuggling antiques, explosives, weapons, and drugs. We mentioned here only two of the prisoners who were "released" from Al-Maliki prisons.
In Iraq today, the violence continues.  All Iraq News reports a Mosul roadside bombing injured a solider  and the corpse of 1 city council member was discovered dumped in Mosul (he'd been kidnapped over a month ago).  Alsumaria notes a Baghdad home invasion in which 5 members of the same family were stabbed to death.  Sinan Salaheddin (AP) states the people were shot dead and it was 6 family members killed.  Alsumaria adds
 a Mosul bombing left three police officers injured, a Mosul armed 
attack left 1 civilian dead, a car bombing to the west of Mousl left 
five police officers and one civilian injured, a Mosul armed attack 
claimed the life of 1 Iraqi soldier and there was a   mass arrest (14) 
in Kirkuk today on charges of 'terrorism.'
October 9th, with much fanfare, Nouri signed a $4.2 billion dollar weapons deal with Russia. After taking his bows on the world stage and with Parliament and others raising objections, Nouri quickly announced the deal was off. It's not going away.
And it's made Nouri a joke on the international stage -- which hurts investment in Iraq. Nouri signed a deal and then trashed it. Was it corrupt? Maybe so. If so, he should have known before he signed it. Among all the leaders of countries in the world, Nouri now looks like the most rank amateur. He brings that shame on Iraq. And he does so after six years in office.
Mohammad Sabah (Al Mada) reports Parliament's Integrticy Committee began their questioning Sunday of the officials who went to Russia with Nouri -- including the 'acting' Minister of Defense. Yeah, Nouri should have had a Minister of Defense looking over that deal. But, oops, despite Constitutional requirements, Nouri never nominated anyone for that post. As part of a power-grab, he wanted to leave it open. As Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) observed in July, "Shiite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has struggled to forge a lasting power-sharing agreement and has yet to fill key Cabinet positions, including the ministers of defense, interior and national security, while his backers have also shown signs of wobbling support." Rumors swirl in Iraq right now that Nouri's former spokesperson Ali al-Dabbagh (who is reported to have fled the country) has passed on papers to the Committee -- documenting the corruption. State of Law's Izzat Shabandar was scheduled to testify today. All Iraq News notes that a statement from the Sadr bloc notes that Shabandar did testify today and that his remarks matched information that the Integrity Committee had previously unearthed in their corruption investigation. Ayad al-Tamimi (Al Mada) reports the Sadr bloc declared yesterday that the deal wasn't worth half its stated value.
Turning to the US and US Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice.  Back on November 15th, in "The unqualified Susan Rice," we noted Rice was wrong on the Iraq War.  Monday, Ray McGovern (OpEd News) went into Rice's Iraq record at length:
In
 an NPR interview on Dec. 20, 2002, Rice joined the bellicose chorus, 
declaring: "It's clear that Iraq poses a major threat. It's clear that 
its weapons of mass destruction need to be dealt with forcefully, and 
that's the path we're on. I think the question becomes whether we can 
keep the diplomatic balls in the air and not drop any, even as we move 
forward, as we must, on the military side."
Rice
 also was wowed by Secretary of State Colin Powell's deceptive speech to
 the United Nations on Feb. 5, 2003. The next day, again on NPR, Rice 
said, "I think he has proved that Iraq has these weapons and is hiding 
them, and I don't think many informed people doubted that."
After the U.S.-led invasion in March 2003, Rice foresaw an open-ended U.S. occupation of Iraq. In a Washington Post online forum,
 she declared, "To maximize our likelihood of success, the US is going 
to have to remain committed to and focused on reconstruction and 
rehabilitation of Iraq for many years to come. This administration and 
future ones will need to demonstrate a longer attention span than we 
have in Afghanistan, and we will have to embrace rather than evade the 
essential tasks of peacekeeping and nation building."
Only
 later, when the Iraq War began going badly and especially after she 
became an adviser to Sen. Barack Obama's presidential campaign, did Rice
 take a less hawkish position. She opposed President Bush's troop 
"surge" in 2007, a stance in line with Obama's anti-Iraq War posture. 
During Campaign 2008, she also mocked one of Sen. John McCain's trips to
 the Baghdad as "strolling around the market in a flak jacket."
 
