The news about Syria. Like this Xinhua article.
Or Barack saying there's a red line Syria must not cross.
Watching that wuss try to act like a man. I've seen it before. A puny boy trying to pretend to be a man by declaring war on an already suffering nation.
I saw this in 2003. It's repeating now.
And it's disgusting. And it goes to how crooked the system is and what a liar Barack Obama is. The only good thing?
As the blood bath sets in, maybe it will force people to confront the lies that they've been told by Barack. But what's really sad is that I can see them continuing to lie and make excuses.
It's not like the Drone War Barack's been over hasn't been killing people. And the Cult didn't give a damn about that.
So I'm just a little depressed tonight. Sorry.
Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"
Wednesday,
 December 5, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue,  the standoff between 
Baghdad and Erbil continues, Nouri wants his face adorning checkpoints, 
 news emerges of a lawsuit Nouri filed to slap down the Iraqi people, 
Iraq's First Lady calls for honoring diversity, the US Congress 
discusses Iraqi refugees, and more.
Chair
 Patrick Meehan:  From 2004 - 2007, the insurgency in Iraq produced 
substantial civilian displacement and emigration from the country.  In 
response to the growing humanitarian crisis, Congress passed legislation
 which gave Iraqis who helped the US government or military the 
opportunity to receive special refugee status and resettlement in the 
United States.  While the motivation behind creating these special 
immigrant categories were well intentioned, the fact remains that in May
 2011, two Iraqi nationals who were given refugee status and resettled 
in the US were arrested and accused by the FBI of plotting to send 
weapons and money to al Qaeda in Iraq.  One of the men arrested had 
openly discussed his prior experience as an insurgent in Iraq and the 
IED attacks he participated against US troops.  The fingerprints of the 
other Iraqi refugee who was charged were traced by the FBI to a 
component of an   unexploded IED that was recovered by US forces in 
northern Iraq.  In the wake of these arrests, DHS Secretary Janet 
Napolitano and others have publicly acknowledged that 
security screenings have been expanded to the more than 58,000 Iraqi 
refugees who had already been settled in the United States.
US
 House Rep Patrick Meehan was speaking at the House Homeland Security 
Subccomittee on Counterterrorism and Intelligence yesterday as they 
explored the topic of refugees.
The
 Iraq War created the largest refugee crisis in the Middle East since 
1949.  Millions were displaced within Iraq (internal refugees) and 
millions were forced to leave the country (external refugee).  There's a
 mistaken impression that the United States government did something 
wonderful.  They didn't.  The high water mark for Iraqi refugees being 
admitted into the US was in the year Bully Boy Bush and Barack share.  
Under President Barack Obama, the number has gone down each year.  
Fiscal Year 2009 (October 1, 2008 through September 30, 2009) saw 18,838
 Iraqis admitted to the US.  That number dropped to 9,388 in FY2011.  
The 2012 Fiscal Year ended two months ago but the government has yet 
to release figures for the full year.  Through the end of March 2012, 
the number of Iraqis admitted to the US stood at 2,501. And the number 
12,000 was used by Homeland Security officials for   FY2012 during 
yesterday's hearing.   In the 2008 presidential campaign, then-Senator 
Barack Obama won a lot of support for promises on Iraqi refugees -- 
promises that were not kept.
Some may look at 
the case of the two Iraqis Chair Meehan was referring to -- Waad Ramadan
 Alwan and Mohanand Shareef Hammadi -- and think the low numbers count 
as good news.  That's a judgment call.  If that's what you feel, you're 
entitled to feel that way.  I don't feel that way.  
As
 for the two men making it through the system with one being an obvious 
mistake -- security concerns should have resulted in his being kicked 
out of the program.   The fact that he wasn't goes to information 
sharing and not to the program itself.   As Ranking Member Janice Han 
pointed out, "In 2005, Alwan's finger print was found on a roadside bomb
 in Iraq.  This information was in a Department of Defense data base 
that was not checked during his background investigation when he applied
 to the refugees admissions program.  This illustrates that  we still 
have failed to close the remaining information sharing gaps that 
continue to persist since the September 11th terrorist attacks." So the 
issue in one of the cases was a failure to utilize information the 
government already had access to.  
Two people
 isn't enough to alarm me.  That's me.  For others, that number may be 
way too high.  Regardless of where you fall on that spectrum, it is a 
serious issue and we'll go into what was said about it during the 
hearing.  
Appearing before the Subcommittee 
were the State Dept's Director of the Refugee Admissions Office Lawrence
 Bartlett, Homeland Security's Chief in the Refugee Affairs Division 
Barbara Strack and Homeland Security's Deputy Undersecretary for 
Analysis Dawn Scalici.   The hearing covered many aspects.  I sat 
through it for the issue of Iraqi refugees and that's what we'll focus 
on.
From Barbara Strack and Dawn Scalici's prepared (written) statement:
USCIS
 officers conduct refugee status interviews for applicants from more 
than 60 countries each year, though the vast majority of these 
applicants are currently Iraqi, Bhutanese and Burmese nationals.  
Refugee processing operations in the Middle East are primarily focused 
on Iraqi nationals with interviews taking place in Lebanon, Turkey, 
Jordan and Egypt as well as in-country processing of Iraqi nationals in 
Baghdad.  Operations in Damascus, Syria, previously a large refugee 
processing site, have been suspended since March 2011.  In FY2012, over 
12,000 Iraqi refugees were admitted to the United States, and since 
2007, over 71,000 Iraqi nationals have been resettled, many of whom have
 ties to the United States through work or family. 
Strack
 testified that the Iraqi program was modified as it went along, 
fine-tuned, and that it is now the standard for all refugees (age 14 to 
65, Scalici explained) attempting to enter the US regardless of their 
nationality -- this is the standard across the board whether you're 
attempting to become a refugee from Eastern Europe or from Iraq. And 
prior to that?
Dawn Scalici:  [. . .] 
what we have done as an interagency process is to go back and do 
retroactive checks on those individuals that were earlier admitted to 
the United States and any relevant information that comes to light is 
then shared with releveant intelligence community or law enforcement 
agencies as appropriate.  One other thing I think I would mention as 
well, not only do we have analysts who are looking at all the relevant 
intelligence and data at the time that an applicant originally puts 
forward their application, we review it again before that applicant 
actually enters the United States in case any derogatory information has
 arisen in the intervening time. So we do believe, again, this 
interagency process drawing on more intelligence and data than we ever 
did before as well as the recurring and retroactive checks has greatly 
enhanced our ability to identify individuals of concern.
Now we're going to an exchange on the same topic.
Ranking
 Member Janice Hahn: How did we miss that initial information? And could
 you speak to what are we doing? I hear vague comments about information
 sharing but we know that is key as we move forward that was one of the 
one lessons we learned from 9-11. So what, without divulging any 
classified information, how did we miss that information the first time 
around and what can you tell us that will give us some confidence that 
we really are able to look at all the data available out there to make 
responsible decisions as we move forward in this refugee program?
Dawn
 Scalici: Well for those two individuals of concern that we've been 
talking about, at the time that they made their original application to 
enter the refugee program in the United States both their biographic and
 biometric information that we had available on them at the time and 
that were used in the screening processes came in clean. So we did not 
have any derogatory information on those two individuals that we used as
 part of the screening effort when they entered the United States. And 
the finger print clearance came through as well from DoD, FBI as well as
 DHS -- 
Ranking Member Janice Hahn:  Even though their finger prints were found to have been on a roadside bomb?
Dawn
 Scalici:  That's what we have learned in the aftermath. I would have to
 refer to DoD and FBI for any specific information on that but again all
 the biographic and biometric information as well as the biometric 
checks that were performed at the time did come back clean. But since 
that time, as I think we've noted, we've actually enhanced the program 
and the security checks. We now draw upon a greater wealth of 
intelligence and data holdings on individuals seeking application to the
 refugee program which greatly enhances our ability to identify 
derogatory compared to earlier.
Janice
 Hahn: Anyone else want to comment on that? [The other two witnesses 
didn't.] So other than the recent Iraqi refugee case, have there been --
We're
 cutting Hahn there because our focus is Iraq and she goes on to 
expand.  We're not including the witness responses because they had no 
other cases.
But before someone e-mails to 
tell me there may be another terrorist case . . .  Yes, there was a 
bombing of a Social Securtiy building last Friday in Casa Grande, 
Arizona.  The suspect is a man the media has identified as 
Iraqi-American (Abdullatif Aldosary).  When did he come to the US?  
Reports differ with some saying before 2008 and some saying 1998.  If 
he were found guilty -- and currently he has the presumption of 
innocence -- and he entered the US before Fiscal Year 2007 (so before 
September 30, 2006), he predates the screening system that was being 
discussed.  If he were found guilty and he was admitted to the US after 
October 1, 2006, he would have been admitted under the system that was 
being discussed. That doesn't mean that, if guilty, he necessarily had 
any indicators that should have been caught in the screening.  
Though
 lumped together, there are actually two groups of Iraqis who can work 
through the current system. There are the refugees who are threatened 
and there are also the Iraqis who worked with US forces or US-approved 
missions.  
Chair Chair Patrick 
Meehan:  Ms. Strack, Ms. Scalici,  could you, identify if you will -- 
we're talking about those who are eligible for consideration.  There has
 been the identification of an emphasis on those who have participated 
in assisting United States efforts -- either in the military, 
intelligence, otherwise non-governmental organizations -- who then put 
themselves into some peril.  What is the distinction between those who 
are humanitarain versus those who have performed to the benefit of our 
interests and are therefore being given some consideration because of 
the exposure that may result from that service?
Barbara
 Strack: It's a -- The programs work in several ways to address both 
humanitarian concerns and those who worked side-by-side, employed 
directly by the US or with US affiliated organizations, NGOs or media 
organizations.  The SIV program that we've talked about is often 
conflated with the refugee program but it's actually distinct so --
Chair Patrick Meehan: Could you explain that for me please?  What an SIV stands for --
Barbara Strack:  I'm sorry --
Chair Patrick Meehan: -- because we've seen this before and I want to see how that's different from the other program?
Barbara
 Strack:  Yes, sir.  It stands for Special Immigrant Visa program.   And
 so unlike the refugee program, the fundamental focus of the refugee 
program is on whether someone has been persecuted, have they been 
persecuted in the past or do they have a well founded fear of 
persecution in the future based on a protected category: Race, religion,
 nationality,  political opinion or membership in a particular social 
group.  The SIV program traditionally is -- Special Immigrant Visa -- is
 really based on service with the United States.  And this is something 
Mr. Bartlett is a little bit more of an expert on.  But Congress 
legislated familiar a program -- Special Immigrant Visas -- to say that 
those who've worked for the United States government in -- there are 
actually three sub-categories within the Special Immigrant Visa 
program.  Initially, it was small: If you were a translator with the   
military.  But it expanded beyond that to include embassy 
employees.   And really, for them, it's the fact that their service with
 the United States that makes them eligible.  And when they come to the 
United States, its' -- both our agencies -- it is handled through a 
different bueractric stream,  They don't come as a refugee.  They come 
as a lawful, permanent resident.  So when they arrive, they get a green 
card based on their service.  Now there are some individuals who may be 
eligble to apply for both programs, they may have worked with the US 
embassy or the US military so they're eligible to apply for an SIV but 
they may very well be able to articulate a refugee claim because -- 
because of that service -- they have also faced persecution.  So we work
 -- we work on the refugee side of the program.  But individuals may 
choose which of those two avenues is better for them, which they think  
 operates more quickly depending on whether they're in Iraq or somewhere
 else --
Chair
 Patrick Meehan: Well that's an interesting question.  Do they operate 
on a parallel track or is there some preference given to somebody 
who has served as an interpreter for our troops that are, you know, out 
in the midst of the mountains in Afghanistan?  Do they get a preference 
or is there not any difference?
Barbara
 Strack:  I can tell you that they do operate on a parallel track so an 
individual -- an individual who is eligible -- has the opportunity to 
file for an SIV and, again, that would be filed with the State 
Department.  And, in the refugee program, having worked with the United 
States or a US affiliated organization is one of the criteria that can 
help you get access to the program but it is not the sole criteria.
It
 was an informative hearing.  And while the State Dept has yet to 
release a complete figure for FY2012, again, the number used in the 
hearing was 12,000 and "over 12,000." 
That is not in keeping with the promises made in the 2008 campaign.  The International Rescue Committee notes on their Iraq page, "A small number of vulnerable Iraqi refugees are being granted refuge in the United States."  And, as Refugees International observes,
 "the country continues to face large scale displacement and pressing 
humanitarian needs.  Millions of Iraqis have fled their homes -- either 
for safer locations within Iraq or to other countreis in the region -- 
and are living in increasingly desperate circumstances."  The Iraqi Refugee Assistand Program highlights the Ibrahims with a video of   the mother and two of her sons and one of her daughters.  
Ekhlas Zaky:  My name is Ekhlas Zaky.  I'm from Mosul. I was born in '72. Married with five kids. 
Mustafa:  Mustafa.  I'm from Mosul.
Ekhlas Zaky:  You're in second year.
Mustafa:  I'm in second year. 
Tuhama:  My name is Tuhama.  From Mosul.  Second year. 
Ekhlas
 Zaky: Ibrahim doesn't speak.  Our main reason for leaving Iraq was the 
children.  I'm sure the war is to blame for my children's illness. The 
doctors talked about the chemicals that had been dropped on Iraq. They 
said that they affect the kidneys and the heart. So the chemicals 
affected Tuhama's kidneys.  It's a rare disease. Provision of medical 
treatment was unreliable.   Most often Tuhama's fits would happen at 
night.  Getting her to hospital was very difficult. The closest hospital
 was surrounded by military forces.  So my husband and I had to risk our
 lives to get her there. Otherwise she would have died in front of our 
eyes.  Ibrahim is unable to speak.  And he can't see out of one eye.  
One day he was with me at the market.  A truck drove in, loaded with 
melons.  It drove past and then exploded.  Of course Ibrahim is just a 
child.  The explosion   terrified him. He kept screaming and crying. 
Afterwards, he wouldn't talk so I took him to see the sheiks. They said 
that the shock had caused him not to speak. Many doctors advised us to 
seek medical treatment abroad.  There, medicine is more advanced and 
equipment is more modern.  The doctors said the children would benefit. 
 Even if they found good reason to deny me and my husband resettlement 
what about the fate of the children?  
Refugees
 are people in need.  As Barbara Strack pointed out in yesterday's 
hearing, "Bad actors will try to take advantage of any admission program
 to the United States -- whether its visa programs or refugee 
programs."  Part of the job Strack and others do is determining who 
meets the criteria and who doesn't.  In many ways, the criteria is a 
failure.  One example: Iraq's LGBT community is at risk because they 
have been repeatedly targeted throughout the war.  The Ministry of the 
Interior targeted them this year alone with 'teach-ins' at schools where
 they demonized and, yes, justified killing LGBTs.  But Iraq's LGBT 
community does readily make one of the five categories for refugee 
status.  They are a targeted group.  Another example of the criteria?  
In Iraq, "nationality" -- one of the five at risk categories the US 
government recognizes -- really isn't an issue.  Religious sect? Yeah.  
  Nationality, not really.  (Palestinian Iraqis would be one notable 
exception but the international community has been more than happy to 
leave them in refugee camps on the outskirts of Iraq for years now.)  At
 Iraqi Refugee Stories, you can learn about the many reasons Iraqis seek asylum.  And, as Catholic Relief Services notes,
 making it out of Iraq doesn't mean problems all vanish since "a 
majority of Iraqi refugees cannot legally work and lack access to basic 
health, social services and education.  As a result many Iraqi refugees 
are destitute.  They have depleted all of their savings after several 
years in exile.  Many suffer from debilitating illnesses, such as 
diabetes, hypertension, kidney problems and cancer with limited or not 
access to health care."
On Iraqi health, Sherwood Ross (OpEd News) reports:
Approximately
 3.3 million Iraqis, including 750,000 children, were "exterminated" by 
economic sanctions and/or illegal wars conducted by the U.S. and Great 
Britain between 1990 and 2012, an eminent international legal authority 
says.   
The slaughter fits the classic
 definition of Genocide Convention Article II of, "Deliberately 
inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its
 physical destruction in whole or in part," says Francis Boyle, 
professor of international law at the University of Illinois, Champaign,
 and who in 1991 filed a class-action complaint with the UN against 
President George H.W. Bush.   
Boyle explained the basics at The International Conference on War-affected Children at Kuala Lampur in Malaysia last month (click here
 for the speech in full),  "The United States and the United Kingdom 
obstinately insisted that the genocidal economic sanctions imposed 
against Iraq remain in place until after the conclusion of the 
internationally illegal Gulf War II of aggression perpetrated by the 
Bush Junior administration and the Tony Blair government against Iraq in
 March of 2003. Then, on 22 May 2003 the United States and the United 
Kingdom procured U.N. Security Council Resolution 1483 lifting these 
genocidal economic sanctions; yet not with a view to easing the over 
decade-long suffering of the Iraqi people and children. But rather so as
 to better facilitate the U.S./U.K. unsupervised looting and plundering 
of the Iraqi   economy and oil fields in violation of the international 
laws of war as well as to the grave detriment of the Iraqi people and 
their children."
In Iraq, it's difficult to 
keep track of the many crises plaguing the country.  The latest one 
revolves around the disputed areas.  Having refused to obey the 
Constitution he took an oath to uphold, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki  
has refused to implement Article 140 which addresses how to resolve the 
disputes (census and referendum).  Having refused to follow the 
Constitution for six years, Nouri decided this was the year to send his 
forces (Tigris Operation Command) into the disputed areas.  The Kurds 
sees this as Nouri's attempt to take over the regions.  The Peshmerga 
(elite Kurdish forces) and Nouri's forces are now in a standoff.  
Observers and Iraqi politicians fear the outbreak of war if tensions are
 not eased quickly.  By the way, the Tigris forces?  The unit heads were
 not approved by Parliament in violation of the Constitution.  
Let's note Ghaith Abdul-Ahad (Guardian):
Critics
 say Maliki is concentrating power in his office (the office of the 
prime minister) and his advisers are running "a government inside a 
government", bypassing ministers and parliament. In his role as 
commander in chief, he appoints generals as heads of military units 
without the approval of parliament. The officers, critics say, are all 
loyal to him. He has created at least one intelligence service, 
dominated by his clan and party members, and taken two military units - 
the anti-terrorism unit and the Baghdad brigade - under his direct 
command. At the same time he has inflated the size of the ministry of 
national security that is run by one of his allies.
Does that not describe everything?
Thing is though, the Guardian ran Ghait Abdul-Ahad's article April 29, 2009.
Yeah,
 Nouri's completely predictable and completely out of control.  And this
 has been obvious for years now to anyone paying attention.
Last week, the Baghdad generals and the Peshmerga leaders met and came up with a 14-point agreement that would ease the situation but Nouri rejected the agreement and tensions have only increased. The Kurdish Globe today carries an Al-Monitor article on the crisis:
The president of the Kurdistan region, Massoud Barzani, has said that the formation of the Tigris Operations Command (TOC) is illegal, unconstitutional and provocative. In an interview with Azzaman to be published in the paper?s Iraqi, Arab and international editions, Barzani said that the policy of gradual takeover and establishing facts on the ground in disputed areas is rejected. He said that the best options for the Kurds and for all Iraqis is to reach an agreement, to return to the constitution and to solve the differences through dialogue.
Barzani stressed that Baghdad does not belong to one person, one party or one group. He said that the Kurds are willing to assume all results and consequences, but that they cannot accept a new dictatorship.
Alsumaria reports that a delegation from the Kurdish Regional Government, headed by former Preisdent Barham Salih, has arrived in Baghdad and been met with Speaker of Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi. al-Nujaifi has just returned from the KRG. Alsumaria notes that he met with KRG Presidnet Massoud Barzani yesterday to discuss the continued tensions and what has become an armed standoff between Nouri's forces and the Peshmerga. All Iraq News notes that al-Nuajifi is hoping to meet with Nouri.
Iraqi President Jalal Talabani arrived in Baghdad yesterday. Al Mada notes that he held meetings to address the crisis including one with Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq leader Ammar al-Hakim. On the topic of Talabani, a news flash scrawling across the screen of Alsumaria's live feed this morning notes that Nouri's office is denying rumors that Nouri is cutting the salaries for the guards protecting Talabani.
New Europe reports that the European Union's Foreign Affairs Committee is calling for a stronger European Union presence in Iraq. The Iraq Times adds that British and US officials are working to de-escalate the situation. Others calling for calm? Al-Monitor provides a translation of an Al-Hayat article which includes:
The supreme authority Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani
 called on the central government to "be patient and stay away from 
bloody conflicts." For his part, Ayatollah Hussein al-Sadr mentioned 
previous fatwas issued by senior authorities that prohibited fighting 
the Kurds.
[. . .]
In
 a statement yesterday [Dec. 4], Sistani called on Maliki to "be patient
 and refrain from pushing Iraqis into any bloody conflict, which would 
only harm the people."
Furthermore, 
Ayatollah Hussein Ismail al-Sadr said in a statement yesterday that the 
authorities are "committed to the fatwa of Ayatollah Mohsen al-Hakim and
 his uncle the martyr Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr prohibiting fighting the 
Kurds. The fatwa was issued during the 1960s." He emphasized his 
commitment to "put in place efforts to bridge the gap between the two 
parties and adopt dialogue under the governorship of the constitution, 
the principles of brotherhood and the long record of struggle that 
weighed down the oppressed.
All Iraq News notes
 that Kurdistan President Massoud Barzani declared today his thanks to 
Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani and the other religious clerics for the 
supervision they have provided throughout the current crisis.
The concerns come as a new wrinkle emerges. Nouri is a paranoid tyrant and that was known well before the end of his first term in 2010. But some 'reporters' have repeatedly felt the need to say that Nouri's not that bad because, goodness, Saddam Hussein has statues and pictures of himself posted throughout Iraq and Nouri's done nothing like that. Take a loook at the photo to this Iraq Times report -- see the standing photo of Nouri? The article explains that Nouri issued orders Sunday that his image must be displayed at all checkpoints.
Meanwhile Chief Justice Medhat al-Mahmoud is considered a Ba'athist by many Iraqis. It's not even 'whispered' anymore. And possibly he's in the bag for Nouri for that reason? Regardless, Nouri does control the Baghdad judiciary and the Iraq Times reports that al-Mahmoud has issued an order to all the judges under him that they will not execute an arrest warrant for Nouri. Strange isn't it, Nouri claims that arrest warrants have to be executed. Remember his claim publicly that he didn't want to execute the one on Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi, that he was forced to do so? But when its an arrest warrant for Nouri, it gets buried. The judiciary jumps for Nouri. A few weeks ago, Nouri attempted to end the food-rations card system and his spokesperson announced, November 6th, that it was over. It wasn't over because it's too popular. The Iraqi people wouldn't stand for it nor would the politicians (except for those in Nouri's State of Law). So Nouri had to back down. Moqtada al-Sadr was one of the leaders on that issue.
The concerns come as a new wrinkle emerges. Nouri is a paranoid tyrant and that was known well before the end of his first term in 2010. But some 'reporters' have repeatedly felt the need to say that Nouri's not that bad because, goodness, Saddam Hussein has statues and pictures of himself posted throughout Iraq and Nouri's done nothing like that. Take a loook at the photo to this Iraq Times report -- see the standing photo of Nouri? The article explains that Nouri issued orders Sunday that his image must be displayed at all checkpoints.
Meanwhile Chief Justice Medhat al-Mahmoud is considered a Ba'athist by many Iraqis. It's not even 'whispered' anymore. And possibly he's in the bag for Nouri for that reason? Regardless, Nouri does control the Baghdad judiciary and the Iraq Times reports that al-Mahmoud has issued an order to all the judges under him that they will not execute an arrest warrant for Nouri. Strange isn't it, Nouri claims that arrest warrants have to be executed. Remember his claim publicly that he didn't want to execute the one on Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi, that he was forced to do so? But when its an arrest warrant for Nouri, it gets buried. The judiciary jumps for Nouri. A few weeks ago, Nouri attempted to end the food-rations card system and his spokesperson announced, November 6th, that it was over. It wasn't over because it's too popular. The Iraqi people wouldn't stand for it nor would the politicians (except for those in Nouri's State of Law). So Nouri had to back down. Moqtada al-Sadr was one of the leaders on that issue.
But 
he and Moqtada tangled weeks before that as well.  It happened when 
Nouri said there was no oil surplus money that could become dividends 
for the Iraqi people and Moqtada al-Sadr expressed doubt and 
disapproval.  All Iraq News explained in October
 that Moqtada and his poltical bloc have not let the matter die or just 
resorted to words, they're actively working with the Minister of Finance
 Rafie al-Issawi and the Minister of Planning Ali Shukri to find oil 
money that can go to the Iraqi people with plans to set aside 25% of 
future revenues for that.  Moqtada and his bloc continued working on the
 issue and had the people's support.  In November,  All Iraq News reported
 that a delegation from the Sadr bloc met  with Minister of 
Finance Rafie al-Issawi to discuss this issue and find out what the 
progess was on it and to announce that  they will continue to stay 
focused on this and ensure that the country and its children benefit 
from the oil.
While Moqtada al-Sadr's bloc was fighting for the people and doing so in the open, Nouri was doing something else.  Alsumaria reports
 that MP Bahaa al-Araji of the Sadr bloc held a press conference today 
outside Parliament to reveal that Nouri al-Maliki filed a lawsuit to 
dismiss the budget item on sharing the oil suprlus with the citizens 
from the year's budget.   The court -- no surprise, it's not a real 
court -- ruled in Nouri's favor.  Only now, after the ruling, do they 
find out what Nouri was doing behind everyone's back.
Violence
 never gets buried, it's always right there on the surface with Iraqis 
unable to escape it and Nouri unable/unwilling to provide security.   Alsumaria reports 1 soldier was shot dead in Kirkuk today by unknown assailants in a passing car.  All Iraq News notes a Baquba car bomb and a second bomb went off together claiming 2 lives and leaving ten people injured. In addition, All Iraq News reports that Zia Ahmed Shehab, the brother of the Governor of Salahuddin Province, was kidnapped today in Tikrit.
In
 other news,  Hero Ibrahim Ahmed has grabbed some headlines.  Among 
other things, she is over the charity Kurdistan Save the Children.  Like
 many notable Iraqis, her family has a long history of involvement in 
Iraqi politics and in being persecuted.  Novelist Ibrahim Ahmad was her 
father.  He was also a judge and one of the first chairs of the 
Kurdistan Democratic Party (the first after it changed its name).  
Moving up the political chain in Iraq has always meant creating 
enemies.  He would end up in Abu Ghraib prison for two years.  He would 
go on to become an editor of a newspaper and, more importantly to the 
political situation, the voice of the KDP following it's split into two 
parties -- the other, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, would be headed 
by Mustafa Barzani.    Today the PUK is headed by Massoud Barzani who is
 also the President of the Kurdistan Regional Government.  He is   the 
son of the late Mustafa Barzani.  Mustafa's grandson is KRG Prime 
Minister Nechirvan Barzani.  
And if those links and connections alone make Hero Ibrahim Ahmed's story one of the basic histories of Iraq, let's note that she's also the First Lady of Iraq, she's married to President Jalal Talabani. She's also begun a new project aimed at celebrating the rich diversity in Iraq. Al Mada reports that she initated yesterday Kirkuk for Social Awareness, a program to ensure that diversity and nationality is protected in Kirkuk. One aspect of the program, she explained to government officials in Kirkuk yesterday, is the creation of a song that will bring in all the languages spoken by the people of Iraq and recognize the diversity. She stressed that this would include the Mandaeans whose language, UNESCO has warned, is in danger of vanishing. The Mandaeans numbered a little over 50,000 in Iraq prior to the start of the war in 2003. Some estimates now put their number as low as 5,000. Many fled to Jordan and Syria during the ethnic cleansing years of roughly 2006 through 2008. They have a special issue regarding immigration in that it is a water-based religion (for baptisms) and they prefer natural bodies of water for their ceremonies. In 2009, David Grant (AP) reported on a community in Detroit.
And if those links and connections alone make Hero Ibrahim Ahmed's story one of the basic histories of Iraq, let's note that she's also the First Lady of Iraq, she's married to President Jalal Talabani. She's also begun a new project aimed at celebrating the rich diversity in Iraq. Al Mada reports that she initated yesterday Kirkuk for Social Awareness, a program to ensure that diversity and nationality is protected in Kirkuk. One aspect of the program, she explained to government officials in Kirkuk yesterday, is the creation of a song that will bring in all the languages spoken by the people of Iraq and recognize the diversity. She stressed that this would include the Mandaeans whose language, UNESCO has warned, is in danger of vanishing. The Mandaeans numbered a little over 50,000 in Iraq prior to the start of the war in 2003. Some estimates now put their number as low as 5,000. Many fled to Jordan and Syria during the ethnic cleansing years of roughly 2006 through 2008. They have a special issue regarding immigration in that it is a water-based religion (for baptisms) and they prefer natural bodies of water for their ceremonies. In 2009, David Grant (AP) reported on a community in Detroit.
In the US,  the House Veterans Affairs Committee which released the following:
WASHINGTON,
 D.C. -- Today, Rep. Jeff Miller, Chairman of the House Committee on 
Veterans' Affairs, issued the following statement on the appointment of 
Rep. Michael Michaud as the Ranking Member of the Committee: 
"I
 heartily congratulate Mike on becoming the Ranking Member of the 
Committee.  Mike has been an invaluable member and colleague, serving in
 a variety of positions over the past 10 years, including most recently 
as the Ranking Member of the Subcommittee on Health.  
"Mike
 has been a vocal advocate for America's veterans and their families, 
and has been instrumental in the passage of several pieces of major 
legislation to uphold benefits earned through service to our nation.  
Mike has also been a leader, ensuring the Department of Veterans Affairs
 provides the best healthcare available.  I look forward to working with
 Mike to address the major issues facing our veterans today, and 
ensuring the bipartisanship of the Committee continues in the 113th 
Congress."
The 113th Full Committee is expected to be announced in the next two weeks.
Last week, the  ACLU filed a lawsuit on behalf of four service members in an attempt to remedy the inequality in the current military system:
The
 Defense Department's longstanding policy barring women from thousands 
of ground combat positions was challenged today in a federal lawsuit by 
four servicewomen and the Service Women's Action Network.
The
 plaintiffs are represented by the American Civil Liberties Union, the 
ACLU of Northern California and the law firm Munger, Tolles & Olson 
LLP.
The four servicemembers have all done 
tours in Iraq or Afghanistan -- some deploying multiple times --where 
they served in combat or led female troops who went on missions with 
combat infantrymen. Their careers and opportunities have been limited by
 a policy that does not grant them the same recognition for their 
service as their male counterparts. The combat exclusion policy also 
makes it harder for them to do their jobs.
Today at the ACLU Blog of Rights, Ariela Migdal explores the issues involved:
Women
 have been killed on the battlefield, and many more have been wounded in
 the course of their service. Take plaintiff Army Staff Sergeant 
Jennifer Hunt, who was awarded the Purple Heart, was wounded after 
serving in combat in Afghanistan and Iraq. While women have an equal 
opportunity of being hurt or killed, the policy limits their ability to 
receive equal, integrated training and to advance in the ranks. Because 
their combat experience often is unofficial or outside of their official
 career field, it doesn't count in the same way for promotions resulting
 in a "brass ceiling" that keeps our military leadership overwhelmingly 
male.
The Constitution forbids the 
government from imposing a blanket ban on women's participation, 
especially where the rule is outdated and doesn't accurately capture how
 war is being waged today. Now, after a decade of armed service abroad, 
our servicewomen are demanding the opportunity to compete for official 
assignment to the combat jobs they've been doing for years.
On women, Sunday "How NPR Silences Women (Ann, Ava and C.I.)" went up at Third.  As we observed:
We documented how only 18% of Terry Gross' 2010 guests on Fresh Air were women. Next,  we documented how over 66% of Diane Rehm's guests in were men.  We then went on to document that only 30% of Talk of the Nation's guests were women.
People are always 'puzzled' how this happens. NPR friends insist it's an accident.
Really?
An accident can have a multitude of outcomes.
If these are accidents how come the outcomes is always the same: Men booked more often than women on NPR?
That's not accidental, that sound likes engineering.
People are always 'puzzled' how this happens. NPR friends insist it's an accident.
Really?
An accident can have a multitude of outcomes.
If these are accidents how come the outcomes is always the same: Men booked more often than women on NPR?
That's not accidental, that sound likes engineering.
Ann
 tracks this gender imbalance at her site all the time and, Sunday, we 
explained how it happens -- it happens when Tell Me More airs a segment 
entitled "Women Fire Back At Working Dads" where there are two male 
guests and only one woman (and the woman's actually a listener comment 
left on the NPR answering line).  It happens when Don Gonyea decides 
he's going to 'explore' a female US Senator and decides that it's 
perfectly natural to go to 3 men and no women, and to pretend like it's 
perfectly natural to air two of those men insulting her but not backing 
up the insults.  That's the mind-set that repeatedly allows NPR 
programming to feature more female guests than male guests over and over
 every day of the year.
And the reason I'm working that in is because Women's Media Center has an article we need to note, Rachel Larris' "A Closer Look: Who's Writing Nine Newspapers' Presidential Election Coverage." 
 That went up in August.  I only learned of it Monday night when I was 
speaking with a WMC friend who mentioned the Third piece and said that 
they were doing stuff like that at WMC and I said, "Let me know when it 
goes up and I'll link to it."  It went up at the end of August.  As I 
explained, I avoid WMC for about six months every four years and there's
 fault because -- my opinion -- they fall to their knees swooning 
over the Democratic Party.  (If you're late to the party, I am a 
Democrat.  I don't tell anyone else how to vote.  If you're voting 
you're an adult and you   should be able to figure it out yourself.  I 
did not vote in the presidential race this year -- no candidate running 
earned my vote.)   Life is too short, I don't need to be upset by that 
so I completely avoid the website during that time period.  It's 
happened two presidential election cycles so when 2012 rolled around -- 
and when 2016 rolls around -- I won't be visiting that site.  Now maybe 
that will change and I hope it does.  Women are a varied group, even 
women on the left.  And we've been told what to do for so long that 
telling us who to vote for these days is not 'sweetened' by the fact 
that the attempted marching order is coming from a woman.  We'll note 
the WMC article at Third on Sunday.  It's an important article
 and it's the kind we need.    NPR wouldn't be able to get away with 
bringing so few women on were it not for the fact that they know 
feminists will see them as a 'friend' and refuse to call them out.  
Equality isn't something that we should wait on.  Women have been told 
to wait for centuries.  Good for WMC for tracking the gender imbalance. 
 Good for Rachel Larris for writing such a strong article.  Hopefully, 
you caught it in real time.  If you missed it, please make a point to check it out.
 
