Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Chuck

Tuesday. Chuck?

It was actually a great episode. After last week's (which I didn't even finish watching) and after Fringe's finale, I wasn't expecting much. But this was a really strong episode. For everyone. Even Devon. So there's this weapon Vivian has. And Chuck's mom is trying to steal it but gets caught and captured. Chuck, Sarah and Casey have to break her out.

They do over her objections. She doesn't want to do this because she wants to get the weapon. While Chuck and Sarah are with her, Vivian and Vivian's henchmen arrive. They get trapped in the cell but not before Vivian learns that Sarah is Chuck's mother.

They have to get the weapon. As Chuck and Sarah get ready for their wedding.

The weapon can kill anyone, it's some major weapon.

So Morgan looks like one of the bidders invited to bid on the weapon. Therefore they tap him to go in as a bad guy.

Sarah and Chuck are part of the mission and so is Casey and so Chuck's mother.

As people get ready to bill, Vivian and the henchman arrive. And explain that they've decided to keep the weapon . . . and kill all the bidders.

Okay, you get someone's DNA (how? I don't know) and you turn the gun on and it kills them. So they do this in the room and it has no effect on Morgan because he's not the real bidder. So they're telling MOrgan in his ear piece to act like the others.

The hench says one person isn't dead. Chuck tells Morgan (via ear piece) to stay still. And Morgan gets lucky. A blond dead man leaps up and he's MI6 (British secret agent). He gets shot in the middle of a long winded speech.

Viv leaves with hench but Morgan's an idiot and does get out of there. Now there are four goons in the room with acid to destroy all the bodies. Morgan tries to escape but can't. Casey shoots them one at a time.

When the weapon's turned on this green stuff (DNA) kind of glows and then it's like you have a really bad headache and sometimes nose bleeds.

Outside Viv and the hench bump into Chuck and Sarah. And Chuck tells Viv this isn't who she is and her father's name comes up. Chuck tells her Lexy wasn't a bad guy, he was Agent X. And the experiments changed him. Then hench responds that Chuck's father was the one who made Lexy Agent X and that drove Lexy crazy.

Viv is ready to kill Chick's entire family.

At the . . .

Is that the wedding party?

The reception?

The party the day before?

I don't know. But it's got a huge turnout. Oh, when they're having to do the mission I wrote about above? General Beckman made a point to say to Chuck, "Thanks for my invitation." She didn't get one. :D

But anyway.

So the party's going great and Chuck gets a call. I'm thinking it's got to be his father. (I know he's dead but I am not giving up hope.) It's Viv. She tells him she's decided to kill someone he loves so he can know how she feels.

Sarah comes over. Chuck tells her he thinks Vivian's about to kill his mother. He's rushing towards her when Sarah's head starts killing her. And she's got a nose bleed. She's the one Vivian's trying to kill.

Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"


Tuesday, May 10, 2011. Chaos and violence continue, a labor strike takes place in Basra, a strike takes place in the midst of a social incident, Iraqi hospitals continue to suffer, and more.
Starting with veterans issues. Tomorrow morning there will be a major press conference. Senator Patty Murray's office issued the following today:

(Washington, D.C.) -- On Wednesday, U.S. Senator Patty Murray, Chairman of the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee, will hold a press conference with co-sponsors of the bill, veterans struggling to find work, and veterans service organizations to discuss aggressive new legislation to address rising unemployment among our nation's veterans. Senator Murray's bill, the Hiring Heroes Act of 2011, is the first of its kind to require broad job skills training for all service members returning home and comes at a time when more than one in four veterans aged 18-24 are unemployed. In addition to providing new job skills training to all service members, the bill will also create new direct federal hiring authority so that more service members have jobs waiting for them the day they leave the military, and will improve veteran mentorship programs in the working world. For more information on the bill visit HERE.

WHO: Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee Chairman Patty Murray

U.S. Senator Jon Tester

U.S. Senator Mark Begich

U.S. Senator Chris Coons

Eric Smith, Unemployed Iraq War Veteran, Baltimore, MD

Also represented at the event:

Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America (IAVA)

Military Officers Association of America (MOAA)

Disabled American Veterans (DAV)

Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW)

WHAT: Press Conference Introducing the Hiring Heroes Act of 2011

WHEN: Wednesday, May 11th, 2011

11:00 AM EST

WHERE: Senate Swamp -- Outdoor press area located on the Senate side of the Capitol Complex across from the East stairs -- SEE MAP - HERE

Note for press -- there is power access at this site and the Capitol will be the backdrop.

Matt McAlvanah

Communications Director

U.S. Senator Patty Murray

202-224-2834 - press office

202--224-0228 - direct

matt_mcalvanah@murray.senate.gov

News Releases | Economic Resource Center | E-Mail Updates

Moving over to Iraq and starting with labor issues, the Iraqi Freedom Congress issued the following:
Hundreds of workers walked off the job in protest, which rocked the headquarters of Southern Oil Company in Bab al-Zubayr in the southern city of Basra.
The workers have come from oil fields in Basra; from North and South Rumaila, Albirjisya, West of Qurna and Majnoon and were led by the General Federation of Workers Councils and Unions.
The workers raised slogans condemning corruption, while trying to bring all corrupt officers to justice. Among the corrupt officers includes the deputy director-general's of Southern Oil Company and director of trade.
To confront the demonstrators, the management of the company called security forces. Sami Hassan (one of the organizers of the demonstration) was also imprisoned for two hours.
The demonstration was part of a series of protests sweeping the Iraqi and foreign companies operating in the southern region.
Ali Abu Iraq (Iraq Oil Report) reports, "Hundreds of workers from Iraq's southern oil hub of Basra protested outside numerous facilities Monday, claiming Oil Ministry officials have ignored repeated concerns about the use of funds, the allocation of housing, and equal pay." Reuters adds, "The demonstrators were engineers, technicians and workers at the state-run South Oil Co., which has some 18,000 employees developing some of Iraq's big oil fields. They protested for three hours at the company's headquarters in Basra and at another location near an oil field west of the city." The company's homepage notes:
South oil company one of the major fundamental formations of Iraqi national oil company (INOC), it's the first nucleus and the basic of national direct investment projects in the seventies, where the SOC was subsidiary to national company. Events and activisites have escalated steadily and rapidly rising since the beginning of the seventies where investment and development stages of the north Rumaila field were completed, in three stages lead to rate production (42) million tons per year, conincided with the expansion of works in all fields, the expansion began with drilling works, building and expanding production facilities and implementing investment projects associated with natural gas field in north and south Rumaila [. . .]
Iraq Oil Report Tweets:
iraqoilreport Iraq Oil Report
Oil workers protest in Basra: Workers threaten strike, mass May 25 protest following repeated claims to better pay. http://bit.ly/mpzJgi
Meanwhile Brendan Barber (Guardian) reports on efforts of the Iraqi government to destroy Iraq's unions ("Ministers appoined a government committee, packed with officials from the Sadrist movement, to take over the structures and assets of the General Federation of Iraqi Workers (GFIQ) -- the Iraqi equivalent of the TUC -- and run its upcoming elections"):
We have reports of government officials, flanked by police, attempting to take over union offices. And it is painfully sectarian. In Basra last week, the seven officials that demanded the keys to the local union office were all from the Sadrist party. These followers of Shia cleric Moqtada al-Sadr are a small, but important, minority in the Iraqi coalition government, and won control of the labour ministry in the recent carve-up of government portfolios. In preparation for union elections, these Sadrist officials have been issuing their own union membership cards, effectively giving them the right to decide who can vote. In a similar incident last year – and a worrying sign of things to come – the polling booth for a union election was inside the Sadrist party offices. These are tactics that Hosni Mubarak would be proud of.
Back to protests, The Great Iraqi Revolution notes that the Ramadi sit-in continued yesterday and that "The Young Rebels and the Tribal Shaikhs have setup a site for a SIT-IN very close by! Haliki [Nouri al-Maliki] and his goons really can't stop the Iraqi People protesting -- this is our land and this is our country." Yesterday was day 16 of the continued sit-in. And a woman in Baghdad, Eaman, says "that they have no men left in their district because all the men have been detained by the government security forces as a result fo the 'Secret Informer' system -- she is appealing for help" and states that "the 'Secret Informer' in Fadhil District in Baghdad is called Khalid Mihsin Awwad". Protesters are being targeted in Iraq. The Great Iraqi Revolution notes, "The night before last Shaikh Khalil Al Sabba'awi's home was raided in the Geyara District of Mosul but could not find him. The next morning, yesterday, they saw his son in the family car and arrested the son and hijacked the car! Shaikh Khalil was live on air and said that he will not give up the protests and that soon they will be starting Civil Disobedience in Mosul. He is the Shaikh who refused Maliki's invitation to go down to Baghdad and negotiate the demands of the Ahrar Protestors - these demands are the same as of Tahrir, Baghdad and Tahrir, Ramadi." And in Falluja, "We've just heard that Haliki has setup a checkpoint just at Fallujah's gates and is arresting young men just because they are young men! I wonder, is he so frightened???? And if he is so frightened why does he remain???? What is he going to do in a few days' time????? The citizens in Anbar now are also speaking about a Civil Disobedience Campaign...... well, let's wait and see....."
Meanwhile Aswat al-Iraq reports guests and the wedding party turned a Mosul social event into a protest as the approximately 500 began shouting for reform, an end to corruption, the release of detainees and the departure of US forces. Sticking with departure, The Great Iraqi Revolution passes on, "Dhafir Al Ani has stated that they (meaning the Iraqiya Block, I suppose) have heard from the Americans that Haliki has in principle agreed to the extension of the SOFA Agreement!!!!!!! Poor .... Poor... thing - He needs them for his protection....." Aaron C. Davis (Washington Post) quotes Speaker of Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi stating, "There is no certain time or certain date to decide on the U.S. military, and we will not be in a hurry to take a decision." Davis notes, "If Iraqi leaders decide late in the year to request that some U.S. troops or equipment stay, military officials say, it would entail significantly altering or even reversing the course and could compound security concerns and costs." Ayub Nuri (Rudaw) maintains there is anxiety over a potential withdrawal throughout Iraq but especially in the oil-rich Kirkuk. Kirkuk police department has issued a statement calling for US forces to remain on the ground in Kirkuk past 2011; however, The Great Iraqi Revolution explains, "The Political Arab Council in Kirkuk has just denied the statement issued yesterday by the Kirkuk Police Department. They categorically stated that they refuse the further stay of the Occupation troops in Kirkuk. The spokesman said that this refusal is the opinion of all the parties living in Kirkuk with the exception of the 2 Kurdish Parties. He also said that the occupation troops did not deal evenhandedly with the citizens in Kirkuk. He said that they wanted Kirkuk to be the first city from which occupation troops depart from Iraq."
Still on departure, we'll note this from David Elkins (IPS):

Any extension of the SOFA is all but a political impossibility in Iraq since, even though Iraqi government officials, including Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, have indicated their desire to keep some troops past the deadline, the response from their constituencies, and from leaders such as Moqtada al-Sadr, strongly opposed to any prolonged presence, would be disastrous for Iraq's fragile parliamentary coalition.

It's "all but a political impossibility," is it? Because you say so? Moqtada al-Sadr made the same threats he makes today in 2006 regarding the extension of the UN mandate. Nouri extended it. Moqtada made the same noises in 2007 regarding the extension onf the UN mandate. Nouri extended it. In 2008, Nouri didn't extend the UN mandate. But only because the SOFA replaced it. And, in 2008, Moqtada made the same threats.

In all cases, nothing ever happened but talk from Moqtada which was quickly forgotten. In 2008, when he was threatening, do you remember the concession that was made to Moqtada? In July 2009, the people of Iraq would get to vote on the SOFA. It's two months shy of July 2011 and, guess what, there was never a vote.

Moqtada al-Sadr is worshipped by some on the left. In terms of verbal statements only, he's a lot like US House Rep Dennis Kucinich in that he makes a lot of promises -- such as he would never, ever vote for ObamaCare -- but then ends up caving.

Meanwhile, US intelligence indicates that Moqtada al-Sadr is at his weakest ever in terms of support and loyalty from his Iraqi followers. Not only does the US know this but it's also been shared with Nouri by the US government.

So based on US intell and based upon past pattern, Moqtada al-Sadr's empty words don't mean much at all. You have to be pretty stupid to claim it's "all but a political impossibility" for Nouri to keep US forces on the ground in Iraq past 2011 based on what Moqtada might do.

But IPS has a pattern of the stupid. In fact, IPS readers should be slamming the site with e-mails insiting, "You told us the SOFA was an end of the war treaty! You told us that it meant the war ended! What is this talk about extending the US presence! According to over two years of your 'reporting,' that could never happen!"

Yeah, IPS predicted on the SOFA. Didn't offer a legal analysis. Just smugly asserted it was something it wasn't and did so for over two years. IPS should really walk away from the predictions. Doing so would help deliver us all from the stupid.

March 2010, Iraq held elections. And Nouri wanted to remain prime minister. And he did. Despite the fact that most Iraqis want the US out of their country. Despite the fact that most Iraqis wanted a referendum on the SOFA and Nouri promised one but never held it. Nouri's a thug and a US puppet. But somehow he's managed to hang on. If he manages past the start of June, when the 100 day deadline he imposed expires -- it will be interesting to see if anything could dislodge him in the coming months. Not only has he managed to retain power, but he's also worked on consolidating power and stealing the power. As prime minister currently, due to his power-grab, he has more control than he's had in the same post at any time previously.

Nouri may or may not choose to extend the US military presence. That's a prediction. (It's true that if he doesn't, the current US plan is to shove the forces under the State Dept and keep many in Iraq that way. A fact that IPS can't seem to find in the latest article.) But to claim that it's "all but a political impossiblity" shows a reliance on fantasy, not on the facts.
Meanwhile, Iraqis in charge focused on bit-ticket items and not on necessities when stocking hospitals. Stephanie McCrummen (Washington Post) reports on gleaming state-of-the-art equipment and machinery which stands idle (often because no one's been trained on operating it) while the most basic supplies (such as proper-size IV catheters) are no where to be found leading to tragic results. From the article:
As security has improved and a semblance of calm has settled over Iraq, doctors say the biggest menace to patients these days is not so much a lack of money, basic training or even supplies. Rather, they say, it is the skewed priorities of a corrupt, often indifferent Health Ministry that has gone on spending sprees in certain realms while leaving basic health care to flounder.
The problems are emblematic of the wider dysfunction of the U.S.-backed Iraqi government as a whole, a bubble of elites for whom ministries are treated as spoils of bare-knuckled political battles, with key positions often going to the well connected rather than those with technical expertise. To some extent, such issues are common to developing nations, which is what Iraq essentially is, having been plunged backward by years of war.
And the Post has this photo gallery which compliments the article. In October 2006, Lara Logan (CBS News -- link is text and video) reported on how Nouri giving the Sadr bloc control of the Ministry of Health allowed Moqtada's Mahdi militia to overrun the hospitals and, the US military stated, murdering Sunni patients (among other charges). The minister was Ali al-Shermani and he would faces these charges in 2007; however, he walked when those set to testify against him refused to testify in open court. Having walked, Ali al-Shermani now ran -- right out of the country. In July 2010, Timothy Williams and Yasmine Mousa (New York Times) reported that al Qaeda was swiping blood from Iraqi hospitals.
From corruption to violence, today Oxfam International has released a new report entitled [PDF format warning] "Protection of Civilians in 2010" and, with regards to Iraq, its findings include that over 4,000 civilians died in Iraq last year, Iraq gets included again when it's time for displaced people, an estimated 2.8 million people (that section relies on estimations as well). Karl Allen (Zawya) mines for gold and comes up with this:


At least 4,000 Iraqi civilians were killed by insurgent violence in 2010 - the highest number of civilian fatalities in any of the world's 'conflict zones' - according to an Oxfam international report published today.
The report, "Protection of Civilians in 2010", examines 18 zones of armed conflict throughout the world and lists the numbers of civilians reported to have been killed, raped or displaced.
Following closely behind Iraq with 3,500 direct civilian fatalities was Pakistan, then Afghanistan and Somalia where the figures reached 2,700 and 2,000 respectively.

New Sabah notes the report here. In today's violence, Reuters notes a Tikrit roadside bombing which claimed the life of a police officer and left three more injured, a Mosul sticky bombing injured police Lt Col Zaid al-Omari, a Baghdad roadside bombing injured one person (bodyguard for a provincial council member), a second Baghdad roadside bombing injured two people, a Baghdad bombing claimed the life of Salam Abdullah and, dropping back to last night, a Baghdad roadside bombing injured one person.

Back to the topic of NGOs, Al Mada reports UNICEF has a new goodwill ambassador in Iraq: Kadhim al-Sahir an Iraqi who left the country in 1997 and who is the first Iraqi to hold the position. Trade Arabia adds:


His humanitarian work started in 1998 when he performed a song about Iraqi children stranded in conflict at benefit concerts in the Royal Albert Hall in the UK as well as to members of the United Nations.
"It has been a long and difficult journey for Iraq's children over the past few decades" said Al-Sahir.
"I am deeply touched and honored to return to Iraq today as Unicef's Ambassador and will do everything possible to protect the rights and improve the well-being of Iraq's children," he added.


Khalid al-Ansary and Jon Boyle (Reuters) quote al-Sahir stating, "It is the right of the people to work, have a good life, and have a happy childhood." The Great Iraqi Revolution adds, "An idea is being floated about that The Revolutionary Youth invite Kadhim Al Shahir to come to Tahrir so that the Rebels explain to him the reason for thier protests since Kadhim Al Sahir had stated earlier that he would not be honoured to sing for such a chaotic mob ..... so do you support such an idea, particularly since he is now a Goodwill Ambassador as well as being a world renouned artist. we would welcome your ideas....."
Iraq Tweet of the day from Prashant Rao (AFP):
prashantrao Prashant Rao
To those of you who missed it this morning, I give you Pizza HAT: http://is.gd/RXGm8B
Turning to radio . . .
You try to be unique
But somehow something's wrong
Your flower childish vision of life
Cannot last for long
You're over thirty and underweight
Though you call yourself petite
And you hang around with all the clowns
Who think they're so elite
Well I don't expect humility
But what about some good old
Dishonest modesty
-- "Dishonest Modesty," written by Carly Simon, first appears on her album Another Passenger
Ira Glass is 52-years-old but can't stop trying to sound like a snot-nosed, five-year-old, little girl. And his gulping mid-statement isn't being masked by the microphones and is becoming as annoying as Brenda Vacarro's gasp in those early 80s Playtex Tampons commercial. When not living his stunted life outside the studio, Ira hosts This American Life. He's popping up throughout the country these days with a 'best of' hour special for pledge drives at various NPRs. It includes his playing clips of Fox News' Bill O'Reilly and his calling Bill O'Reilly various names -- apparently this how NPR now handles pledge drives. He also whines that he's been called biased but he's not, he insists, biased.
He choose some strange clips to indicate he's not biased. In the special he plays "Crybabies" which aired back in September originally. Adam Davidson and Jane Feltes are part of the story.
Ira Glass: You'd think if anybody would be out there thanking President Obama for helping them out these past few years, it would be Wall Street. Back when he was running for office, Barack Obama led the Democrats in supporting President Bush's original bailout of Wall Street and as president he kept that bail out going. [. . .] are they whining about the Obama administration?
Really? That's a measure of what? You can be a 'good' American and have no respect for any elected official. Apparently, Ira woke up on the wrong side of the gildled lily as did the overly praised Davidson who whined that you could go into any Wall St. bar and find "someone complaining about the president." Oh, the horror. Oh, the novelty. Surely in this country's 235 years, no one has ever dared complain about a president before.
It only gets worse. To prove just how 'hostile' Wall Street is to Barack (and therefore America because, in their eyes, Barack and the US are one and the same -- amazing 'logic' in a country where approximately 40% of adult Americans choose not to vote in presidential elections each cycle), Davidson and Feltes hit Pound & Pence.
They 'forget' to report on the NYC bar so let's sketch out the detail they left out. It's a British pub on Liberty in Manhattan's Financial District. The upstairs (more of a loft than a second floor) is dominated by a huge pool table. The downstairs is dominated by the bar. Along with the Wall Street crowd, hotels steer a great deal of foot traffic there (such as the Holiday Inn on Nassau). In such a rush to find 'mean' people who didn't give thanks to Barack, the 'reporters' forgot to provide the basic set up. They talk to some drunken guys (slurring and all) and are surprised that drunken men might say 'bad' things and might brag about themselves. Really? Strap on some breasts and you'll really hear some drunken men say 'bad' things and do some heavy bragging. Next up, Ira and the gang hit The 40/40 Club on 25th to find out if all the men claiming to have eight inches really do.
Ira and Adam liken the patrons to the "Ba'athists" in Iraq who were whiners -- according to Ira and Adam -- and cry babies in 2003 when Adam was there. Really? Your country's invaded and you're a cry baby? You're country's invaded in an illegal war and you're a cry baby? Adam also schills for JPMorgan Chase which -- he appears to forgot -- took $38 billion in bailout money and which, as US House Rep Bob Filner pointed out in a February 9th Congressional hearing, "broke the law. Your bank [JPMorgan Chase] broke the law. Shouldn't someone go to jail for that?"
In the pitch during the special, Ira brags that you can get a 'flash drive' with 35 hours of his program and no one in public radio has ever done that. Really? Law and Disorder Radio has offered their past programs in that format during pledge drives in the past two years now. How nice of Ira to 'discover' something other public radio shows have been doing and claim he's the first. But then he's never been accused of possessing any modesty -- dishonest or otherwise. Ira and This American Life would do well to grasp that a US citizen bows to no one. Nor do pub goers need to celebrate the presidency. Since it's a British pub, let's quote William Pitt from many centuries ago, "The poorest man may in his cottage bid defiance to all the forces of the crown. It may be frail -- its roof may shake -- the wind may blow through it -- the storm may enter -- the rain may enter -- but the Kind of England cannot enter." After work, at night, drunk off their asses, a few Americans working on Wall Street refused to show fealty to Barack and this was news to Ira -- indicating that he's got a great deal still to learn about American life and that he's got his own system of bias blasting out on public airwaves.
America thought they were electing a president in 2008, Barack thought he was being elected Miss Manners USA. For example, the CBC reported May 17, 2009 on Barack's call for civility in the debate over abortion and how the "presumption of good faith to others" should be extended. August 11, 2009, the Associated Press posted video of Barack speaking that day in Portsmouth, New Hampshire calling, yes, for civility. February 4, 2010, Bruce Nolan (Times-Picayune) reported, "President Barack Obama this morning called for a return to civility in the public arena and an end to invective [. . .]" The White House posted his May 1, 2010 commencement speech at the University of Michigan where he again called for civility and which included:
The practice of listening to opposing views is essential to effective citizenship. It is essential for our democracy. If we choose to actively seek out information that challenges our assumptions and our beliefs, perhaps we can begin to understand where the people who disagree with us are coming from.
We can't expect to solver our problems if all we do is tear each other down.
January 13, 2011, David Chalian and Terence Burlij (PBS' The NewsHour) reported he had issued again cried for civility and that people speak to one another "in a way that heals, not in a way that wounds."

I don't issue calls for civility. I'm not a historical idiot. I'm fully aware that this is not the worst or most heated moment in the nation's discourse in the last forty years or since the nation began. But Barack's forever issuing calls for 'civility.' Yet he never follows them himself, does he?
It's not just the 'jokes' two Saturdays ago -- which can be written off as someone sorely lacking humor being pushed into doing a monologue -- or even just his easy and, yes, natural attack (no hesitation at all) in 2009 on The Tonight Show of the Special Olympics. No, it's things like this statement to 60 Minutes in an interview which aired Sunday night: "And I think that anyone who would question that the perpetrator of mass murder on American soil didn't deserve what he got needs to have their head examined." That's civility? That's not civility. The next time the little priss cries for civility again, the press needs to point out the reality which is Piss Panties only cares about civility when he's losing the argument. When he's being fawned over, he loves to talk trash.
Earlier, in the same interview, he admits that some of his advisers didn't agree with the plan and were against it. Will he be firing them? Will he be ordering them to seek treatment? Or will he just order their executions?
I have no idea but I'm tired of a grown adult acting like a little fussbudget every five minutes crying "civility!" and no one ever pointing out that the little priss can't heed his own cry. In the same interview he claims to have withdrawn 100,000 troops from Iraq. That is not true. Approximately 90,000 (special ops aren't included in the count) have left since he entered the White House. Some of that was the last remains of the so-called 'surge' which were transitioning out on Bush's orders given before Barack was sworn in. But it's very telling that 60 Minutes didn't question him on that or on anything else. See, Ira, the press will show the fealty the people rightly reject.
The Cult of St. Barack insisted he was a professor of Constitutional Law. He was a lecturer. Marjorie Cohn (War Is A Crime) is a Constitutional Law professor and she notes:
When he announced that Osama bin Laden had been killed by a Navy Seal team in Pakistan, President Barack Obama said, "Justice has been done." Mr. Obama misused the word "justice" when he made that statement. He should have said, "Retaliation has been accomplished." A former professor of constitutional law should know the difference between those two concepts. The word "justice" implies an act of applying or upholding the law.
Targeted assassinations violate well-established principles of international law. Also called political assassinations, they are extrajudicial executions. These are unlawful and deliberate killings carried out by order of, or with the acquisescence of, a government, outside any judicial framework.
What was done went against the law and those of us who have respect for the law and object to vigilantism don't need our heads examined but maybe Barack needs his examined. In Robert Bolt's A Man For All Seasons, Thomas More is under pressure from King Henry the XIII to grant the king a divorce and More refuses explaining, "The law, Roper, the law. I know what's legal, not what's right. And I'll stick to what's legal." Barack is no Sir Thomas More.
The Iraq war has become the mistaken war, the one that so many Americans believe we never should have waged. I have come to realize that, regardless of my personal beliefs and opinions, this is how the Iraq war will be remembered - as an unfortunate error increasingly divorced from the country's valiant fight against terrorism.
This, in turn, brings me to question myself, my efforts, and my worth. How will my and others' achievements and sacrifices in Iraq be remembered? Will all that we did while serving amount to nothing more than a mistake?
The more I travel and speak about my experiences, the more I sense that the cultural memory of this war is shifting and devolving over time. Rather than thanks for helping to keep the country safe from terrorism, I get appreciation mixed with pity for having fought in an "illegal" war, as many refer to it.

Monday, May 09, 2011

Isaiah, Fringe, Third

Monday, Monday. I didn't eat sushi today. :( If I had, I'd be flying. I really am addicted to sushi and am not joking. I can't walk by it without grabbing some.

You should grab Stevie Nicks' new In Your Dreams album -- as a download or the physical CD. It's a great album. If you don't believe me, go read Kat's "Kat's Korner: The vision and authenticity of Stevie Nicks."

And if you're needing a laugh, Isaiah's The World Today Just Nuts "Family Affair" went up yesterday.


Family Affair


David North has an article at WSWS that I love. Here's a sample:

For the past week, the Obama administration and the media have attempted to generate enthusiasm in the American public over the killing of Osama bin Laden. No sooner had Obama completed his speech announcing Bin Laden’s death than the media broadcast images of students outside the White House spontaneously celebrating the news. Though the presence of beer bottles and signs of public inebriation detracted seriously from the scene’s “iconic” value, it was intended, quite obviously, to serve as a demonstration of an outpouring of popular support for the assassination.

In fact, there has been little sign that Bin Laden’s killing has evoked among the broad mass of the American people anything approaching the wild enthusiasm of the media. Except for a small number of orchestrated events, the American people have during the past week gone about their increasingly difficult lives as they normally do. They did not regret Bin Laden’s death, but they saw no reason to participate in the media’s celebration of his killing. Despite all the efforts over the past 30 years to extinguish democratic consciousness among the people, it still exists. The practice of “targeted killings” is not a popular one.

The media, which seems to sense the public’s unease, has responded with increasing belligerence. In a column published Sunday in the New York Times entitled “Killing Evil Doesn’t Make Us Evil,” Maureen Dowd lashed out at expressions of public doubt about the legitimacy of Bin Laden’s assassination. She denounced the “inane debate” over the legality of the killing. “I want memory, and justice, and revenge,” she declaimed. Ms. Dowd does not recognize that there is a basic incompatibility between justice, which is an ideal embedded in democratic principles, and revenge, the pursuit of which has sent lynch mobs into action.


There's stuff in there I'm going to carry to Third next Sunday and try to get it a Truest statement of the Week. There are a lot in the essay that qualify for that honor.

Fringe.

It wrapped up the season.

I love the show.

I want it to come back.

But the season finale underwhelmed me.

I told you last time that we were ten years or so in the future at the end of the episode. We stayed there for all but the last ten or so minutes.

In the future, Walter is in prison for some awful thing he did. Peter and Olivia are married. Olivia's niece (Rachel's daughter) is both Juno (the Juno actress played her, I believe) and a Fringe agent. Astrid's an agent as well.

I know, I know, who died?

If someone died on that episode it was Peter.

In the future, Walternet shot Olivia. She was dead. Walter figured out how Peter could alter time and then realized (Walter did) that he (Walter) was the "first people" because he'd gone back in time to drop off the machine they were using.

So Peter gets back in time to the present and he's able to pull both worlds together to have both Olivias and both Walters facing one another and then he disappears mid-sentence. He's taken away. So apparently, he somehow got erased from present day.

I don't know, the whole thing was confusing.

And I didn't want 20 years in the future then worlds merging.

SO that's me.

Dallas and the following people helped on Third:

The Third Estate Sunday Review's Jim, Dona, Ty, Jess and Ava,
Rebecca of Sex and Politics and Screeds and Attitude,
Betty of Thomas Friedman Is a Great Man,
C.I. of The Common Ills and The Third Estate Sunday Review,
Kat of Kat's Korner (of The Common Ills),
Cedric of Cedric's Big Mix,
Mike of Mikey Likes It!,
Elaine of Like Maria Said Paz),
Ruth of Ruth's Report,
Wally of The Daily Jot,
Trina of Trina's Kitchen,
Marcia of SICKOFITRDLZ,
Stan of Oh Boy It Never Ends,
Isaiah of The World Today Just Nuts,
and Ann of Ann's Mega Dub.


What did we come up with:

I should do a break down and discuss each piece but I'm just too tired, sorry.



Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"


Monday, May 9, 2011. Chaos and violence continue, a sexist tries to bully the Peace Mom, an attempted prison break in Iraq results in the loss of multiple lives, the security posts remain vacant in Iraq, US Senator Patty Murray continues fighting for those who take care of their wounded veterans, and more.
Congress passed the Caregivers and Veterans Omnibus Health Services Act of 2010 but, as snapshot after snapshot has noted, that wasn't the end of it. Senator Daniel Akaka was Chair of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee when it passed and he has since gone on to steer the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs as Chair. That could have meant the ball got dropped and the act forgotten. Instead, Senator Patty Murray has stayed on this issue and fought and cajoled to get the VA to implement the act and implement it the way Congress intended. She continues to provide oversight and leadership on this very important issue. Today her office issued the following news release:
(Washington, D.C.) -- Today, U.S. Senator Patty Murray, Chairman of the Senate Veterans' Affair Committee, sent a letter to Secretary of Veterans Affairs (VA) Eric Shinseki urging him to increase the amount of assets a spouse of a veteran receiving VA long-term care is able to protect to current levels. Currently, the allowance is based on the amount allowed under Medicaid programs in 2002 and has not been adjusted for increases in the cost of living. The letter also advises Secretary Shinseki to index the allowance for the future to offset the effects of inflation. The change would affect the spouses of veterans who are receiving long-term care.
"As a result of Committee oversight, I learned that the spouses of veterans who are required to make co-payments for VA extended care are allowed to keep less in financial resources than are the spouses of Medicaid recipients. I do not believe that this inequity was VA's intent at the time the applicable regulation was issued, and I urge you to eliminate this harmful discrepancy," wrote Senator Murray.
Full text of the letter is below:

May 9, 2011

The Honorable Eric K. Shinseki

Secretary of Veterans Affairs

810 Vermont Avenue, NW

Washington, DC 20420

Dear Secretary Shinseki:

As a result of Committee oversight, I learned that the spouses of veterans who are required to make co-payments for VA extended care are allowed to keep less in financial resources than are the spouses of Medicaid recipients. I do not believe that this inequity was VA's intent at the time the applicable regulation was issued, and I urge you to eliminate this harmful discrepancy.

I served on the Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs when we considered and reported legislation to mandate extended care to certain veterans. Enacted as the Veterans Millennium Health Care and Benefits Act, Public Law 106-117, I fully expected that VA would take the needs of the spouse of such veterans into account when establishing co-pays and the amount of exempted financial resources.

The VA set the spousal resource protection amount at $89,289, basing the figure on the
amount allowed by 23 State Medicaid programs in calendar year 2002. While Medicaid programs have continued to adjust the allowable amount to offset the effects of inflation -- the allowable amount for 2011 is $109,560 --- the comparable amount for the spouses of our veterans in extended-care facilities remains frozen at the 2002 level.
Unlike the VA, Medicaid indexes its spousal allowance. I believe that the spouses of our veterans receiving extended care should receive no less and therefore hope that you will consider raising the spousal resource protection amount and indexing it for the future. As many of the veterans in extended-care facilities are exempt from co-payments, I believe
that the cost of doing so would be minimal. I am enclosing a memo prepared by Committee staff that may be of assistance to your staff.

Thank you for your consideration of my request. I am confident that, working together, we can ensure that the spouses of veterans who receive extended care can avoid depleting assets urgently needed for their own retirement years.

Sincerely,

Patty Murray

Chairman

###

Evan Miller

Specialty Media Director

U.S. Senator Patty Murray

202-224-2834

Again, Senator and Veterans Affairs Committee Chair Murray continues to follow up on this issue and tackle the bureaucracy. "Bureaucracy," as Peace Mom Cindy Sheehan attempted to point out on TV, is composed of people. Cindy attempted to explain that to the highly sexist Drew Pinsky -- who holds no degree in psychology or psychiatry. (We covered this topic at Third yesterday, FYI.) Pinsky, who goes by Dr. Drew, had Cindy on his show in the latest of his never ending attempts to popularize sexism and blame the women's rights movement for all the ills in the country -- apparently including that he was both born Drew Pinsky and that he was born in a man's body.
Pinsky attempted to guilt trip Cindy Sheehan over the journeys and trips she takes to advocate for peace. If you're confused, Pinsky made it clear that Cindy should have been at home with her children like a 'good little woman' -- that would be her adult children, by the way. Now Pinsky's children only turned 18 last year (triplets, most likely fertility issues required that drugs be used for conception) but he didn't feel the need to stay home with them when they were children. It's really telling that at this late date, a woman with grown children (they've all been adults since Cindy started the first Camp Casey) would have to justify her 2011 actions and whether or not her actions are both hurting and keeping her away from her children. It's past time that internist Pinsky's long track record of sexism and idiociy (for one example of the latter, note this Jezebel post and the comments) was widely noted. As Amanda Marcotte (Slate) wondered last year, "Can America Just Fire Dr. Drew?" Pinsky wanted to attack Cindy Sheehan because she stands for peace -- indicating yet again that the man is very sick.
Staying with peace. Russia Today's CrossTalk explored the death of the antiwar movement in the United States in a story "ANTIWAR.RIP: AFTER 2 YEARS IN THE WHITE HOUSE BARACK OBAMA MADE BOTH OF BUSH WARS HIS OWN" (link is video and goes to Antiwar.com). Host Peter Lavelle spoke with Antiwar.com's Angela Keaton, historian Thaddeus Russell (who was such a great guest on Cindy Sheehan's Soapbox April 4th) and the University of Michigan's Michael Heaney.
Daria Chernyshova: What happened to the antiwar movement so active just prior to Bush's war in Iraq? Mass demonstrations in the streets, on city squares and in front of the White House. Where are they, brave fighters for peace? Activists adamentally opposed to military interventions have always tried to reflect public opinion and influence policy makers. How much has changed? The anti-Vietnam War movement had a major impact.
Male voice over reading from Tom Wells' The War Within: America's Battle Over Vietnam: By 1968, faced with widespread public opposition to the war and troubling prospects in Vietnam, the Johnson administration halted the bombing of North Vietnam and stabilized the ground war. This policy reversal was the major turning point.
Daria Chernyshova: It would appear it's difficult to witness history repeat itself. Numbers show antiwar rallies have significantly decreased over the past years. Some claim this is because of the election of Barack Obama to the US presidency. As a Democrat he rose to power opposing the war in Iraq and promising to end it.
President Barack Obama: By August 31, 2010, our combat mission in Iraq will end.
Daria Chernyshova: Expectations were high when Obama entered office and after he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Nonetheless, on the sidelines of the Nobel Committee's ceremony antiwar activists expressed their concern.
Peace Mom Cindy Sheehan: This peace prize is a slap in the face to us, [the sound of cheering] all of us, all of us who have been working and sacrificing for true peace for years.
Daria Chernyshova: After two years in office many do not see a difference between Barack Obama and George W. Bush -- at least in terms of foreign policy. Obama inherited two wars -- neither of which has ended. And the United States is now involved in military action in Libya. It would appear that the antiwar movement today has gone AWOL. Daria Chernyshova for Crosstalk, RT.
Peter Lavelle: Alright, I usually like to reward the person who had to get up earliest for this program but we have two people from Los Angeles today. But I'm going to go to Angela anyway. Uhm, I read Antiwar.com every single day, many times a day, and you do a wonderful service. But you know, Antiwar.com, that was something that really brought people together when Bush was going to war, an illegal war that he was pushing and mainstream followed along. And now, and I think you're a wonderful success, but where is the antiwar movement today? We have a lot more war. If you read Antiwar.com, the United States is contemplating military action in even more places right now beyond Libya. So Angela, what happened?
Angela Keaton: Well -- and I owe one of these anwers to one of these guests here today -- but the sobering, unfortunate answer is that neoconservatives and nationalists were right, it was an anti-Bush movement more than it was an antiwar movement. And that's where it went. Barack Ob -- Partisanship is so strong in the US and Democrats are so wedded to Barack Obama and so afraid of weakening him, they will put up with any number of moral indecency to allow him to keep his vaunted position, including the situation and also because Barack Obama -- there's no leadup, public leadup to Libya, so there's no chance for organization. The fact that Democrats are afraid to criticize Obama and the fact that there was so little public debate on Libya says really terrible things about the future of democracy in the US. So this is a very -- it's actually, the whole situation is a bit of a microcosm, a reflection of what I think is actually going on in the US right now.
Peter Lavelle: Thaddeus, if I can go to you, too, also in Los Angeles. The empire -- it's appetite for war is insatiable. So was the antiwar movement really all about George W. Bush -- as Angela pointed out and as I'm sure Michael's going to tell us in a few minutes? Go ahead.
Thaddeus Russell: I agree with everything that Angela said. I think that, in a large part, the antiwar movement during Bush was really about, unfortunately, personality in a sense. He was seen as sort of this disreputable, low brow Texan who was very crude in his ways but what we've gotten is an imperialist who is actually very refined and very articulate. And I would just say, liberals now are basically the more effective -- and always have been -- the more effective imperialists than conservatives who usually tend to use brute force and very crude rhetoric. So that, I think, is one reason but we can talk about many others for why there is no antiwar movement and why there are actually more wars now than before.
Peter Lavelle: Well, Michael, you've written probably the most authoritative report on this to date. If you could give my audience the title of that report. But , I mean, you basically say it was really just about Bush, is that right?
Michael Heaney: Well I think it's a little bit more than that. I would say that it's both about being antiwar and about being anti-Bush. So I believe that the people who participated in the antiwar movement were genuinely and earnestly antiwar and that was the reason why they participated. But it was President George W. Bush that made the events seem so threatening. And once President Bush went away, people felt less threatened and were thus less likely to participate. I guess I would also add that the antiwar movement has not gone away completely but rather it has gotten very small so that what is really left is the hardcore, the highly organized, dedicated people. In other words, it's become a movement in abeyance now rather than a mass movement.
[And that's all I care to hear from the quack. He then starts repeating his quack study. Quack? If you're talking about whether people feel a sense of danger or not, you social science study needs to factor in the media and the coverage. Michael Heaney managed to do a 'study' in a world where the media not only doesn't have any impact at all, it doesn't even exist. Quack.]
Peter Lavelle: Angela, what do you think about that because I guess you could argue that the average American citizen is even more threatened now by more wars but the perception isn't there. How do we -- how do we square the circle on that?
Angela Keaton: Well think about it for a second. In the beginning, towards the end of 2009, the beginning of 2010, 63% of Americans were theoretically against the war in Afghanistan but when you actually ask people what they vote on, only 2 and 1/2 percent voted -- would vote the war being a deciding factor in what they did in the ballot box. This is not a bread and butter issue. The antiwar movement, this is post-Vietnam era antiwar movement, has no draft to coalesce around. People don't know anyone who died in Afghanistan or Iraq. It's just, it's not -- it's not -- People are going to -- Political action is ultimately about the pocket book and their home life and this just doesn't -- just doesn't -- It's not that important. You don't have to pay attention. You don't have to watch the news in and out every day, it's not even in people's faces. So it's not -- It doesn't grab and galvanize people. Like Michael was saying, there's just not -- people are not going to be moved to action on it.
Peter Lavelle: Thaddues, if I can just kind of again, to echo the point Angela was making right there, I mean it's an empire that can fight its wars but it doesn't have to necessarily stir up anybody's emotions because that's exactly what they want to do.
Thaddeus Russell: I slightly disagree with Angela -- although I agree with her in general on almost everything. I do think there was a significant antiwar movement during the Bush administration. I was at many demonstrations in New York that had hundreds of thousands of people at them. They were less than what they had in Vietnam and she's absolutely right that a draft certainly provokes an antiwar movement, great numbers of casualties provoke an antiwar movement. But what -- the point I want to make here today and I think this is very important is it's really about what happened with the left and liberals which is that they merged their identity with the head of empire during the campaign and since. And that is why they have left the antiwar movement in droves because now they are part of the empire. They have become a part of this global effort to remake the world in our image. And that is really the tragedy. The left and the liberals in this country need to really need to take a close look at what they did with Obama and begin to psychologically distance themselves from him. They need to start saying, "Not In Our Name!" Which is what they used to say during the Bush and during Vietnam and they no longer say that.
Of course Not In Our Name -- the organization -- closed shop in 2008. Couldn't be around to call out a Democratic White House. They actually beat a faster retreat than even the pathetic United for Peace and Justice (which waited until after the 2008 election to waive the white flag). We'll move over to Scott Horton's Antiwar Radio from last week (May 4th, audio link) when he spoke with Veterans For Peace's Joey King about the Libyan War and other topics. We're going to focus on the observations on the peace movement. Excerpt:
Joey King: And I'm sure you would agree that the Democratic activists that were so against the wars of George Bush seem to have faded away on election day after Barack Obama became president. And it's very disturbing to me because if George Bush would have done the same thing [Libyan War], you know, the Democratic activists that were against the war -- you know, the MoveOn.orgs or whomever -- would have been far more stringent than they have been with this escalation in Afghanistan and now Syria.
Scott Horton: Well you know I saw the most ridiculous poll number like that the other day that had -- I think it was just yesterday -- that had 70% of the American people are against the war in Afghanistan but then it was 70% of Democrats approve of Barack Obama's handling of Afghanistan.
Joey King: Yeah, there is definitely a disconnect. And I guess the easiest way to explain that is a mile wide and an inch deep. They just don't seem to be as opposed to the war of Barack Obama as they were when George Bush was in charge and, I know, I listen to Cindy Sheehan interview that you did, I don't know, two months ago when you had her on and she -- That's been a constant complaint of hers, is the fact that the Democrats seem to be okay as long as it's a Democratic war but not okay when it's a Republican war. And it's -- it's definitely a double standard. It's laughable.
Scott Horton: Yeah well it really is sad. You think back to even 2002, 2003, it was pretty obvious that most of the people protesting that war were at the very least silent if not supportive of Bill Clinton's war in Kosovo --
Joey King: Sure.
Scott Horton: And if it had been anybody but a bunch of oil executives and neocons planning the thing, if it had been Bill Clinton's third term and he had said we're going to go liberate the Iraqi people and whatever and we're going to go to the United Nations for resolutions saying it's okay first, they would have gone right along with it. It's just that it was a bunch of guys -- I mean, they thought Bush was from Texas, anyway, like in the TV show. And so they just didn't trust 'oh cynical Texan Republican oil man Christian types that we don't like, they couldn't possibly have good motives.' But if Bill Clinton and Madaline Albright had been implementing the exact same policy, they would have been for it. So now, here we are again, it's just the same thing.
Joey King: Yep, you're exactly right. The actions are not important. It's whether you have a "D" or an "R" behind your name. That is the most important thing, unfortunately.
Scott Horton: Well and certainly we can see all the sudden this re-emergence of, at least, the war skeptical right if not the antiwar right in this country. But it's not based on everyone went back and read Garet Garrett or anything like that. It's just that they don't like Barack Obama, 'So why would you put him in charge of a war, you know? He's a Kenyan secret agent, here to get us,' you know?
Joey King: Exactly. And it's something that we've probably done a poor job of and I hope that we can -- we can do better as far as reaching out to the antiwar right which I know is a large part of your audience and we have probably done a poor job of reaching out to those folks because -- I guess the easiest way to explain it, in my local chapter here in Nashville, we've got a pretty hard core Libertarian and a pretty hard core Socialist and they both agree that war sucks. They disagree on the causes of war. But they definitely agree that war sucks and we're all opposed to war. So it's probably something that we need to do on our end to outreach to some of the folks with the more Libertarian minded.
Yesterday Dahlia Wasfi spoke with Press TV (link has video that is not working currently) about the so-called withdrawal and stated, "We've heard time and again that when we reach a certain benchmark, US forces will withdraw from Iraq, but as most things that have come out of the mouth of the United States' government, it's dishonest. [. . .] We [US] intend to stay there as basically the vice-royalty in Iraq, as a colonial presence."
Colonial presence would explain all the members of Congress visiting Iraq over the weekend. First up, Saturday, Nancy Pelosi led a delegation on a visit to Iraq. The one-time Speaker of the House got that position by campaigning -- in 2006 -- to end the Iraq War. She was one of the faces of the Democratic Party effort that promised if the American people gave the then-minority party control of just one house of Congress, the Iraq War would end. With just one house, America was told, they would have investigative power and so much more. Many Americans believed Pelosi & Co -- so many, in fact, that Democrats were not given control of one house, they were given control of both houses of Congress. And in January of 2007, the 110th Congress was sworn in.

Did the Iraq War end?

No.

Has Nancy expressed remorse?

No.


But she visited Iraq Sautrday and she Tweeted about it.

Nancy Pelosi
NancyPelosi Nancy Pelosi
Congressional delegation with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki earlier today. http://yfrog.com/h2xs4cmj
»
Nancy Pelosi
NancyPelosi Nancy Pelosi
Arrived w/ bipartisan CODEL in Iraq to thank our troops, assess progress on redeployment and meet w/ Iraqi & US officials.


Felicia Sonmez (Washington Post) adds, "Traveling with Pelosi are Republican Rep. Roscoe Bartlett (Md.) and Democratic Reps. George Miller (Calif.), Ed Markey (Mass.), Nick Rahall (W.Va.), Anna Eshoo (Calif.), Carolyn Maloney (N.Y.), Steve Israel (N.Y.) and Cedric Richmond (La.)." Hisham Rikabi (Al Mada) reports that Pelosi was in Iraq as part of the continued effort "to convince the Iraqi government of the need to keep a number of US troops beyond 2011 and that Nouri told her extending the US presence would require an agreement on the part of all political blocs. Sunday's Iraq tweets came from Senator John McCain.

John McCain
SenJohnMcCain John McCain
@GrahamBlog & I met with one of the great Kurdish leaders PM Barham Salah in Erbil http://yfrog.com/h875370321j
»
John McCain
SenJohnMcCain John McCain
Just landed in Baghdad & ran into Marshall Tucker Band. Thanks 4 coming over 2 support our troops! http://yfrog.com/h72rwgkj
And all the visiting dignitaries couldn't put a once-independent nation back together again. Or even stop the blood flow as violence continued all weekend and continued to be reported today. Reuters notes 1 police officer was shot dead in Kirkuk today, an al-Zab roadside bombing left a teacher injured, a Baghdad roadside bombing which injured six people, another Baghdad roadside bombing which injured seven people, a third Baghdad roadside bombing which injured two people, a fourth Baghdad roadside bombing left two people wounded, a Baghdad sticky bombing which claimed ISCI's Hassan Jasim, and, dropping back to Sunday for the rest, Baghdad bombing by an alcohol store injured the store's owner, a Mosul clash in which 1 police officer was killed and 1 person shot dead in Talafar.
In violence reported over the weekend? Jane Arraf (Christian Science Monitor and al-Jazeera) points to one of the most violent incidents, one which took place Sunday.
janearraf jane arraf
Disturbing #Iraq story - Islamic State of Iraq leader kills five police in Baghdad jail before being killed. Eleven other inmates also dead.
Raheem Salman and Ned Parker (Los Angeles Times) report on a prison break aatempt of a suspect, Huthaifa Batawi, in the October 31st assault on Baghdad's Our Lady of Salvation Church. The death toll is 11 prisoners and six police officers: "The prisoners Sunday overpowered guards and killed a senior counter-terrorism general and five others before they were detained or shot dead. It was unclear how many detainees participated in the mayhem that lasted several hours." Jack Healy (New York Times) explains, "The melee inside the Baghdad prison began around 10 p.m. on Saturday when the man believed to have masterminded the church attack, Huthaifa al-Batawi, seized a police lieutenant's pistol, shot him in the head and led other inmates on a rampage, the officials said. It was unclear exactly where Mr. Batawi was when he grabbed the gun, but the authorities said that he and the other inmates had not been handcuffed, making it easier for them to overpower their captors, break out of a holding area and overrun the jail." Philip Caufield (New York Daily News) adds, "After killing his captors, al-Batawi freed nearly a dozen members of his crew, who snatched a cache of weapons -- including guns and grenades -- and attempted to overrun the prison, officials said." al-Batawi is among the dead.
Laith Hammoudi (McClatchy Newspapers) offers a detailed account full of details others missed out on. Hammoudi notes that the prisoners were being held "inside the heavily fortified compound of the Ministry of the Interiror in Baghdad" and Hammoudi observers:
It was a highly embarrassing setback for the Iraqi security services. Police said the detainees had all confessed to membership in the Islamic State of iraqi, the Iraqi extremist group linked to al Qaida and to planning and implementing a number of assaults, including the bloody attack on Lady of Salvation Church in October 2010, when more than 50 people were killed.
Appearing before reporters Sunday, four ministry officials gave a confusing and incomplete account of the incident and then departed after taking three questions.
It's a very strong, hard news report with much more to offer than just what's noted above. Great job by Hammoudi.
Still on violence, Iran's Fars News Agency reports, "Head of Iran-Iraq Friendship Committee in Iraq's Northern Salahuddin province Nafeh Eissa underlined his country's deterimnation to expel the anti-Iran terrorist Mojahedin-e Khalq Oranization (MKO) from Iraq's soil." An expulsion would conflict with the effort the US is attempting to coordinate, moving the residents of Camp Ashraf to a section of Iraq further from its shared border with Iran.


The residents of Camp Ashraf hail from Iran. They were in Iraq before the start of the Iraq War and, following the US invasion, the US made these MEK residents of Camp Ashraf -- these Iranian refuees who had been in Iraq for decades -- surrender weapons and also put them under US protection. They also extracted a 'promise' from Nouri that he would not move against them. July 28, 2009 the world saw what Nouri's word was actually worth. Since that Nouri-ordered assault in which at least 11 residents died, he's continued to bully the residents. April 4th, Iran's Fars News Agency reported that the Iraqi military denied allegations that it entered the camp and assaulted residents. Specifically, Camp Ashraf residents state, "The forces of Iraq's Fifth Division invaded Camp Ashraf with columns of armored vehicles, occupying areas inside the camp, since midnight on Saturday." Friday April 8th saw another attack which the Iraqi government again denied. Thursday April 14th, the United Nations confirmed that 34 people were killed in the April 8th assault on Camp Ashraf. Barbara Grady (San Jose Mercury News) reported that the dead included journalist Asieh Rakhshani who has family in California. The assault hasn't really registered in the US. By comparison, several British MPs have expressed their outrage.


The Foreign Affairs Committee of the National Council of Resistance of Iran notes this statement from France's Socialist Party:

Since the control of Camp Ashraf in Iraq, home to People's Mojahedin refugees, was transferred to Iraqi authorities, the residents of this camp have been subjected to a persistent and bloody repression.
After the intervention of the Iraqi security forces on April 8, the UN confirmed the death of 34 people. The unacceptable acts of violence have been criticized by the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights and condemned by the international community, but no effective protection measure has been taken since.
In unison with human rights organizations, the Socialist Party condemns the violent repression against the inhabitants of Camp Ashraf and calls for ensuring of the protection of the Ashraf population.
International humanitarian law requires that the Iraqi regime ensures the security of refugees and protected persons under the Fourth Geneva Convention. The protection of civilians must be a priority in all circumstances and France and the European Union must demand that this (protection) is ensured.

And there are problems with Kuwait as well, at least with a cell phone company located there. AFP reports that Iraqis are gearing up to boycott Zain due to the company's alleged gaps in service throughout Iraq. On the violence, it all takes place as Dar Addustour reports that Iraqiya is threatening to withdraw from the process as a result of Nouri's nominees for the security posts. Various blocs are opposed to Nouri's nominees which were made without input from Iraqiya or, for that matter, Nouri's co-horts in the National Alliance. If Nouri's serious about these nominess, this may be an indicator of what he would like to do after June 1st if he is successful in demanding new elections.
Osama bin Laden was announced dead last week by US President Barack Obama. Vanity Fair has a reaction from an Iraqi (Sunni). The reaction provides various examples of violence and the main point appears to be: "Brother, Osama bin Laden's death was victory to childhood all over the world, nnot only United States because they are who suffered from him." Noam Chomsky has a brief piece entitled "My Reaction to Osama bin Laden's Death" (ICH) and he observes:

We might ask ourselves how we would be reacting if Iraqi commandos landed at George W. Bush's compound, assassinated him, and dumped his body in the Atlantic. Uncontroversially, his crimes vastly exceed bin Laden's, and he is not a "suspect" but uncontroversially the "decider" who gave the orders to commit the "supreme international crime differing only from other war crimes in that it contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole" (quoting the Nuremberg Tribunal) for which Nazi criminals were hanged: the hundreds of thousands of deaths, millions of refugees, destruction of much of the country, the bitter sectarian conflict that has now spread to the rest of the region.
Today on Law and Disorder Radio (begins broadcasting at 9:00 am EST on WBAI and around the country throughout the week), Michael Ratner, Heidi Boghosian and Michael S. Smith explore with attorney Shane Kadidal the issue of Guantanamo -- the never ending hell -- and what was done to children, the mentally ill and the elderly; and with journalist Will Potter they explore the efforts to demonize eco-activists. On WBAI, the hosts actually did three hours of fundraising this morning and addressed the reality that the courts were the place to try and convict. Most know Dalia Hashad as a former host of Law & Disorder Radio (and for her work with the ACLU and Amnesty). She weighs in on the death in "Bin Laden's Gone, the Problem Remains" (The Scoop):

The world was not a better place with Osama bin Laden in it. But the rejoicing that has followed his death -- and the largely uncritical coverage of that bloodlust in the mainstream press -- demands careful consideration. It shows that after a decade of hard lessons, a significant portion of the U.S. population is still mired in the Why-do-they-hate-us? mentality, unable to critically reflect on America's role in the world, let alone understand the consequences of American military and economic policy.
Here's what we should remember: The U.S. is engaged militarily in four countries (let's not overlook Colombia) and has operatives and "advisers" in uncounted others. By the most conservative estimates, hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians -- including thousands of children -- have died in U.S. military operations since 9/11. Drone strikes in impoverished Pakistani villages stoke resentment against our imperiousness. And as if to prove the point, people who can't find Pakistan on a map -- and who are happy to remain blissfully unaware of the names of the dead or the consequences that follow -- take to the streets to cheer the murder of a ruthless giant-killer whom we ourselves had a hand in creating.
How does the press figure into all of this? Better to ask, How doesn't the press figure into all of this? As scary as it might be to report facts that fickle news consumers don't want to hear, catering to willful ignorance isn't journalism. It's propaganda.