Wednesday, March 11, 2015

Who's following The Following?

 First up,  Isaiah's   The World Today Just Nuts "Hillary Teaches Children"is one of the three comics he did on Sunday.





Hillary Clinton's a disgrace.

You know what else is?

Fox's The Following

The first season was something.

Season two sucked for the first half and only slightly improved in the last half.

Now there's a season three.

Ratings wise, the season opener got more than last year's season ender.

But the second episode cratered.

How come?

We don't give a f**k about Kevin Bacon's sex life.

If his character isn't going to be with Natalie Zea's character, we really don't care that much about him.

Despite killing the ratings last year by keeping Zea off for half the season, the show's started with Zea gone.  She's not supposed to be dead this time.

She's just supposed to have told Bacon it won't work.

You know what does work?

This show without her.

They need to cancel The Following.

No one's watching and it's nothing but mindless violence -- on all sides.

It's worthless and has no redeeming qualities.



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


 
Tuesday, March 10, 2015.  Chaos and violence continue, Iraq gets noted in the Senate, the assault on Tikrit may reach Tikrit . . . some day, 4D PAC emerges to advocate for war (though they hope you're too ignorant to catch on), Jason Ditz sports his  gross stupidity yet again, and much more.

This morning, US Senator John McCain declared, "Indeed, all four of the military service chiefs have testified that defense spending at sequestration levels would put American lives at risk. Now more than ever, a strong Navy and Marine Corps are essential to our nation's ability to deter adversaries, assure allies and defend our national interests."


He was speaking at a budget hearing the Senate Armed Services Committee was holding.  Mccain is the Chair of the Committee, Senator Jack Reed is the Ranking Member.  The witnesses appearing before them were Gen Joseph Dunford Jr (Commandant of the Marine Corps), Secretary of the Navy Raymond Mabus Jr. and Adm John Greenert (Chief of Naval Operations).

We'll come back to the hearing in a moment.

But let's think about what the Chair was saying.

Not in terms of the US but in terms of Iraq.

Nouri al-Maliki was prime minister of Iraq from 2006 - 2014.  There were no real public works programs to repair Iraq's crumbling infrastructure.  There were times when the yearly budget was such that Nouri could have given every Iraqi citizen in the country a billion dollars.  But didn't.

The money also didn't go to help address Iraq's problems -- such as the severe shortage of nurses and doctors (but especially nurses).  Instead, Nouri was fine with bringing in nurses from other countries.

This despite double-digit unemployment in Iraq and a severe need for employment.

Now there was money for Nouri's son to amass a fleet of sports cars in London as well as a bachelor pad where he -- contrary to the strict Shi'ite beliefs Nouri is supposed to hold (supposed to) -- entertained woman after woman.  There was money for Nouri's son to party.

But there was no money spent on the Iraqi people.

Nouri created his own political slate and dubbed it State and Law.

The point being, Nouri insisted, he was law and order and restoring that to Iraq.

And he ran in 2010 on the (false) claim that he'd restored order to Iraq.

The one thing he did pour money into was the Iraqi forces.

(Not the Peshmerga.  The Kurdish Regional Government paid the Peshmerga out of their portion of the national budget.)

In fact, the Iraqi forces were so 'covered' by Nouri, he was able to say, "I got this."

He was able to say, "I got this" -- and to refuse to US training for them.


This was noted in the November 30, 2011 House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on the Middle East and South Asia hearing on Iraq.  We covered it in the next day's snapshot (December 1, 2011).  The Ranking Member, US House Rep Gary Ackerman, noted how the US training program was being publicly rebuked by the Ministry of the Interior.  They did not want or need US trainers.  That was made clear.  (There was no Minister of the Interior.  Nouri refused to nominate anyone for the post so that he could control the Ministry himself.)

They didn't show up for training, these forces.

What's changed since then?

Not much.

CBS News reported Monday:


CBS News correspondent Holly Williams reports there are already more than 2,500 U.S. military advisers and trainers in Iraq, but Dempsey said their work is being hindered by the fact that Iraqi units sometimes fail to show up for training, or arrive without the proper equipment.
"Right now we don't need more advisers on the ground," Dempsey told reporters on board the French aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle, alongside his counterpart French Gen. Pierre de Villiers.
"We've got trainers and advisers that are waiting for some of the Iraqi units to show up, and when they've shown up -- a handful of them -- they've shown up understrength and sometimes without the proper equipment. The Iraqi government can actually fix that themselves," said Dempsey.


Back at the 2011 hearing when Ackerman was noting the Iraqi forces didn't want US training, he also noted that the Iraqi forces were unable to provide security to the country by themselves as he questioned the State Dept's Brooke Darby:


Ranking Member Gary Ackerman: When will they be willing to stand up without us?
Brooke Darby: I wish I could answer that question.
Ranking Member Gary Ackerman: Then why are we spending money if we don't have the answer?
[long pause]

Ranking Member Gary Ackerman: You know, this is turning into what happens after a bar mitzvah or a Jewish wedding. It's called "a Jewish goodbye."  Everybody keeps saying goodbye but nobody leaves.


When will they be able to stand up?


Not then.

And apparently still not now.

In fairness to them, it turns out some of Nouri's spending was wasted on corruption and on paying people for service that they were not actually performing.

But the US is yet again working on training.

Iraqi forces, by themselves, are still not able to meet the goals McCain expects from US allies: "to deter adversaries, assure allies and defend our national interests."

The assault on Tikrit was announced (and begun) two Sundays ago. Kareem Khadder and Ben Wedeman (CNN) remind, "Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi ordered Iraqi forces on March 1 to retake Tikrit and Salahuddin province. Tikrit, best known to Westerners as the birthplace of former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein, fell in June to ISIS, which has captured parts of Iraq and Syria for what it says is its Islamic caliphate."

BBC News notes Iraqi officials are saying today  "parts" of Tikrit were entered (finally) as the assault reached day ten.

Mitchell Prothero (McClatchy Newspapers) reports:

Iraqi security forces and Iranian-backed Shiite Muslim militias on Tuesday pushed to the outskirts of the encircled city of Tikrit, residents and Iraqi officials said, after 10 days of heavy fighting that have seen government-aligned forces take control of two key towns north and south of the city.
News that government forces had arrived on the outskirts of Tikrit, which has been occupied by the Islamic State since last summer, was greeted triumphantly on state television, with officials claiming the militants had withdrawn from the city and predicting a quick victory.
But officials have made similar claims in the past about the success of operations against the Islamic State – last summer about a failed mission to retake Tikrit, and most notably last fall about the town of Baiji – only to see the gains they claimed evaporate before fierce counterattacks.

Read more here: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2015/03/10/259287/iranian-led-militias-close-in.html#storylink=cpy


On today's CBS Evening News with Scott Pelley, Holly Williams reported (link is video) on the move towards Tikrit:

Holly Williams [. . .] Iraqi forces claim they're closing in on Tikrit.  Today, they seized the town of Alam -- five miles from the city.

General Saad Maan:  Now we are surrounding Tikrit from four directions

Holly Williams:  General Saad Maan of Iraq's Interior Ministry dismissed criticism from America's top general Martin Dempsey [Chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff] or Iraqi military's readiness.

General Saad Maan:  We are not kids in our work.  We have skills, We have a very big amount of experience.

Holly Williams:  But in Tikrit, progress is painfully slow as ISIS fights back with weapons including mines and suicide bombs



Reuters offers:

There have been fears that the Shi'ite-dominated security forces and militia would seek revenge on local Sunni residents for the Speicher killings. In the nearby village of Albu Ajil, local officials said houses had been set on fire by the militia.

Some houses were also set alight in al-Alam, but local tribal fighters said they belonged to security force members and government workers and were burnt by the retreating insurgents.


So  Reuters knows that the assault has already resulted in homes being set on fire in Albu Ajil and Reuters knows that some homes were burned in today's seizure of al-Alam.  Reuters doesn't know who burned the homes in al-Alam but they tie a pretty ribbon around it -- an orange one, like police tape intended to halt traffic -- only Reuters' orange ribbon is intended to halt thought and questions.


The topic of Iraq was raised briefly in today's Senate Armed Services Committee hearing.  Excerpt.


Senator Lindsey Graham:  When it comes to Iraq and Syria, do you agree with me, when we take ISIL on -- and when I say "we," the United States and the region -- that we must win.

Gen Joseph Dunford Jr.: Yes, Senator.

Senator Lindsey Graham:  How many Marines were involved in the first battle and second battle of Falluja 

Gen Joseph Dunford Jr: The first battle, Senator, was about two regimental combat teams of in the order of 6,000.  The second battle -- and, of course, it was soldiers as well -- The second battle was about 14,000 US forces -- that's Marines and US soldiers.

Senator Lindsey Graham:  So-so do you agree with me, without that capacity, it would have been very difficult for the Sunni tribes to prevail over al Qaeda in Iraq at the time? 

Gen Joseph Dunford Jr.: Without?  Absolutely, Senator.

Senator Lindsey Graham: Okay, so we're about to fight a bigger force and how many members of our military do we have in Iraq today?

Gen Joseph Dunford Jr.:  Senator, I don't know the exact numbers but I think on the order of 3,000. 

Senator Lindsey Graham: How many of those are Marines?

Gen Joseph Dunford Jr.:  We've got about 500 Marines, Senator -- that are actually on the ground --


Senator Lindsey Graham:  Do you agree with me, both of you, that ISIL represents a threat to us, not just the region?

Gen Joseph Dunford Jr.: : I do, Senator.

Senator Lindsey Graham:  Do you agree with that, Adm?

Adm John Greenert:  I do, Senator.

Senator Lindsey Graham:  So anybody who thinks that defeating or destroying ISIL was their problem not ours is making a huge mistake? 

Gen Joseph Dunford Jr.:  I agree with that, Senator.

Adm John Greenert: We have to prevail, yes, Senator.

Senator Lindsey Graham:  Do you agree that it is in our national security interests to make sure that not only that they're degraded and destroyed but they don't come back?

Gen Joseph Dunford Jr.:  I-I agree with that, Senator. 

Senator Lindsey Graham:  Do you agree with me that the best way that you guarantee that you destroy and degrade ISIL is that you have some American ground forces to help the regional forces?

Gen Joseph Dunford Jr.: Senator, uh, right now, uh, I think it's critical that we provide US support.  And I think, as you know, we're waiting for Gen [Lloyd]  Austin to make a recommendation as to exactly what that support would be.


Senator Lindsey Graham:  Doesn't that guarantee the highest chance of success is to have some American capability on the ground enhancing our regional partners?

Gen Joseph Dunford Jr.:  Cer-Certainly my perspective would be as a link to supporting capability.

Senator Lindsey Graham:  Do you agree with me that any Marine, Soldier, Airman, Sailor who participated in these operations would be protecting the homeland?

Gen Joseph Dunford:  I-I believe that, Senator.

Senator Lindsey Graham: If somebody died trying to deal with ISIL in Iraq or Syria, they would have died on behalf of protecting their nation?


Gen Joseph Dunford: They would have died in protecting our national interest is clear, Senator. 

Senator Lindsey Graham:  Do you agree with me that if we don't stop ISIL sooner rather than later, the likelihood of another attack against this country grows?

Gen Joseph Dunford:  I think it grows but also I think if we don't stop them, there will be destabilization in the region as well as inamicable to our national interests.

Senator Lindsey Graham:  Do you worry about the King of Jordan if they don't at least get slowed down or degraded pretty quickly?

Gen Joseph Dunford: I do, Senator.

Senator Lindsey Graham:  Do you, Adm?

Adm John Greenert:  I do, Senator.  Yes, I do. 

Senator Lindsey Graham: So to both of you, and to those who serve under you, I am sorry that some of you may have to go back. I regret it more than you'll ever know.  But I think you know, better than anyone else, why you may have to go back.  And the only commitment that I will make as a senator from South Carolina, is that if you go back, you go back to win and that we get this right this time. 


Graham supported the Iraq War in 2003, he supports it now.

He's not alone.

A Democratic group has remade itself into 4D PAC and they have recommendations.

Recommendations do not include: "No war on Iraq."

But that's hardly surprising.  They see themselves as "center-left," others see them as War Hawks -- and saw them that way when they were known as VET PAC.  Back then, they were apologists for the Democratic Party.  They remain such today.

They sent out a mass e-mail today -- if you donated to a Democratic presidential candidate -- even as far back as John Kerry in 2004 -- there's a good chance you received the e-mail because pro-war groups always have access to big money and this group bought one e-mail list after another.

Their e-mail reads:


As you may have heard, the President’s request for a new authorization for the use of military force (AUMF) against ISIS has hit a political wall.
The rollout of the President’s proposal sparked such consternation from both the left and the right that leadership in both houses don’t know how to proceed. There's even talk of scrapping an AUMF vote all together.
That would be a bad outcome.
Without new legislation, this and future administrations will be able to rely on the near-limitless authorities granted by the post-9/11 AUMF, without Congressional approval. A new AUMF, even if imperfect, could restore Congress’ constitutional responsibility to oversee military deployments.
4D PAC has identified four core principles necessary in a new AUMF. Beyond these principles, we urge Members of Congress to allow some room for compromise.
  1. Repeal the 2002 AUMF and sunset the 2001 AUMF.
  2. Include a sunset clause for the new AUMF.
  3. Specify that the new AUMF will be the only authorization that applies to U.S. operations against ISIS.
  4. Give the president all the tools necessary to defeat ISIS.

Read our full memo and help us show Congress that it is in their interest - as well as America’s - to pass a new AUMF.


Barack's AUMF "has hit a political wall" -- and note that they don't see that as a good thing.

It's certainly not cause for them to rethink their advocacy of war.

And they insist it would be "bad" to scrap the AUMF.

Why?

Because, they whine, an AUMF "could restore Congress' constitutional responsibility to oversee military deployments."

That won't happen.

Barack, John Kerry, everyone in the administration has made clear that -- with or without an AUMF -- Barack will do what he wants.

How stupid are they in 4D PAC -- and how stupid do they think everyone else is?

They insist that the 2002 AUMF should be repealed -- that's the authorization for war on Iraq.  But note that the new one they want -- they just want that one to have a sunset clause -- they also want a sunset clause on the 2001 AUMF.

Now the 2002 -- that they want revoked -- covers only Iraq.

But the 2001 one was used to take war around the world and is so would the AUMF that Barack wants.  These won't be revoked, 4D PAC insists, just have sunset clauses attached.

The February 23rd snapshot noted that week's Law and Disorder Radio,  hosted by attorneys Heidi Boghosian, Michael S. Smith and Michael Ratner (Center for Constitutional Rights), which featured a discussion of  US President Barack Obama's recent AUMF request:

Michael Ratner:  Now there's three or four points in it that I want to mention because they're so shocking and surprising.  Let's just look at the scenario here.  The Democrats want to put some limits on it -- not very many, but some -- on this use of force.  The Republicans want an ever expansive use of force.  Not much real difference between them but in some of the details.  The first one comes up in what's known as the 'sunset clause.'  We've talked about sunset clauses here with respect to the PATRIOT Act, etc.  When liberals want to vote for something bad but they want to feel better about it, they say, 'Oh, we're going to put a sunset clause in!'  That means that in two, three, four years, whatever the sunset provision is, the law will end by itself and it won't be renewed automatically.  Well we know what happened with the PATRIOT Act -- which we predicted at the time -- was a lot of liberals voted for the PATRIOT Act because it had a sunset clause, that was their excuse.  'Oh, tell our liberal constituents it's going to set in four years.'  And, of course, it did set.  But, of course, before it did set, Congress went ahead and renewed it for another four, ten, whatever number of years.  So this one has a three year sunset clause.  Let's think about that.  One, they can renew it always.  But secondly, even if it sets in three years, the president -- and it won't be Obama anymore -- just goes back to the 2001 Authorization to Use Military Force --

Heidi Boghosian: Right. 

Michael Ratner: -- which has no sunset.  So essentially the sunset clause is meaningless for lots of reasons except it gives liberals cover.  And for that reason, I oppose the sunset clause because I don't want liberals having cover.  They ought to vote for what they understand they're voting for which is  indefinite war against the world.  So that's one very bad provision. 


A sunset clause would be meaningless.

But 4D PAC knows that.

Which is why they want the 2002 AUMF (only covers Iraq) revoked (their term "revoked") but they want the 2001 AUMF and the 2015 AUMF to have "sunset clauses" -- even though they know the clauses are meaningless.

The 2001 AUMF and the 2015 that Barack requested have been and will be used as legal cover to allow war anywhere in the world.

That's not Congress showing their power or exercising their Constitutional duties.  It's Congress signing blank checks for war anywhere in the world.

4D PAC knows that.

4D PAC is War Hawk front.

No one should be fooled by them and they shouldn't be able to escape their past via a name change.


Let's move to a Tweet.




Great to embark on USS New Hampshire yesterday! The sub & its crew are incredibly impressive:
0 replies 2 retweets 1 favorite


Shaheen was at today's Senate Armed Services Committee hearing and we'll note this:

Senator Jeanne Shaheen: . . . a lot of the discussions during the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq has been about the toll that's taken on our fighting men and women.  And one of the things that was clear yesterday -- not because anybody on The New Hampshire complained about it -- but the toll that the reduction in our ships and their capacity has on the men and women who serve on those ships because the deployments increase just as our deployments increased during Iraq and Afghanistan in a way that I think is less clear to the American public and the toll that that takes.  And I wonder -- Adm or Secretary Mabus -- if either of you would like to speak to what that shortfall in our ship capacity, the impact that that has on the men and women who are serving on those ships?

Adm John Greenert:  You explained it very well, Senator.  There's a commitment -- a covenant -- that we have for providing ready forces forward around the world to be -- like we like to say -- where it matters, when it matters.  If you have less ships to distribute, those which are out there will stay on the watch longer.



Let's turn to the topic of stupid idiots.  A real stupid trend is taking place.  The biggest idiot may be this dumb ass:









  • US Senators are allowed to say whatever they want.

    In America, we're supposed to have free speech.

    But members of Congress have it even more so.

    We aren't -- US citizens -- protected from lawsuits if we make remarks.  But members of Congress can say pretty much anything from the floors of Congress.

    We could debate whether the letter was right or wrong -- it's a letter that basically states, "Tehran, any deal you make with Barack Obama?  You need to remember he's got less than 2 years left in his term as president."  -- but no one wants to debate that.

    Instead dumb asses, hacks, human filth like Nancy Osborne want to scream "traitor!"

    That's a really serious charge and you don't make it lightly.

    Dumb ass Nancy says Dick Cheney would have thrown them in Guantanamo.

    She apparently knows Dick so intimately that she knows what he'd do.  Maybe she's been to bed with him?  Maybe she's just been on her knees in front of him?  Maybe she just has sexual fantasies about him?

    But, as a liberal, if you tell me that Dick Cheney would do X, my immediate reaction is I don't want to do anything like X because I loathe Dick Cheney and consider him a War Criminal.

    I've had it with the six years of dumb asses, of temple whores in the Cult of St. Barack.

    I've had it with them soiling the left because they're so damn in lust with Barack that they've confused that with being left or being liberal.  They've confused twisted sexual desire for Barack with an actual set of ethics.

    If you have a problem with the letter the Republicans sent, take out the letter.

    Mock the senators involved.

    Call them dirty names.

    And I won't care one bit.

    But when you start tossing around "treason," you've crossed a line.

    You should actually be expelled from public discourse because you're no longer just stupid, you are grossly immature and dangerous to the free exchange of information.  (It is these cries that took root and lead to witch hunts and 'purity tests' for citizens.)

    During the White House occupation of Bully Boy Bush, we watched this happen over and over and swore we'd never do it.

    But here we are, so few years later and we're doing it.

    It needs to stop.

    And the media needs to do their duty which is to weed out these wackos from the public discourse.

    If all you have to offer is "treason!" screamed at others, you really don't have anything to contribute and you should sit your tired and uninformed ass down.

    And shame on Jason Ditz (living up to his name yet again!) and Antiwar.com for refusing to call out these cries of "treason" but instead writing an ahistoric piece of drivel that looks like it came from the desk of attack fetus Paul Begala.












    law and disorder radio
    michael s. smith
    heidi boghosian
    michael ratner

    Tuesday, March 10, 2015

    Left to choke on her own words

    Week two of Hillary Clinton's ongoing e-mail scandal.  Sunday Isaiah's The World Today Just Nuts "Hillary's E-mails" went up.





     Josh Rogin and Eli Lake (Bloomberg) note:


    As secretary of state, Hillary Clinton repeatedly criticized other governments for not living up to high standards of openness and transparency with their citizens, while shielding her own emails from the U.S. archives.
    During her tenure in the Obama administration, Clinton promoted a worldwide effort to improve government transparency. This effort included an action plan for the U.S. that pledged to reform the storage of digital records and increase Americans’ access to government information.

    In July 2011, Clinton gave a speech in Washington to inaugurate the Open Government Partnership, which her State Department co-chaired with Brazil.
    “When a government hides its work from public view, hands out jobs and money to political cronies, administers unequal justice, looks away as corrupt bureaucrats and businessmen enrich themselves at the people’s expense, that government is failing its citizens,” she said. “And most importantly, that government is failing to earn and hold the trust of its people. And that lack of trust, in a world of instantaneous communication, means that the very fabric of society begins to fray and the foundation of governmental legitimacy begins to crumble.”


    Poor Hillary.  Choking on her own words.

    She's a liar.

    She's stayed silent on the scandal because there is no excuse for her actions.

    None at all.

    New content at Third:




    And Dallas and the following worked on it:




    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),
    Mike of Mikey Likes It!,
    Elaine of Like Maria Said Paz),
    Cedric of Cedric's Big Mix,
    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.

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


     
    Monday, March 9, 2015.  Chaos and violence continue, the assault on Tirkit (or near it) continues, US Gen Martin Dempsey appears to have been misquoted, a Tehran government official reportedly asserts Baghdad is the new capital in Iran's growing empire, Senator Angus King says sending (more) US troops into Iraq is what the Islamic State wants, Law and Disorder Radio covers Iraq, and much more.




    Prensa Latina reports, "US Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Martin Dempsey said today that the self proclaimed Islamic State for Syria and Iraq, ISIS will be defeated at the same time that the local government increases is offensive against Tikrit and Al-Anbar."

    Is that what he said?

    If that's what he said, he's an idiot.

    As many observers have pointed out -- to stick only with Tikrit -- Iraq grabbing control of it from the Islamic State doesn't matter as much as what happens the day after liberation or 'liberation.'

    Is there a reason for Sunnis to buy in?  A reason for them to feel the government out of Baghdad is a representative one.

    Dempsey usually makes remarks about the need for a political solution.

    Maybe he forgot.

    Or maybe Prensa Latina got it wrong.

    Robert Burns (AP) reports, "Before arriving in the Iraqi capital, Dempsey said that he wanted to press the Shiite-dominated government to deliver on its promise to reconcile with the Sunni minority and to explain how it intends to balance its relations with Iran."


    It's a shame that the Pentagon failed to release a transcript of the press conference.

    It might have cleared up some errors.

    Might have even mitigated some of the reactions to the press briefing.


    At Rudaw's report on Dempsey's remarks at the press conference, the most popular reader comment is this:


    They're spinning the story, what's happened is the Iranians have instructed Baghdad to get rid of the Americans, all of it, the air support, bases, training etc. and now the Americans are doing damage control, trying to save face. Fist they claimed Baghdad is not requesting more air support, now they're claiming that they want to "avoid civilian casualties", they have no such concerns in Syria or Yemen or Afghanistan. A month ago the Pentagon and the administration declared that they were planing to send additional advisers, special forces and around 4000 marines to Iraq, this past week they've changed their tone completely, even today Dempsey said Iraq "doesn't need" more US trainers or advisories.                      



    Before anymore US troops are sent to Iraq, it would be good to know how the missing is seen in the region and in Iraq.  Not how it's seen by the US appointed and anointed rulers in Iraq, but by the people.


    In America, some are saying the people have spoken.  For example, Andrew Tilghman (Military Times) writes, "According to a Rasmussen poll in early February, 52 percent of Americans believe the U.S. should send 'send combat troops back to Iraq as part of an international coalition to fight ISIS.' That's up from 48 percent in October. Meanwhile, the percentage of those opposed fell 8 points, to 28 percent from 36 percent in October."

    A few problems.

    "International coalition" isn't defined.

    Second, Rasmussen?

    Seriously.

    I believe, correct me if I'm wrong, their polling had Mitt Romney winning the 2012 election.

    For those who've forgotten, Mitt Romney lost that election to Barack Obama.


    Whatever the actual figure, I don't doubt that it's increased since October.

    The US media's been selling fear non-stop since then.

    It's attempted to stir up the public.  It's featured 'talkers' who've predicted mayhem on the streets of America from the Islamic State despite the fact that it's really not possible.

    Homegrown terrorists launching an attack on US soil?

    Very possible.

    It's even possible that they might be terrorists who are sympathetic to the Islamic State.

    But the Islamic State having fighters to spare, fighters who can easily cross into the US?

    Not as simple as the talkers would insist.



    Let's note some violence.  All Iraq News notes 5 people are dead and thirty more injured as a result of 3 car bombing in Kirku Province.  AFP adds, "Daesh executed 20 people who wanted to fight against them in the northern Iraqi province of Kirkuk, officials said on Monday."  IANS reports, "Members of the Islamic State (IS) terrorist group publicly beheaded four young people on charges of homosexuality in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul on Monday."

    That last one, that would be the second reported attack on gay men or men suspected of being gay.

    But that's not used to stir up anger or fear in the US?

    Why?

    First off, they don't have their own public relations agency working their angle.

    The Yezidis, after their plight -- trapped on Mount Sinjar -- became news, neoconservatives in the United States suddenly loved the Yezidis and got them a public relations firm to ensure that they got press and lots of it.  Their  representative in Parliament -- at a time when Parliament is supposed to be focused on mending fences and moving Iraq forward -- skipped weeks of legislative sessions to fulfill a p.r. tour in the west that the public relations firm had booked her on.

    An Iraqi ethnic minority never had it so good.

    And it's resulted in Iraqi Christians -- who have been under attacks much longer -- to marvel at the ease with which the Yazidis have become the face of Iraq's minority population, who have been able to dominate the conversation.

    Yazidis are not Christians.

    But they've been sold and marketed as such by the neocon public relations firm.

    It's amazing the way they and their cause have been embraced when you remember that for years western reporters described the religion as worshiping Lucifer/Satan.

    But US neocons who want war pour millions into promoting the Yazidis and everything can be re-written.

    The Yazidis truly suffered on Mount Sinjar.

    But what's followed in the last months has been the Yazidis -- at least their leaders -- using their misfortune to promote war.

    Iraq's LGBTQ community has no such public relations firm.

    Equally true, there's no benefit in 'merchandising' them.

    You can't sell war with them.

    They wouldn't go along the way the Yazidi MP has.

    They're fully aware that any targeting from the Sunni extremists in the Islamic State is nothing compared to the many years of targeting by Shi'ite militias.

    They're fully aware that the Shi'ite militias targeted them throughout Nouri al-Maliki's second term as prime minister (2010 - 2014) targeted them with the encouragement and support of the Baghdad government.  It was Nouri, as head of the Ministery of Interior (he refused to nominate anyone to head the Ministry so that he could control it), who dispatched MoI employees to schools to encourage Iraqi youths to attack and kill gay men and those suspected of being gay.

    Unlike the Yazidi PM, you wouldn't find gay men willing to whore for a little bit of publicity or a few coins tossed their way.

    So the attacks on gay men and men suspected of being gay are not going to be embraced by the US media determined to sell fear and panic.

    Panhandle Media -- media that begs its audience for donations -- could tell the truths that the MSM is not telling.

    But they've run from Iraq.

    They've refused to cover it.

    Even today, when a brave soul steps forward, they refuse to tell the truth about Nouri's second term.  How it was brutal for the Sunnis.  How Nouri didn't win a second term but Barack insisted Nouri get a second term.  How a legal contract (The Erbil Agreement) was used to give Nouri a second term after he lost the 2010 election to Ayad Allawi's Iraqiya.

    These details and so many more are ignored.


    On this week's Law and Disorder Radio,  an hour long program that airs Monday mornings at 9:00 a.m. EST on WBAI and around the country throughout the week, hosted by attorneys Heidi Boghosian, Michael S. Smith and Michael Ratner (Center for Constitutional Rights) topics addressed include Iraq and the Islamic State and that segment features Jim Lafferty of the National Lawyers Guild.  Excerpt.


    Heidi Boghosian:  Now there are so many things we could talk to you about but we'd like to focus a bit on ISIS and ask you what gave rise to the creation of ISIS

    Jim Lafferty:  Yes, I think that is important for the people in this country to understand as they hopefully will debate what Obama wants to do next -- which is sort of double down on a failed policy. It was US military strategy in the Middle East to begin with and past US military action in that part of the world -- especially in Iraq -- that provided the primary catalyst for the growth of ISIS.  I mean, we destroyed the secular government in Iraq and Libya and that created the political space for ISIS and other right-wing forces to grow.  I mean, when you have years of sanctions and war in Iraq,  you fragment the country along ethnic and sectarian lines and-and countries in that part of the world often have tribal divsions to begin with and we conciously re-organized the political life in Iraq.  We said a Shi'ite would be prime minister, a Kurd would be president, a Sunni would be Speaker of the National Assembly.  And then starting in 2002, 2003, in an effort to prevent the emergence of a reunited Iraq, a resistance to our occupation, we started funding militias whose identities were anchored in religion or ethnicity.  We bombed populated areas in Iraq thereby marginalizing the central government.  The old Iraq wasn't there anymore.  ISIS filled the governing vacuum, took advantage of these ethnic divisions -- angered at the US -- and steadily gained strength thereafter.  The people were angry at the US.  If you think about it, we spent the last 40 or 50 years destroying leftists and secular and anti-imperialist movements all over that region of the world and governments that constituted any kind of leadership of anti-colonial and anti-imperialist movements.  I don't think the US should now be surprised that loathsome organizations like ISIS have risen to fill that void.

    Michael Smith: What about President Obama in advance of any Congressional authorization for the use of military force -- which is what he's going to ask for but aren't they already waging the very war that he's now talking about authorizations for?

    Jim Lafferty:  Yeah, I mean he's looking for political cover.  You know, I guess he's tired of being called a wimp by the Congress, so he asks them to have some backbone and support his failed policy.  There are already thousands of more troops on the ground.  Two weeks ago, the Pentagon announced it's sending another 4,000 US troops with very heavy weaponry to Kuwait.  The US has already set up a "division headquarters" in Iraq -- a new division headquarters in Iraq.  Well a division consists of 20,000 troops.  Suddenly anyone who thinks this is a war the US can wage for a decade or more -- as he talks about -- without tens of thousands boots on the ground is


    We'll try to note more from the program throughout the week.


    For now let's move over to the US State Dept and Jen Psaki's frustrations when asked of Iraq.


    QUESTION: Local media has reported in numerous articles that the Iranian Government is intervening – helping the Iraqi Government retake Tikrit. There are reports that Qasem Soleimani is there. So I just want to know whether you agree with any of these local reports that Iran plays a role in retaking Tikrit.

    MS. PSAKI: Well, we’ve spoken to this before. We’ve said previously we are aware Iran has sent some operatives into Iraq that are training and advising some Iraqi Security Forces. We also know that Iran has provided some supplies, arms, ammunition and aircraft for Iraq’s armed forces. I would point you to what the Secretary said on Saturday, where he addressed a very similar question.

    QUESTION: On Tikrit specifically?

    MS. PSAKI: Yes, he did on Saturday. I would look at his press avail.

    QUESTION: But you’re not opposed to the Iranians being there fighting ISIS, are you?

    MS. PSAKI: Well, we’ve addressed this many times, Said. We’ve been clear that Iran – Iraq can best counter the threat from ISIL with a government and security forces that are inclusive, and if the interests of all groups are respected. With respect to the activities of any country in Iraq, including Iran, we believe strongly that Iraq’s sovereignty must be respected and the Government of Iraq must focus on strengthening its internal political and security situation – institutions in an inclusive way. Clearly, that’s what our focus is on. We’re not coordinating with the Iranians; nothing has changed in that regard.

    QUESTION: Are you concerned that the militia al-Hashd al-Shaabi, which is an Iranian-backed militia – in fact, an Iranian militia – is – there are claims that they are doing some terrible things to the Sunni populations and so on. How do you raise these issues with the Iranians directly?

    MS. PSAKI: Well, we’ve also spoken to this a number of times, but I’m happy to reiterate.

    QUESTION: (Inaudible) last 24 hours.

    MS. PSAKI: And Prime Minister Abadi has also spoken to this, including, I believe, in his inaugural address, and his efforts to not only regulate militias but to look into these reports. That’s something we certainly support. We’ve raised this issue with – from Washington, D.C. as well as from our Embassy in Baghdad, and we’ll continue to do that.

    QUESTION: I have been following the CENTCOM announcements. I haven’t seen airstrikes being carried out to help Iraqi forces to retake Tikrit. Why so?

    MS. PSAKI: Well, Iraqi forces continue to advance on the city of Tikrit with a combination of regular Iraqi Security Forces, militias and tribes. We’ve seen some success by the Iraqi Security Forces in pushing ISIL back in a number of towns and villages around Tikrit, but operations remains ongoing. Tikrit is one operation of many Iraqi-led efforts to push back against ISIL. The United States and our Coalition partners have assisted Iraqi ground forces in over 20 counter-ISIL operations across Iraq, all of them successful. I would refer you to the Department of Defense about airstrikes.

    QUESTION: But why don’t you help them in Tikrit? Is it because of Iran’s role? Do you not want to cooperate with Iran?

    MS. PSAKI: I would refer you to the Department of Defense about military action.

    QUESTION: This is a political --

    MS. PSAKI: Any more on Iraq?

    QUESTION: Yeah.

    MS. PSAKI: Go ahead.

    QUESTION: The government is digging a trench right along the entire length of the border with Anbar, between Anbar and the heartland. Are you concerned that this may be sort of a prelude to dividing the country?

    MS. PSAKI: I have not seen the report you’re referring to, Said, and I don’t think your question is accurate with what’s happening on the ground.

    QUESTION: There’s been over 2,700 airstrikes among the U.S.-led coalition in Iraq and Syria. Would you like to see other countries do more – Egypt, for example?

    MS. PSAKI: Well, there are a number of countries, as you know. There are 60 countries in the coalition. Certainly, the military component is a very important component of it. There are a number of countries that have participated in that. But as we’ve long said, it’s not just a military effort to degrade and defeat ISIL. There are several other components many countries are participating in. We also continue to have discussions with a range of countries about the role that they can play. We’ll let them speak to what role they’re going to play.

    QUESTION: The United States has taken part in over 81 percent of the strikes. Would you like to see other countries do more? Would you like to see --


    MS. PSAKI: I think I’ve addressed the question.


    Yes, Tehran is calling the shots.









    مستشار الرئيس الايراني: اصبحنا امبراطورية عاصمتنا بغداد. .
    0 replies30 retweets5 favorites





    That's Ali Younesi,  adviser to the Iranian president, and Iraqi Spring MC reports his alleged declaration that Iran has become an empire and it's new capital is Baghdad.


    Sunday, The NewsHour (PBS -- link is text, video and audio) spoke with the New York Times' Anne Barnard about the assault on Tikrit:



    HARI SREENIVASAN: Iraqi forces have been making significant headway against ISIS in the last few days, pushing extremist fighters back out of some of the territory they seized last year.
    Anne Barnard has been reporting for The New York Times on the fighting and the rising political tension. She joins me via Skype from Baghdad.
    So, what is the latest on the Iraqi forces’ efforts to take back some of the ground that ISIS gained last summer?

    ANNE BARNARD, Beirut Bureau Chief, The New York Times: Well, tonight, we’re starting to hear reports that they have moved into another village called Abu Ajeel, which is close to Tikrit.
    The — the offensive has been going for the last week, perhaps more slowly than expected, but moving steadily ahead.
    And there’s about 30,000 troops involved. ISIS has been able to hold out against them in the center of Tikrit but they lost a number of villages around Tikrit and Samarra.

    HARI SREENIVASAN: So, by some measures, this is a sign of success.
    I mean, is the Iraqi military ready for this fight now versus in other times where we had reports of them turning away on the battlefield and fleeing?

    ANNE BARNARD: Well, we were out on the front lines the other day.
    And we definitely saw, I would say, a new level of organization and enthusiasm.
    But I wouldn’t say it’s as much the Iraqi army that is leading the fight as the Shiite paramilitary organization known as the Popular Mobilization Committee, the Shiite militias, which are closely tied to Iran, which are providing the bulk of the fighters.
    And there was a call that went out from Shia clerics asking everyone to come and fight ISIS.



    The assault started a week ago.  The forces are still not in Tikrit.  The assault started a week ago.  Near the end of last week, Iraqi officials were swearing the foces would reach Tikirt by late Friday.  Friday came and went.


    Saturday, came news of a Friday death among foreign forces in Iraq.  The Pentagon released the following on that death:


    IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    Release No: NR-072-15
    March 08, 2015

    Readout of Defense Secretary Ash Carter's Phone Call with Canadian Minister of Defense Jason Kenney


      Secretary Carter spoke today via telephone with Canadian Minister of Defense Jason Kenney. ‎ Secretary Carter extended his deepest condolences to Minister Kenney and to the family of Sergeant Andrew Joseph Doiron, a Canadian Special Forces soldier killed Friday in Iraq. Sgt. Doiron was the first Canadian service member killed while engaging in the fight against ISIL. Secretary Carter also wished a speedy recovery to those who were injured.
    This was Secretary Carter's first conversation with Minister Kenney, who became minister of defense on February 9, 2015. Secretary Carter thanked him for his leadership and for Canada’s contributions to global security efforts, to include their support to ongoing operations in Iraq against ISIL and for Canada's contributions to Ukraine.
    As NATO allies, NORAD partners, and North American neighbors, Secretary Carter and Minister Kenney highlighted the deep and enduring defense partnership between the United States and Canada. The two leaders noted that they look forward to meeting in person and agreed to continue the strong institutional and personal relationship that their predecessors enjoyed.‎ ‎

     


    CBC reports the Canadian government and the Kurdish government are at odds over what happened.  Kurdish government officials insist that the sergeant and unnamed Canadians appeared on the front line and started calling in air strikes and when they  replied to questions from the Peshmerga in Arabic and began replying in Arabic, the Peshmerga began shooting them.  Among the disputes the Canadian government is offering to the Kurdish account is that the Peshmerga would have been the third 'checkpoint' -- and that the Canadian soldiers had passed through two prior successfully.  Canadian Minister of Defence Jason Kenney insists the soldiers were not on the front line when the attack took place.  CTV News notes, "In the wake of a Canadian soldier's death in Iraq, the Conservative government is likely to face fresh scrutiny over extending the country's mission against the Islamic State."

    David J. Climenhaga (Rabble) offers:


    The real problem has to do with our 69 special-operations soldiers -- a small and oddly specific number -- and what they are doing in Iraq.
    After our long , painful and expensive Afghanistan experience, Canadians obviously want no part in a ground war in the Middle East or Asia. We have made this clear, and the government has responded -- against its instincts -- by not remaining in Afghanistan and promising us that Canadian troops will not get involved on the ground in Iraq.
    For this reason, the Harper Government has been careful to claim, repeatedly, that the Canadian special-ops soldiers are there as non-combatants to train and advise soldiers of the Kurdish Peshmerga, far behind the front lines of the fight with ISIS.
    So what was a party of four Canadian soldiers doing Friday inside the combat zone?


    Will that question be answered or clarified?


    Probably not.

    But it hasn't stopped other countries from promising more troops.  Al Arabiya News reports UK Prime Minister David Cameron declared Sunday he would send additional British troops to Iraq.  AP reports Hungary's Prime Minister Viktor Orban declared today that he was going to Parliament to ask for Hungarian soldiers to be sent to Iraq because it "would bring prestige" to the country.

    Really?

    Well then maybe Viktor should suit up, arm up and take his own ass over to Iraq in search of "prestige"?


    On CNN's New Day today (link is video), Senator Angus King spoke with hosts Chris Cuomo and Alisyn Camerota about sending (more) troops into Iraq.

    Senator Angus King: That's what they want.  If you want to make a gift to IS tomorrow, send in U.S. troops.  They -- they want this to be a war of the west against Islam. This has to be Arabs, Muslims, taking the fight to them in Mosul, in Tikrit.  We can do the air power part.  And we can do the leadership and training.  But for us to actually send in troops would backfire.  No matter how you slice it, we're the invaders, we're the infidels, we're the crusaders -- all of that historic reference.  That would make their day.









    wbai
    law and disorder radio
    michael s. smith
    heidi boghosian
    michael ratner





    Sunday, March 08, 2015

    Don't treat me like an idiot

    This week's idiot of the week is John Stanton.

    He's written an article about selective service and what he believes is the coming draft.

    I believe the draft is coming too.

    And the topic is one I really care about.

    So I'm reading along and thinking how I agree.

    And then I get to this passage about the GOP.

    And it's like, "Do you think I'm an idiot?"

    Do I need this 'red meat'?

    The fact of the matter is that the last person to float the draft was a Democrat in the Senate.  That was in January.  As C.I. reported:


    Of all the idiotic moments in the history -- and there were a good many -- Senator Joe Manchin provided the worst as he used his time to advocate and argue for re-instating the draft -- a position that even the three generals were reluctant to embrace.  Manchin kept insisting the US forces would still be in Vietnam today if there had not been a draft during the Vietnam era.  He also, when he realized no one was supporting his call for a return of the draft, began proposing an enlisted force with "some" element of a draft. Is Manchin insane? That was the Vietnam era. You had people drafted and you had them enlist. I'm confused that Manchin's confused by this. He graduated high school in 1965, he lived in this era. Of course, he didn't serve. The Chicken Hawk who now wants to bring back the draft didn't serve in Vietnam. He took a football scholarship to college. Had a -- we're sure -- 'brutal' injury on the football field -- why, he's practically a P.O.W.! It takes a lot of nerve to be a sitting US Senator trying to bring back the draft, pointing to the Vietnam era, and failing to note that your own ass sat that war out. By choice. And via war babies, right?  Avoiding the draft by rushing into marriage and popping out war babies? Dick Cheney did the same thing.  We've called him out for it as well. When Manchin starts trying to bring back the draft, how he avoided it becomes news worthy.


     So if you're going to write about the draft coming back, I have no idea why you're spinning fantasies about what you think Republicans are thinking when you've got Joe Manchin calling for it in the Senate.

    Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:" 

     
    Saturday, March 7, 2015.  Chaos and violence continue, Canada suffers a loss in Iraq, Stephen Harper is a Chicken Hawk in hiding, Gen Martin Dempsey apparently previously worked for Dionne Warwick's Psychic Network, the VA shows up at a budget hearing unprepared and leaning on the work of others, and much more.





    February 26th, the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee heard from the VA led by Secretary Robert McDonald, we covered part of the hearing in Thursday's snapshot.  McDonald is in his seventh month on the job.  He replaced Eric Shinseki who resigned in disgrace.  As Ranking Member Richard Blumenthal told McDonald in the hearing, "That has been one of the downfalls of the VA to this point, the lack of reliable truthful information.  It was the downfall of your predecessor."


    It was noted throughout the hearing and it sort of left a question mark hanging over whatever limited information the VA was able to provide in the hearing.  Blumenthal is the Ranking Member and Senator Johnny Isakson is the Chair.  The hearing was about the VA's budget request and the first panel was composed of VA employees led by McDonald.  The others were Dr. Carolyn Clancy, well known fabulist Allison Hickey, Ronald Walters, Stephen Warren and Helen Tierney.


    Senator Patty Murray is a long serving member of the Committee and is a former Chair of the Committee.  She and Senator Dean Heller sponsored the Women Veterans Access to Quality Care Act of 2015.


    Senator Patty Murray:  Secretary McDonald, as you know and as you said in your opening statement, the population of women veterans is increasing dramatically, it's doubled since 2001. I was really pleased to work with Senator Heller to introduce the Women's Veterans Access to Quality Care Act to make sure that the VA does have the services and the facilities to meet the needs of women veterans.  One of the key positions of that bill is requiring obstetrics and gynecology to be available at every medical center.  I wanted to ask you what resources and staff -- including support staff -- will you need to meet that requirement?

    Secretary Robert McDonald: Thank you, Senator Murray.  We've very much in favor of that -- of that approach.  We're in the process of putting, uh, women's clinics all over the country.  We have a new one here in Washington, D.C. and I'd like to invite the members of the Committee to visit it.  Uhm, it's in our Washington, D.C. facility, it's a women's clinic.  Uh, as you know, I've been out to about 12 medical schools, talked to deans.  I'm -- We're hiring.  And we need to hire more gynecologists --

    Senator Patty Murray:  Do you -- Do you know how many you would need to --

    Secretary Robert McDonald:  Exact number --

    Senator Patty Murray (Con't):  -- to do this?

    Secretary Robert McDonald:  I don't have an exact number.  I can tell you that in the past -- the past nine months or so, we've hired about 8,000 people.  Of that, about 1,000 are doctors.  But I don't have how many of that are, uh, gynecologists --

    Senator Patty Murray:  Okay, if you can get --

    Senator Robert McDonald (Con't):  -- with that --

    Senator Patty Murray (Con't): -- that for me and get back with me on that.  


    And this is what frustrates me regarding the hearings.

    McDonald doesn't have basic information?

    He's got a team siting with him at the table and they don't have the information.

    Forget not know -- they should know it -- but they're not able to flip through their paperwork in front of them and pull out the figure?

    And the team McDonald has sitting behind him at the hearing can't whisper the information to him?

    Because, throughout the hearing, the people behind him were feeding him figures and statistics.

    When they don't feed on that, when no one at the table volunteers, it doesn't look like people just do not know, it plays like they don't want to share the information.

    As Ranking Member Blumenthal and others noted throughout the hearing, Shinseki himself complained, when resigning, that he was not given accurate information from those in the VA reporting to him.

    So you'd assume McDonald would be focusing on nailing down information.

    If you're aware that approximately 8,000 people have been hired and 1,000 are doctors, knowing how many are OB-GYNs should not be a mystery.

    Though he didn't supply a number, with 1,000 being doctors.


    There are 152 VA medical centers and if we add in VA outpatient clinics, we're left with nearly 1,000 facilities.  (We could also add in the nursing home care units and domiciliaries.)

    So there is an issue of a serious lack of gynecologists at VA medical facilities and if only 1,000 doctors were hired, you probably didn't fulfill the needs.

    The hearing was February 26th.  The Women Veterans Access to Quality Care Act of 2015 was read and referred to Committee on February 12th.

    14 days later, you're not prepared to discuss it?  You don't anticipate discussing it?

    Let's go back:

    Senator Patty Murray:  One of the key positions of that bill is requiring obstetrics and gynecology to be available at every medical center.  I wanted to ask you what resources and staff -- including support staff -- will you need to meet that requirement?

    Secretary Robert McDonald: Thank you, Senator Murray.  We've very much in favor of that -- of that approach.  We're in the process of putting, uh, women's clinics all over the country.  We have a new one here in Washington, D.C. and I'd like to invite the members of the Committee to visit it.  Uhm, it's in our Washington, D.C. facility, it's a women's clinic.  Uh, as you know, I've been out to about 12 medical schools, talked to deans.  I'm -- We're hiring.  And we need to hire more gynecologists --

    Senator Patty Murray:  Do you -- Do you know how many you would need to --

    Secretary Robert McDonald:  Exact number --

    Senator Patty Murray (Con't):  -- to do this?

    Secretary Robert McDonald:  I don't have an exact number. 



    The VA was present to argue for the budget and what the budget needs are.

    The failure to be prepared to address this issue goes to the continued lack of respect for the needs of women veterans.


    Senator Patty Murray:  And I also just wanted to bring up the VA's policy, up-to-date -- It is way past time to VA's policies up-to-date with modern medicine and allow the VA to provide better fertility treatment -- including in vitro fertilization for seriously injured veterans who want to start a family.  This is a high priority for me.  I think it is a high priority for our veterans and I want to work with you to get that done so I'll be talking to you more on that.

    Senator Robert McDonald:  Working on it.


    Senator Patty Murray:  Okay, I want to hear from you.  What are you doing to work on this?


    Dr Carolyn Clancy: So my staff briefed me recently on how many women might be eligible and what would be the specific --

    Senator Patty Murray:  Well it's women and men. 

    Dr. Carolyn Clancy:  -- medical requirements.  Yes.  Uh, also compared what the Dept of Defense covers versus what we cover.  Or, actually, don't.  At the moment.  So, uhm, I sent them back with some more questions.  So we'll be happy to follow up with you.  

    Senator Patty Murray:  I'll submit some questions on this but I think this is absolutely critical for our men and women who serve overseas, lose their capability and we have to make sure they can start a family so I will be focused on this.  



    Again, the lack of respect for women veterans.

    An issue the VA has failed on is referred to, by a medical doctor -- no less, as an issue for women.

    Murray corrected her because Murray's worked on this issue repeatedly. She has spoken to many couple's effected by the issue.  She has Chaired hearings on this issue.

    She is informed.

    And she's done the work to be.

    Why hasn't Clancy?

    Check her official bio and ask yourself why she is so ignorant of this basic medical issue.

    And, please note, this ignorance is after, she maintains, "my staff briefed me on this issue."

    And let's note again, as Senator Murray has highlighted for several years now, the Defense Dept provides coverage for this to service members.  It's the VA that's failing to do so.



    Senator Patty Murray:  I also wanted to talk to you about the legislation that I introduced last year to expand the caregivers support systems to VA, to all eras of veterans.  I'm going to be introducing that again this year and I want to be sure we're all working together to strengthen that program so that it will be ready to take on the additional workload.  VA's budget request says that in Fiscal Year 2015 you cannot hire any new caregiver support coordinators to help with overwhelming demand and I hear already at some facilities that providers refuse to help with doing initial evaluations or home visits.  And to me that is just unacceptable. I wanted to ask what you were doing to bring in more caregvier support coordinators?

    Secretary Robert McDonald: Let me start and then I'll ask Carolyn to comment. We're very much in favor of improving our care-caregiver operation.  In fact, in the last week, I met with, uh, Senator Dole of The Elizabeth Dole Foundation.

    Senator Patty Murray:  We're working very closely.

    Secretary Robert McDonald:  We're working closely with her.  Uh, what we've agreed to do, I want to set up a special advisory committee for the Secretary on caregivers.  We don't have that and I think we would benefit from having that.  Number two -- working with her, incidentally, working with her foundation.  Secondly, is, uhm, we're talking about having a caregiver summit. Uh, something where we could get everybody together and, uh --

    Senator Patty Murray:  For all eras? Or just --

    Secretary Robert McDonald:  All eras.  Because-because, again, post 9/11 is not enough.

    Senator Patty Muray:  Yeah.

    Secretary Robert McDonald:  So we want to work together with you on this.

    Senator Patty Murray:  Okay.  Well I want to stay in touch with you on that and keep me up-to-date on what they are doing. 


    A basic question was asked:  What are you doing to bring in more caregiver support coordinators?

    And the answer?

    We're talking to Elizabeth Dole's foundation and we plan to have a summit at some point.

    That's what you're doing?

    After all the hearings on caregivers, that's what you point to as 'action'?  Farming out your work to Elizabeth Dole's foundation and talk of a summit?



    Senator Patty Murray: And, finally, I want to talk to you about a home state issue -- the Spokane Emergency Room.  They have seen a dramatic cutback in operations simply because of staffing problems.  I have to tell you as the daughter of a WWII veteran this is unacceptable to me.  It is a very serious problem for veterans in that area and we've got to get it back to a full time operation.  I wanted to ask you today, when will the emergency room at the Spokane VA start operating 24 hours again?

    Dr. Carolyn Clancy: So, Senator, we have had significant recruiting problems.  We had originally hoped to open it to 24/7 in April and it's now looking like that's going to get pushed back a few months until I met with some colleagues from the American Legion just a couple of days ago at their meeting this week and they have actually been out speaking to some of the other hospitals in town who may be able to help us out.  The other area where I think we need help recruiting emergency physicians is, uh, a legislative, uh, change that would allow us to accomodate what many people who go into emergency medicine want which is greater flexibility for hours than the current federal HR policies allow.

    Senator Patty Murray:  So are you looking at every option because -- 

    Dr. Carolyn Clancy:  Yes.

    Senator Patty Murray (Con't):  -- we've heard recruiting forever. Temporary providers, bringing in doctors from other facilities, absolutely everything because this is a critical need in that community. 

    Dr. Carolyn Clancy:  No, I would agree with you.  And we are looking at all options, yes.


    Senator Patty Murray:  Okay and I want to follow up on you with that.  Let me know when and how and when we're going to see that open again.  Thank you. 



    Robert McDonald has had many mis-steps since becoming VA Secretary.  And maybe that distracts from the above nonsense.

    As Murray noted "we've heard recruiting forever."

    The excuse has gotten more than a little old.

    In addition, it's shameful that the E.R. would not be open full time but I find it more shameful that the needed work on the issue is done by the American Legion and not by the VA who is paid to do that work.

    Good for the American Legion, They are a strong advocate and defender of veterans.

    But why is the Legion able to do the work and the VA isn't?

    The VA comes into a budget hearing, doesn't know the basics and repeatedly points to the foundations and VSOs as the answer -- in a budget hearing requesting funding.

    'Fund us because of all the work that the VSOs and foundations do!'

    McDonald's chief selling point was that he knew how to run things.  Seven months into his tenure, that has yet to be demonstrated.


    In Iraq, Mahmud Saleh (AFP) reports, "Iraqi forces faced tough resistance from jihadist fighters around Tikrit Saturday, but the top US military officer said ahead of a Baghdad visit that victory was only a matter of time."  The officer is Gen Martin Dempsey, Chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.   You'd think US military brass, having so often gotten predictions on Iraq wrong, would hesitate before consulting their crystal balls yet again.

    Even more so since the US military is shut out of this Tehran-Baghdad assault on Tikrit.  Hassan Hassan (The Observer) feels things may be less clear cut than Dempsey's predicting:


    But there are ominous signs that the campaign faces many perils and there are fears that its impact may unleash fresh waves of sectarian conflict, as well as long-term rebalancing of political forces in the region.
    The campaign, which entered it’s second week on Sunday, is the first serious attempt to dislodge Isis from a Sunni area it has governed since the group’s military blitz in Iraq last June. Despite the American-led air strikes since the summer, the militant group has faced little pressure inside what can be described as its heartlands, such as Mosul, Falluja, Raqqa and Deir Ezzor. The offensive in Tikrit is therefore a critical development that will be monitored closely and nervously by almost everyone involved in the conflict. It is also the first major effort led by pro-government forces without consulting the United States and members of the international coalition. That latter fact leaves many question marks about the campaign. The Iraqi government portrays it as a national effort, led by the security forces and including thousands of Sunni tribal fighters. It also claims that Tikrit is all but empty of civilians.

    But these claims are not entirely accurate. Hashd al-Shaabi, the umbrella organisation for Iranian-backed Shia militias, put together in the wake of Isis’s takeover of Mosul in June to serve as a de facto replacement for the army in the fight against the terror group, is leading the offensive. Any Sunni forces participating, notwithstanding their numbers, take a back seat at best.

    You'd also think predictions would be put on hold considering the claim Press TV reported earlier this week, "According to provincial officials, Iraqi forces are expected to reach Tikrit late on Friday."

    They're supposedly still outside.

    Dempsey did offer other things.  Missy Ryan (Washington Post) notes:



    “The important thing about this operation in Tikrit in my view is less about how the military aspect of it goes and more about what follows,” he told reporters ahead of a visit to Iraq, where he will meet with the Shiite-led government. “Because if the Sunni population is then allowed to continue to live its life the way it wants to, and can come back to their homes . . . then I think we’re in a really good place.”  
    "But if what follows the Tikrit operation is not that, if there’s no reconstruction that follows it, if there’s no inclusivity that follows it, if there’s the movement of populations out of their homeland that follows it, then I think we’ve got a challenge in the campaign.”

    It's already a condemned operation.  Iraqi forces and Shi'ite militia were captured on camera this week executing an 11-year-old Sunni boy.  An unarmed child.

    Dempsey's full of crap -- probably had his mouth pressed Barack's anus too long.

    The US is backing the slaughter of children.

    There is no high ground to scramble to.

    As for what follows a 'liberation' of Tikrit, Abdulrahman al-Rashed (Al Arabiya) offers a Sunni perspective

    The Americans should realize that they have become part of the region’s repugnant sectarianism, fighting alongside Alawites in Syria and Shiites in Iraq, while negotiating with Shiite Iran on the nuclear issue. All three scenarios are against Sunnis, or at least this is how it seems. The Americans have put themselves in an unprecedented, terrible trap.
    We hoped, and are still hoping, that the United States will participate in isolating Assad, the Syrian regime and its sectarianism, and support the moderate opposition that includes all religions and ethnic groups. We hoped that Washington would refrain from supporting the government in Baghdad unless it agreed to become representative of all Iraqis.

    Widening the sectarian wars in the region will not serve the West. Al-Qaeda, ISIS, Al-Nusra, Hezbollah, Asaib Ahl al-Haq and others are nothing but the outcome of such blind fighting. The West should help promote moderate civilian institutions against religious hardliners, not support the latter to achieve victories in wars against temporary opponents.



    While the US government -- including Dempsey -- lie, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani at least expresses concern.  Human Rights Watch's Kenneth Roth Tweets:







  • Across Iraq, Margaret Griffis (Antiwar.com) counts 143 dead and 47 injured on Friday.



    And the violence includes a death.


    The State Dept's Brett McGurk Tweets:



    We mourn with & send our deepest condolences to our Canadian partners after the loss of SGT Doiron in northern Iraq.
    0 replies 24 retweets 9 favorites



    Do you mourn, Brett?

    Because (a) you enabled Nouri al-Maliki.  You saw him as your ticket to power.  You almost succeeded in becoming Ambassador to Iraq.  Now you do the work but don't get the title.

    Fitting for someone who saw Baghdad as a whore house and couldn't keep it in his pants.

    Maybe Brett is mourning . . . if death turns turns him on.

    Otherwise, it's just hollow empty words.

    Stephen Harper is the prime minister of Canada.  He promised it would just be training -- that's all Canadian forces would be engaged in.

    Barack's made similar promises.

    Will Brett "mourn" if or when a US service member is killed in the latest wave of the never-ending Iraq War?

    Sgt Andrew Joseph Doiron.  Brett "mourns" so hard he can't even include the first name of the fallen.

    If there's anything more shameful than Brett, maybe it's Stephen Harper.  While Defence Minister Jason Kenney did make an on camera statement, Harper still hasn't released a statement.

    Grasp that Harper can grand stand and preen about sending Canadian forces into Iraq, he just goes AWOL, runs like a coward and hides when it's time to face citizens and explain his 'peaceful' operation resulted in death.


    That's how a War Hawk becomes a Chicken Hawk.

    Support war, demand it.  I'll disagree with you on that.  But I'll lose any remaining respect for you when you don't have the maturity to step forward when it's time to own consequences of your actions.

    Stephen Harper is a Chicken Hawk.

    Somebody should tell him that but they'd have to figure out what closet he was cowering in first.








    missy ryan