| Friday, August 27, 2010. Chaos and violence continue, the political  stalemate continues, the American people continue to see the Iraq War as a  mistake and worse, greater attention comes to prolonging the illegal war,  who's  trying to overthrow Iraq's labor unions, and more.       Last week, Gallup and AP polls were released  offering the findings that most Americans are opposed to the Iraq War and feel  it should never have been started.  Gallup found 53% judge it as a failure, 55%  judged it a failure.  AP's poll with GfK Roper Public Affairs found that 65%  opposed the Iraq War.  Now Brian Montopoli (CBS News) reports  on CBS' poll (but doesn't  explain why the New York Times  took a pass) which finds "nearly six in  ten say it was a mistake to start the battle in the first place, and most say  their country did not accomplish its objectives in Iraq." The number saying it  was a mistake is 59% which is in stark contrast to March 2003 when a majority,  69%, stated the US was correct to declare war on Iraq (the US-led invasion began  in March 2003) and only 25% of respondents then (March 2003) said it was a  mistake. The most telling response is to question eleven:    Do you think the result of the war with Iraq was worth the loss of  American lives and other costs of attacking Iraq, or not?   Only 20% of respondents say the war was worth the costs while 72% say it  was not worth the costs. Looking at the costs to the US, 72% are, in fact,  calling the illegal war a mistake.
 57% of Americans believe the Iraq War is going well (don't blame them,  blame a media that's forgotten Iraq) and who do they credit for that? Montopoli  reports that "one in three say both the Obama and Bush administrations [deserve  credit]. Twenty-six percent credit the Bush administration, 20 percent credit  the Obama administration, and 19 percent say neither deserves credit." Cynthia English reviews  Gallup's latest poll  which sureveyed Iraqis and found a five-percent drop in approval of US  leadership from 2008 (35%) to 2010 (30%) and an increase in approval of Iraqi  leadership during the same time (2008: 28%; 2010: 41%).    "I don't think there's been any measurable  thing that we could cite that this occupation of Iraq has made better. We  achieved exactly nothing," says Cindy Sheehan, an anti-war activist. Sheehan  says the war made things worse for Iraqis and others.                  "My work has gone from trying to stop these  wars to trying to alert people to the problems of being subjects of a military  empire," she says.     Empire as a shell game?  That would require the Orwellian use of language  to misdirect the citizens and misidentify what is going on.  In other words,  that would be Barack Obama calling the military "non-combat" forces and calling  bases "outposts" and calling the continuation of the Iraq War the 'end.' Today  the Council on Foreign Relations' Bernard Gwertzman  interviews  the Christian Science Monitor 's Jane Arraf.  Bernard Gwertzman: President Obama is planning to give a speech on  Iraq next week marking the pullout of U.S. combat troops from the country. Does  their departure make a big difference in Iraq?   Jane Arraf: It really doesn't. A lot of that is because it isn't a  development that has had much of an impact on the ground. Some have called it a  "rebranding" of the conflict, and there is some truth to that. What we've got  left are fifty thousand other troops, a substantial number, and a lot of those  are actually combat troops. Any brigade here is erady, equipped, and trained for  combat. It's just that the mission is changing.  So with that many troops on the  ground, the latest withdrawals really don't have that much of an impact,  particularly since we haven't been seeing the United States in unilateral combat  missions since June of last year. As part of the security agreement signed by  the Bush administration, the U.S. forces are taking ab ackseat to the Iraqi  forces.  The bottom line is that nothing will change on September 1. What we're  really looking at is what happens as next year's deadline of December 31, 2011,  approaches for all the troops to leave.    [. . .]   Bernard Gwertzman: Will the United States be providing long-term  air defense? Or is that supposed to end next year too?   Jane Arraf: Everything ends next year, so it really all has to be  negotiated. The commanding general in charge of training Iraqi forces told me  they are in the midst of negotiating an agreement to allow NATO to continue  training. Such an agreement of course to replace the Iraq-U.S. security  agreement will actually have to be negotiated by whatever new government is  formed. The assumption is that it will be a pro-Western, pro-U.S. government,  but that's not a certainty. What if, for instance, the Sadrists have a large  role to play in the new government?   What if it's a much more Iranian-friendly  government than some people are suggesting? They could turn to Iraq for a  security agreement.   On public radio today, the security agreement was  briefly touched upon. On the second hour of today's The Diane  Rehm Show (NPR), Diane was joined by Courtney Kube (NBC News), Moises  Naim (El Pais) and David Wood (PoliticsDaily).   Diane Rehm: Let's turn to Iraq. For the first time since the US  invasion in 2003, US troop strength in Iraq has dropped below 50,000.  Is Iraq  prepared to defend itself, Courtney?   Courtney Kube: Well I think you have to remember -- I don't think  you'll find many average Iraqis on the street in Baghdad or anywhere in the  country that would say that just because Operation Iraqi Freedom is technically  ending in a few days, Operation New Dawn begins, US combat forces are out, I  don't think the average Iraqi believes that that means a light switch is going  to flick off and violence is going to end.  The Iraqi security forces are  certainly going to be tested in the coming days, weeks, months probably.  But  the US force that exists there now -- it's still almost 50,000 troops, they're  not going anywhere, they're not going any beyond this until next  summer.   Diane Rehm: But you did have a wave of coordinated attacks in  thirteen cities just --   David Wood: Yeah, just a horrific thing.  Mounted apparently by al  Qaeda in Iraq, the sort of home grown, foreign directed, Sunni terrorist  organization.  What was particularly striking, I thought, was that after these  bombs went off in these thirteen cities in a two hour period, the Iraqi people  rushed in to help and people stoned them and shouted at them and were very angry  and yelled: "Why can't you protect us!"  And it was, I thought, "Uh-oh."  It was  a real uh-oh moment because clearly the Iraqi security forces cannot keep this  kind of thing from happening.   Diane Rehm: Moises?   Moises Naim: August was the deadliest month for Iraqi security  forces in the past three years, at least 265 have been killed in June alone. And  if you look at these places where the attacks took place.  They bring back names  that had gone out of the news. Falludi, Ramadi, Tikrit, Kirkuk, Basra.  These  were places where we used to talk about them all the time and then they  disappeared. This is a way of telling the world and telling Iraqis, we are still  here -- on the part of insurgents in Iraq.  And explaining the fact that the US  troops are leaving is creating -- plus -- the very important backdrop to this  story is that Iraq doesn't have a government.  They had an election several  months ago.  That election does not yield a clear result. And now they have been  struggling to create a functioning government.   Diane Rehm: How are these 50,000 so-called non-combat troops going  to be able to stand back and watch as this kind of desecration  happens.   Courtney Kube: Well they won't be standing back at all.  I mean  20,000 of those 50,000 are assigned to advise-and-assist brigades that -- Just  today, there was an advise-and-assist, some US troops that went out with Iraqi  security forces, arrested seven al Qaeda in Iraq suspected members.  They won't  be sitting back. Almost half of those forces are going to be involved in combat  missions, frankly, it's just that they cannot do it alone.There really hasn't  been a big change in posture of US forces since last summer, since the US forces  were no longer allowed to operate on their own, no longer allowed to conduct  missions within Iraqi cities.  So the only real difference that we're seeing  right now is the numbers are down a little bit, the combat troops that were  assigned to, you know, so-called combat brigades are now out and they're now  reassigned to advise-and-assist.   Diane Rehm: There is more than a little ambiguety here, David Wood.     David Wood: I think it's deliberate. I want to pick up on something  Moises was saying and that was that there's no Iraqi government in power, of  course. There's been a lot of political turbulence since March when there were  presidential [C.I. note: Parlimentary elections] elections and nobody won a  clear majority or enough to put together a government in Parliament. One of the  -- one of the upshots of that is that the United States is supposed to be, by  law, withdraw all of its military forces from Iraq by December 31st of next  year.  I think that agreement was made in the last months of the Bush  administration with the understanding that it would be renegotiated because, if  it were carried out, you wouldn't even be able to have Marine guards at the US  Embassy.  With no government, you can't regnegotiate it. And the clock is  ticking. And al Qaeda in Iraq has noticed and the statement they issued after  this bombing was: "The countdown has begun to return Iraq to the embrace of  Islam and its Sunnis with God's permission." Pretty chilling  stuff.   Diane Rehm: Moises.   Moises Naim: So the story here again is one of calendars versus  conditions.  There is a political -- a Washington based or a US  politics-centered calendar that people are following and then there are  realities on the ground. And these two are clashing.  The realities on the  ground in Iraq are not in synch with deadlines and with timelines and the  calendar that has been decided by purely domestic US politics kind of  consideration and calculations.   Diane Rehm: So next week President Obama is going to make an Oval  Office speech, next Tuesday. What's he expected to say, Moises?   Moises Naim: He's going to confirm two things that may be a bit  contradictory.  I think.  One is that the troops are going out and this was his  campaign promise and that Iraq is in better shape than before and so on.  But at  the same time he's going to claim the continuing support and commitment of the  United States to the building of a democratic Iraqi nation.   Staying on the 'end of war' 'treaty' 'requirement,' Gareth Porter (IPS via Dissident  Voice) reports , "All indications are that the administration expects to  renegotiate the security agreement with the Iraqi government to allow a  post-2011 combat presence of up to 10,000 troops, once a new government is  formed in Baghdad But Obama, fearing a backlash from anti-war voters in the  Democratic Party, who have already become disenchanted with him over  Afghanistan, is trying to play down that possibility. Instead, the White House  is trying to reassure its anti-war base that the U.S. military role in Iraq is  coming to an end."  The editorial board for the Seattle Times  notes  the drawdown is phase one, "Remember, the operative description is  Phase One. The departure of all U.S. military is supposed to come at the end of  2011.  Do not confuse that goal with an end of U.S. presence or involvement in  Iraq. Parsing out the future depends on definitions and interpretations. The  exist of designated combat forces still leaves 50,000 American troops in Iraq,  with another 79,000 U.S. contractors. Men and women in uniform are essentially  replaced by taxpayer supported mercenaries who attract a lot less public  attention."  Elise Labot (CNN) reports : For the people of Iraq, the withdrawal of U.S. forces  will be largely symbolic. The average Iraqi has not seen U.S. forces since June  2009, when they redeployed to the outskirts of Iraqi cities under the terms of  the 2008 security agreement between the United States and Iraq. Since then, Iraqi forces have been in charge of urban  areas: manning most checkpoints, conducting operations against extremists and  maintaining law and order. But for the  United States, the transfer from Operation Iraqi Freedom to Operation New Dawn  is monumental. The handover will put the U.S. State Department in an expanded  and indeed unprecedented role, one it is forced to scale back before it even  starts due to budget constraints.     Besides, the United States is not actually leaving the country. As  Chris Toensing, editor of the Middle East Report (a must-read for understanding  the area), points out, there will still be 50,000 troops left behind in an  "advisory" capacity. "The essential realities of the Iraq War remain the same: Iraq is  oil-rich and strategically located at the head of the Persian Gulf. Its ruling  elites are fractious and weak," Toensing writes. "Our  continued troop presence is an insurance policy against disaster for the  U.S.-sponsored Iraqi politicians, who would otherwise fear violent overthrow,  and the White House, which would otherwise fear Iraq's takeover by unfriendly  elements."  A lot of people will be paying for George Bush's folly for a long  time to come.   And Glen Ford (Black Agenda Report -- link has  text and audio) points out , "In addition to the fantasy reporting, American  military and civilian authorities are conducting fantasy arguments behind closed  doors about whether the U.S. is going to withdraw all of its military forces,  regardless of the nomenclature, by the end 0f 2011 - as required by solemn  agreement with the Iraqis. One faction favors deploying a force of up to 10,000  mercenaries, complete with their own armored trucks, air force and  missile-firing drones. But powerful figures in the Obama administration say they  are confident they can talk the Iraqis into allowing 10,000 uniformed American  troops to stay in the country after the deadline. Certainly, billions of dollars  in bribes can sometimes work wonders - but U.S. plans for an eternity in Iraq  have repeatedly been thwarted by the Iraqi people, themselves."   As Diane and her guests noted, a political stalemate exists currently in  Iraq. March 7th,  Iraq concluded Parliamentary elections. The Guardian's editorial board  notes, "These elections were hailed prematurely by Mr Obama as a  success, but everything that has happened since has surely doused that optimism  in a cold shower of reality." 163 seats are needed to form the executive  government (prime minister and council of ministers). When no single slate wins  163 seats (or possibly higher -- 163 is the number today but the Parliament  added seats this election and, in four more years, they may add more which could  increase the number of seats needed to form the executive government),  power-sharing coalitions must be formed with other slates, parties and/or  individual candidates. (Eight Parliament seats were awarded, for example, to  minority candidates who represent various religious minorities in Iraq.) Ayad  Allawi is the head of Iraqiya which won 91 seats in the Parliament making it the  biggest seat holder. Second place went to State Of Law which Nouri al-Maliki,  the current prime minister, heads. They won 89 seats. Nouri made a big show of  lodging complaints and issuing allegations to distract and delay the  certification of the initial results while he formed a power-sharing coalition  with third place winner Iraqi National Alliance -- this coalition still does not  give them 163 seats. They are claiming they have the right to form the  government. In 2005, Iraq  took four months and seven days to pick a prime minister. It's now 5  months and 20 days. Phil Sands  (National Newspaper) notes that if the stalemate continues  through September 8th, it will then be a half a year since Iraqis  voted.      Salih Mutlak can only wonder where in Iraq he might find justice. As one of  the country's leading Sunni politicians, he was puzzled and angry to learn  shortly before this spring's parliamentary elections that the Accountability and  Justice Commission had barred him from running, along with roughly 500 other  candidates. Prominent Sunni politicians like Mutlak were particularly targeted.  So he picked up the phone and called the commission's head, Ahmad Chalabi, who  was relaxing in Beirut. "I had nothing to do with it," Chalabi calmly asserted.  "Come on, Ahmad," Mutlak persisted. "What does the committee have against me?"  Chalabi told him there was a letter showing that Mutlak had cooperated with  Saddam Hussein's notorious secret police, the Mukhabarat. "That's nonsense!"  Mutlak snapped. Chalabi promised to look into the matter and try to resolve  it.   But it was not resolved. With the March elections looming, Mutlak's  brother Ibrahim took over the vacant slot -- and won. That didn't stop the  commission from stepping in again with dubious authority and disqualifying the  substitute candidate retroactively. Today, the fate of Ibrahim Mutlak and a  dozen or so other similarly disqualified candidates remains an open question.  "It's a disaster that Ahmad Chalabi would have such an influence in this  country," says Salih Mutlak. "He wants to bring sectarianism back. He wants to  damage the reputation of the Americans. He wants to spoil everything  here!"   Michael Christie (Reuters) notes of the stalemate,  "But the longer the political impasse continues, the longer it will take to  address public anger about poor public services, such as a lack of electricity  in the stifling summer heat. The perception may also grow that democracy in Iraq  does not work, and Iraqi leaders are incapable of governing, raising the risks  of public disturbances, coup attempts and increased meddling by often  troublesome neighbours."  But the stalemate hasn't prevented targeting of labor  unions in Iraq.  David Bacon (Truthout) reports :   Early in the morning of July 21 police stormed  the offices of the Iraqi Electrical Utility Workers Union in Basra, the  poverty-stricken capital of Iraq's oil-rich south.  A shamefaced officer told  Hashmeya Muhsin, the first woman to head a national union in Iraq, that they'd  come to carry out the orders of Electricity Minister Hussain al-Shahristani to  shut the union down.  As more police arrived, they took the membership records,  the files documenting often-atrocious working conditions, the leaflets for  demonstrations protesting Basra's agonizing power outages, the computers and the  phones.  Finally, Muhsin and her coworkers were pushed out and the doors  locked.                     Shahristani's order prohibits all trade union  activity in the plants operated by the ministry, closes union offices, and  seizes control of union assets from bank accounts to furniture.  The order says  the ministry will determine what rights have been given to union officers, and  take them all away.  Anyone who protests, it says, will be arrested under Iraq's  Anti-Terrorism Act of 2005.      So ended seven years in which workers in  the region's power plants have fought for the right to organize a legal union,  to bargain with the electrical ministry, and to stop the contracting-out and  privatization schemes that have threatened their jobs.
 The Iraqi  government, while it seems paralyzed on many fronts, has unleashed a wave of  actions against the country's unions that are intended to take Iraq back to the  era when Saddam Hussein prohibited them for most workers, and arrested activists  who protested.  In just the last few months, the Maliki government has issued  arrest warrants for oil union leaders and transferred that union's officers to  worksites hundreds of miles from home, prohibited union activity in the oil  fields, ports and refineries, forbade unions from collecting dues or opening  bank accounts, and even kept leaders from leaving the country to seek support  while the government cracks down.
 At the U.S. Embassy, the  largest in the world, an official says mildly,  "We're looking into it.  We hope  that everybody resolves their differences in an amicable way."  Meanwhile,  however, while the U.S. command withdraws combat troops from many areas, it is  beefing up the military and private-security apparatus it maintains to protect  the wave of foreign oil companies coming into Basra to exploit the wealth of  Iraq's oil fields.
       Overnight, violence continued in Iraq. Reuters notes  a Baaj  attack in which 2 Iraqi soldiers and 1 Iraqi military officer were shot dead, a  Falluja roadside bombing apparently targeting police which wounded seven people  and was followed by a second bombing when police arrived (wounding three) and a  Shirqat attack on Sahwa which led to two Sahwa being killed and four more  injured. AFP  reminds , "When full control of the Sahwa passed from the US military to the  Iraqi government in April last year, Baghdad promised to integrate 20 percent of  its men into the police or army, and find civil service jobs for many others.  But 52,000 are still waiting for new employment."  Reuters notes  today's violence included a Kirkuk home  invasion in which 1 child was slaughtered and three members of the child's  family were left injured, a Baghdad roadside bombing claimed 1 life and injured  four more people, a Mosul roadside bombing claimed 1 life and left another  person injured, a Mosul mortar attack injured one adult male and the corpse of a  Christian male was discovered in Mosul (the man had been kidnapped earlier in  the week).Turning to England, Mark Stone (Sky News) observes  of the British  inquiry into the Iraq War, "At the top of that list, surely, is the civilian  death toll. I wrote about it on this blog last  month . There was an expectation then that the subject  would be raised with ex-Armed Forces Minister Adam Ingram. It was. For about a  minute. Other than that, it's hardly been mentioned."  Ian Dunt (Politics) reports  that Iraq Body Count  (IBC) -- infamous for undercounting the dead in Iraq -- has hurled insults at  the Iraq  Inquiry , labeling it both "flawed" and "derisory" and has released their  correspondent with Committee Chair John Chilcot in which they advocate for the  inquiry to (quoting from correspondence) "fully and properly investigate Iraq  casualties" and Dunt closes by noting that the Inquiry will go to Iraq. Only  they "won't." They may. That was always the point. Chilcott has made two public  statements about that. They would like to, they hope to. Whether they go or not,  nothing is concrete at this point. Jonathan Steele (Guardian) grasps  that reality, "The  five-person Chilcot inquiry team plans to visit Iraq briefly in the next few  weeks but the IBS says this appears to be 'an afterthought'." Channel 4 News adds , "Iraq Body  Count  (IBC) co-founder John Sloboda told Channel 4  News:  'Some of the deaths and injuries caused must have been  breaches of British and international law, so some sort of judicial inquiry  would seem to be in order'."    The legal case is straightforward: Neither invasion had the  necessary approval of the United Nations Security Council, and neither was a  response to an imminent attack. In both cases, U.S. officials pretended to  engage in diplomacy but demanded war. Under international law and the U.S.  Constitution (Article 6 is clear that "all Treaties made," such as the UN  Charter, are "the supreme Law of the Land"), both invasions were  illegal.                     The moral case is also clear: U.S. officials' claims that the  invasions were necessary to protect us from terrorism or locate weapons of mass  destruction were never plausible and have been exposed as lies. The world is a  more dangerous place today than it was in 2001, when sensible changes in U.S.  foreign policy and vigorous law enforcement in collaboration with other nations  could have made us safer.                           The people who bear the greatest legal and moral responsibility for  these crimes are the politicians who send the military to war and the generals  who plan the actions, and it may seem unfair to deny the front-line service  personnel the label of "hero" when they did their duty as they understood it.  But this talk of heroism is part of the way we avoid politics and deny the  unpleasant fact that these are imperial wars. U.S. military forces are in the  Middle East and Central Asia not to bring freedom but to extend and deepen U.S.  power in a region home to the world's most important energy resources. The  nation exercising control there increases its influence over the global economy,  and despite all the U.S. propaganda, the world realizes we have tens of  thousands of troops on the ground because of those oil and gas  reserves.     While Jensen attempts to explore the complexities, Mr. Pretty Lies Barack  Obama is already reducing it all to a simplistic bumper sticker -- one full of  lies -- such as today's claim that Americans are "safer" as a result of the Iraq  War.  Notice that only a War Hawk or a War Whore can sell and spin an illegal  war.  The Cult of St. Barack damn well better decide which Barry is: a War Hawk  or a War Whore.  He certainly isn't a truth teller.  We need to highlight two  today who told the truth about the illegal war.  First up, Justin Raimondo's "All Lies, All The Time " (Antiwar.com ):  This farcical "withdrawal," which amounts  to merely increasing the number of mercenaries  in the region, is a complete fabrication , motivated by pure politics and an infinite faith in  the cluelessness of the Average Joe, who is too busy looking for a job   to care. As to what they'll do when the insurgency starts to rise again, not to  worry: no one will notice but the soldiers in the field .  Surely the American media won't be so rude as to point it out, unless the Green Zone   goes up in flames and they have to evacuate stragglers by helicopter as they did  in Vietnam . In that  case, the visuals would be too good to pass up.         Everything that comes out of this administration, from  its pronouncements on the overseas front to its own unemployment numbers , is a lie: it's all lies, all the time. Even in small  matters, the default is a fib, such as in the case of the Pentagon's denial  that it  was ever in touch with WikiLeaks about minimizing the alleged damage done by the  next Afghanistan document dump. After all, why would WikiLeaks make up such a  story? The feds just want the documents "expunged," thank you. I doubt they  really believe   it's possible to "expunge" the Afghan war logs from the internet. If so, they  are dumber than anyone has so far imagined. And so much for the myth that the  Pentagon really cares about any danger to Afghan informants, who might be  compromised by the release of more documents: Julian Assange and WikiLeaks have  given them their chance to safeguard the identities of US collaborators, and the  Pentagon flat out rejected it . So  be it.    It's true that  Iraqis suffered under the brutal rule of Saddam Hussein but his overthrow did  not lead to a better life for Iraqis. "I am not a political person, but I know  that under Saddam Hussein, we had electricity, clean drinking water, a  healthcare system that was the envy of the Arab world and free education through  college," Iraqi pharmacist Dr. Entisar Al-Arabi told me. "I have five children  and every time I had a baby, I was entitled to a year of paid maternity leave. I  owned a pharmacy and I could close up shop as late as I chose because the  streets were safe. Today there is no security and Iraqis have terrible shortages  of everything--electricity, food, water, medicines, even gasoline. Most of the  educated people have fled the country, and those who remain look back longingly  to the days of Saddam Hussein."          Dr. Al-Arabi has  joined the ranks of the nearly four million Iraqi refugees, many of whom are now  living in increasingly desperate circumstances in Syria, Jordan, Lebanon and  around the world. Undocumented, most are not allowed to work and are forced to  take extremely low paying, illegal jobs or rely on the UN and charities to  survive. The United Nations refugee agency (UNHCR) has reported a disturbing  spike in the sex trafficking of  Iraqi women.     There were many truth tellers and that was a great thing.  This week, we've  attempted to highlight some each day but there wasn't room on Thursday.    Stealing America's Secrets "60 Minutes" has obtained an FBI videotape  showing a Defense Department employee selling secrets to a Chinese spy that  offers a rare glimpse into the secretive world of espionage and illustrates how  China's spying may pose the biggest espionage threat to the U.S. Scott Pelley  reports. | Watch Video
 The Bloom Box Large corporations in California have been secretly  testing a new device that can generate power on the spot, without being  connected to the electric grid. They're saying it's efficient, clean, and saves  them money. Will we have one in every home someday? Lesley Stahl reports. | Watch Video
 Birdmen In the latest craze that has killed several extreme sports  enthusiasts, men don wing-suits, jump off mountaintops and glide down at speeds  approaching 140 miles per hour. Steve Kroft reports. | Watch Video
 60 Minutes, Sunday, August 29, at 7 p.m. ET/PT.      |