Monday, February 13, 2017

I skipped the Grammys

Did you?

I just wasn't in the mood for a multi-hour show last night.

Or the likes of J-Lo giving us politics.

Thanks, J-Lo, you've shaved 5 years off your age -- your official age -- and you really can't sing so you're as fake as possible.

I knew she was going to say something and I knew others would as well.

Didn't want to wade through it.

Caught Bruno Mars' Prince cover on Twitter last night and Adele's tribute to George Michael the same way.

Didn't need to sit through all the nonsense and used my time better.


I'm going to skip the Academy Awards, most likely,

I don't need their politics or their belief that winning an award for acting requires them to make a political statement -- that's really just a partisan statement.



Going out with C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"


Monday, February 13, 2016.  Chaos and violence continue, it's day 119 of The Mosul Slog, US troops and US taxdollars fight for Iraqi women . . . to be forced to cover their faces in Karbala, Moqtada al-Sadr's protests finally get a bit of western media coverage, and much more.



Iraq, Iran and Afghanistan in the 1960's, progress is never a given






That's a good place to start because I, honestly, do see progress as a given.  And I'm wrong many, many times.  So the Tweet above is a good reminder and also a good point of reference for one bit of latest  news.


Journalist Mustafa Habib Tweets:


While Iraqi forces fight extremists in Mosul, politicians vote on application laws of , today hijab, tomorrow anything can happen
 
 





And AL BAWABA reports:




This will especially be a problem come June when temperatures in Karbala will rise to a high of 106 degrees Fahrenheit and higher.


The latest step backward in Iraq.


So the US government supports this?

US forces are in the ground in Iraq.  US taxdollars are flowing into Iraq.

And this is what's being supported?

Iraq War veteran Phil Klay wrote a column for THE NEW YORK TIMES.

Not really sure why -- and that's after reading it.

Apparently, he wrote it to attest to his moral superiority.

He's especially morally superior to veteran Eric Fair in his column -- which drones on and on even more than his overly praised collection of short stories did.

Is Eric not a victim?

I sure see him as such (and a survivor).

The US government put Eric in Abu Ghriab, he didn't put himself there.

Phil Klay also finds  Stanley McChrystal to be a source worth quoting.  Point of fact, it's not "Gen. Stanley McChrystal," Phil.  He's retired now.  If you'd stop slobbering over the crotch of the brass -- wait, if you did that you wouldn't have signed up in the first place but I do love how you enlisted after the Iraq War started but love to insist that you signed up because you knew the US was going to war.

Point of fact, it did that in October 2001.  Or, Phil, did you miss the whole (and ongoing) Afghanistan War?

The title of Klay's useless nonsense is "What We're Fighting For."

While he does get in a dig at US President Donald Trump, he never does get around to explaining "what we're fighting for" in the ongoing Iraq War.

Nor does he ever entertain the idea of what Iraqi civilians want.

We're supposed to consider him liberal because he can see an Iraqi solider as human.

Wow.

Such is the lowered bar.

Meanwhile, the Iraq War has destroyed the rights of Iraqi women.

It's created the region's worst refugee crisis since 1948.

It's led the educated to flee because the US government backed and installed exiles who returned to Iraq (after the war started) with a chip on their shoulder and grudge to f**k for the rest of their lives.

None of which makes it into 'educated' Phil Klay's useless column of rah-rah-let's-stay-in-Iraq-for-centuries.  It's occupation porn  that bleeds war zealot.


But occupation porn is all corporate media has to offer.


Qassim Abdul-Zahra and Susannah George (AP) file an embarrassing piece about how Iraq is up in arms over Donald.  The article includes this:


Now the Iraqi leader [Prime Minister Hayder al-Abadi] is coming under pressure. Lawmakers are demanding he reduce cooperation with Washington in the future, limit or prevent American troops from staying in the country after the defeat of IS, and reciprocate for any travel ban on Iraqis. Members of powerful Shiite militias have outright warned of retaliation against Americans if the U.S. carries out any military action against Iran, their patron.
"Trump embarrassed al-Abadi," said Saad al-Mutalabi, a lawmaker and long-time ally of former Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, one of al-Abadi's most powerful political opponents.
"There will be a general consensus that Americans should not stay in Iraq after Mosul, after the statements and the executive order from Trump," he said. "We believed that we had a strategic agreement with the U.S."


Oh, horror!

Donald's statements may mean Iraq asks US troops to leave Iraq after the Mosul liberation or 'liberation' is finished.

Only the war mongering (and profitting) corporate press could paint US forces leaving Iraq as a bad thing.

The two AP reporters insist on speaking for Iraqis.

But they speak for Nouri al-Maliki and they speak for a Shi'ite fighter.

When do they speak to the Iraqi public?

Never.


And the reporters really confess to their two-faced lying nature in this paragraph:

Many among the Iraqi public, as well as the military and political class acknowledged the need for -- even welcomed -- U.S. forces and political support. But that has been mixed with anger over abuses and civilian casualties caused by U.S. troops, as well as frustration that U.S. policy missteps following the 2003 invasion, including disbanding the Iraq army after Saddam's fall, helped foster the insurgency, eventually leading to the creation of al-Qaida in Iraq and later the Islamic State group.

Many?

Strange.

Since the start of the Iraq War, the one consistent in all polling of the Iraqi people has been?

That they want US troops out of Iraq.

Now.

Possibly, if the 'reporters' bothered to actually cover Iraq -- instead of dashing to politicians and military officers -- they might know that.

But, chances are, they do know that, they just are under orders to whore in order to keep the never-ending Iraq War just that: Never-ending.


Interestingly, they also avoid noting what Hayder al-Abadi has said, or rather, what he's publicly Tweeted:

PM Al-Abadi speaks with who assures continued support for liberation operations and efforts to resolve visa entry issues for Iraqis
 
 



Good to speak with on brave sacrifices of Iraqi people to defeat [the Islamic State] and US backing for Iraq
 
 






119.

What is that?

The number of days in the operation to liberate or 'liberate' Mosul so far.

119 days.

And last week, they were claiming east Mosul was liberated and that was proof of success.


Then the bombs went off.




 
 
''My Fair Lady'' restaurant bombed; IS sleeper cells active in east Mosul via
 
 
Iraqi officials: Suicide bombings in eastern Mosul kill 5
 
 




119 days and what is there to show for it?



Turning to protests in Iraq . . .

Saturday, February 4th, we noted:



Hundreds of Iraqis did useful things yesterday inclu
NINA reportsding the hundred who rallied in Baghdad's Tahrir Square.  ALSUMARIA reports they rallied to call for reforms in the government (corruption) and reforms in the election law and the Independent High Electoral Commission.  ALSUMARIA reports hundred also protested in Karbala with the same demands.

The western media ignored the protest.

From the February 8th snapshot:



NINA reports that MP Magda al-Tamimi is calling for the members of the electoral commission to appear before Parliament for questioning due to a number of reasons including the large amounts of complaints about alleged corruption she has been receiving about them.


Due to the protest, ALSUMARIA reports, the Election Commission has closed shop and gone home for the day to avoid "friction" with the protesters.

And ALSUMARIA is reporting that the protest has started with thousands turning out to demand changes in the electoral commission and in the voting law.


Sadrist respond to link the demonstrations on the anniversary of the Baath coup




ALL IRAQ NEWS carries the above photo in their report on today's protest in Baghdad.



But the western media ignored that one as well.


Over the weekend, a third protest took place.

This one the western media -- at least AP and BBC -- covered.

What interested them this go round?

Violence.


As we noted Saturday the 11th:

Shi'ite cleric and movement leader Moqtada al-Sadr called for demonstrations in Baghdad today.

Did the crowd turn out?

Goodness, did they.


The demonstration in Tahrir square is getting bigger and bigger.
 
 
Massive demonstration started in Tahrir square by Sadr supporters demanding change to the elections committee.
 
 
 




Huge protest in
 
 
 



Breaking: Demonstrators pass the security barriers & they go to the gates of the .
 
 




This was the third protest Moqtada had called in the last nine days.

It's also the only one western press elected to cover.


Violence is the 'hook' for their stories.


Qassim Abdul-Zahra (AP) reports:


Saturday's protests were called for by influential cleric Muqtada al-Sadr and clashes that erupted as crowds pushed toward the Green Zone left two policeman and three protesters dead, according to police and hospital officials.
The officials said six other policemen were injured along with dozens of protesters. The violent outbreak prompted the government to call for a "full investigation."

The western media is all over this story . . .

Well AP is.

Qassim Abdul-Zahra's report is reprinted all over (like here).

And a longer version also includes:

Mr al-Sadr's office issued another statement on Saturday night following news of protester casualties claiming that "excessive force" was used against the demonstrators and threatened greater protests.
"The next time the blood of our martyrs will not go in vain," the statement read.



Dozens of protesters were injured?

Try hundreds.


: Two riot police, five protesters declared dead so far in protests
 
 
BREAKING: police says 7 killed when for electoral reform turned violent - 5 protesters and 2 mb security forces
 
 
BREAKING: At least 5 people killed, 320 were injured after a protest turned deadly in , -
 
 
governor "4 protesters dead & 320 wounded after security forces fired tear gas & gunfire to disperse demo earlier"
 
 



It would appear the forces overreacted in their responses -- from the deaths and wounded tolls alone, they overreacted.


It would appear AP under-reacted in their reporting -- including what was at the heart of the protests -- corruption.






BBC NEWS noted:

The protesters, mostly supporters of the Shia cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, want changes to the electoral commission that oversees elections.
They say the commission is not independent because all its members are linked to political parties.


AL BAWABA reports:

Head of the Sadrist Movement, Muqtada al-Sadr warned on Sunday of a “dark end” in Iraq, after at least eight people were killed and hundreds were injured when confrontations erupted between his supporters and security forces during a protest held in Baghdad’s central Tahrir Square to demand an overhaul of a commission that supervises elections ahead of a provincial poll due in September.
As a response to the Katyusha rockets that hit the fortified Green Zone and its surroundings on Saturday evening, Sadr wrote on his Twitter account: “If any of my followers resorts to violence and does not withdraw or engages in an act of sabotage to put security in Baghdad or Iraq in jeopardy, I disavow it.”
Security sources said the rockets seem to have been fired from Baladiyat, a district where Sadr has a lot of followers. However, Sadr denies the claims.
Sadr issued another statement later on Sunday warning of a “dark end to our Iraq, our beloved nation, and our proud people.”


ASHARQ AL-AWSAT carries the same report.


Interestingly, the report notes that Dawa is criticizing Moqtada and states Dawa is the party of former prime minister (and forever thug) Nouri al-Maliki.

While Nouri and Moqtada are bitter rivals, it's also true that Dawa is the political party of the sitting prime minister Hayder al-Abadi who, interestingly -- or tellingly?, is not mentioned.







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