Isaiah's The World Today Just Nuts "I Want Four More Years"went up last night. Today was Nora Ephron's memorial. CBS News has a nice (but brief) article on the director's memorial and they also have a slide show of it with over 30 pictures. E's article has a Meg Ryan photo at the top which is as it should be. She embodied Nora Ephron's films. She was directed twice by her (Sleepless In Seattle and You've Got Mail) and along with co-writing those films, Ephron co-wrote Hanging Up which Meg also starred in and Nora Ephron wrote When Harry Met Sally . . . which Meg starred in.
Meg's got spiky short hair (a little shorter than in French Kiss) and she looks really good in the photo.
Here's US Weekly's coverage (also features a nice photo of Meg). And this article is worth noting:
Carrie Fisher and Meg Ryan were among the many actresses who said they loved working with Ephron because she understood them so much better than did her male peers.
"I suppose you could say Nora was my ideal," Fisher said. "In a world where we're told that you can't have it all, Nora consistently proved that adage wrong. A writer, director, wife, mother, chef, wit - there didn't seem to be anything she couldn't do."
Ryan, reacting to Ephron's death, said, "Nora was an era. We pictured ourselves inside her dreams and they became ours."
Worth tossing in the garbage?
James Atlas and his crappy Newsweek article which is one error after another. I don't have all night so we'll play baseball -- meaning, three strikes you're out.
1) The best way to handle this would have been just to deal. “I got the news very late,” said Meryl Streep, who appeared in three of Ephron’s films. “I started to clean and make dinner. There are female activities that make things OK—‘and now the next minute you’ll do this and everyone has to eat—and that’s how you get through the day.’” Parsing a major theme in Ephron’s life, she added: “That’s what recipes were to Nora.”
She appeared in one of Nora Ephron's films: Julie and Julia. Mike Nichols directed Silkwood and he directed Heartburn. Remember that.
2) Out of this domestic catastrophe would emerge Ephron’s breakout book, Heartburn, and, eventually, the breakout film she wrote and directed, featuring Meryl Streep as Ephron and Jack Nicholson as the philandering Bernstein.
You stupid idiot, James Atlas. Mike Nichols directed Heartburn. And it was not a 'breakout film' for anyone except Carly Simon -- Carly began her comeback by writing and recording "Coming Around Again" for this film.
3) When Harry Met Sally and Sleepless in Seattle are part of American film iconography, and Ephron’s last feature, Julie and Julia, will be when her legacy gets put in order. (Who can ever forget Meryl Streep as the tottering, absurdly tall Julia Child?) But there were duds, too. Michael (John Travolta as an ill-behaved angel who comes down to earth), and Bewitched (Will Ferrell as a narcissistic movie star) both bombed.
Michael was not a bomb. Nora Ephron directed two bombs: Lucky Numbers and Mixed Nuts -- both made less than 11 million.
From The Numbers.com, here's the films she directed:
Directorships
Released | Movie Name | 1st weekend | Total Gross |
---|---|---|---|
8/7/2009 | Julie & Julia | $20,027,956 | $94,125,426 |
6/24/2005 | Bewitched | $20,131,130 | $63,313,159 |
10/27/2000 | Lucky Numbers | $4,536,625 | $10,014,234 |
12/18/1998 | You've Got Mail | $18,426,749 | $115,821,495 |
12/25/1996 | Michael | $17,435,711 | $95,370,000 |
12/21/1994 | Mixed Nuts | $2,307,850 | $6,670,176 |
6/25/1993 | Sleepless in Seattle | $17,253,733 | $126,680,884 |
Total Grosses | $511,995,374 | ||
Average Gross | $73,142,196 | ||
Average Opening Weekend | $14,302,822 |
As you can see (and I swiped that from Betty's post), Michael made $95 million in the US alone. That's not a bomb. Bewitched made $63 million.
I told you earlier that Heartburn wasn't a hit. Here's the box office it for it and four other Meryl films:
11/11/1988 | A Cry in the Dark | Lindy Chamberlain | $1,561,793 | $6,908,797 | $6,908,797 |
12/18/1987 | Ironweed | Helen Archer | $7,393,346 | $7,393,346 | |
7/25/1986 | Heartburn | Rachel Louise Samstat/Forman | $5,783,079 | $25,314,289 | $25,314,289 |
12/18/1985 | Out of Africa | Karen Christence Dinesen Blixen-Finecke | $3,637,290 | $79,096,86 |
Now he was wrong about Nora Ephron directing Heartburn and he called it a hit but is only made $25 million. Bewitched made $63 million. Bewitched was a hit. It was not a blockbuster but it was a hit.
And James Atlas is an asshole who's insulted Nora Ephron's memory with an article that is nothing but errors. He should be ashamed of himself and Newsweek needs to do corrections immediately.
Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"
July
9, 2012. Chaos and violence continue, Camp Ashraf is back in the news,
Kurds export crude oil to Turkey, Speaker of Parliament Osama
al-Nujaifi weighs in on provincial elections, and more.
I'd
wrongly thought Tom Hayden would be wearing the dunce cap in today's
snapshot. Though he made a fool of himself, ABC News surpassed him.
Matt Negrin may have written the article (I was told he did but only by
one friend at ABC News so we'll say "may have"). Whomever wrote it
needs to be tested for drugs and have their resume checked. The piece
is entitled, "The Troops in Iraq: Sent Home, as Promised."
You
really have to wonder about these whores for government who write this
crap with no concern for the families of the Marines or Special-Ops and
others still in Iraq. You really have to wonder. And today it's not
just me explaining that's b.s. and the various people who e-mail the
public e-mail account about their loved ones still being in Iraq.
No. Today it's Rita Cook (Waxahachie Daily Light) reporting
on Tim Vansyckle just returning home to Ovilla, Texas from Iraq and the
joy his parents Bill and Martha Vansyckle has this weekend when they
and other "family and friends gathered to cut the [yellow] ribbon on a
tree that Bill says has grown during the year his son has been serving
his country overseas." From Cook's report:
This
past year was his second time in Iraq and he explains that his brigade
was always there, despite the President's announcement the war in Iraq
was over and U.S. troops would be returning home.
"There
were a lot of reports that every soldier left or that the last of 1st
Cavalry had left," he says. "It was pretty weird seeing stories about
us being home for good when we were literally walking around Iraq."
It
is beyond "whorish" to lie the way the media repeatedly has, it is
trashy and every other term to repeatedly say "all US troops came
home." No, they damn well didn't. And even now, US troops are in
Iraq.
Matt Negrin or whatever stupid moron ABC was idiot enough to hire concludes their fact-free fantasy with this:
In
December, the last troops left, officially ending the American military
presence in Iraq. However, while most of the troops returned to the
United States in time for Christmas as Obama promised, about 4,000
troops in a brigade were reassigned to nearby Kuwait to complete a tour
involving security and training, Stars and Stripes reported.
Did they report that, Moron, did they?
Today the Senate Foreign Relations Committee released [PDF format warning] "The Gulf Security Architecture: Partnership With The Gulf Co-Operation Council."
On page v., Senator John Kerry, Chair of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, notes, "Home to more than half of the world's oil reserves
and over a third of its natural gas, the stability of the Persian Gulf
is critical to the global economy." Chair John Kerry has stated of the report,
"The Gulf Region is strategically important to the United States
economically, politically, and for security reasons. This is a period
of historic, but turbulent change in the Middle East. We need to be
clear-eyed about what these interests are and how best to promote them.
This report provides a thoughtful set of recommendations designed to do
exactly that."
The report may well map
out that for many. That's not what stood out to me. The takeaway for me
is US troops remain in the region, right next to Iraq in Kuwait and the
Committee's recommendation is that they remain present. (For those who
don't want to read the report in full or operating systems are not PDF
friendly, click here for the Committee's one page explanation of the report.)
[. . .]
Further into the report, we get the point AP' was emphasizing this morning. AP:
"The United States is planning a significant military presence of
13,500 troops in Kuwait to give it the flexibility to respond to sudden
conflicts in the region as Iraq adjusts to the withdrawal of American
combat forces and the world nervously eyes Iran, according to a
congressional report." Page nine of the report:
A
residual American military presence in the Gulf and increased
burden-sharing with GCC [Gulf Cooperation Council] states are
fundamental components of such a framework. However, the United States
must also carefully shape its military footprint to protect the
free-flow of critical natural resources and promote regional stability
while not creating a popular backlash.
Page 12:
Kuwait
is especially keen to maintain a significant U.S. military presence. In
fact, the Kuwaiti public perception of the United States is more
positive than any other Gulf country, dating back to the U.S.-led
liberation of Kuwait in 1991. Kuwait paid over $16 billion to compensate
coalition efforts for costs incurred during Desert Shield and Desert
Storm and $350 million for Operation Southern Watch. In 2004, the Bush
Administration designated Kuwait a major non-NATO ally.
*
U.S. Military Presence: A U.S.-Kuwaiti defense agreement signed in 1991
and extended in 2001 provides a framework that guards the legal rights
of American troops and promotes military cooperation. When U.S. troops
departed Iraq at the end of 2011, Kuwait welcomed a more enduring
American footprint. Currently, there are approximately 15,000 U.S.
forces in Kuwait, but the number is likely to decrease to 13,500.
Kuwaiti bases such as Camp Arifjan, Ali Al Salem Air Field, and Camp
Buehring offer the United States major staging hubs, training rages, and
logistical support for regional operations. U.S. forces also operate
Patriot missile batteries in Kuwait, which are vital to theater missile
defense.
Get
it? ABC News doesn't seem to. And Kuwait's not the only US military
staging area surrounding Iraq. ABC News has turned in campaigning, they
haven't turned in reporting. That 'report' is misleading at best and
the network should be embarrassed to have posted it regardless of who
wrote it. I don't know what's more shocking, that someone was paid to
write that garbage or that a professional news outlet posted it.
Equally stupid is Roberty Dreyfuss at The Nation but, then, he has an excuse -- he spent the bulk of his professional career writing for Lyndon LaRouche. Showing just how worthless that 'training' is, Dreyfuss churns out an article with its own problems. He recommends Susan Crabtree's Washington Times article and he quotes from it, "June was Iraq's second-deadliest month since U.S. troops pulled out Dec. 18, 2011 . . ."
Uh, LaRouche Zombie, what was Iraq's deadliest month?
The
United Nations counts over 400 dead in the month of June. Are you
aware of that? Apparently not and aren't we all lucky that you and The Nation
decided to advertise your disinterest in All Things Iraq yet again. He
agrees that violence is a problem and that there's a political crisis.
This is his conclusion:
And here's what the Obama administration ought to do about violence in Iraq: Nothing.
You have to marvel over the intellectual decay at The Nation.
The Obama administration ought to do nothing?
I guess in LaRouche Land there is only dualities and no complexities. I thought The Nation -- the country's oldest opinion journal -- had a little bit more on the ball than that.
What should the administration do? There are a host of things they should immediately be doing. We'll throw out two.
1)
The F-16 deal is off. The Iraqi press in the last two weeks has been
reporting that Nouri actually wants more F-16s than the deal calls for.
And, of course, they've also reported that US Vice President Joe Biden
called him and told him that the ExxonMobil deal needs to go through or
the F-16 deal is off.
If the US government
can threaten to pull the F-16 deal to help our a multi-national
corporation, it can damn well use it as leverage with regards to the
ongoing political crisis.
2) Then there is
the UN issue of Chapter VII. Though little reported in the US press,
Chapter VII is a big deal in Iraq and each year they plead with the UN
to remove them from it. Each year they just know it will happen but it
hasn't so far. The US government can ensure that it doesn't and should
be doing that right now.
There are a host of
things that the US government can do to influence the political crisis
and the violence. And the two are related, which Dreyfuss probably
doesn't grasp either. The US could pressure Nouri to follow the Erbil
Agreement -- that alone would immediately effect life in Iraq.
How screwed up is The Nation
magazine today that they publish an article that claims the US should
do nothing? I guess I shouldn't be surprised, they've never once
written a single article during any of the waves of attacks on Iraq's
LGBT community. But the reality is that there a ton of things the US
government can do besides declare war or send soldiers. How awful that The Nation now sees the US government's only power as whether or not to declare war -- how awful and how telling.
Violence continued in Iraq today. AFP reports
2 Sahwa were shot dead in Samarra and a Mosul roadside bombing claimed
the life of 1 Brigadier General while leaving one major general and
three bystanders injured. Alsumaria reports
a Diyala Province sticky bombing injured one person while a roadside
bombing in Diyala Province claimed 1 life and left another person
injured. All Iraqi News reports
two bodies were pulled out of the Eurphrates in Dhi Qar province while
police in Nasiriyah prevented an elderly man from taking his own life. IANS notes,
"At least one person was killed and nine wounded in separate bomb
attacks in Iraq's Kirkuk province Sunday, Xinhua reported." On the
topic of violence, Al Mada reports
that independent MP Hassan al-Alawi has noted Iraq is now Shi'ite-led
-- civilian, military, government -- and he wonders what does it say
with the daily bloodshed of Shi'ite blood and when the Shi'ite regime
is unable to protect the Shi'ites, how will it be able to protect any of
the other communities?
As Nouri and company continue to flounder and flail with regards to security, Alsumaria reports
that KRG President Massoud Barzani announced today the formation of the
National Security Council of Kurdistan which will work to protect the
people in the Kurdistan Regional Government and their property.
Barzani hailed it as a major step in serving the people of Kurdistan.
Space permitting, we'll note the KRG in today's snapshot. There's news
out of the KRG in regards to a recent Congressional hearing we covered
here. The National Security Council of Kurdistan had just been
announced when, Alsumaria reports,
Nouri's State of Law began attacking it. MP Mohammed Chihod insists
that the creation of the body is an abuse of the Constitution and that
the KRG is attempting to play a dual role. I'm sure the residents of
Iraq would love it if Nouri could play any role in nominating people to
head the security ministries. He was supposed to have done that in
2010. It's 2012. Is he just stupid or incompetent? Possibly both but
what he's been attempting is a power grab.
At Moqtada's website, MP Bahaa al-Araji calls out the paper the Reform Commission is currently floating and states that they have already made proposals -- the Sadr bloc, Iraqiya and the Kurds jointly -- in Erbil and Najaf. Al Mada reports that the KRG's Parliament stated yesterday that the ExxonMobil deal remains part of the conflict between Erbil and Baghdad and that this is the main part of their move to withdraw confidence in Nouri -- his refusal to follow the law.
At Moqtada's website, MP Bahaa al-Araji calls out the paper the Reform Commission is currently floating and states that they have already made proposals -- the Sadr bloc, Iraqiya and the Kurds jointly -- in Erbil and Najaf. Al Mada reports that the KRG's Parliament stated yesterday that the ExxonMobil deal remains part of the conflict between Erbil and Baghdad and that this is the main part of their move to withdraw confidence in Nouri -- his refusal to follow the law.
Tomorrow, Dar Addustour reports, the Parliament is set to resume session and will be looking at a number of bills including one on telecommunications. Adnan Hussein (Rudaw) reports, "A number of lawmakers have forwarded a draft law to the speaker of Iraqi Parliament regarding the Kurdish language in education system. A lack of teachers specializing in the Kurdish language to fill position in more than 21,000 schools is the main obstacle to implementing the law. The draft law, which stipulates that the Kurdish language be studied from the fourth grade through college in all of Iraq, has been signed by 30 MPs." The Speaker of Parliament is Osama al-Nujaifi and All Iraqi News notes al-Nujaifi states that the election date for provincial elections early next year must be respected and that the Independent High Electoral Commission needs to have the new appointments and that women and other minorities need to be represented in the body. He discussed these issues today with the UN Secretary-General's Special Envoy in Iraq Martin Kobler. KUNA adds, "A statement by the Speaker office said that Al-Nujaifi expressed pleasure for the keeness of the UN representative to engage in the formation process, noting on the ongoing discussion inside experts committee members concerning a collective meeting with all political parties involved."
On Friday, Moqtada al-Sadr gave a major, televised speech. The full text of the speech is up at Moqtada's website. We covered the bulk of it in Friday's snapshot
but there are some other points to pick up on. It was a ten point
speech. The most poetic portion of the speech was when he spoke of Iraq
being a lovely moasic of Shias, Sunnis, Christians, Sabians, Alayazdihs,
Torkomen, Failis, Shabaks, etc. and how this moasic was Iraq and needed
to be protected and maintained with an air of democracy and a spirit of
tolerance. The issue of Iraqi's finances was discussed in terms of
looting by the government (needs to stop) and in terms of distributing
this to the people. We noted the corruption issue on Friday -- he
called for government corruption to be addressed via a vareity of
forums including judicial and parliamentary committees and he added that
the corrupt must be held accountable regardless of political bloc,
ideology or ethnicity and that those government officials engaging in
corruption should be put to death because this would be pleasing (to the
people and to God) and because this would act as a deterrent to prevent
others from engaging in corruption. On corruption, Omar Sattar (Al-Monitor) reported Saturday, "Iraq's Integrity Committee pledged to launch a full-scale investigation into major "corruption" cases involving the ministries of defense, interior and electricity and billions of dollars that were squandered from the public budget."
Of
the ten points, only one received traction in the media and, even then,
it was just one aspect of the third point. Saturday, Al Rafidayn reported
on Moqtada's call for a law limiting the three presidencies (President
of Iraq, Prime Minister of Iraq and Speaker of Iraq) to two terms. This
call alarmed State of Law. Alsumaria reports State of Law MP Haitham al-Jubouri insisted this must be done by a Constitutional amendment and not by a law. Alsumaria notes
that Kurdish MP Mohsan Saadoun insists that this is a measure that
would be done by law, through Parliament. State of Law opposes the
measure (it would mean this would be Nouri al-Maliki's final term as
prime minister) and they insist on a Constitutional Amendment because
that's much more difficult than passing a law in Parliament.
He couldn't provide security and he's refused to implement Article 140 of the Constitution, but, AKnews reports, Nouri al-Maliki has ordered a census, a country-wide census . . .
of animals. If they count jack asses, presumable, Nouri will be tallied in that category.
Turning to Camp Ashraf. Friday,
the State Dept did a teleconference with reporters. Representing the
State Dept was Coodriantor for Counterterrorism Daniel Benjamin and
Special Advisor on Camp Ashraf Daniel Fried. We'll be kind and include the
Benjamin's opening remarks.
AMBASSADOR
BENJAMIN: Yes. Thank you very much. I wanted to talk today a bit about
the situation in Iraq, where there is an impasse between the Iraqi
Government and the Mujahedin-e Khalq, the MEK, over the relocation of
residents from the group's paramilitary Camp Ashraf to the temporary
transit facility at Camp Hurriya. The Iraqi Government and the United
Nations continue to encourage the secure, humane relocation of residents
to Hurriya for refugee status determinations by the United Nations High
Commission on Refugees. Almost 2,000 individuals have already
relocated, but the remaining 1,200 to 1,300 are holding at Ashraf until
various MEK demands are met by the Iraqi Government. The last convoy of
individuals, about 400 people, was on May 5th. And the patience of the
Iraqi Government is wearing thin.
The MEK
seems to have misinterpreted the June 1 order by the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. MEK leaders appear to believe that the
Secretary has no choice now but to delist them. That conclusion is quite
plainly wrong. In short, the court did not order the Secretary of State
to revoke the MEK designation as a Foreign Terrorist Organization. As
the Secretary has made clear, the MEK's cooperation in the successful
and peaceful closure of Camp Ashraf will be a key factor in her decision
regarding the MEK's FTO status. The court has told the State Department
that it must act by October 1, but it did not mandate a particular
result. I think that's very important to underscore. The Secretary thus
retains the discretion to either maintain or revoke the designation in
accordance with the law. It is past time for the MEK to recognize that
Ashraf is not going to remain an MEK base in Iraq. The Iraqi Government
is committed to closing it, and any plan to wait out the government in
the hope that something will change is irresponsible and dangerous.
The
MEK is a group whose violent history against the United States includes
the bombing of U.S. companies in Iran, the assassination of seven U.S.
citizens, and the provision of support for the attack, occupation, and
hostage-taking at the U.S. Embassy in Tehran. The MEK is also one of the
few foreign groups to attempt an attack on U.S. soil when, in 1992, it
launched near simultaneous attacks in 13 countries, including against
the Iranian mission to the UN in New York. Even the MEK itself has
admitted to continuing violent attacks until 2001.
With
such a history, cooperating fully with the UN's efforts in Iraq would
be a tangible demonstration that the MEK has left its violent past
behind and that it no longer retains the capability and intent to engage
in acts of terrorism. This is the MEK's moment to show that it has
taken on a fundamentally different character. It should act quickly and
complete the relocation and close Camp Ashraf.
Kindness
has it limits so we stop there. What a bunch of collective idiots.
The State Dept? No, the press or 'press.' The State Dept's intent is
to distort and misdirect. That's what they do. The press is supposed
to be interested in truth and, on every level, they failed at that
repeatedly.
The times they failed are too
numerous so we'll note only one example. CNN's Jill Dougherty wants to
know, with Nouri's government saying the residents will be evicted after
July 20th, what they can "legally" do if the residents are still at
Camp Ashraf? And Daniel Fried opens with, "I'm not a lawyer at all,
much less an expert on Iraqi law." The State Dept's Special Advisor on
Camp Ashraf can't answer a basic legal question? And Jill Dougherty let
him get away with that. How embarrassing. What a cowed media we
have. On something as banal as a call-in, the media can't even do their
job.
On July 6th, the State Dept's Special Advisor on Camp Ashraf has no clue what options are open in less than 14 days?
How embarrassing.
Jill Dougherty can at least assert that she did a better job in her reporting
than she did in her questioning -- reading over the reports by her
collegues, she's the only one who can make that claim. Why are the
remaining residents (approximately 1,400 remain at Camp Ashraf,
approximately 2,000 have already moved to Camp Liberty) refusing to go?
These are there demands.
- Transfer of 300 air conditioners from Ashraf to Liberty.
- Transfer of all the power generators that are currently in Camp Ashraf to Camp Liberty. If there is any dispute about the ownership of the generators, they can be resolved in the future, under supervision of UN.
- Transfer of 25 trucks, containing the belongings left over from the fourth and fifth convoys, and six utility vehicles about which there had already been an agreement.
- Transfer of five forklifts from Ashraf to Liberty for the purpose of moving the residents' belongings.
- Transfer of three specially-designed vehicles and six specially-designed trailers for the disabled.
- Transfer of 50 passenger cars from Ashraf to Liberty. It means one car for every 40 residents, which is absolutely necessary in the hot weather and for wounded and disabled residents.
- Permission for construction, including the building of pavements, porches, canopies, ramps, special facilities for the disabled and green areas.
- Connecting Liberty to Baghdad's water network. Alternatively, the residents should be permitted to hire Iraqi contractors to pump the water into Liberty from a nearby water canal and bringing their own water purification system from Ashraf.
- Allowing merchants or bidders access to Ashraf to negotiate and buy the movable properties as soon as possible and to make advanced payment and start making partial payments to the residents before the resumption of the relocation of the next convoy.
- Start of negotiations between the residents and their financial representatives and the Iraqi Government to sell the immovable assets and properties, or negotiations with third parties (Iraqi Government should provide permission) to sign the necessary agreements. Partial payments should be made before the relocation. At least 200 residents would remain at Ashraf to maintain and upkeep the properties until they are sold in their entirety.
I
don't have a link for those ten, it's from a press release by The
International Solidarity for Democratic Change in Iraq (press release
sent to the public e-mail account for The Common Ills). From the same
press release:
Making the delisting of
the MeK conditional on relocation of the remaining residents of Ashraf
to Liberty is in effect blackmailing the defenseless residents to give
up their basic human rights and willingly go to a prison, ironically
called Liberty, which could turn into a killing field for them. The PMOI
must be delisted because there is no evidence to suggest otherwise. The
safety and well-being of the Ashraf residents are much more important
and must be given priority.
This
is getting ridiculous and the Obama administration is looking inept.
I'm not saying delist or don't delist the MEK here. I'm saying whether
or not a group moves from point A to point B physically does not
determine whether or not they're a terrorist. Saturday, AFP reported,
"The United States on Friday again urged members of an exiled Iranian
opposition group to leave their long-time base in Iraq, saying a move
could facilitate their removal from a US terror blacklist." Regardless
of your feelings on this issue and the residents, you should be offended
that the US government -- and they're revealing this publicly --
assigns someone to the terrorist list or not on something other than
whether or not the group is a terrorist. The US goverment is saying,
'Move to Camp Liberty and the group you belong to, MEK, can be taken
off the terrorist list.'
The US government
currently has 51 groups (counting the MEK) on their designated terrorist
list. (If you've never seen the list, click here.)
I'm sure others on the list -- say the Palestine Liberation Front --
would be happy to move a few miles to the east or west if it meant the
US would take it off the terrorist list.
If
the list has any meaning at all, any integrity, than whether the
residents of Camp Ashraf stay at Ashraf or move to Camp Liberty should
have no bearing on their designation as terrorist or not terrorist.
Everyone
should be offended by the line the State Dept is taking. If the MEK is
a terrorist organization (I have no idea if they are or not), then they
need to be on the list. If they're not a terrorist organization, they
need to be off it. Whether Camp Ashraf residents leave it or not should
have no bearing on a terrorist designation by the US government.
In
Friday's press conference, BBC's Bahman Kalbasi asked about the rumors
of the Camp Ashraf residents being "involved with the assassination of
scientists in Iran" as reported on NBC and Benjamin replied, "I can
assure you that I have never said that they were involved in current
assassinations in Iran. That was a story that ran, and I have no
information to confirm that, so I certainly wouldn't have said it. What
I have given you is the established record, and nothing more and
nothing less." Camp Ashraf is not on the border with Iran. It is on
the Tigris River, to the north of Baghdad. While Iraq's border patrol
is lax, Iran's able to grab three US hikers but unable to protect their
borders from Camp Ashraf residents running back and forth? Doesn't make
a lot of sense.
But the reporters never made
any sense at the press conference. They yammered away about the
'rights' of the government of Iraq. I'm sorry, did I go into a coma and
miss the Amnesty International alert on Camp Ashraf residents
mistreating the government of Iraq? I don't think I was in a coma. And
as I remember it, it's Nouri's goons that have twice alarmed the world
as they've attacked the residents of Camp Ashraf. Dropping back to the Feburary 23rd snapshot
for the details the reporters 'forgot' in the press conference and in
their write-ups -- and that does include Jill's write-up as well:
July 28, 2009 Nouri
launched an attack (while then-US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates
was on the ground in Iraq). In a report released this summer entitled "Iraqi government must respect and protect rights of Camp Ashraf residents,"
Amnesty International described this assault, "Barely a month later, on
28-29 July 2009, Iraqi security forces stormed into the camp; at least
nine residents were killed and many more were injured. Thirty-six
residents who were detained were allegedly tortured and beaten. They
were eventually released on 7 October 2009; by then they were in poor
health after going on hunger strike." April 8, 2011,
Nouri again ordered an assault on Camp Ashraf (then-US Secretary of
Defense Robert Gates was again on the ground in Iraq when the assault
took place). Amnesty International described the assault this way,
"Earlier this year, on 8 April, Iraqi troops took up positions within
the camp using excessive, including lethal, force against residents who
tried to resist them. Troops used live ammunition and by the end of the
operation some 36 residents, including eight women, were dead and more
than 300 others had been wounded. Following international and other
protests, the Iraqi government announced that it had appointed a
committee to investigate the attack and the killings; however, as on
other occasions when the government has announced investigations into
allegations of serious human rights violations by its forces, the
authorities have yet to disclose the outcome, prompting questions
whether any investigation was, in fact, carried out." Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) observesthat
"since 2004, the United States has considered the residents of Camp
Ashraf 'noncombatants' and 'protected persons' under the Geneva
Conventions."
If
you're wondering, the 'protected persons' aspect didn't come up in the
press conference or the write-ups. It's a one-sided kind of
'reporting.' They did make time to insist, in their write-ups, that
advocates for Camp Ashraf had been paid to be advocates. That's a
baseless lie and the press needs to drop it. If they were doing their
job to begin with, they'd know damn well that the leadership on this
issue isn't coming from 'former government officials' as the State Dept
attempted to spin in Friday's conference.
November 15, 2011,
the Senate Armed Services Committee held a hearing on Iraq. Appearing
before the Committee was Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta and the
then-Chair of the Joint-Chiefs of Staff General Martin Dempsy. It was
an important hearing and we covered it in several snapshot. The November 17th snapshot emphasized the Camp Ashraf remarks:
"The
status of the residents at Camp Ashraf from the Iranian dissident group
MEK remains unresolved," Senator Carl Levin declared Tuesday. "As the
December 2011 deadline approaches, the administration needs to remain
vigilant that the government of Iraq lives up to its commitments to
provide for the safety of the Camp Ashraf residents until a resolution
of their status can be reached. We need to make it clear to the
government of Iraq that there cannot be a repeat of the deadly
confrontation began last April by Iraqi security forces against Camp
Ashraf residents."
He
was speaking Tuesday morning at the Senate Armed Services Comittee
hearing while delivering his opening remarks as Chair of the Committee.
Senator John McCain is Ranking Member on the Committee. The first
panel the Committee heard testimony from was composed of US Secretary of
Defense Leon Panetta and the Chair of the Joint-Chiefs of Staff General
Martin Dempsy. Camp Ashraf came up in Chair Levin's opening remarks
and it came up later during the first panel.
Senator
Lindsey Graham: Do you think -- do you think the people in Camp Ashraf,
do you think they're going to get killed? What's going to happen to
them?
General
Martin Dempsey: The, uh, as you know, Senator, the State Department is
leading an effort to ensure that -- work with the Iraqi government ---
Senator
Lindsey Graham: Can you tell the people back here that the likelihood
of their friends and family being killed has gone up greatly if there
are no American forces up there policing the problem?
General Martin Dempsey: I won't say anything to those people because I'm not involved in the outcome.
Senator Lindsey Graham: Fair enough.
In
what was now the second round, John McCain went on to laugh with Leon
Panetta and to thank him for appearing before the Comittee and putting
up with pointed questions. He brought up a request that Panetta had
made to him and Senator Graham (formally, in a letter) and noted they
were working on that issue (defense funding). We're not going to
excerpt that but since so much was made of the first round of
questioning between Panetta and McCain, we will note that both laughed
with one another in an exchange in the second round. (The hysterical
gossip corps portrayed McCain being testy as new or novel and may have
left many with images of poor Leon struggling for the vapors. Neither
person was harmed by the exchange in the first round nor appeared to
hold a grudge or ill will towards the other.) Near the end of his
second round, McCain did bring up the issue of Camp Ashraf.
Ranking
Member John McCain: Could I just say finally on the Camp Ashraf issue, I
know the Secretary of Defense -- I mean, Secretary of State is
addressing this issue, but it is American troops that are protecting
them now. I hope that you can give us some idea of what disposition is
going to be because I think it's -- I think it's very clear that the
lives of these people are at risk and I thank you, Mr. Secretary.
Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta: I appreciate that.
Chair
Carl Levin: Well, just on that, to turn it into a question -- and,
maybe, General, this needs to be addressed to you too -- what -- There's
obviously a greater risk to folks there unless the Iraqis keep a
commitment. What's going to be done to make sure, to the best of our
ability, that they keep that committment and what about the question of
removing them from the list of -- not them, the organization from the
terrorist list?
General Martin Dempsey: Well, Senator --
Senator Carl Levin: We're all concerned about this --
General
Martin Dempsey: And we share your concern. [General] Lloyd Austin
shares your concern. And I know that Ambassador Jeffreys shares the
concern and there is no -- we're not sparing any diplomatic effort to
encourage the Iraqis to do what we think is right in this regard to
ensure the protection of those folks in Camp Ashraf. But right now,
actually, the Iraqi security forces guard Camp Ashraf with our advisory
and assistance group with them. And so the concern, when we do leave
that capacity, is a real one. And But I actually think we've got to
put the pressure on the Iraqi government diplomatically to have the
outcome that we think is correct.
Senator
Carl Levin: Just assure them if you would that there's a real strong
feeling around here that if they -- if they violate a committment to
protect those people -- assuming that they're still there and that they
haven't been removed from the terrorist list so that they can find other
locations -- that if they violate that committment to us, that is going
to have a severely negative impact on the relationship with the -- I
think I can speak here -- the Congress although I'm reluctant to
ever say this. I think there's a lot of concern in the Congress about it
and this will, I believe, in my opinion, will severely negatively
impact their relationship with the Congress. Let me leave it at that.
Secretary
Leon Panetta: Senator, I want to assure you that Ambassador Jeffrey
has made that point loud and clear, loud and clear the Iraqis.
Senator Carl Levin: Senator Lieberman?
Senator
Joe Lieberman: Thanks, Mr. Chairman. And add my voice and I think you
can speak for Congress members of both parties in both houses in
expressing our concern about the safety of the people in Camp Ashraf.
Senators
Carl Levin, John McCain, Lindsey Graham and Joe Lieberman. And, in
fact, the full Senate Armed Services Committee. Know your facts or find
something else to cover. If you're wondering why the above is not more
widely known, that's because while we spent days reporting the hearing
in snapshots, the press -- and Antiwar.com -- reduced the hearing to 'John McCain got testy with Leon Panetta!' They played Gossip Girl
because reporting was too damn hard for them. It's like the recent
Senate Foreign Affairs Committee report about the number of US
servicemembers in Kuwait. That created a mini-stir last month but,
point of fact, Senator Kay Hagan was raising that issue in the hearing.
We treated the hearing seriously in this community, covering it in the November 15th "Iraq snapshot," the November 16th "Iraq snapshot," the November 17th "Iraq snapshot," by Ava in "Scott Brown questions Panetta and Dempsey (Ava)," by Wally with "The costs (Wally)," by Kat in "Who wanted what?" and, at The Third Estate Sunday Review, in "Editorial: The silences that enable and kill," "Enduring bases, staging platforms, continued war" and "Gen Dempsey talks "10 enduring" US bases in Iraq." By contrast, with the exception of Elisabeth Bumiller (New York Times) and Laurence Vance (LewRockwell.com), the press misreported and trivialized the hearing.
On
the subject of Congressional hearings, the House Oversight and
Government Reform Subcommittee on National Security, Homeland Defense
and Foreign Operations held a hearing June 28th (we cover it in the June 29th snapshot). From the snapshot:
Acting
Chair Blake Farenthold: I just have one more question so we'll just do
a quick second round of questions. Ambassador Kennedy, you mentioned
the Baghdad police college annex facility as one of the
facilities. It's my understanding that the United States' taxpayers
have invested more than $100 million in improvements on that site. It
was intended to house the police department program -- a multi-billion dollar effort that's currently
being downsized. And as a result of the State Dept's failure to secure
land use rights the entire facility is being turned over to the Iraqis
at no cost. The GAO reports
Mission Iraq has land use agreements or leases for only 5 out of all of the sites that it operates. Can you say with confidence that those sites now operating without leases or agreements will not be turned over to Iraq for free as was the case with the police development program? And what would the cost to the US taxpayer be if they were to lose without compensation all of those facilities?
Mission Iraq has land use agreements or leases for only 5 out of all of the sites that it operates. Can you say with confidence that those sites now operating without leases or agreements will not be turned over to Iraq for free as was the case with the police development program? And what would the cost to the US taxpayer be if they were to lose without compensation all of those facilities?
[State Dept] Patrick Kennedy: Thank you, Mr. Chairman. First of all, the statement that has been -- that
you were reading from about we are closing the Baghdad police
development center because of a failure to have land use rights is
simply factually incorrect. We have a land use agreement for
that site. As part of the program -- the police development program --
there are periodic reviews that are underway and my colleagues who do
that -- it's not part of my general responsibility on the operating side of the house -- engage in reviews on a six month basis both internally and with the government of Iraq. It was always our plan to make adjustments to the police development program over time. But the statement
that somehow we have wasted or had everything pulled out from under us
because of lack of a land use agreement is very simply false. For our
other properties in Iraq we have -- we have agreements for every single property we have in Iraq except for one which is our interim facility in -- in Basra which is simply a reincarnation of a former US military there. But even in that regard we have a longterm agreement that was signed with the government of Iraq by Ambassador Negroponte in 2005 in which we swapped properties with the government of Iraq and they are committed to provide us with a ten acre facility in-in Basra of our mutal choosing. And so we are covered, sir.
He said it. Too bad it wasn't accurate or, for that matter, truthful. We'll jump over to the second panel.
Acting Chair Blake Farenthold: Mr. Courts, Ambassador Kennedy and I got into a
discussion about the absence of or presence of land use agreements for the facilities we have in Iraq do you have the current status for that information from your latest report as to what facilities we do and do not have land use agreements for?
discussion about the absence of or presence of land use agreements for the facilities we have in Iraq do you have the current status for that information from your latest report as to what facilities we do and do not have land use agreements for?
[Government Accountability Office] Michael Courts: What Ambassador Kennedy may have been referring to that for 13 of the 14 facilities the Iraqis have acknowledged a presence through diplomatic notes. But there's still only 5 of the 14 for which we actually have explicit title land use agreements or leases.
Acting Chair Blake Farenthold: Alright so I'm not -- I'm not a diplomat. So what does that mean? They say, "Oh, you can use it until we change our minds" -- is that basically what those are? Or is there some force of law to those notes?
Michael
Courts: Well the notes are definitely not the same thing as having an
explicit agreement. And as a matter of fact, there's already been one
case where the Iraqis required us to reconfigure, downsize one of our sites. And that was at one of the sites where we did not have a land use agreement and so obviously we're in a much more vulnerable position when there's not an explicit agreement.
The Kurdistan Regional Government really wasn't the concern there. But Sunday the KRG announced
that Foreign Relations Minister Falah Mustafa met with outgoing US
Consul General Alexander Laskaris: "As his last official act in the
Region, prior to the meeting Consul General Laskaris signed an agreement
regarding the allocation of land for the permanent premises of the US
Consulate to be built on. Commenting on this agreement, Mr Laskaris
said, 'We thank the government of Kurdistan for allocating this land as
part of enhancing our permanent diplomatic presence in Iraq including
Baghdad, Basra and Erbil. We look forward to breaking ground and thank
the leadership of the KRG for their continuing support and
partnership'."
On the subject of the KRG, AFP reports,
"Iraqi Kurdistan has begun sending oil produced in its three-province
autonomous region out of the country without the express permission of
the central government, an official said on Sunday." Hassan Hafidh (Dow Jones) notes,
Iraq's government Monday said crude-oil exports from the
semi-autonomous northern region of Kurdistan to neighboring Turkey are
'illegal' and threatened to take 'appropriate action,' in a continuation
of recent of tensions between the two." Turkey's Minister of Energey Taner Yildiz tells Hurriyet Daily News,
"The main issue here is the fact that both the Iraqi central government
and the Iraqi Kurdish regional administration need these revenues.
Thus, we are conducting operations [with Baghdad and Arbil] similar to
those we conduct with all neighboring countries in order to meet these
demands. There is not any violation of the law." And if it's anything
like the ExxonMobil deal, it will be no clearer months from now.
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