So a new thing.
It happened at work.
And I am writing about it. (My boss said fine but don't use anyone's real name.)
So at my work, we have different work teams.
There was a party.
Someone 'forgot' to invite a team.
Nothing was forgotten, someone was being petty.
So Team C was hurt that they weren't invited.
And Team C's team lead e-mails her group asking, "Did anyone on our team get invited?"
No.
Or "no" from those who responded.
Carrie, we'll call her, has been moved to Team B for a few weeks to cover for a vacationing employee.
Carrie does not reply to her real team lead.
And she was invited.
So the team lead e-mails to everyone, don't worry about it, we don't have to invite them to our parties.
Carrie has never replied to her team lead.
But she does go around showing everyone on Team B the e-mails.
Then when others feel bad and are talking to that team lead, Carrie rushes over and starts shouting, "I only shared them because I wanted people to know you were hurt."
Which is a lie.
Carrie was seen laughing as she shared the e-mails.
She also never replied.
More to the point, no one mentioned her name. The other team lead speaking to team lead of team C even told her that, "Carrie, no one has mentioned your name."
I just thought, "Of all the drama."
I mean, come on, are we grown ups or what?
Carrie is supposed to be the backup for the team lead on team C and team C fought to get her that post.
And there she goes off laughing and joking about them not being invited and showing team e-mails?
It was a betrayal.
(Carrie knows how I feel.)
I think she's shameful.
Oh, and if she cared, why didn't she reply to any of the e-mails?
Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"
Friday, December 30, 2017. Chaos and violence continue, the US
government admits to bombing a hospital in Iraq, kidnapped journalist
Afrah Shawqi remains missing, and much more.
As 2017 winds down, and the Iraq War continues, Will Bardenwerper (WASHINGTON POST) reflects:
Who can forget Donald Rumsfeld’s pronouncement — delivered with the unwavering confidence that characterized his leadership — that the Iraq War might last “five days or five weeks or five months, but it certainly isn’t going to last any longer than that”? As it turns out, the current struggle to liberate Mosul — for the third time, this time from a terrorist organization, the Islamic State, that didn’t even exist when Hussein was killed — is now projected to last longer than Rumsfeld assured us the entire war would. Just this week, the first of 1,700 soldiers from the Army’s 82nd Airborne Division hugged their loved ones goodbye before deploying to Iraq. The youngest were 5 years old when the United States launched the invasion to remove Saddam.
One wonders how anyone, most notably the war’s architects, can cling to the view that delivering Hussein to the gallows was worth the trillions of dollars spent, not to mention the 4,500 service members killed, the more than 30,000 wounded, or the hundreds of thousands of violent deaths across the region since his overthrow? That doesn’t even count the millions forced to flee the violence with little more than the clothes on their backs, or the terror threats that are now a routine feature of American and European landscapes. None of the American policymakers responsible for this have been held to account as their British counterparts were in the U.K.’s damning Chilcot Report.
It's day 74 of the Mosul "slog."
The Islamic State seized Mosul in June of 2014. 74 days later, the Iraqi government finally decided to do something about it.
Something.
They're not sure what.
Some call it "liberation" but it didn't look that way in Ramadi or Falluja.
And the only significant development has been the creation of more refugees.
As 2017 winds down, and the Iraq War continues, Will Bardenwerper (WASHINGTON POST) reflects:
Who can forget Donald Rumsfeld’s pronouncement — delivered with the unwavering confidence that characterized his leadership — that the Iraq War might last “five days or five weeks or five months, but it certainly isn’t going to last any longer than that”? As it turns out, the current struggle to liberate Mosul — for the third time, this time from a terrorist organization, the Islamic State, that didn’t even exist when Hussein was killed — is now projected to last longer than Rumsfeld assured us the entire war would. Just this week, the first of 1,700 soldiers from the Army’s 82nd Airborne Division hugged their loved ones goodbye before deploying to Iraq. The youngest were 5 years old when the United States launched the invasion to remove Saddam.
One wonders how anyone, most notably the war’s architects, can cling to the view that delivering Hussein to the gallows was worth the trillions of dollars spent, not to mention the 4,500 service members killed, the more than 30,000 wounded, or the hundreds of thousands of violent deaths across the region since his overthrow? That doesn’t even count the millions forced to flee the violence with little more than the clothes on their backs, or the terror threats that are now a routine feature of American and European landscapes. None of the American policymakers responsible for this have been held to account as their British counterparts were in the U.K.’s damning Chilcot Report.
It's day 74 of the Mosul "slog."
The Islamic State seized Mosul in June of 2014. 74 days later, the Iraqi government finally decided to do something about it.
Something.
They're not sure what.
Some call it "liberation" but it didn't look that way in Ramadi or Falluja.
And the only significant development has been the creation of more refugees.
Jason Ditz (ANTIWAR.COM) reports the disturbingly clinical news that in the last two weeks of the operation, Iraqi troops have not been able to get an inch. Maybe Viagra would help?
Nothing's been done by the US to facilitate reconciliation in Iraq but the US does drop a lot of bombs.
Operation Inherent Resolve (also known as Operation Eternal Redundancy) issued the following statement today:
Coalition strike results in possible civilian casualties
By
| Combined Joint Task Force Operation Inherent Resolve | December 30, 2016
CJTF-OIR takes all allegations of civilian casualties seriously and this incident will be fully investigated and the findings released in a timely and transparent manner.
CJTF-OIR releases monthly reports covering our tracking and investigation of allegations of civilian casualties. Coalition forces comply with the Law of Armed Conflict, work diligently to be precise in our airstrikes, and take all feasible precautions during the planning and execution of airstrikes to reduce the risk of harm to civilians.
This is not the first time the US-led group has bombed a hospital. Dropping back to the December 8th snapshot:
Though rushing to deny US involvement in the strike on the market, no such effort was made when it came to the US-led strike on a hospital.
Spencer Ackerman (GUARDIAN) reports:
The US military has deliberately conducted an airstrike on a hospital in the Iraqi city of Mosul, it said on Wednesday, after saying its Iraqi allies came under fire by Islamic State fighters from the hospital complex.
Here's CENTCOM's press release on the attack:
December 8, 2016
Release #20161208-01
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
SOUTHWEST ASIA — On Dec. 6th, Iraqi Security Forces attempted to seize the Al Salem hospital complex from ISIL fighters in the heart of East Mosul. ISIL was using the hospital as a base of operations and command and control headquarters. After seizing the area, the ISF fought off several counterattacks and six VBIEDs the following day before retrograding a short distance, under heavy enemy fire, to strengthen their position.
On Dec. 7th, after Iraqi forces continued to receive heavy and sustained machine gun and rocket propelled grenade fire from ISIL fighters in a building on the hospital complex, they requested immediate support from the Coalition. In support of the Iraqi Security Forces, Coalition aircraft conducted a precision strike on the location to target enemy fighters firing on Iraqi forces.
The Coalition complies with the Law of Armed Conflict and takes all feasible precautions during the planning and execution of airstrikes to reduce the risk of harm to non-combatants. We will continue to strike ISIL military targets in support of our partners in order to defeat ISIL in Iraq.
Ackerman adds:
In a poll released this week, the International Committee of the Red Cross found that 82% of people surveyed in 16 countries considered it wrong to attack “hospitals, ambulances and health-care workers in order to weaken the enemy”. The proportion of people agreeing drops to 79% when only residents of the US, Russia, China, UK, France and Switzerland are questioned.
Of course it's wrong, it's a War Crime, legally defined as such.
The Mousl operation has been little more than a license to kill Sunni civilians.
MIDDLE EAST ONLINE notes:
[T]he coalition has already admitted to killing at least 173
civilians in its strikes in Iraq and Syria since the start of its
campaign against the IS group, a number independent observers believe is
greatly understated.
The London-based NGO Airwars estimates the coalition campaign has actually killed more than 2,000 civilians.
But keep on bombing, Barack Obama, Bombing Barry, it's worked out so well, right?
Barack's all consuming desire to bomb has obliterated any chance that the US government could offer real diplomatic assistance to Iraq on the long festering issues -- issue that remain to this day.
Earlier this week, Omar al-Saleh (AL JAZEERA) reported:
Representatives from the biggest Sunni bloc in Iraq's parliament, the National Forces Alliance, recently met Amar al-Hakim, who heads the ruling Iraqi National Alliance, an umbrella group of Shia parties. The meeting came after the National Forces Alliance rejected a reconciliation plan prepared by Hakim and instead proposed its own vision for governing a post-ISIL Iraq, aiming to remedy the chronic political and sectarian fighting that has plagued the country since the 2003 US-led invasion.
Details of the competing plans were still being worked out, and have not been made public. As the battle for Mosul drags on, Sunni and Shia leaders have not ironed out a timeframe for reaching an agreement.
According to Mohammed al-Karbouli, a member of the National Forces Alliance who has been involved in the discussions, his bloc had agreed to "write and propose a paper with a vision on how to govern the Iraqi state, especially in crucial areas such as the de-Baathification law [which bans members of Saddam Hussein's ruling party from serving in government], the amnesty law and the federal regions". Karbouli was referring to a long-standing Sunni demand for the release of Sunnis held under the country's notorious "anti-terrorism" law, which they believe targets them unfairly, and for an equitable power-sharing agreement.
Yesterday, Karim El-Bar (MIDDLE EAST EYE) reported an update on the tentative 'agreement':
Speaking to Arabi 21, the Sunni MP [Matshar al-Samarrai] said he asked the NIA to “launch initiatives that will build hope among political factions. These initiatives should include the return of displaced persons to their cities, restoration of land to residents once it is taken back from Islamic State forces and release of those innocently imprisoned, as everyone admits that there are innocent people being held in prison.”
Experts were sceptical the announcement would come to much, however.
Tallha Abdulrazaq, an Iraqi security and counterterrorism expert at the University of Exeter, said he would not be surprised if the “preliminary agreement follows the same path of 'one step forward and 10 steps back'."
The US State Dept can't assist with that. Or do much of anything these days.
For example . . .
Iraq – Freedom of the press – Kidnapping of journalist Afrah Shawqi (December 27, 2016)
From France Diplomatie:
We assure the Iraqi authorities of our support for the investigation demanded by Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, and express our hope that Ms. Shawqi will be released in the very near future.
France applauds the courage of Ms. Shawqi, who has notably worked to defend women’s rights and is renowned and appreciated in Iraq and beyond. She has also been active in exposing atrocities committed by armed groups.
We reiterate our commitment to the freedom of the press and freedom of expression throughout the world. Iraqi journalists have paid a heavy toll in the defense of that freedom, as noted in the report published today by the Iraqi professional group: 455 journalists have been killed since 2003, including 20 in 2016 alone.
France was shocked and concerned to learn of the kidnapping of the journalist Afrah Shawqi on December 27 in Baghdad.
We assure the Iraqi authorities of our support for the investigation demanded by Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, and express our hope that Ms. Shawqi will be released in the very near future.
France applauds the courage of Ms. Shawqi, who has notably worked to defend women’s rights and is renowned and appreciated in Iraq and beyond. She has also been active in exposing atrocities committed by armed groups.
We reiterate our commitment to the freedom of the press and freedom of expression throughout the world. Iraqi journalists have paid a heavy toll in the defense of that freedom, as noted in the report published today by the Iraqi professional group: 455 journalists have been killed since 2003, including 20 in 2016 alone.
The US State Dept?
Silent on the kidnapping.
Not that they aren't working.
They issued a statement that amounted to no more than a war of words. With? Theresa May.
But they've ignored Afrah.
She's not being ignored elsewhere.
Poet Dunya Mikhail on Kidnapped Iraqi Writer Afrah Shawqi and Elusive 'Freedom of Expression' arablit.org/2016/12/30/poe… via @arablit
Iraqi Sunnis civilians
Protesting against the abduction of Iraqi Sunni Journalist Afrah Shawqi
by Shia militias backed by Iran
Journalist Afrah Shawqi al-Qaisi has been kidnapped from her Baghdad home. She was taken by armed men posing as security forces. Iraq #media
Iraq gunmen kidnap Afrah Shawqi al-Qaisi, journalist who condemned impunity of armed groups bbc.com/news/world-mid… …
- I wish that oil had NEVER been discovered in the Middle East. (Free Afrah Shawqi al-Qaisi)
adalberto Gunmen have kidnapped an outspoken Iraqi journalist, Afrah Shawqi al-Qaisi, after storming her home in the Iraqi capital of Baghd…
Afrah's life matters.
The failure of the Iraqi police to find her would be yet another indictment of the Iraqi government.
Prime Minister Hayder al-Abadi should be allocating resources on this. They have descriptions, it should not be at all hard to track the kidnappers down.
But no such effort appears to be taking place.
And while foreign reporters -- Jill Carroll, for example -- were released or found alive long after they were kidnapped, Iraqi reporters tend to be killed shortly after they're kidnapped.
This is a very time sensitive issue.
Hayder's inability or refusal to deploy necessary resources to finding Afrah would be a strong indictment of his government.
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