Saturday, January 16, 2016

I Hate The War

Today, the US Defense Dept announced:



Strikes in Iraq

Rocket artillery and attack, bomber, fighter and remotely piloted aircraft conducted 18 strikes in Iraq, coordinated with and in support of Iraq’s government:

-- Near Al Huwayjah, one strike struck an ISIL headquarters.

-- Near Albu Hayat, one strike destroyed an ISIL vehicle-borne bomb.

-- Near Kisik, one strike denied ISIL access to terrain.

-- Near Mosul, eight strikes struck two separate ISIL tactical units and destroyed an ISIL vehicle, two ISIL fighting positions, three ISIL-used culverts, 12 ISIL assembly areas, five ISIL command and control nodes, an ISIL bunker, an ISIL weapons cache, and denied ISIL access to terrain.

-- Near Ramadi, six strikes struck two separate ISIL tactical units and destroyed an ISIL building, an ISIL vehicle-borne bomb, four ISIL staging areas, cratered two ISIL-used roads, and denied ISIL access to terrain.

-- Near Tal Afar, one strike destroyed three ISIL assembly areas and an ISIL vehicle-borne bomb. 

Task force officials define a strike as one or more kinetic events that occur in roughly the same geographic location to produce a single, sometimes cumulative, effect. Therefore, officials explained, a single aircraft delivering a single weapon against a lone ISIL vehicle is one strike, but so is multiple aircraft delivering dozens of weapons against buildings, vehicles and weapon systems in a compound, for example, having the cumulative effect of making those targets harder or impossible for ISIL to use. Accordingly, officials said, they do not report the number or type of aircraft employed in a strike, the number of munitions dropped in each strike, or the number of individual munition impact points against a target.



And CBS and AP report, "The U.S. military said Friday eight civilians were killed and three others injured in five airstrikes last year in Iraq and Syria."


When does that diplomatic push start?

The one that Barack insisted was needed?

Next month, his 'plan' will have been executed for 18 months.

And still no work addressing the root causes, the grievances which led the Islamic State to get a foothold in Iraq to begin with.

Barack just keeps dropping bombs and keeps looking the other way as Sunnis continue to be persecuted in Iraq.



  1. Sunni farmer on video tells Army officers: I am innocent. They shot him like others - bodies are piled.
  2. Shia militias crimes killed Iraqis Sunnis civilians in without guilt This militias backed by Iran





Until the persecution is addressed, the Islamic State is not losing power in Iraq.



What I'm trying to say is
It's time 
To get in the way
It's crazy 
That this thing is still going on
I can't believe
This thing's still going on 
And it goes
Na na na na na na 
I hate the war
Na na na na na na 
I hate the war
Na na na na na na
I hate the war
-- "I Hate The War" (written by Greg Goldberg, on The Ballet's Mattachine!)



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Friday, January 15, 2016

Iraq snapshot

Friday, January 15, 2016.  Chaos and violence continue, the US continues bombing Iraq, Ramadi still not fully 'liberated,' THE NATION tries to have it all ways, and much more.l



Starting with THE NATION magazine which wants credit for "Is It Time for the US to Pull Out of Iraq and Syria?" -- three different friends with the magazine lobbied for the article to be linked to.

They got their wish -- even if only one of the three realized sometimes that's not a good thing.


The piece is the sort of crap the magazine loves to do because it lets them cherry pick in ten years.  "As we said a decade ago . . ."


Because the article presents four views and they can grab whichever one to make themselves look good in ten years.

Taking an actual stand?

That's too much for the rag.

Jeff Faux may offer the strongest take:

The war is already lost. None of the US governing class’ shifting war aims—stabilizing the region, defending human rights, ending terrorism, establishing democracy—can be achieved. There is no future “diplomatic” solution that justifies continuing the waste of life, treasure, and national honor.
Our ongoing intervention in the Middle East cannot succeed for the same reason that it could not succeed in Vietnam: We are foreign invaders, brutal enough to alienate the people of Iraq and Syria but not brutal enough to subjugate them. By expanding and re-escalating the war with enough US troops and bombs—and bribes to every warlord in sight—we might (with or without the Russians) degrade and perhaps even destroy, the Islamic State organization in Iraq and Syria. But it would leave the region an even more ungovernable wasteland of death and destruction and hatred of Americans.
ISIS is but one of many groups using that hatred as a ladder to power. 


Muhammad Idrees Ahmad speaks like an idiot -- we have to stay, we have to help, we have to -- Save the crap.  The US government isn't helping anyone.  As for the Yazidis, they can learn to fight.  There his proof that the US is needed.  Without the US, they could have been trapped on the mountain so much longer.


Those 'peaceful' Yazidis have since targeted Sunni civilians, killed them, for 'retaliation.'


Clearly, they know how to kill and murder.

And, point of fact, the rescue of the Yazidis was done by the Peshmerga -- the elite Kurdish fighting force.



Then there's Phyllis Bennis embarrassing herself.

Does she have a position?

We have to talk about what we owe the people of Iraq and Syria who continue to face the consequences of years or decades of horrific wars. We have an obligation to help support reconstruction, humanitarian relief, diplomacy, compensation, and much more.
But first, the United States needs to stop the airstrikes. They kill civilians and undermine the goal of ending popular support for ISIS. Bombing destroys cities, so ousting ISIS becomes a pyrrhic victory. 


Yes, good to be against bomb strikes.

Sad that our discourse is so degraded and dumbed down that being opposed to dropping bombs is now considered 'radical' and/or 'peaceful.'


But the US has to this and has to that and blah blah blah?


“Pulling out” is what we do with troops, planes, bombs and drones. But crafting a serious strategy does not end with pulling them out; we also need to take the money now being spent on a failing war and redirect it to serve domestic needs and to assist the countries and peoples we’ve been bombing for so long.
.

I'd love to get behind Phyllis but . . .

December 2, 2004, we published "SHOULD THIS MARRIAGE BE SAVED?" which was about how this sort of 'we must' thinking just continues war and occupation.

We've also repeatedly noted that if you spill red wine on someone's white carpet, they're not wanting you to dab at it with a towel, they just want you the hell out.

If all that's too confusing for Phyllis, let's try this.

If a man is beating a woman, you get the man out.  You don't say, "Let's work out the community property settlement and then we'll work on getting him out."

Phyllis is against bombing civilians.

Good.

I'm glad.

I'm sad that we're so whorish as a nation these days that we have to pat someone on the back for being against bombing civilians.  I'm sorry that the 'position' is even seen as risky today.


But applause, Phyllis, applause.

Now lose the laundry list of what you want for Iraq.

Negotiating those wants is only going to continue an ongoing war.

All US troops out of Iraq now.

And, Phyllis, I'm being real easy on you and not slamming you for your silence on the IMF's take over of Iraq -- even though we both know you're silent on it and have been silent for months.

Even though the IMF will be yet another form of occupation.


So, ten years from now, THE NATION will grab one of the four positions their article presents and trumpet the one opinion as proof of the magazine's 'insight' and 'wisdom' and 'bravery.'


Even though the article is nothing but THE NATION trying to have it all ways -- not both ways, all ways.


Let's note some Tweets.


Shiat militias backed by torturing Sunnies by cutting them alive in
















  • Shiite militias kill hundreds of Sunni Arabs citizens in .These actions increase terrorism in the world




  • The persecution of the Sunnis in Iraq continues.

    And the world begins to take notice even if the White House does not.

    Since August 2014, Barack's 'plan' for Iraq has been implemented.

    But the US President's plan has been short on diplomacy and short on addressing the root causes.

    Barack Obama has been, however, happy to drop bombs on Iraq.

    Repeatedly.


    Today, the US Defense Dept announced:



    Strikes in Iraq
    Attack, bomber, fighter, ground attack and remotely piloted aircraft conducted 17 strikes in Iraq, coordinated with and in support of Iraq’s government:

    -- Near Hit, two strikes struck two ISIL bomb-making facilities.

    -- Near Kisik, one strike struck an ISIL tactical unit and destroyed four ISIL fighting positions.

    -- Near Mosul, four strikes struck a large ISIL tactical unit and destroyed an ISIL weapons cache, an ISIL vehicle, seven ISIL fighting positions, four ISIL assembly areas, an ISIL-used culvert and disabled an ISIL front end loader and denied ISIL access to terrain.

    -- Near Ramadi, three strikes struck two separate ISIL tactical units and destroyed 14 ISIL fighting positions, destroyed two ISIL recoilless rifles, 12 ISIL heavy machine guns, two ISIL sniper positions and an ISIL tactical vehicle.

    -- Near Sinjar, one strike struck an ISIL tactical unit and destroyed an ISIL heavy machine gun and an ISIL fighting position.

    -- Near Sultan Abdallah, two strikes struck two separate ISIL tactical units and destroyed two ISIL fighting positions and an ISIL assembly area.

    -- Near Tal Afar, two strikes struck two separate ISIL tactical units and destroyed an ISIL fighting position, an ISIL weapons cache and five ISIL assembly areas.

    -- Near Beiji, one strike struck a large ISIL tactical unit and destroyed three ISIL weapons caches.

    -- Near Habbaniyah, one strike destroyed three ISIL fuel tankers and an ISIL command-and-control node.


    Task force officials define a strike as one or more kinetic events that occur in roughly the same geographic location to produce a single, sometimes cumulative, effect. Therefore, officials explained, a single aircraft delivering a single weapon against a lone ISIL vehicle is one strike, but so is multiple aircraft delivering dozens of weapons against buildings, vehicles and weapon systems in a compound, for example, having the cumulative effect of making those targets harder or impossible for ISIL to use. Accordingly, officials said, they do not report the number or type of aircraft employed in a strike, the number of munitions dropped in each strike, or the number of individual munition impact points against a target.






    What has been the result of Barack's 'plan'?


    Civilian deaths to be sure.

    A country ripped apart.

    The recent Ramadi bombings have been so bad and so destructive that experts outside of Iraq are beginning to weigh whether the 'success' from bombings is worth the destruction that they inflict.


    And Ramadi, despite all those bombings, despite non-stop claims of liberation, remains to be fully liberated from the Islamic State.








  • |i army loosing more ground in north after stormed & took 8 more barracks in al-Jarayshi..





  • Heck of a job, Barry.
















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    Thursday, January 14, 2016

    Old fool Kerry spoke too soon


    Starting with a Tweet:
     




  • | A curfew has been imposed in the provincial city of Saladin Province.


  • No fool like an old fool, the old saying goes and it will be inscribed on John Kerry's tombstone one day.  Yesterday, the Secretary of State was boasting of depriving the Islamic State "of more than 40 percent of the territory that it once occupied in Iraq."

    The percentage was always fuzzy math but the boast itself?

    You better be able to back it up.

    Creeky Kerry can't today.

    Not when SPUTNIK reports that "militants have taken control over some areas east of the Iraqi city of Tikrit, the capital of the central-northern Saladin province, controlled by the country's security forces, local media reported Thursday."


    Reuters adds, "The dawn attacks on Tal Kusaiba, around 35 km (20 miles) east of Tikrit, killed the police station chief and five Shi'ite militia fighters, police and tribal sources in nearby Alam said."


  • Poor John Kerry, such a sad disgrace.

    It was his last State of the Union Address, the last one he'd be attending, he said in his speech.

    What is there left for him to do?

    Barring Fox doing a reboot of THE ADAMS FAMILY and casting him as Lurch, nothing.

    It's a sad ending to what should have been a distinguished career.

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