Sooner Or Later There Will Be A Draft, So Get Cracking On That "Gears of War" Christmas Present Laddies

Stories

New York Daily News – http://www.nydailynews.com

VA boss likes draft – till White House blows it off

BY LISA COLANGELO in New York
and RICHARD SISK in Washington
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITERS

Friday, December 22nd, 2006

Veterans Affairs Secretary Jim Nicholson gave qualified support
yesterday to renewing the draft – a suggestion that rattled the White
House.

“I think that our society would benefit
from that, yes, sir,” Nicholson said of replacing the all-volunteer
force with a tough draft purged of the deferments that allowed many to
avoid service in Vietnam.

“I think if we bring back the draft, there
should be no loopholes for anybody who happens to be drafted,” he said.
“If it’s a random system, it ought to be an honestly random system.”

Nicholson’s remarks came a day after
President Bush said he was seeking new recruits to expand the Army and
Marine Corps, and the secretary was quickly reined in by the White
House.

“The administration is not considering reinstating the draft,” a White House spokesman said.

Nicholson later said his remarks had been
“misconstrued,” and he issued a statement saying, “I strongly support
the all-volunteer military and do not support returning to a draft.”

Nicholson spoke on the draft in answer to a
question at an event with Mayor Bloomberg at the Borden Ave. Residence
Center in Queens, where they announced a program to put 100 homeless
vets in housing in 100 days. They also said a task force would be set
up to boost services to vets.

Rep. Charles Rangel (D-Harlem), an Army vet
who served in Korea, has introduced a resolution in recent years to
bring back the draft and has said he will introduce another in the new
Congress next year.

powered by performancing firefox

DEMOCRATS TO GROW CAJONES

Stories

From US NEWS’ WASHINGTON WHISPERSBLOG

Evidence continues to mount that the new Democratic majority plans to
investigate the war, energy policy, and other Bush policies, as key
committees have begun hiring lawyer-investigators whose job will be to
probe the administration. In the House, for example, the Appropriations
Committee under Rep. John Murtha’s
direction is hiring investigators who will be charged with looking into
the administration’s war policies and spending in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Also, Rep. Henry Waxman,
the incoming chairman of the House Government Reform Committee who’s
been dogging the vice president’s energy task force, is also hiring
lawyers. A Democratic leadership official said that the planned
hearings and investigations into the war and other issues the
lawyer-investigators are being hired to look into will be “very
focused.” In the Senate, officials said similar hirings were underway
in a speeded up effort to have people in place for the start of the new
Congress, especially the planned early January hearings into the war
and military spending that are set to begin January 8.

powered by performancing firefox

How the West will make a killing on Iraqi oil riches

Stories

Independent Online Edition > Middle East

How the West will make a killing on Iraqi oil riches

By Danny Fortson, Andrew Murray-Watson and Tim Webb

Published: 07 January 2007

 Iraq’s massive oil reserves, the third-largest in the world, are about to be thrown open for large-scale exploitation by Western oil companies under a controversial law which is expected to come before the Iraqi parliament within days.

The US government has been involved in drawing up the law, a draft of which has been seen by The Independent on Sunday. It would give big oil companies such as BP, Shell and Exxon 30-year contracts to extract Iraqi crude and allow the first large-scale operation of foreign oil interests in the country since the industry was nationalised in 1972.

The huge potential prizes for Western firms will give ammunition to critics who say the Iraq war was fought for oil. They point to statements such as one from Vice-President Dick Cheney, who said in 1999, while he was still chief executive of the oil services company Halliburton, that the world would need an additional 50 million barrels of oil a day by 2010. “So where is the oil going to come from?… The Middle East, with two-thirds of the world’s oil and the lowest cost, is still where the prize ultimately lies,” he said.

Oil industry executives and analysts say the law, which would permit Western companies to pocket up to three-quarters of profits in the early years, is the only way to get Iraq’s oil industry back on its feet after years of sanctions, war and loss of expertise. But it will operate through “production-sharing agreements” (or PSAs) which are highly unusual in the Middle East, where the oil industry in Saudi Arabia and Iran, the world’s two largest producers, is state controlled.

Opponents say Iraq, where oil accounts for 95 per cent of the economy, is being forced to surrender an unacceptable degree of sovereignty.

Proposing the parliamentary motion for war in 2003, Tony Blair denied the “false claim” that “we want to seize” Iraq’s oil revenues. He said the money should be put into a trust fund, run by the UN, for the Iraqis, but the idea came to nothing. The same year Colin Powell, then Secretary of State, said: “It cost a great deal of money to prosecute this war. But the oil of the Iraqi people belongs to the Iraqi people; it is their wealth, it will be used for their benefit. So we did not do it for oil.”

Supporters say the provision allowing oil companies to take up to 75 per cent of the profits will last until they have recouped initial drilling costs. After that, they would collect about 20 per cent of all profits, according to industry sources in Iraq. But that is twice the industry average for such deals.

Greg Muttitt, a researcher for Platform, a human rights and environmental group which monitors the oil industry, said Iraq was being asked to pay an enormous price over the next 30 years for its present instability. “They would lose out massively,” he said, “because they don’t have the capacity at the moment to strike a good deal.”

Iraq’s Deputy Prime Minister, Barham Salih, who chairs the country’s oil committee, is expected to unveil the legislation as early as today. “It is a redrawing of the whole Iraqi oil industry [to] a modern standard,” said Khaled Salih, spokesman for the Kurdish Regional Government, a party to the negotiations. The Iraqi government hopes to have the law on the books by March.

Several major oil companies are said to have sent teams into the country in recent months to lobby for deals ahead of the law, though the big names are considered unlikely to invest until the violence in Iraq abates.

James Paul, executive director at the Global Policy Forum, the international government watchdog, said: “It is not an exaggeration to say that the overwhelming majority of the population would be opposed to this. To do it anyway, with minimal discussion within the [Iraqi] parliament is really just pouring more oil on the fire.”

Vince Cable, the Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesman and a former chief economist at Shell, said it was crucial that any deal would guarantee funds for rebuilding Iraq. “It is absolutely vital that the revenue from the oil industry goes into Iraqi development and is seen to do so,” he said. “Although it does make sense to collaborate with foreign investors, it is very important the terms are seen to be fair.”

powered by performancing firefox

Bush to raise stakes with new Iraq strategy

Stories

FT.com

Bush to raise stakes with new Iraq strategy

By Edward Luce in Washington

Published: January 10 2007 02:00 | Last updated: January 10 2007 02:00

In a broadcast tonight, George W. Bush will gamble what remains of his presidency on a counter-insurgency strategy drawn up by the general he appointed last week to take charge of US forces in Iraq.

The 168-page manual, that Lieutenant General David Petraeus completed last month, provides the blueprint for what supporters of Mr Bush’s expected 20,000 troop “surge” hope the beefed up US forces will do in Iraq over the coming months.

The first US army counterinsurgency manual in 20 years, it recommends a starkly different approach to tackling the insurgency than most US commanders have followed since the April 2003 Iraq invasion.

It says that the principal goal of the US military should be to win the respect and support of the domestic population and that killing insurgents can often be counter-productive by creating even more to take their place.

Furthermore, it recommends that US soldiers and civilians learn Arabic and become culturally sensitive to the conditions of the local population as a way of improving critical intelligence. “Without good intelligence, counter-insurgents are like blind boxers flailing at an unseen opponent,” it says.

On previous tours in Iraq, most notably in command of US forces in the northern city of Mosul, Gen Petraeus has put much of this into practice with good effect, say analysts. This time around, he is expected to apply it across Iraq but particularly in Baghdad and Anbar province.

Kenneth Pollack, an Iraq analyst at the Brookings Institution, said: “He comes with two very big advantages, which is that the previous strategy of chasing al-Qaeda fruitlessly around Iraq has failed.

“Second, he won’t have Donald Rumsfeld breathing down his neck and vetoing everything he does. Bob Gates [the new defence secretary] is not like that.”

However, Gen Petraeus will also face three obstacles, they say. First, the surge – or “escalation”, as the Democratic party has called it – would need to be many times the expected 20,000 in order to pacify Iraqi population centres.

The report says the ideal ratio of troops to population in a counter-insurgency operation is 20 per 1,000. This would imply the US would need to add at least 250,000 to its existing force of 140,000 – a logistical and political impossibility. Iraq’s population is 26m.

Although Gen Petraeus is advocating what British strategists had long recommended, the UK’s 8,000 force level was never enough to control Basra, a city of more than 1m. “The UK had the right idea but never putits money where its mouth was,” said Mr Pollack. Second, Gen Petraeus cannot rely on the co-operation of all of Iraq’s security forces, many of which are riddled with sectarian death squads. Patrick Clawson, a former administration official at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said: “The thing to watch out for is not the surge but the number of high-quality US trainers Mr Bush can provide for the Iraqi army.”

Third, the focus on counter-insurgency might be years too late. Mr Pollack said: “The Iraqi civil war has acquired a psychological dimension that may now be impossible to control.”

powered by performancing firefox

14 Jimmy Carter Center staff members resign in protest over book

Stories

SHEESH!

14 Carter Center staff members resign in protest over book

ATLANTA Fourteen members of a Carter Center board who worked to build support for the human rights organization started by former President Jimmy Carter and his wife have resigned in protest over Carter’s latest book.
The resignations announced today are the latest in a backlash against the former president’s book “Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid.” It has drawn fire from Jewish groups, been attacked by fellow Democrats and led to the resignation last month of Kenneth Stein — a Carter Center fellow and a longtime Carter adviser.

The members of the Center’s Board of Councilors wrote of Carter in the letter of resignation — quote — “you have clearly abandoned your historic role of broker in favor of becoming an advocate for one side.”

The book follows the Israeli-Palestinian peace process starting with Carter’s 1977-1980 presidency and the peace accord he negotiated between Israel and Egypt. It doles out blame to Israel, the Palestinians, the United States and others, but it is most critical of Israeli policy.

The 14 who resigned are members of the 200-member board.

The Carter Center’s spokeswoman did NOT have an immediate comment.

___

powered by performancing firefox

We had it (Iraq) right at the beginning…

Stories

Billmon goes back into his archives:

But to piece together the truth in those days you had to
scrounge for it, ignore the ignorance and lies pouring out of Donald
Rumfeld’s mouth and defy the prevailing political tide of arrogant
triumphalism. Very few journalists, and even fewer politicians, were
willing to do that. Some in Left Blogistan were (Kos, Needlenose and
Steve Gilliard, among others, also come readily to mind). As a result
we presented a far more accurate picture of the war to our readers than
the corporate media — with a few honorable exceptions — did
to its own. I’m proud enough of that to want to remind the world, and
the moronic media blog bashers in particular, of it…read on

From Crooks and Liars

powered by performancing firefox

"Brainwashed" by President Bush?

Stories

Independent UK:

Tony Blair’s “shoulder to shoulder” support for
George Bush has been called into question again by claims that he was
“brainwashed” by President Bush over plans to pull troops out of Iraq.

The Prime Minister returned yesterday from his seven-nation
visit to the Middle East, apparently without achieving any significant
breakthrough in the peace process. [..]The trip has been overshadowed
by a growing perception that Mr Blair’s relationship with President
Bush is very much a “one-way street” in which Britain gets very little
in return for his unwavering public backing for Washington. Even some
Blairites are starting to question the Prime Minister’s stance. They
are appalled that President Bush has refused to honour his 2004 promise
to expend “capital” on the Middle East peace process during his second
term. “He doesn’t cut Tony much slack,” one Blair aide said yesterday.

For someone who is often described as a “lucky” politician,
cabinet ministers believe that Mr Blair was extremely unlucky to have
President Bush in the White House for the past six years.

(Read the rest of this story…)

powered by performancing firefox

Spike Lee has added another two hours to his documentary

Stories

RawStory:

Spike Lee has added another two hours to his documentary on the victims of Hurricane Katrina, When the Levees Broke. [now available on DVD, a portion of the proceeds will go directly to victims]

Lee plans to make the film an ongoing project. Future chapters will add coverage of other areas affected by Hurricane Katrina.

powered by performancing firefox

WINGNUTS GONE WILD

Stories

WINGNUTS GONE WILD: Hugh Hewitt says, “The Iraqis and the Afghanis are going to be as grateful to Bush as African-Americans are to Lincoln”…Over at The Corner, reality has donned a rubber glove and is probing the depths of John Derbyshire’s political conviction…A rational person looks at our media and sees Fortune 500 corporations.  A crazy person looks and sees willing accomplices of jihadists and suicide bombers…GOP radio host: Send Critics of Dear Leader Bush to Detention Camps

FROM MIKE’S BLOG ROUNDUP ON JOHN AMATO’S EXCELLENT Crooks and Liars

powered by performancing firefox

Information Architects selected CrooksandLiars as one of the Top Blogs of 2006.

Stories

Crooks and Liars » 2006 » December » 22:

Information Architects selected CrooksandLiars as one of the  Top Blogs of 2006