BULLY BOY
PRESS & CEDRIC'S BIG MIX -- THE KOOL-AID
TABLE
AS JOE JACKSON WONDERED YEARS AGO, "IS SHE REALLY GOING OUT WITH HIM?"
THAT'S THE ONLY QUESTION TO ASK AS THE PHOTO OF L.A. LAKERS FORMER COACH PHIL JACKSON AND CELEBRITY IN CHIEF BARRY O KEEP EMERGING -- HERE AND HERE.
WHAT STRAIGHT MAN WRAPS HIMSELF LIKE A COBRA AROUND ANOTHER MAN?
THESE REPORTERS REACHED JAY CARNEY WHO WAS BEACHED AT THE DINNER TABLE STILL, GNAWING ON THE CARCASS OF THURSDAY'S TURKEY WHILE SCREAMING FOR "MORE SIDES! STAT!"
THE WHITE HOUSE PLUS SIZE SPOKESMODEL TOLD THESE REPORTERS THAT THE P.D.A. WAS "MORE THAN FINE BECAUSE WHAT YOU'RE MISSING FROM THE PHOTOS IS THAT BARRY O SLID HIS HAND DOWN PHIL'S PANTS WHILE HOLLERING 'NO HOMO!''
FROM THE TCI WIRE:
In Iraq, the political crisis on top of the political crisis continues. And it dwarfs the original one. Earlier this week, Rami Ruhayem (BBC News) described the origins of the first political crisis this way:
Straight
after the withdrawal of US troops at the end of last year, a warrant
was issued for the arrest of Vice-President Tariq al-Hashemi, the most
senior Sunni politician in Iraq.
He was accused of running death squads, tried in absentia, and sentenced to death.
And
Mr [Nouri al-]Maliki has kept both the defence and interior ministries
under his control, refusing to hand them over to his partners within the
government.
That
was alarming and had led to calls for a National Conference to resolve
it -- calls by Iraqi President Jalal Talabani and Speaker of Parliament
Osama al-Nujaifi. But Nouri's created yet another crisis and it's so
huge even some who normally stay out of the political process are wading
in to try to resolve the issues. Kitabat notes
things are so fraught that Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani has had to
weigh in to try to resolve the situation. The Grand Ayatollah is
calling for the Constitution to be followed with regards to the
conflict. All Iraq News notes that Sheikh Abdul Mahdi al-Karabalai has joined the Grand Ayatollah's call.
Along with the clergy, others are alarmed as well. Hurriyet reports:
Turkish
Prime Minister Tayyip Erdoğan warned about a sectarian and ethnic-based
civil war in Iraq on Nov. 22 and pointed to energy wars as the main
motivation behind it. The next day, Iraq's Shiite-origin Prime Minister,
Nouri al-Maliki, sent a strong "Not if you trigger it" reply to
Erdoğan, only to be snubbed as "delusional" by the Turkish Foreign
Ministry. Almost simultaneously, al-Maliki released a photo showing the
deployment of Iraqi troops to Tuzhurmatu in order to face Kurds piling
up along the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) borders, despite still
being part of Iraq on paper.
It is surely about energy resources. There are still untapped oil and natural gas beds in the KRG territory, for which the energy giants of the world - from Exxon and Chevron of the United States to Total of France and Gazprom of Russia (Turkish companies too) - have sealed deals with the KRG President Massoud Barzani in Arbil. Despite the strong protests of al-Maliki in Baghdad and disapproving lip service from Washington, D.C., they are not taking any steps back. Al-Maliki knows that if Kurds manage to sell their oil and gas via NATO member Turkey without interference from Arabs, Russians and Iranians, that would mean a de-facto change in Iraqi borders and sovereignty, if not de jure.
It is surely about energy resources. There are still untapped oil and natural gas beds in the KRG territory, for which the energy giants of the world - from Exxon and Chevron of the United States to Total of France and Gazprom of Russia (Turkish companies too) - have sealed deals with the KRG President Massoud Barzani in Arbil. Despite the strong protests of al-Maliki in Baghdad and disapproving lip service from Washington, D.C., they are not taking any steps back. Al-Maliki knows that if Kurds manage to sell their oil and gas via NATO member Turkey without interference from Arabs, Russians and Iranians, that would mean a de-facto change in Iraqi borders and sovereignty, if not de jure.
Nouri
had his own response, he publicly stated that the conflict in Syria
could take over Turkey, implying that the Turkish government should
focus on that and not speak of Iraq. UPI notes
the response of the Turkish government, "Turkish officials labeled
delusional statements by Iraqi [Prime Minister] Nouri al-Maliki warning
sectarian violence in Syria could engulf Turkey. Roy Gutman (McClatchy Newspapers) reports
Nouri's response also hinted that Erdogan would soon be ousted in
Turkey. Nouri declared, "Erdogan should focus his attention on
addressing Turkey's domestic issues, which raise our concern, as
Turkey heads toward civil war. [. . .] Turkish people are looking
forward to changing the political situation to protect Turkey from
worsening domestic and foreign problems."
The
crisis results from Nouri sending forces into the disputed areas after
years of refusing to implement Article 140 of the Constitution (which
states that disputed areas will be resolved via census and referendum).
The Kurds see this is as an attempt by Nouri to seize the areas and
claim them for the Baghdad-based area. Realizing too late that Barack
Obama's for-show trip to Asia was a mistake, the White House is
scrambling to get more face-to-face diplomats into Iraq. (The trip was a
joke and Barack made a fool of himself. Americans didn't give a damn
about the visit, his reception on the trip was lukewarm and Hillary
Clinton seized all the news interest with her trip to the MidEast
leaving Barack looking like a glorified extra on the world stage.) Reuters adds:,
"Washington intervened to end a similar standoff in August and is now
again in contact with Iraqi and Kurdish officials to ease tension
mounting over the formation of a new command center for Iraqi forces to
operate in the disputed areas." Iran's Trend News Agency notes
that Iraq's Col Dhia al-Wakeel is alleging that "Kurdish forces, backed
by rocket launchers and artillery, reinforced troops already in the
cities of Khaniqeen and Kirkuk on Thursday."
Iraqi politicians are attempting to resolve the issue as well. Speaker of Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi visited with KRG President Massoud Barzani Wednesday and returned to Bahgdad yesterday to meet with Nouri al-Maliki. All Iraq News notes that they met late yesterday evening and that a statement issued by al-Nuajaif called the meeting productive.
Bit by bit, all of the political blocs are getting into the process.All Iraq News notes that the National Alliance leader Ibrahim al-Jaafari is preparing a paper on the issue. Alsumaria notes that Kurdistan Alliance MP Mahmoud Othman is calling for Nouri al-Maliki and Massoud Barzani to sit down together (this echoes Moqtada al-Sadr's call for a working lunch between the two to be hosted by Moqtada).Kitabat reports that sources are stating Iraqi President Jalal Talabani and KRG President Massoud Barzani are discussing the option of withdrawing confidence from Nouri. Dar Addustour reports that Iraqiya leader Ayad Allawi traveled to Erbil yesterday to meet with Talabani and Barzani to discuss this issue. All Iraq News says that Moqtada al-Sadr, leader of the Sadr bloc, has given the green light for such talks.
Rebwar Karim Wali (Rudaw) offers his opinions on the political situation:
The Shia will stand by him, and the Sunnis will too since most of his officers are former Baathist Sunnis.
Then,
he thinks, if everything goes according to plan, he will turn on the
Kurdistan Region and what the Kurds have achieved so far. Maliki wants
to show the Kurds that Kurdistan is part of Iraq, and he does not
conceal this sentiment.
At
this time, Kurds and their political groups have reached a unanimous
conclusion that this is Maliki's intention. In the meantime, they have
admitted that they lack a united voice.
However,
when the Dijla Operations Command deployed, the leader of the Change
Movement (Gorran) -- who had previously sided with keeping Maliki in his
seat -- went to Kirkuk and vehemently rejected the actions of the
forces.
Judging
from the tone of its media, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) is
waging a full war against Maliki. The party's secretary general, Jalal
Talabani, concurs with President Barzani that Maliki is a threat to both
Iraq and Kurdistan.
Territories
defined as "disputed" through constitutional Article 140 include 43
percent of Kurdish land. According to international laws, when an area
is considered disputed, no one side has the right to make decisions
about it unilaterally. If the two sides do not trust each other, then a
third force -- often an international one -- comes to mediate.
Yesterday, Al Mada reported Nouri' had announced that KRG officials may not leave Iraq without the permission of the federal government (his permission). Kitabat picks up
the story about Nouri al-Maliki declaring that Kuridstan officials
could not leave the country without the federal government/s permission
-- that would be Nouri's permission. It is intended to be an
inflammatory insult. It has no teeth. Not unlike when Nouri was
screeching that the KRG had to hand over Iraqi Vice President Tareq
al-Hashemi and they didn't have to do that and they didn't do that.
They will continue to do as they want. They share a border with
Turkey which doesn't take orders from Nouri. Hurriyet Daily News notes:
The Turkish Foreign Ministry issued a statement on its website today calling for the Iraqi government to "not make imaginary assumptions about the expectations of the Turkish public, but to listen to advice instead," according to daily Hurriyet.
The statement was released Nov. 23 in response to a statement issued by the Iraqi Prime Ministry several days before that accused Turkey of "meddling with regional problems."
The Turkish Foreign Ministry issued a statement on its website today calling for the Iraqi government to "not make imaginary assumptions about the expectations of the Turkish public, but to listen to advice instead," according to daily Hurriyet.
The statement was released Nov. 23 in response to a statement issued by the Iraqi Prime Ministry several days before that accused Turkey of "meddling with regional problems."
In other news, the Telegram reports
that Iraq's crude oil exports for October increased by 1.1%. According
to the World Bank, Iraq's GDP for 2010 was $82.15 billion. And yet even
with increased crude oil output, Azzaman reports,
"Iraq imports 70% of its needs from foreign countries, especially
neighboring states, said the head of the Iraqi Chamber of Commerce
Jaafar al-Hamadani." That's the reality of Nouri's Iraq where
demonstrations have not vanished. Al Mada reports
that yesterday, for the third day in a row, special needs persons
staged a strike outside the Kurdistan Parliament in Sulaimaniya. They
are staging a hunger strike, spokesperson Iara Mohammed explained, that
the money allocated to those with special needs does not meet the most
basic needs. Azzaman notes,
"The wars Iraq has gone through in the last three decades have produced
a nation of disabled people -- six million out of a population of 30
millions." Najaf alone has at least 120,000 people who are challenged
or have special needs. Meanwhile, a strike is threatened in Babylon. Al Mada reports
that teachers in Babylon are considering going on strike for, among
other reasons, a lack of protection and accountability. A school
headmaster was killed and Wednesday saw demonstrations over it. It is
not felt that the death is being taken seriously or being investigated
as needed.