BULLY BOY PRESS & CEDRIC'S BIG MIX -- THE KOOL-AID TABLE
LEAKS ARE BAD! EXCEPT WHEN THEY'RE NOT.
FORMER CIA DIRECTOR MICHAEL HAYDEN TOOK TIME OUT FROM HIS SECOND GIG AS CELEBRITY IMPRESSIONIST (HE DRESSES UP AS JOHN FIEDLER) TO DECLARE LEAKS WONDERFUL -- LEAKS FROM OFFICIALS ABOUT OUR SPYING SEND A MESSAGE -- A NEEDED ONE.
OF COURSE, HAYDEN HAS A HISSY, PISSY FIT WHEN IT COMES TO ED SNOWDEN'S WHISTLE-BLOWING.
REMEMBER LEAKS ARE BAD! EXCEPT WHEN THEY AREN'T!
Michael Hayden, the former CIA director, has been harshly criticizing
Edward Snowden and calling for his immediate prosecution. But in the
wake of the leaks about America spying on specific terrorists in
specific times and specific areas, Hayden says it was important “to put them on the back foot, to let them know that we’re alert…”
FROM THE TCI WIRE:
Iraq is slammed with bombs yet again. Mohammed Tawfeeq and Jason Hanna (CNN) report, "At least 30 people were killed and more than 100 others were injured
in car bombings and roadside bomb explosions in Baghdad neighborhoods
Tuesday evening, police officials in the Iraqi capital said. Most of the explosions
happened in Shiite areas, police said. Nearly all of the blasts happened
just before people were to celebrate iftar, the fast-breaking dinner
eaten at sunset during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan." The UK Daily Express adds, "The explosions mainly targeted markets in and near Baghdad." AFP observes, "Iraq is struggling to contain the worst violence to hit the country
since 2008 when it was emerging from a bloody sectarian conflict."
Through Monday, Iraq Body Count counts 106 violent deaths in Iraq so far this month -- a month that isn't even 10 days old. National Iraqi News Agency reports that a Hamrin bombing claimed 2 lives and left three people injured, and Nouri's Tigris Operation command has killed at least 11 Iraqis in their latest efforts today at mass arrests. Alsumaria reports 1 police officer was shot dead outside of Falluja, a Mosul armed attack has left 4 people dead (three were brothers). Ahmed Rasheed (Reuters) explains, "The past
four months have all had higher death tolls than any in the five years
before April, leading the Interior Ministry to declare last week that Iraq was now once again in 'open war'."
Since December 21st, Iraq has seen an ongoing wave of protests. The protests continued on Friday and from that day's snapshot:
World Bulletin reports
today that reporters who attempted to cover a protest in Baghdad's
Tahrir Square, "A group of journalists wanted to go to Tahrir Square to
follow the
protests which are to be held for the improvement of security standards
in the state, but were detained by Iraqi
security officials, sources said. The journalists' cameras and video
cameras were also confiscated." Nouti's back to imprisoning
journalists. Will anyone bother to condemn his latest attack on the
press?
This protest was part of the Consolidated Friday theme and included recognition of International Quds Day. National Iraqi News Agency notes
that it featured "hundreds of members of the League of the Righteous,
Hezbollah, Badr Organization and other parties" took part in actions
which were "called by Iranian Imam Khomeini." In Baghdad, All Iraq News notes,
hundreds turned out. Looking at the photo with the article, you'll see
that it should probably be changed to "thousands." They explains
"International Quds Day is an annual event that began in Iran in 1979
that is commemorated on the last Friday of Ramadan, expressing
solidarity with the Palestinian people and opposing Zioneism as well as
Israel's control of Jerusalem." But NINA makes clear,
that the Baghdad Tahrir Square demonstration also included those who
were "demanding the government to address the security file and the
elimination of terrorism as well as the abolition of the use of broken
sonar devices in the multiple checkpoints in Baghdad and of other
provinces.
Iraqi Spring MC notes that Nouri's SWAT forces cut off roads leading to Tahrir Square. In addition, the SWAT forces began arresting people in Tahrir Square and downtown Baghdad. And they turned out in Baghdad's Adhamiya, in Baiji, in Jalawla, and these protests also took place today in Basra and in Karbala.
The protests have been going on since December 21st (and today's theme
was Consolidated Friday which allowed the ongoing protests to also
include the Quds focus).
Saturday, Al Mada reported that at least two activists are still being held. Buthaina al-Suhail wants to know where her son Ahmed al-Suhail is?
Mushreq Abbas (Al-Monitor) divides
the two protests in Baghdad on Friday, stating that the Quds protest
was permitted while the Iraqis protesting each Friday was denied a
permit:
The issue of these young people trying to get approval for their
demonstration seems like a paradox. In a statement posted on the group’s
Facebook page on
the evening of Aug. 4, the group said that they went to the local
government in Baghdad to get a permit for the demonstration and were
told to “go to the Council of Ministers.” So, they went to the Council
of Ministers, which told them that demonstration permits were under the
jurisdiction of the Interior Ministry. They then went to the Interior
Ministry, which told them that they would get the permit from the
Baghdad Operations Command on the day of the demonstration.”
According to the statement they issued, on the morning of the
demonstration, the “Iraq Rises Up” demonstrators distributed flowers to
the military forces who deployed around them. But soon after, the
military forces attacked them.
That long scenario about granting a demonstration permit illustrates
one of the most important aspects of the imbalance in the Iraqi legal
system. Article 38 of the constitution provides that the state shall guarantee “freedom of assembly and peaceful demonstration, and this shall be regulated by law.”
The phrase “regulated by law,” which is everywhere in the Iraqi
constitution, may be one of the most prominent aspects of the Iraqi
political crisis. The Iraqi parliament never sought to pass a law that
translates the essence of the phrase “the state shall guarantee ...
freedom of assembly and peaceful demonstration.” But rather, the Iraqi
administrative and security bodies are relying on laws that go back to
the era of the former Iraqi regime.
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"THIS JUST IN! THE PRESIDENTIAL AID!"