Sunday, May 24, 2009

Spain's Judges Cross Borders in Rights Cases

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High-Ranking US Officials Among Targets of Inquiries

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Craig Whitlock
May 24, 2009 - The Washington Post

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MADRID -- Spanish judges are boldly declaring their authority to prosecute high-ranking government officials in the United States, China and Israel, among other places, delighting human rights activists but enraging officials in the countries they target and triggering a political backlash in a nation uncomfortable acting as the world's conscience.

Judges at Spain's National Court, acting on complaints filed by human rights groups, are pursuing 16 international investigations into suspected cases of torture, genocide and crimes against humanity, according to prosecutors. Among them are two probes of Bush administration officials for allegedly approving the use of torture on terrorism suspects, including prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

The judges have opened the cases by invoking a legal principle known as universal jurisdiction, which under Spanish law gives them the right to investigate serious human rights crimes anywhere in the world, even if there is no Spanish connection.

International-law advocates have cheered the developments and called the judges heroes for daring to hold the world's superpowers accountable. But the proliferation of investigations has also prompted a backlash in Spain, where legislators and even some law enforcement officials have criticized the powerful judges for overreaching, as well as souring diplomatic relations with allies.

"How can a Spanish judge with limited resources determine what really happened in Tiananmen or Tibet, or in massacres in Guatemala or God knows where else?" said Gustavo de Arístegui, a legislator and foreign-policy spokesman for the opposition Popular Party. "We have our own problems and our own bad guys to take care of."

On Tuesday, the lower house of the Spanish parliament easily passed a resolution calling for a new law that would limit judges to pursuing cases with ties to Spanish citizens or a link to Spanish territory. Cases could be brought only if the targeted country failed to take action on its own.

The vote was prompted, in part, by two National Court judges who decided separately last month to investigate Bush administration officials on allegations that they encouraged a policy of torture. The judges have moved forward despite the opposition of Spanish Attorney General Cándido Conde-Pumpido, who said the cases risked turning the National Court into "a plaything" for politically motivated prosecutions.

Another judge announced Thursday that he would charge three U.S. soldiers with crimes against humanity, holding them accountable for the April 2003 deaths of a Spanish television cameraman and a Ukrainian journalist. The men were killed when a U.S. tank crew shelled their Baghdad hotel. Judge Santiago Pedraz said he would pursue the case even though a National Court panel, as well as a U.S. Army investigation, recommended that no action be taken against the soldiers.

The controversy over universal jurisdiction has left the government of Spanish Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero in a bind. Many members of his Socialist Party have supported the judges in the past. But the probes are causing diplomatic headaches for Zapatero, who has sought to improve his standing in Washington after years of frosty relations with the Bush White House.

Israel and China have complained strenuously about the investigations of their countries, making clear that Spain will pay a political price if they continue. Spanish judges have opened two probes into Israeli military airstrikes on the Gaza Strip, dating to 2002. They are also conducting two investigations into alleged abuses committed by Chinese officials in Tibet, and a third regarding repression of the Falun Gong movement.

Julio Villarubia, a Socialist member of parliament, said it was unclear exactly how or when the Spanish government would amend its universal-jurisdiction law. But he said limits are necessary.

"We have not adopted the resolution because of pressures by the U.S., China, and Israel, though that pressure is known; the disagreements are there," he said.

It is unclear whether changes to the law would apply retroactively to pending cases. In interviews, a Justice Ministry official said they would not, but a senior prosecutor in the National Court suggested otherwise.

Regardless, most of the probes underway do have at least a tangential Spanish connection. The Guantanamo cases, for example, are partly based on testimony by a Spanish citizen who spent three years at the U.S. naval prison in Cuba.

A Global Portfolio

Spain's embrace of universal jurisdiction dates back more than a decade. In 1996, a crusading judge on the National Court, Baltasar Garzón, opened a criminal investigation into human rights abuses in Chile and Argentina.

When Chile's aging dictator, Gen. Augusto Pinochet, traveled to London for medical treatment in 1998, Garzón issued a warrant for his arrest. British officials complied and held him under house arrest. But they later allowed Pinochet to return to Chile, citing his ill health as a reason for not extraditing him to Spain.

Garzón had asserted jurisdiction because some of the victims of the Chilean dictatorship were Spanish citizens. But that legal condition was pronounced unnecessary in 2005, when Spain's Constitutional Court ruled that judges can pursue grave human rights crimes anywhere, even if there is no Spanish connection.

Since then, rights groups have made a beeline for Madrid, where they have enlisted local lawyers to file complaints with the National Court. Spanish judges are obligated to examine each case and investigate whether it meets certain thresholds.

Under Spain's legal system, judges such as Garzón serve as investigating magistrates and hold enormous power. They oversee police work, collect evidence and can compel witnesses to testify. If they conclude that charges are warranted, they hand the case to another judge for trial.

The National Court judges originally concentrated on countries with colonial ties to Spain, such as Guatemala, Argentina and El Salvador. But the judges have recently branched out to other places, such as Rwanda, Morocco, China and Israel.

Alan Cantos, president of the Tibet Support Committee, a Spanish advocacy group that requested the probes, said he is worried the Spanish government will succumb to outside political pressure.

"When powerful countries start getting touched, there is a backlash," he said. "You mix U.S., Israeli and Chinese propaganda and complaints, and all of a sudden, the Spanish government starts shaking at the knees. Quite frankly, I find it pathetic."

The Spanish universal-jurisdiction investigations have resulted in a single conviction. Adolfo Scilingo, a former Argentine naval captain, was found guilty of crimes against humanity in 2005 for pushing 30 drugged and bound prisoners out of government airplanes in the 1970s. He was sentenced to more than 1,000 years in prison by a Spanish court.

Carlos Slepoy, a Spanish-Argentine lawyer who helped pursue Scilingo, said the universal-jurisdiction cases have valuable secondary effects. Officials targeted by Spanish judges need to be careful about where they travel; Spanish arrest warrants are generally enforced throughout Europe but also sometimes in Mexico and other countries.

"Any country should be able to bring these cases, as long as they are democracies that belong to the United Nations," Slepoy said.

'An Inflation of Cases'

Critics say the cases are influenced by politics. They note that the National Court has been quick to accept complaints about human rights abuses in Israel and the United States but has ignored problems in Syria, North Korea and Cuba.

"These guys are not proper judges from a professional point of view," said Florentino Portero, a contemporary history professor at Madrid's National Open University. "They are following a trend from the left wing of the Spanish political arena."

Spanish prosecutors have also expressed concern. They recommended that the National Court not pursue many of the 16 pending cases but were overruled by judges, who have the final say.

Javier Zaragoza, chief prosecutor at the National Court, said universal-jurisdiction cases are legitimate in principle. But he said Spain should not try to intervene in the affairs of democratic countries that are equipped to police themselves.

Even some human rights advocates said the explosion of cases has made them uneasy.

Gregorio Dionis, president of Equipo Nizkor, a Brussels-based group that has urged the National Court to prosecute accused former Nazi death camp guards living in the United States, said it has become too easy to have a complaint acted upon.

"There's been an inflation of cases filed under universal jurisdiction," he said. "Not all of them have been well grounded from a legal point of view."

Other advocates, however, point out that Israel and the United States have embraced the principle of universal jurisdiction when it suits them.

In 1960, Israeli agents kidnapped Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann in Argentina and tried him in Israel; he was convicted and executed.

More recently, the U.S. Department of Justice has supported efforts to have Spain pursue investigations against two alleged Nazi concentration camp guards living in the United States. The Justice Department lacks the jurisdiction to prosecute the men for crimes committed decades ago in Europe but would like to deport them to Spain to stand trial there.

TOON

The Church of WTF?

http://cbs4.com/slideshows/religious.sightings.objects.20.1016866.html

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Ed Naha
May 22, 2009 - Smirking Chimp

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Admittedly, I've been out of the loop recently, with my town nearly burning down for the fourth time in less than two years and having to evacuate my family for the second time in six months. The threat of all that immolation stuff distracted me from important stories like the great Obama mustard debate and the mystery of why Dick Cheney is allowed to speak in public about anything but the topic he knows best - shooting elderly lawyers in the face.

So, I've been playing catch-up with life in the world outside. The first story to jump out at me concerned a joint in a California bordertown where the image of the Virgin Mary was found on a half-cleaned grill. Both the local priest and a group of masked Mexican wrestlers declared it legit, although the web site "Virgin Mary Again" examined the photo and declared that the shape looked more like a butt plug.

This, in turn, led me to various Republican zealots whose quasi-religious ramblings are rapidly transforming the GOP Big Tent into something resembling a two-bit revival meeting wherein inbred believers writhe on the floor and speak in tongues. The big difference between the two groups is that, occasionally, the inbred believers make sense.

In my absence, some of the GOP highlights have included recently baptized serial philanderer Newt Gingrich declaring himself an uber-Catholic and condemning Obama as being "anti-church," (not) Joe the (not) Plumber explaining the term "queer" to the populace, the RNC holding a special meeting to consider re-christening the Democratic Party "The Democrat Socialist Party" and a blond beauty queen with two store-bought silicone sisters strapped to her chest declaring gay marriage unnatural.

Phew! Even by Republican standards, that's great stuff!

Let's tackle the GOP new faces first. Miss California, Carrie Prefab, er, Prejean claimed that she didn't win the Miss USA title because she stated that marriage should be "between a man and a woman" during the think-tank portion of the pageant. She later stated "I felt as though Satan was trying to tempt me in asking me this question...And I knew right here that it wasn't about winning. It was about being true to my convictions."

So. She didn't win. She then hooked up with a local gay bashing Church and dove headfirst into the muck known as the National Organization for Marriage, creators of the much-lampooned "Gathering Storm" ad wherein galloping gays destroy everyone's lives, from doctors to teachers.

Whilst portraying herself as the bestest Christian martyr since Barbie of Arc, word leaked out (Rimshot!) that at Carrie's behest, pageant organizers paid for a beatific boob job in order to boost her, uh, self-esteem. A bevy of semi-nude photos of her then popped up featuring Carrie popping out of various pieces of apparel. The ingenue blamed it all on secular liberals and a photographer who snapped photos when the wind blew her blouses open or off or something. Devil winds! Anyhow, she almost lost her title but didn't so now she can settle down and wait for the Virgin Mary to appear on her grill.

While on the subject of gay abandon, (not) Joe the (not) Plumber was interviewed by "Christianity Today" and lent his intellect to the topic. "People don't understand the dictionary--it's called queer. Queer means strange and unusual. It's not like a slur, like you would call a white person a honky or something like that. You know, God is pretty explicit in what we're supposed to do--what man and woman are for. Now, at the same time, we're supposed to love everybody and accept people, and preach against the sins. I've had some friends that are actually homosexual. And, I mean, they know where I stand, and they know that I wouldn't have them anywhere near my children. But at the same time, they're people, and they're going to do their thing."

"Tool Time" redefined on so many levels.

Switching to God's own "natural" boinking method, Republican abstinence Queen Bristol Palin revealed to "People" magazine, "Girls need to imagine and picture their life with a screaming newborn baby and then think before they have sex... If girls realized the consequences of sex, nobody would be having sex. Trust me. Nobody."

Or, SOMEbody could acknowledge the 21st Century, take a sex education class and, perhaps, look up the word "condom."

A group of "new faces" of the Republican Party also ran aground, launching "The National Council For A New America," a GOP attempt at rebranding itself. The first thing the group of newbies did was to declare that they weren't rebranding themselves. Such fresh faces as John McCain, Jeb Bush, Haley Barbour, Bobby Jindal, John Boehner, Eric Can'tor, Mitch McConnell, Lamar Alexander and Jon Kyl declared that their forum would be "forward looking and relevant."

While this was going on, Republican House members released a "Last White House On the Left" video splicing together shots of Obama shaking hands with Hugo Chavez, al-Qaeda training videos and the Pentagon burning on 9/11 and asking "After 100 days, do you feel safer?"

Anyhow, the Republicans met at a pizza parlor and, looking forward, announced, via newbie Mitt Romney that "We are the party of the revolutionaries. They (the Dems) are the party of the monarchists."

Tally ho! Into the future we go! Off with their heads!

In a sense, Mittens was right. These Republicans are pretty revolutionary!

North Carolina Rep. Virginia Foxx, for instance, dismissed the notion of hate crimes, declaring that the 1998 murder of Matthew Shepard was due to a botched robbery and not gay bashing. The gay bashing claim was part of "a hoax that continues to be used as an excuse for passing these bills."

Louisiana Rep. Steve Scalise warned the House Energy and Commerce Committee that a proposed climate bill would lead to the formation of a "Global Warming Gestapo."

Can't wait for those goose-stepping Grizzlies.

Minnesota's Michelle Bachman (the "dramatic chipmunk" emulator) somehow equated Obama's fiscal policy with a "Penthouse Magazine" physical policy. "During the last 100 days we have seen an orgy. It would make any local smorgasbord embarrassed. The government spent its wad by April 26th."

I'm not sure what she meant but I am not going near a salad bar with this woman.

Republicans are also presenting their own health plan (again) in the near future, calling it "The Patients' Choice Act" because "The Windfall for Insurance Companies Act" sounds too backwards. They dismiss the Democratic plan because it would be run "with the compassion of the IRS, the efficiency of the Post Office and the incompetence of Katrina." Bush who?

Arkansas state senator Kim Hendren proved himself not only a forward thinker but also a quick study by referring to Democratic Senator Charles Schumer as "that Jew."

He later retracted his diss. "I shouldn't have gotten into this Jewish business because it distracts from the issue."

The issue was: do Jews have cloven feet for real?

Senator Jeff Sessions, Alabama's retro-racial ranking member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, came up with a very creative reason for not closing down Gitmo. "They (the prisoners) wouldn't be treated any better in the United States, and they wouldn't have the tropical breezes blowing through."

And those tropical breezes combined with water-boarding spells F-U-N in the sun.

(Sessions, by the by, is the Republican pit-bull of choice to mangle any Obama choice for Supreme Court Justice deemed too "empathetic." As we all know, folks like Jesus, Gandhi and Mother Theresa would have benefited from a leaner, meaner Scalia streak.)

Oklahoma's senator Jim Inhofe figured that the Gitmo detainees have it pretty damned good and wouldn't even want to leave, saying that they have better health care than most Americans. He singled out their rectums, stating "Anyone, any detainee, over 55 has an opportunity to have a colonoscopy.

"Now, none of them take 'em up on it, because once they explain what it is, none of them want to do it. But nonetheless, it's an opportunity they have."

Most detainees have also taken a pass on having a German Shepherd shoved up their butt, as well.

"The Philadelphia Inquirer," in a move to play down their non-existent "liberal" label, hired torture maven John Yoo as a monthly columnist. It's understandable. With newspaper revenues down and both Himmler and Goering dead, it's hard to find a distinctive voice to help boost circulation or, at least, the heart rate.

Senator Lindsey Graham nearly tore a jowl muscle at the thought of Obama delving into BushCo.'s torture trove. He said that there were no laws broken although Bush's team "saw the law as a nicety we could not afford." Graham is a lawyer, too.

In Florida, a license plate featuring the image of a crucified Jesus is ready to roll, or rise. Governor Charlie Crist doesn't see that as a breach of the separation of church and state. "If (people) don't want one they don't have to buy one."

A videotape from Afghanistan just surfaced showing Lieutenant-Colonel Gary Hensley, the chief of US military chaplains thereabouts, telling his troops "We hunt people for Jesus. We do. We hunt them down. Get the hound of heaven after them, so we get them into the kingdom. That's what we do. That's our business."

Hensley's weapons of choice were Bibles translated into Pashto and Dari. Jesus license plates were obviously unavailable. Besides, they tend to get stigmata after the first roadside bombing.

Nouveau Catholic Newt Gingrich, when not hurling insults at the current administration, has revealed that he's going to film a documentary on Pope John Paul II's 1979 trip to Poland. And he said that without giggling. One of the reasons he cited for his conversion to Catholicism was "Part of me is inherently medieval. I resonate to Gothic churches and the sense of the cross in a way that is really pre-modern."

Tens of thousands of former Irish Catholic school students would get the medieval reference.

Probably the most acrobatic personage on the "new" Republican scene is RNC head (and quite often, ass) Michael Steele, who has been doing a tap-dancing high-wire act that would put the Flying Wallendas to shame.

At an emergency meeting of the RNC, as if there were any other kind, he declared, "The era of apologizing for Republican mistakes of the past is now officially over. It is done."

So, now, they can all apologize for the mistakes of the present and the future?

In an article for "Politico," he also stated, "The Republican Party will be forward-looking. It is time to stop looking backward. Republicans have spent ample time re-examining the past."

Unfortunately for Steele, at the same time he was saying this, Republicans were trying to terrify Americans about the closing of Gitmo, claiming that the Obama ninnies would house these salivating, musky terrorists stateside...probably in your kid's school or under your bed.

Revving up the monster machine was none other than Dick Cheney and his lovely daughter, Liz - a woman I'm beginning to suspect is actually Dick in drag. I mean, have we seen them together lately?

When it looked as if Obama was going to release some more U.S. torture photos, Liz took to the airwaves, accusing Obama of encouraging terrorists. She also took umbrage to the idea that her father should just can it on the torture topic and go home and dissect frogs. Why doesn't anyone tell Al Gore to just shut up and go home, she opined? Um, maybe because Gore is talking about the fate of the world and your Pops is talking about the fate of his political ass?

With Dick Cheney embarking on a Magical Misery Tour, defending torture, connecting Saddam and bin Laden and saying that BushCo. did it all to keep America safe, it's clear that he's lost the last of his few marbles. The American MSM has apparently found its sack empty as well; actually covering Cheney when he ruminates on the whole world being against America on things like Iran. "Everybody's in a giant conspiracy to achieve a different objective than the one we want to achieve."

He then accused the Iranians of stealing his strawberries.

Clearly missing being an armchair warrior, Cheney has now declared war on the Obama administration, coughing up hilarious hairballs in a "major speech" before the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank that cancelled their long-awaited "What Went Right In Salem" barbecue into order to allow Cheney to regurgitate every smarmy remark he's offered since 2006.

Republicans, of course, are urging Cheney to keep on ratcheting up the fear factor, seeking a return to the good old days where even QUESTIONING America's use of torture helped the enemy and Democrats were perceived as wusses.

Even if it's not working on a national scale (Recent polls showed the GOP to be losing members across the board but for conservative Christians and those voters over 65. Another poll showed that regular church-goers are more apt to endorse torture, with over six out of ten evangelicals saying it's "okie-dokee."), the Republican's "oh boo-tiful and specious sighs" are having an effect on Democrats, whose spines seem to be on loan from Jell-O.

The Democrats' solid stance reminds me of an old joke in "The National Lampoon" describing a Judy Garland doll. Wind it up and it pisses down its leg.

The Democrats, bowing to the will of convulsing conservatives worried about terrorists taking over our country once they escape from our super-max jails, voted against funding the closure of Gitmo. (Then, Obama denounced the revamped politics of irrational fear and several of the Democratic slugs strapped on their backbones again, vowing to work with the president on his goals in the future. Right.)

Oh, yeah, Democrats also rolled over and allowed a provision to be placed in the friggin' credit card bill allowing folks to carry loaded guns into National Parks and Wildlife Refuges. I don't know about you but I'll feel a lot safer now knowing that my fear of rampaging bears will be superceded by the fear of some drunken, gun-toting asshole stalking a ranger whut did him wrong.

Praise the Lord and charge the flack jackets.

You know this country is in a unique spot when the only person making sense on the national scene is former Minnesota Governor/Navy Seal/pro-wrestler Jesse "The Body" Ventura who has been storming across the small screen this week slamming both BushCo. and any pro-torture twink who dares to try to diss him. The guy is cheesed-off at the current way Bush ("the worst president in my lifetime") is being rebranded as a man of heroic stature and "enhanced interrogation" techniques are being recast as necessary, legal evils.

"Water-boarding is torture," he declared this week. "It's drowning. It gives you the complete sensation that you are drowning. It is no good because you - I'll put it to you this way, you give me a water-board, Dick Cheney and one hour, and I'll have him confessing to the Sharon Tate murders."

How far we've come. Headlines featuring torture, anti-gay rhetoric, Cheney, Bush, Gitmo, Gingrich and Romney.

Our Lady of Butt Plugs pray for us.

Provoking the Inevitable

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Dahr Jamail
May 23, 2009 - Truthout

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On Monday, Iraqi government security forces arrested two prominent Sunni leaders in Iraq's volatile Diyala Province. One of them, Sheikh Riyadh al-Mujami, not coincidentally, is a prominent leader in the local Sahwa (Sons of Iraq), the 100,000-strong Sunni militia that was set up by the US military to quell attacks against occupation forces and launch an effort to battle al-Qaeda in Iraq. Both of those objectives were accomplished, but these efforts are being erased by ongoing missions by Iraqi government security forces, sometimes backed by the US military, to kill or capture both Sahwa leadership and fighters. The results of these attacks against the Sahwa are already evident in an escalation in violence that has taken two forms - a dramatic increase in spectacular attacks against Iraqi civilians and increasing attacks against occupation forces.

The Sahwa played a critical role in the reduction of overall violence in Iraq. When the US decided to pay off the resistance (to the tune of $300 per month per fighter) that was effectively shredding occupation forces from late 2003 until mid-2006, the number of US military personnel being killed began to decline, and has, until recently, continued to decline. The Sahwa were also effective in finding and eliminating al-Qaeda in Iraq, so the fact that we are now seeing a renewing of horrific attacks against the Shia should not come as a surprise as the Sahwa continue to leave their security posts around the country.

The Maliki government in Baghdad, which has perceived the Sahwa as a threat from the beginning of the group's formation, is systematically eliminating the perceived threat. Maliki has broken his promise to integrate the Sahwa into the government security apparatus, while continuing to forgo payment to Sahwa forces working in security positions around much of Baghdad.

Recent weeks have found a major Iraqi military campaign in Diyala province, including more than 30,000 Iraqi soldiers and police. Over 1,000 Sunni tribal figures and Sahwa have arrest warrants issued against them, and dozens of detentions have already been made. On May 17 alone, 14 Sahwa fighters were detained as "suspects."

The Maliki government has attempted to legitimize the ongoing attacks against the Sahwa by claiming, as did a local security official in Diyala concerning the recent arrests, that the men being detained are charged with "committing crimes against civilians."

The day after the aforementioned arrests, the Maliki government attempted to "reassure" the Sahwa, by having one of Maliki's advisers, Mohammed Salman al-Saadi, tell the media, "The government does appreciate the role of Awakening Councils in imposing security and stability, but the integration and paying of 100,000 members is a big process."

This rhetoric comes in the wake of an ongoing series of attacks against the Sahwa. On May 8, Al-Hayat, a Saudi-owned newspaper wrote, "Iraq: Dozens of Awakening fighters abandon their posts," and "The fate of the awakening councils [Sahwa] in Iraq depends on calculations ruled by the logic of sectarian quotas and these calculations are putting the whole experience of Sunni fighters at risk of political suppression. While withdrawals continue from the ranks of the councils in protest against the delay in receiving their salaries, Iraqi Vice President Tarek Al-Hashemi confirmed that the "experience of the awakening councils is being targeted 100 percent." Leaders of some councils confirmed that dozens of their members left their posts in protest against the delays in paying their salaries. Politicians and observers fear that the dissatisfaction might push thousands of fighters back into the lap of the armed groups."

On May 6, Reuters reported that while there isn't yet a mass of Sahwa rejoining the armed resistance, many Sahwa leaders fear that many of their fighters are heading in that direction due to the ongoing attacks from the government, as well as the lack of pay. Shuja al-Adhami, who heads a Sahwa unit in western Baghdad's Ghazaliya district, said "I have 170 Sahwa fighters and 40 have already left their posts to drive taxis, sell groceries or do construction, and why? Because they have children to feed and can't bear the government's delay." Hassan al-Jubouri, a Sahwa leader in northern Kirkuk, said a quarter of his 500 fighters had already quit. In Baghdad's Adhamiya district, Sahwa guard leader Abu Omar, who is also an ex-military intelligence officer, said "Without us, things would return to what they were in 2005. What Awakening guards can do in two hours, US and Iraqi troops weren't able to do in four years."

On May 10, a roadside bomb attack in Taji, north of Baghdad, killed Abed al-Khairiya, a senior Sahwa member. On May 14, gunmen stormed a home in Baquba, killing two Sahwa fighters and their mother. May 15 found two policemen and a Sahwa member wounded when gunmen attacked their Samarra area checkpoint, and on the same day, during a raid in Suwayra, police arrested 12 "al-Qaeda suspects" and two members of the Sahwa. On May 19, a Sahwa leader was wounded in Jurf al-Sakhar during a roadside bomb attack. While all of this is happening, scores of Sahwa fighters are walking away from their security posts each week, in protest of having not been paid by the government.

Meanwhile, violence, much of which is largely a result of the ongoing efforts of the Iraqi government targetings of the Sahwa, continues to burn across Iraq on a daily basis.

On May 20, a car bomb exploded near several restaurants in a Shiite neighborhood of northwest Baghdad, killing 41 people and injuring more than 70, according to local police and hospital officials. May 19 found five Iraqis killed in violence, another 12 wounded, and the Green Zone rocketed, and on May 18 five Iraqis died, with another 14 wounded. May 17, Sunday, at least 20 Iraqis had been slaughtered and 21 wounded. Violence included a bomb at a coffee shop in the Dora district of Baghdad, 55 detentions in and around Fallujah, and a professor being wounded by US troops near Hilla, while he was driving in his car. Twenty-two Iraqis were killed and 28 wounded on May 16, along with a US soldier killed down in Basra, and hundreds of bodies being unearthed in a mass graves in Najaf province. That same day, mortars killed a toddler in Sadr City, in addition to wounding the mother and two other siblings. The previous day, May 15, saw six Iraqis dead, another
nine wounded, and a British mercenary killed in Hilla, while on May 14 eight Iraqis and a US soldier were killed, with 14 Iraqis wounded.

Two US soldiers were killed on May 9, along with three Iraqis, with another 11 Iraqis wounded. At the time of this writing, 14 US soldiers have been killed this month, bringing the overall total to just four shy of 4,300.

As several of my previous articles for this web site have been outlining, the ongoing attacks by the Maliki government against the Sahwa continue to destabilize the situation in Iraq and allow overall violence to increase with each passing week. We are seeing Sahwa fighters leave their posts in ever-increasing numbers; the US military is literally redrawing the boundaries of cities in order not to move their bases outside of them to respect the Status of Forces Agreement, and there is no sign from the Obama administration that there will ever be a full withdrawal from Iraq, nor reparations made to the people of Iraq.

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Dahr Jamail, an independent journalist, is the author of "Beyond the Green Zone: Dispatches From an Unembedded Journalist in Occupied Iraq,". Jamail reported from occupied Iraq for eight months as well as from Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and Turkey over the last four years.