Wednesday, January 31, 2007

JAWS II and WAR WITHOUT END.

As President Bush is trying to get support to increase funding and escalate troop involvement for his ill-fated war in Iraq, the squandering goes on.
An audit by Stuart Bowen, the special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction, is the latest in a regular series of updates to Congress. Budgeting problems, vague invoices, as well as not spending funds, the audit also highlights ways in which money has been used either improperly or wastefully. (According to BBC News)
This SMALL reason alone is enough justification for us to get the hell out of Iraq.

How many more lives will it take? How much more of our grandchildren's future will be plundered? How much longer will the lunacy continue? Are we to accept the Bush/Cheney/Neocon doctrine, of WAR WITHOUT END?

Keith Olbermann, takes us on a tour of JAWS II and points the finger at who is creating such maniacal reasoning for our ponderings. Here's a couple more questions... WHEN WILL THOSE RESPONSIBLE FOR ALL THE UNNECESSARY HUMAN LOSS AND USELESS DESTRUCTION BE HELD ACCOUNTABLE? When is the Democratic majority going to stand up and demand putting a stop to the Bush/Cheney/Neocon madness? I, for one, want answers, NOW! thinkingblue

PS: Please watch Keith O's commentary of January 30, 2007 and read the attached articles, it may not give us the answers we are searching for but it will keep us informed.

It's a sad and stupid thing to have to proclaim yourself a revolutionary just to be a decent man. ~David Harris

US money is 'squandered' in Iraq

Iraqi reconstruction has seen limited progress, the audit says Millions of
dollars in US rebuilding funds have been wasted in Iraq, US auditors say in a
report which warns corruption in the country is rife.

A never-used camp in Baghdad for police trainers with an Olympic-size swimming pool is one of the examples highlighted in the quarterly audit.

Billions of budgeted dollars meanwhile remain unspent by Iraq's government.
The report comes as President Bush is urging Congress to approve $1.2bn (£600m) in further reconstruction aid.

The audit by Stuart Bowen, the special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction (Sigir), is the latest in a regular series of updates to Congress.
Budgeting problems
"The security situation continue to deteriorate, hindering progress in all
reconstruction sectors and threatening the overall reconstruction effort," says his 579-page report, which is due to be released later on Wednesday.

More remains to be done to account for past US investment and to promote the highest and best use of future US funding for Iraq

Stuart Bowen

Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction

Among the wide-ranging findings, the audit says that corruption continues to
plague Iraq and infrastructure security remains vulnerable.

Auditors express "significant concern" about the Iraqi government's record in managing and spending budgets.

Billions of dollars budgeted for capital projects remained unspent at the end of 2006, the report says.

Vague invoices
As well as not spending funds, the audit also highlights ways in which money has been used either improperly or wastefully.

US FUNDS IN IRAQ
Security and justice 34%
Electricity 23%
Water 12%
Economic, societal development 12%
Oil and gas 9%
Transport, communications4%
Health care 4%

Source: Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction


FOR MORE CLICK HERE





Bush's Gamble; Your World By: Don Williams

We'd best get ahead of the game. The Kid from Waco may be wacko, but he's the one dealing the cards. And near as I can tell, the game is chaos.

It's as if somebody powerful made the town drunk sheriff and he thinks he's a gambler and a gunslinger. The real problem could be his sidekick, though, Deadeye Dick.

Yes, I'm harping on George W. Bush and Dick Cheney again, and people who don't mind being lied to and jerked around outrageously by oil and arms merchants will complain against critics like me. But what can you do? What other subject could possibly be more serious?

True, "there are many here among us who feel that life is but a joke," in the words of Bob Dylan, "but you and I, we've been through that, and this is not our fate, so let us not talk falsely now, the hour is getting late."

How late? So late that Bush's "shock and awe" has ignited a fire that's spreading like flame chasing spilt gasoline--into Somalia, Pakistan, Lebanon, Israel, possibly Iran and Syria. It's moving so fast so suddenly that the posse who built Bush up as someone worthy to run the world-people like James Baker, Republican Supreme Court justices, and once overly-friendly Big Media types like Tim Russert--are learning the hard way that George W. Bush is out of control.

Item: While you were sleeping, Thursday morning, Americans raided the Iranian consulate in Irbil, an industrial town in Kurdish Northern Iraq, near the Iranian border. This just hours after Bush accused Iran and Syria-without offering evidence-of providing material support for attacks on American troops. Meanwhile, American gunships are killing people in Somalia. Our government is calling them al-Qaida, and people without pride will take Bush's word for it. Me? I'll wait on the evidence.

There are times when America needs to exert force, but we'd best find a way to curb a president who rules through use of signing statements, "faulty intelligence," torture, wiretaps, press leaks, threats, manipulation and whim, all while ignoring the majority.

It's not enough for Congress to make a fuss with a vote of no-confidence against sending 22,000 more troops to Baghdad. That's already happening. Some talking heads say smart move, he's passing to his successor-maybe John McCain or Hillary Clinton. The new presidential sweepstakes have begun, they exult. Isn't this fun?

But not so fast. Two years can be a long time, and international poker's a deadly game when played in the Texas gunslinger style. Dubya's going double or nothing, drawing to an inside straight, with lots of wild cards. And if he loses in Iraq, he'll curtail the game by starting a brawl, I'd wager. You could hear it in his speech Wednesday night, when he put Iran and Syria on notice. With gunboats in the Gulf and serious reporters like Seymour Hersh citing contingency plans for bombing Iran, those of us who oppose WWIII had best get ahead of the game.

Lest you think spreading the war is new policy, consider a widely quoted saying from halcyon days of the Neocons. "Men go to Baghdad, real men go to Damascus and Tehran." Or this from writer Ron Suskind, quoting a White House Neocon: "We're an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality. And while you're studying that reality... we'll act again, creating other new realities, which you can study too... We're history's actors . . . and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do.'' Time to run the Necons out of the game.

A report on CNN, Wednesday, pointed out Bush's so-called "surge" tactic was hatched at the American Enterprise Institute, a Neocon think tank in Washington. And it was little noted by big media last week that Cheney's hand has been dramatically strengthened. Zalmay Khalilzad, set to replace John Bolton as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, is a Cheney protégé. So is Mike McConnell, whom Bush dealt in as our new national intelligence director.

I'm not heartened to hear Tim Russert say on MS-NBC, Wednesday, "Iran is going to surface in a very acute way... we have to cover it very carefully." Remember yellowcake? Aluminum tubes? Mobile anthrax labs? Aerial drones? Saddam ties to al-Qaida? Well, get set for a new parade of lies on TV. Face it, media profit from wars. So do arms merchants, energy corporations, aircraft makers and congressional people of both parties. So who'll stop the war?

As Molly Ivens said recently, "It's up to us, Bubba, you and me." But what can a person do? You might start by taking two minutes to phone (800) 614-2803, to reach the Congressional switchboard and ask for your senator or representative. Tell them you're against spreading the war in Iraq. Then you might take a moment to email Complex2030@nnsa.doe.gov .

That's the National Nuclear Security Administration, which is taking citizen comments through Jan. 17, 2007, on a proposal to build a new nuclear bomb factory. It's a factory that could return us to Cold War levels of production-with attendant cancer, pollution and treaty violations. Tell them you oppose it. Our so-called leaders and their minions are way ahead of us in having their way with reality. Maybe to them it's a game. But it's our world they're gambling.

http://www.mach2.com/williams/

Don Williams is a prize-winning columnist for the Knoxville News-Sentinel and the founding editor and publisher of New Millennium Writings, an annual anthology of literary writing. His awards include a National Endowment for the Humanities Michigan Journalism Fellowship, a Golden Presscard Award and the Malcolm Law Journalism Prize. He is finishing a novel, RED STATE BLUES, set in his native Tennessee and Iraq. His book of selected journalism, ?Heroes, Sheroes and Zeroes, the Best Writings About People? by Don Williams, is now available for ordering. For more information, email him at donwilliams7@charter.net. Or visit the NMW website at www.mach2.com/williams/.

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YOU CAN BEAM ME UP NOW, SCOTTIE. Thinkingblue

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