Saturday, May 13, 2017

Pay to Play Hillary


The Clinton Foundation -- quite the piggy bank.


Donate money and then call in your favors.


CIRCA reports:

“Former US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton telephoned Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina in March 2011 insisting her not to remove Dr. Muhammad Yunus from the post of Managing Director of Grameen Bank,” Deputy Press Secretary Md Nazrul Islam told Circa in an email.


Hillary Clinton needs to stay in the woods.

The realities of her actions are not good.

She was Secretary of State and calling for the Prime Minister of Bangledesh to break her country's law requiring that the Managing Director retire at the age of 60.

Islam said the prime minister informed Mrs. Clinton that according to Grameen Bank rules and regulations, nobody can hold the position of the Managing Director of Grameen Bank after the age of 60. He was 70 at the time of his removal and had wrangled for months to no avail with the prime minister over his removal.




Dr. Yunus steered funds to The Clinton Foundation which is why Ms. Clinton was involved in the matter.


This was an ethical violation and a violation of the promise she made to then-President Barack Obama when he nominated her for Secretary of State.


This is C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot" for today:

 
Friday, May 12, 2017.  Chaos and violence continue, The Mosul Slog continues (with a new hopeful end date attached), the Islamic State continues to creep back into supposedly 'liberated' areas, and much more.



Starting in the US with a firing.  Andrea Zelinski (HOUSTON CHRONICLE) reports:


The state inspector general responsible for ensuring the integrity of one of the state's largest public agencies was fired by the governor amid revelations he was doubling as a consultant for the government of Iraq, which successfully sought to pull the country from the Trump administration's travel ban, officials confirmed Thursday.
Gov. Greg Abbott demanded Stuart Bowen Jr.'s, resignation Wednesday night after Texas Monthly's R.G. Ratcliffe began inquiring about the inspector general's communications and representation of the Iraqi government.


Edgar Walters (TEXAS TRIBUNE) adds, "Before his appointment by the governor, Bowen served as the U.S. special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction for nearly a decade."  R.G. Ratcliffe (TEXAS MONTHLY) elaborates:


Before Bowen was appointed by Governor Greg Abbott in 2015 to monitor $40 billion a year in state health and welfare spending, he was the U.S. inspector general for the reconstruction of Iraq. I recently found out that he had been hired as a senior advisor to a Washington lobby firm that had registered as a foreign agent for the government of Iraq in late 2016. The lobby firm repeatedly invoked Bowen’s name in letters to senior Trump administration officials seeking meetings between them and a senior Iraqi aide to Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi (Bowen said that he did not authorize the firm to use his name). On April 6, al-Abadi posted a photograph of himself standing next to Bowen at a United Nation’s conference on corruption in Iraq.
[. . .]
Bowen said in a statement that in October 2016 a family friend who works for a Washington, D.C. law firm contacted him to ask for help connecting with the governor of the Iraqi Central Bank. Bowen made the introduction. The next month, according to Bowen, the firm approached him again for advice on anti-corruption efforts related to the financial services sector in Iraq, offering to pay him hourly. Bowen said that he consulted with the HHSC ethics advisor about the outside work. “My efforts for the law firm fully complied with that advice, with HHSC ethics policy, and state law,” he said in the statement. “I have never worked for Iraq and was not involved in any law firm activities regarding the travel ban issue.”


Today is day 205 of The Mosul Slog.

To recap, the terrorist group the Islamic State seized the city of Mosul in June of 2014.


It was over two years before Prime Minister Hayder al-Abadi did anything.  Last October, an operation to liberate or 'liberate' Mosul began.

This was supposed to last a few weeks.  Instead, it's on day 205.

Throughout the operation, the end date has been pushed back.  Today?  The government is stating that the operation will be done by the start of Ramadan.  (Observing begins at sundown on May 26th.)

Here's what they have to show for 205 days.

joint operations officially announce The ENTIRE Haramat district west completely liberated.



The white area above is still controlled by the Islamic State.


While the space ISIS occupies in Mosul has decreased, the number of refugees in Iraq has increased as a result of The Mosul Slog.  THE DAILY SABAH reports:


The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) announced Friday that 630,000 civilians have been displaced from Iraq's Mosul since the battle against the [Islamic State] terror group began in October.
UNHCR spokesperson Andrej Mahecic said [. . .] that the civilians who were trying to leave the city were at great risk, stressing that most of the families in Mosul were deprived of food, water, oil and other basic needs.
"Some families eat only one meal a day, mostly comprised of a single bread, flour or water," Mahecic stated.



The citizens of Mosul were told by the government not to leave Mosul, to instead stay in their homes.


Many of those homes were then bombed by Iraq and the US-led coalition.


Near the end of last month, people were finally encouraged to leave.

But there was no safe passage and those who attempt to leave are left to their own resources.


It's been a failure in every regard.

But at some point, when the slog is finally over, watch the pretense kick in that it was a victory and that it was worth it and blah blah blah.


Mustafah Habib (NIQASH) reports:

Many Iraqis and international observers are continuing to watch the fighting in Mosul, where pro-government forces are slowly driving out the last vestiges of the extremist group known as the Islamic State. But even as this happens and the troops continue their painstaking and expensive advance toward victory, the extremists are re-grouping elsewhere in Iraq.
It seems that all those involved are coming to the conclusion that, in order to truly expel the extremist Islamic State, or IS, group from Iraq, the final campaign must take place in the deserts of Anbar province, around the borders of Iraq and Syria.
“Ending the IS group in Mosul will make the extremist group sick,” a senior Iraqi army officer told NIQASH, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to talk to media. “But ending the organisation in Anbar will kill them. That is why fighting in Anbar will be the next main campaign in Iraq and also the most dangerous yet. It is different there because the battle will take place around international borders.”
A plan for this is already taking shape, the officer noted.

“The plan includes the mobilization of large numbers of pro-government forces from both the Iraqi army and from the anti-terrorism corps, that are currently in Mosul, as well as tribal brigades, along with US forces to provide air and artillery support,” he added. 



Of course, Mosul is only one city in Iraq.


Ongoing operations in south Rutbah west by Army targeting camps and hideouts in the desert.





For those playing along with the home version of IRAQ THE NEVER ENDING WAR, the Iraqi army 'liberated' May 18th of last year, driving ISIS out of the city.

Driving them out . . .

And guess who's back?


Which is why you can't defeat ISIS militarily.

It works off the persecution of Sunnis.

End the persecution and ISIS loses its standing.

But since the overthrow of Saddam Hussein in 2003, Iraq has been a government that persecutes Sunnis.


Violence continues throughout Iraq.  One example:


IED exploded in Quba, al-Waqf, Killing 3 Iraqi soldiers and wounding 4.





The northern section of Iraq is the Kurdistan Regional Government, a semi-autonomous region.  The Kurds are the largest ethnic group in the world that does not have homeland.





In 1974 today, Kurdish revolutionary woman, Leyla Qasim, was executed by the -i regime in for fighting for Kurdish rights.





WIKIPEDIA notes:


Leyla Qasim (Southern Kurdish: لەیلا قاسم‎; 1952 – May 12, 1974) was a Kurdish activist against the Iraqi Ba'ath regime who was executed in Baghdad. She is known as a national martyr among the Kurds.

Birth and childhood

She was the third out of five children born to a Kurdish farmer, Dalaho Qasim, and his wife Kanî. She was born in Xaneqîn but was relocated to Irbil when she was four years old. The Qasims lived in wretched poverty, relying on rations for food and clothes. Leyla and her brother Çiyako were taught Arabic and agriculture by their mother when they were aged six and eight.

Political activism

When Leyla was sixteen years old Abdul Rahman Arif was overthrown by Ba'ath party leader, General Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr. Leyla was disturbed by the violent takeover in the capital. During the late 1960s, Leyla and Çiyako wrote pamphlets on the horrors of the Ba'ath party including the new leader, Saddam Hussein, whom they described as being against Kurdish independence.
Leyla spoke to several Kurds in the Northern region of Iraq about the Ba'ath regime and the loose morals of the members. Leyla was told that her words were inspiring sedition.
In 1970 she joined the Kurdistan Students Union and the Kurdistan Democratic Party.[1]

In 1974, while studying at Baghdad University, she was accused of trying to assassinate Saddam Hussein. She was arrested, tortured and, in Baghdad on May 12, 1974, ultimately hanged after a lengthy show trial, broadcast throughout Iraq.[2]






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