Tuesday, June 15, 2021

Done with THE BLACKLIST

I am done with THE BLACKLIST. I will watch this season and that is it. Remember it starts airing on Wednesday nights this week. Why am I bailing? DEADLINE reports:

The Blacklist is headed for a shocker. Megan Boone, the female lead opposite James Spader, is departing the long-running NBC series after eight seasons, I have learned. She will make her last appearance as a series regular in the upcoming Season 8 finale.
The decision about Boone’s exit was made early on, well ahead of The Blacklist‘s Season 9 renewal in January. That allowed the writers to craft the arc for her character, Elizabeth “Liz”” Keen, this season as her final chapter. I hear the decision was mutual, and Boone already is plotting her next move. Reps for NBC and Sony Pictures TV, which produces The Blacklist with Universal TV, had no comment.
With Boone’s departure, Spader, Diego Klattenhoff and Harry Lennix remain the only original cast members on the show.


Bye-bye BLACKLIST. Not watching once Liz is gone. It is the most sexist show without Liz and I cannot stand Agent Park. If Samir came back on, I might watch but they are not bringing her back so I will be bailing. There is no show without Liz. This is a huge mistake. If she is leaving at the end of this season -- and she is -- then the show should be ending as well. Not since CASTLE got rid of their female lead has a show made such a stupid decision.

 

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


Tuesday, June 15, 2021.  The AMUF may be repealed so it's time for more fakery, Amnesty International warns about crackdowns in Kurdistan, and much more


CNN's Jeremy Herb reports

The House is voting this week on a bill to repeal the 2002 US war authorization in Iraq, with Democrats hopeful that the White House's backing will give them newfound momentum to finally revoke the nearly 20-year-old authorization.
The White House's Office of Management and Budget on Monday issued a statement supporting the House's legislation, a move that's likely to boost the prospects that the Senate will also take action to repeal the authorization for use of military force, which was passed in the months before the George W. Bush administration invaded Iraq in 2003. The House will vote on the rule for the legislation Monday evening ahead of the final vote, which is expected to occur on Thursday. The Biden administration said in a statement of administration policy Monday that it supports the House's legislation because "the United States has no ongoing military activities that rely solely on the 2002 AUMF as a domestic legal basis, and repeal of the 2002 AUMF would likely have minimal impact on current military operations."


Ted Kopan (SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE) words it this way:
 

President Biden on Monday formally endorsed a bill from Oakland Rep. Barbara Lee to repeal the bill that authorized the U.S. invasion of Iraq, marking a sea change in politics on the issue of military engagement. The East Bay Democrat’s bill to terminate the 2002 Authorization for Use of Military Force is set for a vote in the House later this week.
In a statement of administration policy, the vehicle through which presidents telegraph their position on legislation under consideration in Congress, the White House supported the bill’s passage in the House, saying it would not 
jeopardize any current military operations because none is solely based on that authorization. “Repeal of the 2002 AUMF would likely have minimal impact on current military operations,” the statement said. “Furthermore, the President is committed to working with the Congress to ensure that outdated authorizations for the use of military force are replaced with a narrow and specific framework appropriate to ensure that we can continue to protect Americans from terrorist threats.”
Lee has been at the vanguard of the movement to end what are referred to in politics as “endless wars” — military engagements by the U.S. abroad that have no clear endpoint. She was the only member of Congress to vote in 2001 against green-lighting the U.S. war on terror just days after the Sept. 11 attacks, a stand that earned her death threats at the time and respect from her colleagues in hindsight. 


At the vanguard? Maybe of fake assery. She swore this, she swore that. She's a worthless fake ass. "Next year, if we're not out of Afghanistan . . ." she'd promise each year of Barack Obama's eight year presidency, she'd do something. She never did anything but flap her gums.


Bernie Sanders revealed himself to be a sheep dog to steer voters into the Democratic Party and that's bad but Barbara Less's worse. She lulls people into believing that there's real opposition to war in the party and there's none. That's why we still have US troops in Iraq and in Afghanistan. That's why the repeal is only possible at this moment because a sitting president has pronounced it unnecessary. 


It might get repealed. I don't know that it will but I don't know that that's the most pressing issue this week -- or even the most pressing issue regarding the AUMF. I'd love to see all the Democrats who claimed they were tricked or that they didn't vote for war to have a microphone shoved in their face and asked on live TV, "If you weren't voting for war, why does the AMUF need to be repealed?" 


They were voting for war. And they did so knowingly and willingly. And they did so because that's what they believed in. Senator Bob Grahm urged others in Congress -- including Hillary Clinton -- to go and look at what was being offered as evidence. They were 'too busy' to look or think, but they had plenty of time to vote to start a war that has killed over a million people -- Iraqis, US troops and support personnel, people from the United Kingdom and elsewhere.


And they've skirted responsibility and presented themselves as the victim. It's the Joe Biden playbook, after all. Insist that the mean old Bully Boy Bush tricked you. Admit that you're such a moron that the global village idiot could trick you. 


ALJAZEERA quotes US House Rep Jim McGovern:

“The idea that they have not been repealed or ended just doesn’t make any sense,” said Representative Jim McGovern, a leading Democrat.
“It’s either that we just haven’t done our due diligence, or we are not keeping a close watch on these things,” McGovern said on Monday.



You think? And it's not either/or, it's both. Congress did not do due diligence and they are not keeping a close watch on these things. They have no idea what's going on in Iraq. They don't even pretend to be interested in, for example, corruption in Iraq anymore -- this despite the fact that millions of US tax dollars continue to be handed over to the government of Iraq. There is no oversight. 

The office of the Special Investigator over reconstruction in Iraq was forced on Bully Boy Bush. Who shut it down? Donald Trump? No, Barack Obama. And he shut it down over loud objections. Maybe it was just a little too effective in highlighting waste or, maybe as two senators told me, the office embarrassed Barack by revealing that the police academy Americans spent a ton of money building was not wanted by the government of Iraq and they did not plan to use it. That went into not just a report but to testimony before the House and Senate. Barack's reaction was to shut down the office and the press reaction was to look the other way and pretend like he was about openness and transparency. 


Who's pretending these days?


Maybe the US Congress and the US media who refuse to own the amount of money wasted on an illegal war. The amount of money still being wasted.


You won't hear Babsy Lee talk about that. Just like you won't hear her defend Palestinians. The reality of Barbara Lee is far less inspiring that the media image that was long ago created. 

 

On the issue of Iraq, Amnesty International issued the following:


Arbitrary arrests and enforced disappearance of dozens in the past year 

Crackdown intensified after protests against corruption and poor public services  

‘Many of those detained were tried on fabricated charges’ - Lynn Maalouf

The authorities in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq have launched a chilling crackdown on journalists and activists in the past year amid a “growing atmosphere of fear” in the region, said Amnesty International today.

The crackdown began in March 2020, intensifying after widespread protests in August demanding an end to corruption and better public services. 

In the governorate of Duhok alone, Kurdish security forces arrested more than 100 people between March 2020 and April 2021. Most were later released but at least 30 remain in detention. 

Amnesty investigated in detail the cases of 14 people from Badinan, in Duhok governorate, who were arbitrarily arrested between March and October 2020 by Asayish (Kurdistan Regional Government security and intelligence) and Parastin forces (Kurdistan Democratic Party intelligence) in connection with their participation in protests, criticism of the local authorities or for their journalistic work. 

All of the 14 were held incommunicado for up to five months and at least six were forcibly disappeared for periods of up to three months. Eight of the detainees said they had been tortured or otherwise ill-treated during their detention. On 16 February, five were sentenced to six years in prison based on “confessions” extracted under duress.

The Kurdistan authorities have used three specific laws to arrest and prosecute the activists - Law no.21 on matters of national security, a defamation law and a law on the misuse of electronics, all of which contain vague and overly-broad definitions of crimes not recognised under international law.

Lynn Maalouf, Amnesty International’s Middle East Deputy Director, said: 

“The authorities in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq have launched a chilling crackdown in their efforts to silence critics over the past year. 

“They have rounded up activists and journalists, prosecuting them on trumped-up charges in unfair trials and harassing or intimidating family members who were kept in the dark about the status of their loved ones. 

“Many of those detained were tried on fabricated charges and some of those who have been released have fled the region, amidst a growing atmosphere of fear that has even seen family members of activists, journalists and protesters threatened and harassed.

"The Kurdistan Region of Iraq authorities must end the crackdown and immediately release all of those who have been arbitrarily detained.”



On the topic of Kurdistan, MENA's Maria Fantappie weighs in with a Twitter feed:

While fighting the PKK, Turkey’s military incursions in Iraq, have major, often unnoticed, multi-layered implications for the US and NAT0. This is why: A THREAD 1/11


2/10– Unlike previous operations in Syria, these incursions attracted relatively low media attention, occurring over several months in remote areas, utilizing drones technology that enables gaining control over tough terrain, causing displacement & ecological damage.



3/10 Ankara is also gaining influence in Iraqi Kurdistan & Baghdad, leveraging on a mix of threats owing to its military superiority & incentives, winning Iraqi and Kurdish leaders’ acquiesce re: incursions in return for support in their domestic struggles.



4/10 In Iraqi Kurdistan the ops pushed PKK out of its traditional stronghold, induced Peshmerga-PKK violent incidents, leading prominent KDP figures to openly side with Ankara against PKK and leverage on Turkey’s support to get more powerful within KRI.


5/10– In Baghdad, PM Mustafa al-Kadimi have also offered Turkey nearly carte blanche on ops, prioritizing good relations with Ankara & KDP’s support to counterbalance Iran and pro-Iranian forces in national politics ahead of the elections.


6/10 Baghdad’s acquiescence and Turkey invoking national security concerns re: PKK presence in Iraq, persuaded allied nations to refrain from criticism & preserve NATO unity. Yet, operations in Iraq risk harming NATO/US strategic interests:



7/10–Turkey conducting unilateral operations while being a NATO member, places the NATO mission in Iraq— which has ambitious plans to expand— into a controversial position, inviting more criticisms and attacks from pro-Iranian forces.


8/10 Ops feed vicious trends: empower politicians betting on escalation (KDP-PKK; Iraqi gov. Vs PMF), disempower others supportive of Iraq’s sovereignty & Turkey’s peace process, making Iraq an arena to settle scores among external powers (Turkey Vs Iran; US Vs Iran).


9/10– Ops feed Turkey-Iran feud over northern Iraq that splits Iraqi forces in competing camps (PMF& pro-PKK forces Vs ISF), create opportunities for more PMF deployments, more Turkish incursions (as we saw in Sinjar) & favorable conditions for a potential resurgence of ISIS.



10/10 Attacks on PKK indirectly impacts US interests in Syria: shrink space for SDF to build strategic autonomy from PKK, corners the US into a choice between SDF &Turkey, offering the latter leverage to play US and Russia against each others in Syria and elsewhere.


11/11 The longer operations continue, the more their humanitarian, ecological and political impact may become apparent, deepening US-Turkey tensions & undermining the strategic relevance and credibility of the Atlantic Alliance. END



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