In Country But Not Your Country: Democrats in Iraq

ThinkProgress spoke with one of the delegation’s military escorts, Maj. Toby Patterson, who said that he didn’t know who made the bios or why they were created in the first place. He added that his office, the Marine Corps liaison for the U.S. House of Representatives, usually just uses lawmakers’ readily-available bios off of congressionalquarterly.com

I call bullshit. The only way this is true is if Maj. Patterson is admitting things are so out of control in the Green Zone, they can't even provide reasonable security for a Congressional visit. Or does he expect me to believe anyone can just run around posting flyers and giving them to troops in the Green Zone without notice?

The whole thing stinks of fascism. Plain, ugly, in your face fascism. Unspoken here is that the number of contractors in Iraq exceeds that of the "regular" military. And those people truly answer to no one.
h/t linda at the crack den.

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Children's cartoons in the Green Zone

Oh, CD, you missed the best part!

Of course the "codels" were a dog and pony show; it's just remarkable that they're so crude about it. (Equally remarkable, or not, is how easy it is to get Democrats to fall for it.)

Of course, WaPo buries the story on A13, so everyone will miss the best part:

Brief, choreographed and carefully controlled, the codels (short for congressional delegations) often have showed only what the Pentagon and the Bush administration have wanted the lawmakers to see. At one point, as Moran, Tauscher and Rep. Jon Porter (R-Nev.) were heading to lunch in the fortified Green Zone, an American urgently tried to get their attention, apparently to voice concerns about the war effort, the participants said. Security whisked the man away before he could make his point.

Tauscher called it "the Green Zone fog."

"Spin City," Moran grumbled. "The Iraqis and the Americans were all singing from the same song sheet, and it was deliberately manipulated."

But even such tight control could not always filter out the bizarre world inside the barricades. At one point, the three were trying to discuss the state of Iraqi security forces with Iraq's national security adviser, Mowaffak al-Rubaie, but the large, flat-panel television set facing the official proved to be a distraction. Rubaie was watching children's cartoons.

When Moran asked him to turn it off, Rubaie protested with a laugh and said, "But this is my favorite television show," Moran recalled.

We. Are. So. Fucked.

(Or was this al-Rubaie's silent rebuke to his colonial occupiers?)

The pathetic Republican spin is just the icing on the cake:

Porter confirmed the incident, although he tried to paint the scene in the best light, noting that at least they had electricity.

"I don't disagree it was an odd moment, but I did take a deep breath and say, 'Wait a minute, at least they are using the latest technology, and they are monitoring the world,' " Porter said. "But, yes, it was pretty annoying."

Children's cartoons...

The whole fucking thing is a children's cartoon. If real body parts weren't flying around, of course. And if real children weren't bloody and screaming.

We. Are. Going. To. Die. We must restore hope in the world. We must bring forth a new way of living that can sustain the world. Or else it is not just us who will die but everyone. What have we got to lose? Go forth and Fight!—Xan

"First they ignore you, then they ridicule you, then they fight you, then you win." -- Mahatma Gandhi