It’s An Equitable Life, Eventually

Blairs’ properties go into negative equity.

Oh please, please, please let them be repossessed and evicted by the bailiffs.

UPDATE:

Chicken Yogurt reports that Scotland Yard is launching a war crimes investigation into Blair and former Attorney General Goldsmith:

[…]

Officers from Scotland Yard have commenced a criminal investigation into the deaths of Iraqi citizens killed during the armed invasion and occupation of Iraq. The Metropolitan Police are acting in response to crimes reported by peace activists from We Are Change UK and The Campaign to Make War History. In an unprecedented step, the case was handed to the War Crimes division of the Counter Terrorism branch who are now investigating allegations of 14 criminal offences committed by Tony Blair, Lord Goldsmith and others. The offences are under the International Criminal Court Act 2001, which came into effect under English common law, just two days before 9/11.

Two Members of We Are Change UK and a representative from the Campaign to Make War History were interviewed for six hours at Belgravia Police station on the 20th December 2007. Evidence was provided to the police relating to the crimes of:-

• genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes and conduct ancillary to these crimes under Sections 51 and 52 of The International Criminal Court Act 2001.
• a crime against peace and complicity in a crime against peace under Articles 6 and 7 of The Nuremburg Principles.
• murder, incitement to murder and conspiracy to murder under the Offences Against the Person Act 1861.
• conspiracy to commit genocide, a crime against humanity and war crimes under the Criminal Law Act 1977.

More…

The Surge ™ worked: Shell, others to get Iraqi oil concessions

Or perhaps it’s just that oil is at such a high price level now, partially thanks to erm the War on Iraq that the profits now outweight even the risks of working in Iraq. At any rate, the big sell-off has started:

BAGHDAD — Four Western oil companies are in the final stages of negotiations this month on contracts that will return them to Iraq, 36 years after losing their oil concession to nationalization as Saddam Hussein rose to power.

Exxon Mobil, Shell, Total and BP — the original partners in the Iraq Petroleum Company — along with Chevron and a number of smaller oil companies, are in talks with Iraq’s Oil Ministry for no-bid contracts to service Iraq’s largest fields, according to ministry officials, oil company officials and an American diplomat.

The deals, expected to be announced on June 30, will lay the foundation for the first commercial work for the major companies in Iraq since the American invasion, and open a new and potentially lucrative country for their operations.

The no-bid contracts are unusual for the industry, and the offers prevailed over others by more than 40 companies, including companies in Russia, China and India. The contracts, which would run for one to two years and are relatively small by industry standards, would nonetheless give the companies an advantage in bidding on future contracts in a country that many experts consider to be the best hope for a large-scale increase in oil production.

Of course the contracts on offer are still relatively small and the idea that the Iraqi fields might be the key to lowering oil prices is certainly in the short term just a fantasy. But just getting control of the oil fields is important in its own right. For the companies involved just adding more reserves to their portfolio will of course help boost stock prices, while it helps eliminate the threat of an independent Iraqi oil industry ruining things for them..

Today’s essential reading: Fallujah’s legacy

Fallujah the myth:

The results of the Anbar Awakening and the surge are plain to see. Since the Fifth Marine Regiment’s Third Battalion rotated into Fallujah in September 2007, not a single American has been wounded there, let alone killed. Hardly anyone even tries to start a fight now. A handful of people have taken potshots at Marines; one man threw a hand grenade in the neighborhood of Dubat; some fool blew himself up when the Iraqi police caught him planting an IED outside their station. Every attack has been ineffective. Of all Iraq’s cities, only nearby Ramadi has experienced so many dramatic changes in so short a time.

Fallujah the reality:

What is currently lauded as ‘stability’ is in fact a harsh despotism run by former Republican Guards who round up suspects arbitrarily, then beat and torture them. It is a city riddled with blast walls and checkpoints, and any imam who preaches against the occupation is ordered to shut down. It is a place where the mere suspicion of insurgency can result in your fingernails being pulled out as you are beaten up. A city in tatters, a “big jail” still under biometric lockdown, still without regular electricity or clean water (which one reason is why malaria is spreading). And you can do all this to a city and call it progress because of the success of the preparatory propaganda.

America just can’t quit Iraq

The United Nations figleaf mandate under which the US has been occupying Iraq since 2003 is running out soon and without it the occupation would become *gasp* illegal. Yes, what difference would it make, I hear you say and you’re right, but the US likes to have its legal fictions all in order, if only so ex-Bush administration people will still be able to holiday in Europe. Therefore they been pressuring the Iraqi government to sign a new treaty:

America currently has 151,000 troops in Iraq and, even after projected withdrawals next month, troop levels will stand at more than 142,000 – 10 000 more than when the military “surge” began in January 2007. Under the terms of the new treaty, the Americans would retain the long-term use of more than 50 bases in Iraq. American negotiators are also demanding immunity from Iraqi law for US troops and contractors, and a free hand to carry out arrests and conduct military activities in Iraq without consulting the Baghdad government.

The precise nature of the American demands has been kept secret until now. The leaks are certain to generate an angry backlash in Iraq. “It is a terrible breach of our sovereignty,” said one Iraqi politician, adding that if the security deal was signed it would delegitimise the government in Baghdad which will be seen as an American pawn.

The US has repeatedly denied it wants permanent bases in Iraq but one Iraqi source said: “This is just a tactical subterfuge.” Washington also wants control of Iraqi airspace below 29,000ft and the right to pursue its “war on terror” in Iraq, giving it the authority to arrest anybody it wants and to launch military campaigns without consultation.

The Iraqi government is putting on a show of defiance at the moment, though the suspicions are that they will cave in later, as they damn well know they’re just a puppet regime dependent on American support to stay alive. But the US is taking no changes and is effectively blackmailing the Iraqis, by threatening to take away their foreign reserves:

No doubt some key figures in the Bush administration have asked themselves that, and here’s what they come up with. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York holds $ 50 billion of Iraq’s foreign exchange reserves as a result of the UN sanctions dating back to the first Gulf War. These include virtually all oil revenues that under UN mandate must be placed in the Development Fund for Iraq “controlled” by the Iraqi government. $ 20 billion of this is owed to plaintiffs who’ve won court judgments against Iraq, but a presidential order gives the account legal immunity. Bush can threaten to remove the immunity and wipe out 40% of Iraq’s foreign reselves if Baghdad doesn’t cooperate. At the same time, Bush can tell al-Maliki that if Iraq enters into a ‘strategic relationship” with the U.S., the U.S. will arrange for Iraq to finally escape those lingering UN “Chapter Seven” sanctions. Perhaps Bush and Cheney are confidant that this carrot and stick” approach will force the Iraqi government to sign the deal.

This isn’t just about the US keeping military control of Iraq either. At the heart of the new “treaty” is a secret appendix, which determines who will control its oil fields:

A secret appendix to the draft law, according to London-based Iraqi political analyst Munir Chalabi, “will decide which oil fields will be allocated to the Iraqi National Oil Company (INOC) and which of the existing fields will be allocated to the IOCs [international oil companies]. The appendices will determine if 10% or possibly up to 80% of these major oil fields will be given to the IOCs.” This, in other words, is another national humiliation in the offing. As six women Nobel Peace Prize recipients wrote in September 2007, it “would transform Iraq’s oil industry from a nationalized model to a commercial model that is much more open to U.S. corporate control. Its provisions allow much (if not most) of Iraq’s oil revenues to flow out of Iraq and into the pockets of international oil companies.”

Hitler misled Germany on Russia, former aide says in new book

Berlin — The Furherbunker called former minister of propagande Joseph Goebbels “disgruntled” after he wrote a blistering review of the administration and concluded that his longtime boss misled the nation into an unnecessary war in Russia in a book due out Monday.

“History appears poised to confirm what most Germanss today have decided — that the decision to invade Russia was a serious strategic blunder,” Goebbels wrote in “What Happened,” due out Monday. “No one, including me, can know with absolute certainty how the war will be viewed decades from now when we can more fully understand its impact.”

“What I do know is that war should only be waged when necessary, and the Second World War was not necessary,” he wrote in the preface.

Well, not really, but McClennan’s book on his experiences as press secretary for Bush seems to be equally inane. Why is it that all these Bush apologists only start criticising Bush when they got a book to sell? At the time McClennan lied and lied to protect his boss frome vent he mild criticisms the press back then was capable off, so to now see him play the fierce critic is not just wrong, it’s downright insulting.