What happened to the Billions sent to Iraq by the Bush Administration?

Reba K asked:


The US flew nearly $12bn in shrink-wrapped $100 bills into Iraq, then distributed the cash with no proper control over who was receiving it and how it was being spent.

The staggering scale of the biggest transfer of cash in the history of the Federal Reserve has been graphically laid bare by a US congressional committee.

In the year after the invasion of Iraq in 2003 nearly 281 million notes, weighing 363 tonnes, were sent from New York to Baghdad for disbursement to Iraqi ministries and US contractors.

Who deserves prosecution over this loss of US funds?

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Lucrative Jobs in Iraq - are You Ready?

Alan Nelson asked:


looking for employment opportunities and considering the Middle East, then rest assured there are plenty of jobs in Iraq. Regardless of your skill set, jobs in numerous industries from semi-skilled to experts of the trade are readily available. Some of the many fields’ currently recruiting employees are: Food service worker - Throughout the country, numerous dining facilities exist on military installations. Help of all types are needed from food preparation to facility management. These facilities are open almost around the clock. Military personnel and civilians alike eat most (if not all) of their meals at these facilities. Many of them are very large and set up in a cafeteria type setting. As you can imagine, it takes a lot of personnel to manage these facilities. IT Professionals - Information Technology professionals are always needed to maintain and engineer computer networks and systems. This is a field that is in very high demand and can be quite lucrative. These professionals manage the various computer infrastructures throughout the country. It’s a plus if you have a US Security Clearance but not always necessary depending on the type of systems that you are supporting. Mechanics - As you can imagine, there are literally thousands of military and leased vehicles throughout Iraq and they all need to be maintained. The military installations are huge and personnel need to be transported from point to point. These mechanics need to be skilled to maintain all sorts of vehicles from standard cars and trucks to armored personnel carriers. Construction - You’ve probably heard in the news of the many construction projects in Iraq. If you have the skills, construction jobs in Iraq are available. Many companies from various nations have been awarded lucrative contracts to support the reconstruction efforts. Truck drivers - Always in high demand, truck drivers are needed to haul supplies to support the thousands of personnel at numerous installations. The truckers often carry cargo within the safer areas of the country which are patrolled by the military, but are also needed in the more dangerous regions. Translators - Of course linguists’ are always needed. If you are fluent in Arabic and willing to utilize you’re highly sought after skills, you can often demand a lot of money. Often these translators go out in the field with the military troops, but at other times they work within the confines of the bases. Security - Civilian security specialists are utilized throughout the Mideast to assist the military at numerous military installations as well as provide personal protection to high level individuals and dignitaries.

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Mccain on Victory in Iraq

John Barell asked:


McCain on Victory in Iraq

 

            In 2002 Senator John McCain told us that the impending Iraq invasion was a “well-planned effort. . .not very difficult. . . fairly easy. . .[with] victory in a short period of time.”

            “Well planned”?  “Not very difficult?”

            It was somewhere between the invasion, the toppling of Saddam Hussein’s statue and his capture that the insurgency became a real problem and some like Senator McCain began to say we didn’t have enough troops and listed all of the mistakes made in the prosecution of this war.  Would that some had listened to Colin Powell and General Shinseki earlier!

            Now, at the Veterans of Foreign Wars convention this past Monday Senator McCain described the Iraq operation as similar to driving a bus into a ditch, “and then after five years and a trillion dollars and 4,000 lives lost, you are getting the bus halfway out of the ditch. . .” 

He went on to note that both he and Senator Obama want to bring troops home from this war.  “The great difference,” he told the veterans, “is that I intend to win it.”

            Senator McCain is often claiming that he will never put politics and voting for him ahead of winning this war. Indeed, he often claims that those who disagree with this stance on winning in Iraq are placing personal ambition ahead of doing what’s right or best for America.  He and his surrogates are often heard saying “We will put America first.”

            It seems as if those who disagree with him are un-American, unpatriotic.

            But, just two days prior to this Florida address on Saturday evening Senator McCain told Rick Warren at the Saddleback Civil Forum that  General David Petraeus is “one of the great military leaders in American history, who took us from  defeat to victory in Iraq.”

            Now, Senator McCain did not say, General Petraeus is in the process of taking us to victory.”  Nor did he claim that Petraeus “is taking us toward victory.”

            No, the claim was that Petraeus “took us from defeat to victory in Iraq.” 

            We’ve won!  We’ve achieved his goal of winning, defeating al Qaeda, and stabilizing Iraq!

            Maybe the Senator mis-spoke.  Perhaps he confused his verb tenses and meant to use the so-called “present continuous” (“is taking us”) rather than the simple past (“took”).

            This is an understandable mix-up in a complex language like English.

            So, what if he meant that Petraeus has indeed achieved victory?  What do we do now?  What is our strategy?  To continue the draw-down of Surge forces, those 30,000 troops that have helped stabilize the country—together with the Sunni Awakening and the standing down of the Shia militias controlled by Muqtada al-Sadr?  Accelerate our withdrawal along a time-table approved by Prime Minister Maliki?

            But what if Senator McCain did in fact get his verb tenses confused? What if he meant Petraeus is taking us toward victory?

            What is our definition of this term victory?  Some have said, “A stable Iraq that can defend itself.”  But what does this look like?

 What would be the conditions on the ground that would indicate such a status? 

                        Reduction in violence for all.

                        Sustainable political agreements amongst the Sunni, Shia and Kurds about elections, oil revenues and who serves in the government.

                        The full “standing up” of the Iraqi forces to defend their country and its borders.

                        Functioning civic processes and organizations: a free press; an equitable legal system; schools open continuously.

                        Resources available to all citizens; fuel oil, electricity, sewage, goods and services in open, risk-free markets.

                        Support from neighbors in the region

            And a government that supports the United States?

            Victory involves some or all of these, but if we never define our goal, we will work toward it indefinitely.

And if we are still striving toward victory, what is our strategy for achieving it? 

Just doing more of the same is an unreflective way of never achieving our goals.

            Any strategy should keep in mind that General Petraeus has also told members of Congress earlier this year that our success in Iraq will not be primarily military.  We will have to use a combination of military force and skilled diplomacy—more the latter than the former.

            Let’s hear more straight talk about how to achieve stability amongst all the factions in Iraq and with neighbors in the region , not just about “winning.”

            In an era of terrorism the terms “victory” and “defeat” are  outdated and mislead  us toward over-reliance on military means of attaining our goals. There will be no surrender ceremony on the decks of the USS Missouri or anywhere in this world.

We need other ways of achieving the desired goal of stability, and new concepts of what security means and looks like within an age of constant threats to our safety.

We are in  a continuous, arduous struggle to maintain our freedom, one requiring that we maintain a vigilant inquisitiveness about all policies, performances and philosophies.

 

 

John Barell

Author of Quest for Antarctica—A Journey of Wonder and Discovery (2007)

www.morecuriousminds.com

           

           

           

            



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How much is important for US the cooperation of others countries in Iraq war?

Alb90 asked:


I’m italian, and my country is present in Iraq for a “peaceful mission”, but our presence in there is really important for US?

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Secretary of the Navy Visits Iraq’s Al Anbar Province

Randy L. Garsee asked:


SECNAV Delivers Message to Service Members in Iraq: Stay Focused

Story by Randy Garsee

AL ASAD AIR BASE, Iraq -Going green on the deep blue seas, hi-tech weapons systems, and a message to finish the job in Iraq.  During his stopover aboard Al Asad Air Base in the Al Anbar Province this week, the secretary of the Navy (SECNAV), the Honorable Ray Mabus, talked about those subjects, as well as what impressed him most in his first trip outside the U.S. since becoming the Navy’s top civilian.

“The Marines and sailors: the confidence, the skill, the patriotism, the dedication, the devotion of the people that serve our country,” Mabus said.

The secretary wanted to see, first hand, the job Marines and sailors are doing today in Iraq. “I learn better when I see and experience than I do from a Power Point presentation at the Pentagon.  But I also wanted to let the Marines, sailors, soldiers here know how important their work is.”

The military is familiar territory for the former Mississippi governor.  He served as a surface warfare officer aboard the USS Little Rock (CG-4) from 1971-72.  He illustrated a major difference between his service then and the service now.

“When we went into port it was almost guaranteed that a whole bunch of folks would get in trouble, that there’d be arrests, that there’d be this, that there’d be that, there’d be a big captain’s mast when we left,” he explained.  “You could put a whole carrier strike group in today with five, six-thousand people and you won’t have a single incident.  Sailors, Marines see it as part of the mission now.  They are professional.”

Mabus was sworn into office two and a half months ago as the 75th secretary of the Navy.  He believes it’s important for the Navy and Marines to be global.

“We have 284 ships in the fleet right now and those 284 ships are far more capable than the almost 600 ships that we had in the 1980’s,” he said.  “But, at some point, quantity becomes quality and one ship can’t be two places at the same time.  So you’ve got to make sure that you have enough, that you have enough surface combatants, that you have enough amphibian transport for our Marines, that you have enough submarines, that you have enough of the type ships that you need to project the force that you need and to do all the missions that the country calls on the Navy to do.”

During his visit, he also addressed Congressional bill, H.R. 24, which proposes to change the name of his department to “The Department of the Navy and Marine Corps.”

“Whenever I’m asked that, I quote the Commandant of the Marine Corps, who says he’s got a lot of things on his plate and that’s not one of them,” Mabus said, “What I say is that regardless of what the name is, I want to be the secretary.”

And as secretary, he makes his priorities clear.  “Take care of the sailors and Marines who take care of us,” he said.  “Make sure they have, first, what they need to do their mission: the training, the equipment, the leadership.  Second, to make sure that we take care of them in terms of health care and education.  Third, make sure that we take care of their families while they’re deployed, because oftentimes the families have the harder job.”

Mabus also explained how the Navy needs to change some old ways of doing business.  “I think we need to drive the cost of our equipment down, ships and airplanes.  We can not afford any longer to have ever more exotic, ever more expensive, ever longer-to-get ships, for example, or we’re going to unilaterally disarm ourselves.  Next, I think we need to move away from petroleum as a source of energy for the Navy and the Marine Corps both ashore and afloat.  Petroleum, oil, comes from, sometimes, dangerous parts of the world and I don’t want our military strength to be dependent on that or those supplies could be interrupted.”

The secretary would like to see another hi-tech area expand under his leadership.  “I think we need to take a much more detailed look, and move faster, in terms of unmanned vehicles, whether in the air, on the ground or the sea, or under the sea.”

Mabus also has previous experience in the middle east.  He was ambassador to Saudi Arabia during the Clinton administration.  His knowledge gave weight to the message he delivered to those serving in Operation Iraqi Freedom.

“The job that’s being done here in Iraq remains a critical job, remains a job that is demanding and exacting and that we have to stay focused on,” he said.  “One of the primary purposes of my trip was to tell Marines and sailors that the job they’re doing is not going unnoticed.  We’re proud of them.  Stay focused on this job until the very last Marine or sailor comes home.”



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Iraq: Governance, Past And Present

John Parks asked:


capital city of Baghdad is located on the Tigris River. With a population touching 7 million, it is the nation’s most important metropolis, and the one of the largest of its kind in southwest Asia. With its history dating back to the 8th century, when it was renowned as a hub of learning and knowledge, it was the home of the House of Wisdom created solely for Greek, Middle Persian, and Syriac works’ translations. With problems brewing with the ancient Caliphate rule of the region during the period between the 10th and 16th centuries, during which the Mongols destroyed a great part of the heart and body of the city, Baghdad fell to further despair under the Ottoman empire’s reign till the 19th century. Then with the formation of a British kingdom in Iraq in the early 20th century, the nation finally took over the reins of its own governance in 1958. A couple of decades on, Baghdad rose to enormous power and prosperity with the steep upward climb of the price of oil, which happens to be the nation’s largest export tem. Post the Gulf War and Saddam Hussein’s invasion of Kuwait, the United States military’s bombing of Baghdad began in mid 2003, which is when a lot of looting and rioting took place all over the city, resulting in loss of invaluable human and national treasures. The political upheaval of the country lies intricately woven into every aspect of its existence. Various priceless artifacts of the National Museum of Iraq were stolen during random disturbances. A Similar fate was in store for the hundreds of ancient documents lying in the city’s National Library, when the entire building fell due to arson. This continued till the end of the war, when Hussein was deposed, and Baghdad was taken over by the United States military. A Green Zone was created in the heart of Baghdad, for the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) to govern the nation, while the people of the country formed their own government. The CPA began the procedure for creating new political functions for the city’s 89 official neighborhoods within nine districts. With neighborhood councils in place, the members voted for their own representatives to take a place on the city’s nine district councils, which was followed by the district councils electing their people for representation at the 37 member Baghdad City Council. With various other areas just out of Baghdad but lying within its provincial jurisdiction, a similar method was employed to form local councils from a total of 20 neighborhoods, which in turn chose their representatives for the six district councils. These in turn sent their chosen few to represent them in the 35 member Baghdad Regional Council. The last step of creation of the Baghdad province local government was done by election of people from the lower councils by their peers, for representation in the new Baghdad Provincial Council. This happened in 2005. Though this complicated hierarchy of 127 distinct councils might seem bulky, one must always remember that even at the lowest level, the groups serve a population of close to a 100,000 people each. For more information on Baghdad, Iraq visit http://baghdadmicroblog.com and http://iraqmicroblog.com

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What cultivating projects are good for a Marine deployed in Iraq?

Natasha N asked:


We were going to grow potatoes (since this year is the international year of the spud) but we just found out that there are a whole bunch of potatoes in Iraq already, so cultivating them would be kind of silly. I mean, doable, but silly.

What other kinds of edible plants can be cultivated easily in a climate like Iraq? The pot-in-pot system of cooling could probably be incorporated into this. Probably.

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How much does our government pay Blackwater Corporation for guard duties in Iraq?

rog asked:


Not sure if I ran out of allowable letters above. I would like to know how much our government is paying to Blackwater per month or year or whatever for its services in Iraq.

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What are the chances of dying while being deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan?

Brock asked:


I mean some people think once you go to Iraq and/or Afghanistan you will completely die. I mean can’t anyone die anywhere? Not just by getting deployed.

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IRAQ HANGS OBSERVER JOURNALIST

Michael Mifsud asked:


NG WITH FATE A crushed vibrant life….

He told me that he would go on his own if necessary. Six months later he was dead – a disfigured corpse just about recognizable which betrayed the loneliness of those last weeks that led to his life being, crudely and obscenely removed from his body.

Farzhad Bazoft was an affectionate, very good looking boy in his middle twenties, fresh from Iran and intent on making a future for himself - a future away from a mother country he loved but which the Authorities of the day deprived him from calling his own. His parents, still in Iran, came from a family capable of supporting itself and which had managed to get its children out into the free world. None of them faced going back after their studies,with any degree of aspiration and one – Farzhad was never to see any of them again.

He stood defiantly in the lounge of my Kensington house where he stayed as often as he wanted treating me like a long lost uncle and making few demands that I was not willing to give him. He asked for my camera and I denied helping in this respect, knowing that he would interpret it as a indication of my acceptance of his planned trip to Baghdad. The mysterious figure who was to go with him, an Egyptian journalist by the name of Darwich, had pulled out and Farzhad was adamant. “I have been invited by the Ministry of Information of Iraq”. I could not disagree, but I warned him of my very intimate knowledge of the weird and wonderful ways in which the diplomatic and intelligence services worked. He had already been arrested and pressurised to admit his connection with the British Intelligence services in Cairo or Algers. I have always been interested in substance and not in detail but I remember that he was accused of spying and that he managed to be got out eventually. Farzhad wrote about what he knew and pestered me for material whenever he run dry. Once he came in foaming at the mouth and showing me a copy of The Observer ranting about the abuse of the free press because Tiny Rolands had utilized it to make a scathing attack on Al Fayed, the Harrods owner who had beat him to the purchase of the famous shop. To write for British Newspapers you have to be in the right place at the right time and be lucky enough to get an editor pounce on material he or she wanted at the time and which suited the editoral policy. Opinions, however gifted and well written, were thrown aside in favour of things that fitted the bill. I found that out when I wrote for agencies on subjects that I was particularly knowledgeable about. I also found that anything of any controversial worth (in my opinion) was wheedled out and the texts made to say whatever the editor or advisors wanted it to say. One classical comment, was “We want facts, not comments…..” As a long standing member of the Commonwealth Press Union with a ticket to meet the rich, the powerful and the famous, it did not take me long to work out what made society tick and all too often came close to shadowy figures who asked for favours which I was not prepared to give and who worked away with great diligence on my weakness. I was therefore quite often dined and wined by people determined to make you miss them and build them into your lives. Of course whereas they were every inch as exciting and enjoyable as they made themselves to be, I had no difficulty in seeing the shadows behind them and the purpose behind their madness. I knew just how reptilic and ungrateful the intelligence services were (from dumped elderly agents) and the implications of their requests when rich and influential people like myself were singled out for cosy talks and loose compliments. It made my hackles rise with the implied disrespect for my life and safety. I had therefore very deep suspicions of potential manipulation of Farzhads rampant needs both from the services and diplomatic elements working in their periphery. I did not suspect the editor of the Observer, Donald Trelford who appeared to be taking a deep interest in his work (bearing in mind that Farzhad could barely write reasonable English). He was however learning fast and short of strightening out a sentence or two, his general comments were appreciably consolidating. Trelford was an interesting character, but I could not but see a typical tolerated editor looking for material on which to hang establishment aspirations. The disgust about the sizeable section of The Observer, written or dictated by Rowlands against Al Fayed, spoke volumes about so called editorial integrity and perhaps Farzhad had been denied print of more articles than I was aware of. Farzhad spoke of checking out potential bacteriological contamination of a recent site in Baghdad which had been the scene of a mysterious explosion worthy of inspection and he said he experts out there willing to help. I could not understand why teams of experts throughout the world had not sent their representatives under the auspices of the UN and or why the world press had not asked for admission. Yet Farzhad seemed to have obtained an exclusive (and I thought suicidal invitation if he even remotely got hold of any damning evidence). “You are mad and the whole thing smacks of a manipulated attempt to get you there for some other reason. “ I can do a good story here and I need to get on with my work.” I challenged him then “Have you been approached by intelligence services to do work for them or perhaps by others working for them ? His response was emphatic. “Never ! Do you think I´m an idiot ? I know what they get up to and after what I went through last time in Algeria when they thought I was a spy, I would never allow myself to be associated with things like that”. He did not convince me, but I realized later that he was was not aware of the very many different ways the agencies worked. I suspected that those who had invited him hoped that they would convince Farzhad that they would give the Iraqui Government a clean bill of health or perhaps usefully indict him. Those who had asked him to come across, it would appear, were not totally in favour of the ruthless Hussein who was already producing a reactionary political situation in his country. However, despite sewing it all up in my mind and making a few enquiries from journalistic contacts, I was anxious to ensure that I found him other material to dissuade him from taking on such a perilous journey. I was informed (in the same shadowy way that I often learnt of things which for some peculiar reasons I was supposed to be informed about), that Farzhad had obtained soil samples and that he had successful passed them on to British personnel prior to his arrest, kangaroo court, torture and eventual partial or singular execution.

Signs of Success and a taste of what was to come

Farzhad had by then obtained an expense account and treated me to dinners that I had previously always paid for, refusing to allow me to pay despite the fact, as I learnt later, that he had not paid his mortgage for some time. Friends of his his often came to my house and I loved their Arabic stimulating company, feeling as I always did the exciting difference of their perceptions and spontaneous ability to make the business of living so simple and meaningful. Farshad was not typical. He came from a Jewish background and had more in common with that culture than the Arab one which obviously, as a Persian, he was not connected with. Maybe, therein lay the determined attempt to show Iraq up and his reckless bid for British fame. Despite all of that, I still think he could have been spared and perhaps even saved by the warring Iron Lady who said “she was not for turning” Farzhad had British status, as far as I knew, but I suspect that he was discarded as just another one of those Middle Easterners hwo made claims on British protection and who did not qualify for rule bending. I endorsed this in my mind when the Press found material to damage his integrity after the execution.

I would rather forget the night I confronted him with the horrors of what could be ahead of him, - especially after what followed.

We were quite close to the The Windsor Castle pub and I often went there for the cosmopolitan atmosphere created by the huge variety of people with such diverse ethnic origins. This was Holland Park and Notting Hill Gate after all. I was not prepared to hear what he told me once inside the milling fold. “Be careful, I think I´m being watched…. Did you see the guy outside ? I know he is Arab probably Algerian and I think he just came in to see where we were standing.” I needed very little bidding to wish I was somewhere else, but if he was correct and he were going to be ambushed, it was safer inside. It was probably one of the worst experiences of my life since I could not understand why the man who had come in had scoured the room for heaven knows what and did not go to the bar for a drink. He went out looking behind his back and I had a peculiar sensation that it was all too real for comfort. I challenged Farzhad again “and you want to go into situations that produce this….? “ He did not seem the slightest perturbed and I felt as if he was involving me in something that he had no right to. “I think I am being followed for some reason, but I don´t think it is more than that….” Little did I know then that I would, after his death, be considered Thatcher´s Spymaster and that I would have the world cameras at my doorstep after just having been told that he had been unceremoniously hanged in the presence of Sadhham Hussein himself. I was even accused of having recruited, trained and prepared him for the task ahead. The crestfallen, rag that faced the interviewers that morning was hardly an 007 but I hope the outrage and sense of futility came across. During the solemn and almost State like funeral in Fleet Street and final burial in Highgate cemetery, the state presence permeated the atmosphere with a sense of guilt that I could not fail to undertand. Peculiar introductions noticed by our close circle of friends, pointed towards a dimension of other perhaps professional friends who wanted to tell me more. There was no need to, but as things stand today, perhaps the Press may have cause to analyse its own function and maybe make a final effort to become what it was designed to be initially in the mantle of democracy – a source of reliable information and an active instrument of moderation and criticism of public manipulation and abuse. Print for its own sake or shareholder amusement makes very little sense especially when it dominates a market and excludes others less flirted with by editorially conscious advertisers.

A Potentially good investigative reporter.

My staff called him Buzz Off , from his surname, because his calls were usually designed to get hold of me there and then. They all knew that he was a friend and they liked him, but his constant telephone calls amidst so much to do were infuriating to them. I also found him very time consuming, but he was “at home” with me and he had the uncanny ability to make me feel that that was were I wanted to be. I had not met all of his many friends outside the Arab circle, but I was to meet them later, during the campaign to release him outside the Iraqui embassy and after that, almost as members of my own family. One particular girl, and one he had often quizzed me about who worked for the Observer, was Ruth Miller. Many a time I had tried to reason with Farzhad that if she continued to go out with her childhood boyfriend that she obviously did not feel enough to want to return his attentions. “Let her be” I had chided him. “The last thing you want is more problems especially of that sort..” I had had my own share of broken relationships and impossible dreams, especially among the high fliers and cynicism had set in well before my thirties. I could only stand in silent amazement, holding this girl´s hand before the gruesome sight of a man we both loved in different ways, in a box in a cramped dimly lit room resembling a scene from a horror movie. His neck betrayed every mark of the fibres that made up the rope that had robbed him of his life and to which he had surrendered with such dignity and bravery. We felt his body in an attempt to determine whether the final cause of death had been the actual lynching or whether by demanding his body, we had accelerated his final removal from the world he was so capable of loving. Farzhad was a very approachable person, but difficult to influence. He disagreed with most things but always looked at you from the corner of his eye to determine whether it altered his relationship with him. Throughout the years, he disappeared for a while only to turn up with new ideas and always silent about the lost periods. He spoke about a couple in the outskirts whom, like me he had adopted. And with whom he spent a great deal of his time. I was to learn from a vindicative sadly manipulated press that he had been to jail once for demands with menaces in a bank. It was an obvious, however true, attempt to mitigate British Government fear of public reaction for the lost opportunities to save his life. Thatcher, as always, returned Foreign threats with scorn and in the light of modern versions of similar dramas in other countries, she was negligent. The connection between her son´s business involvement with the Iraqui Government and the Missile launcher has never been properly investigated and the manner in which it was all handled, leaves a very bitter taste in the mouth. Whatever, all our attempts to soften the butcher of Baghdad came to nothing, including a personal letter and a determined conversation with Embassy officials. I knew and told the campaigners the day before, that Farzhad would not survive the night. The Embassy officials had just put out a message that told me so..”When it is all over, we can perhaps all get down to reason……” Sacrificial victims could not be more clearly defined. Farzhad was killed to spite Thatcher and as promised, sent in a box. What still undermines my strength is that like myself, Ruth, felt that he was still alive after the declaration of his execution. She had a gasping voice phone call and appeared to recognize the overtones. I also had something similar, but there was a rather evil, self destructive, ex-employee who had abused my friendship and the heavy breathing on the phone for some reason, provoked his repulsive image. The security services no doubt tracked the call but I was not informed. The strange thing however, was that both Ruth and I and later, another of his close friends, a charismatic designer with whom I was to establish a close friendly relationship, felt, like we all did, that sense of a life cord that had not yet been entirely severed. By demanding the repatriation of the body, we may have accelerated his final demise. One day whilst searching internet for details of Iranian and Chinese state depravities, I watched a particular photograph of a figure with his back to the camera on the ground but with enough profile to recognize him. It must have been taken just after the lynching. His right arm was curled round the back of his head in a sleeping posture and he may have still been alive then.

What a pity that I should have to die before the world knows the truth”.

Farzad’s grave, the site of yearly gatherings by friends and family who lovingly share food and drink over it, states what he said before being pushed through a grim, ungodly, door - shortly after having been woken up by the ill prepared Consul who told him that he had half and hour left. He lies next to one of his press mates, and just about opposite the redoubtable Karl Marx who did what all ideologists do well – divide and destroy innocent victims of lesser intelligence and no capability.



Goodman Gas Furnace
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