IRAQ
Sadr's Surge
For the past several weeks, U.S. and Iraqi forces have been battling the Jaysh al-Mehdi, the militia of Shi'a cleric Muqtada al-Sadr. Supported by U.S. airstrikes, U.S. and Iraqi troops have steadily moved into Sadrist neighborhoods in Basra and the Sadrist stronghold of Sadr City in northeast Baghdad. The fighting has resulted in heavy casualties. Voices of Iraq reported Sadrist Member of Parliament Falah Shenshel's claim that "at least 400 civilians were killed and 1,720 others, including women and children, were wounded in the armed confrontations and bombarding operations that took place in Sadr city over the last three weeks." According to the International Committee of the Red Cross, the weeks of fighting in the Shi'ite neighborhood "have destroyed the main market and isolated civilians from supplies of food and water," and several hospitals in Sadr City "have run out of basic medical supplies, including anesthesia and dressings." Despite President Bush hailing Iraqi efforts at the onset of hostilities in mid-March, subsequent accounts reveal that the Iraq army has performed poorly, requiring U.S. forces to play a much bigger role in the fighting than they had intended. The BBC reported that it was "clear that although the initial military planning was Iraqi, U.S. and British forces [were] deeply involved." Sadr is now giving indications that he may set aside his political ambitions and restart "a full-scale fight against U.S.-led forces."
POLITICS BY OTHER MEANS: Though Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and the Bush administration have characterized the current offensive as a crackdown on "criminals," many observers believe that it is an attempt by Maliki and his political allies to do by force what they can not do through elections: weaken the Sadr movement in advance of provincial elections in November, when the Sadrists are widely expected to make gains in Baghdad and in Iraq's Shi'a south. According to security expert Anthony Cordesman of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, Maliki's offensive "is more of a power struggle with Sadr than an effort to deal with security, 'militias,' and 'criminals.' Mohammed Bazzi of the Council on Foreign Relations wrote in the Washington Times, "in singling out the Sadrists" and ignoring the existence of other militias, "Maliki is not trying to restore order. ... He wants to eliminate a political rival. " Though Maliki initially came to power with Sadr's support (after Maliki's predecessor, Ibrahim al-Jafari, was pushed out due to American pressure), Sadrists have become frustrated with Maliki because of what they see as his acquiescence to the U.S. occupation, evidenced by his unwillingness to demand a timetable for U.S. withdrawal. Maliki has since allied with the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq (ISCI), the chief rival of the Sadr movement. Many of the U.S.-backed Iraqi army units doing battle with Sadrist forces "are pulled largely from the Badr Brigade," ISCI's militia wing. Both ISCI and the Badr were founded in Iran with the support of Ayatollah Khomeini, and Iran continues to support both groups.
AN EXPRESSION OF SHI'A GRIEVANCE: Iraq expert Reidar Visser of the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs stated, "The Sadrists represent a strong popular movement with deep roots in Iraqi society, and it is entirely unrealistic to deal with them through military solutions alone." Reporter Patrick Cockburn notes that a good portion of Moqtada's support come from "young Shia who have been brought up with nothing" during the Saddam Hussein era and "who are pretty anarchic, pretty dangerous," and willing to fight and die for the cause. The Sadr movement dervies its populist message from the preachings of Moqtada's father, Grand Ayatollah Sadeq al-Sadr, who advocated a form of religious activism in which clerics take an active role in establishing a society based upon strict Islamic principles. The elder Sadr was assassinated by Saddam in 1999. Currently, in many of the poorest Shi'ite neighborhoods, Moqtada's offices provide a range of much-needed humanitarian services."A recent report from the Washington-based Refugees International said the Sadrist movement "has established itself as the main service provider in the country." Moqtada formed the JAM militia in the lawless aftermath of the 2003 U.S. invasion, to protect Shi'a neighborhoods as well as to help him secure his political base against the Iranian-trained and supported Badr Brigade militia. In the sectarian civil war which followed the February 2006 bombing of the al-Askariya mosque in Samarra, JAM elements engaged in sectarian cleansing of Sunni neighborhoods in Baghdad and were responsible for numerous atrocities.
DENYING A LEGITIMATE POLITICAL TREND: The current violence represents the culmination of years of denial by United States authorities of Moqtada's position in the Iraq political scene. Since the beginning of the U.S. occupation of Iraq, the United States has consistently refused to acknowledge Sadr's movement as a legitimate expression of Iraqi Shi'a populism. Former exile Ali Allawi recalled Coalition Provisional Authority chief Paul Bremer's reaction to the suggestion that Sadr represented a legitimate political tendency: Bremer retorted that he "didn't care a damn about the underclass and what they [the Sadrists] represented!" As Patrick Cockburn writes in his new book on Sadr, "One of the grossest of U.S. errors in Iraq was to try to marginalize [al-Sadr] and his movement. ... In any real accommodation between Shia and Sunni, the Sadrists must play a central part." Cordesman agrees that the Sadrists "will be a major political force in any future elections regardless of whether Sadr survives, Sadrists are allowed to run, or the elections are fair or partly rigged. ... Iraq's poorer and more religious Shi'ites will not disappear no matter how good the military gains are against the JAM."

ADMINISTRATION -- HOMELAND SECURITY SAYS U.S SHOULD SCRAP 'ISLAMO-FASCIST' TERROR LANGUAGE: In attempts to rally the country around a militant response to terrorism and terrorists, conservatives such as Rush Limbaugh and Fox News' Sean Hannity often refer to the ideology that Muslim terrorists use to justify violence as "Islamofascism." Right-wing talker David Horowitz has even organized "Islamo-Fascism Awareness Week" on college campuses to highlight the so-called "global threat from Islamo-Fascism, and to protest the oppression of women in Islam." President Bush has used the term on a number of occasions, saying terrorists "try to spread their jihadist message -- a message I call ... Islamic radicalism, Islamic fascism." Nearly two years ago, Muslim leaders in the United States spoke out, saying such language "offends the vast majority of moderate Muslims." Now, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is finally catching up. A new DHS report has concluded that "such words may actually boost support for radicals among Arab and Muslim audiences by giving them a veneer of religious credibility or by causing offense to moderates." Federal agencies are "telling their people not to describe Islamic extremists as 'jihadists' or 'mujahedeen.'" "Lingo like 'Islamo-fascism' is out too," the AP notes.
ECONOMY -- TROOPS BATTLE FORECLOSURES, FACE RISKS TO THEIR CAREERS: U.S. soldiers are battling the harsh realities of the country's economic downturn. Army spokeswoman Lt. Col. Anne Edgecomb and military financial services company USAA report seeing "an increase in soldiers and families seeking assistance for mortgage foreclosures." With limited protection from the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, troops can face foreclosure "even if the soldier is in combat." As the military uses a soldier's credit history as part of the screening process to determine "who can be trusted with classified information," security clearances and career advancement are also at risk if a solider is forced to file for bankruptcy or has his or her home foreclosed. Navy Captain Mark Patton points out that there are credit counselors on most bases, but he acknowledges that because of a "'culture of fear' in the military," some soldiers fail to take advantage of the counseling offered. Patton also said that preoccupation with worry over losing their homes may cause some soldiers to "lose some of their edge on the battlefield or at the controls of a nuclear submarine." "[C]alls from troops in mortgage crisis received by one non-profit credit counseling service -- Houston-based Money Management International -- doubled from two dozen per month the first quarter of 2007 to four dozen per month this past quarter," reports USA Today.
IRAQ -- BAGHDAD TO GET DISNEYLAND-STYLE THEME PARK: A Los Angeles-based firm "is pouring millions of dollars into developing the Baghdad Zoo and Entertainment Experience, a massive American-style amusement park that will feature a skateboard park, rides, a concert theatre and a museum." The 50-acre park will sit next to the Green Zone and encompass Baghdad's existing zoo, "which was looted, left without power and abandoned" after the 2003 invasion. Llewellyn Werner, chairman of C3, the company developing the project, said the park is "going to have a huge psychological impact" and claimed Iraqis would "see it as an opportunity for their children regardless if they're Shi'a or Sunni." Werner, who will dole out $500 million for the project, admitted the practical considerations as well. "I wouldn't be doing this if I wasn't making money," he said. "I also have this wonderful sense that we're doing the right thing -- we're going to employ thousands of Iraqis. But mostly everything here is for profit."
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A new survey by the National
Conference of State Legislatures finds
that the "finances of many
states have deteriorated so badly
that they
appear to be in a recession,
regardless of whether that's
true for the nation as a whole."
The Washington Post's Dana Milbank notes that during "a book-launch
event last night," Iraq war architect Douglas Feith "pointed
his finger every which way but inward"
in blaming others for the Iraq war's failures. Milbank added, "It must
have been very difficult being Doug Feith: correct all the time, and surrounded
by idiots."
A new
report from Special Inspector
General for Iraq Reconstruction
Stuart Bowen says "Iraq's
military and police forces need years
of improvements before they
have enough recruits, officers and
support systems to secure the country."
"Iraq's
largest Sunni bloc has agreed to return
to
Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki's cabinet after a boycott of nearly
a year" citing "a recently passed amnesty law and the
government’s
crackdown on Shiite militias." The deal "could still fall through," but
the return "would represent a major
political victory for Mr.
Maliki."
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
(D-CA) may push a plan to
move
the Iraq war supplemental,
which includes "three separate legislative vehicles: one to exclusively
provide emergency funding for military operations in Iraq and
Afghanistan; another aimed at stimulating the economy through a mix of
domestic spending measures; and potentially, a third that would advance
some
sort of language on troop withdrawals."
73 percent:
American consumers who are worried
about rising food prices.
"According to the USA Today/Gallup
Poll, 46% of respondents say higher food prices have caused a hardship,
including 10%
who said they've created a severe hardship."
Due to soaring heating costs, "millions
of Americans are
behind on electric and gas bills,"
which means that over the
next two months, "a
record number of families could face energy shut-offs."
And finally: Rep.
Neil
Abercrombie (D-HI)
just doesn't understand cold weather -- or why anyone would want to
live
in such climates. Meeting with a group of high school students from
frigid Cold Bay, AK, Abercrombie wondered, "Let me get this straight: The
name is Cold Bay. You are talking about Alaska.
This is
something called Cold Bay.
When you are in Alaska and something is called Cold Bay, is
it
colder than other bays or
something? Why the hell are you even out
there?"
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The research team that brings you The Progress Report and ThinkProgress.org needs summer interns! Click here for more information.

The Senate voted 95-0 to pass the Genetic
Information Nondiscrimination Act,
which bars "insurance companies
from using genetic information to set premiums or determine enrollment
eligibility" and "in hiring, firing
or promotion decisions."

OHIO:
State legislature
passes renewable energy standard requiring utilities to provide 12.5
percent of electricity from clean energy sources, such as wind
and
solar, by 2025.
ALASKA:
State
"still has the nation's highest worker death rates."
ECONOMY:
"Anemic
revenue returns forced 16 states to patch nearly $12 billion holes in
their current budgets, up from the seven that faced shortfalls last
November."

THINK PROGRESS: Record high 63 percent say the United States made a mistake in sending troops to Iraq.
WONK ROOM: Global food crisis hits home as retailers begin to ration rice.
POLITICAL INSIDER: New novel by former Christian Coalition chair Ralph Reed treats women as "tarts who use sex to get ahead."
MEDIA MATTERS: Fox News continues to use military analyst included in The New York Times expose on the "Pentagon's hidden hand."

"We took an extremely strongly pro-Geneva Convention position in the Pentagon."
-- Iraq war architect Doug Feith, 4/23/08
VERSUS
"Doug Feith described to me how he and General Myers worked together, and that he, in particular, took the steps to ensure that none of these [U.S.] detainees could rely on Geneva."
-- International lawyer Phillippe Sands, 4/3/08
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