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Family loses second son in Iraq due to Blackhawk crash.

The downing of a Blackhawk helicopter in Iraq this week that killed 14 U.S. soldiers was especially devastating for the Hubbard family. The death of Spc. Nathan Hubbard, 21, “was the second tragedy for his family, who lost another son to the war three years ago, family friends said.”img

Hubbard’s family was taking his death “very, very hard,” said Clovis police spokeswoman Janet Stoll-Lee, who spoke on behalf of the Hubbards. The soldier’s father, Jeff Hubbard, is a retired 30-year veteran of the police department.

The Hubbards lost Nathan’s older brother, Marine Lance Cpl. Jared Hubbard, to a roadside bomb in downtown Ramadi in 2004. A third brother, Jason, will be returning home from Iraq to be with his family, Stoll-Lee said.

USA Today offers more details on some of the other soldiers.

Politics

White House says it is not endorsing pro-Allawi campaign.

Earlier today, ThinkProgress noted that the Republican lobbying firm Barbour Griffith & Rogers was plotting to replace Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki with former interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi. CNN reports that a senior Bush administration official acknowledged the White House is aware of the lobbying campaign because the firm is “blasting e-mails all over town” criticizing Maliki and promoting Allawi. “But the administration official insisted that White House officials are not privately involved or blessing the lobbying campaign to undermine al-Maliki.”

UPDATE: Salon’s Joan Walsh notes that a White House spokesperson addressed the Allawi issue in a press briefing today. She adds, “Iraqi democracy wasn’t good to Allawi, whose leadership didn’t survive elections. But the CIA-connected leader is a right-wing favorite.”

Climate Progress

Rule Four of Offsets: No Enhanced Oil Recovery

no_oil.gifCapturing CO2 and injecting it into a well to squeeze more oil out of the ground is not real carbon sequestration. Why? When the recovered oil is burned, it releases at least as much CO2 as was stored (and possibly much more). Therefore, CO2 used for such enhanced oil recovery (EOR) does not reduce net carbon emissions and should not be sold to the public as a carbon offset.

Yet a company, Blue Source, LLC, proposes to do just that, to capture the CO2 from a fertilizer plant, pipe it to an oil field, and inject it into wells for EOR :

The company hopes to profit from the project by earning credits for the carbon reductions in voluntary carbon markets and by selling carbon dioxide to energy companies.

The deal will cut CO2 from the plant by about 650,000 tonnes per year by permanently storing the emissions in the oil fields, he said. The U.S. Department of Energy says that capturing CO2 from power plants for enhanced oil recovery could greatly boost U.S. oil reserves while permanently keeping CO2 from reaching the atmosphere.

Uhh, no. To repeat, if the captured CO2 is used to extract oil that releases CO2 when it is burned, then how is that offsetting anything?

The key ratio is CO2 injected vs. CO2 released from recovered oil. Fortunately, BP and UCLA did that life-cycle analysis (subs. req’d) in 2001 and concluded, “the EOR activity is almost carbon-neutral when comparing net storage potential and gasoline emissions from the additional oil extracted.” And that may be optimistic. The study notes:

Read more

Politics

Senate to hold hearings on Utah mine collapse.

When Congress returns, the Senate Appropriations subcommittee that oversees labor issues will hold hearings on the collapse in a Utah mine that caused six coal miners to go missing. The committee wants mine co-owner Bob Murray to answer questions about the safety of the mine and “whether mining should have been conducted at Crandall Canyon at all because of the potential for collapses.”

UPDATE: Huffington Post notes that, after 17 days of silence, CNN finally offered a critical look into Murray’s record.

Yglesias

Saying What I Mean

Ilan Goldenberg calls me out over this post and he has the goods:

In fact, that’s exactly what they did.  Ten minutes after the President’s speech ended yesterday 40 reporters from many of the key mainstream media outlets got on a press call sponsored by the National Security Network with with General John Johns, General Robert Gard, Rand Beers, Larry Korb and Steven Simon (Of the hated Council on Foreign Relations).  For over an hour these experts took the time to explain to the press why the President’s comparison to Vietnam was bull.

These stories don’t write themselves.  There is a reason the speech got trashed yesterday  by the media and the clerisy had a great deal to do with that.

I’m afraid a bloggerish tendency toward sarcasm, in-group lingo and a proclivity to write in haste and a degree of anger got the better of me here. I wanted to make a point about Brookings and about Peter Rodman and I should have just made it and not gotten re-entanged in this larger and increasingly vague debate about clerisies. I think the people at the National Security Network do great work and deserve more support and attention.

Politics

MySpace and MTV team up for interactive politics.

Today, MySpace and MTV announced that users will be able to submit questions real-time to presidential candidates during Internet and tv broadcasts:

The two companies described the events as “dialogues” between major Republican and Democratic candidates and MySpace and MTV devotees. Users can participate via MySpace instant messaging, mobile devices and e-mail. The dialogues will take place on college campuses nationwide and air on the MTV and mtvU cable stations, and will be webcast live on MTV.com and MySpaceTV.

Online viewer reaction to the discussions will be captured through live polling on MTV.com and MySpace.com.

The first dialogue will feature former Sen. John Edwards (D-N.C.) on Sept. 27. Eleven other presidential candidates — including Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.), Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.), former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.), Gov. Bill Richardson and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney — have all agreed to participate in events to be held between September and December.

Yglesias

Fueling Civil War

As Mark Kleiman says “More Iraqis will probably die of violence just after a U.S. withdrawal than are dying violently now,” but “that’s not a good enough reason to hang around, unless at some point it stops being true: that six months, or a year, or two years, or five years from now we would be able to withdraw and not have civil war and massacre follow. If all we’re spending blood and treasure on is postponing a catastrophe we can’t prevent, the “humanitarian” argument against a fairly rapid withdrawal collapses.” It is, in fact, worse than that. Our continued presence in Iraq is probably making things worse. Take a look at this slice of counterinsurgency in action:

Slowly but deliberately, U.S. forces are enlisting groups of armed men — many probably former insurgents — and paying cash, a strategy they say has dramatically reduced violence in some of Iraq’s most dangerous areas in just weeks. [...]

“People say: ‘But you’re paying the enemy’. I say: ‘You got a better idea?’,” says Balcavage. “It’s a lot easier to recruit them than to detain or kill them.”

But U.S. forces also say the militia — dubbed the Concerned Citizens Programme, or CCP, — is only a temporary measure. If the comparative peace is to hold, the mainly Shi’ite government must offer the fighters real jobs in its army and police force.

As far as Colonel Balcavage’s area of operations is concerned, this is a smart policy. But the jigsaw puzzle doesn’t fit together. The central government has no intention of incorporating these people into its security forces. Under the circumstances, as Greg Djerejian says:

Arming Sunni militias (sorry, Concerned Citizens Programmes) rather than the national army, as nascent and pitable as it is, will almost certainly lead to more intensified Sunni–Shi’a fighting. Meantime, these bolstered Sunni forces (some of them simply ex-Baathists we supposedly went in to topple) will eventually be fighting for primacy against the very Government we’ve been trying to prop up in Baghdad. I find this mind-boggling in its short-sightedness and lack of overarching strategic direction (unless we’ve truly become Machiavellian, and are plotting to return the Sunnis to power to contain Iran!)

And thus goes all the talk of “training” Iraqi troops. The longer we stay, the more guns and training we hand out to multiple sides of the brewing conflict. This stuff matters. There’s a big difference between a civil war fought with sticks and stones and one fought with tanks and aircraft. Iraq is, obviously, somewhere in the middle. But as of now the one saving grace of the situation is that all the parties in Iraq (save the USA) are relatively lightly armed. With each passing month, though, we shift it to a deadlier and deadlier situation with better armed forces on all sides. We need to be doing the reverse — moving our troops out, ceasing the arming and equipping of militias, and acting aggressively on the diplomatic front to try to make sure that other countries don’t step into the armaments-providing breach.

Yglesias

The Fraud Caucus Continued

Am I reading this right? John Warner thinks we should bring the troops home from Iraq but “said he still would not support Democratic legislation championed by [Carl] Levin that would call for Bush to bring troops home by a certain date.”

Now Warner has surely noticed that George W. Bush favors an open-ended US military presence in Iraq, and, in fact, believes that we never should have withdrawn troops from Vietnam. And Warner favors, in his capacity as a member of the United States Senate, giving Bush a free hand to conduct Iraq policy as he sees fit. Thus, if Warner gets his way legislatively, as many American soldiers as the Pentagon can logistically manage will be in Iraq in January 2009. Between now and then hundreds will die, thousands will be seriously injured, and hundreds of billions of dollars will be spent. Warner, unlike 99.999 percent of the American population, is actually in a position to stop Bush from carrying out his plan to prolong the war. But he intends to let Bush do it.

Why on earth, if Warner really does think we need to withdraw troops, does he intend to do that?

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