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stevemcgarrett

Joined: 24 Mar 2006
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Posted: Thu Jan 25, 2007 4:36 am Post subject: DARE ANY ANTI-IRAQ WAR POSTERS TO ANSWER THIS QUESTION |
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For years, and on several threads, I've been trying without success to get a direct and specific, relevant response to the following question from all the anti-Iraq war crowd out there:
Why would Tony Blair, as the height of his popularity as British PM, in command of the Labour Party known for its pacifism and opposed ideologically to American conservatism, agree to let the UK armed forces join the coalition in Iraq?
C'mon, I dare ya. And trite quips like Blair wanted to be Georgie's poodle just won't cut the mustard. |
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thepeel
Joined: 08 Aug 2004
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Posted: Thu Jan 25, 2007 5:07 am Post subject: |
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He did it because he thought that an America without the UK as an partner was substantially more dangerous than an America with English help. In addition, he was honoring a long tradition of UK/USA military alliance. |
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Scouse Mouse
Joined: 07 Jan 2007 Location: Cloud #9
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Posted: Thu Jan 25, 2007 5:38 am Post subject: |
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I honestly believe that he was provided with misleading information by the USA. Despite his faults, Blair has been a great PM and has always let his conscience decide how he should respond to things. It was his belief at the time of the invasion that he was doing the right thing.
Despite what has happened since, Blair also reaslises that we now have an obligation to finish the job. If he turned to the UK people and said "I was wrong, now all of our troops will be home by the end of February" his popularity would rocket... but he can not do that knowing that Iraq is in such a terrible state at the moment, so he sucks up the criticism and wants to stay until the Iraqi people have some stability.
Remember that Blair tried everything he could to find a peaceful resolution to the Iraq problem before he commited any troops. He was the only moderate voice that had the ear of Bush at a time when Bush was going all out for blood. Even now he describes the US as a "difficult friend" - he does not agree with Bush, but he realises that the influence he has (no matter how small that influence may be) is a good thing, and something he should nurture. |
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ddeubel

Joined: 20 Jul 2005
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Posted: Thu Jan 25, 2007 5:40 am Post subject: |
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I think the answer is very clear and has been stated by many who posted previously on this topic.
Of further note is how Blair continued to lie to Brits, even as evidence became known that he had clearly committed Britain to war, even just weeks after 9/11. Lots of questions which he has never come clean about, regarding how he clearly misled his govt and his people. I think Blair's buddy buddy "special relationship" played a big part. he also has something of the drama / moral queen in him. A wish to be seen as the moral compass of his people. Very queer now in retrospect.
But the fact of the matter is as this very well written article attests,
http://www.lrb.co.uk/v25/n04/gear01_.html
Blair thought it would all be a clean, nice, tidy deal. He bought GWB's lies, just as the American people did. As the leaked memo of a meeting well before the war, Bush said categorically that the war wouldn't lead to any internecine tribal or ethnic warfare. Blair bought it.
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Let us suppose that the Prime Minister is being advised by the military that this will be a quick and relatively painless war. The Americans will bombard efficiently and with overwhelming force, Saddam Hussein will be killed or dash off into exile with his cronies, and not very long afterwards President Bush will be accepting plaudits as the liberator of Baghdad. Various Iraqis of whom we have never heard will quickly emerge as approved leaders in some regionally sensitive democratic process. Hitherto hidden weapons of mass destruction with horrifying capabilities will be laid before the world's media. 'Ordinary' Iraqis will all agree on how awful Saddam Hussein was. Effective regime change will soon be copper-fastened. Let us suppose further that the Prime Minister is being told that this victory will be forthcoming whether or not Britain (or anyone else for that matter) is on the US side. |
Further,
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He has a passionate desire to avoid being known to history as the Prime Minister whose lax approach to security exposed his country to attack by a 'rogue state' equipped with 'weapons of mass destruction'. |
I like Harold Pinter's take the best. He can't be outdone as a playwright and as a person, for telling it as it is.
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"A Monster of Obscene & Grotesque Proportions"
The Bush / Blair Gang
by HAROLD PINTER
There's an old story about Oliver Cromwell. After he had taken the Irish town of Drogheda the citizens were brought to the main square. Cromwell announced to his lieutenants: "Right! Kill all the women and rape all the men." One of his aides said: "Excuse me, general. Isn't it the other way around?" A voice from the crowd called out: "Mr Cromwell knows what he's doing."
That voice is the voice of Tony Blair--"Mr Bush knows what he's doing."
The fact is that Mr Bush and his gang do know what they're doing and Blair, unless he really is the deluded idiot he often appears to be, also knows what they're doing. Bush and company are determined, quite simply, to control the world and the world's resources. And they don't give a damn how many people they murder on the way. And Blair goes along with it.
He hasn't the support of the Labour Party, he hasn't the support of the country or of the celebrated "international community". How can he justify taking this country into a war nobody wants? He can't. He can only resort to rhetoric, cliche and propaganda. Little did we think when we voted Blair into power that we would come to despise him. The idea that he has influence over Bush is laughable. His supine acceptance of US bullying is pathetic.
Bullying is, of course, a time-honoured US tradition. Addressing the Greek ambassador to the US in 1965, Lyndon Johnson said: "*beep* your parliament and your constitution. The US is an elephant. Cyprus is a flea. Greece is a flea. If these two fellows continue itching the elephant they may just get whacked by the elephant's trunk, whacked good."
He meant what he said. Shortly afterwards the colonels, supported by the US, took over in Greece and the Greek people spent seven years in hell.
As for the US elephant, it has grown to be a monster of grotesque and obscene proportions.
The terrible atrocity in Bali does not alter the facts of the case.
The "special relationship" between the US and the UK has, in the last 12 years, brought about the deaths of thousands upon thousands of people in Iraq, Afghanistan and Serbia. All this in pursuit of the US and UK "moral crusade" to bring "peace and stability" to the world. |
DD |
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regicide
Joined: 01 Sep 2006 Location: United States
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cbclark4

Joined: 20 Aug 2006 Location: Masan
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Posted: Thu Jan 25, 2007 5:58 am Post subject: |
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Scouse Mouse wrote: |
I honestly believe that he was provided with misleading information by the USA. Despite his faults, Blair has been a great PM and has always let his conscience decide how he should respond to things. It was his belief at the time of the invasion that he was doing the right thing.
Despite what has happened since, Blair also reaslises that we now have an obligation to finish the job. If he turned to the UK people and said "I was wrong, now all of our troops will be home by the end of February" his popularity would rocket... but he can not do that knowing that Iraq is in such a terrible state at the moment, so he sucks up the criticism and wants to stay until the Iraqi people have some stability.
Remember that Blair tried everything he could to find a peaceful resolution to the Iraq problem before he commited any troops. He was the only moderate voice that had the ear of Bush at a time when Bush was going all out for blood. Even now he describes the US as a "difficult friend" - he does not agree with Bush, but he realises that the influence he has (no matter how small that influence may be) is a good thing, and something he should nurture. |
The "evidence" of Uranium imports to Iraq came from British sources.
cbc |
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jaganath69

Joined: 17 Jul 2003
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Posted: Thu Jan 25, 2007 6:14 am Post subject: Re: DARE ANY ANTI-IRAQ WAR POSTERS TO ANSWER THIS QUESTION |
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stevemcgarrett wrote: |
For years, and on several threads, I've been trying without success to get a direct and specific, relevant response to the following question from all the anti-Iraq war crowd out there:
Why would Tony Blair, as the height of his popularity as British PM, in command of the Labour Party known for its pacifism and opposed ideologically to American conservatism, agree to let the UK armed forces join the coalition in Iraq?
C'mon, I dare ya. And trite quips like Blair wanted to be Georgie's poodle just won't cut the mustard. |
Ummm, special relationship? Ideology often takes a back seat to pragmatism. Plus your premise is perhaps the grossest over-simplification of where the British Labour Party is at in the post John Smith era. Blair owes more to the Thatcherite revolution than he does to traditional cloth-cap socialism. |
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Neil
Joined: 02 Jan 2004 Location: Tokyo
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Posted: Thu Jan 25, 2007 6:29 am Post subject: |
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Even pre Blair, old Labour supported both the war in Vietnam and the 1st gulf war. |
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On the other hand
Joined: 19 Apr 2003 Location: I walk along the avenue
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Posted: Thu Jan 25, 2007 7:13 am Post subject: |
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My own theory is that Blair, for all his telegenic intellectualism, is just as dumb as Bush is reputed to be, at least in the area of common sense. So he probably did in fact get duped by the whole WMD fraud, just like all those trailer-trash Americans did.
As for why Labour went along with it: Blair's the guy who brought them back to power after two decades of going absolutely nowhere. So they're probably not gonna wanna burn their ticket to the soup kitchen. Either that, or they're just as gullible as he is. |
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On the other hand
Joined: 19 Apr 2003 Location: I walk along the avenue
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Posted: Thu Jan 25, 2007 7:19 am Post subject: |
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Oh, and here's the repsonse McGarret was probably hoping for...
As a leftist, I always thought that the British Labour Party was the zenith of multiculturalism, intellectualism, and moral imperative. I cannot understand how they could in any way be supporting the same policies advocated by declasse individuals like Rush Limbaugh. This is such an affront to my worldview that I am thinking of renouncing forever my allegiance to the left. Honestly, I don't know how I can go on living. |
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EFLtrainer

Joined: 04 May 2005
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Posted: Thu Jan 25, 2007 7:44 am Post subject: |
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Here's the truth: power and money fanned by fear-mongering.
Here's the short answer: He's an idiot.
Here's the best answer: SteveMcGarret is a troll. |
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stevemcgarrett

Joined: 24 Mar 2006
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Posted: Thu Jan 25, 2007 8:10 am Post subject: |
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On the other hand wrote:
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My own theory is that Blair, for all his telegenic intellectualism, is just as dumb as Bush is reputed to be |
What, pray tell, are the dimensions to your "theory?" Perhaps you can delineate them for those not so well informed. Blair can't be too stupid to have risen to his position in English society. You and I haven't accomplished half as much, if we're honest with ourselves.
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So they're probably not gonna wanna burn their ticket to the soup kitchen |
For someone who claims to be "in the know," you apparently missed the repeated calls for Blair to step down by party leaders over the past three years, the resignation of cabinet members, and the public belittling of him at party meetings, well documented on the BBC and CNN International.
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Either that, or they're just as gullible as he is. |
Now you sound like that British rag that ran the headline about how stupid millions of Americans are who voted for Bush.
What I was hoping for is a genuine attempt to answer rather than evade my question. And EFLtrainer, I'll bet you're at least as clever as that girl in your avatar with that dismissive retort.
jaganath:
Oh, do explain in vivid detail how pragmatism is at work in this scenario and how Blair is indebted to the Thatcher era. And then, if you can get around to it, try to respond directly to the question posed.
regicide:
Blair was put up to this role by the Kennedy clan as a means of taking attention off the JFK conspiracy. But then I'm sure you ascertained that long ago.
ddeubel:
Blair, as cbclark4 has noted here, was operating on the same intelligence from MI6 as Bush, only his included field reports filed by 007. Harold Pinter, master of the theatre of absurd, also holds an absurd worldview. Playwrights are not statesmen and Pinter is a leftist from the get-go. Nice try.
BJWD:
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He did it because he thought that an America without the UK as an partner was substantially more dangerous than an America with English help |
How so? The British presence has been largely confined to Basra, which is predominantly Shiite. Please enumerate how America would have been more dangerous.
[/b] |
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crazy_arcade
Joined: 05 Nov 2006
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Posted: Thu Jan 25, 2007 8:11 am Post subject: |
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because he's a sell out and it's a feeble attempt to hold onto the last crumb of British power. furthermore, if you knew your history then you'd know that the British Empire is responsible for the mess that is the Middle East. Of course, you don't know your history. |
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stevemcgarrett

Joined: 24 Mar 2006
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Posted: Thu Jan 25, 2007 8:20 am Post subject: |
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crazy arcade:
Oh, I see, I don't know my history and you will of course point out the many ways that is so.* Yes, Blair is trying to reinvigorate the British presence in the MidEast. And he rubs the pate on the bust of T.E. Lawrence in the parlour at 10 Downing Street on his way to Parliament.
Again, you've offered nothing substantive; just another accusation. Typical leftist fare, to be sure.
*I hold an MFA in Creative Writing, an M.A. in History (modern era), and a Ph.D in Applied Linguistics, all from top universities. Other than that, I don't know much, darn it. |
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mithridates

Joined: 03 Mar 2003 Location: President's office, Korean Space Agency
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Posted: Thu Jan 25, 2007 8:45 am Post subject: |
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I assume the reasons would be similar to the ones that the other European leaders who supported the war had, but on a larger scale. It's a tough decision because it's a gamble on the success of the war - if it had worked out well ("six days, six weeks, I doubt six months") then they would have contributed to a new and modern Iraq while the countries that opposed it would be there with egg on their face. If the UK were one of the main architects of such a big success, all the better for them.
I agree with OTOH, by the way - taking a gamble such as this one wasn't the brightest idea and it does show a lack of wisdom (not education, common sense). Colin Powell's another one who I like but seemed to have gotten pushed into doing something he wasn't all that into against his well and I assume he regrets that (the speech at the UN). I would still vote for him if I were American though. |
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