Harry would like me to offer some commentary: I see this article as an
attempt to expose propaganda. I think it is successful. I don't see the
article as propaganda.

Brian McAndrews
----------------------------------------


http://argument.independent.co.uk/leading_articles/story.jsp?story9197
7
They do not know what they are doing or why they are doing it
30 March 2003
Every day public statements on the war are made with great bravado by
British and US leaders. A day later most of them turn out to be
inaccurate or untrue. Political leaders are understandably evasive about
the detailed military strategy, but these evasions and inaccuracies have
nothing to do with the movements of the troops.

Without qualification Tony Blair declared at the joint press conference
with President Bush last week that two British soldiers had been
"executed". Shortly afterwards distressed relatives were informed that
the soldiers had died in combat. A junior minister was despatched to
make the appropriate public apologies. On the same day that Mr Blair
spoke of the "executions", the Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon claimed that
the discovery of protection suits in Iraq was "categorical proof" that
Saddam possessed chemical weapons. He withdrew the claim within 24
hours.

Today we report that Mr Blair greatly exaggerated the scale of
humanitarian aid being shipped to Basra. Half the load of a naval ship
consists of food and other supplies from Britain. The rest of the ship
is stuffed full of arms and ammunition. As the head of emergencies at
Christian Aid writes opposite, Iraq needs the equivalent of 32 such
ships to deal with the humanitarian crisis. Most preposterous of all, Mr
Blair and the US leaders said with certainty in advance that the
"liberators" would be cheered in the streets. Now we are told that our
war leaders always knew the cheers would be delayed and that they are
not at all surprised that Iraqis are resisting their liberators.

So the obfuscation over the causes of war continues now the war has
started. Before the war began the reasons for the conflict shifted
constantly. One day the objective was to remove the weapons of mass
destruction, the next it was regime change and the day after that it was
a "war of liberation". An old PhD thesis was paraded as evidence that
Saddam was a threat to the world and had to be dealt with by war. The
"UN route" was followed, but only so long as the UN agreed with the US
and Britain. When the UN "failed to agree" Britain and the US blamed the
UN. Each time President Bush or Tony Blair were questioned about a
previously declared objective or statement, which had since changed,
they appeared irritated or bewildered. The leaders believed what they
were saying on that particular day. Now the same sequence is recurring
over the conflict itself. Statements made with apparent certainty are
later contradicted by the facts or "clarified" by a new ministerial
statement. The pattern is already extending itself to what will happen
after the war, with linguistic games being played to cover up divisions
and uncertainty about the political "reconstruction" of Iraq.

The persistent inaccuracies, proclaimed so confidently, expose the great
flaw of this war. President Bush and Tony Blair were never clear about
why it was being conducted and what would happen once it had ended. If
they were not clear in their own minds it is hardly surprising that
their public statements fail to make much coherent sense.

>From before 11 September Iraq was "on the agenda" of the divided Bush
administration for reasons that would require the assistance of a
psychiatrist, as well as political and military analysts. They decided
on war long ago and then went about searching for the precise reasons.
Even less thought has been given as to how the war will end and what
will happen in the immediate aftermath. In Britain, Clare Short was
quite open about this in a Commons debate held last month. She said then
that the UN did not want to contemplate the aftermath of a war that many
of its members strongly opposed. Of the many statements from the Bush
administration about the war none conveys a clear sense of what will
happen afterwards. It has been a constant theme in US newspapers, most
of whom support the war, while despairing over the lack of planning.
That is what is so worrying about the shifting arguments and statements
from the political leaders. They do not know what they are doing or why
they are doing it. They are fighting an unnecessary war and are still
trying to find the reasons to justify it, even though the conflict has
started and lives are being lost.

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