Morning Star.png

 

 

A Deal Soaked In Blood

 

How Blair conspired with the US to invade Iraq while feeding the British
public a very different story

 

 

Felicity Arbuthnot, The Morning Star, London, 26 October 2015

 

In what the Mail on Sunday has described as a “bombshell White House memo,”
leaked classified correspondence from then secretary of state General Colin
Powell to President George W Bush, of March 28 2002, alleges that Tony Blair
had done what the newspaper called “a deal in blood” with Bush to support
him, come what may, in the attack on Iraq — a full year before the invasion.

 

Blair at the time was claiming to be seeking a diplomatic solution in the
Iraq crisis.

 

“We’re not proposing military action,” he told the public, as he prepared
“to act as spin doctor for Bush,” according to the Mail, which also revealed
Powell’s affirmation that “the UK will follow our lead.”

 

Blair continued to claim to have made no decision regarding military action
for most of 2002 — a diplomatic solution was being pursued, he stated.

 

Since there was no US or British embassy in Baghdad and British ministers
and their US counterparts refused to travel there or engage with the Iraqi
government, his assertions never rang even vaguely true.

 

Powell’s memo proves the lie. Headed: “Memorandum to the President; Subject:
Your Meeting with United Kingdom Prime Minister Tony Blair, April 5-7, 2002,
Crawford, Texas,” he states: 

 

“Blair continues to stand by you and the US as we move forward on the war on
terrorism and on Iraq. He will present to you the strategic, tactical and
public affairs lines that he believes will strengthen global support for our
common cause.”

 

The paragraph confirms Blair’s integral part in the planning and all-round
strategy of the illegal invasion, while telling both Parliament and the
public something else entirely.

 

It should also be noted that while the line to Parliament and the public had
been to tie Saddam Hussein’s government to the events of September 11 2001,
in the Powell/Bush/Blair circle they seem to be entirely separated — note:
“The war on terrorism and on Iraq.” No mention of their numerous public
allegations of Iraq and international terrorism being interlinked.

 

Powell confirms: “On Iraq, Blair will be with us should military actions be
necessary.”

 

Pointing out that Blair was not quite unfettered in his entirely illegal
plans, Powell writes: 

 

“Aside from his foreign and defence secretaries, however, Blair’s Cabinet
shows signs of division, and the Labour Party and the British public are
unconvinced that military action is warranted now.”

 

However, “Blair may suggest ideas on how to make a credible public case on
current Iraqi threats to international peace” and how to handle demands for
any action to be sanctioned by the UN security council.”

 

Thus there was full awareness by the Bush and Blair regimes of the
lawlessness of attacking a sovereign nation posing them no threat and whose
“sovereignty and territorial integrity” was guaranteed by the UN.

 

Also notable is that so keen was Blair to ally with Bush in
invasion-plotting that he left Britain during the 10 days of national
mourning for the Queen Mother.

 

The longest living member of the royal family had died on March 30 2002.
Queues lined to pay their last respects as she lay in state in Westminster
Abbey, the monarchy grieved and Her Majesty’s prime minister Blair boarded a
plane to the US.

 

In September that year Blair claimed that Saddam’s government could release
weapons of mass destruction on the West “within 45 minutes,” which Powell
used in his Iraq war speech to the UN the following February.

 

Blair would also “demonstrate that we have thought through ‘the day after’,”
states the communication.

 

Not only had “the day after” not been “thought through,” but also the weeks,
months, years as Iraq continues to implode and Iraqis continue to die in
their uncounted thousands.

 

Even Iraq Body Count, whose estimates of Iraqi deaths are so sanguine and
understated that they are used by the US and British governments, released a
report early this year stating that Iraqi deaths from violence are doubling
year on year.

 

Blair, wrote Powell, “is sharply criticised by the media for being too
pro-US, too arrogant and ‘presidential’ (not a compliment in the British
context) and too inattentive on issues of concern to voters.

 

“Blair knows he may have to pay a political price for supporting us on Iraq
and want to minimise it. Nonetheless he will stick with us on the big
issues. His voters will look for signs that Britain and America are truly
equal partners in the special relationship.”

 

Powell had not been paying attention. The majority of British voters wanted
no “equal partnership” and nothing to do with the Iraq assault or general US
global belligerence.

 

After Bush left office and Barack Obama was elected with such (now dashed)
hopes, numerous US citizens living in Britain interviewed in the media
repeated similar phrases, that they had tried to keep silent on public
transport and in public places, ashamed of their US accent, so strong was
the anti-US feeling over the treatment of and further threats to Iraq.

 

Scrutiny of Blair’s role in Iraq’s tragedy has only grown over the years.
Currently circulating is a petition to Britain’s Parliament demanding his
impeachment and a poll asking: “Should Tony Blair stand trial for war
crimes?”

 

Further, it seems Blair also was not entirely truthful with the £10 million,
six-year-long Chilcot inquiry into the Iraq invasion — publication still
awaited.

 

Sir John Chilcot has given varying reasons for the delay, including 2002
correspondence between Bush and Blair which has been withheld from the
inquiry. It will not be published for another year. He surely has now all he
needs to know.

 

Also according the Mail on Sunday: “During his appearance before the Chilcot
inquiry in January 2010, Blair denied that he had struck a secret deal with
Bush at Crawford to overthrow Saddam. Blair said the two men had agreed on
the need to confront the Iraqi dictator, but insisted they did not get into
‘specifics’.”

 

British MP David Davis, a former shadow home secretary, is clearly stunned
at the memo, writing: “This is one of the most astonishing documents I have
ever read.

 

“It proves in explicit terms what many of us have believed all along: Tony
Blair effectively agreed to act as a front man for American foreign policy
in advance of any decision by the House of Commons or the British Cabinet.

 

“He was happy to launder George Bush’s policy on Iraq and subcontract
British foreign policy to another country without having the remotest
ability to have any real influence over it.”

 

He adds: “Judging from this memorandum, Blair signed up for the Iraq war
even before the Americans themselves did. It beggars belief.

 

“Blair was telling MPs and voters back home that he was still pursuing a
diplomatic solution while Colin Powell was telling President Bush: ‘Don’t
worry, George, Tony is signed up for the war come what may — he’ll handle
the PR for you, just make him look big in return’.”

 

Further: “What is truly shocking is the casualness of it all, such as the
reference in the memo to ‘the day after’ — meaning the day after Saddam
would be toppled.”

 

Davis concludes by linking the terrorism scourging Iraq and the Middle East
directly to the actions in which Blair had such an integral part: “We saw
the catastrophic so-called ‘de-Ba’athification’ of Iraq, with the country’s
entire civil and military structure dismantled, leading to years of
bloodshed and chaos. It has infected surrounding countries to this day and
created the vacuum into which Islamic State has stepped.

 

“This may well be the Iraq ‘smoking gun’ we have all been looking for.”

 

Anthony Charles Lynton Blair’s final untruths before the invasion were an
address to Parliament on March 18 2003. They included: “And now the world
has to learn the lesson all over again that weakness in the face of a threat
from a tyrant, is the surest way not to peace but to war.”

 

And: “The real problem is that, underneath, people dispute that Iraq is a
threat; dispute the link between terrorism and WMD; dispute the whole basis
of our assertion that the two together constitute a fundamental assault on
our way of life.”

 

Should Britain not enjoin the attack “and then, when the threat returns from
Iraq or elsewhere, who will believe us? What price our credibility…”

 

“To retreat now, I believe, would put at hazard all that we hold dearest …
stifle the first steps of progress in the Middle East.

 

“This is the time for [Parliament] not just this government or indeed this
prime minister, but for this house to give a lead, to show that we will
stand up for what we know to be right, to show that we will confront the
tyrannies and dictatorships and terrorists who put our way of life at risk,
to show at the moment of decision that we have the courage to do the right
thing.”

 

How wrong, devious and duplicitous can one man be? For how long can he now
avoid justice?

 

 

From:
http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/a-2da4-A-Deal-Soaked-in-Blood#.Vi2wprcrK0
0

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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