Evans Politics
January 29, 2010

 

Audience Really Works Over Tony Blair,
Just Pointing Out He Told The Truth
Here for the First Time

 

Originally Published As: Tony Blair Forced to Testify on “War Crimes”, OpEdNews, January 29, 2009, by David Swanson, photo from Wikipedia, excerpt quoted verbatim:

Excerpt Posted Without Comment
For Our Understanding Under New Title

 

Former prime minister Tony Blair’s testimony was streamed live at 4:30 a.m. ET at the Iraq Inquiry website and on other sites, such as the UK newspaper the Telegraph which allowed viewers to rank Blair’s responses on a “Lie Meter”. Telegraph readers’ top desired questions pre-hearing were:

* What was the real motivation for invading Iraq?
* Why did you not act like a Statesman and stand up to Bush?
* Do you think the world is a safer place after our illegal Iraq crusade/mission for regime change?
* I would like Tony Blair to tell us what he knows about the death of Dr Kelly.

Try to imagine a U.S. media outlet proposing such questions to Blair’s senior partner in crime! But the Inquiry itself did not put these questions to Blair in any effective way.

British former Prime Minister Tony Blair

In the lead up to Blair’s testimony, a London protest was planned here.

Documents were thought to be the key, and while the existing evidence more than proves the case of the war’s illegality, this Inquiry, it was feared, might be barred from asking Blair about the public (and still secret) evidence. Bizzarely, this could have turned the thing into a whitewash, adding to the general impression that specific evidence is still needed to prove that a war is illegal. Any war not fought in self-defense or through UN authorization simply is illegal. But these fears turned out to be justified. Blair was not confronted with public and undisputed evidence that he knew he was lying about weapons, that he lied about his commitment to making war a last resort, and so forth. And nobody broke out of the whole charade to point out that an aggressive war is still illegal even if the nation attacked has weapons and even if other options have been pursued.

Some recent stories on the ongoing inquiry:

Elizabeth Wilmshurst is first witness to be applauded by the public.

Now we know: Blair went to war on an “assumption”.

How Alastair Campbell changed Iraq dossier.

Liveblog:

9:40 a.m. GMT The opening question was pretty discouraging: How did Blair view containment of Saddam Hussein? Blair responded that his view changed entirely on 9/11. This is bizarre, given Hussein’s total lack of involvement in 9/11, but it went unchallenged. Blair spoke in terms of the “risk of Saddam reconstituting programs” – quite different from his blatant lies in 2002 and 2003 about his certainty that Hussein had “WMDs” and could attack the UK with them in 45 minutes, a claim already shown in this inquiry to have been a lie. Nobody questioned him on his shift to now talking about a “risk” of SH developing weapons “progams”.

9:46 Blair’s being allowed to go on and on with fearmongering about the people behind 9/11, whom he identifies only as “they” and nobody explains to him that “they” were not Iraqis, and nobody points out that the attack on Iraq inspired more would-be terrorists, not fewer. Blair says he had to go after North Korea, Pakistan, and “all of this”, but he did not of course do so.

9:49 Now the questioner, Sir Roderic Lyne, points out that SH was not behind al Qaeda, but Blair seems not to comprehend the point.

9:51 Blair tries to refer to a document, and Lyne responds that, while it is public he’s not sure it’s been declassified, resulting in laughter from the audience – first sign of life from them, and only sign of life from them. This is not encouraging in terms of the prospects for bringing in documents.

The Aug 7, 2001, document, an Iraqi Policy Framework or Options Paper, Blair says was declassified yesterday. He drones on about sanctions. He argues that the sanctions might not have “worked,” but nobody asks what that means or how the sanctions did not work, given the complete absence of the weapons this was all supposedly about.

9:56 Sir Roderick simply asks again if the sanctions might have worked, whatever that means. Blair says that the sanctions had to be watered down to please the Russians, etc., and weren’t working (whatever that means), the implication apparently being that if the UN would not create successful sanctions (whatever that means) it would be necessary to go around the UN with an illegal war (without calling it that).

10:00 am GMT Lyne is trying to soften his softballs. He wants to know whom Blair met with and consulted. Blair names Jack Straw. Blair says the options were:
1. sanctions that worked
2. the UN inspectors doing their job
3. removing Saddam
Blair refers to “WMD”.

But how were the sanctions not working?
How did the UN inspectors fail?

Since when is removing a nation’s leader a legal “option”?
Maybe someone other than this “Sir” should have been allowed to do this questioning. Here’s how Wikipedia describes him: “He is an advisor to JPMorgan Chase, who have been chosen to operate the Trade Bank of Iraq, which will give banks access to the financial system of Iraq. He was a special adviser to BP, which currently has major interests in Iraq.”

10:05 Lyne points out that by April 2002 Blair was inclined to “regime change”. Blair says the key issue was “WMD”. But no “WMDs” could legalize an aggressive war. It’s tempting to be frustrated with Lyne for not pointing out that the WMD claims were lies, but the deeper lie here is the concerted pretense that it matters. An illegal war of aggression is simply illegal regardless.

10:10 Blair is insisting on quoting from his 2002 speeches to show that his concern was in fact his and Bush-Cheney’s pretenses about “WMD”. Nobody even objects to this crazy conflation of various types of weapons, used to suggest a nuclear threat without actually claiming it. Nobody points out that we know they knew no such threat existed. Nobody brings up the Downing Street Minutes or the White House memo or any of the dozens of other smoking guns on this. Presumably they are all “classified”.

10:12 Lyne points to Blair’s recent interview (which may turn out to have done a better job than this Inquiry) in which he said he would have favored regime change even were there no WMDs (as of course he knew there were not -DS). Blair lies that what he meant in the interview was purely that you cannot talk about the threat now in the same way, given what we now know. Lyne does not point out that Blair knew it then.

10:15 Blair calls SH “a monster” and nobody asks him to define that in terms that do not include himself. He goes on to recommend doing the same thing to Iran that he did to Iraq, thereby establishing more firmly his own monsterhood.

10:18 Now Chilcot announces that only two documents were “declassified” yesterday, including the one Blair brought up, so those two will now (or sometime soon) go on the Inquiry website.

Questioning now will be done by Lady Usha Prashar who wants to know exactly why Blair wanted regime change, (never mind its illegality).

((Please Note: You should especially from this point on, but all through the article, be very cognizant of the superior, knowing and not-necessarily true tone of the narrative. Read the rest of the article, here.))

UPDATE: See Citing 9/11, Blair Defends Legacy at Iraq Inquiry, The New York Times, January 29, 2010, by John F. Burns and Alan Cowell.






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