Regarding the Chilcot
report, the following philosophical point looms large in my mind. If there were
actually weapons of mass destruction (WMD) but they were either a) in Iraq but
undiscovered, b) moved out of Iraq, or c) destroyed (either deliberately or in
conflict), there would be enough people unapprised of their existence to
engender a mounting campaign of being deceived by Tony Blair.
So, do you think Tony Blair deliberately misled the
British public with information he knew to be false?
I don't, actually - I
think he believed it at the time, or at the very least played fast and loose
with the element of doubt and the necessary caution that ought to have been
employed.
Sometimes caution costs lives too though?
Indeed it can.
I wonder what those who are always banging
on about the 'legality' of the Iraq
war would have made of our heroic activities in both World Wars?
Yes it's a
relevant question. Under the legal luminaries' pretext those wars would have
been illegal too. I think it is evident from our observations of neighbouring
Middle Eastern states in 2003 and before that Tony Blair and George Bush made a
Dulce et Decorum est-type of decision that the intervention was their equivalent of Churchill intervening
while Hitler was making plans for the Rhineland (albeit on a smaller scale).
But the two situations are hardly
comparable are they?
No, and it is
much easier to assert that with the benefit of hindsight. But every historical
failure in preventing genocide contributes to the decision-making process. The
failure in averting World War Two is one of the gravest mistakes in Western
History, and it was clear that Blair and Bush were never going to make that
mistake in the Middle East, especially not after observing the intentions (and
in some cases, actions) of the neighbouring Middle Eastern countries. One only
need think of Chamberlain's reaction to Hitler sending troops into the
demilitarised Rhineland - it seems a fair point to suggest that if allied
democracies had acted sooner they probably would have prevented the Holocaust.
What about Blair's claim that "The world is a
safer place now"?
Yes, well, the statement
is true in about the same way that the statement "Jeremy Cobyn is a UKIP
politician" is true if you replace the words 'Jeremy Cobyn' with the words
'Tom Cruise' and the words 'UKIP politician' with the words 'short
Scientologist'.
And what about Blair as a war criminal?
No, not a bit of it. Those
who foolishly
argue that Blair should be sent off to the Hague ought to consider the correlative
effects if such action were taken. No future Prime Minster would dare sanction
any intervention in the foreseeable future for fear of the same reprisals, and
that would somewhat tie our own hands behind our back and make our enemies sit
up and take note.
Fair point.
Thanks. In actual fact, we
probably already have a comparable situation. One of the other main lasting
legacies of the Iraq
war is that no British government is ever likely to attempt an intervention
process in that way and on that scale ever again.
But what about those elusive WMDs - do you think they
were there or not?
Possibly. The real
question you have to ask is, if they were there at some point and yet not
found, how would we know about it? One cannot simply claim absence of evidence
as evidence of absence. If they were there, then the almost unanimous belief in
their non-existence must go down as one of the occasions in human history when
the greatest number of people were mistaken.
I don't know if there were
WMDs, but as regular readers of this Blog will be aware, I am not the sort of
person who automatically trusts the consensual view either. I'm open to the
idea that there were, because I have heard a positive claim for their
existence, whereas on the other side we've only heard that a lack of
satisfactory evidence for their existence is enough to rule out their existence
(people do this a lot when the subject is God's existence too).
Really? Who made a positive claim fro the existence of
WMD?
The positive claim for WMD
was from a man who served under Saddam and openly testifies that he had WMD.
That man is Georges Hormiz Sada: a retired general officer of the Iraqi air
force and a born-again Christian. He has had a book published (called Saddam’s
Secrets) in which he talks about Saddam’s plans to destroy Israel , his
attempts to control the Arab world and how he aspired to command and occupy
much more of it.
Mr Sada also talks about his own role in supervising the removal of WMD toDamascus in Syria because
Saddam was worried that the Western troops would find them. There have been
many other sources which expose Saddam’s complex concealment plans, and the
media have nothing credible to say on this.
Mr Sada also talks about his own role in supervising the removal of WMD to
Hmm, but one man's word against a mountain of
investigative analysis is quite meagre though.
It is, but that just takes
us back to the philosophical conundrum at the beginning. I mean, it is more
generally known, I think, that Saddam
had a nuclear centrifuge - or at least it was in its incipient stages, which
was found by US troops thanks to compliant scientists.
Moreover, there had also
been emergent information about a plutonium-producing reactor in Syria which had
been hit following an Israeli air-strike; it was a reactor being built by the
Syrians with the help from expert North Korean engineers.
So this rather incriminates North Korea and makes them culpable
for their actions in securing nuclear knowledge to rogue leaders.
It is quite worrying that
America seems so impotent in the face of North Korea’s nuclear proliferation,
and that they have faced no penalties for their criminal activities. That is
perhaps the most trenchant argument against reticence when it comes to nuclear
weapons in the international community.
The much derided doctrine
of pre-emption still stands over counter-arguments – and it is supported by the
realisation that once a country with a fanatical leader acquires nuclear
capacity it is that much harder to do very much about it. Any exaggeration
regarding Saddam’s capability does not detract from the fact that inaction was
seen by Blair to have been too risky, and any misjudgement on the subject of
WMD might have brought about a Middle Eastern catastrophe that was perfectly
plausible with the knowledge they had at the time.
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