The Chilcot report, the U.K.’s official inquiry into its participation in the Iraq War, has finally been released after seven years of investigation.
Its executive summary certainly makes former Prime Minister Tony Blair, who led the British push for war, look terrible. According to the report, Blair made statements about Iraq’s nonexistent chemical, biological, and nuclear programs based on “what Mr. Blair believed” rather than the intelligence he had been given. The U.K. went to war despite the fact that “diplomatic options had not been exhausted.” Blair was warned by British intelligence that terrorism would “increase in the event of war, reflecting intensified anti-U.S./anti-Western sentiment in the Muslim world, including among Muslim communities in the West.”
On the other hand, the inquiry explicitly says that it is not “questioning Mr. Blair’s belief” in the case for war — i.e., it is not accusing him of conscious misrepresentations. Blair is already spinning this as an exoneration, saying the report “should lay to rest allegations of bad faith, lies, or deceit.”
But consider that for as long as the Chilcot commission has existed, the U.K. and U.S. intelligence communities have probably fought over the language of the executive summary.
So the place to look for the less adulterated truth about Blair and the U.K. government is in the rest of the report’s 2.6 million words, including footnotes and newly declassified documents.
Consider this July 28, 2002, letter from Blair to George W. Bush. The first thing you’ll notice is its tone: It sounds like an adult trying to placate a heavily armed 8-year-old. “I will be with you, whatever,” Blair writes. “Getting rid of Saddam is the right thing to do.” But, he writes, “Suppose it got militarily tricky.” And suppose “the Iraqis feel ambivalent about being invaded.” Blair suggests Bush not go it alone. “If we win quickly, everyone will be our friend.”
Chillingly naïve stuff. But the most important thing about Blair’s letter is that it’s clearly a response to a British cabinet meeting memorialized in the famous “Downing Street Memo” of July 23, 2002, which was authored just five days before Blair wrote to Bush.
The Downing Street Memo, sometimes called the “smoking gun” document of the Iraq War, was leaked to the U.K.’s Sunday Times in 2005 (and the original has now been declassified as part of the Chilcot report).
According to the Downing Street Memo, the British cabinet — including Blair — was informed by Richard Dearlove, then head of British intelligence, that the U.S. government was being consciously deceptive about its case for war. Dearlove, the memo reads, “reported on his recent talks in Washington. … Bush wanted to remove Saddam, through military action, justified by the conjunction of terrorism and WMD. But the intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy.”
Blair’s letter five days later was obviously his attempt to address the British government’s deepest concerns about Iraq.
So: On July 23, Blair’s cabinet expressed concern about the dishonest case for war. On July 28, Blair wrote to Bush that “I have been told the U.S. thinks [evidence] unnecessary,” but such evidence was crucial if the two leaders were to have any kind of coalition behind them.
Blair’s cabinet thought the best strategy was to create a casus belli by giving Saddam Hussein an ultimatum on letting inspectors into Iraq. Five days later, that’s what Blair suggested to Bush.
So the Blair letter is, among other things, the final proof of the seriousness of the Downing Street Memo, which, if you recall, the mainstream U.S. media ignored and mocked when it was leaked. The memo did not record meaningless D.C. gossip, as pundit Michael Kinsley suggested when it was published in 2005. Instead, it was the basis for the most crucial communication possible between the U.S. president and the U.K. prime minister.
Top photo: Former Prime Minister Tony Blair speaks during a press conference at Admiralty House, July 6, 2016.
How can we see that the GWB administration is imprisoned, once Mr Blair is imprisoned; that is the real question in all of this. Especially, “The Decider” himself! Rat Bass-turd
Blair and his BFF Bush…wow what a pair! This went beyond a school boy love affair with his friend. I hear Bush carved their initials on the bark of an apple tree in his ranch. If this weren’t so sick it would be funny.
You know, it’s conceivable that Blair might see the inside of a courtroom for this. How will Americans justify their complete lack of action then?
George W. Bush – Bush Administration Convicted of War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity – no longer a world traveler…….stays on the ranch behind SS protection compliments of the Republican Party… Where would Tony Blair hide? Does Britain have their own SS to protect him??
Radicalization of Muslims has been a direct cause of the WAR BASED ON LIES – AND HIDDEN BY THE PRESS OF BOTH COUNTRIES
NEW YORK CITY POLICE HOLD TERROR DRILLS – BUT CONGRESS IGNORES THE TRUTH
what was Bibi’s role in all this? just curious that no one mentions him at all.
our establishment scribes, devotees and aficionados are so splendidly useful in depicting influential or privileged wants…well done, Kinsley, old chap (the fawning ditto dweebs).
The supreme pity is that no perp of the Iraq war has had to face a fair trial!!!!
The absence of any indictment let alone conviction of the perps is evidence enough of the total rot of the USA and British governments. And the show goes on. Bah!!!!!
To Ludovicus: A very useful quote that is completely relevant here:
“To initiate a war of aggression, therefore, is not only an international crime; it is the supreme international crime differing only from other war crimes in that it contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole.”–Nuremberg Trial Proceedings
I can’t help but feel that the complete lack of any accountability on the part of our leadership utterly undermines our faith in our leaders. This was clearly an act of aggression, pursued in spite of all the reasonable evidence to the contrary. Why are the architects of this invasion not being put on trial?
This war was not presented to the public as a war of aggression. It was presented as self-defense. We were told that Saddam had used poison gas against his own people & if we didn’t stop him, he would use poison gas against others. Also, we were told that the UN had said that he should not have wmd’s & if UN resolutions were not enforced, the UN would become useless.
Exactly. Reparations to the families on both sides. Rank the care of the vets as priority one instead in the “defense budget”.
“The charges in the Indictment that the defendants planned and waged aggressive wars are charges of the utmost gravity. War is essentially an evil thing. Its consequences are not confined to the belligerent states alone, but affect the whole world.
“To initiate a war of aggression, therefore, is not only an international crime; it is the supreme international crime differing only from other war crimes in that it contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole.”–Nuremberg Trial Proceedings
“The Chilcot Report has rightly dug deep into the litany of failures of planning for the occupation, the calamitous decision to stand down the Iraqi army and to dissolve the Iraqi state.
“But the reality is it was the original decision to follow the US president into an unprovoked war in the most volatile region of the world and impose a colonial-style occupation that led to every other disaster.”– British Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn
The fecund lessons of Nuremberg were clearly not forgotten by the Bush and Blair governments, but nevertheless having been so scrupulously repudiated they predictably, indeed with a reproducibility that eludes almost all other intrinsically chaotic mass undertakings of men, again birthed “the accumulated evil of the whole…not confined to the belligerent states alone, but affect[ing] the whole world.”
Nothing exemplifies The epitome of TYRANNY in plain view than the puppets of the corrupt establishment pretending to be for democracy when they are subverting it at every turn while keeping the masses entertained rather than informed along with the domestic and foreign lapdogs of the corrupt establishment perpetuating the farse/propaganda/lies/facades/hypocresy. – Alejandro Grace Ararat.
By deception we shall be potus or prime minister and do war. Disgusting is short
When the corrupt establishment of the zero-point-one-percent have is the hammer of deception deemed as non-treasonous and the patriotic thing to do that everything looks like and propagandized as a nail/enemy/hostile actors.
Nothing exemplifies The epitome of TYRANNY in plain view than the puppets of the corrupt establishment pretending to be for democracy when they are subverting it at every turn while keeping the masses entertained rather than informed along with the domestic and foreign lapdogs of the corrupt establishment perpetuating the farse/propaganda/lies/facades/hypocresy. – Alejandro Grace Ararat.
By deception we shall be potus or prime minister and do war. Disgusting is short
When all the corrupt establishment of the zero-point-one-percent have is just the hammer of deception deemed as non-treasonous and the patriotic thing to do that everything looks like and propagandized as a nail/enemy/hostile actors.
Far from exonerating Blair, the report should raise questions anew about his definition of “bad faith.” British Intelligence told Blair the concerns it had, and even the consequences that their actions would bring. But Blair did his own thing, anyway, joining Team America for one of the West’s most horrific military responses. That’s not acting in good faith. That’s deceitful, dishonest and acting in very, very bad faith.
And the world has paid dearly for it.
It’s worth remembering that Jacques Chirac also had the choice to join George W. in this debacle, just like Tony, and M. Chirac declined. I wonder if Bush talked about Gog and Magog to Tony as well.
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/andrewbrown/2009/aug/10/religion-george-bush
It could have been that Tony didn’t get it, or that the President of France decided that the Leader of the Free World was either trés fou ou trés bouré, and either way not a good bet for this Iraq adventure.
And Gerhard Schroeder as well. But you know the Germans are inherently untrustworthy, warmongers that they are.
To me, perhaps the most hilarious part of this entire sorry episode was Bush’s welcoming of the British as partners for his Middle East adventure, together with Tony’s profession that everyone in the region would welcome us. It is quite apparent that neither of them had – or have – any awareness whatsoever of the fact that the British almost single-handedly laid the foundation for the present situation during World War I, with their eternal greed for empire.
In fact, if the US truly wanted to bring about a “better” Middle East we could not have possibly chosen a worse partner than the British, who are almost universally reviled in the region. But apparently George Bush’s fine Ivy League education included no history courses.
Iraq sealed its fate in 2000:
The ‘Iraq adventure’ was a complete success, as that country no longer sells oil in euros.
A NYT opinion piece from 2003, describing the strong commercial ties between France and Iraq under Saddam Hussein:
As a born again evangelical, I believe G.W. Bush was ‘speaking in tongues’ and the President of France mistook it for French.
(Gog & Magog, LLC, is a super PAC in DC.)
*side bar: the Ark (re)opens today, coram … just in the nick of time: https://arkencounter.com/blog/archive/
Is that a trick question, bah? ;-}
Someone’s desperate for a county fair blue ribbon….. :-s
p.s. coram, good to see you again in nearabout, hereabout. :-)
The whole list of crimes associated with the push to invade and occupy Iraq in the aftermath of 9/11 is pretty long. Of course, a whole other set of crimes was committed after the invasion took place, but the precursors are worth listing:
1. In the immediate aftermath of 9/11, the Cheney-Rumsfeld gang is discussing how the blame might be pinned on Iraq. The anthrax letters, mailed on 9/18 and 10/9, are pointed to by the Bush Administration as having possibly involved Iraq.
2. Coordination with Blair & Britain begins by late October, as reported in the Telegraph UK, Oct 26 2001:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/iraq/1360627/Building-the-case-against-Iraq.html
(TI readers might be familiar with James Woolsey as the individual who recently called for the hanging of Edward Snowden, or as the chair of Paladin Capital, a major CIA-NSA/private sector contractor.)
3. CIA torture programs are initiated soon afterwards, clearly by the end of 2001.
At this point, a determined effort to link 9/11 Al Qaeda suspects to Saddam begins. Since FBI interrogations are only pointing to Saudi Royal links (not the story the neocons want), detainees are handed over to the CIA for black site torture programs, as legally justified by memos from laywers Yoo and Addington. Despite extensive torture, no credible stories about links between Saddam and 9/11 are produced. The CIA later destroys all tapes of these torture sessions – but that’s how the torture program began, as an effort by Bush neocons to link 9/11 to Saddam to justify the invasion and occupation.
4. The story shifts to “Saddam’s nuclear, chemical and biological weapons programs.”
That’s explicitly spelled out in the Downing Street Memo, which states that
That’s clear evidence that Blair knew the so-called ‘faulty intelligence’ was in reality ‘deliberate deception of the public.’ – what else could it mean? This smacks of Cheney-Rumsfeld, who would have wanted the CIA to take the fall for the “faulty intelligence” – since they knew no WMDs would be found.
5. Nevertheless, media outlets printed all of these lies verbatim, with no fact-checking or independent verification (with Judith Miller and the NYTimes in the lead), Congress went along, and so the invasion began – a deliberate act of aggression aimed primarily at economic control of Iraq’s resources, little different from Hitler’s invasion of Poland.
Already the list of crimes of the Bush Administration was pretty extreme: torture of detainees in an effort to link Iraq to 9/11, deliberately falsified intelligence about Iraqi WMD programs, lying to Congress and the American public to start an illegal war of aggression – all well documented, not speculative at all (for speculative, by comparison, one could look at the Bush team’s plausible role in carrying out the anthrax attacks).
Once the invasion took place, and no WMDs were found, and the attempt to install a neocolonial puppet regime led to a huge Iraqi uprising, a whole new set of crimes took place – the CIA torture program was imported to Iraq, many covert operations against the insurgency were launched, etc.
As far as prosecution goes, the cases might be divided into crimes committed before and after the invasion and occupation began- but either way, there’s a very good legal argument for Bush, Blair, Cheney, Rumsfeld, and their cohort to suffer the same eventual fate that Chile’s Pinochet did.
Speaking of one of the casualties of that war, what is going on with Chelsea Manning just now?
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/jul/06/chelsea-manning-lawyers-hospital-rumors
They claim she tried to commit suicide but then sent her back to her cell after only one day. It’s very suspicious.
It appears they’re trying to use it as an excuse to prevent her from seeing her lawyers. That in itself is shady as hell.
Either she really made a serious suicide attempt and they don’t know how to handle it or they’ve just seized an opportunity for a little routine psychological torture — because they can.
They have developed a special fondness, in recent years, for keeping the lawyers of people they especially dislike in the dark. They seem to have figured out that the courts will let them and, after all, how many divisions does the defense bar have?
She won’t be in terribly good shape for the military appellate trial coming up.
I had no idea her appeal was pending soon. Makes sense that they would be giving her extra-heaping helpings of shit as a result.
The last info I saw on twitter, she would be allowed to speak to her lawyer tomorrow.
I’m sure the troops at the “Disciplinary Barracks” are just heartbroken that Chelsea won’t be fully able to assist counsel at appeal.
The vicious creeps.
What a pathetic little man, Tony Blair. And what a coward, to be unwilling to face up to the truth, that he along with George W. Bush led the West and the Middle East into an era of brutality, with millions of lives ruined and lost due to their obscene lust for power.
Once again, all together now … OOPS.
Intentional, well-planned, prepackaged mass murder does not merit an oops…
Obviously a sarcastic “oops.” Please have your sarcasm detector re-calibrated.
As for the coward Blair, at least he publicly shows his face on occasion. Bush, OTOH, almost never ventures from his
hideouthome in Dallas.“I have been told the US thinks [evidence] unnecessary,”
Indeed, evidence never had anything to do with blowing-up the Middle East.
From the false-flag of 9/11, the game has been to destabilize, provoke, and then retaliate against ‘the enemy’ and the American constitution.
A time-honored recipe …
The U.S. thinks evidence is unnecessary because most Americans just go with the official government line, anyway, no evidence needed, especially with a terrorist around every corner. The government’s strategy of spreading fear succeeds virtually every time in these matters, with the public eschewing any meaningful oversight or accountability of our government’s actions in return for what has proven to be a false sense of security from terrorism.
The perceived sense of safety should wear thin, as we are much less safer now then we were then, obviously, and anyone who can’t see that simply doesn’t want to. They are in state of terminal denial, and are an intricate part of the whole sham of deceit that ultimately works against the people themselves. And the merry-go-round keeps spinning…
Not only should the Blair Administration but the Bush Administration face war crimes as well. And a lawsuit by the American people for going to war on false pretenses?
No, the American people are complicit. Many wanted to strike out, bought Bush’s promise of a crusade. Many others were merely apathetic, unwilling to inform themselves concerning the issues and expressing them selves based on a deeper understanding. Few of us were open to the torrent of information coming from the outside, from ElBaradei, from French and German intelligence, from our own State Department, that all pointed toward the facts that Iraq had no WMDs, that they did not harbor terrorists. But for the vast majority, the truth did not matter. And thus we are getting our just rewards, and will continue to do so.
Why yes 24b4Jeff… You were quite complicit… in all things negative originating from the States and you will continue to be as such. For good measure take credit too for all the positives… because you know what, when you or your offspring travel abroad, remember should anything negative happen to them or you whilst on holiday, it was your fault and theirs…
You’re leaving something out there. We were looking at reports that the international sanctions on Iraq were on track to kill a million people! We were reading about how Iraqis didn’t have access to medicine, their economy was falling apart, the Kurds and “marsh Arabs” were being slaughtered, the Shiites were being put down. We “knew” Bush had his war for oil (we never really considered it was something else, like a war for international instability and antiterrorism/military arms sales) and figured what the hell, what difference does it make if Saddam and buddies are pumping it or Bush is. We let them have their blitzkrieg, figured fine, after that Iraq will get put together like Panama – maybe not for better, but at least we wouldn’t hear about it again. And it was all perfectly on track right up to the point where Bush sticks the knife in everybody’s back and says no elections, instead it’s an occupying regime and some cockamamie constitution! I mean, I could have put up with a bit of imperialism in Iraq if it had been stuff like legalizing homosexuality and Christian proselytism and beer. But no, it’s just one big long trough with a bunch of crooked American and Iraqi pigs at it, and nobody is even keeping track of who is who or which is which, just that it’s not us and it’s not the Iraqi people.
The bill of particulars can start with this charge:
This is not news – when holding a press conference to try and justify invading Iraq, I clearly remember George Bush Jr. first giving the WMD and a couple of other *supposed* reasons to the press, but finally after being pressed further about the legitimacy of the stated reasons, George Bush Jr. said, and I paraphrase from memory, “Well he tried to kill my dad.” Bingo! Right then and there GW Bush Jr. subconsciously exposed one of the real reasons why… It pissed me off to no end, and I could never understand the reason why nobody in the press picked up on that and ran with it. Bunch of lap dogs.
Ignorant, or a troll. Or both.
For those who would like to know what happened in Iraq after the war was “won” in great detail, this book might help:
“THE OCCUPATION OF IRAQ: WINNING THE WAR, LOSING THE PEACE” by Dr. Ali A. Allawi, at http://www.aliallawi.com/pub_occupationOfIraq.php
“Involved for over thirty years in the politics of Iraq, Ali A. Allawi was a long-time opposition leader against the Baathist regime. In the post-Saddam years he has held important government positions and participated in crucial national decisions and events. In this book, the former Minister of Defense and Finance draws on his unique personal experience, extensive relationships with members of the main political groups and parties in Iraq, and deep understanding of the history and society of his country to answer the baffling questions that persist about its current crises. What really led the United States to invade Iraq, and why have events failed to unfold as planned?
The Occupation of Iraq examines what the United States did and didn’t know at the time of the invasion, the reasons for the confused and contradictory policies that were enacted, and the emergence of the Iraqi political class during the difficult transition process. The book tracks the growth of the insurgency and illuminates the complex relationships among Sunnis, Shias, and Kurds. Bringing the discussion forward to the reconfiguration of political forces in 2006, Allawi provides in these pages the clearest view to date of the modern history of Iraq and the invasion that changed its course in unpredicted ways.
Since the Coalition’s invasion of Iraq, Ali A. Allawi has served as his country’s first postwar civilian Minister of Defense, was elected to the Transitional National Assembly as a member of the United Iraqi Alliance, and was appointed Minister of Finance under Dr. Ibrahim al-Jaffari. He divides his time between London and Baghdad.”
——–
In this book, Dr. Allawi details the extreme complex society with lots of tribalism that many in the West did not fully understand.
He once appeared on 60 Minutes and pointed out the corruption in the post-Saddam Iraqi government.
No good deed goes unpunished. America will NEVER win the war on terror.
You cannot change the hearts of man by killing them. American’s never understood the idea of Muslim tribes. Iraqi and Afghans don’t care about democracy or McDonalds and American debt…
good luck America. How’s the war on drugs working out for ya?
“Bush wanted to remove Saddam, through military action, justified by the conjunction of terrorism and WMD. But the intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy.” Yeah, we call that LYING where I come from but nobody, least of all the neutered American press, had the guts to utter these words. Tom Brokaw, they have a seat all warmed up for you on North Korean News.
Of course he was. Donald Rumsfeld commissioned a study in ’04 to determine the cause of terrorism when committed by Muslims, and the Defense Science Board reported that it’s our violent and nefarious policies in the Middle East, including those vis-a-vis Israel. This is common sense to anyone with two IQ points to rub together.
Thing is…they knew this and did it anyway. Much like they have for a long time. That geo-political pot of gold was too good to pass up.
Mona your words really captured the essence of the matter.
Some gems from that report, which is really just a recipe for more effective propaganda delivery, not an honest analysis of the causes of terrorism:
http://fas.org/irp/agency/dod/dsb/commun.pdf
The general conclusion is that manipulation of public opinion requires a sophisticated private-sector-type PR approach:
Goebbels would have loved it. “Credible messengers” to deliver canned PR lines with “message authority”. Gosh, where have we seen that kind of thing?
Here’s a nice bit, about how hiring third parties to spew government messages has the advantage of “deniability”:
Yes, that’s Rumsfeld’s style; but what he was really after was a strategy for the Bush Administration to talk its way out of the disaster they’d created in Iraq, not any kind of honest analysis of the causes of terrorism.
Nice sleuthing, but until someone can find something in the report to prosecute Blair with (which no one will), it ultimately amounts to mere establishment theater.
Like the US Senate Torture Report – because no suggestion of prosecution was in it, the report could use fiercely damning language to make it appear vigorously scathing and unflinching, while actually producing fuck all by way of consequences for those exacting the torture program.
The establishment forgives itself (see ‘Clinton, Hillary, emails’) – albeit sometimes after a stern lecture.
more like a stern tut-tut…
There has been no such inquiry ( or a call for one ) in the USA for killing of thousands and destruction of a country. In fact, the next administration refused to acknowledge wrong doing and told the country to move on and look forward!! Wonder if there is ANYONE in a leadership position ( and has the power ) with moral courage to demand one. It is never too late to reflect and look back and ADMIT, a horrible act was committed and hold people responsible, accountable.
“In fact, the next administration refused to acknowledge wrong doing and told the country to move on and look forward!” Actually, the next administration learned absolutely nothing and decided to repeat the “nation building” in Libya, resulting another country totally destroyed and more terrorists. The frightening thing is that the primary advocate of this piece of insanity is likely to be the next president. The even more frightening thing is the second most likely next president is probably even worse. I think I’m going to “waste my vote” on Gary Johnson.
Yes, this Gary Johnson is a bright light at the end of the tunnel. Jill Stein doesn’t stand a snowballs chance in hell and these two other “feeders from the same trough” are not valid presidential candidates.
@bud101 and @john K.
What a sad commentary on the state of affairs…..
In front of the names of two presumptive leading candidates, there should be an option to mark “neither”!
ONLY IF, there was a leader like him in the USA….
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uCfUOZqij8M
LOL Gary Johnson stands a better chance than Jill Stein.
Look, dummy, put away the crystal balls & vote for who you think is the best candidate. If everybody did that rather simple fucking thing, we’d live in a better country.
the libertarian party is just the republican part without religion. In 1980, David Koch ran as the Libertarian Party’s vice-presidential candidate. Just one more party that is there for the rich. go green
Close set eyes similar to 43; and that same beliefs always trumping knowns paradigm which is the process backwards-
Ignorant sully in public never works-
Wilson had it correct; frog march works and the close set eye types can knot be supported protected immune forever…
Bardos should be phun…
:?)
“So the Blair letter is, among other things, the final proof of the seriousness of the Downing Street Memo”
How is it proof the Brits consciously lied about WMD to intentionally deceive the public? I remember Dick Cheney going on TV and talking about certainties but I don’t remember Blair ever doing that.
See what you find in this:
Weapons claim: the dossier, the PM, and the headlines
Thanks for the reply but it doesn’t answer my question. The author claims that because Blair reportedly said win quick and everybody will be our friend is proof that he lied to the public. How is that proof? You are trying to convince me he lied using 2003 evidence instead of the evidence that the author used.
Actually, I’m not trying to convince *you* of anything, because I know that you being “convinced” of something which goes asunder of whatever contrarian foothold you’ve taken on in any given day is your one and your only goal to resist.
But to the subject, Blair’s comments in 2003 are just as relevant today and to the author’s piece as they were in 2003. In fact, because he made those statements in 2003 they are even more relevant than whatever walking-back or doubling down that Blair is in the process of balloon testing presently.
He did, his catchphrase at the time was “incontrovertible evidence,” and all of a sudden the whole country knew what incontrovertible meant.
To me, the moment when victory turned into defeat in Iraq seemed very clearly defined. After the initial blitzkrieg and amid signs of hopeful (or perhaps craven) celebration, Jay Garner said there would be snap elections in 90 days. That seemed to me to be the obvious and essential thing to do – get a democracy going in Iraq, and then worry about whether it is well behaved. Start with legitimizing various local Huey Longs in a large number of local states with varying ratios of minorities, then have them horse trade for a weak national government they could sign onto, which could readily be modelled on the early U.S. government, back when states elected Senators. And then the word comes out – no elections! A “transition” with an occupation government that even we in America could see was bullshit. And at that moment, and from then on, the U.S. had no chance to win. And this dramatic decision came from what? Some kind of palace intrigue in Washington? Certainly never debated in the congress or the press. We left all the crucial bits to Responsible People, and there are no responsible people, just crooks.
“The U.K. went to war despite the fact that “diplomatic options had not been exhausted.””
I don’t know all the factors which constitute a war of aggression, but that seems a pretty significant part of the equation.
Barbarians – fools – hypocrites to the bone …
http://bit.ly/1j6ze6g
Comey is not an apolitical player. Look at his work on behest of the Wall Street elites when Martin Armstrong would not play ball with them or the US Government. And on top of that he got the Judge to give Armstrong an lifetime gag order about it.
Please post your robo-talking-points under the correct articles. This isn’t about Hillary Clinton or FBI Comey, it’s about the UK’s Chilcot report on Blair’s collaborating with George W. Bush and Dick Cheney on scamming the UK into Cheney’s Iraq War.
We’ll get to arresting Hillary after we’ve dealt with Bush, Cheney, Blair, and other people closer to exceeding the statute of limitations.
Is that what Goebbels and Goering said to Hitler, or was it vice-versa?
Yes
They used a private email server, so who knows?