fishcox wrote:In the end, it comes down to a personal decision we must make. If you believe that Blair lied to Parliament, and to us, then that is your decision. I do not know on what basis you make that decision, but there must be something.
It is the duty of a politician to sometimes lie for his country and I would not damn him necessarily for embarking on an illegal war. Kosovo was technically probably illegal but in the circumstances the overwhelming view of the world it was a justified action.
I read those dossiers. The first reminded me of many marketing submissions I had read. It was clearly bending the evidential statements to supporting a conclusion rather than the other way round. This raised my suspicions. Then came the second. The first section killed it for me. "Iraq is the size of France". Any schoolboy who has studied a world map should know that is untrue. Clearly nobody had properly checked the facts in the document and if this obviously easy to verify fact was wrong how can one have confidence in the rest? (subsequently confirmed by the google 'lift').
I then checked out the Blix statements. He had been provided with details of where the supposed WMDs were stored but could find no trace. Even though the Iraqi's were frustrating Blix's search it was very worrying to him that no trace could be found. Were the Iraqis really that good?
I think that anybody taking a sceptical view of the *published evidence* had to come to the conclusion that there no direct evidence of operational WMD. I am sure Tony Blair was well aware of that when he added "if you knew what I knew..."
Fair enough. I had family connections with Station X and am well aware that smokescreens over intelligence are often necessary and the dossiers may have been just that. I prayed that was true. I assume Jim Dowd believed that too when he echoed the 'no doubt' mantra.
I presume you now accept that there was no "if you knew what I knew...". The consequences of our support of the war has now led onto regrettable (but perhaps justifiable) restrictions on liberty such as ID cards, suspension of habeus corpus etc. This was re-inforced, for me, during a walk down embassy row in Berlin. No police to be seen near most embassies. One to control the the visa queue at the Russian embassy but the British Embassy was hidden behind tank busting defences. Armed police everywhere. Our security services must have problems sleeping at night.
Now I don't mind putting my life at risk for a good cause. My parents did it willingly in WW2. But 'cross-party' support never did extend to cross country. War I presume most people agree should be the last resort. Here it never was.
The affair is so messy. The conseqences to the good of this country and maybe 100,000 dead and mostly innocent Iraqis is surely of a different order to all the good Gordon Brown can claim in improving education, health etc in the last government and the next.
I'm not an 'Islington chatterer'. I'm a Lewisham West voter with a problem on May 5th.