Illegal Slaughter: Cameron’s Bombings of Syria,
Equals Blair’s Iraq War Crimes
By Felicity ArbuthnotDecember 12, 2015
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“Russia bombing Syria
will lead to further radicalization and increased terrorism”.
Prime Minister David Cameron, 4th
October 2015.
How desperately
Prime Minister Cameron has been yearning to bomb the Syrian Arab
Republic.
In August 2013 when his aim was defeated in
Parliament by a 285-272 vote, his vision of the UK joining US-led
strikes bit the dust. His dreams of illegally joining the bigger
bully and bombing an historic nation of just 22.85 million people
(2013 figures) three and a half thousand kilometers away, posing no
threat to Britain, was thwarted.
The US threw a conciliatory bone to the snarling
Cameron and according to the BBC (1): “would ‘continue to consult’
with the UK, ‘one of our closest allies and friends.’
France said (that) the UK’s vote does not
change its resolve on the need to act in Syria.
After the vote … Cameron said it was clear
Parliament did not want action and ‘the government will act
accordingly.’
Chancellor George Osborne whined on BBC Radio
4′s flagship “Today” programme that: “there would now be
“national soul searching about our role in the world “, adding:
“I hope this doesn’t become a moment when we turn our back on
all of the world’s problems.
Translation: “Inconsequential politicians on small
island only feel like real men when sending off their depleted air
force to blow modest populations far away to bits.”
The then Defence Secretary Philip Hammond: “ …
told BBC’s Newsnight programme that he and the Prime Minister were
“disappointed” with the result, saying it would harm Britain’s
“special relationship” with Washington. Ah ha, that tail wagging,
panting, lap dog “special relationship” again, for which no body
part licking, no crawling on all fours, no humiliation, no deviation
of international law is too much.
The excuse for the 2013 rush to annihilate was
accusations that the Syrian government had used chemical weapons in
March and August of that year, a claim subsequently comprehensively
dismissed by detailed UN investigations (2.)
Cameron’s excuse for attack had all the validity
of Tony Blair’s fantasy Iraq weapons of mass destruction, but of
course he regards Blair as a trusted advisor. Judgement, it might be
argued, as Blair’s, is not one of Cameron’s strong attributes.
Then came the Friday 13th November
tragedies in Paris and by 2nd December Cameron’s
parliamentary press gangs managed to threaten and arm twist through
a vote to attack Syria in an action of shame which will surely haunt
him as Blair is haunted by Iraq.
As the bombs fell, on 6th December,
Cameron celebrated the anniversary of his his tenth year as Leader
of the Conservative Party with his very own military action, Libya’s
tragedy forgotten and belonging to yesterday. That, as Blair’s Iraq,
it is entirely illegal (3) apparently bothers the former PR man not
a whit.
As the Parliamentary debate was taking place,
before the vote, it was reported that RAF reconnaissance ‘planes had
already taken off for Syria from Scotland – of whose fifty nine
parliamentarians, fifty seven voted against the attack. Cameron
thumbed his arrogant nose to near and far.
Apart from the illegality, did it even cross
Cameron’s mind, or did he care, that using the Paris attack not only
defied law, it defied reason. To repeat again, the attackers were
French and Belgian born, of North African extraction, with no Syrian
connections apart from that some of them had been there joining the
organ eating, head chopping, people incinerating terrorists. Syria
is the victim, not the perpetrator, deserving aid and protection,
not cowardly retribution from 30,000 feet.
After the vote, pro-killing MPs reportedly went
straight into the Commons bar to celebrate with tax payer subsidized
booze. Warned that the main doors in to Parliament had been closed
due to anti-war protesters outside, one woman MP apparently shouted
gleefully “It’s a lock in.” How lightly mass murder is taken in the
Palace of Westminster.
Chancellor George Osborne: “eschewed the
celebratory drinks … and joined a carol service in nearby St.
Margaret’s Church – in aid of a charity for child amputees. You
couldn’t make it up”, wrote a ballistic friend.
Within a week Osborne was in the US addressing the
Council on Foreign Relations stating that with the air strikes
Britain had “got it’s mojo back” and stood with the United States to
“reassert Western values.”
It was he said “a real source of pride” to have
the authority for air strikes in Syria.
“Britain has got its mojo back and we are going to
be with you as we reassert Western values, confident that our best
days lie ahead.”
Britain was prepared to play a “bigger role”, he
vowed.
“Mojo” according to varying dictionaries means “a
quality that attracts people to you, makes you successful and full
of energy”, denotes “influence” and “sex appeal.” The man needs
help.
Immediately after the vote during a visit to RAF
Akrotiri, the British base in Cyprus from which the airborne killers
will take off to drop their human being incinerating ordnance, UK
Defence Secretary, Michael Fallon, told military personnel that
their mission had the backing of “both the government and the people
of Britain.” He lied.
A recent ITV poll showed 89.32 % of British people
against bombing. Governmental “mojo” has clearly passed them by.
Pro bombing MPs though, it seems, are anything but
warrior material. When angry emails arrived from their constituents
condemning the bombing, the heavyweight Deputy Leader of the Labour
Party, Tom Watson (pro bombing) complained of “bullying” saying
stronger social media policy was needed to prevent such
correspondence.
Anti war campaigners had also sent graphic
photographs of dead Syrian children to MPs to persuade them not to
vote for creating more mutilated little souls. This, the warmongers
said, was “intimidation.”
One pro-war parliamentarian said the messages led
him to have concerns for the health of his pregnant wife. Beyond
pathetic, try being the husband of a pregnant wife, or the wife, in
Syria with Britain’s bombs incinerating your neighbourhood.
Another MP was so keen to become a member of the
“bullied” club, she was found to have added a death threat to
herself at the end of a justifiably angry email from a member of the
public. Her attempt to was speedily uncovered. The desire to tarnish
those repelled by illegally murdering others is seemingly becoming
common currency in the Cameron Reichstag.
A majority of British politicians, prepared to
drop bombs on people, blow their children, parents, relatives,
villages, towns, homes to bits and are cowed by a few words. As for
“bullied”, try being under a bomb Mr Watson, one of the bombs you
voted for. “Bullying” doesn’t come bigger than that.
Upset at being sent pictures of dead babies?
Imagine being a mother or father holding the shredded remains of
theirs. Courtesy the RAF.
Have they any idea of the reality of their “mojo”
moment? People tearing at the tons of rubble that was a home, trying
to dig friends, beloveds out with bare, bleeding hands?
Further reality is the demented, terrified howls
of the dogs who hear the ‘planes long before the human ear can, the
swathes of birds that drop from the sky from the fear and vibration,
their bodies carpeting the ground, the cats that go mad with fear,
rushing from a loving home, never to be seen again. And the children
that become mute in their terror, losing the ability to speak for
weeks, sometimes months and even years.
Yet David Cameron allegedly called Labour Leader
Jeremy Corbyn and those who voted against this shameful act of
terror: “terrorist sympathisers”, reportedly telling a meeting of a
Parliamentary Committee before the vote: “You should not be walking
through the lobbies with Jeremy Corbyn and a bunch of terrorist
sympathisers.” (5)
This presumably was juvenile pay back time for
Corbyn having stated correctly that: “Cameron’s approach is bomb
first, talk later. But instead of adding British bombs to the others
now raining down on Syria what’s needed is an acceleration of the
peace talks in Vienna.”
Cameron also received widespread derision,
including from Conservative Parliamentarian Julian Lewis, Chairman
of the influential Defence Select Committee, for his claims that
there were 70,000 “moderate” fighters on the ground ready to take on
ISIS after British bombing.
One government source compared the claim to Tony
Blair’s fantasy that Iraq could launch weapons of mass destruction
on the West “in 45 minutes.” Lewis commented: “Instead of having
‘dodgy dossiers’, we now have bogus battalions of moderate
fighters.” (6) Another commentator referred unkindly to Cameron’s
“70,000 fantasy friends.”
Perhaps the best encapsulation of anger and
desperation came from author Michel Faber, who sent his latest book
to Cameron (7.)
In searing sarcasm, he wrote in an accompanying
letter that he realized: “a book cannot compete with a bomb in its
ability to cause death and misery, but each of us must make whatever
small contribution we can, and I figure that if you drop my novel
from a plane, it might hit a Syrian on the head … With luck, we
might even kill a child: their skulls are quite soft.”
He explained:
“I just felt so heartsick, despondent and
exasperated that the human race, and particularly the benighted
political arm of the human race, has learned nothing in 10,000
years, 100,000 years, however long we’ve been waging wars, and
clearly the likes of Cameron are not interested in what
individuals have to say.”
He speaks for the despairing 89.32% who hang their
heads in shame. He speaks for those of us who simply cannot find the
words.
Notes
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-23892783
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http://www.globalresearch.ca/syria-un-mission-report-confirms-that-opposition-rebels-used-chemical-weapons-against-civilians-and-government-forces/5363139
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http://www.globalresearch.ca/the-uk-parliaments-decision-to-bomb-syria-is-illegal/5493200
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http://www.heraldscotland.com/news/14129765.Osborne__UK_has__got_its_mojo_back__with_air_strikes/?ref=twtrec
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http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2015/dec/01/cameron-accuses-corbyn-of-being-terrorist-sympathiser
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http://www.theguardian.com/media/greenslade/2015/dec/04/so-david-camerons-70000-syrian-forces-claim-really-is-dodgy?CMP=share_btn
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http://www.theguardian.com/books/2015/dec/07/michel-faber-donates-book-of-strange-things-to-syria-cameron
Copyright ©
Felicity Arbuthnot, Global Research, 2015