War
Criminal Blair Warmongers for Ground Invasion of
Syria and Iraq
By
Steven MacMillan
June 02, 2016
"Information
Clearing House"
- "NEO"
-
In an ideal
world, Tony Blair would have been tried for war
crimes years ago, and most probably would be over a
decade into a life-time jail sentence for his role
in the Iraq war. However, in our Orwellian world,
devoid of justice and accountability, Blair is doing
what he does best: warmongering.
The former British Prime Minister
stated this week that in order to defeat ISIS,
Britain and the wider West will have to “wage a
proper ground war
against them.” Blair has been a vocal of proponent
of deploying ground forces against ISIS in the
Middle East and North Africa, calling again for
Western
troops on the ground in March of this year.
Blair’s
remarks are conformation of what many in the
independent media have been warning about for years
now; that some individuals in the West are trying to
use the threat of ISIS (which they created) to
launch a full-scale invasion of Syria and attempt to
oust Assad. If the West is filled with enough hubris
to actually deploy ground troops to Syria, it would
move the West one step closer to military
confrontation with Russia.
The
Illegal Invasion of the Cradle of Civilisation
There is
ubiquitous evidence which proves that the 2003
invasion and occupation of Iraq was an illegal,
criminal and highly destructive policy. In 2004, the
former United Nations Secretary General, Kofi Annan,
denounced the invasion as “illegal,”
adding that it was in violation of the UN charter.
The former chief weapons inspector for the UN,
Hans Blix, also condemned the Iraq war as
illegal, and argued that London and Washington
should have known that their ‘sources’ were poor in
relation to those elusive weapons of mass
destruction.
Furthermore, a
Dutch inquiry in 2010 concluded that the Iraq war
was
illegal, and that it had no grounding in
international law. There have been some reports in
the UK press that senior officials in Blair’s
government were told to
burn a 13-page document from the former attorney
general, Lord Goldsmith, who raised questions over
the legality of the war, a fortnight before the war
began.
A Malaysian
tribunal in 2011 which applied the Nuremberg
Principles to the 2003 war found that both George
Bush and Tony Blair were
guilty of war crimes. A leaked memo written by
former US Secretary of State, Colin Powell, also
appears to show that Blair was committed to military
action
a year prior to the invasion.
Although the
death toll is widely contested and difficult to
calculate, a 2013 study published in the medical
journal ‘PLOS
Medicine,’ concluded that approximately 500,000
people died in Iraq between 2003 and 2011, due to
the war and subsequent occupation of the country.
Flashback: US Made “Willful Decision” to Support
ISIS Rise
Blair’s sole justification for
advocating another Western ground invasion in the
Middle East (because the 2003 one went so well) is
based on the threat posed from ISIS. What Blair
conveniently omits from his warmongering remarks
however, is the revelation from the former head of
the Defense Intelligence Agency, Michael Flynn, last
year.
In an interview with Mehdi Hasan
of
Al Jazeera,
Flynn reveals that the Obama administration was well
aware that the Syrian opposition was predominantly
composed of terrorist forces; but instead of halting
the support for the Syrian opposition, the
administration took the “willful
decision”
to support the extremists anyway.
Tony Blair
belongs behind bars; not in the public arena
advocating another ludicrous and nefarious war in
the Middle East. A Western ground invasion would be
disastrous for the region, and would only add fuel
to an already volatile fire. Any rationale Western
strategy would concentrate on stopping the flow of
arms and money to the extremists in the region, and
assist Russia and the Syrian army in their effective
war against the terrorists destabilising Syria.
Steven
MacMillan is an independent writer, researcher,
geopolitical analyst and editor of The
Analyst Report, especially for the online
magazine “New
Eastern Outlook”.
|