I Travelled
Across Syria And Saw For Myself What Blair's Actions
Caused
What’s the difference between Iraqi WMDs that don’t
exist, 45-minute warnings that are falsities, 70,000
non-existent Syrian “moderates” and a fictitious NHS
windfall of millions if Britain left the EU?
By Robert Fisk
July 07,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Independent"-
I guess a Nuremburg trial might have been a better
place to sort out the minutiae of the Blair-Bush
crimes we committed to go to war in the Middle
East. We brought about the deaths of up to half a
million people, most of them Muslims who were as
innocent as Blair was guilty. A Nuremburg-style
court might thus have concentrated more on the mass
Arab victims of our criminal expedition than the
heinous guilt and “profound regret” – his words, of
course – of Lord Blair of Kut al-Amara.
Sure, Blair
lied about the intelligence on weapons of mass
destruction before going to war, then lied about the
Foreign Office warnings of the chaos that would
overwhelm Iraq and now – today – pretends that the
Chilcot report has proclaimed him innocent when in
fact it says he is quite the opposite.
But a
prolonged study of the report, rather than the
necessarily swift precis we have been fed these past
few hours, may produce lines of enquiry far more
distressing than the conclusions in the
easy-to-regurgitate, simplified and shorter version
handed out to the media. Besides, our concentration
on the iniquitous Blair and his lies, while itself
an understandable response to Chilcot, has provided
a worrying diversion from the mendacity that still
today afflicts our political class, our prime
ministers and party leaders, and their insulting
attitude towards those they claim to represent.
Hearing the
first news of Sir John Chilcot’s epic work of
literature while I was travelling across Syria was a
disturbing experience. Not just because the plague
of Islamist cruelty spreading outwards from Raqqa
was (despite Blair’s nonsense to the contrary) a
direct result of the Iraqi inferno; but because our
own present, though discredited, Prime Minister used
Blairite falsehoods to persuade MPs to bomb Isis
targets in Syria last December. Remember the
nonsense about the 70,000 “moderate” rebels who
needed our help, even though they don’t exist and
were manufactured by the very same Joint
Intelligence Committee on which Blair relied for his
criminal adventure?
And when
MPs questioned this claptrap, they were haughtily
put down by General Gordon Messenger, deputy chief
of the defence staff, who said that for security
reasons these various rebel units could not be named
– even though we know the identity of these ragtag
CIA outfits and of their inability to fight
anyone. The appropriately named Messenger went along
with David Cameron’s fantasy and was duly promoted,
just as John Scarlett, the JIC’s chairman who
provided all the duff “intelligence” to Blair, was
later knighted.
And so we
went to war against Isis in Syria – unless, of
course, Isis was attacking Assad’s regime, in which
case we did nothing at all, despite all the
outrageous huffing and puffing of Hilary Benn about
pre-war fascism. Condemn Blair we will, poor chap,
but don’t think that anything changed in the six
years Sir John spent writing up his Biblical tome.
And that’s
the problem. When Blair can say, as he did the
moment the Chilcot report was published, that it
should “lay to rest allegations [sic] of bad faith,
lies and deceit” – without a revolution in the
streets against his bad faith, lies and deceit –
then you can be sure that his successors will have
no hesitation in swindling the public again and
again. After all, what’s the difference between
Iraqi WMDs that don’t exist, 45-minute warnings that
are falsities, 70,000 non-existent Syrian
“moderates” and a fictitious NHS windfall of
millions if Britain left the European Union?
There are
many versions – and misquotations – of that most
cynical of Nazi propagandists, Joseph “the bigger
the lie, the better” Goebbels, but it is impossible
not to be shocked by some of his observations. “The
essential English leadership secret does not depend
on particular intelligence,” he wrote in 1941.
“Rather, it depends on a remarkably stupid
thick-headedness. The English follow the principle
that when one lies, it should be a big lie, and one
should stick to it. They keep up their lies, even at
the risk of looking ridiculous.”
What is
chilling about these words is not that the wartime
English Goebbels maligned, nor that Churchill (who
was his special target) did actually lie. Given the
struggle against Nazism – and despite Churchill’s
observation that truth in war should always be
attended by a bodyguard of lies – the British had a
virtuous ability in the 1939-45 conflict to tell the
truth even when a bit of Blairite flummery might
have sufficed to cover up Britain’s defeats. No,
what is frightening is that Goebbels’s words apply
so painfully to English politicians today.
Who do we
know after the report, for example, who keeps up
their big lies even at the risk of looking
ridiculous? I fear, in an awful way, that small men
who want to walk in big shoes – who actually think
they are Churchill and take their country to war –
are committing the very lies of which their
political ancestors were largely innocent. Perhaps
the key to all this was captured in Sir John’s
contention that Blair relied more on his “beliefs” –
whatever that dangerous word obscures – and the
judgement of others.
Blair
accepts responsibility
Thus he can
tell us – and tell me as I drove in from the Syrian
desert city of Palmyra whose desecrators brought
their vile practices from the Iraqi disaster that
Blair helped to create – that “I do not believe
[that Saddam Hussein’s removal] is the cause of
terrorism we see today whether in the Middle East or
elsewhere in the world”. All this duplicity, of
course, is to form part of the “full debate” that
Blair now threatens in the aftermath of the Chilcot
report.
He is going
– heaven spare us -- to “set out the lessons I
believe future leaders can learn from my
experience”. But Blair doesn’t need to bore us with
his lies all over again. They’ve already been
imbibed by Dave “70,000 moderates” Cameron and the
Brexit lads who are now self-destructing amid the
very lies they told – and which may achieve all that
Goebbels wished for this country: the end of the
United Kingdom.
In this
context, the Chilcot report is not so much a massive
work of investigation into the sins that took us to
war in 2003, but just another chapter in the story
of our inability to control a world in which
Britain’s public relations politicians treat their
people with contempt, kill some of their soldiers
and slaughter hundreds of thousands of foreigners
without any real remorse. |