Sharesmagazine
 Home   Log In   Register   Our Services   My Account   Contact   Help 
 Stockwatch   Level 2   Portfolio   Charts   Share Price   Awards   Market Scan   Videos   Broker Notes   Director Deals   Traders' Room 
 Funds   Trades   Terminal   Alerts   Heatmaps   News   Indices   Forward Diary   Forex Prices   Shares Magazine   Investors' Room 
 CFDs   Shares   SIPPs   ISAs   Forex   ETFs   Comparison Tables   Spread Betting 
You are NOT currently logged in
 
Register now or login to post to this thread.

Is it time that Blair who is a close friend and confidant of Bush were tried for War Crimes? (WAR2)     

Fred1new - 07 Dec 2005 16:40

This board has been a little to quiet for while.

Is it time that Bush and Blair who is a close friend and confidant of Bush were tried for War Crimes?

Do you think the use by the American Administrations of renditions are War Crimes and committed with full knowledge of American and British leaders ie. Blair and Bush and they are ultimately responsible?

Also in the aftermath of the illegal invasion of Iraq are should their action seen to be as the provocation for the rising toll of British, American and Iraqi deaths.

As a result of the military intervention in Iraq do you think you are safer in Britain to-day?

Do you think one should expect government leaders and ministers who have been responsible for massive foreseeable casualties should visit the hospitals to meet the casualties they have produced directly or indirectly by their actions?

Kivver - 08 Dec 2005 11:49 - 34 of 1327

fred - oh as if the conservatives would have been any different, they have already given there full support. They probably would have wanted to be harder. Only the lib-dems were against the war.

aldwickk - 08 Dec 2005 11:53 - 35 of 1327

The conservatives gave there full support based on the lies by Blair.

hewittalan6 - 08 Dec 2005 11:55 - 36 of 1327

Fred,
I have no recollection of the UK or USA unleashing WMD's on their own people because they worshipped God in a slightly different way. Iraq did.
As i keep saying I have no truck with America. I am deflated by the way they act on many things but this thread was to address whether the war in Iraq was legal and the point is, it was. The un resolution gave clear sanction to invade because of a percieved threat to world security. Whether the threat was real or not is neither here nor there. The compliance was not there. For the security of the world, all other nuclear nations are inspected with alarming regularity. Should Iraq be exempted?
I also think our biggest problem, both domestically amd internationally is to give too much respect to things most people would find abhorrant, and we accept a lack of respect back.

Aldwick. Please read my posts. At what point did I say nobody told any lies? What I said was the reason we went to war was nothing to do with the lies of anyone.
What planet are you on, dear chap, a non-English speaking one?
Alan

Kivver - 08 Dec 2005 11:56 - 37 of 1327

Aldwikk - dream on. power and oil were behind the lies, as if they tories would have been any different. How many tory mps are on boards of companies?

Fred1new - 08 Dec 2005 11:56 - 38 of 1327

Kivver, the conservatives have earnt a warm place in my heart.












Hell!


Davea3, I agree with the sentiments in your posting. Besides the actions which have and are taking place it is the B. Hypocrisy of some of the political leaders which angers me.


But I have this stupid belief that it doen't have to be like it is.

hewittalan6 - 08 Dec 2005 12:00 - 39 of 1327

Dave,
The Uk may have been implicit in supplying arms to the man in the full knowledge of what he may do with them, but your argument runs along the lines of we made a mistake in the past and now should do nothing to put it right.
If I am right with the timings the weapons sales to him were sanctioned by a Tory government so it is a little rich to take a later Labour PM to task over it and say that if we did that then we shouldn't do this. Times, personalities and situations change.
Alan

Fred1new - 08 Dec 2005 12:00 - 40 of 1327

Many actions are carried out in the name of religion, by many who understanding the religion is compliant with their own desires.

Beliefs rather than thought are Very Dangerous.

davea3 - 08 Dec 2005 12:17 - 41 of 1327

tens of thousands of people are dead today who would have been alive, for wmd that everyone knew didnt exsit, and so what if he did he was the us pupet in the iranina war and in the 1st gulf war rumsfeld told sadam they wouldnt object if he invaded kuwait dont confuse morality with the motives of corrupt politicians, if the us cares about human rights then they would not have vetoed actions in the un against israeli human rights abuses against the Palastinian people, the us also refused to sign up to the international criminal court, they supported sadam hussain, mobuto and many other scum bags and are the worlds biggest arms exporter.

namreh3 - 08 Dec 2005 12:17 - 42 of 1327

Alan et al (ahem)

Interesting thread. Just spent the last 55 minutes composing a 1200 word rant on this very subject. Have shredded it. What a load of bumf.

It all boils down to a few things. It's like being back in the playground.

You are not playing my game. I made up the rules. If you don't like it, do not play - else tough. I am six foot six, have more friends who are weak followers and you are alone. When we have influenced enough of your neighbours and friends by giving them sweets paid for by your dinner money which we stole earlier, and flattering their egos, they will rise up with us to annihilate you (and thus not have the inconvenience of having to listen to your cries of foul) or we will subjugate you and you will be our bitch, cowering in the corner and grateful for any scraps thrown in your direction (for as long as you continue to please us).

Do not even think of crying to the headmaster. We pay his salary. If he sympathises with you, that is ok. If he tries to expel us, we will tell the School Governors that your son has been stealing from the tuck shop. No smoke without fire, eh?

Be assured although you may be in pain at the moment, when you leave school, all this will be behind you. In the adult world of international diplomacy, people just don't act like that. Do they?

aldwickk - 08 Dec 2005 12:19 - 43 of 1327

The UN based they decision on the lies of Bush and Blair, so that makes the decision illegal on that one point alone.

hewittalan6 - 08 Dec 2005 12:34 - 44 of 1327

Aldwick,
The un based their decision on the reports of the nuclear inspectorate and the intelligence gathering of 167 nations.
I'll say it again. The mandate was simple and passed by all nations. Let us have free and full access to the sites we desire to see or we will use force. The inspectorate reported they had not had full and free access and force was used. If any lying was done at the UN it was done long after the original ultimatum and therefore, by any application of logic, any lying was both unneccessary and could have no effect on the original resolution.
Was the war illegal? No. Did politicians on both sides use language to advance their case? Yes. Its called politics. Was there any lying from the anti-war brigade? yes. Is this being used to make them out as monsters? No.
It will always be easier to argue for the Status Quo, as those who do not make the decisions can alays rely on supposition about what might have been. Those who make the decisions have to rely on the outcomes afterwards.
Had the PM not gone to war when he did, he would have been acting against the wishes of the majority of the electorate, which is very undemocratic, and may have had to deal with attacks on the western world that international sources insisted at the time were a possibility, having been seen to back down from Saddams brinksmanship.
I supported his decision at the time and still do now. To judge with the benefit of hindsight is a disservice.
Alan

namreh3 - 08 Dec 2005 12:44 - 45 of 1327

Alan

What is that modern phrase? Oh, yes - 'On-message'.

Nam

hewittalan6 - 08 Dec 2005 12:45 - 46 of 1327

Nam,
?
Alan

namreh3 - 08 Dec 2005 13:18 - 47 of 1327

Alan

Yesterday, Alan Pinter spoke of 'suffocating moral criticism' in his Nobel speech.

Language can be the prostitute which we use to fuck others and pleasure ourselves.

If wars - asymmetric or otherwise - are being fought, that is a failure at all levels of personal and professional responsibility by those who wield the power to inluence others. Those who seek to justify their behaviour are usually those who NEED so to do.

Power needs violence in order to self-justify. Entities need power because they are lacking and feel a 'need'. This is the problem of language. What those who lack (the power-seekers) are missing is the UNDERSTANDING of the difference between what is WANTED and what is NEEDED.

It is a selfish act therefore to want something when it isn't truly NEEDED, no matter how it is dressed.

Hope that explains (a bit). That is all I WANT to say on this subject. (the selfish inadequate egotist that I am).

Nam

hewittalan6 - 08 Dec 2005 13:47 - 48 of 1327

Still all at sea this end Nam, on which side of the fence you find yourself.
Your earlier analogy of the playground bully can be read as the Un being the bully or as Saddam being the bully, with the Un acting as the Headmaster who has had enough of the bully ruling the roost.
The quotes from Alan Pinter could similarly be read as lambasting the western Governments for aggression in place of understanding or as an attack on how power breeds violence. Let us not forget then that the power the Allies wielded was borne of the will of the entire planet in passing the resolution. The power Saddam wielded was born of fear.
I know not who I am quoting but power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.

PS I just looked resolution up in a dictionary and it means to be resolved to do something. It doesn't mean to have a chat and change our minds later. It should be read as a promise to take a certain action for a certain set of circumstances. The circumstances arose, the action was taken. If anyone does not like the action, their beef is with the UN who passed the resolution, not those who enforced it.
Alan

namreh3 - 08 Dec 2005 13:50 - 49 of 1327

Alan

Arse load of splinters at this (my) end!

Must be on the fence.

Typical.

Nam

(ps- only first quote Pinter)

hewittalan6 - 08 Dec 2005 13:59 - 50 of 1327

Pinter said he had an arseload of splinters!!!!!

I am very happy for you to be on the fence. Under vitriolic attacks for my reasoning I sometimes wish I was.
I have the utmost respect for any persons point of view, for, against or undecided. I have no respect whatsoever for those who deliberately twist the things I say and misrepresent them, finishing by mildly insulting my intelligence.
Fortunately there appears to be very few individuals of this type on these boards and I rejoice in that.
Nuff said.
Lets get back to Bazas jokes on the NOWT thread
Alan

namreh3 - 08 Dec 2005 14:03 - 51 of 1327

My brain hurts!

Nam

hewittalan6 - 08 Dec 2005 14:04 - 52 of 1327

You definitely need the NOWT thread then. You can leave the brain at home, plugged in for re-charging.
alan

namreh3 - 08 Dec 2005 14:05 - 53 of 1327

Cheers me dear

Nam
Register now or login to post to this thread.