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 - 27 Mar 2006 23:13 - 437 of 1327

al - what good do think has come from this for the iragi people??? there is no law and order, hospitals, museaums, schools, houses of religion etc etc have been lost, bombed, ruined, damaged for ever. There is little law and order, hospitals are close to stand still, (with little left) the armies (us, gb and iragi) and the iragi people are murdering each other at will. People are scared to go out doors and equally scared inside, cant visit and look after relatives, people living agony, limbs missing, dying slowly and quickly. Exactly who has benefitted from this. Saddam effected the lives of hundreds maybe thousands, this as effected millions. Like i have said before, many on here and everywhere show little empathy or sympathy with the plight of many decent people. I am convinced that many brits dont give two hoots about this foriegn race a million miles from where we live. Its time the cameras went in there 2 hours every day and show on telly at 6 o'oclock in the evening the reality of this evasion. and like my gran used to say ''what goes around comes around'' Cannot for the life me see why we spent billions on this crazy war. If the oil installions we're setting up by the west are under constant threat if not attack.

jimmy b - 27 Mar 2006 23:17 - 438 of 1327



Just need a few of these sunbathing on deck .. katcenker ,i'm not completely selfish ,i give to the Sally Army every year ,and the foot and mouth painting artists, (people who create xmas cards with no limbs .

By the way she's not one of them .

Kivver - 27 Mar 2006 23:21 - 439 of 1327

oh, i think her suntan might just put a few off.

jimmy b - 27 Mar 2006 23:28 - 440 of 1327

Kivver behave ,,, i think i better get off this thread as i don't have much to add , where Alan when you need him .

Kivver - 27 Mar 2006 23:32 - 441 of 1327

me behave, lol, a very serious thread and you just post half naked women (very nice though)

jimmy b - 27 Mar 2006 23:36 - 442 of 1327

I'll try and stick to the NOWT thread :-)

hewittalan6 - 27 Mar 2006 23:56 - 443 of 1327

Missing the point, kivver.
All the terrible things you talk about exist. there is no denying that. But it was equally bad before. Ask the shi'ites and Kurds. If you don't believe them, ask the Arab neighbours who despised the way the Iraqis were treated, but put their faith in Allah to solve it all.
The real point is that there is now an end in sight that was never there before. Saddam and his evil regime are gone. This is a good thing. honest. It will be replaced by a government of the people, through democracy and iraq will rise from its own ashes.
This will take time. Generations of people who have known nothing other than the rule of brutality will use brutality to their own ends, but this will die away.
Nobody has ever said that war was a nice solution, or an easy one, but it was a necessary one and possibly the only one (maybe Fred has a suggestion on how things could have been done differently but he has failed to tell us what it is yet, even though i keep asking).
What every single opponent of the war has failed to do is to enlighten the rest of us how inaction would have made life better for the Iraqis who were made to drink petrol before being shot by hussein junior, so they would explode (he's a card isn't he?). or for the Kurds who were gassed because they disagreed. Or the political opponents who were shot. or the villagers who were massacred en masse because Saddam thought someone there was plotting against him.
How the rest of the world could believe a leader who kept saying "We aint got no WMD, honest Guv", while threatening to use them and acting furtively every time the UN came to check. How the UN could ever have any influence if every dodgy regime in the world had watched while Saddam did whatever the hell he liked as the UN fell out with itself.
The stock response goes along the lines of either "It's not very nice to kill people", or "Bloody yanks, who are they to throw their weight around. they're not perfect themselves".
The responses are tedious. Killing people is a last resort, but alas a necessary one sometimes in the real world. The whole Iraq debate has descended from sensible discussion to a flag for those who dislike the USA and/or tony Blairs premiership to march under. You know I have a deep seated hatred of the USA. I also have one or two problems with TB. But I do not confuse the issues with what should or should not have happened in Iraq. Nor do i criticise the judgement of others when i am unable to offer a better alternative.
Katcenka. If you study the world capitalist model you will be aware that your suggestion would lead to either margins being forced to increase fourfold to make up the losses, leading to rampant inflation and mass unemployment or a complete reversal of the idea of investing money in business as the returns became less attractive. The first would lead countries like ours to the brink of bankruptcy, leaving us unable to offer foreign aid. the second would lead to less and less efficient industry and eventually the collapse of capitalism as all the worlds wealth was withdrawn from production and wealth creation.
As I said. You start by handing your investments over to Oxfam. I think you will find they already have a massive stock portfolio, including HSBC, and they know a bit more about how to solve global poverty than you or I.
Alan

maestro - 28 Mar 2006 06:39 - 444 of 1327

amazing...welcome to fantasy land

hewittalan6 - 28 Mar 2006 07:55 - 445 of 1327

What a superbly educated and beautifully argued response.
And your workable alternative is................?

Kivver - 28 Mar 2006 08:54 - 446 of 1327

workable alternative - the same as the rest of world, including france and germany, do not go there, just to make a country much worse than it was before, i agree with getting rid of saddam but surely there must of been a better way of doing it.

hewittalan6 - 28 Mar 2006 09:07 - 447 of 1327

But leaving him to get on with it was to sentance thousands of Innocent Iraqis to death by torture and the survivors to fear and poverty. It was to allow a homocidal madman to continue with the weapons programme he bragged about and just cross our fingers that he was lying.
For me, that would have been a deriliction of our duty to protect the weak and vulnerable.
If we applied that argument consistently, then Europe would have been divi'd up between Hitler and Mussollini, the Falklanders would have lived under the Argentine Military Junta, God alone knows what the Kosovans / Serbs / Croats would be going through, the entire far east would be under Nippon rule, Spain would be a communist hell hole under Franco instead of a holiday destination and a prosperous nation. The list is endless.
What we would certainly end with is a morass of states, ruled by the ruthless doing whatever they wished because "we wouldn't go there".
The rest of the world argument is something of a red herring. Those that knew best (the immediate neighbours who had most to fear, and in most cases hate the west) welcomed us with open arms and supported the efforts. they knew only too well the regime we were dealing with.
No. The "not our problem, Guv" approach is not really an alternative.
Alan

Kivver - 28 Mar 2006 10:28 - 448 of 1327

dont forget the preceedent it sets and all the other mad mullers around the world, which country is next, the sudan, zimbabwe, and lots more im sure you could roll of the tougue.

hewittalan6 - 28 Mar 2006 10:37 - 449 of 1327

But the other precedent is to give carte blanche to every leader to do as they wish.

Kivver - 28 Mar 2006 10:43 - 450 of 1327

so why irag and not sudan then whoes muderous regime could be argued to be worse than irag, oh i forgot no oil in the sudan.

hewittalan6 - 28 Mar 2006 10:53 - 451 of 1327

No. There is no reason to suspect the Sudan of developing WMD. There was every reason to suspect Iraq of same.
The oil issue is a smokescreen. It has cost more to the UK and USA to prosecute the policy than could ever be gained by controlling the Iraqi oil (most of which is in Kuwait anyway).
Alan

Fred1new - 28 Mar 2006 12:18 - 452 of 1327

Do you think there is an element of paranoia in USA/Blair and others view of the world?
After all paranoia could be said to be projection of ones own covert or overt motivations.

Just asking?

Fred1new - 28 Mar 2006 12:18 - 453 of 1327

Do you think there is an element of paranoia in USA/Blair and others view of the world?
After all paranoia could be said to be projection of ones own covert or overt motivations.

Just asking?

hewittalan6 - 28 Mar 2006 12:28 - 454 of 1327

Not in the Blair camp, and not in the USA camp over this issue.
The USA are famously paranoid of all things that are not Moms apple pie, but in this instance I sincerely believe that the Allies made the only decision open to them.
It is not a nice decision, but it had to be made. The alternative was indecision, which is exactly what Saddam, and others who were watching wanted.
Had we gone the French/German route of no action, then the brakes would be off. their would be no threat, and therefore no control over Iran / Sudan / Israel / Zimbabwe / Korea et al. All the other loose canon states.
The Tyrant is a bully by nature. If you turn the other cheek and walk away, the bullying gets more intense. If you stand up to him, you may well get a bloody nose, but you discover he is a coward and the bullying stops.
The world really is like a school playground in this respect.
I know we disagree, Fred (hopefully respectfully), But negotiations with Iran continue, and I believe Iran would have told the world to piss off if we had been unable to deal effectively with Iraq. After all, what would be the Iranian motivation for negotiation?
Alan

Fred1new - 28 Mar 2006 13:04 - 455 of 1327

The Tyrant is a bully by nature. I agree, but who is the big boy with all the weapons and using them to further their immediate desires.

hewittalan6 - 28 Mar 2006 13:23 - 456 of 1327

This is the nub of the disagreement, in many ways.
I believe the desire of the UK/USA and others action was to try to protect the world from Iraq sponsored terrorism, ensure that no WMD were available to that regime and give Iraq a chance to throw off the tyrannical yolk, become free and more prosperous.
You believe it was done for the oil. I cannot find a good economic or political reason for this, but on that point we must differ.
The economic cost of the war has far outwheighed the savings on getting oil (or an alternative) elsewhere, and most of Iraqs oil is under kuwait anyway (which is why Kuwait was invaded by them in 1991).
If the war was as illegal as you claim the political risk of offending all the other oil producing nations and losing out to them diplomatically would be too great to allow for the action.
For my money, Saddam and the Iraqi regime were the bullys, albeit of the very weakest kids in the playground. The allies have used their strength to stop that bullying and send a warning to other bullies that it will not be rolerated.
Alan
Register now or login to post to this thread.