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Blair war criminal?

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By *eerob OP   Couple  over a year ago

solihull

It is now being said that Blair may face a war crimes tribunal as a result of the Iraq war. My opinion is that this would be a good thing, to find out if he and Bush took us into an illegal war. Do you think a trail is the most appropriate course of action now?

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

If a valid case can be brought against him, yes. It's one thing to believe something and it's another to be certain.

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By *obbytupperMan  over a year ago

Menston near Ilkley

Not before time.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

He's a smart cookie Blair, or at least the people advising him are Wylie bastards.

He didn't give parliament the vote on it for the first time ever for no reason you know!.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"It is now being said that Blair may face a war crimes tribunal as a result of the Iraq war. My opinion is that this would be a good thing, to find out if he and Bush took us into an illegal war. Do you think a trail is the most appropriate course of action now? "

About fucking time too!

We all know he lied about Saddam's weapons of Mass destruction & wouldn't listen to the country that didn't want us to go to war.

Lock him up and throw away the key.

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By *icefellatwoMan  over a year ago

hastings


"It is now being said that Blair may face a war crimes tribunal as a result of the Iraq war. My opinion is that this would be a good thing, to find out if he and Bush took us into an illegal war. Do you think a trail is the most appropriate course of action now? "

He wasted enough of our money!

Why waste more just execute him along with all the other politicians

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

Surely it would need to be an international tribunal which included and acknowledged the _iews held by the population of Iraq .

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"It is now being said that Blair may face a war crimes tribunal as a result of the Iraq war. My opinion is that this would be a good thing, to find out if he and Bush took us into an illegal war. Do you think a trail is the most appropriate course of action now?

He wasted enough of our money!

Why waste more just execute him along with all the other politicians "

More murder....that'll help!

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

Parliament voted for the invasion of Iraq not just Tony Blair!

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

Yes he should stand trial .

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

I have grave doubts about him but I d like to hear his thoughts and motives for it

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By *icefellatwoMan  over a year ago

hastings


"It is now being said that Blair may face a war crimes tribunal as a result of the Iraq war. My opinion is that this would be a good thing, to find out if he and Bush took us into an illegal war. Do you think a trail is the most appropriate course of action now?

He wasted enough of our money!

Why waste more just execute him along with all the other politicians

More murder....that'll help! "

What do you mean more mueder

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By *ouple in LancashireCouple  over a year ago

in Lancashire


"Parliament voted for the invasion of Iraq not just Tony Blair!"

this..

it wont happen in my opinion..

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By *eerob OP   Couple  over a year ago

solihull

It does appear that Cameron is nowholding the findings back, i feel possibly because it will implicate a lot of the government in wrongdoings. Does seem so far that there are not many on Blairs side.

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By *icefellatwoMan  over a year ago

hastings

I cant stand Blair but we could not stand back and let Saddam continue to murder and eventually take the middle east to war

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"It does appear that Cameron is nowholding the findings back, i feel possibly because it will implicate a lot of the government in wrongdoings. Does seem so far that there are not many on Blairs side. "
.

Arrest Cameron for holding back evidence then!.

There's 0.00000000000001% chance of ever getting Tony Blair convicted of it for thousands of reasons from him actually not being a criminal!! To who the hell is going to release any tangible evidence of his involvement. To even if they could prove it... Nobody actually gives a shit about Iraq anyhow.

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By *icefellatwoMan  over a year ago

hastings


"It does appear that Cameron is nowholding the findings back, i feel possibly because it will implicate a lot of the government in wrongdoings. Does seem so far that there are not many on Blairs side. .

Arrest Cameron for holding back evidence then!.

There's 0.00000000000001% chance of ever getting Tony Blair convicted of it for thousands of reasons from him actually not being a criminal!! To who the hell is going to release any tangible evidence of his involvement. To even if they could prove it... Nobody actually gives a shit about Iraq anyhow."

Correct and why waste anymore money

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"It does appear that Cameron is nowholding the findings back, i feel possibly because it will implicate a lot of the government in wrongdoings. Does seem so far that there are not many on Blairs side. .

Arrest Cameron for holding back evidence then!.

There's 0.00000000000001% chance of ever getting Tony Blair convicted of it for thousands of reasons from him actually not being a criminal!! To who the hell is going to release any tangible evidence of his involvement. To even if they could prove it... Nobody actually gives a shit about Iraq anyhow.

Correct and why waste anymore money "

If we don't investigate these things though we cease to be a democracy

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"It does appear that Cameron is nowholding the findings back, i feel possibly because it will implicate a lot of the government in wrongdoings. Does seem so far that there are not many on Blairs side. .

Arrest Cameron for holding back evidence then!.

There's 0.00000000000001% chance of ever getting Tony Blair convicted of it for thousands of reasons from him actually not being a criminal!! To who the hell is going to release any tangible evidence of his involvement. To even if they could prove it... Nobody actually gives a shit about Iraq anyhow.

Correct and why waste anymore money

If we don't investigate these things though we cease to be a democracy "

.

Well it all boils down to that nice dr and his report.

Personally I've said for years that mi5 bumped him off... But that's just my feeling, it stands for shit all in court, they investigated and found he committed suicide. Case closed Blair got away with it and made millions and avoided tax on it in the process.... Still you can't hold that against him... if I'd have been him I'd have done it myself

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"It is now being said that Blair may face a war crimes tribunal as a result of the Iraq war. My opinion is that this would be a good thing, to find out if he and Bush took us into an illegal war. Do you think a trail is the most appropriate course of action now? "

sadly wont happen imo

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"Parliament voted for the invasion of Iraq not just Tony Blair!"

On the basis of lies and a bogus file of documents! If a person is convicted by a jury on the basis of false evidence then a re-trial is the fair thing wouldn't you say? It doesn't mean the first jury was wrong....just misled. As we all were by this lying scumbag!

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By *eerob OP   Couple  over a year ago

solihull


"I cant stand Blair but we could not stand back and let Saddam continue to murder and eventually take the middle east to war "

It seems that the country is in a worse state now than when saddam was in charge. The question is should the world investigate by trail if the war was illega. Lies were almost certainly told by blair and bush. If no one keeps asking the questions then the two people who have been responsible for hundreds of thousands of deaths are not held to account. This cant be correct.

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By *arry247Couple  over a year ago

Wakefield


"I cant stand Blair but we could not stand back and let Saddam continue to murder and eventually take the middle east to war "

Apart from whether there were weapons of mass destruction in Iraq or not the war for regime change was illegal under international law. The Attorney General told Blair that.

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By *eerob OP   Couple  over a year ago

solihull


"I cant stand Blair but we could not stand back and let Saddam continue to murder and eventually take the middle east to war

Apart from whether there were weapons of mass destruction in Iraq or not the war for regime change was illegal under international law. The Attorney General told Blair that."

Exactly. I cannot understand why the opposition parties are not making more of all this rather tjan protecting Blair.

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By *luezuluMan  over a year ago

Suffolk

Hang him

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By *icefellatwoMan  over a year ago

hastings


"I cant stand Blair but we could not stand back and let Saddam continue to murder and eventually take the middle east to war

Apart from whether there were weapons of mass destruction in Iraq or not the war for regime change was illegal under international law. The Attorney General told Blair that.

Exactly. I cannot understand why the opposition parties are not making more of all this rather tjan protecting Blair. "

They look after their own

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"I cant stand Blair but we could not stand back and let Saddam continue to murder and eventually take the middle east to war

Apart from whether there were weapons of mass destruction in Iraq or not the war for regime change was illegal under international law. The Attorney General told Blair that.

Exactly. I cannot understand why the opposition parties are not making more of all this rather tjan protecting Blair. "

.

Because there is no opposition. No right or left, no ideologies left except... Money!.

Cameron went to school and university with most of the labour party members, they go to each others Christmas parties and weddings and christenings!.

It's a fucking charade for the people so you can go about your life's thinking you have democracy and choice!, so you can think your little opinion has some value to events in life, it's why people like to say "I was there" at some massive world wide event, so they can think there existence had some sort of influence... It doesn't

Live with it, or don't, that choice is yours!

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"Hang him"

We are talking about a guy who advised Rebeka Brooke's to take sleeping tablets during her "ordeal" , lord knows what lengths Bliar uses to obtain a good nights sleep , his name has cropped up in Jeffrey Epstein's little black book , let's watch him squirm some more .

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"I cant stand Blair but we could not stand back and let Saddam continue to murder and eventually take the middle east to war "

True, but we seem to be OK about allowing Assad to continue to do so.

Some might argue that the Syrian civil war really isn't any of our business and that it is a matter for Serbia. If that is the case, then why not for Iraq in 2003.

The first time we got involved with fighting Iraq, when John Major was Prime Minister, it was at the request of Saudi Arabia which he had invaded.

2003 was the first time in a very long time that the United Kingdom had gone on the offensive, so to speak, and begun a conflict.

If we look back, The Falklands conflict - initiated by General Leopoldo Galtieri, then president of Argentina invading the British territory of the Balkland islands. Britain sent forces to defend against this invasion.

World War 2 - well, we all know who kicked that off

World War 1 - Started with the assassination of a rock band - Franz Ferdinand, Archduke of Austria-Este, Austro-Hungarian and Royal Prince of Hungary and Bohemia in Sarajevo on 28th June 1914 thus precipitating Austria-Hungary's declaration of war against Serbia and causing the central powers (including Austria-Hungary and Germany) and Serbia's allies to declare war against each other.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

No way at least he had some balls good luck Blair hope they don't

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By *isandreTV/TS  over a year ago

Durham

There are several different ways that Tony Blair could be prosecuted.

I'm not sure if it could be done through the International Courts, but it could certainly be done by us here in the UK.

In my _iew there should be a trial. That doesn't mean he should be found guilty but there is a case to answer and we owe it to ourselves and to all those lives lost to pursue this. The right precedent should be set for the future too.

There are problems bringing this about. The political will has to be there. Governments won't like the idea of being held criminally accountable for anything. Let's face it, they haven't gone after any of the bankers individually for their financial wrongdoings even.

So public pressure is the only thing that would make them shift.

That said, a private prosecution could be brought and there is a coalition of people ready to do that. However things have to be done right.

The key is the Chilcot Enquiry findings and these have not been published yet.

Don't discount a trial yet. Remember, these pressure groups persisted to get a full (Chilcot) enquiry despite huge resistance and the other inadequate earlier inquiries. Getting a prosecution might be a problem because of secrecy/national security issues but the Chilcot Enquiry were given access to this info. Therefore if this report is damning of Blair, Straw, Hoon and the AG a prosecution could still happen.

If it is damning, concludes that Blair and his inner circle had reasons for taking us to war that were illegal and therefore misled Parliament then the only real barrier to a prosecution in the UK is whether it will be in the National Interest.

That will raise some big questions on precedent.

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By *iscomanMan  over a year ago

Solihull

My usual comment

The only good position is a dead one

Blair and Bush Shouldd stand trial for war crimes

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By *ouple in LancashireCouple  over a year ago

in Lancashire


"I cant stand Blair but we could not stand back and let Saddam continue to murder and eventually take the middle east to war

Apart from whether there were weapons of mass destruction in Iraq or not the war for regime change was illegal under international law. The Attorney General told Blair that.

Exactly. I cannot understand why the opposition parties are not making more of all this rather tjan protecting Blair. "

maybe because they were fully behind what they were fed by and large..

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By *ouple in LancashireCouple  over a year ago

in Lancashire


"My usual comment

The only good position is a dead one

Blair and Bush Shouldd stand trial for war crimes"

how strange an outlook..

there are amongst them good well meaning people, to assume otherwise is naive..

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By *iewMan  over a year ago
Forum Mod

Angus & Findhorn

No

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By *luezuluMan  over a year ago

Suffolk


"My usual comment

The only good position is a dead one

Blair and Bush Shouldd stand trial for war crimes"

There are lots of good "positions" my favourite is doggy

Never heard of the dead one

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

a. I hope there is a trial, just so it does clear up what happened.

b. I hope they find Blair quilty.

c. I hope it carries the death penalty for the cunt.

d. If that penalty can be carried to that disgusting wife of his, all the better.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

I never liked the guy.

He was rubbish on Celebrity Big Brother and I never liked him on Give Us A Clue either!!

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By *luezuluMan  over a year ago

Suffolk


"a. I hope there is a trial, just so it does clear up what happened.

b. I hope they find Blair quilty.

c. I hope it carries the death penalty for the cunt.

d. If that penalty can be carried to that disgusting wife of his, all the better.

"

I once got absolutely slated on here because I said Cherie Blair was ugly, glad to see someone agrees with me

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

Saddam , laden , gaddafi and others all some got tries some didn't , but never the less all was punished for there so called crimes against humanity , why should it be no different for bush and Blair , should be the same for Obama and that Netanyahu for the precaution of innocent people and the use of illegal weapons and chemicals I.e white phosphate too, just saying .

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"a. I hope there is a trial, just so it does clear up what happened.

b. I hope they find Blair quilty.

c. I hope it carries the death penalty for the cunt.

d. If that penalty can be carried to that disgusting wife of his, all the better.

I once got absolutely slated on here because I said Cherie Blair was ugly, glad to see someone agrees with me "

I was talking about her character, not her looks!

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By *icefellatwoMan  over a year ago

hastings

[Removed by poster at 07/01/15 14:08:52]

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By *luezuluMan  over a year ago

Suffolk


"a. I hope there is a trial, just so it does clear up what happened.

b. I hope they find Blair quilty.

c. I hope it carries the death penalty for the cunt.

d. If that penalty can be carried to that disgusting wife of his, all the better.

I once got absolutely slated on here because I said Cherie Blair was ugly, glad to see someone agrees with me

I was talking about her character, not her looks! "

Yeah, she's a disgusting woman who's ugly as well

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"a. I hope there is a trial, just so it does clear up what happened.

b. I hope they find Blair quilty.

c. I hope it carries the death penalty for the cunt.

d. If that penalty can be carried to that disgusting wife of his, all the better.

I once got absolutely slated on here because I said Cherie Blair was ugly, glad to see someone agrees with me

I was talking about her character, not her looks!

Yeah, she's a disgusting woman who's ugly as well"

I dont disagree with you

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

They've already been tried (and found guilty), apparently bush could have been arrested for it when he went to canada but nobody arrested him. They are above the law, they make the laws, they do what they want and nothing anyone can do about it.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuala_Lumpur_War_Crimes_Commission

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"a. I hope there is a trial, just so it does clear up what happened.

b. I hope they find Blair quilty.

c. I hope it carries the death penalty for the cunt.

d. If that penalty can be carried to that disgusting wife of his, all the better.

"

You do know you can be prosecuted for defamatory remarks on the net

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"a. I hope there is a trial, just so it does clear up what happened.

b. I hope they find Blair quilty.

c. I hope it carries the death penalty for the cunt.

d. If that penalty can be carried to that disgusting wife of his, all the better.

You do know you can be prosecuted for defamatory remarks on the net "

They would have to start building a lot of prisons to lock up everyone who thought that Blair is a cunt and/or wished him ill!

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"a. I hope there is a trial, just so it does clear up what happened.

b. I hope they find Blair quilty.

c. I hope it carries the death penalty for the cunt.

d. If that penalty can be carried to that disgusting wife of his, all the better.

You do know you can be prosecuted for defamatory remarks on the net

They would have to start building a lot of prisons to lock up everyone who thought that Blair is a cunt and/or wished him ill!"

Same could be said of Maggie Thatcher, when she sunk the Belgrano, but hey shes from a different political party

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By *isandreTV/TS  over a year ago

Durham


"They've already been tried (and found guilty), apparently bush could have been arrested for it when he went to canada but nobody arrested him. They are above the law, they make the laws, they do what they want and nothing anyone can do about it.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuala_Lumpur_War_Crimes_Commission"

From Wikipedia

'The tribunal does not have a UN mandate or recognition, no power to order arrests or impose sentences, and it is unclear that its verdicts have any but symbolic significance.[14]

A statement on the tribunal's website states: "In the event the tribunal convicts any of the accused, the only sanction is that the name of the guilty person will be entered in the Commission’s Register of War Criminals and publicized worldwide."

I reckon that is why, in regard to that.

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By *isandreTV/TS  over a year ago

Durham


"

Same could be said of Maggie Thatcher, when she sunk the Belgrano, but hey shes from a different political party "

There are many things I would like to have seen Thatcher prosecuted for, but the Belgrano wasn't actually a War Crime.

The Red Cross ruled that 'the vessel, though outside the TEZ, was within the security zone of British ships in the area; was fully armed and engaged in operations and that therefore there was no breach of the Geneva Convention.'

The Argentine Captain of the Belgrano also said

“ It was an act of war. The acts of those who are at war, like the submarine’s attack, are not a crime … The crime is the war. We were on the front line and suffered the consequences. On April 30, we were authorised to open fire, and if the submarine had surfaced in front of me I would have opened fire with all our 15 guns until it sank.”

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"

Same could be said of Maggie Thatcher, when she sunk the Belgrano, but hey shes from a different political party

There are many things I would like to have seen Thatcher prosecuted for, but the Belgrano wasn't actually a War Crime.

The Red Cross ruled that 'the vessel, though outside the TEZ, was within the security zone of British ships in the area; was fully armed and engaged in operations and that therefore there was no breach of the Geneva Convention.'

The Argentine Captain of the Belgrano also said

“ It was an act of war. The acts of those who are at war, like the submarine’s attack, are not a crime … The crime is the war. We were on the front line and suffered the consequences. On April 30, we were authorised to open fire, and if the submarine had surfaced in front of me I would have opened fire with all our 15 guns until it sank.”"

It was heading back to Argentina fact, yes Thatcher authorised it

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

I seem to remember a few years ago when they had the parliamentary legality of the war public enquiry that Jack Straw, when asked if The White House pressured Britain in to going to war, he replied;

'No, - but we were leant on by the military!!'

........I also remember wondering - who's military????

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By *isandreTV/TS  over a year ago

Durham

It isn't as simple as that.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"They've already been tried (and found guilty), apparently bush could have been arrested for it when he went to canada but nobody arrested him. They are above the law, they make the laws, they do what they want and nothing anyone can do about it.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuala_Lumpur_War_Crimes_Commission

From Wikipedia

'The tribunal does not have a UN mandate or recognition, no power to order arrests or impose sentences, and it is unclear that its verdicts have any but symbolic significance.[14]

A statement on the tribunal's website states: "In the event the tribunal convicts any of the accused, the only sanction is that the name of the guilty person will be entered in the Commission’s Register of War Criminals and publicized worldwide."

I reckon that is why, in regard to that."

Aw, don't see the point of them then.

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By *isandreTV/TS  over a year ago

Durham

Sorry, that was to Mel

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"

Same could be said of Maggie Thatcher, when she sunk the Belgrano, but hey shes from a different political party

There are many things I would like to have seen Thatcher prosecuted for, but the Belgrano wasn't actually a War Crime.

The Red Cross ruled that 'the vessel, though outside the TEZ, was within the security zone of British ships in the area; was fully armed and engaged in operations and that therefore there was no breach of the Geneva Convention.'

The Argentine Captain of the Belgrano also said

“ It was an act of war. The acts of those who are at war, like the submarine’s attack, are not a crime … The crime is the war. We were on the front line and suffered the consequences. On April 30, we were authorised to open fire, and if the submarine had surfaced in front of me I would have opened fire with all our 15 guns until it sank.”

It was heading back to Argentina fact, yes Thatcher authorised it "

I suppose you'll try and convince us that sinking the Bismarck in WW2 was a war crime, as that was damaged and attempting to make a safe port when it was sunk - despite it having Sunk HMS Hood.

The fact is that The Belgrano was part of the invasion / attacking Argentine forces.

Differences between Thatcher and Blair

1. She had backbone and integrity.

2. She didn't send our troops to attack or invade another country, she sent them to defend British sovereign territory.

3. Blair would have simply handed the Falklands over to the Argentines.

4. Maggie was one of the greatest (if not THE greatest) Prime Ministers this country has EVER had. Blair was just a Weasel.

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By *isandreTV/TS  over a year ago

Durham


"

Aw, don't see the point of them then."

Symbolic.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"

Same could be said of Maggie Thatcher, when she sunk the Belgrano, but hey shes from a different political party

There are many things I would like to have seen Thatcher prosecuted for, but the Belgrano wasn't actually a War Crime.

The Red Cross ruled that 'the vessel, though outside the TEZ, was within the security zone of British ships in the area; was fully armed and engaged in operations and that therefore there was no breach of the Geneva Convention.'

The Argentine Captain of the Belgrano also said

“ It was an act of war. The acts of those who are at war, like the submarine’s attack, are not a crime … The crime is the war. We were on the front line and suffered the consequences. On April 30, we were authorised to open fire, and if the submarine had surfaced in front of me I would have opened fire with all our 15 guns until it sank.”

It was heading back to Argentina fact, yes Thatcher authorised it

I suppose you'll try and convince us that sinking the Bismarck in WW2 was a war crime, as that was damaged and attempting to make a safe port when it was sunk - despite it having Sunk HMS Hood.

The fact is that The Belgrano was part of the invasion / attacking Argentine forces.

Differences between Thatcher and Blair

1. She had backbone and integrity.

2. She didn't send our troops to attack or invade another country, she sent them to defend British sovereign territory.

3. Blair would have simply handed the Falklands over to the Argentines.

4. Maggie was one of the greatest (if not THE greatest) Prime Ministers this country has EVER had. Blair was just a Weasel."

Obviously never lived or tried to work under good old Maggie then

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

Snakes are invertebrates - & lack on the integrity side of things too!!!

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"a. I hope there is a trial, just so it does clear up what happened.

b. I hope they find Blair quilty.

c. I hope it carries the death penalty for the cunt.

d. If that penalty can be carried to that disgusting wife of his, all the better.

"

Beautifully succinct.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

And to poster who thinks the West's forcing regime change in Syria through massive violence is a good thing. Really?

Working out well ain't it?

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"Obviously never lived or tried to work under good old Maggie then "

That's quite an assumption you're making.

I remember Thatchers Britain perfectly well, thank you. It was her government that cleared up the economic mess left behind by Harold Wilson & James Callaghan's Labour government, much as Cameron and Osbourne are doing now.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

How about usa that did the 9/11 twin towers to justify war? no clue how an government can destroy their own people, its so obvious it was an inside job.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"

Aw, don't see the point of them then.

Symbolic.

"

But useless.

Don't know what all the fuss was about then whether Bush could go to Canada or not because he might get arrested.

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By *icefellatwoMan  over a year ago

hastings


"Obviously never lived or tried to work under good old Maggie then

That's quite an assumption you're making.

I remember Thatchers Britain perfectly well, thank you. It was her government that cleared up the economic mess left behind by Harold Wilson & James Callaghan's Labour government, much as Cameron and Osbourne are doing now."

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By *isandreTV/TS  over a year ago

Durham


"

Differences between Thatcher and Blair

1. She had backbone and integrity.

2. She didn't send our troops to attack or invade another country, she sent them to defend British sovereign territory.

3. Blair would have simply handed the Falklands over to the Argentines.

4. Maggie was one of the greatest (if not THE greatest) Prime Ministers this country has EVER had. Blair was just a Weasel."

Point 4 I couldn't disagree with more but I won't argue with it here.

Point 3. I suspect not. What he'd have done, unlike Mrs Thatcher, is listen to the Ministers in Callaghans previous government who, when faced with an identical problem, sent a nuclear sub down and warned Argentina that any attempted invasion would be met with force and repercussions. Mrs Thatcher was even warned by her own junior Foreign Office Minister Richard Luce, in advance. What she did was ignore all this. In fact she sent an even bigger signal we didn't care about the islands by deciding to scrap HMS Endurance, our only remaining naval presence in the region! Arrogance or massive incompetence, it's one or the other and she should have resigned after the war on this point alone if she did indeed have integrity, just as Carrington and Luce did? She could have avoided the war.

Regarding point 1, I would say she had backbone, but not much integrity. She supported General Pinochet and the South African Apartheid regime.

What you must remember is that Blair was instrumental in the UN intervention in Kosovo and this was also potentially illegal at the time. It was a fine thing he did. It was not something Mrs Thatcher would ever have done.

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By *luezuluMan  over a year ago

Suffolk


"

Same could be said of Maggie Thatcher, when she sunk the Belgrano, but hey shes from a different political party

There are many things I would like to have seen Thatcher prosecuted for, but the Belgrano wasn't actually a War Crime.

The Red Cross ruled that 'the vessel, though outside the TEZ, was within the security zone of British ships in the area; was fully armed and engaged in operations and that therefore there was no breach of the Geneva Convention.'

The Argentine Captain of the Belgrano also said

“ It was an act of war. The acts of those who are at war, like the submarine’s attack, are not a crime … The crime is the war. We were on the front line and suffered the consequences. On April 30, we were authorised to open fire, and if the submarine had surfaced in front of me I would have opened fire with all our 15 guns until it sank.”

It was heading back to Argentina fact, yes Thatcher authorised it

I suppose you'll try and convince us that sinking the Bismarck in WW2 was a war crime, as that was damaged and attempting to make a safe port when it was sunk - despite it having Sunk HMS Hood.

The fact is that The Belgrano was part of the invasion / attacking Argentine forces.

Differences between Thatcher and Blair

1. She had backbone and integrity.

2. She didn't send our troops to attack or invade another country, she sent them to defend British sovereign territory.

3. Blair would have simply handed the Falklands over to the Argentines.

4. Maggie was one of the greatest (if not THE greatest) Prime Ministers this country has EVER had. Blair was just a Weasel."

Closely followed by Sir Winston Churchill

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"

Differences between Thatcher and Blair

1. She had backbone and integrity.

2. She didn't send our troops to attack or invade another country, she sent them to defend British sovereign territory.

3. Blair would have simply handed the Falklands over to the Argentines.

4. Maggie was one of the greatest (if not THE greatest) Prime Ministers this country has EVER had. Blair was just a Weasel.

Point 4 I couldn't disagree with more but I won't argue with it here.

Point 3. I suspect not. What he'd have done, unlike Mrs Thatcher, is listen to the Ministers in Callaghans previous government who, when faced with an identical problem, sent a nuclear sub down and warned Argentina that any attempted invasion would be met with force and repercussions. Mrs Thatcher was even warned by her own junior Foreign Office Minister Richard Luce, in advance. What she did was ignore all this. In fact she sent an even bigger signal we didn't care about the islands by deciding to scrap HMS Endurance, our only remaining naval presence in the region! Arrogance or massive incompetence, it's one or the other and she should have resigned after the war on this point alone if she did indeed have integrity, just as Carrington and Luce did? She could have avoided the war.

Regarding point 1, I would say she had backbone, but not much integrity. She supported General Pinochet and the South African Apartheid regime.

What you must remember is that Blair was instrumental in the UN intervention in Kosovo and this was also potentially illegal at the time. It was a fine thing he did. It was not something Mrs Thatcher would ever have done. "

Two words

Northern Ireland

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"

Same could be said of Maggie Thatcher, when she sunk the Belgrano, but hey shes from a different political party

There are many things I would like to have seen Thatcher prosecuted for, but the Belgrano wasn't actually a War Crime.

The Red Cross ruled that 'the vessel, though outside the TEZ, was within the security zone of British ships in the area; was fully armed and engaged in operations and that therefore there was no breach of the Geneva Convention.'

The Argentine Captain of the Belgrano also said

“ It was an act of war. The acts of those who are at war, like the submarine’s attack, are not a crime … The crime is the war. We were on the front line and suffered the consequences. On April 30, we were authorised to open fire, and if the submarine had surfaced in front of me I would have opened fire with all our 15 guns until it sank.”

It was heading back to Argentina fact, yes Thatcher authorised it

I suppose you'll try and convince us that sinking the Bismarck in WW2 was a war crime, as that was damaged and attempting to make a safe port when it was sunk - despite it having Sunk HMS Hood.

The fact is that The Belgrano was part of the invasion / attacking Argentine forces.

Differences between Thatcher and Blair

1. She had backbone and integrity.

2. She didn't send our troops to attack or invade another country, she sent them to defend British sovereign territory.

3. Blair would have simply handed the Falklands over to the Argentines.

4. Maggie was one of the greatest (if not THE greatest) Prime Ministers this country has EVER had. Blair was just a Weasel.

Closely followed by Sir Winston Churchill"

Who was voted straight out of power once the war was over, he was lucky to even be a politician. Galipoli

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

Around the time of the 1997 election, i stated to many friends that Tony Blair would be the worst Prime Minister the UK had ever had. Obviously i hadn't then fcatored in that twat of a Gordon Brown.

As they say, the proof of the pudding.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

I like tony blair, nice guy

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"I like tony blair, nice guy "

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By *icefellatwoMan  over a year ago

hastings

DONATIONS

A driver was stuck in a traffic jam on the M25.

Nothing was moving (quelle surprise !)

Suddenly, a man knocks on the window.

The driver rolls down the window and asks, "What's going on?"

"Terrorists have kidnapped all of our MP's during a sitting of Parliament, and they're asking for a £100 million ransom. Otherwise, they are going to douse them all in petrol and set them on fire.

We are going from car to car collecting donations."

"How much is everyone giving, on average?" the driver asks.

The man replies, "Roughly four litres."

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"Obviously never lived or tried to work under good old Maggie then

That's quite an assumption you're making.

I remember Thatchers Britain perfectly well, thank you. It was her government that cleared up the economic mess left behind by Harold Wilson & James Callaghan's Labour government, much as Cameron and Osbourne are doing now."

Oh, so it wasn't the banks after all, - silly me!!!

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

Tony Blair was a bloody good prime minister! He took us into a war with Iraq on the say so of his advisors. As a prime minister you have to do your job (protect the country) as you see fit. It's easy to look back in hindsight and nitpick. Our country was at risk of a terrorist attack after 9/11 and Blair would have been damned either way! It would be a sad day to see Tony Blair taken to court!

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"I cant stand Blair but we could not stand back and let Saddam continue to murder and eventually take the middle east to war "

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"Tony Blair was a bloody good prime minister! He took us into a war with Iraq on the say so of his advisors. As a prime minister you have to do your job (protect the country) as you see fit. It's easy to look back in hindsight and nitpick. Our country was at risk of a terrorist attack after 9/11 and Blair would have been damned either way! It would be a sad day to see Tony Blair taken to court!"

Shame he didn't listen to Hans Blix or Dr David Kelly (R.I.P)

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By *isandreTV/TS  over a year ago

Durham


"Tony Blair was a bloody good prime minister! He took us into a war with Iraq on the say so of his advisors. As a prime minister you have to do your job (protect the country) as you see fit. It's easy to look back in hindsight and nitpick. Our country was at risk of a terrorist attack after 9/11 and Blair would have been damned either way! It would be a sad day to see Tony Blair taken to court!"

The point is that we weren't at risk of a terrorist attack. If this was known, or should have been known, and just used as another excuse for the real reason, such as a personal commitment to the Bush Administration which were in turn only interested in economic or other dubious reasons then a crime might have been committed.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"I cant stand Blair but we could not stand back and let Saddam continue to murder and eventually take the middle east to war

"

Saddam was never "taking the Mid East to war". The one time he did, in the early 80's he was encouraged to do so, and heavily armed by the West.

Just as the West armed and trained the Mujahadeen (sp?) aainst the Russians.

Just as the West armed and trained the Syrian terrorists, oops, rebels against Assad.

See a pattern here?

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By *icefellatwoMan  over a year ago

hastings


"I cant stand Blair but we could not stand back and let Saddam continue to murder and eventually take the middle east to war

Saddam was never "taking the Mid East to war". The one time he did, in the early 80's he was encouraged to do so, and heavily armed by the West.

Just as the West armed and trained the Mujahadeen (sp?) aainst the Russians.

Just as the West armed and trained the Syrian terrorists, oops, rebels against Assad.

See a pattern here?

"

Yes you start most of your sentences with JUST

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"Tony Blair was a bloody good prime minister! He took us into a war with Iraq on the say so of his advisors. As a prime minister you have to do your job (protect the country) as you see fit. It's easy to look back in hindsight and nitpick. Our country was at risk of a terrorist attack after 9/11 and Blair would have been damned either way! It would be a sad day to see Tony Blair taken to court!"

Blair gave massive ground to terrorists in Ireland yet created a major problem for us by getting us involved with American action against Iraq: we are much more at risk from terrorist activity since 9/11 than before it.

Plus 9/11 had nothing to do with Iraq!

We were dragged into a war under the false premise that Iraq had WMDs. They didn't. The war was against UN resolutions and was ultimately an illegal war.

He and Bush should be answerable for their actions: sadly they won't be

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By *luezuluMan  over a year ago

Suffolk


"

Same could be said of Maggie Thatcher, when she sunk the Belgrano, but hey shes from a different political party

There are many things I would like to have seen Thatcher prosecuted for, but the Belgrano wasn't actually a War Crime.

The Red Cross ruled that 'the vessel, though outside the TEZ, was within the security zone of British ships in the area; was fully armed and engaged in operations and that therefore there was no breach of the Geneva Convention.'

The Argentine Captain of the Belgrano also said

“ It was an act of war. The acts of those who are at war, like the submarine’s attack, are not a crime … The crime is the war. We were on the front line and suffered the consequences. On April 30, we were authorised to open fire, and if the submarine had surfaced in front of me I would have opened fire with all our 15 guns until it sank.”

It was heading back to Argentina fact, yes Thatcher authorised it

I suppose you'll try and convince us that sinking the Bismarck in WW2 was a war crime, as that was damaged and attempting to make a safe port when it was sunk - despite it having Sunk HMS Hood.

The fact is that The Belgrano was part of the invasion / attacking Argentine forces.

Differences between Thatcher and Blair

1. She had backbone and integrity.

2. She didn't send our troops to attack or invade another country, she sent them to defend British sovereign territory.

3. Blair would have simply handed the Falklands over to the Argentines.

4. Maggie was one of the greatest (if not THE greatest) Prime Ministers this country has EVER had. Blair was just a Weasel.

Closely followed by Sir Winston Churchill

Who was voted straight out of power once the war was over, he was lucky to even be a politician. Galipoli "

And voted back in, in 1951

And in 2002 was voted the greatest Briton ever

Tony Fucking Blair aint fit to be mentioned along side Sir Winston Churchill

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

Who can say what would have happened had US and UK not invaded Iraq. The weapons The UK and US sold Iraq during the Iraq vs Iran conflict gave them cause to be concerned under a Thatcher government. Also I remember something about UK selling arms to Iraq or Iran during the first gulf war, the supergun scandal. Should Thatcher have been put on trial???

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

Well I'm happy to be unpopular. Blair was the best primeminister for a very long time. The reason to go to war...largely irrelevant..the west including china comsume massive amounts of oil. Power..money..oil are at the heart of us being in the middle east. Many middle eastern countires are so corrupt. .we moan about our own...really..really..come on... want to be locked in a Saudi prison...or stoned to death in iran...or live under the taleban where radio..tv would be out lawed. Oil..money..and for humanistic reasons we are at war...like it or not...and we will be meddling for years to come...we have to. Are you going to give up your 5 series bmw...flat screen...ipad....warm house..naaa...think not...so..cynics..shut up...be real...as the news today proves...at what ever aspect you look at it...the war..is on.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"I cant stand Blair but we could not stand back and let Saddam continue to murder and eventually take the middle east to war

Apart from whether there were weapons of mass destruction in Iraq or not the war for regime change was illegal under international law. The Attorney General told Blair that.

Exactly. I cannot understand why the opposition parties are not making more of all this rather tjan protecting Blair. .

Because there is no opposition. No right or left, no ideologies left except... Money!.

Cameron went to school and university with most of the labour party members, they go to each others Christmas parties and weddings and christenings!.

It's a fucking charade for the people so you can go about your life's thinking you have democracy and choice!, so you can think your little opinion has some value to events in life, it's why people like to say "I was there" at some massive world wide event, so they can think there existence had some sort of influence... It doesn't

Live with it, or don't, that choice is yours!"

You hit the nail on the head with that comment.

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By *teveanddebsCouple  over a year ago

Norwich


"a. I hope there is a trial, just so it does clear up what happened.

b. I hope they find Blair quilty.

c. I hope it carries the death penalty for the cunt.

d. If that penalty can be carried to that disgusting wife of his, all the better.

You do know you can be prosecuted for defamatory remarks on the net "

I think 'truth' is a good defence though

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By *isandreTV/TS  over a year ago

Durham

Well, public pressure was responsible for at least getting the Chilcot Inquiry, so I wouldn't write democracy off completely just yet.

The Labour Government tried to brush it under the carpet with the earlier limited inquiries but Cameron acceeded to Chilcot and even widened the brief.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

Thanks...like to see how many swinging sites there are in iran..saudi...etc....and people seek Blairs head...god...thats a joke...a big fucking joke...!

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

Love it if Chereie was chosen to prosecute

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By *isandreTV/TS  over a year ago

Durham


"Well I'm happy to be unpopular. Blair was the best primeminister for a very long time. The reason to go to war...largely irrelevant..the west including china comsume massive amounts of oil. Power..money..oil are at the heart of us being in the middle east. Many middle eastern countires are so corrupt. .we moan about our own...really..really..come on... want to be locked in a Saudi prison...or stoned to death in iran...or live under the taleban where radio..tv would be out lawed. Oil..money..and for humanistic reasons we are at war...like it or not...and we will be meddling for years to come...we have to. Are you going to give up your 5 series bmw...flat screen...ipad....warm house..naaa...think not...so..cynics..shut up...be real...as the news today proves...at what ever aspect you look at it...the war..is on. "

The reason to go to war is largely irrelevant? You think it has either had no effect or a positive effect on our standing and relations in the middle east?

Of course the main question is whether we needed to go to war in the first place. You need to know the real reasons to decide that.

And of course if it was all a fuck up, which it was, then you need to know the truth, learn lessons and taking steps such as prosecuting the fuckers who did it if applicable, to stop it happening again.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"It is now being said that Blair may face a war crimes tribunal as a result of the Iraq war. My opinion is that this would be a good thing, to find out if he and Bush took us into an illegal war. Do you think a trail is the most appropriate course of action now? "

It is now being said that Blair may face a war crimes tribunal as a result of the Iraq war --- where?

who said it, when was it said and where was it said

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"Well I'm happy to be unpopular. Blair was the best primeminister for a very long time. The reason to go to war...largely irrelevant..the west including china comsume massive amounts of oil. Power..money..oil are at the heart of us being in the middle east. Many middle eastern countires are so corrupt. .we moan about our own...really..really..come on... want to be locked in a Saudi prison...or stoned to death in iran...or live under the taleban where radio..tv would be out lawed. Oil..money..and for humanistic reasons we are at war...like it or not...and we will be meddling for years to come...we have to. Are you going to give up your 5 series bmw...flat screen...ipad....warm house..naaa...think not...so..cynics..shut up...be real...as the news today proves...at what ever aspect you look at it...the war..is on. "

Yeah, shut up all you cynics & never question our 'oh so straight' politicians ........... just agree with them, bend over & apply liberally ..................especially if your under 16........... not that any politicians are peodos, though, - just stop being so cynical!!

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By *isandreTV/TS  over a year ago

Durham


"Thanks...like to see how many swinging sites there are in iran..saudi...etc....and people seek Blairs head...god...thats a joke...a big fucking joke...! "

I'm trying to follow that line of argument.

Are you saying WMD was a smokescreen not for regime change for strategic and economic reasons but to protect our right to swing.

Or are you saying that all countries without a liberal swinging culture, particularly muslim ones, should be bombed until they do?

I'm not sure where I stand on this as I do like a nice middle eastern guy.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"Thanks...like to see how many swinging sites there are in iran..saudi...etc....and people seek Blairs head...god...thats a joke...a big fucking joke...! "

Happy to leave you to his arse and cock.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"Thanks...like to see how many swinging sites there are in iran..saudi...etc....and people seek Blairs head...god...thats a joke...a big fucking joke...!

Happy to leave you to his arse and cock. "

And he might just find Blair in a public toilet..maybe not as he keep's away from them now.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

Not worth of reply..

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"Tony Blair was a bloody good prime minister! He took us into a war with Iraq on the say so of his advisors. As a prime minister you have to do your job (protect the country) as you see fit. It's easy to look back in hindsight and nitpick. Our country was at risk of a terrorist attack after 9/11 and Blair would have been damned either way! It would be a sad day to see Tony Blair taken to court!

Shame he didn't listen to Hans Blix or Dr David Kelly (R.I.P)"

But he did listen to Dr Kelly... and he died for speaking up. Yet more blood on his hands.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"Thanks...like to see how many swinging sites there are in iran..saudi...etc....and people seek Blairs head...god...thats a joke...a big fucking joke...! "

Is he notorious for giving head in the middle east?

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"Thanks...like to see how many swinging sites there are in iran..saudi...etc....and people seek Blairs head...god...thats a joke...a big fucking joke...!

Is he notorious for giving head in the middle east? "

Isn't it Kazahkstan or thereabouts paying him £15m a year for his special talents?

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By *kin BohnerMan  over a year ago

derby


"It is now being said that Blair may face a war crimes tribunal as a result of the Iraq war. My opinion is that this would be a good thing, to find out if he and Bush took us into an illegal war. Do you think a trail is the most appropriate course of action now? "

Should have happened years ago with Bush in the doc beside him.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"

Same could be said of Maggie Thatcher, when she sunk the Belgrano, but hey shes from a different political party

There are many things I would like to have seen Thatcher prosecuted for, but the Belgrano wasn't actually a War Crime.

The Red Cross ruled that 'the vessel, though outside the TEZ, was within the security zone of British ships in the area; was fully armed and engaged in operations and that therefore there was no breach of the Geneva Convention.'

The Argentine Captain of the Belgrano also said

“ It was an act of war. The acts of those who are at war, like the submarine’s attack, are not a crime … The crime is the war. We were on the front line and suffered the consequences. On April 30, we were authorised to open fire, and if the submarine had surfaced in front of me I would have opened fire with all our 15 guns until it sank.”

It was heading back to Argentina fact, yes Thatcher authorised it

I suppose you'll try and convince us that sinking the Bismarck in WW2 was a war crime, as that was damaged and attempting to make a safe port when it was sunk - despite it having Sunk HMS Hood.

The fact is that The Belgrano was part of the invasion / attacking Argentine forces.

Differences between Thatcher and Blair

1. She had backbone and integrity.

2. She didn't send our troops to attack or invade another country, she sent them to defend British sovereign territory.

3. Blair would have simply handed the Falklands over to the Argentines.

4. Maggie was one of the greatest (if not THE greatest) Prime Ministers this country has EVER had. Blair was just a Weasel."

Totally agree but imo none of the above is going to help us now. With all the terrorist attacks that are on the increase I think the money would be far better spent on trying to sort that out.

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By *kin BohnerMan  over a year ago

derby

He took us into the gulf war on the back of a lie and doctored reports, he was advised not to do it yet his ego got in the way. There never was any WMD in Iraq and Bliar has the blood of thousands on his hands.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

What about Brown he carried it on, what about Cameron they are still coming back with no legs or worse parents having to standby there graves. We are up Americas arse, why are we building more nuclear power stations in Britain, there nuclear breeders for there missiles. BBC news! Hitler would have loved such a tool a box designed to fool.

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By *inaTitzTV/TS  over a year ago

Titz Towers, North Notts

I don't suppose Blair was a Muslim was he?

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"What about Brown he carried it on, what about Cameron they are still coming back with no legs or worse parents having to standby there graves. We are up Americas arse, why are we building more nuclear power stations in Britain, there nuclear breeders for there missiles. BBC news! Hitler would have loved such a tool a box designed to fool. "

When did the last nuclear missile fire or was it something I missed on the BBC news?????????

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"I don't suppose Blair was a Muslim was he? "

Nah, dont you remember he has such strong convictions in his chosen faith, that he waited until he was no longer Prime Minister to openly adopt Catholicism.

The man is a cunt

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"Tony Blair was a bloody good prime minister! He took us into a war with Iraq on the say so of his advisors. As a prime minister you have to do your job (protect the country) as you see fit. It's easy to look back in hindsight and nitpick. Our country was at risk of a terrorist attack after 9/11 and Blair would have been damned either way! It would be a sad day to see Tony Blair taken to court!

Shame he didn't listen to Hans Blix or Dr David Kelly (R.I.P)"

Yes people are to fast to forget about Dr Kelly and his extremely strange death

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"It is now being said that Blair may face a war crimes tribunal as a result of the Iraq war. My opinion is that this would be a good thing, to find out if he and Bush took us into an illegal war. Do you think a trail is the most appropriate course of action now? "
Absolutely he should, the world is a more dangerous place as a result of Blair pandering to Bush's wishes to fight his father war! At a fraction of the cost, in both loss of life and expenditure, Saddam Hussein could have been paid off and brought back in to line.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

No doubt if he was still in power today we'd see light tanks deployed on the streets of Britain his morning , just to ramp up the fear factor...wretched wretched man.

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By *illwill69uMan  over a year ago

moston

Bush and Blair may have lied to the Americans and this country to justify their actions, but that is not a crime, if it were every politician that has ever gained power would be a criminal. The fact is that GW2 was legal.

However I would say that GW2 was an error. Removing Sadam, like removing Gaddafi was a mistake, and to be honest backing those trying to remove Assad in Syria is also a mistake. Although all 3 are or were disgusting tyrants they provided strong stable governments in an area of the world that is infamous for instability and violence. I for one would rather close my eyes, hold my nose and let Arab hard men continue their reigns of terror if in doing so they act as a shield and buffer against the religious violence that many in the middle east would unleash against the rest of the world.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

How about Bush Senior and John Major being tried for stopping the first war so that Saddam could use his forces to brutally put down a civil insurrection that Bush and Major feared may be communist led?

IF the "intel" fed to parliament that got Blair a majority yes to war vote was written by Blair and Bush then they are war criminals, and should be tried as such.

If it was a decision made on the information given which parliament backed then they are not criminals. Perhaps someone in MI5, 6 or whatever is... got a feeling that is a dead end.

Not liking someone is not grounds for making them a criminal.

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By *isandreTV/TS  over a year ago

Durham


"The fact is that GW2 was legal.

"

You can only be basing that on one of two things.

1.The opinion of a minority of lawyers, mainly the Bush Administrations own lawyers.

The vast majority of experts in International Law believe they are wrong. Even the US State Department Lawyers and the UK Foreign Office Lawyers, who ARE experts advised the War was probably illegal.

The Bush Admin lawyers are not experts in International Law. They were Bush appointees and it does seem they were appointed to find some sort of legal justification for having the war. The war was a long considered desirable strategy aim of a certain section of the Republican Party, (Cheney etc.) who wrote a paper long before coming to power called the Project For The New American Century. In it they proposed securing both a strategic military powerbase in the middle east as well as securing considerable oil reserves, the basis on which the American Economy relies, in the face of increasing economic and military threats from Russia and China. The suggested ideal country in the paper was, surprise, surprise, Iraq.

2. The fact that there hasn't been a prosecution yet.

Well it is difficult to force the worlds only superpower, that spends orders of magnitude on its military more than the rest of the world put together, to give up it's President. The will for that would have to come from within the US itself and it is never going to be possible in such a country with the strength of the Republican Right.

We are the best hope of testing the legality of the war by putting Blair on trial and as has been pointed out on here, there are many tricky hoops to negotiate. So far, it has been slow but they have gradually been negotiated.

As for Gulf War One, that was legal. They had a UN mandate but it only authorised expelling Iraqi forces from Kuwait and ensuring Kuwaits security. That was why Bush senior (an intelligent man unlike his completely out of his depth son) had to stop short of deposing Saddam and regrettably the civil uprisings in Iraq were then left high and dry to be massacred by Saddam.

It is quite amazing that the Bush lawyers have actually tried to use the GW1 resolution as part justification for GW2. If the resolution wasn't considered authorisation for removing Saddam in GW1, how could that possibly stand up for GW2?

Only if you really really want it to is the answer.

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By *illwill69uMan  over a year ago

moston


"The fact is that GW2 was legal.

You can only be basing that on one of two things.

1.The opinion of a minority of lawyers, mainly the Bush Administrations own lawyers.

The vast majority of experts in International Law believe they are wrong. Even the US State Department Lawyers and the UK Foreign Office Lawyers, who ARE experts advised the War was probably illegal.

The Bush Admin lawyers are not experts in International Law. They were Bush appointees and it does seem they were appointed to find some sort of legal justification for having the war. The war was a long considered desirable strategy aim of a certain section of the Republican Party, (Cheney etc.) who wrote a paper long before coming to power called the Project For The New American Century. In it they proposed securing both a strategic military powerbase in the middle east as well as securing considerable oil reserves, the basis on which the American Economy relies, in the face of increasing economic and military threats from Russia and China. The suggested ideal country in the paper was, surprise, surprise, Iraq.

2. The fact that there hasn't been a prosecution yet.

Well it is difficult to force the worlds only superpower, that spends orders of magnitude on its military more than the rest of the world put together, to give up it's President. The will for that would have to come from within the US itself and it is never going to be possible in such a country with the strength of the Republican Right.

We are the best hope of testing the legality of the war by putting Blair on trial and as has been pointed out on here, there are many tricky hoops to negotiate. So far, it has been slow but they have gradually been negotiated.

As for Gulf War One, that was legal. They had a UN mandate but it only authorised expelling Iraqi forces from Kuwait and ensuring Kuwaits security. That was why Bush senior (an intelligent man unlike his completely out of his depth son) had to stop short of deposing Saddam and regrettably the civil uprisings in Iraq were then left high and dry to be massacred by Saddam.

It is quite amazing that the Bush lawyers have actually tried to use the GW1 resolution as part justification for GW2. If the resolution wasn't considered authorisation for removing Saddam in GW1, how could that possibly stand up for GW2?

Only if you really really want it to is the answer. "

Thanks for such a good reply to one of my comments, it is a pleasure to read a well thought out reply.

I fully accept everything you say about US right wing Republican doctrine. The self same quarter of the US political establishment planned to go to war with us by invading Canada in the mid to late 30's and have a habit of picking the wrong wars and wrong sides in those wars.

However the reason I say the war was legal is because Saddam had many opportunities to fully open his country to the UN weapons inspectors but spent 10 years playing silly games pretending to have things it is now obvious he no longer had. I fully accept that there will have been many Psywar analysts and specialists manipulating the political situation round the world and that Saddam was probably backed into a war he never wanted by US skulduggery, but and it is a big but, he always had a way out. He choose not to take it. He choose to ignore the ultimatums that were delivered, therefore he must bare the blame for starting the war.

Further both the US Congress and our House of Commons voted overwhelmingly for war (in our case by over 2 to 1 if I remember correctly) therefore if the war was illegal then every member of parliament who voted for war is as equally guilty as Blair and (again if my memory serves correctly) includes Call me Dave and all the then Tory MP's who supported the Government against a Labour parliamentary revolt.

I do not think it is a war we should have fought, but I do believe it was a legal war in so far as any aggressive war can be legal.

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By *isandreTV/TS  over a year ago

Durham

But with regard to the Parliamentary Vote on the war, the MP's were not party to the intelligence information.

They had to take the situation as the Prime Minister described it. They were not privy to the joint intelligence committee detailed briefings for reasons of national security.

They were reliant on the summation of these reports by Blair and his inner circle. It is important to remember that not even the full cabinet were privy to this information. The inner circle were Blair, Foreign Minister Straw, Defence Minister Hoon, Attorney General Goldsmith and Alistair Campbell.

It doesn't even look as if Gordon Brown or Prescott were that privy to much of the info. Brown had to be involved eventually because as Chancellor he had to come up with the funding for the proposed war but at this point he and Blair had a very frosty relationship and Blair did not take him into detailed confidences.

Hoon was almost as rabidly for the war as any Republican.

Straw initially was not. As a lawyer, experienced politician and Foreign Minister he was aware of the opinion of the expert foreign office civil servants and lawyers on the legality of the war which was that they did not have a mandate to invade,based on the existing UN resolutions and that therefore the War would have been illegal. This was why we pushed the UN so hard for a further UN resolution - remember Colin Powell and his special pleading and dossier.

Goldsmith is an interesting one. His original advice was in accordance with the F.O. _iew on the matter. He was then sent to Washington to discuss it with the attorneys in the Bush Administration, not the US State Department legal experts in international law, but the likes of Gonzales and Ashcroft who were appointed by Bush to give the legal advice or find a legal excuse to justify a long planned action. It seems.

Goldsmith returned and, presumably as a result of the Americans 'persuasion', changed his advice. The Foreign Office were appalled and Elizabeth Wilmshurst, the second most senior FO legal advisors resigned in protest. Sir Michael Wood, the most senior advisor considered doing so also, but they both couldn't go. Every single other FO lawyer disagreed with the AG.

Straw however, under pressure from Blair and the US, with the new AG advice was prepared to go along with the war.

Now, the next important thing to consider is the legal advice that was presented to Parliament prior to the vote. The full legal advice, which had considerable qualifications, was not presented to parliament prior to the vote. Instead parliament got a 'summary'.

So you had parliament given a summary of the J-I-C intelligence reports and a summary of the legal advice.

That is Tony Blair and Alistair Campbell summarising? Anyone think it might just have been spun.

The legal advice was qualified. It was wrong any way but it was qualified. The intelligence dossiers were sexed up.

Parliament, when it voted couldn't know that. They could not assume Blair was lying to Parliament, they had to accept his word. At that point we all still trusted Blair. He had in fact been a great statement over Kosovo, Northern Ireland, 9-11 etc.

On that basis only Parliament voted. Even then the lib dems and around 100 labour MP's voted against the war. No Tories did but I am sure many would had they been presented the full advice and intelligence reports and many more labour MP's and the War wouldn't have happened.

Remember Robin Cook, resigned from the Cabinet. Clare Short was going to until Cook persuaded her to stay and fight it from the inside. Cook was a former FO and a highly experience intelligent man and hugely respected in the Middle East. He should have been part of Blairs inner circle when debating something as momentous as a war in the middle east. It is very telling that he was actively excluded. Blair, like Bush, had made up his mind and only wanted yes men around him.

I personally think the reasons we went to war and the US did are very different. I think Blair was duped into it in a way. I'm certain Parliament were.

The MP's said at the time if the PM stands in front of Parliament and says there is compelling evidence that this country was in danger of an imminent terrorist threat by Saddam and that the legal situation was that the war was legitimate then they had to accept that as the situation and it was under these conditions only that the yes vote can be considered authorisation.

Since these conditions were not actually the case I don't think it can be said that Blair took us to worth with the consent of Parliament or the people. We were all fucking duped.

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By *illwill69uMan  over a year ago

moston


"But with regard to the Parliamentary Vote on the war, the MP's were not party to the intelligence information.

They had to take the situation as the Prime Minister described it. They were not privy to the joint intelligence committee detailed briefings for reasons of national security.

They were reliant on the summation of these reports by Blair and his inner circle. It is important to remember that not even the full cabinet were privy to this information. The inner circle were Blair, Foreign Minister Straw, Defence Minister Hoon, Attorney General Goldsmith and Alistair Campbell.

It doesn't even look as if Gordon Brown or Prescott were that privy to much of the info. Brown had to be involved eventually because as Chancellor he had to come up with the funding for the proposed war but at this point he and Blair had a very frosty relationship and Blair did not take him into detailed confidences.

Hoon was almost as rabidly for the war as any Republican.

Straw initially was not. As a lawyer, experienced politician and Foreign Minister he was aware of the opinion of the expert foreign office civil servants and lawyers on the legality of the war which was that they did not have a mandate to invade,based on the existing UN resolutions and that therefore the War would have been illegal. This was why we pushed the UN so hard for a further UN resolution - remember Colin Powell and his special pleading and dossier.

Goldsmith is an interesting one. His original advice was in accordance with the F.O. _iew on the matter. He was then sent to Washington to discuss it with the attorneys in the Bush Administration, not the US State Department legal experts in international law, but the likes of Gonzales and Ashcroft who were appointed by Bush to give the legal advice or find a legal excuse to justify a long planned action. It seems.

Goldsmith returned and, presumably as a result of the Americans 'persuasion', changed his advice. The Foreign Office were appalled and Elizabeth Wilmshurst, the second most senior FO legal advisors resigned in protest. Sir Michael Wood, the most senior advisor considered doing so also, but they both couldn't go. Every single other FO lawyer disagreed with the AG.

Straw however, under pressure from Blair and the US, with the new AG advice was prepared to go along with the war.

Now, the next important thing to consider is the legal advice that was presented to Parliament prior to the vote. The full legal advice, which had considerable qualifications, was not presented to parliament prior to the vote. Instead parliament got a 'summary'.

So you had parliament given a summary of the J-I-C intelligence reports and a summary of the legal advice.

That is Tony Blair and Alistair Campbell summarising? Anyone think it might just have been spun.

The legal advice was qualified. It was wrong any way but it was qualified. The intelligence dossiers were sexed up.

Parliament, when it voted couldn't know that. They could not assume Blair was lying to Parliament, they had to accept his word. At that point we all still trusted Blair. He had in fact been a great statement over Kosovo, Northern Ireland, 9-11 etc.

On that basis only Parliament voted. Even then the lib dems and around 100 labour MP's voted against the war. No Tories did but I am sure many would had they been presented the full advice and intelligence reports and many more labour MP's and the War wouldn't have happened.

Remember Robin Cook, resigned from the Cabinet. Clare Short was going to until Cook persuaded her to stay and fight it from the inside. Cook was a former FO and a highly experience intelligent man and hugely respected in the Middle East. He should have been part of Blairs inner circle when debating something as momentous as a war in the middle east. It is very telling that he was actively excluded. Blair, like Bush, had made up his mind and only wanted yes men around him.

I personally think the reasons we went to war and the US did are very different. I think Blair was duped into it in a way. I'm certain Parliament were.

The MP's said at the time if the PM stands in front of Parliament and says there is compelling evidence that this country was in danger of an imminent terrorist threat by Saddam and that the legal situation was that the war was legitimate then they had to accept that as the situation and it was under these conditions only that the yes vote can be considered authorisation.

Since these conditions were not actually the case I don't think it can be said that Blair took us to worth with the consent of Parliament or the people. We were all fucking duped. "

I fully agree with most of what you say. Especially the last statement about us being duped. However I fundamentally disagree with your position that parliaments consent can be discounted. The fact is parliament did vote for war and no matter how misled parliament was that is not a matter for any court to question. That is the whole point of parliament being sovereign and until that changes and parliament becomes subservient to another body then parliaments decision is law. We cannot pick and choose which decisions have the weight of sovereignty.

I well remember Blair telling the nation that that we had a very special relationship with the USA and that we "had to pay the blood price" for that relationship. I understand that that is a real reason we went to war with Bush, however I still believe that the war was legal, no matter how dubious the justifications or how questionable the motives.

I do not believe that all things legal are just or correct, and I think GW2 falls into this category.

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By *coutin4girlzMan  over a year ago

Moo-Moo land :-)


"

Same could be said of Maggie Thatcher, when she sunk the Belgrano, but hey shes from a different political party

There are many things I would like to have seen Thatcher prosecuted for, but the Belgrano wasn't actually a War Crime.

The Red Cross ruled that 'the vessel, though outside the TEZ, was within the security zone of British ships in the area; was fully armed and engaged in operations and that therefore there was no breach of the Geneva Convention.'

The Argentine Captain of the Belgrano also said

“ It was an act of war. The acts of those who are at war, like the submarine’s attack, are not a crime … The crime is the war. We were on the front line and suffered the consequences. On April 30, we were authorised to open fire, and if the submarine had surfaced in front of me I would have opened fire with all our 15 guns until it sank.”

It was heading back to Argentina fact, yes Thatcher authorised it

I suppose you'll try and convince us that sinking the Bismarck in WW2 was a war crime, as that was damaged and attempting to make a safe port when it was sunk - despite it having Sunk HMS Hood.

The fact is that The Belgrano was part of the invasion / attacking Argentine forces.

Differences between Thatcher and Blair

1. She had backbone and integrity.

2. She didn't send our troops to attack or invade another country, she sent them to defend British sovereign territory.

3. Blair would have simply handed the Falklands over to the Argentines.

4. Maggie was one of the greatest (if not THE greatest) Prime Ministers this country has EVER had. Blair was just a Weasel.

Closely followed by Sir Winston Churchill"

What the same Winston Churchill that ordered British troops to open fire on un-armed striking Tonypandy miners when he was Home Secretary coz they were asking for a living wage n safer working conditions??? I can see where Maggie n her bunch of sick paedophile croanies got their hatred for the working classes from now lol

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

We also need to be aware of the punishment. ... irrespective of what happens to him, what if the UK has to pay billions and billions in damages, then we are all stuffed.....

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By *kin BohnerMan  over a year ago

derby


"How about Bush Senior and John Major being tried for stopping the first war so that Saddam could use his forces to brutally put down a civil insurrection that Bush and Major feared may be communist led?

IF the "intel" fed to parliament that got Blair a majority yes to war vote was written by Blair and Bush then they are war criminals, and should be tried as such.

If it was a decision made on the information given which parliament backed then they are not criminals. Perhaps someone in MI5, 6 or whatever is... got a feeling that is a dead end.

Not liking someone is not grounds pfor making them a criminal."

The remit of the first gulf war was to drive Iraqi troops out of Quate which they had invaded. If the coalition had gone into Iraq they would have exceeded their legal remit.

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By *entaur_UKMan  over a year ago

Cannock


"It is now being said that Blair may face a war crimes tribunal as a result of the Iraq war. My opinion is that this would be a good thing, to find out if he and Bush took us into an illegal war. Do you think a trail is the most appropriate course of action now? "

Yes i'd like to see him put on trial, the public were lied to and deceived, where are the weapons of mass destruction? I also think there is something very suspicious and dodgy about the death of Dr David Kelly, was he about to blow the whistle on the whole thing and thats why he was murdered?

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By *nleashedCrakenMan  over a year ago

Widnes


"I cant stand Blair but we could not stand back and let Saddam continue to murder and eventually take the middle east to war "

That's what I thought at the time but could it really have ended up much worse than it is now if we had let him continue.

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By *nleashedCrakenMan  over a year ago

Widnes


"Parliament voted for the invasion of Iraq not just Tony Blair!

On the basis of lies and a bogus file of documents! If a person is convicted by a jury on the basis of false evidence then a re-trial is the fair thing wouldn't you say? It doesn't mean the first jury was wrong....just misled. As we all were by this lying scumbag!"

Was it a lie? Did you know that he didn't have WMD? Did anyone know he didn't have WMD. Saddam himself wanted us to believe he had WMD. I don't remember anybody at the time saying he didn't have WMD. Where's the lie?

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By *nleashedCrakenMan  over a year ago

Widnes


"I cant stand Blair but we could not stand back and let Saddam continue to murder and eventually take the middle east to war

Apart from whether there were weapons of mass destruction in Iraq or not the war for regime change was illegal under international law. The Attorney General told Blair that.

Exactly. I cannot understand why the opposition parties are not making more of all this rather tjan protecting Blair. "

Some things go beyond party politics and this is one. Legally it was not Tony Blair or the labour party that took Britain to war, it was the British government. If it turns out that the war was illegal it would be the British government in the dock and the British tax payer, that's you and me, who would have to pay any reparations due. And it would not be a small amount either.

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By *nnyMan  over a year ago

Glasgow


"I cant stand Blair but we could not stand back and let Saddam continue to murder and eventually take the middle east to war

That's what I thought at the time but could it really have ended up much worse than it is now if we had let him continue."

It would have been much worse had Saddam been allowed to stay in power.

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By *nleashedCrakenMan  over a year ago

Widnes


"

Same could be said of Maggie Thatcher, when she sunk the Belgrano, but hey shes from a different political party

There are many things I would like to have seen Thatcher prosecuted for, but the Belgrano wasn't actually a War Crime.

The Red Cross ruled that 'the vessel, though outside the TEZ, was within the security zone of British ships in the area; was fully armed and engaged in operations and that therefore there was no breach of the Geneva Convention.'

The Argentine Captain of the Belgrano also said

“ It was an act of war. The acts of those who are at war, like the submarine’s attack, are not a crime … The crime is the war. We were on the front line and suffered the consequences. On April 30, we were authorised to open fire, and if the submarine had surfaced in front of me I would have opened fire with all our 15 guns until it sank.”

It was heading back to Argentina fact, yes Thatcher authorised it "

The point is not whether she should have done it nor whether it would have been better or worse if she had not authorized it. The point is it was not a war crime.

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By *nleashedCrakenMan  over a year ago

Widnes


"Snakes are invertebrates - & lack on the integrity side of things too!!! "

Actually snakes are reptiles and reptiles are vertebrates.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"It is now being said that Blair may face a war crimes tribunal as a result of the Iraq war. My opinion is that this would be a good thing, to find out if he and Bush took us into an illegal war. Do you think a trail is the most appropriate course of action now? "

Really , you need to think what you wrote, and the 100s list tgere life's out tgere and the 100000s list there life's so people like you can write freely,

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"It is now being said that Blair may face a war crimes tribunal as a result of the Iraq war. My opinion is that this would be a good thing, to find out if he and Bush took us into an illegal war. Do you think a trail is the most appropriate course of action now? "

Really , you need to think what you wrote, and the 100s list tgere life's out tgere and the 100000s list there life's so people like you can write freely,

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

Has a lot of blood on his hands

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"I cant stand Blair but we could not stand back and let Saddam continue to murder and eventually take the middle east to war

That's what I thought at the time but could it really have ended up much worse than it is now if we had let him continue.

It would have been much worse had Saddam been allowed to stay in power."

That's a strange statement, Saddam was put into power with backing from the USA, he was allowed to stay in power after the first gulf war. And many more have died in Iraq since gulf war 2 than died at the hand of Saddam. Plus the region is not exactly stable since the UK and Others armed ISIS against Syria.

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By *nleashedCrakenMan  over a year ago

Widnes


"Tony Blair was a bloody good prime minister! He took us into a war with Iraq on the say so of his advisors. As a prime minister you have to do your job (protect the country) as you see fit. It's easy to look back in hindsight and nitpick. Our country was at risk of a terrorist attack after 9/11 and Blair would have been damned either way! It would be a sad day to see Tony Blair taken to court!

The point is that we weren't at risk of a terrorist attack. "

I think you'll find that in law the situation would not whether we were actually at risk of a terrorist attack but whether the government, not Tony Blair, believed we were at risk of a terrorist attack


"

If this was known, or should have been known, and just used as another excuse for the real reason, such as a personal commitment to the Bush Administration which were in turn only interested in economic or other dubious reasons then a crime might have been committed."

And it would not be Tony Blair who would be held to account if the war was found to be illegal, it would be the British government.

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By *nleashedCrakenMan  over a year ago

Widnes


"Parliament voted for the invasion of Iraq not just Tony Blair!

On the basis of lies and a bogus file of documents! If a person is convicted by a jury on the basis of false evidence then a re-trial is the fair thing wouldn't you say? It doesn't mean the first jury was wrong....just misled. As we all were by this lying scumbag!"

But if a person is found not guilty of an offence he can't be re tried even if new evidence does come to light.

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By *nleashedCrakenMan  over a year ago

Widnes


"I cant stand Blair but we could not stand back and let Saddam continue to murder and eventually take the middle east to war

Saddam was never "taking the Mid East to war". The one time he did, in the early 80's he was encouraged to do so, and heavily armed by the West.

Just as the West armed and trained the Mujahadeen (sp?) aainst the Russians.

Just as the West armed and trained the Syrian terrorists, oops, rebels against Assad.

See a pattern here?

"

So Saddam didn't invade Kuwait in 1990. That never happened?

And I always thought that SCUD missiles and MIG fighter were made in Russia, I never knew they were made here in the west.

How diluded I've been all my life.

Are YOU starting to see a patern here?

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By *vsnikkiTV/TS  over a year ago

Limavady


"I cant stand Blair but we could not stand back and let Saddam continue to murder and eventually take the middle east to war

Saddam was never "taking the Mid East to war". The one time he did, in the early 80's he was encouraged to do so, and heavily armed by the West.

Just as the West armed and trained the Mujahadeen (sp?) aainst the Russians.

Just as the West armed and trained the Syrian terrorists, oops, rebels against Assad.

See a pattern here?

"

Actually Iraq was armed by the USSR. Iran was in possession of Western arms that had been suppled pre revolution to the Shah.

Hence why Iraqi military students were welcome in the UK, to get information re their equipment as well as to influence future Iraqi military thinking

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By *nnyMan  over a year ago

Glasgow


"I cant stand Blair but we could not stand back and let Saddam continue to murder and eventually take the middle east to war

That's what I thought at the time but could it really have ended up much worse than it is now if we had let him continue.

It would have been much worse had Saddam been allowed to stay in power.

That's a strange statement, Saddam was put into power with backing from the USA, he was allowed to stay in power after the first gulf war. And many more have died in Iraq since gulf war 2 than died at the hand of Saddam. Plus the region is not exactly stable since the UK and Others armed ISIS against Syria. "

None of that contradicts my statement that it would have been much worse had Saddam been allowed to stay in power.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"

Same could be said of Maggie Thatcher, when she sunk the Belgrano, but hey shes from a different political party

There are many things I would like to have seen Thatcher prosecuted for, but the Belgrano wasn't actually a War Crime.

The Red Cross ruled that 'the vessel, though outside the TEZ, was within the security zone of British ships in the area; was fully armed and engaged in operations and that therefore there was no breach of the Geneva Convention.'

The Argentine Captain of the Belgrano also said

“ It was an act of war. The acts of those who are at war, like the submarine’s attack, are not a crime … The crime is the war. We were on the front line and suffered the consequences. On April 30, we were authorised to open fire, and if the submarine had surfaced in front of me I would have opened fire with all our 15 guns until it sank.”

It was heading back to Argentina fact, yes Thatcher authorised it "

The Bismark was heading back to Germany when it was sunk. Belgrade was a WARSHIP from a country we were AT WAR with. There is no definition in the world that makes its sinking a war crime! THAT is the only fact that matters.

And yes....of course Bliar is a war criminal.

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By *ukkakewhoreWoman  over a year ago

Dublin

Of course he's a war criminal as is every British Prime Minister involved in any war!! There is no justification for any leader of any nation to go to war be it a Western nation or any other nation. War is wrong and the only people who gain anything from war are the political elite. Its certainly not the fucking idiots who take orders from the aforementioned elite for war"the sake of their country"

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By *nleashedCrakenMan  over a year ago

Widnes


"He took us into the gulf war on the back of a lie and doctored reports, he was advised not to do it yet his ego got in the way. There never was any WMD in Iraq and Bliar has the blood of thousands on his hands. "

The fact that no WMD were found in Iraq does not prove that anybody lied to anyone.

As I have said before, all that matters is whether the government, not Tony Blair, believed that Iraq had WMD. All the evidence seems to suggest that they did. In which case no lie and no illegal war.

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By *vsnikkiTV/TS  over a year ago

Limavady


"

That's a strange statement, Saddam was put into power with backing from the USA, he was allowed to stay in power after the first gulf war. And many more have died in Iraq since gulf war 2 than died at the hand of Saddam. Plus the region is not exactly stable since the UK and Others armed ISIS against Syria. "

Not actually true. Sadaam was almost certainly not put in place by the US and although no exact figures exist for deaths during the Sadaam era it almost certainly exceedsed present death rates by 400%. However it is not presently stable in Iraq but most informed sources would say the situation would be worse if Sadaam was still in power.

He was allowed to stay in power after the first gulf war because there was no way to remove him from power as there was no coalition wide support.

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By *nleashedCrakenMan  over a year ago

Widnes


"I don't suppose Blair was a Muslim was he?

Nah, dont you remember he has such strong convictions in his chosen faith, that he waited until he was no longer Prime Minister to openly adopt Catholicism.

The man is a cunt"

Why does becoming a Catholic make him any more or less of a cunt.

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By *nleashedCrakenMan  over a year ago

Widnes


"The fact is that GW2 was legal.

You can only be basing that on one of two things.

1.The opinion of a minority of lawyers, mainly the Bush Administrations own lawyers.

The vast majority of experts in International Law believe they are wrong. Even the US State Department Lawyers and the UK Foreign Office Lawyers, who ARE experts advised the War was probably illegal.

The Bush Admin lawyers are not experts in International Law. They were Bush appointees and it does seem they were appointed to find some sort of legal justification for having the war. The war was a long considered desirable strategy aim of a certain section of the Republican Party, (Cheney etc.) who wrote a paper long before coming to power called the Project For The New American Century. In it they proposed securing both a strategic military powerbase in the middle east as well as securing considerable oil reserves, the basis on which the American Economy relies, in the face of increasing economic and military threats from Russia and China. The suggested ideal country in the paper was, surprise, surprise, Iraq.

2. The fact that there hasn't been a prosecution yet.

Well it is difficult to force the worlds only superpower, that spends orders of magnitude on its military more than the rest of the world put together, to give up it's President. The will for that would have to come from within the US itself and it is never going to be possible in such a country with the strength of the Republican Right.

We are the best hope of testing the legality of the war by putting Blair on trial and as has been pointed out on here, there are many tricky hoops to negotiate. So far, it has been slow but they have gradually been negotiated.

As for Gulf War One, that was legal. They had a UN mandate but it only authorised expelling Iraqi forces from Kuwait and ensuring Kuwaits security. That was why Bush senior (an intelligent man unlike his completely out of his depth son) had to stop short of deposing Saddam and regrettably the civil uprisings in Iraq were then left high and dry to be massacred by Saddam.

It is quite amazing that the Bush lawyers have actually tried to use the GW1 resolution as part justification for GW2. If the resolution wasn't considered authorisation for removing Saddam in GW1, how could that possibly stand up for GW2?

Only if you really really want it to is the answer.

Thanks for such a good reply to one of my comments, it is a pleasure to read a well thought out reply.

I fully accept everything you say about US right wing Republican doctrine. The self same quarter of the US political establishment planned to go to war with us by invading Canada in the mid to late 30's and have a habit of picking the wrong wars and wrong sides in those wars.

However the reason I say the war was legal is because Saddam had many opportunities to fully open his country to the UN weapons inspectors but spent 10 years playing silly games pretending to have things it is now obvious he no longer had. I fully accept that there will have been many Psywar analysts and specialists manipulating the political situation round the world and that Saddam was probably backed into a war he never wanted by US skulduggery, but and it is a big but, he always had a way out. He choose not to take it. He choose to ignore the ultimatums that were delivered, therefore he must bare the blame for starting the war.

Further both the US Congress and our House of Commons voted overwhelmingly for war (in our case by over 2 to 1 if I remember correctly) therefore if the war was illegal then every member of parliament who voted for war is as equally guilty as Blair and (again if my memory serves correctly) includes Call me Dave and all the then Tory MP's who supported the Government against a Labour parliamentary revolt.

I do not think it is a war we should have fought, but I do believe it was a legal war in so far as any aggressive war can be legal.

"

That's pretty much the way I see it to

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By *nleashedCrakenMan  over a year ago

Widnes


"I cant stand Blair but we could not stand back and let Saddam continue to murder and eventually take the middle east to war

That's what I thought at the time but could it really have ended up much worse than it is now if we had let him continue.

It would have been much worse had Saddam been allowed to stay in power.

That's a strange statement, Saddam was put into power with backing from the USA, he was allowed to stay in power after the first gulf war. And many more have died in Iraq since gulf war 2 than died at the hand of Saddam. Plus the region is not exactly stable since the UK and Others armed ISIS against Syria.

None of that contradicts my statement that it would have been much worse had Saddam been allowed to stay in power."

But neither have you given any grounds to support what you are saying. It's pretty terrible in Iraq now. In what way do you think it could have been worse if the 2003 war had not happened?

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"The fact is that GW2 was legal.

You can only be basing that on one of two things.

1.The opinion of a minority of lawyers, mainly the Bush Administrations own lawyers.

The vast majority of experts in International Law believe they are wrong. Even the US State Department Lawyers and the UK Foreign Office Lawyers, who ARE experts advised the War was probably illegal.

The Bush Admin lawyers are not experts in International Law. They were Bush appointees and it does seem they were appointed to find some sort of legal justification for having the war. The war was a long considered desirable strategy aim of a certain section of the Republican Party, (Cheney etc.) who wrote a paper long before coming to power called the Project For The New American Century. In it they proposed securing both a strategic military powerbase in the middle east as well as securing considerable oil reserves, the basis on which the American Economy relies, in the face of increasing economic and military threats from Russia and China. The suggested ideal country in the paper was, surprise, surprise, Iraq.

2. The fact that there hasn't been a prosecution yet.

Well it is difficult to force the worlds only superpower, that spends orders of magnitude on its military more than the rest of the world put together, to give up it's President. The will for that would have to come from within the US itself and it is never going to be possible in such a country with the strength of the Republican Right.

We are the best hope of testing the legality of the war by putting Blair on trial and as has been pointed out on here, there are many tricky hoops to negotiate. So far, it has been slow but they have gradually been negotiated.

As for Gulf War One, that was legal. They had a UN mandate but it only authorised expelling Iraqi forces from Kuwait and ensuring Kuwaits security. That was why Bush senior (an intelligent man unlike his completely out of his depth son) had to stop short of deposing Saddam and regrettably the civil uprisings in Iraq were then left high and dry to be massacred by Saddam.

It is quite amazing that the Bush lawyers have actually tried to use the GW1 resolution as part justification for GW2. If the resolution wasn't considered authorisation for removing Saddam in GW1, how could that possibly stand up for GW2?

Only if you really really want it to is the answer.

Thanks for such a good reply to one of my comments, it is a pleasure to read a well thought out reply.

I fully accept everything you say about US right wing Republican doctrine. The self same quarter of the US political establishment planned to go to war with us by invading Canada in the mid to late 30's and have a habit of picking the wrong wars and wrong sides in those wars.

However the reason I say the war was legal is because Saddam had many opportunities to fully open his country to the UN weapons inspectors but spent 10 years playing silly games pretending to have things it is now obvious he no longer had. I fully accept that there will have been many Psywar analysts and specialists manipulating the political situation round the world and that Saddam was probably backed into a war he never wanted by US skulduggery, but and it is a big but, he always had a way out. He choose not to take it. He choose to ignore the ultimatums that were delivered, therefore he must bare the blame for starting the war.

Further both the US Congress and our House of Commons voted overwhelmingly for war (in our case by over 2 to 1 if I remember correctly) therefore if the war was illegal then every member of parliament who voted for war is as equally guilty as Blair and (again if my memory serves correctly) includes Call me Dave and all the then Tory MP's who supported the Government against a Labour parliamentary revolt.

I do not think it is a war we should have fought, but I do believe it was a legal war in so far as any aggressive war can be legal.

That's pretty much the way I see it to"

.Although that's pretty much correct... We could have removed Saddam after gw1 through the UN imposed no fly zones which he broke consistently to massacre the civil uprising of both the Kurds in the north and the marsh Arabs in the south.

The reason they didn't remove Saddam back then is because they had no exit strategy of what do one there'd removed him (dick Cheney gave 60 minute an inter_iew in 1996 stating just that) they knew that Iraq was a hot bed of Islamic tribes held together by a ruthless dictatorship, the tell question is if dick Cheney knew that in 1996 why did it come as such a surprise only 7 years later?, of course it didn't, it was the entire objective of the united states to destabilise Iraq for the purpose of Saudi Arabia's caliphate.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

My own personal belief is that politics is a dangerous business as the untimely or timely deaths of both Dr Kelly and robin cook proved.

Whether or not you believe Blair and bush to be criminal is one thing! Proving it is entirely different.

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By *razedcatMan  over a year ago

London / Herts

As someone who studies international criminal law at university, I'd be interested in finding out precisely how Tony Blair would face prosecution.

Iraq was only briefly party to the Rome Statute, the treaty that would allow Iraq to take him to the International Criminal Court at the Hague. The UK is party, but for political reasons will likely not pursue prosecution.

The Prosecutor of the ICC could potentially begin an investigation themselves, but again, politics will likely intervene.

The United Nations Security Council could also force through prosecution, either at the ICC, or (and REALLY unlikely) through an ad hoc tribunal like those seen in the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda. But again, politics will probably prevent this.

And then there's an issue of exactly what he'll be charged with. Waging a war of aggression? It's taken 70 years to develop that crime beyond the propaganda tool it was at the trial of the major Nazi war criminals, and since Nuremberg no one has been charged with it. Nor does, in the words of my professor, anyone know what the precise definition of the crime is

Seriously, law is just politics' bitch. He'll walk.

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By *oandjohnCouple  over a year ago

South Wales, will travel to Hereford, Worcestershire and Shropshire

I think that he is guilty of War Crimes. But any trial in the UK would e a fix and he would get away with it.

If found guilty it would put him in the same camp as Hitler and others.. This would then mean the officers and civil servants below him would also go on trial... It will never happen.

It is most defiantly a war that should never have been fought.

Remember the golden rule, ' if you want something royaly screwing up get a politician involved'.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

In my opinion the two posts above are correct , sadly it will never happen , they say in life you wear the face you deserve ....looking at bliar these days I'd day that's something else that's correct .

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

I actually went on the march,although I disagree with it being an unjust war, freeing millions of people from a brutal dictator can never be a bad thing in itself.

I'd really in my heart like to see the UN step up to the plate and start doing these things itself just so there could be no claims of outside interest.

Yes Iraq now is a fucking mess but that is not the fault of the war perse, it was always going to be a mess for awhile after, and i fundamentally disagree with how we went about it and some of the acts in it (Abu ghraib, depleted uranium shell, phosphor) we proclaiming being the civil side really do need to raise our bar.

Having said that yes we do a lot of lousy geo political shite but let's not forget Kosovo and Bosnia Herzegovina where we saved millions of Muslims from genocide and gave them a chance of what they have now, which is a democratic free country or Sierra Leone where our intervention saved thousands from a potentially worse civil war.

Open debate is great but let's not always bang on about our failures.

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By *coutin4girlzMan  over a year ago

Moo-Moo land :-)


"My own personal belief is that politics is a dangerous business as the untimely or timely deaths of both Dr Kelly and robin cook proved.

Whether or not you believe Blair and bush to be criminal is one thing! Proving it is entirely different."

Totally agree with you there n I hear Dr David Kelly's family still say he didn't commit suicide n so do a few top ex-MP's,...I'm no medical expert but wasn't there a distinct lack of blood considering he'd supposedly severed a main artery??? ...Very strange indeed..I was all for Blair until HE Invaded Iraq n then he tried to spin-it saying it was about getting rid of Saddam n Terrorist's even tho there weren't any coz his Regime was so br.utal....But then again look how bratal Saudi Arabia n Bahrain are but there's no clamour to oust those leaders...

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

A fantastic book called "Lawless world" in which Phillipe Sands explains the rules that were broken by Bush and Blaire for war crimes. Fortunately or unfortunately there are a lot of countries waiting for both individuals to not be under the safety of political immunity....

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

I agree with you to a point.

Don't forget there is already an ongoing investigation as the ICC is independent from politics (ok I'm being a little idealistic) an therefore a referral that is made has to be considered.

The issue of Iraq not being a state party to the Rome Treaty wouldn't prevent an investigation. As you correctly point out, the UK is a state party and therefore the ICC has jurisdiction over those crimes committed by UK forces.

The UN Security cannot force a prosecution, they can only refer the matter to the ICC to open the investigation into a situation and not individual people. However, this is a non-starter as has been pointed out, given that one of the permanent members would exercise its veto right if a resolution referring the UK was tabled.

The point with Blair, is that you are going to have to be able to show command responsibility and that is going to be incredibly difficult to do given how our forces are structured.

I think we will see an ad hoc tribunal being set up, however id be very surprised as to whether we would see defendants from the UK or the US there, it is more likely that those from the Maliki regime (recently left power) who will face charges given the clear sectarian basis upon which the regime governed which arguably contributed more to the problem in Iraq now than the actual war did.

The point with Blair, and Bush, is what crimes are you going to charge them with.

I agree, the crime of aggression is unlikely to get off the ground as there has been no clear definition of it.

Going to war on what may be deemed an unlawful basis is not an actual war crime, nor is it a crime against humanity.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

sorry my reply was to the post from _razedcat

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By *razedcatMan  over a year ago

London / Herts


"I agree with you to a point.

Don't forget there is already an ongoing investigation as the ICC is independent from politics (ok I'm being a little idealistic) an therefore a referral that is made has to be considered.

The issue of Iraq not being a state party to the Rome Treaty wouldn't prevent an investigation. As you correctly point out, the UK is a state party and therefore the ICC has jurisdiction over those crimes committed by UK forces.

The UN Security cannot force a prosecution, they can only refer the matter to the ICC to open the investigation into a situation and not individual people. However, this is a non-starter as has been pointed out, given that one of the permanent members would exercise its veto right if a resolution referring the UK was tabled.

The point with Blair, is that you are going to have to be able to show command responsibility and that is going to be incredibly difficult to do given how our forces are structured.

I think we will see an ad hoc tribunal being set up, however id be very surprised as to whether we would see defendants from the UK or the US there, it is more likely that those from the Maliki regime (recently left power) who will face charges given the clear sectarian basis upon which the regime governed which arguably contributed more to the problem in Iraq now than the actual war did.

The point with Blair, and Bush, is what crimes are you going to charge them with.

I agree, the crime of aggression is unlikely to get off the ground as there has been no clear definition of it.

Going to war on what may be deemed an unlawful basis is not an actual war crime, nor is it a crime against humanity."

Nice response. Truthfully I was rushing when I said that the UN could force a prosecution through to the ICC, you're right, they simply have a referral ability.

As for Iraq not being party to the Rome statute, my point was that om a political level they would be much more likely to refer to the ICC than the UK, being the victim state. But they cant, because America effectively bullied them into pulling out of the treaty.

And I agree with everything you've said about Blair's position. There's a reason countries like the UK and America are top dog, many provisions are in place that effectively make them immune from accountability.

Makes me sick that we live in such a Darwinian world, to be honest.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"I agree with you to a point.

Don't forget there is already an ongoing investigation as the ICC is independent from politics (ok I'm being a little idealistic) an therefore a referral that is made has to be considered.

The issue of Iraq not being a state party to the Rome Treaty wouldn't prevent an investigation. As you correctly point out, the UK is a state party and therefore the ICC has jurisdiction over those crimes committed by UK forces.

The UN Security cannot force a prosecution, they can only refer the matter to the ICC to open the investigation into a situation and not individual people. However, this is a non-starter as has been pointed out, given that one of the permanent members would exercise its veto right if a resolution referring the UK was tabled.

The point with Blair, is that you are going to have to be able to show command responsibility and that is going to be incredibly difficult to do given how our forces are structured.

I think we will see an ad hoc tribunal being set up, however id be very surprised as to whether we would see defendants from the UK or the US there, it is more likely that those from the Maliki regime (recently left power) who will face charges given the clear sectarian basis upon which the regime governed which arguably contributed more to the problem in Iraq now than the actual war did.

The point with Blair, and Bush, is what crimes are you going to charge them with.

I agree, the crime of aggression is unlikely to get off the ground as there has been no clear definition of it.

Going to war on what may be deemed an unlawful basis is not an actual war crime, nor is it a crime against humanity.

Nice response. Truthfully I was rushing when I said that the UN could force a prosecution through to the ICC, you're right, they simply have a referral ability.

As for Iraq not being party to the Rome statute, my point was that om a political level they would be much more likely to refer to the ICC than the UK, being the victim state. But they cant, because America effectively bullied them into pulling out of the treaty.

And I agree with everything you've said about Blair's position. There's a reason countries like the UK and America are top dog, many provisions are in place that effectively make them immune from accountability.

Makes me sick that we live in such a Darwinian world, to be honest."

It quite the coincidence that the us, uk, Russia and China are permanent members of unsc and therefore have the right of veto.

Justice and accountability is central to any peace process and yet we insist on politicising it.

Good look with your studies, you might want to message me direct

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By *arry247Couple  over a year ago

Wakefield

It may get nearer soon as the Chilcot inquiry may be published next month or March

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"I cant stand Blair but we could not stand back and let Saddam continue to murder and eventually take the middle east to war "
seriously? What did we do in iran/iraq war?first gulf war when Bush snr's coalition stood back n let Saddam deal with the kurds n marsh arabs? And seeing how things have turned out since,the constant war and instability in the area which spreads to our own doorstep thanks to Bliar n every other pm's open door policy,got rid of Saddam n look what we've got now,much better??

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By *entaur_UKMan  over a year ago

Cannock


"My own personal belief is that politics is a dangerous business as the untimely or timely deaths of both Dr Kelly and robin cook proved.

Whether or not you believe Blair and bush to be criminal is one thing! Proving it is entirely different. Totally agree with you there n I hear Dr David Kelly's family still say he didn't commit suicide n so do a few top ex-MP's,...I'm no medical expert but wasn't there a distinct lack of blood considering he'd supposedly severed a main artery??? ...Very strange indeed..I was all for Blair until HE Invaded Iraq n then he tried to spin-it saying it was about getting rid of Saddam n Terrorist's even tho there weren't any coz his Regime was so br.utal....But then again look how bratal Saudi Arabia n Bahrain are but there's no clamour to oust those leaders... "

Yes and there was also the dodgy dossier, which Tony Blair had the intelligence "sexed up" (the sexed up dossier) in order to make the case for war look more convincing.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"My own personal belief is that politics is a dangerous business as the untimely or timely deaths of both Dr Kelly and robin cook proved.

Whether or not you believe Blair and bush to be criminal is one thing! Proving it is entirely different. Totally agree with you there n I hear Dr David Kelly's family still say he didn't commit suicide n so do a few top ex-MP's,...I'm no medical expert but wasn't there a distinct lack of blood considering he'd supposedly severed a main artery??? ...Very strange indeed..I was all for Blair until HE Invaded Iraq n then he tried to spin-it saying it was about getting rid of Saddam n Terrorist's even tho there weren't any coz his Regime was so br.utal....But then again look how bratal Saudi Arabia n Bahrain are but there's no clamour to oust those leaders...

Yes and there was also the dodgy dossier, which Tony Blair had the intelligence "sexed up" (the sexed up dossier) in order to make the case for war look more convincing. "

There is a book called the strange death of david Kelly

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago


"I cant stand Blair but we could not stand back and let Saddam continue to murder and eventually take the middle east to war seriously? What did we do in iran/iraq war?first gulf war when Bush snr's coalition stood back n let Saddam deal with the kurds n marsh arabs? And seeing how things have turned out since,the constant war and instability in the area which spreads to our own doorstep thanks to Bliar n every other pm's open door policy,got rid of Saddam n look what we've got now,much better??"

Er, No, the first Gulf War was due to Saddam Hussain invading Kuwait on 2nd August 1990. This was met with international condemnation, and brought immediate economic sanctions against Iraq by members of the U.N. Security Council. U.S. President George H. W. Bush deployed U.S. forces into Saudi Arabia, and urged other countries to send their own forces to the scene. An array of nations joined the Coalition, the largest military alliance since World War II. It had nothing to do with the Kurds.

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By (user no longer on site)  over a year ago

well the chilcot enguiry into the war is still ongoing and tony blair is still managing to evade appearing and being grilled about it.

At the time it was deemed illegal to invade than all of a sudden tony had a word with his pal lord goldsmith and suddenly goldsmith gave it the house of lords legality ..

The us pushed blair into it blair dint have a backbone to refuse him hence the tony bushs poodle term.

they needed there arms inspectors to state there were wmds as a green light to invade ...no inspectors came back saying there were wmds yet bush and blair invaded anyway.

Blair also has the blood of british arms inspector david Kelly on his hands to ...how blair ended up later being given the title "peace envoy to the middle east." is the sickest joke ever..yes blair should stand trial in the hague along with bush

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