| The Carp of Truth: Jack Straw, Colin Powell and the Smoking Guns of War Crime |
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| Written by Chris Floyd | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Tuesday, 09 February 2010 16:20 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Your bait of falsehood takes this carp of truth: Freedman asked: Can you start by confirming that you knew that military action was planned by the US for the middle of March come what may? You were copied in, presumably, to reports of conversations between the prime minister and the president?
SIR RODERIC LYNE: ... The American administration's stated objective was to change the regime in Iraq, and they didn't feel that further UN authorisation for that was required. At this point, these two objectives came to a crunch and time ran out for your diplomacy.
But that having happened, I think there are few in Iraq, despite the bloodshed, would now say that they want to go back to what existed before 20 March 2003.
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Comments (14)
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Horatio
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... Chris, you've captured in the last paragraph of this piece, with your usual eloquence, my daily lament for the lack of justice in this world. Beautiful phrases for an endless ache. |
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john kelley
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... Yes, really, this justice thing is an increasingly lean and oblique serving. Almost obsolete. And yet it actually reverberates against the deafening silence in the US halls of justice. Nevermind the mountains of evidence of massive criminality in that sub-species ruling class that is slapping us upside the jowls. In America freedom is indifference. The New World Order is fully endorsed. Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Feith, Wolfowitz, Powell, Rice, et al...they're all onboard the gravy train, and they'll likely ride it to the end of the line.......like, mmmm, Pinochet, or, Suharto, or... |
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Jimmy Montague
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Too bad, Chris! I think Bush and Blair and Straw and the rest spend their days laughing at the rest of us. They don't hurt for society because they've still got the friends they had when they took office -- the only people that matter to them -- and their bank accounts and their villas and their security screens. They don't fear eternity; their only gods are money and power. . . . It's depressing, I know. I can't stand it either, but there it is. |
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gordon burns
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Higher justice Almost makes one yearn to believe in an afterlife and real moral justice. |
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mandt
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... "And Powell, as we all remember, was the "good American," the "honorable American" in the run-up to war, a "decent man" who somehow got "railroaded" into making a false case for war "---the mythology around Powell as a kind-of-Eisenhower is ludicrous. How quickly America has forgotten Powell's participation in the My Lai Massacre cover-up. Honorable is the last word to describe Powell. |
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Jimmy Montague
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To Gordon Burns-- Believing a thing doesn't make it real -- unless the believer is pathological. For my part, I believe in God but everything I've read about he/she/it convinces me that all religions are BS and nobody on earth (including me) knows the least thing about God. If you really wanna get depressed -- I just finished reading Jack London's "The People of the Abyss." Not bad enough that it's depressing, it's probably the most powerful argument I've ever read. Definitely NOT one for the emotionally infirm. |
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scott douglas
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... Dear Jimmy Montague, I just finished Jack London's critique of London, circa 1902, as per your direction. Man, what a hell-hole. Now I see just how far these fuckers are willing to drive us down. Thanks for the reference. Well read. Look out, proggies! The past is prologue! |
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Jimmy Montague
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Gee, Scott! I'm glad you liked it! What impressed me about it is not how far the fuckers are willing to drive us down but how low the poor are willing to go. I read on Global Research the other day that Democrats and Republicans are agreed on changes to Social Security and Medicare that will put many folks on the street. Will America accept those changes? I believe America will -- and obviously the two parties believe the same. They spend a lot of money on research. . . . |
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john kelley
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... Jimmy Montague, Why will America accept those changes? And I'm not being provocative...I really want to know. You said so yourself...you believe in something you know nothing about. |
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scott douglas
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... Kelly, look how far it has already gone. Why would you think that the systematically and deliberately dumbed-down masses will suddenly realize that they are being played by the two party system and...and...what? revolt? Vote Green? C'mon, bro... |
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Sean O'Neil
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... I have nothing to say other than my usual desire to acknowledge Mr Floyd's excellent writing and analysis, and... I agree with Jimmy. |
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john kelley
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... I commented on the run...I was sensing a 'devine intervention' scenario. Something about human yearning. Drop it. But come on Scott, I've been throwing in my two cents around here for long enough to let anyone following know where I stand. I'm not even convinced that anything better will rise from the ashes when the whole fucking failed American experiment finally collapses. I wholeheartedly agree with Mr. Montague(and I guess Jack London as well)...how much shit will people eat? Anyway Scott, clearly some of us around here see more or less eye to eye. The problem is, how many more are out there? 35...40? |
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john kelley
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And... In all of my comments over the years I doubt if I've ever once mentioned Republicans, or Democrats....they are interchangeable. The entire gaggle of newts is corrupt, pathological, and dysfunctional. |
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Jimmy Montague
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john kelley -- America will accept those changes for at least two reasons. For one, America is characterized by a popular tendency toward the suspension of disbelief. When American leaders tell America that shit is diamonds, Americans are prone to believe them. Why things are so is the subject of endless debate but, regardless what the "why" may actually be, the fact remains. For the other, a great many Americans have no politics but resentment: whenever the legislative process produces a turd and the intent to drop it on the masses, something like 33 percent of the public clamor to have it enacted because they think the shit will only land on people they don't like. |
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