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Britain: Former diplomats blast Blairs support for US
Middle East policy
By Julie Hyland
28 April 2004
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An unprecedented attack on Prime Minister Tony Blairs
policy in the Middle East by 52 of the UKs former senior
ambassadors has brought longstanding divisions over the British
governments foreign policy into the open.
An open letter, from what has been described as the cream
of Foreign Office expertise, castigates the US-led occupation
of Iraq as doomed, rebukes Blair for endorsing Israeli
Prime Minister Ariel Sharons one-sided and illegal
land grab in the Occupied Territories, and calls for a fundamental
reassessment of the governments relations with the
Bush administration.
The letter comes at a time when the government is considering
sending a further 2,000 troops to Iraq to replace those being
withdrawn by the new Spanish government.
Signatories to the letter, which was delivered to the prime
minister on Monday, April 26, include Sir Terence Clark, the UKs
ambassador to Iraq from 1985 to 1989; Sir Marrack Goulding, a
former diplomat in Kuwait, Libya, Egypt and Lebanon who worked
for the United Nations from 1986 to 1993; and Oliver Miles, ambassador
to Libya during the takeover of the Libyan embassy in London during
1984 and now a business consultant on the Middle East.
Some prominent signatories have only recently left the Foreign
Office, including Francis Cornish, former head of the Foreign
Office news department and UK ambassador to Israel from 1998 to
2001, and Richard Muir, ambassador to Kuwait until 2002. The letter
also includes diplomats from outside the Middle East.
Moreover, according to Richard Beeston in the Times,
the letters sentiments are almost certainly shared
by many serving diplomats, including some officials working in
the coalition government in Baghdad.
If so, then it represents a damning repudiation of the British
governments strategy in the Middle East by virtually the
entire Foreign Office establishment.
The signatories write that we ... have watched with deepening
concern the policies which you have followed on the Arab-Israel
problem and Iraq, in close cooperation with the United States.
Britain and much of the world, have waited in vain
on American leadership, as the Israeli-Palestinian conflict continues
to spiral out of control, the letter adds. Worse still, the
international community has now been confronted with the announcement
by [Israeli Prime Minister] Ariel Sharon and President Bush of
new policies which are one-sided and illegal and which will cost
yet more Israeli and Palestinian blood.
This is a reference to the April 14 press conference between
Sharon and Bush, where the US ripped up international law to sanction
Israeli annexation of around half of the West Bank Palestinian
land through the building of a so-called security wall, and overturned
the right of Palestinian refugees to return to their homes in
Israel.
Dismay at this backward step was heightened,
the signatories continue, when Blair seemed to endorse it
during his own press conference with Bush just two days later.
The prime ministers abandonment of principle comes
at a time when, rightly or wrongly, we are portrayed throughout
the Arab and Muslim world as partners in an illegal and brutal
occupation in Iraq.
Within Iraq itself, it is clear that there was no effective
plan for the post-Saddam settlement. All those with experience
of the area predicted that the occupation of Iraq by the coalition
forces would meet serious and stubborn resistance, as has proved
to be the case. To describe the resistance as led by terrorists,
fanatics and foreigners is neither convincing nor helpful.
US brutality is inflaming opposition, the letter continues,
especially as the Iraqis killed by coalition forces probably
total between ten and fifteen thousand (it is a disgrace that
the coalition forces themselves appear to have no estimate), and
the number killed in the last month in Fallujah alone is apparently
several hundred including many civilian men, women and children.
The letter concludes that whilst, as Blair argues, the UK has
an interest in exerting real influence on the US,
as a loyal ally ... we believe that the need for such influence
is now a matter of the highest urgency. If that is unacceptable
or unwelcome there is no case for supporting policies which are
doomed to failure.
Oliver Miles, who helped coordinate gathering support for the
letter, said, A number of us felt that our opinions on the
two subjects, Iraq and the Arab-Israel problem, were pretty widely
shared and we felt that we ought to make it public.
Never has government policy been so controversial. It
is an indication of our serious concern that what is probably
the biggest such collective group has gone straight to government
in this way.
Our objective is not to damage Blair politically but
to strengthen the hand of those who feel as we do.
Whatever the intent, any criticism of UK foreign policy in
the Middle East and Blairs alliance with Washington must
inevitably undermine the prime minister, who has made it his own
personal crusade. In the run-up to the US-led war against Iraq,
Blair famously insisted that he would not be turned away from
pursuing the objectives he felt correct, regardless of the level
of disquiet and opposition that it encountered.
It is a measure of how determined he has been in carrying this
agenda forward that he has succeeded in alienating whole swathes
of the civil service foreign policy apparatus.
There have been indications of discontent within the Foreign
Office and more broadly within the intelligence and defence establishment
for some time. This was evident during the Hutton Inquiry into
the death of Dr. David Kelly, the UKs leading specialist
on Iraqs weapons capabilities, where emails and correspondence
revealed conflicts between the government and the Foreign Office
and security services over the advisability of signing up to war
against Iraq on Bushs terms.
Times journalist Peter Riddells recent book, Hug
them closeBlair, Clinton, Bush and the special relationship,
notes that there was widespread concern throughout much of the
Foreign Office and foreign policy think tanks in Britain at Bushs
invocation of a war on terror following the September
11 attacks. This centred on the fact that any campaign against
terrorism would be indefinite, and would require intelligence
and police operations as much as, if not more than, military action.
It should also involve political initiatives to tackle the causes
of terrorism, notably the Israeli-Palestine dispute.
Blair had countered such anxieties by insisting that his alliance
with Washington would strengthen Britain, and enable it to assert
its own interests more forcefully. Dismissing concerns over the
destabilising impact of war for the Middle East, he suggested
that US involvement in finding a settlement to the Arab-Israeli
conflict would be a significant payback for backing a preemptive
attack on Iraq.
A year ago, Blair appeared triumphantnot only had Saddam
Hussein been toppled, and Iraq occupied relatively quickly, but
Bush had also apparently given his endorsement to the so-called
road map agreement drawn up by the quartet of the
US, the European Union, the United Nations and Russia aimed at
the eventual creation of a Palestinian state alongside Israel.
Twelve months on, Blairs strategy is in tatters. His
alliance with Washington threatens to embroil British military
forces in an increasingly bloody confrontation with the Iraqi
people, whilst Bush has seen fit to rip up the road map without
even a by your leave from Blairthe man he still
describes as his administrations closest friend.
Small wonder that such longstanding pillars of Britains
ruling class feel forced to make their objections known so openly
and in such a categorical way. By speaking out in this manner
they hope to regain some measure of influence over government
policy after being all but excluded from decision-making by Blair.
Blair was obviously pushed onto the back foot by the attack,
refusing to make any public comment. Privately, government spokesman
were said to be briefing the press that the former diplomats were
just the camel corps, (those based so long in Arab
countries that they had gone native).
Foreign Secretary Jack Straw was also nowhere to be seen. So
it fell to a lightweight, Foreign Office Minister Mike OBrien,
to defend the governments policy.
His reply was a pathetic restatement of the governments
arguments that it can whisper confidences in Bushs ear,
but only so long as it does Washingtons bidding. OBrien
asked for the governments critics to be realistic and portrayed
their response as a cry of frustration that things are not
going as quickly as we would all like.
We can influence the US, he continued, but
we cant control a superpower. They listen to our quiet diplomacy
but they also have their own policywe influence each other.
OBrien insisted that the UK had been successful in encouraging
Bush to become the first US president to call for a Palestinian
state independent of Israel and to support the whole road map
process. But he declined to answer whether Bush had consulted
Blair when he made the decision to repudiate this position.
See Also:
Blair and Bush plan further crimes in
the Middle East
[22 April 2004]
Reject Blairs colonial adventureWithdraw
British troops from Iraq now!
[14 April 2004]
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