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But the damage may already have been done. Read this article by this
decent British pillar of British conservatism and imperialism, in
yesterday's Sunday Telegraph.<br>
<br>
This is more threatening for Blair and the alliance with Bush than any
number of embarrassed left wing Labour MP's. It probably indicates that
the Conservatives would support Robin Cook's call for an enquiry. It may
be very difficult to Tony Blair to resist this. <br>
<br>
Chris Burford<br>
<br>
______<br>
<br>
I was silly to trust America<br>
By Max Hastings<br>
<i>(Filed: 01/06/2003) <br>
<br>
</i>Even by the standards of the Bush Administration, last week was a
remarkable one for diplomatic folly. Paul Wolfowitz, the Assistant
Defence Secretary, disclosed that the US wilfully exaggerated the threat
of weapons of mass destruction, to rally support for an Iraq war.
Likewise, Wolfowitz's boss, Donald Rumsfeld, declared that he has little
expectation of finding any WMDs. He then launched a new round of
sabre-rattling against Iran. So much for the gleeful banner under which
President Bush greeted a homebound American aircraft-carrier crew:
"Mission accomplished".<br>
<br>
The leading lights of the US Defence Department always made it plain that
disarming Saddam was a pretext for regime change in Iraq. Yet that
pretext was the basis of a massive American diplomatic offensive. Tony
Blair explicitly told the British people that disarming Saddam justified
taking Britain to war. That argument was fraudulent.<br>
<br>
Some of us, who accepted public and private Whitehall assurances about
WMDs, today feel rather silly. Robin Cook is crowing, and well he may. He
said that WMDs did not exist. He appears to have been right. It is
irrelevant that the Allies won the war. The Prime Minister committed
British troops and sacrificed British lives on the basis of a deceit, and
it stinks.<br>
<br>
Meanwhile inside Iraq, it has become irrelevant to criticise the
Americans for past failure to anticipate the problems of making the
country work. The question is whether they intend to commit resources on
a scale commensurate with the task, now that the requirement is plain.
The example of Afghanistan, where Washington seems untroubled by post-war
anarchy, is not encouraging. The Americans shrug that today's warlordism
offers Afghans better lives than yesterday's Taliban, and that outcome
should suffice.<br>
The Administration has always asserted that the Iraqi people were not
enemies, but hapless pawns of a tyrant. In 1945, the Germans and Japanese
begged for cigarettes and scratched in the ruins of their cities without
much audible protest, because they knew they were the vanquished. The
Iraqis, by contrast, behave as if they had just voted the Americans into
office. They are petulantly impatient to see their new government fulfil
its election pledges. The world is happy to cheer them on.<br>
<br>
George Bush seems likely to fight a khaki presidential election in 2004,
on a platform of tough action abroad in the cause of homeland defence.
Critics observe that he can scarcely do anything else, since his
management of the US economy frightens the life out of everyone who
thinks beyond polling day.<br>
<br>
It is hard to overstate the seriousness of the damage to British trust
which is inflicted almost daily by Washington's insouciance. What was the
point of reluctantly joining the Iraqi adventure, people ask, if the
British Government cannot curb the excesses of American policy, and if
the British Army's reward for participation is a half-baked war crimes
charge against one of its officers by a disgruntled American major?<br>
<br>
American hawks would dismiss most of the above as a reflection of
familiar British liberal pusillanimity, our unflagging belief that we ran
the world more intelligently in our centuries than they do in theirs. Yet
there are good grounds for mistrusting American judgment.<br>
I was among those who thought the war mistaken, but reluctantly accepted
the arguments for British participation, to preserve the Atlantic
alliance and to maintain some marginal influence upon American policy.
Today, given the behaviour of the US Administration, that case is in
tatters.<br>
<br>
Thus, some people declare that this is the moment for Britain to jump
ship, plainly to assert that we will go no further alongside an ally so
reckless in its diplomacy, so careless in its actions. Yet the US remains
the only superpower we have got. It cannot be exchanged for a new model.
Britain is now committed in Iraq, for better or worse.<br>
<br>
It remains vital to engage with Washington. Even in the face of great
difficulties, the diplomatic effort must continue, to restrain American
unilateralism. But a heavy blow has been struck against our faith in
American rhetoric and judgment. The struggle against terrorism, and the
management of the world look harder today than they did a week ago,
thanks to Washington's frightening surge of unforced errors.<br>
<br>
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