Daily Kos

Tag: Tony Blair

Suskind shows Bush as a "Bully"

Wed Aug 06, 2008 at 03:21:52 PM PDT

Since the newest Ron Suskind book called The Way of the World hit the shelves in the last two days most readers have focused on the news of Habbush, the Iraqi Intelligence leader, and the information the Bush Administration received in January and February, 2003 prior to Bush taking our nation to war as we colonized Iraq. The request/demand of the White House from Cheney's office to forge a letter for Habbush to sign that linked Saddam to Al Qaeda and the Nigeria yellow-cake to shipments into Iraq all to push back on the Wilson/Plame crimes has also been featured. I have looked at the book, called my Congress men and women and tried to force some attention on this important issue.
   I'll admit that I have skipped around in the book as I have searched for more exposures. This morning in reading more thoroughly, I saw one that would make me anger enough to kick Bush's ass if I had been Tony Blair. Follow me below and I'll provide a few more details.

Assessing Suskind's forgery charge

Tue Aug 05, 2008 at 07:35:27 PM PDT

George Bush and George Tenet both deny the allegation leveled by Ron Suskind's new book, The Way of the World, that in late 2003 the White House ordered the CIA to forge and circulate a letter that would seem to justify the invasion of Iraq after the fact. Here is WH deputy press secretary Tony Fratto:

"Ron Suskind makes a living from gutter journalism. He is about selling books and making wild allegations that no one can verify..."

Bush has a long record of dishonesty, and Tenet's memoirs were not exactly a model of candor. There's no reason to give weight to either man's denials. Suskind has a record of credibility, and his account is partly backed up by Sir Richard Dearlove. But that doesn't mean Suskind's allegation about a forged letter, which depends on the word of two former CIA agents (Rob Richer and John Maguire), is necessarily credible. Do we have any independent means to assess its likelihood?

The best we can do is to examine known patterns to see if they tend to fit with the forgery allegation. Here are several.

Is there other evidence of the WH endorsing public deception to make a case for war? Check. In a Jan. 31, 2003 WH meeting Bush proposed to Tony Blair that, absent any actual justification for war, the US should paint one of our spy planes in UN colors and provoke Iraq to shoot it down. Enough said.

Suskind's sources allege that the author of the forged letter, the director of Iraqi intelligence,  Tahir Jalil Habbush al-Tikriti, had earlier entered into secret talks with the British before the invasion. He sent word to Bush that Hussein had no active chemical, biological, or nuclear programs – but Bush rejected the information and said he didn't wish to learn any more of what Habbush had to reveal. Is there other evidence of Bush shutting down lines of communication with Iraqi officials who were conveying unwelcome information? Check. In Sept. 2002 the CIA convinced Iraq's foreign minister, Naji Sabri, to feed information secretly to the US about Iraq's WMD capabilities. The WH was ecstatic at first. But Sabri said Hussein had none. The WH stopped listening.

Does the CIA have a history of forging documents? Check.

Were there any grounds to think the letter, published in Dec. 2003 by Con Coughlin, is a forgery? Obviously, the letter had classic hallmarks of a forgery. Forged documents typically relate to important people or events, and generally tell us something highly remarkable that goes well beyond what we already knew. Often it intersects with controversies, typically purporting to settle them. Often it appears precisely when controversies are intense. It's provenance often is mysterious, though a figure with authority may vouch for it. It spells things out more than authentic documents tend to do. With forged documents, the identity, interests, or attitudes of their creators often can be perceived from the contents with striking clarity because the forgery rarely leaves room for (authentic) ambiguity. When a document pops up that meets any of those criteria, there's a good probability that it's a forgery.

In this case, the letter meets all the criteria. It posits incredibly enough that Hussein oversaw a visit to Iraq by Mohammed Atta just two months before Sept. 11, 2001.  In fact, the letter outdoes itself. It presents not just one dramatic revelation, but two (the second describes the import to Iraq of uranium yellow-cake from Niger). It's provenance was shrouded in mystery.

Although Iraqi officials refused to disclose how and where they had obtained the document, Dr Ayad Allawi, a member of Iraq's ruling seven-man Presidential Committee, said the document was genuine.

Everything about the letter tends in the direction of exculpating the Bush administration over its baseless (and by the summer of 2003, badly discredited) allegations against Saddam Hussein. In other words, there's virtually no chance that the letter is not a forgery.

One further pattern: the conduit for publication. How could any reporter with a shred of sense, when leaked this obviously forged document, treat it as genuine?

The arch-conservative Telegraph's Con Coughlin has frequently and accurately been described by blogger and British ex-pat Cernig as a reliable neocon shill. Over the years Coughlin has dutifully passed on so much official and semi-official disinformation about the Middle East on behalf of the Bush and Blair governments, that he's become a parody of a journalist. Without any doubt, he is the first reporter I would have leaked this forgery to if I were doing this job for the CIA. The fact that Coughlin is involved strengthens the case that the letter was forged by somebody connected to the neocon war faction in either the US or UK governments.

So, there are plenty of patterns that support Suskind's allegation. I'd like to know what the evidence is against it – if any. Because the forging of a document by the CIA to influence public perception in the US of the decision to invade Iraq would constitute an act of domestic propaganda.

UK torture coverup unravels

Sun Jul 27, 2008 at 07:00:32 PM PDT

The British governments of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown have been shockingly complicit with the Bush administration both in using, encouraging, and facilitating torture, as well as in helping to cover up the traces. Some CIA torture flights passed through the UK, and British-controlled Diego Garcia has served as one of the primary staging grounds for those flights and itself is one of the network of 'black sites'. Indeed MI5 agents have arranged the arrest of men who ended up at Guantanamo, and taken part in interviews there - as for example in the case of Bisher al Rawi.

 title=In other words, Tony Blair fully integrated the UK into Bush's torture regime. That's made even clearer in a new parliamentary report just published in Britain. The Joint Committee on Human Rights has been investigating the torture and murder of Baha Musa in Iraq in 2003. Musa was beaten and suffocated.

The Committeee found that top military officials misled it when they claimed that Bush-style "conditioning techniques" used by the British military had not been approved for interrogations in Iraq. Such techniques (e.g. hooding, sleep deprivation, and stress positions) were prohibited by law more than 30 years ago. Since 2004 UK military officials have pled the few bad apples defense, both in their own internal review and in testimony to Parliament.

[In 2004] Adam Ingram, the armed forces minister, and Lieutenant General Robin Brims, Commander Field Army in 2006, had told the Joint Committee on Human Rights that hooding and sleep deprivation were forbidden.

But the committee said the assurances appeared to be false, and not all troops had known these and other "conditioning techniques" were banned.

Neither man has explained to Parliament why they lied. The Independent adds:

A scathing report from the Joint Human Rights Committee (JHRC) warns that the use of "coercive interrogation techniques" may have been officially sanctioned, despite assurances that troops knew they were outlawed...

The JHRC report also found that the use of hooding and stress positioning by 1 Queen's Lancashire Regiment in 2003 was based on legal advice received from brigade headquarters. It claims that, at least until the Baha Mousa case came to light, the prohibition on the use of conditioning techniques "was not as clearly articulated to troops in Iraq as it might, and indeed should, have been".

Legal advice from the military chain of command authorizing torture. How familiar.

Phil Shiner, of Public Interest Lawyers, said: "We are meant to believe that it is just a few bad apples, but the evidence from courts martial and other cases shows that nothing could be further from the truth."

The report also finds that...

...even at the start of 2008 an official army investigation had found that the prohibition on [the techniques'] use was still not 'clearly being articulated' to ordinary soldiers...

[Phil Shiner said] "There is evidence that British forces in Iraq routinely used coercive interrogation techniques - including sexual humiliation - and that interrogators were made to use them."

In the face of this damning evidence, and very much on the model of the Bush administration, the British Defense Minister Des Browne has the temerity to say:

"Since 2003 we have made considerable improvements to the training and information given to soldiers deploying on operations about the correct and humane treatment of detainees. We have always been clear that we expect our forces to comply fully with international law. We will not tolerate anything less."

Even so, Browne has announced that a judge's inquiry will investigate the "discrepancies" between what military officials told legislators and, presumably, the truth. Such a judicial investigation into official government lies would be welcome in the US as well.

Photo: Autopsy of Baha Musa, Sept. 2003

"It Was Raining When Senator McCain Visited"

Sat Jul 26, 2008 at 05:06:07 PM PDT

Barack was today in London, enjoying some good weather (yep, it happens sometimes) and discussing some foreign policy. BBC News reports:

A beaming Gordon Brown welcomed his guest into No 10's rose-garlanded terrace. His meeting with Gordon Brown was a very British affair. The prime minister looked genuinely cheerful as he basked in the sunshine and the star power of the Democratic candidate.

... As they settled into wicker chairs, they shared cold drinks, a plate of chocolate biscuits and a discussion about foreign policy. Then came an unexpected walkabout among the tourists in Horse Guards Parade.

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They do look pretty good together, don't they? A bit too good, some will say:

Downing Street appeared to be pushing protocol to the limit - but officials said the two men simply wanted to enjoy the sunshine and that it was raining when Senator McCain visited.

Yeah right, it's raining McCain.

Poll

Are you happy Barack is coming back?

79%258 votes
2%7 votes
18%60 votes

| 325 votes | Vote | Results

The Impact on Atlanticism

Fri Jun 27, 2008 at 02:00:56 PM PDT

First off, I'm not American. I've lived in the UK my whole life, but nonetheless I'm an avid follower of American politics and I've been watching this election, via my computer, very closely since mid-2007. I'll admit that at first I was rooting for Hillary, but somewhere during the primaries I realised the game was up for her and I started to see everything Obama could have to offer once he took the White House.

Manning memo proves Bush is guilty of murder

Sun Jun 01, 2008 at 09:15:49 AM PDT

When I first heard that Vincent Bugliosi was coming out with a new book, The Prosecution of George W. Bush for Murder, I was skeptical.  Granted, there is now a mountain of evidence as high as K2 that this president deliberately lied to us and our elected representatives about the evidence supporting war.  For that, he should have been impeached ten times over.  However, it took only one piece of evidence out of the avalanche of documentation outlined by Bugliosi to convince me that impeachment is no longer sufficient, and that this president must be tried for murder.

Bugliosi refers to a meeting Bush held on January 31, 2003 with Tony Blair and six of Bush and Blair's top aides to discuss the Iraq issue.  According to a memo summarizing the meeting that was written by David Manning (then Blair's foreign policy adviser and later British ambassador to Washington), Bush actually indicated that he was willing to provoke a confrontation with Saddam.  This summary has never been disputed by the White House.

Poll

After reading this, do you feel George Bush should be prosecuted for murder?

90%215 votes
7%17 votes
2%5 votes

| 237 votes | Vote | Results

WANTAGATE - The Real Reasons We're In This Mess

Sat May 10, 2008 at 09:57:56 PM PDT

I've been reading the "way out" writings of Christopher Story for over two years. He was always such a mystery: Authority on International Currency - yet strangely involved with this Wanta guy. Wanta turned up on Tom Flocco's site and the term "Box Gang" was formed, and apparently survives (I have the PDFs if anyone is interested).

Back to Christopher Story (I Wanta Big Story is the name of my next art-piece): Apparently he is the heir to a financial newsletter in Britain that has been around since the '60s. He claims heritage. He claims to know where TRILLIONS of your dollars are - and why: Because they were stolen by - You Know Who - and their friends. Oh, yes, this is as dirty as it gets.

The whole latest article is posted below the virtual fold: But, I'm going to give you the link now (so you can follow up if the web crashes with all this info.Christopher Story's site.

BREAKING: MI6, Tony Blair, James Bond did NOT kill Diana

Mon Apr 07, 2008 at 12:42:41 PM PDT

The Guardian reports the verdict, by a 9-2 majority, of the jurors in the inquest into the deaths of Diana, Princess of Wales, and her companion Dodi Fayed. The inquest, which lasted about six months, heard more than 240 witnesses and is estimated to have cost about $10 million pounds.

The verdict:

Diana, Princess of Wales, and Dodi Fayed were unlawfully killed by the reckless driving of their chauffeur, Henri Paul, and the paparazzi who chased them, jurors in the inquest into their deaths decided today.

"The coroner, Lord Justice Scott Baker, set a very high threshold for returning an unlawful killing verdict on the deaths, saying it would be equivalent to a finding of manslaughter. It is one of the most serious verdicts they could have delivered."

Time for Divorce??

Sun Mar 23, 2008 at 02:29:34 PM PDT

"Relationship",says Hugh Grant in romantic comedy Love Actually, "is a word that covers so many sins". His fictional character then goes onto to chastise the fictional President of the United States in terms that I can only say I would immensley proud to hear from any British politician, let alone the Prime Minister. The 'special relationship' that the two countries are supposed to enjoy has definatly gone sour of late and a lot of people are starting to question it's worth. So, is it time for a divorce or at least a trial seperation??

The 7 men who enabled evil

Tue Mar 18, 2008 at 02:29:35 AM PDT

No group has wrecked more havoc in modern history than the following men:

Tony Blair Revividus

Sat Mar 08, 2008 at 07:55:06 AM PDT

This is the most amazing news I've seen in some time.  From The Guardian:

Yale, the Ivy League alma mater of his good friend George Bush, confirmed yesterday that the former prime minister is to join the schools of management and divinity at the campus in New Haven, Connecticut, in the autumn. He will teach a course on faith and globalisation, looking at religion in the modern world.

Gobsmacked, I don't have much to say...

Although its safe to suppose that the seven deadly sins will be off the agenda, what is he going to go on about?  Is he adding Gott mit uns! to the global class war?  Will he finally reveal the Christian principles behind misleading and bullying people into waging brutal imperial wars for oil and Jesus?  Perhaps a post-modern deconstruction of the moral imperative of increasing wealth disparities, unemployment, social instability and lower wages around the world?

The funny thing is, he's having trouble finding the time to enlighten young and impressionable minds given his prior commitments to JP Morgan and Zurich Financial Services Group Insurance.

Transcripts of Blair’s Cabinet Meetings Ordered Released

Thu Feb 28, 2008 at 05:17:13 AM PDT

The proverbial shit has hit the fan across the pond. Now that Tony Blair is out of office, the British government seems bound and determined to investigate just how the British Army ended up attached to George W. Bush’s preemptive war machine in Iraq.

Hmm, one would think that some of the British government’s renewed enthusiasm for investigating the run up to the Iraq invasion would somehow rub off on our own Congress. After all, Tony Blair was only the sidekick to the real warmonger, George W. Bush.

"There is a widespread view that the justification for the decision on military action in Iraq is either not fully understood or that the public were not given the full or genuine reasons for that decision," Information Commissioner Richard Thomas said in his ruling on a request made under the British version of the Freedom of Information Act.

Well, if nothing else, perhaps... just perhaps our own Congress will at least feel a twinge or two of shame for being the frat-boy-in-chief’s enablers protectors.

Who flubbed the records search about "rendition" flights?

Thu Feb 21, 2008 at 07:56:06 AM PDT

[Cross posted on BureaucracyBlog.com]

Today’s GuardianAmerica carries a story about US flights on "extraordinary rendition" missions—i.e. transporting terrorist suspects to and from secret prisons where "enhanced interrogation," aka torture, was used—that had twice landed on British soil.  Tony Blair’s government had assured Britons that no such flights had ever landed on British soil, that the UK had not participated in the US "extraordinary rendition" activities.

The report leaves some important questions unasked.

"A Device To Circumvent The Rule Of English Law"

Tue Feb 19, 2008 at 01:55:30 AM PDT

The UK continues to pay for timorous Tony Blair's white-livered decision to debase his nation as George II's quivering lapdog.

One debt will be collected by Lofti Raissi, a British resident who last week won the right to seek monetary damages from the UK, as compensation for his groundless arrest and incarceration, on American orders, during the disgraceful Anglo-American overreaction to the attacks of September 11.

Three senior British judges held that the British government impermissibly used "unsubstantiated allegations" in a US extradition warrant "as a device to circumvent the rule of English law."

Raissi, wholly innocent, was held in maximum-security confinement for six months, where he was twice stabbed by other inmates, while his name was foamingly bruited about in the shrieking British tabloids as a slavering 9/11 arch-fiend.

The court concluded that, to poodle up to the Americans, British police and prosecutors abused the legal process, filed false allegations, and concealed evidence, and thus Raissi may seek up to 2 million pounds in damages.

"I always say Britain is a civilised country with beautiful people," Raissi said. "I really cherish the customs, the way of life here. But after 9/11, things changed."

Raissi's ordeal, below the divide.

Saudi Prince Blackmails Britain

Sat Feb 16, 2008 at 04:12:34 AM PDT

A repeat from yesterday...

We had been told that 'British lives on British streets' were at risk ... If this caused another 7/7, how could we say that our investigation was more important? ...  

In case you haven’t been following this, the British Government had launched an investigation into defense contractor BAE for paying bribes to Saudi officials, including Bush family BFF and former Saudi Ambassador to the United States Prince Bandar bin Sultan. As you probably already know,Prince Bandar knew about the Invasion of Iraq before our own State Department.  As it turns out, while Prince Bandar was getting more access to our deepest secrets than our own State Department, he was also getting up to 120 million Pounds a year deposited into a Washington DC Riggs Bank account for facilitating the 43 billion pound Al-Yamanah arms deal between Saudi Arabia and BAE.

The investgation was quashed because Bandar threatened the UK if they didn't stop.

More chilling details on the flip...

Bandar, Bush, Blair and Threats

Fri Feb 15, 2008 at 01:24:42 PM PDT

So, Bush's good friend and dearest buddy in the whole wide world, Prince Bandar of Saudi Arabia, threatened Britain's Tony Blair with another 7/7 attack on Britain unless corruption investigations into the arms deals of Saudi Arabian rulers were halted, huh?

http://www.guardian.co.uk/...

If you don't rec THIS diary, the terrorists...ah screw it, they already won...

Fri Feb 15, 2008 at 12:07:59 PM PDT

In case you haven’t been following this, the British Government had launched an investigation in to defense contractor paying bribes to Saudi officials, including Bush family BFF and former Saudi Ambassador to the United States Prince Bandar bin Sultan. As you probably already know,Prince Bandar knew about the Invasion of Iraq before our own State Department.  As it turns out, while Prince Bandar was getting more access to our deepest secrets than our own State Department, he was also getting up to 120 million Pounds a year deposited into a Washington DC Riggs Bank account for facilitating the 43 billion pound Al-Yamanah arms deal between Saudi Arabia and BAE.

The investgation was quashed because Bandar threatened the UK if they didn't stop.

More chilling details on the flip...

(Updated) Bandar Bush terrorized the Serious Fraud Office

Fri Feb 15, 2008 at 08:24:57 AM PDT

According to this story in the Guardian, today, Prince Bandar of Saudi Arabia and former Prime Minister Tony Blair are in trouble. Apparently Bandar took a billion pounds as a bribe from the multinational defense contractor and arms producer, BAE, to pressure the British government into halting fraud investigations into BAE activities. Bandar is said to have threatened the British government that the Saudi government would allow further terrorist attacks to take place in Britain if they continued investigations.


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