Page 1 of 1

DOWNING STREET MEMO/ BUSHCO's 2002 Lies

Posted: June 12th, 2005, 6:31 pm
by Zlatko Waterman
The following article from the London Times today outlines the continuing DUBCO EMPIRE'S response ( or non-response) to the "DSM"-- Downing Street Memo-- that proves, finally, that while BUSHCO was lying to Congress, the UN and the American people about its war plans in Iraq, which were already well settled in early 2002 ( a few months after 9/11), Tony Blair was called to the Texas White House.

There, he was instructed how to "fall in line" with BUSHCO's war machine, then fully cranking up to attack Iraq. The Brit support for the coming US aggression was necessary, Blair was made to understand, because the US bombers would be using bases on Diego Garcia and Cyprus, among other bases, controlled by England.

Read below:



( paste)

(London Times)


June 12, 2005

Ministers were told of need for Gulf war ‘excuse’
Michael Smith



MINISTERS were warned in July 2002 that Britain was committed to taking part in an American-led invasion of Iraq and they had no choice but to find a way of making it legal.
The warning, in a leaked Cabinet Office briefing paper, said Tony Blair had already agreed to back military action to get rid of Saddam Hussein at a summit at the Texas ranch of President George W Bush three months earlier.



The briefing paper, for participants at a meeting of Blair’s inner circle on July 23, 2002, said that since regime change was illegal it was “necessary to create the conditions” which would make it legal.

This was required because, even if ministers decided Britain should not take part in an invasion, the American military would be using British bases. This would automatically make Britain complicit in any illegal US action.

“US plans assume, as a minimum, the use of British bases in Cyprus and Diego Garcia,” the briefing paper warned. This meant that issues of legality “would arise virtually whatever option ministers choose with regard to UK participation”.

The paper was circulated to those present at the meeting, among whom were Blair, Geoff Hoon, then defence secretary, Jack Straw, the foreign secretary, and Sir Richard Dearlove, then chief of MI6. The full minutes of the meeting were published last month in The Sunday Times.

The document said the only way the allies could justify military action was to place Saddam Hussein in a position where he ignored or rejected a United Nations ultimatum ordering him to co-operate with the weapons inspectors. But it warned this would be difficult.

“It is just possible that an ultimatum could be cast in terms which Saddam would reject,” the document says. But if he accepted it and did not attack the allies, they would be “most unlikely” to obtain the legal justification they needed.

The suggestions that the allies use the UN to justify war contradicts claims by Blair and Bush, repeated during their Washington summit last week, that they turned to the UN in order to avoid having to go to war. The attack on Iraq finally began in March 2003.

The briefing paper is certain to add to the pressure, particularly on the American president, because of the damaging revelation that Bush and Blair agreed on regime change in April 2002 and then looked for a way to justify it.

There has been a growing storm of protest in America, created by last month’s publication of the minutes in The Sunday Times. A host of citizens, including many internet bloggers, have demanded to know why the Downing Street memo (often shortened to “the DSM” on websites) has been largely ignored by the US mainstream media.

The White House has declined to respond to a letter from 89 Democratic congressmen asking if it was true — as Dearlove told the July meeting — that “the intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy” in Washington.

The Downing Street memo burst into the mainstream American media only last week after it was raised at a joint Bush-Blair press conference, forcing the prime minister to insist that “the facts were not fixed in any shape or form at all”.

John Conyers, the Democratic congressman who drafted the letter to Bush, has now written to Dearlove asking him to say whether or not it was accurate that he believed the intelligence was being “fixed” around the policy. He also asked the former MI6 chief precisely when Bush and Blair had agreed to invade Iraq and whether it is true they agreed to “manufacture” the UN ultimatum in order to justify the war.

He and other Democratic congressmen plan to hold their own inquiry this Thursday with witnesses including Joe Wilson, the American former ambassador who went to Niger to investigate claims that Iraq was seeking to buy uranium ore for its nuclear weapons programme.



Frustrated at the refusal by the White House to respond to their letter, the congressmen have set up a website — www.downingstreetmemo.com — to collect signatures on a petition demanding the same answers.
Conyers promised to deliver it to Bush once it reached 250,000 signatures. By Friday morning it already had more than 500,000 with as many as 1m expected to have been obtained when he delivers it to the White House on Thursday.



AfterDowningStreet.org, another website set up as a result of the memo, is calling for a congressional committee to consider whether Bush’s actions as depicted in the memo constitute grounds for impeachment.

It has been flooded with visits from people angry at what they see as media self-censorship in ignoring the memo. It claims to have attracted more than 1m hits a day.

Democrats.com, another website, even offered $1,000 (about £550) to any journalist who quizzed Bush about the memo’s contents, although the Reuters reporter who asked the question last Tuesday was not aware of the reward and has no intention of claiming it.

The complaints of media self-censorship have been backed up by the ombudsmen of The Washington Post, The New York Times and National Public Radio, who have questioned the lack of attention the minutes have received from their organisations.

Posted: June 13th, 2005, 2:54 pm
by hester_prynne
This link is also a place to sign up for requesting that the truth be told.....
Speak up! Let's get the truth, and get the liars out of office, ASAP

http://www.moveonpac.org/tellthetruth/? ... PvsV4w&t=4

H 8)

Posted: June 13th, 2005, 4:29 pm
by Zlatko Waterman
First, thanks Hester for the link.

I get many articles, like the DSM article above ( which for some weird reason shows itself posted three times??) from

www.antiwar.com


which is a link and a site worth checking daily, in my opinion. The site links world-wide coverage of our two wars in progress-- such as this article by an Australian correspondent in Washington:


--Z


(paste)

Military draft back on US agenda


By Maxim Kniazkov in Washington
( Finance News, Australia)
June 13, 2005



From: Agence France-Presse



THE United States would "have to face" a painful dilemma on restoring the military draft as rising casualties saw the number of volunteers dry up, a senator warned today.

Joseph Biden, the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, made the prediction after new data released by the Pentagon showed the US Army failing to meet its recruitment targets for four straight months.
"We're going to have to face that question," he said on NBC's Meet the Press TV show when asked if it was realistic to expect restoration of the draft.

"The truth of the matter is, it is going to become a subject, if, in fact, there's a 40 per cent shortfall in recruitment. It's just a reality," he said.

Advertisement:
The comment came after the Department of Defence announced the army had missed its recruiting goal for May by 1661 recruits, or 25 per cent. Similar losses have been reported by army officials every month since February.

Experts said the latest figure was misleading because the army had quietly lowered its May recruitment target from 8050 to 6700 people. It has been suggested the real shortfall is closer to 40 per cent.

Since October, the shortfall in recruits has been put at more than 8000 people, which amounts to the loss of about a modern brigade.

The army, navy and marine corps reserves also fell short of their monthly goals by 18 per cent, six per cent and 12 per cent respectively, according to the latest figures.

Recruitment at the Army National Guard was down 29 per cent, while the Air National Guard fell short 22 per cent.

The United States abandoned the military draft in 1973, following mass protests during the Vietnam War, and switched to an all-volunteer force.

Mandatory registration for the draft was suspended in 1975, but resumed in 1980 after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. About 13.5 million men are now registered with the US Government as potential draftees.

During the 2004 election campaign, Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry repeatedly accused President George W. Bush of planning to re-instate "a back-door draft", charges the president vehemently denied.

But while admitting that restoring the draft would be politically "very difficult," Senator Patrick Leahy, the ranking Democrat of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said something would have to be done because the situation with recruitment was not likely to improve.

"If you think you have trouble getting recruits today, you're going to have far more trouble six months from now," he predicted on CBS's Face the Nation.

"It is not going to get better. That's going to get worse."

Republican Representative Curt Weldon called the recruitment shortfalls "troublesome" and "unacceptable".

But he urged the military "to find ways to fix the current system" and to attract more recruits with the help of new incentives.

Nearly 1900 US troops have been killed in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere since the beginning of the war on terror in the wake of the September 11, 2001, attacks.

Posted: June 13th, 2005, 5:05 pm
by hester_prynne
Thank you too, Zlatko for your link(s). It's so important that we the people speak out now.

Hope all is well with you Zlatko, despite our floundering world.
I saw your newest works in visuals by the way...they hold such beauty in them, rich textures that speak softly with rich feeling....like you do.

your fan always...
H 8)

Posted: June 13th, 2005, 5:25 pm
by Traveller13
you know, even though I like input about it, I don't think that Iraq is "such a big thing".
I'm also considering the possibility that it's being used as a diversion tool.

I mean how many countries have suffered "preventive strikes" from the US before?
Do I even have to start naming them?
The difference is that now the media is making a big fuss about it.
Years ago Iraq was being bombed too, as well as Afghanistan, Lebanon, etc. The only difference between now and then is that then people weren't that informed.

Take the 1994 Rwanda example. 5000 Tutsis get killed in 6 hours, 500000 deaths in total, most killed by machete and plastic bags. It was a tribal genocide. The UN or anyone else was too scared of moving in, so the Hutus were left unpunished.
Meaningless to say the press was filtered dry about this. And yet a quick internet search will lead you to websites that mainly support the Hutu survivors, or a few discrete articles that date from some time later.

And yet the event kinda dwarves Iraq, doesn't it?

So don't you find the situation a bit iffy? Why Iraq, Iraq, Iraq, on every TV screen, all of a sudden? The country's been under attack for more than 10 years, so why now? There's also stuff going on in other countries, so why this one?

Posted: June 13th, 2005, 7:30 pm
by Zlatko Waterman
Answer:

1. We have 140,000 troops on active duty in Iraq.

2. The war costs US taxpayers one billion dollars PER WEEK.

3. The White House and Pentagon have just asked for 80 additional billions for the war. The war has cost about 176 billion dollars so far.

Try this web site and see your own taxpayer dollars go up in smoke while you watch the register tab change. Then try some of the "equivalency" links and see where that money MIGHT have been spent.


http://costofwar.com/

4. More than 1,700 US soldiers have died so far in Iraq. Many thousands more have been seriously injured-- their injuries include paralysis and other spinal cord trauma, blindness and amputations-- as well as untold thousands who will suffer nervous shock ( post-traumatic stress syndrome) the rest of their lives.

5. The number of Iraqi civilians estimated killed by US military aggression in Iraq varies between 22,000 and 25,000. Some organizations put the toll as high as 100,000.

http://www.iraqbodycount.net/


6. The reason for the invasion of Iraq was predicated on lies and misinformation, sloppily assembled with the intent already to go to war. See my post on "Culture" about the Downing Street memorandum for the latest developments. The yellow cake uranium from Niger was just one of many hoaxes. There were no weapons of mass destruction. The US spent one and one-half years and over 150 million dollars of taxpayer money to confirm that fact, already confirmed before the war began by UN inspectors. Saddam Hussein had no connections to Osama bin Laden or Al-Qaeda.


http://www.cnn.com/2004/US/03/21/iraq.weapons/

It's interesting that you compare Vietnam and Iraq.

Here are some comparisons:

TWO GALLUP POLLS


( year: 1968)

LYNDON JOHNSON


performance as president: 48 percent approval

handling of Vietnam:


39 percent approval

Vietnam War a mistake:

45 percent said yes

( year: 2005)

BUSH

performance as president: 47-49 percent approval

handling of Iraq: 63 percent approval

Iraq War a mistake:


65 percent said yes

http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington ... poll_x.htm

7. Proceeding as it did, without consultation with and against the wishes of the European powers, the US under Bush arrogantly damaged its standing with its post WWII allies. Millions of persons ( including myself) protested the war before it was launched, both in the US and around the world by marching and writing to their elected representatives ( I did both).

8. In its rush toward war, the US branded the UN, the world's only near-universal forum founded after World War II to preserve world peace, as "irrelevant."

Your mention of Rwanda is important. The crisis there was a human tragedy, claiming the lives of over one million persons. Rwanda does not sit on most of the world's oil supply. It is not strategically placed as a base for US military power seeking hegemony in the Middle East.

The Iraq War, and its preamble, The Afghan War, now spiralling away from US control once again, are important diplomatic and military mistakes, costing thousands of useless deaths and billions of dollars. There is new talk of a draft ( see my post on "Culture" today here at S8 and its link), which was ended after extreme public protest in 1973 in the US.

The military commitments of the US around the globe cannot be met at current and projected levels of troop strength and weapons deployment. The Iraq war is the major reason for this.


For all the reasons above, the Iraq War is the most costly, arrogant and mindless blunder since the US got deeply involved in the Vietnam War, which ended in 1975 after a convulsion in US social, political and intellectual life unprecedented since WWII.

That's why the Iraq War is " . . . such a big thing."

Yes, the Iraq War may be used " . . .as a diversion tool . . ."

We are continually being lied to by mass media in the US, which are controlled by and complicit with the Pentagon. World Press coverage of our military adventures differs radically from US television, for instance, the worst offender in terms of distortion and omission.


Zlatko