Pages: 272 (Hardcover) ISBN: 1405050012 Pub: Macmillan Pub date: 2004-09-17 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 341797
|
|
![]() ![]()
Reader Reviews:Yet another tiresome tirade from the 'I think...' school (7/40 people found this helpful)Lets not beat about the Bush (sic)This book is about the Iraq war, and how to bring Tony Blair to book for shafting the BBC... The book reiterates, and reiterates, ad nausea; embelishing the points Naughtie wants to make without necessarily casting any further light on the issues with which we have become so familiar from his utterances on the BBC's Today programme. Explaining the Blair- Bush paradox (18/20 people found this helpful)James Naughtie tackles the vexing question of the process by which the only substantial international friend of George W Bush and ally of his neoconservative government turned out to be the Prime Minster of a UK Labour Party government whose links with the previous and, The US' Right's bete noir, incumbent Bill Clinton had been workman-like and friendly. Useful account of Blair's links with Bush (25/50 people found this helpful)James Naughtie, the Today presenter, has written a useful account of Blair's links with the USA, particularly with Bush and his colleagues. Naughtie recalls that when he asked Pentagon insider Richard Perle what came next after Afghanistan, Perle replied, "The really important thing is that there is a next." So, in January 2002, Bush set the timetable for invading Iraq and told Blair. Blair then promised to join Bush's war, secretly changing government policy from peace to war, without telling anybody. Naughtie writes that the 'bloodstream' of the US-British special relationship is the intelligence linkage. Indeed, the USA's intelligence services are the world's biggest and most expensive. Yet all the US intelligence claims about Iraq's WMD - the uranium oxide bought from Niger, the mobile chemical laboratories - have been proven false. US intelligence was so bad that the CIA's head resigned, and his deputy left too. The Labour government had all these intelligence resources behind them. Yet their notorious government dossier on WMD was largely pilfered from a ten-year-old PhD thesis! So what, exactly, did Britain gain from this so-special relationship and its precious 'bloodstream'? As a result of the illegal invasion of Iraq, there is now an illegal occupation of Iraq. Naughtie quotes a senior Foreign Office man who described the US's occupation policy as 'a catastrophe from beginning to end'. When Naughtie asked Blair if he agreed with the White House lawyer who said that the Geneva Conventions were 'quaint', Blair replied, "Of course not. Neither do the Americans." Typically, Blair was denying the evidence just put in front of him. Labour's war (for the Labour Party could have stopped it, but didn't even try) has weakened all that it holds dear. The link with the USA is in danger, the EU split, NATO divided, the Labour Party eviscerated, and Parliament, the Foreign Office and the intelligence services all discredited. But worse, Labour's war has made Israel increase its killings, thrown the Middle East into chaos, worsened the risks of terrorism to Britain and elsewhere, and added the danger of endless wars in a 'clash of civilisations'. Similar ProductsHug Them Close: Blair, Clinton, Bush and the 'special Relationship' Blair's Wars The Rivals: The Intimate Story of a Political Marriage The Point of Departure: Diaries from the Front Bench Thirty Days: An Inside Account of Tony Blair at War CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
Books -> Subjects -> Biography -> General
Books -> Subjects -> Biography -> Political -> Britain -> Blair, Tony Books -> Subjects -> Biography -> Political -> Britain -> Prime Ministers Books -> Subjects -> Society, Politics & Philosophy -> Government & Politics -> International Relations Books -> Refinements -> Language (feature_browse-bin) -> English Books -> Refinements -> Age (feature_two_browse-bin) Books -> Refinements -> Format (binding_browse-bin) -> Hardcover
|