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DLR'sCock
11-05-2005, 04:16 PM
Ex-British Ambassador: Iraq War 'Fueled Terrorism'
Agence France-Presse

Britain's involvement in the Iraq war has "partly radicalized and fueled" the rise of home-grown terrorism, London's former ambassador to Washington, Sir Christopher Meyer, says.

Prime Minister Tony Blair has repeatedly denied that the US and British invasion of Iraq in March 2003 has led to an increase in Islamic extremism and that it played a part in the July 7 attacks in London which left 56 dead.

But in an interview with the Guardian newspaper, Meyer said: "There is plenty of evidence around at the moment that home-grown terrorism was partly radicalized and fueled by what is going on in Iraq."

"There is no way we can credibly get up and say it has nothing to do with it. Don't tell me that being in Iraq has got nothing to do with it. Of course it does," said the veteran diplomat, who was ambassador in Washington in the run-up to the war.

"The issue is it is part of the price we have to pay and should be paying for the removal of Saddam Hussein and at the moment the jury is still out."

Meyer - a key aide to Blair in crucial talks between London and Washington in the months and weeks leading up to military action - said the continued US-British presence in the Gulf was aiding Iraqi insurgents.

But he said he opposes an early pull-out of US and British troops even though the tide of violence in Iraq has left both countries "on the horns of an absolutely impossible dilemma".

"DC Confidential," Meyer's memoirs of the decision-making that led to the Iraq war, is to be serialized in the Guardian and the Daily Mail newspapers from Monday.

The book reportedly singles out Blair and a number of British cabinet members for criticism, and reveals that in the build-up to war the prime minister had few dealings with the Foreign Office, where diplomats raised doubts about the conflict's legitimacy.

Meyer, who returned from Washington in February 2003 and now chairs the watchdog Press Complaints Commission in London, insisted he was still pro-war.

But he expressed concern about how it was conducted and the apparent lack of a coherent strategy following victory.

"One of the things that came to me when writing was how political the war was," he told The Guardian, which editorially opposed the invasion. "This wasn't just a war, it was a political war."

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Nickdfresh
11-05-2005, 09:39 PM
This just in, bears also pee in the woods...


Oh yeah, some of you out there believe they use outhouses.

Hardrock69
11-06-2005, 01:16 AM
Anyone who denies our presence there has fueled terrorism needs to be sent over there to pick up the body parts of our soldiers who are dying every day....