ChatterBank3 mins ago
the iraq war
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Every one of the major countries on the Security Council has its own intelligence services, so it's not very likely that they all just thought: "Well, if Tony tells us they're there, these WMD, then they must be!" It is clearly arrant nonsense to believe any such thing.
Also, does anyone seriously imagine that - if he really knew there were no WMD - Blair didn't see this vast elephant-trap lying in the path ahead of him? I refer to what he thought he would say when, after the inevitable military victory, no such weapons were found. Do you suppose he clapped his little hand over his mouth, saying: "Oops! What am I going to tell everybody now?"
It is perfectly plain that the whole WMD fiasco was a failure on the part of many different national intelligence services and not a lie by Blair or anyone else.
The main question that needs to be put to the anti-war brigade - if one can use such a military word for them - is this: "Would you like to see Saddam back in power?" If the answer is "No", then ask: "So how would the wonderful result of his downfall have been achieved if not by the military means by which it actually was achieved?"
As an elaboration on the "wonderful result of his downfall" I think I need only suggest the absence henceforth of mass graves filled with many thousands of the corpses of his own people. The man himself was a 'weapon of mass destruction', for goodness' sake! And we found him!
Yes, alliance personnel and Iraqis are still dying...that's pretty much what happens in any post-war territory. Things will eventually settle and the Iraqis will have been freed from tyranny. If they decide to misuse the opportunity afforded them, that's their lookout. The problem is that the media show us nothing but burning wreckage; what we rarely see are the hospitals reopening, the school-children returning to classes and so forth. There's no capital in 'good' news, you see.
2. Don't forget, also, that one of the best debating-techniques is to work out what your opponent's key points will be and then show how those are wrong. For example, you may be sure that the supposedly "sexed-up" dossier will be mentioned as evidence of Tony Blair's 'lies'. You now know that that is nonsense because - weeks after it - the world's leaders were queuing up to sign Resolution 1441 which claimed the same thing! The failure to find WMD makes it look now as if their beliefs were unfounded but that doesn't make then 'liars'...just 'wrong'. All of them, not just Blair!
3. Here's a possible approach:-
String all the ideas mentioned in Paragraphs 1 and 2 above into a logical sequence and write them out like an essay. Read that through several times and then reduce the contents to a series of key headings. Have that in front of you when you stand up to speak at the debate. If your audience has been told - as they should have been - to vote according to the facts they hear and not according to some pre-ordained correct 'line' - you'll win hands down. Good luck!
PS One extra point worth making is that Dr David Kelly was apparently in favour of the military intervention!
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I don't understand what Dave_in_cw means in the response above by saying: "Resolution 1441 DOES NOT say that there were WMD in Iraq." If you click on his own link and scroll down to where it says: "Following is the text of the resolution", you will find these words in Paragraph 3...
"Recognizing the threat Iraq's noncompliance with Council resolutions and proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and long-range missiles poses to international peace..."
"Iraq's...proliferation" means "Iraq's continuing growth, repeated production and multiplication of WMD", so - if that isn't a crystal-clear statement that Iraq was, indeed, believed to have WMD - I find it hard to imagine what would constitute such a statement.
Unless, of course, Dave imagines the Iraqi authorities were doing all these naughty things somewhere other than in Iraq itself and hiding the WMD in Syria, say! (Hey! Maybe that's why they haven't been found!) But it is beyond dispute that everybody at the UN Security Council believed they had WMD and were developing and spreading them!
What the red-print material in my last response meant - just read it, for goodness's sake! - was that Iraqi WMD were believed-in unequivocally and by all concerned at the UNSC, not just Blair and Bush. The 45-minute claim and 'plagiarised' material had nothing whatever to do with Resolution 1441 or with the supposedly 'sexed-up' dossier, as you appear to imagine. (You should get back onto the Web and find out what it is that you are now referring to. It certainly ain't what we've supposedly been talking about!)
It's perfectly obvious that the word 'proliferate' must (quote): "imply the existence of what is being increased". You can't increase something that isn't there and you can multiply zero by as big a number as you like and still get absolutely zilch! At a job-interview, before salary had even been mentioned, could you ask for an increase?
You further quibble about my use of the phrase 'continuing growth' as an explanation of 'proliferation'. 'Chambers Thesaurus' lists 'increase' - which you seem to be happy with - as the very first alternative for 'growth'! And, since proliferation is clearly an on-going process, what can conceivably be wrong with calling it 'continuing growth'?
As I said above, 'here endeth the lesson', as far as I'm concerned, since you've drifted off in various directions but mainly - and wildly erroneously - into the field of semantics. Cheers