“Mysteries” of the Iraq
War are getting exposed: Rupert Murdoch, the media Moghul, pressed Tony
Blair, the British prime minister, to hasten joining the Iraq War.
Murdoch did it on behalf of the US Republicans. And, the war took over
100,000 lives.
It is not only the interests behind waging the war,
but also the principles and interests bourgeois press uphold, and the
secretive and conspiratorial way bourgeois democracy works, lies are
fabricated, readers are informed, and mass psychology is manipulated are
being divulged.
The Guardian, British newspaper and AFP, news agency, reported the facts. The news reports said:
“Rupert Murdoch took part in an ‘over-crude’ attempt
by US Republicans to push Tony Blair into action before the invasion of
Iraq, the former British prime minister’s ex-media chief claimed
[Alastair Campbell…].
“Alastair Campbell said the News Corporation media
baron warned Blair in a phone call of the dangers in delaying signing up
to the March 19, 2003 invasion, as part of an attempt to speed up
Britain joining the military campaign.”
Campbell’s assertions were made in The Burden of Power: Countdown to Iraq, diaries from his years at Blair’s side.
The news reports said:
“Campbell suggested Murdoch made moves to help the
right-wing Republican Party of then US president George W. Bush before
the March 18 vote in the […] House of Commons on deploying troops to
Iraq, which was passed.”
Citing Campbell the news reports said:
On March 11, 2003, Blair “took a call from Murdoch
who was pressing on timings, saying how News International would support
us […]”
The reports said:
“‘Both TB [Tony Blair] and I felt it was prompted by
Washington, and another example of their over-crude diplomacy. Murdoch
was pushing all the Republican buttons, how the longer we waited the
harder it got.’
“Campbell said Murdoch’s intervention came ‘out of the blue’.
“‘On one level (Murdoch) was trying to be
supportive, saying ‘I know this is a very difficult place, my papers are
going to support you on this’. Fine.
“‘But I think Tony did feel that there was something a bit crude about it. It was another very right-wing voice saying to him: ‘Look, isn’t it about time you got on with this?’”
The news reports said:
“‘But I think Tony did feel that there was something a bit crude about it. It was another very right-wing voice saying to him: ‘Look, isn’t it about time you got on with this?’”
The news reports said:
“Gordon Brown agitated so aggressively against Tony
Blair – demanding a departure date soon after the 9/11 attacks – that
Downing Street concluded in 2002 that the then chancellor was ‘hell-bent
on TB’s destruction’.
Murdoch’s “worldwide contacts through the businesses that” he operated should not be missed while going through the news items.
However, in his witness statement to the Leveson
inquiry Murdoch said: “As for the three telephone calls with the then
prime minister, Tony Blair, in 2003, I cannot recall what I discussed
with him now, […] or indeed even if I spoke with him at all. I
understand that published reports indicate that calls were placed by him
to me. What I am sure about is that I would not in any telephone call
have conveyed a secret message of support for the war; the NI titles’
position on Iraq was a matter of public record before 11 March 2003.”
His famous declaration: “I’ve never asked a prime minister for
anything.” He cited “four articles from the Sun and the News of the
World which illustrated their ‘pro-war stance’ before 11 March 2003 when
the main phone call took place.”
The media Moghul’s company termed the assertion that
he lobbied Blair over the Iraq War on behalf of the US Republicans as
“complete rubbish”. It said: “Furthermore, there isn’t even any evidence
in Alastair Campbell’s diaries to support such a ridiculous claim.”
It should be mentioned that News International is
News Corp.’s British newspaper arm, publishing The Times, The Sun and
The Sunday Times. Blair faced a challenge getting his Labour Party
lawmakers to back UK’s involvement. Many of them rebelled. (“Murdoch
pushed Blair on Iraq: ex-media chief” and “Rupert Murdoch pressured Tony
Blair over Iraq, says Alastair Campbell”, June 16, 2012)
Already known is the Bush – Blair 2003 Iraq memo or
Manning memo, a secret memo of a meeting between Bush and Blair. The
historic meeting took place on January 31, 2003 in the White House. The
memo, written by David Manning, Blair’s chief foreign adviser, showed
that the US had already decided on the invasion of Iraq at that point.
Manning participated at the meeting.
The memo showed Bush and Blair made a secret deal to
carry out the invasion regardless of whether WMD were discovered by UN
inspectors. The fact contradicts statements Blair made to the British
parliament that Saddam Hussein would be given a final chance to disarm.
Existence of the memo was made by Philippe Sands in
his book Lawless World. The New York Times collected the memo and
confirmed its authenticity.
Then, there is the Colin Powell case. While arguing
for invading Iraq Powel claimed that Saddam was hiding a secret
biological weapons program. Powell dramatically and confidently held up a
vial he said could contain anthrax during his presentation of the Iraq
case at the UN in 2003. But, later, the claim proved bogus.
Powel relied on information provided by an Iraqi
defector. The defector was code-named “Curveball”. CBS News identified
Rafid Ahmed Alwan al-Janabi as “Curveball”. Rafid made the false claims
to German intelligence officials. The US used the claim that ultimately
turned a lie. But the Empire used the false information to start the
war. The UN inspectors found no evidence of a biological weapons
program, which was claimed.
In interviews with The Guardian, Rafid told the way
he sought asylum in Germany and wanted to see an end to Saddam’s regime.
“They gave me this chance. I had the chance to fabricate something to
topple the regime. I and my sons are proud of that […]”
The “story” of falsehood and fabrication doesn’t end there.
Citing Britain’s The Independent, Thomas Ferguson,
Senior Fellow at the Roosevelt Institute and Professor of Political
Science at the University of Massachusetts, Boston, wrote: The
Independent news report “buries forever all claims that the US, the UK,
and other governments did not have oil on their minds as they prepared
to invade Iraq.” He referred to a book that drew on more than a thousand
secret government documents. These show meetings between the UK
government and British oil companies in the run up to the war. “These
demonstrate that all the denials in London and Washington that
policymakers were not concerned about oil as they invaded were as false
as the famous cover story about weapons of mass destruction.” These also
show that all the governments were negotiating over rights to oil long
before the invasion and that they were working closely with their
companies. Dick Cheney’s Energy Task Force was reviewing documents on
Iraqi oil well before the attack on 9/11. (“Oil-Soaked Politics: Secret
U.K. Docs on Iraq”)
So, the profit issue emerges. The Iraq war brought
profit to all interested: weaponeer, supplier, infrastructureer, defense
contractor, mercenary companies, and a section of media and
politicians.
According to MSN Money, Halliburton’s KBR, Inc.
division made $17.2 bn in the desert war in the 2003-2006 period, which
was one-fifth of KBR’s total revenue for the 2006 fiscal year.
Halliburton was involved with construction and maintenance of military
bases, oil field repairs, and infrastructure rebuilding projects in the
country.
Veritas Capital Fund/DynCorp, the private equity fund, gathered $1.44 bn through its DynCorp subsidiary by imparting training to new Iraqi police forces. The company is termed by many as a ‘state within a state’.
Veritas Capital Fund/DynCorp, the private equity fund, gathered $1.44 bn through its DynCorp subsidiary by imparting training to new Iraqi police forces. The company is termed by many as a ‘state within a state’.
Through repair, maintenance, etc. work in Iraqi oil
fields the Washington Group International gathered $931 mn in the period
2003-2006. Through the work of munitions disposal the Environmental
Chemical got $878 mn by the end of fiscal 2006. The Aegis of the UK made
$430 mn. (“25 Most Vicious Iraq War Profiteers”)
And, after the Bush Blair, Murdoch, Halliburton war business where Iraq stood?
And, after the Bush Blair, Murdoch, Halliburton war business where Iraq stood?
Thomas E. Ricks, Washington Post Pentagon
correspondent quoted Mohammed Abdullah, an Iraqi in his Fiasco: The
American Military Adventure in Iraq: “They said they came to liberate
us. Liberate us from what? They came and said they would free us. Free
us from what? We have traditions, morals, and customs. We are Arabs.
We’re different from the West. Baghdad is the mother of Arab culture,
and they want to wipe out our culture, absolutely.”
Iraq now stands devastated, a bold sign of Naked
Imperialism (title of a book by John Bellamy Foster). Parts of life in
the land have been wiped out. Does imperialism have the power to restore
what has been lost in Iraq? It’s incapable. Imperialism’s devastating
power lacks power to create and nourish life and nature. Iraq is one of
the monuments of destruction imperialism has constructed in many parts
of the world.
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