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Going To War with Iraq Was Wrong, Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd Admits
In an admission that will make uncomfortable reading in London and Washington, the Labour leader dismissed one-by-one the reasons used by his predecessor, John Howard, to join the Anglo-American invasion of Iraq five years ago.
"Have further terrorist attacks been prevented? No, they have not been, as the victims of the Madrid train bombing will attest," Mr Rudd told parliament.
"Has any evidence of a link between weapons of mass destruction and the former Iraqi regime and terrorists been found? No.
"Have the actions of rogue states like Iran been moderated? No ... Iran's nuclear ambitions remain a fundamental challenge.
"After five years, has the humanitarian crisis in Iraq been removed? No it has not."
Mr Rudd, whose campaign for election last November included a pledge to withdraw Australian combat forces from Iraq, said pre-war intelligence had been "abused" by the Howard government.
He said there had been a "failure to disclose to the Australian people the qualified nature of the intelligence - for example, the pre-war warning that an attack on Iraq would increase the terrorist threat, not decrease it".
Mr Rudd, a former diplomat, also dismissed his predecessor's argument that Australia had been obliged to send troops to Iraq because of its long-standing alliance with the United States.
He said while he valued the alliance highly, it did not mean that Canberra should automatically accede to US requests for military support.
His comments came a day after Australia's 550-strong combat force began leaving its base at Tallil, 185 miles south of Baghdad.
Mr Howard, who has kept a low profile since being ousted from office six months ago, said he was still convinced that being part of the 2003 invasion of Iraq was justified.
"I firmly believe it was the right thing to have done," he said, while acknowledging that it was the hardest decision he made as prime minister and that the cost of the war had been "very, very heavy and much greater than anybody would have liked".
His decision to send troops was deeply influenced by the fact that he was in the US on an official visit on September 11, 2001, when terrorists struck New York and Washington.
Mr Howard was one of four leaders who supported the US-led coalition but who are all now out of office: Tony Blair, Jose Maria Aznar of Spain and Polish president Aleksander Kwasniewski.
One of Mr Howard's former senior officials said the government had been fully briefed on the fact that invading Iraq would damage US prestige, foster anti-Western sentiment, require a massive troop presence and destabilise the wider Middle East.
"All that was predictable and I don't think the benefits of the West going in were worth the cost," the official, who declined to be named, told the Sydney Morning Herald.
"That was my judgment at the time and that hasn't changed."
Australia will still have about 800 military personnel in and around Iraq, including a 110-strong diplomatic security detachment in Baghdad, sailors on board warships in the Persian Gulf and Royal Australian Air Force crew.
© 2008 The Telegraph

24 Comments so far
Show AllFinally someone has the " lls" to take the correct decision
Good job mate, great work
Thank you Mr. Rudd.
Well, hopefully in the future these countries won't allow themselves to be bumrushed when the United States claims it needs their help for some military adventurism. As someone once said, "Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice ...can't get fooled again."
Thanks !
BTW check the US reply which is full of lies
http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5hiVM44ZRq_L5YIhYfesuXM2ysBKw
Looks like the coalition of the coerced is gradually becoming the coalition of the willing (as they were original labeled by the Bush Regime). Not willing to support the Bush Regime, however, but Willing to exit Iraq.
Seldom have I seen so many silly hats in one photograph.
Bravo to Kevin Rudd. We need a leader like him in the U.S.
I just hope the US doesn't do to Rudd what they did to Prime Minister Whitlam in the seventies.
this praise for mr. rudd is premature. notice how the message is crafted to give the appearance of sober hindsight (iraq as "strategic blunder" and not "ongoing war crime") yet speaks of iran as a "rogue state" with "nuclear ambitions."
this is right out of cheney's libretto. watch him carefully.
Thank you to the people in Australia for electing Mr. Rudd, may the actions toward peace and truth continue. Thank you Mr. Rudd.
good point hazmat.
Also note that Australia also lead the way with Canada, US and China to undermine the anti-Cluster bomb treaty just signed in Dublin.
http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/australia-baulks-at-cluster-bomb-ban/2008/05/24/1211183186925.html
"His (John Howard, previous PM) decision to send troops was deeply influenced by the fact that he was in the US on an official visit on September 11, 2001, when terrorists struck New York and Washington."
He still hasn't been told it was not Iraqis apparently, but mainly Saudi nationals, however there is good news too:
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/06/02/2262414.htm?section=justin
Whether it comes to anything, who knows? But in the meantime have a good chuckle.
I guess Mr. Rudd deserves something along the lines of congratulations for his present stand.
The mathematics involved do not, however, support his statements. The article says 550 forces will be removed and 800 will remain.
If he feels so strongly that the Howard government was wrong in joining with the U. S. in the first place, someone please explain to me the reason for the 800 remaining.
ANYBODY!
I guess Mr. Rudd deserves something along the lines of congratulations for his present stand.
The mathematics involved do not, however, support his statements. The article says 550 forces will be removed and 800 will remain.
If he feels so strongly that the Howard government was wrong in joining with the U. S. in the first place, someone please explain to me the reason for the 800 remaining.
ANYBODY!
Mr Rudd is a politician. Politicans speak with forked tongues using many sided words.
Its good that Kevin Rudd has pulled out of Iraq, BUT he has swallowed the lie that Ahmadinejad said 'to wipe Israel off the map', and now wants to take action against Iran.
Ahmadinejad wiping out Israel? Let's have George Foreman come out of retirement so Pee Wee Herman can challenge him to a heavyweight bout.
As I commented elsewhere today, "The Runt" is all talk. I strongly believe that the only reason he's made statements denying that there was ever a holocaust is because he knows how he can get under the skin of the Israelis (and their war-monger U. S. supporters)
If Rudd wants to take action against Iran, let's see him do it all by himself
Just when I was beginning to like the guy; he's gotta remind me that he's a political leader by sticking his head up his ass!
Ahmadinejad wiping out Israel? Let's have George Foreman come out of retirement so Pee Wee Herman can challenge him to a heavyweight bout.
As I commented elsewhere today, "The Runt" is all talk. I strongly believe that the only reason he's made statements denying that there was ever a holocaust is because he knows how he can get under the skin of the Israelis (and their war-monger U. S. supporters)
If Rudd wants to take action against Iran, let's see him do it all by himself.
I don't think the benefits of the West going in were worth the cost
The payees disagree.
Another part of the endgame of Dubya, Cheney, & Co. has occurred as one the countries coerced into the Bush crime family's great strategic blunder, Australia, has left. Of course, it took the removal of the troglodyte Howard (who was an obnoxious partisan for the Iraq debacle) by an Australian electorate that finally came to its' senses (though it should be written that Howard's myriad outrages piled up exponentially to the point that enough of his countrymen tired of him).
BTW: cut Rudd some slack, any government that has Peter Garrett (Midnight Oil's singer) is not all bad.
I think the Australian people deserve some credit for ousting Howard and replacing him with someone with a brain.
pontificating papa: Ahmadinjehad did not say the holocaust didn't happen. War is not a boxing match, or a game of any sort. Your bravado is part of the disease.
I'm waiting for an apology like this one from the Prime minister of my home country as well: Jan-Peter Balkenende. The Dutch left Iraq several years ago, but I'm afraid we'll never hear an apology like this one.
Firstly, I would like to say that it is absolute music to finally hear the truth come from my Prime Minister.
@curmudgeon99 June 2nd, 2008 11:37 am
Thanks for that link. It makes me spit in contempt.
http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5hiVM44ZRq_L5YIhYfesuXM2ysBKw
I must comment on the link provided by curmudgeon99. The Washington
response is a BALD FACED LIE!!! They are still lying. And it makes me angry.
WASHINGTON (AFP) — The White House Monday rejected Australian Prime
Minister Kevin Rudd's charges of "abuse" of pre-war intelligence on
Iraq, saying "the entire world" agreed on the threat posed by Saddam
Hussein.
"We acted on the intelligence that we had, and that the entire world
had," spokeswoman Dana Perino told reporters after Rudd alleged
"abuse of intelligence information" on the regime in Baghdad.
"No-one else in the world, no other government, had different
information and so we acted based on what was the threat that was
presented to us. When the intelligence community presents you with
their concerns, you'd better take them seriously," said Perino.
What an utter BALD FACED LIE!!! There was simply NO evidence that
Saddam had WMD apart from concocted lies. The "intelligence" was
interfered with until came up with the desired falsehood. In Britain,
Australia and in the USA, the original inteligence was that if there
were any remains of the chemical weapons that we sold them, then it was
no longer operational. But in each case, politicians directly
interfered with that intelligence.
See my home link. It left unchanged since 2003:-
http://web.aanet.com.au/~webspace/BloodForOil/factsheet.html
But you didnt even NEED an intelligence organisation. The information
was there all along for anyone who wanted to know, and there is no way
that major government or media organisations could not have known the
truth other than by willfull ignorance, which is not really ignorance.
Our media and governments are responsible for entire holocaust which
totally destroyed Iraq. Iraq previously enjoyed one of the best living
standards in the Arab world. Citizens enjoyed a free and robust medical
system and a free and robust health system.
The sanctions (also justified by lies) killed approximately 2 million
people. And now Iraq has been reduced to a living hell, by the lies of
Rupert Murdoch, George Bush, Tony Blair and John Howard. I suppose that
they will never admit it, because once they do, they have practically
pleaded guilty to the most serious war crimes.