On Monday the New York Times reported on the "White House Memo" --
secret minutes, taken by a high British official, of a White House
meeting between President Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair in
January 2003.
Highlights of the memo were first published this year in January in the
book "Lawless World: America and the Making and Breaking of Global
Rules," which was written by a British lawyer and international law
professor, Philippe Sands.
Sands, currently on a brief visit to the U.S., spoke at the New America
Foundation this afternoon; information on the event is available at the
webpage and
video will be available.
The Times reported: "The January 2003 memo is the latest in a series of
secret memos produced by top aides to Mr. Blair that summarize private
discussions between the president and the prime minister. Another group
of British memos, including the so-called Downing Street memo written in
July 2002, showed that the United States was determined to invade Iraq,
and that the 'intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy'
by the Bush administration to fit its desire to go to war."
The Times added: "The memo also shows that the president and the prime
minister acknowledged that no unconventional weapons had been found
inside Iraq. Faced with the possibility of not finding any before the
planned invasion, Mr. Bush talked about several ways to provoke a
confrontation, including a proposal to paint a United States
surveillance plane in the colors of the United Nations in hopes of
drawing fire, or assassinating Mr. Hussein." [see:
]
BOB FERTIK, bob@democrats.com, http://afterdowningstreet.org
A founder of AfterDowningStreet.org, Fertik said today: "In January
2003, millions of us were protesting around the world. We all knew Bush
wanted war -- that's why we were protesting! But Bush insisted publicly
that he did not want war.
"The 'White House Memo' proves that Bush was lying -- saying one
thing in public while saying the opposite in private. In private, he
told Tony Blair that war was inevitable, and that it didn't matter if
WMDs were found or if the U.N. adopted a resolution actually authorizing
the invasion. ... Bush wanted war, no matter what."
JONATHAN SCHWARZ, jonathan_schwarz@sbcglobal.net, http://tinyrevolution.com
Schwarz has been a contributor to AfterDowningStreet.org and has
followed the various leaked memos closely. He said today: "The most
shocking aspect of the 'White House Memo' is that George Bush advocated
the U.S. and U.K. manufacture a pretext for war by flying a U.S. spy
plane over Iraq in false U.N. colors -- in hopes Iraq would fire upon it.
"This demonstrates Bush knew the U.S. case for war was extremely
unconvincing. Rather than forego war, however, he and Blair were willing
to deceive both their own people and the entire world."
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