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The end does not justify the means
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White Rock B.C. - Friday, April 11, 2003 - by: Brian
Marlatt |
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unilateral
action
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I am absolutely ecstatic that the Ba'ath Party and Saddam
Hussein seem to have been driven from power with a minimum loss of life in the
allied invasion of Iraq. One brutal dictator and regime removed from the power
to oppress will make the world a better place. Of that I have no doubt. I welcome
it to that extent. But let's not pretend that ends justify the means. Let's not pretend
that the invasion of Iraq is anything other than the unilateral action of a military
power to shape the world as it sees fit. |
poisoned
relationship
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This is the critical issue raised by the invasion of Iraq, and it will shape the
next century. Because of it the Bush presidency and "Rummy's War,"
as the invasion of Iraq urged by US Secretary of Defence Donald Rumsfeld will
go down in history, has poisoned the US relationship with the rest of the world.
Of that I am also convinced. |
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imposition
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The brutality of Saddam Hussein is one thing. The ambition of
the Bush presidency is another, barely visible in the sanitized war reports of "embedded
journalists." The invasion of Iraq looks too much like pursuit of American
interests, regional hegemony, and imposition of an American version of western values
by force and without the consent of the people in the region. |
regime
change
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No other conclusion appears likely in the face of the open declaration by the United
States of America through its spokespersons so frequently since the outbreak
of war that the true intention of the invasion of Iraq in the mind of the
present US administration is regime change. All else is rhetoric. |
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moral
outrage
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Ironically, if the Bush administration had sought support of the world
based on the moral outrage against the brutal oppression of the Kurds and
Shiite Muslims, it may well have received it and our admiration. Instead,
a unilateral decision to overthrow the Iraqi regime seems to have been the taken
early on in the Bush presidency. |
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no
evidence
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What is more, it has been argued in recent weeks through untruths such
as the claim that France opposed the disarmament of Iraq's dictator and deceit
such as the claim that the US had provided clear proof of the existence of weapons
of mass destruction and thus demonstrated material breach of UN resolutions.
Had such evidence been presented, in fact, the Bush administration would also have
received the support of most of the world, including France, as French President
Chirac stated . No such evidence was presented. |
prior
knowledge
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We must ask why the US has ceased to reference UN Resolution 1441 since the
invasion and why they refer to chemical or similar weapons only when it seems they
might be asked to justify themselves. The answer likely is that they knew that Weapons
of Mass Destruction probably haven't existed in Iraq for years. |
what
right?
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What right and under what law does the Bush presidency propose to overthrow governments
anywhere in the world and to remake them in their own image or interest? |
lurches
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So the issue becomes not will democracy be seeded by present events
and the fate of Iraqi's bettered, but what does this say about a world in which "the
world's only superpower" lurches from unilateral decision to unilateral
decision. The UN will not find lasting solutions any more than the US, but anything
it does attempt to accomplish will not necessarily be seen as an imposition by a
First World imperial power. |
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I see no reason for optimism. |
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Brian Marlatt |
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Editor's note: The images used on this page were obtained from
the Arab News
in Jeddah, Saudia Arabia. The third last picture is of ophaned children in Baghdad,
the last three pictures were taken today and the others earlier in the week. |
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Return to Ensign
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News
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This page is a story posted on Ensign and/or Saskatchewan
News, both of which are daily web sites offering a variety of material from scenic
images, political commentary, information and news. These publications are the work
of Faster Than Light Communications . If you would like to comment on this story or you wish to contact
the editor of these sites please send us email. |
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Editor : Timothy W. Shire
Faster Than Light Communication
Box 1776, Tisdale, Saskatchewan, Canada, S0E 1T0
306 873 2004
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