Tony Blair on the reasons for the Iraq war

Comments

[this is good]
Great history lesson Jack. I've not read this until now. And here you are again - calling for the truth! Well done.
Thanks, A. I. This was an easy one: a copy-and-paste job! I have just written a summary which I hope is both entertaining and insightful for those who don’t want to read through Prime Minister Blair’s history.
Do you happen to know where a copy of Tony Blair's speech about Saddam and Iraq before our full congress that also inspired all of us to see the need to go into Iraq militarily?

Here is a transcript of his July 2003 speech:

http://edition.cnn.com/2003/US/07/17/blair.transcript/

A funny part was this: ‘On our way down here, Senator Frist was kind enough to show me the fireplace where, in 1814, the British had burnt the Congress Library. I know this is, kind of, late, but sorry.’

[this is good]
To American Infidel: Is this the 2003 Congress speech of Blair's you refer to? I have plenty more at my blog - dedicated to Tony Blair, a Prime Minister many more of us are now missing. We're not all blindfolded liberal intelligentsia in Britain!

http://keeptonyblairforpm.wordpress.com/iraq-2003-june-18th-blairs-speech-to-congress-usa/


Correction to the above url. Just realised I had the wrong month in this Congress speech page url. Have now altered it to "july". So this is the correct link.

http://keeptonyblairforpm.wordpress.com/iraq-2003-july-18th-blairs-speech-to-congress-usa/
Blair Supporter, thanks for popping by. It’s interesting: I did not like Rt Hon Tony Blair when he was campaigning in 1997. But I sure came to respect him during his terms. I might not agree with him all the time but I respect his steadfastness and principle. When it came to international law, he was a wise counsel to George W. Bush and other leaders. The man knows what he is talking about and I hope he has success as a Middle East peace envoy.
Hello Mr Yan, and thanks for your reply.

Well, I didn't vote for Blair or Labour. I actually supported another party, though I am no longer a member of any party.

I quite liked him when he first appeared on the scene, and I smiled with the rest of the country when he swept into Downing Street. And I watched with growing respect, as he dealt competently with issues domestic and international. But it was only when some in his party (Brown and cohorts) started to get heavy with the political knifing, that I looked more deeply into Blair. I was amazed at what I found.

Despite his being written off by opponents as "lightweight" and "all spin and no substance" I have found the opposite to be the case.

The phrase "too good for the room" comes to mind now. Especially so when Brown seems to have blown New Labour into history. Today they are 20% behind the Conservatives in a new opinion poll - the lowest showing since the 1930s!!!

Blair's political project up in smoke? I don't know, but he can't, surely, be too happy with his successor.

As for the Middle East, it looks a thankless task. But knowing how Blair brought together people in Northern Ireland, we can only wish him well.

I wrote this post recently on the current mess in the Blairless governing party, if your readers are interested. The wikipedia entry 2050 is a bit of fun. HONESTLY! I think!

http://keeptonyblairforpm.wordpress.com/2008/04/20/death-of-glue-less-clueless-labour-and-wiki-entry-2050/


It’s funny, isn’t it: I agree with your emphasized type above. I was one of those critics because I believed that Major left behind a very good economic legacy and his principles mirrored my own. I saw the easy ride David Frost and others gave Blair in the lead-up to the May 1997 General Election. And, like you, the more I discovered about the PM in the ensuing years, the more I found him to be substantial, partly because he always was, partly because he realized that shrewdness alone could not get him through life, and partly because he found himself and his own security in the role.
I blogged recently on the quotation that Gordon Brown had a Life on Mars moment: he woke up and found that Labour was back to the 1970s in terms of how much it was disliked. The 1930s’ comparison is more accurate.
I believe Blair saw through his eager successor and it was not a selfish desire to hang on to power but the firm knowledge that Brown lacked leadership skills to be in No. 10. A man who corrects minutiæ in Cabinet members’ speeches is not a man who trusts those around him. But why, then, appoint such MPs to Cabinet—but what does the Prime Minister’s Department’s corrections tell that minister? At least Blair—and Major—would assign a minister a job and expect them to get on with it. The PM is not an emperor where things must be done his way.
Blair probably learned from the Northern Ireland situation though he does give plenty of credit to his predecessor. I believe without the insistence by Major for total disarmament, the Troubles would have continued. I wish Blair well, too.
I will surf to your entry right now: thank you.
I seem to have corrections galore today! Like to get my facts straight.

On the opinion poll on Brown and Labour I've read that it's the worst since the 1970s AND the 1930s. Some confusion here.

"The YouGov poll conducted earlier this week and published in the Sun tabloid put Labour on 23 percent with the opposition Conservative Party on a 49 percent -- enough for it to win a landslide if national elections were held now.

Labour's showing was the worst since opinion polls were first published in the 1930s.

Whatever - it's not good.
I’m never going to argue with anyone who wants to get things across accurately. Corrections are welcome!
Been to your blog post: there are some fascinating what-ifs, and I think you are right on those counts.
Tony Blair seems to be lucky: in terms of legacy he seems fairly untainted.
On a different note, notice how Sarah Brown seemed to have smiled more during these local elections, knowing Labour might have a poor showing? We are talking a proper smile, not the forced one she showed when she moved in to No. 10.
Hadn't noticed Sarah Brown, I'm afraid, smiling or not. Just like her other half, she seems to be almost invisible.

She can't match Gordon on the forced (Tony-like) smile though, I'm sure. No-one can. It's one of his problems. You've either got or you haven't got, style ... I mean, smile.

I put this together at the end of 2007 when Brown's government was starting to crack up. It illustrates the many concerns around Brown after he bottled out of holding a general election.

A few months later it's getting even worse.

The smile at the end says it all, imho.

[這個好]
Great wee song and Blair’s smile is unbeatable. Back in ’97, that creeped me out a bit.
Excellent images, I must say, charting Brown’s self-destruction.
Going off-topic again, here’s another version of the song.
Blast, the video is gone from YouTube. Will try to find another copy …
[this is good]
Thank you so much. Also I'd like to tell you it's good to meet you here. I'll check out your blog.

Jack - thanks for the transcript link. I'm off to read and listen.

Again, thanks to both of you.
[this is good]
I checked out your blog at wordpress. I like it much and I'll be returning. I hope you copy/paste some of your post here at Vox.
Thanks American Infidel. You may feel that some of your fellow countrymen are kind of weird. Well, you ain't seen nothing until you've read the weirdos on The Guardian.

I DO miss Tony Blair very much and I 'm not the only one. A great leader and what's more important, a good man.

I might send a few like minds over here to say hello to you all.

Here's another page from my site about the Guardian Cif-ers - 'Comment Is Free'. (Just as well - who'd pay for this junk!?)

http://keeptonyblairforpm.wordpress.com/the-guardian-cif-ers-and-other-such/
Hi there, United States Military Men and Women of Valor -

Great to hear from you. Glad you enjoyed my Keep Tony Blair blog. If you go back, please leave a comment at one of my posts.

Your site is great, btw, and I intend to send the link to a few friends.

That's a good idea about copying and pasting. Wish I'd thought of that ;0)

http://keeptonyblairforpm.wordpress.com/2008/03/03/the-regal-has-landed-harrys-home/
I even have a friend at The Guardian who talked to me about the weirdos on that blog …

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Jack Yan

About Me

Jack Yan
New Zealand
‘I think they’re wonderful. They have so much courage! Here they are, hurling through space on a molten rock at 67,000 miles an hour, and the only thing that keeps them in their shoes is their misplaced faith in gravity.’—John Lithgow as Prof Dick Solomon, in Third Rock from the Sun

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