Yes, yes, I know, I normally disagree with everything she writes, including the words and, or and the. There are parts I disagree with in this too, however, praise where it is due:
Every minister hotly denying this obvious truth sounds absurd – but
makes the wrong point altogether. The point is that a democratically
elected government’s foreign policy can’t be moulded by threats from
murdering religious maniacs. There are 1,001 good reasons why we should
never have supported, let alone joined, the war in Iraq. But the one
truly bad reason would have been fear of terrorism.
Those signing the letter steer perilously close to suggesting the
government had it coming. The Muslim leaders wrote: "The debacle of
Iraq and now the failure to do more to secure an immediate end to the
attacks on civilians in the Middle East not only increases the risk to
ordinary people in that region, it is also ammunition to extremists who
threaten us all." They urge the prime minister to "change our foreign
policy to show the world that we value the lives of civilians wherever
they live and whatever their religion. Such a move would make us
safer." Maybe it would, but there can’t be many, pro- or anti-war, who
think sparing us from threats by God-blinded killers should be the
number-one priority in foreign policy.
…
It goes with the selective amnesia that forgets about the Kosovo
Muslims Blair and Clinton saved from genocide. It goes with a distorted
memory of the Taliban as anything other than ruthless despots to their
people (especially their women) and unprovoked originators of terror
against the rest of the world. As for Iraq, invasion was dangerously
misguided, but selective Islamic memory forgets that Saddam murdered
Muslims.
…
Spot on. As she says, we can agree or disagree with any of the specific actions but to have not done any or all of them because medieval theocrats would threaten us is absurd.
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