Ex-British envoy's book criticizes Blair
By Ed Johnson, Associated Press Writer | November 7, 2005
LONDON --Prime Minister Tony Blair repeatedly failed to exert his influence with President Bush and to slow down the rush to war in Iraq, a former British ambassador to the United States claims.
In excerpts from his book, serialized in the British newspaper The Guardian on Monday, Sir Christopher Meyer said Blair appeared to be "seduced" by the glamor of U.S. power and was reluctant to negotiate conditions with Bush for Britain's support for the war.
"We may have been the junior partner in the enterprise, but the ace up our sleeve was that America did not want to go it alone," Meyer wrote in his book "DC Confidential."
"Had Britain so insisted, Iraq after Saddam might have avoided the violence that may yet prove fatal to the entire enterprise."
The claim is embarrassing for the prime minister, who committed British troops to the U.S.-led invasion in the face of widespread opposition and has been pilloried by the British press, and some of his own lawmakers, as Bush's poodle.
Blair's Downing Street office declined to comment, saying it did not intend to fuel publicity for the book.
As British ambassador to the United States from 1997 to 2003, Meyer sat in on sensitive meetings between Blair and Bush in the runup to the war and had a close relationship with senior figures in the Bush administration -- including his tennis partner Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.
In his book, Meyer recounted a conversation with White House adviser I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, who told him Britain was "the only ally that mattered. That was a powerful lever."
Nevertheless, Meyer wrote that Blair had little appetite for hard bargaining to delay the conflict and allow more time for postwar planning. Meyer has argued before that the March invasion should have been delayed several months.
London, Meyer wrote, "was not fertile ground for the notion of leverage or the tough negotiating position that must sometimes be taken even with the closest allies, as Churchill did with Roosevelt and Thatcher did with Reagan."
"Tony Blair chose to take his stand against Saddam and alongside President Bush from the highest of high moral ground. It is the definitive riposte to Blair the poodle, seduced though he and his team always appeared to be by the proximity and glamour of American power," he added.
"But the high moral ground, and the pure white flame of unconditional support to an ally in service of an idea, have their disadvantages. They place your destiny in the hands of an ally.
"They fly above the tangled history of Sunni, Shia, Kurd, Turkomen and Assyrian. They discourage descent into the dull detail of tough and necessary bargaining: meat and drink to Thatcher but, so it seemed, uncongenial to Tony Blair."
In his book, Meyer argued that delaying the invasion until the fall would have allowed U.N. weapons inspectors extra time to establish whether Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction, diluted intense opposition in the international community and increased support for the conflict, instead of going to war "in the company of a motley ad hoc coalition of allies."




Rispondi Citando
...............!
