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Re: Interviews with Wilson and Blair



Hi,

In reply to Mr. Wilson statement that "There is no evidence that sanctions
are hurting the Iraqi people " I would like to invite Mr. Wilson for a week
visit to
Baghdad in July or August. Mr. Wilson will be my guest in our home, not in a
5 star hotel. I am sure Mr. Wilson will not mind staying in a house that
does not have electricity for 18 hours each day when the temperature inside
the house is above 45 degrees. If he elects to go to the garden to cool of
the temperature is close to 55. I will make sure to boil the water he drinks
not because he likes his water hot but to kill the bacteria. He should not
wary about his health because my wife is a doctor and will take him to the
hospital " it feels like an oven, no air-conditioning" were he is going to
have the same medical facilities we have. If that does not convince him then
I will take him the poor section in Baghdad were he will walk through sewage
ponds. If that does not convince him then I will give him a megaphone to
tell the people of Baghdad that " There is no evidence that sanctions are
hurting the Iraqi people". I think hot-tempered people in such hot climate
might just kill him.

God where did you find such a leader? Was he a sleep for ten years or is he
as smart as the " smart bombs" that hit Baghdad last week? No wonder the UK
is losing credibility fast.

Regards

Ghazwan Al-Mukhtar
Baghdad, Iraq


----- Original Message -----
From: "Milan Rai" <milanrai@trinityroad.free-online.co.uk>
To: "CASI Discussion Group" <soc-casi-discuss@lists.cam.ac.uk>
Sent: Wednesday, February 28, 2001 8:33 PM
Subject: Interviews with Wilson and Blair


> Two items from the Foreign Office website
>
> 1) Brian Wilson BBC interview 26 February 2001
> 2) Tony Blair CNN interview 23 February 2001
>
> URLs given with each item.
>
> 1) EDITED TRANSCRIPT OF AN INTERVIEW GIVEN BY FCO MINISTER OF STATE, BRIAN
> WILSON, FOR THE BBC, MONDAY 26 FEBRUARY 2001
>
> http://www.fco.gov.uk/news/newstext.asp?4730
>
> QUESTION:
> Are there to be any possible changes to sanctions policies against Iraq?
>
> BRIAN WILSON:
> Sanctions are perfectly legal. They have a clear objective which is to
> prevent Saddam Hussein rebuilding his weapons of mass destruction
programme.
> I think it's quite clear that the precise intention of Saddam Hussein is
to
> rebuild his weapons of mass destruction programme both nuclear and
chemical.
>
> QUESTION:
> But we do know first of all that sanctions are hurting ordinary Iraqi
people
> and that is causing a lot of disquiet in the West.
>
> BRIAN WILSON:
> There is no evidence that sanctions are hurting the Iraqi people. What is
> hurting the Iraqi people is the fact that Saddam Hussein is using the
> existence of sanctions as a propaganda weapon in order to deny to his own
> people the medical and food supplies which they need.
>
> QUESTION:
> But the point is that ten years after the Gulf War Saddam appears to be
> stronger than ever and has a lot more in the Arab world behind him than he
> had ten years ago.
>
> BRIAN WILSON:
> You can't measure the success of the last ten years simply in terms of
> whether or not Saddam Hussein is still there. He was not going to
disappear
> in a puff of smoke because we all wished it that way. But the success of
the
> past ten years has been the containment of Saddam Hussein and the fact
that
> he is not in a position to use chemical weapons against his own people.
The
> fact is that he is not attacking Kuwait and has not developed the weapons
of
> mass destruction programme to which he so clearly aspires.
>
> 2) EDITED TRANSCRIPT OF AN INTERVIEW GIVEN BY THE PRIME MINISTER, TONY
> BLAIR, FOR CNN, WASHINGTON, FRIDAY, 23 FEBRUARY 2001
>
> http://www.fco.gov.uk/news/newstext.asp?4724
>
> QUESTION:
> Prime Minister, as you know President Bush's first and foremost goal with
> you is to establish a personal rapport with you. What is it that you have
in
> common with President Bush?
>
> PRIME MINISTER:
> I think what is important is not just the personal relationship, although
I
> am sure that will be good, but it is that the UK and the US have a very
> strong relationship together, we share the same outlook, we share the same
> values, we share much of common history and we usually are on the same
side
> together on the big issues that face the world. So it is an immensely
> important relationship.
>
> QUESTION:
> Just a week ago you did have much in common to talk about with President
> Bush. Both US military forces and British forces bombed Iraq, President
Bush
> called it a big success though half the targets were missed. Critics are
> saying that the bombing targeting has not worked in the last ten years and
> neither have the sanctions, they are now being treated as a joke. Do you
> think that there is a more effective way of dealing with Saddam Hussein?
>
> PRIME MINISTER:
> We have always got to look at the ways that we are dealing with him and
how
> to make them more effective. But I think that people should understand
that
> for the last 10 years he has been contained. Before then, when he wasn't
> being contained, he was launching the war against Iran, which cost a
million
> lives, he was using chemical weapons against his own people, killing
> thousands of them, he annexed Kuwait and had to be repelled by the Allies
> back in the early '90s. You know this is a man that is a serial sinner
when
> it comes to weapons of mass destruction and a threat to the external
world,
> and I think it is important therefore that we take whatever steps are
> necessary to contain him, and our containment has basically been
successful.
>
> QUESTION:
> How should the sanctions then be treated? One of the proposals on the
table
> by the United States is to ease up on some of the sanctions, for example,
by
>
> allowing flights into Iraq to allow things like medical supplies and food
> for children, but to still work with the Arab allies in trying to crack
down
> on other sanctions. Can you have it both ways when the sanctions still
have
> not worked?
>
> PRIME MINISTER:
> Of course we have in place, and it is important to point this out, the Oil
> for Food regime which actually allows Saddam to use oil revenues in order
to
> provide humanitarian and medical aid for his people, but he chooses not to
> do so, he chooses instead to spend whatever money he can on his military
> base. But yes, of course, we have got to look and see how we make
sanctions
> more effective, and in particular how we target those sanctions most
> effectively on limiting his ability to develop these extremely dangerous
> weapons.
>
> Milan Rai
> Joint Coordinator
> Voices in the Wilderness UK
> National Office
> 16B Cherwell St, Oxford OX4 1BG
>
> Personal contact details
> 29 Gensing Road, St Leonards-on-sea TN38 0HE
> ph 0845 458 9571 (local rate) pager 07623 746 462
>
>
> --
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------
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