Lords
Against the War
Baroness
Williams of Crosby - LD
The Lord
Bishop of Oxford
Lord Howe
of Aberavon - C
Lord Thomson
of Monifieth - LD
Lord Bruce
of Donington - L
Lord Gilmour
of Craigmillar - C
Lord Goodhart
- LD
Lord Wright
of Richmond – X Bench
Lord Brennan
- L
The Earl
of Sandwich – X Bench
Baroness
Uddin - L
The Lord
Bishop of Guilford
Lord Judd
- L
Lord Redesdale
- LD
Lord Rea
- L
Lord Alderdice
- LD
Lord Morgan
- L
Lord Chan
– X Bench
The Lord
Bishop of Salisbury
Baroness
Miller of Chilthorne Domer - LD
Lord Skidelsky
- XB
Baroness
Turner of Camden - L
Lord Stoddart
of Swindon - O
Lord Phillips
of Sudbury - LD
Baroness
Massey of Darwen - L
Lord Greaves
- LD
Lord Wallace
of Saltaire - LD
5.2 p.m.
Lord Bruce of Donington: My Lords, I ask the indulgence of
the House with regard to its rules. Owing to the unfortunate
fact that I am more than 90 years of age and consequently
find it difficult for medical reasons to be up much after
normal dinner time, I must ask your Lordships' indulgence
in this respect. I shall not be able to be here at the end
of the debate—after, no doubt, some distinguished speeches.
I hope that the House will extend its generosity to me if
I disobey that rule on this one occasion.
I do not believe in war. I do not believe in war because it
is one of the most immoral acts that organised or semi-organised
society can perpetrate. We talk of collateral damage in the
event of any war. I wonder whether we understand what is really
meant by collateral damage. In the case of the people of Iraq,
it means that in addition to whatever disabilities they may
face now—I should not want to minimise them—they
will be blown up and torn apart, men, women and children who
have never played any part in even mildly inconveniencing
our life here.
It is more than 50 years ago since, as a serving officer in
Her Majesty's Army during the war—I was a member of
the Territorial Army even before that—I was asked to
go before the North Portsmouth Labour Party, which was looking
for a candidate at the time. When they invited me, party members
knew perfectly well my military record at the time—risible
and uninteresting though it may be. So I went to see them.
It was probably an unwinnable seat, but I eventually won it.
Praise be to luck; praise be to my good luck.
But one thing that my party in Portsmouth impressed on me
was that one of the cardinal tenets, one of the built-in beliefs,
of my party was the wickedness of war. My party said that
it quite understood that I had been involved in both the TA
and in the then current conflict but, for the future, my party
through to its core did not
26 Feb 2003 : Column 273
believe in war; it believed passionately in peace. It secured
my agreement to obey that edict. Thus I have tried ever since.
I very much regret the way in which the current argument has
occasionally been conducted. It has not always been conducted
in public. Where it has been aired in public, it has not always
been other than rather loose with the truth. I have abundant
examples of that, which only the constraints of time permit
me to ignore.
War is an evil thing. It is not something to be brushed over
or set aside. It is not something to be borne and tolerated
in the back of one's mind on the basis of some probability
occurring in future. It is a terrible thing and has terrible
consequences for the individuals concerned. If we go to war—if
we were unwise enough to go to war—we should be doing
rather more than that. We should be implicitly harming the
whole political structure of the world—a political structure
based in the main on the sovereignty of individual states
to arrive at their own decisions, to consult their own people
and, through the United Nations, to express their collective
view.
What would happen in the event of our opening hostilities
with the rest of the world—because that is what it would
be? We would be destroying its civil structure. Instead, we
would be substituting—for perfectly good, sincere reasons—the
power and authority of one state, the United States, which,
thereafter, would in effect conduct the affairs of mankind
in general.
One may find that difficult to realise, until one comes to
consider one small matter—it is very small, but illustrative.
It concerns the European Community, in which I have a more
than passing interest. One of the reasons why Turkey has,
so far, been denied membership of the European Community is,
ironically, its record in dealing with the Kurds. It is small
things like that—there are many more like them—that
go to illustrate that, if we go to war in support of our colleagues
in the United States, we shall do rather more than achieve
a bloody victory; we shall achieve a transformation in the
way that the affairs of the world outside the United Kingdom
and America are conducted.
5.10 p.m.
Lord Gilmour of Craigmillar: My Lords, if the war starts in
March, as seems almost certain, it will be, in my view, a
war of cynicism, aggression, greed and unpopularity. In Glasgow,
the Prime Minister claimed that unpopularity was the price
of leadership; in fact, Mr Blair has been unpopular not because
he has been leading but because he has been following President
Bush. His unpopularity is the price not of leadership but
of "followership".
During the past century, the United States was, undoubtedly,
a considerable force for good. However, it would be difficult
to argue that the current Administration in Washington are
a force for good. That is why they are so generally unpopular
in much of the world. Their arrogant bullying; their opposition
to
26 Feb 2003 : Column 274
measures to improve the environment and to arms control, as
outlined by the noble Baroness, Lady Williams of Crosby; their
attitude to the international court; their meanness over foreign
aid; and their economic policy—free trade for everybody
else but subsidies and tariffs for themselves—which
damages the economy of many poor countries, make it difficult
to argue that they are a force for good. Yet, it is that most
benighted American Administration for many years—probably
over a century—that this country has followed so slavishly.
That is what causes the Government's unpopularity.
It will be a cynical war because the reasons given for it
are largely bogus. The idea that Saddam Hussein—odious
though he be—presents an imminent threat to this country
or the United States is deeply implausible. In an article
in the New York Times entitled "Bush should start telling
the truth about this war", the pro-war, pro-Israeli right-wing
American columnist Thomas Friedman admitted that Saddam,
"does not threaten America. He can be deterred".
Friedman added:
"It is a war
of choice".
That is plainly true. It is certainly not a war of necessity,
still less a just war.
Another reason given for the war—the alleged connection
between Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden—is even more
bogus. There is no evidence for it.
The third reason given is that Saddam defies UN resolutions.
That will not wash either: Israel also defies UN resolutions.
Instead of being bombed by the Americans, however, Israel
is showered with weapons and dollars for its defiance. In
her interesting speech, the noble Baroness, Lady Symons of
Vernham Dean, sought to differentiate between Israel and Iraq,
but there are many other UN resolutions concerning Israel
besides Nos. 242 and 338. Unlike Iraq, Israel occupies territory
and rules people in Syria and Palestine with no conceivable
right to do so. Israel also wages a vicious colonial war against
the Palestinians, who are struggling to free themselves from
a brutal occupation. Yet, the Bush Administration give the
Israeli Government unconditional support and allow Sharon
to go on building illegal Jewish settlements in contravention
of United Nations Resolution 465, as well as international
law. Thus continues Sharon's robbery with violence of the
small amount of land still left to the Palestinians.
If our Prime Minister had made his support of the United States
over Iraq conditional on serious action—rather than
inaction—from Bush to settle the Palestinian issue on
the basis of UN resolutions, he would, at least, have been
consistent and just, unlike the president. Unfortunately,
he has done nothing of the sort.
The fourth reason—that there is a moral case for war
because of the undoubtedly bestial nature of the Iraqi regime—was
produced by the Prime Minister in some desperation, after
his other reasons were shown to be unconvincing. As Harold
Macmillan said, morals are best left to the archbishops; we
all know what the
26 Feb 2003 : Column 275
archbishops—and the Pope—think about war in Iraq.
In consequence, many fewer people than before believe what
the Prime Minister says. In the late 1940s, there was a saying
about President Truman that ran:
"Washington
could not tell a lie; Roosevelt could not tell the truth;
Truman does not know the difference".
That is increasingly applicable to the Prime Minister. He
says that we are making a final push for peace, when, clearly,
we are making a final push for war.
It will be a war of aggression. As many noble Lords have said,
Saddam—horrendous though he is—has done nothing
recently to merit being attacked. The principal warmongers
in America are called "chicken-hawks". Bush, Cheney,
Wolfowitz, Perle and company were not brave enough to risk
their own lives fighting in Vietnam, but they are plenty brave
enough to risk other people's lives attacking Iraq. Aggression
against Iraq takes attention away from America's flagging
economy and the failure to find bin Laden. They also want
Iraq's oil, which is where the greed comes in, and they aim
to establish US-Israeli imperial hegemony throughout the Middle
East. My noble and learned friend Lord Howe of Aberavon touched
briefly on that.
Probably—far from certainly—the Iraqis will crumble,
not fight. Probably, America, through persuasion of various
sorts, will get a UN resolution. That will mean that the president
and the Prime Minister will get away with their aggression
for the time being. But, as many noble Lords have said, Heaven
knows what will happen after that. As the fine Israeli writer
Amos Oz has said, the dangers of the war are immense, and,
as others have pointed out, what has happened in Afghanistan
is not very encouraging.
The only sure result of the aggression will be even greater
hatred of the United States and the recruitment of more terrorists.
The eventual victims of those terrorists will be innocent,
but the president will be guilty.
5.18 p.m
Lord Goodhart: My Lords, as a lawyer, I shall speak about
the Iraq crisis in the context of international law. I do
so as someone who is British and American by birth and has
strong links to both countries.
I shall start from a basic principle: there should be an international
rule of law that governs the external actions of states in
the same way that, as we now accept, the rule of law must
govern the conduct of the state in the internal exercise of
its powers. In that context, it is a matter of great concern
that, in some respects, the USA—the present Administration,
at least—rejects that principle, which it sees as a
limitation on its powers. That is true of, at least, some
of the aspects of the handling of prisoners in Guantanamo
Bay, and it is true of the American attitude to the International
Criminal Court, which has been not just a refusal to co-operate
but a policy of active obstruction.
International law is more amorphous and uncertain than domestic
law. It has something equivalent to statute law, with the
Charter of the United Nations and the numerous covenants,
conventions and treaties made since the end of the Second
World War.
26 Feb 2003 : Column 276
However, those are not exhaustive sources of international
law. International law develops outside the treaty system,
as well as within it. There is only a rudimentary court system.
There is the International Court of Justice, but it has limited
jurisdiction. We now have the International Criminal Court
and the ad hoc tribunals on Rwanda and former Yugoslavia.
Finally, there is of course no central agency for law enforcement.
We must rely on the willingness of states to contribute their
own forces and logistics support to enforcement actions.
If we are to support action against Iraq we must be satisfied
that that action is within the rule of law and not outside
it. There are three possible legal justifications for military
intervention in Iraq: first, the right of humanitarian intervention;
secondly, self-defence; and, thirdly, the failure to comply
with the United Nations resolutions. There has been confusion
between these three justifications, which has at times been
shared by our own Government.
Let us look first at humanitarian intervention. This is a
new principle which has arisen outside the charter. It was
most clearly recognised in Kosovo. It is widely, but not universally,
accepted by international lawyers. In cases such as genocide
by rulers against their own people, as in Rwanda and Cambodia,
it is hard to deny that such a principle exists.
Can it apply to Iraq? Can we invade Iraq to save its own people
from tyranny? Saddam Hussein is certainly a murderous tyrant.
He has killed thousands of his opponents and he has caused
many thousands of deaths among Iraqis by the way he has spent
money on arms and palaces which he was supposed to spend on
food and medicines. But the right of humanitarian intervention
is an exceptional power and can be used only in exceptional
circumstances such as genocide or major ethnic cleansing.
The closest Saddam has come to this is in his treatment of
the Marsh Arabs, whose culture he has destroyed and many of
whose people he has killed. But it would be unrealistic to
treat even that as a justification for war. I do not believe
that we are entitled to go to war with Iraq to save the Iraqi
people from Saddam Hussein, desirable as that result would
be.
As regards self-defence, individual and collective rights
of self-defence are recognised by Article 51 of the Charter
of the United Nations. However, evidence of Iraqi involvement
in the events of 11th September are non-existent. We plainly
cannot use that as a justification for an attack. We are looking
therefore at the question of pre- emptive self-defence—the
right to strike first to forestall an attack which will happen
in the future.
It is questionable whether a right of pre-emptive self-defence
exists in international law. Most, but not all, international
lawyers believe that it does. But most are also agreed that
the right can exist only when an attack is imminent. What
"imminent" means is, admittedly, unclear when weapons
of mass destruction can be transported in a container on a
lorry or a ship, or, indeed, even in a test-tube.
26 Feb 2003 : Column 277
The most that can be said now is that at some time in the
future Saddam may choose to make a weapon of mass destruction
available to a terrorist group. We cannot regard that as a
sufficiently clear and imminent threat to justify an attack
now. On that issue, I beg leave to disagree with the noble
Lord, Lord Howell, of Guildford.
And so we come back to the third ground for intervention,
the failure of Iraq to comply with the United Nations orders
to destroy weapons of mass destruction and not to re-equip
itself, and, in particular, its non-compliance with resolutions
687 and 1441. I believe that this is a far stronger ground
for intervention, and the noble Baroness, Lady Symons, was
right to concentrate entirely on it.
The United Nations has power under Article 39 to decide on
the measures to take to maintain peace and security; under
Article 41 the measures may be sanctions; and under Article
42, if sanctions prove to be inadequate, the United Nations
may use armed force.
I have little doubt that Iraq still has biological and chemical
weapons; I have little doubt that an Iraq in possession of
weapons of mass destruction is, and would become increasingly,
a threat to the peace and security of its region, if not of
the wider world. I therefore have to accept that the use of
armed force would be a proportionate and legitimate response
if no other form of pressure can induce Iraq to disclose and
destroy its weapons of mass destruction and its facilities
for making them.
But the use of armed force would be legitimate only if other
methods had failed. The question is, have they failed? Certainly
they have not yet succeeded, but it is not clear that they
have yet failed. We must not allow a timetable to be dictated
by logistics and climate. We must act with deliberate speed
and not with haste. Others have discussed, and will discuss,
possible alternatives to armed force. I will say, once again,
that force must be used only as a last resort.
I turn to the final issue, which is perhaps the most important
of all. A decision under Article 42 of the United Nations
Charter to use force is a matter that must be decided by the
international community, acting through the United Nations.
That brings me back to where I started—the rule of law
must be paramount.
I recognise that without the commitment of the USA there would
be no chance whatever of enforcing compliance by Saddam Hussein
with the United Nations resolutions. That gives the USA a
right to respect for its views and to a strong voice in the
decision-making process. But it must balance its great powers
with great restraint. As Shakespeare said in "Measure
for Measure",
"O, it is excellent
To have a giant's strength; but it is tyrannous
"To use it like a giant".
The United States and the United Kingdom should act only with
the authority of the international community behind them.
Without that authority, military force would not be legitimate.
I believe that
26 Feb 2003 : Column 278
what I have said represents the views not only of most of
the British people but of very many Americans as well.
9.3 p.m.
Lord Morgan: My Lords, it is late. As a historian, I want
to reflect briefly on the observable and wide gulf between
the views of the Government and the views of the British people.
Normally in a war crisis, historically government and people
converge as they did in 1914 and in 1939. This time, they
have grown further and further apart. At the present time,
perhaps three-quarters of the British people do not support
a war. At least 30 per cent have said that they will not support
a war under any circumstances, even with a second UN resolution.
The Government say that the facts need to be explained and
the message elucidated and then people will form correct views.
Well, the message has been elucidated; the spinners have spun;
the plagiarists have plagiarised; and the people are more
hostile than ever and public opposition to an attack on Iraq
has grown stronger. Why is that? Have our people suddenly
turned uniformly into Trotskyists and pacifists? They find
the Government's case unconvincing; they simply do not believe
it.
In the first place, it is evident that people are not persuaded
that Saddam Hussein is an obvious threat to the United Kingdom—perhaps
not immediately a threat to anywhere. After all, he was successfully
contained by international force for 12 years previous to
this crisis. It was only after September 11th—indeed,
some time after that—that the United States turned its
attention, in a way that future historians will find mysterious
and interesting to penetrate, from Al'Qaeda to Iraq, which,
after all, had been there all along.
The public recognise that Saddam Hussein is an unpleasant
man and that his regime is cruel. They do not regard the case
for his having weapons of mass destruction—certainly
not nuclear weapons—as currently proven. Saddam Hussein
certainly has some unpleasant weapons—of course he has,
we gave him some of them; the United States gave him others.
The
26 Feb 2003 : Column 331
United States was responsible for selling Iraq anthrax, West
Nile virus and botuliniol toxin in the 1980s, the salesman
being Mr Donald Rumsfeld.
In spite of that, the reports by Dr Blix have so far been
temperate. Things are by no means satisfactory, but they are
moderately encouraging. He talks of positive progress and
it is surely reasonable to ask for inspection to be undertaken
properly and to reach its appointed time, rather than to resort
to the extreme response of war.
Secondly, as many noble Lords have said, people are not convinced
of any link between Iraq and international terrorism. The
evidence for that is derisory. The people of this country
fear that the threat of terrorism will be greatly increased
by an attack on Iraq—as may be tension between the different
ethnic communities in this country.
Thirdly, people deeply suspect the motives of the United States.
That is not just anti-Americanism; our people are not anti-American.
I am not anti-American; I taught American history in universities
for 30 years and greatly enjoyed it. But there is great hostility
to and distrust of an extreme Right-wing administration. People
distrust the unilateralism of American foreign and external
policy in relation to the environment, armaments, the International
Criminal Court and many other issues.
There is mass popular distrust in this country about the American
concern with oil and the hypocrisy that is shown in not acting
against an aggressive Israeli regime with an extremely Right-wing
government who consistently defy the UN's edicts and deny
fundamental human rights for Palestinians. There is great
disbelief in this country that the United States, rather late
in the day, has decided that this is a crusade for human rights.
What human rights, when the Kurds, for example, are specifically
omitted? Why are they omitted? Because it would upset the
Turks and a large number of Kurds live in Turkey, which is
a valuable base.
It is also recognised that the United States has for decades
propped up and continues to prop up some of the most atrocious
regimes in the world, which have flouted human rights—at
present, Uzbekistan, which provides virtually no human rights,
but is a convenient base. That is recognised and regarded
with a good deal of suspicion.
The British people also believe in the United Nations. Admirably,
our Prime Minister also believes in the United Nations. People
in this country suspect that that the Americans do not—at
any rate, to nothing like the same degree. The Commonwealth
background of this country makes us attuned to dialogue and
international discourse, whereas the history, background and
outlook of the United States are different.
People see the United States apparently overruling or ignoring
United Nations resolutions and probably not wanting to use
the United Nations at all, had it not been admirably pressurised
into it by Tony Blair. They see the US regarding the Blix
inspection as an irrelevant interlude, as they have already
decided on war. They see the Americans trying to impose their
26 Feb 2003 : Column 332
definition of regime change unilaterally and in complete defiance
of the edicts and principles of international law. They see
a United States committed to following its own interests,
whatever the rest of the world thinks. Speaking historically,
I fear that that is the other side of America's so-called
isolationism; it is an interventionist consequence of isolationism.
It frightens people.
Finally, the British people fear war because they think that
it will be barbarous and will lead to the death of hundreds
of thousands of innocent people—children, old people
and others—in Iraq. They think that it will be far worse
than the atrocities undoubtedly committed by Saddam Hussein
and will result in a humanitarian catastrophe. They feel that
war should be the last resort and that we are a long way short
of the last resort.
In addition to what I have tried to identify as popular concerns
about Iraq, there are some more specialist concerns. Economists
are anxious about the long-term damage to the world economy
and the prospects for economic recovery, particularly given
the high price of oil. As we have heard in the debate, military
experts are worried about the absence of clearly defined strategic
objectives and ask about the purpose of the projected war.
Those who are expert in international analysis fear the probability
of extreme instability for many decades throughout the Middle
East. I noticed a remarkable statement by the former Prime
Minister, Mr John Major, pointing out the difficulties of
getting a stable settlement in Iraq, given the deep animosities
between Shias and Sunnis, the position of the Kurds and so
on. The effect of the war will be to exacerbate the problems,
not to cure them.
Others worry about the new gulf emerging between us and our
allies and comrades in France and Germany and the effect that
it will have on the European ideal. We are being alienated
from France and cosying up to the neo-fascist President Berlusconi,
with whom this country has little common interest.
As a historian, I worry about the crude use of history, particularly
our old friend the 1930s. Time and again we hear that this
crisis is the 1930s come again—what nonsense. Saddam
is not another Hitler. Where is his Mein Kampf? Where is his
dream of universal conquest? George Bush is certainly no Churchill;
it would be a calumny on the reputation of that great man
to suggest it. It is a facile argument, and it disturbs me
that Downing Street produces it, all the more because I taught
one or two of them. My efforts were clearly somewhat in vain.
We should anatomise public opinion. The polls show the components
of alienated public opinion on the threatened policy. Every
element that brought new Labour to power is hostile. Women
are strongly hostile, more so than men. At least 70 per cent
of women are hostile to war under almost any circumstances.
Young people are deeply alienated, as are the trade unions.
In Scotland, only 13 per cent of the people would support
a war. God help the Labour Party in the elections in May.
It will be a bonus for the SNP and perhaps, in my own nation,
for Plaid Cymru. All faiths are opposed to
26 Feb 2003 : Column 333
the war. Today, we heard the bishops speak out with courage
and vision. They do not see it as a just war. There is also
the powerful opposition of the Pope. All political parties
are united, even Conservatives who reject the gung-ho militarism
of Iain Duncan Smith.
That opposition was reflected on 15th February in a great
and moving protest comparable with any in our history, comparable
with the Chartists or the Suffragettes. The extent of that
protest shows how the crisis can destabilise our country.
Nearer home, it is certainly destabilising the Labour Party.
I have been a member of the Labour Party since 1955. I was
a member of the Labour League of Youth before Tony Blair was
born. It grieves me to see the haemorrhaging of good members
from our party. There are masses of them, and friends of mine
are leaving the party.
Tony Blair is a brave man who prides himself on being another
Churchill. He must be wary of not being another Ramsay MacDonald.
This is said to be a listening Government; one that listens
to the people. They should listen—not to transatlantic
ideologues but to the wisdom, humanity and decency of the
British people.
9.56 p.m.
Lord Skidelsky: My Lords, I do not believe that the war against
Iraq, when it comes—as I fear it will—will have
much to do with weapons of mass destruction. We already have
the instruments in place to keep Saddam Hussein and his weapons
bottled up in Baghdad indefinitely. Further measures of disarmament
can be secured without war.
On paper, the Government agree with that. The Prime Minister
and Foreign Secretary have repeatedly said that they seek
to disarm Saddam, not to overthrow
26 Feb 2003 : Column 343
him, and that can be achieved without war if he co-operates.
The Government's policy is disarmament, not regime change.
But no one believes that that is President Bush's policy.
The US Administration are committed to regime change, come
what may. That, barring coup, assassination or the voluntary
retirement of Saddam, means war. The Prime Minister, who courageously
set out to divert the American drive towards war into the
endless complexity of UN procedure, finds himself a passenger
in a run-away car without any further influence on the driver.
True enough, a formula has been discovered to paper over the
cracks. It might even be enough to avoid a Security Council
veto. Saddam has not fully complied with Security Council
Resolutions 687 and 1441. He is in material breach of his
obligations and must now face the consequences.
Those, I submit, are legal fictions that are designed to cover
up the drive to war. Saddam's military capacity has been much
reduced since 1991. I do not believe that anyone disputes
that. The Government have admitted as much. Their own dossier,
Weapons of Mass Destruction, which was published last September
and which was certainly not intended to maximise Saddam's
contributions to world peace, pointed out that between 1991
and 1998, his nuclear weapons programme was destroyed and,
with it, large parts of his chemical, biological and ballistic
missile programmes. The new generation of inspectors has not
found that those programmes have been reconstituted.
One might think that that was a record of success, not failure
and of substantial compliance, not substantial breach. However,
the Government cannot acknowledge that because it underscores
the case for keeping up the pressure and, in fact, possibly
producing more pressure for Saddam to deliver. It does not
support the case for going to war.
I listened carefully to the Prime Minister's speech yesterday.
He said that 50 per cent compliance was not good enough; it
had to be 100 per cent. Of course ideally we would like 100
per cent, but where in the world do a government have a 100
per cent success rate in meeting their targets? I daresay
this Government would be pleased with 50 per cent.
The only reasonable test of compliance is whether Saddam retains
or could quickly develop a capacity in present circumstances
to wage aggressive war. I stress "in present circumstances",
because the choice has never been between destroying Saddam
and leaving him free to do what he wants. There is the middle
course represented by the regime of sanctions and coercive
inspections. The Prime Minister has said that Saddam has been
given 12 years to comply and has not done so. But the fact
is that he has been bottled up in Baghdad for 12 years.
I regard this as a killer argument. Saddam has not been good,
but he has been kept quiet. His expansionist ambitions have
been completely frustrated. Why do we believe that a system
that has achieved these results over
26 Feb 2003 : Column 344
12 years cannot keep him trussed up for another 12 years,
or as long as he lives? He is 65, so maybe it will take 12
years.
One could argue that 9/11 has changed everything; now we face
a terrorist threat and Saddam might pass on his small supplies
of chemicals and bacteria to terrorist groups. But we need
to consider carefully what incentive he might have to do so.
I do not think that his incentive is strong; it is extremely
weak. If small amounts of these substances can do as much
damage as is claimed—and I am very sceptical—destroying
government laboratories will not do much good. Small-scale
private enterprise operating on well-tried principles, located
almost anywhere in the world, could produce as much anthrax
or nerve gas as demanded by any terrorist group.
If the looming war is not about Iraq's so-called weapons of
mass destruction, what is it that drives American policy?
That is fundamental to the whole question. I believe it is
a desire to reshape the geopolitics of the Middle East, and
beyond that, of other areas of the world, backed by the conviction
that the United States alone has the power to do so.
This line of argument can be traced through the thinking of
a number of neo-conservative hawks associated with the Project
for the New American Century, most of whom—I am talking
especially of Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz, Elliott Abrams,
Douglas Feith, Richard Armitage, William Bennett, John Bolton
and Richard Perle—occupy key places in the Bush Administration
or his entourage. These people were advocating the overthrow
of Saddam Hussein long before the election of George W Bush
and before 9/11. Those events gave them the opportunity to
carry out their plans.
But Saddam's overthrow was simply to be a first step in a
larger programme which amounts to the establishment of long-term
American rule in the Middle East, with Israel as its junior
partner. I am using my own language, but I know enough history
and enough about international relations to be confident of
decoding language that has to be kept coded if it is not to
sound too alarming.
Traces of this grand design can be found in President Bush's
"axis of evil" speech and the new strategic doctrine
of premption. But the underlying philosophy is most cogently
expressed in Robert Kagan's remarkable book Paradise and Power.
In essence, the argument is that a liberal order rests on
the foundation of armed might; that the United States is the
only power possessed of the will and force to ensure such
an order; and that therefore it must be prepared to use its
"unipolar moment" to secure the world order it wants.
That is coupled with the view that the Europeans are decadent
and therefore hopeless as partners in such a project. As Kagan
puts it,
"the Americans are from Mars and the Europeans are from
Venus";
or, as the title of his book suggests, the paradise in which
the Europeans live depends on America's willingness to use
force to deter or defeat those who lack the requisite degree
of moral maturity. That is the
26 Feb 2003 : Column 345
choice between peace and war that we face. It is not about
how many vials of poison Saddam Hussein has or whether he
is in technical breach of UN resolutions.
I describe this neo-conservative project not to belittle it.
In some moods, I am quite attracted by it. I admire its daring,
and its aims are not ignoble. But, on balance, I find it chilling,
mainly because I do not believe that it can be made to work,
at least in a democracy. A democracy that embarks on a career
of conquest will soon cease to be a democracy. That is the
lesson that we have learnt. That is why, in the end, we in
old Europe abandoned the old imperialism. And that is why
we should pause long and think hard before sanctioning a new
imperialism.
10.6 p.m.
Baroness Turner of Camden: My Lords, I have been away from
your Lordships' House for several weeks but I have endeavoured
to keep up to date with what has been happening. I am horrified
that we appear to be moving inexorably towards war, despite
assurances from members of the Government that war is not
inevitable. I do not believe that the present Iraqi regime
represents a threat to anyone—not even to the countries
closest to it.
Iraq suffered a crushing defeat in the first Gulf War. Since
then, there have been punitive sanctions; inspections which
were carried out extensively until 1998 have now been resumed;
and there have been regular bombing raids by ourselves and
the United States. As a result, a country which once had one
of the highest living standards in the Arab world is now at
a third-world level.
The idea that this battered country offers any threat to ourselves
or the United States is, in my view, simply absurd. Indeed,
the Americans seem to recognise that themselves—hence
the rather desperate attempt to link the regime with Al'Qaeda.
There is of course no evidence for that, as our own Government
have said on more than one occasion. The notion of a pre-emptive
strike against a country that does not threaten us or anyone
else, whatever the past history may be, is quite unacceptable.
It is a cover for aggression and a breach of the United Nations
charter.
The Government have been applauded for having, it is said,
persuaded the United States to go the UN route. But it is
clear that the United States Government are interested in
that route only if the UN agrees with the US view and gives
authority for military action. The same applies to the inspectors—there
is so much anxiety about identifying a "smoking gun".
There was palpable disappointment when, in their last report,
the inspectors did not come up with this. Indeed, they stated
categorically that there was no evidence of a nuclear programme.
What? No weapons of mass destruction? They must be hidden
somewhere. So there must be biological or chemical weapons.
The Iraqis claim that what they once had was destroyed, and
they have offered the names of about 80 people who can attest
to that. A previous inspector has said that the material that
the Iraqis once had
26 Feb 2003 : Column 346
would now be so degraded as to be no longer useable, even
if it exists. But, in any event, why not let the inspectors
do their job and, if we have contrary information based on
intelligence, why do we not supply it to the inspectors and
let them check it out? But no, President Bush's patience is
running out, so decisions have to be made.
Obviously the United States Administration would prefer a
UN cloak of respectability. That is necessary to silence criticism
at home, let alone in this country and throughout Europe.
But it is clear that the US will go to war, with us tagging
along behind, whether or not UN authorisation is obtained.
The war programme is based on hostilities commencing around
the middle of March. Later, the climatic conditions may not
be so favourable.
I do not believe that a moral case can be made for this war.
It will involve the deaths and injuries of many civilians.
It is likely to commence with a massive aerial attack, and
that is always destructive of civilian lives and civilian
infrastructure. Water supplies are disrupted and poisoned,
occasioning more deaths. Hospitals are unable to work because
of the destruction of power supplies. Food supplies are disrupted—in
particular the Oil for Food scheme, which enables some poorer
people at least to exist, is likely to be destroyed. The people
not killed in the bombing will starve.
Millions will be made homeless, and jobless, as the factories,
homes and workplaces are destroyed. Modern warfare requires
that civilian morale is totally and brutally crushed. It is
a truly terrifying prospect for a civilian population.
We are told that there is a moral case for war, and that Saddam
Hussein is so awful a ruler that he is killing his own people
through his interpretation of the sanctions imposed by ourselves
and others. Of course, Saddam Hussein's worst crimes were
committed when he was an ally of ourselves and the United
States—so nothing much was said about Halabja at the
time.
I find the argument about sanctions astonishing. They are
administered by a UN sanctions committee, as regards which
we, and the US, have a substantial input. Radiotherapy equipment,
chemotherapy drugs and analgesics are consistently blocked
by the United States and ourselves, on the grounds that they
could be converted into chemical and other weapons. Therefore
Iraqi children are denied pain-killing medicines through our
actions, rather than those of the Iraqi rulers.
Meanwhile, we and the US are constantly bombing Iraq on the
pretext of protecting the no-fly zones. These are clearly
attempts to degrade Iraqi installations in advance of war.
There is no UN authority for these bombing raids. This was
recently made clear by a UN spokesperson. Basra has been bombed
repeatedly—as has northern Iraq—and there have
been civilian casualties. They are acts of war, and as such
totally breach the UN charter.
However, the powerful can get away with it, and that is also
the problem with the United Nations route. Many people have
said that they would reluctantly support military action if
there were UN authorisation. However, it is clear that a lot
of arm-twisting is going on
26 Feb 2003 : Column 347
behind the scenes to try to gain support for the US position.
Countries facing economic problems have been offered loans
or aid—or else there are threats that aid would be withdrawn.
In domestic politics the purchase of votes is regarded as
unacceptable. Why is it countenanced in international affairs,
when issues of life and death are involved?
The world population has a right to be sure that the decisions
taken on its behalf are on the merits of the issues themselves—rather
than as a result of backstage bullying and bribery. It now
seems that France, Germany and Russia have produced a plan
offering an alternative to war. This involves more inspectors,
more monitoring and a longer timescale and so forth. It is
surely worthy of consideration, particularly in view of the
widespread concern that exists in this country and throughout
Europe. The Motion drafted by ourselves and the United States
is intended as a trigger for war, despite its anodyne wording.
The Government have not convinced the British public that
there is a case for war. Myself and others question whether
it is about disarmament of Saddam Hussein at all. I was very
interested in the remarks of the noble Lord, Lord Skidelsky.
I believe that there is an agenda to which the Republican
advisers around President Bush subscribe, and which they made
known before he was elected. They believe that if the United
States dominates Iraq, it will be able to reshape the Middle
East. They believe they would be stabilising one of the world's
most important oil producing regions. They think that they
would eventually produce a solution to the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, on terms which are likely to be much more welcome
to Ariel Sharon than to the Palestinians.
Most people would not want to go to war for such a strategy—so
we have the farce of the dossiers about a threat, in which
many people simply do not believe. Those of us who oppose
war are often derided as appeasers—or else are told
that we are anti-American. I know that there are many Americans
who share our feelings against war. It takes some time for
them to get organised and to make their views known. But they
will do so and they are already being joined by a number of
prominent United States citizens.
As to the charge of appeasement, that makes me very angry.
I am old enough to remember the Second World War. I know what
it is like to huddle in an air-raid shelter and hear the scream
of the bombs as they come down—and to see people, or
what remains of them, dug out of the wreckage of their homes.
The generation who challenged Hitler's regime—and Saddam
Hussein is no Hitler—knew very well what had to be faced.
Today's armchair worriers face no such threat. They will watch
the war on television while others pay the price.
In my experience, those who have first-hand knowledge of war
are often those most opposed to it and critical of those who
want to start another one. That was certainly true of my late
husband, a former RAF pilot with a string of medals for bravery
earned during the Second World War. I remember how we watched
the first Gulf War on television and saw the
26 Feb 2003 : Column 348
bombing of Baghdad. I remember how he said to me, "Smart
bombs, smart bombs. Don't you believe it. We are watching
people being killed down there". And of course so we
were.
My Lords, we must not let it happen again.
10.18 p.m.
Lord Stoddart of Swindon: My Lords, I support noble Lords
who today have opposed what is clearly the inexorable drive
to war. I do so not because I am a pacifist; I am not. Indeed,
I supported the campaign to regain the Falklands when at least
one member of the present Government marched in favour of
bringing troops home and ceding sovereignty to a fascist dictator.
It would be interesting to know how many members of the Government
were against our retaking the Falklands—perhaps we ought
to send them a questionnaire to discover exactly what their
attitude was.
I also supported the Gulf War in 1991 to eject Iraq from Kuwait,
because I do not believe in dictators, or anyone else, invading
other people's countries and removing their sovereignty. Again,
it would be interesting to know how many members of the present
administration were opposed to that war and to taking back
Kuwait from Saddam Hussein.
I was also in favour of pursuing Saddam, taking over Baghdad
and removing the regime at that time. We failed to do so.
I urged that we should. If we had, we would not be having
this debate. So we missed the opportunity to get rid of that
awful man about whom everyone is talking. We did not do it
then and there is
26 Feb 2003 : Column 349
no reason why we should do it now, because, as many other
noble Lords, including the noble Lord, Lord Skidelsky, have
said, he is contained and cannot get out of his box.
The Prime Minister's Statement yesterday referred to 4 million
refugees. But of course, many of those refugees are Shia Muslims,
who were encouraged by the first Bush Administration to rise
up against the Iraqi regime. When they did so, they were abandoned
by Mr Bush I. Many of them were killed and many of them went
into exile. That is one reason why we have so many refugees.
As many noble Lords have said, the West was also complicit
in the use of chemical weapons against Iran and the Kurds.
Indeed, they supplied them and were aware that they were being
used, but did nothing. That suited them at the time because
the policy was to contain Iran. So the policy then pursued
by Saddam was agreed by the West.
What has concerned me during the past four or five months
has been the implausible and chameleon-like case for immediate
war against Iraq. First, the case was the possession of weapons
of mass destruction. Then it was that Iraq posed a military
threat to the United States and Europe, which of course it
does not. It is absurd to suggest that Saddam does; he has
neither the weapons nor the means to deliver them. That was
always absurd. Then it was because he had links with Osama
bin Laden, which the CIA itself denied. Then there was regime
change, followed, of course, by the moral duty to free the
people of Iraq from Saddam's tyranny. But yesterday, the Prime
Minister's Statement returned to ridding Iraq of weapons of
mass destruction. Saddam could remain in power—presumably
to continue to tyrannise his own people.
It is that incoherent message that has confused so many people
and led them to suspect the real motives of the United States
and, to some degree, of the United Kingdom. Speculation about
the real agenda ranges from grabbing Iraq's oil to taking
over the whole of the Middle East for their own purposes.
What I have found reprehensible about the stance taken by
the United States and the United Kingdom is that their policy
has been underpinned not only by a threat of massive military
action against Iraq—a country of 20 million poor people,
not Hitler's Germany—but by a threat to the future of
the United Nations. The threat is that if the United Nations
does not bow to their wishes, it will be undermined. If it
does not come to heel, the United States will undermine its
position in the world. That is not only unacceptable but dangerous
for world peace and order.
What has not yet been properly tried is real diplomacy. We
used to have diplomacy before war, but it has not been tried.
Mr Blair has been all over the world to solicit support for
belligerence. Why has not he or any other British Minister
visited Iraq to attempt to negotiate? The same goes for the
United States. The United Nations arms inspectors are just
that; they are not negotiators and should not be seen as such.
26 Feb 2003 : Column 350
War should always be the last resort for democracies. As Churchill
said so well:
"To jaw-jaw is always better than to war-war".
Diplomacy should not consist simply of threats. It should
offer carrots as well as sticks, in return for co-operation
and reformation, rather than humiliating a country and its
leaders. Why cannot we offer Iraq a deal that would gradually
end sanctions and no-fly zones in return for full co-operation
on weapons of mass destruction? There has already been movement
on that and moves to end military rule and establish a democratic
system.
No doubt I shall be accused of being naive, but, before we
embark on military action that is likely to kill thousands
of innocent civilians and is bound to destabilise the Middle
East further and put the United Kingdom and its citizens at
heightened risk of terrorist attack, we should seriously try
the diplomatic route. True, that will take months of patient
negotiation, but is not that what democracy is about and what
makes democracy superior to dictatorship and tyranny?
10.37 p.m.
Lord Phillips of Sudbury: My Lords, this is probably the first
time in history that a world crisis has unfolded in real time
in our sitting-rooms. Twist by twist and turn by turn, everyone
has been able to follow the complex and intractable Iraqi
tragedy. The deep public engagement puts, I suggest, unique
strains on political leadership.
I am proud of the reaction of the British public. I am proud
of their maturity and balance, and of that remarkable demonstration
on 15th February which shattered the notion that we have become
a frivolous nation, disengaged from serious politics. It is
also fair to say that, like others, I have been impressed
by the role and intent of the Prime Minister, although I disagree
with aspects of his strategy now. We all wish him and his
Ministers wisdom and stamina in the months ahead.
Before turning to the single issue that I want to deal with
at this late hour, perhaps I may say a word about the legality
and status of the different UN resolutions. The noble Baroness,
Lady Symons, fairly and accurately referred to the differences
between the Iraq resolutions—Resolutions 687 and 1441—and
the Israeli occupied territory resolutions, Resolutions 242
and 338. My noble friend Lord Goodhart gave a very able analysis
of the legalities and the noble Lord, Lord Brennan, made some
apposite remarks. But there is a danger. On the one hand we
are insistent—at least on this side of the House and
I think on all sides
26 Feb 2003 : Column 353
of the House—that everything that we do now is in accord
with international law, for itself and also for the preservation
and strengthening of the United Nations; but it is a strange
lawyer who will advise his client that merely because the
law is on his side he should use the rights that it bestows.
The trick is in the political judgment as to whether to utilise
resolutions that may at this moment allow intervention.
I return to the issue that the Prime Minister so acutely and
correctly identified shortly after September 11th when he
said that the battle in respect of international terrorism
is one of hearts and minds. He seems to some extent to have
forgotten that, yet it colours every prospect and every consequence,
every hope and every fear.
I do not think I need spend much time convincing your Lordships
that Britain has an ambiguous enough history and relationship
with the Middle East and that that of the USA is more contentious
still. Unfortunately, in the Muslim world, few believe that
a President backed by the US oil industry has no designs on
Iraqi oil or that the influence of the likes of Mr. Wolfowitz
and Mr. Perle at the heart of his Administration, to say nothing
of the fiercely pro-Israeli lobby, is unrelated to what they
see as double standards applied by the United States towards
Israel vis-a-vis the Palestinians as compared with Iraq.
I, too, welcome the noble Baroness, Lady Turner of Camden,
back in her place. She said all that I would have wished to
say and more on the human and moral concerns that are at the
forefront of Anglo-American justification for war. However,
people in the Middle East have long memories when it comes
to their attitude to the Americans and to us. They do not
forget that one of the two invasions that are now used by
us as justification for invading Iraq—namely, the invasion
of Iran in 1980—was undertaken by Saddam with the support
of the United States, ourselves and France and that we supplied
him with all his arms in that eight-year war, during which
over 1 million Iranians were killed or seriously wounded.
Mr. Cheney himself authorised the supply of weapons of mass
destruction to Saddam which he then used with devastating
and horrific effects against the Iranians. The Muslims do
not forget the double standards—the hypocrisy as they
see it—which this represents.
I listened avidly to what the noble Lord, Lord Skidelsky,
said about the other political background. It is no surprise
that America in particular is seen by many decent Muslims
as ignorant, if not contemptuous, of their way of life and
the values of traditional Islam. It is characterised in the
eyes of many by its righteous aggressiveness and capitalist
fundamentalism, and I say this as a staunch friend of America.
In his speech yesterday, Mr Blair talked of our looking foolish
if we were to delay war much longer and of our loss of potential
authority and credibility. I urge him to concentrate on the
issue of hearts and minds. If our invasion of Iraq is generally
perceived as unjust here, will it be fair to commit our soldiers
to it, as the noble and gallant Lord, Lord Bramall, asked?
26 Feb 2003 : Column 354
Above all, if the American and British Governments have not
convinced a clear majority of their own citizens of the justness
and wisdom of war, how on earth do we think we are anywhere
near convincing those in the Middle East of its justness and
wisdom?
If war is perceived as unjust in the Middle East, as I believe
it is, no ease of military victory will compensate for the
aftermath, particularly if massive Iraqi casualties are paralleled
by only a handful of our own. If the overwhelming might of
our means of war is felt to be unjust as well as the ends,
the bad blood—indeed, hatred—which could be vented
would convert military victory into political disaster. We
would have won a truly Pyrrhic triumph. Instead of being rooted
out, terrorism would be sown like dragon's teeth around the
Muslim world. Then we could, and I think would, reap a savage
harvest.
What will President Bush and Prime Minister Blair have to
say to us if, in the year following "victory", there
is launched against the cities of the West a series of devastating
suicide attacks which we know would be virtually unstoppable?
What if the position in Palestine goes from disastrous to
worse, with the level of conflict and killing escalating exponentially
and in the process energising further hatred and violence?
All that would be grist to the mill of Al'Qaeda and provoke
other nascent terrorist groups, accelerate the prospect of
unintended regime change in other Middle Eastern states, and
risk regional chaos with who knows what world economic circumstances,
to which my noble friend Lord Newby has referred.
Of course there is no guarantee that holding back unless and
until there is an unequivocal second United Nations resolution
for invasion will avoid those prospects. But to my mind what
is unanswerable is that the "soft war"—the
war of allegiance—is infinitely more important and difficult
to win, and can only be done by consensus and restraint up
to and if necessary beyond the 11th hour.
It is against that assessment that I am convinced that only
an invasion fully endorsed by the United Nations, as was the
case with Kuwait, can avoid these malign and self-defeating
outcomes.
10.46 p.m.
Baroness Massey of Darwen: My Lords, I have never been the
49th speaker anywhere before, and as such I shall be remarkably
brief. In any case, so much has already been said most eloquently.
I do not usually speak in debates on international affairs
although I have been involved in and worked in international
development programmes. Perhaps that is why I feel so passionately
about many issues related to dealings with Iraq; why I speak
with a deep anxiety about the processes in which we are now
engaged; and why I feel that debate must continue and indeed
be encouraged.
I preface my remarks by stating that I, like others, have
great regard for the energy and leadership of the Prime Minister.
He has undoubtedly exerted a restraining influence on the
United States over many months. I accept that Saddam Hussein
is a brutal dictator with a violent history. I know that after
26 Feb 2003 : Column 355
September 11th there was justifiably a deep sense of outrage
in the United States and many parts of the world. The terrorist
issue is very real. However, is Iraq the legitimate focus
or a scapegoat? I want to summarise my concerns at the beginning
and then illustrate them with material drawn from American
sources.
I believe that we should not act without United Nations consensus.
However difficult international negotiation may be, it is
the only mechanism we have for avoiding war, even if those
negotiations need to be long and tortuous. The consequences
and aftermath of war in Iraq in humanitarian terms have not,
for me, been sufficiently and convincingly detailed, although
they have been mentioned many times tonight. The consequences
of military action may increase, not diffuse tension and terrorism
in the Middle East and the rest of the world.
I am deeply concerned about the impact of military action
on the domestic economies of both the United States and Britain.
What would be the benefits of such a war to the US? Do we
know, honestly and realistically? What would be the benefits
to Britain, and what would be the negative impacts? Has such
an analysis been done? I am deeply concerned about Britain
being seen to be irrevocably attached to an American regime
which has a poor record in support of issues that I believe
are important: reproductive rights, the environment, children's
rights and poverty. It also has a poor record of humanitarian
support for nations following military action, such as in
Afghanistan. As that has already been mentioned, I will not
go into it.
I am not anti-American. I have lived and worked in the US
and admire its founding principles of justice and human rights
and its get up and go-ism. However, I have serious misgivings
about its sometimes simplistic approaches to complex problems,
its materialism and self-interest. My noble friend Lord Morgan
expressed it better than I can.
Perhaps I may now illustrate my concerns by examples from
an article in the New York Times last week and from a declaration
opposing war with Iraq signed by over 60 towns in the United
States. The New York Times article suggests that the American
Administration have,
"turned the regular foreign aid budget into a tool of
war diplomacy".
Small countries who have seats on the UN Security Council
have suddenly received aid. Is this an attempt to influence
votes? Is this a "coalition of the willing" spoken
of by President Bush or a "coalition of the bought off"
asks the author. What about the promises to Afghanistan to
help rebuild when the 2004 budget ignored aid and had hastily
to add it later? At least one senior American administrator
has said that Iraq must pay for its own reconstruction.
Some talk of Iraqi oil being the spoils of war. What would
happen, as others have asked, to Iraqi Kurdistan? Would Turkey
be allowed to occupy the territory? Would Saddam be replaced
by American governance, but many of his officials remain in
post? Would the Sunni
26 Feb 2003 : Column 356
minority rule the Shi'ite majority? Those questions are posed
in an American newspaper. They are terrifying in their implications.
I see no adequate responses.
A recent declaration by American towns opposing war makes
the following points. I summarise and edit. This is from a
copy sent to me by a friend in a town in Illinois. First,
issues between Iraq and the world community have not proved
to be unresolvable by traditional diplomatic efforts. Secondly,
sanctions imposed on Iraq by the UN at the urging of the US
Government have resulted in the death of hundreds of thousands
of non-combatants, an overwhelming number of them under the
age of five. Thirdly, in a war the lives of American soldiers
and Iraqi civilians would be in jeopardy. I add a note that
around 50 per cent of the Iraqi population is under the age
of 15. Fourthly, the cost estimate to the US for a war with
Iraq is between 9 billion dollars and 18 billion dollars a
month—80 per cent of the school districts in Illinois
face budget crises. Fifthly, the billions of dollars spent
on war could be better spent on schools, nutrition, healthcare,
housing and eliminating poverty in the United States. Sixthly,
the US is urged in this declaration to work through the UN,
disarm Iraq, and reaffirm its commitment to the rule of law
in international relationships.
Again, these are Americans raising concerns. We all know that
many people in the UK share similar concerns for similar reasons.
I believe that we have a duty to support the concept and principles
of the United Nations. I believe that the full consequences
of war with Iraq have not been thoroughly explored: the aftermath
remains uncertain. Just getting rid of Saddam and his weapons
is not enough for me and I would not wish to see Britain launched
on military commitments with the US under these circumstances.
I hope that the Government will think very carefully about
their alliances and the terrible complexities of their undertakings.
10.54 p.m.
Lord Greaves: My Lords, I start by stating where I stand.
I took part in the march on 15th February, along with at least
15 of my noble friends. I was proud to be led by my noble
friend Lady Williams and by Charles Kennedy. I am also proud
that 52 of my colleagues in another place turned out, with
the exception of Menzies Campbell who is away sick, to vote
against the Government today. I stand firm with my party on
this issue but, having said that, I want to pick up a point
raised by the noble Baroness, Lady Uddin, and mentioned by
the noble Lord, Lord Chan. I refer to the effect of current
developments on Muslim communities in this country.
The noble Baroness referred to the demonising of Muslims and
said that people feel able to make forced entries into mosques
willy-nilly. An excellent report published last August by
the Minority Rights Group International, Muslims in Britain,
refers to
"long-standing marginalization and the worrying rise
in open hostility against Muslims".
26 Feb 2003 : Column 357
My experience of the 1.5 million Muslims in this country is
largely based on communities in Lancashire consisting of people
of Pakistani and Indian origin. My friends in those communities
have an increasing sense that they are under siege and suffer
a growing lack of confidence in their future in this country.
A few weeks ago, The Times surveyed children in a primary
school playground in Surrey, asking them to suggest terms
with which they associated the word "Muslim". Forty
per cent of the children equated "Muslim" with "terrorist".
In the British media, terms such as "terrorist",
"Muslim" "asylum seeker", "crime"
and "disease" go round and round in any order, with
disgraceful exploitation of individual cases—some of
which are unfounded. It is therefore not surprising that many
British-born Muslims ask, as one did of me this morning, "What
the hell are we doing here?"
Muslim communities are increasingly retreating into their
own media. In almost all the Asian households in Nelson in
Lancashire, the main TV channel is PTV—Pakistan Television.
That reflects a typical retreat from British society to something
with which Muslims feel much safer. That relatively recent
trend has come with the development of cable and satellite
TV.
There is much perceived petty racism, such as spitting at
women in headscarves. If someone spat at one of your Lordships
or myself, we would regard it as rudeness. If one is used
to being on the receiving end of petty racism, one assumes
that it is racist. Young people perceive that they are being
harassed by the police.
More importantly, I am told by people whose information and
views I respect that ordinary individuals are moving money
out of the UK to safety pots, as they are called, in other
countries. That was common in the 1970s, when immigrants would
bank surplus money in Pakistan, commenting, "We do not
know how long we'll be here. We don't know when they'll kick
us out". That practice is starting up again. At weddings,
funerals and other family gatherings, the gossip usually gets
around to, "Where are you putting your money now? Switzerland,
Canada or Dubai?"
Economically more important is the growing belief since September
11th that there has been a dramatic increase in the targeting
of Muslim businesses in this country by the security services
and fraud investigators in a way that does not apply to other
ethnic minorities or communities. I have been provided with
details of a number of instances in which it appears that
that is taking place. People are finding that they are unable
to get banking facilities any longer in this country, or that
their businesses are raided and their computers and records
taken away, only to be brought back a week later with no charges
laid. When the businesses are in financial services or trading,
that is very serious as those records may be used for all
sorts of purposes, and the people concerned have no idea that
it is happening.
I have no idea whether that is taking place on a discriminatory
basis, because all the evidence that I have been provided
with is anecdotal, and I do not
26 Feb 2003 : Column 358
know how to find out. I have tabled Written Questions, but
the Government say that they do not keep records about that
kind of thing on an ethnic basis. That is probably right.
Whether it is right or wrong, the fact is that there is a
perception that it is happening. People are moving large sums
of money out of this country and into places such as Dubai
where they believe that their funds and businesses will be
safe.
At a different level, one of the advantages of the Government's
rather incompetently organised asylum seekers' dispersal programme
is that, in an area such as mine, the ethnic composition of
the population has been greatly enriched, at least temporarily.
We have lots of asylum seekers, including Kurds and Arabs
of various sorts from Iraq. There are concerns that the Government
intend, if there is a war—perhaps I should say "when
the war on Iraq starts"—that there will be a general
rounding-up of Iraqis. The concern is that it will be used
as an excuse to round up, intern or detain people, including
large numbers of people who have come here to escape the tyranny
of the brutal Saddam Hussein regime.
Of course, that happened during the Second World War when
many Jews who came here for safe haven found themselves interned
for the duration. It would be a disgrace if that were to happen
again. I should like to ask the Minister specifically for
an assurance that that is not planned. If it is planned, what
powers are intended to be used? Who will be responsible for
choosing the people to be interned? I hope that she will be
able to answer that.
I support most of what has been said by many noble Lords,
particularly those on these Benches, and I look forward to
the remainder of the debate.
11.13 p.m.
Lord Wallace of Saltaire: My Lords, this has been a sober
debate on a vital subject. In a powerful speech to the American
Senate 10 days ago, the Democratic Senator for West Virginia,
Robert Byrd, said:
"This coming battle, if it materialises, represents a
turning point in US foreign policy".
It will also represent a turning point in British foreign
policy. We must therefore give it very serious attention,
as all noble Lords have done. The balance of the debate in
this Chamber has reflected the balance of debate in the country
that the overwhelming majority are not yet convinced of the
case that the Government put forward.
During the early stages of this debate, I felt that the unusual
emptiness of the Government Benches spoke strongly of the
hesitation of the Government's party on this matter. It is
the first occasion on which I have noticed that the Cross
Benches are markedly fuller than the Labour Benches.
We have heard a number of extremely helpful speeches and powerful
critical speeches from behind the Government Front Bench,
particularly from the noble Lord, Lord Brennan, who answered
the points raised by the noble Lord, Lord Gilbert, about the
relevance or irrelevance of international law. I was glad
to hear from those on my own Benches a number of speeches
on the many different dimensions of this complex issue.
The Government's rationale, as set out by the noble Baroness,
Lady Symons, in her opening speech seemed to present the American
position more than the British. To summarise, it states that
Iraq is an immediate threat to world order. She made only
a passing reference to the Arab-Israel conflict and, unless
I misheard her, no reference to the terrorist threat or to
the implications for the Middle East region as a whole or
the rest of the Muslim world in south and south-east Asia;
nor, as the noble Baroness, Lady Uddin, and my noble friend
Lord Greaves remarked, for Europe and our own country.
The concerns in the debate have been widely repeated on all
sides of the House: concerns that the war on Iraq will spark
increased terrorism, not lessen it; that the implications
for the region as a whole have not been addressed; that we
hear absurd ideas floating around Washington and Tel-Aviv
on how a simple intervention in Iraq would bring peace to
the entire region and that, to quote Henry Kissinger, the
road to Jerusalem lies through Baghdad; that the management
of Iraq post-conflict has not yet been set out in any way
that commands confidence; and that the potential damage to
world order, to the United Nations and to other institutions
and to the structure of international law itself may be considerable.
We all accept the appalling nature of the Saddam regime. Iraq
and its neighbours would benefit if he were to be removed.
But we cannot treat this question in
26 Feb 2003 : Column 362
isolation without considering why the Bush Administration
are pursuing it now and the wider context and implications.
As I listened to some of the opening speeches, Thomas à
Becket's speech in Murder in the Cathedral suddenly came to
me, where he talks about the courses he has to take and says:
"The last temptation
is the greatest treason:
To do the right
thing for the wrong reason".
We have to consider the Bush Administration's reasons and
our Government's reasons, which follow the Bush Administration,
for attacking Saddam. I regret that the noble Lord, Lord Chalfont,
accused those who criticised the Bush Administration of being
anti-American and anti-Semitic. That is the argument used
by right-wing Americans to silence criticism. I would like
to quote from a number of American sources, as the noble Lord,
Lord Skidelsky did.
Lord Chalfont: My Lords, I did not accuse anyone of anything.
I said that there was a degree of anti-Americanism in the
debate, which there was.
Lord Wallace of Saltaire: My Lords, the noble Lord also referred
to anti-Semitism. There may be a certain amount of it, but
many noble Lords who are neither anti-Semitic nor anti-American
have justifiable criticisms to make.
The noble Lord, Lord Skidelsky, remarked on the neo-conservatives
in the United States and their power in the Bush Administration.
At the weekend I pulled out Bob Woodward's book, Bush at War.
He remarks that three days after September 11th, the briefing
to the President was given by the Deputy Defense Secretary—the
noble Lord, Lord Desai, will note that it is not just people
in think tanks—Paul Wolfowitz, whom I have known personally
for nearly 40 years. It says that he,
"often voiced the views of an outspoken group of national
security conservatives in Washington . . . These were men
who believed that there was no greater menace in the world
than Iraqi President Saddam Hussein".
The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff is quoted as saying:
"In his analysis, the only justification for going after
Iraq would be clear evidence linking the Iraqis to the September
11 attacks. Short of that, targeting Iraq was not worth the
risk of angering moderate Arab states whose support was crucial
not only to any campaign in Afghanistan, but to reviving the
Middle East peace process".
Colin Powell is
quoted as saying to him on the aside:
"What the hell,
what are these guys thinking about? Can't you get these guys
back in the box?"
Those are Americans
in the Administration criticising the push, which was there
among the neo-conservatives well before September 11th, for
taking Saddam out. I agree strongly with what the noble Lord,
Lord Skidelsky, said about the determination to use the unipolar
moment to establish what they call a "democratic imperialism"
across the world. At Davos on 26th January, Colin Powell said
to his audience:
"I believe that the United States has earned the trust
of men, women and children around the world".
26 Feb 2003 : Column 363
That is currently the pitch: you do not need the UN; you can
trust the United States, and you can trust the Bush Administration.
Robert Kagan, in the opening paragraph of the book which the
noble Lord, Lord Skidelsky, quoted, starts by saying:
"It is time to stop pretending that Europeans and Americans
share a common view of the world, or even that they occupy
the same world".
So much for the
Prime Minister's appeal to our "shared values",
which make Britain a natural bridge, as he argues, between
Europe and the United States. Tom Friedman, one of the best,
and rather conservative, commentators in the American press,
said in the New York Times on 20th February:
"The Bush folks
are big on attitude, weak on strategy, and terrible on diplomacy".
We have heard many comparisons in this debate about Munich.
I believe that it is important also to remember Suez and Vietnam.
I was studying and teaching in the United States in the early
years of the Vietnam war and I remember very well the twisting
of intelligence information by the political masters of intelligence
and the denigration of the experts on the region. I was at
Cornell University, which had an Institute of Southeast Asian
Studies. It was vigorously attacked by the State Department
and in Congress with threats of withdrawal of funds. There
was over-confidence in the ability to resolve the problem
through military force, a refusal to pay any attention to
the different culture and assumptions of the opponent, and,
indeed, denigration of the enemy as such.
Now, I am afraid to say, we have a similar mood within the
United States. There have been some bitter attacks on the
Middle East studies community, including calls for federal
funding for all university institutes on Middle East studies
in the United States to be withdrawn. Tom Friedman, whom I
quote again, said:
"Every time
I hear [the Bush Administration try to justify war on the
grounds that Saddam is allied with Osama bin Laden], I think
of the Gulf of Tonkin resolution. You don't take the country
to war on the wings of a lie".
As I listened to
the noble Lord, Lord Howell, say that there was amazing evidence
that terrorists were closely linked to Saddam Hussein and
that, indeed, since September 11th Iraq was at the heart of
a new network of international terrorism, I have to say that
I was not sure where he got that from.
I quote again Senator Byrd's powerful speech, which, sadly,
received almost no attention in the American media. He complains:
"There is no debate",
within the United
States,
"no discussion,
no attempt to lay out for the nation the pros and cons of
this particular war . . . The doctrine of pre-emption .. appears
to be in contravention of international law and the UN charter
. . . This reckless and arrogant administration has initiated
policies which may reap disastrous consequences . . . to turn
one's frustration and anger into the kind of destabilising
foreign policy debacle that the world is currently witnessing
is inexcusable".
26 Feb 2003 : Column 364
That is not an anti-American diatribe from a European; it
is from a member of the US Senate.
Many other speakers have referred to the radical character
of this Administration and to the fundamentalist groups which
have gained so much influence over it. Political fundamentalism,
as the noble Baroness, Lady Massey, pointed out, means tax
cuts, which are intended to force the dismantling of the welfare
state, and cuts in funding for education, which are clearly
and explicitly a radical departure from the Rooseveltian values
which we all share and are intended to complete what the Reagan
administration hesitated to carry through. There is also economic
fundamentalism, which says that deficits do not matter, and
religious fundamentalism, which includes support for Israel
to occupy all the historic land, including further expansion
of settlements and the expulsion of Palestinians. The capture
of American Middle East policy by Likud is one of the most
worrying dimensions of this. I quote again from the international
edition of the New York Times of 25th February. The Israeli
defence Minister said hopefully:
"'We have great interest in shaping the Middle East the
day after a war".
The article continued:
"Israel regards
Iran and Syria as greater threats and hopes that once Saddam
is dispensed with, the dominoes will start to tumble".
Later in the article,
a senior Israeli official is reported as hoping that,
"after the
war would come a fork in the road for American policy",
in which the Americans
would choose Israel rather than Europe. It went on to say
that,
"the Quartet
may itself prove a casualty of an Iraqi war . . . there are
people in Washington who are going to say 'What do we need
these people for?'"
By "these people", he meant the Europeans. The Israelis
hope that the Quartet will die the death quietly during the
course of the war.
There are circumstances in which it may be justifiable to
intervene in Iraq and to remove Saddam Hussein from power.
However, that has to be through the meticulous and careful
use of UN procedures. It should also be with the understanding
and, if possible, the support of other states in the region.
This is not a strong basis for Britain and the United States
alone to decide whether Iraq has met its objectives. We need
to carry others with us.
There are some circumstances in which British forces should
not follow American forces into Iraq alone—not without
broader support from the international community, and not
without parallel progress on the Arab/Israel conflict, which
includes the publication of the road-map, which has been blocked
by the Sharon government. There are now bilateral negotiations
between the Israelis and the United States about the parts
that the Israelis want changed. It seems to me to be a sine
qua non of British involvement that the road-map is published
beforehand and not left until afterwards.
We need a strategy towards terrorism. I agree with the noble
Lord, Lord Thomson of Monifieth, that we need also to be tough
on the causes of terrorism. The
26 Feb 2003 : Column 365
most depressing thing about President Bush's Jacksonville
speech was the extent to which he entirely merged intervention
in Iraq with the war on terrorism. It was as if defeating
Iraq would solve the terrorist problem. We all know that is
not the case.
Lord Howell of Guildford:
My Lords, I am grateful to the noble Lord. He was asking where
all the evidence about Iraq's links with terrorism came from.
The answer is that there is a very wide range of sources,
mostly coming from Washington and from senior members of the
Administration. However, if he does not want to look at those,
he needs only to consult the excellent speech made by his
noble friend Lady Nicholson. She gave ample evidence of Iraq's
habit of being involved in terrorism.
Lord Wallace of Saltaire: My Lords, I listened carefully to
the speech of my noble friend Lady Nicholson. She referred
to the use of MKO in Iraq and Iran. It was not the sort of
world-wide network of which I understood the noble Lord to
be talking.
We need a multilateral approach to energy supplies and conservation.
One of the many disturbing things about the current debate
in Washington is that in the State of the Union message President
Bush spoke only about the use of hydrogen-powered vehicles
at some time within the next 10 to 15 years as resolving the
problem of energy dependence in the United States. We need
to have the US coming back into multilateral discussions about
energy dependence. We also want the Government to pursue the
re-establishment of some consensus among European governments.
We want to see a government who will ensure that the United
Nations and international institutions come out of this stronger
and not weaker.
Why is there a rush to war now? Why is there an assumption
that the United Kingdom will, together with the United States,
intervene in Iraq, even if no other significant government,
except Australia, accompany them? The Prime Minister, in his
Glasgow speech on 15th February justifying intervention, talked
about the,
"threat of chaos, disorder, and instability",
if we do not go in. The threat of chaos,
disorder and instability if we do go in without a clear sense
of why we are going and what we are going to do after the
war is serious. The absence of any coherent strategy for post-conflict
Iraq or the Middle East as a whole is one of the underlying
weaknesses. We are not yet convinced. The Government have
not yet made a reasonable case. British troops should not
be sent into action on such a thin basis of policy with such
unclear objectives and with so large a proportion of the British
public doubtful of the whole enterprise. |