"There is no Iraqi government" - George's
speech to Parliament about Iraq
24 January 2007
George Galloway's Home Page
When I was his warm-up act, I used to describe the right honourable
member for
Manchester Gorton [Gerald Kaufman] as the best foreign
secretary we never had, and his speech this evening
showed why.
Indeed, an alternative administration of all the
talents became clear on the Labour benches, including
the right honourable gentleman's friends, the right
honourable member for Holborn and St Pancras [Frank
Dobson], and the honourable members for Islington North
[Jeremy Corbyn] and for Liverpool Walton [Peter Kilfoyle].
How much stronger the Labour Party's position would be
in the opinion polls today if those were the men sitting
around the cabinet table, rather than the men and women
who are.
What
a contrast there was between those shafts of light and
the myopia displayed by the foreign secretary.
So rose-tinted were her glasses that she had even
spotted the first elections in Saudi Arabia.
As one who follows events in the Arab world closely, I
must tell the house that I missed the first elections in
Saudi Arabia, probably the un-freest, most undemocratic
and most anti-democratic country on earth. So keen was
the Foreign Secretary to describe the success of
Anglo-American policy in the Arab world that she prayed
in aid [appealed to] a grant to the youth parliament in
Bahrain.
Lebanon
But those were not the most foolish of the things that
the foreign secretary said in her long speech. She
talked about supporting the government and people of
Lebanon. Well, let us split that proposition.
She
was not much help to the government of Lebanon when its
prime minister was weeping on television and begging for
a ceasefire,
and when the
British and American governments alone in the world were
refusing,
indeed blocking, any attempts to demand an immediate
cessation of the Israeli bombardment.
Worse, she was not much help to the government or the
people of Lebanon when British airports were being used
for the trans-shipment of American weapons to Israel
that were raining down death and destruction on the very
people of Lebanon whom she now claims to stand beside.
But, of course, that was code for saying that she does
not support the one million demonstrators in the square
in Beirut who are demanding democracy.
The foreign secretary describes
the government of Lebanon as a democratic government.
If the minister will listen, I can educate him.
There is no democratic government in Lebanon.
The minister should know that.
If
there were a democracy in Lebanon, Hassan Nasrallah
would be the president, because he would get the most
votes.
But of course he cannot be the president, because you
have to be a Christian to be the president, and you have
to be a Sunni to be the prime minister, and you have to
be a Shi'ite to be the speaker.
What they have in
Lebanon
is precisely the opposite of democracy. It is a
sectarian building-block government that they have in
Lebanon,
and moreover one based on a census that is more than 50
years out of date.
If those one million demonstrators had been in Ukraine
or Belarus or Georgia, they would be described as the
orange revolution, or given some other epithet – perhaps
even "the cedar revolution".
Palestine
and Iraq
So myopic was the foreign secretary that she talked
about the peace process in Palestine and refused to
condemn the theft, as the right honourable member for
Manchester Gorton put it – he used the word – of $900
million, stolen from the Palestinian Authority.
The right honourable member for Liverpool Wavertree
[Jane Kennedy], without a hint of irony, advanced the
extraordinary proposition that we are fighting for
democracy in
Iraq,
while
we
can steal the money of the Palestinian Administration in
the occupied territories because the people voted for a
government
whom Olmert, Bush and Blair did not like.
So myopic was the foreign secretary's view that she
prayed in aid an opinion poll from Basra
which told us that the people had every confidence in
the police
– we
had to send the British in to blow up a police station
and kill umpteen Iraqi policemen because we said that
they were about to massacre the prisoners in their
jails.
The foreign secretary prayed in aid the Iraqi
government – a virtual government – saying that, more
importantly,
the
Iraqi government do not consider that they have a civil
war.
Of course they do not, because there is no Iraqi
government. As the right honourable member for
Manchester Gorton put it, we have installed a gang of
warlords in power in
Baghdad,
the heads of competing militias, some of them at war
with our own soldiers in the south of Iraq.
It is not a government, but Martin Scorsese's "Gangs of
New York" that we have put in charge in
Baghdad.
That is not my concept. That is the concept of the right
honourable member for Manchester Gorton.
Iran
So myopic was the foreign secretary that she had her
finger out and wagging at Iran, warning it of what it
must do, or must not do in terms of nuclear weapons.
She is the foreign secretary of a government who are
about to spend £75 billion on our own nuclear weapons,
who
declare themselves the best friend of Israel, which has
hundreds of nuclear weapons and refuses to sign the
non-proliferation treaty,
and who say nothing about Pakistan, a military
dictatorship acquiring nuclear weapons. It would make
you laugh if it did not make you cry.
Most serious of all was the extent to which the foreign
secretary sought to lull us to sleep walk into a coming
conflict with Iran. Invited by one of her colleagues to
describe, as the former foreign secretary had, an attack
on Iran as inconceivable, she refused, preferring
instead the formulation that no one is contemplating it.
But they are contemplating it. Israel has a war plan
carefully worked out to do it. As we know from the
journalism of Seymour Hersh, the greatest of all
American journalists, who brought us the stories from
Vietnam, American generals have to the nth degree worked
out an attack upon Iran.
Trial
The foreign secretary says that we stand by our
soldiers. We stand by them so much that we pay them so
little. We had to give them a Christmas bonus to make up
their wages. Their families are claiming means-tested
benefits and living in houses that you would not put a
dangerous dog in. We send them, ill clad, ill equipped,
ill armed, without armour, on a pack of lies into war
after war after war.
Let me invite the house to contemplate this and see if
I am as right about this as I was about
Iraq
four years ago. If a finger is raised against Iran by
Israel or the United States, the first people to pay the
price will be the 7,000 young men and women of the
British armed forces that we have stationed in the south
of Iraq, where Iran, thanks to us, is now top dog.
If members want to know what that will look like, think
about the film "Zulu", but without the happy ending.
That is how irresponsible our government are. They are
part of an axis that is contemplating a war against a
country that we have made powerful in a place where we
have our soldiers standing in a thin red line in the
sand.
For the moment, the trial of Tony Blair merely takes
place on Channel 4 television. The day will come, and it
is coming soon, when a real trial of Tony Blair will
take place in a real court. |