Home Page

Not In My Name  Not In My Name
What have we done?

News Updates

May 2004 to Present

May 2004 to Present
November 2003 to April 2004
July 2003 to October 2003
May 2003 to June 2003
March 2003 to April 2003

These pages contains news items since the start of the war and will be maintained as a diary of events. It will demonstrate that the war against Iraq was unjust and questions US/UK motives for the pre-emptive attack on Iraq.

The links used in these pages are from respected media sources that make their archives freely available. The majority are from the BBC, Guardian, Observer, Independent and Times. A few are taken from the Daily Mirror, and a few from Al Jazeera to obtain an Arab perspective.

29th June 2007
Iraq is the shameful secret in our cellar - we must hold our politicians accountable for their role in Iraq's bloody chaos.

16th September 2007
Alan Greenspan claims Iraq war was really for oil - America ’s elder statesman of finance, Alan Greenspan, has shaken the White House by declaring that the prime motive for the war in Iraq was oil.

19th May 2007
Carter attacks Blair's Iraq role - former US President Jimmy Carter has criticised outgoing British Prime Minister Tony Blair for his "blind" support of the war in Iraq.

16th April 2007

Not In My Name
An image of hypocrisy -
Baha Mousa, an Iraqi civilian, died in UK military custody in Iraq. Mousa, a hotel receptionist, was one of several Iraqis who were tortured at a Basra detention centre by British troops in September 2003. Despite an enquiry no one has been charged.

7th January 2007
So was this what the Iraq war was fought for, after all - Iraq's massive oil reserves, the third-largest in the world, are about to be thrown open for large-scale exploitation by Western oil companies under a controversial law which is expected to come before the Iraqi parliament within days. The US government has been involved in drawing up the law
.

4th December
Situation in Iraq has become "much worse" than a civil war - Mr Annan, who leaves office after 10 years on 31 December, said life for the average Iraqi was now worse than under the regime of Saddam Hussein
.

30th November
Blair's US influence 'a myth' - in a devastating verdict on Tony Blair’s decision to back war in Iraq and his “totally one-sided” relationship with President Bush, a US State Department official has said that Britain’s role as a bridge between America and Europe is now “disappearing before our eyes”. Kendall Myers, a senior State Department analyst, disclosed that for all Britain’s attempts to influence US policy in recent years, “we typically ignore them and take no notice — it’s a sad business”.

5th November
Bush & Blair: The Iraq fantasy - neither will admit that Iraq is a disaster. But while their state of denial may cost votes in Washington and London, on the frontline in the Middle East, it continues to cost lives.

11th October
655,000 Iraqis killed since 2003 -
death toll among Iraqis as a result of US-led invasion reaches estimated 655,000, Lancet study reports.

25th September
Campaign in Iraq has increased terrorism threat, says American intelligence report - The US/UK 'claimed' legal justification for war on the basis that Iraq possessed Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD) and was a direct and immediate threat. It is clear that this was not the case. As of October 2003 no WMD have been located, and even if they are present it is clear that Iraq was in no position to be a threat. Who is accountable for the deaths of thousands of people in the Iraq war, Mr Blair, Mr Bush? Not only did the US/UK initiate an unjust war, it was also clearly an illegal war initiated by two irresponsible leaders who have misled the world. Events since the war suggest that the motives for this war were control of the region and it's oil supplies. And as for human rights, how have the Iraqi prisoners been treated by the US and UK.....

25th September
Campaign in Iraq has increased terrorism threat, says American intelligence report - an authoritative US intelligence report pooling the views of 16 government agencies concludes America's campaign in Iraq has increased the threat of terrorism.

2nd April
Iraq terror backlash in UK 'for years' - SPY chiefs have warned Tony Blair that the war in Iraq has made Britain the target of a terror campaign by Al-Qaeda that will last “for many years to come.” A leaked top-secret memo from the Joint Intelligence Committee (JIC) says the war in Iraq has “exacerbated” the threat by radicalising British Muslims and attracting new recruits to anti-western terror attacks.

17th February
Judge's anger at US torture - a high court judge yesterday delivered a stinging attack on America, saying its idea of what constituted torture was out of step with that of "most civilised nations".
The UN Secretary General, Kofi Annan, has said the United States must shut down Guantanamo Bay prison camp "as soon as is possible".

16th February
America's Long War - the US announces its sinister plan for battling global Islamist extremism.

3rd February
Blair promised to be 'solidly behind' US invasion with or without UN backing - Tony Blair told President George Bush that he was "solidly" behind US plans to invade Iraq before he sought advice about the invasion's legality and despite the absence of a second UN resolution, according to a new account of the build-up to the war published today.

27th November
Abuse worse than under Saddam, says Iraqi leader - human rights abuses in Iraq are now as bad as they were under Saddam Hussein and are even in danger of eclipsing his record, according to the country's first Prime Minister after the fall of Saddam's regime.

22nd November
Iraq's oil: The spoils of war - Iraqis face the dire prospect of losing up to $200bn (£116bn) of the wealth of their country if an American-inspired plan to hand over development of its oil reserves to US and British multinationals comes into force next year. A report produced by American and British pressure groups warns Iraq will be caught in an "old colonial trap" if it allows foreign companies to take a share of its vast energy reserves. The report is certain to reawaken fears that the real purpose of the 2003 war on Iraq was to ensure its oil came under Western control.

20th July
At least 25,000 Iraqi civilians killed since invasion - four times as many died at the hands of US-led forces than suicide bombers and other insurgents, according to a detailed study of the human cost of the conflict.

20th July
Ministers warned of Iraq link to UK terror - despite Tony Blairs denials, fresh evidence emerged yesterday that the government was privately warned by the intelligence agencies that the conflict in Iraq could provoke terrorist acts in Britain and compound anger among young British Muslims.

18th July
Supporting the US-led invasion of Iraq put the UK more at risk from terrorist attack - Britain has laid itself open to terrorist attack by acting as a "pillion passenger" to US foreign policy according to an independent report by Chatham House with the Economic and Social Research Council.

11th July
Many of those who backed the Iraq war refute any link with the London bombs on 7th July - they are in deepest denial.

27th April
Documents show Blair's secret plans for war - Tony Blair had resolved to send British troops into action alongside US forces eight months before the Iraq War began, despite the Foreign Office warning that the conflict could be illegal.

27th April
British military chief reveals new legal fears over Iraq war - the man who led Britain's armed forces into Iraq has said that Tony Blair and the Attorney General, Lord Goldsmith, will join British soldiers in the dock if the military are ever prosecuted for war crimes in Iraq.

27th April
The attorney general cast doubt on the legality of the war against Iraq without a second UN resolution - Tony Blair was told by the government's most senior law officer in a confidential minute less than two weeks before the war in Iraq that British participation in the US-led invasion could be declared illegal.

18th April
Personal Comment - The forthcoming British election, a vote of conscience? Tony Blair has shown contempt towards the British electorate, another clear victory and he will have a clear mandate to continue. He took this country to war at the expense of the lives of of tens of thousands of Iraqis, and over 2,000 soldiers, and at a cost of over 5 billion pounds to the tax payers of this country. Tony Blair ignored the pleas of over a million people who marched through London. Many people who marched were not against possible war, but did not feel that there was sufficient evidence at the time (and were subsequently proved correct). Even now, Mr Blair will not share with us the legal advice that he received concerning the legality of the war.
One of the most serious decisions a British prime minister will ever have to make is whether to take their country to war. We were taken to war on the basis of the threats from weapons of mass destruction. Mr Blair assured us that he had seen the evidence and it was irrefutable. He would not share that evidence with us. He promised us that he would only go to war with a second UN resolution, he broke this promise. Tony Blair either misinformed us, or clearly made a grave error of judgement. Either way, should we be voting for a prime minister who knowingly took us to war on a false pretext. Many people have said that it is time to move on, try telling that to the families of the people who have suffered as a consequence of the Iraq war. What does it say about the society we live in if we just brush aside this issue? Is there no accountability? We have to send a clear message to our politicians that they have to respect the wishes of the people of this country.

10th April
Iraqis stage huge anti-US protest - tens of thousands of protesters have marched through Baghdad denouncing the US occupation of Iraq, two years after the fall of Saddam Hussein.

3rd April
Green light for Iraqi prison abuse came right from the top - classified documents show the former US military chief in Iraq personally sanctioned measures banned by the Geneva Conventions.

1st April
WMD verdict: 'Dead wrong' - The damning verdict of America's official report into the reasons for going to war in Iraq. A bipartisan US commission has delivered adevastating critique of the intelligence assessment of Iraq's pre-war weapons of mass destruction.

24th March
Was the Attorney General leant on to change his mind? - Lord Goldsmith, the Attorney General, believed that invading Iraq without a second United Nations resolution would be illegal until shortly before the war started, it was disclosed last night. Documentary evidence has emerged showing that the Attorney General, Lord Goldsmith, changed his mind about the legality of the Iraq war just before the conflict began. The damning revelation is contained in the resignation letter of Elizabeth Wilmshurst, a legal adviser at the Foreign Office, in which she said the war would be a "crime of aggression". She quit the day after Lord Goldsmith's ruling was made public, three days before the war began in March 2003.

21st March
The BBC Panorama programme has re-examining the UK leader's case for war in light of the evidence - on the second anniversary of the Iraq war, Panorama reveals how several of the claims he made in public during the build up to the war - and afterwards - conflict with what we now know was going on behind the scenes, as evidenced for instance by government officials and documents. A transcript o fthe programme is also available.

27th February
New charge undermines Blair claims on Iraq war - fresh evidence has come to light suggesting that Tony Blair committed himself to war in Iraq nearly a year before the American and British assault in March 2003.

23rd February
Revealed: the rush to war - the attorney general, Lord Goldsmith, warned less than two weeks before the invasion of Iraq that military action could be ruled illegal. Elizabeth Wilmshurst, deputy legal adviser at the Foreign Office, described the planned invasion of Iraq as a "crime of aggression".

12th January
US gives up search for Iraq WMD - Intelligence officials have confirmed the US has stopped searching for weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. The existence of WMD had been the stated reason in Washington and London for going to war with Iraq.

8th December
CIA adds to gloom over Iraq - the CIA station chief in Baghdad has sent a pessimistic end-of-tour assessment about Iraq, according to the New York Times.

16th November
More US war crimes - first the torture of prisoners, now the murder of unarmed and wounded people.

15th November
An apology - at least half of America is sorry......

29th October
100,000 Iraqi civilians dead, says study in Lancet - the first scientific study on the number of civilians killed (murdered?) in Iraq reveals that100,000 Iraqi civilians - half of them women and children - have died in Iraq since the invasion, mostly as a result of airstrikes by coalition forces.

17th October
Aide quits over ‘illegal’ war - a senior official who helped draw up Tony Blair’s dossier on weapons of mass destruction has quit in disgust over what he regards as the illegal war in Iraq. Ross is understood to believe the evidence was “unambiguous” that Iraq posed little or no threat so the legal case for war was flawed. He and other officials are believed to have raised their concerns with ministers. Ross said yesterday: “I am happy to confirm that I resigned because of the war, but I cannot comment further.”

16th October
Why is war-torn Iraq giving $190,000 to Toys R Us? - next week, something will happen that will unmask the upside-down morality of the invasion and occupation of Iraq. On October 21, Iraq will pay $200m in war reparations to some of the richest countries and corporations in the world.

15th October
Poll reveals world anger at Bush - George Bush has squandered a wealth of sympathy around the world towards America since September 11 with public opinion in 10 leading countries - including some of its closest allies - growing more hostile to the United States while he has been in office.

15th October
The making of the terror myth - since September 11 Britain has been warned of the 'inevitability' of catastrophic terrorist attack. But has the danger been exaggerated? In the UK the Home Office's own statistics for arrests and convictions of suspected terrorists since September 11 2001 state that of the 664 people detained up to the end of last month, only 17 have been found guilty. Of these, the majority were Irish Republicans, Sikh militants or members of other groups with no connection to Islamist terrorism. Nobody has been convicted who is a proven member of al-Qaida.

13th October
Weapons of Mass Deceipt - Jack Straw yesterday finally admitted the claim Iraq could deploy weapons of mass destruction in 45 minutes was not justified.

10th October
Blair 'clinging to straws' - Tony Blair and George Bush are "clinging to straws" to justify the war in Iraq, Hans Blix has said. He also said the report was further evidence "that the reality on the ground was totally different from the virtual reality that had been spun".

9th October
Paul Bigley: “Mr. Blair has blood on his hands” - after hearing news of his brother’s death, Paul Bigley quit the meeting, and instead he sent a short message to be read by Carmel Brown of Stop The War.The message said: “Please, please stop the war and prevent any other lives being lost. It is illegal. It has to stop. “Mr Blair has blood on his hands.” He added: "This war is illegal and it must stop. The United Nations declared this war illegal. There are no weapons of mass destruction, which were taken as a foundation for this war."

7th October
Iraq had no WMD, inspectors conclude - Saddam Hussein destroyed his last weapons of mass destruction more than a decade ago and his capacity to build new ones had been dwindling for years by the time of the Iraq invasion, according to a comprehensive US report released yesterday. Iraq kept up WMD pretence 'to deter Iran' and was not a threat to Europe or the USA.

5th October
Dear Mike, Iraq sucks - civilian contractors are fleecing taxpayers; US troops don't have proper equipment; and supposedly liberated Iraqis hate them. After the release of Fahrenheit 9/11, Michael Moore received a flood of letters and emails from disillusioned and angry American soldiers serving in Iraq.

18th September
Blair 'was warned of Iraq chaos' - Tony Blair was warned there could be post-war problems a year before the Iraq invasion. Documents further show that the Prime Minister was advised that he would have to "wrong foot" Saddam Hussein into giving the allies an excuse for war, and that British officials believed that President George W Bush merely wanted to complete his father's "unfinished business" in a "grudge match" against Saddam.

18th September
Iraq had no WMD: the final verdict - a draft of the Iraq Survey Group's final report circulating in Washington found no sign of the alleged illegal stockpiles that the US and Britain presented as the justification for going to war, nor did it find any evidence of efforts to reconstitute Iraq's nuclear weapons programme.

16th September
IIraq war illegal, says Annan - the United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan has told the BBC the US-led invasion of Iraq was an illegal act that contravened the UN charter.

16th September
IColonel accuses Allies over Iraq -a British Army officer who won praise for a rousing speech to troops in Iraq has accused the US and UK of failing to plan for after the war.

10th September
New blow to Blair over Iraq - Tony Blair will be confronted with a fresh challenge over Iraq within the next two weeks when the long-awaited final report of the Iraq Survey Group concludes there were no weapons of mass destruction in the country at the time of the US-UK invasion.

18th July
Butler Report independent and accurate? - Downing Street secured vital changes to the Butler Report before its publication, watering down an explicit criticism of Tony Blair and the way he made the case for war in the House of Commons.

18th July
Attorney General warned Blair on legality of war - Tony Blair was warned before the Iraq war by the Attorney General, Lord Goldsmith, that a UN court could rule Britain's invasion unlawful.

16th July
Blair 'in dark' over Iraq report - Tony Blair claims that he did not know a key piece of Iraq intelligence had been discredited when he gave evidence to last year's Hutton inquiry. What else did he not know? Is this acceptable from the man that took us to war?

15th July
European reaction to Butler report - Blair's credibility lies in tatters... his stubborn insistence that the Iraq war was right is merely an act of desperation ( Berliner Zeitung). Even those who don't call into question the prime minister's honesty will at least have to think about his ability to lead the country (Sueddeutsche Zeitung). Whatever the final details of the report on the CIA and MI6, the total failure of British intelligence is obvious (Nepszabadsag).

15th July
Blair faces renewed war questions - Tony Blair faces renewed pressure over the war with Iraq after Lord Butler's revelations about the "thinness" of the intelligence used to justify it.

15th July
Headlines from UK papers - Tony Blair oversold the case for war and failed to reveal how little British intelligence knew about Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction, the Butler report concludes (Telegraph). Iraq intelligence was flawed and misused. The devil for Blair remains in the detail with evidence stretched to 'outer limits' (Guardian). So why did our sons have to die? (Daily Mirror)

The intelligence: flawed
The dossier: dodgy
The 45-minute claim: wrong
Dr Brian Jones: vindicated
Iraq's link to al-Qa'ida: unproven
The public: misled
The case for war: exaggerated
And who was to blame? No one (Independent)

15th July
Butler Report - represents a damning indictment of the way Britain was taken to war on Iraq. The intelligence on which the action was based was flawed and it was then presented to the public by security chiefs and the government without accompanying reservations. In particular, the infamous claim that Saddam Hussein could deploy weapons of mass destruction within 45 minutes should not have been included in the document in the way it was. Unfortunately the Butler Report could not identify who was responsible as the clear remit was to look at the quality of the intelligence, NOT the way it was used and who was responsible for the way it was 'sold' to the public. Thus the important questions are still unanswered. Tony Blair has said he accepts responsibility for the failings highlighted in the report, but is not prepared to resign honorably. Dr Hans Blix, the UN's former chief weapons inspector, said the government had "hyped" Iraq's weapons capability in its September 2002 dossier. He told BBC's Hardtalk programme: "I think it was a spin that was not acceptable. "They put exclamation marks where there had been question marks and I think that is hyping, a spin, that leads the public to the wrong conclusions."

11th July
Now Blair must face an inquiry - 'the fundamental question posed by the Iraq war is about judgment - specifically the Prime Minister's. He made the decisions that took us to war. He overrode the concerns of all of us who believed the case for war had not been made. He chose to follow George Bush at any cost. We need a full explanation.'

10th July
Blair's Iraq evidence 'confusing' - two former intelligence officers have cast doubts over Tony Blair's use of evidence in the run-up to war in Iraq.

10th July
Personal Comment - why is it that Tony Blair and his Government did not question the evidence presented to them when those of us against war did? I have yet to see the convincing evidence that took us to war? The majority of this country did not want to go to war yet we were assured by Tony Blair that Iraq was a real and imminent threat. Will Tony Blair take responsibility and resign for his mistakes and those of his intelligence services? The BBC director general was forced to resign following failures within the BBC. Greg Dyke's failures did not have such serious consequences, and did not lead to the death of thousands of people. Was Humberside police chief David Westwood not suspended under severe pressure from this Government because of failings within his force concerning the Soham murders?
Come election time I will certainly take into account how such poor judgement has led to an illegal and immoral war with the death of over 10,000 Iraqis and 1,000 coalition members. This war has increased the global threat of terrorism, damaged the reputation of Britain, and will cost the tax payers of this country in excess of 5 billion pounds.

10th July
Iraq war report damns CIA - the American Senate has delivered a damning report on the case for war against Iraq, savaging the CIA and implicitly blaming British intelligence. It concluded that assessments of the threat of Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction were wrong, unreasonable and largely unsubstantiated. "We went into Iraq based on false claims," said Senator Jay Rockefeller, one of the authors of yesterday's report on the debacle, said. He added that he now regretted his vote in October 2002 to support the war. But did the Government manipulate intelligence for its own political ends? We know the answer, but the truth is unlikely to be told.......There will be many quiet retirements with generous pensions.........

5th July
Legality of Iraq occupation 'flawed' - the senior Foreign Office lawyer who resigned after ministers ignored her advice that the war in Iraq was illegal has issued a damning legal critique of the occupation, claiming that the alleged abuse of prisoners "could amount to war crimes".

30th June
Archbishops slam Iraq jail abuse - Dr Rowan Williams and Dr David Hope's letter was written on behalf of the 114 Anglican bishops, they say the abuse of Iraqi detainees has been "deeply damaging" and the apparent double standards "diminish the credibility of western governments".

16th June
Probe rules out Iraq-9/11 links - the commission investigating the 11 September 2001 attacks on the US has found no "credible evidence" that Iraq helped al-Qaeda carry them out. The report does not make pleasant reading for the Bush Administration.

10th June
Iraq abuse 'came from US policy' - A human rights group says the torture and mistreatment of Iraqi prisoners by US soldiers was due to a decision to circumvent international law.

6th June
The emperor has no clothes - by senator Robert Byrd. An old article I just found......

5th June
Bush takes a tongue-lashing from the Pope over Iraq - the Pope yesterday subjected George Bush to a very public, relentlessly critical assessment of the US administration's performance in Iraq, attacking "deplorable" abuses of prisoners and calling for an international solution to the country's crisis. In addition, tens of thousands of people have been marching in Rome in a protest against the visit by US President George W Bush.

1st June
The lying game - an A-Z of the Iraq war and its aftermath, focusing on misrepresentation, manipulation, and mistakes.

26th May
UK accused of major rights abuses - the UK has carried out "serious human rights violations" as part of its war on terror, Amnesty International says. Hundreds of civilians had been killed and thousands injured by coalition bombing during the war in Iraq, the report said. Thousands of people had been arrested and detained without charge or trial in Iraq, and "torture and ill-treatment by coalition forces were widespread", it said. The report also stated that the US-led "war on terror" is behind a surge of human rights abuses around the world, according to a report by Amnesty International. The organisation said America's offensive against global terrorism was "bankrupt of vision" and had "made the world a more dangerous place".

21st May
'US soldiers started to shoot us, one by one' - survivors describe wedding massacre as generals refuse to apologise. When Iraqis are blown apart in Baghdad by a car bomb, or Israelis in Haifa by a suicide bomber, these are instantly and correctly labelled as terrorist attacks. However when American helicopters or Israeli tanks cause death to innocent civilians on a similar scale, there is always an alternative version on offer. This comes amidst the row over the conduct of US personnel in Iraq which intensified yesterday after an American news channel showed gruesome new photographs of military police officers posing with the battered body of a dead Iraqi prisoner. Inmates were raped, ridden like animals, and forced to eat pork

20th May
What the war was really about - many in the US are worried about pulling out of Iraq, traditional conservatives who see American interests in the Middle East as focused on a regular supply of oil are anxious because it has pulled its troops out of one big producer, Saudi Arabia, without establishing a sustainable military presence in another, Iraq.
Administration critics, as well as a growing number of Republican moderates, are arguing that to salvage the situation in Iraq the administration will have to jettison many of its other policy goals and political ambitions. For example, it will have to give up all hope of establishing permanent military bases in Iraq, securing advantages for US firms, and staying out of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

16th May
Daily Mirror photos were a hoax - but it is clear that acts of cruelty were committed by a number of British troops. The Daily Mirror admitted its mistake and sacked its editor. Will Mr Blair and Mr Bush apologise for their mistakes/lies. We were taken to war on the false premise that weapons of mass destruction would be found in Iraq. Bogus dossiers were produced and lies told to the UN to convince the world it was legally right to invade a sovereign country.

11th May
Senior Britons were in the dark - the Red Cross said last night it could not understand how senior British figures did not know troops were accused of abusing Iraqi civilians when British diplomats and military commanders had been given a number of detailed warnings over the past 13 months. The Red Cross report condemned physical and psychological abuse employed by US troops at Abu Ghraib prison as “standard operating procedure”.

11th May
UK troops 'shot harmless Iraqis' - UK troops have killed Iraqi civilians including an eight-year-old girl when they were under no apparent threat, Amnesty International has claimed. In a further revelation, British troops in Iraq were acting illegally by "hooding" prisoners, the Government was forced to admit yesterday.

10th May
Abuse claims known a year ago - the government was told of allegations UK troops abused Iraqi prisoners a year ago according to Amnesty International. Meanwhile, as more torture pictures are released, Iraq's first human rights minister launched a blistering attack yesterday on America's chief administrator in Iraq, Paul Bremer, saying that he had warned him repeatedly last year that US soldiers were abusing Iraqi detainees.

9th May
Cover-up - the UK government has confirmed it received a Red Cross report on alleged abuses by UK troops on Iraqi prisoners in February. This is despite its claims of knowing nothing about allegations of abuse of Iraqi prisoners by British troops. The Red Cross has been documenting abuse that was not the 'exception' but was close to the norm - abuse that was 'tantamount' to a policy of torture, and tolerated by coalition forces.

7th May
The Arab papers respond to Bush's appearances on Arabic television as more evidence of abuse emerges - "No expression of 'deep disgust' by President George Bush or apology by the US military will ever change or even minimise the hatred felt in Iraq and the Arab world towards the Americans and their coalition. Mr Bush said that the way the US military treated Iraqis is 'not the way we do things in America'. This may be true about the US when it deals with Americans. But since the US administration has one set of standards for Americans and Israel and another for Iraqis and Arabs, respect for human rights somehow turns into a joke...

7th May
Red Cross saw 'widespread abuse' - new details have emerged from a Red Cross report into incidences of alleged Iraqi prisoner abuse by US soldiers. The Red Cross describes the abuse as widespread and, in some cases, tantamount to torture. The Red Cross says it repeatedly warned Washington about the mistreatment.

3rd May
Further reports of the US torture of Iraqi prisoners - "Saddam Hussein may have oppressed us but he was better than the Americans. They are garbage." "The Americans said they would bring us freedom. Is this what they mean?" The coalition has already found its first justification for invasion - finding weapons of mass destruction - to be hollow. Its second justification - humanitarian moral necessity - is rapidly going the same way.

Not In My Name  Not In My Name

 

Top of Page
Home Page