04-01-2014, 10:30 AM
Blimey, if Jack Straw speaks the truth then GW planned a nuke strike against Iran back in 2004 - and Tony Bliar was compliant to that idea. Quite startling if true.
Quote:Jack Straw blames George Bush for his sacking from post as Foreign Secretary
By JASON GROVES
- He says U.S. hawks plotted his removal after he ruled out UK attack on Iran
- And he concedes that his stance also led to a rift with Tony Blair
- But he suggests he could have 'saved Blair' if he stayed on the front bench
PUBLISHED: 23:55, 3 January 2014 | UPDATED: 23:55, 3 January 2014
Former Foreign Secretary Jack Straw suggested last night that he may have been sacked by Tony Blair following pressure from George Bush's White House.
Mr Straw, who was Foreign Secretary during the Iraq war in 2003, was demoted three years later to Leader of the Commons.
Yesterday, he said hawkish allies of Mr Bush may have had a hand in his removal after he ruled out Britain ever joining an attack against Iran.
Sacked: Jack Straw, who was Foreign Secretary during the Iraq war in 2003, was demoted three years later to Leader of the Commons after, he believes, the intervention of senior figures in the Bush administration
He said neo-conservatives in the White House such as UN ambassador John Bolton were never terribly keen on me'.
But he conceded that his public insistence in 2004 that war against Iran was inconceivable' also led to a rift with Mr Blair.
Asked by Total Politics magazine whether he believed the Bush administration played a hand in his sacking, he replied: People say that. The neo-cons, people like John Bolton, were never terribly keen on me, but I've no idea what observations were made through the back door.
Tony and I were getting to a different place on handling Iran, and Tony certainly felt disconcerted when I said that it was inconceivable that the UK would go to war with Iran and described a nuclear attack as nuts.
Close: Former Prime Minister Tony Blair, left, with former President George W. Bush, whose allies Mr Straw says plotted his removal from the Cabinet after he ruled out British involvement in an attack on Iran
As events have proved, we haven't been involved in military action in Iran it's inconceivable now there's no way a British House of Commons would approve any kind of military action in Iran.
'And a nuclear strike remains nuts.'
Mr Straw suggested he could have extended Mr Blair's tenure at No10 if he had remained at the Foreign Office, but Mr Blair's decision to exile him to the Commons in 2005 made it impossible for him to save the Prime Minister from himself.
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14