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A response from the Home Office

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by Laurence Rowe published Nov 13, 2008 12:14 AM

Back in May I wrote to the Home Office asking for the evidence behind a reported statement that "the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan had no bearing on the level of the security threat in the UK or in the rest of Europe." This in an article in the Independent highlighting a recent European report warning "British foreign policy presented critical dangers for all Europe: "The conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq have a large impact on the security environment of the EU."

After a number of false starts, lost e-mails and clarifications, I received a reply.

When approached by the journalist our spokesman followed the normal procedure and queried the Home Office's press database to see if the Department had been asked a similar question before.

Querying the database yielded a question and answer from the launch of the Government's counter-terrorism strategy, CONTEST. It is this information from the database our spokesman relied on when speaking to the journalist. The information from the database is as follows:

Are you conceding that the Iraq war and UK invasion of Iraq have fuelled extremism?

No. It is the right of every citizen to question UK foreign policy and to have the freedom to debate and disagree. Understand that not everyone agreed with decision to intervene in Iraq. But the UK government did so because of wider issues not because it is a Muslim country. No foreign policy issue justifies terrorism or advocating it.

Must bear in mind that the threat from international terrorism existed before the Iraq war:

Feb 1993
World Trade Centre - 6 dead.
Aug 1998
bombings of US Embassies in Tanzania and Kenya 224 dead, mostly locals.
11 Sept 2001
World Trade Centre, Pentagon 2992 killed.
April 2002
historic synagogue in Tunisia bombed 21 dead including European tourists.
May 2002
hotel bombed in Karachi 14 killed.
Oct 2002
Bali bombs 202 dead, mostly tourists.

 

This tells us more about the processes of the Government media machine than it does about evidence based policy making. The press office database is not of answers to questions, but rather points of rebuttal. The aim being to divert the attention of the journalist from the question at hand to the departmental line that 'terrorists have always done bad things'.

The failure of imagination (either in the Government or presumed in the media audience) displayed by the emphasis on the reasoning for going to war, when it is the perception that is pertinent. The perception that the west has been engaged in a war on Muslims is widely held in many parts of the world and within some communities within Britain.

It appears that the original 'answer' dates from 2003, the launch of CONTEST (or at the FCO, 'Protect and Survive' anyone?) By 2006 the head of MI5 acknowledged that British suicide bombers were driven by the perception of a long standing injustices against Muslims.

So what of the 'wider issues' that lead to the Iraq war. JK Galbraith had the most convincing account I have read.

Tønsberg

by Laurence Rowe published Nov 02, 2008 05:29 PM

Tønsberg waterfront

Further north, the light has a different quality. Colours appear stronger, more intense. Around freezing, the water takes on an almost waxy texture.

Leaving London

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by Laurence Rowe published Oct 01, 2008 08:39 PM

National Portrait Gallery Café

I'm glad to have spent some time here and there will definitely be a few places I'll miss, but I must admit it's a bit of a relief to be leaving. Perhaps there is just a little bit too much of it, but everywhere else I have been recently feels like an oasis of calm in comparison. Not one to do things by halves I'm off to spend the winter in Tønsberg, Norway. I mean, it can't really be that cold... can it?

Kinder Scout

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by Laurence Rowe published Aug 10, 2008 07:40 PM

Kinder Low

On Kinder, so long as you keep near the edge you can usually tell where you are. The moor has an other-worldly feel in the fog, with a peace that is difficult to find in an over-stimulated city. A little disconcerting, but you can always follow a stream back to the path. Still, there was something reassuring about finding Kinder Low.

Having woken early on Saturday morning I decided I needed to be up a hill. Even with a stop in Manchester to pick up a tent, I'd made it by 3pm. In this weather the only real option is to wear shorts and embrace the elements. Once you've stepped in a few puddles you can wade through the streams... I was glad of the warm shower when I got down though!

Thomas Pynchon: Against the Day

by Laurence Rowe published Aug 10, 2008 06:55 PM

"...Those they may not at the moment harm, they corrupt. Usually all it takes is money, for they have so much that no one feels any moral hesitancy about taking it. Their targets become rich, and where's the harm in that?"
"And if money doesn't do the trick..."