SMRs and AMRs

Saturday, February 11, 2006

Bush and Blair and a Pretext for War

Book Casts Doubt on Case for War

Believing the evidence fell short, Bush discussed with Blair the possibility of inciting a conflict with Iraq, British author says.

By John Daniszewski, Times Staff Writer

LONDON -- It was the end of January 2003. Secretary of State Colin L. Powell was five days away from giving a critical speech at the U.N. Security Council, laying out the case that Iraq was hiding weapons of mass destruction and posed a danger to world peace.

But huddled with aides at the White House, President Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair were not sure there was enough evidence to convince the Security Council. Without the council's explicit authorization, their plans for an invasion to depose Saddam Hussein could be difficult to defend under international law.

Bush proposed an alternative: paint a U.S. spy plane in United Nations colors and see if that didn't tempt Hussein's forces to shoot at it. In any case, he said, the war was "penciled in" for March 10 and the United States would go ahead with or without a second U.N. resolution.

Click here to see the rest of the article, from the LA Times.

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