KEMBER - RANSOM WAS PAID FOR CREDIBILITY
kember reality check | 27.03.2006 21:27 | Analysis | Anti-militarism
This is no different to what the US forces did in Afghanistan, did anyone report how Medicins Sans Frontiere lost seven of their staff to masked gunman because the US armed forces tried to link humanitarian aid with their illegitimate efforts. Now the UK is there to join them - that tells you a lot about armed forces.
Which media office has bothered to report how the Taleban and Saddam Hussein came into power to reveal why people in the Middle East are stuck in an awful battle by people who have created a climate of danger, religious fundamentalism and fear.
kember reality check
Comments
Hide the following 3 comments
Try this for a reality check
28.03.2006 12:47
So "no hostages were found"?
What, apart from Kember and the other people who were taken hostage with him?
And isn't a rescue operation in which no shots are fired generally A Good Thing?
Norville B
Double take!
28.03.2006 19:30
Mean while here is five questions for the very judgemental General Sir Mike Jackson:-
1. When you took the British army into Iraq for Tony Blair what was your exit strategy?
2. Did your originally plan envisage keeping thousands of British troops in Iraq three years after the war-fighting stage had finished?
3. When are you going to express some gratitude to the British tax payer for continuing to pay your wages when you have failed to deliver either out-right military victory or a functioning Iraq after three years?
4. By invading Iraq without a clear objective and plan of how to create a democratic and stable country, isn't it General Jackson rather than Norman Kember who has acted irresponsibly in a war-zone and put far more people's lives at risk than Norman?
4. What precisely was your involvement on Bloody Sunday?
Ex-squaddie
> no shots are fired generally A Good Thing?
29.03.2006 01:10
Kidnapping is an epidemic in Iraq and the only way to end it is to stop paying ransoms or any such trading with kidnappers. Whatever awful events have driven someone to kidnap, they can no longer expector threaten our cooperation.
Three of those unarmed innocents risked their lives, and one lost his, but not in vain, at least more people in the occupying countries now have now heard of the tens of thousands of Iraqi kidnaps.
And then they might begin to question why every legal occupying force has a duty to provide security.
eeeeeee