KashifAsrar
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Jack Straw stands up for Lebanon
Rashmee Roshan Lall | TNN
London: The 19-day-old West Asia crisis hit the British capital and Tony Blairââ¬â¢s cabinet on Sunday with his former foreign secretary leading a full ministerial revolt against the prime ministerââ¬â¢s refusal to blame Israel for the ââ¬Ådisproportionateââ¬Â use of force.
In an eye-popping bold attack on Blairââ¬â¢s Americanled foreign policy of equidistance between Israeli attack and Lebanese suffering, former foreign secretary Jack Straw fired the first cabinet salvo on the prime minister.
Speaking to his mainly Indian Muslim constituents in Blackburn, north west England, Jack Straw said that he was speaking for several cabinet colleagues when he voiced concern over Israeli tactics in bombing Lebanese civilians.
ââ¬ÅIf you want to go for Hezbollah, go for Hezbollah, not the whole Lebanese nation,ââ¬Â Straw said, in the first sign that Blairââ¬â¢s fragile cabinet unity on the West Asian crisis may be splintering.
Strawââ¬â¢s comments became public in a Britain nervously watching the escalating violence in West Asia with an Israeli air strike on the southern Lebanese town of Qana leaving more than 40 people, including 20 children, dead.
Strawââ¬â¢s words were echoed by other leading members of Blairââ¬â¢s cabinet, including the youthful rising star of the government, environment secretary David Miliband and deputy prime minister John Prescott. According to British newspaper reports, Prescott has already pointed out that Blairââ¬â¢s equivocation on the West Asia conflict had prompted grave concerns within the governing Labour Party. Senior cabinet ministers have criticised Blair for refusing to condemn Israelââ¬â¢s disproportionate use of force and warned that Labour would lose British Muslim votes ââ¬Åhand over fistââ¬Â.
Reports say that Blair was pressed by minister after minister at a recent cabinet meeting to break with the American view and publicly criticise Israel over the scale of death and destruction. But Blair still flew to Washington on Friday for a summit with President George Bush, after which the two men publicly told the worldââ¬â¢s media they could not back calls for an immediate ceasefire in West Asia.
The British prime minister's troubles are understood to be spiralling because two US planes carrying ââ¬Åhazardous cargoââ¬Â or bombs meant for delivery to Israel, touched down at a British airport on Saturday before continuing their journey to West Asia. MPs belonging to Blair's Labour Party said that the prime minister was to blame for allowing Britain to be the ââ¬Åin-flight fuellerââ¬Â for Israelbound bombs.
Strawââ¬â¢s broadside against Blairââ¬â¢s foreign policy comes nearly three months after his removal from the post of foreign secretary was celebrated by leading Israeli newspapers such as The Jerusalem Post. In a prescient piece after Straw was removed from the foreign office to make way for the Blair loyalist, foreign policy virgin Margaret Beckett, the Post predicted that ââ¬ÅIsrael may have come out the winner following Prime Minister Tony Blairââ¬â¢s cabinet shuffle on May 5.ââ¬Â
It said that ââ¬Åthe demotion of Foreign Secretary Jack Straw and appointment of Blair loyalist Margaret Beckett to his post are likely to result in a more unified Anglo-American approach to Iran, Hamas and the Middle East.ââ¬Â
The paper said that Beckett's lack of ââ¬Åexperience in Middle East affairs and a reputation as a capable manager and Blair loyalistââ¬Â meant she would ââ¬Åback her political master and favor the American approach to conflict resolution in the Middle East over the initiatives favored by the European Union, with a tougher stance towards Hamas and terrorismââ¬Â.
British foreign policy observers said Postââ¬â¢s prediction appeared to be coming true with respect to an uncritical UK backing for Tel Aviv, except that Blair was now in the firing line ââ¬â from his cabinet and parliamentary party ââ¬â for refusing to criticise Israel.
Rashmee Roshan Lall | TNN
London: The 19-day-old West Asia crisis hit the British capital and Tony Blairââ¬â¢s cabinet on Sunday with his former foreign secretary leading a full ministerial revolt against the prime ministerââ¬â¢s refusal to blame Israel for the ââ¬Ådisproportionateââ¬Â use of force.
In an eye-popping bold attack on Blairââ¬â¢s Americanled foreign policy of equidistance between Israeli attack and Lebanese suffering, former foreign secretary Jack Straw fired the first cabinet salvo on the prime minister.
Speaking to his mainly Indian Muslim constituents in Blackburn, north west England, Jack Straw said that he was speaking for several cabinet colleagues when he voiced concern over Israeli tactics in bombing Lebanese civilians.
ââ¬ÅIf you want to go for Hezbollah, go for Hezbollah, not the whole Lebanese nation,ââ¬Â Straw said, in the first sign that Blairââ¬â¢s fragile cabinet unity on the West Asian crisis may be splintering.
Strawââ¬â¢s comments became public in a Britain nervously watching the escalating violence in West Asia with an Israeli air strike on the southern Lebanese town of Qana leaving more than 40 people, including 20 children, dead.
Strawââ¬â¢s words were echoed by other leading members of Blairââ¬â¢s cabinet, including the youthful rising star of the government, environment secretary David Miliband and deputy prime minister John Prescott. According to British newspaper reports, Prescott has already pointed out that Blairââ¬â¢s equivocation on the West Asia conflict had prompted grave concerns within the governing Labour Party. Senior cabinet ministers have criticised Blair for refusing to condemn Israelââ¬â¢s disproportionate use of force and warned that Labour would lose British Muslim votes ââ¬Åhand over fistââ¬Â.
Reports say that Blair was pressed by minister after minister at a recent cabinet meeting to break with the American view and publicly criticise Israel over the scale of death and destruction. But Blair still flew to Washington on Friday for a summit with President George Bush, after which the two men publicly told the worldââ¬â¢s media they could not back calls for an immediate ceasefire in West Asia.
The British prime minister's troubles are understood to be spiralling because two US planes carrying ââ¬Åhazardous cargoââ¬Â or bombs meant for delivery to Israel, touched down at a British airport on Saturday before continuing their journey to West Asia. MPs belonging to Blair's Labour Party said that the prime minister was to blame for allowing Britain to be the ââ¬Åin-flight fuellerââ¬Â for Israelbound bombs.
Strawââ¬â¢s broadside against Blairââ¬â¢s foreign policy comes nearly three months after his removal from the post of foreign secretary was celebrated by leading Israeli newspapers such as The Jerusalem Post. In a prescient piece after Straw was removed from the foreign office to make way for the Blair loyalist, foreign policy virgin Margaret Beckett, the Post predicted that ââ¬ÅIsrael may have come out the winner following Prime Minister Tony Blairââ¬â¢s cabinet shuffle on May 5.ââ¬Â
It said that ââ¬Åthe demotion of Foreign Secretary Jack Straw and appointment of Blair loyalist Margaret Beckett to his post are likely to result in a more unified Anglo-American approach to Iran, Hamas and the Middle East.ââ¬Â
The paper said that Beckett's lack of ââ¬Åexperience in Middle East affairs and a reputation as a capable manager and Blair loyalistââ¬Â meant she would ââ¬Åback her political master and favor the American approach to conflict resolution in the Middle East over the initiatives favored by the European Union, with a tougher stance towards Hamas and terrorismââ¬Â.
British foreign policy observers said Postââ¬â¢s prediction appeared to be coming true with respect to an uncritical UK backing for Tel Aviv, except that Blair was now in the firing line ââ¬â from his cabinet and parliamentary party ââ¬â for refusing to criticise Israel.