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The woman who nearly stopped the war

  • Posted by Martin Bright
  • 19 March 2008

Of all the stories told on the fifth anniversary of the Iraq War, there is one important episode that took place during the build-up to the conflict that has gone largely unreported. It concerns a young woman who was a witness to something so outrageous, something so contrary to the principles of diplomacy and international law, that in revealing it she believed war could be averted. That woman was Katharine Gun, a 29-year-old Mandarin translator at the Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) in Cheltenham.

On Friday 31 January 2003 she and many of her colleagues were forwarded a request from the US government for an intelligence "surge" at the United Nations (with hindsight, an interesting choice of words). In essence, the US was ordering the intensification of espionage at the UN headquarters in New York to help persuade the Security Council to authorise war in Iraq. The aim, according to the email, was to give the United States "the edge" in negotiations for a crucial resolution to give international authorisation for the war. Many believed that, without it, the war would be illegal.

The email was sent by a man with a name straight out of a Hollywood thriller, Frank Koza, who headed up the "regional targets" section of the National Security Agency, the US equivalent of GCHQ. It named six nations to be targeted in the operation: Chile, Pakistan, Guinea, Angola, Cameroon and Bulgaria. These six so-called "swing nations" were non-permanent members of the Security Council whose votes were crucial to getting the resolution through. It later emerged that Mexico was also targeted because of its influence with Chile and other countries in Latin America, though it was not mentioned in the memo. But the operation went far wider - in fact, only Britain was specifically named as a country to be exempt from the "surge".

Koza insisted that he was looking for "insights" into how individual countries were reacting to the ongoing debate, "plans to vote on any related resolutions, what related policies/negotiating positions they may be considering, alliances/ dependencies etc". In summary, he added: "The whole gamut of information that could give US policymakers the edge in obtaining results favourable to US goals or to head off surprises." The scope of the operation was vast: "Make sure they pay attention to existing non-UNSC member UN-related and domestic comms for anything useful related to the UNSC deliberations/debates/votes," wrote Koza.

Gun was appalled by the email in two ways. First by the seediness of the operation: she believed the clear message was that GCHQ was being asked to find personal information that would allow Britain and America to blackmail diplomats in New York. But second and more importantly, she believed GCHQ was being asked to undermine the democratic pro cesses of the United Nations.

Secret email

Over the weekend after receiving the email, Gun decided to act. On returning to work on 3 February she printed out the document and took it home with her. She knew people involved with the anti-war movement and passed the email to a friend who was in contact with the media. This individual in turn passed it to the former Fleet Street journalist Yvonne Ridley, who had become famous as the reporter captured by the Taliban in 2001. By this time Ridley was a prominent opponent of the war. After first approaching the Mirror, which failed to verify the email, Ridley called me at the Observer, where I was working at the time, to ask if I would look at it.

The Koza memo presented me and my colleagues at the newspaper with a number of problems. For a start, the Observer supported the war in Iraq. Then there was the problem of verification. The Koza memo consisted of simply the body of the text, with all identifying information from the email header ripped from the top. In theory, anyone could have typed it. Koza's name was written on the back along with other clues to its veracity, but it could easily have been a hoax. We were also hamstrung by the fact that Gun had not come directly to the newspaper, so there was no way of going back to the source of the leak to check the information.

Peter Beaumont, the Observer's defence correspondent at the time, got his sources to confirm that the language used in the memo was consistent with the NSA and GCHQ.

But still there were doubts. One intelligence contact suggested it could be a sophisticated Russian forgery and another raised the possibility that British spy chiefs had written it to flush out anti-war elements at GCHQ. In the end, the paper's then US correspondent, Ed Vulliamy, struck lucky. After a string of "no comment" responses from the NSA, a phone call to the organisation's headquarters in Maryland was by chance put through to the office of Koza himself. This proved that he existed and we now felt confident that the email was genuine. Despite the paper's pro-war stance, the then editor, Roger Alton, would not have rejected a good story and on 2 March 2003 the Observer splashed on the tale of US dirty tricks at the United Nations.

The story was followed up around the world and caused fury in Chile, which had known its fair share of US dirty tricks during the 1970s. Mexico was equally unhappy and both countries distanced themselves from a second resolution as a result of the revelations. Other countries were less bold in the face of cajoling and bullying from the US, but it became clear in the weeks that followed the leak that a fresh UN resolution was never going to happen.

This was precisely what Katharine Gun had hoped for when she walked out of GCHQ with the document a month earlier. What she could not have known, however, was that George W Bush was determined to go to war, with or without the support of the UN.

Within days of the Observer article, Gun was arrested under the Official Secrets Act and almost a year later she finally appeared at the Old Bailey to stand trial for leaking the NSA document. But, in a dramatic retreat, the then attorney general, Lord Goldsmith, dropped the case at the last minute and despite her prima facie breach of the secrecy laws, Gun walked free.

What did she gain? She failed to stop a war that has now cost thousands of lives. She gave up a secure career as an expert translator. But she was one of the first to reveal the truth about the lies and dirty tricks that took us to war in 2003.

Britain's role

Questions still remain about Britain's involvement in the spying operation, which was the ultimate responsibility of the then prime minister, Tony Blair. A full inquiry into the Iraq War has now been promised by the present Prime Minister, Gordon Brown, and, among other things, this should force the government to disclose the full extent of its knowledge of the 2003 intelligence "surge".

Those who doubt whether Gun's actions had lasting his torical significance should refer to the statement issued by the Crown Prosecution Service when the case was dropped on 26 February 2004. There was speculation that Lord Goldsmith backed down because Gun's defence requested disclosure of his legal opinion on the legitimacy of the war. As was later revealed, his legal opinion shifted as the prospects of a second UN resolution faded.

On this the CPS statement is clear: "This determination by the prosecution had nothing to do with advice given by the Attorney General to the government in connection with the legality of the Iraq War."

Instead, the prosecution stated that "there was no longer a realistic prospect of convicting Katharine Gun". The reasons for this remain a mystery, especially considering that Gun had admitted to the crime of leaking the document. Her only defence was the untried "defence of necessity", under which her lawyers would have argued that her actions were designed to stop the imminent loss of human life.

The CPS statement contains the following intriguing paragraph: "The evidential deficiency related to the prosecution's inability, with in the current statutory framework, to disprove the defence of necessity to be raised on the particular facts of this case."

Read through the legalese, this is an astonishing admission from the government that Katharine Gun's actions were entirely honourable. She really had tried to stop a war.

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40 comments from readers

ikotubo
20 March 2008 at 14:18

Anyone could have taken the stance that Ms Gun took; but what sets her apart is the personal sacrifices she consciously made, namely, the loss of her job, and the readiness to serve a prison sentence, not to mention the inevitable personal villification that would have followed. That's what I call heroism. I salute her courage!

willoyen
20 March 2008 at 15:31

thank god for people like Ms Gun! people with great generosity of spirit in the teeth of the foul lies meted out to us all. Long live rebellion against state crimes.

Interesting that Goldsmith dropped the charges against her. I wonder why.

BegbiesEvilTwin
20 March 2008 at 19:24

She's got balls of steel.

Ergo
20 March 2008 at 20:18

One would like to believe that the information disclosed by Katherine Gun "almost stopped the war" but it seems the grim reality is that even the disclosure of bribery, extortion, threats, the whole gamut of what we all privately consider evil, was not enough to stop an illegal war against a sovereign state on the basis of lies. Still, stories like these, about the personal integrity and sacrifices of individuals, help to balance the feelings induced by the fact that around 50% of Americans still think the invasion and destruction of Iraq was necessary.

writeon
20 March 2008 at 21:25

Good article Martin, and Gunn showed backbone and civil courage which puts many of her collegues to shame.

If you want another tip about investigating yet another vile example of the desparate lengths the UK government was ready to go to in its rush to justify the attack on Iraq, examine the tawdry episode of Jacque Chirac's speech relating to France's conditions for joining the coming war.

Downing Street and the BBC and most of the UK mass media grossly distorted, mis-translated and tendentiously edited Chirac's television address to give the impression that France would not support an attack on Iraq under any circumstances, when Chirac actually said the exact opposite! That France would accept/support a UN resolution support action against Iraq if evidence showing that Iraq had WMDs was forthcoming! So Chirac said that France was willing to punish Iraq, but the condition was that Blix and the weapons inspectors reported that Iraq was in material breach of its obligaitions.

The spin, twisting Chriacs words beyond all recognition came directly from Downing Street and the rest of the media followed like sheep. The reason the propaganda aimed at Chriac was so violent was that by lying and portraying Chriac as opposed to attacking Iraq under any circumstances this gave the UK government 'an excuse' to drop and stop negotiations in the security council and step back from a vote and supplying more 'evidence' relating to Iraq, because what was the point, Chirac had just said he would use his veto no matter what happened!

Now this was a truly disgraceful misrepresentation of Chirac's views and one can examine Chiracs statements in French and actually prove it. All one needs to do is have some ability in the French language, but Downing Street knows that the vast majority of UK citizens don't 'do' French, so they and their lackies in the media pushed a piece of war-propaganda that was patently false and a lie, and like so much else in the run up to the war, they got away with it!

knave
21 March 2008 at 10:21

I hate to play devils advocate and as somebody who was opposed to the iraq invasion it goes against the grain. But she was a civil servent who had signed the official secrets act . She had a legal responsibility not to give sensitive documents to the press. She wasn't forced to sign the official secret acts. I have a feeling if it was conservative government who took us to war she would have done nothing and Bright would not have investigated it.

writeon
21 March 2008 at 10:43

What's also indicative of the 'challenged' state of our socalled 'democracy' is the collosal contrast in the fates of those individuals who actually tried to tell the truth and pull aside the veil of lies supposedly 'justifying' the attack on Iraq, compared to the coterie of criminal conspirators who lied the country into war! Most of the truth sayers have paid a price for daring to speak truth to power, whilst the liars got off free and have even prospered. How is this possible in a country that trumpets and lectures foreigners about the nature of democracy? Raher than facing prosecution Gun should have been given a medal and been rewarded, yet she suffered whilst others in the civil service just carried on with their careers as if nothing had happened even though they knew that Downing Street was building a case for war based on lies and distortions. What does this tell us about the real nature of our 'democracy'? In short is illustrates that what matters isn't voting, what matters is Power. Every four or five years, for one day, Britain is a democracy, we have a vote, we are apparently free and equal and live in a one day democracy, like an exotic plant that flowers for one day every few years. The rest of the time 'democracy' is just a fancy word and an interesting concept, but what matters is who has power and controls the political, economic and cultural heights of the country. In truth a tiny elite rules and nothing much has really changed over the decades.

Motherknowsbest
21 March 2008 at 14:13

I am always heartened when I hear of stories where people are prepared to make sacrifices (no matter how large/small) for the better of others. Few they may be in numbers, but powerful they stand in the face of the "principalities and powers" because they offer hope to those of us who believe that we hold no power at all in the political arena.

I am trying to raise my daughter in a difficult social climate that suggests that our youth (leaders of tomorrow) are lost in terms of humanity. I remind her that among our young men and women there are in fact honest and dishonest people and this she will find everywhere in society; she is responsible for her own actions and thoughts, something we should all try to achieve.

All too often we give up when we believe that things can not change, but instead we should, "Take therefore no thought for the morrow: for the morrow shall take thought for the things of itself."

I am grateful to Ms Gunn for her courage, for she has shown my daughter that it is possible to think for oneself and in so doing obtain great power (at a price) to encourage others to do the same. Each little step goes a long way and this is something that 'elite rulers' and their puppeteers are all too well aware of.

Thank you Ms Gunn.

willoyen
22 March 2008 at 09:07

Any state must protect sensitive information; not to do so risks laying its and its citizens’ wellbeing and security open to threats, internal or external. But does that licence the state to enforce compliance and obedience in its servants when its prime movers are intent on committing crimes or other acts which will endanger that very security, let alone the lives of others? In fact, obedience by state servants in such a case would surely rank as complicity in state crimes. And obedience is no defence, as the Nuremberg tribunals showed.

Cybertiger
22 March 2008 at 12:17

"And obedience is no defence, as the Nuremberg tribunals showed."

And what about obedience to G-d? Does G-d count? If they should ever come to trial, I feel sure Bush and Blair will tell the court that they were only following orders.

AthenaM
22 March 2008 at 17:59

What a brave woman - I can't believe the amount of opposition to the war (millions took the streets around the world), the amount of lies that were exposed and the amount of people wiling to resign their jobs/leak information/speak out and yet still it went ahead. And now over a million Iraqis lay dead and the country is in ruins. The greatest, most blatant crime perhaps ever, as it took place in front of our eyes and despite our cries. Tony Blair will be done for war crimes yes; I have absolute faith in the good people of this earth that they will work tirelessly until this man is behind bars. And Obama better not even THINK of going to war again, we WILL be watching him.

AthenaM
22 March 2008 at 18:04

"she was a civil servent who had signed the official secrets act . She had a legal responsibility not to give sensitive documents to the press. She wasn't forced to sign the official secret acts."

you sir have a robot-mentality, and it is those with robot-mentalities that are bringing unnecessary death and misery to this world. Come back when you've grown a soul.

foxxx
22 March 2008 at 18:14

I SENT A BATTLE PLAN TO THE PRESIDENT TO BE ABLE TO END THE WAR IN IRAQ IN 3 MONTHS, STILL WAITING TO CONFIRM. ALSO MAKE IRAQ A STATE OF U.S. THEN THE OIL'S OURS.

Cybertiger
22 March 2008 at 21:32

@AthenaM

Q. What is the collective term for pathetic, ignorant Americans.

A. A democracy.

"And Obama better not even THINK of going to war again, we WILL be watching him."

The cost of gasoline and the continuing use of the death penalty are the only things that Americans care about and are watching out for.

Nine months to go .... George W, the Great Shepherd and democratically elected moron, presides over an idiot nation. Bush has the power to inflict a lot of damage on this world in that sort of time and there is but a democracy of half wits and dullards watching over him.

theguntz
22 March 2008 at 22:23

What news of the military chap who did time because for principled reasons he refused to serve again in Irak?

knave
23 March 2008 at 07:37

you sir have a robot-mentality, and it is those with robot-mentalities that are bringing unnecessary death and misery to this world. Come back when you've grown a soul

Blimey I didn't expect a biblical punishment.

Again playing Devils advocate, she had opportunities to write to her bosses about her concerns.

I might add I have always been against the Iraq invasion for many reasons.

papigosh
23 March 2008 at 08:38

'Any state must protect sensitive information; not to do so risks laying its citizens well being and security open to threats internal or external'.

I can guarantee that the cleverest and the most senior civil servant and government official would be hard-pressed to define 'sensitive information' and what amounts to a 'security threat'.

I am pleased to note that this was qualified by 'obedience is no defence, as the Nuremberg tribunals show'.

It would not be inappropriate to put this succintly. It is this kind of docility and obedience by the people of a certain country that led to the Nazi mayhem and atrocities. This dangerous traits is becoming apparent in our cousins across the pond. This is reflected in a significant number of Americans still believing that the Iraq war was justified in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary.

We should be very worried with this kind of so called allies. Allies of misinformation, illegal killing of women and children and occupation. Even a downturn in the economy and a drift towards recession brought about by their belief in a moronic president is incapable of helping them 'remove the log from their eyes'. On this evidence, i can guarantee they are likely to go for another leader in the mould of dubya. He has already been to our country to cement 'this special relationship'. God help us.

And Katherine Gun would forever remain a heroine even if the powers that be refuse to take out the log in their eyes like the Americans.

writeon
23 March 2008 at 10:29

Katharine Gunn discovered that the United States in collusion with the United Kingdom government was engaging in illegal activities in an effort to manipulate the Security Council into supporting and 'legalising' the planned invasion of Iraq.

She believed that by publicizing the truth about this outrageous and undemocratic practice the rush to war might be delayed or halted. Aren't we all taught to believe that the truth is powerful and an integral part of the funcitoning of democratic societies?

The truth was that these governments were also breaking international law by spying on the United Nations, this was espionage.

The unfortunate point is, that we have moved beyond the law, international, domestic or otherwise. The law no longer really matters, what matters is power. That's why Blair and his cronies have escaped justice and will never be held accountable for their crimes. The ear of laws is rapidly being replaced by a new era of lawlessness. Where what matters is the law of the sword. Stopping Blair would have meant 'stopping' the society we have created too. It's become fashionable to blame the debacle of Iraq on Blair's 'madness', whilst he may indeed have been 'mad', it's too easy to wipe the responsibility off on a single individual, there was an entire corrupt political culture that surrounded, protected and gave him the power to commit warscrimes.

This is important. We have created a political culture that allows are leaders to commit warcrimes.

How do we correct and tame this monsterous culture? Is it really enough to punish one man or does the sickness and cancer go far, far, deeper and require more drastic action to restore our democarcy to heatlh?

The dominant Western nations and their leaderships have become outlaws, criminals and terrorists, ready and willing to use brute force to get their way in international affairs. This is the brutal truth about what we are and what we are increasingly becoming. We are self-delusional hypocrites, who sex-up and tart-up our agression and terrorism in the whorish-garb of humanitarianism and liberal interventionism, the grosteque lie that it is our burdon to protect the innocent and the weak from violence - pull the other leg, it's got bells on! We are imperialist war-mongers out for all we can get, but obviously we can't proclaim our interests openly, we disguise our true motives with purity and spotless ideology and rhetoric, only we don't fool the poor sods on the sharp end of our bayonets - only ourselves, and the solution and responsibilty for ending the reign of the terrorists in Armani suits rest with us.

Citylocal Fife
23 March 2008 at 14:13

This may account for the recent actions of Tony Blair, desperately trying to form some moral high ground to stand on, before he is summoned to court.

Cybertiger
23 March 2008 at 16:12

"... the solution and responsibilty for ending the reign of the terrorists in Armani suits rest with us."

Never trust an American. Americans will only rise up to protect the death penalty and the price of gas.

w1cked
23 March 2008 at 20:24

@ Cybertiger - Wow, that is a lot of hatred you have. I am American and I must say I am against everything that you claim that we are not. Interesting how people like to blame us Americans but never stop to ask what we tried to do to change the tide. We are just like you Britons, only Democratic for one day every four years. This goes to everyone else as well who wrote here all against us Americans. We do not have some magical control over our government that most of the world seems to think we do. It's just as hard for us to make a change as it is for Britons or Canadians or anyone else. If you do not hold any power than no one will listen (and that seems the rest of the world as well).

Just so you know, I do not trust any of our current presidential hopefuls. I believe that they are all going to destroy our country, but what choice do I have. Here is where we fall in to the same BS every time, who do I vote for if they all are going to destroy my control even more? It basically comes down to the lesser of all the evils, every voting period. It's not like theres a good choice up there, if there is do me and the rest of America a favor and point them out would you!

Cybertiger
23 March 2008 at 23:32

@w1cked

"@ Cybertiger - Wow, that is a lot of hatred you have."

It isn't hatred ... but it's certainly a lot of anger. I could believe in a United States of Anger if it really existed and if the anger was motivated for the common good. The reality though, is very United in its States of Apathy.

PS. Their predilection for the death penalty is what gives the game away on what motivates the American people. The motivation is revenge. Americans are very scary folk.

PPS. All power to good folk like Katherine Gun and the fight against Britain's real enemies.

taghioff.info
24 March 2008 at 05:32

The interesting thing here is that in dropping the case, and the wording of it, the CPS tacitly acknowledges that the war was most likely illegal, since that is what the necessity defence also implies.

They probably avoided the case for precisely this reason, which also indicates that a large part of the legal establishment is not in any way behind this war now.

My feeling is that the Iraq war was where the British establishment finally fell out of love with America.

Cybertiger
24 March 2008 at 08:44

"My feeling is that the Iraq war was where the British establishment finally fell out of love with America."

So why is the Amercanization of Britain proceeding apace?

writeon
24 March 2008 at 09:09

It's tempting, looking from the outside, to see the British and American establishment, or ruling-class; to use a slightly archaic term, as a monolithic entity, but it too has its factions that often disagree profoundly on a whole range of issues.

Since Britain lost its position as real economic and military world power after WW1 and came increasingly to rely on the United States for 'protection' there has been debate in the ruling elite about just how far one should go in proving ones' loyality to the United States in return for protected status.

After WW2, yet another 'defeat' for Britain's interests, the United Kingdom became even weaker in relation to United States which had now become the world's undisputed and unparalelled economic, military and cultural power, a true world empire in all but name.

But what makes Bush and the circle around him so dangerous is their agressiveness, ignorance and extraordinary belief in the effecacy of military power. The law of the sword.

It's the grossly unrealistic nature of goals these fanatics are pursuing that is so dangerous for the United States. They seem to believe that ripping the velvet glove from the iron fist and revealing it to the world is actually productive, awe inspiring and a sign of overwhelming strength. What makes them even more dangerous is their fanatical, dogmatic belief, in their own mythology. Lies are for mass consumption only, once the ruling elite begins to believe in the accuracy of their own myth/propaganda things can catastrophic consequences.

Clearly in the United States there is a 'realist' faction inside the ruling elite that is not only appalled and frightened by the 'incompetance' and 'stupidity' of the Bush regime and where his policies are dragging the empire. By all means let's fight wars and project our power and crush those who oppose us, but let's do it properly and intelligently, use the dagger not the slegdehammer!

'Idealists' of the fanatical, right-wing variety, like Bush and his cohorts are intrinsically very, very dangerous. They strive for instability and 'chaos' as a means to impliment their grandios plans to reshape the world and reality in their own warped image.

taghioff.info
24 March 2008 at 11:57

@Cybertiger

"So why is the Amercanization of Britain proceeding apace?"

I am not sure it really is, I think there is a tendency to confuse americanisation with Globalisation, due to a certain lowest common denominator, which has been American dominated (i.e. neo-liberal) , but is slowly changing form due to criticism from the rest of the world.

What is striking in the UK is the adoption of European standards of late, from Polish builders to well-tarmacked road to changing standards in public utilities.

taghioff.info
24 March 2008 at 12:03

@writeon

"It's tempting, looking from the outside, to see the British and American establishment, or ruling-class; to use a slightly archaic term, as a monolithic entity, but it too has its factions that often disagree profoundly on a whole range of issues."

Yes, this is a good point, though there has been a hegemony around neo-liberal governance, which is fairly widespread, pushing for public-private partnership etc, though I know enough civil servants that hate these ideas to say your point is well made.

But diversity does not erase power, there are still more or less dominant ideas, and shifts in them. The mounting criticism of the American-driven Hegemony on privatization is a good example.

I am not sure that "realists" are so realistic. The European soft-power approach is actaully very, very effective, and Europe is richer and more productive than the US, and is a growing rather than declining political force. That we do not rely on military power and Hollywood to project this does not make our project any less real, even if it is less obvious.

writeon
24 March 2008 at 13:23

The terms 'realist' and 'idealist' in relation to the US elite and their imperial ambitions are, of course, subject to debate. Few in the elite question the goal of empire and domination, at most they argue about the style and methods employed to maintain and expand US power. There are no anti-imperial candidates in the race for the White House.

I suspect one of the major differences between the attitudes of the ruling elite in Europe compared to the United States is grounded in the fact that the US is a global military empire covering most of the world, whilst Europe is not. Europe did its best to destroy itself, twice, during the twentieth century. Bankrupt and exhausted it was clear that yet another war would probably mean the end of European civilization, so mechanisms were introduced in an attempt to eleminate warfare as an option on European soil.

The United States hasn't learnt the hard lessons Europe has learned, neither has it turned its back on empire and militarism like Europe has been forced to.

In my opinion the major, historical, challenge for the United States' ruling elite is how they deal with the rise of China in the coming decades. After a couple of 'awkward' centuries China is back on the world scene and cannot be ignored. Given its huge population and growing power to ignore or antagonize China unduly seems absurd. Unless one actually desires conflict with China. Given China's economic, political and social structure, negotiating with China could prove very beneficial for all of us, for example in relation to solving the environmental challenges we collectively face.

But will the United States choose to come to a mutually beneficial accomodation with China, or will they opt for confrontation and encirclement, as Britain did in relation to the rise of Germany as a rival, and we all know what that led to, at least I hope we do!

Frankly
24 March 2008 at 19:55

When we get down to the nitty-gritty it comes to the fact; that although "Nato" wants to prosecute all that fall foul of the US alliance, they steadfastly refuse to join the International Rule of Law, as both the US and UK are culpable under international law of various crimes. Name a war they have not been party to human rights abuses? Ireland, India, Russia, Vietnam, Cambodia, Korea, Iraq… Colombia, Nicaragua, Cuba, El-Savador… wasn't it Chuchill that bombed the Kurds with poison gas way before Saddam?

aflatoon
25 March 2008 at 05:22

i just salute this courageous lady at her courage of conviction.i wish there were more laies like her not only in the west but amongst the europeans,asians & africans.but alas her efforts went invain.the world is seeing the results unravelling in untold miseries,hardship, death & destructionall around us.but the unjust war is devaluing all of us,dehumanising all mankind. aflatoon india

taghioff.info
25 March 2008 at 05:26

@frankly

Sadly true, but it is not clear how long US exceptionalism is sustainable, wither geopolitically or environmentally, so this situation may well change in the not-too-distant future.

@writeon

Yes, I agree broadly speaking. There is also the rise of India to take into account, which is a nation with a much more substantial track record of military aggression, and an absolutely enormous vulnerability to environmental issues in food and water security terms.

However, the US needs to get out of its exceptionalist mindset if it is to have any chance of dealing with these rising powers adequately. And yes, the lessons of the pre world-war power struggles are unsettling relevant here.

Part of the problem is that the US model of social and economic flexibility underwritten by economic security guaranteed by market access in developing countries to natural resources, and monetarist price controlls at home, seems amost perfectly designed to fail in this emerging global scene of climate instability, natural resource scarcity and the resulting rising commodity prices.

Are the American Elites really capable of such a huge rethink so quickly, to catch up with

1) that they are now becoming one power among many in a multi-polar world (the UK is still getting its head around not having an Empire and being a European country)

2) that their economic and social approach looks like a house of cards sitting on an unstable environment, when compared to the mixed economy models of Europe and East Asia.

So the rise of China and India, and the environmental issues associated with our current model of progress really do challenge the American way right to the core.

Martin Bright
25 March 2008 at 10:49

As is often the case, taghioff.info goes straight to the heart of the matter. The question is: "Why did the UK government really drop the case?" Why, indeed, did they admit that they could not face down the defence of necessity? We still don't have the answers. Perhaps they realised the war was illegal. Perhaps they recognised that Katharine's actions were designed to stop needless killing. Perhaps they realised that her actions should have stopped it. Perhaps we will find out at an inquiry. Perhaps not.

rodmc
25 March 2008 at 11:58

Dirty tricks are sadly not out of the ordinary when it comes to almost any aspect of the now defunct Blair regime, in particular with respect to Iraq. I went to a lecture in Sweden by Hans Blix and he was pretty scathing in his views, and he was a victim of much of the US/UK smearing campaign so should know.

writeon
25 March 2008 at 13:36

Martin,

I think it's pretty clear why the government dropped the case - publicity.

Pursuing Katharine Gunn through the courts would have focused attention on a potentially very embarrasing episode in the frantic effort to get a second security council resolution authorising punative action against a non-compliant Iraq.

On balance dragging this whole sorry tale into the light of public scrutiny was simply not worth the time and effort. Punishing a modern and attractive version of Joan of Arc doesn't really play well, especially as she was in the right.

Katharine Gunn would have become a martyr and perhaps even in the worse case a prisoner of conscience. The ruling-caste aren't that out of touch and stupid, especially the New Labour variety. Far better to cut ones losses and let the tawdry little story just fade away quietly, soon to be forgotten, hidden under the mountains of rubble and piles of Iraqi dead.

The deterrent effect of losing ones job and the stamp of unreliability were deemed sufficient for the purpose.

In a different and decent world Kathrine Gunn would receive a medal for her brave effort to draw our attention to criminality at the very heart of our political system, though spying at the United Nations is really of minor importance compared to the far worse crimes of destroying an entire coutry and slaughtering hundreds of thousands, based on a giant eddifice of lies.

A tiny post script which I believe is indicative of the corruption eating away at the heart of our national life.

Yesterday on BBC World they announced on a news programme that 4,000 American soldiers had been killed in Iraq, and following that, to show 'balance' they mentioned that somewhere in the region of seventy to eighty thousand Iraqis had also been killed in the 'violence'. This figure of eighty thousand is so not accurate, by now even the dullards at the BBC must know how much of an underestimate this number is. It's out by a factor of ten or more. 800,000 is arguably far closer to the true number, yet that horrendous figure is simply unacceptable and can not be right, or even named as a possiblility. What I find difficult to stomach is that the woman anchor seemed to regard the figure of around 80,000 as a terrible figure, which it is, and I wonder what the expression on her face would have been like if she'd had the courage and professionalism to say 800,000 instead!

In my opinion It would have been worth losing ones job and shown courage like Katharine Gunn, and create a little bit of history, to look into the camera and tell the truth about the extra civilian casualities, instead of mouthing lies over and over again, but I imagine that's why I would never be allowed near a live feed on the BBC.

Skiing4Pz
25 March 2008 at 16:16

I have enjoyed reading your intelligent comments. The lack of personal attacks by posters is refreshing. To better understand the US voters you have to understand how different our system of government is from most “democracies” in the world. Our 2 party system does not allow us any type rule except by the corporate elite. As one comment earlier stated “we are a democracy once every 4 years “ and not really then.

The new and truly scary thing is the growing number of otherwise rational people in the US who think we are on a divine mission. That we have been chosen. The majority of my countrymen do not read and are not interested in history. So I fear we will follow the paths of all empires, maybe just a little quicker than most.

The question is not will the American Empire pass away, but will it take mankind with it?

I salute Katharine Gunn for trying to speak Truth to Power.

Power is always deaf. Hence terrorism

writeon
25 March 2008 at 18:54

Skiing4pz

This is, of course, the crucial question, will the close to bankrupt and militarily overstretched American Empire take the rest of mankind with it as it struggles vainly against the tide of history to maintain its dominant position in the world?

Looking at the fate of the British Empire doesn't give one much grounds for optimism, though the myth promoted by the ruling elite, to disguise their disasterous incompetance, was that they actually chose to dismantle the Empire 'peacefully'.

This is a comforting lie/myth which absolved them from the terrible consequences of their policies and diverted attention from the true scale of their defeat in trying to maintain imperial domination.

The long struggle with Germany over Europe, virtually broke the back of Britain, Germany and the rest of the continent. Was the rivalry with Germany that led to two terrible and totally debilitating, financially disasterous wars, inevitable? Could one have avoided these wars, which only delayed the inevitable rise of Germany, given its large poupulation and geographical position in the heart of Europe? Did Britain have to choose a collision course with Germany and feed German intrasigence and nationalism, with tragic consequences to follow?

The reason I mention the rivalry between Great Britain and Germany, is because I believe there is a startling historical parallel in the relationship between China and the United States. I hope I'm way off track on this, but I don't think I am. There are powerful forces in the US that will simply not accept the rise of China to the level of economic superpower and potential rival without a fight.

taghioff.info
26 March 2008 at 05:30

@writeon

I hope you are wrong too, the only encouraging thing is that the current excesses of global capitalism have an up-side, actually envisaged as it was set up as a system post-war, that massive trade makes war prohibitively expensive. So for once one is hoping that the American Elites are watching the bottom line, oh the cruel irony.

@Martin

Thanks, I feel slightly guilty now, having just given you a little bit of a hard time elsewhere, all in the name of peace and harmony hopefully ;-)

I think this question over the motivation for the war will remain as a heart of darkness in this whole thing.

To reduce this down to one person, and rerun a slightly dated joke, since the Talented Mr Blair has converted to Catholocism, perhaps the only person who will ever get an inkling of "why" is his priest, although that is assuming Tony is able to be honest with himself...

Nowt as queer as folk.

knave
26 March 2008 at 19:01

Good point tag about Tone

Although the NS is going all confessional with the" buy the Opus dei" article.

Maybe Paul Johnson is going to be the next editor. That 's what the NS needs a carrot headed, conservative Pinochet loving catholic

Skiing4Pz
27 March 2008 at 16:51

writeon "Looking at the fate of the British Empire doesn't give one much grounds for optimism, though the myth promoted by the ruling elite, to disguise their disasterous incompetance, was that they actually chose to dismantle the Empire 'peacefully'." This is the real questions are: Will this change in the World Order be survivable?

Can the common people influence the “Elite”?

There are many strong forces who have put all their power and influence on the current Balance of Power.

For instance:

The religious right in the US (50%+ of Republican base 30% of all voters in 2004)

Israel and the Pro Israel lobby in the US

The Energy Corps. (Exxon, BP, RDShell, ect)

A very strong faction in Britain

The US military

The Neo Fascist wing of the Republican party (Cheney’s base of support)

The Corporate Media

These are a few of the majors.

On the other side there is no one to compete with any of these in organization or power.

The Democratic party is strongly influenced by all of the above.

The lobbyists for the above have power over a Democratic Congress.

No Democratic congressman or Senator will say they do not want to increase military spending.

We in the US now spend more on our military than all of rest of the World combined.

Both Obama and Clinton want to increase the size or our armed forces. (McCain also)

This should be a wakeup call for ourselves and the rest of you out there.

Moral people continue to believe that War is acceptable if used for "Peace".

Every country who ever went to War thought they were Morally right.

We never seem to learn.

The Elite control Congress and the media.

The Elite are only interested in maintaining their power.

Odds for a positive (peaceful) outcome seem quite long to me.

papigosh
27 March 2008 at 19:34

Skiing4Pz

'Can the common people influence the elite?'

Did the over one million man strong demo across London affect the Blair government decision to illegally invade Iraq ?

'the US now spend more on military than the rest of the world combined. Obama, Clinton and McCain want to increase the size of their armed forces'.

They however threaten the other so-called minnions from the US perspective like India, Brazil, Venezuela and China not to do same!

I am under no illusion that the American elite would prefer to spend the bulk of their overflowing (but now dwidling fast) natural resources in uplifting the bulk of their citizens languishing in sub-saharan type health malaise by investing more in the health sector for the benefit of these cohorts. No wonder the US languish at the bottom of health league tables of industrialised nations. Talk of the only hyper power!

Who needs hyper power when we have the cream de l'cream of human species in the form of Katherine Gunn. I join you and other commentators in saluting Katherine Gunn, for as you put it, trying to Speak Truth To Power. She deserves the highest honour of the land.

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About the writer

Martin Bright began his journalistic career writing in very simple English for a magazine aimed at French school children. This experience has informed his style ever since. He worked for the BBC World Service, and The Guardian before joining the Observer as Education Correspondent. He went on to become Home Affairs Editor before becoming the New Statesman's political editor in 2005.

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