Compliant and subservient:
Jimmy Carter's explosive critique of Tony Blair
By John Preston and Melissa Kite
08/27/06 "The
Telegraph" -- -- Tony Blair's lack of leadership and
timid subservience to George W Bush lie behind the ongoing crisis in
Iraq and the worldwide threat of terrorism, according to the former
American president Jimmy Carter.
"I have been surprised and extremely disappointed by Tony Blair's
behaviour," he told The Sunday Telegraph.
"I think that more than any other person in the world the Prime
Minister could have had a moderating influence on Washington - and
he has not. I really thought that Tony Blair, who I know personally
to some degree, would be a constraint on President Bush's policies
towards Iraq."
In an exclusive interview, President Carter made it plain that he
sees Mr Blair's lack of leadership as being a key factor in the
present crisis in Iraq, which followed the 2003 invasion - a
pre-emptive move he said he would never have considered himself as
president.
Mr Carter also said that the Iraq invasion had subverted the fight
against terrorism and instead strengthened al-Qaeda and the
recruitment of terrorists.
"In many countries where I meet with leaders and private citizens
there is an equating of American policy with Great Britain - with
Great Britain obviously playing the lesser role.
"We now have a situation where America is so unpopular overseas that
even in countries like Egypt and Jordan our approval ratings are
less than five per cent. It's a shameful and pitiful state of
affairs and I hold your British Prime Minister to be substantially
responsible for being so compliant and subservient."
The outspoken attack by the former Democratic president shows the
extent of the alienation between the Labour Party and its
traditional Democrat allies in America.
It will embarrass the Prime Minister on his return from his summer
family holiday in Barbados and comes as Mr Blair prepares to make a
defiant speech warning his party that it risks losing the next
election if it does not unite behind him.
As friends of the Prime Minister mounted frenzied briefings in his
defence yesterday, the Downing Street spin machine appeared to run
out of control. A statement first put out on Friday was reissued, in
which Mr Blair made a desperate defence of his Government, insisting
that "after nearly a decade in office the PM is convinced that his
Government has the experience and authority to meet these
challenges".
Later officials at Downing Street admitted that they had simply
redated the identical statement before sending it out to the press.
At 81, Mr Carter - the 39th American president, from 1977 to 1981,
and the winner of the 2002 Nobel Peace Prize - plainly has no
intention of sitting on his porch and nodding quietly away as the
sun goes down over his peanut farm. He has just published a book,
Faith and Freedom, in which he savages the American administration
for leading the country into insularity and intolerance.
"We've never before had an administration that would endorse
pre-emptive war - that is a basic policy of going to war against
another country even though our own security was not directly
threatened," he said. In his book, President Carter writes: "I have
been sorely tempted to launch a military attack on foreigners."
But had he still been president, he says that he would never have
considered invading Iraq in 2003.
"No," he said, "I would never have ordered it. However, I wouldn't
have excluded going into Afghanistan, because I think we had to
strike at al-Qaeda and its leadership. But then, to a major degree,
we abandoned the anti-terrorist effort and went almost unilaterally
with Great Britain into Iraq."
This, Mr Carter believes, subverted the effectiveness of
anti-terrorist efforts. Far from achieving peace and stability, the
result has been a disaster on all fronts. "My own personal opinion
is that the Iraqi people are not better off as a result of the
invasion and people in America and Great Britain are not safer."
Asked why he thinks Mr Blair has behaved in the way that he has with
President Bush's belligerent regime, Mr Carter said he could only
put it down to timidity. Yet he confessed that he remains baffled by
the apparent contrast between Mr Blair's private remarks and his
public utterances.
"I really believe the reports of former leaders who were present in
conversations between Blair and Bush that Blair has expressed
private opinions contrary to some of the public policies that he has
adopted in subservience."
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