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Britain
Jack Straw's Light Goes "On" About Teheran's Iraqi Incursions
2005-10-09
It was not the outcome the Foreign Office had been planning. When it was announced early last week that a senior British diplomat in Baghdad was flying back to London to give a briefing on Iraq's constitutional referendum, the general expectation in Whitehall was that the following day's headlines would focus exclusively on whether sufficient numbers of Iraqis would turn out to validate the exercise.

Imagine the surprise, then, of Jack Straw and his officials the following morning when they opened their newspapers to discover that the future constitutional arrangements for Iraq had been completely superseded by official British confirmation that Iran's Revolutionary Guards were behind the deadly attacks that have recently claimed the lives of eight British soldiers.

For the past two years it has been a Foreign Office mantra that not a word should be uttered that could in any way be construed as criticising the Iranian government. Having voiced his last-minute opposition to the invasion of Iraq, Mr Straw had taken it upon himself to find a "negotiated solution" to the West's stand-off with Teheran over its clandestine nuclear programme as an alternative to military confrontation. Indeed, when The Sunday Telegraph two weeks ago revealed that agents working for the Revolutionary Guards had linked up with the Iraqi groups responsible for the attacks on British troops, the Foreign Office continued to insist that there was no firm evidence.

But now the cat is out of the bag. Not realising the sensitivity that Mr Straw attaches to Britain's dealings with Teheran, the unfortunate diplomat unwittingly strayed from his referendum brief and started laying into the Iranians with a gusto not seen in the British diplomatic service for decades. The Iranians, said the diplomat, were colluding with Sunni Muslim insurgent groups in southern Iraq. They were providing them with deadly terrorist technology that has been perfected by the Iranian-funded Hizbollah militia in southern Lebanon against the Israeli army. And their motivation was to deter Britain from insisting that Teheran abandon its controversial nuclear programme. "It would be entirely natural that they would want to send a message 'don't mess with us'. It would not be outside the policy parameters of Teheran." This is diplomat-speak for, if Britain wants to confront Iran over its nuclear weapons programme, then Iran feels entitled to blow up young British soldiers.

The off-message tone of the unnamed diplomat's comments sent shock-waves through the oak-panelled walls of the Foreign Office. "It was all very amusing," said one official. "For years diplomats have been under strict instructions not to say anything in public that might upset the Iranians. And then someone gives it to them straight between the eyes." Perversely, this undiplomatic bout of straight-talking may turn out to have done Mr Straw and the Foreign Office an enormous favour. By baldly stating what the Iranians are really up to in southern Iraq, the diplomat has freed his employers from the obligation of persisting with the charade of constructive engagement with a regime whose only interest in construction appears to be directed at building an atom bomb.

More at Link
Posted by:Captain America

#17  I was going to guess, "complacent" from what I've seen of Lord Mayor Livingstone and the Anglican terror sympathizers.
Posted by: Zenster   2005-10-09 22:58  

#16  compliant?
Posted by: trailing wife   2005-10-09 20:59  

#15  "Halliburton Tectonic Services Division, how may I direct you call?"
Posted by: Sock Puppet O´ Doom   2005-10-09 16:32  

#14  There are a series of fault lines in north-central Iran that, if hit in the right place by a 1MT burrowing nuke, would destroy the entire country - not to mention seriously damaging parts of Iraq, Afghanistan, and the former Soviet republics to the north. It might be a nice idea to let Tehran know we have that information, and the technology to make it happen.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2005-10-09 16:24  

#13  not a problem.
Posted by: raptor   2005-10-09 15:01  

#12  I get it, Coptic Christians. LOL, sorry raptor! ;)
Posted by: Red Dog   2005-10-09 13:23  

#11  I doubt this senior British diplomat's "slip" was truly accidental. The timing was just too good. It was a convenient way publicize Iran's meddling without having it sound like a declaration of war.
Posted by: Darrell   2005-10-09 13:22  

#10  Copacetic?
Posted by: Grunter   2005-10-09 13:07  

#9  What lopt said,my m dosn't always work.
Posted by: raptor   2005-10-09 13:02  

#8  That was supposed to complicant.
Posted by: raptor   2005-10-09 13:01  

#7  Picant is spicy, like picante sauce, so copicant is "spicy together"?
Posted by: Bobby   2005-10-09 11:55  

#6  complicit???
Posted by: lotp   2005-10-09 11:30  

#5  Not trying to be a smart ass here, have enough trouble communicanting myself. But please, take another crack at it. Copicant? Can't figure it out.
Posted by: Whiskey Mike   2005-10-09 11:28  

#4  Well now,I guess this makes the government copicant in the killing of British soldiers.
Posted by: raptor   2005-10-09 11:15  

#3  humm.. it's a break in the ususal diplomatic speak, and comming from Straw it might have woken up a stenographer or two.

speak btw, is not a language understood by the Mad Mullahs.

Posted by: Red Dog   2005-10-09 10:51  

#2  This is a good thing. Not that it will make a lick of difference. There are plenty of closet Galloway and and visible Livingstone fans and supporters in Labor.
Posted by: Sock Puppet O´ Doom   2005-10-09 00:12  

#1  cut off his MM pension, did they?
Posted by: Frank G   2005-10-09 00:01  

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