Iraq
Gordon Brown has apparently not changed the governments stance on troops in Iraq- and everyone seems pretty upset about this.
But isn't it fair to say that now a commitment has been made, whether it was right or wrong, or morally repugnant, or whatever, it should be honoured?
Also, it seems to be common opinion that Britain should be less politically reliant on America, but Britain ranks only the same as Israel on the world affluence survey (or something like that, I think). Without America's goodwill, Britain would be thrown to the dogs.
Saying that, I understand that our presence in Iraq is not beneficial (well, our military presence anyway). That's not to say that a monitoring system shouldn't be set up in Iraq. The government there doesn't necessarily need to be a mirror of either the British or American system, right? In fact, it's unlikely to manage a system quite like ours since ours is so well established.
Maybe Britain could encourage America to withdraw? Maybe if we drew numbers out slowly, the Americans would follow suit? Or is the value of Iraq just too high for the Americans to let go of?
Thoughts?
My latest killing is:
http://www.bookscape.co.uk/short_stories/human_sacrifice.php
Author Page at the 'Zon
Author Page at the 'Zon