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BLAIR'S WARS
Free Press, 2004
Now updated with two new chapters on the Hutton Report and the latest developments
in Iraq
Tony Blair has committed British forces to action five times in six
years. No British Prime Minister and few world leaders have come close
in contemporary history. What is it about this deeply Christian man
that has given him such a taste for war?
In Blair’s Wars, award-winning journalist John Kampfner gives
the inside story of a man who came to office with no experience of
-- and virtually no interest in -- foreign affairs but who quickly
moulded himself into a man on a mission: to punish dictators and spread
democracy across the globe. To do that he fell back on the basic tenets
of British diplomacy, a yearning for friendship with the United States
and a reliance on the armed forces, while proclaiming his vision in
the more modern guise of liberal intervention.
This mission has taken Blair from the first air strikes against Iraq
in 1998, at the time of Bill Clinton’s impeachment trial, to
the Kosovo conflict of 1999; from the deployment of troops in Sierra
Leone to George W. Bush’s attack on the Taleban and al-Qaeda
in Afghanistan after September 11 -- and then on to the final and decisive
war against Saddam Hussein.
Through conversations with the main players across governments in London,
Washington, New York and European capitals, Blair’s Wars details
the processes by which the Prime Minister has prosecuted these campaigns
-- and why. It reveals in riveting fashion the failure of diplomacy
that preceded the showdown with Saddam. It shows how Blair decided
from the beginning of Bush’s presidency that he would allow nothing
to get in the way of their close alliance; how he reconciled himself
to war on Iraq at a very early stage; how he willed the intelligence
material to conform to his plans; and how he dismissed the warnings
of his diplomats that his approach would alienate him from countries
he had so assiduously courted. This is the story of a man who had convinced
himself that his powers of persuasion could overcome all problems and
defy all logic - only to see those powers disappear.
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BOOK NEWS
Independent paperbacks of the
week - 16/07/04. Boyd Tomkin,
The Independent's literary editor, says of Blair's
Wars:
"Now updated, the New Statesman political editor's punchy and perceptive
account of the evangelical warrior in No 10 and his crusades will retain its
importance during the fallout from this week's Butler report. From Kosovo to
Baghdad, Kampfner highlights the mingled streak of 'naivety and hubris' that
led the PM into so many battle-fronts, both defensible (as in Sierra Leone) and
dodgy in every way (Iraq). Well-sourced, revealing proof of how personality can
still shape politics."
Blair's Wars was
listed as one of the 30 non-fiction 'must read paperbacks'
for the Summer in The Daily
Telegraph, July 3rd.
Blair's Wars is
reviewed in both
The Times (June
19th) and The Guardian (June
12th).
In The Guardian,
Steven Poole writes that: "Kampfner's disturbing portrayal of the actions
of an inner circle of unelected advisers casts Blair as idealistic yet blasé -
not good on details, one Foreign Office individual mutters darkly - and worryingly
simple-minded."
Guardian
review
Times
review
Extracts from the paperback edition
of Blair's Wars were
published exclusively in The Guardian on May 27th.
Guardian
link 1
Guardian link 2
Blair's Wars was
listed as paperback of the week in
The
Observer on June 6.
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