Alastair Campbell: Questions about my role in Iraq War are 'boring'

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  • čas přidán 7. 06. 2024
  • "It just gets boring when I say there were six inquiries into how I handled the so-called dodgy dossier."
    Alastair Campbell says that 'only journalists' care about his role in the Iraq War.
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Komentáře • 332

  • @freemantle85
    @freemantle85 Před rokem +69

    I would love to see Campbell try and make that point in the middle of Baghdad or visit some veterans of the war

    • @dommidavros2211
      @dommidavros2211 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Yup, and if they had any sense they'd accept his answer!

    • @ziggerzee
      @ziggerzee Před 8 měsíci

      Or at The Hague

    • @HazeyEd1ts
      @HazeyEd1ts Před 8 měsíci +3

      POV: You read to title and not what he actually said

    • @TheMadmacs
      @TheMadmacs Před měsícem

      he says only journalists ask him about iraq.... cause your average person would go straight to the kicking.

  • @londonphotographer1
    @londonphotographer1 Před rokem +105

    The utter contempt is jaw dropping.

    • @londonphotographer1
      @londonphotographer1 Před rokem +18

      Hang on, is Alister Campbel trying to take the moral high ground on truth, I feel sick. This is a guy that tried to exert power as an unelected person and he's preaching about Trump, look it the mirror Mr Campbel.

    • @proselytizingorthodoxpente8304
      @proselytizingorthodoxpente8304 Před rokem

      @@londonphotographer1 Sounds a lot like Trump himself. 'The media are the problem... The entire system... Forces of conservatism'. Why doesn't he just come out and say the words 'deep state' when describing anyone who disagrees with him or asks awkward questions he's rather not answer? No wonder he prefers his own echo chamber podcast. I'm surprised he hasn't set up his own social media app.

    • @seanclark2085
      @seanclark2085 Před rokem

      He's morally repugnant .

    • @jugbywellington1134
      @jugbywellington1134 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@londonphotographer1 Vampires don't have a reflection.

    • @mikipiediaelburro7588
      @mikipiediaelburro7588 Před 11 měsíci

      A scumbag who needs holding to account...spin and lies to wage war on innocents...its just boring isn't it Alastair..as is your constant trolling of people who exercised their democraticr right to leave EU...boring

  • @frze5645
    @frze5645 Před rokem +16

    The essence of Campbell's problem is that no matter which tactic he uses, shouting, insulting etc, most people do not agree with him and he resents the fact that his view is rejected by the majority.

    • @davecross4493
      @davecross4493 Před 4 měsíci +1

      The Labour Government of the time based their decisions on the best intelligence available at the time, which suggested Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) and posed a global threat. This stance was taken in the context of a post-9/11 world, where the risk of WMDs falling into terrorist hands was a significant concern. The intelligence suggesting Iraq's threat was shared among international allies, not solely the UK, pointing to a collective concern rather than unilateral fabrication.
      The key documents, the "September Dossier" and the "Iraq Dossier," were compilations of intelligence from various sources. Criticisms of these documents for inflating the threat were addressed in inquiries like the Butler Review, which identified flaws in intelligence handling but did not find evidence of deliberate manipulation by Blair or Campbell. Instead, these inquiries highlighted systemic issues in intelligence gathering and analysis.
      Their belief in the threat posed by Iraq, based on the intelligence they were provided, underscores a response to perceived global security risks, not an intention to deceive. The absence of found WMDs reflects the inherent uncertainties and challenges in intelligence work rather than a calculated lie.
      They relied on the intelligence at the time, highlighted the WMD threat, but their rationale also included the need for regime change due to Saddam Hussein's human rights abuses and threat to regional stability. The post-9/11 global security landscape, emphasising the prevention of terrorism, influenced their decision, highlighting the potential for Iraq to support terrorist activities.
      Furthermore, the UK sought to enforce United Nations resolutions that Iraq was violating by not cooperating with WMD inspections, aiming to maintain the UN's credibility. The strategic and political alliance with the United States also played a crucial role, as supporting the US in Iraq was seen as key to reinforcing the transatlantic relationship vital for UK foreign policy. The concept of preventive war, acting to remove a threat before it materialises, was another factor underpinning the decision to join the invasion.
      This multi-faceted approach shows the decision was not made lightly or based on a single issue. Instead, it was the result of weighing various serious and interconnected global concerns, demonstrating a broader context beyond the accusation of lying about WMDs.

  • @nivmhn
    @nivmhn Před rokem +55

    This man will never accept his crimes. It's pathetic to see.

    • @Guted77
      @Guted77 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Maybe because he hasnt been convicted of a crime.

    • @davecross4493
      @davecross4493 Před 4 měsíci

      The Labour Government of the time based their decisions on the best intelligence available at the time, which suggested Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) and posed a global threat. This stance was taken in the context of a post-9/11 world, where the risk of WMDs falling into terrorist hands was a significant concern. The intelligence suggesting Iraq's threat was shared among international allies, not solely the UK, pointing to a collective concern rather than unilateral fabrication.
      The key documents, the "September Dossier" and the "Iraq Dossier," were compilations of intelligence from various sources. Criticisms of these documents for inflating the threat were addressed in inquiries like the Butler Review, which identified flaws in intelligence handling but did not find evidence of deliberate manipulation by Blair or Campbell. Instead, these inquiries highlighted systemic issues in intelligence gathering and analysis.
      Their belief in the threat posed by Iraq, based on the intelligence they were provided, underscores a response to perceived global security risks, not an intention to deceive. The absence of found WMDs reflects the inherent uncertainties and challenges in intelligence work rather than a calculated lie.
      They relied on the intelligence at the time, highlighted the WMD threat, but their rationale also included the need for regime change due to Saddam Hussein's human rights abuses and threat to regional stability. The post-9/11 global security landscape, emphasising the prevention of terrorism, influenced their decision, highlighting the potential for Iraq to support terrorist activities.
      Furthermore, the UK sought to enforce United Nations resolutions that Iraq was violating by not cooperating with WMD inspections, aiming to maintain the UN's credibility. The strategic and political alliance with the United States also played a crucial role, as supporting the US in Iraq was seen as key to reinforcing the transatlantic relationship vital for UK foreign policy. The concept of preventive war, acting to remove a threat before it materialises, was another factor underpinning the decision to join the invasion.
      This multi-faceted approach shows the decision was not made lightly or based on a single issue. Instead, it was the result of weighing various serious and interconnected global concerns, demonstrating a broader context beyond the accusation of lying about WMDs.

  • @DiscourseToday
    @DiscourseToday Před rokem +75

    I'm sure the families that lost loved one's in Iraq will be pleased to hear that their deaths are boring and not worth talking about...

  • @JohnAdams-kc8wx
    @JohnAdams-kc8wx Před rokem +66

    He just sounds bitter. Bitter about being found out for the man that he is.

    • @davecross4493
      @davecross4493 Před 4 měsíci

      The Labour Government of the time based their decisions on the best intelligence available at the time, which suggested Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) and posed a global threat. This stance was taken in the context of a post-9/11 world, where the risk of WMDs falling into terrorist hands was a significant concern. The intelligence suggesting Iraq's threat was shared among international allies, not solely the UK, pointing to a collective concern rather than unilateral fabrication.
      The key documents, the "September Dossier" and the "Iraq Dossier," were compilations of intelligence from various sources. Criticisms of these documents for inflating the threat were addressed in inquiries like the Butler Review, which identified flaws in intelligence handling but did not find evidence of deliberate manipulation by Blair or Campbell. Instead, these inquiries highlighted systemic issues in intelligence gathering and analysis.
      Their belief in the threat posed by Iraq, based on the intelligence they were provided, underscores a response to perceived global security risks, not an intention to deceive. The absence of found WMDs reflects the inherent uncertainties and challenges in intelligence work rather than a calculated lie.
      They relied on the intelligence at the time, highlighted the WMD threat, but their rationale also included the need for regime change due to Saddam Hussein's human rights abuses and threat to regional stability. The post-9/11 global security landscape, emphasising the prevention of terrorism, influenced their decision, highlighting the potential for Iraq to support terrorist activities.
      Furthermore, the UK sought to enforce United Nations resolutions that Iraq was violating by not cooperating with WMD inspections, aiming to maintain the UN's credibility. The strategic and political alliance with the United States also played a crucial role, as supporting the US in Iraq was seen as key to reinforcing the transatlantic relationship vital for UK foreign policy. The concept of preventive war, acting to remove a threat before it materialises, was another factor underpinning the decision to join the invasion.
      This multi-faceted approach shows the decision was not made lightly or based on a single issue. Instead, it was the result of weighing various serious and interconnected global concerns, demonstrating a broader context beyond the accusation of lying about WMDs.

    • @moluther2826
      @moluther2826 Před 13 dny

      ​@@davecross4493shut up chatgpt

  • @josephgonzalez_
    @josephgonzalez_ Před rokem +36

    He obviously just wants to move on from it. The problem is he is such a belligerent bloke who himself isn’t averse to twisting situations to his benefit that people can’t help but remind him of his hypocrisy

  • @robbieshand6139
    @robbieshand6139 Před rokem +52

    It may be boring to him but he's just going to have to get used to it because Iraq is all he is going to be remembered for. For the rest of his life, the Iraq war will be a shadow on his shoulder, as it should.

    • @DAVJULART
      @DAVJULART Před rokem +5

      Can you imagine a world where Churchill was only ever remembered for his role in the Dardanelles campaign! Mistakes made and acknowledged are the stuff of history!

    • @robbieshand6139
      @robbieshand6139 Před rokem

      @@DAVJULART Are you really comparing Alistair Campbell with Churchill? But okay, if we need to fight a fascist empire again and Campbell somehow proves instrumental in our victory then I will let bygones be bygones. Until that happens, he is and shall remain a war criminal.

    • @DanielMasmanian
      @DanielMasmanian Před 10 měsíci

      well, for that, come to Aus

    • @danielhall6354
      @danielhall6354 Před 4 měsíci

      perhaps only to people with an un healthy obsession

    • @crowbar9566
      @crowbar9566 Před 4 měsíci

      Not even the same league so don't bother com[aring the two. @@DAVJULART

  • @libertinoradio4597
    @libertinoradio4597 Před rokem +32

    This p.o.s. is sadly typical of our political establishment. Utter contempt for anyone that has a memory and a moral compass.

  • @timcomley5948
    @timcomley5948 Před rokem +29

    Might be boring but you are accountable

    • @crowbar9566
      @crowbar9566 Před rokem +1

      No he's never been held accountable. None of them have.

    • @mikipiediaelburro7588
      @mikipiediaelburro7588 Před 11 měsíci

      Being told something is boring by a bore..oh the irony😂

  • @TheJrr71
    @TheJrr71 Před rokem +39

    "One of which , I've got a lot of experience..." in being deceitful in politics. Campbell is either completely lacking in self awareness, or just a dishonest c'nt. Probably a bit of both.

  • @rgp1976
    @rgp1976 Před rokem +8

    If you were a spin doctor complicit in an illegal invasion what else would you say?

  • @stevec7876
    @stevec7876 Před rokem +41

    Because many British soldiers died, this guy thinks it’s boring?

    • @almac8524
      @almac8524 Před rokem +10

      He’s saying his responses are boring because he repeats the same answers. Not the same is it?

    • @Fort976
      @Fort976 Před rokem +2

      No, that is not remotely what he said. Listen again

    • @crowbar9566
      @crowbar9566 Před rokem

      @@Fort976 We don't want to listen to the lies of a war propagandist. He should be in prison, not ranting on tv and radio about Brexit.

    • @robinj6137
      @robinj6137 Před rokem

      I don't care about what he did or didn't do wrt Iraq. I only care that he delivered for Britain and has astute fact based political observations now

    • @archvaldor
      @archvaldor Před rokem

      @@robinj6137 So you trust the opinions of a man who made up some bs and lied the country into an illegal war? You don't think he's a self-serving egotist with a massive problem with truth like everyone else?

  • @OldAustria
    @OldAustria Před rokem +12

    The poor man just doesn’t see the reality of his own past. A past which damages the credibility of his contributions to the present. His is a toxic brand. Sad really…

  • @sej8806
    @sej8806 Před rokem +33

    Campbell is a despicable character. Why do we keep giving him the oxygen of publicity?

    • @mrharry448
      @mrharry448 Před rokem

      Wrong. One of the most humane voices out there.
      He also has the most successful podcast in the UK, not bad for a dyed in the wool socialist. No one is giving him free publicity.

    • @braxxian
      @braxxian Před rokem

      What’s gone wrong with politics?. People lie, him and Blair were given power.

    • @danielhall6354
      @danielhall6354 Před 4 měsíci

      because it gets engagement and people like you watch and comment ... - also he does actually have an interesting perspective and some insight - his podcast is actually very good

    • @crowbar9566
      @crowbar9566 Před 4 měsíci

      His podcast with the other feeble former viceory of Basra (Rory Stewart) is just drivel trotted out for their delusional sycophants who can't seem to fathom how we got from their illegal war and occupation to a permanent state of malais and general disillusionment with politics in this country. @@danielhall6354

    • @davecross4493
      @davecross4493 Před 4 měsíci

      The Labour Government of the time based their decisions on the best intelligence available at the time, which suggested Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) and posed a global threat. This stance was taken in the context of a post-9/11 world, where the risk of WMDs falling into terrorist hands was a significant concern. The intelligence suggesting Iraq's threat was shared among international allies, not solely the UK, pointing to a collective concern rather than unilateral fabrication.
      The key documents, the "September Dossier" and the "Iraq Dossier," were compilations of intelligence from various sources. Criticisms of these documents for inflating the threat were addressed in inquiries like the Butler Review, which identified flaws in intelligence handling but did not find evidence of deliberate manipulation by Blair or Campbell. Instead, these inquiries highlighted systemic issues in intelligence gathering and analysis.
      Their belief in the threat posed by Iraq, based on the intelligence they were provided, underscores a response to perceived global security risks, not an intention to deceive. The absence of found WMDs reflects the inherent uncertainties and challenges in intelligence work rather than a calculated lie.
      They relied on the intelligence at the time, highlighted the WMD threat, but their rationale also included the need for regime change due to Saddam Hussein's human rights abuses and threat to regional stability. The post-9/11 global security landscape, emphasising the prevention of terrorism, influenced their decision, highlighting the potential for Iraq to support terrorist activities.
      Furthermore, the UK sought to enforce United Nations resolutions that Iraq was violating by not cooperating with WMD inspections, aiming to maintain the UN's credibility. The strategic and political alliance with the United States also played a crucial role, as supporting the US in Iraq was seen as key to reinforcing the transatlantic relationship vital for UK foreign policy. The concept of preventive war, acting to remove a threat before it materialises, was another factor underpinning the decision to join the invasion.
      This multi-faceted approach shows the decision was not made lightly or based on a single issue. Instead, it was the result of weighing various serious and interconnected global concerns, demonstrating a broader context beyond the accusation of lying about WMDs.

  • @pauldavis3460
    @pauldavis3460 Před rokem +31

    Hard to believe a guy like this had so much power. He was the most appalling lier of all time in no 10. His brass is extraordinary. He has NO moral authority. I’m shocked he is taken even slightly seriously……

    • @ezzler
      @ezzler Před rokem +4

      Astonishing that he accuses Sunak of lying over crime figures. When New Labour presided over the largest increase in crime, in the zuK, ever. Those figures from the actual crime statistics.
      Campbell used to spin crime figures so hard, he insisted they went down and there was no crime,
      .
      Whilst the ASBO came into its ineffective own during that time. Entire libraries of books, written by police officers, informed that the figures were massaged

    • @Breaker_Excessive
      @Breaker_Excessive Před rokem +2

      And just about what a high bar that is to be one of the biggest liars to pass through no 10

    • @nigelhopkinson6614
      @nigelhopkinson6614 Před rokem +4

      Sorry Johnson has the crown for the worst liar of all time

    • @braxxian
      @braxxian Před rokem

      The guy is a war criminal like his buddy Blair. But because our so called system is corrupt to the core he is allowed to still be walking free.

    • @crowbar9566
      @crowbar9566 Před rokem +2

      @@nigelhopkinson6614 But Johnson didn't egg on a horrific war that cost hundreds of British lives and hundreds of thousands of innocent Iraqi lives. Campbell is by far the deadliest liar of all; a war propagandist who has gone unpunished for far too long.

  • @anthonyferris8912
    @anthonyferris8912 Před rokem +20

    Campbell certainly never finds Brexit ‘boring’…He never shuts up about it.
    So Johnson ‘lied’ about Brexit, but Campbell only ‘sexed up’ his ‘Dodgy Dossier’.

  • @rodneycooperLMSCoach
    @rodneycooperLMSCoach Před rokem +16

    No it doesn't always come from journalists. It's just that you wouldn't go anywhere near the public in case they questioned you. This man is trying to put forward all kinds of smoke screens around him. MOST people who are capable of thinking know what you are guilty of.

    • @RetroByteZone
      @RetroByteZone Před rokem +2

      Don't assume that most people were happy to leave Saddam Hussein in power.

    • @rodneycooperLMSCoach
      @rodneycooperLMSCoach Před rokem +3

      @@RetroByteZone I'm not so sure about that. Saddam was a friend of the west at one time and was used to fight Iran. When he failed he was dropped and removing him has left the country in near anarchy ever since despite the fact of his treatment of his marsh arabs.

    • @RetroByteZone
      @RetroByteZone Před rokem +1

      @@rodneycooperLMSCoach It goes way beyond the Marsh Arabs. I can list you a long list of events.

    • @rodneycooperLMSCoach
      @rodneycooperLMSCoach Před rokem

      @@RetroByteZone I know what you are going to say, threats of terrorism,biological and nuclear wars and Kuwait with his setting fire to it's oil fields but we should not have bombed them. It's just giving ammunition against us to other hostile nations decades later as we see today. The arrogance of the Blairites is equal to the Tories today.

    • @DAVJULART
      @DAVJULART Před rokem

      @@RetroByteZone unfortunately critical people are highly selective in what they choose to remember🙄

  • @A2Z1Two3
    @A2Z1Two3 Před rokem +16

    War criminals don't like to be asked about their crimes.( as we can see)

    • @danielhall6354
      @danielhall6354 Před 4 měsíci

      you can't unironically be calling him a war criminal? come on now - perhaps view the events though a less ideological and emotional lens - have some understanding and nuance...

  • @timcomley5948
    @timcomley5948 Před rokem +34

    Lack of self awareness is incredible

  • @DriventoExtremes
    @DriventoExtremes Před rokem +19

    I don’t think the families of the fallen soldiers will feel the same way. The man shows no remorse, shame or responsibility. Don’t know how he sleeps at night.

    • @braxxian
      @braxxian Před rokem

      Blair is your typical toxic narcissist. His kind always claw and backstab their way to the top. That’s why you need to be very careful who you vote for, very careful.

    • @DAVJULART
      @DAVJULART Před rokem

      Like anyone who's made mistakes he's moved on and doesn't like so many others live in past.

    • @TriumInfinitum
      @TriumInfinitum Před 4 měsíci

      @@DAVJULARTc***t!!!.

  • @BM-jy6cb
    @BM-jy6cb Před rokem +8

    When Macron, Merkel and Hollande are the only allies to your vision you can think of, you're really scraping the barrel.

  • @user-wx6fl3pc1x
    @user-wx6fl3pc1x Před rokem +3

    Arrogant. Guilty of the mess in Iraq.

  • @JayDeeChannel
    @JayDeeChannel Před rokem +9

    Do as I say not as I do..

  • @grantconnell760
    @grantconnell760 Před rokem +12

    I wonder what the families of all the Iraqis who have died since the illegal invasion led by the US and UK would say to Alistair’s response that questions about the Iraq war are “boring”. Despicable.

    • @braxxian
      @braxxian Před rokem

      Is there such a thing as a legal invasion?.

    • @bwright227
      @bwright227 Před rokem

      That is very disingenuous Grant

    • @grantconnell760
      @grantconnell760 Před rokem +2

      @@bwright227 I’m genuinely intrigued to understand how my comment is “disingenuous”. If someone I loved died as a consequence of a civil war, triggered by an invasion which relied upon the most specious of subsequently discredited ‘evidence’, I would not consider the assertion disingenuous.

    • @danielhall6354
      @danielhall6354 Před 4 měsíci

      it's like you don't understand the context of the question or his answer - he's basically saying why ask something that has been asked a milli8on times before and that he has a prepared answer for? Do you think for a second he'd say that it was right that those civilians died?

  • @frze5645
    @frze5645 Před rokem +4

    Alistair Campbell will not start on the road to forgiveness until he apologises.

    • @davecross4493
      @davecross4493 Před 4 měsíci

      The Labour Government of the time based their decisions on the best intelligence available at the time, which suggested Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) and posed a global threat. This stance was taken in the context of a post-9/11 world, where the risk of WMDs falling into terrorist hands was a significant concern. The intelligence suggesting Iraq's threat was shared among international allies, not solely the UK, pointing to a collective concern rather than unilateral fabrication.
      The key documents, the "September Dossier" and the "Iraq Dossier," were compilations of intelligence from various sources. Criticisms of these documents for inflating the threat were addressed in inquiries like the Butler Review, which identified flaws in intelligence handling but did not find evidence of deliberate manipulation by Blair or Campbell. Instead, these inquiries highlighted systemic issues in intelligence gathering and analysis.
      Their belief in the threat posed by Iraq, based on the intelligence they were provided, underscores a response to perceived global security risks, not an intention to deceive. The absence of found WMDs reflects the inherent uncertainties and challenges in intelligence work rather than a calculated lie.
      They relied on the intelligence at the time, highlighted the WMD threat, but their rationale also included the need for regime change due to Saddam Hussein's human rights abuses and threat to regional stability. The post-9/11 global security landscape, emphasising the prevention of terrorism, influenced their decision, highlighting the potential for Iraq to support terrorist activities.
      Furthermore, the UK sought to enforce United Nations resolutions that Iraq was violating by not cooperating with WMD inspections, aiming to maintain the UN's credibility. The strategic and political alliance with the United States also played a crucial role, as supporting the US in Iraq was seen as key to reinforcing the transatlantic relationship vital for UK foreign policy. The concept of preventive war, acting to remove a threat before it materialises, was another factor underpinning the decision to join the invasion.
      This multi-faceted approach shows the decision was not made lightly or based on a single issue. Instead, it was the result of weighing various serious and interconnected global concerns, demonstrating a broader context beyond the accusation of lying about WMDs.

  • @crowbar9566
    @crowbar9566 Před rokem +16

    A war propagandist going unpunished is never boring. What actually is boring is his never-ending tantrum and lies about brexit. His role in the illegal invasion of Iraq and al the lies he spun in order to get that horrific war started is never boring.

    • @danielhall6354
      @danielhall6354 Před 4 měsíci +1

      you are talking as if war only happened becasue of him

    • @crowbar9566
      @crowbar9566 Před 4 měsíci

      He was a big part in Britain's participation in that illegal war and occupation, he promoted and falsely justified the policy of regime change. @@danielhall6354

    • @davecross4493
      @davecross4493 Před 4 měsíci +1

      The Labour Government of the time based their decisions on the best intelligence available at the time, which suggested Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) and posed a global threat. This stance was taken in the context of a post-9/11 world, where the risk of WMDs falling into terrorist hands was a significant concern. The intelligence suggesting Iraq's threat was shared among international allies, not solely the UK, pointing to a collective concern rather than unilateral fabrication.
      The key documents, the "September Dossier" and the "Iraq Dossier," were compilations of intelligence from various sources. Criticisms of these documents for inflating the threat were addressed in inquiries like the Butler Review, which identified flaws in intelligence handling but did not find evidence of deliberate manipulation by Blair or Campbell. Instead, these inquiries highlighted systemic issues in intelligence gathering and analysis.
      Their belief in the threat posed by Iraq, based on the intelligence they were provided, underscores a response to perceived global security risks, not an intention to deceive. The absence of found WMDs reflects the inherent uncertainties and challenges in intelligence work rather than a calculated lie.
      They relied on the intelligence at the time, highlighted the WMD threat, but their rationale also included the need for regime change due to Saddam Hussein's human rights abuses and threat to regional stability. The post-9/11 global security landscape, emphasising the prevention of terrorism, influenced their decision, highlighting the potential for Iraq to support terrorist activities.
      Furthermore, the UK sought to enforce United Nations resolutions that Iraq was violating by not cooperating with WMD inspections, aiming to maintain the UN's credibility. The strategic and political alliance with the United States also played a crucial role, as supporting the US in Iraq was seen as key to reinforcing the transatlantic relationship vital for UK foreign policy. The concept of preventive war, acting to remove a threat before it materialises, was another factor underpinning the decision to join the invasion.
      This multi-faceted approach shows the decision was not made lightly or based on a single issue. Instead, it was the result of weighing various serious and interconnected global concerns, demonstrating a broader context beyond the accusation of lying about WMDs.

  • @DigitalPerspectivesUK
    @DigitalPerspectivesUK Před rokem +3

    Absolutely liar about Iraq…

    • @davecross4493
      @davecross4493 Před 4 měsíci

      The Labour Government of the time based their decisions on the best intelligence available at the time, which suggested Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) and posed a global threat. This stance was taken in the context of a post-9/11 world, where the risk of WMDs falling into terrorist hands was a significant concern. The intelligence suggesting Iraq's threat was shared among international allies, not solely the UK, pointing to a collective concern rather than unilateral fabrication.
      The key documents, the "September Dossier" and the "Iraq Dossier," were compilations of intelligence from various sources. Criticisms of these documents for inflating the threat were addressed in inquiries like the Butler Review, which identified flaws in intelligence handling but did not find evidence of deliberate manipulation by Blair or Campbell. Instead, these inquiries highlighted systemic issues in intelligence gathering and analysis.
      Their belief in the threat posed by Iraq, based on the intelligence they were provided, underscores a response to perceived global security risks, not an intention to deceive. The absence of found WMDs reflects the inherent uncertainties and challenges in intelligence work rather than a calculated lie.
      They relied on the intelligence at the time, highlighted the WMD threat, but their rationale also included the need for regime change due to Saddam Hussein's human rights abuses and threat to regional stability. The post-9/11 global security landscape, emphasising the prevention of terrorism, influenced their decision, highlighting the potential for Iraq to support terrorist activities.
      Furthermore, the UK sought to enforce United Nations resolutions that Iraq was violating by not cooperating with WMD inspections, aiming to maintain the UN's credibility. The strategic and political alliance with the United States also played a crucial role, as supporting the US in Iraq was seen as key to reinforcing the transatlantic relationship vital for UK foreign policy. The concept of preventive war, acting to remove a threat before it materialises, was another factor underpinning the decision to join the invasion.
      This multi-faceted approach shows the decision was not made lightly or based on a single issue. Instead, it was the result of weighing various serious and interconnected global concerns, demonstrating a broader context beyond the accusation of lying about WMDs.

  • @QwadLuzr
    @QwadLuzr Před rokem +22

    Imagine killing so many and causing such disasters, then still being paid to tell people what you think.

    • @mrharry448
      @mrharry448 Před rokem

      Says the QAnon loony who says nobody died from Co-Vid and posts demands for doctors to be executed

    • @WHS_reviews
      @WHS_reviews Před rokem

      Hey Ivan, shouldn't you be 1) making pro-ruZzian comments on other videos, 2) counting your potatoes, and 3) ordering more velcro to convert your remaining shoes, as laces are just too hard for you?

    • @proselytizingorthodoxpente8304
      @proselytizingorthodoxpente8304 Před rokem

      I see your content worked very hard to undermine the country's covid response. Shame on you too, dude.

    • @QwadLuzr
      @QwadLuzr Před rokem

      @@proselytizingorthodoxpente8304 Hahaha how many did they con you into taking?? And besides, I have undermined the world's crime you call the "covid response", not just my own country.

    • @QwadLuzr
      @QwadLuzr Před rokem

      @@WHS_reviews If you are a fan of Campbell, so much you are angrily defending him, good luck. Follow everything he says. I have no doubt Ukraine will end up in the same state as Iraq after these vampires are done with it.

  • @coldworld5
    @coldworld5 Před 5 měsíci +1

    His horrific. His daughter is horrific. They’re contempt for working class people is palpable

  • @RIPhikennoace
    @RIPhikennoace Před rokem +2

    Lied. Killed. Threw the whole world into chaos. But oh so boring.

  • @JayeshPatel-ct5ps
    @JayeshPatel-ct5ps Před rokem +4

    Maybe to stay sane he has to delude himself about what he's done.

  • @mattdavis5453
    @mattdavis5453 Před rokem +3

    It’s not boring to the people his actions murdered!

    • @davecross4493
      @davecross4493 Před 4 měsíci

      The Labour Government of the time based their decisions on the best intelligence available at the time, which suggested Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) and posed a global threat. This stance was taken in the context of a post-9/11 world, where the risk of WMDs falling into terrorist hands was a significant concern. The intelligence suggesting Iraq's threat was shared among international allies, not solely the UK, pointing to a collective concern rather than unilateral fabrication.
      The key documents, the "September Dossier" and the "Iraq Dossier," were compilations of intelligence from various sources. Criticisms of these documents for inflating the threat were addressed in inquiries like the Butler Review, which identified flaws in intelligence handling but did not find evidence of deliberate manipulation by Blair or Campbell. Instead, these inquiries highlighted systemic issues in intelligence gathering and analysis.
      Their belief in the threat posed by Iraq, based on the intelligence they were provided, underscores a response to perceived global security risks, not an intention to deceive. The absence of found WMDs reflects the inherent uncertainties and challenges in intelligence work rather than a calculated lie.
      They relied on the intelligence at the time, highlighted the WMD threat, but their rationale also included the need for regime change due to Saddam Hussein's human rights abuses and threat to regional stability. The post-9/11 global security landscape, emphasising the prevention of terrorism, influenced their decision, highlighting the potential for Iraq to support terrorist activities.
      Furthermore, the UK sought to enforce United Nations resolutions that Iraq was violating by not cooperating with WMD inspections, aiming to maintain the UN's credibility. The strategic and political alliance with the United States also played a crucial role, as supporting the US in Iraq was seen as key to reinforcing the transatlantic relationship vital for UK foreign policy. The concept of preventive war, acting to remove a threat before it materialises, was another factor underpinning the decision to join the invasion.
      This multi-faceted approach shows the decision was not made lightly or based on a single issue. Instead, it was the result of weighing various serious and interconnected global concerns, demonstrating a broader context beyond the accusation of lying about WMDs.

  • @StuartJ
    @StuartJ Před rokem +5

    If he were in jail, we wouldn't have to listen to this anymore.

    • @davecross4493
      @davecross4493 Před 4 měsíci

      The Labour Government of the time based their decisions on the best intelligence available at the time, which suggested Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) and posed a global threat. This stance was taken in the context of a post-9/11 world, where the risk of WMDs falling into terrorist hands was a significant concern. The intelligence suggesting Iraq's threat was shared among international allies, not solely the UK, pointing to a collective concern rather than unilateral fabrication.
      The key documents, the "September Dossier" and the "Iraq Dossier," were compilations of intelligence from various sources. Criticisms of these documents for inflating the threat were addressed in inquiries like the Butler Review, which identified flaws in intelligence handling but did not find evidence of deliberate manipulation by Blair or Campbell. Instead, these inquiries highlighted systemic issues in intelligence gathering and analysis.
      Their belief in the threat posed by Iraq, based on the intelligence they were provided, underscores a response to perceived global security risks, not an intention to deceive. The absence of found WMDs reflects the inherent uncertainties and challenges in intelligence work rather than a calculated lie.
      They relied on the intelligence at the time, highlighted the WMD threat, but their rationale also included the need for regime change due to Saddam Hussein's human rights abuses and threat to regional stability. The post-9/11 global security landscape, emphasising the prevention of terrorism, influenced their decision, highlighting the potential for Iraq to support terrorist activities.
      Furthermore, the UK sought to enforce United Nations resolutions that Iraq was violating by not cooperating with WMD inspections, aiming to maintain the UN's credibility. The strategic and political alliance with the United States also played a crucial role, as supporting the US in Iraq was seen as key to reinforcing the transatlantic relationship vital for UK foreign policy. The concept of preventive war, acting to remove a threat before it materialises, was another factor underpinning the decision to join the invasion.
      This multi-faceted approach shows the decision was not made lightly or based on a single issue. Instead, it was the result of weighing various serious and interconnected global concerns, demonstrating a broader context beyond the accusation of lying about WMDs.

    • @StuartJ
      @StuartJ Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@davecross4493 I don't think Dr David Kelly would agree.

  • @venmis137
    @venmis137 Před měsícem

    I like how this title is misleading, and doesn't match what was said in the video. It allows you to see just how many of the commenters didn't actually watch the video. It's quite illuminating.

  • @alst4817
    @alst4817 Před rokem +1

    I marched against the Iraq invasion but the headline chosen by Times Radio is pretty misleading, trash journalism.

  • @1669Python
    @1669Python Před rokem +6

    Did his breath smell of drink?

  • @franksmith6637
    @franksmith6637 Před rokem +2

    Mr Campbell losing a family member in your panacea is horrific not boring let's hope you don't meet your end in a pointless violent way

  • @markbebber2284
    @markbebber2284 Před rokem +1

    “Boring” tell that to 1,000,000 dead and millions more displaced

  • @RetroByteZone
    @RetroByteZone Před rokem +14

    Those that criticize that conflict have no answer to what they would have done differently. Should we have left Saddam Hussein, his family, and his cronies in power to this day? and please don't say that Iraqis would have preferred "the stability" of a dictator. Tell that to the minorities and critics who lost their lives to his genocides and would have continued to do so to this day.

    • @ashcarrier6606
      @ashcarrier6606 Před rokem +4

      I think the people to ask would be ones whose son, husband, or father came back from Iraq in a box.
      Speaking as an American who was in OIF twice, I question my government's propensity for spending lives and treasure on foreign wars that whether we win or lose have absolutely no impact on daily life in America whatsoever.

    • @proselytizingorthodoxpente8304
      @proselytizingorthodoxpente8304 Před rokem +3

      I kinda agree with you. Morally, it was the right thing to do. If Bush had got his way in Iraq it would be a better place now. But in practice, sadly, the cost to Iraqis was too great. And its they who paid that price. Do we have a right to decide that? Besides, the moral case wasn't helped by Campbell's usual grubby little spin tactics. If he'd had any self awareness at all, he'd have taken a long, long media vacation.

    • @KJ-js7pi
      @KJ-js7pi Před rokem

      The UK is not the police of the world. It has no right to interfere illegally into another country.
      The United Nations voted against what the UK and US did

    • @catmonarchist8920
      @catmonarchist8920 Před rokem

      They'll be under Iranian boots instead as their political system collapses

    • @RetroByteZone
      @RetroByteZone Před rokem

      @@ashcarrier6606 soldiers are there to do what they do and considering the size of the forces involved the coalition forces did an incredible job to end that vile regime with minimal losses on their part. Generally, I can’t imagine why anyone would join the military if they didn’t accept they’d be used as a hard-force solution to a problem at some point.

  • @brendatenorio5721
    @brendatenorio5721 Před rokem +1

    Need not respond to Iraq answers over and over again especially to individuals who refuse to study the issue more thoroughly, read more history or political philosophy or think more analytically. We most stopped flogging our politicians on that subject.

  • @JC-KeepSmiling
    @JC-KeepSmiling Před 10 měsíci +5

    Fair play to him for at least coming on Times Radio and trying to have a debate. Why all these CZcams channels love to concentrate on the past and then edit a video in a certain style staggers me. So much wrong with country now that needs fixing no matter which political party you follow.

  • @steve24550
    @steve24550 Před rokem +1

    See you next Tuesday Alastair....

  • @anglomandingo666
    @anglomandingo666 Před rokem +4

    Not boring for my family, as my nephew died there.
    Let me question the goon.

  • @Lamilton82828
    @Lamilton82828 Před 8 měsíci +1

    What am incredibly evil man. My only question i would have for this “man” would be how do you live with yourself after what you did to millions of people.

  • @mikeavalon3086
    @mikeavalon3086 Před rokem

    Who is the interviewer?

  • @Zara-jl5zw
    @Zara-jl5zw Před rokem +1

    Bless him he looks obnoxious sounds obnoxious and is obnoxious . He justs talksin a louder over others and seems to earn a living doing exactly this

  • @marktynan6820
    @marktynan6820 Před 2 měsíci

    She the way he moved the narrative to brexit just when I was hoping the journalist would corner him on the horrific outcome of his mistakes.. he forgives himself by saying to himself that he was lied to so he won’t take any responsibility. He’s a walking demon.

  • @patrickferran1678
    @patrickferran1678 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Tony Blair should be in court for war crimes..

    • @danielhall6354
      @danielhall6354 Před 4 měsíci

      thats totally delusional - how can anyone seriously say something like that?

    • @davecross4493
      @davecross4493 Před 4 měsíci

      The Labour Government of the time based their decisions on the best intelligence available at the time, which suggested Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) and posed a global threat. This stance was taken in the context of a post-9/11 world, where the risk of WMDs falling into terrorist hands was a significant concern. The intelligence suggesting Iraq's threat was shared among international allies, not solely the UK, pointing to a collective concern rather than unilateral fabrication.
      The key documents, the "September Dossier" and the "Iraq Dossier," were compilations of intelligence from various sources. Criticisms of these documents for inflating the threat were addressed in inquiries like the Butler Review, which identified flaws in intelligence handling but did not find evidence of deliberate manipulation by Blair or Campbell. Instead, these inquiries highlighted systemic issues in intelligence gathering and analysis.
      Their belief in the threat posed by Iraq, based on the intelligence they were provided, underscores a response to perceived global security risks, not an intention to deceive. The absence of found WMDs reflects the inherent uncertainties and challenges in intelligence work rather than a calculated lie.
      They relied on the intelligence at the time, highlighted the WMD threat, but their rationale also included the need for regime change due to Saddam Hussein's human rights abuses and threat to regional stability. The post-9/11 global security landscape, emphasising the prevention of terrorism, influenced their decision, highlighting the potential for Iraq to support terrorist activities.
      Furthermore, the UK sought to enforce United Nations resolutions that Iraq was violating by not cooperating with WMD inspections, aiming to maintain the UN's credibility. The strategic and political alliance with the United States also played a crucial role, as supporting the US in Iraq was seen as key to reinforcing the transatlantic relationship vital for UK foreign policy. The concept of preventive war, acting to remove a threat before it materialises, was another factor underpinning the decision to join the invasion.
      This multi-faceted approach shows the decision was not made lightly or based on a single issue. Instead, it was the result of weighing various serious and interconnected global concerns, demonstrating a broader context beyond the accusation of lying about WMDs.

  • @starlightsign8666
    @starlightsign8666 Před rokem

    He’s “ I’m not a grass…” broadcast to the world.

  • @kerrywilliams9323
    @kerrywilliams9323 Před rokem +2

    110% a criminal. Jail time is even to good for this Megalomaniac.

  • @olivercoleman2562
    @olivercoleman2562 Před rokem +1

    A million dead is quite boring, let's talk about a newspaper article no one reads.

  • @joprocter4573
    @joprocter4573 Před rokem +1

    Role=war criminal

  • @conorbarry1928
    @conorbarry1928 Před 7 měsíci +1

    He is purely delusional

  • @paulmcgrath3248
    @paulmcgrath3248 Před rokem +1

    Think Pete mandelson with a moustache

  • @Robert-xy4xi
    @Robert-xy4xi Před rokem

    The public are asking to Alistair!

  • @mellowtrinidad
    @mellowtrinidad Před rokem +2

    This is a joke, right?

  • @iveneverseenahealthyvegan.9885

    This man is a clear narsasist by putting other's down distracting attention away from himself.

  • @MrSimonw58
    @MrSimonw58 Před rokem

    Sexed up the dossier .... hey dossier, I've been waiting a long, long time ...

  • @Robert-xy4xi
    @Robert-xy4xi Před rokem +1

    Just forgot everything Alistair 😄

  • @PantherBlack-ff1wy
    @PantherBlack-ff1wy Před rokem +8

    He doctored the intelligence report - Campbell is complicit.

    • @danielwebb8402
      @danielwebb8402 Před rokem +2

      As evidenced by... the multiple enquiries that.... didn't show that to be true.

    • @PantherBlack-ff1wy
      @PantherBlack-ff1wy Před rokem

      @@danielwebb8402 Campbell chaired intelligence meetings for which he had no background or qualifications, placing the review of the data under Campbell and the Iraqi Communications Group he chaired, and the Coalition Information Centre, “were contributory factors to the affair of the ‘dodgy dossier’.

    • @danielwebb8402
      @danielwebb8402 Před rokem

      @Panther Black
      Which is a different argument to doctored.
      Most political actors have none / not real world background or experience for meetings they chair. Most defence secretaries haven't worked in the forces. Gordon Brown never worked on finance field. So had no background or qualifications......
      Corbyn would have been qualified to..... talk to trade unions. His only ever job / field. So you don't think he would have been able to chair 99%+ of meetings if was PM?

    • @davecross4493
      @davecross4493 Před 4 měsíci

      The Labour Government of the time based their decisions on the best intelligence available at the time, which suggested Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) and posed a global threat. This stance was taken in the context of a post-9/11 world, where the risk of WMDs falling into terrorist hands was a significant concern. The intelligence suggesting Iraq's threat was shared among international allies, not solely the UK, pointing to a collective concern rather than unilateral fabrication.
      The key documents, the "September Dossier" and the "Iraq Dossier," were compilations of intelligence from various sources. Criticisms of these documents for inflating the threat were addressed in inquiries like the Butler Review, which identified flaws in intelligence handling but did not find evidence of deliberate manipulation by Blair or Campbell. Instead, these inquiries highlighted systemic issues in intelligence gathering and analysis.
      Their belief in the threat posed by Iraq, based on the intelligence they were provided, underscores a response to perceived global security risks, not an intention to deceive. The absence of found WMDs reflects the inherent uncertainties and challenges in intelligence work rather than a calculated lie.
      They relied on the intelligence at the time, highlighted the WMD threat, but their rationale also included the need for regime change due to Saddam Hussein's human rights abuses and threat to regional stability. The post-9/11 global security landscape, emphasising the prevention of terrorism, influenced their decision, highlighting the potential for Iraq to support terrorist activities.
      Furthermore, the UK sought to enforce United Nations resolutions that Iraq was violating by not cooperating with WMD inspections, aiming to maintain the UN's credibility. The strategic and political alliance with the United States also played a crucial role, as supporting the US in Iraq was seen as key to reinforcing the transatlantic relationship vital for UK foreign policy. The concept of preventive war, acting to remove a threat before it materialises, was another factor underpinning the decision to join the invasion.
      This multi-faceted approach shows the decision was not made lightly or based on a single issue. Instead, it was the result of weighing various serious and interconnected global concerns, demonstrating a broader context beyond the accusation of lying about WMDs.

  • @MerryOlSoulGigglesmith
    @MerryOlSoulGigglesmith Před rokem +1

    It's criminal

    • @davecross4493
      @davecross4493 Před 4 měsíci

      The Labour Government of the time based their decisions on the best intelligence available at the time, which suggested Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) and posed a global threat. This stance was taken in the context of a post-9/11 world, where the risk of WMDs falling into terrorist hands was a significant concern. The intelligence suggesting Iraq's threat was shared among international allies, not solely the UK, pointing to a collective concern rather than unilateral fabrication.
      The key documents, the "September Dossier" and the "Iraq Dossier," were compilations of intelligence from various sources. Criticisms of these documents for inflating the threat were addressed in inquiries like the Butler Review, which identified flaws in intelligence handling but did not find evidence of deliberate manipulation by Blair or Campbell. Instead, these inquiries highlighted systemic issues in intelligence gathering and analysis.
      Their belief in the threat posed by Iraq, based on the intelligence they were provided, underscores a response to perceived global security risks, not an intention to deceive. The absence of found WMDs reflects the inherent uncertainties and challenges in intelligence work rather than a calculated lie.
      They relied on the intelligence at the time, highlighted the WMD threat, but their rationale also included the need for regime change due to Saddam Hussein's human rights abuses and threat to regional stability. The post-9/11 global security landscape, emphasising the prevention of terrorism, influenced their decision, highlighting the potential for Iraq to support terrorist activities.
      Furthermore, the UK sought to enforce United Nations resolutions that Iraq was violating by not cooperating with WMD inspections, aiming to maintain the UN's credibility. The strategic and political alliance with the United States also played a crucial role, as supporting the US in Iraq was seen as key to reinforcing the transatlantic relationship vital for UK foreign policy. The concept of preventive war, acting to remove a threat before it materialises, was another factor underpinning the decision to join the invasion.
      This multi-faceted approach shows the decision was not made lightly or based on a single issue. Instead, it was the result of weighing various serious and interconnected global concerns, demonstrating a broader context beyond the accusation of lying about WMDs.

  • @keiththompson5173
    @keiththompson5173 Před rokem +1

    This guy is a See You Next Tuesday

  • @marcmcdonald9930
    @marcmcdonald9930 Před rokem +4

    Blair should be in jail !!!

    • @braxxian
      @braxxian Před rokem

      And this joker should be his cell mate. But because our so called system is so corrupt they are allowed to walk free while people like Assange who expose their crimes are hounded till their dying days. What a world.

    • @davecross4493
      @davecross4493 Před 4 měsíci

      The Labour Government of the time based their decisions on the best intelligence available at the time, which suggested Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) and posed a global threat. This stance was taken in the context of a post-9/11 world, where the risk of WMDs falling into terrorist hands was a significant concern. The intelligence suggesting Iraq's threat was shared among international allies, not solely the UK, pointing to a collective concern rather than unilateral fabrication.
      The key documents, the "September Dossier" and the "Iraq Dossier," were compilations of intelligence from various sources. Criticisms of these documents for inflating the threat were addressed in inquiries like the Butler Review, which identified flaws in intelligence handling but did not find evidence of deliberate manipulation by Blair or Campbell. Instead, these inquiries highlighted systemic issues in intelligence gathering and analysis.
      Their belief in the threat posed by Iraq, based on the intelligence they were provided, underscores a response to perceived global security risks, not an intention to deceive. The absence of found WMDs reflects the inherent uncertainties and challenges in intelligence work rather than a calculated lie.
      They relied on the intelligence at the time, highlighted the WMD threat, but their rationale also included the need for regime change due to Saddam Hussein's human rights abuses and threat to regional stability. The post-9/11 global security landscape, emphasising the prevention of terrorism, influenced their decision, highlighting the potential for Iraq to support terrorist activities.
      Furthermore, the UK sought to enforce United Nations resolutions that Iraq was violating by not cooperating with WMD inspections, aiming to maintain the UN's credibility. The strategic and political alliance with the United States also played a crucial role, as supporting the US in Iraq was seen as key to reinforcing the transatlantic relationship vital for UK foreign policy. The concept of preventive war, acting to remove a threat before it materialises, was another factor underpinning the decision to join the invasion.
      This multi-faceted approach shows the decision was not made lightly or based on a single issue. Instead, it was the result of weighing various serious and interconnected global concerns, demonstrating a broader context beyond the accusation of lying about WMDs.

  • @frze5645
    @frze5645 Před rokem +3

    Tony Blair came into office on a wave of popularism... but this charatan does not see it.

    • @davecross4493
      @davecross4493 Před 4 měsíci

      The Labour Government of the time based their decisions on the best intelligence available at the time, which suggested Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) and posed a global threat. This stance was taken in the context of a post-9/11 world, where the risk of WMDs falling into terrorist hands was a significant concern. The intelligence suggesting Iraq's threat was shared among international allies, not solely the UK, pointing to a collective concern rather than unilateral fabrication.
      The key documents, the "September Dossier" and the "Iraq Dossier," were compilations of intelligence from various sources. Criticisms of these documents for inflating the threat were addressed in inquiries like the Butler Review, which identified flaws in intelligence handling but did not find evidence of deliberate manipulation by Blair or Campbell. Instead, these inquiries highlighted systemic issues in intelligence gathering and analysis.
      Their belief in the threat posed by Iraq, based on the intelligence they were provided, underscores a response to perceived global security risks, not an intention to deceive. The absence of found WMDs reflects the inherent uncertainties and challenges in intelligence work rather than a calculated lie.
      They relied on the intelligence at the time, highlighted the WMD threat, but their rationale also included the need for regime change due to Saddam Hussein's human rights abuses and threat to regional stability. The post-9/11 global security landscape, emphasising the prevention of terrorism, influenced their decision, highlighting the potential for Iraq to support terrorist activities.
      Furthermore, the UK sought to enforce United Nations resolutions that Iraq was violating by not cooperating with WMD inspections, aiming to maintain the UN's credibility. The strategic and political alliance with the United States also played a crucial role, as supporting the US in Iraq was seen as key to reinforcing the transatlantic relationship vital for UK foreign policy. The concept of preventive war, acting to remove a threat before it materialises, was another factor underpinning the decision to join the invasion.
      This multi-faceted approach shows the decision was not made lightly or based on a single issue. Instead, it was the result of weighing various serious and interconnected global concerns, demonstrating a broader context beyond the accusation of lying about WMDs.

  • @myneighbourjohnturturro

    Campbell is as immovable as Gibraltar on Iraq, it’s frustrating but ultimately pointless to press him on it.

    • @davecross4493
      @davecross4493 Před 4 měsíci +1

      The Labour Government of the time based their decisions on the best intelligence available at the time, which suggested Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) and posed a global threat. This stance was taken in the context of a post-9/11 world, where the risk of WMDs falling into terrorist hands was a significant concern. The intelligence suggesting Iraq's threat was shared among international allies, not solely the UK, pointing to a collective concern rather than unilateral fabrication.
      The key documents, the "September Dossier" and the "Iraq Dossier," were compilations of intelligence from various sources. Criticisms of these documents for inflating the threat were addressed in inquiries like the Butler Review, which identified flaws in intelligence handling but did not find evidence of deliberate manipulation by Blair or Campbell. Instead, these inquiries highlighted systemic issues in intelligence gathering and analysis.
      Their belief in the threat posed by Iraq, based on the intelligence they were provided, underscores a response to perceived global security risks, not an intention to deceive. The absence of found WMDs reflects the inherent uncertainties and challenges in intelligence work rather than a calculated lie.
      They relied on the intelligence at the time, highlighted the WMD threat, but their rationale also included the need for regime change due to Saddam Hussein's human rights abuses and threat to regional stability. The post-9/11 global security landscape, emphasising the prevention of terrorism, influenced their decision, highlighting the potential for Iraq to support terrorist activities.
      Furthermore, the UK sought to enforce United Nations resolutions that Iraq was violating by not cooperating with WMD inspections, aiming to maintain the UN's credibility. The strategic and political alliance with the United States also played a crucial role, as supporting the US in Iraq was seen as key to reinforcing the transatlantic relationship vital for UK foreign policy. The concept of preventive war, acting to remove a threat before it materialises, was another factor underpinning the decision to join the invasion.
      This multi-faceted approach shows the decision was not made lightly or based on a single issue. Instead, it was the result of weighing various serious and interconnected global concerns, demonstrating a broader context beyond the accusation of lying about WMDs.

  • @user-th5nb3ox1w
    @user-th5nb3ox1w Před 9 měsíci

    Not boring to our war dead or the millions of Iraqis who died...,

  • @morzee94
    @morzee94 Před 10 měsíci

    The “boring” quote and section you clipped at the start had nothing to do with Iraq. They were talking about Alastair’s role in spin at the time. Incredibly misleading journalism.

  • @michaelgray7847
    @michaelgray7847 Před 6 měsíci

    Him and Blair should be behind bars !!)

    • @davecross4493
      @davecross4493 Před 4 měsíci

      The Labour Government of the time based their decisions on the best intelligence available at the time, which suggested Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) and posed a global threat. This stance was taken in the context of a post-9/11 world, where the risk of WMDs falling into terrorist hands was a significant concern. The intelligence suggesting Iraq's threat was shared among international allies, not solely the UK, pointing to a collective concern rather than unilateral fabrication.
      The key documents, the "September Dossier" and the "Iraq Dossier," were compilations of intelligence from various sources. Criticisms of these documents for inflating the threat were addressed in inquiries like the Butler Review, which identified flaws in intelligence handling but did not find evidence of deliberate manipulation by Blair or Campbell. Instead, these inquiries highlighted systemic issues in intelligence gathering and analysis.
      Their belief in the threat posed by Iraq, based on the intelligence they were provided, underscores a response to perceived global security risks, not an intention to deceive. The absence of found WMDs reflects the inherent uncertainties and challenges in intelligence work rather than a calculated lie.
      They relied on the intelligence at the time, highlighted the WMD threat, but their rationale also included the need for regime change due to Saddam Hussein's human rights abuses and threat to regional stability. The post-9/11 global security landscape, emphasising the prevention of terrorism, influenced their decision, highlighting the potential for Iraq to support terrorist activities.
      Furthermore, the UK sought to enforce United Nations resolutions that Iraq was violating by not cooperating with WMD inspections, aiming to maintain the UN's credibility. The strategic and political alliance with the United States also played a crucial role, as supporting the US in Iraq was seen as key to reinforcing the transatlantic relationship vital for UK foreign policy. The concept of preventive war, acting to remove a threat before it materialises, was another factor underpinning the decision to join the invasion.
      This multi-faceted approach shows the decision was not made lightly or based on a single issue. Instead, it was the result of weighing various serious and interconnected global concerns, demonstrating a broader context beyond the accusation of lying about WMDs.

  • @mikipiediaelburro7588
    @mikipiediaelburro7588 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Of course they are boring Alastair...if you mean uncomfortable truths are boring you then they are boring
    Thousands of dead Iraqis families would disagree I bet

  • @dnyhan
    @dnyhan Před rokem +4

    A badly needed voice - whether you agree or not doesnt matter - the UK is in very serious trouble and still far from rock bottom.

    • @StuartJ
      @StuartJ Před rokem

      We are in danger from war criminals.

    • @braxxian
      @braxxian Před rokem

      The guy is every bit the war criminal that Blair and Bush are. They hypocrisy of the West is truly staggering when they point the finger at Putin while pretending they didn’t do exactly the same thing a few years back.

    • @AlTarif
      @AlTarif Před 2 měsíci

      Badly needed? He doesn't have solutions and just peddles the same failed policies and ideology which has destroyed not only Britain but the West in general.

  • @brianbozo2447
    @brianbozo2447 Před měsícem

    Campbell was a bully in the lead up to 2003 invasion.

  • @charlesburgoyne-probyn6044

    It's fine we got away with it, lost a few chaps and pieces of equipment, no one can attack the UK itself , God save the king rule Britannia

  • @garrymcfadden4105
    @garrymcfadden4105 Před rokem +1

    Whataboutery is perfectly acceptable. Don’t let anyone tell you it’s not

  • @anglomandingo666
    @anglomandingo666 Před rokem

    However, the mug is correct about post truth.

  • @darrenpearce6617
    @darrenpearce6617 Před 8 měsíci

    Out damned spot. Fingers in ears lah lah lah lah lah. Iraq war lies only matters to journalists.
    Err NO.

  • @BIBIWCICC
    @BIBIWCICC Před 5 měsíci

    Alastair Campbell - Israel’s man on the inside.

  • @docastrov9013
    @docastrov9013 Před 8 měsíci

    Imagine hosting this war-criminal then taking down Russell Brand.

  • @noavocadoanymore
    @noavocadoanymore Před rokem +1

    Malignant Narc

  • @barrygriffiths4530
    @barrygriffiths4530 Před rokem

    Im surprised they are still alive rotten to the core

  • @RockDove5212
    @RockDove5212 Před 2 měsíci

    A war which the united nations called illegal, in which over 100,000 Iraqis civilians died and it's "boring" talking about his part in it. What a sickening and disrespectful individual. He seems contemptuous of those wanting the truth and justice.

  • @lanikozmat5746
    @lanikozmat5746 Před rokem +2

    Bla bla bla 👎👎👎

  • @zapfanzapfan
    @zapfanzapfan Před rokem +1

    Planning, preparation, initiation or waging of a war of aggression, or a war in violation of international treaties, agreements or assurances, or participation in a common plan or conspiracy for the accomplishment of any of the foregoing...

  • @jodyburrows1253
    @jodyburrows1253 Před 9 měsíci

    He's still trying to manipulate how people think.

  • @diogenes1815
    @diogenes1815 Před 7 měsíci +1

    YOU’RE what’s wrong with politics Aleister Campbell, war criminal.

  • @shamteal8614
    @shamteal8614 Před rokem +2

    I dare say if anyone asked Hermann Goring about the Battle of Britain they would get a similar answer to Campbell's. He is a most repulsive and vile character.

    • @danielhall6354
      @danielhall6354 Před 4 měsíci

      this shows you just didnt really understand what his point was

  • @DadgeCity
    @DadgeCity Před 10 měsíci

    I like AC but he can't dodge these questions.

  • @caspardavidfriedrich7916

    Annoyingly, I find Campbell interesting, but just can't see past the hypocrisy. "The only people who ever ask this question is journalists," is literally a Trump-style response which implies: I don't go by what the media say, I go by what the people say.
    Noone has ever answered for Iraq in court, so there will always be questions. Just like Andrew will never be see the inside of a courtroom over Epstein, so he will always have questions. Also, I am not a journalist, but I would love to ask him those questions, I'm just unlikely to run into him down the local Sainsbury's.
    Be more honest 2023!

    • @markpalmer8083
      @markpalmer8083 Před rokem

      Yeah. Saddam Hussein should still be in power. He was a wonderful man.

    • @TriumInfinitum
      @TriumInfinitum Před 4 měsíci

      @@markpalmer8083c***t!.

  • @pipoo1
    @pipoo1 Před rokem +1

    Agreed. They accusers have had 20 years to present the evidence and none has ever been provided. Mistakes were made not in the execution of the Iraq war but in the fact they didn’t overthrow Sadam’s regime in the aftermath of the Kuwait invasion in 1990, when Iraqis were in open revolt, mainly due to cowardice on the part of the US administration, and that they didn’t in 2003 properly foresee or prepare for the blood letting and violence that follow the collapse of such a violent regime.

  • @jodyburrows1253
    @jodyburrows1253 Před 9 měsíci

    Ask him about Dr kelly

  • @davidjhall5315
    @davidjhall5315 Před rokem +1

    I am a ex soldier who served in op teilc in 2004. This clown needs to tell us veterans WHY? Why did we go to Iraq. So WHY?

  • @Nomadicmillennial92
    @Nomadicmillennial92 Před rokem +1

    War Crimes is like so 20 years ago

    • @braxxian
      @braxxian Před rokem

      Unless your Putin of course. Apparently it’s ok when we do it🤪

    • @davecross4493
      @davecross4493 Před 4 měsíci

      The Labour Government of the time based their decisions on the best intelligence available at the time, which suggested Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) and posed a global threat. This stance was taken in the context of a post-9/11 world, where the risk of WMDs falling into terrorist hands was a significant concern. The intelligence suggesting Iraq's threat was shared among international allies, not solely the UK, pointing to a collective concern rather than unilateral fabrication.
      The key documents, the "September Dossier" and the "Iraq Dossier," were compilations of intelligence from various sources. Criticisms of these documents for inflating the threat were addressed in inquiries like the Butler Review, which identified flaws in intelligence handling but did not find evidence of deliberate manipulation by Blair or Campbell. Instead, these inquiries highlighted systemic issues in intelligence gathering and analysis.
      Their belief in the threat posed by Iraq, based on the intelligence they were provided, underscores a response to perceived global security risks, not an intention to deceive. The absence of found WMDs reflects the inherent uncertainties and challenges in intelligence work rather than a calculated lie.
      They relied on the intelligence at the time, highlighted the WMD threat, but their rationale also included the need for regime change due to Saddam Hussein's human rights abuses and threat to regional stability. The post-9/11 global security landscape, emphasising the prevention of terrorism, influenced their decision, highlighting the potential for Iraq to support terrorist activities.
      Furthermore, the UK sought to enforce United Nations resolutions that Iraq was violating by not cooperating with WMD inspections, aiming to maintain the UN's credibility. The strategic and political alliance with the United States also played a crucial role, as supporting the US in Iraq was seen as key to reinforcing the transatlantic relationship vital for UK foreign policy. The concept of preventive war, acting to remove a threat before it materialises, was another factor underpinning the decision to join the invasion.
      This multi-faceted approach shows the decision was not made lightly or based on a single issue. Instead, it was the result of weighing various serious and interconnected global concerns, demonstrating a broader context beyond the accusation of lying about WMDs.

  • @johndavies5985
    @johndavies5985 Před 10 měsíci

    Putin will find Ukraine boring.

  • @andrewheron2399
    @andrewheron2399 Před rokem

    Haha... love the hypocrite.

  • @stuplant6693
    @stuplant6693 Před rokem

    There is no comparison between blair years labour and thistoey shower in government. Labour repaired the NHS, repaired education, sure start, minimum wage, biggest decrease in inequality ever recorded, and all he he says is Iraq.

    • @moomin7461
      @moomin7461 Před rokem

      Which the Tories also backed at the time

  • @miller2624
    @miller2624 Před rokem +5

    Alistair Campbell is absolutely spot on . Half the population has been gas lit and don't even realise it . One day they will .

    • @crowbar9566
      @crowbar9566 Před rokem +4

      He a war propagandist who got off scot-free with his deceitful role in a horrific war and not the person to be talking about this.

    • @miller2624
      @miller2624 Před rokem

      The government at the time (which Campbell was a small part of ) decided to follow America and remove a dictator from power . The were many unintentional civilian casualties but Iraq is in a much better place for it .
      You could argue no war is right

    • @garrymcfadden4105
      @garrymcfadden4105 Před rokem

      @@miller2624Iraq is better?

    • @davecross4493
      @davecross4493 Před 4 měsíci

      @@crowbar9566 The Labour Government of the time based their decisions on the best intelligence available at the time, which suggested Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) and posed a global threat. This stance was taken in the context of a post-9/11 world, where the risk of WMDs falling into terrorist hands was a significant concern. The intelligence suggesting Iraq's threat was shared among international allies, not solely the UK, pointing to a collective concern rather than unilateral fabrication.
      The key documents, the "September Dossier" and the "Iraq Dossier," were compilations of intelligence from various sources. Criticisms of these documents for inflating the threat were addressed in inquiries like the Butler Review, which identified flaws in intelligence handling but did not find evidence of deliberate manipulation by Blair or Campbell. Instead, these inquiries highlighted systemic issues in intelligence gathering and analysis.
      Their belief in the threat posed by Iraq, based on the intelligence they were provided, underscores a response to perceived global security risks, not an intention to deceive. The absence of found WMDs reflects the inherent uncertainties and challenges in intelligence work rather than a calculated lie.
      They relied on the intelligence at the time, highlighted the WMD threat, but their rationale also included the need for regime change due to Saddam Hussein's human rights abuses and threat to regional stability. The post-9/11 global security landscape, emphasising the prevention of terrorism, influenced their decision, highlighting the potential for Iraq to support terrorist activities.
      Furthermore, the UK sought to enforce United Nations resolutions that Iraq was violating by not cooperating with WMD inspections, aiming to maintain the UN's credibility. The strategic and political alliance with the United States also played a crucial role, as supporting the US in Iraq was seen as key to reinforcing the transatlantic relationship vital for UK foreign policy. The concept of preventive war, acting to remove a threat before it materialises, was another factor underpinning the decision to join the invasion.
      This multi-faceted approach shows the decision was not made lightly or based on a single issue. Instead, it was the result of weighing various serious and interconnected global concerns, demonstrating a broader context beyond the accusation of lying about WMDs.

  • @soviet9366
    @soviet9366 Před rokem +3

    I am sick of hearing about Iraq, like its all that happened in the only 12 years of non tory rule I have known in my life.

    • @StuartJ
      @StuartJ Před rokem +1

      It won't go away until the war criminals that started it are in jail.

    • @soviet9366
      @soviet9366 Před rokem

      ​@@StuartJ people like you can & will prattle on about a bad war 2 decades ago, whilst ever more tory administrations come and go, each hoovering up the national wealth for themselves and their mates, whilst you wait & wait for your ideologically pure messiah

    • @braxxian
      @braxxian Před rokem

      Then it will never go away. Invading other nations based on nothing but lies and BS is apparently ok when we do it.

    • @leonmilner9994
      @leonmilner9994 Před rokem

      Do people think the Tories would not have joined the US in Iraq? Maybe I'm missing info, but this seems like a key question that only Rory explores on their podcasts on Iraq.

    • @leonmilner9994
      @leonmilner9994 Před rokem

      I mean, Canada got roped into the middle east too. When the USA says jump, countries like Canada and Britain just say, "how high?"

  • @michaeltrue6202
    @michaeltrue6202 Před 10 měsíci

    its so sad because i love campbell as a person speaker neurodiveristy champion etc but end of the day he is just never going to accept he is wrong and blood is on blairs hands for idiocy

    • @dalvinderbasi3495
      @dalvinderbasi3495 Před 8 měsíci

      100 percent my thoughts too.

    • @davecross4493
      @davecross4493 Před 4 měsíci

      The Labour Government of the time based their decisions on the best intelligence available at the time, which suggested Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction (WMDs) and posed a global threat. This stance was taken in the context of a post-9/11 world, where the risk of WMDs falling into terrorist hands was a significant concern. The intelligence suggesting Iraq's threat was shared among international allies, not solely the UK, pointing to a collective concern rather than unilateral fabrication.
      The key documents, the "September Dossier" and the "Iraq Dossier," were compilations of intelligence from various sources. Criticisms of these documents for inflating the threat were addressed in inquiries like the Butler Review, which identified flaws in intelligence handling but did not find evidence of deliberate manipulation by Blair or Campbell. Instead, these inquiries highlighted systemic issues in intelligence gathering and analysis.
      Their belief in the threat posed by Iraq, based on the intelligence they were provided, underscores a response to perceived global security risks, not an intention to deceive. The absence of found WMDs reflects the inherent uncertainties and challenges in intelligence work rather than a calculated lie.
      They relied on the intelligence at the time, highlighted the WMD threat, but their rationale also included the need for regime change due to Saddam Hussein's human rights abuses and threat to regional stability. The post-9/11 global security landscape, emphasising the prevention of terrorism, influenced their decision, highlighting the potential for Iraq to support terrorist activities.
      Furthermore, the UK sought to enforce United Nations resolutions that Iraq was violating by not cooperating with WMD inspections, aiming to maintain the UN's credibility. The strategic and political alliance with the United States also played a crucial role, as supporting the US in Iraq was seen as key to reinforcing the transatlantic relationship vital for UK foreign policy. The concept of preventive war, acting to remove a threat before it materialises, was another factor underpinning the decision to join the invasion.
      This multi-faceted approach shows the decision was not made lightly or based on a single issue. Instead, it was the result of weighing various serious and interconnected global concerns, demonstrating a broader context beyond the accusation of lying about WMDs.

  • @davidlatimer539
    @davidlatimer539 Před rokem +10

    Alastair is spot on !

    • @johntooth1886
      @johntooth1886 Před rokem +1

      Would not trust a word he os a twister along with Blair.

    • @frze5645
      @frze5645 Před rokem +1

      Alistair is definitely not 'spot on' - just read the comments - 99% against and then the oddity (you) pops up in support without offering any valid defence of this odious character.

  • @jakel8627
    @jakel8627 Před rokem +3

    A study by Professor Theakston of the University of Leeds concluded New Labour was the best government this country ever had. I agree with this study, I think Blair modernised Britain, was the most honest and effective prime minister of all time. Then we had the coalition which wasn't awful, wasn't too bad. Then the country voted Brexit in 2016 and that was the beginning of this country's decline. Brexit hasn't benefited this country at all and has only reduced trade and our influence in the world.

    • @QwadLuzr
      @QwadLuzr Před rokem

      I bet you clapped on your doorstep when they shut the economy for 2 years and Blair destroyed this country for the young, greedy boomers love him.

    • @murderincme
      @murderincme Před rokem

      @@QwadLuzr The number of children and seniors lifted out of poverty speaks for itself. Brown is actually credited with handling the financial crisis well with global coordination. Unfortunately the austerity didn't bring economic growth, so on the whole New Labour did a lot of good things. But understandably some people won't forgive the war or the immigration rate of the time. Yet Britain's standing was much higher during the Blair-Brown era.

    • @QwadLuzr
      @QwadLuzr Před rokem

      @@murderincme Yes and it fell from there. Every public service is in crisis due to unsustainable population growth, caused by migration, let alone the dream of having a house and family, all stolen by the new labour project.

    • @braxxian
      @braxxian Před rokem +2

      Your delusional Jake.

    • @liammccann8763
      @liammccann8763 Před rokem

      GB's decline, on the world stage, can be traced to Suez rather than Brexit. 'Modernism is the synthesis of all heresies' - Pope Pius X.