shot on suspicion: martial law. SHOT ON SUSPICION: Martial...

  1. 1,037 Posts.
    shot on suspicion: martial law. SHOT ON SUSPICION: Martial Law.

    It is a tragedy that the one English-speaking nation which has
    always had the highest tolerance for individual eccentricities,
    strange manners, speech, conduct and dress, should now find
    itself in the situation where a law-abiding Brazilian man has
    been shot to death by the London metropolitan police simply
    because he looked suspicious to them.

    The situation is not improved by what the Guardian newspaper has reported. Up to seven other people have come within seconds or inches of also being shot to death by the special teams of the British police.

    This IS a shoot to kill policy! It is also a failure on the
    policy level. Regardless of Prime Minister Blair's protestations
    that it is not true, 85 percent of the British public according to
    the latest polls have drawn a straight line connecting the British
    military participation in the attack and occupation of Iraq and
    the attacks made in London. According to Prime Minister Blair,
    that makes 85 percent of the British public supporters of
    terrorism!

    Prime Minister Blair is blatantly ignoring the nearly two million
    people who peacefully marched past the offices of the British
    Government in London, protesting against him joining with
    President Bush in an attack upon Iraq even before that military
    attack had been made.

    Now, the British Armed Forces are in Iraq and "others" have decided to bring the consequences of aggressive war back to Britain, so that the people in England could themselves get a taste of what war is really like. At the policy level, Mr Blair has clearly decided that a "shoot on suspicion" policy is the proper answer.

    Here lies the ultimate failure of Mr Blair's policy. It has made
    the British civil police as dangerous to any person who might
    attract attention as are the terrorists themselves. What is the
    difference between being blown up in a terrorist bombing or
    being shot to death by the police because of a foreign policy
    which is certain to bring about such terrorist bombings?

    Terrorism, so-called, is the militarily weak party's response to
    being attacked because it does not have the Tornados or the F-
    16s with which to make a "proper" military response to being
    attacked.

    The central policy question here is simple. Is Prime
    Minister Blair prepared to accept that a full-scale air and ground
    attack would be made upon Britain because of his own military
    attack upon Iraq? The answer to this nearly classical question is
    obvious. Of course, Prime Minister Blair would NOT have
    made his attack if the response could have been a real, full-
    scale, "proper" military war with the nation he had attacked.

    The attack upon Iraq was made by Prime Minister Blair
    because he thought that it was "safe". He thought that there
    would be no direct "proper" military response, because Iraq did
    not have military means with which to respond.

    Now, a response has come. It is neither a "proper" nor an
    official response. Four bombs exploded in London and another
    four might have gone off a few days later, if the detonators or
    home made explosives had functioned. They did not and
    Londoners were saved from another massive number of dead
    and wounded.

    Now, the political cry is out to the effect that the
    Blair government needs additional emergency powers. When
    Parliament returns, it looks like these emergency laws will be
    passed very quickly. Then, Britain too will be under emergency
    laws, with the only difference from martial law being that it is its
    civil police doing the random killing instead of soldiers, as would
    have been the case under martial law.

    =======================================
 
arrow-down-2 Created with Sketch. arrow-down-2 Created with Sketch.