Chilcot Report and 7/7 London Bombing Anniversary Converge to Highlight Terrorism’s Causes
Eleven years ago today, three suicide bombers attacked the London subway and a bus and killed 51 people. Almost immediately, it was obvious that retaliation for Britains invasion and destruction of Iraq was a major motive for the attackers.
Two of them said exactly that in videotapes they left behind: the attacks will continue and pick up strengths till you pull your soldiers from Afghanistan and Iraq . . . . until we feel security, you will be targets. Then, less than a year later, a secret report from British military and intelligence chiefs concluded that the war in Iraq contributed to the radicalisation of the July 7 London bombers and is likely to continue to provoke extremism among British Muslims. The secret report, leaked to the Observer, added: Iraq is likely to be an important motivating factor for some time to come in the radicalisation of British Muslims and for those extremists who view attacks against the UK as legitimate."
The release on Tuesday of the massive Chilcot report which the New York Times called a devastating critique of Tony Blair not only offers more proof of this causal link, but also reveals that Blair was expressly warned before the invasion that his actions would provoke Al Qaeda attacks on the UK. As my colleague Jon Schwarz reported yesterday, the reports Executive Summary quotes Blair confirming he was aware of a warning by British intelligence that terrorism would increase in the event of war, reflecting intensified anti-US/anti-Western sentiment in the Muslim world, including among Muslim communities in the West.
None of this is the slightest bit surprising. Just as the British did, multiple western intelligence agencies have long recognized (usually in secret) that at the top of the list of terrorisms causes is the wests militarism and interference in predominant Muslim nations as a 2004 Pentagon-commissioned report specified in listing the causes of terrorism: American direct intervention in the Muslim world; our one sided support in favor of Israel; support for Islamic tyrannies in places like Egypt and Saudi Arabia; and, most of all, the American occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan. The report concluded: Muslims do not hate our freedom, but rather, they hate our policies. Countless individuals who carried out or plotted attacks on the west have said the same.
https://theintercept.com/2016/07/07/chilcot-report-and-77-london-bombing-anniversary-converge-to-highlight-terrorisms-causes/