Sunday 29 August 2021

General Sir Michael Rose warns of British politicians who believe their own propaganda. A letter in The Week.

I once attended an illuminating and interesting lecture by General Sir Michael Rose at Dillington House, near Ilminster, in South Somerset, and so I took especial note of the letter below.  It was published in The Week on 27th August having first appeared in The Times.

Illusions of Victory

To The Times

To quote Kosovo as an example of a substantial military success, as William Hague does in his article, is to commit the same error as Tony Blair did.  Believing his own propaganda that Nato’s bombing campaign in Kosovo had been successful, Blair led Britain into the disastrous invasion of Iraq.  Yet the reality in Kosovo was very different.  At the end of 11 weeks of the most intensive bombing by Nato since the War, the Serb army in Kosovo emerged undefeated, and peace only came about when Boris Yeltsin withdrew his support for the Milosevic regime.  Furthermore, it was the people of Serbia who removed Slobodan Milosevic from power in a democratic election nearly 14 months later – not Nato as Hague implies.  Surely the true lesson we can draw from the crisis in Afghanistan is that if strategy is not based on reality, then disaster will surely follow.

General Sir Michael Rose, former commander of the UN forces in Bosnia.

 

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