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June 18, 2005
The Mounting Protests Against The Iraq War
Conservative Columnist William F. Buckley, Jr., founder and Editor-at-Large of National Review, acknowledges that, "It's correct that there is political commotion mounting in opposition to the war [in Iraq]. It is important to distinguish between two kinds," he opined in a June 18, 2005 Op/Ed column at Yahoo!News.
"One, which is gaining attention, centers on misrepresentations," he added. "The so-called Downing Street Memo is cited. This records an exchange at 10 Downing St. on July 23, 2002, at which, it is said, the representatives of Mr. Bush made it clear that the president had resolved to proceed against Iraq irrespective of what the United Nations might do." Mr. Buckley also wrote:
Rejecting that account, the Bush people have said that the invasion was not finally planned until after the appeal to the United Nations by Secretary of State Colin Powell on Feb. 5, 2003.He said, "The revisionist line is saying that the war should not have taken place and that many who gave it support were deceived by apodictic claims from the White House that the enemy had weapons of mass destruction." See "The Mounting Protests" for more of Mr. Buckley's interesting analysis
Posted by Munir Umrani at June 18, 2005 05:35 PM
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