
Review of the year: Robert Fisk on war without end
Only justice, not bombs, can make our dangerous world a safer place
Published: 30 December 2005
This was the year the "war on terror" - an obnoxious expression which we all parroted after 11 September 2001 - appeared to be almost as endless as George Bush once claimed it would be. And unsuccessful. For, after all the bombing of Afghanistan, the overthrow of the Taliban, the invasion of Iraq and its appallingly tragic aftermath, can anyone claim today that they feel safer than they did a year ago?
We have gone on smashing away at the human rights we trumpeted at the Russians - and the Arabs - during the Cold War. We have perhaps fatally weakened all those provisions that were written into our treaties and conventions in the aftermath of the Second World War to make the world a safer place. And we claim we are winning.
Article Length: 849 words (approx.)
Independent Portfolio
Existing Independent Portfolio subscribers: Log in here, please.
Click here to find out more about subscribing to the Independent Portfolio.
Click here to buy this article for �1.
Payments are taken using BT click&buy.; Click here to find out more about BT click&buy.;
Also in this section
-
Robert Fisk: Another truly brave man dies in Lebanon
-
A fearfully light coffin is carried to a Beirut grave. Who will be next?
-
Robert Fisk: In Lebanon, the men do the dying, and the women do the mourning
-
Robert Fisk: Despite floods of soldiers, assassinations still continue. No one is safe in Lebanon
-
Robert Fisk: Some buried bones are best left undug