[faithandlife] Some CE Bishops against war with Iraq

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From: charles scott <crscottblu@...>
Date: Sat, 16 Nov 2002 02:20:38 -0800 (PST)
Brothers:

Though the assembled Bishops gave a half-way, sort-of,
last resort blessing to a preemptive strike on Iraq,
many bishops, including ++Williams disapproved.

Charles 
-----------------------------------


from THE TELEGRAPH U K

Archbishop warns West of nuclear conflict over Iraq
 By Jonathan Petre Religion Correspondent
(Filed: 05/11/2002) 


War against Iraq could escalate into a nuclear
conflict and risk the lives of hundreds of thousands
of people in the Middle East, Dr Rowan Williams, the
next Archbishop of Canterbury, warns today.

In his strongest criticism yet of military action, Dr
Williams says that a pre-emptive strike against Saddam
Hussein could "rapidly and uncontrollably spiral down
into chaos." 

   
Dr Rowan Williams: asks 'whether the West is the best
judge of the needs of the region' 
In an article in The Telegraph, he adds that to ignore
the fears of people in the area would leave the West
open to the criticism that it was behaving like a
colonial power.

His comments are unlikely to endear him to Downing
Street, which is engaged in delicate negotiations over
the wording of a new resolution on Iraq expected to be
debated at the United Nations this week. 

Government officials have already privately voiced
their irritation at the anti-war rhetoric of Church of
England bishops and Dr Williams, who was selected for
the post of Archbishop by Tony Blair.

Making his first public statement since the retirement
last Thursday of his predecessor, Dr George Carey, Dr
Williams recognises that the Iraqi regime is "brutal
and violent". However, pre-emptive action against
Saddam could "undermine the society of states" and
destabilise other parts of the world, a dangerous
prospect when a number of countries have weapons of
mass destruction.

"The exact calculation of what weaponry might be
employed by a cornered Saddam Hussein is uncertain;
and so is the retaliation that might then be provoked
in the region from its sole nuclear power, Israel," he
says.

An attack by the West is likely to "risk the lives of
hundreds of thousands in a region that could rapidly
and uncontrollably spiral down into chaos. We also
jeopardise any authority we might have to appeal for
restraint in other situations on the basis of
international law."

The moral issue is whether the West is the best judge
of the needs of the region, especially when that
judgement appears to overrule local concerns.

The Archbishop has been a consistent opponent of war
against Iraq since he signed a declaration in July
which described it as "illegal and immoral". On the
day of his appointment later that month he pledged to
continue asking "awkward questions". Dr Carey has also
been an outspoken critic of action against Iraq.

<snip>

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