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Force must be an option - Blair | |
(about 4 hours later) | |
Tony Blair has said the case for using military force to topple oppressive regimes is as strong as it ever was - despite events in Iraq and Afghanistan. | |
He said intervention was needed to tackle the growing "menace" of Islamic "extremism" across the Middle East. | |
But he also stressed the need for engagement with "progressive" Muslims. | |
The former prime minister was speaking on the 10th anniversary of a speech in Chicago which he set out his belief in an interventionist foreign policy. | |
In April 1999, during the Kosovo conflict, Mr Blair outlined his criteria for military action abroad in an address to the Chicago Economic Club. | |
Back in April 1999, I thought that removal of a despotic regime was almost sufficient in itself to create the conditions for progress Tony Blair | |
Returning to the city this week, he told the Chicago Council on Global Affairs: "Many, at the time, described the speech as hopelessly idealistic; dangerous even. | |
"And, probably, in the light of events since then, some would feel vindicated. | |
"As for me, I am older, better educated by the events that shaped my premiership, but I still believe that those who oppress and brutalise their citizens are better put out of power than kept in it." | |
'Religious error' | |
Events in Iraq and Afghanistan had shaken the "familiar certainty that our power would always triumph", argued Mr Blair. | |
He said it would be wrong to revert to a "more traditional foreign policy" which he described as "less bold, more cautious; less idealistic, more pragmatic, more willing to tolerate the intolerable". | |
But he said a broader strategy was needed to deal with the threats posed by extremism. | |
FROM THE TODAY PROGRAMME More from Today programme | FROM THE TODAY PROGRAMME More from Today programme |
"Back in April 1999, I thought that removal of a despotic regime was almost sufficient in itself to create the conditions for progress. But this battle cannot so easily be won. | |
"Because it is based on an ideology and because its roots are deep, so our strategy for victory has to be broader, more comprehensive but also more sharply defined. | |
"It is important to recognise that it is not going to be won except over a prolonged period. | |
"In this sense, it is more akin to fighting revolutionary Communism than a discrete campaign such as the one which changed the Balkans a decade ago." | |
He stressed the importance of supporting moderate Muslims, but also of confronting radical Islamic thinking through a "consistent critique of its religious error". | |
And he spoke of the role he hoped to play in developing a dialogue between different religious groups, through his Tony Blair Faith Foundation. | |
In an interview with the BBC, Mr Blair described extemism as a genuine "menace", the scope of which "stretches very wide" across the Middle East. | |
'Root causes' | |
He said extremists needed to know that the international community "will do whatever is necessary to defeat them" including, but not limited to, military action. | |
Mr Blair added: "The cause is not British colonialism from years ago or the creation of the state of Israel. | |
"There is an extremism that has grown up over decades that will have to be confronted, possibly over decades. | "There is an extremism that has grown up over decades that will have to be confronted, possibly over decades. |
"We've got to stick to what we believe, and take it on by the combination - not just military and security means - but of diplomatic initiatives that allow us, together with those sensible and progressive forces within Islam, to uproot the extremism and eradicate it." | |
But he rejected the idea of military action in Pakistan, arguing instead for a more subtle approach. | |
He said: "We need to start working on some of the root causes of this, for example deep within the Pakistani education system, the way kids are brought up and taught. | |
"We need to get those clerics and thinkers within the world of Islam, who have got in fact a far more accurate and true view of what Islam is about, to be speaking out, to be given the ability to influence people's minds because otherwise we will be in a situation where whatever military action we take there is a continual growth of this extremism in countries like Pakistan and elsewhere." | |
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