Cameron chose to attack people in Syria for some reason. Which of the many factions was he trying to beat? I don't know; does he? Did it make sense in the first place? No. After the Second World War we had the Nuremberg War Trials. We were told that the Nazis were war criminals; that they were not allowed to invade other countries, like Poland. But now Cameron can invade Libya or Syria when he feels like it. Blair & Bush attacked Iraq, murdering thousands. What was their Casus Belli, case for war, apart from the lies? Blair told lies to make excuses for doing it. Blair is a War Criminal so where does that leave Cameron?
UPDATE
The Cabinet Office produced a response to a Freedom of Information request,
eventually, begrudgingly.
Cameron alleged in Parliament that:-
Mr Speaker, let me turn to the question of legality.... his attacks on
Syria are an exercise of the
right of self-defence in aid of a friendly
power i.e. Iraq. The alleged enemy is
ISIS, another bunch of irate Arabs that object to being attacked willy
nilly, especially by Western powers. They also know who pulls the strings in
Washington & London. The Puppet Masters have
their head office in Tel Aviv.
PS Their .pdf reply is at FOI322143 Reply.pdf
The allegation that Her Majesty's Government is defending Iraq against irate Syrians extends to the vicious Syrian rogues invading England by way of Calais. It is nearer, easier to attack. Why not? Answer: Because Cameron wants them.
1 Horse Guards Road
T +44 (0)20 7276 2294
London SW1A 2HQ
foi.team@cabinet-office.gsi.gov.uk
www.cabinet-office.gov.uk
Mike Emery
mike@21pronto.com FOI Reference: FOI322143
05/01/2016
Dear Mike Emery
Ref: FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT REQUEST
I can confirm that the Cabinet Office holds information relevant to your request but I must advise you that I must extend the time limit for responding to your request.
It is occasionally necessary to extend the 20 working day time limit for issuing a response. Information you have requested is exempt under Section 42 of the Act, which relates to information that would be subject to legal professional privilege if litigation were in progress. Section 42 is subject to a public interest test and the Cabinet Office has not yet reached a decision on whether the balance of the public interest favours disclosure of this information.
By virtue of section 10(3), when public authorities have to consider the balance of the public interest in relation to a request, they do not have to comply with the request until such time as is reasonable in the circumstances. Owing to the need to consider, in all the circumstances of the case, where the balance of the public interest lies in relation to your request, we will not be able to respond to your request in full within 20 working days. I hope to let you have a response by 2 February 2016. If I can reply before that date, I shall do so. If I need more time to consider the balance of the public interest, I shall write again to let you know.
If you have any queries about this letter, please contact the FOI team. Please remember to quote the reference number above in any future communications.
Yours sincerely
FOI Team Cabinet Office
Room 405 70 Whitehall London, SW1A 2AS
foi-team@cabinetoffice.gov.uk www.cabinet office.gov.uk
Mike Emery mike@21pronto.com
FOI Reference: FOI322143 01/03/2016
Dear Mike Emery
I refer to your request where you asked: “ Dear Sir, RE: War on Syria
Have David Cameron's attacks on Syria been authorised by the United Nation? What
is his legal justification for attacking Syria or Syrians?
Yours sincerely
Mike
Emery
PS This is a Freedom of Information request.
Yours faithfully,
Mike Emery”
In compliance with our section 16 FOIA duty, you may be interested to see the
answer that the Prime Minister gave to the House on 1st December 2015:
“Mr Speaker, let me turn to the question of legality. It is a long-standing
constitutional convention that we don’t publish our formal legal advice. But the
document I have published today shows in some detail the clear legal basis for
military action against ISIL in Syria. It is founded on the right of
self-defence
as recognised in Article 51 of the UN Charter. The right of
self-defence may be exercised individually where it is necessary to the UK’s own
defence and of course collectively in the defence of our friends and allies. Mr
Speaker, the main basis of the Global Coalition’s actions against ISIL in Syria
is the collective self-defence of Iraq. Iraq has a legitimate government, one
that we support and help. There is a solid basis of evidence on which to
conclude, firstly, that there is a direct link between the presence and
activities of ISIL in Syria, and their ongoing attack in Iraq and, secondly,
that the Assad regime is unwilling and/or unable to take action necessary to
prevent ISIL’s continuing attack on Iraq – or indeed attacks on us. It is also
clear that ISIL’s campaign against the UK and our allies has reached the level
of an “armed attack” such that force may lawfully be used in self-defence to
prevent further atrocities being committed by ISIL. And this is further
underscored by the unanimous adoption of UN Security Council Resolution 2249.
The Prime Minister also commented that he:
“welcomes United Nations Security Council Resolution 2249 which determines that
ISIL constitutes an ‘unprecedented threat to international peace and security’
and calls on
states to take ‘all necessary measures’ to prevent terrorist acts by ISIL and to
‘eradicate the safe haven they have established over significant parts of Iraq
and Syria’; further notes the clear legal basis to defend the UK and our allies
in accordance with the UN Charter”
You may also wish to know that there is a substantial volume of information on
this subject that is in the public domain, including the Prime Minister’s
speeches and the full record of the House of Commons debate of 2 December 2015.
The parliamentary record of the debate is available at:
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201516/cmhansrd/chan80.pdf.
The PM’s statement responding to the Foreign Affairs Committee report on
military operations in Syria is available at:
www.gov.uk/government/speeches/pm-statementresponding-to-fac-report-on-military-operations-in-syria.
The Foreign Affairs Committees’ report on the extension of offensive British
military operations in Syria is available at:
www.parliament.uk/business/committees/commiteesa-z/commons-select/foreign-affairs-committee/publications/.
This letter constitutes a Refusal Notice in respect of your request in
accordance with the terms of section 17 of FOIA.
Section 1 of FOIA places two duties on public authorities. Unless exemptions
apply, the first duty (contained in section 1(1)(a)) is to confirm or deny
whether the information specified in a request is held. I confirm that the
Cabinet Office holds information falling within the scope of your request.
The second duty (contained in section 1(1)(b)) is, unless one or more of the
exemptions contained in Part II of FOIA applies, to disclose the information
that has been confirmed as being held. The duty to disclose does not apply in
respect of the information you have requested because the following exemptions
apply:
Section 23(1) - Information supplied by, or relating to, bodies dealing with
security matters Section 26(1) - Defence Section 27(1) - International Relations
Section 35(1)(c) - Information relating to the provision of advice by any of the
Law Officers or any request for the provision of such advice Section 40(2) -
Protection of personal data Section 42 - Legal Professional Privilege
Section 23(1) is an absolute exemption, in accordance with section 2(3)(b) of
FOIA, and so the public interest balance test set out in section 2(2)(b) does
not apply. Some of the information you have requested is exempt because it is
information falling within the terms of section 23(1), that is, information
which “was directly or indirectly supplied to the public authority by, or
relates to, any of the bodies specified in subsection (3)”.
Section 40(2) is also an absolute exemption. Some of the information within the
scope of your request is personal data, disclosure of which would contravene the
data protection principles (as defined in section 40(7) of FOIA).
All the other exemptions relied on are qualified exemptions, to which the public
interest balancing test contained in section 2(2)(b) of FOIA applies. That is,
exemptions which apply if “in all the circumstances of the case, the public
interest in maintaining the exemption outweighs the public interest in
disclosing the information” (section 2(2)(b)) of FOIA).
In all the circumstances of the case, I consider that the public interest in
maintaining the exemptions I have referred to above outweighs the public
interest in disclosing the information.
I recognise that it is in the public interest that society should, as far as
possible, be able to understand and debate the decision taken to use lethal
force in Syria against the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) in the
circumstances set out in the Prime Minister’s statement to Parliament of 7
September 2015, and the legal basis for it. There is a public interest in
demonstrating to the public that the government sought and received appropriate
professional legal advice, and that this military action took place in
accordance with the rule of law.
However, the public interest in maintaining legal professional privilege, and in
particular in maintaining the confidentiality of legal advice provided by the
Law Officers, is of particular importance in this case. There is a strong public
interest in the Prime Minister, Secretary of State for Defence and government
more broadly being able to seek legal advice in confidence. The particular
importance of maintaining the confidentiality of advice given by the Law
Officers is reflected in the convention, observed by successive governments,
that their advice should not be disclosed outside government.
The advice given by the Attorney represents the definitive legal position of the
government and has a special status in terms of the requirement for the Cabinet
to have regard to it in coming to a decision. Where the Attorney has advised,
that advice forms an essential part of the collective Cabinet decision-making
process and therefore must be treated in the same way as other material subject
to Cabinet confidentiality.
In this case, with the consent of the Attorney General, the Prime Minister
disclosed to Parliament in the statement he gave on 7 September 2015 the fact
that the Attorney General’s advice had been sought and given, in recognition of
the interest in enabling the public to understand that appropriate professional
legal advice was taken before this military action took place. But the
long-standing Law Officers’ convention has been observed, and the legal advice
has not been disclosed.
This strong public interest in government being able to seek legal advice in
confidence is heightened in the context of matters of the importance and
sensitivity of those in issue here - engaging matters of intelligence, defence,
national security and foreign relations - in respect of which it is
exceptionally important that the government should be able to ask its most
senior legal adviser for full and careful advice, with confidence that it will
remain confidential.
Recognising the strength of the public interests in disclosure of this
information, I am nevertheless of the view that those interests are
substantially and clearly outweighed by the public interests in maintaining the
qualified exemptions I have cited above. If you have any queries about this
letter, please contact the FOI team. Please remember to quote the reference
number above in any future communications. If you are unhappy with the service
you have received in relation to your request or wish to request an internal
review, you should write to:
Helen Ewen Cabinet Office 70 Whitehall London SW1A 2AS
email: foi-team@cabinetoffice.gov.uk
You should note that the Cabinet Office will not normally accept an application
for internal review if it is received more than two months after the date that
the reply was issued.
If you are not content with the outcome of your internal review, you may apply
directly to the Information Commissioner for a decision. Generally, the
Commissioner cannot make a decision unless you have exhausted the complaints
procedure provided by Cabinet Office. The Information Commissioner can be
contacted at:
The Information Commissioner’s Office Wycliffe House Water Lane Wilmslow
Cheshire SK9 5AF
Yours sincerely
FOI Team Cabinet Office
Cameron Refuses To State His Legal Authority For Attacking Syria [ 5 February 2016 ]
QUOTE
Cameron chose to attack people in Syria for some reason. Which of the many factions was he trying to beat? I don't know; does he? Did it make sense in the first place? No........I asked whether Cameron was authorised by the United Nations & what was his legal justification for invading. Now Cameron is holding out on me. He is a war criminal just as much as Blair, Brown, Bush, Obama & Netanyahu.
UNQUOTE
How many of our current crop of War Criminals ever served, heard a shot fired in anger or even wore uniform? Recall that naughty Adolf was not just a sensitive little chap, an artist, very successful author & political philosopher; he was also a war hero.