Here we are in UK, one of of the wealthiest nations on the planet, gripped still by Government-applied austerity, and our Prime Minister is in the country for a change, talking with his chums in the G8.
One of the things on top of their agenda is what to do about Syria, particularly with the lessons of co-operative intervention so fresh in their minds after intervening in Libya, and its aftermath. I think most people think that something should be done to spare Syrian (and Turkish and Lebanese) civilians further trauma and bloodshed but after that opinions about what to do diverge.
One of the criticisms of modern warfare is that nations individually and en bloc have gone to war without giving too much thought about what will happen once the peace has been won. This is certainly the case in Iraq and as we enter possibly the last phase in our current involvement in Afghanistan.
Frank Ledwidge, author of Losing Small Wars: British Military Failure in Iraq and Afghanistan, has now published Investment in Blood: The True Cost of Britain’s Afghan War, in which he claims that the Afghanistan war has cost Britain more than £37bn, or £2,000 per UK household.
Here, Richard Norton-Taylor and Ledwidge explore some of the mistakes and the true costs of war.
One of the things on top of their agenda is what to do about Syria, particularly with the lessons of co-operative intervention so fresh in their minds after intervening in Libya, and its aftermath. I think most people think that something should be done to spare Syrian (and Turkish and Lebanese) civilians further trauma and bloodshed but after that opinions about what to do diverge.
One of the criticisms of modern warfare is that nations individually and en bloc have gone to war without giving too much thought about what will happen once the peace has been won. This is certainly the case in Iraq and as we enter possibly the last phase in our current involvement in Afghanistan.
Frank Ledwidge, author of Losing Small Wars: British Military Failure in Iraq and Afghanistan, has now published Investment in Blood: The True Cost of Britain’s Afghan War, in which he claims that the Afghanistan war has cost Britain more than £37bn, or £2,000 per UK household.
Here, Richard Norton-Taylor and Ledwidge explore some of the mistakes and the true costs of war.
Comment