John Bolton, the former US ambassador to the United Nations, escaped a citizen’s arrest Wednesday night as he addressed an audience in Britain. We speak to George Monbiot, the British activist and columnist who tried to arrest Bolton. Monbiot says Bolton is a war criminal for his role in helping to initiate the US invasion of Iraq.
Democracy Now ! Reports - 30/05/08
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AMY GOODMAN: John Bolton, the former US
ambassador to the United Nations, escaped a
citizen’s arrest Wednesday night as he
addressed an audience gathered at the Hay
Festival in Wales. Security guards blocked
the path of columnist and activist George
Monbiot, who tried to make the arrest as
Bolton left the stage. Monbiot planned the
action, because he says Bolton is a war
criminal for his role in helping to initiate
the invasion of Iraq in 2003 while he served
as US undersecretary of state for arms
control.
George Monbiot joins us now on the phone
from England. He is a widely read columnist
for the Guardian of London and the author of
numerous books. His latest is Bring On the
Apocalypse: Collected Writing. Actually, he
joins us now from Wales.
Welcome to Democracy Now!, George Monbiot.
GEORGE MONBIOT: Thanks very much, Amy. Thank
you.
AMY GOODMAN: Tell us exactly what happened.
GEORGE MONBIOT: Well, I made my intention
clear to perform a citizen’s arrest of John
Bolton. I wrote a charge sheet detailing
exactly the role that he had played in
launching a war of aggression in violation
of international treaties, which is a clear
violation of the Nuremberg Principles. And I
took a dossier of evidence down to the local
police station. I asked them to act on it.
But when they failed to arrest Mr. Bolton, I
tried to arrest him myself, and I tried to
get up onto the stage as he was leaving it.
And I called out, “John Robert Bolton, I am
arresting you for the charge of aggression,
the crime of aggression, as defined by the
Nuremberg Principles.” But I was caught by
two very large security guards and pulled
out of the venue very quickly.
AMY GOODMAN: How does a citizen’s arrest
work?
GEORGE MONBIOT: Well, under an act of
Parliament here, the Serious Organised
[Crime and Police] Act, a citizen has the
right to arrest anyone that they suspect to
be guilty of a crime who would otherwise get
away from the scene or escape without being
arrested, and to hand that person over to
the police. Now, there is a proviso which
says that if—you can only act in this way if
the police are unable to act to arrest this
person. In this particular case, the police
were able to act and had chosen not to do
so. So, had I succeeded in arresting Mr.
Bolton, I would have put myself on the wrong
side of the law.
AMY GOODMAN: John Bolton has also been
criticized for calling for US strikes on
Iran. Earlier this month, the New York Times
published an article, based solely on
unnamed sources, suggesting the Lebanese
group Hezbollah is training Iraqi militants
inside Iran. Hours after the article was
published, this is what John Bolton had to
say on Fox News.
JOHN BOLTON: I think this is a case where
the use of military force against a training
camp or to show the Iranians we’re simply
not going to tolerate this is really the
most prudent thing to do, and then the ball
would be in Iran’s court to draw the
appropriate lesson to stop harming our
troops.
JAIME COLBY: Ambassador John Bolton, a good
message to end on. Thank you very much.
JOHN BOLTON: Thank you.
AMY GOODMAN: Your response, George Monbiot?
GEORGE MONBIOT: Yes. Well, John Bolton has
the position that any and every country of
which he disapproves should be attacked, and
then we work out the justification for that
attack later. He was one of the signatories
of the letter sent by the Project for a New
American Century to Bill Clinton in 1998,
saying that we should attack Iraq and
overthrow Saddam Hussein. And he had one
justification then, he had a different
justification in 2003, he has a different
justification today. It’s very clear that
with Bolton, as with Bush, as with Cheney,
as with Rumsfeld, the urge to go to war came
first, and the justification came second.
Now, when you look at the main instruments
of international law, you see very clearly
that waging a preemptive war where you are
not in an immediate crisis of self-defense
is a crime against international law. In
fact, the Nuremberg tribunals described it
as the supreme international crime. And it
was for that crime that most of the Nazi war
criminals were convicted. And that is
exactly the crime that Bolton has conspired
in committing.
AMY GOODMAN: Can you talk about what
happened to Jose Bustani?
GEORGE MONBIOT: Well, Jose Bustani is a
Brazilian diplomat who was head of the
Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical
Weapons. And in 2002, Bustani offered a way
out of the impasse between Iraq in the
United States. He said, OK, Saddam Hussein
won’t allow the UNMOVIC inspectors in,
primarily because UNSCOM turned out to have
been infiltrated by the CIA, and so the
successor organization UNMOVIC was viewed
with intense suspicion in Iraq. Bustani
said, “I can solve this problem for you by
bringing Saddam Hussein into the Chemical
Weapons Convention and then launching
inspections of my own in Iraq, and therefore
we could have a peaceful resolution to this
crisis.”
Immediately, the United States swung into
action against him—the delegation led by
John Bolton—and demanded his dismissal as
director-general of the Organisation for the
Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, failed at
first and then threatened to withhold all
its dues and to destroy the organization
altogether, whereupon the other nations, led
by the United Kingdom, went along with the
US delegation and agreed to sack Bustani.
Bustani later took his case to an
international labor organization tribunal
and was completely exonerated of all the
complaints which the US had leveled against
him. And the only one which seemed to remain
was that he had tried to prevent war from
being waged with Iraq. And so, far from
seeking a negotiated settlement to the issue
of the alleged weapons of mass destruction
in Iraq, John Bolton ensured that anyone—Bustani’s
attempt to ensure there was a negotiated
settlement was, in Bolton’s word, “tanked.”
AMY GOODMAN: So, George Monbiot, where you
go from here? You didn’t—were not able to
arrest John Bolton in Wales. Did he know
what you were attempting to do?
GEORGE MONBIOT: Yes, he does. And he’s
actually made a public statement concerning
it. I would urge anyone who is in a position
to do so to try to exercise a citizen’s
arrest of any of the primary authors of the
Iraq War. And I’m talking about Bush—that
makes it very, very difficult, but
it’s—there’s a higher chance obviously when
he ceases to be president—Cheney, Rumsfeld,
Wolfowitz, Perle, Bolton, and over here in
the United Kingdom, Tony Blair and some of
his cabinet ministers. And I certainly
intend to try to carry out a citizen’s
arrest of either Blair or one of the other
senior architects of the war here in the
United Kingdom.
And what I found from this instance was that
even if you don’t succeed in carrying out
the citizen’s arrest, you are able to focus
a great deal of attention on the issue and
to ensure that people do not forget. This is
not an ordinary political mistake which was
committed in Iraq. This was the supreme
international crime, which led to the deaths
of hundreds of thousands of people. Those
people were not killed in the ordinary
sense; they were murdered. And they were
murdered by the authors of that war, who are
the greatest mass murderers of the
twenty-first century so far.
AMY GOODMAN: George Monbiot, I want to thank
you very much for being with us, a columnist
for the Guardian of London. His latest book
is called Bring On the Apocalypse: Collected
Writing.



