TAKE ACTION! Protest the Nomination of George W. Bush and Tony Blair for Nobel Peace Prize
They say that satire died when Henry Kissinger was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, but if a Right-wing Norwegian MP has
his way, the Nobel committee will be spitting on its grave.
Harald Tom Nesvik, a member of the Norwegian Parliament from the Right-wing Party of Progress, has nominated U.K. Prime
Minister Tony Blair and U.S. President George W. Bush for the Nobel Peace Prize for "decisive action against terrorism,
something I believe in the future will be the greatest threat to peace." According to the provisions of Nobel, the
winner of the Nobel Peace Prize "shall have done the most or the best work for fraternity between nations, for the
abolition or reduction of standing armies and for the holding and promotion of peace congresses."
Tony Blair has ordered more military actions than any U.K. leader since World War II, with at least one military action
every year since 1998. George W. Bush has urged budgets massively increasing the size and funding of the U.S. standing
military, continued and deepened U.S. military aid for the on-going civil war in Colombia and Israeli military
occupation of Palestine, and initiated a war not only against Afghanistan, but an undefined, open-ended "War on
Terrorism" which administration officials daily threaten to expand to other nations such Iran, North Korea, and Iraq.
Vice President Dick Cheney told the Washington Post that the campaign of warfare the President has launched "may never
end. At least, not in our lifetimes." Both Bush and Blair have refused to work with multilateral consultation and
diplomacy through peace congresses, with Bush's refusal to secure UN Security Council approval before initiating the war
in Afghanistan, and Blair's refusal to place the British troops occupying Sierra Leone under the command of United
Nations Peacekeeping forces.
Urge the Nobel Institute to reject the nomination of Tony Blair and George W. Bush. Reckless and ever-expanding pursuit
of war is not peace, and awarding the Peace Prize for massive world-wide military campaigns would be a slap in the face
of peace and justice activists world wide.
For more Bush and Blair's nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize, see: http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,645075,00.html
To take action, go to: http://www.eskimo.com/~cwj2/actions/bushblairnobel.html