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Dateline Earth 3205.215
SDF:
Hallo, Good bording, and Welcome. I have on the blue sofa today
Dr Drakkir Hands, until recently foreign minister of the Mars Association
of Free Colonies. Drakkir, thank you for being here.
DH: Thank you for having me, Surre-David.
SDF: Let's talk about your new book - it's the second volume of
your autobigraphy, 'Unreliable Memoirs', and available from all
good bookshops, as they say. And we are of course exclusively serialising
it here at INN over the next few octants. With that in mind, I hope
you won't mind answering a few questions about issues you raise
in it.
DH: Fire away.
SDF: Let's begin with Binni, if we may. You point the finger
at the Wolf government for encouraging this warlord, President Ancongo.
DH: No, that's not quite true, Surre-David. Wolf corporate
interests were certainly involved in the Free Republic of Binni,
and helped fuel its economic growth, and were willing to sell it
arms, which led to its expansionist foreign policy, but I wouldn't
want to lay the Ancongo regime's crimes at the Wolf government's
door. As you'll see in the book, I regard
Lord Young as a sound chap whom I got on very well with on a personal
level.
SDF: Even though they sent a heavy cruiser and landed Marines
in the FRB?
DH: They acted to preserve the lives and property of Wolfer
nationals, as any responsible government would have done.
SDF: And the nuclear weapons allegation?
DH: I never alleged Wolf had supplied nuclear weapons -
at least, not publically. That was Claire Tall, our special envoy
to Binni, and she was repeating sound intelligence we had that Ancongo
had tried to acquire such weapons from Wolf.
SDF: But the Wolfers refused him.
DH: Yes, as it turns out. But we didn't know that for sure
at the time, and had to factor the potential threat into our calculations.
SDF: You wouldn't say you 'sexed up' the threat in order
to justify military action against the FRB?
DH: We presented the evidence in the most favourable light,
of course. But in fact we didn't intervene against the FRB - that
was Earth. We only moved in to restore order afterwards, and have
since withdrawn.
SDF: Although there were rumours of a 'secret deal' with
Earth over Binni.
DH: You may very well think that. I couldn't possibly comment.
SDF: And what about the Sirian intervention on Binni? Did
Mars really discuss firing at Sirian forces, as you claim in the
book?
DH:
Yes, it was discussed. Sirius - for all of its utopian protestations
- was to my mind trying to throw its weight around militarily, to
achieve its own political purposes. Nothing wrong with that, but
they had to face up to the fact that some other nations took a different
view, and if they insisted on pressing the issue - when no Sirian
interests were at stake - then consequences may flow from that.
At the time they were discussing landing a Ground Force division
in support of the Free Republic of Binni. Given the history of our
relations with the Ancongo regime and the delicate state of negotiations
with the
FRB we regarded that as a threatening act, and were not prepared
to allow it, and if that meant deterring Sirian ships militarily,
well, that was an option we were prepared to consider. But as it
happens they didn't press the point, which was probably just as
well for all concerned.
SDF: Although this wasn't the last time you had a run-in
with the Sirian government, was it? You were later forced to publically
apologise for upsetting them.
DH: I think 'forced' is overstating the case - I reached
a decision in conjunction with my ICC colleagues. But yes, I had
my difficulties with the Sirians. They seemed to have this idea
that I supported their rather legalistic view of the universe
- which I most certainly did not, although it may have been politic
on occasion to say I did. But over IFF membership - which is the
incident you are referring to - all I said was that I would not
countenance the SSR trying to change the character of the IFF which
the treaty powers had negotiated. They decided to take extreme umbrage,
for whatever internal reasons of
their own.
SDF: But you did call them 'bureaucratic'.
DH: I did. And I'll repeat it: the SSR is bureaucratic.
And I could also add...
SDF: Well Drakkir, I'd love to discuss this further with
you, but the clock is against us. However, I hope you'll be able
to come back next time, when we can discuss the Venerian Entente
and Lee Zhang, whom you describe as 'possibly the most dangerous
man in the Universe.' Drakkir Hands, thank you.
DH: Thank you, Surre-David.
SDF: And now, Boira, with a summary of the news.
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