Difference between revisions of "Talk:Dean McLoughlin"

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"As the hostage deadline neared, there were signs of a shift by the Foreign Office, which distanced itself from the US in an appeal on the al-Arabiya television station by an Arabic-speaking British diplomat, Dean McLoughlin. He emphasised to the hostage takers that the Americans were holding the women, not the British. He said: "The British forces in Iraq have no Iraqi female prisoners, not one."
 
"As the hostage deadline neared, there were signs of a shift by the Foreign Office, which distanced itself from the US in an appeal on the al-Arabiya television station by an Arabic-speaking British diplomat, Dean McLoughlin. He emphasised to the hostage takers that the Americans were holding the women, not the British. He said: "The British forces in Iraq have no Iraqi female prisoners, not one."
 
 
The statement was the first clear attempt by Britain to disown the actions of the US."
 
The statement was the first clear attempt by Britain to disown the actions of the US."
 
<ref> HOSTAGE CRISIS: KIDNAP THREATENS BLAIR ATTEMPT TO HEAL LABOUR RIFT OVER WAR, The Independent (London) September 22, 2004, pg4</ref>
 
<ref> HOSTAGE CRISIS: KIDNAP THREATENS BLAIR ATTEMPT TO HEAL LABOUR RIFT OVER WAR, The Independent (London) September 22, 2004, pg4</ref>
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He reappeared in the media spotlight when photographs that allegedly show soldiers humiliating Iraqi prisoners were made public. <ref> Court martial: Muted response from Arab world: World media Anger expected to increase, The Guardian (London) - January 20, 2005, pg4 </ref>
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==Notes==
 
==Notes==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>

Revision as of 15:38, 23 February 2008

Current head of Islamic Media Unit

Pointers

His first major media appearance was when he made an appeal in Arabic during a Hostage crisis in Iraq 19 September 2004. [1]

"As the hostage deadline neared, there were signs of a shift by the Foreign Office, which distanced itself from the US in an appeal on the al-Arabiya television station by an Arabic-speaking British diplomat, Dean McLoughlin. He emphasised to the hostage takers that the Americans were holding the women, not the British. He said: "The British forces in Iraq have no Iraqi female prisoners, not one." The statement was the first clear attempt by Britain to disown the actions of the US." [2]

He reappeared in the media spotlight when photographs that allegedly show soldiers humiliating Iraqi prisoners were made public. [3]


Notes

  1. Press Association September 19, 2004, Sunday,
  2. HOSTAGE CRISIS: KIDNAP THREATENS BLAIR ATTEMPT TO HEAL LABOUR RIFT OVER WAR, The Independent (London) September 22, 2004, pg4
  3. Court martial: Muted response from Arab world: World media Anger expected to increase, The Guardian (London) - January 20, 2005, pg4