Archbishop of Canterbury: US 'is worse than the British Empire at its peak'
Last updated at 18:22pm on 25.11.07
Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams has heavily criticised U.S foreign policy
The Archbishop of Canterbury has launched a stinging attack on America, comparing it unfavourably with the British Empire at its peak.
Dr Rowan Williams condemned America for moving on from Iraq and leaving others to "put it back together".
In an interview with Muslim lifestyle magazine Emel, reported in The Sunday Times, the head of the Church of England said America's attempts to accumulate influence and control around the world were "not working".
America in Iraq had tried a "short burst of violent action" in an attempt to "clear the decks", he said.
He told Emel magazine: "It is one thing to take over a territory and then pour energy and resources in to administering it and normalising it.
"Rightly or wrongly, that's what the British Empire did - in India, for example.
"It is another thing to go in on the assumption that a quick burst of violent action will somehow clear the decks and that you can move on and other people will put it back together - Iraq, for example."
Of Britain's presence in Iraq, he said: "A lot of the pressure around the invasion of Iraq was 'We've got to do something! Then we'll feel better.' That's very dangerous."
He said the modern Western definition of humanity is "clearly not working very well" and said there is something about Western modernity "which really does eat away at the soul".
Dr Williams has been a persistent critic of the Iraq conflict.
Last month he said the Iraq conflict had wreaked "terrible damage" on the region. He said "urgent action" was needed to stabilise the country.
Reader views (1)
Here's a sample of the latest views published.
Williams, and his predecessor, have been weak in their leadership of the Anglican Church. He has courted favour in the Muslim world in an attempt to appease the atrocities committed in the name of Islam. He has been party to the catastrophic rift formed in the Church over homosexuality and the ordination of women (I'm not religious myself, but do not understand how a creed that is supposedly based upon the word of God can be amended to satisfy a shift in moral values).
I believe that the US has undoubtedly lost the moral high ground and there is a place to debate this, but it is not in the context of comments made by a failing church leader.
- Keith Lonsdale, Doncaster
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