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Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair gestures as he arrives at the RTE studios, where he will appear on The Late Late Show, in Dublin, Ireland September 3, 2010. Blair was in Ireland to promote his newly published autobiography, "A Journey". [Agencies] |
DUBLIN - Anti-war protesters hurled shoes and eggs at Tony Blair on Saturday as he arrived for the first public signing of his fast-selling memoir.
Scores of demonstrators chanted that Blair had "blood on his hands" as the former British prime minister arrived at a Dublin book store. A shoe, eggs and other projectiles were thrown toward Blair as he emerged from a car, but did not hit him.
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"A Journey" mounts a strong defense of Blair's policies during his decade as prime minister, including the 2003 invasion of Iraq.
In an interview aired Saturday, Blair rejected claims that the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan had increased Muslim radicalization, saying said "wicked and backward-looking" radical Islam is the greatest threat to global security.
Blair told the BBC World Service "the biggest threat in international security is this broader radicalized movement."
He said al-Qaida-linked extremism was "loosely a global ideological movement, but Iran is a state sponsor of it."