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"I don't think military intervention is the correct solution. I regret what we as a country have done so far," Ford said
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MADRID,
August 27 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Joining a chorus
of Hollywood top starts speaking out against the Bush
administration’s war on Iraq, superstar Harrison Ford launched
Wednesday, August 27, a broadside at U.S. policy on the Arab country.
At
a safe distance from his homeland, veteran Hollywood actor Harrison
Ford on Wednesday launched a broadside at US policy on Iraq, his
country's gun laws -- and the film industry for producing "video
games" for teenagers.
"I'm
very disturbed about the direction American foreign policy is
going," said Ford, at a safe distance from his homeland, after
reports that the U.S. post-war fatalities having exceeded those during
the actual three-week invasion of the oil-rich country.
"I
think something needs to be done to help alleviate the conditions
which have created a disenfranchised and angry faction in the Middle
East.
"I
don't think military intervention is the correct solution. I regret
what we as a country have done so far," said Chicago-born veteran
superstar, 62.
Ford
is in Madrid to promote his latest release "Hollywood
Homicide", a story of two moonlighting Los Angeles policemen.
He
also slammed the American film industry for relying on hi-tech
wizardry at the expense of thrilling plots.
"I
think American films right now are suffering from an excess of scale.
Lots of movies we're seeing now are more akin to video games than
stories about human life and relationships," said Ford, while
noting "12- to 20-year-olds are maybe the largest economic force
in the U.S. movie business."
Although
on screen Ford has starred in many action-packed, gun-toting
thrillers, Ford abhors liberal U.S. gun laws.
"I'm
very troubled by the proliferation of arms, at the fact so many people
in the United States carry guns. It obviously contributes greatly to
the crime problems we have. I'm sure gun laws should be strengthened
in the United States. I just don't know the correct mechanism."
On
Wednesday, February 5, double Oscar winner Dustin
Hoffman accused the Bush administration of "manipulating the
grief of the country" post-September 11 to win backing for a
possible war with Iraq.
Hoffman,
speaking as he picked up the life-time achievement prize at the Empire
magazine film awards in central London said : "I believe, though
I may wrong because I am no expert, that this war is about what most
wars are about: hegemony, money, power and oil."
U.S.
movie star Martin
Sheen on Saturday, January 11, led thousands of people in a rowdy
protest march in Los Angeles against Bush's plans to wage war on Iraq.
"We
are telling the world that we are patriotic Americans but we do not
support going to war with Iraq."
On
a growing list of Hollywood celebrities speaking out against war,
actor George Clooney made a strong case against the Bush
administration’s "war
mongering", this time on a German screen.
"America's
policies frustrate me,…I think a war against Iraq is as unavoidable
as it senseless. I think it's coming. But I also think the real danger
is going to be what happens after it," Clooney said Sunday,
February 23.
Castigating
him for publicly criticizing the Iraq war, the Baseball Hall of Fame
has scrapped a screening of one of Tim
Robbins movies.
In
an open letter published on Washington Post, U.S. actor Sean
Penn called wrote addressing Bush: " I beg you, help save
America before yours is a legacy of shame and horror. Don't destroy
our children's future."
Famed
U.S. filmmaker Michael Moore used his Oscar win Sunday, March 23, to
launch a diatribe on wartime Bush and invasion of Iraq.
"We
are against this war Mr Bush. Shame
on you. Shame on you!" Moore said addressing an audience of
3,500, including most of Hollywood's top stars.
Joining
he army of anti-war advocates, George
Michael recorded a new song protesting Britain's unwavering
support for the U.S.-led war on Iraq.