|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
Blair caught out again over Iraqi weapons of mass destruction
By Julie Hyland
31 December 2003
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Prime Minister Tony Blair has come under renewed attack for
his support for the US-led war of aggression against Iraq, following
a damning admission by Paul Bremer, US head of Iraqs puppet
Provisional Authority, that US and British troops have found no
evidence of weapons of mass destruction.
Bremer has inadvertently caught Blair out in yet another lie
over Iraqi WMDs.
During the course of an interview on ITV1s Jonathan
Dimbleby programme on December 28, Dimbleby asked Bremer whether
the Iraq Survey Group (ISG) had unearthed massive evidence
of clandestine laboratories capable of producing such weapons.
Bremer interjected, rejecting the claim as untrue. I
dont know where those words come from but that is not what
(ISG chief) David Kay has said, he said.
I have read his reports so I dont know who said
that, he went on, accusing those responsible for making
such misleading statements as being motivated by an antiwar agenda.
It sounds like a bit of a red herring to me, Bremer
said. It sounds like someone who doesnt agree with
the policy sets up a red herring then knocks it down.
In fact, Blair himself made the claim during his televised
Christmas message to British troops stationed in Iraq. In his
adjective-laden remarks the prime minister had claimed, The
Iraq Survey Group has already found massive evidence of a huge
system of clandestine laboratories, workings by scientists, plans
to develop long range ballistic missiles.
Now, frankly, these things werent being developed
unless they were developed for a purpose.
When told that the citation came direct from the prime minister,
a clearly embarrassed Bremer sought to retract his previous admission.
There is actually a lot of evidence that had been made public,
he said, including clear evidence of biological and chemical
programmes, ongoing.
The damage had already been done, however.
Blairs predicament was made worse when former United
Nations Chief Weapons Inspector Hans Blix said in a TV interview
that the ISG had failed to find any concrete evidence of WMD programmes.
In a scarcely veiled reference to Blair, he continued that those
who claimed the discovery of laboratories was proof of an Iraqi
WMD programme were resorting to innuendo. Blix has
previously stated that it was increasingly clear that
Iraq did not have any WMD capability at the time of the US-led
attack.
Bremers interview came just as Blair had left Britain
for a seasonal family break, still bathing in the political afterglow
of Saddam Husseins arrest. In response, a spokeswoman for
Blair argued that the prime minister had been referring in his
broadcast to already published material in the ISGs
interim report.
This again is not true. The ISGs interim report does
not make the same grandiose claims as Blair. Whilst citing evidence
of clandestine laboratories, it does not describe
them to be part of a huge system for developing biological
and chemical weapons capabilities. More cautiously it alleges
that the labs contained equipment suitable for continuing
research into weapons development. Contradicting itself, the report
also states that these supposedly hidden laboratories were in
fact subject to US monitoring.
The ISG report, it must be stressed, admits that no weapons
of mass destruction had been uncovered.
After the momentary shock of his faux pas, Bremer went on to
attack Dimbleby for his obsession with what he called minor details.
He ordered the reporter to Listen! As a historian
he knew that in the future people would not care about the failure
to find WMDs. Weapons of mass destruction or no weapons
of mass destruction, its important to step back a little
bit here, to see what we have done historically, he said.
But Blair sold the war to the British people on the strength
of Iraqs supposed threat to world peace and cannot simply
switch to hailing the benefits of regime change. Bremers
interview consequently provoked renewed criticism of the prime
minister by leading Church of England representatives and Labour
MPs.
Interviewed by the Times newspaper Dr David Hope, the
Archbishop of York and Britains second most senior church
leader, said, We still have not found any weapons of mass
destruction anywhere.
Are we likely to find any? Does that alter the view as
to whether we really ought to have mounted the invasion or not?
Referring to Blairs own pronouncement that he would answer
for his actions before Goda statement designed to deflect
from his refusal to answer to the British peopleHope warned
that the supreme being could also find the prime minister wanting!
There is a higher authority before whom one day we all have
to give an account, he said.
The Bishop of Durham, Dr Tom Wright, went further calling Blair
a vigilante. Blair and US President George W. Bush
did not have the credibility to deal with the problems facing
Iraq, Wright said.
For Bush and Blair to go into Iraq together was like
a bunch of white vigilantes going into Brixton to stop drug-dealing,
he told the Independent newspaper.
This is not to deny theres a problem to be sorted,
just that they are not credible people to deal with it.
Criticisms by the clergy were backed by Labour MP Clare Short,
who resigned as Blairs international development secretary
following the attack on Iraq. Short repeated her allegation that
Blair had lied when he claimed that Saddam Hussein possessed weapons
of mass destruction and called on Blair to resign. If you
are going to start getting into deceit when you are going to war
and risking human life it has gone too far, she said.
The intelligence agencies and the prime minister knew that
Iraq did not have weapons of mass destruction but continued to
claim this was the case to justify a pre-emptive strike. No
one thought there was some imminent danger, she said. That
was all talked up and talked up to a point of deceit.
Blair had been driven to go to war by his obsession with his
place in history and in order to satisfy an agreement he
had made with Bush some months before that his government would
stand by the US regardless of international law.
What followed was a complete disaster for the Middle
East, for Iraq, for the world, Short said. Blair must not
lead Labour into the 2004 election, she continued, urging him
to resign for the honour of Britain.
Former Foreign Secretary Robin Cook, who also resigned his
position in advance of the war, was more cautious, urging Blair
to recognise that he had lost public trust and should admit he
was wrong about the threat posed by Iraq.
See Also:
Britain: Senior politicians condemn internment
of foreign terrorist suspects
[27 December 2003]
US military metes out collective punishment
to Iraqi city
[22 December 2003]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |