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Britain: Blair caught in lies over Iraqi WMDs
By Julie Hyland
31 May 2003
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Prime Minister Tony Blairs fleeting visit to Basra Thursday
May 29 was meant to vindicate his decision to defy popular opposition
and join the US-led attack on Iraq.
Thursdays visit was the first by any Western leader to
Iraq since US and British forces invaded the country, supposedly
in search of its weapons of mass destruction (WMDs).
Arriving at the port of Umm Qasr in an RAF Hercules C130 plane,
Blair addressed 400 British troops in Basra, expressing pride
at the magnificent job they have done.
I know there were a lot of disagreements in the country
about the wisdom of my decision to order the action, he
continued. But I can assure you of one thingthere
is absolutely no dispute in Britain at all about your professionalism
and your courage and your dedication and not just in the way you
won the war, which was extraordinary, but the way you are conducting
the peace, which is remarkable.
In truth, the US and UK governments plans for the
peace in Iraq are just as bitterly disputed as were their
plans for war.
There could be no victorious walk about for the
prime minister. Army officers had informed Blair that his visit
would have to be tightly controlled and confined to select areas,
under immediate military control, as his safety could not be guaranteed
elsewhere.
The coalition forces are widely perceived as an army of occupation,
not liberation. In the last week alone, at least six US soldiers
have been killed and dozens of others wounded in separate guerrilla
attacks.
Civil unrest over the US presence is also growing. On Wednesday,
May 28, local residents in the town of Hit, 90 miles northwest
of Baghdad, rioted in protest over intrusive weapons searches
by Iraqi police and US soldiers. According to Reuters, the town
of 155,000 people was in uproar as angry residents
surged into the streets, burning police cars and throwing stones
and handmade grenades at the Americans.
A local man told the news agency that the trouble began after
police and US troops carried out house-to-house searches, supposedly
looking for weapons. The Iraqi police were very rough with
our women, he said. They forced their way into houses
without knocking, sometimes when women were sleeping.
Another complained, Saddam is gone, but we want the occupation
to end. The Americans must know they can never come back to town.
Far from ending, the occupation is being consolidated with
the US administration announcing this week that it intends to
increase the number of troops deployed in Iraq, as it prepares
a military campaign aimed at stamping out such resistance.
If the prospect of British forces becoming embroiled in a bitter
and protracted war of suppression were not enough to revive criticisms
of Blairs pro-war strategy, the prime minister has not been
helped by US officials, who have called into question the entire
basis of the invasion.
US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfelds admission this
week that Iraq may not have had weapons of mass destruction after
all, has created a furore in Britain.
In his typically cynical manner, Rumsfeld brushed aside questions
over Americas failure to recover such weapons by saying
that Iraq may have destroyed them before the war. The search for
hidden weapons was continuing, Rumsfeld said, but it is
also possible that they [the Iraqis] decided that they would destroy
them prior to a conflict.
The claim that Saddam Hussein possessed chemical, biological
and nuclear weapons was crucial to US and UK justifications for
attacking Iraq. Even on March 18, President George W. Bush was
insisting to the world that Intelligence leaves no doubt
that Iraq continues to possess and conceal lethal weapons.
The US administration may believe it can simply set its previous
allegations to one side, but in doing so it risks hanging its
most loyal ally out to dry.
For Blair, allegations of Iraqi WMDs were the crucial justification
for defying popular opposition to the war and committing British
troops alongside the US. On February 15, almost 2 million people
took to the streets of London to condemn plans for warthe
largest demonstration in British history. Blair himself acknowledged
that he was in a small minority in supporting a US-led attack,
even turning his isolation into a badge of honour.
To this end, the prime minister became the lead advocate against
Iraq over its alleged weapons arsenal. Government departments
churned out one document after another, supposedly outlining Iraqs
terrifying capabilities, whilst the prime minister toured Europe
lecturing other heads of state on the threat posed to world security
by Husseins regime.
Blair insisted that military action was necessary immediately
against Iraq or the consequences would be catastrophic. One intelligence
dossier released in September 2002 and setting out the assessment
of the British government over WMDs, warned that Saddam
Husseins regime could deploy nuclear weapons within
45 minutes.
Even as late as March 18, 2003, Blair was stridently denouncing
the claim that Iraq no longer possessed WMDs. We are asked
to accept Saddam decided to destroy those weapons. I say that
such a claim is palpably absurd, he said.
As Blair was making his appearance in Basra, he was being denounced
as a liar in Britain.
Robin Cook, former foreign secretary who resigned from the
government over the war, described Rumsfelds admission that
Iraq may have destroyed its weapons as breathtaking.
It meant that the prime minister had taken Britain to war on a
false basis, Cook said. That has to be investigateda
[House of Commons] select committee is one way of pursuing it.
Peter Kilfoyle MP said, This is absolutely dangerous
for Tony Blair. The potential charge is that the House of Commons
has been misled.
Senior intelligence officers have also entered the row, albeit
anonymously, with one informing the BBC that the original version
of the dossier released in September was doctored by the government
to suit its political ends.
The dossier had been transformed a week before
it was published on the orders of Downing Street, the official
said.
The classic example was the statement that weapons of
mass destruction were ready for use within 45 minutes. That information
was not in the original draft. It was included in the dossier
against our wishes because it wasnt reliable, he told
the BBC.
Government efforts to calm the row have so far backfired. Responding
to the BBCs claims, Defence Minister Adam Ingram denied
that the UK had gone to war on a false pretext, claiming that
the United Nations had also provided damning evidence
of Iraqs WMDs.
Almost immediately, Ewen Buchanan, spokesman for leading UN
weapons inspector Dr Hans Blix, rejected Ingrams claim.
Blix had never asserted that Iraq definitely had illegal
weaponry, Buchanan said.
See Also:
US government lied about Iraqi weapons
to justify war
[31 May 2003]
Faced with growing resistance
US prepares military repression in Iraq
[30 May 2003]
Britain: Blair government
caught out in plagiarism and lies over latest Iraq dossier
[10 February 2003]
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