|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
Hutton Inquiry: A black day for democracy in Britain
Statement of the Socialist Equality Party (Britain)
3 February 2004
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Lord Huttons inquiry into the death of whistleblower
Dr. David Kelly has revealed the advanced stage of decay of British
democracy. It is a watershed in the attack on democratic rights
that has been waged for more than two decades by successive governments
and which has dramatically accelerated under the Labour government
of Prime Minister Tony Blair.
The fundamental question underlying the inquiry was: Do the
British people have the right to hold their government accountable
on matters pertaining to life and death?
Huttons verdict was a resounding No. He has
come down squarely in favour of a quasi-dictatorial form of government,
in which those who hold power are not answerable for their actions
to the people. He has, moreover, set in motion a witch-hunt against
any section of the media that maintains the slightest independence
from the government and subjects its claims to critical review.
His findings clear the way for an unprecedented attack on freedom
of the press and free speech.
To understand the import of Huttons findings, it is necessary
to review the circumstances under which the inquiry was convened.
Months before hostilities against Iraq began, Blair decided
to line his government up behind the drive of the Bush administration
for war. He launched a propaganda offensive aimed at terrorizing
the population and stampeding it behind the war drive, making
blood-curdling claims about Iraqi weapons of mass destruction
and an imminent threat to the safety of the British people that
have since been proven to be utterly false.
Blair pursued his war policy in the face of the indisputable
opposition of the majority of people in Britain, not to mention
the popular will of broad masses of people in the rest of Europe,
the US, and around the world. Some two million people marched
in London on February 15, 2003 to oppose the coming war, in the
largest political demonstration in British history. This and similar
expressions of popular opposition and anger showed that a large
majority of the population had made its own evaluation of Blairs
WMD assertions, and concluded they were not credible.
Blairs response was to declare that the essence of democracy
was the conduct of state policy in defiance of the popular will.
His drive to war provoked significant differences within the
state apparatus. This included factions within the intelligence
services that objected to the manipulation and misuse of intelligence
for the purpose of justifying a predetermined policy of military
intervention. The eventual response of the Blair government was
to silence all such opposition by outing one of its
chief critics from within the intelligence establishmentDr.
Kellyand making an example of him.
The dossiers of September 2002 and February 2003 making the
case for war aroused serious criticism as soon as they were published.
Septembers dossier contained the by now infamous claim that
Iraq could launch weapons of mass destruction within 45 minutes,
and the charge that Iraq had sought to purchase nuclear materials
from Africa. The claim that Niger had supplied yellow cake uranium
to Saddam Hussein was exposed as a fraud by the International
Atomic Energy Agency only weeks after it was made a centrepiece
of US and British propaganda. Within a matter of hours, the February
2003 dossier was found to have been largely plagiarised from a
US student thesis that was based on intelligence more than ten
years old.
Blair hoped that victory in Iraq would allow him to suppress
such uncomfortable facts and to cow his political critics. Instead,
the declaration of an end to hostilities was followed by mounting
popular resistance within Iraq to the joint US/British occupation,
prompting fears that it would prove to be a new Vietnam.
Under these circumstances, sections of the security apparatus
sought to exonerate themselves and pin the blame for the Iraqi
debacle firmly on Blair. Hence the decision of Kelly, Britains
top weapons inspector and a man intimately involved in the preparation
of the September, 2002 dossier, to give an unscheduled interview
to the BBCs Today reporter, Andrew Gilligan.
When Gilligan reported at the end of March, 2003 that his anonymous
source (Kelly) had spoken of significant discontent within the
security apparatus as to the bona fides of the September dossier
and had blamed Blairs Director of Communications Alastair
Campbell for having made it more sexy, the government
decided to mount a campaign to silence the BBC and demand a retraction.
The government made it known that Kelly was the source of the
Gilligan report and forced him to testify before two parliamentary
inquiries. On July 18, Kelly was found dead in the woods near
his home.
This event led to demands for an investigation not only of
the circumstances leading to Kellys death, but also of the
way in which the war had been prepared and whether false intelligence
claims had been employed by the government.
Blair could not countenance any such investigation, and determined
that any official inquiry would focus exclusively on Kellys
death and his governments dispute with the BBC. To this
end Blair appointed Lord Hutton to preside over an inquiry that
was designed to conceal rather than reveal the truth.
Hutton, a former Lord Chief Justice of Northern Ireland, had
made his reputation defending British soldiers in Northern Ireland
during the inquiry into Bloody Sunday 1972, and prosecuting alleged
terrorists in the no-jury Diplock courts. Considered a safe
pair of hands, he was given a narrow remit that did not
extend beyond examining the immediate circumstances leading up
to Kellys death. Though he went on to take oral and written
evidence from leading figures within the civil service and the
government, right up to Blair himself, that dealt extensively
with the preparation of the September 2002 intelligence dossier,
Huttons verdict is entirely consistent with this initial
proscription.
Many commentators who followed the inquirys proceedings
expressed incredulity over Huttons final ruling. From the
standpoint of the facts placed before himthe mass of evidence
showing that the government must have known its intelligence was
dubious, at best, and that it had sought to sex up
the dossier, as Kelly had claimedHuttons findings
make no sense. But politically, Hutton has performed the job with
which he was charged.
In order to arrive at his absurd conclusionclearing Blair
and the rest of his government of any wrongdoing and instead attacking
both the BBC and KelleyHutton declared that the objective
fact that no WMDs were found in Iraq and the governments
claims were proven to be false was irrelevant! All that mattered
was whether Blair knowingly used false intelligence claims, and
since there was no proof as to the prime ministers mental
processes as the time, he had to be given the benefit of the doubt
and politically vindicated.
Huttons pose of agnosticism toward Blairs intelligence
claims did not prevent him from declaringwithout any substantiationthat
the government and the security services had acted in good faith
in proclaiming that Iraq represented a real and immediate danger.
Nor did it prevent him from denouncing as impermissible any questioning
of their integrity.
Even with regard to Kellys death, the government was
found to be blameless, and its representatives of having acted
impeccably. Hutton ignored all testimony showing that the government
outed the scientist as part of a campaign to silence its critics,
including the diary entry of Campbell explaining that naming Kelly
would fk Gilligan.
Sole blame was placed on the shoulders of Gilligan and the
BBC.
Gilligan was found to have committed the cardinal sin of impugning
the integrity of the government and the security services, especially
by his remark that the government probably knew its
claim that Iraq could launch WMD within 45-minutes was wrong.
The BBCs board of governors was found to have defective
editorial structures because it had allowed his story to stand
and was condemned for having defended their reporter from Campbells
witch-hunt.
Hutton also concluded that Kelly was partially responsible
for his own misfortune, underscoring the ruthlessness of the British
state, even against one of its own.
Thus, reality has been turned on its head.
Gilligan and the BBC are held to an exacting account for a
never repeated remark made during a one minute, early morning
radio broadcast. In contrast, the government and its spy chiefs
are not required to answer for using untrue statements to drag
the country into a war that has killed thousands of innocent people,
as well as nearly sixty British soldiers, and reduced a country
to ruins.
The verdict against the BBC has major implications for the
future of the corporation and more broadly for press freedoms
in Britain. The entire future of the BBC as a public broadcaster
may be thrown into question when its charter is due for renewal
in 2006. The commercial stations may be allowed a greater share
of the market, with one of the major beneficiaries being the governments
most fervent supporterRupert Murdoch.
Huttons report marks a black day for democratic rights
in Britain. In overriding the right to publish a story so clearly
based upon the public interest, Hutton has confirmed the contempt
felt by the political elite towards the popular will. His findings
prove that all avenues through which working people were once
able to exert some form of control over the government and the
state have been closed down.
His conclusions must be set in the context of the offensive
against civil liberties that has accompanied the governments
so-called war on terrorfrom the detaining of
people indefinitely without charge to plans to implement legislation
enabling parliament to be bypassed in the event of a state of
emergency being declared.
Not even during the Second World War, when Britain did face
a real threat of invasion, have so many basic democratic freedoms
been jettisoned.
This cannot be attributed to the personal failings of Blair
or his cabinet. The government has faced virtually no opposition
to its warmongering and attacks on democratic rights, whether
from the judiciary, the opposition parties, the media or any other
section of the establishment. And it has been able to build on
a legacy left to it by previous Conservative governments.
The establishment of a legal framework for a de facto dictatorship
must express profound social and economic processes. It manifests
an international phenomenon that finds its most finished expression
in the United States.
Political and economic power has become concentrated in the
hands of a super-rich financial oligarchy, which rules over a
society riven by historically unprecedented levels of social inequality.
In Britain, the richest 1,000 individuals have a combined personal
wealth of more than £155 billion, largely accumulated as
a result of government policies aimed at slashing corporate taxation
and cutting public spending. The aim of these policies is to transform
the country into a cheap labour platform for global investors.
So pronounced are class antagonisms, so great is the contradiction
between the interests of the rulers and the ruled, that the democratic
process has become atrophied and sclerotic. The broad mass of
the population must be excluded from the political process in
order that there can be no check on the activities of an elite
whose interests are diametrically opposed to those of the working
class.
This common pro-big business agenda ensures that none of the
old parties enjoy mass support. This is especially true of the
Labour Party, whose traditional working class constituency is
the target for its right-wing policies. Whatever their tactical
differences, all sections of the ruling class are in full agreement
with the programme of imperialist aggression and the destruction
of workers living standards that is being spearheaded by
Blairs government.
Only this can explain why Hutton and Blair believe they can
get away with such a crude whitewash.
The necessary conclusions must be drawn. Working people cannot
look to any section of the establishment or to dissenting elements
within the state to oppose war and defend their essential social
interests and democratic rights. Popular hostility to the government
must find independent political expression through the construction
of a new workers party based on a socialist programme. As
part of this fight, the demand must be raised for the immediate
withdrawal of all occupying forces from Iraq, and for Blair and
Bush to be held to account for their war crimes.
See Also:
Hutton Inquiry: British media
warns of a whitewash too far
[30 January 2004]
Britain: Hutton inquiry whitewashes
Blair government over Iraq war
[29 January 2004]
Britain: Lessons of
the Hutton Inquiry
[24 September 2003]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |