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London bombings: Why does Blair oppose an inquiry into intelligence
failures?
By Chris Marsden
13 July 2005
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Speaking in Parliament this week, Prime Minister Tony Blair
rejected demands from the Conservative Party opposition for an
inquiry into the July 7 London bombings that have so far have
resulted in 52 confirmed deaths.
Tory leader Michael Howard called on July 10 for an examination
of whether anything more could have been done to prevent
the bombings. This broached the issue of possible intelligence
failuresparticularly the decision by the Joint Terrorism
Analysis Centre (JTAC) to downgrade the threat level facing the
UK in June from severe general to substantial.
Cabinet minister John Hutton denounced the proposal, saying
every ounce of effort was needed to bring the criminals
to justice and that there was no evidence of complacency
on the part of the security services. Blair himself told Parliament
that no specific intelligence could have prevented
the bombings, which he again attributed to Islamist terrorists.
The Tories clearly feared being denounced for breaking national
unity, so Howard retreated from demanding an immediate inquiry
in favour of suggesting a future probe. A limited inquiry
could, in due course, provide a calm and dispassionate forum for
learning appropriate lessons, helping to quell unhelpful speculation,
he said.
In opposing such an inquiry, Blair is following in the footsteps
of the Bush administration. After the terror attacks of September
11, 2001, the White House categorically opposed an inquiry into
why the destruction of the World Trade Centre and the attack on
the Pentagon had not been prevented.
Only months later, after revelations emerged that the FBI command
had ignored warnings from lower-level officials of a possible
hijack bombing at the hands of Islamic terrorists, and that Bush
himself had ignored similar warnings from his intelligence briefers,
did Congress hold hearings. These were eventually followed by
the establishment of a special commission, which held its own
hearings and issued a report last summer.
Both the congressional report and the report issued by the
commission proceeded from the premise that no section of the state
or intelligence apparatus wilfully acted in a manner to allow
the terrorists to carry out an attack. Instead, they attributed
the failure of the FBI, the CIA and other government agencies
to foil the hijackers to organisational glitches and an inability
to connect the dots.
In the London bombings, too, a number of questions have emerged.
(See Unanswered questions in London
bombings.)
* Why was Britains threat level not raised in advance
of the G8 summit of major industrial nations held last week at
Gleneagles, near Edinburgh?
* Are reports that the Israeli embassy was informed of the
bombings beforehand true?
* Did Israels security service Mossad warn MI5 of a possible
attack, as has been suggested by Stratfor?
In the past two days, more questions have been raised that
demand answers. Not least is the fact that military explosives
appear to have been used, according to Superintendent Christophe
Chaboud, the chief of the French anti-terrorist police, who is
working with Scotland Yard. Who would have access to such explosives?
There is one additional anomaly. On the morning of July 7,
BBC Radio Five Live carried an interview with Peter
Power, managing Director of Visor Consultants, a crisis management
company. Power is a former Scotland Yard official who worked with
the Anti-Terrorist Branch.
Power told Radio Five, At half past nine
this morning we were actually running an exercise for a company
of over a thousand people in London based on simultaneous bombs
going off precisely at the railway stations where it happened
this morning, so I still have the hairs on the back of my neck
standing up right now.
The host then asked Power, To get this quite straight,
you were running an exercise to see how you would cope with this,
and it happened while you were running the exercise?
Power replied, Precisely, and it was about half past
nine this morning, we planned this for a company and for obvious
reasons I dont want to reveal their name but theyre
listening and theyll know it.
This raises a number of issues. For which company was the exercise
staged? Does the company have any government connections? Who
decided the timing and location of the exercise?
Assertions that an investigation into the workings of the British
government in the run-up to the bombings would be a diversion
are a means by which the ruling elite defends itself from scrutiny.
Those who will suffer the consequences are millions of working
people, who are being asked to sacrifice their democratic rights.
Every day brings fresh demands for greater repressive measures.
The government insists, on the one hand, that the so-called
war against terrorism is the single most important
issue facing the world, while on the other it maintains that the
public does not have a right to know how the bomb attacks on London,
resulting in the greatest loss of life in a terror attack on British
soil since World War II, were allowed to happen.
Even if the government were to relent and acquiesce to a probe
of its role in the events of July 7, no confidence could be placed
in any investigation carried out by the establishment parties
and the British state. They would serve a similar function as
the official inquiries conducted in the USto obscure the
most vital facts, provide a rationale for further attacks on democratic
rights at home, and justify militarism and aggression abroad.
Any genuinely independent investigation can come about only as
the product of an independent political movement of the working
class against the ruling elite and its policies of war and social
reaction.
See Also:
Unanswered questions in London bombings
[11 July 2005]
London terror bombings: a political crime
[8 July 2005]
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