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Chilcot Report: British Inquiry Finds Iraq War ‘Went Badly Wrong’

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07.06.2016 at 01:03pm

Chilcot Report: British Inquiry Finds Iraq War 'Went Badly Wrong'

Chris Hannas, Voice of America

The head of an inquiry into Britain's role in the Iraq War said Wednesday the conflict was "an intervention that went badly wrong with consequences to this day."

Former civil servant John Chilcot spoke as his panel released a long-awaited report that drew on several years of public hearings and analysis of 150,000 documents.  They were trying to answer whether the U.S.-led invasion was necessary and whether the unrest that followed should have been anticipated.

"Military action in Iraq might have been necessary at some point, but in March 2003 there was no imminent threat from Saddam Hussein," Chilcot said.

He said the decision to go to war was made before the international community had exhausted opportunities to contain and disarm Iraq and that judgments about the extent of the threat from weapons of mass destruction were presented "with a certainty that was not justified."

​​No WMDs

No weapons of mass destruction have been found in Iraq.

Chilcot said the risks of internal strife and al-Qaida activity in Iraq, as well as regional instability, were explicitly noted before the invasion began.  He also said former Prime Minister Tony Blair had been warned that military action would increase the threat Britain faced from al-Qaida.

Blair has rejected accusations that he acted dishonestly in making the case for a war that killed 179 British troops.

"Whether people agree or disagree with my decision to take military action against Saddam Hussein, I took it in good faith and in what I believed to be the best interests of the country," he said Wednesday.

More

Inquiry Slams Blair Over Iraq War, Reveals Secret Commitment to Bush by Reuters

Scathing Report Slams Blair Over Botched Iraq War by Associated Press

UK Report Criticizes Tony Blair, Legal Basis for Iraq War by Wall Street Journal

UK Chilcot Report on Iraq War: Findings at a Glance by BBC

Long-awaited British Inquiry into Iraq War Finds Failure at Multiple Levels by Washington Post

UK: Chilcot Report on Iraq War Offers Devastating Critique of Tony Blair by New York Times

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davidbfpo

After a very long wait the Chilcot Report has finally arrived and has extensive coverage today, although the sheer bulk means it will take weeks before it is fully absorbed.

I too was skeptical that with a retired senor civil servant, or “mandarin” would produce anything of note. A Guardian journalist sums up well many people’s reaction: ‘The Chilcot report is an unprecedented, devastating indictment of how a prime minister was allowed to make decisions by discarding all pretence at cabinet government, subverting the intelligence agencies, and making exaggerated claims about threats to Britain’s national security.

This is not the whitewash sceptics had previously predicted the inquiry by the former senior Whitehall mandarin would be’.
See for more: https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2016/jul/06/chilcot-indictment-of-tony-blair-could-hardly-have-been-more-serious

Professor Paul Rogers writes well and his latest comment ends with: ‘If this week’s debate over the Chilcot Report concentrates almost entirely on Blair and Iraq and does not even begin to recognise this wider dimension, it will have been a tragic missed opportunity to address where the West has really gone wrong’.
Link: https://theconversation.com/there-was-a-post-invasion-plan-for-iraq-but-the-west-has-learned-nothing-from-its-failure-62004?

Peter Oborne, a conservative journalist with an independent streak, wrote a short book before the report was published and Paul Rogers reviewed it here: https://www.opendemocracy.net/paul-rogers/peter-obornes-not-chilcot-report-review?

Today the media focus has been on the politicians, notably Tony Blair and the senior civil & military leadership – who were found wanting.

Tony Blair’s statement today is of note and he does accept FULL responsibility: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/video_and_audio/headlines/36727331