Yahoo – AFP, Alice Ritchie, July 6, 2016
Iraq Inquiry chairman John Chilcot presents the findings of his report at the QEII Centre in London, on July 6, 2016 (AFP Photo/Dan Kitwood) |
London
(AFP) - Former British prime minister Tony Blair on Wednesday made a passionate
defence of the 2003 war in Iraq, after a long-awaited official inquiry
condemned it as woefully executed and based on flawed evidence.
His voice
cracking with emotion, Blair said he had "more sorrow, regret and apology
than you may ever know or can believe" for some mistakes in the planning
of a war that deeply divided Britain.
But, in a
two-hour press conference, he stuck resolutely to his defence, as more than 100
anti-war protesters rallied in London, shouting: "Blair lied, thousands
died" and "war criminal Tony Blair."
Former
prime minister Tony Blair said
he acted "in good faith and in what I
believed to be the best interests of the
country" (AFP Photo/Stefan
Rousseau)
|
The
long-awaited Chilcot report offered a damning verdict on Britain's role in the
US-led war, detailing the flawed intelligence, questionable legal basis and
"woefully inadequate" preparation for the occupation.
Iraq's
descent into violence and loss of life following the invasion saw 150,000
Iraqis killed by the time most British troops left in 2009.
The report
said Britain deployed troops before diplomatic options had been exhausted.
It also
highlighted how Blair wrote to president George W. Bush in July 2002, the year
before the war saying: "I will be with you, whatever."
The inquiry
found that "military action in Iraq might have been necessary at some
point. But in March 2003 there was no imminent threat from Saddam
Hussein".
Shortly
after Blair had responded to the report, current Labour Party leader Jeremy
Corbyn -- a top figure in the anti-war campaign -- directly contradicted the
former Labour premier.
"The
invasion and occupation of Iraq was a catastrophe," Corbyn, who formed the
Stop the War coalition, said in a speech to the families of British soldiers
who died.
"I now
apologise sincerely on behalf of my party for the disastrous decision to go to
war in Iraq," he said.
'No lies,
parliament not misled'
The war was
justified at the time by claims that Saddam had weapons of mass destruction,
but they were never found and the intelligence was later withdrawn.
Inquiry
chairman John Chilcot laid the blame for this firmly on spy chiefs, clearing
Blair's officials of "improperly" influencing a key intelligence
paper published in September 2002.
The report
also criticised Blair for failing to challenge Bush on the lack of planning for
the post-invasion phase -- and dismissed his assertion that the impact of local
militia and Iran could not have been predicted.
"I
accept that especially in hindsight we should have approached the situation
differently," said Blair, who was prime minister from 1997 to 2007.
But he
added: "There were no lies, parliament and cabinet were not misled, there
was no secret commitment to war. The intelligence was not falsified and the
decision was made in good faith."
Iraq
remains plagued by sectarian violence -- on Sunday at least 250 people were
killed by a Baghdad suicide bombing claimed by the Islamic State group.
Blair
rejected claims the war led to the rise of Islamist groups in the region,
saying Saddam was "himself a wellspring of terror" -- but admitted
many disagreed.
'I hold
him responsible'
Relatives
of some of the 179 British soldiers who died in Iraq said they would scrutinise
the findings for possible grounds for legal action against Blair and other
officials.
"The
inquiry has confirmed all our fears that these young men and women were
deployed on the back of a falsehood," said Roger Bacon, whose son Matthew,
34, died in 2005.
The
legality of the invasion was not in his remit, but Chilcot said the process of
deciding the legal basis for war was "far from satisfactory".
"We
have concluded that the UK chose to join the invasion of Iraq before the
peaceful options for disarmament had been exhausted. Military action at that
time was not a last resort," he said.
The families
are not the only ones considering legal action against Blair -- a cross-party
group of MPs is also looking into the possibility, including of taking a case
to the International Criminal Court.
The war,
which at one point saw 46,000 British troops deployed, mostly in southern Iraq
around the strategic oil hub of Basra, still looms large over British politics.
Britain's
scarring experience in Iraq has made it deeply wary of committing ground troops
to international military interventions in countries like Syria and Libya.
Retired
civil servant Chilcot said his report was "an account of an intervention
which went badly wrong, with consequences to this day".
In a
statement to the House of Commons, Prime Minister David Cameron said: "We
cannot turn the clock back but can ensure that lessons are learned and acted
on".
Rage against Blair as families mourn Iraq war dead https://t.co/q06JFb9D7l pic.twitter.com/4ZpUxakiFg— AFP news agency (@AFP) July 6, 2016
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