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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: PROLIFE who wrote (416447)6/18/2003 6:09:59 PM
From: tejek  Respond to of 769670
 
Oh oh......the PM is really starting to have a bad time of it. He should be more careful who he picks to be his friends.

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Short: I was briefed on Blair's
secret war pact
Patrick Wintour, chief political correspondent
Wednesday June 18, 2003
The Guardian

Senior figures in the intelligence community and across
Whitehall briefed the former international development secretary
Clare Short that Tony Blair had made a secret agreement last
summer with George Bush to invade Iraq in February or March,
she claimed yesterday.

In damning evidence to the foreign affairs select committee, Ms
Short refused to identify the three figures, but she cited their
authority for making her claim that Mr Blair had actively deceived
the cabinet and the country in persuading them of the need to
go to war.

Ms Short told the first day of the committee's inquiry into the
events leading up to the Iraq conflict that Mr Blair had "used a
series of half-truths, exaggerations, reassurances that were not
the case to get us into conflict by the spring".

She claimed Mr Blair told President Bush that "we will be with
you" without laying down conditions to temper US ambitions.

She also claimed that the intelligence and diplomatic
community had privately opposed the war. This is the first time
she has alleged that intelligence figures had serious doubts
about the need for early military action.

Justifying her charge of deception, she said: "Three extremely
senior people in the Whitehall system said to me very clearly
and specifically that the target date was mid-February."

She went on: "I believe that the prime minister must have
concluded that it was honourable and desirable to back the US
in going for military action in Iraq and therefore it was honourable
for him to persuade us through various ruses and ways to get us
there - so for him I think it was an honourable deception."

No 10 last night denied Ms Short's charge and said Mr Blair had
worked as hard as possible to secure support for a second UN
resolution that might have persuaded Saddam Hussein to
cooperate.

In the same evidence session Mr Cook exonerated Mr Blair of
the charge of deliberately misleading the country, but asserted
that intelligence material was chosen selectively to fit a
predetermined policy.

He said his own personal briefing by the Secret Intelligence
Service (MI6) confirmed him in his belief that Iraq did not have
weaponised chemicals, let alone weapons capable of being fired
within 45 minutes, a claim made in the main intelligence
document published last September.

"I think it would be fair to say there was a selection of evidence
to support a conclusion," he said. "I fear we got into a position in
which the intelligence was not being used to inform and shape
policy, but to shape policy that was already settled."

He asserted that No 10 had "a burning fixation" with weapons of
mass destruction that led Mr Blair to reject Mr Cook's view that
the policy of containment was working.

Both former cabinet ministers confirmed a previous Guardian
story that cabinet ministers had been given private intelligence
briefings by SIS, but insisted the briefings did not indicate that
the world had to act immediately to stem an imminent Iraqi
threat. At best, Ms Short said, Iraq had scientists working to try
to develop biological and chemical weapons, but it was wrong to
suggest that meant there were "weaponised" materials.

Ms Short also claimed there was a shocking collapse in proper
government procedure, with a small unelected entourage in
Downing Street making the decisions without minutes, proper
options papers or any written material. She said the cabinet was
never shown military options papers.

She also gave the impression that the foreign secretary, Jack
Straw, was a cypher who "went along" with the decisions, while
the real decision-making was "sucked out" of the Foreign Office.

The vehemence of the attack by the two ex-cabinet ministers
and their damning analysis of the intelligence failure over Iraq
raises fresh questions for Mr Straw when he gives evidence
before the committee next week.

He will defend the use of intelligence material in both public and
private evidence sessions. The prime minister has declined to
speak to the foreign affairs committee, but will co-operate with
the private inquiry by the intelligence and security committee.

He is determined to disprove the claim that the September
document was manipulated by No 10 to exaggerate the case for
war.

The former UN weapons inspector Hans Blix has withdrawn his
earlier offer to give evidence to the foreign affairs committee,
arguing the misuse of intelligence is a matter for the British
government and parliament.