UK High
Court Blocks Bid to Prosecute Tony Blair Over
Iraq War
Lord Chief Justice says there is 'no prospect'
of the case succeeding
By Samuel Osborne
August 01,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- The High Court has blocked a bid by a former
chief of staff of the Iraqi army to bring a
private prosecution against Tony Blair over the
Iraq War.
General Abdul Wahed Shannan Al Rabbat has
accused Mr Blair of committing a “crime of
aggression” by invading Iraq in 2003 to
overthrow
Saddam Hussein.
Lord
Thomas of Cwmgiedd, the Lord Chief Justice, and
Mr Justice Ouseley dismissed the general’s
application, saying there was “no prospect” of
the case succeeding.
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The
general wanted to prosecute Mr Blair and two
other key ministers at the time – Jack Straw,
the Foreign Secretary, and Lord Goldsmith, the
Attorney General.
He
lives in Muscat, Oman, does not possess a
passport and travel to the UK.
His
lawyers asked London’s High Court for permission
to seek judicial review in an attempt to get the
Supreme Court, now the highest court in the
land, to overturn a ruling by the House of Lords
in 2006 that there is no such crime as the crime
of aggression under the law of England and
Wales.
Westminster Magistrates Court refused to issue
summonses in November last year on the grounds
the ex-ministers had immunity from legal action,
and in any event the current Attorney General,
Jeremy Wright QC, would have to give consent.
The
Attorney General intervened in the case and his
legal team urged Lord Thomas and Mr Justice
Ouseley to block the general’s legal challenge
on the grounds that it was “hopeless” and
unarguable because the crime of aggression is
not recognised in English law
The UK
was part of a US-led coalition which invaded
Iraq after George W Bush and Mr Blair accused
Hussein of possessing weapons of mass
destruction and having links to terrorists.
Michael
Mansfield QC, appearing for General Al Rabbat,
said at a recent hearing the inquiry into the
invasion conducted by Sir John Chilcot, which
concluded with a report published in July last
year, justified the prosecution of Mr Blair.
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Mr
Mansfield said the main findings were contained
in a paragraph early in the 12-volume report and
could be summarised as concluding that Hussein
did not pose an urgent threat to the interests
of the UK, and the intelligence regarding
weapons of mass destruction had been presented
with “unwarranted certainty”.
It also
concluded peaceful alternatives to war had not
been exhausted and the war in Iraq was not
necessary.
The UK
was part of a US-led coalition which invaded
Iraq after George W Bush and Mr Blair
accused
SaddamHussein
of possessing weapons of mass destruction
and having links to terrorists (INA/Getty
Images)
Mr
Mansfield argued that the international crime of
a war of aggression had been accepted by then UK
attorney general Sir Hartley Shawcross QC in the
1940s, at the time of the Nuremberg trials of
Nazi war crimes.
The QC
contended that, as the international community
had held those responsible for the Second World
War to account by prosecuting those thought
responsible for aggression at Nuremberg, it was
the duty of the UK courts to follow that example
in relation to the Iraq War.
The
House of Lords decided in the 2006 case of “R v
Jones”, which also concerned the Iraq War, that
although there was a crime of aggression under
customary international law, there was no such
crime under English law.
Mr
Mansfield argued the Jones case was wrongly
decided and permission should be given to allow
General Al Rabbat to re-argue the issue before
the Supreme Court.
But the
High Court ruled: “In our opinion there is no
prospect of the Supreme Court holding that the
decision in Jones was wrong or the reasoning no
longer applicable.”
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