Watch Out Tony
Blair, The Legal Noose is Tightening. “Dead-End Road” Towards a War
Crimes Trial?
The Chilcot Inquiry, “Sir Cover Up” and The House of Lords
By Felicity Arbuthnot
The individual is handicapped by coming face to face
with a conspiracy so monstrous he cannot believe it exists.”
(J.Edgar Hoover, 1895-1972.)
October 29, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Global
Research" -
Did the Government
believe the claims about Saddam Hussein’s weapons of mass
destruction or was the aim regime change, which has no basis
whatsoever in international law? Was this the real motivation?
Secondly, when was the decision taken to go to war? Was it at
Crawford or Camp David, in April 2002, (Lord
Morris of Aberavon, House of Lords, October 22, 2015
”Why did Tony
Blair have those embarrassing exchanges in 2002 [with G.W. Bush]
when there was no question of there being any declaration of
war? Why did the then Government ignore the instinct and
feelings of 1.5 million people marching down Piccadilly to
protest about what was still an illegal war?”
(Lord Dykes, House of Lords, October 22, 2015)
* * *
“Sir Cover Up”
Just
five days after it was revealed (1) that former British Prime
Minster Tony Blair and then President George W. Bush had made a pact
to attack Iraq and overthrow the country’s sovereign government a
full year before the invasion took place – as Blair continued to
mislead government and populace stating that diplomacy was being
pursued and no decisions made – another snake has slithered from
under the hay (as the Arab saying goes) in the form of
Sir Jeremy Heywood.
Sir
Jeremy who has been unkindly dubbed “Sir Cover Up”
by sections of the media is Prime Minister David Cameron’s Cabinet
Secretary, thus the UK’s top Civil Servant.
According
to the Daily Mail, Sir Jeremy has: “insisted he did not deserve his
reputation as the secretive and manipulative power behind the
throne” and was “frustrated” at his public portrayal.
However:
“Sources close to the Iraq Inquiry claim it was held up for
months while chairman Sir John Chilcot argued with Sir Jeremy
about which documents could be put in the public domain.
“In the end, Sir Jeremy insisted that 150
messages between Tony Blair and George Bush in the run-up to the
2003 war must be censored. Only the ‘gists’ of the messages and
selected quotes will be released. (Emphasis mine.)
“Former Shadow Home Secretary David Davis said
it was ‘wholly inappropriate’ that Sir Jeremy had been involved
in decisions on the Iraq Inquiry, given his role as Mr. Blair’s
Private Secretary at the time of the war.” (2)
Sir
Jeremy was Principal Private Secretary to Tony Blair from June 1999
to July 2003 and would thus have been party to every step of
the scheming and untruths about the invasion and surely the plotting
between Bush and Blair to attack, during their April 2002,
three day meeting at the Bush ranch in Crawford, Texas. (See 1.)
Subsequently Heywood stepped in to the same position when Gordon
Brown became Prime Minister after Blair’s resignation, a post he
held between January 2008 and May 2010, so would also have been
party to the plans for and structure of the Chilcot Inquiry in to
the war, which was set up by Brown. Thus those involved in the
bloodbath and invasion, convened the Inquiry in to the illegality.
Gordon Brown as
Blair’s Chancellor of the Exchequer, wrote the cheques for the years
of illegal UK bombings of Iraq and for the UK’s participation in
“Operation Iraqi Liberation” (OIL.) He also wrote the cheques for
Britain’s part in the disastrous invasion of Afghanistan.
According
to Ministry of Defence figures, the total cost of UK military
operation in Iraq, 2003-2009, was £8.4 Billion – ongoing since they
are back bombing, with Special Forces in Northern Iraq – and it
would be unsurprising if also elsewhere in the country, given
Britain’s duplicitous track record. To 2013 the cost of UK
operations in Afghanistan reached £37 Billion, also ongoing.
David Cameron who
voted to attack Iraq told a news programme at the time: “You’ve got
to do what you think right, even if it’s unpopular …”, near
mirroring Blair’s “I know I’m right” of the same time. Cameron
admires Blair, regarding him as a “mentor.” At every level of
government past and present, there are vested interests in the truth
on Iraq never coming out.
Cameron’s words on his
election as Prime Minister come to mind again:
“We’re all in it together.”
Of Sir Jeremy,
political commentator Peter Oborne has written: “Heywood is a
perfect manifestation of everything that has gone so very wrong with
the British civil service over the past 15 years.” (3)
House of Lords Debate: Prelude to a Criminal
Indictment of Tony Blair?
On
Thursday, 22nd October, in a debate in the House of
Lords, Tony Blair’s former Attorney General (May 1997-July 1999)
Lord Morris of Aberavon cited the “scandalous delay” in producing
the Chilcot Report.
Sir John
Chilcot’s Inquiry took evidence between November 2009 and 2nd
February 2011. Costing £10 million (and rising) the final Report is
now not expected until summer 2016 and maybe even sometime in 2017.
The families and
friends of the 179 British service people who died had been “badly
let down” by the delays, stated his Lordship. Indeed, but, tragic as
the whole Iraq horror is for the UK’s bereaved, their sons,
daughters, relatives, signed up to join the armed forces, trained
extensively in killing other human beings and had the lawful right,
if in conscience they believed it wrong, illegal, to refuse to
serve.
In their
debate (4) their Lordships devoted no time to the grief of the
relatives of the over one million Iraqi dead, the 800,000 Iraqi
children who have lost one or both parents, the million widows, the
maimed, the limbless, those who lost their minds, homes, all, in the
horror, who also are “badly let down”, their need for answers
paramount. Only Lord Dykes in just two lines referred to:
“ … the fate of Iraqi civilians. That should
be a substantial part of this report.”
Lord Dykes also
encapsulated the hitherto unspoken questions:
*“Why
was it so important for them to turn on Saddam Hussein if regime
change was not the main driver?
*”Why did Tony Blair have those embarrassing
exchanges in 2002 when there was no question of there being any
declaration of war?
*“Why did the then Government ignore the
instinct and feelings of 1.5 million people marching down
Piccadilly to protest about what was still an illegal war?
*”Why did the Americans and the British ignore
the wise advice of the French Government under President Chirac
and Foreign Secretary Dominique de Villepin about the mistake of
going to war on that occasion?”
In a surely clear
reference to Sir Jeremy Heywood, Lord Morris said that: “ … the
saddest feature of the inquiry process was the ‘strenuous effort’ of
the Cabinet Office to block the committee from having access to
‘swathes of vital documentation,’ including notes from Blair to
Bush” adding: “ Respect for good governance is undermined if Reports
don’t see the light of day before issues become dimmed in public
memory.”
Lord Parekh also
referred to the “delay” caused by: “the dispute over access to
various documents”, Sir Jeremy’s spectre stalked the Chamber:
“For example, it
took nearly a year to obtain the Blair-Bush correspondence and
the notes Mr Blair is supposed to have left with Mr Bush, to
read them and to decide whether to include them in the report.”
Baroness Falkner was
surely also referring to Blair and Cameron’s ally, “Sir Cover Up”
when she said:
“Looking at the sequencing of events, it is clear that there was
some kind of stand-off between the Cabinet Secretary and the
Inquiry team, which lasted for a while … it took from July 2012
to January 2015 to reach an agreement on publishing the
Blair-Bush correspondence.”
And does
that refer to the “censored” version?
Lady Falkner made a
vital point regarding David Cameron’s desire to emulate Blair in
visiting a full scale “Shock and Awe” on another devastated country
which poses Britain no threat and which would be as unlawful as
Iraq:
“I
want to pick up the issue of our continuing intervention in the
Middle East. Let us go back to the August 2013 vote on not
intervening in Syria. We as a country cannot, and should not,
make a decision on that until we know of our hand in setting
that region ablaze in the first instance. That is the least we
owe the country.”
Earl Attlee had hands
on experience having served as a Territorial Army Officer in Iraq
during the Invasion had clearly had enough of prevarications:
“I do not believe
that democratic leaders can lead a country to war without being
held to account for the decisions that they made on our behalf.
I could see the ‘dodgy dossier’ for what it was … “
Baroness Williams was
equally scathing, demanding: “ … the truest possible account of
this, which I think is the second-gravest mistake ever made in the
history of the United Kingdom’s foreign policy after the end of the
Second World War.”
Comparing the Iraq
disaster to the 1956 Suez crisis in “scale” and “effect”, she
stated:
“Today, when we look at what has been
tragically not only an attempt to try to invade Iraq but,
perhaps more crucially, an attempt to see the Middle East fade
away into a situation where there is almost no legally available
support, let us not forget that an invasion based on the
argument that you need regime change has no place in
international law and no place in the United Nations.” (Emphasis
mine.)
In context, Suez has
been described (5) as: “ … one of the most important and
controversial events in British history since the Second World War.
Not only did Suez result in deep political and public division in
Britain, it also caused international uproar.”
“It has come to be
regarded as the end of Britain’s role as one of the world powers and
as the beginning of the end for the British Empire.”
Suez led to the
downfall of Prime Minister Anthony Eden whom, it was widely
believed, had mislead Parliament over the degree of collusion
between Britain and Israel.
Tony
Blair also mislead Parliament, including over the extent of his
collusion with George W. Bush. Ironically he has also been described
as: “having an unremitting record of bias toward Israel.”
(Electronic Intifada, 29th June 2007.) When he was –
Orewellianly – appointed “Middle East Peace Envoy”, he was described
as: “A true friend of the State of Israel” by then Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert and: “a very well appreciated figure in Israel” by then
Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni.
Eden and Blair may
have more in common regarding their actions in the Middle East than
meet the eye. Eden however simply sunk into obscurity whereas the
clamour for Blair to account for his actions grow ever louder. The
petition to Parliament for his arrest for war crimes and misleading
the nation has nearly reached the required 10,000 when it is
mandatory for the Prime Minister to respond. At 100,000 a
Parliamentary debate can be called.
“Dead-End
Road” towards a War Crimes Trial?
The Leader of the
Labour Party, Jeremy Corbyn told BBC Newsnight that Blair could see
a war crimes trial over the: “illegal Iraq invasion.”
www.arrestblair.org
established by journalist George Monbiot: “offers a reward to people
attempting a peaceful citizen’s arrest of the former Prime Minister,
Tony Blair, for crimes against the peace.” So far five credible
attempts have been made and around £13,000 paid out.
As events are
unfolding there may soon be no more wriggle room for all those
involved in the lies and cover ups. Their Nuremberg may yet await.
It is owed to those who lost their lives for a pack of lies. For the
people of Iraq it is a sacred accounting, a debt of ultimate honour
and a woefully inadequate apology which might at least demand
reparations..
Notes:
1.
http://www.globalresearch.ca/tony-blairs-deal-in-blood-with-george-w-bush-to-attack-iraq-one-year-before-the-march-2003-invasion/5483029
2. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3279702/Don-t-call-Sir-Cover-Britain-s-civil-servant-Jeremy-Heywood-rejects-claims-muzzling-ministers-Heathrow.html
3.
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/sir-jeremy-heywood-the-most-powerful-751584
4.
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld201516/ldhansrd/text/151022-0002.htm#15102244000633
5.
http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/projects/suez/suez.html
6.
https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/108495