The Iraq Inquiry / FRFI 213 Feb / Mar 2010
FRFI 213 February / March 2010
Imperialists clean their stables
‘The general leaning towards barbarity acquires a certain method, immorality becomes a system, lawlessness gets its law givers and club law its law books.’ Karl Marx.
It was noted that the four politicians who took
The terms of reference of the Chilcot Inquiry were decided by Prime Minister Gordon Brown and agreed by the House of Commons. Since the 2005 Inquiries Act government ministers and not judges control public inquiry proceedings, set the terms of reference, determine public access and access to evidence submitted to the inquiry. If ministers do not like the direction an inquiry is taking they can withdraw funding. If ministers do not like the content of the resulting report they can withhold part or all of the publication. The Inquiries Act was passed in response to a demand that there be a public inquiry into Royal Ulster Constabulary and British intelligence collusion in the loyalist murder of Irish solicitor Pat Finucane. During the parliamentary debate on the legislation it was hardly mentioned that the Finucane case was the motive for the bill.
In Sir John Chilcot the ruling class chose a safe pair of hands. He is chair of the Police Foundation and a Trustee of the Police Rehabilitation Trust. Chilcot conducted a review of Royal and VIP security, sat on an inquiry into an alleged IRA break-in to the Police Service of Northern Ireland Special Branch HQ and the Lord Butler 2004 Review of (Iraq’s non-existent) Weapons of Mass Destruction. He is a former Staff Counsellor to the Security and Intelligence Agencies and the National Criminal Intelligence Service. Chilcot’s four fellow Inquiry panellists are equally reliable representatives of their class and include a noted Zionist. This Inquiry will certainly not call any representative of the Iraqi people.
Whatever acuity the panel displayed when questioning senior civil servants, it escaped them when confronted by Tony Blair, who was allowed to stick to his well-rehearsed script and was not questioned on details such as misleading Parliament on weapons of mass destruction and whether he put pressure on the Attorney General Lord Goldsmith to give the legal advice Blair wanted. Instead, Blair was able to propose targeting
One of the more revealing episodes of the Inquiry came when Lord Goldsmith explained how he changed his mind from considering an invasion of
The division in the British ruling class over allying with the
On 25 January the Daily Mail reported that Lord Hutton, who headed the 2004 inquiry into the death of the government scientist Dr David Kelly, had placed a 70-year ban on the release of medical records of Dr Kelly’s post-mortem. The Hutton inquiry concluded that Dr Kelly had committed suicide. Thirteen eminent doctors have now challenged the Hutton verdict and elicited a letter from Oxfordshire County Council revealing the ban. One of the doctors said, ‘I am shocked but not surprised by this. It fits in with the subversion of due process we have seen for six years.’ Dr Kelly had accused the Labour government of manipulating evidence to draw
The World Health Organisation estimated that UN sanctions imposed on
‘The most important questions – war, peace, diplomatic questions – are decided by a handful of capitalists, who deceive not only the masses, but very often parliament itself.’ VI Lenin.
Trevor Rayne
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