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David Morrison, 30 June 2005 In the months leading up to the invasion of I
detest his [Saddam Husseins] regime I hope most people do but even
now, he could save it by complying with the UN's demand. Even now, we
are prepared to go the extra step to achieve disarmament peacefully. In
fact, a year earlier, the Prime Minister had already offered his
wholehearted support to President Bush in the overthrow of Saddam
Hussein. This is proved by documents leaked to the Daily Telegraph last September, which are now in the public domain. Facsimiles of them are on my website (see links below). The story begins
I said [to Condoleeza Rice] that you would not budge in your support for regime change but
you had to manage a press, a Parliament and a public opinion that was
very different than anything in the States [my emphasis]. These are the words of Sir David Manning in a memo to the Prime Minister on 14 March 2002, when he was the Prime Ministers Foreign Policy adviser. Sir David was reporting to the Prime Minister on discussions in In other words, in March 2002 the The Prime Ministers unflinching commitment to regime change in March 2002 is confirmed by another memo, this one from the British Ambassador in Washington, Sir Christopher Meyer, to Sir David himself. This reported on a conversation with Paul Wolfowitz, the I opened by sticking very closely to the script that you used with Condi Rice. We backed regime change, but the plan had to be clever and failure was not an option. It would be a tough sell for us domestically, and probably tougher elsewhere in Parliament not told Of course, neither Parliament nor the public was told at the time, or ever, that we backed regime change. On
the contrary, on many occasions in the following 12 months, the Prime
Minister specifically denied that we backed regime change. For
example, when he launched the September dossier in the House of Commons
on 24 September 2002, he was asked if regime change was his objective. He replied: Regime change in Speaking on Radio Monte Carlo on 14 November 2002, he said:
So far as our objective, it is disarmament, not regime change that is our objective
. I
have got no doubt either that the purpose of our challenge from the
United Nations is disarmament of weapons of mass destruction, it is not
regime change. On 25 February 2003, he told the House of Commons that Saddam Hussein could stay in power if he gave up his proscribed weapons: I
detest his regime I hope most people do but even now, he could save
it by complying with the UN's demand. Even now, we are prepared to go
the extra step to achieve disarmament peacefully. On 18 March 2003, in proposing the resolution for war, he told the House of Commons: I
have never put the justification for action as regime change. We have
to act within the terms set out in resolution 1441 that is our legal
base. These memos prove that the Prime Ministers misleading of Parliament on The
impression was given in the autumn of 2002 that the Prime Minister had
persuaded President Bush to modify his position from regime change to
disarmament. In reality, from the outset he
shared the Presidents objective of regime change, but persuaded the
President to co-operate in dressing it up as disarmament. Is
there any doubt that disarmament was merely the central element in a
clever plan to manage the press, Parliament and public opinion into
supporting military action with the objective of changing the regime in
US/UK blocks inspection There was
a good deal of circumstantial evidence in the months prior to military
action that the US/UK were not going to settle for disarmament as
prescribed by Security Council resolutions. This began with their refusal to allow inspection to restart in September 2002. On 16 September 2002, On 19 September 2002, US Secretary of State, Colin Powell, gave evidence
to the House of Representatives International Relations Committee and
was asked what the administration would do if, within the Security
Council, some of the permanent representatives, France, Russia, China,
would insist on proceeding with inspections under the current existing
UN regime. He replied: We would oppose it. We would oppose it.
And if somebody tried to move the team in now, we would find ways to thwart that. Around this time, the Prime Minister was warning the British public of a growing danger from
[Saddam Husseins] chemical, biological and nuclear weapons programme
is not an historic left-over from 1998. The inspectors are not needed
to clean up the old remains. His weapons of mass destruction programme
is active, detailed and growing. Despite this, he and his friends in The
excuse given for this apparently bizarre behaviour was that the
inspection regime prescribed in existing Security Council resolutions
wasnt tough enough and that there must be a new resolution laying down
tougher conditions. This makes no sense,
since the presence of inspectors on the ground, even with restrictions
on their movement, would obviously render the production and deployment
of proscribed weapons more difficult. As such, it would have been some form of constraint on what the Prime Minister said was the growing threat from The
sensible course of action in these circumstances was to send the
inspectors in as soon as possible and to lay down tougher conditions
later, if necessary. Because the US/UK prevented this happening, two months inspection time was lost and Stopping inspectors entering Why block inspection? So what were the US/UK up to in blocking inspection? The
clue is in Sir David Mannings memo to the Prime Minister, where he
writes that renwed refused [sic] by Saddam to accept unfettered
inspections would be a powerful argument for military action. In similar vein, Sir Christopher Meyer reported that, having assured Paul Wolfowitz that we backed regime change, he told him: The The
hope was that the Security Council could be persuaded to prescribe an
inspection regime that was so unpalatable to Saddam Hussein that he
would refuse to allow inspectors in which would, in Sir Davids
words, be a powerful argument for military action. In other words, Plan A was that UN inspectors would never enter This strategy was obviously incompatible with allowing inspection to restart once Wrongfooting Saddam In furtherance of the strategy to wrongfoot Saddam, the US/UK attempted to get the Security Council to pass a resolution which (a) laid down conditions which (b) clearly authorised military action in that event without further recourse to the Council. The original US/UK draft of what eventually became resolution 1441 was geared to achieve this objective: specifically, it (a) allowed the US/UK to put their troops on the ground in (b) in
the event of a breach of the resolution, it authorised UN member states
to use all necessary means to restore international peace and security
in the area. Had the resolution been passed in its original form, and had Fortunately, or unfortunately, they were forced by France and others to modify their draft 1441 significantly (a) to soften the inspection regime demanded of (b) to remove the authorisation of use of force, without further reference to the Security Council, in the event of The US/UK had to accept these amendments, otherwise they would have suffered the humiliation of failing to get a new resolution. Thanks to France and others, resolution 1441, passed on 8 November 2002, was acceptable to Not co-operating fully? Another had to be found: it had to be that By
March 2003, after 3 months inspection, no significant quantities of
proscribed agents or weapons had been found (apart from the Al Samoud
missiles, which were in the process of being destroyed). All
of the sites named in the September dossier as possibly being used for
agent/weapons production were visited by inspectors in December 2002
and January 2003. They found no evidence of current, or recent, production activity. Other sites, nominated to the inspectors by the CIA and MI6, were also visited with the same result. Faced with this lack of evidence that The Butler Report understandably expresses surprise
that policy-makers and the intelligence community did not, as the
generally negative results of UNMOVIC inspections became increasingly
apparent, re-evaluate in early-2003 the quality of the intelligence
(paragraph 472). A Prime Minister committed to the disarmament of But the last thing a Prime Minister committed to regime change wanted to hear in March 2003 was any suggestion that Leaked documents The
memos from Manning to Blair and from Meyer to Manning were among a
group of six official documents from March 2002, leaked to the Daily
Telegraph in September 2004. They were the subject of Daily Telegraph articles on 18 September 2004. Facsimiles of all these documents are now in the public domain. In chronological order, they are: (1) (2) (3) Memo from Sir David Manning to the Prime Minister, dated 14 March, see here (4) Memo from Sir Christopher Meyer to Sir David Manning, dated 18 March, see here (5) Memo
from Peter Ricketts, Political Director, Foreign & Commonwealth
Office, to the Foreign Secretary, Jack Straw, dated 22 March, see here (6) Memo from Jack Straw to the Prime Minister, dated 25 March, see here As its name implies, the Options Paper sets out the options regarding The contents of the four memos reinforce the view that by March 2002 the Prime Minister was determined to support the Sir Christopher says he lied Sir Christopher Meyer addressed a meeting of the Politics Society at So, we are supposed to believe that Sir Christopher (and Sir David Manning) told the Peter Ricketts problem In his memo to Jack Straw, Peter Ricketts identified the lack of evidence of a growing threat from The
truth is that what has changed is not the pace of Saddam Hussein's WMD
programmes, but our tolerance of them post-11 September.
But even the best survey of US scrambling to establish a link between To get public and Parliamentary support for military options we have to be convincing that - the threat is so serious/imminent that it is worth sending our troops to die for; -
it is qualitatively different from the threat posed by other
proliferators who are closer to achieving nuclear capability (including
The existence of this problem is confirmed by the JIC assessment of 15 March 2002, which didnt suggest that Intelligence on However, the Prime Minister had a solution to the problem: it was to say that We
know that he [Saddam Hussein] has stockpiles of major amounts of
chemical and biological weapons, we know that he is trying to acquire
nuclear capability, we know that he is trying to develop ballistic
missile capability of a greater range. The
small quantities that might exist, according to the JIC assessment of
15 March 2002, were transformed by the Prime Minister into stockpiles
that definitely did exist. Problem solved. This
was not an isolated instance of gross prime ministerial exaggeration,
which had accidentally slipped out: he made several statements in a
similar vein around that time and he continued to make them over the
next 12 months. www.david-morrison.org.uk
Labour & Trade Union Review
April 2005
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