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IRAQ WARS
UK press condemn Blair' 'arrogance' over Iraq war
by Staff Writers
London (AFP) July 7, 2016


Iraq war decision justified: Australia's Howard
Sydney (AFP) July 7, 2016 - Former Australian leader John Howard Thursday defended his decision to go to war with Iraq alongside the United States and Britain, saying it was justified at the time and there was "no lie".

His comments follow an inquiry into Britain's role in the conflict which found its then prime minister Tony Blair took his country into a badly planned, woefully executed and legally questionable conflict in Iraq in 2003.

Howard, prime minister from 1996 to 2007 and considered with Blair to be George W. Bush's staunchest ally in the US-led invasion, said he regretted the loss of life but stood by his decision.

"I believed that the decision to go into Iraq was justified at the time and I don't resile from that because I thought it was the right decision," he told a press conference in Sydney.

Asked whether he should offer an apology to military families, Howard said: "Obviously I am sorry for the wounds or injuries that anybody suffered.

"But if you're saying to me do I apologise for the decision that I took, the core decision? Well, I defend that decision. Of course I defend it.

"I don't retreat from it. I don't believe, based on the information available to me, that it was the wrong decision. I really don't."

The long-awaited British Chilcot report found that Blair's decision to join the invasion was taken before all other options had been exhausted and on the basis of false intelligence.

Launched with the stated goal of wiping out Saddam Hussein's stores of weapons of mass destruction, the war aimed to enshrine a liberal democracy in the Middle East but instead unleashed sectarian violence and endless political disputes.

No weapons of mass destruction were ever found, undermining the basis for the conflict which left thousands of Iraqis and foreign soldiers dead.

Howard said there was intelligence that suggested the weapons existed before the invasion.

"There was no lie. There were errors in intelligence but there was no lie," he said, adding that he respected Chilcot's findings but did not agree with all of them.

Australia contributed about 2,000 troops to the US-led coalition from March 2003. No Australian military personnel were killed in action, although many were wounded and a handful died in accidents.

Tony Blair pleaded with his critics to stop questioning his intentions over Britain's disastrous war in Iraq, after a blistering verdict by the Chilcot inquiry -- but commentators Thursday showed scant sympathy.

"For his own sanity he still has to tell himself the world is 'better and safer' for him joining George Bush's assault on Iraq. It is a monumental delusion," said an editorial in The Sun, Britain's top-selling paper.

It added: "Blair does admit the post-war planning was a calamity. That is his only concession. He sees no reason to apologise for his decision to go to war and insists he'd do the same again.

"He still believes he had no choice. You could have said no, Tony."

After the publication of the long-awaited inquiry report on Wednesday, Blair gave an emotional two-hour press conference in which he acknowledged mistakes but defended his intentions -- and said he would do it again.

Newspaper coverage on Thursday was scathing of the former Labour prime minister, who won three elections but stepped down in 2007, as Iraq collapsed into sectarian violence, with his reputation in tatters.

Appearing close to tears, Blair had said he felt more sorrow than anyone could imagine for the conflict.

In the left-learning Guardian, commentator Anne Perkins admitted that "it feels cheap at such a time to doubt someone's sincerity".

"But I have seen him look stricken before -- and like millions of other voters, I don't trust him any more," she wrote, adding that he was guilty of "unbowed arrogance".

Michael Deacon, the sketch writer for the conservative Daily Telegraph, noted that Blair refused to apologise for the invasion.

"What to make of it all? An honest plea for understanding from a broken man? Or a performance, an immaculately executed impersonation of one?" he wrote.

John Crace, the sketch writer for the Guardian, said his performance showed sorrow mainly for himself.

"Me, me me. The war hadn't been about the 179 British soldiers and several hundred thousand Iraqis who died. It had been about him all along," he wrote.

Drawing on Monty Python's comic film "Life of Brian", he added: "Tony's eyes burned with the conviction of martyrdom. He wasn't a naughty boy, he was the Messiah.

"And he was heaven-bent on carrying on fighting a war he lost long ago."

Trevor Kavanagh, associate editor of The Sun, said Blair "was always obsessed with legacy as prime minister".

"He may have hoped it would be as a US war hero with all the lucrative benefits associated with it," he wrote.

"Instead he will be remembered for inflicting a terrorist firestorm on a fragile and unstable world."


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