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In this section Get-out for Blair over intelligence inquiry MI6 led protest against war dossier Blair warned of Iran-backed Shia powers Dress-down Blair just one of the blokes Ministers 'distorted' UN weapons report 'I simply don't believe the whole thing was a lie' Middle East more secure, PM tells troops |
Special
report: politics and Iraq
"I am absolutely convinced that weapons of mass destruction were there
and that they will be found. I simply do not believe that the whole thing
was a lie.
"But I must admit I am perplexed that they haven't been found, although
I think they will be. Just because Saddam Hussein has not been found does
not mean he did not exist either."
Brian Donohoe Labour MP for Cunningham South, rebelled in the
initial Iraq debate in February but abstained in the March 18 debate
"In the Iraq debate, my conscience was overruled by loyalty but I doubt
I'd vote the same way again. The sole reason I backed the government
amendment was because we were given very clear indications there were
weapons of mass destruction and that these could be used against
neighbouring countries. As far as I'm concerned, that was the only
legitimate reason for going to war.
"The prime minister is still of the opinion that they exist, and we
will hold him to this.
"Do I think they exist? I just can't accept the government, with the
intelligence facilities they have over here and in the States ... would
make such a fundamental mistake ... But it's beginning to look as if they
don't. It's five or six weeks after the end of the war, we've
300,000-400,000 troops over there and we're still not in a position to
have determined if they're there.
"I am not saying I feel conned. But at some point in the future the
government have to be able to establish the fact they exist. It's an
extremely worrying situation and we would want to have clarification in
our own party, in our government. We want an explanation being given.
Clearly, there are major concerns about the credibility of those telling
us things about WMD."
Doug Henderson Former defence minister, rebelled against the
government
"I was opposed to the invasion of Iraq but not specifically because of
weapons of mass destruction. The issue wasn't just about WMD but about
whether [Saddam] was a danger to other countries.
"I thought after the war that it would be reasonable to give the
government six months or a year [to find them], but now Rumsfeld has more
or less implied there may not be WMD. I think the government are going to
have to make a statement when the house comes back and tell the house what
exactly they knew before the war.
"If it transpires the government had information that said it was
unlikely there were WMD then parliament, and the country, have been
misled.
"If the government doesn't find the WMD quickly, I think there will be
political instability.
"I know a lot of colleagues voted with the government because of WMD.
They have had to face their constituency parties over this - and they will
feel they have been made mugs of."
Parmjit Dhanda Labour MP for Gloucester, voted with the
government in the first Iraq debate, rebelled in the second and abstained
from the government's motion on weapons of mass destruction
"I don't regret the way I voted and I would do so again.
"Finding weapons of mass destruction does matter but for me this wasn't
the overriding reason: for me, and for many of my colleagues, the main
thing was not getting a second UN resolution.
"I personally believe weapons of mass destruction will be found, but we
have to be patient and give this time. They could be found within the next
24 hours."
Frederick Forsyth Novelist
"Tony Blair is exceptionally dangerous in that he can believe anything
he wants to believe. If he wants to believe that north is south, that is
what he will do.
"Oddly that does not change my view that there was justification for
the war. Firstly there is no doubt Saddam had cracked all the technology
of WMD, secondly the cruelty and mass murder he committed, and thirdly it
is not a good idea to have a third of the world's oil resources under the
control of a man who is so clearly mad."
Malcolm Rifkind Former Conservative foreign secretary
"At each stage Blair's justification for the war has been shown to be
on very very shaky ground. What you tend to get now is statements from
Washington and London, saying, 'Well never mind all that we have got rid
of a very nasty regime which would have been still there if we hadn't gone
to war.'
"Quite a lot of us, from all political parties, had significant
reservations about the conflict. We were entitled to assume the government
had access to information which made them confident that the attack on
Iraq was essential to eliminate weapons of mass destruction.
"I think it is too early to conclude that they were wrong, because who
knows they could be discovered tomorrow, but it is looking pretty odd."
Andrew Roberts Rightwing historian
"It has not changed my view of the war at all. Just because we have not
found WMD does not mean we want Saddam back. It was a brilliant operation,
it was over in three weeks and it cost 31 British dead. It was a
miraculous victory.
"I truly believe that both Bush and Blair genuinely believed there were
weapons of mass destruction so logically that does not affect the
justification for the war.
"I believe they genuinely thought he was a threat to the region.
"I think they were right in that; I think his invasions of his
neighbours prove that and he had used WMD before so he obviously had them
at some stage.
"So in all logic they had every right and it does not affect my view
one iota. Anyway, shouldn't we all be celebrating that our troops were not
subjected to chemical and biological weapons rather than moaning about
it?"
Yasser Alaskary Iraqi exile who supported military action to
bring down Saddam Hussein
"The issue of weapons of mass destruction is the way that America and
Britain justified the war, but it would not have been the way that I
justified it.
"I believe that there was a humanitarian disaster going on in Iraq for
so many years under the regime of Saddam Hussein - and that was good
enough on its own.
"That's quite clear if you look at the mass graves being dug up. If
they'd based it on that, they would have been on much stronger ground.
"As an Iraqi, it doesn't concern me what trouble the UK or American
administrations are in, what concerns me is that the Iraqi people have
been liberated from Saddam.
"The major task is rebuilding the country and finding weapons of mass
destruction doesn't aid that at all.
"It doesn't matter to ordinary Iraqis. I've spoken to relatives, who
can now speak freely, and nobody mentions this." |