Join the Socialist Party Join us today!

Printable version Printable version

Facebook   Twitter

Link to this page: https://www.socialistparty.org.uk/issue/333/5620

From The Socialist newspaper, 7 February 2004

War Crimes and Whitewashes

AS ANY inept DIY bodger could tell you, whitewash, applied carefully and thinly will last years. Too thick and it will flake off in no time." (Letter to the Guardian, 29 January)

The long awaited report by ‘Lord’ Hutton on the ‘Kelly affair’ was so blatantly and crudely one sided that it has produced a massive public backlash against the ‘exonerated’ Tony Blair and his crony Alistair Campbell.

The ‘collateral’ damage to the government and its legal hit man, Hutton, is unprecedented in its scope and intensity.

 Polls taken a few days after in newspapers and in TV programmes show that three times as many people were prepared to accept the BBC’s version of the truth as that of the government.

Blair’s personal rating in the ICM poll in the Guardian was minus 17 points, with 55% of voters unhappy with his performance.

Support for the war has dropped by six points, with less than half of voters now in support. Contrary to Hutton, 45% of voters believe the prime minister lied over his claim that he did not authorise the leaking of Dr Kelly’s name.

More people believe that Blair should have resigned than those who supported Greg Dyke resigning as the head of the BBC.

An avalanche of criticism and condemnation has rained down on Hutton. Even pillars of the establishment, such as Lord Rees Mogg, former deputy chairman of the BBC, have waded in, declaring: "I don’t have any confidence in Hutton."

 Many capitalists luminaries like this, unlike the socialist and the Socialist Party, did have confidence that Hutton, one of their kind, would act fairly and ‘judiciously’.

Criticism

BUT WHY should this scion of the aristocratic Unionist ascendancy of Northern Ireland act any differently than he did? He was a defending barrister of soldiers at the discredited Widgery inquiry set up after the Bloody Sunday massacre in Northern Ireland in 1972. Moreover, there is a long standing tradition of ‘inquiries’, judicious or otherwise, being used by governments, usually Tory governments, to cover up their crimes and misdemeanours.

The difference this time is that the inquiry was public, shedding light into the dark corners, the intrigues, dirty dealings and dishonesty of capitalist governments and their state.

The documented evidence overwhelmingly pointed to the guilt of Blair on the key issues. This showed that the intelligence evidence was changed by Blair and Campbell, that (a) they colluded in the ‘outing’ of Kelly who was alleged to have taken his own life, and (b) that the notorious 45-minute claim was altered to give the impression that Britain could be attacked by Saddam’s non-existent weapons of mass destruction at 45 minutes notice.

The original title of the intelligence dossier – "programmes of weapons of mass destruction" – was altered. The word ‘programme’ was eliminated.

Both Blair and Bush are now falling back on this word as justification for the war. But this and Hutton’s report cut no ice with the British people, outraged at this colossal cover up. In their millions they protested in the last year against the war and its effects. Tens of thousands of innocent Iraqi civilians, as well as troops, estimated at 55,000 by John Pilger, together with British, US and other troops, died for what a Tory, Max Hastings, has called a "war on a false prospectus".

It is this massive anti-war feeling, together with the fact that Britain is no longer a deferential society, which explains the indignation of Hutton and Blair. The gloating of Blair and Campbell the day after the report undoubtedly reinforced the sense of public outrage. One Labour apparatchik triumphantly declared of Hutton: "Make that man a duke." Instead of this, however, the report and its author have been discredited in a matter of days.

Massive anti-war feeling

BLAIR HIMSELF, rather than basking in the afterglow of this ‘triumph’ came under pressure to emulate his buddy, Bush, in declaring, ‘it wasn’t me, guv, it was the intelligence spooks who got it wrong’. Up to now, like the character in the famous Monty Python sketch who declares that the parrot is still alive despite all the evidence, Blair has insisted that WMDs, or at least ‘programmes’, will be discovered. But now David Kay, Bush’s own hunter for WMDs in Iraq, has concluded what we and others consistently argued before the Iraq invasion, that Saddam’s WMDs do not exist. He has declared: "We were all wrong."

This ‘we’ refers to Blair, Bush and their pro-war supporters and, yes, they did get it wrong while the millions who marched against the war, and who still oppose the war and its consequences, were right. If the 'intelligence community' got it wrong it shatters the whole premise of the Bush doctrine of 'pre-emptive strike'.

Will Blair and Bush, therefore, follow the example of Dyke and Davis at the BBC and ‘fall on their swords’, resign? Not a bit of it. Bush is preparing to set up another "inquiry into US intelligence" and the information allegedly supplied to him on WMDs. Blair is to follow suit, thereby hoping to deflect responsibility for the war onto the ‘un-intelligence community’ in Britain and the US.

This manoeuvre, however, is fraught with difficulties, perhaps more for Blair than Bush. Bush hopes that his congressional supporters can delay the results of such an inquiry until after November’s presidential elections. If Blair concedes an inquiry, again narrowly restricting it to intelligence issues and not the overall reasons for war, than it is likely to report well before a general election is called.

Alternative

THOSE WHO opposed and demonstrated against the war, as well as the dead and mutilated victims in Iraq, have no need for anymore whitewashes, cover ups in the form of more US and British ‘inquiries’. No trust in capitalist governments to honestly and democratically examine their own actions, particularly on the most crucial of events, going to war!

If there are to be any more ‘inquiries’ let them be convened by the organisations of working class people in Britain and the US and, moreover, on the broad general reasons for this war and the culpability of capitalist politicians, and not on this or that aspect, which can allow the perpetrators of the Iraq adventure to go unpunished.

Blair and Bush and their cronies unleashed a war not for ‘liberation’ in Iraq, but for the imperialist plunder of Iraqi resources, particularly oil. They have created devastation and terrible suffering for the peoples of Iraq and the world.

They should be driven from office. But the alternative is not their capitalist critics, whose concern is not for the British or Iraqi people but in defending their own system and preventing similar adventures in the future which could endanger this. The real alternative is a new mass party of the working class, pledged to oppose war and militarism by establishing a new democratic socialist society.

Donate to the Socialist Party

Finance appeal

The coronavirus crisis has laid bare the class character of society in numerous ways. It is making clear to many that it is the working class that keeps society running, not the CEOs of major corporations.

The results of austerity have been graphically demonstrated as public services strain to cope with the crisis.

The government has now ripped up its 'austerity' mantra and turned to policies that not long ago were denounced as socialist. But after the corona crisis, it will try to make the working class pay for it, by trying to claw back what has been given.

  • The Socialist Party's material is more vital than ever, so we can continue to report from workers who are fighting for better health and safety measures, against layoffs, for adequate staffing levels, etc.
  • When the health crisis subsides, we must be ready for the stormy events ahead and the need to arm workers' movements with a socialist programme - one which puts the health and needs of humanity before the profits of a few.
Inevitably, during the crisis we have not been able to sell the Socialist and raise funds in the ways we normally would.
We therefore urgently appeal to all our viewers to donate to our Fighting Fund.

Please donate here.

All payments are made through a secure server.

My donation £

 

Your message: 

 


In The Socialist 7 February 2004:


War and occupation

No More Lies

War Crimes and Whitewashes

We demand a real investigation

BBC Workers Angry At Hutton Attacks


Socialist Party workplace news and analysis

The Trade Unions And The Labour Party

Trade Union Left Convention

Civil Service Strike: Around the Picket Lines

Strike threat forces negotiations in civil service pay battle

Leicester Lecturers On Indefinite Strike

Stop These Council Cuts


International socialist news and analysis

Brazil - Movement For A New Workers' Party Is Launched

Venezuela: Workers Struggle Against Reaction


 

Home   |   The Socialist 7 February 2004   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate  




Related links:

War:

triangleConflict in Jerusalem widens across Israeli cities and to war on Gaza

triangleHow partition of Ireland derailed a revolutionary struggle for national and social liberation

trianglePoverty increasing. Welfare state in crisis. Do we need a new Beveridge Report?

triangleMet police investigate British mercenary war crimes against Tamils

triangleObituary: Roger Priest

Iraq:

triangleTV: Once Upon a Time in Iraq

triangleIraq - a brutal legacy of imperialist intervention

triangleSuleimani's assassination - Middle East thrown into turmoil

US:

triangleIs Biden offering a new 'New Deal'?

triangleBiden's policies will not solve underlying US crisis

triangleSuperpowers' tensions continue to ratchet up

BBC:

triangleNews in Brief

triangleCripTales: A painful reflection of a system that pits us against each other

Reports and campaigns

Reports and campaigns

12/5/21

Obituary

Obituary - Jon Elvin

12/5/21

Workers

United action needed to defeat fire and rehire

12/5/21

TUSC

TUSC is back

12/5/21

RMT

RMT: Militant industrial and political strategy must be fought for

12/5/21

National Education Union

National Education Union needs a socialist, fighting deputy general secretary

12/5/21

Thurrock

Thurrock refuse workers strike escalates

12/5/21

Ealing

Ealing parking wardens strike against Serco over absence policy

12/5/21

Norwich

Norwich City Council workers vote for strike action over broken promises on pay and conditions

12/5/21

National Education Union

Beal school strikers suspend action after possible victory

12/5/21

Electricians

Sparks fight continues

9/5/21

Socialist Party

Post-election meetings

5/5/21

National Education Union

Four Socialist Party members elected to NEU executive

5/5/21

East London

Goodlord strike forces talks

5/5/21

Bullying

St Mungo's strikers fight on

5/5/21

Unison

For a fighting, democratic, member-led union to stop the austerity attacks

triangleMore Reports and campaigns articles...


Join the Socialist Party
Subscribe to Socialist Party publications
Donate to the Socialist Party
Socialist Party Facebook page
Socialist Party on Twitter
Visit us on Youtube

LATEST POSTS

CONTACT US

Phone our national office on 020 8988 8777

Email: [email protected]

Locate your nearest Socialist Party branch Text your name and postcode to 07761 818 206

Regional Socialist Party organisers:

Eastern: 079 8202 1969

East Mids: 077 3797 8057

London: 075 4018 9052

North East: 078 4114 4890

North West 079 5437 6096

South West: 077 5979 6478

Southern: 078 3368 1910

Wales: 079 3539 1947

West Mids: 024 7655 5620

Yorkshire: 078 0983 9793

ABOUT US

ARCHIVE

Alphabetical listing


May 2021

April 2021

March 2021

February 2021

January 2021

2020

2019

2018

2017

2016

2015

2014

2013

2012

2011

2010

2009

2008

2007

2006

2005

2004

2003

2002

2001

2000

1999