"Yet,
according to a senior intelligence source interviewed by BBC1's
Panorama tonight, MI6 has since taken the rare step of withdrawing the
intelligence assessment that underpinned the claim that (ousted
president) Saddam Hussein had continued to produce WMD - an admission
that it was fundamentally unreliable," reported the Observer
Sunday.
"The
charge leaves Blair open to serious questions over why, if the nature
of the proof had changed, he did not tell the public that the evidence
of WMD was crumbling beneath him.
"It
will increase speculation that he may be forced to disown chunks of
the controversial September dossier on banned weapons when Lord Butler
publishes his report this week on the handling of intelligence on
Iraq," said the paper.
It
added that "after the undisclosed material emerged, John Scarlett
- chair of the Joint Intelligence Committee which oversaw the dossier
process - hardened up the draft dossier's suggestion that Iraq
'probably' had more recently produced stocks of banned weapons to the
assertion that it 'has' continued to produce them.
"That
allowed Blair to claim dramatically that evidence received only 'in
recent months' showed Saddam was still generating WMD."
Yet,
the intelligence underpinning this claim was subsequently withdrawn by
MI6, which decided it could not be relied upon, the senior
intelligence source told the BBC.
This
raised serious questions over the quality of the work that went into
the dossier, and how far it can now be trusted, stressed the Observer.
Although
it is not known exactly when MI6 changed its mind, the revelation will
prompt calls for Blair to put the record straight publicly about what
he knew and when, it predicted.
|
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Scarlett insisted Blair must assume responsibility for any mistakes by the intelligence services over Iraq
|
According
to the BBC News Online, Dr Brian Jones, formerly of the Defense
Intelligence Staff (DIS), told Panorama that no-one knew what chemical
or biological agents had been produced since the first Gulf War and
there was no certainty among intelligence staff that agents had been
stockpiled.
"There
was a reasonable assumption that there may have been some stocks left
over from the first Gulf War.
"If
there had been any other production, then we have not identified that
it had taken place."
On
October 5, 2003, former British Foreign Secretary Robin Cook had
stressed that Blair
privately admitted before the US-led invasion of Iraq
that Saddam had no weapons of mass destruction that posed a "real
and present danger", although he publicly claimed otherwise.
Judged
Before God
The
Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, stressed Saturday, July 10,
that Blair, a practicing Christian, would have to account for his
decision over the Iraq war at "the judgment seat".
The
top cleric was quoted in the Observer as saying: "When you
acknowledge that you have taken a risk which has not paid off, which
has cost, and that cost does not seem to be justified that's the
punishment."
Williams
had warned Blair and US President George W. Bush against using
religious language in their drive to wage war on Iraq.
"There
is no
war that is holy and good in itself and to bring the
heavy artillery of a religious kind, to say that is the only way of
resisting evil, is something that has to be watched out for," the
archbishop told his first press conference on Friday, February 21, in
reference to Bush’s use of the Christian imagery to justify war on
Baghdad.
The
new announcement came two days after the US Senate Intelligence
Committee concluded Friday, July 10, that the CIA’s rationale to
invade Iraq was "overstated, misleading
or incorrect".