LONDON,
January 8, 2006 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – British
Prime Minister Tony Blair should be impeached for his role in the Iraq
war, a leading British Army officer was quoted as saying by Britain's
the Mail on Sunday.
"I
think the politicians should be held to account ... my view is that
Blair should be impeached," General Sir Michael Rose, a former UN
commander in Bosnia, said in a television documentary to be aired on
Channel Four television on Friday, reported Agence France-Presse
(AFP).
"That
would prevent the politicians treating quite so carelessly the subject
of taking a country into war."
US
President George Bush and his war alley Blair invaded Iraq in March
2003 without a mandate from the UN Security Council on claims of
possessing weapons of mass destruction, none of them had ever been
found.
"I
would not have gone to war on such flimsy grounds," Rose said.
Clare
Short, a former minister who quit Blair's government over the Iraq
invasion, has said the government never held an honest debate
concerning Iraq's WMDs and most ministers saw little intelligence and
knew only what they read in the press.
In
2004, an official inquiry blasted the British pre-war intelligence as
.
Negligence
Martin
Bell, BBC television's former war correspondent who made the
documentary – "Iraq: The Failure of War" – backed
impeaching Blair.
"Ordering
the armed forces to war is the most serious decision any government
takes. On Iraq it was taken with a degree of nonchalance bordering on
negligence," said the former independent member of parliament.
In
his film, Bell argue the case that war is an increasingly unreliable
and unjustifiable means of solving conflicts in the 21st century.
Twenty-three
British lawmakers attempted in November 2004 to file a motion to
impeach Blair on charges of "gross misconduct" over the
US-led invasion.
Although
it fell by the wayside despite attempts to revive it during the
general election last May, it was the first such bid to impeach a
British prime minister in 198 years.
A
recently-leaked government memo revealed that Blair had already
committed himself to a regime change in Iraq by force eight months
before the invasion of the oil-rich Arab country.
In
a 13-page legal advice to Blair on March 7, 2003, British Attorney
General Lord Goldsmith raised doubts over the legality of the Iraq
war.