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Jun 16
2009

Demand an open Inquiry on Iraq

Posted by Kate Hudson in Untagged 

The government decision to hold the long-promised Inquiry into the Iraq war in private is outrageous.  CND will continue to fight for a comprehensive, open and independent Inquiry into all factors leading up to and during the invasion and occupation of Iraq. 

The illegality of the war on Iraq, and the crimes committed there, cannot be swept under the carpet. Six years do not erase the guilt of those responsible for breaking international law and bringing about the deaths of countless thousands of innocent civilians and 179 British troops. Mr Brown has stated that the Inquiry will not aim to 'apportion blame'. But it is not a question of blame - it is a question of justice.

If criminal acts have taken place, if the law has knowingly and intentionally been broken, then the prepetrators must be indentified and charged. That is the normal procedure when crimes are carried out. We cannot have one law for those in government and one law for everyone else.  This will be a running sore, not only in British politics, but in international relations, until the truth comes out and those that are guilty are put on trial.

Prior to the invasion, CND took extensive legal steps to challenge the government's excuse for attacking Iraq. In December 2002, it took the government to court to ask for an advisory opinion on the legality of using UNSC Resolution 1441 as a pretext for war. This was argued by Rabinder Singh QC and Charlotte Kilroy acting for CND. Three judges ruled that they could not give an opinion as they had no jurisdiction on this aspect of international law and that it may be 'damaging to the public interest in the field of international relations, national security or defence'.

The same CND legal team also produced an opinion on the Attorney General's use of Resolutions 678, 687 and 1441 to authorise the war, both on the eve of the war and after it became clear that weapons of mass destruction were not being found in Iraq. (note 4 below)Consistent government refusal to agree to a Public Inquiry and Jack Straw's veto of the release of the crucial Cabinet meetings of March 13th and 17th 2003, suggest that the government knew it was breaking international law in attacking Iraq and went ahead anyway.

The government must not be allowed to duck this issue any more. Too many people have died and too many lives have been wrecked for any more prevarication to be tolerated.

  

Comments (4)Add Comment
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written by Claus-Erik Hamle, June 27, 2009
Former Trident missile engineer Bob Aldridge approved this: According to former Trident missile engineer Bob Aldridge-www.plrc.org-the Pentagon aims to achieve a disarming and unanswerable first-strike capability. And according to Bob Aldridge the US Navy can track and destroy all enemy submarines simultaneously. Minuteman-3s and Trident-2 D5s linked to NAVSTAR obtain a CEP of 30-40 metres, enough to destroy any hard target. Please see the article by Keir Lieber and Daryl Press, "The Rise of US Nuclear Primacy" in the 2006 March/April issue of Foreign Affairs. A First-Strike Capability won´t be complete without the missiles in Poland to shoot down any surviving Russian missiles. Even if it´s only for blackmail, the Russians may have no choice but implementing Launch On Warning. Trident missile engineer Bob Aldridge resigned because a disarming and unanswerable first-strike capability is suicidal.
Peace & All the best
Claus-Erik Hamle
PS: I´ve sent this message to the governments in the Czech Republic and Poland. Have you got mailaddresses the two countries, papers, radio, TV, etc. ?
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written by rich thurgood, July 03, 2009
can CND be taken seriously when one of your members started the war, namely Tony Blair and no one in your organisation has got the guts to publically expell or rebuke him, is it the case that all of your members say one thing but would do another if they had the job.
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written by Ben S, July 09, 2009
Rich, I'm afraid you're mistaken. Tony Blair was never actually a member of CND. He was involved in Parliamentary Labour CND in the 80s but was, as far as anyone is aware, never an individual member of the national organisation.

I think the fact that CND was one of the core organisations who brought 2 million people onto the streets in protest against the war gives CND credibility to address the issue, regardless of the exact status of Tony Blair's association with the organisation a couple of decades previously!
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written by Buddha Wisdom, August 14, 2009

2 Trillion Dollars for a War to Control Oil?

1/3 of the World without clean water to drink?

Will Justice and Peace ever preside over Death and Destruction?

Hard Power Solutions are Not Solutions.

The Iraq War should never have happened.

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About Kate Hudson

Kate Hudson has been chair of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament since 2003. She is a leading anti-nuclear and anti-war campaigner nationally and internationally. She is also author of 'CND Now More than Ever: The Story of a Peace Movement'.