Source:
Telegraph UKSources in Washington said the inquiry sent out emails "about three weeks ago" to senior officials in Mr Bush's government including, it is believed, the former president himself.
Other requests are understood to have been made to Dick Cheney, Mr Bush's vice-president, Condoleezza Rice, the former secretary of state, Donald Rumsfeld, the former US defence secretary, and Stephen Hadley, an ex-national security adviser – as well as to their deputies and senior assistants.
Members of Sir John Chilcot's panel are believed to be willing to travel to the US to take evidence – almost certainly in private – on the administration's policies between the 2003 invasion of Iraq and 2009.
While the most senior figures are reluctant to give evidence, Washington sources claim about 10 former officials, most involved in the post-invasion period, have agreed to do so.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/7488615/Iraq-Inquiry-asks-to-question-George-Bushs-senior-officials.htmlRead more:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/7488615/Iraq-Inquiry-asks-to-question-George-Bushs-senior-officials.html
Not much hoopla at DU about this. It's odd to consider this was all that mattered at DU 7 years ago. Now all that matters is the health care debate. What good is it to trumpet these issues when no one cares after the fact? It's sad really that the site was pretty much about stolen elections and an illegal immoral war yet now it's about passing a health hand out to the crooks at insurance companies who have been ripping us off.
No real results or resolution on these issues going our way. It's a screwy world we're living in. 1 million dead Iraqi men, women and children deserved better. These war criminals should still be held to account. America won't do it. At least the British are asking questions.