An article by Clarles Kennedy, leader of the UK Liberal Democrats.
http://argument.independent.co.uk/commentators/story.jsp?story=485376I met too many brave and dignified widows last October. The occasion was the memorial service at St Paul's Cathedral, London, for the troops who died in Iraq. It was moving and emotional. As I talked to the families of those who had been killed, I found that some were angry and others disillusioned, while many seemed simply hurt and bewildered. As a politician, I was fiercely aware that we had let them down. Tony Blair kept his distance.
I believe the Prime Minister made a disastrous error of judgment over Iraq and last week's ICM poll showed that 48 per cent of the population believe he lied. This is enormously damaging both to his integrity and the trust we should have in the office.
Whether knowingly or not, Tony Blair misled us; his judgement was seriously flawed. Mr Blair clings to his assertions that in the end some evidence will be found by the Iraq Survey Group. This is now starting to make him look silly. Even if some weapons were eventually to turn up, they won't help him. It is quite clear there was no vast, battle-ready arsenal. Tony Blair took us to war on a false prospectus and we cannot, as a nation, let that pass unquestioned.
The Conservatives are unintentionally helping to get the Prime Minister off the hook. Michael Howard is pursuing the wrong issue. He suggested in Parliament that the Prime Minister misled journalists in an informal briefing on a plane shortly after David Kelly died. Of course, what happened during that briefing is important, but set alongside the much greater untruth perpetrated by Saddam's weapons of mass destruction it's just a sideshow. And the Conservative leader has already conceded it's unlikely that Lord Hutton will even mention it. The problem for the Tories is that they can't credibly take on Tony Blair about the real issues because they were his principal cheerleaders for the war.