snip>>
His record as the former head of the civil service shows that he consistently showed deference to those in power. During the height of the Conservative sleaze scandals of the 1990s, Sir Robin, as he then was, chose to believe the dishonest arms sales minister Jonathan Aitken and attacked journalists who were investigating him.
He followed this up by defending Whitehall deceit during the Scott inquiry into covert arms sales to Iraq. During that investigation too, he went out of his way to attack the media for undermining "our system of government" by what he called "grossly distorted and prejudicial allegations".
<<snip>>
In the midst of the Aitken row, in September 1994, John Major, then prime minister, summoned Sir Robin and asked him also to investigate as yet unpublished allegations of bribe-taking against Neil Hamilton.
Sir Robin delayed for a fortnight before questioning Hamilton, and gave him advance notice of his intentions. Mr Hamilton told an untrue story of the way he had become involved with Mohamed Al Fayed, owner of Harrods and payer of the bribes. Sir Robin failed to investigate what turned out to be a crucial question - whether Hamilton had any financial relationship with Mr Fayed's lobbyist.
<<snip>>
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/iraq/story/0,12956,1140406,00.htmlPure whitewash, not even bothering with the charade that it will be anything else.