Even though top world experts on the subject consider direct contravene of Internation Law, the one time Prime Minister for the U.K. PM thinks, all the same it was legal. This, despite his own government legal adviser told him - "Deposing Saddam, would conravene international law."
Britain's former prime minister Tony Blair on Sunday denied a report that his government's chief legal adviser told him before the start of the Iraq War that deposing Saddam Hussein would contravene international law.
Asked by CNN television whether an allegation published in Britain's Mail on Sunday newspaper that then-attorney general Peter Goldsmith was "gagged" after trying dissuade Blair from lending Britain's support to the US-led war, the former prime minister responded, "No, it's not."
"But I think the best thing with this inquiry is actually to let us all give our evidence to the inquiry," Blair said.
The newspaper wrote that ministers were secretly told at a July 23, 2002 cabinet meeting that the United States and Britain were set on "regime change" in Iraq and that Goldsmith, who attended the meeting, strongly expressed his disagreement with the policy in July 29 letter he wrote to Blair.
I've been through these issues many, many times over the past few years and I'm very happy to go through them again. But I think probably the appropriate place to do that is in front of the inquiry.
Tony Blair
In the letter, Goldsmith pointed out that war could not be justified purely on the grounds of "regime change", the newspaper reported.
Goldsmith eventually gave qualified legal backing to the conflict days before the war started in March 2003 in a brief, carefully drafted statement.
But Blair refuted the newspaper account Sunday, telling CNN he would have more to say on the matter when he testifies before an inquiry currently probing Britain's involvement in the war.
"I've been through these issues many, many times over the past few years and I'm very happy to go through them again. But I think probably the appropriate place to do that is in front of the inquiry," the former prime minister said.
The inquiry heard in its first week that Britain's ambassador to the United Nations at the time, Jeremy Greenstock, believed the invasion to be "of questionable legitimacy".
The inquiry, Britain's third related to the conflict, is looking at its role in Iraq between 2001 and 2009, when nearly all its troops withdrew and is to report its findings by the end of 2010.
|