www射-国产免费一级-欧美福利-亚洲成人福利-成人一区在线观看-亚州成人

  .contact us |.about us
News > International News ... ...
Search:
    Advertisement
Blair says Iraq data wasn't manipulated
( 2003-08-29 09:47) (Agencies)

Prime Minister Tony Blair, facing the biggest crisis of his six years in office, denied Thursday that the government "sexed up" a dossier on Iraq's weapons threat, and said he would have resigned if it had been true.
Blair says Iraq data wasn't manipulated
British Prime Minister Tony Blair  arrives back at Downing Street Aug 28, 2003, from the Royal Courts of Justice in London where he gave evidence to the Hutton Inquiry into the apparent suicide of Dr. David Kelly, a Ministry of Defence weapon expert.  [AP]
Blair was testifying at a judicial inquiry into the apparent suicide of David Kelly, a weapons expert named as the source of a BBC story that said the government knowingly exaggerated the Iraqi threat in the September dossier.

"This was an attack that went not just to the heart of the office of the prime minister but also the way our intelligence services operated," Blair said. "It went, in a sense, to the credibility, I felt, of the country."

Blair said the British Broadcasting Corp. story attacked his integrity and led Britons to believe that his government duped them about the threat of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction as the U.S.-led coalition built its case to invade Iraq.

Among other charges, the May 29 BBC report said Blair's aides had inserted a claim into the dossier on Iraq's biological and chemical weapons saying they could be deployed in 45 minutes. The BBC report, citing an unidentified source later revealed to be Kelly, said the government knew the claim was false and some intelligence agents had disputed it.

"This was an absolutely fundamental charge," Blair said. "This was an allegation, were it true, that would have merited my resignation."

Blair became only the second prime minister to ever testify at such a hearing. The first was his immediate predecessor, Prime Minister John Major, who appeared at a 1994 inquiry studying whether the government violated its own policy on weapons sales to Iraq under Margaret Thatcher.

The bitter public spat between the government and the BBC has focused the nation on a debate about the failure to find any weapons of mass destruction since Saddam Hussein was ousted.

The dispute over the report and the inquiry have knocked Blair's popularity to its lowest levels in his six years in office and left many Britons questioning his reliability, according to recent polls.

The dispute produced front-page headlines last month when Kelly, 59, a former U.N. weapons inspector in Iraq and a government adviser, was identified as the possible source of the BBC report. Three days after he testified before a parliamentary committee, Kelly was found dead near his home, his wrist slashed.

The inquiry is trying to determine how the government came to expose Kelly — a move that placed him under intense media pressure and led him to testify before the committees. Whatever the finding, few believe that Blair is likely to step down, even if his government is criticized for the way it treated Kelly.

Blair said he took responsibility for the decisions by government officials that led to Kelly being identified publicly after the scientist told his bosses at the Ministry of Defense that he might be the source for the BBC story.

Blair said the action was necessary to ensure all the facts were known.

"I take full responsibility for the decisions. I stand by them. I believe they were the right decisions," Blair said. "It was better just to be open."

The credibility of the BBC also has been hurt by the dispute.

Critics have questioned the accuracy of some elements in the radio piece by BBC reporter Andrew Gilligan and steps that he took to secretly provide background information on Kelly to legislators who were questioning him about the dossier.

On Thursday, Gavyn Davies, chairman of the BBC, told the inquiry that Gilligan appears to have accurately quoted Kelly's criticism of the dossier, but should not have sent e-mails to the House of Commons legislators about the scientist before they questioned him.

The BBC already has indicated that it is prepared to take steps to better define the rules that reporters like Gilligan must follow when they come up with stories containing serious allegations attributed to a single, unidentified source.

Dozens of anti-war protesters jeered Blair as he arrived Thursday at the Royal Courts of Justice in central London.

Blair, who appeared for nearly two hours at the inquiry, said the government dossier on Iraq's arsenal was based on intelligence sources and was not manipulated for political reasons.

"At that stage, the strategy was not to use the dossier as the immediate reason for going to conflict, but as the reason why we had to return to the issue of Saddam's weapons of mass destruction," he said.

Looking calm, Blair said a claim in the dossier that Iraq could deploy weapons of mass destruction within 45 minutes came from British intelligence and was not inserted at the insistence of his office.

"We could not produce this as evidence that came from anything other than an objective source" in Iraq.

Hundreds of people waited in line for hours to watch Blair's testimony at the Royal Courts of Justice in central London.

 
Close  
   
  Today's Top News   Top International News
   
+WHO: Bird flu death rises to 15; vaccination recommended
(2004-02-05)
+Solana: EU ready to lift China arms embargo
(2004-02-05)
+Nation tops TV, cell phone, monitor production
(2004-02-05)
+Absence ... still makes China hot
(2004-02-05)
+Hu: Developing world in key role
(2004-02-04)
+WHO: Bird flu death rises to 15; vaccination recommended
(2004-02-05)
+Solana: EU ready to lift China arms embargo
(2004-02-05)
+US court clears way for gay marriages
(2004-02-05)
+Pakistan nuke scientist asks forgiveness
(2004-02-05)
+Sharon ready for referendum on scrapping settlements
(2004-02-05)
   
  Go to Another Section  
     
 
 
     
  Article Tools  
     
 
 
     
  Related Articles  
     
 

+Focus: Who's at fault for Kelly's death?
2003-07-29

+Blair under fire over dead scientist slur
2003-08-06

+Probe into Iraq expert's death puts focus on Blair
2003-08-11

+Iraq weapons expert predicted 'death in woods'

2003-08-22

+UK's Hoon drags Blair into dead scientist Inquiry
2003-08-28

+Embattled Blair faces dead UK scientist inquiry
2003-08-28

+Blair denies hyping Iraq threat; UK soldier killed
2003-08-29

   
        .contact us |.about us
  Copyright By chinadaily.com.cn. All rights reserved  
主站蜘蛛池模板: 中文字幕色站 | 国产成人亚洲精品一区二区在线看 | 欧美日韩精品一区二区三区视频在线 | 精品久久一区二区 | 亚洲欧美成人影院 | 久久九九国产 | 日韩中文字幕精品一区在线 | 一级全黄毛片 | 色吧久久 | 欧美精品久久久亚洲 | 久久精品2020| 波多野结衣一区二区三区在线观看 | 欧洲97色综合成人网 | a级片在线 | 99re热精品视频国产免费 | 成人精品一区二区久久久 | 欧美成人免费在线视频 | 在线观看亚洲精品专区 | 99久久免费午夜国产精品 | 国产精品久久人人做人人爽 | 久久综合精品国产一区二区三区 | 久久九九国产 | 欧美日韩一区二区在线 | 成人毛片18女人毛片免费 | 日韩美女强理论片 | 国产成人资源 | 国产成人精品日本亚洲专 | 在线观看精品国内福利视频 | 毛片一级在线观看 | 免费观看情趣v视频网站 | 91在线免费观看网站 | 一级在线免费视频 | 欧美日韩精品一区二区在线线 | 亚洲高清国产一区二区三区 | 日本黄页网站在线观看 | 高清性色生活片欧美在线 | 男人毛片 | 搞黄网站在线观看 | 欧美性视频一区二区三区 | 欧美亚洲国产精品久久久 | 欧美国产大片 |