UK: Iraq inquiry to question US officials 
Tue, 09 Feb 2010 07:08:57 GMT 





A spokesman for the ex-president has declined to comment on whether 
any request has been made to George W. Bush, or if he would co-operate. 



In Britain, the head of the Iraq war inquiry is to seek meetings with 
members of the administration of former US President George W. Bush, over 
the 2003 war. 

John Chilcot confirmed on Monday he hopes to obtain evidence from American 
officials, but did not say which specific individuals he wants to question. 

"We cannot take formal evidence as such from foreign nationals, but we can 
of course have discussions with them," Chilcot stressed. 

The long-awaited public hearings of Britain's involvement in the 2003 Iraq 
war began in November last year. 

The inquiry has so far seen former Prime Minister Tony Blair, former Foreign 
Secretary Jack Straw, current MI6 intelligence agency Chief John Sawers, 
Head of Britain's military Jock Stirrup and a host of ministers and 
government officials offer testimony on the conflict's origins. 

Chilcot said his panel will question British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, 
Foreign Secretary David Miliband and a number of other British officials in 
a second round of hearings before summer. 

He added that he also plans to gather evidence from US officials and 
military veterans. 

A spokesman for Bush has declined to comment on whether any request has been 
made to the former president or if he would cooperate. 

The inquiry has so far gathered much information about the lead-up to the 
war, with former Foreign Policy Adviser Sir David Manning testifying that 
Blair had assured Bush of backing "regime change" in Iraq, 11 months prior 
to the 2003 invasion, during a meeting at the ex-president's Texas ranch. 

Recalling the meeting at the Crawford ranch in April 2002, Britain's former 
Ambassador to the United States' Christopher Meyer, also said that Bush and 
Blair had "signed in blood" an agreement to take military action in Iraq. 

Meanwhile, military historian Lawrence Freedman indicated in questioning 
that Bush had advised Blair he planned to topple Saddam Hussein even if the 
despot cooperated with the United Nations weapons inspectors. 

Details of private correspondence between the two former heads of Britain 
and the United States have been provided to the panel, but have not been 
released publicly. 

Some lawmakers have demanded that the letters be made public, but the 
government has declined. 

According to data compiled by the London-based Opinion Research Business and 
its research partner in Iraq, the Independent Institute for Administration 
and Civil Society Studies, the Iraq war has left more than one million 
Iraqis dead. 

Moreover, a fifth of Iraqi households have lost at least one family member 
due to the conflict. 

The United Nations estimates that the number of displaced persons in Iraq 
stands at more than four million. 

FF/TG/DT 



http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=118234&sectionid=351020601 
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