Britain never thought Saddam
was threat - diplomat
By Richard Norton-Taylor
12/16/06 "The
Guardian" -- -- The British government
never believed Saddam Hussein posed a threat to British
interests and warned the US that toppling him would lead
to "chaos", according to a Foreign Office diplomat
closely involved in negotiations in the run-up to the
invasion of Iraq.
Damning repudiation of the government's public claims in
the run-up to the war is contained in secret evidence to
Lord Butler's committee on the abuse of intelligence
over Iraq by Carne Ross, a diplomat at Britain's UN
mission in New York.
His evidence, in which he says the government privately
assessed that Iraq possessed no significant quantity of
weapons of mass destruction, has been published on the
Commons foreign affairs committee website. Mr Ross gave
evidence to the group last month but some MPs had been
reluctant to have it published.
Mr Ross told Lord Butler he read UK and US human and
signals intelligence on Iraq every working day during
the four years he spent in New York up to 2002, and
spoke at length to UN weapons inspectors.
"At no time did [the government] assess that Iraq's WMD
(or any other capability) posed a threat to the UK," he
told the Butler committee. "On the contrary, it was the
commonly-held view among the officials dealing with Iraq
that any threat had been effectively contained ... At
the same time, we would frequently argue, when the US
raised the subject, that 'regime change' was
inadvisable, primarily on the grounds that Iraq would
collapse into chaos."
Mr Ross continued: "There was no intelligence evidence
of significant holdings of CW [chemical warfare], BW
[biological warfare] or nuclear material. Aerial or
satellite surveillance was unable to get under the roofs
of Iraqi facilities. We therefore had to rely on
inherently unreliable human sources."
He added: "Iraq's ability to launch a WMD or any form of
attack was very limited. There were approximately 12 or
so unaccounted-for Scud missiles; Iraq's airforce was
depleted to the point of total ineffectiveness; its army
was but a pale shadow of its earlier might; there was no
evidence of any connection with any terrorist
organisation that might have planned an attack using
Iraqi WMD."
Mr Ross said he repeatedly questioned FO and Ministry of
Defence officials about their threat assessments of
Iraq. He said: "None told me that any new evidence had
emerged to change our assessment; what had changed was
the government's determination to present available
evidence in a different light." Referring to the
government's weapons adviser who later committed
suicide, he added: "I discussed this at some length with
David Kelly in late 2002, who agreed that the Number 10
WMD dossier was overstated".
He said colleagues in other UN delegations told him the
UK sold security council resolution 1441 - later used to
help justify the invasion - "explicitly on the grounds
that it did not represent authorisation for war".
Mr Ross, who was responsible at the UK's UN mission for
sanctions as well as weapons inspections, said he and
his FO colleagues repeatedly attempted to get the UK and
US to act more vigorously on the breaches.
Mr Ross resigned from the FO in 2004.
Sir John Major, the former prime minister, backed calls
for an independent inquiry into the causes and conduct
of the war. It should include "new information that is
becoming available", he told Radio 4's Today.
© Guardian News and Media Limited 2006
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