The Report
of the Iraq Inquiry
538.
But the
deliberate selection of a formulation which grounded the statement
in what
Mr Blair
believed, rather than in the judgements which the JIC had actually
reached in its
assessment
of the intelligence, indicates a distinction between his beliefs
and the JIC’s
actual
judgements.
539.
That is
supported by the position taken by the JIC and No.10 officials at
the time,
and in the
evidence offered to the Inquiry by some of those
involved.
540.
The assessed
intelligence had not
established
beyond doubt that Saddam Hussein
had
continued to produce chemical and biological weapons. The Executive
Summary
of the
dossier stated that the JIC judged that Iraq had “continued to
produce chemical
and
biological agents”. The main text of the dossier said that there
had been “recent”
production.
It also stated that Iraq had the means to deliver chemical and
biological
weapons. It
did not say that Iraq had continued to produce
weapons.
541.
Nor had the
assessed intelligence established beyond doubt that efforts to
develop
nuclear
weapons continued. The JIC stated in the Executive Summary of the
dossier
that Iraq
had:
•
made covert
attempts “to acquire technology and materials which could be
used
in the
production of nuclear weapons”;
•
“sought
significant quantities of uranium from Africa, despite having no
active
nuclear
programme that would require it”; and
•
“recalled
specialists to work on its nuclear programme”.
542.
But the
dossier made clear that, as long as sanctions remained effective,
Iraq
could not
produce a nuclear weapon.
543.
These
conclusions draw on the evidence from the JIC Assessments at the
time
and the
Executive Summary of the dossier, which are set out in Section 4.2.
They do
not rely
on hindsight.
544.
The JIC itself
should have made that position clear because its ownership of
the
dossier,
which was intended to inform a highly controversial policy debate,
carried with
it the
responsibility to ensure that the JIC’s integrity was
protected.
545.
The process of
seeking the JIC’s views, through Mr Scarlett, on the text of
the
Foreword
shows that No.10 expected the JIC to raise any concerns it
had.
546.
The firmness
of Mr Blair’s beliefs, despite the underlying uncertainties,
is important
in
considering how the judgements in the Foreword would have been
interpreted by
Cabinet in
its discussions on 23 September and by Parliament.
547.
In his
statement to Parliament on 24 September and in his answers to
subsequent
questions,
Mr Blair presented Iraq’s past, current and potential future
capabilities as
evidence of
the severity of the potential threat from Iraq’s weapons of mass
destruction;
and that,
at some point in the future, that threat would become a
reality.
74