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Army chief piles pressure on Brown over Iraq inquiry

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Published Date: 18 June 2009
THE pressure on Gordon Brown to allow the Iraq war inquiry to sit in public intensified last night after the head of the army disclosed he was not consulted about the decision to conduct the hearings behind closed doors.
General Sir Richard Dannatt, the Chief of the General Staff, said that he saw "a lot of merit" in holding at least some hearings in public with others taking place in private when sensitive intelligence was being discussed.

He suggested the wisdom
of the government's decision to hold all the hearings in private would only be seen when the inquiry finally reports next year.

"I was not privy to the discussions about how this inquiry was going to be done. I am sure the option of part in public and part in private was considered and I think that is an option that has got a lot of merit to it," he said.

"The proof of the pudding will be in the eating when it is published – whatever is published – in a year's time."

His comments came after his predecessor, General Sir Mike Jackson who was head of the army at the time of the invasion of Iraq in 2003, said that he would have "no problem at all" in giving his evidence in public.

Earlier the Prime Minister's spokesman said the Cabinet Office had consulted with all relevant Whitehall departments – including the MoD and serving military officers – on the decision to conduct hearings in private.





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  • Last Updated: 17 June 2009 10:00 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: War in Iraq
 
1

Brianwci,

18/06/2009 01:40:13
OIL AND GAS: £20BILLION SHORTFALL

Marvellous what you can do with numbers. Kuwait, Abu Dhabi, Saudi Arabia, Qatar etc can be transformed from desert economies (i.e. have to build a modern civilisation from scratch....goats the main resource)but Scotland, above all other countries in the world discovers Oil and gas and yet somehow or other would not have enough to live on for most of the years Oil has been flowing!

Many words spring to mind, none of them printable.

The sooner the Independence debate gets going so we can nail this sh*te into the ground the better. This is absolutely lunacy.

No, worse, it's downright LIES!!!

I comment here because we are not allowed to challenge this 'filth' in the original article.



2

Bret,

Aberdeen 18/06/2009 06:43:04
"...the Prime Minister's spokesman said the Cabinet Office had consulted with all relevant Whitehall departments – including the MoD and serving military officers..."

Yet another of Browns LIES.
He must go.
3

John S,

18/06/2009 08:05:14
Notice the "get out" wording:- Earlier the Prime Minister's
spokesman..............and serving military officers.
Was this to prevent General Sir Mike Jackson who was head of the army at the time of the invasion of Iraq in 2003 and is now retired from being consulted and he would have had "no problem at all" in giving his evidence in public ?
4

Mercutio,

FALKIRK 18/06/2009 12:56:40
The politicians have already shafted Sir Richard Dannatt because of his outspoken views.This fine man has been deprived of the Chief of Defence Staff post after saying publicly that British Troops should come home from Iraq in 2006. That Sir Richard felt the need to speak out about this government's disastrous foreign policy is testament to the levels of anger and frustration running through our armed services over the task they were set in Iraq.

 

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