• 05:25
  • Wednesday ,25 November 2009
العربية

Iraq war inquiry due to begin public hearings

By-BBC

International News

00:11

Wednesday ,25 November 2009

Iraq war inquiry due to begin public hearings

Between 2003 and 2009, 179 UK service personnel were killed in Iraq
The Iraq war inquiry is to begin its public hearings later, with top civil servants and a former spy chief giving evidence on the conflict's origins.

The investigation, looking at the whole period from 2001 to 2009, is expected to last months, with a report not out until after the next general election.

Former Prime Minister Tony Blair will be among the future witnesses.

Tuesday's session looks at UK foreign policy towards Iraq in the lead-up to the war, which began in 2003.

The Iraq inquiry will begin with a statement from its chairman, Sir John Chilcot.

It will then hear from figures including Sir Peter Ricketts, who was the chairman of the Joint Intelligence Committee (JIC) - which oversees MI5, MI6 and GCHQ - from 2000 to 2001.

Others giving evidence are former senior Ministry of Defence official Simon Webb and ex-Foreign Office officials Sir Michael Wood and Sir William Patey.

Controversial dossier

The members of the committee were chosen by Downing Street, leading critics to ask whether it can be independent of the government.

But Sir John has promised the inquiry will not produce a "whitewash".

On Wednesday, the panel will hear from former senior Foreign Office staff on the claims that Saddam Hussein's regime possessed "weapons of mass destruction".


HAVE YOUR SAY I confidently predict that by the end of this inquiry the British public still won't know why we sent troops to Iraq or what advice the government was given regarding the war's legality.
Richard, UK
Send us your comments Over the coming weeks the inquiry is expected to hear from a succession of diplomats, military officers and politicians, including Mr Blair, who is due to appear early in the new year.

Sir John Scarlett, the former chief of MI6 who - as chairman of the JIC - drew up the Government's controversial dossier on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, is also due to give evidence to the five-strong inquiry panel.

The BBC's Jim Muir, in Iraq, said people there appeared to be "bemused by the sight of the Western powers dissecting the decisions that were taken".

"As one politician put it, it's not at all relevant to Iraq today," said our correspondent.

The war resulted in the deaths of 179 UK forces personnel.

Previously, the Butler inquiry looked at intelligence failures before the war, while the Hutton inquiry examined the circumstances leading to the death of former government adviser David Kelly.

Sir John Chilcot has said he hopes to complete his final report by the end of next year, although he has warned it could slip into 2011.