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Tony Blair has already apologised for aspects of Iraq War, his spokesperson insists

The former PM's message has been inconsistent, however

Jon Stone
Sunday 25 October 2015 14:40 GMT
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The memo was written a week before the Crawford summit at the President’s ranch in Texas in 2002
The memo was written a week before the Crawford summit at the President’s ranch in Texas in 2002 (AFP/Getty Images)

Tony Blair has previously apologised for aspects of the Iraq War, a spokesperson for Tony Blair’s office has said.

The former PM’s office downplayed his latest apology said that he had not changed his position.

“Tony Blair has always apologised for the intelligence being wrong and for mistakes in planning. He has always also said, and says again here, that he does not however think it was wrong to remove Saddam,” she said.

In 2004 Mr Blair told the Labour Party's annual conference: “I can apologise for the information that turned out to be wrong, but I can't, sincerely at least, apologise for removing Saddam.”

Mr Blair’s message has been inconsistent, however. In 2007 he said “I don’t think we should be apologising at all for what we are doing in Iraq … I don't think we should be apologising because we're not causing the terrorism.”

In a documentary interview for CNN to be broadcast on Monday, Mr Blair said “I apologise for the fact that the intelligence we received was wrong.

“I also apologise, by the way, for some of the mistakes in planning and certainly, our mistake in our understanding of what would happen once you removed the regime. But I find it hard to apologise for removing Saddam.”

The comments were widely interpreted to refer to the rise of Isis after the fall of Saddam.

However, this interpretation was disputed by Mr Blair’s spokesperson.

“He did not say the decision to remove Saddam in 2003 ‘caused Isis’ and pointed out that Isis was barely heard of at the end of 2008, when al-Qaida was basically beaten. He went on to say in 2009, Iraq was relatively more stable," she said.

“What then happened was a combination of two things: there was a sectarian policy pursued by the government of Iraq, which were mistaken policies.

“But also when the Arab spring began, Isis moved from Iraq into Syria, built themselves from Syria and then came back into Iraq. All of this he has said before.”

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