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Blix: Britain Embellished Iraq Dossiers

BLIX: BRITAIN EMBELLISHED IRAQ DOSSIERS
By Dan Keane, Associated Press Writer

AZG Armenian Daily
14/03/2007

The British government embellished intelligence used to justify
the decision to invade Iraq in 2003, the former U.N. chief weapons
inspector said in an interview broadcast Monday.

Hans Blix, who led the U.N. search for weapons of mass destruction
in Iraq until June 2003, said a later discredited dossier on Iraq’s
weapons programs had deliberately embellished the case for war.

British Prime Minister Tony Blair’s government published a dossier
before the invasion that claimed Saddam Hussein had stockpiles
of chemical and biological weapons and could deploy some within
45 minutes.

"I do think they exercised spin. They put exclamation marks instead
of question marks," Blix said in an interview with Britain’s Sky News
television broadcast Monday.

Blix said, according to excerpts released in advance, that Blair
and President Bush had "lost a lot of confidence" once failures in
intelligence were exposed.

Britain’s dossier on Iraq’s supposed possession of weapons of mass
destruction was criticized by a 2004 official inquiry into intelligence
on Iraq.

Though the inquiry’s head, Lord Butler, did not fault Blair’s
government, he criticized intelligence officials for relying in part on
"seriously flawed" or "unreliable" sources.

Butler’s review concluded that the dossier, which helped Blair win the
support of Parliament to join the U.S. in the conflict, had pushed
the government’s case to the limits of available intelligence and
left out vital caveats.

Blix said that if inspectors had been allowed to carry out inspections
"a couple of months more" intelligence officials would likely have
drawn the eventual conclusion that Iraq had no weapons stockpiles
and that their sources were providing poor quality information.

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