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Blair
gets ready to say "sorry"
Monday 21st June 2004
There won't be a direct apology, because the PM still believes he was right on
Iraq, but his advisers' escape plan involves expressions of regret for misleading
the country.
By John Kampfner
At the end of January, Tony Blair lobbied the Americans not to hold an inquiry
into the elusive weapons of mass destruction. He did not want a committee to
look into the same question in the UK, and he did not want Lord Butler to chair
it. Now, as he puts together a "post-Iraq strategy" to improve his
fortunes after the electoral drubbings of the past week, Blair is being advised
that Butler's report could actually help him.
There is nothing inconsistent about Blair's position. The Prime Minister says
publicly what he says privately. He believes, as he stated in his press conference
on 15 June, that his decision to go to war in Iraq was right and that history
will vindicate him. His confidence startles those close to him. A short while
ago, I asked a Downing Street official if there was anyone left in that building
who believed that the Iraqi venture had been anything but a terrible mistake. "Oh
yes," he replied. "There is one."
That is why there will not, cannot, be a direct apology. And yet Labour's woeful
share of the vote at the local and European elections - below the lowest expectations
of campaign managers - has begun to persuade even Blair that he needs to show
some limited form of contrition. His heart will not be in it, but his people
are telling him he has to do it to re-engage with the party. That is where Butler,
conveniently, comes in. For the past four months, Butler's team has been investigating
in secret, and in some depth, the reasons behind the mistaken intelligence on
Saddam Hussein's chemical and biological weapons. Some of those who have been
summoned before it say they have been impressed by the manner of the questioning,
and predict this will not be a Hutton Mark II.
Blair knows, having told all sides to agree to Lord Hutton's magnanimous findings
in full, that he will have no choice but to accept the outcome of this latest
inquiry. As before, the remit has been set narrowly, and yet there is still scope
for damage. "We might be able to turn the criticism to our advantage," says
one member of Blair's entourage. "It will allow Tony to express regret on
the procedures, while sticking to the principles."
The plan is for Blair to admit that while the intelligence might have been wrong,
it had been gathered in good faith, he had acted on it in good faith, and in
any case he had secured the "right" outcome - the removal of Saddam.
The expressions of regret will be framed within the context of Whitehall - the
failings, it will be stated, were institutional, lessons will be learned, changes
will be introduced and that will be that. The WMD issue will be revived for a
few days, but Downing Street hopes that it will then be laid to rest. Whenever
Blair is challenged that he misled the country by going to war on the basis of
mistaken intelligence, he will reply that he has dealt with the problem by implementing
the Butler recommendations.
The sanguine scenario in Downing Street is that, by the autumn, Iraq will have
dropped down news schedules. Already, for the first time at his monthly meetings
with the press, lobby journalists appeared to have lost interest in the aftermath
of war. The passage of UN Resolution 1546 transferring sovereignty is seen as
the single most important factor in Blair's survival. The assumption is that
after 30 June the political discourse will change. Any bomb or assassination
in Iraq (the current estimate is that anything below two major attacks a week
would be manageable) will lead to offers of "assistance" to the sovereign
Iraqi government by UK/US forces.
Removing Iraq from the front pages is the first step. Disconnecting it from broader
discontent with the government, and Blair in particular, will be more difficult.
Experienced Labour canvassers reported back a link between the war and a deeper
sense of distrust. "What worried me was not so much the people who were
angry with the war and who knew the details," said one Labour MP, "but
the people who seemed embarrassed to talk about it." Another noted: "It
might not have been top of people's list of grievances, but it was there. We
could all feel it."
Top of that list was a mix of anti-Europeanism and xenophobia, harnessed by the
UK Independence Party (Ukip). Older disgruntled Labour voters appeared prone
to conflating the Europe issue with asylum and immigration, seeing in the combination
a threat to Britishness. Their complaints about Iraq are different from those
coming from what might be called the more modern left, which argues that Blair
is neglecting more immediate needs in his quest for foreign military adventures.
For all his professed determination over Europe, Blair all but admitted ahead
of the Brussels summit that he would not take on the sceptics this side of a
general election. He was, he said, determined to make the case during a campaign
for a referendum on the constitution. That, if it takes place, is between 15
and 24 months away. In the meantime, the No camp - bolstered by newspapers that
Blair is more fearful of and more desperate to accommodate than ever before -
will have the field to itself to consolidate its already tight grip on the debate.
When David Blunkett declared that he was "mortified" by the 26 per
cent Labour had secured in the local elections, its lowest ever performance,
he was choosing his words carefully. He is one of several influential figures
in the cabinet and the party who do not share the Prime Minister's sanguine scenario.
They argue that such is the volatility of the electorate, too much is being read
into the Conservatives' reverses in the European elections at the hands of Ukip.
A sizeable part of the Parliamentary Labour Party believes that Blair's position
remains vulnerable. One senior figure said the onus was on him to demonstrate
by the autumn that he had "got a grip".
That agenda over the next few weeks should play well with the party. Gordon Brown's
Comprehensive Spending Review, which is being brought forward, will spawn a series
of "good news" spending announcements for a number of departments,
including Health and Transport. For the first time since the eve of war, Blair
senses that he has a chance to regain the initiative on public services. Yet
his interpretation of reform is likely to stoke yet more hostility from Labour
MPs who want less emphasis on "choice" and more on equity.
The Chancellor's role will, as ever, be pivotal in determining levels of resistance.
He, too, will be looking keenly ahead to the period around September for assessing
the extent to which Blair has re-established himself as an electoral asset. John
Prescott and Jack Straw, both now close to Brown, have let it be known that they
will be doing the same.
Blair's escape plan is taking shape. Push the Tories on to the battleground of
public services; ensure that asylum and immigration are defused as political
issues; and give ground to the Eurosceptics while claiming to be doing the opposite.
On Iraq, pray that the security situation improves. And express regret for mistakes
over WMDs and seek to place the war in a new context.
Blair has already begun this process. Less than 24 hours after the elections
débâcle, he put a positive gloss on the G8 summit, telling MPs there
was now a consensus, including the US, that global terrorism would not be defeated
by security measures alone. "Political freedom and rising prosperity as
much as force of arms will be our ultimate shield," he told them. "It
is morally right that we extend democracy, cut poverty, remove the causes of
conflict and instability and bring the hope of advancement to all nations."
He adopted a similar template when he declared at the annual banquet of Labour
Friends of Israel that the "road map" for the Middle East was still
alive. He warned the assembled diners, ever so gently, that it was in Israel's
self-interest to enable the Palestinians to construct a secure and viable state.
He told them that child malnutrition in the occupied territories was now at the
levels of Chad and Niger. And yet, as ever with Blair, the rhetoric has outperformed
the results. He has tried to portray as positive the deal that Ariel Sharon did
with George W Bush in April behind his back, in which Israel pledged to withdraw
from Gaza while subsuming parts of the West Bank. Blair has still to convince
the White House to repudiate the Likud view, and is all too aware that until
he does, his claims of influence will ring hollow.
Blair is looking to his conference speech in September to return to the themes
of 2001, when he spoke of Africa being a scar on the conscience of the world
and pledged to reorder the world "from the slums of Gaza to the mountain
ranges of Afghanistan". He wants to use Britain's presidency of the G8 and
the EU next year to push these themes, particularly debt relief in Africa. He
has not given up on his "global mission"; he still sees it as central
to his legacy. But from now on, wars may not feature so prominently.
This article first appeared in the New
Statesman and may not be reproduced
without permission.
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