Joined: 2006/12/22 10:28 Last Login
: 2014/10/9 18:18
Group:
Moderator Registered Users Privat
|
British tribunal orders Iraq minutes released
Date: Jan 27, 2009 12:11 PM
AP News Tuesday, January 27, 2009
A British tribunal ordered the government to make public the formal minutes of two contentious Cabinet discussions held before the invasion of Iraq.
Tuesday's decision could provide insight into one of the most contentious periods in recent British history. The decision to join the U.S.-led invasion in 2003 sparked widespread domestic opposition and helped transform public opinion of then Prime Minister Tony Blair.
Cabinet papers usually remain private for at least 30 years, but those containing sensitive material can be kept closed for even longer.
In the case of the formal minutes from the meetings on March 13 and 17, 2003, Britain's Information Tribunal said in its decision that "maintaining the confidentiality of the formal minutes of two Cabinet meetings at which ministers decided to commit forces to military action in Iraq did not ... outweigh the public interest in disclosure. "
But it also makes clear that some portions of the discussion that took place will remain closed, and that sensitive material will be removed in order to protect Britain's foreign policy.
The decision was made in response to a request made under the Freedom of Information Act, and upholds a previous decision by the information commissioner. The government has 28 days to appeal, and the Cabinet Office statement said it was considering its response.
The minutes are from two meetings at which the Cabinet discussed whether invading Iraq would be legal.
Then attorney-general Peter Goldsmith, the government's chief legal adviser, raised doubts about the legality of the war in a 13-page memorandum dated March 7, 2003.
Goldsmith said it would be safer to go to war with a second U.N. Security Council resolution specifically authorizing military action. He also warned that British troops taking part in the conflict could be open to legal action.
But in a final, single-page statement discussed at a second meeting 10 days later, Goldsmith gave an unequivocal view that military action was justified under existing U.N. resolutions.
The meeting minutes should show how the Cabinet responded to Goldsmith's advice.
Clare Short, a member of that Cabinet _ who eventually resigned her position over the decision to go to war in Iraq _ said the formal minutes are always written in a sweeping manner.
"I think people will be disappointed about how little the minutes will say," she said. "For example, they never attribute different points to different people. They are always in very generalized terms. "
Copyright © 2008 Salem Web Network. All Rights Reserved.
Posted on: 2009/1/27 21:43
|