Tuesday, 16 June 2009

Broon fails again

So finally there is to be an inquiry into the execution and reconstruction involved in the war on Iraq. It is to be overseen by a former senior Northern Ireland civil servant who knows a thing or two about secrecy - Sir John Chilcot - who also sat on the Butler Committee which investigated the intelligence on weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.
It is to hear evidence in private and will not have the power of legal subpoena - specifically the legal power to require people to attend or divulge documents. That last fact seems to be the central criticism of the way the inquiry has been set up, coupled with the secrecy. But the people supervising the inquiry, whilst lacking a certain amount of diversity, have been largely welcomed. Gary Gibbon will be reporting on Mr Brown's announcement.

Action's speak louder than words. By holding this inquiry in private shows the disrespect that politicians have for the ordinary Brit who are the backbone of the British dying nation. If this is what being a 'son of the Manse' means I am glad I was brought up by an ordinary, hard working Northern family.

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