Gordon Carrera
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Appearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
So I guess as we come to the end, focusing on that WMD question, I mean, who's to blame?
There have been so many inquiries.
inquiries and things like that.
Well, it is because where do we assign blame?
I mean, should we?
I think it's interesting because I felt in the aftermath, there was this question and the accusation that the politicians had lied about WMD and that became very much the narrative in the UK, which is that Tony Blair and others had lied about the WMD.
I actually think it's much more complicated than that because Tony Blair says he went to his intelligence chiefs, even on the eve of war, went to the Joint Intelligence Committee and said to them, are you sure Saddam has got this stuff?
And they said, yes, he's relying on what they are told.
The spies were the ones who got it wrong rather than the politicians lying about it.
Now, that is not, before people have a go at me, to say that that excuses the politicians
from responsibility because ultimately it was a political decision to go to war.
And it was Tony Blair and George W. Bush's decision that they were going to go to war and Tony Blair's commitment.
And they are just using the intelligence as a justification for a political decision that they are doing.
So I think the ultimate political responsibility lies with the politicians.
But I do think there is a massive intelligence failure because the public were told and they were told that the weapons were there.
Yeah, there's an interesting line, which is that the French spies, for instance, so France doesn't go to war, stays out of the war.
And the French president at the time says, yeah, my people thought they were spies.
But he says something interesting.
He says spy agencies sometimes intoxicate each other.
Sounds very French.