Iraq inquiry to quiz Brown after election

Prime Minister Gordon Brown and other members of his government will not appear before an inquiry into the Iraq war until after…

Prime Minister Gordon Brown and other members of his government will not appear before an inquiry into the Iraq war until after a British general election next year, the inquiry team said today.

John Chilcot, who is leading the inquiry, has said that he wants it to remain outside of party politics. Public hearings will be suspended from February until after the election which must be held by June.

Former prime minister Tony Blair, who led Britain into the war with Iraq in 2003, will appear before the inquiry early in the new year. Alastair Campbell, Mr Blair's former director of communications, has also been asked to appear either next month or in February.

Mr Blair said earlier this month he believed it was right to oust Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein from power even though no weapons of mass destruction were found in Iraq.

READ MORE

Mr Blair's order to send 45,000 British troops to take part in the 2003 invasion to topple Saddam Hussein provoked big anti-war protests in London.

Along with Mr Brown, Foreign Secretary David Miliband and International Development Secretary Douglas Alexander will also not appear until after the election.

Reuters