Failing Intelligence: How Blair Led Us into War in Iraq

Failing Intelligence: How Blair Led Us into War in Iraq

by Brian Jones
Failing Intelligence: How Blair Led Us into War in Iraq

Failing Intelligence: How Blair Led Us into War in Iraq

by Brian Jones

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Overview

This is the first book on Iraq by a British intelligence official involved in the process that led to Britain taking part in the 2003 invasion. As the former head of the UK Defence Intelligence Staff's nuclear, biological and chemical section, Brian Jones is ideally placed to pronounce upon the way in which Britain was taken to war and the way in which the intelligence reporting on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction (WMD) was manipulated to justify Saddam Hussein's removal from power. Jones calls on his own experience and knowledge, a variety of leaked documents, and the expert testimony given to a series of inquiries, including the current Chilcot inquiry, to examine how and why Tony Blair and George W. Bush, managed to deceive their legislatures and their electorates into believing that Iraqi WMD was a real threat that could attack the West within 45 minutes. He describes how Blair and Bush sought to use subsequent inquiries to cover up their own culpability in the deception, in order to facilitate re-election and keep their jobs. In conclusion, Jones pulls together the lessons that should have been learned in relation to both the use of intelligence to justify policy-making and with regard to broader international issues of security and governance.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781849542739
Publisher: Biteback Publishing, Ltd.
Publication date: 10/31/2011
Sold by: Bookwire
Format: eBook
Pages: 336
File size: 462 KB

About the Author

BRIAN JONES, now retired, was formerly in the scientific and technical directorate of the Defence Intelligence Staff (DIS) and was responsible for analysing all intelligence on nuclear, biological and chemical weapons. He was the first British intelligence official to go public on the misuse of intelligence to justify the war.
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