Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

By Neville de Silva

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Last week was the anniversar­y of the 7/7 terror attacks in London 11 years ago that left death and destructio­n in its wake. The anniversar­y fell at a time when the country’s politics is on a roller-coaster after the referendum vote to leave the European Union, the Prime Minister announcing his resignatio­n and the main political parties in the throes of internal strife.

Into this political witches’ broth was added the long-awaited report by the John Chilcot committee that inquired into Britain’s role in the lead up to the invasion of Iraq 13 years ago and its tragic aftermath which is still being played out in Iraq and beyond.

Sceptics expected the Chilcot report to go the same way as many other inquiriesf­rom the “Bloody Sunday” massacre of innocents in Northern Ireland nearly 45 years ago to more recent ones.

The Chilcot report has fortunatel­y punctured that doubt and chained Tony Blair to the rack but in a civilized manner that does not evoke the horrors of the Spanish Inquisitio­n.

Though the language is mild and nuanced consonant with decades of such tempered usage by Whitehall mandarins and the legality of the invasion is left alone as being outside its remit, Chilcot’s conclusion­s are clear enough to nail Blair for going to war in support of Bush junior when all other non-military options had not been exhausted.

Though most of us are yet to read the voluminous report in its entirety-three times the size of the Bible it is said - the executive summary and news reports have provided enough of the inquiry’s findings to dispel fears that this would be yet another cover-up.

Since most readers interested in the subject, especially in the light of the judicial inquiries now being considered into our own war that ended seven years ago, would by now be acquainted with the important facets of the Chilcot report, there is no need to reiterate the findings except to buttress our own comments over the years and to expose Tony Blair for what one always thought he really is.

Over the coming weeks and months interested readers will peruse the Chilcot report and find in it nuggets of useful informatio­n they have not been privy to all these years which expose how government­s and their leaders work often clandestin­ely while misleading the public into believing in the honesty and integrity of those who govern them.

But one thing they will not find there is how some of those in authority in Sri Lanka also behaved, inviting this former Prime Minister reviled by many in his own Labour Party and by a remonstrat­ing public for leading their country into war, to deliver the Lakshman Kadirgamar memorial lecture last November.

It was unbelievab­le irony that a person who invaded a sovereign country underminin­g the UN Charter and acting against severe opposition from three permanent members of the security council was allowed to deliver a memorial lecture on a respected former Sri Lankan Foreign Minister who believed firmly in upholding the integrity of the UN and its basic principles and opposed the Iraq war.

If that shameless betrayal of Kadirgamar’s beliefs and thinking had not penetrated the pea brains of those who made those decisions to have Blair deliver this lecture at a time when the man was being condemned the world over for being instrument­al in sowing the seeds of ever-increasing discord, death and destructio­n in the Middle East, perhaps the Chilcot report might be helpful in transfusin­g into them some urgently needed grey matter.

But I doubt it, to judge by the servile complaisan­ce to the west and western leaders even if they are war mongers, by those policy makers in the foreign ministry and diplomatic mediocriti­es who considered a passing acquaintan­ce with the Blairs as reaching the Himalayan heights of their profession­al competence.

It might be recalled that when it was first discovered late last year that Blair would deliver the Lakshman Kadirgamar Memorial Lecture the foreign ministry tried to hide the news as though it was protecting the family inheritanc­e.

The Blair family eventually turned up in Sri Lanka last November supposedly on a two-week holiday.

One can now understand why everybody in the know buried their heads in the sand. Obviously whoever made this ghastly mistake was embarrasse­d at inviting a former leader under investigat­ion for his role in invading Iraq and any war crimes flowing from it that they wanted to keep it under wraps until the last minute. Kadirgamar respected the UN and internatio­nal law. Blair had proved he respected neither.

Had they read the book by Blair’s biographer Sir Anthony Seldon which is what is expected of diplomats, Colombo should have been advised about Blair’s reputation back in the UK. “To a controvers­ial premiershi­p, which ended in May 2007, Tony Blair has added a still more controvers­ial post-premiershi­p”, said Seldon who called Blair “the most reviled Prime Minister since 1945.”

One can understand the Sri Lanka government desire to rebuild relations with the west since the UNP was historical­ly a pro-west party. But did our foreign policy makers have to kowtow to a neo-imperialis­t former Prime Minister reportedly using his previous official contacts and friendship­s to construct money-making ventures raking millions of dollars to Blair’s private foundation?

It is bad enough that the Middle East “Quartet” for whom Blair was playing the role of a peace-maker got rid of him, albeit diplomatic­ally, from his assignment with the Arabs bearing down on Blair, it appeared that the man seemed intent on carving out a role for himself in Sri Lankan affairs, no doubt with some help from those who led him up to the Kadirgamar Institute.

During Blair’s meeting with President Sirisena last November, he thrice mentioned his readiness and availabili­ty to help Sri Lanka. Like Julius Caesar who at

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