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Written by Afua Hirsch, legal affairs correspondent Afua Hirsch, legal affairs correspondent
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Category: News News
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Published: 12 January 2010 12 January 2010
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Last Updated: 12 January 2010 12 January 2010
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Created: 12 January 2010 12 January 2010
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Investigation into the Netherlands' support for 2003 war finds military action was not justified under UN resolutions
US President George W Bush, left, and British Prime Minister Tony Blair in 2001.
The Dutch government's decision to support George Bush and Tony Blair's
attack on Iraq had no basis in international law, the Davids report
found. Photograph: Mario Tama/AFP
The invasion of Iraq in 2003 was a violation of international law, an independent inquiry in the Netherlands has found.
In a damning series of findings on the decision of the Dutch government
to support Tony Blair and George Bush in the strategy of regime change
in Iraq, the inquiry found the action had "no basis in international
law".
The 551-page report, published today and chaired by former Dutch
supreme court judge Willibrord Davids, said UN resolutions in the 1990s
prior to the outbreak of war gave no authority to the invasion. "The
Dutch government lent its political support to a war whose purpose was
not consistent with Dutch government policy. The military action had no
sound mandate in international law," it said.
The report came as the Chilcot inquiry in the UK heard evidence from
Tony Blair's former press secretary, Alastair Campbell, about Britain's
decision to enter the war.
Comparisons between the Davids report, which looked at the
decision-making process surrounding the Dutch decision to back the war,
and Chilcot's have led to criticism that the UK was not conducting a
similar analysis of the legal implications in the run-up to the war.
The findings of the Davids report has serious implications for the UK,
experts say, as it raises questions about the use of intelligence about
weapons of mass destruction (WMD), an issue addressed by Campbell in
his evidence before the Chilcot panel this morning.
"In its depiction of Iraq's WMD programme, the [Dutch] government was
to a considerable extent led by public and other information from the
US and the UK," the Davids report says.
It found that when the Dutch government decided in August 2002 to
support the attack on Iraq it treated intelligence about WMD and the
legality of an invasion as "subservient". The Dutch cabinet's policy
was laid out in a 45-minute meeting, and came at a time when the newly
elected prime minister, Jan Peter Balkenende, was preoccupied with
domestic concerns, it said.
The Dutch intelligence agencies were "more reserved" in their
assessments than the government when discussing the initiative in
parliament, the report found.
During the build-up to the war, in 2003, the US abandoned an attempt to
get a UN security council resolution approving the invasion when it
became apparent it would not be granted. In 2004, the UN secretary
general at the time, Kofi Annan, said the invasion was illegal.