Summary
LIKE ghosts at the feast, the sulphurous spirits of Tony Blair and Alastair Campbell loom large over Gordon Brown's latest political disaster. As chief architects of Britain's involvement in the Iraq War, they will be the key witnesses at the inquiry into the conflict - and have most to lose from being forced to give evidence in public and on oath.
And both were quietly consulted, according to Government sources, before the Prime Minister's announcement last week that the investigation would take place behind closed doors.See the full content of this document
Extract
So what role did Campbell have to play? [Edition 2]
The inquiry, resisted by the Government for years, was supposed to be a key stage in Mr Brown's political fightback, finding favour with critical Labour backbenchers and millions of voters who feel the country was deceived.
In...See the full content of this document
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