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  • Brown announces inquiry into Iraq war

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Brown announces inquiry into Iraq war

A long-awaited inquiry into the Iraq war will hear evidence in private, the Prime Minister has confirmed. Gordon Brown said the measure has been taken so witnesses can be "as candid as possible". Mr Brown said the inquiry would be "fully independent of Government", and the final report will disclose "all but the most secret of information". The move has disappointed opponents of the war who have been pushing for a full public inquiry. Lindsey German, from Stop The War Coalition said: "My reaction is it is what I expected, another whitewash. It's another inquiry that will take over a year and cost millions of pounds. "It will bring us no closer to apportioning blame and finding out what happened in this disastrous war in Iraq." Tory leader David Cameron argued the inquiry should have been started earlier. He said there was a danger people would think the inquiry had been "fixed" because it would not report until after the next General Election. Mr Brown said the probe would be conducted by non-politicians, led by ex-Whitehall mandarin Sir John Chilcot. It would cover the period from September 2001, in the run-up to war, until July this year when the last UK soldier will come home, Mr Brown told MPs in a Commons statement. British troops conducted their last combat mission on April 30 and their withdrawal is expected to be completed soon. The inquiry is expected to follow the model of the Franks Inquiry into the 1982 Falklands War, which met in private.

ITN | June 15, 2009Watch more videos from ITN

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