REAL AUTHORS OF IRAQ DOSSIER BLAST BLAIR
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REAL AUTHORS OF IRAQ
DOSSIER BLAST BLAIR
by Gary Jones And Alexandra Williams In LA
Saturday February 08, 2003 at 12:50 AM
mailbox@mirror.co.uk
Journalist Sean Boyne and student Ibrahim al-Marashi
have attacked Tony Blair for using their reports to call for war against Iraq.
Both men are against the war on Iraq and believe the 'dossier' is one part of a
massive media misinformation campaign.
REAL AUTHORS OF IRAQ DOSSIER BLAST BLAIR
Feb 8 2003
Exclusive By Gary Jones And Alexandra Williams In Los Angeles
JOURNALIST Sean Boyne and student Ibrahim al-Marashi have attacked Tony
Blair for using their reports to call for war against Iraq.
Mr Boyne, who works for military magazine Jane's Intelligence
Review, said he was shocked his work had been used in the Government's dossier.
Articles he wrote in 1997 were plagiarised for a 19-page
intelligence document entitled Iraq: Its Infrastructure Of Concealment,
Deception And Intimidation to add weight to the PM's warmongering.
He said: "I don't like to think that anything I wrote has been
used for an argument for war. I am concerned because I am against the war."
The other main source was a thesis by post-graduate student,
Ibrahim al-Marashi, the US-born son of Iraqis, who lives in California. His
research was partly based on documents seized in the 1991 Gulf War.
He said: "This is wholesale deception. How can the British
public trust the Government if it is up to these sort of tricks? People will
treat any other information they publish with a lot of scepticism from now on."
After the dossier's origins were revealed, Mr Blair was accused
by his own MPs of theft and lies. The fiasco has deeply damaged his attempts to
win backing for military action.
It emerged the PA to Mr Blair's spin chief Alastair Campbell
was involved in drawing up the dossier which was published last month.
Alison Blackshaw and a Government press officer were both named
on the dossier when it was first put on the Government's website. But the names
were later removed.
The bulk of the Government's document is directly copied,
without acknowledgement, from Ibrahim's 5,000-word thesis - Iraq's Security and
Intelligence Network - published last September.
He did not even know the dossier existed until Glen Rangwala, a
Cambridge-based Iraq analyst, spotted the plagarism and called him.
Ibrahim, whose parents fled to the US from Iraq in 1968, said
the Government not only blatantly lifted much of his work, including typing and
grammatical errors. Mr al-Marashi and Mr Boyne said their figures had been
altered in the Government document.
Former Labour Defence Minister MP Peter Kilfoyle said: "It just
adds to the general impression that what we have been treated to is a farrago of
half-truths.
"I am shocked that on such thin evidence that we should be
trying to convince the British people that this is a war worth fighting."
And Labour MP Glenda Jackson said: "It is another example of
how the Government is attempting to mislead the country and Parliament.
"And of course to mislead is a Parliamentary euphemism for
lying."
The PM's official spokesman rejected Ms Jackson's claims but
admitted it had been a mistake not to acknowledge Mr al-Marashi's thesis in the
dossier.
He added: "The fact we used some of his work doesn't throw into
question the accuracy of the document as a whole. This document is solid."
Asked whether Downing Street was embarrassed about the affair,
the spokesman said: "We all have lessons to learn."
The dossier had been praised by US Secretary of State Colin
Powell in his speech to the UN Security Council. Mr Boyne added: "Maybe I should
invoice Colin Powell."
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