The
Hutton Inquiry was a British
judicial inquiry chaired by Lord Hutton, appointed by the
United
Kingdom
Labour government
with the terms of reference "...urgently to conduct an
investigation into the circumstances surrounding the death of
Dr David Kelly".
On 18 July 2003, Kelly, an employee of the
Ministry of Defence,
was found dead after he had been named as the source of quotes used
by
BBC journalist
Andrew Gilligan. These quotes had formed the
basis of media reports claiming that
Tony
Blair's
Labour government had
knowingly "
sexed up" the "
September Dossier", a report into
Iraq and weapons of mass
destruction. The inquiry opened in August 2003 and reported on
28 January 2004. The inquiry report cleared the government of
wrongdoing, while the BBC was strongly criticised, leading to the
resignation of the BBC's chairman and director-general.
The report was met with criticism by British newspapers opposed to
the Iraq invasion, such as
The Guardian and the
Daily
Mail, though others said it exposed serious flaws within the
BBC.
Background
Kelly had
been the source for reports made by three BBC journalists that the
Government, particularly the press office of Tony Blair, the Prime Minister, had
knowingly embellished the dossier with misleading exaggerations of
Iraq
's military capabilities; specifically, a claim that
Iraq had the ability to launch a strike using "weapons of mass
destruction" within 45 minutes. These were reported by
Andrew Gilligan on
BBC Radio 4's
Today programme on 29 May 2003, by
Gavin Hewitt on the Ten O'Clock News
the same day and by
Susan Watts on
BBC Two's
Newsnight on 2 June. On 1 June Gilligan
repeated his allegations in an article written for
The Mail on Sunday, naming
government press secretary
Alastair
Campbell as the driving force for alteration of the
dossier.
The Government angrily denounced the reports and accused the
corporation of poor journalism. In subsequent weeks the corporation
stood by the report, saying that it had a reliable source.
Following intense media speculation, Kelly was finally named in the
press as the source for Gilligan's story on 9 July. Kelly
apparently committed suicide in a field close to his home on 17
July. An inquiry was announced by the British government the
following day. The inquiry was to investigate "the circumstances
surrounding the death of Dr Kelly".
The inquiry
A ticket for the public gallery of the Hutton Inquiry.
A large number of members of the public turned up to try to
see the proceedings for themselves.
The inquiry opened on 1 August. Hearings began on 11 August. The
first phase of the inquiry closed on 4 September. A second session
of witness-calling began on Monday 15 September, where some
witnesses from the first session, such as Andrew Gilligan,
Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon, BBC chairman Gavyn Davies and
Alastair Campbell were recalled
for further questions arising from the first phase, and some
witnesses were called for the first time. The taking of evidence
closed on Wednesday 24 September. The inquiry heard evidence on 22
days, lasting 110 hours, from 74 witnesses. Examination and
cross-examination came from five
Queen's
Counsels, representing the Inquiry was James Dingemans QC and
Peter Knox, the Government, the BBC, the Kelly family and Andrew
Gilligan.
At the conclusion of the Inquiry there was widespread approval of
the process conducted by Hutton. The Inquiry had provided
exceptional access to the inner workings of the UK Government and
the BBC. Virtually all the documentation provided to the Inquiry
was quickly provided to the public on the Inquiry's website.
The coroner had already ruled that Kelly's death was suicide, but
one witness raised another possibility.
A British ambassador
called David Broucher reported a conversation with Dr Kelly at a
Geneva
meeting in February 2003, which he described as
from "deep within the memory hole". Broucher related that
Kelly said he had assured his Iraqi sources that there would be no
war if they co-operated, and that a war would put him in an
'ambiguous' moral position. Broucher had asked Kelly what would
happen if Iraq were invaded, and Kelly had replied, 'I will
probably be found dead in the woods.' Broucher then quoted from an
email he had sent just after Kelly's death: 'I did not think much
of this at the time, taking it to be a hint that the Iraqis might
try to take revenge against him, something that did not seem at all
fanciful then. I now see that he may have been thinking on rather
different lines.'
The report
Hutton initially announced that he expected to be able to deliver
his report in late November or early December. The report was
eventually published on 28 January 2004. It ran to 750 pages in 13
chapters and 18 appendices, though this was mainly composed of
excerpts from the hundreds of documents (letters, emails,
transcripts of conversation, and so on) that were published during
the inquiry. The main conclusions were:
- Nobody could have anticipated that Dr Kelly would take his
life
- There was "no underhand [government] strategy" to name him as
the source for the BBC's accusations
- Gilligan's original accusation was "unfounded" and the BBC's
editorial and management processes were "defective"
- The dossier had not been "sexed up",
but was in line with available intelligence, although the Joint Intelligence
Committee, chaired by John
Scarlett, may have been "subconsciously influenced" by the
government
- The Ministry of Defence (MOD) was at fault for not informing
Kelly of its strategy that would involve naming him
The report exonerated the Government much more completely than had
been expected by many observers prior to its publication. Evidence
presented to the inquiry had indicated:
- That the wording of the dossier had been altered to present the
strongest possible case for war within the bounds of available
intelligence
- That some of these changes had been suggested by Alastair
Campbell
- That reservations had been expressed by experts within the
Intelligence Community about the wording of the dossier
- That David Kelly had direct contact with the dissenters within
the Defence Intelligence
Staff and had communicated their reservations (and his own) to
several journalists.
- That, following Kelly's decision to come forward as one of
Gilligan's contacts, Alastair Campbell and Geoff Hoon had wanted
his identity made public
- That the Prime Minister himself had chaired a meeting at which
it was decided that Dr Kelly's name would be confirmed by the
Ministry of Defence if put to them by journalists
- That Kelly's name had been confirmed after journalists had made
multiple suggestions to the MOD press office.
Despite this evidence, Hutton's report largely cleared the
government of any wrongdoing. In large measure this was because
evidence to the Inquiry indicated that the government had not known
of the reservations in the intelligence community: it seemed they
had been discounted by senior intelligence assessors (the Joint
Intelligence Committee) — thus Gilligan's claim that the government
"probably knew" the intelligence was flawed, was itself unfounded.
Furthermore, the Inquiry had heard that these were not the words
used by Gilligan's source, but his own inference. Meanwhile, Hutton
determined that any failure of intelligence assessment fell outside
his remit, and the Intelligence Services thus also escaped
censure.
Instead the report placed a great deal of emphasis on evidence of
the failings of Gilligan and the BBC, many of which had been
explicitly acknowledged during the course of the Inquiry. Gilligan,
for example, admitted and apologised for surreptitiously briefing
politicians on a
select committee in
order to put pressure on Kelly. Gilligan, whilst disagreeing with
the overall thrust of the report, also admitted that he had
attributed inferences to Kelly which were in fact his own.
The Inquiry specifically criticised the chain of management that
caused the BBC to defend its story. The BBC management, the report
said, had accepted Gilligan's word that his story was accurate, in
spite of his notes being incomplete.
Davies had then told the BBC Board of Governors that he was happy
with the story, and told the Prime Minister that a satisfactory
internal inquiry had taken place. The Board of Governors, under
Davies' guidance, accepted that further investigation of the
Government's complaints were unnecessary. In his report Hutton
wrote of this:
- The Governors should have recognised more fully than they did
that their duty to protect the independence of the BBC was not
incompatible with giving proper consideration to whether there was
validity in the Government's complaints, no matter how strongly
worded by Mr Campbell, that the allegations against its integrity
reported in Mr Gilligan's broadcasts were unfounded and the
Governors failed to give this issue proper consideration.
There was considerable speculation in the media that the report had
been deliberately written to clear the government, a claim disputed
by Lord Hutton at a later press conference. Many people remain
convinced that this was the case. Suggestions of whitewash were
supported by Hutton's careful choice of language at certain points
in the report. For example, he argued that the use of the phrase
'
sexed up' by Gilligan would have been
taken by the general public to indicate an outright lie rather than
mere exaggeration, and thus the claim was untrue.
Immediate aftermath of publication
It was because of the report's criticism of his actions that
Gavyn Davies resigned on the day of
publication, 28 January. Reporters from rival news organisation ITN
described the day of publication as "one of the worst in the BBC's
history".
Greg Dyke resigned two days
after the publication of the report, following a meeting of BBC
Governors where it is reported he only retained the support of one
third of the board. However, after announcing his resignation, Dyke
stated:
- I do not necessarily accept the findings of Lord Hutton.
Andrew Gilligan resigned because of
his part in the affair on 30 January, making three BBC resignations
in three days. However, in his resignation statement he questioned
the value of Hutton's report:
- This report casts a chill over all journalism, not just the
BBC's. It seeks to hold reporters, with all the difficulties they
face, to a standard that it does not appear to demand of, for
instance, Government dossiers.
Blair, who
had been repeatedly under fire for the "sexing-up" allegations,
told the House of
Commons
in the debate following the release of the report
that he had been completely exonerated. He demanded a
retraction from those who had accused him of lying to the House,
particularly
Michael Howard, the
Leader of the
Opposition:
- The allegation that I or anyone else lied to this House or
deliberately misled the country by falsifying intelligence on WMD
is itself the real lie. And I simply ask that those that made it
and those who have repeated it over all these months, now withdraw
it, fully, openly and clearly.
Howard sidestepped the demand for an apology. However, immediately
after the Board of Governors had accepted Dyke's resignation Lord
Ryder, as Acting Chairman of the BBC (Davies's replacement),
apologised "unreservedly" for errors made during the Dr David Kelly
affair. Dyke, who has not given the conclusions of the Hutton
report his full backing, said that he "could not quite work out"
what the BBC was apologising for.
The
Independent subsequently reported that the BBC governors had
ignored the advice of BBC lawyers that the Hutton report was
"legally flawed". Although this was denied by the BBC, it was
confirmed in 2007 when the BBC was forced to publish minutes of a
governors meeting at the BBC that took place directly after the
Hutton report.
At the end of the report Hutton recalled how the final part of
David Kelly's life had not been representative of his whole career
in the civil service:
- The evidence at this Inquiry has concentrated largely on the
last two months of Dr Kelly's life, and therefore it is fitting
that I should end this report with some words written in Dr Kelly's
obituary in The Independent on 31 July by Mr Terence Taylor, the
President and Executive Director of the International Institute of
Strategic Studies, Washington DC and a former colleague of Dr
Kelly: "It is most important that the extraordinary public
attention and political fallout arising from the events of the past
month do not mask the extraordinary achievements of a scientist who
loyally served not only his Government but also the international
community at large."
Deliberately or otherwise, Dr. Kelly had raised wider questions
about the quality, interpretation and presentation of intelligence
that Hutton had left unanswered. Some of these were to be addressed
in a
new inquiry, announced by the
government on 3 February 2004. Amongst other things, the Butler
Report concluded that "the fact that the reference to the 45 minute
claim in the classified assessment was repeated in the dossier
later led to suspicions that it had been included because of its
eye-catching character".
Andrew
Gilligan claims that this has vindicated his original story
that the dossier had been "sexed up".
Leaking of the report prior to publication
The report was leaked by an unknown party to
The Sun the night before the
official publication date. The Sun and consequently most other
newspapers in their later editions ran with the leaked version of
the report. Delivered by an unnamed source over the telephone to
Sun Political Editor
Trevor
Kavanagh, the leaked version accurately described the report's
main findings. All sides involved in the Inquiry denounced the
leak. Lord Hutton launched a further inquiry into how the report
came to be leaked. This second inquiry, carried out by a solicitor,
reported on 11 August 2004, but failed to find the source of the
leak. It also said there were "no particular weaknesses" in the
security of the report and so offered no suggestions of how a
similar leak might be prevented in the future.
Media reaction to the report

The cover of
The Independent
when the report was released: "Whitewash?
Several national newspapers judged the report to be so uncritical
of the Government that they accused Hutton of participating in an
"establishment whitewash". The
Daily
Mail wrote in its editorial "We're faced with the wretched
spectacle of the BBC chairman resigning while
Alastair Campbell crows from the summit of
his dunghill. Does this verdict, my lord, serve the real interest
of truth?".
The Independent
included a large, mostly empty, white space above the fold on its
front page containing just the word "whitewash?" in small red
type.
The
Daily Express headline
read "Hutton's whitewash leaves questions unanswered" — referring
to the fact that an investigation into Britain's reasons for
joining the war in Iraq was beyond the scope of the inquiry. None
of the newspapers presented evidence of a cover-up, but they
questioned whether the conclusions were supported by the
evidence.
Other newspapers such as
The
Times,
The Sun (both owned by
News Corporation and usually critical of
the BBC) and
The Daily
Telegraph concentrated on the behaviour of the BBC
criticised in the report and called for Greg Dyke to resign, as he
did later that day (29 January).
The Sunday Times depicted Lord
Hutton as the
Three Wise Monkeys
who would 'see no evil, hear no evil and speak no evil'.
The
reactions of papers supportive of the Conservative Party, such as
The Daily Mail and The
Daily Telegraph, in part reflected the Conservatives'
disappointment that the report did not find that Blair had misled
the House of
Commons
or the public, which might have precipitated his
resignation. On the other hand, left-wing newspapers such as
The Guardian and
The Daily Mirror, while supporting
Blair against the Conservatives, strongly opposed British
participation in the war in Iraq, and sympathised with what they
(and many others) saw as the anti-war stance of BBC journalists
such as Gilligan. While they probably did not want Blair forced
from office, they would have welcomed a finding that
Alastair Campbell had falsified the
September Dossier.
Martin Kettle wrote in
The
Guardian on 3 February: "Too many newspapers invested too
heavily in a particular preferred outcome on these key points. They
wanted the government found guilty on the dossier and on the
naming, and they wanted Gilligan's reporting vindicated. When
Hutton drew opposite conclusions, they damned his findings as
perverse and his report as a whitewash. But the report's weakness
was its narrowness, and to some extent its unworldliness, not the
accuracy of its verdicts."
Thousands of BBC workers paid for a full-page advertisement in
The Daily Telegraph on 31 January in order to publish a
message of support for Dyke, followed by a list of their names. The
message read:
- The following statement is from BBC employees, presenters,
reporters and contributors. It was paid for by them personally, not
the BBC itself.
- Greg Dyke stood for brave, independent BBC journalism that
was fearless in its search for the truth. We are resolute
that the BBC should not step back from its determination to
investigate the facts in pursuit of the truth. Through his
passion and integrity Greg Dyke inspired us to make programmes of
the highest quality and creativity. We are dismayed by
Greg's departure, but we are determined to maintain his
achievements and his vision for an independent organisation that
serves the public above all else.
An
ICM public
opinion
poll, commissioned by the
News
of the World and published on 1 February 2004, showed that
54% of respondents believed Tony Blair's reputation had
deteriorated. Only 14% thought his status had improved after being
vindicated in the report.
In some countries the reputation of the BBC in fact improved as a
result of its attacks on the British government during the Dr David
Kelly affair. The BBC is sometimes viewed, especially outside the
UK, as a puppet of the government. The BBC's willingness to accuse
the Prime Minister and the
Ministry of Defence so
publicly of wrongdoing, despite the mistakes the BBC itself
acknowledged it had made, boosted its credentials as an impartial
and unbiased news source.
Hutton himself defended the report, speaking before a Commons
select committee on 14 May 2004. He stated he had not thought it
appropriate to embark on a study of the pre-war intelligence:
"I had to draw the line somewhere." He felt the
allegations against Gilligan were
"far graver" than
questions concerning the quality of the intelligence, and that it
was right that a separate inquiry, the
Butler Review, was being conducted.
Later coverage
The notoriety of the Hutton Report received a boost when
Cherie Blair was reported to have auctioned off
a signed copy of the report for £400 for the benefit of the Labour
Party in May 2006.
Throughout 2004 there were frequent questions from medical
practitioners, as well as ambulance crew on the scene, about the
veracity of the verdict of suicide. They said that it was extremely
unusual to die as a result of cutting the
ulnar artery - Kelly being the only supposed
case of this occurring in 2003 - and that almost no blood was found
at the scene.
In November 2006 Lord Hutton broke his two year silence on the
report to dismiss widespread media claims that his report was a
whitewash."He stated that
I knew that if I delivered a report concluding that the
Government had deliberately misled the country about the existence
of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and had acted towards Dr
Kelly in a dishonourable and underhand way, I would be acclaimed in
many sections of the media as a fearless and independent judge.
I also knew that if I did not come to such findings it was
probable that my report would be subjected to considerable
criticism".
The Strange Death of David Kelly
In his 2007 book
The Strange Death of David Kelly,
shortlisted for the Channel 4 Political Book Award 2008,
Norman Baker MP argued that Kelly was almost
certainly murdered. He described the police investigation and
Hutton Inquiry as a 'farce', which failed to investigate numerous
discrepancies and anomalies in the physical, medical and witness
evidence.
Baker concluded that Kelly's death was probably a revenge killing
by Iraqi supporters of Saddam Hussein, and that it was crudely
disguised as a suicide by Thames Valley police - who appeared to
have known of an assassination plot in advance - because the
British government was fearful of the political consequences. He
noted that many of those apparently involved have since received
promotions or unusual awards.
Baker later stated that more detail about this had to be removed
from the book.
While investigating Kelly's death, Baker himself experienced
strange events, including apparent intimidation of a woman who was
assisting him, and the unexplained wiping of his computer hard
disk.
References
- Hutton Inquiry Web Site - Hearing
Transcripts
- [1]
-
http://image.guardian.co.uk/sys-files/Media/documents/2007/01/11/DykeMinutes280104.pdf
- UK press mauls Hutton 'whitewash' CNN 29 January 2004
-
http://dr-david-kelly.blogspot.com/2008/03/friday-february-22-2008-without-access.html
External links
See also