Jeremy Corbyn Would Apologise For Iraq War And Promise To Never Break UN Law Again If Voted As Leader

Jeremy Corbyn Vows Labour Will Never Do What Blair Did Again
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Labour leadership frontrunner, Jeremy Corbyn, said he would issue a formal apology over the Iraq War on behalf of the party if he wins the leadership election contest next month.

The 66-year-old veteran Labour MP initially struggled to get the backing of the 35 MPs he needed, but is now the bookies' favourite to succeed Ed Miliband.

The surprise frontrunner said if he wins the leadership contest he would apologise for the Labour government leading the country into war with Iraq in 2003.

He also said that Labour would never make “the same mistake again” or “flout the United Nations and international law”.

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Jeremy Corbyn said he would apologise for the Iraq War if he became Labour leader

Corbyn's announcement comes hours after his camp was forced to defend comments he made in a television broadcast last year in which he appeared to compare Islamic State militants to the US military.

The Islington MP, who fiercely opposed the war at the time, said Tony Blair had taken the country into the conflict “on the basis of deception” and that the former Prime Minister's decision to support the then-US president George W Bush to invade the Middle Eastern country had cost Labour millions of voters.

This is not the first time that the leadership hopeful has challenged Blair on this issue.

Earlier this month, Corbyn said that the former Prime Minister should stand trial on charges of war crimes if the evidence suggests he broke international law over the “illegal” Iraq War.

When asked on BBC Newsnight whether Blair should stand trial on war crimes charges, Corbyn said: “If he has committed a war crime, yes. Everybody who has committed a war crime should be.”

He continued: “It was an illegal war. I am confident about that. Indeed Kofi Annan [UN secretary general at the time of the war] confirmed it was an illegal war and therefore [Tony Blair] has to explain to that. Is he going to be tried for it? I don’t know. Could he be tried for it? Possibly.”

In a statement to the Guardian on Thursday, Corbyn said: “It is past time that Labour apologised to the British people for taking them into the Iraq war on the basis of deception and to the Iraqi people for the suffering we have helped cause.

“Under our Labour, we will make this apology.”

He went on: “It has also lost Labour the votes of millions of our natural supporters, who marched and protested against the war.

“We turned our backs on them and many of them have either withheld their votes from us or felt disillusioned, unenthusiastic and unmotivated.”

The MP said suggested that future UK military interventions will become rarer if he had control of Labour.

He said that he would “never again unnecessarily put our troops under fire and our country’s standing in the world at risk”, adding that Labour would “never make the same mistake again”.

His comments are believed to effectively rule out Labour under Corbyn from supporting David Cameron’s government in a proposed House of Commons vote to expand to Syria the current UK air strikes in Iraq against Islamic State.

In a video that surfaced online, Corbyn spoke to Moscow-funded news channel, Russia Today, about the increasing dominance of IS militants in Iraq.

He was asked: “What could shift the balance of forces here? What would it take for the Iraqi forces to regain control?”

Corbyn replied: “It requires a sense of unity among people in Iraq that want to stay part of Iraq and also an acceptance and an understanding why so many people in so many of the cities in the north have been prepared to accept the Isis forces.

“Yes they are brutal, yes some of what they have done is quite appalling, likewise what the Americans did in Fallujah and other places is appalling.”

The Labour MP's spokesman clarified his comments, saying: “Jeremy Corbyn believes the violent ideology of Isis is a vicious, repugnant force that has to be stopped - where Jeremy Corbyn talks about the need for a political solution and compromise he means not with Isis but against Isis, working across the region and beyond to choke off supplies that help fund and arm them and working with neighbouring states in the region to come to common solutions.”

The news that the Labour MP will apologise for the Iraq War has sparked a host of bizarre scenarios which people think he needs to express remorse for, including England's cricket team, TV shows and Mr Blobby's chart-topping success.

Also on the Huffington Post UK:

Celebrities backing and attacking Jeremy Corbyn
ATTACK: Robert Webb(01 of10)
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The Peep Show actor said: "He's a nice guy, totally marooned in 1980s politics. And I remember the 1980s very well. The Bennites f****d Labour. And then we had 17 years of Tories. Lots of people suffered while the Left kept their splendid principles. F**k that. Come on, guys." (credit:Zak Hussein/PA Archive)
BACK: Charlotte Church(02 of10)
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The singer said: "He is one of the only politicians of note that seems to truly recognise the dire inequality that exists in this country today and actually have a problem with it. There is something inherently virtuous about him, and that is a quality that can rally the support of a lot of people, and most importantly, a lot of young people." (credit:Daniel Leal-Olivas/PA Wire)
ATTACK: Tony Blair(03 of10)
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The former Prime Minister said: "If Jeremy Corbyn becomes leader it won't be a defeat like 1983 or 2015 at the next election. It will mean rout, possibly annihilation. It doesn't matter whether you're on the left, right or centre of the party, whether you used to support me or hate me. But please understand the danger we are in. The party is walking eyes shut, arms outstretched over the cliff's edge to the jagged rocks below." (credit:JUSTIN TALLIS via Getty Images)
BACK: Maxine Peake (04 of10)
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The actor said: "For me Jeremy Corbyn is our only beacon of hope to get the Labour Party back on track, get the electorate back in touch with politics and save this country from the constant mindless bullying of the vulnerable and poor. Aspirational? Surely we should all aspire that everyone living in this country has the right to a decent quality of life." (credit:Matt Crossick/Matt Crossick)
BACK: Brian Eno(05 of10)
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The musician said: "Corbyn has a story that people want to hear. It’s positive – idealistic even – but it isn’t outlandish, although the neoliberals would like you to think it is." (credit:Michael Crabtree/PA Archive)
ATTACK: Alan Johnson(06 of10)
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The Labour grandee said: “In my view only Yvette Cooper can unite the party to win again. Those members who can’t give her their first preference should give her their second. After over a century of male leaders we have an election where the most qualified candidate to lead our party back to government happens to be a woman. Let’s end the madness and elect her.” (credit:Dominic Lipinski/PA Wire)
BACK: Mary Beard(07 of10)
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The scholar said: "If I were a member of the Labour Party, I would vote for Corbyn. He actually seems to have some ideological commitment, which could get the Labour Party to think about what it actually stands for." (credit:John Stillwell/PA Archive)
BACK: Ken Loach(08 of10)
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The film director said: ""Jeremy Corbyn, true to the best traditions of Labour, has a realistic plan to build new homes. Councils should have the power to plan and build good houses, environmentally sound, with proper infrastructure. Labour had the best Housing Minister ever in Nye Bevan. It's time for another with the same vision." (credit:Thibault Camus/AP)
ATTACK: Polly Toynbee(09 of10)
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The Guardian journalist said: "Labour people, motivated by the plight of the needy in a grossly unjust society, shouldn’t gamble the future of the weak on such a slender chance. Every Tory government impoverishes the poor and enriches the wealthy. Every Labour government makes landmark social progress. Winning next time matters desperately. A Cooper leadership offers an infinitely better hope of success." (credit:Ben Birchall/PA Archive)
BACK: Owen Jones(10 of10)
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The Guardian journalist said: "He is the very antithesis of the negative caricature of an MP: he’s defined by his principles and beliefs, uninterested in personal self-advancement, and determined to use his platform to further the interests of people and causes that are otherwise ignored." (credit:Rob Stothard via Getty Images)