MI6 used hoax WMD reports based on action film ‘The Rock’ to justify Iraq invasion - Chilcot
A fake intelligence source fooled MI6 with false reports based on the action movie ‘The Rock’, which ended up being used to justify Britain’s invasion of Iraq in 2003, the Chilcot report has revealed.
The Chilcot report into Britain’s involvement in the invasion of Iraq is highly critical of the UK intelligence services, claiming it provided the government with “flawed” information, including about Saddam Hussein’s alleged weapons of mass destruction (WMD) - the basis for going to war.
In September 2002, MI6 chief Sir Richard Dearlove reported the agency was on the edge of a “significant breakthrough” after finding a new source inside Iraq with “phenomenal access” to information about suspected WMDs.
The source claimed senior scientists in Iraq were working seven days a week on stepping up the production of chemical and biological weaponry, and the regime was concentrating its efforts on the production of anthrax and chlorine gas.
The source’s information was not included in the government’s 2002 war dossier, which was published a few days after that information came to hand, amid fears Saddam would start locking up scientists.
However, it is said to have underpinned “key judgments” in the report. Then-Prime Minister Tony Blair was said to have been personally briefed on the information.
A second report later that month, based on the same source, claimed that VX, sarin and soman nerve agents were being produced at a facility in Al-Yarmuk, where they were loaded into containers of various sorts including “linked hollow glass spheres.”
However, questions were soon raised about the new agent’s claims, when it was pointed out his description bore a striking resemblance to a scene from the 1996 action movie, The Rock, starring Nicolas Cage and Sean Connery.
“It was pointed out that glass containers were not typically used in chemical munitions, and that a popular movie (The Rock) had inaccurately depicted nerve agents being carried in glass beads or spheres,” the Chilcot report says.
“The questions about the use of glass containers for chemical agent and the similarity of the description to those portrayed in The Rock had been recognised by SIS.”
MI6 later discovered the source had been lying “over a period of time.”
According to the Chilcot report, MI6 “did not inform No 10 or others that the source who had provided the reporting issued on September 11 and 23, 2002, about production of chemical and biological agent, had been lying to SIS.”
In July 2003, the reports were officially withdrawn, but in a “low key manner compared with the way in which the original intelligence was issued.”
Chilcot says MI6 worked on the “misguided assumption” that Saddam had WMD and made no effort to investigate otherwise.
“At no stage was the proposition that Iraq might no longer have chemical, biological or nuclear weapons or programs identified and examined by either the joint intelligence committee (JIC) or the policy community,” the report says.