Iraq

53% of Britons think Iraq invasion was wrong, 22% say put Tony Blair on trial

Half of those questioned said they believed Blair deliberately set out to mislead the British public about the threat posed by weapons of mass destruction.

Human rights in Iraq ten years on from the war Bush and Blair said would liberate Iraqis

Amnesty International report says there has been a failure to investigate systematically the widespread human rights violations committed by the US and UK forces.

George Galloway: No lessons learned, so Iraqis will not be the last victims of the Iraq war

The Iraq war bankrupted the British and American political class. They no longer speak for the people they claim to represent. Few believe any longer anything they say.

Reconciliation in Iraq is impossible without US truth about its dirty war

Into the political tinderbox, the Bush-era Pentagon, the CIA, and their proxies among the brutal Shia militias, threw the lighted match of systematic torture.

10 years on: the elephant in the room the media still won't mention: Iraq was a war crime

News reports list "failures", "setbacks" and "lessons" for "the West", but there's never a line of background saying the people who started the war are now criminally liable.

Revealed: secret network of US torture centres in Iraq

The pattern in Iraq provides an eerie parallel to the well-documented human rights abuses committed by US-advised and funded paramilitary squads in Central America in the 1980s.

Whatever the lies, however many dead, was Blair still right to wage illegal Iraq war?

The real decadence is found amongst lazy and credulous journalists who endlessly recycle the lies and delusions of more powerful people than themselves.

How the BBC is still spinning lies and myths about the Iraq war

BBC Newsnight ignored the hi-jacking of British democratic institutions for a self-serving geopolitical strategy invented by a tiny group of American neoconservative politicians.

America promised democracy for Iraqi women: this is what 'liberation' looks like

Human rights are a litmus test for democracy, but contrary to what Iraqis had hoped for – the "liberators" have actually set the conditions for the continuity of injustice.

George Bush, Tony Blair and this century's greatest crime

The deadly duo should be sharing a cell in The Hague awaiting trial for war crimes, but as we see time and time again, victors' justice translates to no justice at all.

Did millions protesting against the Iraq war on 15 February 2003 achieve anything?

Not only did the march have the traditional left but also, for example, there was the Muslim community, sections of the Jewish community, Liberal Democrats, even some Tories.

We didn't stop the Iraq war ten years ago. But we transformed British politics

The 2 million of us who marched against the Iraq invasion 10 years ago created a force that is still shaping politics and society.

Iraqis are worse off today than they were before the invasion ten years ago

The greatest weapon of mass destruction was the invasion itself: over the past ten years, Iraqis have seen the physical, social and economic destruction of their country.

Why the incalculable horror of the Iraq war must never happen again

The hawks were wrong on every count. Wrong about the weapons; wrong about being greeted with flowers; wrong about the human cost; wrong about Iraq becoming a flourishing democracy.

UK government in court implicated in systematic torture of hundreds of Iraqi prisoners

There are hundreds of shocking testimonies documenting sexual abuse and torture of Iraqi prisoners and their families by British armed forces between 2003 and 2008.

The British government must come clean over torture in Iraq

This compensation leaves a sour taste: it is certainly not justice done, the full truth of what happened is yet to emerge, and those responsible have not been held to account.