Article by Michael Portillo on Iraq for The Sunday Times, 4 June 2006.

Tony Blair is lucky to have John Prescott. The misfortunes of the hapless deputy prime minister dominated the front pages last week, eclipsing a series of harrowing stories from Iraq. It is a sign of our times that Prescott’s use of the country estate at Dorneywood, where he was photographed playing croquet, gets greater prominence than the roll call of death emanating from Baghdad and Basra. Blair may squirm over his deputy’s follies, but Iraq raises deeper questions about the prime minister’s judgment, with consequences infinitely more serious.

The deaths of two British men, who were gathering news for CBS, did make headlines. A roadside bomb ended the lives of cameraman Paul Douglas and soundman James Brolan, and seriously wounded their reporter Kimberly Dozier. The reports by fellow journalists who knew them well and who take the same risks every day were moving. The dead men and the injured woman became for readers and viewers more than statistics because their colleagues could tell us what they were like, and attest to the cheerful courage with which they did their work.

On the same day, two British soldiers from the Queen's Dragoon Guards died when their Land Rover was torn apart by an explosion. Their deaths were not ignored, but inevitably, since those writing the reports had not known them in life, we had less sense of who and what we had lost. On the day that the journalists and guards died, 40 Iraqi civilians were killed too. There were eleven British deaths last month, the highest total since the fall of Baghdad three years ago. Over a hundred British soldiers have been killed in Iraq, and the US figure approaches 2,500. The number of lost Iraqi lives is somewhere between 30,000 and 40,000.

Compared with the wars of the last century those are still small numbers. Tremendous loss of life can be justified, even required, when the cause is right, as it was in the fight against the Axis powers during World War II.

The problem in this conflict is that we have doubts about the cause and our effectiveness. Blair does not bear responsibility alone for our being in Iraq. I was amongst that majority of MPs who voted to send the troops there. For those who made that judgment, it is painful to own up that we were wrong. But it is becoming hard to avoid the admission.

Blair’s defence is that he need never apologise for ousting the evil tyrant Saddam. But I remember well his telling parliament that if Saddam would just give up his weapons of mass destruction, his regime could continue. That was the British position (though not the American one) because with our multilateralist approach we knew that we would not obtain legal sanction from the United Nations for regime change.

It does not wash for Blair to claim that toppling Saddam justifies the war. The House of Commons voted for invasion to seek out and destroy WMD. The former Conservative leader Michael Howard once said that if he had known then what he knew later, he could not have voted for the war on the same terms. His remark was thought to be lawyerly and weasely. Even so, it was literally true. With the benefit of hindsight Blair himself could not have voted for the war on those terms because the premise – the existence of WMD – was false.

But even on a wider view of our interests and those of the Iraqis the war looks a failure. I backed the invasion because I thought the West needed to re-assert its power after ten years during which America had looked irresolute. It had made no effective response to a series of Al Qaeda attacks that began with a truck bomb in the World Trade Center in 1993. After the decision by George Bush père not to march on Baghdad at the end of the Gulf War in 1991, Saddam provided another example of anti-American defiance that had gone dangerously unpunished.

For those who took my view to feel justified now we would have to show that Western willpower had been effectively re-asserted. The early signs were encouraging. Colonel Gaddafi, whose agents had blown up an airliner over Lockerbie in 1988, renounced terror and shook hands with Blair. But after three years the invasion of Iraq has proved counter-productive. The US has shown itself incapable of controlling Iraq, or Afghanistan for that matter. As the American public becomes disillusioned with the war and as the President’s ratings plummet, the world has fresh reasons to doubt America’s willpower. Its military looks over-stretched, and the idea of another war of conquest is implausible.

Iran is certainly not cowed by having more than a hundred thousand US troops next door. Saddam’s forces caused it much greater concern. Tehran pursues uranium enrichment with a new militancy. America denounces it as the premier state sponsor of terror. Yet now the White House is willing to enter direct talks with that regime, even at a time when Iranian agents and explosives are probably killing American soldiers in Iraq. It is a vivid illustration of US weakness, though the new demarche is none the less the right thing to do. America has given up a policy of pre-emptive strikes against regimes that pose a threat, in favour of a Cold War-style strategy of diplomacy, economic sanctions and containment.

President Bush argues that Iraq is the frontline against terror. Even if you do not believe that invading Iraq has helped terrorist recruitment (a view that is becoming harder to sustain) the war has certainly provided the West’s enemies with easy targets. The US has lost about as many dead in Iraq and Afghanistan as it did in New York and Washington on September 11th 2001.

Nor is it now easy to argue that overall Iraqis have benefited from their liberation. Saddam ran a wicked regime under which many people suffered horrible deaths. But the unheroic ones who avoided politics could live quiet lives. Now those people are being slaughtered by the dozen in cities like Baghdad.

Things are getting worse not better. That, rather than just the level of casualties, is the reason for despondency. British troops’ attempts to apply a soft approach in Basra have ended in failure. The Iraqi police force cannot be trusted and the local politicians are now hostile. Our soldiers cannot impose order, so Iraqis have little reason to be grateful to them. British forces are now a target too.

Even though British soldiers relish danger it is not easy to maintain morale when the operation is losing momentum. Desertion has reached a shocking rate. The upbeat message from Bush and Blair about the new Iraqi government hardly thrills any more. Encouraging though it was to see Iraqis voting, the country’s third democratic administration cannot hope to restore security.

Allegations of a massacre by US Marines at Haditha last November, and news that there may have been a more recent atrocity at Ishaqi, will damage morale further. Indeed, in the US Haditha may provoke the same sort of revulsion against the conflict that the slaughter of civilians at the village of My Lai in 1968 caused against the Vietnam War. Americans will want the truth: until now, no investigation, whether of Abu Ghraib or Haditha, has been independent of the Pentagon.

You have to wonder whether Blair really believes still that it has all been worthwhile. He does have a way of convincing himself. Also, it must be recognised that there are practical limits to candour in politics. If he admitted that the war has been a mistake, even though it might seem a welcome statement of the obvious, it would end his premiership.

I do not advocate withdrawal, nor will it be a serious option for Gordon Brown, as some have suggested. To pull out would merely underline Western weakness and irresolution, and add treachery to the many other charges that we face.

I recall a day shortly after the fall of Baghdad when Blair crowed to parliament that he had proved wrong those who had predicted that Iraq would be his Vietnam. Even then it struck me as a foolish hostage to fortune. America will not lose 55,000 in Iraq men as it did then. But this Iraqi conflict will tie us down for many years.

Vietnam ended with US helicopters plucking Marines from the roof of the embassy in Saigon as the Vietcong overran the city. It is not impossible that one day the scene will be re-enacted in the green zone of Baghdad.