Tony Blair defends knighthood after Iraq criticism


Tony Blair has been appointed as Knight Companion of the Most Noble Order of the Garter, the most senior order of knighthood, by Queen Elizabeth II. – EPA pic, January 16, 2022.

FORMER British prime minister Tony Blair said his leadership should be remembered for more than the Iraq war, as he rejected criticism over his receipt of a knighthood.

The Labour party’s most successful leader, who won three successive general elections, was made Sir Tony in Queen Elizabeth II’s New Year’s Honours list.

The announcement was defended by the Conservative government, but several online petitions want it rescinded. One on change.org, accusing Blair of “war crimes”, has drawn more than one million signatories.

Blair said he accepted not just for himself, but also the “committed, dedicated people” who worked with him in government and “provided a lot of change to the country”.

“Of course, there will be people who object to it strongly. That is to be expected,” he told Times Radio.

“There are some people who want to say the only thing the government did was Iraq and ignore all the rest of the things we did.”

But he stressed “you do not occupy a position of leadership and take decisions without arousing a lot of opposition, and so it did not surprise me”.

The Queen personally appointed Blair as Knight Companion of the Most Noble Order of the Garter, the most senior order of knighthood.

She previously knighted former Conservative prime minister John Major in this way in 2005.

Blair, now 68, defeated Major with a landslide Labour victory in 1997 and spent a decade in office.

His successes included securing peace in Northern Ireland, investments in health and education, and expanding gay rights. But he was widely reviled at home for his support for the United States-led invasion of Iraq in 2003.

Senior Conservative minister Michael Gove, while noting their political differences, said Blair is an “outstanding statesman and performer”.

Current Labour leader Keir Starmer said Blair earned his knighthood, arguing he “made Britain a better country”. – AFP, January 16, 2022.


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