Body Of Iraq WMD Whistleblower Exhumed, Cremated After Calls To Investigate His Death
The body of a chemical weapons expert who was critical of the UK’s use of “weapons of mass destruction” as a pretense for war, was unearthed and cremated.
by Jack
Burns
1
November, 2017
This
past week, the Kelly family decided to unearth the corpse of their
beloved family member and cremate his remains. In 2003, Dr. David
Kelly, formerly a United Nations (UN) weapons inspector and member of
the Ministry of Defence (UK), walked into the woods near his home,
ate a couple dozen opiates, slit his left wrist, and died.
That
was the official cause of death, but conspiracy theorists believe
Kelly was killed by members of his own government. Even now, after 14
years, many activists say an official coroner’s inquiry into his
death should take place. But it’s what Kelly said, or was reported
to have said, which some believe got him officially assassinated, and
his death made to look like a suicide.
After
9/11/01, just as the United States needed Iraq to possess weapons of
mass destruction (WMDs), so did the United Kingdom need the Middle
Eastern county to possess them in an effort to get its people on
board with a preemptive attack on a sovereign nation. Kelly was a
chemical weapons experts employed by the United Nations to inspect
Iraq’s chemical weapons programs.
In
2002, in an off the record interview with the BBC’s Andrew
Gilligan, Kelly told reporters the dossier the UK Prime Minister Tony
Blaire used to justify the invasion of Iraq was “sexed up” and
that he had personally inspected the supposed mobile chemical weapons
plants and stated they were nothing more than helium factories for
filling balloons.
They
are not mobile germ warfare laboratories. You could not use them for
making biological weapons. They do not even look like them. They are
exactly what the Iraqis said they were – facilities for the
production of hydrogen gas to fill balloons.
As
an employee with the Defense Department, he was allowed to speak with
members of the media but only on the condition of anonymity and was
often referred to as “a scientist” with the government as the
media’s confidential source.
All
that changed when he started being more vocal about his doubts that
Saddam Hussein’s military was capable of launching a battlefield
chemical weapons attack within “45 minutes” of being given the
order. He admitted the country probably did possess some chemical
weapons but it was his opinion they were not capable of making them
battlefield ready in such a short period of time.
After
being outed by the media as the scientist making those controversial
claims (implying the government was using WMDs as a weak argument for
going to war), he was called before an official government inquiry
and grilled. He was forced to answer questions related to which
reporters he’d spoken to and what he’d actually communicated.
Two
days after being in the literal hot seat (the air conditioning had to
be turned off because Kelly was such a soft-spoken person), the
microbiologist walked off into the woods and killed himself. And
that’s when the conspiracy theories were launched, made possible by
the government’s attempt at secrecy, even going so far as to
classify the details of his death for 70 years.
Those
critical of the events surrounding the death of the chemical weapons
expert and member of the military pointed to several facts in the
case which remained unexplained;
-
The artery which was cut was not capable of killing someone.
-
Paramedics went on record as saying there was not enough blood on the scene to conclude he’d bled out.
-
There were no fingerprints found on the knife used nor the prescription bottle of pills he supposedly took.
-
The government has refused to open an official coroner’s inquiry into his death, for the first time in modern history of someone of his status.
-
The government’s decision to classify his death as a suicide after only an official government inquiry, and the subsequent labeling of the details of his death as a state secret (marked classified for 70 years) was indicative that foul play was involved.
Even
a group of doctors were seeking legal recourse to be allowed to
investigate Kelly’s death. But what made his family dig up his body
last week and cremate his remains was a consequence of vandals,
according to those close to the family who said that the many
conspiracy theorists visiting his grave and holding vigils was
unnerving for them. They said it was a desecration. At any rate, any
clues found in his corpse as to how he died, if he was killed, why he
died, have all been obliterated.
But
it is likely Kelly’s cremation will not be the end of the ordeal as
activists are still determined to get to the bottom of why the
whistleblower would feel the need to kill himself and make such a
mess of his own suicide. It’s ultimately not the way a scientist
would likely have taken his or her life.
In
2007, Norman Baker wrote an article written for the DailyMail titled,
“Why I know weapons expert Dr. David Kelly was murdered, by the MP
who spent a year investigating his death.” In it, Baker theorized
Kelly was either murdered by his own government, by Saddam loyalists,
Mossad, South Africans or even by the Central Intelligence Agency,
among other possible bad actors. He concluded:
This
now infamous “45-minute claim” fed through to the dossier of
intelligence which was used as the justification for our involvement
in the invasion of Iraq. It was this dossier, and the 45-minute claim
in particular, that David Kelly challenged in his crucial interview
with the BBC. By doing so, did he sign his own death warrant?
When will the British government admit its roque PM Tony BLAIR was a WAR CRIMINAL thus only justice will prevail in International Court of Hague
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