Five months before invasion, pair agreed to go ahead if weapons breach was revealed, according to newly released letter Britain and the US were planning to take action against Saddam Hussein without a second UN resolution five months before the invasion of Iraq, a newly released letter from Tony Blair’s office shows. A letter from Blair’s private secretary reveals that “we and the US would take action” without a new resolution by the UN security council if UN weapons inspectors showed Saddam had clearly breached an earlier resolution. In that case, he “would not have a second chance”. That was the only way Britain could persuade the Bush administration to agree to a role for the UN and continuing work by UN weapons inspectors, the letter says. Dated 17 October 2002, it was written by Matthew Rycroft to Mark Sedwill, private secretary to the foreign secretary, Jack Straw. “This letter is sensitive,” Rycroft underlined. “It must be seen only by those with a real need to know its contents, and must not be copied further.” He sent it to a number of other senior officials, including Sir Jeremy Greenstock, Britain’s ambassador to the UN. There is no indication that it was seen by Lord Goldsmith, the attorney general, who at the time was advising that invading Iraq without a fresh UN resolution would be illegal. Rycroft’s letter referred to a Downing Street meeting on the Iraqi crisis attended by Straw, the defence secretary, Geoff Hoon, and the chief of the defence staff, Admiral Sir Mike Boyce. Also present were Blair’s chief of staff, Jonathan Powell; his director of government relations, Sally Morgan; his director of communications, Alastair Campbell; and his chief foreign policy adviser, David Manning. The meeting concluded, wrote Rycroft, that “the only way to keep the US on the UN route was for there to be a clear understanding that if [chief UN weapons inspector Hans] Blix reported an Iraqi breach of the first resolution, then Saddam would not have a second chance”. In a devastating passage, Rycroft added: “In other words, if for some reason [such as a French or Russian veto] there were no second resolution agreed … we and the US would take action.” The Downing Street letter is particularly significant considering the government’s repeated emphasis in public at the time on the need for UN approval before any invasion of Iraq. The first resolution referred to in Rycroft’s letter was number 1441, passed unanimously in November 2002. Goldsmith and most of the government’s legal advisers insisted a second UN resolution was needed before military action could lawfully take place. Blair was put in an even more difficult position with Washington as, in the event, Blix never reported an unconditional breach of the first resolution. The Rycroft letter also appears to conflict with Straw’s actions at the time. A statement recently released by the Chilcot inquiry revealed that in October 2002 Straw told his French counterpart, Dominique de Villepin, that US acceptance of the wording of the first UN resolution “implied” a further one was required. The statement was written by Sir Michael Wood, the Foreign Office’s top legal adviser, who also opposed the invasion. It also disclosed that Greenstock had told his US counterpart that Britain would state publicly after the resolution was passed “that there needed to be a second resolution”. The issue is at the heart of the deep and continuing arguments over the legality of the invasion. Goldsmith originally advised Blair and Straw that the first UN resolution did not provide sufficient legal cover for war. Goldsmith said he changed his mind in February 2003 after Bush’s legal advisers told him on a US visit that they had agreed to the wording of 1441 only because it had not crossed their “red line” – the clear message was that, as far as the US was concerned, no new resolution was needed. Philippe Sands, professor of international law at University College London, said: “The letter of 17 October 2002 is consistent with the conclusion that the prime minister wanted to proceed to action with the US on the basis of a single security council resolution, irrespective of what the law required, and ignoring the views at the time of the Foreign Office legal adviser and the attorney general.” According to Wood’s statement to the Chilcot inquiry, Straw told the US secretary of state, Colin Powell, “that we needed a second resolution and that it was extremely unlikely we could find a legal basis without it”. Sands said: “It reflects the widespread view that what became UNSCR 1441 would not authorise military action without a second resolution. His latest statement shoots a very big hole in the arguments of Messrs Goldsmith and Straw, and one wonders why they ultimately failed to reflect its contents in their words and actions.” Tony Blair Iraq war inquiry Foreign policy US foreign policy Iraq Middle East George Bush United States Chris Ames Richard Norton-Taylor guardian.co.uk