 The situation that we faced in 2002, in particular with the run-up to the war in Iraq, was that we knew Tony Blair and George Bush were telling us repeatedly lies, and we were mobilising very, very significant numbers of people already in the autumn of 2002 against the war in Iraq, and the government responded to this by issuing a dossier which was supposed to contain the evidence to go to war, and that Saddam Hussein had weapons for our destruction. Now we rejected the idea that we should go to war. We sent one of our leading members at the time who was named Peter Jeremy Corbyn, who's now the leader of the Labour Party, and he went down on his bike and picked up a copy. He got an early copy of the dossier to find out what it said, and I remember him phoning me and saying, this dossier, we've got nothing to worry about. It doesn't contain any real evidence of anything that we didn't know already, or that's any serious evidence. And I remember very, very strongly looking at the dossier and thinking that this was a series of speculative claims, a series of claims, for example, that the Saddam's palaces were where he was supposed to have hidden the weapons of our destruction were much bigger than Buckingham Palace and the Queen's other palaces. In fact, they even did diagrams along these lines. And I remember thinking then what ridiculous arguments these were. But of course, what happened as repeatedly in the run-up to war that was the spin which we put on this dossier, particularly by Alice Campbell, was that Saddam had weapons of mass destruction, which could hit British interests in 45 minutes. And the headline of the London Even paper that day was 45 minutes threat from Saddam. And this was the kind of argument that they used. We knew this lie then. We've since been vindicated about this because Hillcott, who reported in July, has made it absolutely clear that there was no serious evidence for weapons of destruction. This was one of the many, many lies. There are repeated sources that so many people know, but it was very important for us to be able to nail that. And that weekend, we had a demonstration of 300,000 people, which was the first very big demonstration we had against war in Iraq. Jeremy Corbyn went down to Westminster on his bike because as an MP, he was allowed an early sight of the dossier. He got it a few hours before we did. He's been a tremendous supporter of the stop of war. And of course, he's now leader of the Labour Party. I was very, very proud to be in Westminster in July when he apologised on behalf of the Labour Party to the Iraq War in front of families of children who died in Iraq, in front of Iraqis in front of former veterans and peace and anti-war campaigners. And it's a tremendous thing to have a leader of the opposition who is anti-war and poor peace. Of course, it's one of the main things he gets attacked for in the media, but it's something that he's very much stuck to. And we hope that this will be, we don't see Hillcott as the end. Jeremy Corbyn, we have to see this as something where we can find the full truth and hold those who took us to war accountable. And this is still a very, very big question. And it's one that is facing us in the United States and Britain and in every other country that was involved in going to war.