Well it’s up to them but I think the Conservative politicians involved should be very careful

Well, it’s up to them, but I think the Conservative politicians involved should be very careful. If they make this a test of credibility – theirs against the judge’s – they will lose. For the underlying suspicion of the executive which provoked the inquiry back in 1992 is still as forcibly present today.. Whitehall has been worried sick about the inquiry from day one; and has been looking for reasons to discredit it from day two.

That doesn’t mean the criticisms are invalid, but it ought to make us very suspicious about attempts to elevate failures in its proceedings into a generalised attack on the inquiry itself.The counter-attack on Scott is clattering along in crusading and increasingly aggressive spirit. Mr Waldegrave has been meticulous about refusing to defend himself through the media. The Prime Minister is biding his time, too; but I would be surprised if he did not criticise the conduct of the inquiry when it eventually reports.If that leads him to reject it as impertinent and misguided, then the backlash will have triumphantly succeeded – and public cynicism will be powerfully reinforced. Or, if I’m wrong, then hopping into bed with your neighbour’s wife is merely a flexible interpretation of the Seventh Commandment (a viewpoint which, come to think of it, the Church of England will surely endorse before long).On such verbal shadings and cultural arguments individual ministers and officials will be judged, not by Sir Richard, but by Downing Street and, in due course, by the voters. But if a policy of not exporting potentially lethal kit is interpreted so as to allow gun-barrels to be exported after all, then this is ”flexibility” so extreme that it is indistinguishable from a change of policy. Mr Waldegrave’s conscience and the conscience of the British state were, at least for a while, the same thing. Looking at the papers that were available before Scott started work, for instance, it was clear that government policy on arms sales was changed, and that a decision was taken to say nothing to Parliament.Mr Waldegrave, who is a thoroughly serious and public-spirited person, justified this as the flexible interpretation of policy.

It matters far more than the survival of this minister or that.The problem for the ministers concerned is that their actions weren’t private ones, but the actions of the state. Reasserting those values, and rubbing the executive’s nose in them, is the prime public interest in all this. But when it comes to the crunch, which good matters more?We are talking here not simply about individual acts, but about public values. It is good that British exporters do well; it is good that Parliament is told the truth by ministers.

When these goods conflict, which should be considered the higher one? Or again: it is good that ministers protect private and necessary sources of information; it is good that innocent people are not jailed. Above all, we should be watchful for attempts to use the regrettable leaks and procedural failures of the inquiry to hide the big questions which the arms-to-Iraq story raises.Like all the most interesting questions in politics, they are about balancing competing goods. And without such instincts, probably, government could not carry on.The rest of us, though, must distinguish between the pain felt by individual politicians and officials, and the attempt by the culture of government to repel any criticism from outside as ill-informed. The writers of satires about government always miss out the fierce sense of mutual loyalty and self-belief shared by ministers and senior civil servants. It also accounts for the passionate, even Quixotic, defence of Mr Waldegrave mounted by Garel-Jones on this page yesterday The feelings of hurt are real. The judge has been uncovering, probing and criticising the most delicate, hidden membranes of British government.

Denied its anaesthetic mix of privacy and authority, the government machine finds its exposure on the judge’s dissection table both humiliating and agonising.Almost everyone involved does. It is a sense of corporate loyalty that explains Lord Howe’s persistence – he has his teeth into Sir Richard’s ankle, and try as he may, the bicycling judge cannot shake him off. Which takes Mr Major into a possible election year.From the Prime Minister’s own point of view, therefore, the game isn’t going too badly. But from the collective viewpoint of the executive, Scott has been terrible.

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