Iraq Inquiry

Completed

Chilcot Inquiry

Chair Sir John Chilcot Civil servant
Established 30 Jul 2009
Final Report 06 Jul 2016
Commissioned by Cabinet Office Commissioned by the Prime Minister

Inquiry into the UK's role in the Iraq War, examining decisions taken between 2001 and 2009.

Evidence & Impact
The Iraq Inquiry, chaired by Sir John Chilcot, was established in 2009 to examine the UK's involvement in Iraq from 2001 to 2009, including the decision to go to war, the conduct of military operations, and post-conflict planning. The inquiry's report, published in July 2016, identified eight key lessons rather than formal recommendations.

The government accepted seven of these lessons and accepted one in principle. According to the Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee (PACAC) review in 2018, seven were recorded as completed and one as partially delivered.

The government response describes several institutional changes. The Chilcot Checklist was developed as a practical framework for policy-making and integrated into departmental training. The Ministry of Defence produced The Good Operation handbook and developed immersive decision-making scenarios. The role of FCO Legal Advisors was strengthened to ensure international law considerations are central to decisions on military action.

Intelligence processes were reformed, with the Joint Intelligence Committee introducing enhanced mechanisms to communicate uncertainties and caveats. The fusion doctrine was launched to improve cross-departmental coordination, though PACAC recorded this as only partially delivered by 2018.

The government committed to maintaining defence spending at 2% of GDP in line with NATO targets and established regular strategic defence and security reviews. The Armed Forces Covenant was enshrined in law. The FCDO's Diplomacy 20:20 programme incorporated lessons about maintaining independent policy analysis.

The PACAC Committee noted that Chilcot identified lessons rather than making formal recommendations, which may explain the limited tracking of implementation beyond 2018. No formal implementation reviews or subsequent progress updates have been recorded in the available evidence since the PACAC assessment.
Reforms Attributed to This Inquiry
- The Chilcot Checklist: a 10-point framework covering Vision, Analysis, Scenarios, Options, Legal implications, Policy and strategy, Resources, Planning, Performance monitoring, and Evaluation, integrated into training across departments
- The Good Operation handbook developed by the Ministry of Defence incorporating lessons on military planning and decision-making
- Strengthened role of FCO Legal Advisors in policy development with improved processes for considering international law in decisions on military action
- Enhanced Joint Intelligence Committee processes to ensure appropriate communication of caveats and uncertainties in intelligence assessments
- Introduction of the fusion doctrine to improve collective Cabinet decision-making on complex cross-departmental issues
- Commitment to NATO 2% GDP defence spending target
- Armed Forces Covenant enshrined in law
- Regular strategic defence and security reviews established as standard practice
- FCDO Diplomacy 20:20 programme embedding lessons on maintaining independent policy analysis when working with allies
Unfinished Business
- The fusion doctrine for collective Cabinet engagement (recommendation 2) was recorded as only 'Partially Delivered' according to the 2018 PACAC Committee review, with no subsequent evidence of full implementation
Generated 18 Mar 2026 using claude-opus-4. Assessment is indicative, not authoritative.
6 years, 11 months Duration
£13m Total Cost
150 Witnesses
130 Hearing Days
150,000 Documents
6,275 Report Pages
The Iraq Inquiry identified 150 conclusions and lessons across its 12-volume report but did not make formal numbered recommendations. The Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee (PACAC) conducted a follow-up inquiry in 2016-17 examining how government was implementing the lessons.
2 debates 7 questions since May 2016
Written Question Iraq Committee of Inquiry
Liz Saville Roberts (Plaid Cymru)
29 Jan 2019
Written Question Iraq Committee of Inquiry
Dr Julian Lewis (Conservative)
27 Jun 2018
Written Question Iraq Committee of Inquiry
Lord Truscott (Independent Labour)
19 Jul 2017
Hansard Debate Chilcot Inquiry
16 Mar 2017
View all 11 mentions →
15 Jun 2009
Inquiry Announced
30 Jul 2009
Inquiry Established
06 Jul 2016
Final Report Published