Britain's Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon has told colleagues he accepts he must "carry the can" for the death of a government scientist at the center of claims that London exaggerated the case for war on Baghdad, the Sunday Telegraph reported.
According to the paper, Hoon telephoned colleagues to tell them he expected to have to "fall on his sword" over the affair, which has triggered a major political crisis for British Prime Minister Tony Blair.
Last week, a judicial inquiry into the suspected suicide of weapons expert David Kelly heard that Hoon had overruled his most senior civil servant's request that the scientist be spared a public grilling by a parliamentary committee.
Hoon has informed friends that he believes the disclosure, and allegations that he was prepared to put political expediency ahead of Kelly's welfare, spell doom for his career as a member of Blair's Cabinet of senior ministers, the Sunday Telegraph reported.
"He's told us he's going to carry the can," one close colleague told the right-wing weekly.
Some of the most senior officials of Blair's office, including media chief Alastair Campbell and Jonathan Powell, the prime minister's chief of staff, are preparing to give evidence to the judicial probe in London this week.
Blair is due to be summoned to testify at some stage, along with Hoon himself.
The body of Kelly, a former UN weapons inspector in Iraq, was found on July 18 near his home at Southmoor, west of London, days after he was grilled by two parliamentary committees.
The committees were investigating disputed claims by the BBC that London exaggerated an official dossier published last September on Baghdad's weapons arsenal to bolster the case for the war on Iraq launched in March.
The Mail on Sunday tabloid reported that Kelly had been warned by a senior defense ministry official a year before his death that his career would suffer if he refused to "sex up" the government dossier on Iraq.
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