An ICM poll in the Guardian found that 52 per cent approved of the war and 34 per cent opposed it; among Conservatives approval was 61 per cent, among Labour supporters 59 per cent and among Liberal Democrats 31 per cent. Mr Geoff Hoon, the Secretary of State for Defence, told Parliament that, with 45,000 British servicemen already sent to the war, ‘what I am ruling out, at this stage at any rate, is the necessity for any substantial increase’. Mr Robin Cook, who resigned as Leader of the Commons before the war started, wrote in the Sunday Mirror: ‘I have already had my fill of this bloody and unnecessary war. I want our troops home and I want them home before more of them are killed.’ But on the day the article came out he said: ‘I am not in favour of abandoning the battlefield.’ By 2 April, British fatalities totalled 27: five killed in combat, 17 killed in accidents and five by ‘friendly fire’.
issue 05 April 2003
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