They have the Chilcot report. Now Scotland's Iraqi diaspora wants justice on its basis.
The small Glasgow-based community of Arabs is currently in mourning, for the suicide bombings that rocked Baghdad at the weekend.
The attacks were carried out by Islamic State. But Fatan Hameed, of the Scottish Iraqi Association still blames Tony Blair for more than a decade of instability and death.
And, after hearing the evidence in the Iraq Inquiry Report, Ms Hameed,ants to see the former prime minister in court.
She said: "We must have faith in the British or Scottish justice system. I will rely on them to use to
he evidence of this report.
"The thing that shocks me most is the way Blair told [President George W] Bush that he would go to war 'whatever'. The whole thing is appalling.
"Millions of people in Iraq and the the families of 179 lost British servicemen and women have paid the price for Blair's decision to go to war without exhausting all the peaceful options.
"The whole invasion was based on assumptions and assertions about weapons of mass destruction.
"You can just assume your way in to a war.
Ms Hameed, originally from Baghdad, said: "There actually were other options for getting rid of Saddam Hussein, this dictator.
"There was no basis for war. I am very very angry. And we are still paying the price for this years later, as we saw with Sunday's bomb. Even in Glasgow we know people who were killed."
Scotland's Iraqis plan a candlelight vigil to remember those who lost their lives in the latest atrocity, the bombings on Sunday. The official death tool for the atrocity has now reached 250. They will gather outside the Royal Concert Hall at 5:30pm on Thursday.
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