Past injustices inflicted on the last outpost of empire need to be acknowledged – and redressed.
The former British Prime Minister is parading around the world acting as a spin doctor for murderous regimes and a salesman of Saudi oil.
Sir Jeremy Heywood was Principal Private Secretary to Tony Blair; he must not be the man to decide which conversations are to be made public at the Chilcot enquiry. Here is David Owen's full letter to David Cameron with accompanying note.
China is a favoured stopover for a former prime minister with money on his mind. But this is a game that his hosts too are playing, says Kerry Brown.
When trying to understand what happened to New Labour, it is instructive to compare the spirit of progressive optimism found in Blair's first book in 1996 with the defence of power and privilege to be found in his recently released autobiography.
The reflections of The Economist and Tony Blair on Scottish devolution are united by a sense that Scotland matters and that its politics, priorities and dynamics are a threat to the preservation of the existing order.
This is an alternative, and some would say more honest, rendition of Blair's journey performed by artist Julia Brosnan.
Ahead of Blair's testimony on the Iraq war, it is worth considering a recent exchange in the American blogosphere which illustrates the imperial temptation in the politics of both nations
The British prime minister is in a state of wilful denial about Iraq, says John Sloboda of Iraq Body Count.
Tony Blair's denial of reality was astounding enough
Lord Huttons now notorious report on the circumstances surrounding the death of the British government weapons scientist David Kelly, has been greeted with an unprecedented chorus of disdain. Almost
Many on the political left have been perplexed by the way in which British prime minister Tony Blair has increasingly aligned himself with politicians, on both sides of the Atlantic,