After seven years, the British have released the findings of inquiry into the Iraq War.

NPR's Lauren Frayer says that the 6,000-page report, the result of an investigation led by retired civil servant John Chilcot, found that Britain rushed to war before all peaceful means were exhausted. Lauren filed this report for our Newscast unit:

"Protesters yelled, 'Tony Blair war criminal!' outside Britain's Parliament. An investigation has concluded there was 'no imminent threat' by Saddam Hussein when Prime Minister Blair decided to invade, alongside the U.S.

"It also reveals secret communications nine months before the war in which Blair told President George W. Bush, 'I will be with you whatever.'

"Blair decided to invade before all the evidence was in, the report says. Families of the 179 British troops who died in Iraq are weighing lawsuits.

"Blair issued a statement in his defense, saying he made the decision to go to war 'in good faith.' "

The New York Times adds:

"Mr. Blair knew by January 2003 that Washington had decided to go to war to overthrow Mr. Hussein and accepted the American timetable for the military action by mid-March, pushing only for a second Security Council resolution that never came, 'undermining the Security Council's authority,' the report concludes.

"The report is likely to underline in Britain the sense that Mr. Blair was 'Washington's poodle,' the phrase widely used by Mr. Blair's critics at the time. The report says the lessons from the British government's conduct are that 'all aspects' of military intervention 'need to be calculated, debated and challenged with the utmost rigor,' and decisions, once made, 'need to be implemented fully.' "

CNN reports that Blair also held a news conference to respond to the report.

"The intelligence assessments made at the time of going to war turned out to be wrong," Blair said.

Al-Jazeera reports that Blair also said that there was "no rush" to war. The network adds:

" 'There were no lies. There was no secret commitment to war.'

"[Blair] also said that he made the decision because 'it was the right thing to do based on the information I had.' He said his mistake was in the 'planning and process' following the invasion."

Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more, visit NPR.

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