At times Mr David Cameron appeared tetchy and rattled as the committee’s chairman, senior Tory MP Andrew Tyrie, repeatedly urged him to make more information available to the public and MPs.
Video: PM: 70,000 Is The Best Estimate
Mr Cameron’s first clash came with the Tory chairman of the Defence Select Committee, Julian Lewis, over the PM’s claim last month that there were 70,000 “non-extremist” opposition fighters in Syria.
Refusing to give details of the groups concerned, Mr Cameron said: “It would be effectively giving President Assad a list of the groups and the people and potentially the areas he should be targeting.”
He did admit, however, that some were “relatively hardline Islamists” and said: “They are not all the sort of people you would bump into at a Liberal Democrat party conference.”
Mr David Cameron was then challenged by Harriet Harman, the former interim Labour leader who now chairs Parliament’s Joint Human Rights Committee, to publish Government policy on the use of drones for targeted killings.
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