This week the Foreign Affairs Select Committee released a big report on Libya, pointing out the campaign to oust Gaddafi was deeply flawed.

But a journalist today found the report was more misleading than many thought.

The Guardian’s Patrick Kingley wrote out 24 tweets this morning, showing how flawed the report was.

Here are those tweets in order.

a) analysis from Alison Pargeter; b) George Joffe (whose work was part funded by a Gaddafi charity https://t.co/UWFtgc5Ihl) and c) … 2/ — Patrick Kingsley (@PatrickKingsley) September 16, 2016

4: This Amnesty investigation "uncovered evidence that rebels in Benghazi made false claims and manufactured evidence." @CommonsForeign — Patrick Kingsley (@PatrickKingsley) September 16, 2016

6: I was very interested to read this Amnesty report, so I looked for it online. But I couldn't find it. @CommonsForeign — Patrick Kingsley (@PatrickKingsley) September 16, 2016

8: So I went back to the footnotes of the @CommonsForeign report, & it turns out this assertion, which gives the report rhetorical heft … — Patrick Kingsley (@PatrickKingsley) September 16, 2016

10: … and that there wasn't an Amnesty investigation as such, but rather Cockburn quoted an Amnesty researcher … @CommonsForeign — Patrick Kingsley (@PatrickKingsley) September 16, 2016

11: … who specifically queried the claim of Gaddafi-led mass-rape@CommonsForeign pic.twitter.com/tT9CwEtCEf — Patrick Kingsley (@PatrickKingsley) September 16, 2016

12: But who also said Gaddafi killed c.110 largely unarmed protesters in Benghazi, & 60 nearby @CommonsForeign pic.twitter.com/jbeBtjF355 — Patrick Kingsley (@PatrickKingsley) September 16, 2016

14: Tho that Crisis report ruled out claims of Gadafi-led genocide, it did cite "brutal repression" @CommonsForeign pic.twitter.com/QGXu95NcrH — Patrick Kingsley (@PatrickKingsley) September 16, 2016

16: Anyway, where am I going w this? The central pt is that when @CommonsForeign argues that Gaddafi posed little threat to Benghazi, — Patrick Kingsley (@PatrickKingsley) September 16, 2016

18: and another was a misrepresentation of an Amnesty report that as far as I can see doesn’t exist. (Send a link if you can find it.) — Patrick Kingsley (@PatrickKingsley) September 16, 2016

20: More widely, I wonder if we put parliament comm investigations on a bit too much of a pedestal. If you look at the list of witnesses … — Patrick Kingsley (@PatrickKingsley) September 16, 2016

22: I had a similar feeling giving evidence to a Lords committee earlier this year. That time I happened to agree with their conclusion. — Patrick Kingsley (@PatrickKingsley) September 16, 2016

Crispin Blunt, chair of the Foreign Affairs Select committee, has been making excuses for Saudi Arabia all this week too.

Doesn’t seem like they know much about their brief at all