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Peace Without Honour
The Spectator ^ | March 20, 2003 | Dan Hannan

Posted on 03/18/2004 9:45:49 AM PST by quidnunc

No one could have foretold in the immediate aftermath of the bombs that Spain would vote for appeasement

Few election results are wholly unpredicted. Punditry is a trade that places a premium on being counter-cyclical. As soon as a consensus begins to emerge around a particular outcome, someone — often Mark Steyn — begins to forecast the opposite. If he is proved right, he can justifiably swank about it afterwards; and if not, no one much minds.

But if any commentators foresaw that the Spanish Socialist Party (PSOE) would win last Sunday’s election, they kept very quiet about it. The result took everyone by surprise — not just the journalists and politicians but the voters, too. In the 72 hours before polling day, I was unable to find a single person who expected José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, the saturnine socialist leader, to form the next government. Believe me, it wasn’t for lack of asking. Spaniards are much easier to engage in conversation than Englishmen, since they do not avoid eye contact. I polled away like mad, in shopping queues and tapas bars, in buses and lifts. I even sampled a group of old ladies leaving Mass. Everyone said the same thing. The Partido Popular (PP) had been comfortably ahead even before Thursday’s atrocity; now it was a dead cert.

This conviction was especially deeply held on the Left. The day before the general election, I chatted to a group of socialist voters, members of a local taurine peña. They were not happy men. In fact, they were furious. They were bitter, of course, about the attack itself. They were angry, too, that four scheduled bullfights had been cancelled in its aftermath while the general election was going ahead. But what made them truly incandescent was the suspicion that the government was lying about the bomb.

-snip-

There was a paradox here. Ever since the Iraq war, the Left had claimed that the threat of Islamist terror had been exaggerated. Now they expected the suspicion of an Islamist bomb to help them at the polls. And, to Spain’s shame, it did.

There are more charitable ways of putting it, of course. One could say that 11-M served to remind Spaniards of how much they had resented the war. Or one could argue that what changed their minds was not so much the bomb as the suspicion of a government cover-up. But for at least some Spanish voters, I am afraid the late switch in voting intentions was pure cowardice. As a teenage girl told me on polling day, ‘When we supported the Americans, we made ourselves targets.’

It is always hard to explain what motivates voters. But consider two separate pieces of evidence. First, opinion polls in almost every country tend to register a ‘shy Tory’ factor: in other words, the raw findings overstate the support for the Left, because some people are ashamed of admitting that they vote for the Right. This time, though, PSOE outperformed all the exit polls. People were evidently reluctant to admit that they had changed their minds because of the bomb. Second, the Catalan politician who had controversially discussed with Eta the possibility of a truce in Catalonia saw his party increase its representation eightfold. It looks as though at least some Spaniards chose to vote for peace without honour.

-snip-

(Excerpt) Read more at spectator.co.uk ...


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: appeasement; madridbombing; psoe; spain; theleft

1 posted on 03/18/2004 9:45:49 AM PST by quidnunc
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To: quidnunc
It looks as though at least some Spaniards chose to vote for peace without honour.

In the immortal words of Winston Churchill, "They have chosen dishonor. They will get war."

2 posted on 03/18/2004 9:49:43 AM PST by Restorer
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To: quidnunc
Only Fools, Dead People ^and Spaniards^ Trust Terrorists.
3 posted on 03/18/2004 9:57:43 AM PST by Enduring Freedom (ONLY FOOLS & DEAD PEOPLE TRUST TERRORISTS)
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To: Enduring Freedom
"Only Fools, Dead People ^and Spaniards^ Trust Terrorists."

You forgot the French and Germans!!!

4 posted on 03/18/2004 10:23:05 AM PST by Wonder Warthog (The Hog of Steel)
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To: quidnunc
"More dangers have deceived men than forced them." - Francis Bacon.

"There can be no peace in a world where differences and grievances become an excuse to target the innocent for murder. In fighting terror, we fight for the conditions that will make lasting peace possible. We fight for lawful change against chaotic violence, for human choice against coercion and cruelty, and for the dignity and goodness of every life." - President George W. Bush, Remarks by the President on the Six-Month Anniversary of the September 11th Attacks The South Lawn, March 11, 2002.

"My good friends, this is the second time in our history that there has come back from Germany to Downing street peace with honor. I believe it is peace for our time. We thank you from the bottom of our hearts. And now I recommend to you to go home and sleep quietly in your beds." - Neville Chamberlain, speech after returning from peace talks with Hitler. September 30, 1938.

"All the world wishes for peace and security. Have we gained it by the sacrifice of the Czechoslovak Republic? Here was the model democratic state of Central Europe, a country where minorities were treated better than anywhere else. It has been deserted, destroyed and devoured. It is now being digested. The question which is of interest to a lot of ordinary, common people is whether this destruction of the Czechoslovak Republic will bring upon the world a blessing or a curse...." - Winston Churchill, House of Commons. October 5, 1938.

"Where is it all to end? To try to buy off Nazidom, or any other sign of moral weakness, would only be to bring near the very thing we still hope may be averted." - Winston Churchill, House of Commons. June 28, 1939.

"To know what is right and not to do it is the worst cowardice." - Confucius, Analects, c.400 b.c.
5 posted on 03/18/2004 3:07:45 PM PST by PsyOp ("Zapatero" is Spanish for "appeasing little girly man".)
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