Posted on 02/13/2003 6:40:19 AM PST by Pokey78
Phil Craig marched against cruise missiles, but now believes that Bush will be vindicated
We were there for peace. We were there to confront the American cowboy warmonger. We were there to watch Emma Thompson on a lorry.
Actually, of the day I marched against cruise and Pershing missiles what I remember best is the bemused look on the faces of a group of NUM men as Emma performed her mobile political cabaret.
Anyone remember cruise and Pershing? Or Greenham Common? How about Frankie Goes to Hollywood? You only catch them on television archive shows now, but back in the early 1980s stopping Nato deploying those America missiles was the great anti-war cause. It was what you did if you were young, decent and liberal.
And how we decent young people hated Reagan. We all had that poster of him as Rhett Butler with Thatcher as Scarlett OHara: She promised to follow him to the ends of the earth. He promised to organise it.
No, he wasnt funny; he was dangerous. He wanted to tear up détente, he wanted to confront what he naively called the Evil Empire. For Christs sake, he even went to Berlin and shouted, Tear Down that Wall! Now, please understand, wed all read Animal Farm and none of us was that keen on the Soviets, but at least theyd given their people decent healthcare, hadnt they, and a fantastic underground system? Oh, and jobs for life, unlike the evil Thatcher. And what was the point of provoking them?
Like a lot of Oxbridge lefties I ended up in the BBC current affairs department. Eight years after carrying my CND banner through Hyde Park I found myself in Eastern Europe. Amazingly, the Wall had, indeed, been torn down. My assistant producer had family in the old East Germany and he wasnt too pleased to hear of my peacenik past. Did I have any idea how much people like him had hated people like me? Did I know how crushingly miserable life had been in Eastern Europe, that the image of healthcare and jobs for life was strictly for the consumption of visiting Guardian reporters, and that the reality was grey, oppressive and corrupt? And, most of all, did I not know how much it had meant when Reagan challenged the Soviet overlord, matching their SS-20s with his own missiles, inviting them into a spending race that they could not win?
And thats why I wont be marching in Hyde Park this time around. Because America, even with a cowboy in charge, isnt always wrong.
Two paragraphs, both true:
1) The United States has bankrolled and armed vicious regimes, refused to pressure Israel into making substantial territorial concessions in the West Bank, and has wilfully undermined international efforts to secure fair trade and environmental protections Bad America, very bad.
2) For three generations the people of Europe have benefited hugely from the military and economic power of the United States. That power disposed of first the Nazis and then the Soviets. In the last decade it has chased a fascist dictator out of the Balkans and a reactionary death cult from its laboratories in Afghanistan Good America, yes, very good America indeed, especially when you consider what the multilateral, United Nations, decent and liberal approach to world problems has given us in recent years: Rwanda, Srebrenica and a 12-year game of hide-and-seek in Iraq.
I like to imagine this weekends protesters sitting in a café in Jerusalem, Baghdad or Damascus one day, in a revitalised, democratised and peaceful Middle East, and realising that the turning point was the removal of Saddam. Optimistic? Naive? I suppose so. But some good will come out of regime-change in Iraq. Reformers in Tehran will be inspired, Hamas will lose its major paymaster, and the Saudi oligarchs will think twice before they fund any more jihad-preaching madrasas.
Id say that the optimists have as good a chance of being right as the Pilgers and the Pinters, whose relentlessly negative predictions about recent Western military actions have been equally relentlessly wrong.
Madeleine Bunting another decent liberal type is a columnist for the Guardian. A few days into the bombing of the Taleban, she described Afghanistan as Americas new Vietnam. Last week she attempted to discount any cheering crowds that we might see on the streets of Iraq as a few days jubilation staged for the TV cameras. Well, Afghanistan wasnt Vietnam, nor will it ever be, and CNN will not need to stage-manage any of the upcoming jubilations in Baghdad. Why would a liberal want to dismiss the liberation of the Iraqi people? Because, for the moment, anti-Americanism trumps all her other instincts.
From my experience (and believe me, I know, I have to work with these people), mainstream left-liberal opinion remains resolutely opposed to the war, however many nasties Hans and his team can dig up in Saddams back garden. Its also very much inclined to believe anyone but Bush or Powell when it comes to evidence about the nasties. Still not proven ...no clear risk is the consensus, even after Colin Powells tape recordings, and even after Jane Corbins excellent Panorama showed just how the inspectors get the run-around. Corbin also introduced the British public to the truly scary Dr Germ whose husband, it turns out, is in charge of Iraqi liaison with the UN inspectors. Who said Saddam didnt have a sense of humour?
Ive made enough current affairs programmes to understand and to share much of the case against America. But my feelings about the war on terror have been different from the start.
I was in Florida researching a book on the second world war on 11 September 2001. In the week after the attack the airlines were down, so I drove across rural Florida and Georgia, watching the flags come out and the patriotic messages go up on the billboards. People were calling the radio shows. One question dominated, the same one I heard in bars, shops and around dinner tables: Why do they hate us so much? Its just a minority, I said.
I returned home and realised that it wasnt a minority at all. To my astonishment, it included many of my liberal and left-wing friends, and writers and thinkers I admired. In that first week a cartoon in the Guardian painted President Bush as an ape dumbly trying to impersonate Winston Churchill, while the Independent offered a blind, deranged Bush firing his cowboy six-shooter and treading on a dead Arab. And all this before a single American bomb had been dropped on Afghanistan, and with 3,000 bodies we still thought 10,000 then warm beneath the rubble.
I called up a friend in the television business. We both said we were fearful. I was talking about Islamic terrorism, perhaps next time with a nuke, but it turned out he meant the mad cowboy in the White House. It struck me then that, after so many years of opposing American foreign policy, the Left could not see beyond Vietnam-era slogans. It could not recognise that a toxic stew of rogue regimes, apocalyptic weapons programmes and a perverted form of Islam posed a deadly threat. It posed a particularly deadly threat, come to think of it, to the values of the Left itself: to womens rights and gay rights; to secularism, pluralism and multiculturalism. In fact, you name the liberal ism and Osama was against it. But one ism still trumped all: anti-Americanism.
The coming endgame with Saddam will at the very least rid the world of a proven danger, and lessen the chances that the next terrorist attack will take out millions not thousands. If war comes, will innocent Iraqis die? Certainly. More than the Americans will admit, fewer than the peaceniks will claim. But innocents have been dying for decades under this revolting regime.
Were told that war will drive Muslims into the arms of al-Qaeda. But remember what bin Laden said in the days after 9/11: America is weak, it cannot take casualties, it ran away in Somalia. Throughout the 1990s the West responded tamely to attacks by bin Laden (the African embassy bombs, the USS Cole), to attacks by groups linked to Saddam (the Saudi barracks bomb, the assassination attempt on Bushs father, the first World Trade Center attack), and to the continued refusal of Iraq to disarm as required by the Gulf war ceasefire. Ten years of this weakness only encouraged our enemies to be bolder.
Matthew Parris is a peacenik I respect. He cuts through the normal anti-war drivel that its all about Oil, God, Dad and accepts that the core justification for disarming Iraq is fear of a bigger version of 9/11. Hes opposed to war because he doesnt want to live in a world solely policed by the USA. Fair enough, thats a real worry. But Ill take it over the insecurity of living in an unpoliced world, or trusting my future to the men in blue helmets.
Good, decent people are painting their No War signs; friends are talking excitedly about how they are going to get to the great demo (its going to be a Woodstock moment, apparently); even Nelson Mandela, the conscience of the bloody world, tells me Im backing a bunch of racist oil-imperialists. The only thing to cheer me up was the New Europe letter. Nelson may be against me, but at least Vaclav Havel understands. Which brings me back to Hyde Park in 1983.
Eastern Europeans know that when they suffered oppression it was America which tried to help them, and the Western Left who marched in tacit support of their oppressors. The politburo, as we later discovered, never believed that Nato would respond to the deployment of its SS-20s. It thought that the protests of Phil Craig and Emma Thompson and lots of other decent liberal people would make it impossible. It was wrong, and when faced with Western resolve it slowly realised that the game was up.
I still hope that Saddam will do the same and join Idi Amin for an ill-deserved retirement in Saudi Arabia. But I fear that all this marching will make him think that he still has a chance. And that could be more dangerous than any cowboy in the White House.
Phil Craig is a television producer and historian. His books on the second world war Finest Hour and End of the Beginning are published by Hodder & Stoughton.
And they wonder why we liken Blix to Inspector Cluesoe...
Good to see him admit the error of his ways (although he is continuing to make blunders in this column). For some it is difficult to realize the political movement they've been following their whole lives is a sham, it is for some like losing their religion.
Same arguments we hear from the Hollywood Left when they rhapsodize about Cuba. I'm reminded of nothing so much as French aristocrats before the Revolution, trying to think of ways to buy off the masses before the masses rise up and seize their property. The entire Democrat/Left platform is based around bribing the poor with free love, free money, and free healthcare.
"I called up a friend in the television business. We both said we were fearful. I was talking about Islamic terrorism, perhaps next time with a nuke, but it turned out he meant the mad cowboy in the White House. It struck me then that, after so many years of opposing American foreign policy, the Left could not see beyond Vietnam-era slogans. It could not recognise that a toxic stew of rogue regimes, apocalyptic weapons programmes and a perverted form of Islam posed a deadly threat. It posed a particularly deadly threat, come to think of it, to the values of the Left itself: to womens rights and gay rights; to secularism, pluralism and multiculturalism. In fact, you name the liberal ism and Osama was against it. But one ism still trumped all: anti-Americanism."
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I've had almost the exact conversation...discussing "fears" with a couple co-workers..Their stance makes no sense whatsoever.....But I keep placing seeds in their sheeple minds...LOL!!
Nice article...FRegards,
By seizing CONTROL of 10% of the world's oil, a stake will be driven through the heart of OPEC, a building in Vienna will be for sale.
In addition, the US will no longer be begging for the use of bases, we'll have a permanent one in Iraq.
Hello, HOLLYWOOD!!
Did you hear THAT!
The reason the left ignores the fact that the Arab-Islamic axis stomps on everything the liberals stand for is that, except for secularism, none of these 'isms' represent real beliefs for them, none are core values, these isms are embraced only as a means to an end, that end being the accumulation of absolute power.
This is the bottom line -- the anti-American leftist "anti war" people are going to make a war MORE likely.
Most cannot, and that is killing the left as a political movement. Some can, and it's driving them crazy. What is most disturbing to me is the level of power that has been reached by people who still really do think in terms of slogans. I could cope with a left dedicated to the end of capitalism on theoretical terms, but not with one that substitutes the same, stale platitudes we've been hearing for years for genuine thought. But as long as these are sheep with puppets in the street, it isn't much more than an annoyance, part of the cost of doing business in a representative government.
When the sloganeers attain high office, however, we have a problem, because the real world is far more complex than the neat certainties of campus piety can easily grasp, and when otherwise intelligent people think that they are basing their actions on principle when they are really glossing over complexity with platitudes, then the political situation becomes dangerously rigid. This is not restricted to the current administrations in Germany and France, it happened in the United States under Clinton, and much of the garbage we're now having to pick up is its direct result.
Thanks, Bill.
Pray for GW and the Truth
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