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Britain: Blair outlines his imperial mission
By Chris Marsden
6 October 2001
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Prime Minister Tony Blairs speech to the Labour Party
conference this week sounded as if it were delivered by a man
who was politically and psychologically unhinged. Yet, with few
exceptions, the mass media in Britain and throughout the world
hailed his speech as a career-best and lauded Blair himself as
a politician of Churchillian stature.
Support stretched across the political spectrum of official
opinion in Britain. On the conservative right, the Daily Mail
called it one of the most impressive speeches Mr Blair has
made. The usually pro-Tory Telegraph said that Blair
had delivered a presidential speech and done so brilliantly.
But the liberal lefts reaction was even more enthusiastic.
The Guardian called the speech, a defining statement...
intellectually ambitious and formidable. The Independent
called it, the most statesmanlike and mature he has delivered
in seven years as leader. The Mirror called it an
extraordinary, emotional and visionary view of the future... we
at The Mirror feel proud to have a man like that leading
our country in this troubled time.
Americas CNN broadcast Blairs speech live around
the world. In Australia, it was also shown live on late-night
television. Former Labor Senator Graeme Richardson, who hosts
a Sydney radio show, told his audience, We are looking here
at the true leader of the world... That speech stamps him as the
great leader of the new millennium.
Italys Corriere della Sera said, If there
was ever any need for someone to keep the alliance between Europe
and America against terrorism who better than the British Prime
Minister?
Clearly there was a receptive audience for Blairs message,
despite a display of messianic fervour bordering on egomania.
Why is this?
In the first instance, Blair was given such a rapturous reception
because his speech was a declaration of war against Afghanistan.
Blair piled on the warrior rhetoric: This is a battle with
only one outcome: our victory not theirs... There is no diplomacy
with Bin Laden or the Taliban regime... There is no compromise
possible... Just a choice: defeat it or be defeated by it.
And finally, I say to the Taliban: surrender the terrorists;
or surrender power. Its your choice.
His speech was delivered amidst press reports that the Bush
administration had been forced to put off plans to attack Afghanistan
due to fear of losing the support of the Arab regimes. So for
the most bellicose sections of the bourgeoisie, particular in
the US, it must have sounded a reassuring clarion call: Dont
worry, everything is still on course. War will take place.
But Blair went much further in his speech than Bush and other
leading US politiciansanxious at this point to maintain
international consensuswould have dared. For he proposed
nothing less than to utilise the military and economic might of
the Western powers assembled under the so-called international
coalition against terrorism as the starting point for the reorganisation
of the entire world.
His words dripped with the type of cynical moralising employed
in the nineteenth century to legitimise the imperial ambitions
of the liberal bourgeoisie, but this time dressed up in modern
polemical garb. Whereas his predecessors would have cited the
need to take up the white mans burden and bring
Christianity and civilization to the heathen masses, Blair spoke
of creating hope amongst all nations, a new
beginning, greater understanding between nations and
between faiths; and above all justice and prosperity for the poor
and dispossessed. There was no limit to his ambitions. On
the basis of a mutual abhorrence of terrorism, it would now be
possible to bring together Jews, Muslims and Christians
because according to the Reverend Blair, all are the children
of Abraham.
The power of the international community is asserting
itself, Blair proclaimed, insisting that in the era of globalisation
conflicts rarely stay within national boundaries and
financial confidence is global. On this basis, Blair
made a direct appeal to the latent fears of the middle classes,
of the type long employed by far-right demagogues. Today
the threat is chaos, he warned, because for people
with work to do, family life to balance, mortgages to pay, careers
to further, pensions to provide, the yearning is for order and
stability and if it doesnt exist elsewhere, it is unlikely
to exist here.
In pursuit of global stability, however, sugary phrases about
universal brotherhood soon give way to a more pragmatic assertion
that the West must seize the moment to reorder the world in the
interests of capital and must employ every weapon at its disposal
in order to do soboth military and economic.
According to Blair, this had been done successfully in Yugoslavia
with the bringing down of the Milosevic regime and must now be
carried out in Africa and the Middle East, and closer to home
in Northern Ireland.
Blair promised many by now traditional palliatives, such as
writing off Third World debt, but the thrust of his
speech sought to legitimise direct interference by the West in
African affairs. Blair stated that the West must help with good
governance and infrastructure, and training soldiers in
conflict resolution. In return, he demands true
democracy, no more excuses for dictatorship, abuses of human rights;
no tolerance of bad governance, from the endemic corruption of
some states, to the activities of Mr Mugabes henchmen in
Zimbabwe. Any government deemed to be acting contrary to
the interests of the Western powers can easily be said to have
transgressed such standards. And what is considered legitimate?
Countries with Proper commercial, legal and financial systems,
i.e. ones prepared to abide by the dictates of the IMF and World
Bank, and the will, with our help, to broker agreements
for peace and provide troops to police them.
Blair finished his speech with a call to action. This
is a moment to seize. The Kaleidoscope has been shaken. The pieces
are in flux. Soon they will settle again. Before they do, let
us re-order this world around us.
The prime minister hopes to ride a wave of popularity as the
self-proclaimed captain of Britains ship in these troubled
waters, to push through measures that have hitherto met with opposition.
He even raised the possibility of holding a referendum on adopting
the euro within the lifetime of the present parliament, despite
the deep divisions on this question that continue to plague Britains
ruling elite.
With respect to domestic policy, Blair announced that people
must accept the curtailing of democratic rights in the name of
combating terrorismlaws will be changed, not to deny
basic liberties but to prevent their abuse and protect the most
basic liberty of all: freedom from terror. New extradition laws
will be introduced; new rules to ensure asylum is not a front
for terrorist entry.
Secondly, he rubbished the history of his own party and proclaimed
the superiority of traditional liberal capitalist economic and
social models: Our economic and social policy today owes
as much to the liberal social democratic tradition of Lloyd George,
Keynes and Beveridge as to the socialist principles of the 1945
[Labour] government.
Finally, he called for the abandoning of all opposition to
his plans to privatise vast areas of the public sector, including
education and the National Health Service. Its not
reform that is the enemy of public services. Its the status
quo. Part of that reform programme is partnership with the private
or voluntary sector... I regard it as being as important for the
country as Clause IVs reform was for the Party, and obviously
far more important for the lives of the people we serve.
There is little wonder that Blair was praised for his speech
by the big-business politicians and media internationally, but
it is significant that he could make such explicit warmongering
statements, deliver eulogies to the benefits of imperialist Great
Power politicking, and attack the very foundations of the Labour
Party without meeting so much as a shred of opposition from the
assembled delegates.
Writing in the pro-Blair Guardian, Hugo Young even boasted,
Conferences of old would have uttered some squeals of protest.
The pacifist wing would have had to be overridden. This time it
was not heard from. Not a single speech, not even Tony Benns,
opposed military action outright. The leader had not one enemy
in the hall.
Speaking of Blairs colleagues, Young went on, None
of them disagrees with him on anything very much. It is one consequence
of the way the leftist debate has gone that nobody, least of all
in the cabinet, is capable of framing a serious challenge to what
the leader has articulated on virtually any subject.
For an enraptured Mr Young, Blair is the leadera
term normally associated with the far right and not a liberal
newspaper columnist. For his fellow Guardian journalist
Simon Hoggart, in a more cynical sketch, he is Field-marshal
Blair rallying his troops for waron socialism
and tearing up half the Labour partys history like
a circus strongman with a telephone book. Not only was Blairs
speech applauded, but even in his absence, no ministerial
speech has been complete without an encomium to his powers of
statesmanship, his rhetorical genius, his sheer guts and determination
in the face of the gathering threat.
It is as if the ruling class and its representatives have collectively
lost their heads. Blair is a political opportunist of the worst
type who is pursuing a course that poses grave dangers to the
stability of Central Asia and the Middle East, and threatens the
social cohesion of Britain itself. Yet he is being painted in
the media as a giant, and his every utterance hailed as the product
of profound insight or deeply held convictions. Even the absence
of a credible opposition is saluted as testament to his strength.
The opposite is the case, however. Blair is a hero only to
a narrow elite that presently dictates the political agenda. But
he lacks any popular mandate for declaring war, let alone for
his proposed attacks on education and health provisions. The elevation
of such an extremely limited man to his present international
stature, despite his lack of popular support, is only possible
due to the current absence of any political vehicle through which
ordinary working people can make their views felt. But in the
long run, the inability of official politics to win the backing
of wider layers of the population will prove to be the most dangerous
situation facing the ruling class.
See Also:
Suspicious trading points to advance
knowledge by big investors of September 11 attacks
[5 October 2001]
White House reneges on proof
of bin Ladens guilt
[29 September 2001]
Britain: Why Blair is backing
the US war drive
[29 September 2001]
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