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Britain: Blair suffers second parliamentary rebellion over
war vs. Iraq
By the Editorial Board
20 March 2003
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Britains parliament gathered Tuesday, March 18 to debate
and vote on the impending war against Iraq. The Labour government
again suffered a major rebellion, larger than that which occurred
last month. A total of 216 MPs, comprising 139 Labour dissidents,
15 Conservatives and all 53 Liberal Democrats, voted for an amendment
opposing war.
The amendment was defeated with the support of the Conservatives,
and the government was able to comfortably win its resolution
supporting war by 412 to 149 votes, with 52 abstentions. But it
was nevertheless another major blow to the credibility of an already
embattled government.
Prime Minister Tony Blair presented the 10-hour debate as proof
of his governments democratic accountability. Under Britains
archaic constitution, the prime minister alone can decide to go
to war, using the Royal Prerogative, so a debate and vote were
held out as a major concession.
The decision for war had already been madesome 45,000
British troops having been assembled in the Persian Gulf to join
larger US forces in what has been admitted will be a ferocious
military onslaught. Even as Parliament debated, British forces
were making the closing preparations for invasion.
Blair had made amply clear that he would not retreat from his
support for British participation in the US-led war and could
do so counting on the support of the Conservatives and those on
ministerial salaries in his own party to guarantee him a parliamentary
majority. Just for good measure, however, the prime minister told
the Commons that he would resign if his will were defied. He would
not be party to pulling back from war, Blair stated.
Blair alluded to the gravity of the issues involved in the
war against Iraq. At stake was the entire future course of British
foreign policy, which, he hinted, centred on how to contain or
coexist with an expansionist United States determined to assert
its global hegemony.
It will determine the way in which Britain and the world
confront the central security threat of the twenty-first century,
the development of the United Nations, the relationship between
Europe and the United States, the relations within the European
Union and the way in which the United States engages with the
rest of the world. So it could hardly be more important. It will
determine the pattern of international politics for the next generation,
he warned.
If our plea is for America to work with others, to be
good as well as powerful allies, he continued, will
our retreat make it multilateralist, or will it not rather be
the biggest impulse to unilateralism that we could possibly imagine?
What then of the United Nations, and of the future of Iraq and
the Middle East peace process, devoid of our influence and stripped
of our insistence?
His words, in fact, summed up the decline and putrefaction
of British capitalism. Britain is to participate in the terrorising
and murder of thousands of men, women and children so as to ensure
its place in the New World Order that is to be organised under
US auspices.
Blairs willingness to tie Britains future so fully
to the Bush administration has generated anxiety amongst sections
of the establishment.
In the face of condemnation from across much of the world,
the US and the UK have assembled a coalition of the willing
that reads like a Whos Who? of impoverished, mainly Eastern
European countries whose ruling elites are for sale to the highest
bidder. Blairs critics have pointed out that in doing so,
Britain has alienated itself from many of its European allies
and encouraged a dangerously unilateralist US to press forward
with its world-conquering mission, with no guarantee that the
UK will be kept onside afterwards.
Such concerns have already caused the resignation of three
Labour ministersmost notably, leader of the Commons, Robin
Cook. In his resignation speech one day prior to the debate, the
former foreign secretary articulated the concerns of Labour dissidents.
I cannot support a war without international agreement
or domestic support.... Britain is being asked to embark on a
war without agreement in any of the international bodies of which
we are a leading partnernot NATO, not the European Union
and, now, not the Security Council, Cook said.
He continued: The US can afford to go it alone, but Britain
is not a superpower. Our interests are best protected not by unilateral
action but by multilateral agreement and a world order governed
by rules. Yet tonight the international partnerships most important
to us are weakened: the European Union is divided; the Security
Council is in stalemate.
Cook dismissed most of the justifications advanced for war
and Blairs course of action. He insisted that France was
not the sole obstacle to UN endorsement and it was, in fact, Britain
and the US who were isolated. He intimated there was no legal
basis for the coming war, due to the lack of multilateral
support: by NATO, the European Union. The Persian Gulf War
in 1991 had been supported by every single one of the seven
neighbours in the region. France and Germany were our active allies.
It is precisely because we have none of that support in this case
that it was all the more important to get agreement in the Security
Council as the last hope of demonstrating international agreement.
Pointing to one of the grotesque contradictions in the US-British
brief for war, he said: Ironically, it is only because Iraqs
military forces are so weak that we can even contemplate its invasion.
Some advocates of conflict claim that Saddams forces are
so weak, so demoralized and so badly equipped that the war will
be over in a few days. We cannot base our military strategy on
the assumption that Saddam is weak and at the same time justify
pre-emptive action on the claim that he is a threat.
He went on to dismiss the claims that Iraq possesses significant
weapons of mass destruction, saying, Iraq probably has no
weapons of mass destruction in the commonly understood sense of
the termnamely a credible device capable of being delivered
against a strategic city target.
Alluding to the hijacked presidential election of 2000, Cook
delivered a pointed attack on the Bush administration and its
war aim of regime change. He said, What has
come to trouble me most over past weeks is the suspicion that
if the hanging chads in Florida had gone the other way and Al
Gore had been elected, we would not now be about to commit British
troops.
Amongst the Labour dissidents, variations of these concerns
were expressed time and again in the parliamentary debate. [See
Labour MPs animated by concerns over Britains isolation]
Such anxieties make plain that the Labour rebels
opposition to war against Iraq is something less than a muted
reflection of public hostility to a military offensive. That would
give them too much credit. Rather, their overriding concerns are
for the future course of imperialist foreign policy. Despite their
differences with Blair, therefore, many insist they will function
as a loyal opposition.
The wording of the amendment they proposed was indicative of
the tactical and unprincipled nature of this official opposition,
stressing that the case for war against Iraq has not yet
been established, especially given the absence of specific United
Nations authorization, but hastening to pledge in
the event that hostilities do commence ... total support for the
British forces engaged in the Middle East, and expressing
the hope that their tasks will be swiftly concluded with
minimal casualties on all sides.
The general tenor of media commentary was that Blair had emerged
from the debate bruised but victorious, and the opposition Labour
vote had not been as high as some had predicted. But this almost
exclusive concentration on numbers misses out that which is politically
essential:
It is not only that Blair has started a war with a divided
party. He does so against the express wishes of the majority of
the population. In consequence, the carefully cultivated myth
of New Labour and its Third Way as a democratic political
alternative to Thatcherism lies in ruins.
When Blair gave his back me because there is no alternative
speech opening the Commons debate, the loudest cheers came from
the Tory benches, whose leader, Ian Duncan Smith, and former leader,
William Hague, both spoke in support of Blair. They were joined
in this stand by the leader of the Ulster Unionists, David Trimble,
and the personal embodiment of Protestant sectarian bigotry, the
Reverend Ian Paisley of the Democratic Unionist Party. Rupert
Murdochs flagship publication, the Sun, gushed that
Blair won his place in history alongside Churchill and Thatcherthe
two best known leaders of British Conservatism.
On top of this domestic political line-up, Blair goes to war
as the main ally of the most extreme right-wing regime in American
history, and a US president widely perceived of as a moron who
stole an election and acts on behalf of a semi-criminal coterie
of oil barons and corporate con men.
The other major partners in the 30-strong coalition of
the willing are represented in Western Europe by media mogul
Silvio Berlusconis Forza Italia, which rules in coalition
with the political heirs of Benito Mussolini, and the Spanish
party of reconstructed Francoist fascists, Jose Marie Aznars
Peoples Party.
Nothing could more graphically underline the complete and irrevocable
transformation of the old reformist Labour Party into a right-wing
bourgeois formation of militarists and free-market ideologuesand
this will not be lost on the British working class.
A revealing statement made in the immediate aftermath of the
parliamentary vote came from the BBCs Andrew Marr, a former
radical who now specialises in jaded and cynical political commentary.
As long as the opposition remained confined to those shouting
outside parliament, Marr said, Blair could go home that night
happy. This stupid remark provided an indication of just how far
removed the media establishment is from political reality.
The crisis confronting British imperialism is of historic dimensions
and is not determined by parliamentary arithmetic. A far less
sanguine estimation of Blairs difficulties was made the
day before the vote by the Financial Times, which remains
the authoritative voice of big business in Britain. Though generally
supportive of the Blair government and war with Iraq, its twin
editorials for March 18 warned of the dangers posed both domestically
and globally.
One, pointedly entitled, The Loneliness of Tony Blair,
noted that his efforts to secure a second UN resolution have
come to nothing. It continued: The prime minister
is poised to order his forces into battle in Iraq alongside those
of the USwithout specific United Nations endorsement and
in defiance of the majority of public opinion and a substantial
portion of his own party.
The editorial expressed concern over whether the revolt
[among Labour MPs] was of such a scale as to sweep away a prime
minister who still has much to offer his country.
The other editorial spoke of a diplomatic fiasco
and added, [I]t is hard to overestimate the damage that
has been done to the fabric of international relationships by
this crisis. The Bush administration, moreover, even flanked by
Mr. Blair, will find there is no easy glide-path from what has
rightly been termed gratuitous unilateralism, back to the sort
of multilateralism the US and world need to confront the challenges
ahead.
Blair may well take comfort from the unprincipled character
of most of his parliamentary opponents. He calculates that the
support of the Tories and his ability to browbeat the Liberal
Democrats and Labour dissidents will ensure that he is safe from
any serious political challengeat least for the duration
of the war. He then hopes that a swift victory over Saddam Hussein
will allow him to drape himself in the Union Jack like his idol,
Margaret Thatcher, in the aftermath of the Falklands/Malvinas
war.
Many of his calculations are drawn from experience. Blair saw
Clare Short, his first cabinet criti,c crawl on her belly in order
to save her fat ministerial salary and lead the lobby vote for
war. Even the ministers who did resign all made a point of praising
Blairs leadership and reassuring him that there would be
no challenge mounted against him.
Cook, for example, began his Commons address by declaring,
The present prime minister is the most successful leader
of the Labour Party in my lifetime. I hope that he will continue
to be the leader of our party, and I hope that he will continue
to be successful. I have no sympathy with, and I will give no
comfort to, those who want to use this crisis to displace him.
After Tuesdays vote, he told CNNs Larry King. I
dont think [Blairs] own standing and status is damaged.
Theres nobody who can credibly challenge him for leadership
of the Labour Party.
This is probably true, but it only means that the massive political
disaffection that exists amongst working people can find no viable
means of expression through the traditional parliamentary mechanisms.
The same is true of the trade unions, whose leaders have distinguished
themselves only by their virtual silence on the most fundamental
issue of concern facing their members. Symbolising the refusal
of the trade unions to oppose Blair, on the very night of the
parliamentary vote the ostensibly left leadership
of the Fire Brigades Union (FBU) called off a planned 24-hour
strike in pursuit of a 30 percent wage rise. They then recommended
acceptance of a scarcely altered 16 percent offer over three years,
together with significant cuts in manninga proposal that
has twice been rejected by firefighters. With this action, FBU
General Secretary Andy Gilchrist was pledging industrial peace
at home so that a bloody war could be waged against Iraq.
With no mass political outlet for the anger felt towards Blairs
government, the antiwar movement has so far been characterised
by its spontaneity and the diversity of views expressed within
it. But it has also become the focus of far broader frustration
with the pro-business policies of the government and its attacks
on living standards and essential social services. Few amongst
the millions of working people who do not share Blairs enthusiasm
for war would embrace the political aim of the Labour dissenters
to form a block with other European imperialist powers against
the US, or their ardent wish for Blairs political survival.
To date, the Labour lefts have been able to put themselves
forward as the natural leaders of the antiwar movementand
have done so with the blessing of the assorted radical groups
such as the Socialist Workers Party. But the conditions are now
emerging for this to change.
In the next period a political differentiation will take place
within the antiwar movement that will see the anti-imperialist
kernel it contains bear fruit. The decision to go to war will
thus prove to be politically catastrophic for British imperialism,
just as Blairs critics fear.
See Also:
British government encourages anti-French
hysteria over Iraq
[19 March 2003]
The Bush administration repudiates international
law
[18 March 2003]
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