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Britain: Blairs apologia for Iraq war on eve of Bush
visit
By Chris Marsden and Julie Hyland
12 November 2003
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Every year Britains serving prime minister delivers a
speech dealing with foreign policy to the Lord Mayor of Londons
official banquet, dressed in white tie and tails. This year Tony
Blairs thoughts were immediately focused on an event closer
to homethe upcoming state visit by US President George W.
Bush taking place November 19-21.
There are a series of demonstrations planned to oppose Bushs
visit, denouncing the joint US/British war against Iraq and the
subsequent occupation of the country. The protests will number
in the tens of thousands and have already forced a curtailing
of the initial agenda planned for Bush. A customary open carriage
ride down the Mall has been cancelled amidst growing security
fears. Around 3,800 British police have been drafted in to cover
the events at a cost of £4 million, who have special powers
to stop and arrest under the anti-terror legislation brought in
on the back of the September 11 atrocities. On top of this up
to 250 armed US secret service agents will be on hand and the
presidents officials have even asked for the centre of London
to be cordoned off.
Blair felt it incumbent upon him to justify the visit, but
to do so he had to address the wider issues involvedthe
source of the massive opposition to Bush and himself in their
criminal venture in the Middle East.
His appeal was remarkably defensive. He began by reasserting
his fundamental axis for Britains foreign policy, a need
to maintain an alliance between the US and the European Union
with Britain at its centre. But he acknowledged, At present,
I accept, there is a fairly narrow constituency for this view,
and it was threatened by eurosceptics on the one hand and a resurgent
anti-Americanism on the other.
After making these points he made a somewhat pathetic plea
to his critics to forgive and forget the past. There could be
entirely legitimate disagreement over the Iraq war,
but the issue as far Blair is concerned is what is happening now
and how the fate of Iraq will unfold.
Here Blair made an extraordinary admission as to how the mass
of the population in Britain, internationally and in the Middle
East in particular see the present conflict.
The fate of Iraq will determine the future course of world
politics, Blair said, because it will test the validity
of the view of those whose protest goes far wider than merely
condemnation of the war in Iraq and extends to the whole of American
and UK foreign policy. For this large body of people, the coalition
is an army of occupation; its purpose is to suppress the Muslim
population of Iraq: we are out to steal Iraqs oil; and,
even if they abhor the methods of those causing terror in Iraq,
they will say weve brought it on ourselves. Their view is:
you should never have been there, and get out now. That is the
view of parts of the Arab and Muslim street and a significant
part of western opinion and certainly of the developing world.
More than that, these people say: the whole episode of
Iraq is the epitome of the way the US/UK treat the Arab and Muslim
world. It is a form of colonialism, that seeks to impose its culture,
its rules and its beliefs on its unwilling victims.
Blairs mission, as he sees it, is to disprove and discredit
the widely held conception that what is taking place is a colonial
style occupation of an oppressed nation by the US and British
aggressors. But his attempt to do so is crippled from the start
by the reality of what is taking place in Iraq.
He tried to combat broad based anti-imperialist sentiment by
hailing the supposedly glorious achievements of the puppet administration
in Baghdad and attributing all of Iraqs problems to a handful
of dissidents determined to prevent a flowering of democracy and
prosperity under the benevolent guardianship of Washington and
London.
Posing the question what is happening in Iraq, he answered
that the country was on the way to full democracy, there were
40,000 Iraqi police on duty, a free media, open schools and universities,
and on-going programmes to rebuild the infrastructure, etc. These
supposedly evil Americans have voted $19 billion of their own
money in aid: the Madrid Conference under the excellent guidance
of Prime Minister Aznar has raised another $13 billion. Not a
penny piece of Iraqs oil money has gone anywhere but into
an account under the supervision of the IMF and UN.
And what is the barrier to progress? he then asked.
Saddams small rump of supporters aided and abetted
by foreign terrorists, who know that if we give Iraq
democracy, set it on a path to prosperity, leave it in the sole
charge and sovereignty of the Iraqi people, its oil its own, its
citizens free to worship in the way they wish, Muslim and non-Muslim,
that means not just the rebirth of Iraq, it means the death of
the poisonous propaganda monster about America these extremists
have created in the minds of much of the world.
Blair concluded his apologetics with one final appeal to those
intent on protesting Bushs visit:
Attack the decision to go to war... But accept that the
task now is not to argue about what has been, but to make what
is happening now, work and work for the very Iraqis we all say
we want to help.
There is something faintly ludicrous about Blair. He is a man
without any grasp of history or any real understanding of social
processes and how these shape popular consciousness. Surrounded
as he is by yes men and people whose role in life is to foist
unpopular policies on an unwilling public, he believes fervently
in the power of media management and, most important of all, in
the ability of force to convince.
In his view the might of US imperialism will eventually sort
out Iraq and thereby confound his opponents, when in reality it
is the might of US imperialism, employed as it is in an aggressive
colonialist adventure, that acts as the breeding ground for political
discontent.
Blairs claims will convince no one who does not wish
to be convinced. Few share his rose-tinted view of the intentions
of the Bush administration. When they see Bush they see the representative
of a financial oligarchy intent on securing its domination of
the globe by military force. They are aware of the presidents
connections with the oil giants, Vice-President Dick Cheneys
relations with Haliburton and the fact that Iraqs future
has been placed in hock to US corporations for the foreseeable
future.
Even a compliant and often corrupt media cannot gloss over
the devastation suffered by Iraq, nor the failure of the coalition
powers to reconstruct the country. And the efforts to identify
opposition to the occupation with a handful of Baathist
recidivists and foreign extremists cannot be squared with the
daily reports of popular unrest and the jubilation which greets
every setback suffered by the US.
On top of all this few within Britain will swallow Blairs
attempts to take the moral high ground after more than six years
in which his government has presided over devastating attacks
on workers living standards and has joined a war of aggression
on trumped up charges, in open defiance of the popular opinion
and international law. They will rightly conclude that Blairs
desire for US success in Iraq has nothing to do with a commitment
to democracy and everything to do with his mercenary efforts to
ensure that Britains elite shares in the spoils of war.
There cannot be any accommodation with the war criminals in
Washington and London. No opponent of the war of conquest waged
by US and British imperialism has any responsibility to now endorse
its results, supposedly in order to aid the Iraqis.
Workers in Britain should treat Blairs sophistries with
the contempt they deserve and respond by redoubling their political
opposition to his government. The starting point for any progressive
resolution of the crisis facing Iraq is the immediate withdrawal
of all coalition forces and the payment of full compensation by
the aggressors for the damage they caused, and to allow the Iraqi
people to determine their own fate.
See Also:
Britain: Labour expels antiwar
MP Galloway
[30 October 2003]
An international socialist
strategy is needed to oppose war
[27 September 2003]
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