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June 1, 2006
ANDREW RAWNSLEY AND BLAIR’S ENLIGHTENED VISIONSpringtime For Blair
So writes the Observer’s Andrew Rawnsley in his latest article on Tony Blair. Despite everything we now know, there is not a caveat in sight. Blair did not merely claim to pioneer an “enlightened” foreign policy, he really +was+ a pioneer. A less ’nuanced’ account might read:
Blair’s “enlightened version” was always pure Machiavelli - an ugly lie best told with rosy-cheeked charm and a big smile. Tory leader David Cameron is now reproducing the entire package, right down to the boyish good looks, “Dave’s babes”, and a “Vote blue go green” counterpart to Blair’s “ethical foreign policy”. The Tory political machine, red in corporate tooth and claw, is even using green luminaries like Zac Goldsmith to disarm the doubters, much as New Labour used Robin Cook. Rawnsley continues:
Notice that the issue for Rawnsley is this one individual, Blair - his vision, his dreams, his values. The state-corporate machine, an entrenched system of power that has devastated an entire nation - with the killing and mutilation of hundreds of thousands of people - is a mere backdrop to this one person. Iraq is a “stigma” - not a catastrophe, not a crime, not an ocean of suffering, but a taint on this one man’s career. Thus:
In the real world, Iraq is seen as the “wreckage” of Blair’s credibility and legitimacy as a leader - his “world view“ is therefore a matter of complete irrelevance. Rawnsley, however, remains a believer: “there is still a compelling case for interventionism and Tony Blair remains its most eloquent advocate”. He confronts the issue that matters:
Blair meant well, then - these were his “blundering efforts to do good“. Indeed this is the famous ‘moral case’ for war - Saddam tyrannised his people like no other; he had to go. So, for Blair, it was “supposed to be” just one more benevolent dose of medicinal bombing, although the plan originated in Washington, although it was rooted in neocon hunger for oil (and control of oil), although Blair secretly told Bush he would support war regardless of international legitimacy and progress in weapons inspections. The title of Michael Smith’s Sunday Times article on the leaked 2002 Downing Street memos said it all: “Blair planned Iraq war from start.” (Smith, May 1, 2005) Compare and contrast Rawnsley in September 2002, when a different story mattered:
Earlier that year, Rawnsley had written:
According to Rawnsley, at that time, the problem was not Saddam’s murderous regime, but his threat to the West. This was also Blair’s view as late as February 2003: "I hope, even now, Iraq can be disarmed peacefully, with or without Saddam." ('Blair speech - key quotes,' February 15, 2003; http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/2765763.stm) With Saddam! Clearly, then, “removing one of the worst tyrannies on the planet” was not the primary concern for either Blair or Rawnsley in 2002-2003. Towards the end of his piece, Rawnsley concludes:
At a stroke, Blair’s “military activism” has become “mobilising battalions for the oppressed”. Blair could do with mobilising a few more battalions. An April 2006 IRIN report quoted Dr Haydar Salah, a paediatrician at the Basra Children's Hospital:
No one is doing anything. Indeed Dr Salah’s cry for help - like the fate of his tiny patients in Basra - has not been reported by any newspaper. Another “stigma” tainting Blair’s “enlightened version” of foreign policy.
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