George Galloway speaks out in the Guardian
anti-war hero | 02.06.2004 18:47
Mea culpa, that's what we want
02/06/2004
George Galloway
Wednesday June 2, 2004
The Guardian
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,9115,1229483,00.html
The only professional heads to roll in the whole Iraq imbroglio - Davies, Dyke, Gilligan, Morgan - tumbled into a basket marked "media". And the loud splashes currently being heard, of rats deserting a sinking ship, are of heavyweight newspaper columnists jumping overboard.
Some try to get it over with quietly. Super-heavyweight war-trumpeter David Aaronovitch told Guardian readers: "we thought Rice and Powell ... would do things right ... mea culpa, if that's what you want". Well, yes Dave, I do want.
David Rose, who attacked the anti-war movement in the Evening Standard, the pro-war Observer and across reams of Vanity Fair, now says he was duped and feels "like one of those Tommies running cheering on to the troop ships headed for the front in 1914". Alas, many of those were running towards their own deaths; unlike Rose who merely helped stampede us towards the slaughter of others.
"Mr Macho" Tony Parsons, one of the most gung-ho of the laptop warriors, who wrote that he "despised" those of us marching, now says he was "hoaxed" by Bush and Blair. Poor fool.
But where are the tumbrels for those who actually voted for war, dispatching other people's sons and daughters to kill and be killed on a hoax? No minister on either side of the Atlantic has lost their job over the war or the subsequent shameful conduct of the occupation. Not a single British parliamentarian who voted for it has said, like Aaronovitch, "Mea culpa, if that's what you want".
This is why next week's elections are so important. If our politicians are so unrepentant we must punish them. Not just because people should be punished for mendacity, incompetence, or crimes and blunders as big as this, but because if they are not they or future generations of leaders may do the same again.
Condign punishment for Blair will ensure that neither Brown nor any other New Labour leader will venture down this path in future.
On the campaign trail around the country it is evident the Labour rank and file have no stomach for the fight. What can they say about the issue still dominating every front page more than a year after that "Mission Accomplished" photo-opportunity?
I predict that next week will see the worst election result in Labour history. Then significant numbers on the Labour benches will be staring down the barrel of their own personal general election defeats. Thus the British are the most powerful people in the world on June 10. Give Tony Blair a hard enough slapping and they can bring him down. And umbilically connected as they are, Blair's defenestration would surely be the last straw for Bush's already fading re-election hopes. Only then will it be possible to "draw a line" in the blood-stained quicksands of Arabia and withdraw from the swamp of shame into which the two war-leaders have dragged us.
Many will stay away from the June election - the least effective method of protest. Others will be fooled by the Liberal Democrats' pose as an anti-war party. It's true Charles Kennedy marched with us, but when the shooting started he fell in, saluted the colours and "patriotically" backed our boys. A war he said was immoral before it started suddenly had to be supported once it began. And Kennedy recently told David Frost that British forces must stay in Iraq - even, if the general staff requested it, sending thousands more. This, the sacking of Jenny Tongue MP for expressing her "understanding" of the depths of despair of Palestinian "suicide bombers" and Simon Hughes's somersaulting between attacks on Muslim youth and telling the United Jewish Israel Appeal he was "a lover of Israel" must cause some unsteadiness in the thin yellow line.
Greens have a better war record; they have opposed the invasion from the start. But they too, inexplicably, support the continuation of foreign military occupation of Iraq, though with countries other than those who invaded doing the soldiering under "blue helmets".
Quite apart from the unlikelihood of any such volunteers stepping forward, this misses the point that the UN is hated in Iraq - thanks to more than a decade of murderous sanctions - almost as much as the current "coalition". Blue helmets would be as likely to be shot at as any other.
In any case, a vote for the Lib Dems or the Greens can have many meanings - from endorsement of the former's plan to deregulate the pornography industry to the latter's policy on free-range eggs. Supporting Respect, however, can have only one unambiguous meaning: no more war, no more occupation. That's why we go over the top into no man's land next week full of hope. And this time we are determined to overrun the enemies' lines.
02/06/2004
George Galloway
Wednesday June 2, 2004
The Guardian
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,9115,1229483,00.html
The only professional heads to roll in the whole Iraq imbroglio - Davies, Dyke, Gilligan, Morgan - tumbled into a basket marked "media". And the loud splashes currently being heard, of rats deserting a sinking ship, are of heavyweight newspaper columnists jumping overboard.
Some try to get it over with quietly. Super-heavyweight war-trumpeter David Aaronovitch told Guardian readers: "we thought Rice and Powell ... would do things right ... mea culpa, if that's what you want". Well, yes Dave, I do want.
David Rose, who attacked the anti-war movement in the Evening Standard, the pro-war Observer and across reams of Vanity Fair, now says he was duped and feels "like one of those Tommies running cheering on to the troop ships headed for the front in 1914". Alas, many of those were running towards their own deaths; unlike Rose who merely helped stampede us towards the slaughter of others.
"Mr Macho" Tony Parsons, one of the most gung-ho of the laptop warriors, who wrote that he "despised" those of us marching, now says he was "hoaxed" by Bush and Blair. Poor fool.
But where are the tumbrels for those who actually voted for war, dispatching other people's sons and daughters to kill and be killed on a hoax? No minister on either side of the Atlantic has lost their job over the war or the subsequent shameful conduct of the occupation. Not a single British parliamentarian who voted for it has said, like Aaronovitch, "Mea culpa, if that's what you want".
This is why next week's elections are so important. If our politicians are so unrepentant we must punish them. Not just because people should be punished for mendacity, incompetence, or crimes and blunders as big as this, but because if they are not they or future generations of leaders may do the same again.
Condign punishment for Blair will ensure that neither Brown nor any other New Labour leader will venture down this path in future.
On the campaign trail around the country it is evident the Labour rank and file have no stomach for the fight. What can they say about the issue still dominating every front page more than a year after that "Mission Accomplished" photo-opportunity?
I predict that next week will see the worst election result in Labour history. Then significant numbers on the Labour benches will be staring down the barrel of their own personal general election defeats. Thus the British are the most powerful people in the world on June 10. Give Tony Blair a hard enough slapping and they can bring him down. And umbilically connected as they are, Blair's defenestration would surely be the last straw for Bush's already fading re-election hopes. Only then will it be possible to "draw a line" in the blood-stained quicksands of Arabia and withdraw from the swamp of shame into which the two war-leaders have dragged us.
Many will stay away from the June election - the least effective method of protest. Others will be fooled by the Liberal Democrats' pose as an anti-war party. It's true Charles Kennedy marched with us, but when the shooting started he fell in, saluted the colours and "patriotically" backed our boys. A war he said was immoral before it started suddenly had to be supported once it began. And Kennedy recently told David Frost that British forces must stay in Iraq - even, if the general staff requested it, sending thousands more. This, the sacking of Jenny Tongue MP for expressing her "understanding" of the depths of despair of Palestinian "suicide bombers" and Simon Hughes's somersaulting between attacks on Muslim youth and telling the United Jewish Israel Appeal he was "a lover of Israel" must cause some unsteadiness in the thin yellow line.
Greens have a better war record; they have opposed the invasion from the start. But they too, inexplicably, support the continuation of foreign military occupation of Iraq, though with countries other than those who invaded doing the soldiering under "blue helmets".
Quite apart from the unlikelihood of any such volunteers stepping forward, this misses the point that the UN is hated in Iraq - thanks to more than a decade of murderous sanctions - almost as much as the current "coalition". Blue helmets would be as likely to be shot at as any other.
In any case, a vote for the Lib Dems or the Greens can have many meanings - from endorsement of the former's plan to deregulate the pornography industry to the latter's policy on free-range eggs. Supporting Respect, however, can have only one unambiguous meaning: no more war, no more occupation. That's why we go over the top into no man's land next week full of hope. And this time we are determined to overrun the enemies' lines.
anti-war hero
Comments
Hide the following 6 comments
sigh. yawn.
02.06.2004 20:16
of any sort.
ever.
oh no.
women/abortion/queer
remember the s stands for socialism
r is for righteous
e is for ex-socialist alliance
s is for syncophantic/swp
p is for professional policians (wannabes)
e is for ego/european parliment
c is for chums
t is for tragically hijacking the energy of stop the war
quote from party notes/SWP
"the worst we can hope for is getting George and lyndsey elected"
b-liar out (rather than a nice, honest politician with no ulterior motive whatsoever)
respect
just do it
respect
?
02.06.2004 21:10
?
last comment ever
02.06.2004 21:44
No problem with that only please stop saying the powerful few organised for the weaker many, so driving the movement forward into its only logical home..Respect.
but that is bullshit.and for loads of reasons. many of the reasons have been commented on muchly on this newswire so i won't go back into that discussion.
nobody owned what happened in the big feb demo. lots of people worked from different political groups to make it happen. it was an example in collective working in a sense not an ego trip for the STWC. Learn humility people.
and now Respect is the way forward. No criticism allowed. We mobilised millions in Feb every all. eem.. I thought i'd done a lot of stuff too, but not to work towards a Respect agenda. Revolutionary Socialists team up with ex-Labour party members and MAB to save us from the BNP.
I can't think at what point the political alliance does not become unsustainable (but soon), but if achieves Georgeous George a lovely European seat (ex-lab, dodgy views on hanging, abortion, queers)and dear Lyndsey German (SWP to the bone. rant don't listen. failed politican) a political seat of power also.
Then thats ok. They get to play power games with our lives/our money
but nicer and with prettier leaflets.
ah well.
just a thought, if they wanted to take some responsibilty for keeping the bnp out.
hegative messages are not enough.
Lydsney and George you should have gone clearing up crap on an estate, listening to people by working with people to make things happen.
ah well... you'll get a nice office and have a big party if it works
the bnp will make gains until someone turns their own understanding of the situation against them. it takes a bit more thinking though than don't vote nazi, don't vote bnp. Come on george, lydsney and the rest, get your arse where politics really lives.
laura
Lack of Respect
02.06.2004 21:59
To me they look like recycled SWP policies. Had their been anything like a pluralistic policy strategy there might be something to hang a united hat on. Unfortunately, the manifesto, like the leadership, was devised by some esoteric process with a sop thrown to the mob at the occasional gathering.
I make no secret of my lack of faith in 'democracy' as a possibility or system but I do try to play by the rules when the game is underway and this lack of consultation bodes very unwell, as does the chaos which has been the Respect campaign.
You may well be right about Iraq's mistrust of the UN - personally there is no doubt that the UN force is the standing army of the New World Order - I think that in this area the Green Party are naive. Realistically, there isn't much much chance that they (or Respect) are going to seize any more power next week than the Iraqis will at the end of the month, so the UN issue is fairly accademic. But I'm sorry, George, your comment on 'free range eggs' was condescending and clearly illustrates the answer to one of my unanswered questions. It does matter to me and fortunately there is a party who consistently opposed the war and a comprhensive agricultural and environmental strategy and they will be getting my vote.
I hope that Respect will take time to consider what might have been in the days following this election. You blame the Greens for not accepting you but you were the upstarts who made the demands on them. You could have made fewer and less radical demands and we all might have got somewhere. Instead we will perpetuate the situation and next year we will find ourselves faced with an ever narrowing choice of which dictator we will endure for the next five years.
Zinfandel
movements!
02.06.2004 22:43
2Million people (though on reflection I do feel that estimate maybe conservative) wanted to go to London to object to what was going on and I'm sure the majority of us would have got there by hook or by crook. So "you" laid on some coaches, doesn't make "you" the new revolutionary front!
Winston Smith
don't lecture us George
03.06.2004 01:11
Hang on a minute, what did you do to stop the war, George? You talked. and talked. and talked. Some of the words might've been good, but that's not the point. Maybe you marched a few times. You were a Figurehead. hmm.
Some of us were on the streets, George. Some of us were at the airbases. Some of us were arrested. Some of us were attacked by police. Some of us spent time in prison. We were out there doing our utmost to *physically* stop the war. Ordinary people. Taking action.
You're welcome to oppose the war anyway you want, George, but don't you fucking dare come and lecture us afterwards about "effective protest".
grr... sorry everyone, but this guy really makes me angry... :)
!