|
ANOTHER VOICE
Mr Blair is being timid in not joining
the nations now resisting the hawks of Washington
Matthew Parris
The Prime Minister is right. The whole credibility
of the United Nations is at stake this week. If the Security Council
buckles under the US blackmail to which it is now subject over Iraq,
we can discount the organisation as an independent force for international
order.
Among Spectator readers there are still one or two of us who, prey
to instincts we flatter ourselves to call Conservative, mistrust proposals
for ruinous and dangerous military adventures. In a way we dare think
consistent with remaining Tories, we doubt not America’s goodwill
but her judgment in world affairs. We find ourselves stumped for words
at the cheating to which our Prime Minister and his new friends on
the Right have stooped in their arguments for war. Nobody would call
the hawk’s mind open, but the door of his intellect does seem to have
been hospitably open to a bewildering series of opposing arguments.
First we were told that the point of cleaving to Washington was to
steer America away from unilateralism. Then Tony Blair announced that
Britain’s support was essentially unconditional.
We were told the UN inspectorate was in Iraq to find weapons (and
shown pictures of jeeps racing from site to site) — then, when they
found little, that the inspectorate had never been there to search.
The Foreign Secretary said that if nothing was found, that proved
it must be hidden. Lewis Carroll would have enjoyed that.
We were told invasion was to be justified as self-defence — then,
when this failed to impress focus groups, that the motive was humanitarian.
We were told Saddam would never show his weapons — then, when he showed
some, that this only proved he must be hiding more.
We were told Osama bin Laden was probably dead but al-Qa’eda remained
linked to Baghdad — then, on the emergence of a bin Laden message
which Washington pretended proved a link, that Osama was alive after
all. The message made plain (as some of us always argued) that al-Qa’eda
despised Saddam but hoped to muscle in on Muslim anger at America.
Our government ignored the point.
We were told Colin Powell would present conclusive evidence of Iraqi
non-compliance — then, when Mr Powell’s presentation proved inconclusive,
that proof was a needle in a haystack, and what should be sought was
a change in Saddam’s ‘attitude’.
We were told the aim was to oust the whole Iraqi regime and that (as
with Augusto Pinochet) there could be no haven for monsters; then
that it would be ‘great’ (Tony Blair’s word) if Saddam found a safe
haven somewhere.
Finally we were told that, in international law, Resolution 1441 already
justified an invasion — and then that a second resolution was, after
all, to be sought — and then that if this was vetoed ‘capriciously’
(Mr Blair’s word) the veto would not count.
How irrelevant, how silly and how shameless the debate is going to
look in ten years’ time. Life being short, we might do best to spend
no further exasperated passion on the ebb and flow of this martial
tide. The US President wants his war; the President usually gets his
way. Maybe that is all there is to be said.
But my ears have pricked up twice in recent weeks. There might yet
be something new to consider.
They pricked up first at an essay written by Andrew Tyrie. The Conservative
MP for Chichester made a suggestion hitherto unvoiced in a debate
which has taken American hegemony as a given. Many, including me,
have implied that America will push the world around because America
can.
But can she? asks Mr Tyrie. Let us have realpolitik by all means,
but before we British cleave cynically to a superpower we judge unassailable,
we should ask whether America does have the armies, the weaponry,
the funds, the economic clout and the democratic staying power to
carry all before her in the century ahead. How many wars on how many
fronts could she sustain at once? How much fighting can she fund?
How much does she need to export? Is she really unchallenged by any
other economic bloc? Even the biggest boy in the playground can be
thwarted by gangs. If Blair’s instinct is to back a bully, he had
better be sure this one is big and strong enough to reward his loyalty.
Are we backing a long-term winner?
My second new thought is related. My ears pricked up at Mr Blair’s
suggestion that the standing or falling of a Security Council resolution
may not be a simple jurisprudential fact, but less or more valid depending
on whether a Permanent Member has acted capriciously.
Blair’s choice of ‘caprice’ as capable of invalidating a veto is,
of course, absurd and insulting. Even those who disagreed with France
(for instance) would accept that she could cast her veto in serious
good faith. More familiar to jurisprudence than the concept of caprice,
however, is that of duress. Duress certainly can invalidate a decision-making
process. And there is a powerful argument that a Security Council
endorsement for war can now be obtained only under duress. What else
can explain all the bribing, blackmailing and arm-twisting this week
as emissaries from London and Washington toured the globe in search
of Security Council members susceptible to being heavied?
Whatever the strength in law of my argument, there can be no doubt
of its strength in the world’s perception of events. Nobody is seriously
going to conclude that there was ever any possibility that the United
Nations would authorise war this month on its own independent judgment.
History will record that they were bullied into compliance.
How Tony Blair or George W. Bush can have argued that by complying
now the UN will escape ‘irrelevance’ escapes me. ‘Do what I say or
you’ll be irrelevant’ rather suggests that this is already how you
are seen. All week the Security Council has been made a mockery of
by Washington. Compliance with America now would invite the judgment
that the organisation was bent to Washington’s will. What legitimacy
is lent a decision by forcing a third party to rubber-stamp it? Few
British voters, and perhaps fewer Labour backbenchers than Mr Blair
thinks, will be impressed by this. To comply with Washington will
break the UN’s back.
But (you ask) what is the UN’s alternative? To be pushed aside by
America? That is indeed the alternative and I recommend it. Pushed
aside, perhaps, but enhanced in self-respect.
I see — and, watching him in Algeria, I think the President of France
may see — a new arrangement emerging among nations. A potentially
large and inevitably loose-knit network of sovereign states who do
not take Washington’s whip may be swimming into shape.
Diplomatic leadership in this unaligned world will be important, and
Britain would have been well placed to share it. I am sorry that,
at what may be a critical moment, our Prime Minister has proved blind
to the opportunity. To seize it would in the real sense have been
bold.
Matthew Parris is a political columnist of the Times.
© 2002 The Spectator.co.uk
|
|