Matthew Parris Matthew Parris

Shouldn’t the peaceniks just shut up and move on?

Shouldn’t the peaceniks just shut up and move on?

Already a subscriber? Log in

This article is for subscribers only

Subscribe today to get 3 months' delivery of the magazine, as well as online and app access, for only £3.

  • Weekly delivery of the magazine
  • Unlimited access to our website and app
  • Enjoy Spectator newsletters and podcasts
  • Explore our online archive, going back to 1828

Some of them are unworthy. We peaceniks well know, for instance, that if the whole Iraqi business had gone swimmingly from day one, the Bush and Blair pack and their media supporters — the Mark Steyns, Michael Goves and David Aaronovitches, the William Shawcrosses and Gerald Kaufmans — would be rubbing our noses in it mercilessly. In my view they would be entitled to. Leading articles — ‘Where are they now?’ — in the Daily Telegraph would be asking why we peaceniks hadn’t said sorry. Our Prime Minister, always quick to crow, loves to characterise half of humanity as the fainthearts, nay-sayers and doubting Thomases who, if he had listened to them, would have wrecked all his best ideas. Blairite ultras in the House of Commons would be tormenting those on the Labour Left who made such trouble for the Prime Minister as he prepared for war. Abroad and in more diplomatic language, the German Chancellor and the President of France would be being sneeringly patronised by Mr Blair because they had (as Donald Rumsfeld put it in the immediate euphoria of victory) ‘temporarily lost their way’.

‘Well,’ we peaceniks think, ‘they would not have spared us. Why should we spare them?’ But there are more adult reasons for refusing to let our quarry go.

First, the most abstract. I am very much in favour of the culture of blame. It matters in democratic politics that when our leaders behave dishonestly in order to win our support, we do not let the wrong drop simply because the damage has been done. Only in one sense do I think Blair behaved honestly: he did believe that supporting the Americans was the right thing to do. Assured of the overall rectitude of his purpose, he then (we suspect) threw scruple to the wind in executing it. If that can be demonstrated, then it would be a mark not of generosity but of cynicism to shrug our shoulders and say ‘Hey, that’s politics — move on.’

We devalue the whole idea of constitutional democracy if we let our leaders insinuate that purity of purpose is all that really counts. I think that if the Commons were misled it also counts, and if the result was war it counts tremendously. Though a massacre of Shia Muslims in Iraq today is of course more awful than the discovery that the Attorney-General’s advice a year ago was more ambivalent than the Prime Minister suggested, still the integrity of our politics here in Britain does matter, in a quiet, un-urgent, unsensational but in the end profound way.

And getting our analysis of recent history right matters if we are to get the years ahead for Iraq right. If we persist in following Bush and Blair in believing that this is (‘literally’, as Mr Blair remarked last week) about Good vs Evil, then the occupying powers are unlikely to understand the problems attending the creation of a democratic state there. To a very great extent in America, and to some extent in Britain, people were led to believe that what justified intervention in Iraq was not just the threat Saddam Hussein posed to his own people, or even the threat his weapons programmes posed to us, but some kind of highly unspecified engagement between Iraq (as it then was) and international ‘Terror’. As I have argued here so often before, a Manichaean or dualist view of the universe has been conjured from the horrors of September 11, in which bad or dangerous people worldwide are insinuated to be somehow on the same side. The hunger with which the US–British coalition keeps grasping at any suggestion of links between Saddam and al-Qa’eda is testimony to that.

Dualism is a perversion of the world, and a distraction. Through the fog of confusion, claim and counter-claim about current events in Iraq, one truth strikes this columnist as luminously clear: to approach the reconstruction of that country with the aim of identifying the ‘good’ people and supporting them against the ‘bad’ people will only make matters worse. It matters, therefore, for reasons deeper than historical accuracy or a proper humility that those who instigated the war on Iraq admit that they miscalculated. In their hearts I think most know it. Few of them, asked whether they would do it all again, could reply without a telling pause.

The Conservative party never apologised for Suez, though slowly the realisation crept upon almost everyone that it had been a terrible mistake. Luckily ill health gave Sir Anthony Eden his reason for resignation, and happily he later recovered. We should wish nobody ill health, but for Tony Blair the appearance at least of ill health — nothing grave, nothing from which he too could not later recover — would be a stroke of fortune before the next election, not least for his own place in history. We will not otherwise let go.

Matthew Parris is a political columnist of the Times.

Comments

Join the debate for just $5 for 3 months

Be part of the conversation with other Spectator readers by getting your first three months for $5.

Already a subscriber? Log in