October
8, 2001
"The
bombing begins," screams today's headline of the normally restrained
Guardian. "Battle Joined" echoes the equally cautious Herald Tribune,
quoting George W. Bush. But with whom is it joined? And how will it end? How
about with Osama bin Laden in chains, looking more serene and Christ-like than
ever, arranged before a tribune of his vanquishers with Johnnie Cochran to
defend him? The fees won't be a problem, that's for sure.
Or
how about with a bin Laden blown to smithereens by one of those clever bombs we
keep reading about that kill terrorists in caves but don't break the crockery?
Or is there a solution I haven't thought of that will prevent us from turning
our arch-enemy into an arch-martyr in the eyes of those for whom he is already
semi-divine?
Yet
we must punish him. We must bring him to justice. Like any sane person, I see
no other way. Send in the food and medicines, provide the aid, sweep up the
starving refugees, maimed orphans and body parts--sorry, "collateral
damage"--but bin Laden and his awful men, we have no choice, must be
hunted down.
But
unfortunately what America longs for at this moment, even above retribution, is
more friends and fewer enemies. And what America is storing up for herself, and
so are we Brits, is yet more enemies; because after all the bribes, threats and
promises that have patched together the rickety coalition, we cannot prevent
another suicide bomber being born each time a misdirected missile wipes out an
innocent village, and nobody can tell us how to dodge this devil's cycle of
despair, hatred and--yet again--revenge.
The
stylized television footage and photographs of bin Laden suggest a man of
homoerotic narcissism, and maybe we can draw a grain of hope from that. Posing
with a Kalashnikov, attending a wedding or consulting a sacred text, he
radiates with every self-adoring gesture an actor's awareness of the lens. He
has height, beauty, grace, intelligence and magnetism, all great attributes
unless you're the world's hottest fugitive and on the run, in which case
they're liabilities hard to disguise. But greater than all of them, to my jaded
eye, is his barely containable male vanity, his appetite for self-drama and his
closet passion for the limelight. And just possibly this trait will be his
downfall, seducing him into a final dramatic act of self-destruction, produced,
directed, scripted and acted to death by Osama bin Laden himself.
By
the accepted rules of terrorist engagement, of course, the war is long lost. By
us. What victory can we possibly achieve that matches the defeats we have
already suffered, let alone the defeats that lie ahead? Terror is theater, a
soft-spoken Palestinian firebrand told me in Beirut in 1982. He was talking
about the murder of Israeli athletes at the Munich Olympics, but he might as
well have been talking about the twin towers and the Pentagon. The late
Bakunin, evangelist of anarchism, liked to speak of the propaganda of the Act.
It's hard to imagine more theatrical, more potent acts of propaganda than
these.
Now
Bakunin in his grave and bin Laden in his cave must be rubbing their hands in
glee as we embark on the very process that terrorists of their stamp so relish:
as we hastily double up our police and intelligence forces and award them
greater powers, as we put basic civil rights on hold and curtail press freedom,
impose news blackpoints and secret censorship, spy on ourselves and, at our
worst, violate mosques and hound luckless citizens in our streets because we
are afraid of the color of their skin.
All
the fears that we share--"Dare I fly?" "Ought I to tell the
police about the weird couple upstairs?" "Would it be safer not to
drive down Whitehall this morning?" "Is my child safely back from
school?" "Have my life's savings plummeted?"--are precisely the
fears our attackers want us to have.
Until
September 11, the United States was only too happy to plug away at Vladimir
Putin about his butchery in Chechnya. Russia's abuse of human rights in the
North Caucasus, he was told--we are speaking of wholesale torture, and murder
amounting to genocide, it was generally agreed--was an obstruction to closer
relations with NATO and the United States. There were even voices--mine was
one--that suggested Putin join Milosevic in The Hague; let's do them both
together. Well, goodbye to all that. In the making of the great new coalition,
Putin will look a saint by comparison with some of his bedfellows.
Does
anyone remember anymore the outcry against the perceived economic colonialism
of the G8? Against the plundering of the Third World by uncontrollable
multinational companies? Prague, Seattle and Genoa presented us with disturbing
scenes of broken heads, broken glass, mob violence and police brutality. Tony
Blair was deeply shocked. Yet the debate was a valid one, until it was drowned
in a wave of patriotic sentiment, deftly exploited by corporate America.
Drag
up Kyoto these days and you risk the charge of being anti-American. It's as if
we have entered a new, Orwellian world where our personal reliability as
comrades in the struggle is measured by the degree to which we invoke the past
to explain the present. Suggesting there is a historical context for the recent
atrocities is by implication to make excuses for them. Anyone who is with us
doesn't do that. Anyone who does, is against us.
Ten
years ago, I was making an idealistic bore of myself by telling anyone who
would listen that, with the cold war behind us, we were missing a never-to-be-repeated
chance to transform the global community. Where was the new Marshall Plan? I
pleaded. Why weren't young men and women from the American Peace Corps,
Voluntary Service Overseas and their Continental European equivalents pouring
into the former Soviet Union in their thousands? Where was the world-class
statesman and man of the hour with the voice and vision to define for us the
real, if unglamorous, enemies of mankind: poverty, famine, slavery, tyranny,
drugs, bush-fire wars, racial and religious intolerance, greed?
Now,
overnight, thanks to bin Laden and his lieutenants, all our leaders are
world-class statesmen, proclaiming their voices and visions in distant airports
while they feather their electoral nests.
There
has been unfortunate talk, and not only from Signor Berlusconi, of a crusade.
Crusade, of course, implies a delicious ignorance of history. Was Berlusconi
really proposing to set free the holy places of Christendom and smite the
heathen? Was Bush? And am I out of order in recalling that we actually lost the
Crusades? But all is well: Signor Berlusconi was misquoted and the presidential
reference is no longer operative.
Meanwhile,
Blair's new role as America's fearless spokesman continues apace. Blair speaks
well because Bush speaks badly. Seen from abroad, Blair in this partnership is
the inspired elder statesman with an unassailable domestic power base, whereas
Bush--dare one say it these days?--was barely elected at all.
But
what exactly does Blair, the elder statesman, represent? Both men at this
moment are riding high in their respective approval ratings, but both are
aware, if they know their history books, that riding high on Day One of a
perilous overseas military operation doesn't guarantee you victory on Election
Day. How many American body bags can Bush sustain without losing popular
support? After the horrors of the twin towers and the Pentagon, the American
people may want revenge, but they're on a very short fuse about shedding more
American blood.
Blair--with
the whole Western world to tell him so, except for a few sour voices back
home--is America's eloquent White Knight, the fearless, trusty champion of that
ever-delicate child of the mid-Atlantic, the Special Relationship. Whether that
will win Blair favor with his electorate is another matter, because he was
elected to save the country from decay, and not from Osama bin Laden. The
Britain he is leading to war is a monument to sixty years of administrative
incompetence. Our health, education and transport systems are on the rocks. The
fashionable phrase these days describes them as "Third World," but
there are places in the Third World that are far better off than Britain.
The
Britain Blair governs is blighted by institutionalized racism, white male
dominance, chaotically administered police forces, a constipated judicial
system, obscene private wealth and shameful and unnecessary public poverty. At
the time of his re-election, which was characterized by a dismal turnout, Blair
acknowledged these ills and humbly admitted that he was on notice to put them
right. So when you catch the noble throb in his voice as he leads us
reluctantly to war, and your heart lifts to his undoubted flourishes of
rhetoric, it's worth remembering that he may also be warning you, sotto voce,
that his mission to mankind is so important that you will have to wait another
year for your urgent medical operation and a lot longer before you can ride in
a safe and punctual train. I am not sure that this is the stuff of electoral
victory three years from now. Watching Blair, and listening to him, I can't
resist the impression that he is in a bit of a dream, walking his own dangerous
plank.
Did
I say war? Has either Blair or Bush, I wonder, ever seen a child blown to bits,
or witnessed the effect of a single cluster bomb dropped on an unprotected
refugee camp? It isn't necessarily a qualification for generalship to have seen
such dreadful things, and I don't wish either of them the experience. But it
scares me all the same when I watch uncut, political faces shining with the
light of combat, and hear preppy political voices steeling my heart for battle.
And
please, Mr. Bush--on my knees, Mr. Blair--keep God out of this. To imagine that
God fights wars is to credit Him with the worst follies of mankind. God, if we
know anything about Him, which I don't profess to, prefers effective food
drops, dedicated medical teams, comfort and good tents for the homeless and
bereaved, and, without strings, a decent acceptance of our past sins and a
readiness to put them right. He prefers us less greedy, less arrogant, less
evangelical and less dismissive of life's losers.
It's
not a new world order, not yet, and it's not God's war. It's a horrible, necessary,
humiliating police action to redress the failure of our intelligence services
and our blind political stupidity in arming and exploiting Islamic fanatics to
fight the Soviet invader, then abandoning them to a devastated, leaderless
country. As a result, it's our miserable duty to seek out and punish a bunch of
modern-medieval religious zealots who will gain mythic stature from the very
death we propose to dish out to them.
And
when it's over, it won't be over. The shadowy armies of bin Laden, in the emotional
aftermath of his destruction, will gather numbers rather than wither away. So
will the hinterland of silent sympathizers who provide them with logistical
support. Cautiously, between the lines, we are being invited to believe that
the conscience of the West has been reawakened to the dilemma of the poor and
homeless of the earth. And possibly, out of fear, necessity and rhetoric, a new
sort of political morality has indeed been born. But when the shooting dies and
a seeming peace is achieved, will the United States and its allies stay at
their posts or, as happened at the end of the cold war, hang up their boots and
go home to their own backyards? Even if those backyards will never again be the
safe havens they once were.
� 2001
David Cornwell