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July 28, 2007
Rescuing Gladstone
There was a great fashion among Blair acolytes for comparing their man to Gladstone. Blair himself promoted this, declaring several times, including in a speech at the University of Sofia, that Gladstone was one of his "Political heroes". In fact I very much doubt the notoriously ill-read Blair had very much idea of what Gladstone once stood for. Anti-interventionism and anti-Imperialism were at the heart of Gladstone's creed. He was famously reluctant to send troops anywhere, even to rescue General Gordon, who Gladstone regarded as an unhinged imperialist and dangerous evangelical fanatic. Now there are very definite and interesting parallels between the equally preening Blair and Gordon...
Blair made his claim at the University of Sofia to justify his military intervention in Kosovo, by reference to Gladstones stand against Turkish atrocities in Bulgaria. But Blair seemed not to notice that Gladstone's intervention was strictly non-military.
The difference between the two is most aptly summed up in this great Gladstone quotation, uttered in condemnation of the second Afghan War:
Remember the rights of the savage, as we call him. Remember that the happiness of his humble home, remember that the sanctity of life in the hill villages of Afghanistan, among the winter snows, is as inviolable in the eye of Almighty God, as can be your own.William E. Gladstone
Compare that to Blair's happy inflcition of shock and awe on the poor inhabitants of Baghdad, or the continual bombing of civilian targets in Afghanistan, with every haveli described as a "Taliban compound" and every dead farmer - and his dead family - described as "Taliban fighters".
Then think of extraordinary rendition and the hundreds of people we helped the CIA to ship to be tortured. Think of the government going to the Law Lords to argue that confessions from torture should be eligible as evidence in British courts. Compare that to Gladstone:
Nothing that is morally wrong can be politically right.William E. Gladstone
Gladstone was a great man. It falls to us who actually know something about him, to rescue him from annexation by the neo-cons.
Posted by craig on July 28, 2007 9:25 PM in the category UK Policy
Comments
"Now there are very definite and interesting parallels between the equally preening Blair and Gordon..."
Imagine all the RSS feeds that will include a link to this excellent, I must add, blog post. Simply because of the felicitous positioning of the words "Blair" and "Gordon" - alas not Tony Blair and Gordon Brown!
Clever guy that Craig Murray, should be in marketing... ;)
PS I wanted to italicise three words in this comment but it appears I can't, pity!
Posted by: Johan van Rooyen
at July 28, 2007 11:33 PM
Johan...
It is "General Gordon" that Craig is talking about. But I've noticed that Internet Marketing of media stories moves in "mysterious ways"! Thanks for revealing one of them.
I wonder if Gordon Brown will turn out to be more like Gladstone, and will be equally reluctant to send in the troops to rescue Tony Blair when the latter, inevitably, gets into deep water in the Middle East.
Posted by: peacewisher
at July 29, 2007 4:58 AM
Craig - have you just read a book about Gladstone. In which case - which one?
Posted by: johnf
at July 29, 2007 7:50 AM
johnf
My MA dissertation was on Gladstone and foreign policy. But Roy Jenkins' is a very good general biography.
Posted by: Craig
at July 29, 2007 8:21 AM
I think Johan did know who "Gordon" was. But just discovered that my son, who has an "A" in History and starts to read History at Aberdeen this year, had no idea who I was talking about. To quote C S Lewis: "What do they teach them at school nowadays?"
Posted by: Craig
at July 29, 2007 8:26 AM
Blair would no doubt want to be seen as equal in stature to almost any historical figure, rather than the disastrous failure that he really is.
His place in history is absolutely certain, of course.
But it's not quite what he would wish for himself...
Posted by: Chuck Unsworth
at July 29, 2007 8:58 PM
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