Tuesday, April 26, 2005

Hitchens on Blair - Long Live Labour

A topical piece today in the Slate magazine by Christopher Hitchens on the British General Election and Why He's For Tony Blair.

On May 5, 40 years after I first took out a membership card, it will be possible, for the first time since the 1945 Labor victory that threw out the Churchill Tories, to vote Labor on a point of principle. Sixty years is a long time to wait, but the struggle for Iraq has decided the matter.

He then recognises the work of those on the pro-liberation Left in the UK like John Lloyd, Nick Cohen, David Aaronovitch and Ann Clwyd who have stayed true to their principles and supported regime change and democratisation.

Then he goes onto to make the valuable point that Tony Blair is an ally, and not the poodle of George W. Bush, like his sneering critics would have us believe.

The commonest liberal and Tory jeer against Tony Blair—that he is George Bush's "poodle"—is self-evidently false. Far from being a ditto to Washington, it was Blair who leaned on Clinton and Albright to intervene in the Balkans, putting an end to the long and disgusting Tory appeasement of Slobodan Milosevic. Without asking for any American approval, Blair also decided to stand by Britain's treaty with Sierra Leone and to send troops to put down the barbaric invasion of the hand-loppers and diamond-dealers, based in Charles Taylor's Liberia, who were among other things the regional allies of al-Qaida. In 1999, when Bush was still an isolationist governor of Texas, Blair made a speech in Chicago pointing out that Saddam Hussein's defiance of international law made a future confrontation with him inevitable. After Sept. 11, 2001, Blair told Bush that he would send ground troops to Afghanistan even if the United States would not.


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