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The Iraq Inquiry - historical honesty is overdue and necessary

Shock Awe IraqThe @anthonypainter Labour movement column

One of Barack Obama’s favourite philosophers and theologians is Reinhold Niebuhr. Deep in Niebuhr’s philosophy is the notion of restraint as an antidote to pride and hubris. Niebuhr cautions us, “God, give us grace to accept with serenity the things that cannot be changed, courage to change the things that can be changed, and the wisdom to distinguish one from the other.”

That Niebuhr is now being dusted down - his best writing was in the aftermath of the Second World War amidst the expansion of communism - is surely a reflection of the fact that the US forgot the art and necessity of restraint under the Bush administration.

Britain was part of that. We took the strategic decision to stand ‘shoulder to shoulder’ with the United States in the aftermath of the terrorist atrocities of 9/11. One disastrous war and an ongoing quagmire in Afghanistan and Pakistan later how has that worked out for us?

It is a recurrent aspect of British character to brush our historic failures under the carpet and amplify our - often considerable - successes. To take a recent case in point, we react with complete confusion at the ire shown towards us by the Iranian leadership. We’ve forgotten our history.

Britain - this 'wily fox' - conspired in the overthrow of the democratically elected Iranian government of Mohammed Mossadeq in 1953. Add in a couple of humiliating border and land treaties and there you have it. Of course, Iran’s accusations that this wave of protest was made in the British Consulate are ridiculous. However, Iran seems to have a longer historical memory than we do ourselves. That gives Ayatollah Khamenei and his clown prince, President Ahmadinejad, the opportunity to make the outrageous claims.

This historical memory is a crucial component of a nation’s story and its governing sensibilities. Without it, we are condemned to repeat the same errors time and time again Groundhog Day style. That is why it is absolutely right for there to be an Iraq inquiry. The politically convenient thing to do would be to say that there have already been a series of inquiries into the Iraq War - Hutton, Butler, parliamentary committees - and that is that. Alternatively, the Prime Minister could have simply punted it into the next Parliament, perhaps making it someone else’s problem.

That he did not do so is a mark of political courage as well as of someone who understands the relationship between history and governance. It is no coincidence that Gordon Brown is keen student of history. This is a discipline that he shares with his counterpart across the Atlantic. In fact, the fundamental dynamic of the Barack Obama campaign was the projection of historical lessons in order to craft a different vision of his nation’s political future - see his references in speeches and discourse to the founding fathers, Abraham Lincoln, and, of course, Rev. Martin Luther King.

Given this, quite why the president still refuses to initiatiate an independent Truth Commission into torture is perplexing. Perhaps as Gordon Brown conceded the point on openness in the Iraq Inquiry’s deliberations, Barack Obama - facing a continued onslaught in the US media initiated by Dick Cheney amongst others - will respond in kind and finally purge the American body politic of its shameful illegalities from rendition to black sites to water-boarding. That may be necessary to prevent him from inheriting his predecessor’s legacy.

In the UK, the Iraq inquiry Chairman, John Chilcot, is clearly determined that the same fate will not befall his report as did the Butler and Hutton reports. So the early signs are good. The Iraq War is a poison that still lies beneath the surface. It corrodes everything that touches it. It scars everyone who approaches it. Chilcot may be the man to extract it.

The anger that many feel towards politics in Britain today is in part a consequence of this war. It has spread into other issues, other concerns. The United States released some of the anger through the election of Barack Obama. We have had no such moment of release and we need it and that is where the inquiry comes in. Through honesty comes redemption.

So it was disappointing to hear Tony Blair on CBS@katiecouric a few days ago. For the former Prime Minister, the Iraq War was justified on the grounds that it enhanced regional security. Even if we were in a position to make this assessment now, which we are not, it is highly debatable to say the least. Iran hurtles towards its goal of an operational nuclear capability; Iraq itself is still a long way off complete stability; and the shadow of conflict in Israel and Palestine lingers on. The removal of Saddam Hussein shook things up but we still don’t know whether they will settle - better or worse?

He also dismissed those who argue against the war: “The day we end up believing that when we get rid of a brutal dictator, give the people the chance to vote for democracy, put a vast amount of aid behind it, that we are recruiting people to terrorism is the day that we’ve got our values absolutely upside-down.”

Of course we shouldn’t be cowardly in the face of terrorists or dictators but this notion that there are certain things that you have to do without regard to the consequences is extremely dangerous. It is the opposite of the type of restraint cautioned by Reinhold Niebuhr. Of course, neither of the arguments Tony Blair used in favour of the Iraq War in the Couric interview correspond to the original casus belli - that matters in the context of some future military action.

Why not admit fallibility and force others to confront theirs? He could argue with credibility that the judgements he made were in good faith and based on the evidence as it presented itself at the time - few would want to be confronted with the same judgement call. He could even acknowledge that serious mistakes were made - in the quality of the intelligence, in post-war planning, in failing to properly consider the wider impact on the regional power balance. Instead, there is an unwillingness to confront our past and this leaves the former Prime Minister in the company of hubris.

It is partly for this reason - a resistance to humility - that the Iraq Inquiry is so important. It is why its deliberations had to be open. The historical account cannot be distorted. Niebuhr would have understood why it is necessary. The poison may be out of sight. It is still there, alas. And we have to find a way of extracting it. Honesty is the first step to recovery. 

Posted on Jul 01, 2009 at 10:27am

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Trashing Labour? Why do I need to do that, the facts now are utterly damning.

Yes, GWB offered a route out, I find it amazing that you have to hold up GWB as defence for this Labour government? Surely this is the indefensible defending the indefensible?

Please I would like to know about how we could prosecute a war in Iraq under the pretext of modern history guiding our way? Now that would be an article you could write in honesty.

How about parallels the '39-'41 Iraqi war when a change in Iraqi leadership threatened to side with the Axis power and give them much needed oil. Any historian will tell you that Hitler's failure to secure the Bosporus oil fields through the Russian Steppes and a failure to secure a foothold in the Middle East was the end of his means to match the Allied war machine.

Certainly a just action in a World War.

Or the 1958 in Iran when a change of leader threatened to side with the Soviets at the height of the Cold War? Again, the geopolitical situation has history played out that was probably the right thing to do. However, it gives us one hell of a headache now.

Probably right at the time but it was messy, too overt and now it has served us very badly. It was steeped also part in self-interest in keeping petrol prices at home cheap too.

Yes, the UK and the Arabian tribes liberated their land from the Ottomans and then we have a chain of events of duplicitous French, UK and later, US behaviour.

In my unsophisticated language, our behaviour historically in the Middle East is nothing to be proud of since 1941. We have done little to kerb Arab Nationalism and we bottled it at Suez and since then it has been a litany of failure.

Labour can't even recognise that the only beacon of freedom and democracy in the Middle East is Israel and they have had one hell of a fight for it. It's a convienient omission that Israeli 'freedom fighters' attacked the British in the Palestine Mandate after WW2 to the point that the UK gave up Palestine to the UN in '48.

Surely then from these lessons of history, it might have been a far better course of action not to lie through your teeth regarding the real intentions of invading Iraq.

Saddam Hussein was a brutal despot but the terms of engagement in 1990 stopped short of overthrowing him. Surely then there would have been a far better call to remove a leader caught red-handed with a unified world against him?

Yet the opportunity was never taken.

Iraq was going to be invaded, that much was decided. The pretext was they were a destabilising influence on the whole Middle East, a serious antagonist to a soon to be nuclear armed neighbour and also a key ally in those seeking to fight a proxy war on Israel through terrorism.

Then again, Syria is a far larger sponsor of terrorism and at the time fought two proxy wars in Lebanon and Palestine under the guise of Hezbollah. In a war on terror, surely they were a more meaningful target?

That's the truth. Iraq had tenuous links to terrorism; they were by no way as large a sponsor of it as Syria and sanctions had made them into a paper tiger.

There was the sanction busting legal pipeline from Iraq into Syria, there was the UN Food-for-oil scandal including serious financial irregularities with French banks hiding petrodollars.

These aren't enough of a reason to go to war though.

It was alleged on trumped up 'intelligence' that they had WMDs, no-one found any, lest of all THE eminient UK biological weapons expert was hung out to dry by Labour MPs resulting in his suicide.

There is nothing, absolutely zero recourse through history since a brief period 1939-1941 when they made a bad decision in a just war that would suggest that removing another Iraqi leader would do anything except ferment anti-Western sentiment in the Middle East.

History is hindsight with opinion based on facts and interpretation.

I know history will not be kind on Labour.
Mike Thomas @ 31 weeks and 6 days ago
Mike, your argument may have the advantage of clarity but it lacks sophistication. It is simply ahistorical to suggest there was a 'right' path and there is a 'wrong' path and that is the direction into which you stray with phrases like 'honesty is 100% mea culpa or it is dishonesty.'

The restraint argument cuts both ways- there is also a need for restraint when questioning the morality and motivation of those who make very complex decisions in rapidly moving and unclear situations. This is not an attempt to exculpate. This is simply to accept a degree of historical honesty. We are talking about 2003 and not 2009. Was the war wrong? Yes. Can we say that there is no defence of those who took the decision? A much more difficult question. It is easy to wield hindsight- but that is hardly a historical approach, is it? The inquiry may offer us something clearer in respect of this latter question and that will be one of its purposes.

Of course, we can just dump everything on the heads of those who make the wrong judgement calls- but there is dishonesty in that. All we are doing is denying reality if that is the road we go down.

But perhaps your over-arching concern is to trash New Labour rather than think about how this happened in a broader, non-ring-fenced way? Fine. But like the fact that the Tories did not influence the final decision (though they could have done had they opposed it.....), the UK not joining the Iraqi conflict would not have dissuaded Bush from the action. In fact, GWB offered the UK a way out which was not taken. So on the bigger questions we turn out to be vaguely irrelevant. Though that doesn't in itself justify any decision that was taken- just that our influence was limited.

But if you want to put all the world's ills on the shoulders of Tony Blair carry on. But let's not pretend that is anything other than politics.
Anthony Painter @ 31 weeks and 6 days ago
Is that it? Wow, you've really thought though this whole honesty thing. Or is it because honesty is the political plat de jour.

Is it because Labour have been found out time and time and time again as a pack of lying shysters on policy with an actual alleged criminal element amongst its MPs and Lords that Labour has thought perhaps it might be a good idea to actually tell the truth?

And like a 0% rise in public spending shows that it is psychologically and utterly incapable of doing so?

Even you find it impossible. It's all very well to blather on about honesty and reflect in Obama's glory and desire for change. You can set out on a motherhood and apple pie eating frenzy and peon to great men hoping someone out might get it. Yet in your own words, you find it so difficult to accept this government total culpability in this utter disgrace of a war.

The lead-up, the prosecution, the aftermath and the treatment of our armed force has been shabby, borderline criminally incompetent and downright useless.

You mention colonialism and I'm glad you agree to not ring-fencing history. You have to go back in time to find a parallel to the UK prosecuting this kind of kangaroo court aggression; certainly further back than 1958.

Not since the Crimean War of 1852 have a government prosecuted warfare so utterly disgracefully.

The 'Tories' defence is utterly moot and still there is a desire for deflecting culpability onto them and mitigation. Honesty is not a bedfellow to these concepts; honesty is 100% mea culpa or it is dishonesty.

At the time of that vote, Labour had a massive Parliament majority; it didn't need one single Tory vote at all to go to war.
Mike Thomas @ 31 weeks and 6 days ago
I thought that would be your response. You're getting a bit predictable in your old age Mike. And as a keen historian you will recognise the following as a worthless counter-factual:

"Yes, the Tories voted in favour to conducting the Iraq War, if they knew the level of subterfuge (which they certainly didn't then) and lies I really doubt that they would have voted in favour at all, there would certainly have been many, many abstentions."

I do however agree with you on the following:

"You cannot simply ring-fence a piece of history suitable to your argument without considering the wider picture."



Anthony Painter @ 31 weeks and 6 days ago
Really?

Who ordered publishing of the dissertation/intelligence?

Who went on TV/Radio/Parliament banging on and on and on about 45 minutes from attack?

Who ordered the investigation into the 'sexed' up dossier?

Who wanted to go to the UN Security Council?

Who when receiving conflicting legal advice chose to ignore large parts of it?

Who sent our armed forces into battle poorly equipped and supported?

Who failed to push our Allies for a coherent win-the-peace plan?

You cannot blame neo-liberal laissez-faire economics, the far-right or Thatcher (who knew how to prosecute a just war) - this is all on Labour's watch, Labour's doing and Labour's actions.

As for history, I took the trouble to study some at school and my free time, history is in the eyes of the reader. You cannot simply ring-fence a piece of history suitable to your argument without considering the wider picture.

Yes, the Tories voted in favour to conducting the Iraq War, if they knew the level of subterfuge (which they certainly didn't then) and lies I really doubt that they would have voted in favour at all, there would certainly have been many, many abstentions.

Labour lied through its teeth, to us, to Parliamentary opposition parties and to a degree, to itself.

Labour cannot be trusted. It cannot be trusted to conduct a fair investigation either.
Mike Thomas @ 31 weeks and 6 days ago
Just Labour? Come on Mike, that doesn't display a great deal of historical honesty......

Reassessing Iraq is right while all the players are available, the evidence fresh, and the consequences observable. The other examples you mention are for the historians but should also be part of a more honest discourse about our past....and a more honest assessment of colonialism- its costs (a few benefits too) and consequences.
Anthony Painter @ 31 weeks and 6 days ago
Historical honesty should really go back further to the Sykes-Picot agreement and Lloyd-George going against T.E. Lawrence's assurances to the King Faisal.

Or UK occupation post WW1 of Iraq and then its subsequent independence?

Or the Anglo-Iraqi War of '39-'41?

The fact that the Ayatollah has to refer to Mossadeq at all should be the biggest clue to what desperate straits they are in? In Iran, Mossadeq was effectively airbrushed out of history due to his secular views and engagement with the West.

If there is to be honesty to our actions in Iraq, what is stopping the UK's entire 20th century actions in the Middle East being called into question?

We cannot reverse what has happened and cannot ignore the enthusiasm with which this pre-emptive strike was sold to the British people with fake intelligence.

This war will be Labour's Vietnam when Wilson was wise enough to side-step that war himself. This Iraq conflict it will be a monument to Labour's failure to understand history and its failure to force restraint on a wounded ally. It will also be remembered as another grubby encounter of interfering in Iraq as a sovereign nation when it wouldn't do what the West wanted.
Mike Thomas @ 31 weeks and 6 days ago
ignore last message. keyboard gremlin at work.

-----------------------------------------------


to complete my point.

The end of Sadaam was justified...on persecution of the Kurds and regional instability grounds. It could not be justified on ethical grounds. Did the end justify the means? Ethics of our country matters more to us.....so the war was unethical on those grounds. In any case, Britain is not a global power, so why is going around messing in other countries - so directly?


Having said all the above, the patterns in life dictate that it could not have been done - in any other way.........afterall....extremists attract other who act in a extreme way.
ash cash @ 31 weeks and 6 days ago
The end of sadaam is/was a good thing. why should the Kurds be persecuted? why should there is regional instability.
ash cash @ 31 weeks and 6 days ago
"For the former Prime Minister, the Iraq War was justified on the grounds that it enhanced regional security."


The first rule of lying is to stick to your first lie.

Very good article, shame no-one in the PLP can get their snouts out of the trough to do anything about it.
Charlie Farley @ 31 weeks and 6 days ago