Granta magazine have taken it upon themselves to publish my recollection of northern Iraq at the end of the 1990s, entitled Fly Away Home. It’s a long while since I thought about Iraq, but now that it’s in my forebrain I’m writing another piece, this one about suicidal gypsies in Baghdad. Enjoy this one, and spread the word…
Posts Tagged: iraq
5
Jul 08
Reasons to be cheerful about war
In the Times, Gerard Baker tells us to “Cheer up – we’re winning this War on Terror“:
Until the US-led invasion in 2001, Afghanistan was the cockpit of ascendant Islamist terrorism… Between 1998 and 2005 there were five big terrorist attacks against Western targets – the bombings of the US embassies in Africa in 1998, the attack on the USS Cole in 2000, 9/11, and the Madrid and London bombings in 2004 and 2005. All owed their success either exclusively or largely to Afghanistan’s status as a training and planning base for al-Qaeda. In the past three years there has been no attack on anything like that scale. Al-Qaeda has been driven into a state of permanent flight.
I’m no expert but that looks like a Black Swan waiting to happen. The rest of his piece is equal parts hackwork and guesswork:
- “Afghanistan has been a signal success”! No actual metrics for success provided, of course – that would make it too easy for somebody to point out that it hasn’t been much of a success at all.
- The surge “has been a triumph of US military planning and execution”! Well, so was the initial invasion – but things didn’t go so well after that, which is why we needed the surge in the first place.
- The crazed head-choppers of al-Qaeda have caused “the discrediting of the Islamist creed and its appeal”! Well possibly, but it’s hard to see how we get to take any sort of credit for that.
And so on, and so forth, until we get to my favourite moment:
It’s only their apologists in the Western media who really failed to see the intrinsic evil of Islamists. Those who have had to live with it have never been in much doubt about what it represents. Ask the people of Iran. Or those who fled the horrors of Afghanistan under the Taleban.
Ah, the “intrinsic evil of Islamists”. They’re not like us, you know – they’re more like mutant nazis or alien demons, which means we can kill as many of them as we like. Oh, did you notice Baker cheekily slipping in the Iran = Taleban meme at the end there? Roll on the next installment of the Long War.
18
Jun 08
Prancing Interventionists
Norm Geras is smarter than me, but sometimes smart people can be just plain silly.
Opposing the war Hall, like the rest of the many Iraq-war smugwits in the camp of those who opposed the war, favoured the continuation, sine die, of a regime of torture and murder.
It is a truism, of course, that many (although not all) of the pro-war camp were surprising muted in their opposition to Saddam Hussein while he was busy committing genocide against the Kurds, and for an extremely long time thereafter. Presumably this means that at that point they also favoured the continuation of a regime of torture and murder – perhaps Norm could tell us what changed their minds?
Meanwhile Oliver Kamm descends into self-parody, proclaiming “Bush made the world a safer place”. Witness:
The most fundamental decision in western security policy in the past seven years… has been the recognition that the most voluble adversaries of western society… are a reactionary, millenarian and atavistic force with whom accommodation is impossible as well as intensely undesirable.
Back in the real world, Israel and Hamas agree a ceasefire pending negotiations on re-opening the Rafah border crossing. It is noticeable that those who decry the slightest hint of jaw-jaw and bray most loudly for war-war are frequently those who are unlikely to ever suffer the consequences of war-war. The result is that, while Israel desperately but understandably seeks accommodation with its opponents, professional satirists such as Kamm are busy apparently telling them that they shouldn’t – for their own sake.
Those readers unfamiliar with this brand of satire may require some help understanding passages like this:
For all Bush’s verbal infelicity, diplomatic brusqueness, negligence in planning for post-Saddam Iraq, and insouciance regarding standards of due process when prosecuting the war on terror, the world is a safer place for the influence he has exercised.
“Verbal infelicity” = lying. “Diplomatic brusqueness” = war of aggression. “Negligence in planning for post-Saddam Iraq” = completely dropping the ball at the most critical point. “Insouciance regarding standards of due process” = heavily editing the Geneva Conventions and sanctioning torture. “The world is a safer place” = pretty much as it sounds, unless you’re an Iraqi citizen.
I’m under no illusions that my opinion counts for anything with either Norm or Oliver, but I truly wish that the pro-war camp would just face their truth. Iraq has been a terrifying mess since the beginning (although the results of the surge have been a welcome relief in terms of the human cost) and pretending otherwise is just a fool’s penny in the fountain. Opposing that war – and wars to come – doesn’t make you an apologist for genocide; it can simply mean that you’ve seen how these games tend to play out on the ground.
27
May 08
Wooster in Iraq
David Runciman on Orwell’s defences of hypocrisy:
What Kipling and Wodehouse had in common for Orwell was that there was a kind of integrity to their double standards, though of very different kinds. Kipling deliberately concealed something of himself, but did not seek to conceal the truth about the nature of imperial power; Wodehouse exposed himself, and thereby inadvertently exposed something of the double standards of the system of power in which he unthinkingly believed. But it is also true that what rescued Kipling and Wodehouse in Orwell’s eyes was that they did not share the other’s vice. The easiest way to illustrate this is to consider what would have happened if their positions had been reversed. It is inconceivable that if Kipling had found himself in Wodehouse’s position, broadcasting for the Nazis for the sake of a quiet life, then Orwell would have defended him; there was nothing innocent about Kipling, and therefore there was no way of imagining that he might have been self-deceived in such circumstances. Stupidity might just retain its integrity in the face of totalitarianism, but knowingness never could. Equally, it is impossible to imagine Orwell defending a PG Wodehouse view of British imperialism, because there was nothing innocent about imperialism, and political naivety in that context was always culpable. Kipling could write about empire because he was in no sense naive about it; what made Orwell despair of British imperialism was that it was not on the whole staffed by Kiplings, but by Bertie Woosters.
Ditto the invasion of Iraq, which has been brought to you entirely by Woosters, when all we needed was a Kipling.