Tony Blair and the business of covering up war crimes


Tony Blair on a visit to Israel’s wall in Qalqiliya in the occupied West Bank, August 2009. (Khaleel Reash/MaanImages)

Jim Holstun, The Electronic Intifada, 14 October 2009
On 7 October 2009, Tony Blair gave a lecture at a New York university. In responding to an unexpectedly direct student question, he publicly joined, for the first time, the US and Israeli Zionist consensus rejecting the Goldstone report.

On 27 June 2007, Blair left his job as UK prime minister under the cloud of the war on Iraq that he had concocted with former US President George W. Bush. Just hours later, he assumed his new position as the Special Envoy to the Mideast Quartet (EU, Russia, UN, US). He had long been a Zionist and a member of Labor Friends of Israel, and he received heartfelt farewells-and-hellos from Ehud Olmert (“A true friend of the State of Israel”) and Tzipi Livni (“a very-well appreciated figure in Israel”). Palestinians living under Israeli occupation did not find this a very a promising development.

Though Blair spends only a week a month in the Middle East, he has managed to keep busy. He maintains a grueling, globe-trotting schedule of lectures, for which he receives up to $500,000. On top of this, he has been at work on his memoirs, for which he received a $7.3 million advance. Consulting work brought him $3.2 million (including a bonus) from J. P. Morgan Chase and $800,000 from Zurich Financial Services. By October 2008, he had amassed at least $19 million, far outdistancing even the enterprising Bill Clinton. He is thought to be the highest paid public speaker in the world.

Blair’s schedule has caused some concern in the Middle East. His office insists that his “current role in the Middle East takes up the largest proportion of his time,” but in late 2008, a Western diplomat in Jerusalem wondered if “his overstretchedness has produced a tactical blunder,” while a UN official in Jerusalem said, “There is a general sense that he is not around” (“Lectures see Tony Blair earnings jump over #12,” The Times, 29 October 2008). In September 2008, a coalition of Mideast aid groups accused the Quartet of “losing its grip,” adding that its “failings could have serious ramifications for implementing international law around the globe” (“Aid groups: Tony Blair faces imminent failure in Middle East,” The Times, 25 September 2008).

On 27 December 2008, Israel launched the Gaza massacre, which it dubbed “Operation Cast Lead.” Eight days later, when asked about Blair’s reaction, UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown explained, “Tony’s on holiday at the moment.” While Blair found time to attend a private opening of the new Armani store in Knightsbridge, he found none to call for a ceasefire in Gaza, thus recalling his silence during the 2006 Israeli war on Lebanon (“As Gaza is torn apart by war, where is Middle East peace envoy Tony Blair? He’s been on holiday,” Daily Mail, 5 January 2009). In early January, Blair flew to Israel, but he did not condemn the Israeli assault. In February 2009, while Palestinians in Gaza were still digging themselves out and mourning their dead, he accepted a $1 million prize from Tel Aviv University as the “Laureate for the Present Time Dimension in the field of Leadership” (Press release, 2009 Dan David Prize, 17 February 2009).

On 1 March 2009, he finally made it to Gaza. He conceded “a huge amount of damage” and the deaths of “large numbers of civilians,” but rejected as “not very sensible” any discussion of disproportionality in Israel’s attacks (“Blair shocked at devastation on first Gaza visit as envoy,” The Scotsman, 2 March 2009). Blair did not meet with Hamas leaders, and his visit to Gaza lasted only a few hours, for he had to make a pilgrimage to Sderot, the Gilad Shalit of western Negev settlements (“Middle East envoy Tony Blair in Gaza for first time,” The Independent, 1 March 2009). In June, he visited Gaza a second time and, as proof of his deep humanitarian instincts, went so far as to say that the Palestinians were in a “tough situation” (“Former British PM Blair Visits Gaza Strip,” Voice of America News, 15 June 2009).


On 15 September 2009, the United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict, chaired by Justice Richard Goldstone of South Africa, issued its 575-page report entitled “Human Rights in Palestine and Other Occupied Arab Territories.” For three weeks after the Goldstone report’s publication, Blair said nothing about it in public. Then, on 7 October 2009, he spoke at SUNY Buffalo (UB), where I teach, to a huge audience in the university’s Distinguished Speakers Series. I didn’t hear the lecture, for I was outside in a free speech corral (the first one to have appeared on my campus) with a group protesting Blair’s invitation and his enormous lecture fee of $150,000, as confirmed to me by his exclusive agent, the Washington Speakers Bureau.

We also protested the censorship of questions. For several years now, by requiring that all questions to them be pre-submitted and approved, the UB administration has protected from direct questioning those of our Distinguished Speakers whose resumes include war crimes in the Balkans and West Asia. This time, they packaged the censorship as “The Blair Student Question Contest”: students pre-submitted questions for review, and the administration invited the lucky winners up on the podium to deliver their approved questions in person. When questioned about the practice, Dennis R. Black, UB Vice President of Students and emcee for the evening, told The Buffalo News that “there was no attempt at censorship and that the questions were merely moderated” — an interesting distinction.

An audio version of the whole speech is available on the website of UB’s public radio station (“UB Distinguished Speaker Series – Tony Blair,” WBFO, 13 October 2009). It consists primarily of earnest platitudes and whimsical anecdotes, concluding, incredibly enough, with a story about a comical horse-betting Irishman, rendered in Blair’s very best music-hall brogue. But things took a change for the better in the question-and-answer period. Nicolas Kabat, a UB political science major, co-founder of UB Students for Justice in Palestine, and member of the Western New York Peace Center Palestine-Israel Committee, was one of the lucky contest winners because of the slow-pitch, painfully bland question he pre-submitted. But at the microphone, he asked a hard-edged question about Blair’s response to the Goldstone report, why he thinks the basic principles of international law are irrelevant to the Middle East peace process, and why the continuing siege on Gaza isn’t also harmful to that process.

A video of the five-minute Kabat-Blair exchange is available on YouTube. I’m told by the UB student who recorded it that UB Vice President for Students Dennis Black (visible at the end of the clip) heard Kabat’s unapproved question with vein-popping disbelief. Later, Director of UB Special Events William Regan wrote Kabat to chastise him for departing from the approved question, saying that he had “violated a trust that needs to exist for a contest like this to function properly.” In a delightful Freudian slip, he added that “We are very disappointed with your ethical conduct.” There is something exquisite about the righteous indignation of a befuddled censor.

Blair seemed at first to be thrown off balance by an actual, uncensored question. Though he eventually found his feet and began to concoct his classic blend of choirboy sanctimony and Machiavellian misdirection, he also seemed to wander unwittingly into a public rejection of the Goldstone report. Like most of its opponents, he failed to find fault with a single one of its factual claims but moved immediately into nostrums and whinging. Despite Kabat’s clear statement that the report condemned both Palestinian armed groups and Israel, Blair brightly observed that “you have given one view, and the trouble is that there is another view. … And one of the things you learn about conflicts like this … is that you never solve these conflicts by taking one view and forgetting about the other. … And rocket attacks came out of Gaza on Israeli towns. Now those rocket attacks have got to stop as well.”

Like Benjamin Netanyahu in his recent speech to the UN, Blair failed to note the report’s forthright and detailed chronicle and condemnation of Palestinian rocket and mortar attacks, and its statement that they had all but ended during the lull of June-November 2008 (31-33, 71-82, 449-74). In fact, Hamas ceased all of its attacks and cracked down on firings by other groups, reducing them by 97 percent and Israeli casualties by 100 percent. This Hamas peace offensive was just too much for Israel to bear, so on 4 November 2008, a squad of Israeli commandos infiltrated Gaza and killed six Hamas soldiers, thus shattering the lull (78).

Blair also suggests that we must reject the Goldstone report as hopelessly partisan because it ignores provocations by Hamas: “The Israeli soldier that is kidnapped at the moment, Gilad Shalit, should be released.” The problem here is that the report actually exhibits the usual disproportionate and tacitly racist concern for this lone Israeli detainee (on pages 25, 28, 57, 66, 288, 289, 291, 304, 371-73, 412, 415, 418, 486, 541, 551), though unlike Blair, it also discusses the 8,100 detained Palestinian men, women and children (27-29, 401-23).

The center of Blair’s rejection of the Goldstone report, however, lay in his dismissal of international law as such. He genuflected briefly toward it, but added that we’ll never get anywhere through “a debate over a report that is hotly supported on one side, hotly and deeply contested on the other.” In other words, international law is fine until Israel disagrees with it, at which point we should abandon it. How, then, will the conflict be resolved? Israel needs “security” and the Palestinians need an “independent state,” but first, there needs to be “an end to violence,” which, of course, never includes the root violence of occupation. And most of all, we must “understand the pain on either side, get them to understand that they are not alone in their pain.”

In short, Blair guides us gently away from the fussy, contentious, legalistic and impractical world of international law, which makes us throw our hands up in the air, Rashomon-style, and toward that warm and empathetic place where we feel each other’s pain. This empathetic pain seems to be quite distinct from and finer than the everyday pain experienced by mere Palestinians in Gaza, as they bleed and die in particular places. In the classic mode of conservative ideologists, Blair insists that, if we ever hope to change social institutions, we must first change the human heart.

For all its faults, the Goldstone report never descends to this sort of vacuous moral idiocy. It combines an analysis of massive violations of international law with a chronicle of the human pain those violations have caused: the suffering of people in Gaza crushed in their homes beneath debris (239), wounded and denied medical care (232-33, 377), shot down while waving white flags (199-203), seared by white phosphorus (533), and left to sicken and die in a state of permanent siege (9-10, 22-25, 95-100, 335-71). And the ongoing reality of war crimes arising from an illegal military occupation pervades the report.

But of course, this is Tony Blair, so there’s a cheery upside to things, too, thanks to the Palestinian Authority’s neoliberal development projects and its West Bank security gang: “And just to tell you some good news out of Israel and Palestine this week. … When I first became the Envoy … I couldn’t have gone to a city like Jenin or Nablus on the West Bank. Today, I go to Jenin or Nablus, where they opened a hotel in Nablus just the other day. I go to places like Qalqilyah, I go to Hebron, I go to Jericho, Ramallah obviously. In other words, I can go around the West Bank.”

Who could ask for anything more?

Jim Holstun teaches world literature and Marxism at SUNY Buffalo. He has previously published< "Nonie Darwish and the el-Bureij massacre" and (with Joanna Tinker) "Israel's fabricated rocket crisis" for The Electronic Intifada. He can be reached at jamesholstun A T hotmail D O T com.

Source : ElectronicIntifada

0 Responses to “Tony Blair and the business of covering up war crimes”



  1. Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s




Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 22 other followers

Donate This Blog


Sorry...our twiit on maintanance...

Chat With Me

  • Mobile :
    +62852 773 22056 (SMS Only)

    Palestine Blogs - The Gazette

  • Palestine Blogs - The Gazette
    Gaza Carnage Counter
    Image and video hosting by TinyPic

    Archives

    Visitors

    • 170,367 Guest

    DONATE GAZA

    MER-C PEDULI PALESTINA
    outils webmaster
    weblogs

    RSS Gaza Today

    • Why I oppose Palestine Statehood Bid September 30, 2011
      Palestine, (Pal Telegraph) - Not accidently, this is the third time we announce a Palestinian state. The first time to have a state announced was on September 1948. It was announced by the commons of Palestine government. The second time was in Algeria in 1987. And here we go, this September we announce it for the third time.Many Palestinians are cheering up […]
    • Gaza health conditions in crisis June 11, 2011
      The Israeli siege continues to disturb different facets of the living conditions for the entire population of 1.7 million living in the Gaza Strip. With news that Egypt opened the Rafah border permanently, pressure on Gazans increased. The crossing didn't open properly and Israel still control all commercial crossings. In addition, there are severe secu […]
    • Does Israel seek War or Peace? June 3, 2011
      Gaza, (Pal Telegraph) - Successive Israeli governments have failed to achieve peace with the Palestinians. The reasons were sometimes vague, while in other times they were crystal clear. It was after the killing of Yitzhak Rabin that a lack of vision became dominant in the Israeli political arena and Israeli erosion of that which he agreed upon in Oslo. Vari […]

    RSS Islam Online

    • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

    RSS Palestine Info

    • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

    RSS Palestine News Network

    • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

    RSS Electronic Intifada

    RSS The Independent – Middle East

    • Patrick Cockburn: Why war is marching on the road to Damascus June 2, 2012
      Damascus feels like a city expecting the worst to happen and seeing no way to avoid it. War is spreading across the country and is unlikely to spare the capital. Rebels speak of stepping up attacks in the city and could easily do so in the next few weeks.
    • Israel is new South Africa as boycott calls increase June 2, 2012
      Some of the world's biggest stars – from Madonna to the Red Hot Chili Peppers – are being accused of putting profit before principle in a growing backlash against artists performing in Israel.
    • Joumana Haddad: 'Arab women have been brainwashed' June 1, 2012
      It begins as a tender love letter to the sons who have given her the "greatest, most enriching adventure of all"– motherhood. But, writes Joumana Haddad, there is something she needs to tell her two boys as they become adults.

    RSS Yahoo News – Gaza

    • Mubarak verdict adds to tension before Egypt vote June 3, 2012
      CAIRO (Reuters) - Egyptian pro-democracy campaigners called for a new uprising on Sunday, saying justice was not served by the trial of Hosni Mubarak and others blamed for the killing of protesters during the street revolt that ended his three-decade rule. In the first judicial reckoning of a leader toppled in last year's Arab spring uprisings, Mubarak […]
    • Thousands protest at Turkey anti-abortion law plan June 3, 2012
      ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Thousands of people took to the streets of Istanbul on Sunday to protest against plans by Turkey's prime minister to bring in a new law on abortion, a practice he has called "murder". Women of all ages held aloft banners with slogans including "My body, my choice" and "I am a woman not a mother, don't t […]
    • Egypt prosecutor appeals uprising trial acquittals June 3, 2012
      CAIRO (Reuters) - Egypt's general prosecutor lodged an appeal on Sunday against the acquittal of six senior police officials charged with the killing of protesters during the uprising against Hosni Mubarak, an assistant to the prosecutor said. Former president Mubarak and former interior minister Habib al-Adli were sentenced to life in prison on Saturda […]

    RSS The Real News

    RSS Desert Peace

    • REMEMBERING THE MARTYRS OF JUNE,1964 June 3, 2012
      * MISSISSIPI WAS BURNING LONG BEFORE TEL AVIV WAS. * The Brothers’ Crusade GETTY IMAGES Shared History: Relatives of three civil rights workers slain in Mississippi watch the trial of the activists’ alleged killer. By Jane Eisner June 21, 1964, Father’s Day. Stephen Schwerner was in Provincetown, Mass., on vacation with his wife. Ben Chaney was [...]
    • NOT ILLEGAL TO SPY ON MUSLIMS IN NEW YORK June 2, 2012
      Activists in New York and New Jersey are continuing to contemplate further legal action against the NYPD for its surveillance program. * * Activists fume as NJ attorney general finds NYPD broke no laws in spying on Muslims by Alex Kane When the Associated Press revealed that the New York Police Department (NYPD) spied on Muslim residents of [...]
    • (PHOTO OF THE DAY) ~~ LOOKING FOR IMMODESTY AT ISRAELI BEACHES June 1, 2012
      The Israeli ‘Mod Squad’ in action * A self appointed band of ‘merry men’ have been making life miserable for the Israeli female…. * Shown below is their latest attempt to keep the beaches ‘kosher’… * Filed under: Adult Content, DesertPeace Exclusive, Humour, Israel, Photography, Sarcasm

    RSS Topix.Com/Gaza

    RSS Info Palestina


    Follow

    Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.