TIME
FOR TALKING IS OVER
www.monbiot.com
©2003 George Monbiot.
The rest of Europe must be wondering whether Britain has gone
into hibernation. At the end of this month our Prime Minister
is likely to announce the decision he made months ago, that
Britain will follow the US into Iraq. If so, then two or three
weeks later, the war will begin. Unless the UN inspectors
find something before January 27, this will be a war without
even the flimsiest of pretexts: an unprovoked attack whose
purpose is to enhance the wealth and power of an American
kleptocracy. Far from promoting peace, it could be the first
in a series of imperial wars. The gravest global crisis since
the end of the Cold War is three weeks away, and most of us
seem to be asking why someone else doesn't do something about
it.
It is not often that the people of these islands have an opportunity
to change the course of world events. Bush knows that the
Americans' approval of his war depends, in part, upon its
credibility overseas: opinion polls have shown that many of
those who would support an international attack would withdraw
that support if they perceived that the US was acting alone.
An international attack, in this case, means an attack supported
by Britain. If Blair pulled out, Bush could be forced to think
again. Blair will pull out only if he perceives that the political
cost of sticking with Bush is greater than the cost of deserting
him. Bush's war, in other words, depends upon our indifference.
As Gramsci remarked, "what comes to pass does so not
so much because a few people want it to happen, as because
the mass of citizens abdicate their responsibility and let
things be".
There are several reasons why most British people do not seem
prepared to act. New military technology has removed the need
for a draft, so the otherwise unengaged young men who might
have become the core of the resistance movement are left to
blast imaginary enemies on their Gameboys. The economy is
still growing, so underlying resentment towards the government
is muted; yet we perceive our jobs and prospects to be insecure,
so we are reluctant to expose ourselves to trouble.
It also seems that many people who might have contested this
war simply can't believe it's happening. If, paradoxically,
we were facing a real threat from a real enemy, the debate
would have seemed more urgent. But if Blair had told us that
we had to go to war to stop Saruman of Isengard from sending
his orcs against the good people of Rohan, it would scarcely
seem less plausible than the threat of Saddam of Iraq dropping
bombs on America.
These factors may explain our feebleness. They don't excuse
it. It is true that our chances of stopping this war are slight:
both men appear determined to proceed, with or without evidence
or cause. But to imagine that protest is useless if it doesn't
lead to an immediate cessation is to misunderstand its purpose
and power. Even if we cannot stop the attack upon Iraq, we
must ensure that it becomes so politically costly that there
will never be another like it. And this means that the usual
demos will no longer suffice.
There have, so far, been many well-organised and determined
protests, and several more are planned over the next six weeks.
On January 18, demonstrators will seek to blockade the armed
forces' joint headquarters at Northwood, in North London.
Three days later, there'll be a mass lobby of parliament;
at 6pm on the day the war is announced, protesters will gather
in almost every town centre in Britain. On February 15, there'll
be a massive rally in London. These actions are critically
important, as they'll demonstrate the level of public opposition.
But they're unlikely, by themselves, to provoke one of Blair's
famous sweats. We must raise the temperature.
The Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament has already tried one
bold and unprecedented measure: seeking to persuade the courts
to rule that attacking Iraq without a new UN resolution would
be illegal. But on December 17th, the judges decided that
they do not have the power to interpret the existing resolution.
It seems that we now have few options but to launch a massive,
though non-violent, campaign of disruption.
CND and the Stop the War Coalition have suggested an hour's
stoppage on the day after the war begins. Many activists are
now talking about building on this, and seeking to provoke
wider strike action, or even a general strike.
This is, of course, difficult and dangerous. Some general
strikes have been effective, forcing the tsar to agree to
a constitution and a legislative assembly in 1905, for example,
reversing the Kapp Putsch in Berlin in 1920, and overthrowing
the Khuri regime in Lebanon in 1952. Others have been counter-productive,
in some cases disastrous. When the French general strike was
broken in 1920, the labour movement all but collapsed. Mussolini
used the announcement of a general strike in 1922 to represent
himself as the only man capable of restoring order; he seized
power, with the king's blessing, after the fascists had routed
the strikers and burnt down the Socialist Party headquarters.
If we call for a strike and almost everyone goes to work,
Blair will see this as a sign that he can do as he pleases.
But this is the scale on which we should be thinking. If we
cannot mobilise the workforce, there are still plenty of means
of concentrating politicians' minds. We could, for example,
consider blocking the roads down which Blair and his key ministers
must travel to meet their appointments, disrupting the speeches
they make and blockading the most important public buildings.
Hundreds of us are likely to be arrested, but that, as the
Vietnam protesters found, serves only to generate public interest.
Non-violence, however, is critical: nothing did more harm
to the anti-war movement in the late 1960s than the Days of
Rage organised in Chicago by the Weathermen.
But peaceful, well-focused and widespread nuisance, even if
it irritates other members of the public, forces the issue
to the front of people's minds, and ensures that no one can
contemplate the war without also contemplating the opposition
to the war. We must oblige people to recognise that something
unprecedented in recent times is taking place, that Bush,
assisted by Blair's moral slipstreaming, is seeking to summon
a war from a largely peaceful world. We will fail unless we
stage a political drama commensurate with the scale of the
threat.
All this will, of course, be costly. But there comes a point
at which political commitment is meaningless unless you are
prepared to act on it. According to the latest opinion poll,
some 42% of British people - against the 38% who support it
- want to stop this war. But if our action is confined to
shaking our heads at the television set, Blair might as well
have a universal mandate. Are you out there? Or are you waiting
for someone else to act on your behalf?
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