Your Mail

ÚÑÈí

 

Counseling:

Ask the Scholar

|

Ask About Islam

|

Hajj & `Umrah

|

Cyber Counselor

|

Parenting Counselor

 


Challenging Blair on Home Territory
How the British Public Viewed the War

By Isabelle Humphries
British freelance journalist

20/04/2003

Despite my being a conspiracy theorist and having demonstrated against US hegemony since its war on Vietnam, I never would have foreseen this horror. Today after seeing front page news photo of Razzaq Kazam al-Khafag who lost 15 family members… I took a pile of leaflets and posters and went to my local tube station and just stood there shouting “Stop the war”… I have to do something everyday or feel I am going mad.

                - Frankie Green, London activist

You may have been wondering what British people were thinking when they saw the news from “our boys on the frontline.” For sure there were many people who supported the war, but the participation of British forces in the assault on Iraq produced opposition and questions back home never previously seen in times of war. Isabelle Humphries reports from the UK on the unprecedented reaction towards Tony Blair’s involvement in the attack on Iraq.

Tony Blair – No Longer the Suave Smiling Sophisticate

“What is Tony Blair doing? What is any professed ‘Christian’ doing?” asks Lia Young, a mother in her 40s. “I can imagine how the current American administration arrived at a decision to throw caution to the winds and indulge their predilection for displays of untrammeled force – they are neither subtle nor sophisticated. How did they co-opt Tony Blair? He looks, and sounds, intelligent, and sincere.” Lia voices the shock of many of the British electorate, who had assumed that in Tony Blair, they had a leader with a head for wise judgment. “It is inconceivable to me that he can possibly believe that what he is supporting the Americans in doing can in any way improve the lot of the Iraqi people or anyone else.”


“He has betrayed the Labour movement and the British people.”


“I was already disillusioned with Blair and Labour, now I don’t even have words to express my disgust,” said David Newton, an MA student from the northern city of Bradford. “Blair seems to have forgotten what democracy means. Even worse, he continues to lie to us… He has betrayed the Labour movement and the British people.” Steve Dawe, chair of the Ashford Peace Group in Kent, expressed the views of many on the left; “a conservative Labourism is ideologically indistinguishable from the Conservatives.”

Tony Blair was elected on a wave of dissatisfaction with the failings of the Conservative governments of Margaret Thatcher and John Major. New Labour promised to bring a new more “caring” domestic and foreign policy, and many invested their hopes in Blair. Chris Wright, a university administrator in his 50s from Cambridge, voted Labour for the first time in his life in “high hopes for real change and ethical government.” Yet his hopes “had already faded before all this began” and he will not be voting Labour again, until there is “a total change of leader and policy on this and other issues.”

While anti-war protestors are concerned at our future relations with the Arab and Muslim world, many on all sides are concerned about the implications of Blair’s policy for the British relationship with Europe. Hellen Flewker, 22, a British woman teaching English in Berlin, told of a real antagonism towards her from those Germans who know that she is British. For a younger British generation becoming increasingly integrated with Europe and working across the EU, Blair’s stance is bound to be a step backwards. The anti-French sentiments expressed across British media and political spheres in the light of Chirac’s veto, hark back to old divides between Britain and its close neighbor.

Media: Get Behind “Our Boys”?


With more sons on the front, it was more reason to campaign against the war.


“I really hate the way the war becomes a kind of soap opera entertainment” my mother wrote to me. Zoe, 49, has been an active campaigner for human rights in Palestine and now Iraq, since she visited Palestine some two years ago. She, like others, was disgusted by the dominant media images demanding loyalty from the British public, particularly now that “our boys” are out there. “Now that British soldiers are actually fighting doesn’t mean I suddenly have to support the war, but even more reason to campaign to stop it” she said. “Even if people survive war, they become psychologically scarred, so that is yet another reason to wish that all soldiers involved stop the killing and return home.”

The tabloid Daily Express was marketing its coverage under the title “Crusading for a safer world,” and like other newspapers and news channels, fills its pages with their own brand of “coverage” of the war. David Newton describes his disgust at the hypocrisy and double standards of the British media. He cites the example or reports that Iraqi soldiers are pretending to be civilians “without considering… what we would do if our country were invaded.” What about Afghanistan he asks, where US soldiers posed as “aid” workers whilst seeking to gather intelligence?

Raised Awareness of the Link With Palestine

British march against the occupation of Iraq

Lia Young, like the average British citizen, came from “an initial standpoint of strong sympathy with the Israeli people,” yet recent events have questioned such assumptions. “I have been following the situation in Palestine for some time now, and am appalled. I strongly suspect collusion between the American/international loci of power [media, military, industrial, financial] and the Israeli government… Collusion in genocide, if only by default.” Like others, she does not see the issue of Iraq or Palestine in isolation, but part of a wider policy; “I suspect the same kind of agenda behind the invasion of Iraq” and added her alarm by reports of Americans taking lessons from Israelis in “fighting terrorism.”

Famous journalists such as Robert Fisk continue to defy media limits on reporting to bring out the truth behind government propaganda (only last week coming head to head with the British Defense Secretary Geoff Hoon), but the growing communication medium of the Internet have given the public a greater access to other alternative accounts of the war. And for the first time, a British tabloid is openly against government patriotism in its condemnation of the war. Britain’s Daily Mirror has promoted the work of investigative journalist Peter Arnett in its very public appeal against the war. It immediately hired the US TV journalist fired for speaking on “enemy” TV. Links with Israeli and American policy in other parts of the region are clearly presented for people to read and discuss. The growth of alternative voices must be seen as an encouraging sign amidst the multitude of “you are either with us or against us” style propaganda.


“I suspect the same kind of agenda behind the invasion of Iraq.”


Palestinian Jamal Saeed has just begun a new life in London with his British wife Georgie. The couple met while Georgie was working in the Bethlehem area, as Jamal’s family home is in Dheisheh refugee camp. While Jamal faces the adjustment of living away from Palestine, he has the added difficulty of moving as an Arab to the British capital in the time of war against an Arab nation. He told IslamOnline of his surprise at the number of British people opposing the war; but also that Arab groups (specifically Arab not just Muslim) in the UK were not uniting to campaign against the war. “It is good to see such a big group of people opposing it… but there is no clear direction against the war which could bring change. I am really shocked by the Arabs though. I am shocked that I don’t hear more from them. All of those who do protest that I have met have been students. It hurts not to see Arab groups protesting, not trying to put pressure through the political level to make change.”

Peter Arnett was fired for speaking on “enemy” TV

Campaigning against the war has had a side effect of working towards overcoming inequalities and racial and religious tensions within the British community. David Newton reports that in Bradford, a city with a large Asian population, campaigning has brought significant parts of the white and Asian communities to work together as they had not done previously. Another example; St. Chad’s College in Durham, organized a solidarity visit to a mosque in neighboring Newcastle. For many of the 25 students it was their first visit to a mosque. The aim of the visit was to promote understanding and to try to make a stand against racism directed against British Muslims in the current situation.

This feature has focused on some of the varied perspectives questioning the war, but of course there was also much support for Blair and the war amongst some sectors of the British public. “My views are not necessarily shared by many of my co-workers or friends,” Jon Wright (26), working for local government in Cambridge, told IslamOnline, “Although some of them may have concerns about the conflict and, under duress, claim to not support the war, many are fairly indifferent and almost by default will support our boys.”

British protest and skepticism must, of course, be seen in the context of wider support for the war, but dissent was clearly greater than in any previous British military assault. People were questioning government policy from all angles. The Firefighters Union was demanding an end to the war, asking why Britain had the money to set someone else’s country on fire, when it refused to increase the low pay of those who risk their lives firefighting back home. Children were going on strike, both from government and private fee-paying schools, to demonstrate on the streets and outside parliament. Church leaders, traditionally expected to support government policy, were outspoken against the aggression. Even people who would not in principle be opposed to war against Iraq were not convinced of the need or motivation of British involvement. What will happen in Iraq or to Blair at the next election, nobody can predict for sure. What is certain is that the war on Iraq engaged the British electorate in questioning government policy like never before.

Isabelle Humphries is a British freelance journalist and Development Director at Sawt Al Amel (Laborer’s Voice), an organization supporting Palestinian workers inside Israel. She has an MA in Middle East Politics and is also a freelance writer for the Cairo Times. You can reach her at innazareth@yahoo.co.uk

The articles posted on this page reflect solely the opinions of the authors.

Views Archive

Advanced Search

Views & Analyses

 

Send Mail

Related Links

News | Shari`ah | Health & Science | Politics in Depth | Reading Islam | Family | Culture | Youth | Euro-Muslims

About Us | Speech of Sheikh Qaradawi | Contact Us | Advertise | Support IOL | Site Map