Issue 29: 2015 11 19: Paris

19 February 2015

Paris

Blocking the road from hell

By John Watson

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The thinking behind the outrage in Paris is hard to understand.  This was no assault on the bastions of the capitalist and military establishment.  It was an attack on innocent people enjoying a pleasant evening out.  “Thank God it’s Friday” many of them must have been thinking, little realising what this particular evening had in store for them.  What purpose did the perpetrators expect it all to serve?

One possibility is that they hoped to undermine public support for France’s role in the Middle East.  Perhaps they could demoralise people by making them afraid to carry on their normal activities.  Perhaps they could shut them in their homes and destroy the quality of their lives.  Those who bombed the Russian airliner flying out of Sharm el-Sheikh have caused massive economic hardship in Egypt.  Would terrorism in Paris ruin the economy there too?

The likely answer to that is “no”.  We had experience of terrorist attacks on the population in the days of the IRA campaign.  Bombs in London were fairly frequent and everyone gave a wide berth to a suspicious package.  The public were not cowed, however.  If anything it hardened their resolve and, with tougher security measures in place, people took pride in carrying on their lives as before.  I do not suppose that the French are so very different.

What about a deeper analysis then, that these outrages are intended to stoke the fires of racial intolerance, sparking a conflict between Christian and Muslim which the Muslims will, in some sense or other, win?  Well, that may be what was intended but the line from outrage to outcome is surely too long and tenuous to make it a sensible strategy.  It seems unlikely that the Isis cause will really be furthered by these attacks.

What is likely to happen is something rather different.  Mr Hollande has referred to the attacks as an “act of war” and that, in political terms, is their real significance.  Forget whether this is the work of an isolated cell or whether it was planned from Iraq or Syria.  Isis have claimed responsibility for an attack on France and that simplifies a lot of things for France and its allies.

The war in Iraq and Syria has led to a good deal of soul-searching in the West.  We clearly poked a hornet’s nest when we removed Saddam Hussein and another when we supported the Arab spring.  Leaving aside the dodgy dossier, much of the domestic support for those operations flowed from the nature of the regimes that were being ousted.  Should we have been there at all?  Didn’t we give up our role of trying to police the world when we withdrew from the Empire?  Haven’t our recent interventions in other countries affairs done more harm than good?  Shouldn’t we think twice before doing the same again?

The case against interfering in other countries’ internal affairs because we do not like their regime has been well made.  It also fits in neatly with the government’s strategy of opening trade links with countries with poor human rights records.  What businesses is it of ours?  Let’s keep our soldiers safe and take our profits.  That’s what trading nations do.

Now though it is different.  This is no longer a question of interfering in other countries’ affairs but one of eliminating an organisation which is at war with us and with our allies.  Politicians need no longer agonise as to whether they go beyond their remit in trying to improve the world.  That question has disappeared into the shadow of a greater duty, the duty of Her Majesty’s government to protect the British people and those who are allied to us.

In practical terms that means a number of things.  The draft Investigatory Powers Bill, which seems to have achieved a fair amount of cross party consensus in Westminster anyway, needs to be enacted, subject to whatever adjustments are made during the consultation process.  Mr Cameron needs to get Parliament to extend his remit to authorise attacks over Syria.  In the past those against such operations have pointed to the absence of UN authority.  There are moments when standing shoulder to shoulder with our allies must come before such niceties.  We should also be joining the Americans in sending special forces.

There are domestic measures too.  We need to redouble efforts to ensure that young Muslims are not excluded from society or ghettoised.  Housing policies should be designed to ensure that immigrants live among their indigenous neighbours.  I’m sure there are lots of other things which should be done as well.

There will of course be those who think this is all rather unnecessary.  If we take a back seat in the coalition, perhaps we shall be spared the worst effects of the conflict.  Why take a stance which can only make us targets?  Why stoke the hornets’ nest again?  Can’t we just continue with our peaceful English way of life and generally keep out of trouble?

That might be a possible course if we really believed that Muslim fundamentalism would confine itself to the Middle East, that we could just sacrifice our friends, walk away and continue as before – rather as we once did with the Sudetenland.  Actually, that doesn’t seem likely.  A movement like the Islamic state will only become more voracious if it is not opposed.  Perhaps the point is best expressed in a verse which the early twentieth century writer Saki attributes to his character, the Rev Wilfrid Gaspilton:

‘You are not on the Road to Hell,’
You tell me with fanatic glee:
Vain boaster, what shall that avail
If Hell is on the road to thee?”

There really isn’t much of a choice.

 

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