Photo from aljareeza.com
I don’t often agree with what Max Hasting the ex-Daily
Telegraph editor says, but I have to say he has played a blinder in the last week,
with his sober and negative assessment of the case for bombing Islamic State (IS)
in Syria on BBC TV Question Time last week. Last night I watched him give his
view of the vote in Parliament for approval of bombing on the BBC TV Newsnight
programme and he was spot once again.
Hastings called the decision ‘gesture politics’ and concluded
that MPs were ‘bonkers’ for going along with the Prime Minister, David
Cameron’s desire for Britain to join the multi-national air campaign in Syria.
This is an accusation normally levelled
against left wing politicians, not least the Labour Party leader, Jeremy
Corbyn. It usually involves attending anti-government demonstrations and
advocating things like a boycott of Israeli goods, as a protest against some
perceived misjustice. Hastings added that is also a dangerous policy.
What Hastings meant by using this term gesture, was that, important
though it may be to stand in solidarity with our French allies, it is not a
rational justification for dropping bombs on a country when there is no
credible plan for destroying IS or for it making the British people safer, at
home or abroad.
This is the rub really, the Labour MP Margaret Beckett, an
ex-Foreign Secretary, who voted in favour of the airstrikes made the point in
the debate in Parliament. She said ‘our French allies has explicitly asked us
for such support, and I invite the House to consider how we would feel, and
what we would say if what took place in Paris had happened in London – if we
had explicitly asked France for support and France had refused.’
Hiliary Benn, shadow Foreign Secretary, who won plaudits in Parliament and the media
for his rounding off speech, probably because Cameron was so poor at arguing
his case, made similar points. He referred to the Labour Party’s tradition of
internationalism and the United Nations resolution which he said authorised the
bombing, although that is contested by many international law experts. He also
referred to France’s government as ‘socialist’, which is only true if you accept
the very broadest definition of the term.
We heard a lot of MPs listing the atrocities committed by
IS, but this is uncontested, everyone would like to see IS stopped from
murdering more people, but how will a handful of British warplanes dropping a
few bombs make the slightest difference?
Emotional arguments like this were put forward by others
too, including the Prime Minister, but on the substantive issue of what will
this air campaign achieve, there was little or nothing, and what there was, was
wishful thinking, not a clear headed assessment of the military and diplomatic
situation in Syria and the region.
In the end the government got a 174 vote majority in
Parliament, with 66 Labour MPs supporting the airstrikes, and others
abstaining. 153 Labour MPs voted against along-side 53 SNP (and their 2
suspended MPs), 3 SDLP, 2 Lib Dems, 7 Tories, 2 PC MPs and Caroline Lucas the
Green Party MP. A total of 223 against and 397 for.
And so, we have got ourselves into another foreign military
adventure, probably for the foreseeable future, with all the loss of civilian
life in Syria it will entail, and perhaps elsewhere too. I admit it made me despair watching the
debate last night, after all we have gone through since the 2001 attack by
hijacked aeroplanes on New York and Washington DC. No lessons have been learned despite
all the evidence that this will likely inflame the situation even more.
We elect MPs to take difficult decisions on our behalf, but
we should be able to expect that these representatives take an intelligent,
informed and rational view. Instead many MPs last night based their decision on
emotion and a knee jerk reaction to the mass killing in Paris last month. The
MPs who voted for this air campaign have let us down.
Is it any wonder that over a third of those registered to
vote in general elections do not use their vote, let alone all those who don’t
even bother to register?
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