Sunday, 27 March 2011


26 March 2011 9:51 PM

Another wrong war . . . and another PM who treats Parliament like a neutered chihuahua

This is Peter Hitchens's Mail on Sunday column

David Cameron's war of personal vanity still rages on, its aim and its end unknown. Our ludicrous Libyan allies – who may in fact be our enemies – fight each other as we protect their so-called army from Colonel Gaddafi. If we don’t send weapons and troops to help them, they have no hope of winning.

Will we? Or will we, in desperation, wink at an assassination of the Colonel, an action that will take us close to his moral level?

David Cameron

Or will we, by then, be too busy bombing our way to the Big Society in Bahrain, Yemen, Syria, Iran, Zimbabwe, China and anywhere else where government doesn’t reach our leader’s alleged high ethical standards? Nobody knows.

Ministers, apparently with no idea of the forces they have unleashed, drawl that it’s as long as a piece of string.

Ho ho. Or maybe it’s as long as the rope needed to hang themselves. Yet the House of Commons endorses this leap in the dark with a vote so overwhelming that you wonder if they put something in the water, or whatever it is they drink. What are all these costly people for?

Last year we worried about their expenses. This year we should be worried about their salaries. We hired them to question and watch the Government, not to do what the Prime Minister tells them. Aren’t we still recovering from the gullibility of MPs (and the media) over Saddam Hussein? Do we learn nothing from experience? Are too many of us, and them, just too thick to be in charge of a small nuclear power? It seems so.

MPs should be reminded they are not the employees of Downing Street, but of us.

I am quite sure that a huge number of British people do not want this war, and for good reasons. It is not in our national interests. We can’t even protect old ladies from rapists in our own country, and perhaps we should sort that out before reforming Africa.

They correctly think it is not our affair. After being told that we can’t even afford public libraries, they have to watch Liam Fox burning great mounds of banknotes (provided by us) as he rains costly munitions on Tripoli.

They are baffled to see the remains of our naval power towed surreptitiously to a Turkish scrapyard, because we allegedly cannot afford it. And meanwhile, an obscure public relations man who has never fought in a war poses as the saviour of Benghazi.

Where was the British people’s voice in the Commons on Monday? I don’t care much what the UN, that rabble of torturers and tyrants, thinks. I would cheerfully see it abolished. I have no idea why we still need Nato 20 years after the threat it was formed to face vanished for ever. The fact that it has endorsed Mr Cameron’s adventure doesn’t comfort me.

What really troubles me is that Parliament wasn’t asked its opinion until after the missiles were launched. It was treated, contemptuously, like a neutered chihuahua, a pitiful yapping thing to be pushed about by the Premier’s polished toecap, and patted as long as it fawned. And if it doesn’t now revolt against this treatment, then that is what it will have proved itself to be.

I believe that the Government knew by Friday, March 18 that it was more or less certain it would begin military action on the evening of Saturday, March 19. There was time to call a special session of the Commons. And there was a precedent – the Falklands.

The first motion before the House on Monday should have been a censure of the Government for launching a war of choice without seeking Parliamentary approval.

Yet, while the whole engine of British diplomacy was devoted to getting Mr Cameron’s war past the UN, Nato and (of course) our ultimate rulers in the EU, Westminster was forgotten. And so were we.

This is wrong. Those involved should not get away with it. Later on, I shall say I told you so. Just now, I’m telling you so.

The BBC won’t rest until we’re all talking filth

In the superb recent remake of True Grit, I don’t think there was a single four-letter word.

Yet it was a perfectly credible portrayal of the lives of fierce and often violent men in a cruel, half-civilised time.

Wuthering Heights

In fact, half the pleasure of the film was the almost biblical English, spoken naturally by everyone – slower, clearer and a hundred times more powerful than the slurred, jerky newspeak of our day.

But don’t expect the BBC, that propaganda organisation for avant-garde muck, to learn any lessons from that.

Fresh from ruining Winifred Holtby’s thoughtful classic South Riding on TV, the Corporation now plans to insert four-letter words into a dramatisation of Wuthering Heights on Radio 3.

Partly this is attention-seeking, and I know they are hoping for condemnation from people such as me. But that is because they are immoral and cheap.

Many people still loathe swearing and are made unhappy by it. For instance,
a grandparent trying to listen to this classic with a grandchild could not do so without great embarrassment.

The BBC knows this, thanks to the many complaints it gets about on-air swearing. It still does it because it is biased against the older Britain where swearing was done only under strict rules.

Its executives and journalists use four-letter words in front of their own children, and think it fine to use them in front of yours, too. They think you’re backward and repressed for not doing it yourself.

The same impulse lay behind the needless four-letter scene in that overrated film The King’s Speech. Fashionable liberals despise restraint and take special delight in debauching innocent and kindly things.

It is quite important that this dramatisation fails and is seen to fail, and that it receives a large number of complaints when it is aired. If they can get away with Wuthering ****ing Heights, it won’t be long before we have David ****ing Copperfield, Vanity ****ing Fair, Romeo And ****ing Juliet, Paradise ****ing Lost, Gray’s ****ing Elegy written in a ****ing Country Churchyard, Tennyson’s In ****ing Memoriam, Brave New ****ing World and, before you know where you are, Alice In ****ing Wonderland, Lord Of The ****ing Rings and (of course) Harry Potter And The ****ing Goblet Of Fire.

For goodness sake, we already have Martin Amis if you want this sort of stuff.

*************
Once again the banks are urged to put fivers in their cash machines. Once again they won’t, because it means extra work refilling them. Yet most people want fivers. If market forces are really so powerful, why can’t we get them?

Unrepentant

I have mentioned an argument that has been going on in another part of the forest, and various people here have wanted to know more about it. Well, we've held our own discussion here on second hand smoking, which was my reason for intervening on a hostile and critical site. I defended my doubts here and there. Others are able to judge if I did so successfully. I don't link to such sites for legal reasons. But they are not hard to find.

But an important secondary discussion arose out of my statement some months ago that our political class were incapable of acting effectively against illegal drugs, one of the major causes of crime in our society. I said "So many of our leaders now are unrepentant illegal drug-takers themselves that they shouldn’t be trusted near the making of laws."

This was misrepresented as 'most of our elected leaders are "unrepentant illegal drug-takers" ', wholly changing its meaning and import, and derided on the basis that , had I said what I was misquoted as saying, I would have said something stupid. Which I would have, had I said it. But I hadn't.

ELib_4954228

Now, since the site's host has rightly and honourably apologised for this severe and illegitimate distortion, my prejudiced critics ( who would in general oppose anything I favoured, and favour anything I opposed) have begun to say that the undoctored statement is itself absurd. Is it, though?

Let me waft readers back, past days, weeks, months and years gone by - to the sleepy seaside town of Bournemouth in October 2000. William Hague is leader of the Tory Party, slowly climbing out of the ditch after the car-crash of 1997. Ann Widdecombe, one of the party's few recognisable national figures, then Shadow Home Secretary, has just made a fierce speech calling for the laws against drugs (especially cannabis) to be properly enforced, which you might have thought was a Conservative policy.

Now read on, the account of what happened written by my former colleague Jonathan Oliver, then political reporter for the Mail on Sunday:

'It was the small hours of Thursday morning and the bar of the Swallow Highcliff hotel was heaving. MPs and activists queued six deep to buy beer at £2.80 a pint and wine at £4 a glass to toast the final night of the Tory conference.

Some noisily voiced their views on the leader's upcoming speech which would bring the Bournemouth conference to a close while others sealed plans to travel home together later. But for one or two the week's business was far from over.

A senior party aide had a message to impart.

Placing his glass of champagne on the bar, he leaned forward and quietly explained how half the Shadow Cabinet were furious at the controversial plan by Shadow Home Secretary Ann Widdecombe to target cannabis smokers.

'Ask some of them whether they smoked dope when they were younger. I promise you will receive some fascinating responses,' he murmured before disappearing into the crowd.

Later that morning, The Mail on Sunday, acting on his suggestion, set about contacting William Hague's frontbench team.

The result was astonishing. Over the next 36 hours there followed the most extraordinary series of revelations, which could tear the Tory Party apart and have major implications for Britain's drugs policies.

Shadow Foreign Secretary Francis Maude is the bluest of the present Tory bloodline. A merchant banker, he is the son of former Minister Angus Maude, one of Margaret Thatcher's closest confidantes. The use of drugs, even marijuana, would be intolerable in such a dynasty, and such matters would have been a taboo subject for public discussion. Until now.

Yet Maude, 47, although initially uneasy with the question, told The Mail on Sunday that he had taken the drug: 'I suspect like many people of my generation, it was quite hard to go through Cambridge University in the Seventies without doing it a few times. It was an extremely long time ago.' The MP for Horsham said he stopped smoking cannabis before he entered Tory politics as a Westminster City councillor at the age of 25.

Maude studied history at Corpus Christi College between 1972 and 1976 and said his days there were 'a lot of fun'. His Cambridge contemporaries included fellow Shadow Cabinet members Michael Portillo and Archie Norman.

Maude served as a Treasury Minister in the last Tory government and would be a front-runner for the leadership if Hague quit.

His admission was hardly one of wild drug abuse. Yet within the hierarchy of the Tory Party, even today, it is something of a bombshell. Such a statement could be a disaster in a party whose membership is predominantly over 60 and who find drug use anathema.

It is not the first time Maude's personal circumstances have had a profound effect on his politics. Two years ago his gay brother Charles died of AIDS, prompting the father of five to call for more tolerance for homosexuals.

Shadow Transport Minister Bernard Jenkin was the next to come clean. Jenkin, 41, is another member of a long-established political clan: his father Patrick, now Lord Jenkin, was Environment Secretary under Margaret Thatcher.

'I really only used cannabis a couple of times,' said Jenkin. 'I would not want to give the impression I was doing it all the time. It was in my early 20s. It was miles before politics. I was working at the Ford Motor Company in Essex at their Brentwood head office.

'If the enforcement policy had been more rigorous maybe the temptation would not have come my way. I have children and I don't want them to try it.' Coincidentally, Mr Jenkin also went to Corpus Christi, Cambridge, but he insists he never took drugs while he was a student.

Within hours other members of the Shadow Cabinet were opening up about their drug experiences. They denied colluding, but as they talked more freely to The Mail on Sunday it became obvious that this was more than just a chance to get a bit of youthful excess out in the open.

Personal reputations and political career prospects were being laid on the line as well as possible opprobrium from the party faithful, friends and even family.

But such was the feeling of deep antagonism against 53-year-old Widdecombe and the way she had proselytised on the need to clamp down on those who use cannabis that these senior party members were willing to admit that they had broken the law - albeit some three decades ago.

The rebels, while giving their individual stories of cannabis use, were singing from the same song sheet. All are Right-wing monetarists to a man with no-nonsense views on the need for low taxation and prudent spending, but libertarians on issues effecting individual conduct.

Widdecombe's plan to fine cannabis users infuriated the group who saw it as dangerously undermining the party's attempts to move towards a softer stance on social issues needed to win back support among younger voters.

Their decision to speak out now is a way of mocking a woman they consider out of touch. More seriously it is a challenge by a third of the Shadow Cabinet to Mr Hague, forcing him to choose between them or Widdecombe who they now want removed from the law and order job.

The third Shadow Cabinet member to speak out on the issue was Archie Norman, 44, the Tory spokesman on the environment, transport and the regions.

He went to Charterhouse and said he took cannabis while a student at Cambridge, Harvard and the University of Minnesota in the United States.

Norman, who made his name as chief of the Asda supermarket chain, said: 'I don't regret having done it. It didn't do much for me. I turned to drink instead.

I was just a normal student like anyone else. It was fairly commonplace.' 'It doesn't worry me at all what people think. I think you expect human beings to explore and experiment. If you don't you haven't been young.' Peter Ainsworth, 43, the Shadow Culture Secretary, described how he tried cannabis and the chemical 'upper' amyl nitrate at Oxford University parties in the Seventies.

'There were lots of parties,' recalled Mr Ainsworth. 'I wasn't majorly involved in a set that was taking drugs heavily. But from time to time, actually very infrequently, these things would come round at a party. I didn't want to live my life without discovering what it was like.' He went on: 'It did nothing for me at all. It made me feel slightly sick. Someone once stuffed a handkerchief drenched in amyl nitrate in my face. I thought I was going to die.' But he said he had no regrets. 'The fact is that young people are going to experiment. But it is potentially dangerous. A great friend of mine died from drugs some years later.

It was one of those awful accidents.

I would advise everybody to steer well clear.' Social Security spokesman David Willetts, 44, nicknamed 'Two Brains' by his colleagues for his fearsome intellect, admitted trying marijuana. 'I was once offered cannabis at university,' he said. 'I had two puffs. I didn't like it and I have never had any experience of drugs since then.' Lord Strathclyde, 40, party leader in the Upper House, who is also a member of the shadow team, admitted to experimenting with cannabis. 'I tried it when I was at the University of East Anglia 20 years ago,' he said. 'I haven't done it for two decades.' Rising star Old Etonian Oliver Letwin, 44, a former Thatcher aide promoted to the Shadow Cabinet two weeks ago, said he had smoked pot - but only by accident.

'At Cambridge I was a very pretentious student,' he said. 'I grew a beard and took up a pipe. On one occasion some friends put some dope in a pipe I was smoking.

It had absolutely no effect on me at all. I don't inhale pipes or cigars. When I discovered I was extremely angry.' Of the 14 other Shadow Cabinet members, nine denied they had tried drugs, two were unavailable and three - Shadow Chancellor Michael Portillo, Shadow Agriculture Secretary Tim Yeo and Ulster spokesman Andrew Mackay - refused to answer.

'I think I have given enough information about my younger days. Don't you?' Portillo said.

Yeo said: 'It's very kind of you to ask, but I don't participate in Shadow Cabinet surveys because they rarely reflect well on those that participate.' Mackay said: 'I don't answer surveys.' The openness displayed by such senior political figures on their drug-taking pasts will shock some Tories. Traditionally they have boasted of being the party of law and order but these 'confessions' indicate the way social issues dominate today.

Hague seems to have brought most of the party together in opposing the euro for the immediate future. Now it is issues of behaviour and morality that are threatening to tear the it apart.

The Tory leader recently admitted to heavy drinking as a teenager but has denied taking drugs, while Portillo has talked about his homosexual experiences as a young man.

But the Shadow Cabinet's collective confession about their drugs past is far more political than either of these. The response to The Mail on Sunday's blunt questioning on cannabis goes against the norm. Ministers have been asked about personal drug use ever since President Clinton responded that he had 'smoked but did not inhale'. Labour's response is to decline to answer surveys with only Mo Mowlam, the outgoing Cabinet Minister, ever admitting taking cannabis.

The concerted anger at Widdecombe - an Oxford graduate - is also due to the view that she nearly wrecked the Tories' most successful conference for years while the Shadow Cabinet is miffed at not being consulted over the cannabis policy.

'If we were told about it, we could have pointed out the flaws straight away,' said one. 'It would never have seen the light of day.

We all know that the big problem is the hardcore addicts not the millions who have the occasional joint.' But behind the row lies a bungled attempt by Widdecombe to dominate the conference and undermine Portillo, her arch rival.

On Tuesday afternoon the Shadow Chancellor gave a barnstorming performance leaving Widdecombe furious. Portillo was set to dominate the headlines and eclipse her own speech the following day.

Drastic action was required.

Minutes after the Shadow Chancellor sat down, Widdecombe waddled into the cramped Press area and began briefing the drugs policy to selected journalists - to the consternation of Central Office spin doctors who had not been consulted.

But the next morning her strategy unravelled with alarming speed. The police immediately condemned her plan for fixed penalty fines for cannabis users.

Peter Williams, secretary of the Police Superintendents' Association, said: 'Our priority is not to punish people for possession but to divert them from drugs.' That afternoon Widdecombe returned to the Press room where, standing alone and surrounded by around 40 journalists, she struggled to defend her crumbling position to the delight of a small group of Portillistas.

As the sun set behind Bournemouth pier, Hague's plan to show the Tories as a united party fit for government was in tatters.

He now faces the biggest test of his leadership. He can hardly sack the seven members of his frontbench team who admitted taking drugs, immediately after the Tories promised to impose tougher penalties on drug users.

On the other hand how can he possibly order a U-turn? It would amount to personal humiliation for him and almost certainly provoke the resignation of Widdecombe.

This may well be what the seven drugs rebels want.'

That's the end of Jonathan's interesting, thorough, enterprising ( and widely followed) report. But it's not the end of the matter. Note not just what was said here, but also the manner in which it was said, the official encouragement of the reporter (such things are seldom revealed, though not unknown) and the remarkable willingness of MPs to discuss tricky questions.

Now, this is the most comprehensive survey of the kind ever done. But I think many of us can recall similar confessions, seldom particularly repentant, from many other politicians of (I think) all major parties in the years since. Though the MoS survey actually made the Labour Party (where I guess drug use among MPs is certainly no less than among the Tories) rather nervous of talking about the subject.

I'll see how many I can locate over the next few weeks. Not all of those quoted in this survey are wholly unrepentant. But some certainly are. The Prime Minister notably refuses to discuss his own past drug use (though as a member of the Commons Home Affairs Committee in 2002-3 he voted - though another Tory MP on the committee did not - for a highly radical report which bought all the arguments of the drugs liberalisers and called for the relaxation of the drug laws).

I certainly think it quite wrong to suggest that my use of the words 'so many' in this case was unfounded or absurd. I am, in fact, unrepentant.

Red Meat, Long-Distance Compassion, and Mr 'Mugaffi'

I'll try to pick up one or two issues in the various discussions we are having here. On the Libyan question, I will briefly point out that my Mail on Sunday column on 20th March seems to me to have been some way closer to the mood of the people of this country than the wretched House of Commons, in which adversarial opposition has ceased and dissent is confined to the marginalised.

This House is now Mr Cameron's Poodle. I thought that,after Gordon Brown's post-Iraq declaration, this country would not again enter a war of choice without Parliamentary approval. Obviously if we were under attack, this would not be possible. But we weren't and aren't, and the circumstances under which we began our violence were foreseeable and had been foreseeable for days.

Cameron

By the way, can those who write here and say that Gaddafi is a national enemy because of Lockerbie please state what they believe to be the evidence that Gaddafi is connected with this episode, and where it is on record? I have seen none. Those who rightly point out that Gaddafi armed the IRA need to deal with the fact that this country surrendered to the IRA in 1998 and the lawfully constituted authorities now regard it as a partner in government. (So, in my experience, do most people in this country, who regard my condemnation of the 1998 Belfast Agreement as a weird eccentricity) So there's no current casus belli on that score either. If these people are so keen to make war on evil killers, torturers etc then why are they happy that we are at peace with the Provisional IRA, who actually launched a campaign of murder on our soil and tried to assassinate the British Cabinet in their beds in Brighton, along with anyone else from chambermaids to kitchen staff who happened to be in the way at the time?

Yet Mr Cameron used Royal prerogative (which should really be renamed Downing Street prerogative since the Monarch no longer has anything significant to do with it) to unleash colossal violence against a sovereign foreign country on Saturday night.

If the matter was so urgent, then the Commons could have been summoned on Saturday morning, as they were during the Falklands crisis.

The first item on the business of the Commons on Monday should have been a censure of the executive for launching a war without Parliamentary authority. But it wasn't. Instead the chamber was almost unanimously in favour of the action, with a tiny number of MPs either speaking or voting against it - far fewer, by my reckoning, than would have been justified by the feeling in the country as it has so far been measured. And remember, the doubt among the populace existed despite an almost wholly favourable media, especially TV, which has in my view thrown objectivity to the winds during the alleged 'Arab Spring'.

Edward Miliband failed the first major test of his leadership of the Labour Party. Having become leader by being prepared to condemn the Iraq War, he made himself David Cameron's lifelong slave by failing to oppose the Libya adventure. Why do I say this? Because his acquiescence was evidence that he is afraid of the Prime Minister, and no Leader of the Opposition can do his job if this is so. Once he has acted out of fear once, Mr Cameron knows he has him where he wants him, for good. He and his party were afraid of being jeered at for their attempts to normalise relations with Colonel Gaddafi in 2004. I am sure the Tories would have made the same attempts themselves had they been in office then. Michael Howard did oppose the Blair-Gaddafi meeting on 2004. But I can't see what principle he was applying.

The Tory attitude to the surrender to the IRA (for which William Hague actively campaigned when it was subjected to a rushed referendum in Northern Ireland) has always been devoid of morality. And the IRA were for years Gaddafi's principal allies on British soil(and to this day retain weapons and explosives supplied by him, though we pretend this is not so in case it annoys them).

Commons

As for the 'Liberal Democrats', the pathos and misery of their position must be increasingly unbearable. If they can't oppose this sort of nonsense, then why do they exist at all? Still more votes lost in May.

Dim Tories, we all know, believe that all military action is patriotic. The drum beats. They rally to the colours, however moronic the cause. My theory is that in this way they comfort themselves for their abject surrenders to the EU and the IRA, real threats to this country, by biffing Arabs instead. Though there were one or two genuine patriots prepared to voice fears. And the best moment in the debate, as several contributors have noted, was when Mr Cameron was asked what we would do if the rebels committed war crimes.

From what we know of this uninspiring rabble, it seems more than possible that they have already done so, and very likely that (if we arm them) they will do so. I continue to be puzzled that we should have invested so much in a force so incoherent, so disorganised and of which we know so little. It is all very like that great novel 'Scoop', in which the actual issues took second place to the story. By the way, given how little we know of the various battles taking place, why is it that the BBC insists on saying that Tripoli's reports of civilian casualties cannot be verified.

Of course they can't, and they may well be propaganda. But so may many other things the Corporation reports as fact.If we're going to be cautious about accepting what we are told, then let's not be selective in our caution.

Anyway, there are bound to be civilian casualties. The power of modern munitions is terrible and their accuracy gravely over-rated by gullible war-junkies in the media. War is Hell. Don't forget it.

Then there's the row about whether we are trying to rub out Colonel Gaddafi himself. General Sir David Richards is obviously appalled by such talk, as well he might be, since it is his men who will end up in the International Court in the Hague if this turns nasty. Mr Cameron's strange shiftiness about this seems to me to be very worrying. My guess is that he realises that as long as Gaddafi lives, Tripoli will keep fighting, and the death of the Colonel (in 'collateral damage') is the only way to put a term to a civil war that could otherwise last for years. But that is now much harder than it would have been. And Mr Cameron certainly doesn't intend to spend his late middle age festering in the Slobodan Milosevic wing of the special prison in the Hague for politicians who misjudge the situation. Mind you,nor did Mr Milosevic intend or expect to end up there.

That deals with most of Mr Swanson's objections. As for his view that 'the fact that democracies cannot fight or overthrow every tyranny existing on the planet, all at once without delay, does not mean that they should not deal with at least the ones that present the most urgent and manageable problems', it needs elaboration.

On what principle of law or morality do we fight or overthrow other governments? The whole doctrine of Just war was developed to deal with this, and its principal difficulty is that War is Hell, and needs very strong justification. People such as Mr Swanson really do need to educate themselves about two aspects of war . One, that innocent people's lives are horribly ruined by war, even war in a good cause; and two, that wars are easy to start and hard to end.

Libya

My test is this: If you are so keen to set Libya to rights, establish an International Brigade of like-minded persons, all so truly concerned about that country's fate, and so sure of which side is in the right, that you are prepared to be maimed or rendered limbless and disfigured in that cause, Off you go. Fly to Egypt, slip across the border and offer your services to the heroes of Benghazi.

I won't stop you. But I pay for armed forces to defend me, not to go off on righteous adventures, and soldiers likewise sign up to defend their own country, not mess around with other people's.

My case is that 'democracies' whatever they are, have enough to do at home keeping the weak from being robbed and attacked by the strong. And that war is so wicked that the only real justification for it is to defend yourself against those who would destroy, rob or subjugate you.

And that those who claim to 'care' are usually curiously absent when the guns begin to shoot. George Orwell ( who did actually volunteer for the Spanish Civil War and found when he got there that his own side wasn't as nice as it looked) wrote once, I think, of 'that rare sight, a Jingo with a bullet-hole in him.' I would update it to 'that rare sight. A muscular liberal with a bullet hole in him'.

If you care, go. If you don't go, then I don't believe you care. You just want to feel good about yourself.

This is also the problem for our vegetarian friend. How curious that a person who apparently won't even eat a chicken feels so belligerent that he caricatures my view as follows:

'Dear Mr. Gaddafi,
I understand that, following your repeated gunning down of people in the streets of your fair cities, you are planning to move many tanks, fighter planes and troops, into Benghazi and massacre as many of your citizens as you see fit. Go ahead old man. I certainly hope those nasty people in the British Government don't dare to try and stop you. That would make them, in my humble opinion, which is never wrong, look silly.
Yours faithfully,
Mr. P. Hitchens.'

But as I have explained, I oppose intervention because I doubt my power to act benevolently and effectively, don't imagine that because a TV crew can get there, an army can, fear that intervening in ( and probably prolonging) a civil war I don't understand may well lead to more deaths and more suffering than it will prevent . Also I am by no means sure that the rebels will refrain from atrocities and massacres of their own if the chance comes their way. This person refers to Yugoslavia, and perhaps still believes that the Serbs were the unique villains in that conflict. They weren't. But we simplified the war into that shape, to justify our intervention for different purposes. In this case we have no such purposes, just naivety and vanity.

I am not sure if Mr Cameron thinks this war will make him popular. I certainly suspect that he believes it will enhance other people's opinions of him as a 'statesman' and 'man of action'. But not mine.

On the endless God versus the Atheists subject, I continue to be amused by the writhings and wrigglings of Mr 'Bunker', who is an atheist one minute and an agnostic the next, who has tickled the curiosity of all of us by telling how he was 'forced' to be an atheist, but won't tell us who or what did this awful thing to him, nor how they or it did it, and seems unable to distinguish between belief and knowledge for longer than five minutes at a stretch. And sometimes thinks that 'belief' is a sort of gift that has been denied to him, and which he cannot experience, and sometimes thinks it is an inert object which has nothing to do with the person who holds it.

Better still, through thick and thin, he maintains an extraordinarily high opinion of himself. Well done, Mr Bunker!

But I must go. As I peer nervously out of the window I see a sinister windowless van on the street outside, marked 'Huxley, Darwin and Dawkins, Glue Boilers' and two large men in stocking masks slapping rubber truncheons into their palms. I fear they are going to force me to be an atheist. I shall slip out by the back way.

Oh, and as for Mr 'Mugaffi', this was the figure mentioned in the Commons by that fine old survival, Sir Menzies Campbell. Poor Sir Menzies has lived all his life with a name most people can't pronounce (it is 'Mingus') so we can forgive him for mispronouncing the Libyan dictator's. But his slip of the brain did remind us all that, if you are looking for evil, murderous dictators to bomb, Zimbabwe has one just as foul, placed in office by a simpering British establishment from left to right with barely a voice raised in protest (though his true character was obvious to all who wished to know it) about whom we do two parts of nothing.

And if we don't bomb him, then once again, what is the principle on which we claim to act? And if it isn't a principle, then the action must be judged on its own merits - which are slender.

A Few Occasions for Praise and Thanks

My thanks to Andrew Platt, who has honourably apologised for and withdrawn his suggestion that I 'regularly dismiss' scientific evidence. We would all be saved a lot of time and trouble if some other contributors here were as willing to admit faults and say sorry for them. it takes some courage to do so, and should be applauded.

Incidentally, events in another part of the electronic forest have also taken a pleasing turn. A site devoted to lofty, self-righteous attacks on conservative mid-market newspapers and their journalists recently launched a rather virulent and cocky assault on me. In the course of it, the site's host repeated and intensified a claim he had made some time ago, that I had said something which I hadn't actually said, about the influence of politicians who are themselves unrepentant former drug takers. He placed the distortion inside inverted commas and attributed it directly and unequivocally to me. After a period of claiming that this was legitimate, he eventually acknowledged that it wasn't. Good for him.

(I may have cause to discuss the actual subject of this soon, with reference to an interesting incident involving Ann Widdecombe and the then Shadow Cabinet when she bravely tried to stand against the drug legalisation current.)

I'm working on it.

Fukushima nuclear plant


Anyway, compare and contrast these two postings by this person, separated by three days:

March 19th
'Funny, isn’t it Peter, how everybody who engages with you seems to "misrepresent" what you write, when all they are really doing is quoting you (word-for-word) and commenting.'

March 22nd
‘I apologise, unconditionally for copying and pasting what I did and introducing the whole quote as if you had said every word. That was careless and misleading.’

So not 'word-for-word' after all, then?

I'm grateful for the apology and have forgiven the person involved, though I note that in all other respects he and his followers continue to treat me as I were some kind of monster. Well, let them. It obviously gives them pleasure, and in this rough old world who'd deny them that. A man must have some enemies, and these are the ones I've got.

But the third cause for rejoicing is far greater than these. It is an article by George Monbiot in Tuesday's Guardian, in which - with considerable guts - he follows the logic of his own position. Mr Monbiot believes that the burning of fossil fuels is endangering the planet. I think him mistaken, but I respect the learning, passion, coherence and persistence of his position (we once discussed this amid a forest of whirling windmills in mid-Wales, in a conversation in whic
h I found him to be engaging, intelligent and not without humour).

The logic of this position, it seems to me, must be that we embark on a major programme of building nuclear power stations. But the self same people who get into a passion about man-made global warming tend to have a near-superstitious fear of nuclear power. This superstition is encouraged (for example) by the alarmist coverage of the recent Japanese nuclear problems. These are plainly serious for those working there and living nearby ( as is the case with the many coalmine disasters which plague China each year), but any sensible person can see that the fact that this rather old station was hit successively by a giant earthquake, and a huge tsunami, and that the consequences were as limited as they have been, speaks well for the safety of nuclear power.

Mr Monbiot begins:'You will not be surprised to hear that the events in Japan have changed my view of nuclear power. You will be surprised to hear how they have changed it. As a result of the disaster at Fukushima, I am no longer nuclear-neutral. I now support the technology.

'A c****y old plant with inadequate safety features was hit by a monster earthquake and a vast tsunami. The electricity supply failed, knocking out the cooling system. The reactors began to explode and melt down. The disaster exposed a familiar legacy of poor design and corner-cutting. Yet, as far as we know, no one has yet received a lethal dose of radiation.'

And he concludes : 'Yes, I still loathe the liars who run the nuclear industry. Yes, I would prefer to see the entire sector shut down, if there were harmless alternatives. But there are no ideal solutions. Every energy technology carries a cost; so does the absence of energy technologies. Atomic energy has just been subjected to one of the harshest of possible tests, and the impact on people and the planet has been small. The crisis at Fukushima has converted me to the cause of nuclear power.'

I think this is intellectual courage and honesty of a high order, and we could all do with more of it. We must learn to challenge our friends and allies when we think they are mistaken, and to value changes of mind, and admissions of error, far more highly than we do. If we don't, we are probably finished. I apologise to Mr Monbiot because I know my support will not help him at all with his Green allies, but in fact do him harm. But it needs saying, despite the costs.