Tony Blair and the Self-Exalting Mindset of
the West: in Two Paragraphs
By Glenn Greenwald
July 09, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"The
Intercept" -
Tony Blair today took a little time off
from
serving the world’s despots in order to exploit
the 10th anniversary of the July 7 London train bombing. He did
so by casting blame on “radical Islam” for the world’s violence
while exempting himself,
pronouncing:
This is a global problem … we’re
not going to allow anyone to excuse themselves by saying
that the slaughter of totally innocent people is somehow a
response to any decision by any government.
The proposition Blair just decreed invalid —
“the slaughter of totally innocent people is somehow a response
to any decision by any government” — is exactly the rationale
that he himself
repeatedly
invoked, and to this day still invokes, to justify the
invasion and destruction of Iraq, as in
this example from December 2009:
Tony Blair has said he would have invaded
Iraq even without evidence of weapons of mass destruction
and would have found a way to justify the war to parliament
and the public. . . . “If you had known then that there were
no WMDs, would you still have gone on?” Blair was asked. He
replied: “I would still have thought it right to remove him
[Saddam Hussein]”. . . . He explained it was “the notion of
him as a threat to the region” because Saddam Hussein had
used chemical weapons against his own people.
“Excusing the slaughter of totally innocent
people” — whether in
Fallujah or
Gaza or
Yemen — is a staple of Western elite discourse to justify
the militarism of the U.S., the U.K. and
their most special allies. It only suddenly becomes
inexcusable when carried out by Muslims against the West. It is
a stunning testament to Western self-delusion that one of the
prime architects and salesmen of the most destructive political
crime of this generation — the invasion of Iraq — can stand up
with a straight face and to applause and declare:
“we’re not going to allow anyone to
excuse themselves by saying that the slaughter of totally
innocent people is somehow a response to any decision by any
government.”
There will undoubtedly be all sorts of
self-loving jingoists in the West, along with those whose
overriding political priority is the demonization of Islam, who
will find this comparison invalid and even obscene. After
all, their own governments’ violence, aggression and slaughter
of innocents is kind-hearted, civilized and justified, whereas
the violence, aggression and slaughter of innocents by Muslims
is savage and barbaric. But that’s precisely the point.
While the leading lights of the West love to
celebrate themselves as beacons of civilized, progressive
rationality, their overriding mentality is just the crassest and
most primitive form of tribalism: when Our Side does it, it
is right, and when Their Side does it, it is wrong. No
matter the esoteric finery in which it drapes itself, that is
the primitive, banal formulation that lies at the heart of the
vast, vast majority of foreign policy discourse in the West. So
often, those who fancy themselves brave warriors for rationality
and advancement by demonizing Islam are just rank tribalists
whose own national, religious and cultural loyalties are served
by doing so.
One last point while we’re on this topic: the
notion that radical Muslims commit violence in response to
violence by the West is often characterized as an attempt to
deny that they possess agency or autonomy. That claim is just
bizarre, the opposite of the truth. Those who deny that Muslims
act with agency are, in fact, those who try to claim that they
are manipulated by religious dogma into committing violence
without any rationale or purpose. To point out that there’s an
actual, rational causal relationship between their violence and
the West’s — to acknowledge that they choose violence as a
calculated course of action they believe to be justified just as
the West does — is not a denial of their agency, but rather an
affirmation of it.
This causal relationship is the point
that Tony Blair and his like-minded comrades are, above all
else, most desperate to deny. Blair thus expressly denies that
the July 7 bombing in London was largely motivated by his war in
Iraq even though his own government’s secret report
reached exactly that conclusion; a Pentagon-commissioned
report years ago acknowledged
the same causal motive for “terrorism” generally. They’re
desperate to deny this causation because to recognize it is
necessarily to acknowledge that their professed moral
superiority is the ultimate delusion, that they in fact are the
embodiment of what they love to hear themselves condemning.
It’s always comforting to believe that one’s
own tribe is morally superior yet perpetually victimized, so
it’s an easy sell. But as Blair’s remarkably self-unaware
comments today illustrate, this mentality centrally depends
upon a steadfast commitment to blinding oneself to one’s own
actions and failings. Nobody is more resolute in that commitment
than Tony Blair.
Photo: Ron Edmonds/AP -
Email the author:
glenn.greenwald@theintercept.com