Don’t you know your left from your right?

Thursday, January 25th, 2007

In the second part of Don’t you know your left from your right?, Nick Cohen explores “the disgrace of the anti-war movement” that had a million people marching through London to oppose the overthrow of a fascist regime:

Journalists wondered whether the Americans were puffing up Zarqawi’s role in the violence — as a foreigner he was a convenient enemy — but they couldn’t deny the ferocity of the terror. Like Stalin, Pol Pot and Slobodan Milosevic, they went for the professors and technicians who could make a democratic Iraq work. They murdered Sergio Vieira de Mello, one of the United Nations’s bravest officials, and his colleagues; Red Cross workers, politicians, journalists and thousands upon thousands of Iraqis who happened to be in the wrong church or Shia mosque.

How hard was it for opponents of the war to be against that? Unbelievably hard, it turned out. The anti-war movement disgraced itself not because it was against the war in Iraq, but because it could not oppose the counter-revolution once the war was over. A principled left that still had life in it and a liberalism that meant what it said might have remained ferociously critical of the American and British governments while offering support to Iraqis who wanted the freedoms they enjoyed.

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