Peter Oborne writes:
Last month, Jeremy Corbyn was re-elected
as Labour leader.
It was his second victory by an overwhelming majority in a
year, and it should have given Corbyn uncontested authority.
Yet
he is still regarded with mutinous contempt by a significant proportion of his
own side. They flatly refuse to accept Corbyn’s leadership.
This became clear on Wednesday night,
when more than 100 Labour MPs failed to support a three-line whip on British
policy towards the Yemen.
It was disloyalty on an epic scale.
Corbyn cannot be faulted for calling
a debate on Yemen.
For the past 18 months, Britain has been complicit with mass
murder as our Saudi allies have bombarded Yemen from the air, slaughtering
thousands of innocent people as well as helping fuel a humanitarian calamity.
Corbyn clearly felt that it was his
duty as leader of a responsible and moral opposition to challenge this policy.
He nevertheless bent over backwards to make sure that the Yemen vote was
uncontroversial.
The Labour motion therefore stopped short of calling for the
suspension of arms sales to Saudi Arabia which has been demanded by many
charities and campaign groups.
This is because Corbyn and his
foreign affairs spokeswoman Emily Thornberry were mindful that some Labour MPs
represented constituencies where local jobs depended on the arms industry.
So
they contented themselves with demanding an independent United Nations inquiry
into crimes committed by all sides – not just the Saudis – in this terrible and
bloody conflict.
They reasonably suggested that Britain should suspend support
for the Saudis until this investigation was completed.
Green light to Saudi
This is the position taken by the
bulk of the international community, by all reputable aid agencies and, as far
as I can tell, by almost all ordinary Yemenis.
In her excellent speech on
Wednesday afternoon, Thornberry set out the reasons why the Saudis could no
longer be trusted to investigate their own affairs.
Yet more than 100 Labour MPs – not far
short of half the Labour Party – defied Corbyn.
As a result, Labour’s call for
an independent inquiry was defeated by 283 votes to just 193, a majority of 90.
But for Labour abstainers and absentees, Corbyn’s motion would have been
carried and parliament would have voted for an independent investigation.
The
vote is bound to be interpreted by Saudi King Salman as a vote of confidence in
his deeply controversial assault on the Yemen.
It
will also lift pressure on the Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson as he resists a
growing international clamour for Britain to throw its weight behind an independent
UN investigation.
To
sum up, on Wednesday night, the British parliament sent the green light to
Saudi Arabia and its allies to carry on bombing, maiming and killing.
I have
reported politics from Westminster for almost 25 years and can recall few more
shocking parliamentary events.
Shocking
– but not surprising.
The Yemen vote demonstrates something that has been
apparent ever since the vote on 18 March 2003 to support the invasion of
Iraq: the party of war holds a majority in the Commons.
It
comprises virtually all of the Conservative Party and the Blairite wing of
Labour.
As Nafeez Ahmed wrote in July, there is a
clear and demonstrable connection between the vote for war in Iraq, opposition
to an Iraq inquiry, support for the calamitous intervention in Libya, and
opposition to Jeremy Corbyn.
Ahmed showed the majority of those who
tried to unseat Corbyn last summer were interventionist.
Some 172 supported the
motion of no confidence in Corbyn’s leadership.
By coincidence or not, exactly
the same number of MPs have supported Britain’s calamitous overseas wars.
Now
let’s look at the Labour MPs who put a smile on the faces of King Salman and
Boris Johnson by defying Corbyn’s three-line whip and abstaining in Wednesday
night’s vote: once again we are at least partly talking about a confederacy of
Blairites.
It
turns out that Ann Clywd, who made such a sparkling speech in favour of war
during the 2003 Iraq debate, has abstained over Corbyn’s call for an
independent investigation of Yememi war crimes.
So have John Spellar, Gloria de
Piero, Fiona MacTaggart, Barry Sheerman, Angela Eagle, Liz Kendall, Luciana
Berger, Lucy Powell, Mike Gapes, Stephen Kinnock, Tristram Hunt, Margaret Hodge
etc etc.
Even
Keith Vaz, who was born in Aden and makes a big deal of his Yemeni antecedents,
defied Labour’s three-line whip and abstained.
It
is important to highlight the fact that some of the most prominent opponents of
Jeremy Corbyn did traipse through the division lobbies with their leader on
Wednesday night.
Alan Johnson, Hilary Benn and Yvette Cooper are just three
examples.
And, of course, the majority of those who abstained on Wednesday were
not in parliament for the Iraq vote in 2003.
The
Neocons and the unforgiven
Nevertheless
there is a telling pattern here.
For the past 15 years, parliament has been
governed by a cross-party consensus in favour of war.
During that period,
Britain has undertaken three major foreign interventions, each one of them
utterly disastrous.
In each one, military success was swiftly followed by
political and, ultimately, state failure.
Despite
the hard-won experience of 15 years, there is still a parliamentary majority in
favour of intervention.
Very few parliamentarians opposed all
these interventions.
Jeremy Corbyn was among them and he has never been
forgiven for it.
This
brings me to the final paradox of Wednesday night’s vote: the intimate
connection between politicians who style themselves as moderate or occupying
the centre ground in Britain and neoconservative policies overseas.
For
the past 20 years, the so-called "modernisers", whether Blair’s
Labour or Cameron’s Conservatives, have been in charge at Westminster.
As has
been well-documented (not least by Labour’s Jon Cruddas), they have hollowed
out British politics through techniques of spin and electoral manipulation.
It
is these same modernisers who have caused havoc in the Middle East, condemning
the region to bloodshed and war.
They were at it again on Wednesday by sending
a signal to the Saudi dictatorship that it was acceptable to carry out its
murderous policies in the Yemen.
Thirteen years after Iraq, neoconservatism
still rules.
No comments:
Post a Comment