“Last
week a British man who called himself Abu Suleiman al-Britani drove a
truck full of explosives into the gate of Halab prison in Aleppo. The
explosion, in which he died, allowed rebel fighters to swarm into the
jail and release 300 prisoners. Was
it terrorism or was it heroism? “
Here
is George Monbiot praising al-Qaeda terrorists and equating jihadists
with George Orwell and the International Brigade. I can
scarcely think of a more reprehensible article and yet this man was
once an example to me.
It
is the same George Monbiot who embraced
nuclear power
weeks after the Fukushima disaster as well as disavow Peak Oil
All three contribitions place Monbiot as one of the most stupid and/or toxic contributors to environmental debate.
Orwell
was hailed a hero for fighting in Spain. Today he'd be guilty of
terrorism
The
International Brigades are acclaimed for bravery. But British
citizens who fight in Syria are damned. If only they did it for the
money
George
Monbiot
10
February, 2014
If
George Orwell and Laurie Lee were to return from the Spanish civil
war today, they would be arrested under section five of the Terrorism
Act 2006. If convicted of fighting abroad with a "political,
ideological, religious or racial motive" – a charge they would
find hard to contest – they would face a maximum sentence of life
in prison. That they were fighting to defend an elected government
against a fascist rebellion would have no bearing on the case. They
would go down as terrorists.
As
it happens, the British government did threaten people leaving the
country to join the International Brigades, by reviving the Foreign
Enlistment Act of 1870. In 1937 it warned that anyone volunteering to
fight in Spain would be "liable on conviction to imprisonment up
to two years". This was consistent with its policy of
non-intervention, which even Winston Churchill, initially a
supporter, came to see as "an elaborate system of official
humbug". Britain, whose diplomatic service and military command
were riddled with fascist sympathisers, helped to block munitions and
support for the Republican government, while ignoring Italian and
German deployments on Franco's side.
But
the act was unworkable, and never used – unlike the Crown
Prosecution Service's far graver threat to British citizens fighting
in Syria. In January 16 people were arrested on terror charges after
returning from Syria. Seven others are already awaiting trial. Sue
Hemming, the CPS head of counter-terrorism, explained last week that
"potentially it's an offence to go out and get involved in a
conflict, however loathsome you think the people on the other side
are ... We will apply the law robustly".
People
fighting against forces that run a system of industrialised torture
and murder and are systematically destroying entire communities could
be banged up for life for their pains. Is this any fairer than
imprisoning Orwell would have been?
I
accept that some British fighters in Syria could be changed by their
experience. I also accept that some are already motivated by the
prospect of fighting a borderless jihad, and could return to Britain
with the skills required to pursue it. But this is guilt by
association. Some of those who go to fight in Syria might develop an
interest in blowing up buses in Britain, just as some investment
bankers might be tempted to launder cash for drug dealers and
criminal gangs. We don't round up bankers on the grounds that their
experience in one sector might tempt them to dabble in another. (The
state won't prosecute them even when they do launder money for drug
gangs and terrorists, as the HSBC scandal suggests.) But all those
who leave Britain to fight in Syria potentially face terrorism
charges, even if they seek only to defend their extended families.
Last
week a British man who called himself Abu Suleiman al-Britani drove a
truck full of explosives into the gate of Halab prison in Aleppo. The
explosion, in which he died, allowed rebel fighters to swarm into the
jail and release 300 prisoners. Was it terrorism or was it heroism?
Terrorism, according to many commentators.
It's
true that he carried out this act in the name of the al-Nusra Front,
which the British government treats as synonymous with al-Qaida. But
can anyone claim that liberating the inmates of Syrian government
prisons is not a good thing? We now know that at least 11,000 people
have been killed in these places, and that many were tortured to
death. Pictures of their corpses were smuggled out of Syria by the
government photographer employed to record them. There are probably
many more. That combination of horror and bureaucracy – doing
unspeakable things then ensuring that they are properly documented –
has powerful historical resonances. It haunts us with another horror,
and the questions that still hang over the Allied effort in the
second world war: how much was known, how much could have been done?
As
no one else is now likely to act, and as the raid on the prison would
probably have been impossible without the suicide bomb, should we not
be celebrating this act of extraordinary courage? Had David Cameron
not lost the intervention vote, and had al-Britani been fighting for
the British army, he might have been awarded a posthumous Victoria
Cross.
When
you think of the attempt by the British battalion in the Spanish
civil war to defend a place they called "Suicide Hill",
with the loss of 225 out of 600 men, do you see this as an act of
terror – a suicide mission motivated by an extreme ideology – or
as a valiant attempt to resist a terror campaign?
Sue
Hemming claims it is "an offence to go out and get involved in a
conflict", but that is not always true. You can be prosecuted if
you possess a "political, ideological, religious or racial
motive" for getting involved, but not, strangely, if you possess
a financial motive. Far from it: such motives are now eminently
respectable. You can even obtain a City & Guilds qualification as
a naval mercenary. Sorry, "maritime security operative". As
long as you don't care whom you kill or why, you're exempt from the
law.
I
expect that's a relief to Sir Malcolm Rifkind, the former foreign
secretary who now chairs parliament's intelligence and security
committee, where he ramps up public fears about terrorism. For
several years he was chairman of ArmorGroup, whose business was to go
out and get involved in conflict. The absence of one word from the
legislation – financial – ensures that he is seen as a scourge of
terrorism, rather than an accomplice. The British fighters in Syria
should ask their commanders to pay them, then claim they're only in
it for the money. They would, it seems, then be immune from
prosecution.
Talking
of which, what clearer case could there be of the "use or threat
of action ... designed to influence the government ... for the
purpose of advancing a political, religious, racial or ideological
cause" than the war with Iraq? Tony Blair's ministers were, of
course, protected by crown immunity, but could they have experienced
no flicker of cognitive dissonance while preparing the 2006 act?
Whatever
you might think of armed intervention in Syria, by states or
citizens, Hemming's warning illustrates the arbitrary nature of our
terrorism laws, the ring they throw around certain acts of violence
while ignoring others, the risk that they will be used against brown
and bearded people who present no threat. The non-intervention
agreement of 1936 was not the last elaborate system of official
humbug the British government devised.
Here are a couple of significant examples of George's contributions in recent years
- George Monbiot
Here are a couple of significant examples of George's contributions in recent years
- George Monbiot
'
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.
You ignore his hundreds of good articles, pick three you don't like and say you don't like Monbiot anymore?
ReplyDeleteIt seems you don't like anyone disagreeing with you.
Monbiot has a good debate to offer even though I find his nuclear stance hard to accept. I don't write him off. He's far too valuable for that.
These are not minor things, any of them. If he can be so outspoken and totally wrong on these, how can I trust him in other areas?
Delete"Too valuable"...? There is only truth, and non-truth.
DeleteThe Guardian has been taken over by AngloZionists. The 'journalists' there write whatever they have to write to maintain their well-remunerated lifestyles (c.f. Luke Harding).
ReplyDeleteBTW - I forgot to add that the ISIS/Daesh/FSA/whatever is a mercenary AngloZionist proxy army manned by foreigners. Captured prisoners reveal how much they are paid $50 if unmarried, $100 if married, $130 married with children. See this RT video for details
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xnRW_feEI0I