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Too Little Too Late for Syrians

When I was a kid I was told a story about a man who arrives at a beach only to find it covered with starfish washed in by the tide. He walked for a while along this beach picking his way between all of the washed up starfish until he came upon an old man. He could see him from afar picking up starfish one after the other and throwing them back into the sea. He approached him and said “why are you bothering, there are far too many starfish here for you to make a difference?” The man smiled at him as he picked up another starfish and said “but I can make a difference to this one” as he threw it back into the sea “and this one” as he threw in another.

The refugee crisis in Europe reminded me of this story. It is tempting to scorn at the pitiful numbers of visas being offered (excepting Germany’s 800,000) by the various countries in comparison to the number of people needing help. But those quotas will mean a life changing difference for thousands of families who otherwise would be stuck in Syria, in refugee camps around Syria or in the netherworld of being a non person in Europe. Each entry permit will change someone’s life for the better and prevent them from risking drowning by setting sail in a vessel that’s not seaworthy or by taking other extraordinary risks.

However it must be remembered that as good as it will be for each and every person granted asylum in a European country it will not stop hundreds of thousands more pouring into Europe from the Middle East, risking death along the way. The British government has given £900 million towards the maintenance of refugee camps around the Middle East but this hasn’t proven to be much of a solution either.

Reading the UK media at the moment one is struck by the great lengths so many publications have gone to avoid calling for military action while simultaneously calling for a solution to the Syrian refugee crisis. As if the war in what used to be Syria and Iraq and the refugee crisis it spawned aren’t even a part of the same issue. This unwillingness to confront the fact that the refugee problem they now face could have been resolved had they found the resolve to confront Assad much, much earlier on is quite frankly astounding. The sheer silence from British politicians who blocked Cameron from launching military strikes against Syria when there was some possibility they could have made a difference casts doubt on their own sincerity now.

I wonder how long we will have to wait before Labour MPs start coming forward and admitting that preventing the strikes on Syria was the wrong move to make. I won’t be holding my breath continued unwillingness to face this fact ensures that no matter how many refugees Europe allows in it will never manage to stem the tide and the chances are that there will be plenty more young children washing up on the shores.

Unlike starfish they cannot simply be thrown back into the sea.



Syrian refugees in Hungary

Some of our, um, less informed readers need to start following Anshel Pfeffer’s Twitter reports from Hungary.

If your response is, “Well, they would say that, wouldn’t they?” my response to you is, “Fuck off.”

And if you think I don’t hold Barack Obama responsible for his failure to deal seriously with Assad’s brutality, you’re wrong. I’ve made the same points before, but (for once) I agree with Michael Gerson:

At many points during the past four years, even relatively small actions might have reduced the pace of civilian casualties in Syria. How hard would it have been to destroy the helicopters dropping barrel bombs on neighborhoods? A number of options well short of major intervention might have reduced the regime’s destructive power and/or strengthened the capabilities of more responsible forces. All were untaken.

This was not some humanitarian problem distant from the center of U.S. interests. It was a crisis at the heart of the Middle East that produced a vacuum of sovereignty that has attracted and empowered some of the worst people in the world. Inaction was a conscious, determined choice on the part of the Obama White House. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and CIA Director David Petraeus advocated arming favorable proxies. Sunni friends and allies in the region asked, then begged, for U.S. leadership. All were overruled or ignored.

Update: Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas has asked that Palestinian refugees fleeing Syria be allowed to come to the West Bank.

Zionist Union leader Isaac Herzog, representing Israel at its best, said Israel should also take in some of the refugees fleeing Syria.

“Jews cannot be apathetic when hundreds of thousands of refugees are searching for safe haven,” he said, referring to the plight of Europe’s Jews in the run-up to the Holocaust.

Former British chief rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks made a similar appeal on Thursday, telling the BBC that Britain should make a “very clear and conspicuous humanitarian gesture, like Kindertransport” – the absorption of hundreds of Jewish children fleeing the Nazis before the outbreak of World War II.


Animated Corbyn

You may recall those wild ‘n crazy Taiwanese animators who a few years ago produced a brilliant video about Apple, the iPhone 5, Foxconn, exploited and rioting Chinese workers, and the ghost of Steve Jobs.

Now they’ve turned their attention to– you guessed it– Jeremy Corbyn:


September is the cruellest month:#Corbynpoems

I am not sure that Twitter has yet done full justice to the possibilities of the #Corbynpoems hashtag, and invite readers to contribute their own ideas. Here are a few examples to inspire you:

All changed, changed utterly,

A terrible Putin was fawned.

I have spread my dreams under your feet.

Tread softly because you tread on my dreams.

You infernal Blairite empiricists.

But soft! what light from yonder window breaks?

It is the left, and Jeremy the sun.

Weave a circle round him thrice

And close your eyes with holy dread

For he on vegan food hath fed

And people say he’s very nice

I have eaten

the bankers

that were in

the City

& which

u were probably

hoping

to tax

forgive me

they were greedy

and so fat

Roses are Red

Tories are Blues

My ‘friends’ are Nazis

But I love the Jews


Israel/Palestine:Two libraries – two exhibitions

Last year an exhibition of photographs of Gaza and the West Bank was displayed in Cambridge’s central library.  This was in no way a neutral event:

‘Postcards from Palestine’, on the top floor of the Central Library until next Monday, features pictures taken Fredi Canvander-Attwood, Richard Hopper, and Ahmed Hegazi.

The exhibition is part of a programme of events organised by Cambridge Palestine Solidarity Campaign, highlighting what it describes as Israel’s role as an ‘apartheid state’

I don’t know whether any complaints were received, but the exhibition was certainly allowed to go ahead.

Another exhibition of photographs from the region hasn’t fared so well. This one was hosted by a Cardiff library and its focus was on how different communities in Israel can be brought together by sport.  But now it has been cancelled following allegations of bias:

[A] spokesperson for Cardiff Council said that ‘following a complaint’, the exhibition had been taken down less than 24 hours after it opened.

‘The Council is aware there are protests planned around the Wales Israel game at the weekend and this was taken into consideration,’ the spokesperson said.

‘Our libraries are buildings which promote free speech, but it was felt that running this exhibition could lead visitors to suppose that the Council was displaying bias.’

Judith Woodman, leader of the opposition at Cardiff Council, said that she was ‘appalled’ by the Council’s ’shameful’ censorship and demanded an inquiry into how the decision was made.

‘Sport is non-political. We live in a democracy and have freedom of speech. By this action Cardiff Council have totally disregarded this,’ she said.

‘I intend to take matters further, not least with the Wales Audit Office. As a senior member of this shambolic administration I am aghast at what I have learnt this evening.

‘It is a disgraceful reflection on our city.’

The decision to cancel has been condemned by the Israeli embassy, whose spokesman dryly pointed out that the exhibition had been displayed at the offices of the Guardian, ‘hardly a bastion of pro-Israel views’.


Corbyn’s election means Ukraine’s stuffed

This is a cross-post by Paul Canning

“I didn’t say that, come on I’ve never said that, so please.”

The UK Labour leadership campaign has made one thing abundantly clear – no one much cares about a war in Europe.

When I first wrote my now viral August 8 post on Jeremy Corbyn’s position on Ukraine it was because no one who was then criticising Corbyn was mentioning Ukraine. Someone had to stick up for them so it might as well be me. But I was cynical and nothing since has told me that I was wrong to be cynical.

Nobody busy citing Corbyn’s alleged links to antisemites, for example, has even tried by hook nor by crook to connect him to those fascists fighting for Mother Russia in the Donbas. His biggest enemies have forgotten all about the persecuted Jews in Ukraine.

When the issue finally came up at the Daily Mirror hustings (well after voting had begun) Liz Kendall quoted Corbyn’s own words back at him, that he believed that NATO was to blame for ‘provoking’ Russian aggression against Ukraine, and he replied, Bart Simpson-like: “I didn’t say that, come on I’ve never said that, so please.”

None of the other candidates followed up. No journalists pulled that, well, lie out and waved it about.

This flat out denial and obfuscation is hardly new. When the respected Ukrainian human rights activist Halya Coynash said last week that Corbyn was ignoring Russian human rights abuses his campaign claimed that he’d “sent his support to peace campaigners across the region.” When? Where? Any evidence of this mythic support?

At the Channel Four hustings this week Andy Burnham’s soundbite that “it sounds like you’re making excuses for Putin” got the headlines. But my pick would be when Lithuania (oddly) came up and Corbyn said that if Russia invaded we’d be “sucked into it” because of being in NATO. Here he sounded just like the American libertarian isolationist Ron Paul.

*available from an anti-imperialist store near you

Or another pick from that hustings would be when Corbyn claimed that ‘the Russian military/industrial connections used the opportunity [of Ukraine's Revolution of Dignity]‘ to push their government (Putin) to do things like invade Crimea. Who else argues that it’s never Putin’s fault, that Putin is let down by other mysterious actors? Russian TV and all those banging the drum for the infallible leader, that’s who.

Both of these jaw-dropping comments went unremarked. Clearly UK journalism doesn’t hear this stuff and think ‘gaffe’ because it doesn’t understand that they are gaffes.

No one has Fisked me (picked my argument that Corbyn supports Russian imperialism apart) – although I’ve had my fair share of abuse. Despite over ten thousand views for my August 8 piece it is obvious that Ukraine just isn’t such an important issue for Corbyn supporters that someone feels the need to trash me.

Even though it has now become a headline, via Burnham, Ukraine is still an minor, disposable adjunct to all the other stuff about Hamas and who he sat on a stage with and OBL. Example: When I bovvered commenting on the Labour Uncut website mentioning Ukraine a couple of weeks ago not a single pro or anti Corbyn commentator took me up. Clearly neither side saw Ukraine as a tool in the armory of arguments.

My original post was a reaction to seeing foreign policy starting to be raised but with no mention of Ukraine. It has barely been raised since, including, still, by his opponents.

And none of his supporters has seen fit to even bother to argue for Corbyn’s coming election via his policy on Ukraine – a European war with 7k dead and well over a million displaced. They don’t think that was important enough to argue that Corbyn has the answers.

Instead debate on policy on a war in Europe has been shamefully reduced to #suggestacorbynsmear and Jeremy Corbyn refuses to deny being a Russian agent. This has gone way beyond the fringe to the pages of Private Eye and BBC Radio Four comedy shows.

The amazing, disappearing European war

TL:DR – The collective response from the entire UK left has been ‘I ain’t bovvered.’

Am I bovvered? Am I bovvered though? Look at my face. Is it bovvered? Asks me If I’m bovvered! Look, face, bovvered? I ain’t bovvered!

I was shocked to read the AWL, for example, defending Corbyn while failing to mention Ukraine – when they have been one of the strongest on the issue and in promoting Ukranian socialist voices. This is the same AWL that the Guardian Political Editor saw fit to mention in his long read on what happens post election, so he thinks they have some clout.

Look at the lengthy piece by influential journalist Owen Jones on what happens next and notice what is absent. “Labour should suggest a more constructive role for Britain within the [NATO] Alliance”, he says. What the heck does that mean for Ukraine? We abandon them to their fate or what?

The shining exception is Peter Tatchell who coherently explains why he backs Corbyn despite his difficulties on Ukraine and other issues. Tatchell says:

I am confident that he will respond to fair criticism and reconsider some of his past associations. And I’m certain that if he became prime minister he’d adopt a somewhat different stance. Already he’s modified his position on NATO and the EU, from withdrawal to reform.

Sorry Peter (and others) but I’m not confident and there are numerous reasons why.

We love contradictory Jeremy?

One of the most active Ukraine supporters on the left told me that Jeremy has taken ‘contradictory’ positions. I’ll say he has.

When I wrote my original Corbyn post there was way enough evidence to say that he clearly supported Russian imperialism. So when in late August a video of a speech given last year by Corbyn ‘emerged’ (meaning that someone important was notified) in which he says the following it just underlined what I’d argued. Nevertheless I gawped when Corbyn said:

[Nato's] interests in the Ukraine are not benign interests in support for the people of Ukraine. It’s about advancing military technology and a military presence further and further eastwards in order to create this ghastly scenario of some kind of hi-tech war with Russia in the future.

Just how much nonsense this is is shown by how many are yelling at the Americans now for their delays to supplying non-lethal military help to Ukraine. I already disproved his repeated spiel about NATO ‘expanding eastwards’. It’s just factually wrong, as well as insulting to Eastern Europeans.

So where is he getting this fantasy from?

Have a look. The sole others I can find making this particular “hi-tech war with Russia” argument are American neo-Confederate libertarians. See this piece from the Ron Paul fanclub for example. And you can also read similar arguments on the conspiracist, pro-Putin website Globalresearch.ca.

They’re Jeremy’s go to sources for foreign policy guidance? Anyone who asked would be yelled at. By the candidate (as we’ve seen several times in the election campaign) and by his crew. It’s worth noting here that not even the truly insane John Pilger has mentioned “hi-tech war with Russia.”

Still think, Peter Tatchell, that Corbyn will respond to fair criticism like ‘where are you getting the batty ideas from?’ Or will it be called a ’smear’ or ‘I never said that’?

Again. Jeremy, Jeremy, Jeremy.

Who the heck is advising him was precisely and generously what I said in my original post and the argument that ‘everything will be alright on the night’ seems to consist in part of the notion that Labour leader Jeremy will be shifted because of the weight of the office and that the problems with advice/influence from the Stop The War Coalition leaders and various others will drop away. Oh, and it’ll all turn out OK as he’s ‘basically anti war’, which is just BS because everything he’s said so far supports Russian imperialism aka war.

Again, being fair and generous, I have tried to find out what Corbyn has done behind the scenes. This is because his old mate John McDonnell MP is chair of the Ukraine Solidarity Campaign (USC). Well, he signed an EDM supporting the Independent Union of Miners of Ukraine in the industrial centre of Kryvyi Rih. I’m told he helped USC get a room in Parliament. But he never showed up on a USC platform. And that he supports the Crimean Tatars, but there’s nothing on the public record I could find.

Then there are statements cited such as this one in his Financial Times interview (my emphasis):

I am no defender whatsoever of [Russian President Vladimir] Putin or Russian foreign policy any more than I defend the west’s foreign policy but I do feel nervous about this expansion eastward and the consequent militarisation of Russia. I think the important thing is that there be a better-developed relationship with Russia and [efforts to] demilitarise on both sides of the border [with Ukraine] . . . The onus is on both sides to make that happen.

As the old saying goes, everything before the ‘but’ is BS. Then there is the question of what you do in Corbyn’s scenario if the ‘other side’ fails to demilitarise – which is exactly what is going on right now as Russia continues to pour in troops and equipment. Just keep talking and/or aid the Ukrainians?

When Crimea was invaded, it was recently reported, the Ukrainians were advised not to put up a fight by both the Americans and the Europeans. As it happened during the chaotic situation just after Yanukovych exited the new government was not really in a position to put up a fight anyway, as later events made very clear the military was a mess. So we had the humiliating scenes of Ukrainian bases in Crimea being besieged by the Little Green Men.

That Crimea could be so easily taken surprised the Kremlin and emboldened them in the Donbas. Although she doesn’t cite Crimea, that’s evidence which supports Yvette Cooper’s claim at the Channel Four hustings that soft power does not work with Putin.

We know that Corbyn thinks we shouldn’t aid Ukraine as we now are with night vision goggles, meals ready to eat and training, because in his world that just ‘provokes’ poor Russia who then have to respond to the nasty West. So what do we do when we talk to them? Ask nicely? He’s yet to be asked whether sanctions are a good idea but I think we all know what he’d say.

Next month the MH17 report will come out from the Dutch Safety Board. This will lay out in detail just how come Russia was responsible for downing the Boeing – and killing ten Brits. There will be a renewed call, if not a screaming demand, for more sanctions.

What will Corbyn say on MH17?

Lewes Bonfire Night

The reaction to the MH17 report will immediately bring to the surface who is deciding foreign policy in the Party and whether Corbyn will continue to play the game of saying bad things are indeed bad but actually the biggest baddest West is always ultimately responsible. Going on past practice that is exactly what will happen with any MH17 statement from him and it will be facepalm godawful.

When we ask about foreign policy we are told and Corbyn has said that he supports greater democracy in Labour policy decisions. This does not fill me with confidence either having seen countless repetition on Kremlin memes, even from the likes of Eric Joyce, and when YouGov finds that nearly a third of Corbyn supporters think the world is controlled by a ’secret elite’ and half that “the United States is the greatest single threat to world peace.” Then, as Nick Cohen has pointed out, also take note that there are plenty on the right in Labour who believe in ‘realpolitic’ or are actually in the pay of Russia, Mandelson for one obvious example.

Good luck to anyone trying to patiently explain internally in Labour how Corbyn’s statements align with Marine LePen’s (which they do). It’ll be ‘how very dare you!’ Already is.

Interestingly the pro-Kremlin Irish journalist Bryan MacDonald also puts Corbyn in the same camp as LePen for his anti-Americanism. And MacDonald points out that this position is popular – he’s not wrong, as any visit to the comments on the Daily Mail website will tell you. ‘Why should Britain support Ukraine, we’re better off out of it’ is hardly an unpopular or, probably, vote losing stance.

I’ve also pointed out that Russia would deploy all to get the UK’s alternative government onside. Meaning spies. This is far from a ridiculous red-baiting argument as they’ve already been exposed trying to infiltrate the Tories, as well as the establishment in France and other European countries.

MH17 will be an immediate test of all these factors. Will Labour supporters buy into what will undoubtedly be an all-out effort by the Kremlin to confuse and to defame the Dutch? Will Labour MPs stand up to Corbyn when he says it was an awful thing to happen and he condemns those responsible but it wouldn’t have happened if pesky NATO hadn’t been involved? For MPs it does not bode well.

We just had a two month leadership campaign where a war in Europe barely came up and when it did, at the last moment, it was obviously not important. The other leadership candidates clearly didn’t understand much about it (otherwise they would have raised it much earlier). Corbyn’s other opponents mostly didn’t either. Anyone trying to raise the issue was literally laughed at or dismissed, never debated with.

Tell me again how come Ukraine isn’t going to be stuffed by Labour because I’m buggered if I can find one reason to not think it will be.


Then and Now

On 8 January 1697 at a gibbet by the Old Tolbooth in Edinburgh, 20 year old Thomas Aitkenhead became the last person to be executed in Britain for blasphemy. A repeat offender, this student at the University of Edinburgh was indicted:

That … the prisoner had repeatedly maintained, in conversation, that theology was a rhapsody of ill-invented nonsense, patched up partly of the moral doctrines of philosophers, and partly of poetical fictions and extravagant chimeras: That he ridiculed the holy scriptures, calling the Old Testament Ezra’s fables, in profane allusion to Esop’s Fables; That he railed on Christ, saying, he had learned magick in Egypt, which enabled him to perform those pranks which were called miracles: That he called the New Testament the history of the imposter Christ; That he said Moses was the better artist and the better politician; and he preferred Muhammad to Christ: That the Holy Scriptures were stuffed with such madness, nonsense, and contradictions, that he admired the stupidity of the world in being so long deluded by them: That he rejected the mystery of the Trinity as unworthy of refutation; and scoffed at the incarnation of Christ.

Scroll forward 317 years, Alex Salmond says in a video interview:

I am biased of course because I am a Church of Scotland adherent and I prefer people of faith to people of no faith or people who have lost their faith.

“All denominations have a key role to play in society and we are very fortunate in Scotland because we have a tremendous ability, among religions and denominations, to come together and support good causes.

I doubt Jesus would have charged taxpayers for a pair of tartan trews to be flown halfway across the world, with-held records on £54k more of tax-payers’ money, or charge taxpayers for food allowance when Parliament was not sitting.

I am sure Jesus loves Salmond. I just wish he would fuck off.


Moazzam Begg to speak at NUS-organised event tour

This is a cross-post from Student Rights

In July, the Prime Minister criticised the National Union of Students (NUS) for pledging to work with CAGE, saying it: “shame[s] your organisation and your noble history of campaigning for justice”.

This saw the NUS release a response in which it attacked the Prime Minister’s claim, arguing that: “as previously and categorically stated, we will not work with CAGE in any capacity”.

statement from May, meanwhile, had claimed that suggestions the NUS would work with the group were “highly misleading”, and that “NUS will not work with CAGE”.

It also said that:

CAGE is a deeply problematic organisation. It is clear that its leaders have sympathised with violent extremism, and violence against women, and people associated with the group havesympathised with anti-Semitism”.

The utter hypocrisy of these claims was exposed this week, as senior officers at the NUS have widely promoted a series of events called ‘Students Not Suspects’ due to take place in October.

Part of the NUS campaign to undermine Prevent, and organised by a coalition including the NUS andNUS Black Students’ Campaign, three of the events will feature CAGE Outreach Director MoazzamBegg.

A terrorism case against Begg collapsed in October 2014, but he accepted he had been in Syria training fighters – and was recorded criticising recruits, saying:

…they want to call it martyrdom but I said we have to be physically prepared. If you don’t prepare this just becomes suicide, not martyrdom”.

Begg has also admitted to visiting militant training camps on the Afghan-Pakistan border, and has admitted to fighting in Bosnia in the 1990s.

He will also be joined at one of the events by Simon Pook, the solicitor of convicted terrorist MunirFarooqi.

Both men recently appeared at an event calling for Farooqi’s release, which referred to him as “an innocent victim” who had been “framed” – and which was also promoted by the NUS Black Students’ Campaign.

That the NUS has chosen to work with Begg, and by extension CAGE, on this tour demonstrates the extent to which its policy on Prevent has aligned with the very extremists the strategy seeks to challenge.

It also highlights the hypocrisy of an organisation which simultaneously claims not to work with CAGE while inviting its senior staff members to address students.

Until the NUS stops working with groups like CAGE, and parroting the group’s narratives on Prevent, it should continue to face serious questions about the extent to which it is part of the problem on campuses.


Open our borders to Syrian refugees

This is a guest post by James Snell

While I am to some extent pleased that the campaign to give shelter to Syrian refugees has acquired significant momentum, that small sense of satisfaction is a greatly diminished one. Not only has the total number of those displaced risen almost exponentially since the beginning of the revolution in 2011, hundreds of thousands of Syrians are now dead; that the world has discovered its collective conscience is welcome, but let us not forget that this show of heart is long overdue. Some of us have been writing about this for a very long time. The original iteration of this piece first appeared in December 2013.

Syria is still an issue. It won’t go away just because most people have apparently stopped paying attention. Military intervention is now seemingly off the table – regrettably in my view – and the outside world is pretty much content just to let it all happen. Sadly, although this is morally repugnant, it remains politically popular – and doing anything to lessen the brutality is shrugged off by the British public; after all, such an action would costs money.

The nature of the crisis is changing, and many groups have been drawn into the maelstrom. Religious and tribal Balkanisation has increased the ferocity and brutality of the conflict, and mant factions are guilty of atrocities and possibly war crimes. In short, it is not looking good. Aside from the purely military matters, a humanitarian disaster is slowly accumulating – with many thousands dead from the conflict, Syrians have been sensibly fleeing the horror. This vast movement of people is not a slow trickle but a deluge – millions now survive in refugee camps: on the Syrian-Lebanese border, in hotspots such as Iraq, and in recently unstable Turkey.

The UN estimates there to be over four million registered refugees who have fled this apocalyptic conflict. It is a vast number. Incomprehensible in its scale; impossible to quantify. Where are they to go? The makeshift refugee camps which encircle the country are well intentioned, but they are overflowing. The war-torn nation is surrounded by trouble-spots, and there is a very real possibility that refugees – supposedly living in a safer place – could fall victim to the same violence which forced them to flee Syria.

I have a suggestion. How about we let them all come here? It is not such a controversial viewpoint, surely?

Ian Birrell posed the same question in a no-longer contemporary op-ed for the Independent. Under the headline “Let’s open our borders to Syria’s refugees”, he highlighted the then (largely symbolic) action of Germany’s government in accepting 5,000 temporary refugees from the crisis. This move was doubtless made with the best of intentions, but – if we wish to have a genuine impact on a crisis spiralling out of all control – it is nowhere near enough. (Since then, Germany has made am ethical about-face of impressive proportions. Now its governmentexpects to receive over 800,000 asylum seekers in the course of this year. This is a genuinely principled decision, and Germany will doubtless be commended by future generations – as it should be commended in the here and now – for this tremendous act of moral courage.)

Refugees are pouring into Lebanon in ever-increasing numbers, and an uneasy local history means that tensions are high and escalating. When Birrell put pen to paper, he wrote of the fact that one quarter of all people then residing in Lebanon was Syrian. The number is ever rising, and will soon be approaching half. But the tribal troubles do not end there. Within Syria, Assad and his coterie are all members of a tiny minority group; all are Alawite. As noted by Christopher Hitchens in a farsighted 2004 column for Slate:

Syria has large populations of Sunni, Druses, and Armenians, and the Alawite elite has stayed in power by playing off minorities against minorities. It is in a weak position to rally the rest of society against any identifiable “enemy within,” lest by doing so it call attention to its own tenuous position.

With religious and ethnic issues building up – and the Assad regime and Iran working in concert to stir up sectarian hatred (much in the same way ISIS does) – the need for a pressure valve has never been greater. In allowing those who wish to do so to flee the country, formerly selfish nations can play a serious and positive role in the region.

Britain’s inherent hostility to foreigners is a major stumbling block to this measure. As evidenced by the rise of immigrant-bashing populists such as Nigel Farage and Ukip, it may be hard to get the British people to agree to let Syrians into the country. The comments on Birrell’s piece online sum this worldview up inarticulately but neatly. Despite this, and though it may not be easy, opening our borders to Syrian refugees would be the right thing to do.

We must battle this irrational fear of foreigners; we must allow Syrian refugees into the country. As conditions in hastily constructed refugee camps worsen, and with winter on the horizon, now is the time to take some serious action towards helping people in a region blighted by war, and the ever-present possibility of an escalation in hostilities.

As a rich country, Britain ought to be motivated by a desire to use this wealth to do good things. David Cameron has in my view acted morally in his continued commitment to international development aid – but in cases like that of Syria, he needs to do more.

Opening borders to refugees ought not to be controversial. Helping those who are in desperate need should not be difficult to justify. Despite the popular opposition to this measure, it is one concrete action which the British government can carry out which will actually make a difference on the ground in Syria. For that reason alone, this sensible measure needs to be defended against any consensus.

David Cameron claimed to care about the citizens of Syria when he pushed for military intervention. If he actually does care, he would open the borders of this country to those in desperate need of sanctuary. If he does not, he will only demonstrate the shallowness of his supposed commitment to the Syrian people.


I’m backing Jeremy Corbyn for Labour leadership, despite his unsavoury “friends”

This is a cross post by Peter Tatchell

Like many others, I face a real dilemma. I’ve known Jeremy Corbyn for over 30 years and love nearly everything he stands for. Yet there are a few important issues on which I profoundly disagree with him. Does this mean he should no longer have my support?

Jeremy is not a saint. He’s never claimed to be. Even the best, most admirable politicians usually get some things wrong. Jeremy is no exception. On a majority of UK and foreign policy issues he’s spot on, with real vision and an inspiring alternative. On a small number of issues he has made lamentable misjudgements. Despite these shortcomings, I’m backing his bid for the Labour leadership. Here’s why:

I look at the big picture and judge politicians on their overall record. What are their ideals, motives and aims? What kind of society are they striving for? How would their policies impact on the average person? On all these assessment criteria, Jeremy is on the right side and is the most progressive candidate on nearly every issue.

He has strong, unique policies for social justice and equality – to secure a kinder, gentler, fairer and more inclusive, harmonious Britain. I am with him in opposing austerity. So is much of the country – including the Greens, SNP and Plaid Cymru, with whom I hope Jeremy and Labour will make common cause in a quadruple alliance.

Jeremy’s plan to invest in infrastructure to reboot the economy is backed by 41 economists, including a former advisor to the Bank of England. His strategy echoes FDR’s New Deal and proposals from the International Monetary Fund.

A Corbyn premiership would reverse damaging, cruel welfare cuts and the privatisation of vital public services. He’d tackle climate destruction and rocketing rents and house prices. Trident renewal, foreign wars and the sinister Transatlantic Trade & Investment Partnership would be nixed. His administration would bring rail and energy companies back into a new, decentralised form of public ownership. These are sensible, compassionate policies. Good for him.

In my book, he is head and shoulders above all the other Labour leadership candidates, both in terms of his past political record and his political agenda for the future.

But the single most important over-arching reason for supporting Jeremy is that Britain needs to turn away from the flawed and failed policies of business as usual. He is shaking up the Establishment and breaking with the cosy political consensus that has been shared by Labour, Conservatives, Lib Dems and UKIP. The mainstream, middle-of-the-road policies of the last decade are not the answer. All they offer is more of the same, which is what got us into the current mess.

Jeremy is thinking beyond what is. He’s imagining what could be. It’s a much needed political rethink, which leaves his rivals lagging far behind.

Now that he has a serious chance of winning the Labour leadership, Jeremy has faced a barrage of accusations over his contacts with anti-Semites, Holocaust deniers and Islamist extremists.

This puts me in a very difficult position, given my advocacy for human rights. At what point do links with bad people put a politician beyond the pale? How many flawed judgements does it take to cancel out all the good that a MP might have done and espoused?

Some of the accusations against Jeremy are exaggerations and distortions. Others involve McCarthyite smears of guilt by association. Jeremy has made reassuring noises and given plausible explanations for several of the allegations.

He says, for example, he was not aware of the Holocaust revisionist views of Paul Eisen when he attended meetings of his Deir Yassin Remembered organisation. I can believe that. Some extremists hide their views and politicians sometimes lend their support to what they genuinely believe to be legitimate campaign groups.

On the basis that Jeremy has his heart in the right place and that he is not an Islamist, Holocaust denier or anti-Semite, I’ll give him the benefit of the doubt.

Nevertheless, it is true that he has been often careless in not checking out who he shares platforms with and has been too willing to associate uncritically with the Islamist far right.

While I’m certain that Jeremy doesn’t share their extremist views, he does need to explain in more detail why he has attended and spoken at meetings alongside some pretty unsavoury bigots who advocate human rights abuses – and especially why he did so without publicly criticising their totalitarian politics.

Jeremy supported, for example, the visit to parliament of Sheikh Raed Saleh, who has reportedly slurred Jews as “monkeys” and repeated the anti-Semitic “blood libel” which claims that Jews used the blood of gentile children to make their bread. He called Saleh “a very honoured citizen who represents his people extremely well.” What? Just because Saleh opposes the Israeli occupation and supports Palestinian self-determination does not make him a good person deserving such praise.

While Jeremy is right to dialogue with Hamas and Hezbollah as part of a peace initiative, as Tony Blair and the Israeli government have done, he was wrong to call them “friends”. These are Islamist political parties with poor human rights records that are not consistent with humanitarian – let alone left-wing – values.

Jeremy says he doesn’t agree with their views but I have not been able find any instance, until very recently, where he has publicly criticised either Hezbollah or Hamas, both of which are guilty (alongside Israel) of war crimes and the abuse of their own citizens.

Jeremy was also wrong to call the Islamist extremist Ibrahim Hewitt “my very good friend” and to share platforms with him, given that Hewitt allegedly supports the death penalty for apostates, blasphemers, adulterers and LGBT people.

I don’t buy the excuse that Jeremy’s use of the term “friends” was “diplomatic” language to win over extremists and encourage dialogue. He would rightly not accept a similar explanation by a MP who used those words about, and shared a platform with, the BNP, EDL or European fascist parties.

Islamists are a religious version of the far right. They want a clerical dictatorship, without democracy and human rights. They do not merit friendship, praise or uncritical association of any kind.

Jeremy has also made misjudgements on Russia, Ukraine, Syria and Iran. He says he wants dialogue and negotiations, not war. I agree. But this should not include collusion – even if unintentional – with human rights abusing regimes.

We don’t often hear Jeremy condemning Putin’s oligarchs, show trials and tamed media and judiciary. Where is his solidarity with democracy and human rights campaigners, beleaguered civil society organisations and harassed journalists, LGBT advocates and left-wing activists? I’m sure he opposes all these abuses but he rarely says so publicly.

Halya Coynash of the Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group is one of the most respected human rights figures in Ukraine. Fearless in tackling all abusers from all sides, she says some of Jeremy’s views on Russia and Ukraine echo Putin’s propaganda.

Other rights campaigners have confirmed that the dominance of pro-Russian factions in Crimea, Donetsk and Luhansk has led to increased persecution of ethnic, religious and sexual minorities. Jeremy has not spoken out clearly enough against these abuses by Russia and its local allies.

On Syria, Jeremy seems to have no policies, apart from “Don’t Bomb Syria.” I concur. We don’t want escalation and war. But surely 250,000 dead, 1.5 million wounded and 10 million refugees merits some action? Total inaction aids the survival of Assad and ISIS.

A good start might be a UN General Assembly authorised no-fly-zone, arms embargo, peacekeepers and civilian safe havens – plus cutting funding to the ISIS and Assad armies by a UN blockade of oil sales. Such measures – enforced by non-western states such as Argentina, India, Brazil, Nigeria and South Africa – would help deescalate the conflict and reduce casualties. Jeremy’s wariness of intervention is understandable. I share it. But surely a UN mandate designed to limit war fighting is reasonable and legitimate for a left-wing candidate?

Like Jeremy, I don’t want war with Iran. I opposed the indiscriminate, blanket Western sanctions that hurt ordinary Iranians. But I’ve struggled to find examples of where he has spoken out against Iran’s mass jailing and torture of trade unionists, students, journalists, lawyers, feminists, human rights defenders and sexual, religious and ethnic minorities (such as the Arabs, Kurds, Azeris and Baluchs). Why the silence? He often and loudly criticises Saudi Arabia. Why not Iran?

It is very distressing to see Jeremy appear on the Iranian regime’s propaganda channel Press TV; especially after it defamed peaceful protesters and covered up state violence at the time of the rigged presidential elections in 2009. Moreover, how can Jeremy (and George Galloway) appear on Press TV, despite it broadcasting forced confessions by democrats and human rights defenders who’ve been tortured into admitting false charges and who are later executed?

Based on these serious lapses, Jeremy’s critics say his foreign policies make him unfit to be Labour leader and Prime Minister. I understand some of their reservations but they ignore all the international issues where Jeremy has a superb record, including support for serious action against global poverty and the arms trade, and his opposition to the Saudi Arabian and Bahraini dictatorships (two tyrannies that most other MPs ignore and which Tony Blair, Gordon Brown and David Cameron have actively colluded with).

Moreover, Jeremy’s been a long-time champion of the dispossessed Chagos Islanders, Kurds, Palestinians and Western Sahrawis. Few other MPs have shown similar concern about the fate of most of these peoples.

That’s one of many reasons why, despite misgivings about some of Jeremy’s policies and associations, I support his bid to be Labour leader. Taking into account his overall agenda, on balance he’s the best contender. I am confident that he will respond to fair criticism and reconsider some of his past associations. And I’m certain that if he became Prime Minister he’d adopt a somewhat different stance. Already he’s modified his position on NATO and the EU, from withdrawal to reform.

Some of Jeremy’s supporters may accuse me of betrayal and of aligning myself with his right-wing critics. Not so. My criticisms are rooted in a leftist, human rights politics that is democratic, secular and internationalist.

Support for Jeremy does not require suspension of our critical faculties and a knee-jerk unthinking allegiance. As he himself has often said, it is a citizen’s responsibility to hold politicians to account – including those we support. Nobody is entitled to a free pass – not Jeremy, me or anyone.