Become a Member
Douglas Murray

ByDouglas Murray, Douglas Murray

Opinion

Britain's line on Israel is a cover for its impotence

June 16, 2011 10:36
3 min read

"When you can, you should." That was Tony Blair's opinion on intervention, as boiled down for a journalist a few days before sending British forces into Iraq.

The world has no shortage of dictators and despots. The Blair formula was that when such human-rights violators looked vulnerable, and provided you had the military capability and political will, you should seize the opportunity. Which he did - preventing genocides in, among other places, Kosovo and Sierra Leone. In those days, Britain punched above its weight. How long ago that seems.

The nature of 24-hour multimedia means that popular calls to intervene come faster than ever. A natural disaster occurs, a country erupts or a government begins to massacre its people and within hours "something has happened" turns into "something must be done". And our politics are as reactive as our media.

If Gaddafi turns foreign mercenaries on to the Libyan people or Assad chucks out the press and gets down to a good month's massacring, the human-rights lobby and other elements on the left will insist that something must be done. Those on the political right tend to be more sceptical of demands for action. Not because they are any less bothered by the murder of civilians, but because they are suspicious of the utility of force in such situations and fear protracted involvements abroad. So those who most desire the ends are suspicious of the means, while those most reconciled with the means are suspicious of the ends.