By Michael Gove
(published by Weidenfeld & Nicholson)
Reviewed from different perspectives by Robert Halfon and Brian Jenner
Robert Halfon is Political Director of Conservative Friends of Israel and has been fastracked to re-stand in Harlow at the next election.
Prepare to be depressed. This is not a book for a balmy summer’s day.
It is a more a manual about the threat of global jihad, the new
totalitarianism of our age.
In stark terms, Celsius 7/7 suggests
that just as Fascism subsumed tolerant nationalism and communism
engulfed moderate socialism, Islamism has subjugated Islam (Mr Gove
does not like the term Islamic fundamentalist).
In the bleak
world that is painted by Celsius 7/7, it is the free West - just as in
the 1930s - that has allowed this rise in Islamism to continue
unabated. Through a mixture of short term self interest and so called
‘realpolitik’, it is the West that is the primary author of its own
misfortune.
From the misguided policy towards Iraq and Iran
during the 1980s and 90s, to the encouragement of ‘soft’ authoritarian
regimes such as Saudi Arabia, far from discouraging Islamism, the West
has merely fuelled the appetite for Islamist totalitarianism. Despite
numerous Islamic terrorist atrocities, it took 9/11 and 7/7 for the
free world to finally get to grips with the Islamist threat. Yet even
after these events, the tough response to the war on terror has come
under continuous assault from politicians who prefer populism to
security and from a media and active left wing who have adopted
doctrines of moral relativism and moral equivalence.
When faced
with an Islamic theocracy in Iran, the West prevaricates. When the
Iranian President promises to wipe Israel off the map and builds up his
nuclear arsenal, the West communicates a message that at best is
confused and at worst shows weakness of the highest order. When
President Ahmanidejad supports the Shia insurgency in Iraq, finances
and provides sophisticated weaponry to Hezbollah in Lebanon, the
response of the UN and the EU is more ‘jaw, jaw’ than ‘war war’.
President Chirac, with his eye on French contracts in the Middle East
cautions against sanctions - no doubt hoping to visit Tehran, promising
to return to Europe with a piece of paper proclaiming 'peace in his
time’.
The
West’s lack of will to deal with Islamism, is buttressed by huge
sections of the media and elements of the left who view the conflict
between the free world and Islamism as one of moral relativism and
moral equivalence.
In this warped world view, there is no
difference between Saddam Hussein and George Bush. One gassed and
buried alive hundreds of thousands of Kurds, the other was responsible
for Abu Graib. But, as Mr Gove points out, there is a difference. The
former was state policy, the latter a tragic (and disgusting) abuse by
errant soldiers. Similarly, in the pantheon of moral equivalence there
is no difference between Israel - a democratic state subject to the
rule of law - struggling for its daily existence and Hezbollah and
Hamas, Islamist terrorist organisations who have appropriated the
Palestinian cause.
A recent BBC documentary ‘elusive peace’
provided a classic example of this. The Israelis and Palestinians were
painted as players on a chess board, no different from the other. The
whole process was about ‘tit for tat’. Assassinations of Islamist
terrorist leaders in revenge for suicide bombers and such like rather
than a battle between a democratic state and a Palestinian Government
that refused to dismantle its terrorist infrastructure.
Moral
relativism and moral equivalence have provided a cloak in which the
left can embrace Islamism as a means by which to express their
hostility to capitalism, the West and particularly the United States.
Israel becomes the prism which the left and media establishment can
unite against. So Ken Livingstone can nakedly court the Islamic vote in
London, by making seemingly anti-Semitic remarks and virulent attacks
on the State of Israel. We have a grotesque spectacle of the
re-emergence of the red-brown coalition in which left wingers -
previously campaigners for sexual equality and freedom of speech -
form common cause with Islamists whose raison d’etre is repression of
minorities and dictatorship.
There
are of course some honourable exceptions. Peter Tatchell being a prime
example and the group of left intellectuals behind the Euston
Manifesto. Nevertheless the red-brown alliance gives great
encouragement to Islamist totalitarians across the world. From
Communism to Al Qaeda, sections of the left have transmogrified into
Bin Laden’s ‘useful idiots’. It is no accident that the last chapter in
Celsius 7/7 is entitled ‘What is to be done?’.
Indeed this
concluding chapter offers some hope amidst all the gloom. Celsius 7/7
gives a clarion cry for moral relativism to be replaced by moral
clarity about our values and what we stand for. The book urges the West
to follow through the war in Iraq until the Islamists are defeated and
the war on terror won.
Mr Gove passionately argues for an ethical
foreign policy whose main purpose is to promote genuine democracy and
the rule of law across the world. This must mean more than just
democratic elections. True freedom embodies democratic values not just
the machinery of democracy. So a genuinely free Government upholds the
rule of law, protects minorities and guarantees freedom of expression.
It does not mean winning elections and holding power with the
barrel of the gun as in the case of the Nazis in the 1930s and Hamas in
the Palestinian Authority in 2006.
At home, Mr Gove pleads for
Mr Blair not to fight the war on terror on the one hand but appease
radical Islamists at home by putting them on Government committees or
giving radicals 'knighthoods' that have done nothing in the cause of
moderation to deserve it. The author urges a commitment to build a
truly inclusive model of British citizenship in which divisive
separatist identities are challenged and rejected.
In the 1930s
in Berlin, William L Shirer painstakingly documented the rise of
Hitler, his seizure of power the violence of the brownshirts and the
Nazi quest for world domination. Michael Gove, also a young journalist
(and MP) is the William L Shirer of our time. If anyone cares deeply
about our freedoms, they should read this book. If anyone wants to
understand when Danish newspapers publish cartoons that are sensitive
to Islamists, why buildings are ransacked and destroyed they should
study the chapters in Celsius 7/7. If anyone cannot comprehend why an
academic speech made by the Pope causes nuns to be murdered, Churches
in the West Bank to be destroyed and effigies burnt, they must read
Michael Gove's book. As Celsius 7/7 states: the Islamists smell our
fear.
Brian Jenner runs a blog on the subject of speechwriting.
Michael Gove has written a book articulating the terrible threat that Islamic fundamentalism poses to our way of life. With anyone who raises apocalyptic fears, you can’t dismiss them out of hand, you can only analyse the style and substance of the arguments and work out whether you buy them or not.
Gove’s message is the Islamists are out to get us and we have to fight them like we fought Communism. In the best tradition of conspiracy theorists, he tells us we are bumbling, useless and half-asleep, while they are well-organized, watchful and determined.
Gove’s case is spelt out in irritating overstatements. Take the opening to the chapter which describes the ‘weightless’ (whatever that means) decade: "W H Auden described the 1930s as a ‘low dishonest decade’. Would that he had lived to see the 1990s. This was the decade in which the West forgot itself."
There follows several pages of tendentious theorising. He says Margaret Thatcher achieved ascendancy over the terrorists. Whereas John Major showed weakness. Well, I don’t remember it quite like that. When the IRA started bombing the City of London, the threat to the economy was so great that they had to negotiate. The fact that Major was prepared to deal with them is described as ‘Britain’s terminal weakness’, and Gove implies that when Major did not insist on the decommissioning of weapons, the Islamists took note. You find yourself saying, ‘Whoa!’ on every page, because of the broad sweep of the generalizations.
Gove’s prose gets manic at times, calling for Western society to wake up and acquire moral clarity. He suggests that in Iraq they should have applied more force. The operation at Fallujah was a success. He urges the use of ‘exemplary military force’ to combat terrorism. Why couldn’t he have chosen the word ‘brutal’? That’s what he means.
There is a potted history of the rise of Islamic fundamentalism and some tough and convincing things said about the threat to Israel. But lazy sentences like, ‘Clearly, the Palestinian people deserve a brighter future.’ had me thinking, ‘Well that’s very generous of you Michael.’
He has a chapter on the ‘Fellow Travellers’. Gove doesn’t like George Galloway, he doesn’t like the Guardian, he doesn’t like the BBC. He claims that the fact that a number of people who went on anti-war marches were pro-Palestinian somehow devalues them. At one point Michael Gove, yes Michael Gove, the ubiquitous Times’ journalist, broadcaster, MP and panelist attacks the ‘media establishment’.
Gove says he believes in democracy, but he doesn’t seem to keen to see it in messy action. He attacks Galloway because during his election campaign: "Ms King’s Jewish birth, her gender and her support for the liberation of Iraq were all highlighted". Well, that may not be cricket, but I don’t think it merits outrage.
He ends with an impassioned argument:
"If we believe in the superiority of our way of life, if we believe, as the anti-apartheid movement and the civil rights movement believed, that freedom knows no boundaries and every human being is precious, then we should believe in, and want urgently to work for, the spread of democracy across the globe."
Well that’s right. The moral clarity of the West is that we believe that every human life is precious – that’s why it is so difficult to support the War on Terror. I’m not sure we do believe in the superiority of our way of life. As Chris Patten put it in Not Quite the Diplomat:
"it is important to avoid sounding like Silvio Berlusconi and other politicians and church leaders who suggest that we dwell on a higher moral plane in Europe, custodians of a superior set of moral values and attitudes – conveniently managing to file and forget gas chambers, gulags, and our Christian heritage of flagrant or more discreet anti-Semitism and Islamophobia."
Democracy is desirable, but Western leaders seem to be happy to compromise when it comes to characters like General Musharraf. Is it wise to wage the War on Terror if it makes the situation far worse and you can’t win it? Gove might read up on the life of Robert McNamara, and his 11 Thoughts on the Vietnam War.
This book revels in the idiom of anti-Communist propaganda – Gove seems to be inspired by the style of a 1930s pamphlet. (Maybe he’s going to follow through and sign up to fight himself). Why is he doing this when he is always reminding us that Conservatives have to talk to the voters in a different way? How can any moderniser say: "The sapping of confidence in Western values encouraged by the Radical left since 1968"? Nobody will buy that.
As a grass roots Conservative, I can’t ever see the British public voting in a Government espousing this ‘neo con’ view of world affairs.
I am fed up with the Islamic extremist on the one hand and the Zionist extremists on the other fighting out their battles (either physically 7/7 or intellectually - this book and Robert Halfon's comments) at the expense of the majority of the people of this country and its interests.
To be honest, I can only think of one solution, to move the lot of them onto the moon (including their sympathisers
- Goerge Galloway and Robert Halfon) and let them slug it out until they all realise the folly of their ways. At least that way the rest of us can live in peace!
Posted by: anon | December 18, 2006 at 01:00 PM
@Wellness
- pre 67 borders
- Right of Return
- Palestinian State
The only permanent solution to the whole problem.
You mean final solution of course. Israel retreating to pre-67 borders and allowing the right of return of the jordanian and syrian refugees now fetishized as 'Palestinians' would destroy Israel demographically within a generation or two while she is simply attacked again from the ceded ground (as has happened after every other pullback).
There is no intention to recognise Israel's right to exist even rhetorically - that is a foolish delusion. The thing Hamas fears above all is Fatah holding a referendum on whether 'palestine' should recognise Israel. If you observe Hamas rallies their supporters frequently lead the crowds in cries of 'No referendum'. Do you really think Hamas and hezbollah cling to their charters as some sort of negotiating tactic? Why do you find it so hard to believe that they actually hate with such ferocity that they wish Israel (and the west) wiped out for no other reason than we exist?
What will it take for you to recognise that none of this is hyperbole, none of this is going away, none of this is because of what we or the jews have done but because of the fact that we are.
Posted by: tired and emotional | December 18, 2006 at 05:48 PM
The flaw with Gove's analysis, with which Halfon concurs, is that it takes a far too optimistic view of human nature in general, and Arab politics in particular - hence "The book urges the West to follow through the war in Iraq until the Islamists are defeated and the war on terror won" bears no relation to reality. Not only is there no prospect of winning the war in Iraq, even if we were to do so (which might have been possible 3 years ago), it would have barely any impact on the Islamist threat to the West, far less "win the war on terror", an unattainable aim anyway - you can't win a war on terror, or on fear, or even on jihad.
Gove's failing is the neocon one, the Rousseauean myth that sees all people equally desirous of and capable of freedom and self rule. In reality, building liberal democracy in tribal kin-based societies is extremely difficult. No Arab state offers a plausible prospect of the global democratic transformation that the neocons so blithely assumed could be imposed by US military force.
However, Gove is entirely correct in regards to the existence of the Islamist threat, though not the solution to it. Jenner's response by contrast - "I’m not sure we do believe in the superiority of our way of life" - ie that we are no better than the Islamists - is utterly contemptible.
Posted by: SimonNewman | December 19, 2006 at 09:57 AM
tired and emotional:
"There is no intention to recognise Israel's right to exist even rhetorically - that is a foolish delusion."
I came to realise recently that the major difference between the two sides is that generally speaking Israelis want to live in peace in a state called Israel, whereas Palestinians, other Arabs, and most Muslims, want Israel to be destroyed and replaced by a Muslim state called Palestine. The first side wants peace & security, the second side wants to destroy the first side. You may favour one side or the other, but this difference is fundamental.
Posted by: SimonNewman | December 19, 2006 at 10:03 AM
/agree
Posted by: tired and emotional | December 19, 2006 at 10:22 AM