By Daniel Mandel on 5.10.07 @ 12:08AM
What do the revisionists have in mind?
There have been recent efforts by pundits, foreign affairs
analysts and historians to cut to consign to disrepute the ideas
Winston Churchill personified or to cast him as an exponent of
their opposite. Why these exertions?
Let's examine what these revisionists say.
Writing in the British Spectator in 2004, Michael Lind,
an escapee from conservatism to the New America Foundation,
used selective quotation and the ambiguity of
terminology ("poison gas") from a 1919 Churchill document to paint
him as an advocate of using weapons of mass destruction against
"uncivilized tribes."
The purpose of Lind's exercise was to prove that Churchill was
an imperialist WMD-wielding warmonger and thus scarcely a rightful
model and inspiration to devotees of destroying WMDs and
constructing democracies. But this was nonsense. Consulting the
full passage in that document
shows the very opposite: Churchill explicitly supported the ban
on such weapons while approving the use of lesser ones like tear
gas.
More recently, in September 2006, Graham Allison and Dimitri
Simes, writing
in the National Interest, urged greater indulgence of
Russia's Vladimir Putin on the basis that Churchill would have had
enough sense to form a strategic alliance with Russia in a time of
major crisis like our own.
In which way is America to do that? Conceding Putin's maleficent
role in world affairs, Allison and Simes are "not suggesting that
Russia be permitted to use force against its neighbors with
impunity or try to recreate the Soviet Union." But they are
suggesting that America was wrong for siding "with Russia's new
neighbors in almost every single dispute they had with Moscow,
treating Russian influence in the post-Soviet space as unacceptable
neo-imperialism."
Unfortunately, it is Russia that is intimidating its neighbors,
not the reverse. As such, there is little scope to "side" with
Russia without thereby permitting it to act with "impunity" against
its neighbors. Allison and Simes are therefore saying that allowing
Putin to have his way should not be our policy -- merely our
practice, and that Churchill would have recommended as much.
Churchill might have handled matters differently with Russia
today. We cannot tell. But it is reasonably certain that he would
need something pretty large -- a massive unstinting Russian
commitment to the war on Islamism which Allison and Simes
themselves note is not likely to be forthcoming -- before making a
dirty agreement with them like the one that, in return for fighting
Nazism to the death, conceded to Stalin much of Eastern Europe.
The latest piece of Churchill revisionism concerns his reputed
philo-Semitism and its author seems to have genuinely believed that
he had grounds for it. Richard Toye, author of a new Churchill
biography, last March told of having exhumed an unpublished 1937
article among Churchill 's papers that had "apparently lain
unnoticed in the Churchill archives at Cambridge since the early
months of the Second World War." The article in question contended
that the Jews are partly responsible for the persecution they
suffer.
Says Toye, "I nearly fell off my chair when I found
the article. It appears to have been overlooked. I think a lot of
people thought that the file it was in only contained copies of
articles that had already been published. It was certainly quite a
shock to read some of these things and it is obviously at odds with
the traditional idea we have of Churchill."
With reason -- Churchill biographer Sir Martin Gilbert was quick
to disclose that the article was not penned by
Churchill, but by one of his part-time ghost-writers, Adam Marshall
Diston, who was a supporter of British fascist Sir Oswald Mosley
(though himself a British Labour Party parliamentary candidate at
the time). Churchill disagreed with its contents and vetoed its
publication, leading Gilbert to conclude that "Someone else's
opinions, in an unpublished article, which never appeared in print
under Churchill's name, cannot be laid at Churchill's door."
Just so. Churchill's opinions of Jews and the extent of his
support, at different times, for Zionism have been questioned
before (for example, in Michael J. Cohen's Churchill and the Jews), but Gilbert's
forthcoming Churchill and the Jews: A Lifelong
Friendship should, ideally, put outstanding issues into
perspective. In any event, Toye's rediscovery of the unpublished
article is a broken reed for his revisionist thesis.
The periodic reinvention of Churchill -- Atlanticist, democrat,
totalitarian foe, philo-Semite -- into a WMD-enthusiast, democracy
sacrificer, realpolitiker, anti-Semitic dabbler -- is sometimes
remarkable for its boldness, whether based on a flight of
documentary fancy, manipulation or reinterpretation. The temptation
to undermine (if necessary, invert) the claims on our attention
that is owed to Churchillean ideas is not hard to understand.
Chronic Iraq problems have given strength to opponents of muscular
anti-Islamism and democracy-promotion. A disapproving focus on
their Churchillean antecedents can assist an effort to discredit
them. But the evidence shows that those wishing to do so had better
look elsewhere for inspiration.
topics:
Vladimir Putin, Islam, Books, Iraq, Russia, Conservatism