Labour Friends of Iraq
Building support for the new Iraq

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May 25, 2006

The geography of the left and Iraq


Norman Geras - professor of government at the University of Manchester and one of the authors of the Euston Manifesto – examines the geography of the left in the Guardian. He rightly argues that within the large "middle" sector of left-liberal opinion opposed to the war there has been, from the start, a differentiating subdivision - between those who opposed the war without being in denial about the considerations on the other side of the argument, and those who precisely have been in denial about them. This latter group extends well beyond the far left. The signs of denial are abundant in the recent public life of the western democracies: in the banners and slogans for that Saturday on February 15 2003, from which one would never have known that Saddam's Iraq was a foul tyranny; in the numbers of those on the left unwilling to allow, many indeed unable to comprehend, why others of us supported a regime-change war; in a constant stream of comment in liberal daily papers and weeklies of the left; in the excommunications issued and more recent calls for apology or recantation; and, most seriously, in the perceptible lack of interest in initiatives of solidarity with the forces in Iraq battling for a democratic transformation of their country, part of a wider lack of enthusiasm for the success of this enterprise given its origins in a war led by George Bush.

The Guardian, sadly, is one of the key culprits in demonstrating what he calls a perceptible lack of interest in initiatives of solidarity with the forces in Iraq battling for a democratic transformation of their country.

Gary Kent

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