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washingtonpost.com
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A43665-2003Jan25.html
In Britain, War Concern Grows Into Resentment of U.S. Power
Anxiety Over Attack on Iraq Moves to Political Mainstream

By Glenn Frankel
Washington Post Foreign Service
Sunday, January 26, 2003; Page A14

LONDON -- In a recently televised satire here titled "Between Iraq and a
Hard Place," George W. Bush is depicted as an idiot who can't seem to
grasp why Saddam Hussein isn't cooperating with the U.S. timetable for
war. American democracy is defined as "where there are two candidates
and the one with the most votes loses," and Britain's role in the
forthcoming military campaign is starkly simple:

"What is it that the Americans want from us?" asks a British official.

"From us?" replies an army general. "Dead bodies."

Prime Minister Tony Blair is the Bush administration's staunchest
international ally in its campaign against Iraq and war on terrorism. But
apart from Blair and his inner circle, there is growing unease and
resentment here not just over Iraq but over U.S. power and foreign policy
in general, according to political analysts, commentators and politicians.

There are fears that the United States is determined to act without
heeding the concerns of its allies -- and fears that Britain will be dragged
along in its wake. These fears have spread far beyond the traditionally anti-
American hard left -- known here as "the usual suspects" -- to include
moderates and conservatives as well.

"There's no question the anxiety is moving into the mainstream," said
Raymond Seitz, a former U.S. ambassador to Britain who is vice chairman of
Lehman Brothers Europe. The debate here, he said, has shifted. "It's not
about how you deal with weapons of mass destruction or how you combat
the threat of terrorism in the world, it's about how do you constrain the
United States. How do you tie down Gulliver?"

Opinion polls show that support for military action against Iraq is at its
lowest level ever among the British public. The Guardian newspaper and
the ICM polling group found last week that 30 percent of respondents now
support the idea, down from 42 percent in October. Opposition has risen
from 37 percent to 47 percent.

Other signs of the swing in mood: efforts by the tabloid Daily Mirror to
build circulation with an all-out campaign against an attack on Iraq; the
sold-out success of "The Madness of George Dubya," a north London
theatrical satire that depicts a child-like president in pajamas with a giant
teddy bear; and the continuing bestseller status of Michael Moore's book
"Stupid White Men," a blistering critique of the United States.

Criticism of America here begins with Iraq but quickly broadens to
accusations that Washington is aiding and abetting Israeli repression of
Palestinians and is a gluttonous society of large cars, fast food and
environmental degradation seeking cheap Iraqi oil to feed its consumption
habits.

"People in America don't understand that Blair is a rather lonely figure
within his own party and within the country as a whole" concerning war
and the alliance with the United States, Michael Gove, a columnist for the
Times of London newspaper, said. "Anti-Americanism is a real force here
and a growing one. It starts with tightly focused arguments but broadens
into the crudest of caricatures."

Other British observers insist that what's growing here isn't anti-
Americanism, but rather healthy criticism of a superpower gone awry.
"Being critical of U.S. policy does not constitute a prejudice," said Godfrey
Hodgson, a veteran journalist and author. "A vast majority of the British
people are favorable to the United States, but a substantial majority are
opposed to George W. Bush."

Much of the outrage is indeed aimed at Bush, whose colloquial speaking
style and Texas accent don't go over well here. A cartoon in last Sunday's
Observer newspaper depicted him as the Lone Ranger and Blair as Tonto.
When Blair expresses doubts about the Iraq campaign, Bush replies: "Shut
up, Tonto, and cover my back."

"Bush is a gift for anti-American cartoonists," Timothy Garton Ash, director
of the European Studies Center at St. Antony's College at Oxford
University, said. "If Bill Clinton were still in the White House, I suspect it'd
be a very different story."

Garton Ash insists that anti-Americanism is not moving into the British
mainstream. "America is the new Rome, the hyper-power, and when you're
the imperial power, you get a lot of stick," he said. "But this isn't a clash of
civilizations between Europe and America."

British opposition differs from that found in other European allies such as
France, which has a complicated relationship with the United States, and
Germany, with its post-World War II aversion to warfare.

By contrast, Britain has a martial tradition similar to America's, and its
relationship to the United States remains one of the world's enduring love
affairs. After the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, Blair was one of the first foreign
leaders to express sympathy and solidarity, and he sat next to Laura Bush
during President Bush's speech to Congress regarding the attacks. Queen
Elizabeth II emerged from a memorial service for the victims at St. Paul's
Cathedral with tears in her eyes after singing "Battle Hymn of the
Republic" with fellow mourners.

But there always was an alternative view that the United States had gotten
some of what it deserved, that the attacks were payback for decades of
ignoring Third World grievances. At a BBC televised panel discussion two
days after the attacks, a studio audience fired hostile remarks at former
U.S. ambassador to Britain Philip Lader and jeered his responses. "We share
your grief, America -- totally," wrote columnist Yasmin Alibhai-Brown, one
of the panelists, afterward. "But you must share our concerns."

Novelist John le Carre wrote in an op-ed piece in the Times newspaper
that "America has entered one of its periods of historical madness, but this
is the worst I can remember: worse than McCarthyism, worse than the Bay
of Pigs and in the long term potentially more disastrous than the Vietnam
War."

The British left, which has waged a steady campaign against the United
States since the days of the nuclear disarmament campaign and the
Vietnam War, has also weighed in. Playwright Harold Pinter in a recent
speech denounced "American hysteria, ignorance, arrogance, stupidity
and belligerence."

For the traditional left, said Emmanuele Ottolinghi, a research fellow at the
Middle East Center at St. Antony's, anti-Americanism has replaced a belief
in socialism as the common denominator that holds disparate groups
together. It also binds the left to Britain's growing Muslim population, anti-
globalists and anti-Zionists. "Anti-Americanism is glue that holds them
together, and hatred of Israel is one aspect," he said.

But there is also unease in the establishment. Some of the architects of
Britain's involvement in the first Persian Gulf conflict in 1991, including
former foreign secretary Douglas Hurd, former foreign minister Douglas
Hogg and the former permanent undersecretary of the ministry of
defense, Michael Quinlan, have expressed deep reservations about the
new campaign similar to those expressed in the United States by
Republican veterans such as Brent Scowcroft and James Baker.

Hurd in several opinion pieces has questioned whether overthrowing
Hussein, the Iraqi president, would make the world safer from terrorism or
simply trigger more attacks, especially if no steps are taken to resolve the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Next month, when the Oxford Union debates the proposition that "This
House believes the U.S.A. is the greatest barrier to world peace," one of
those speaking in favor will be Paul Robinson, a lecturer in security studies
at the University of Hull. He is a former military intelligence officer who
calls himself a right-of-center conservative, yet he argues that the Bush
administration is destroying the long-standing international consensus that
nations shouldn't wage war unless they are seriously threatened. "We are
just becoming naked aggressors," he said of the United States and Britain.

Americans in Britain say they still are welcomed here, but feel increasingly
challenged to take a stand against war in Iraq. When Melvyn P. Leffler, a
history professor at the University of Virginia, and John Arthur, a
philosophy professor at Binghamton University in New York, arrived last fall
to spend a year teaching at Oxford, they went to visit a British friend of
Arthur's and spent most of the night arguing over Iraq. "I was stunned to
realize that people here seem more fearful of American power than they
are of the oppressiveness and hideousness of Saddam Hussein's regime,"
Leffler said.

Former ambassador Seitz said the fears of the British are compounded by
the realization that they have little or no control over what happens. "At
the end of the day, the British do not control their own fate," he said.
"They've hitched their wagon to the American juggernaut, and the
decisions that can pose danger to British forces and interests are
essentially taken in Washington, not London."

Few observers believe the current unease here poses a serious political
danger to Blair, whose ruling Labor Party has a massive majority in
Parliament and the backing on Iraq of the leadership of the opposition
Conservatives. But if Washington fails to seek U.N. Security Council support
for military action, or if a military campaign bogs down, Blair could face
trouble.

Having gotten much credit for steering Bush toward the U.N. route last
fall, Blair needs to do so again when he visits Washington next weekend,
analysts said. "He needs plausibly to be able to say we're doing this with
the U.N.," Garton Ash said.

© 2003 The Washington Post Company
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