Global Dialogues

Archbishop Tutu v. Tony Blair

Tony Blair came to Johannesburg last week. He was part of the Discovery Leadership Summit, hosted by Discovery Invest, and as you might expect he was the headline act.  Tony Blair on leadership: now that would be an interesting lecture, if you could afford the high fee to attend (just over a quarter of the monthly take-home pay of your average South African academic).

As it happens in South Africa’s thickly political society, Archbishop Tutu, scheduled to appear at the summit as well, pulled out dramatically and at the last minute. He was unable to share a platform, he said, with the former UK Prime Minister given his ‘morally indefensible’ invasion of Iraq. Tutu’s moral stand also had the strategic political objective of refocusing attention on a war that many in South Africa have forgotten in our parochial obsession with our tangled society.

On the day of Blair’s speech, protestors demonstrated outside the Sandton Convention Centre and grabbed headlines to the chagrin of the conference organisers (who, it must be said, remained graceful throughout).  Some of those protestors hoped to make a citizen’s arrest of Blair on the grounds that he was a war criminal. They did not get close, as security was amped up. And although I sat two feet behind Blair at the taping of a BBC debate on poverty, I did not feel moved to put my hand on his shoulder as the viral email explaining how to effect a citizen’s arrest advised; see http://www.arrestblair.org/. Neither the bounty of over 500 GBP, nor the reassurance that my motives for the arrest did not matter, tempted me. I like the politics of outrage as much as the next leftist, but I prefer thoughtful debate, when all is said and done.

I agree with Tutu that Blair’s war was based on slender evidence, driven by misinformation and an almost blind obsession with “following through” on his conviction (not to mention his commitment to President Bush) that the war should proceed. I would even confess to a visceral dislike of the smarmy mode of politics that Blair epitomizes. By contrast, I have admired Tutu for as long as I can remember and as a student I sat at his feet as he took on the apartheid government. Most recently, I supported his excoriation of the current government of South Africa for not allowing the Dalai Lama to join in Tutu’s 80th birthday celebrations.

But it seems to me that Tutu missed an opportunity to engage with Blair in Johannesburg, and even to embarrass him, if that was the point. The enormous media coverage of Tutu’s action focused on whether Tutu was justified or not in boycotting the Discovery Leadership Summit, rather than on the causes of and justifications for the war.

An eloquent commentary on the nature of ethical leadership would have achieved vastly more in the public debate than the boycott has generated. It might have given us the arguments with which to take on Blair’s view that good leaders need to do what they think is right, even in the face of public disapproval. Really? No debate? Isn’t that what we call authoritarianism? It might have opened a discussion of what evidence is used in decision-making, and who has the right to information. Tutu might have asked Blair why he wrote in his memoir that he looked back on the introduction of the Freedom of Information Act and thought to himself: “you naïve, irresponsible nincompoop.” In retrospect, he thought empowering citizens was “utterly undermining of sensible government.”

Should a small elite, even if it is elected, make world- shattering decisions? And what about Blair’s notorious and repeated retort when questioned about Iraq that he will not apologize for removing a dictator: will he apologize then for supporting Gaddafi and Assad?

Tutu might even have opened a serious discussion of how we define “war criminals.” But the chance has passed, the Blair machine has moved on to its next engagement and all we have to celebrate is that the protesters did not get beaten up by the police.

By the way, if you are wondering what Blair had to say about leadership: not much. Certainly not enough to justify his reputed 6 000 GBP per minute speaking fee. To wit: we need an open society, responsible leadership, and Africans need to take their destiny in their own hands. Blair is a consummate public speaker so his speech was graceful and witty as could be expected, and the audience of high-level business leaders was impressed. The humorous manner in which he responded to his critics, including Tutu, was a model of diplomacy and could teach South African politicians a thing or two about the art of the stylish retort. On questions about his invasion of Iraq, he was smoothly evasive and showed no willingness to debate any of the key issues.

But what he did say – during his tenure as prime minister and again in the BBC debate on poverty – leaves me with a deep fear that the idea of “responsible and sensible” government might be displacing that of “accountable” government. That would be a profoundly undemocratic version of leadership.

7 comments to Archbishop Tutu v. Tony Blair

  • Marcus

    “I like the politics of outrage as much as the next leftist, but I prefer thoughtful debate, when all is said and done.”

    Let’s hope the 100,000+ killed by the Anglo-American assault on Iraq share your admirable sentiments

  • Marcus, I don’t see how you have actually addressed the central argument of this post on the question of boycott versus debate. The issue it seems to me is a practical one: how to call to account those responsible for an atrocious policy and persuade those who might support it. I agree with with Hassim: debate is generally a more effective and more democratic way of proceeding.

  • Marcus

    The only meaningful “debate” you’re ever going to see is the one that would occur if Blair were subjected to the same kind of prosecution that was afforded the defendants at the Nuremberg trials and compelled to defend himself. But that’s never going to happen, for reasons Tutu explains. Any other kind of “debate” gives Blair the opportunity, should he take it, to point out that everything he and Bush did was justified. OK, the majority of people would not side with his position, but, at the end of the day, Blair would just do his usual trick and say that disagreement is healthy and good. Congratulations! You’ve just established that there are different points of view, that your ideal speech society defines how things get done, you’ve allowed Blair once again to establish that those who condemn him merely see things differently (and were not, in any case, privy to all the facts), you’ve helped strengthen the little shit’s position, and you’ve changed nothing.

    Only an academic completely divorced from reality would suggest that a “debate” with Blair would achieve anything material. (I’ll concede the point that it would possibly make even more people despise Blair.) Blair and Bush will NEVER be held accountable because that’s power works. That’s what power is. Amazing that you just can’t see it but, perhaps, not surprising, given your social location.

  • Shireen Hassim

    Marcus, at Blair’s own speech at the Leadership Summit he was asked from the floor about the facts he used to make his decision. He mumbled and stumbled and could not provide an answer. I don’t think he came out looking stronger; if anything, he sounded like a puny bully who has been deprived of his power. I think Blair damned himself. There are many more issues at stake here, by the way, rather than just damning Blair, so to push for more debate is not just an academic exercise. One example close to (my) home: should Mugabe be declared a war criminal?

  • And if Tutu were there as Blair “mumbled and stumbled” appearing as “a puny bully” many beyond academic circles and the already convinced would see. This is particularly important close to my home where a clear line of then and now, with a commitment of never again is an unfulfilled necessity.

  • Marcus

    Blair seems to be doing all right to me. Better than Jeffrey and Shireen, anyway.
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/tony-blair/9366716/I-wish-I-had-been-offered-presidency-of-EU-Tony-Blair-admits.html
    I’m quite willing to believe he mumbled and stumbled at the “Leadership Summit” (don’t you just love it), and did not come off as impressive to his opponents. What good luck this was highlighted by the media so everyone knows about it and was talking about it.

    Maybe I’m wrong, and a few fringe academics will nail this guy and hold him accountable. When it happens I’ll be delighted to be back on Jeffrey’s page, highlighting the fact that I got it all wrong.

    Academic leftists! One on one, or all together, Blair has had you for lunch. You’re gnat’s on the ass of a rhinoceros. Thanks for keeping the “debate” going, anyway.

    BTW, when can we all look forward to the arrest of George W. Bush? You need to debate harder guys.

    Oh, and if you are wondering —- What would YOU have us do, I would have you trying to establish a political party/organization that would hold powerful people accountable. (OK, I realize it’s pretty hopeless in the USA, but, at least, it’s better than another “debate”) But, if that were the agenda, Obama would be one of the last candidates on earth to support, right.? And nobody seriously would endorse Dems. They’re transparently part of the problem. Also, if you were (even slightly) successful you’d be a threat, so you would be targeted. You might even lose your jobs.

    Probably better to stick to the “debate.”

  • Scott

    If I had to choose which was more effective at getting things done, sanctimonious diatribes or reasoned debate, I would certainly opt for the latter.

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