News and Document archive source
copyrighted material disclaimer at bottom of page

NewsMinecabal-eliteglobalizationbritain — Viewing Item


Blair says lets reorder the world { October 3 2001 }

Original Source Link: (May no longer be active)
   http://politics.guardian.co.uk/labour2001/story/0,1414,562269,00.html

http://politics.guardian.co.uk/labour2001/story/0,1414,562269,00.html

'Let us reorder this world'

Michael White, political editor
Wednesday October 3, 2001
The Guardian

Tony Blair yesterday turned his battle against the terrorists who ravaged New York into a far wider struggle for a new world order that would uphold human dignity and social justice "from the slums of Gaza to the mountain ranges of Afghanistan".
In what was almost certainly the most powerful speech of his career, the prime minister used his speech to the Labour conference to synthesise an uncompromising hostility to Osama bin Laden's terrorist network - and the Taliban if they do not give him up - with a vaunting promise to remake the world as a better place.

The sweep and moral fervour of the 54-minute address caught friend and foe off guard. There were no party political jibes and barely a triumphalist mention of Labour's historic June 7 election victory. The Conservatives damned the performance with faint praise.
Evidently sensitive to charges that he was sounding too confrontational, Mr Blair acknowledged that many people are fearful of what lies ahead - and sought to reassure voters whose unwavering support is vital to a long campaign.

"Our way of life is a great deal stronger and will last a greal deal longer than the actions of fanatics, small in number and now facing a unified world against them. People should have confidence. This is a battle with only one outcome: our victory, not theirs," he insisted.

Admitting his own helplessness in the face of so much bereavement on September 11, Mr Blair had earlier said of the dead: "They don't want revenge, they want something better in memory of their loved ones. I believe their memorial can and should be that out of the shadow of this evil should emerge lasting good."

The speech, which was, unusually, drafted by Mr Blair himself, also reflected his private moral preoccupations to an unusual degree. But before a largely secular audience it was repeatedly punctuated with bursts of applause in the packed but sombre Brighton conference centre, where the foreshortened 2001 conference ends today.

As the prime minister sat down he was praised for his vision and tone by friends and critics alike within Labour's ranks, though delegates may come down to earth with a jolt when they size up to the challenges he posed in the name of "the power of community" - local and global - to do good.

"He didn't deal with the whats and hows, but he certainly explained the why," said one former cabinet member. Some leftwingers and trade unionists, irked by the address's religiosity, called it "messianic" and lacking commitment to the means of righting the world's wrongs.

They were a minority. "Brilliant," said a senior colleague after hearing his party leader - famous for his regard for business tycoons - declare: "The starving, the wretched, the dispossessed, the ignorant, they are our cause too."

Throughout the day's debates senior ministers, including Jack Straw, Geoff Hoon and Clare Short, had stressed the importance of adhering to international law in the search for justice - a point echoed by the veteran Tony Benn in an emotional warning against the "sorrows of war".

An end to famine, poverty and corruption in Africa, as well as genocidal conflicts such as Rwanda's, were only part of an agenda that foresaw the world tackling such intractable problems as global warming and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict - an "equal partnership" side by side in their own lands.

Though the back half of Mr Blair's text addressed the domestic agenda - the need to put improved public services before tax cuts - he repeatedly went out of his way to reconcile Islam with the west, above all with America.

For all its flaws the US, where a black child of poverty such as Colin Powell could rise to be secretary of state ("I wonder frankly whether such a thing could have happened here") was still a model to the world, he argued.

Nor had America lashed out, as some had predicted: "no missiles on the first night just for effect". When military strikes came they would be "proportionate, targeted - we will do all we humanly can to avoid civilian casualties".

While the west must address its shameful ignorance of Islam, he later suggested, "it is time also for parts of Islam to confront prejudice against America" - not only Islam, but "parts of western societies too". That was loudly applauded in a conference where such sentiments have long existed.

But Mr Blair's conciliatory and idealistic tone was not extended to the enemy of the moment, whose version of Islam was "no more obedient to the proper teachings of the Koran" than the crusaders of the Middle Ages had exemplified the gospel message, he said.

"Be in no doubt Bin Laden and his people organised this atrocity," Mr Blair insisted. He offered no evidence, although he did suggest that terrorism finances itself through Afghan heroin sold on the streets of Britain.

His contempt for the Taliban and their denial of human rights, especially for women, was stinging. But he did not say, as Labour briefers had indicated overnight, that it was already too late to avoid military retribution.

"I say to the Taliban: surrender the terrorist or surrender power. It's your choice."

Mr Blair's pledge to defeat the "act of evil" that destroyed the World Trade Centre - "if they could have murdered not 7,000 but 70,000 does anyone doubt they would have done so and rejoiced?" - was only the trailer to a declaration that globalisation made cooperation between nations and cultures imperative.

"This is a moment to seize," he said. "The kaleidoscope has been shaken, the pieces are in flux, soon they will settle again. Before they do let us reorder this world around us and use modern science to provide prosperity for all.

"Science can't make that choice for us, only the moral power of a world acting as a community can."




Agents and merchants american colonial policy
Bank of england history
Banks and politics in american revolution
Bill must pass british unelected house of lords { May 7 2003 }
Blair advisor calls for colonialism again { April 7 2002 }
Blair bush [jpg]
Blair faces growing chorus from labour to quit
Blair failed to detain suspects without charge { November 9 2005 }
Blair insists parliament is out of touch with public { November 9 2005 }
Blair says lets reorder the world { October 3 2001 }
Blair takes on his own party with reforms { November 4 2005 }
Blair threat to gag newspapers in iraq { November 24 2005 }
Britain and france nearly married in 1956 { January 15 2007 }
Britain charges two with breaking secrets act { November 18 2005 }
Britain hands tibet to china on silver platter
Britain house of lords seats for sale
British colonization of france { July 10 2005 }
British haughtiness emerges after french riots
British highest judicial court is still house of lords
British intelligence of 1800 { April 15 1994 }
British parliament skips house of lords on fox hunting ban { September 15 2004 }
British prime minister arm twists african nations { September 22 2007 }
Brits assimilated by germans in fifth century
Brits call for world action on global hunger { April 23 2008 }
Brits congratulate napoleon coup 1851
Brits had apartheid society fifth century from dutch { July 18 2006 }
Brits lack of free press protects saudis reputation { May 22 2004 }
Churchill gives east europe to stalin in 1945
Currency market control centered in london
England sells lords seats for secret loans { December 14 2006 }
France proposed union with britain in 1956 { January 15 2007 }
Gunpowder plot work of agents provocateurs [jpg]
London bankers price fix gold { November 18 2007 }
London turns against its foreigners 15th century { May 10 2004 }
Parliament description of the gunpowder plot
Rise of great britain to world power
South sea bubble 1694 1722

Files Listed: 37



Correction/submissions

CIA FOIA Archive

National Security
Archives
Support one-state solution for Israel and Palestine Tea Party bumper stickers JFK for Dummies, The Assassination made simple