True Brit – Part
One
Oxymoron - noun:
oxymoron; plural noun: oxymorons
a figure of
speech in which apparently contradictory terms appear in conjunction
(e.g. faith unfaithful kept him falsely true ).
Yes I know,
Zimbabwe, and the current political crisis there, appears to have no
relationship or connection to Brexit. Wrong.
In my series, True
Brit, I will examine the commonly held myths about the British and
how these false myths affect almost every aspect of our lives in the
early 21st century.
Whilst it is easy to
hypothesise about how Brexit happened, one thing is clear. The
Brexit wing of the Conservative party has long held the belief that
the UK remains, for practical purposes, in the pre-colonial past and
therefore punches far higher in the world influence league than it
deserves.
This is not entirely
without justification. Don’t forget, the UK has a permanent seat
on the UN Security Council, the UK is one of the world’s
acknowledged nuclear powers and, crucially, today’s UK is the
inheritor of “the sun never sets on the British Empire”.
Hence, the political
situation in Zimbabwe has dominated news in the UK for the last few
days. Memories of the Rhodesian UDI are still fresh in the minds of
the majority of Conservative MP’s. And, the taste it leaves in
their mouths is not a pleasant one. Outwardly half-accepting of
Robert Mugabe, they have spent most of their political lives
disparaging his regime – not without justification, but also
revealing a deep-seated hostility to anyone with the temerity to
challenge their world view of a Britain still basking in the wartime
glory of Churchillian rhetoric.
The same scenario
applies to Myanmar (Burma). The UK was the colonial power. Now news
that the “Darling of the Media” Aung San Suu Kyi may be at least
partly complicit in the genocide of displaced Rohingya Muslim
minority has shaken the UK Foreign Office (so far as they are capable
of being shaken).
Manila: Myanmar
leader Aung San Suu Kyi faced rising global pressure Tuesday to solve
the crisis for her nation's displaced Rohingya Muslim minority,
meeting the UN chief and America's top diplomat in the Philippines.
UN Secretary
General Antonio Guterres told the Nobel laureate that hundreds of
thousands of displaced Muslims who had fled to Bangladesh should be
allowed to return to their homes in Myanmar.
"The
Secretary-General highlighted that strengthened efforts to ensure
humanitarian access, safe, dignified, voluntary and sustained
returns, as well as true reconciliation between communities, would be
essential," a UN statement said, summarising comments to Suu
Kyi.
Guterres'
comments came hours before Suu Kyi sat down with US Secretary of
State Rex Tillerson on the sidelines of the East Asia Summit in
Manila.
Washington has
been cautious in its statements on the situation in Rakhine, and has
avoided outright criticism of Suu Kyi.
Supporters say
she must navigate a path between outrage abroad and popular feeling
in a majority Buddhist country where most people believe the Rohingya
are interlopers.
At a photo
opportunity at the top of her meeting with Tillerson, Suu Kyi ignored
a journalist who asked if the Rohingya were citizens of Myanmar.
And in Zimbabwe the demise of Robert Mugabe is seen as a justification of the British position. His overthrow is simply another example of True Brit.
In other news this week: the EU are planning closer co-operation in the area of defence. This has shaken the Little Englanders to the core. Nothing serves to enrage them more than what seems to be an attack on the military. Or, at least on the fantasy of the military. True Brit demands that the populace sees the Army, the Royal Navy and the Royal Air Force as the nonpareil of national military might. There is, of course, little in the way of evidence to support this. (Only the British could celebrate a defeat (Dunkirk) with so much relish) The facts are: in WWI (which is the focus of Remembrance Day celebrations) it was the arrival of the American army which tipped the balance if favour of the allies, in WWII it was the Russian Army who defeated Hitler’s Third Reich and since then whilst the UK Forces have participated in numerous combat operations (Korea, The Falklands Campaign, Bosnia, Desert Storm) in each case they played a subordinate role.
In other news this week: the EU are planning closer co-operation in the area of defence. This has shaken the Little Englanders to the core. Nothing serves to enrage them more than what seems to be an attack on the military. Or, at least on the fantasy of the military. True Brit demands that the populace sees the Army, the Royal Navy and the Royal Air Force as the nonpareil of national military might. There is, of course, little in the way of evidence to support this. (Only the British could celebrate a defeat (Dunkirk) with so much relish) The facts are: in WWI (which is the focus of Remembrance Day celebrations) it was the arrival of the American army which tipped the balance if favour of the allies, in WWII it was the Russian Army who defeated Hitler’s Third Reich and since then whilst the UK Forces have participated in numerous combat operations (Korea, The Falklands Campaign, Bosnia, Desert Storm) in each case they played a subordinate role.
If
we then add the Brexit debacle into the mix, things rapidly approach
the unreasonable. No other fiasco exhibits the core of True Brit
like Brexit. It is the core. In fact, Brexit itself is an oxymoron.
Britain is not going to leave the EU – at least not in the sense
that the voters think they voted for. As the Brexit Secretary, David
Davis, tries to spread the gloss on an untenable set of
circumstances, he only highlights the unsolvable nature of the
problems. I particularly liked the comment on the news today that
for the first time in over 700 years the Irish have the UK over a
barrel. Neither the Conservative and Unionist Party nor the Irish
government will countenance a hard border between Eire and Northern
Ireland. The EU will not countenance no border at all. The whole
thing rhymes with clucking bell.
Watch
this space – things can only get worse.
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