Did your mother ever say to you something along the lines of "it’s your company you’re judged by"? If she’d found out you were spending an evening with former Chief of the British Army’s General Staff General Sir Richard Dannatt GCB, CBE, MC, Bill Rammell (Minister of State for the Armed Forces), William Hague (Tory), Lord Ashdown (jobbing imperial pro-consul), and Piers Morgan (self-publicist) she’d be fully entitled to whack you over the head and send you to bed without any dinner. Not a social worker in the land would raise a finger in your defence. That’s who Salma Yaqoob of the Respect Party found herself sharing a table with on Thursday when she appeared on BBC One’s Question Time from Wooton Basset, the town that’s now famous for grinding to a standstill when the British Army’s dead are borne through it.
A hijab wearing woman in her thirties made quite a contrast to the random selection of pro-imperialist white male pillars of the Establishment who were her co-panelists and that’s setting aside Salma’s record of support for striking workers or the Venezuelan revolution.
Question one was downright peculiar. It floated the notion of using the money raised by taxing bankers’ bonuses to pay more to British troops busily murdering and torturing while on "active service overseas". Dannatt agreed with it. Rammell tried for a bit of crowd pleasing banker bashing that didn’t go down as well as he’d hoped so he sought safety in New Labour multi-agency speak about providing for soldiers’ needs. Morgan plumped for the pub bore "send these bankers to Afghanistan and show them a real day’s work approach" and was warmly applauded for it.
Salma used the opportunity to rip into Labour and described how half of the wounded soldiers in her local hospital had closed their curtains when Gordon Brown went to visit them. Fair point well made. What didn’t really compute with the viewers at chateau Mac Uaid was her rhetorical question which began "why are we betraying the bravery, professionalism and commitment of our troops…" It all made sense with the punchline "by sending them on an ill-conceived and doomed mission?" Sheer silence greeted that, Ashdown droned on about the "military covenant" and the assumption of all the men on the panel was that the British state has a divine right to invade anywhere it fancies. Hague revealed that he’d have wanted Ashdown to get the king of Afghanistan gig just in case anyone wasn’t sure that all these characters agree on the fundamentals. Though Morgan daringly called Tony Blair a liar.
It was when Salma let rip that she got some of the audience on her side by pointing out that in Iraq and Afghanistan many people see the foreign armies as invaders not liberators and highlighted the poor judgement people like Dannatt have consistently demonstrated. Morgan seems to think that he still is in with a chance to win Tosser of The Year 2009 and justified the 35 000 deaths of Afghans.
And that was pretty much it. Copenhagen, Labour’s fiscal proposals or the Tories’ worse ones were not mentioned. The whole discussion swivelled around Iraq and Afghanistan with the male panelists all thinking within a consensus that only Salma challenged while very definitely sticking the boot into Al Qaida and the Taliban. Without her the programme would have been an unwatchable pro-war think tank but she did a good job raising the anti-war flag in the toughest of settings.





Leave a reply to Jason Cancel reply