Brits "Play Act" Indictment of Tony Blair for Iraq-Related Crimes Tomorrow on BBC

The BBC has a must-listen show on radio tomorrow titled Called to Account (times noted further below) offering a theatrical version of Tony Blair's indictment for Iraq War-related crimes. This may inspire many on this side of the Atlantic pond to think about various strategies to hold America's current political leadership accountable for duplicity and mismanagement of America's national security portfolio -- and particularly for the Iraq War.

Democracy has become a term derided in much of the world today because for many beleaguered peoples it has come to mean Western duplicity, uneven standards between the mighty and the weak, an excuse for invasion and occupation, a code word for regime change, or obsessive focus on ballots rather than healthy civil society institutions like courts and a free media that help to keep power accountable.

If 'Democracy' is ever going to shed its bad name, accountability must be one of its fundamental pillars in any genuine system of checks and balances. There should be a price paid for serious errors by national leaders -- and an even higher price paid by those who wield power with impunity and who lie to their publics in so-called democracies.

When the revelations of Abu Ghraib became public, Donald Rumsfeld should have resigned. The fact that he did not and was not fired did more to undermine the American brand than virtually anything up until that point. If there was no accountability for crimes of that scale, why should other foreign states abroad empty their torture prisons or work against corruption or not falsely promise reforms to their people while engaging in self-dealing for themselves or their sectarian interests?

America is struggling with the mess it is in and trying to figure out the power dynamics of fixing blame and responsibility for the Iraq War on national leaders. The current reality is that there is little stomach among moderates and conservatives in the United States to impeach Cheney or Bush for lying America into a war whose end one way or another has disastrous consequences for the nation. This may change -- and certainly the calls for an impeachment process against Cheney have picked up some momentum, though still not enough to be successful in the view of this writer.

But BBC Radio 4 will be broadcasting a play titled Called to Account this Saturday, 14 July 2007, at 2:30 pm UK Time and at 9:30 am EST. This can be listened to over the web live or downloaded to a podcast for later listening.

One of the principals involved in this production is British barrister and writer Philippe Sands whose book, Lawless World: America and the Making and Breaking of Global Rules -- From FDR's Atlantic Charter to George W. Bush's Illegal War, exposed the important fact that Prime Minister Blair and President Bush decided on war with Iraq in January 2003 no matter what the outcome of diplomatic efforts.

Sands is a very serious and thoughtful legal commentator who is part of the "reasonable middle" of British political society -- and the BBC's support of such a provocative legal simulation is something that might inspire similar exercises -- even in theatrical form if not real -- in the United States.

-- Steve Clemons is Senior Fellow and Director of the American Strategy Program at the New America Foundation and publishes the popular political blog, The Washington Note


Comments (2)

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It's good to know that the BBC has the fortitude to proceed with such a program; it seems unlikely that we will be treated to a radio play about war crimes indictments for US leaders on NPR any time soon.

However, Mr. Clemons' commentary is unfortunate in that he seems not to recognize the distinction between a "war crime" and the "mismanagement" of a nation's "national security portfolio." In the case of the former, the victims are the residents of a country subjected to military attack, not the residents of the country doing the attacking. This matters, because there is a pronounced and growing tendency in "progressive" discourse in the US to criticize the war primarily on the grounds of what it has done to Americans -- soldiers killed, money wasted, our national "brand" defiled (by the way, when exactly did intelligent people start referring to our country as a "brand"?). All of these consequences are deeply regrettable; however, they pale in moral comparison to what we have done to the people of Iraq, more than 600,000 of whom have died, mostly as a result of being on the wrong end of US firepower (the vast majority of the dead in Iraq were not killed in sectarian attacks, but by "coalition" forces).

Our current "progressive" discourse portrays Americans as blameless victims of Bush administration foreign policy, but this is absurd. It is our ELECTED government that launched and has prosecuted this murderous and illegal war and we, as Americans, have allowed it. Our media acted as a willing conduit for the propaganda that justified the war. Our elected representatives in Congress voted to authorize the war. Our soldiers have carried out their orders. And most Americans have not uttered so much as a peep of public protest.

We should talk less about what this war has done to "us" and start coming to grips with the reality of what we have done (and continue to do) to the people of Iraq. We need to understand what it is about our political, moral and intellectual culture that enables us, as a nation, to engage in four years of mass murder, without remotely credible legal or moral justification. Put another way, what does it say about us, as a people, that thousands of innocent civilians are being killed every month in our name and most of us either couldn't care less or are primarily focused on what this means for our interests?

Accountability is essential, as Mr. Clemons argues. However, it isn't clear to me that our national political leadership, and our national intelligentsia -- who failed to mount any serious effort to prevent this war, and who seem incapable of grasping the enormity of the crimes the US has committed -- possess the moral authority to hold Bush and his cronies accountable.

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The BBC puts all its broadcasts online for one week after broadcast. The Called To Account play will be uploaded tomorrow.

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