Sunday, August 22, 2021

Forward to the Past: Brief Consideration of Tony Blair "Why We Must Not Abandon the People of Afghanistan – For Their Sakes and Ours"

 

Pix Credit here (Tony Blair and George Bush after a White House press conference in November 2004)

 

Pix Credit HERE; Final Scene as the heroes leave
Anyone who claims to be someone has been polishing up their opinions about the tragedy in the form of a farce that is the botched up U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan.  What started out as a "made for internal consumption" episode of a mediocre parody of the once popular myth making television show "The West Wing," has devolved into  an even more horrific parody of the last scene of Mozart's Singspiel, "The Abduction frm the Seraglio." The action around the withdrawal was scripted by Hollywood writers for domestic ratings.  It featured  a carefully curated  cast (none of them members of the despicables or deplorables) to play come-to-life caring bureaucrats leading a heroic charge under a compassionate and thoughtful leader through the drama and dirt of a world full of less than angelic enemies at home what remains of the Trump camp for example) and abroad (those autocrats who for some reason cannot understand why their ideological systems should not be immediately abandoned in favor of that of the US; and those religious theocrats who did not get the memo on the new kinder and gentler forms of religion and religious practice as political expression). 

Pix Credit: HERE
Oozing compassion cradled in an I-told-you-so-for-more-than-a-decade self righteousness, this dream team would, as if by magic, make bad things go away, by pulling up stakes. Of course this course of action had been attempted by other dream teams who also believed that that magic of their status and position in the United States could make even miracles happen--for example by instantly converting an ancient Iraqi culture into pre-modern English peasants with an acute sense of common law based democratic values, spiced with the  odd phrase from the local holy books. Those people are still around--that was season 3 of this show--part of the same caste that now brings us this version.  They will all meet up again as they switch roles and move back to elite academic, think tank, consulting, and institutional roles until the revolving door revolves again--bringing us yet another pre-scripted version of the same mediocre and self promoting action.  

All this will pass of course; that cast(e) and crew of leadership, alas, will not. Or better put, the basic premises of the way that the world works, will remain, continuing to produce yet another generation of the American nomenklatura  trained to believe (and insist) on  the deference owed by others to them because of their status, education, wealth, position, or induction into an elite, small and closed group of self perpetuating administrator-leader bureaucrats. And thus both the way that these people, generation after generation, see themselves--

Pix Credit: HERE

 

. . . and the way they appear to the rest of the world:

Pix Credit HERE  

 

 






Pix Credit HERE
Thus, the focus here is not so much about what went right or wrong, but rather it is on the characteristics (and underlying premises) of  the structural drivers that in this case and over the last two generations or so inevitably drive the elites in charge of the largest post modern empires on earth into farce.  Related, of course, is the question of the buffoonery that appears to be built into the arrogance of position in those hermetically sealed chambers of influence and world seeing that then practically scripts the last week or so in the offices of political and bureaucratic Washington, within the editorial offices of the semi-official press and its video media cousins (the hangers on and complicit partners of the "official" set), and the intelligentsia who wear their collars. It is worth emphasizing that this is not a uniquely American "thing" (though everyone loves to talk, for good or ill, of American exceptionalism as it it were some sort of divine source of power-meaning that explains all). Theocratic bureaucracies--the priest-warrior cliques of the Taliban are little better (though in this case more patient, less risk averse, and better funded). And variations of this great organizational malaise of the first third of the 21st century are on offer elsewhere, marked by the missteps of sealed off core-collective binaries whose structural coupling is badly managed and most effective in the face of societal explosion (local protests, race riots, poisoning of political and murders figures or irritants, etc.).

Pix Credit HERE
It is only with this in mind that one ought to read the Tony Blair's  "Why We Must Not Abandon the People of Afghanistan – For Their Sakes and Ours" that appeared on his blog, Tony Blair Institute for Global Change on 21 August 2021. That  marvelous intervention in the midst of the current Afghan crisis (well, anyway, a crisis for the West, an episodic triumph for the Taliban, and an opportunity for those seeking a way out of the shadows of what had once presumed to be the global empire of liberal democratic ideals) is worth reading carefully.  It evidences all of the highs and lows of a transnational leadership culture, whose self consciousness is shared, even as the driving values differ. And it offers a useful commentary on the times and the way that framing an issue makes all the difference in the world. Lastly, its engagement with religion suggests the way that religion has become the Achilles Heel of Western political theory.  

Tellingly, it remains a leadership class that, as it has for the last several centuries, more and more strongly embraced the idea that the masses could be managed to believe and act in certain ways but, critically, that could come as a sort of act of free will grounded in a rational understanding of the realities of what is good and what is bad, or rather what is in one's own interest and what is not (valued, of course, on the basis of the presumptions of the rationalized system that permits this act of free will.  Nietzsche long ago stressed the great error of "free will" unmoored from the deep normative structures from which such acts made by made but only within that space permitted by those structures (and thus no exercise of will only an affirmation of the power of norms to make those choices inevitable). 

Pix Credit HERE
But the process of substituting one set of norms for another is not a matter of  a few years of capacity building, lectures, good deeds and the like. The past suggests that cultures that smother others take a long time, create substantial and discriminating systems of rewards based on compliance (and thus the very intriguing potential of Chinese Social Credit systems), or are accompanied by substantial violence. It takes a long time, deep immersion, and the development of substantial "subterranean" social structures along with mercilessly imposed taboos to bring these changes about.  Afghanistan is a case in point--not now of course, but during that period when it was transformed from a Buddhist and Zoroastrian collection of peoples into an Islamic collection of peoples.  

The essay is reposted below; but it is worth examining the entire website. I leave it to its readers to decide for themselves whether Mr. Blair has anything worth considering, whatever one thinks about its conclusions, or whatever one's personal opinion is of Mr. Blair, his time in leadership, etc.  I believe the essay contains a wealth of insight--intentional and unintentional--that makes this a profound read. I make only the following small additional points: 

1. "The abandonment of Afghanistan and its people is tragic, dangerous, unnecessary, not in their interests and not in ours. In the aftermath of the decision to return Afghanistan to the same group from which the carnage of 9/11 arose, and in a manner that seems almost designed to parade our humiliation."

This is a rich opening and there are many ways in which one could take the many many discursive signals packed into so few words.  I will focus only on this here:  The initial theme of abandonment of Afghanistan is worth careful consideration.  The word abandonment cannot be understood in isolation.  It derives is meaning--and power--as a relational signal.  It suggests an active and a passive partner; it suggests a normative structure that defines responsibility and exacts a toll for its breach. But the precise nature of the abandonment is most murky--the Afghan people, certainly--though it appears that not all of its people (unless the retraining of the Taliban was the missed responsibility.  This is abandonment with deep cultural implications--for those doing the abandoning. If it is the abandonment of the state apparatus the  Americans and is leaders badly patched up, propped up, , and then undermined without any thinking about succession, then abandonment becomes something more political. Yet it is worth thinking about the extent to which a loyalty between one one nomenklatura and another made in its own image might well have been the  basis for the sad state of things today. The juxtaposition between the humiliation of the elite nomenklatura in the United States and UK, against the human tragedy for the peoples of all three states is quite striking. 

2. "There is no doubt that in the years that followed we made mistakes, some serious. But the reaction to our mistakes has been, unfortunately, further mistakes. Today we are in a mood that seems to regard the bringing of democracy as a utopian delusion and intervention, virtually of any sort, as a fool’s errand."

Again, an interesting juxtaposition.  It is true enough that mistakes were made--and some of them were of the sort that were then replicated in even worse ways in the Iraqi adventurism that happened with academics and theorists think they can play soldier and great prophets of political, social, and cultural truth. The response, that merely because these people did things badly (they couldn't help themselves--prisoners of the logic of their own orienting action spaces) doesn't mean that the object is unattainable.  It is just that this bizarre alignment between an administrative overlordship  of self perpetuating ruling caste members with the attainability of an ideal ((representative democracy) itself serves as parody and as the reason the ideal appears utopian.  It is not the problem of attainment but rather that of the cultural closed loop of the ideologies of core-collectives with bad communication that produces (and will continue to produce) these sorts of sad conflations of leadership with mass cultural change. That conflation works in some ideological systems (Leninism and American corporate cultures, for example).  But but in this case.  And yet culturally sensitive moment toward that ideal would not have been impossible in theory, just given the nature of the people on the ground and the ideological binders they necessarily wore. 

3. "We didn't need to do it. We chose to do it. We did it in obedience to an imbecilic political slogan about ending “the forever wars”, as if our engagement in 2021 was remotely comparable to our commitment 20 or even ten years ago, and in circumstances in which troop numbers had declined to a minimum and no allied soldier had lost their life in combat for 18 months."

Pix Credit: HERE

It is now increasingly rare to get me to laugh when I read.  This was an exception.  Ooooooohhh so naughty but in an insider kind of way.  It must have been interesting indeed to have been in at 10 Downing Street in the glory days.  And yet here is precisely the point: reality hardly ever gets in the way of sloganeering nowadays among elites.  And sloganeering is merely a way of condensing quite complex (sometimes) normative premises that constrain and guide action-choices. Yet when the complexity is dropped and the only thing that is left is the slogan itself, then all manner of tragic buffoonery follows.  The difference is important and perhaps best understood in the context of icons and other ritual objects.  One does not worship or invoke those ritual objects, vessels, slogans, etc., one understands them as a condensed representation or gateway to meaning. Here one encounters signification through the ritual objects that convey but are not meaning. Honoring a taboo against "forever wars" is important in American society.  This Republic is not built for old fashioned empire (though it is perfectly crafted for empires of the mind and of production). 

Pix Credit: Goethe "Der Zauberlehrling"

And yet the invocation of slogan can be as disastrous as the incantation of a spell without understanding its implications or the context and principles that guide its use. Here a mad  assemblage of shifting meanings (about war, about forever, about ending, etc.) all contribute to what Mr. Blair judges imbecilic. Here it pays to understand just why Mr. Blair might have invoked THAT word (imbecile) rather than another.  Imbecile  derives from the Latin imbecillus "weak, feeble," a word of uncertain origin (here). One line of thinking suggests that the "Latin word traditionally is said to mean "unsupported" or "without a walking stick" (Juvenal: imbecillis: quasi sine baculo)" (Ibid.). These notions, of wekness, of the state of being feeble, and of a failure to provide for appropriate support, all serve to mock not the project but those who adventure abroad without appropriate support. 

That sense becomes critical later on in the essay when Mr. Blair, looking over his shoulder at the approaching Russians and Chinese, see in them, rather than in the Taliban, the great threat that withdrawal poses. The Taliban can be dealt with like any other second or third order group of  irritants to greater empire: "We need to draw up a list of incentives, sanctions and actions we can take, including to protect the civilian population so the Taliban understand their actions will have consequences." But it is the Russians in Syria rather then the Americans in Afghanistan that provides the  guiding star against which withdrawal decisions ought to be judged. 

4. "Islamism is a long-term structural challenge because it is an ideology utterly inconsistent with modern societies based on tolerance and secular government. Yet Western policymakers can't even agree to call it “Radical Islam”. We prefer to identify it as a set of disconnected challenges, each to be dealt with separately. If we did define it as a strategic challenge, and saw it in whole and not as parts, we would never have taken the decision to pull out of Afghanistan. We are in the wrong rhythm of thinking in relation to Radical Islam. With Revolutionary Communism, we recognised it as a threat of a strategic nature, which required us to confront it both ideologically and with security measures. It lasted more than 70 years. Throughout that time, we would never have dreamt of saying, “well, we have been at this for a long time, we should just give up.”

Among the most interesting analogies put forward is the alignment between Russian Communist political internationalism and the political internationalism of what Mr. Blair calls Radical Islam (which in this sense is treated as a Leninist vanguard party but with a very different political-societal ideology). Here the idea is simple: what he calls Radical Islam is a political movement grounded in religion in the way that Communism was a political movement grounded in Marxism. Both are understood to be vanguard parties (the leading societal force within their normative communities), each  pulling their respective communities (and ultimately the world) toward the realization of a particular vision of the ordering of collectives and its governance. In that respect, it is necessary to treat vanguards in the same way. And it that is the case the entire logic of the forever war caution falls apart.  But then so does much of the foundation of what has been a very careful effort by (mostly non-Muslim) liberal democratic societies, to re-imagine Islam in ways suitable to it. That is disrespectful, but the trajectories of respect get turned around in the West when it comes to matters of religion.

It is here that the analogy offers promise. For it suggests a reminder that religion, like politics, is neither unitary, nor necessarily subject to easy rationalization.  Religion is a belief system, but so are many other systems that are organized around a different core cluster of beliefs and practices.  The engagement with religion as an object, as the grammar of seeing the world, as a manifestation of organization, and as its institutions continues to confound a global community that continues to be bedeviled by their own respective histories (see my "Religion As Object And The Grammar Of Law,"  Marq. L. Rev. 81:229 (1998). Religion can neither be taken for granted, nor treated with the delicacy reserved for one's aged grandparents--feeble and cute but no longer of any real consequence except as historical curiosity.  It is built into the bones of all systems and its discursive forms have morphed into the basis for societal organization within the major global powers, whatever their outward forms of belief systems that are not bound by or to a particular profession of faith.  Faith itself has its own devils in its own nomenklatura's and institutional and bureaucratic sinning. Respect is important, delicacy is fatal.  That is likely Mr. Blair's point. and it adds irony to his closing: "

It requires us to learn lessons from the 20 years since 9/11 in a spirit of humility – and the respectful exchange of different points of view – but also with a sense of rediscovery that we in the West represent values and interests worth being proud of and defending. And that commitment to those values and interests needs to define our politics and not our politics define our commitment.





Tony Blair: Why We Must Not Abandon the People of Afghanistan – For Their Sakes and Ours

Commentary
Posted on: 21st August 2021
Tony Blair
Former Prime Minister of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and Executive Chairman of the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change 
 
 

The abandonment of Afghanistan and its people is tragic, dangerous, unnecessary, not in their interests and not in ours. In the aftermath of the decision to return Afghanistan to the same group from which the carnage of 9/11 arose, and in a manner that seems almost designed to parade our humiliation, the question posed by allies and enemies alike is: has the West lost its strategic will? Meaning: is it able to learn from experience, think strategically, define our interests strategically and on that basis commit strategically? Is long term a concept we are still capable of grasping? Is the nature of our politics now inconsistent with the assertion of our traditional global leadership role? And do we care?

As the leader of our country when we took the decision to join the United States in removing the Taliban from power – and who saw the high hopes we had of what we could achieve for the people and the world subside under the weight of bitter reality – I know better than most how difficult the decisions of leadership are, and how easy it is to be critical and how hard to be constructive.

Almost 20 years ago, following the slaughter of 3,000 people on US soil on 11 September, the world was in turmoil. The attacks were organised out of Afghanistan by al-Qaeda, an Islamist terrorist group given protection and assistance by the Taliban. We forget this now, but the world was spinning on its axis. We feared further attacks, possibly worse. The Taliban were given an ultimatum: yield up the al-Qaeda leadership or be removed from power so that Afghanistan could not be used for further attacks. They refused. We felt there was no safer alternative for our security than keeping our word.

We held out the prospect, backed by substantial commitment, of turning Afghanistan from a failed terror state into a functioning democracy on the mend. It may have been a misplaced ambition, but it was not an ignoble one. There is no doubt that in the years that followed we made mistakes, some serious. But the reaction to our mistakes has been, unfortunately, further mistakes. Today we are in a mood that seems to regard the bringing of democracy as a utopian delusion and intervention, virtually of any sort, as a fool’s errand.

The world is now uncertain of where the West stands because it is so obvious that the decision to withdraw from Afghanistan in this way was driven not by grand strategy but by politics.

We didn't need to do it. We chose to do it. We did it in obedience to an imbecilic political slogan about ending “the forever wars”, as if our engagement in 2021 was remotely comparable to our commitment 20 or even ten years ago, and in circumstances in which troop numbers had declined to a minimum and no allied soldier had lost their life in combat for 18 months.

We did it in the knowledge that though worse than imperfect, and though immensely fragile, there were real gains over the past 20 years. And for anyone who disputes that, read the heartbreaking laments from every section of Afghan society as to what they fear will now be lost. Gains in living standards, education particularly of girls, gains in freedom. Not nearly what we hoped or wanted. But not nothing. Something worth defending. Worth protecting.

We did it when the sacrifices of our troops had made those fragile gains our duty to preserve.

We did it when the February 2020 agreement, itself replete with concessions to the Taliban, by which the US agreed to withdraw if the Taliban negotiated a broad-based government and protected civilians, had been violated daily and derisively.

We did it with every jihadist group around the world cheering.

Russia, China and Iran will see and take advantage. Anyone given commitments by Western leaders will understandably regard them as unstable currency.

We did it because our politics seemed to demand it. And that’s the worry of our allies and the source of rejoicing in those who wish us ill.

They think Western politics is broken.

Unsurprisingly therefore friends and foes ask: is this a moment when the West is in epoch-changing retreat?

I can't believe we are in such retreat, but we are going to have to give tangible demonstration that we are not.

This demands an immediate response in respect of Afghanistan. And then measured and clear articulation of where we stand for the future.

We must evacuate and give sanctuary to those to whom we have responsibility – those Afghans who helped us, stood by us and have a right to demand we stand by them. There must be no repetition of arbitrary deadlines. We have a moral obligation to keep at it until all those who need to be are evacuated. And we should do so not grudgingly but out of a deep sense of humanity and responsibility.

We need then to work out a means of dealing with the Taliban and exerting maximum pressure on them. This is not as empty as it seems. We have given up much of our leverage, but we retain some. The Taliban will face very difficult decisions and likely divide deeply over them. The country, its finances and public-sector workforce are significantly dependent on aid notably from the US, Japan, the UK and others. The average age of the population is 18. A majority of Afghans have known freedom and not known the Taliban regime. They will not all conform quietly.

The UK, as the current G7 chair, should convene a Contact Group of the G7 and other key nations, and commit to coordinating help to the Afghan people and holding the new regime to account. NATO – which has had 8,000 troops present in Afghanistan alongside the US – and Europe should be brought fully into cooperation under this grouping.

We need to draw up a list of incentives, sanctions and actions we can take, including to protect the civilian population so the Taliban understand their actions will have consequences.

This is urgent. The disarray of the past weeks needs to be replaced by something resembling coherence, and with a plan that is credible and realistic. 

But then we must answer that overarching question. What are our strategic interests and are we prepared any longer to commit to upholding them?

Compare the Western position with that of President Putin. When the Arab Spring convulsed the Middle East and North Africa toppling regime after regime, he perceived that Russia’s interests were at stake. In particular, in Syria, he believed that Russia needed Assad to stay in power. While the West hesitated and then finally achieved the worst of all worlds – refusing to negotiate with Assad, but not doing anything to remove him, even when he used chemical weapons against his own people – Putin committed. He has spent ten years in open-ended commitment. And though he was intervening to prop up a dictatorship and we were intervening to suppress one, he, along with the Iranians, secured his goal. Likewise, though we removed the Qaddafi government in Libya, it is Russia, not us, who has influence over the future.

Afghanistan was hard to govern all through the 20 years of our time there. And of course, there were mistakes and miscalculations. But we shouldn’t dupe ourselves into thinking it was ever going to be anything other than tough, when there was an internal insurgency combining with external support – in this case, Pakistan – to destabilise the country and thwart its progress.

The Afghan army didn’t hold up once US support was cancelled, but 60,000 Afghan soldiers gave their lives, and any army would have suffered a collapse in morale when effective air support vital for troops in the field was scuttled by the overnight withdrawal of maintenance.

There was endemic corruption in government, but there were also good people doing good work to the benefit of the people.

Read the excellent summary of what we got right and wrong from General Petraeus in his New Yorker interview.

It often dashed our hopes, but it was never hopeless.

Despite everything, if it mattered strategically, it was worth persevering provided that the cost was not inordinate and here it wasn't. 

If it matters, you go through the pain. Even when you are rightly disheartened, you can't lose heart completely. Your friends need to feel it and your foes need to know it.

“If it matters.”

So: does it? Is what is happening in Afghanistan part of a picture that concerns our strategic interests and engages them profoundly?

Some would say no. We have not had another attack on the scale of 9/11, though no-one knows whether that is because of what we did post 9/11 or despite it. You could say that terrorism remains a threat but not one that occupies the thoughts of a lot of our citizens, certainly not to the degree in the years following 9/11.

You could see different elements of jihadism as disconnected, with local causes and containable with modern intelligence.

I would still argue that even if this were right and the action in removing the Taliban in November 2001 was unnecessary, the decision to withdraw was wrong. But it wouldn’t make this a turning point in geopolitics.

But let me make the alternative case – that the Taliban is part of a bigger picture that should concern us strategically.

The 9/11 attack exploded into our consciousness because of its severity and horror. But the motivation for such an atrocity arose from an ideology many years in development. I will call it “Radical Islam” for want of a better term. As a research paper shortly to be published by my Institute shows, this ideology in different forms, and with varying degrees of extremism, has been almost 100 years in gestation.

Its essence is the belief that Muslim people are disrespected and disadvantaged because they are oppressed by outside powers and their own corrupt leadership, and that the answer lies in Islam returning to its roots, creating a state based not on nations but on religion, with society and politics governed by a strict and fundamentalist view of Islam.

It is the turning of the religion of Islam into a political ideology and, of necessity, an exclusionary and extreme one because in a multi-faith and multicultural world, it holds there is only one true faith and we should all conform to it.

Over the past decades and well before 9/11, it was gaining in strength. The 1979 Iranian Islamic Revolution and its echo in the failed storming of the Grand Mosque in Mecca in late 1979 massively boosted the forces of this radicalism. The Muslim Brotherhood became a substantial movement. The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan saw jihadism rise.

In time other groups have sprung up: Boko Haram, al-Shabab, al-Qaeda, ISIS and many others.

Some are violent. Some not. Sometimes they fight each other. But at other times, as with Iran and al-Qaeda, they cooperate. But all subscribe to basic elements of the same ideology.

Today, there is a vast process of destabilisation going on in the Sahel, the group of countries across the northern part of sub-Saharan Africa. This will be the next wave of extremism and immigration that will inevitably hit Europe.

My Institute works in many African countries. Barely a president I know does not think this is a huge problem for them and for some it is becoming THE problem.

Iran uses proxies like Hizbullah to undermine moderate Arab countries in the Middle East. Lebanon is teetering on the brink of collapse.

Turkey has moved increasingly down the Islamist path in recent years.

In the West, we have sections of our own Muslim communities radicalised.

Even more moderate Muslim nations such as Indonesia and Malaysia have, over a period of decades, seen their politics become more Islamic in practice and discourse.

Look no further than Pakistan’s prime minister congratulating the Taliban on their “victory” to see that although, of course, many of those espousing Islamism are opposed to violence, they share ideological characteristics with many of those who use it – and a world view that is constantly presenting Islam as under siege from the West.

Islamism is a long-term structural challenge because it is an ideology utterly inconsistent with modern societies based on tolerance and secular government.

Yet Western policymakers can't even agree to call it “Radical Islam”. We prefer to identify it as a set of disconnected challenges, each to be dealt with separately.

If we did define it as a strategic challenge, and saw it in whole and not as parts, we would never have taken the decision to pull out of Afghanistan.

We are in the wrong rhythm of thinking in relation to Radical Islam. With Revolutionary Communism, we recognised it as a threat of a strategic nature, which required us to confront it both ideologically and with security measures. It lasted more than 70 years. Throughout that time, we would never have dreamt of saying, “well, we have been at this for a long time, we should just give up.”

We knew we had to have the will, the capacity and the staying power to see it through. There were different arenas of conflict and engagement, different dimensions, varying volumes of anxiety as the threat ebbed and flowed.

But we understood it was a real menace and we combined across nations and parties to deal with it.

This is what we need to decide now with Radical Islam. Is it a strategic threat? If so, how do those opposed to it including within Islam, combine to defeat it?

We have learnt the perils of intervention in the way we intervened in Afghanistan, Iraq and indeed Libya. But non-intervention is also policy with consequence.

What is absurd is to believe the choice is between what we did in the first decade after 9/11 and the retreat we are witnessing now: to treat our full-scale military intervention of November 2001 as of the same nature as the secure and support mission in Afghanistan of recent times.  

Intervention can take many forms. We need to do it learning the proper lessons of the past 20 years according not to our short-term politics, but our long-term strategic interests.

But intervention requires commitment. Not time limited by political timetables but by obedience to goals.

For Britain and the US, these questions are acute. The absence of across-the-aisle consensus and collaboration and the deep politicisation of foreign policy and security issues is visibly atrophying US power. And for Britain, out of Europe and suffering the end of the Afghanistan mission by our greatest ally with little or no consultation, we have serious reflection to do. We don’t see it yet. But we are at risk of relegation to the second division of global powers. Maybe we don’t mind. But we should at least take the decision deliberatively.

There are of course many other important issues in geopolitics: Covid-19, climate, the rise of China, poverty, disease and development.

But sometimes an issue comes to mean something not only in its own right but as a metaphor, as a clue to the state of things and the state of peoples.

If the West wants to shape the 21st century, it will take commitment. Through thick and thin. When it’s rough as well as easy. Making sure allies have confidence and opponents caution. Accumulating a reputation for constancy and respect for the plan we have and the skill in its implementation.

It will require parts of the right in politics to understand that isolation in an interconnected world is self-defeating, and parts of the left to accept that intervention can sometimes be necessary to uphold our values.

It requires us to learn lessons from the 20 years since 9/11 in a spirit of humility – and the respectful exchange of different points of view – but also with a sense of rediscovery that we in the West represent values and interests worth being proud of and defending.

And that commitment to those values and interests needs to define our politics and not our politics define our commitment.

This is the large strategic question posed by these last days of chaos in Afghanistan. And on the answer will depend the world’s view of us and our view of ourselves.   

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