Monday 29 December 2008

Of Pinter And Pétain

Utterly predictable rubbish from the usual suspects about Harold Pinter’s temerity in opposing the creation of a Wahhabi-Nazi state in Bosnia, the creation of a Wahhabi-Nazi-Maoist state in Kosovo, and the removal of one of the Arab world’s two principal bulwarks against Islamic fundamentalism.

Perhaps most telling is Nick Cohen’s effort in The Observer, in which he compares Pinter to Claudel, whom Cohen falsely claims is largely an ignored figure just because he himself only knows other frothing-at-the-mouth atheists to whom any literature informed by Christianity in general and Catholicism in particular (Chaucer, Hopkins, Eliot, Waugh, Greene, anything you like) is minor by definition.

In Cohen’s and such people’s world of perpetual adolescence, and early adolescence at that, there are only Goodies and Baddies.

So Milosevic’s ghastly Wahhabi, Nazi and Maoist enemies must have been, and must still be, good, because they were and are the enemies of Milosovic. The Maoist, genocidally racist enemies of the former Hutu government in Rwanda must have been, and must still be, good, because they were and are the enemies of the Hutu as an ethnic group.

The “Northern Alliance” must have been, and must still be, good, because they were and are the enemies of “the Taliban” (strongly Islamist Pashtun nationalists, the same sort of people that Cohen et al have always backed to the hilt in Yugoslavia) and “al-Qaeda” (which does not exist at all).

And the assorted Islamists, Stalinists and other such savoury characters who agitated for the overthrow of Saddam must have been, and must still be, good, because they were and are the enemies of Saddam. Sheer unpleasantness is deemed a sufficient reason to go to war, entirely regardless of what would thus be brought about instead.

And so to Claudel, or at least to his support for Pétain. The Vichy regime’s enactment of, in particular, anti-Semitic legislation unbidden by the Germans can only be deplored, as can its decision to fight with the Axis rather than simply to withdraw from the War. But when it comes down to the Armistice itself, what else were the French supposed to do in 1940?

In Cohen’s Eustonworld, there might have been some sort of third way. But in the real world, there was not. There was the option of doing what they did. Or there was the option of France’s incorporation into the Third Reich, which would thus have acquired the French Empire on every continent. Which would have been preferable? Clearly, the option taken.

To the end of the War and beyond, many of the French regarded Pétain as fighting Hitler from Vichy as surely as de Gaulle was fighting Hitler from London. That view may not have been entirely right, but it was certainly not entirely wrong.

Pétain’s name was never abominated like that of Laval, who really did want France to be run from Berlin. Thanks both to Pétain (who instead wanted to restore the monarchy, an institution always reviled in practice by Fascists) and to de Gaulle (who was also later to consider most seriously such a restoration), Laval never got his wish.

Leaving aside the question of whether Hitler ever had the slightest intention of invading Britain (and if he did then he inexplicably ignored the open goal in 1943), imagine if such an invasion had in fact taken place and then been, as it certainly would have been, successful at least to the extent of capturing London, which is geographically peripheral within its country just as Paris is.

Churchill or whoever might have fled to somewhere or other, although heaven knows where – if Britain had fallen, then America would immediately and understandably have reached the most cordial terms with Germany, with which she was not at war when any such possibility existed.

But if he had ever come back in triumph to a country still legally independent and possessed of her Empire, then that would have been thanks to those who had stayed on and secured that state of affairs, not least against the Laval-like domestic elements that would have wanted incorporation into, and thus also the surrender of the Empire to, the Reich.

It was only thanks to Pétain that there was still a France, as such, for de Gaulle or anyone else to liberate. Had much the same circumstances ever arisen here, then to have done much the same thing would have been infinitely preferable to the only alternative available, not in an ideal world, but in the real world.

There would have been no question of fighting with the Axis, since the War would have been over (the Soviet Union would have come to terms perfectly easily, having started the War as part of the Axis anyway).

Nor would legislation mining the rich seam of French anti-Semitism have been enacted here, since the new government would have been a bulwark against those who wanted it as surely as against those who wanted to go to war against Stalin.

It would have been only thanks to say, Chamberlain, that there would still have been a Britain, as such, for Churchill or anyone else to liberate.

Such things are lost on the Nick Cohens of the world, of course. If they were not, then they would not hold the views that they do on Yugoslavia, or Rwanda, or Afghanistan, or Iraq, or so very many other places and subjects.

But grown-ups have no excuse.

2 comments:

  1. "the monarchy, an institution always reviled in practice by Fascists"

    Do explain.

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  2. They either abolish it outright (Italy), or claim that they want to bring it back but never actually do so (Spain, Hungary), or can only happen at all because it has already been abolished (Germany, the former Austria-Hungary).

    If there had still been Italians or Germans dressing up in their funny uniforms and medals in order to perform this or that ceremony on this or that date as the King of Here or the Grand Duke of There, then Mussolini or Hitler could never have happened. The gap that they filled would not have existed.

    Even as it turned out, Mussolini still had to abolish an Italy-wide monarchy towards which many Italians felt little or no allegiance, simply because there could be no Duce while it was still in place.

    And there could certainly have been no Fuehrer if the Hapsburgs and the Hohenzollerns had still been in situ, never mind all the rest of them.

    There would have been no vacancy, just as there was and is no such vacancy in Britain.

    Pétain actively wanted to fill, and de Gaulle also seriously considered filling, that gap in France. What a pity that neither of them ever quite managed it. There could have been no Le Pen, or whatever comes after Le Pen (and something will), if he had succeeded.

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