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Stephen Pollard

ByStephen Pollard, Stephen Pollard

Opinion

Sir Malcom Rifkind's sick irony

March 18, 2008 24:00
1 min read

I choked on my metaphorical cornflakes this morning when I heard Sir Malcolm Rifkind on the Today programme attacking Gordon Brown for not meeting the Dalai Lama.

Of course Mr Brown should. That, surely, all of us can agree on.

But to hear Sir Malcolm sounding forth on the need for 'values' and taking Mr Brown to task for not following through on an ethical foreign policy is a pretty sick irony. Sir Malcolm and Lord Hurd made for a disgusting double act in office. As Nick Cohen writes, in a review of Brendan Simms' superb Unfinest Hour: How Britain Helped to Destroy Bosnia: The conviction that Britain had a superior knowledge of the futility of reforming a wicked world pushed Whitehall into a kind of madness. Only the possession of an unhinged mind can explain how Malcolm Rifkind, a Defence Secretary who had never seen combat, could bellow 'you Americans don't know the horrors of war' at Senator Bob Dole, who lost an arm in World War II. 'Your guys were usually so refined,' an American diplomat said of the Washington Embassy. 'But they were going crazy on this.'