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  • Alienating one of our few friends ` nice work, David Miliband

    Alienating one of our few friends ` nice work, David Miliband

    The Sunday Times
    January 25, 2009


    Rod Liddle

    Is David Miliband Britain's worst-ever foreign secretary, or do you
    suppose his awfulness and incompetence were eclipsed by Lord Halifax?
    It's a close call. In the extraordinarily tense year of 1938 Halifax
    was dispatched to an important meeting in Germany where, on arriving at
    the Berchtesgaden, he mistook a beaming Adolf Hitler for the doorman.

    Relations between the two countries were never quite the same after
    that. You would think that the moustache might have been a giveaway,
    that someone could have warned his lordship in advance, `Listen, mate,
    anyone you see with a Charlie Chaplin moustache, an extravagant
    side-parting and looking a bit overwrought ` just don't tip him or give
    him your hat, okay?'

    Earlier Lord Halifax had been sent to India to keep everything nice and
    calm and, on arrival, decided that this annoying little brown man in a
    white dhoti who kept cropping up everywhere was quite inconsequential,
    not really to be bothered with. That would be Mahatma Gandhi, then.
    Perhaps he mistook Gandhi for a hatstand.

    The journey of Halifax to high office ` landed gentry, Eton, Cambridge,
    causes second world war ` is different from that of Miliband. Although
    neither of them did much in the way of work before he became a
    politi
    cian, if we're honest. Both were, in their different ways, born
    to the task of making Britain look completely ridiculous abroad.

    Miliband had form even before he annoyed one of the few allies Britain
    has left in the world ` India. On a visit there last week he insisted
    that the government sort out the problem of Kashmir, the failure to do
    so being a direct cause of the murderous attacks in Mumbai, which left
    195 people dead, by the Pakistan-based terrorist group Lashkar-e-Taiba.
    The Indians, who know a bit more about the problem than Banana Boy
    Dave, begged to differ.

    It is a little as if some Indian politician had arrived in London a day
    or two after the 7/7 bombings and said, well, Britain, serves you right
    ` you shouldn't have invaded Iraq, should you? I wonder how we would
    have responded to that. It smacked of a certain ` how can I put this? `
    insensitivity, ignorance, gaucheness and, more to the point, arrogance.

    The Times of India reported that Miliband's `tactlessness has even
    surprised people in the British administration' and his comments were
    immediately and rightly rebuffed by the Indian government, which sent a
    letter to our prime minister which began: `Why in Vishnu's name did you
    send this smug wonk with the weird hair to see us? He can't even hold a
    banana properly.' Well, it probably didn't say quite that, but you get
    the gist.

    By the way, the terrorists who carried out the atrocities in Mumbai
    were a jihadist group with typically psychopathic aims which stretch
    well beyond Kashmir. And as it was a British administration which
    created the problem of Kashmir in the first place, the comments of
    Miliband seem doubly insensitive.

    Miliband has also now conceded that he `regrets' the `war against
    terror'. This seems to me an odd admission for someone who voted no
    fewer than five times in favour of its first manifestation, the illegal
    invasion of Iraq, unless it is accompanied by a personal apology and
    mea culpa, which it wasn't. I cannot remember him attacking the war
    against terror before 2007, either. You cannot be a member of an
    administration which has energetically prosecuted this relentless
    aggression and suddenly decide that it was wrong all along, unless you
    humbly apologise and resign from office (not necessarily in that
    order). You are left with the suspicion that Miliband simply finds it
    expedient to disown the war on terror, there now being a certain shift
    in emphasis emanating from Washington DC.

    The foreign secretary was also fabulously weak in his comments about
    Robert Mugabe, hopelessly misjudged a challenge to the prime minister
    last summer, and has extreme difficulties dealing with soft fruit.
    Weak, tactless, arrogant, hypocritical and ill-informed. Hell, I think
    poor old Lord Halifax has lost his position.

    + Is three years old too young an age to get a child started on
    cigarettes? Or should the conscientious parent at least wait until the
    kid can form a coherent sentence? Kelly Marie Pocock was up in court
    last week for having allowed her toddler son to enjoy the occasional
    snout in his bedroom, but was commended for having attended parenting
    classes and got off with a suspended sentence. She is now going on
    another course to make herself `more mature'. I assume the course will
    involve having her brain sucked out through a straw and replaced with
    something more sentient, ie, Dairylea processed cheese triangles.

    I was 15 when my mum caught me smoking. She came home unexpectedly
    early so, panic-stricken, I dropped the cigarette on the floor and
    tried to look all innocent. She sat down and asked me numerous
    questions about my day at school and then said: `Why are you smoking
    cigarettes, Rod? They're a waste of money.' I protested with great
    vigour. Why on earth should you think that I smoke? And she replied:
    `Well, for one thing your fingers are stained brown with nicotine. And
    your clothes smell of tobacco. And the clincher, son ` if you look to
    your left, you will see that the magazine rack is on fire.'

    How can we make him disappear?

    It's nice to read about someone who is happy with their lot, contented,
    at one with the world and so on. So let me direct you to Paul Daniels's
    blog and allow you to soak up the Middlesbrough magician's unimprovable
    self-satisfaction. This week he has been writing from `paradise' ` aka
    the Caribbean, where he is on holiday with his wife Debbie McGee. He
    spends his time walking on the beach, ogling Debbie (he's posted a
    close-up of her breasts) and commenting on grave matters. Such as
    Prince Harry calling someone a Paki. Bloke was a Paki, after all, he
    says. Paul shyly reveals he attended a bash out there for charidee with
    Russ Abbot and a bloke from the Moody Blues. Check it out at
    pauldaniels.co.uk. You'll like it. Though not a lot.

    Check out the new line in hypocrisy

    I've spent the last week worrying if I am one of the customers the
    Waitrose staff have been writing about on their public internet message
    board. Am I the `mad ugly pikey skank', or the `dirty old loon', whom,
    one storeworker asserted, you can smell approaching from several aisles
    away? Even on a good day, I could pass for either, I suppose.

    It is all most hurtful. In future I shall shop at Lidl or Asda, the
    better to blend in with all the other mad, stinking, pikey skanks.

    Have you noticed, incidentally, that most of the supermarkets have gone
    back to handing out the free plastic carrier bags without looking at
    0Ayou as if you've just clubbed a baby seal to death? That little bit of
    self-serving `environmental responsibility' lasted rather less long
    than the cold snap we've recently been enduring.

    + `The nightmare is over,' said Jon Snow on Channel 4 News, referring
    not to colleague Krishnan Guru-Murthy's desperate attempts to read the
    news without being swallowed whole by his own smugness, but to the
    occasion of George W Bush leaving office.

    I suppose Jon thought that he was speaking for all of us; this is the
    way with our liberal media elite ` they do not think that they are
    remotely biased, merely that they are the sole guardians of the
    unvarnished truth. Bush was a nightmare ` everyone agrees, from that
    nice Armenian chap who works in our local delicatessen to the BBC and
    The Guardian. That is everyone, isn't it?
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