nettime's_roving_reporter on Thu, 15 Apr 1999 20:34:02 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> (fwd) Europe's intellectuals in disarray over Kosovo |
http://asia.yahoo.com/headlines/150499/world/924144540-90415024958.newsworld.html Europe's intellectuals in disarray over Kosovo PARIS, April 15 (AFP) - The NATO bombing campaign against Yugoslavia has set European intellectuals and politicians off against each other, cutting across traditional lines of right and left, as no other conflict has before. In both Britain and France, the traditionally antiwar left is divided while the right is muted in its support of NATO, if not outrightly hostile. The situation has created some strikingly unusual bedfellows with, for example, French far-right leader Jean-Marie Le Pen lined up alongside Socialist Interior Minister Jean-Pierre Chevenement and the communists in opposition, British left-wing actress Vanessa Redgrave linking arms with former Tory premier John Major in favour. In Germany, intellectuals have evoked the Nazi past and the Reich's wartime involvement in the Balkans to urge caution, stressing the complexity of the issues involved, though most figures on the centre-left have expressed support for western engagement in Kosovo. A common thread among left-wing opponents of the NATO airstrikes has been anti-Americanism. Thus, playwright Harold Pinter wrote to the Guardian newspaper to describe the allied action as "misjudged, miscalculated, disastrous", its humanitarian justification "clearly a very bad joke". The operation resulted, he said, from a US policy best expressed as: "Kiss my arse or I'll kick your head in." His view is shared by the writer, publisher and former 1960's activist Tariq Ali but opposed by Ali's erstwhile left-wing ally, Labour MP Ken Livingstone. Left-wing campaigner Paul Foot diverges radically from his father, former Labour leader Michael Foot who favours the NATO raids, and finds himself allied with Alan Clark, the former Thatcherite minister who sees no British interests involved in the Balkans. Veteran feminist Germaine Greer considers the NATO raids "unbelievably stupid" and a "godsend" to the Yugoslav strongman Slobodan Milosevic, siding in effect with right-wing historian Norman Stone who compares the situation in Kosovo with Northern Ireland. German writers traditionally critical of US military operations have been guardedly in favour. Guenter Grass regretted only that the NATO involvement had come so late, while Hans Magnus Enzensberger argued for arming Albanian guerrillas inside Kosovo rather than sending in western ground forces. Christa Wolf deplored the bombing but admitted she could see little alternative. The most heated debate has been in France, where angry words have been exchanged in the press by philosophical stalwarts Regis Debray (against the raids) and Alain Finkelkraut (in favour), or within the family between journalist Olivier Todd (pro-war) and his son the writer Emmanuel (contra). Debray, formerly known as a follower of Ernesto "Che" Guevara", was denounced in the daily Le Monde as a prime exponent of knee-jerk anti-Americanism, notably for his description of the treatment of the North American Indians as "ethnic cleansing". Former 1968 firebrand Daniel Cohn-Bendit, now Green party leader, is in tune with the Gaullist party chairman Philippe Seguin in backing NATO action, while the distinguished human rights activist Pierre Vidal-Naquet finds himself involuntarily allied with the French Communist Party and the National Front. But the most bizarre case, virtually unique in Europe, has been that of Peter Handke, the Austrian writer who since the eruption of the Yugoslav wars in 1991 has adopted an outright pro-Serb stance, at one point comparing the Serbs to the Jews in World War II. Handke, whose mother is Slovenian, travelled to Belgrade to express his solidarity for the Serb people and "sniff the air" during the bombardments. He renounced the prestigious Buechner prize that he won in 1973 and said he was leaving the Catholic Church because of what he saw as its refusal to denounce the NATO intervention. Credited with at least spicing up the debate, Handke is regarded by his fellow German-speaking writers with some perplexity, if not mocking indulgence. He was rewarded by Belgrade earlier this month with a Serbian "kinghthood". --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl