Former anarchist agitator Danny Cohn-Bendit, left and Agit-Prop Marxist film maker Jean- Luc Godard on the cover of Télérama, May, 2010. These days Godard has swapped his proletarian Gauloises for the plutocrat cigar. Now let’s see that again:
and again…..
and…..
Whoops, something’s not quite right. So back to the magazine:
and now the advertisement for the magazine in the Anver Metro station, Paris, May, 2010:
Où est Le Cigare?
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Danny Cohn-Bendit, 1968.Jean-Luc Godard, 1960s
The anarchist of the 1960s, Danny Cohn-Bendit is a child of upper class parents.
The Marxist film maker, and Maoist (1968 – 1980) Jean-Luc Godard is also a child of upper class parents – very wealthy parents at that. His grandfather on his mother’s side was the founder of the Banque Paribas, now BNP Parabis that almost went under in 2015 and was restructured. The group describe themselves as “Global Corporate and Institutional Banking and Retail Banking and Services”.
Le Patron would not normally draw attention to their background were it not for the contempt that Cohn-Bendit and Godard have shown for their own class. In Soviet propaganda terms, or in a Moscow Pravda editorial they would themselves be described as classic “spawn of the bourgeoisie.”
For a while “Red Danny” (Cohn-Bendit) was almost as much a pin-up as Che Guevera. A recent news item (December 2015) that claimed Cohn-Bendit had, at age 70, got married, prompted broken hearted responses from would be suitors. They can recover their composure: it seems the story is untrue.
Cohn-Bendit became one of the photographic images of the May Days in Paris, and his fame was cemented as much by government supporting opponents highlighting the German origin of his family, and his Jewish background. The May, 1968 students took up the chant Nous sommes tous des Juifs allemande – ‘We are all German Jews’. The chanting didn’t prevent him being expelled from France as a “seditious alien” on 22 May, 1968.
During the 70s, initially living in the family home in Germany, he continued to be involved in the ‘movement’: working in the Karl Marx Buchandlung bookshop in Frankfurt. As most anarchists regard Karl Marx in the same way a Primitive Methodist would regard the Pope, it seems his theoretical ‘position’ was in flux.
He also worked as a member of a ‘radical’ nursery. He got a lot of erotic pleasure being with five and six year olds and wrote about it in Le Grande Bazar (1975), talking about engaging in sexual activities with the young children. The German Green Party into the 1980s had a tolerant attitude to paedophilia. Since then Cohn-Bendit has unconvincingly excused himself by saying he was being ‘deliberately provocative’ in La Grand Bazar. If so – to what end? To upset the ‘bourgeoisie’? To stay in the spotlight?
Staying in the spotlight seems to be his emotional need. It’s a Lights, Camera, Action scenario, whether on the Paris boulevards, or on a confrontation with a Czech president. And where ever he is, he is sure to make sure the media knows where he is, and are briefed to what he is going to say and do. His greatest love is himself. His website features the toddler Danny, Danny the boy, Danny the teenager, Danny the young activist. If he was in the nursery, instead of an adult having erotic feelings about a five year old, and was a child, a five year old, he’d be the one elbowing the other kids out of the way pushing himself to the front if the local media were visiting, or on a daily basis creating an upset to get attention.
In the late 1970s Federal German melting pot of opposition to nuclear power stations and other ‘green issues’ Cohn-Bendit was drawn into the movement that would eventually result in the emergence of the Green Party in Germany.
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The film maker Jean Luc Godard who had had a left sentiment prior to 1968 went the whole horrible hog and stuck his colours to Chairman Mao, at a time of appalling repression in the People’s Democratic Republic of China. This grotesque manifestation at this time effected some others in the ‘Arts’ in the West, particularly the performing arts.
Re-education on the land: Xinsheng commune, Qingan county, 4 November 1969. Photo Li Zhensheng, from Red-Colour News Soldier.
If Godard had been in China in 1969 given his class background he would have found himself being ‘re-educated’: forcibly sent to work on the land. He would be getting off lightly. Other perceived enemies of the People’s Democratic Republic got shot.
Photos Li Zhensheng, from Red-Colour News Soldier. ( 1.)
During the period of his support of Chairman Mao he denounced his former cameraman Raoul Coutard for being the cinematographer on a film that had American company backing. Raoul Coutard was one of the best things about watching Godard’s films in the early to mid sixties, for instance Pierrot Le Fou (1965). This was gesture, megaphone politics at its worst. (Is there any other kind?)
Cohn-Bendit, megaphone operative. May, 1968.Cohn-Bendit, 2010, supporter of the E.U. bureaucracy.
In August 1968 when Soviet Pact forces invaded Czechoslovakia, Cohn-Bendit was selling Lenin’s Left-Wing Communism, an Infantile Disorder in the Frankfurt bookshop, and Jean-Luc Godard was reading the Maoist People’s Cause in Paris.
An estimated 200,000 troops and 2,000 tanks (a higher figure of 5,000 tanks is sometimes quoted) invaded Czechoslovakia on the night of 20 August, 1968. It was the largest use of military force against a European country since the end of the Second World War, even exceeding the Soviet military force that invaded Hungary in 1956. The crime that Czechoslovakia had committed? To have a little bit of what citizens (including Cohn-Bendit and Godard) in Western Europe took for granted: the freedom to travel, freedom to express oneself, without being imprisoned, or having your passport taken away, or your children being prohibited from going to college. (Or in Mao’s China, being shot.)
‘A protestor holds a blood stained Czechoslovakian flag in front of a Soviet tank.’ Photo source Czech Press Agency archive.
The loosening of the Marxist straight jacket had started under Alexander Dubček when he was elected First Secretary of the Czechoslovakian Communist Party. Although he wanted the Czech Communist Party to be firmly in control of the State and the reforms – the economy was in a mess – the enthusiasm in the country for the change of direction was endangering the rule of the Communist Party. Dubček was reluctant to use force to reinforce the central role of the Communist Party. It was this that alarmed Moscow. The period was known as the Prague Spring. The winter came early, in August.
‘Protestors throw stones at the Soviet tanks entering Prague’. Photo source Czech Press Agency archive.
photo Josef Koudelka (2.)photo Josef Koudelka.‘Soviet tanks are surrounded by crowds of Czechs protesting against the invasion on Prague’s Wenceslas Square, August 21.’ Photo source Czech Press Agency archive.‘Soviet soldiers try to extinguish a burning tank set on fire by protestors near the Czechoslovak Radio headquarters in Prague.’ Photo source Czech Press Agency archive.
At Radio Prague, journalists refused to give up the station and twenty people were killed before it was captured by the occupying force. It is estimated that a further 100 protesting Czechoslovakians were killed by the occupying forces, upholding the power of Marxist-Leninists to continue the building of the Workers Utopia, not just in Czechoslavakia, but in the rest of central and eastern Europe and the Baltic. As late as 1980 the Central Committee of the German Democratic Republic (East German) were urging fellow Warsaw pact members to use military force to invade Poland and put down the Solidarity movement.
Protester confronts Soviet Tank, morning of 21 August, 1968. Main Square, Bratislava, Slovakia. photo Ladislav Bielik
Whilst Jean-Luc Godard remained committed to the Mao-ist version of Marxist Leninism, and Cohn-Bendit worked in the Karl Marx Buchandlung, the negatives of the photographs that Czech photographer Josef Koudelka took of the Soviet invasion were smuggled out of the country, and published anonymously in the British Sunday Times.
photo Josef Koudelka
Unaware that Josef Koudelka was the photographer who took the invasion photos, the Czechoslovakian authorities allowed him to travel to England on a 3 month working visa issued by the British government. Once there he applied for and was granted political asylum.
Czechoslovakian New Wave film directors and scriptwriters, such as Milos Forman (Loves of a Blonde, and The Firemens Ball) and Ivan Passer (Intimate Lighting) managed to escape to the West. (Foreman happened to be in Paris when the Soviets invaded.) The director of the Academy Award winning Closely Observed Trains, Jiri Menzel, was not so lucky. During 1968 and early 1969 he was shooting Larks on a String, set in a Stalin era industrial scrapyard where the male and female civil and political prisoners were forced to work, and lived in overcrowded, barbed wire surrounded huts. This was no political allegory. This was the reality of 1950s Czechoslovakia.
Larks on a String, Jiri Menzel, 1969.
Larks on a String, Jiri Menzel, 1969.
Film director Jiri Menzel, circa 1968. (3.)
Larks on a String, Jiri Menzel, 1969
Once the film was completed it was immediately banned, and was not seen until 1990, following the collapse of the Communist regime. In an interview recorded for the DVD release of Larks on a String Jiri Menzel said he was not able to leave the country – his passport had been taken away from him.
It was five years before he made another film, and seven years before he made Seclusion Near a Wood (1976). In 1985 My Sweet Little Village was released. These post Prague Spring years were the years of “Normalisation” as the Communist Central Committee, with First Secretary Gustáv Husák at the helm, called it.
Normal. Ostrava, 1974. Photo Viktor Kolár (4.)The years of ‘Normalisation’. Ostrava, 1984. photo Viktor Kolár.My Sweet Little Village, 1985. Jeri Menzil.
The Czech photographer Viktor Kolár covertly photographed the years of “Normalisation” in the industrial city of Ostrava, and the surrounding area, whilst earning a living, at one point, working as a labourer in the Nová Hut’ steelworks.
Jeri Menzil’s My Sweet Little Village still remains one of the Czech and Slovak Republic’s favourite films. Menzil had the ability, almost in a Good Soldier Švejk way in the period of “Normalisation” to get one past the authorities, by re-affirming what is best about being human. Both My Sweet Little Village and Seclusion Near a Wood are loving, and sometimes rye observations of human inter-action, irrespective of the political background of the time, typical of all his films from Closely Observed Trains onwards. It is an approach that Jean-Luc Godard would, at best, not understand, and at worst would dismiss as either ‘bourgeois’ sentimentality or of ‘not facing reality’.
The writer on Film, Ray Durgnat, said about Godard in 1967: “Godard keeps babbling on about the world being absurd because he can’t keep an intellectual hard on long enough to probe for any responsive warmth”.
Durgnat said a lot of pungent and insightful things about Godard in the essay the quote comes from Asides on Godard, in The Films of Jean-Luc Godard, Studio Vista 1967. As much as Le Patron likes Ray Durgnat’s writing, in this instance it isn’t intellect you need for responsive warmth, but an open heart. Godard’s shrivelled damaged little heart naturally leapt, a year later, into the sloganising Marxist-Leninist-Maoist rhetoric, where he found a sense of purpose, and with equally sloganising people, a sense of belonging. Despite supporting a Maoist paper called The People’s Cause, he (and the paper) had no understanding of ‘The People’ and loathed and rejected just about everything they, the people, enjoyed.
Theses days Godard is no longer a Maoist, but still identifies himself as a Marxist.
These days Danny Cohn-Bendit has travelled a long way from being a part player in Parisian street theatre. In the journey the anarchist ideal of a bottom up democracy has been replaced by a top down authoritarianism. Benito Mussolini took a similar journey, from Italian anarcho-syndicalism to the fascist corporate state. The journey that Cohn-Bendit embarked on in 1968 led to a grotesque position – equal to Godard becoming a Maoist – when, with other European MEPs he travelled in December, 2008 to Prague to meet and berate the Czech President Václav Klaus. More of this in a moment, but first some details to where he had arrived at in the 1990s and beyond.
In 1994 he became a Green MEP in the European Parliament, and has remained one since. He is a significant politician within the French and German Green movements, and his belief in the necessity of the European Union to force policies – environmental policies, for instance – on member states is authoritarian. In 2003 during the Convention that was preparing the text of the European constitution – which was to become known as the Lisbon Treaty – he demanded that EU member countries who voted No in referendums to the conditions of the constitution should be forced to hold a second referendum. If the result was still No, then those countries should be expelled from the E.U. The planned constitution (The Lisbon Treaty) was rejected by French and Dutch voters in 2005. Irish voters rejected it in June 2008, but accepted it in a second referendum in October 2009.
There are some significant differences between the Green Parties in Europe. The German Green Party, for instance, approved the rejection of Scottish Independence by voters in the 2014 Scottish Referendum on the question, at odds with the pro-independence position of the Green Party in Scotland. And although the Czech writer, dissident, thinker, and Czech President (1993 – 2003) Václav Havel supported the Czech Green Party from 2004, he remained committed to Direct Democracy, even though some Green Parties stance on environmental matters is authoritarian. A clash in democratic approaches resulted in Cohn-Bendit resigning from the French Greens. More of that in a moment.
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At the invitation of the then Czech President Váklav Klaus a group of MEPs who were members of the “Conference of Presidents of the European Parliament” flew to Prague on 5 December, 2008. To put what happened when they got there in a context, imagine any other President of an autonomous European nation – say Mary Robinson, President of the Republic of Ireland between 1990 and 1997 – getting this kind of drubbing from visiting politicians from Brussels.
Christopher Booker wrote about the extraordinary meeting for the British Daily Telegraph on 14 December, 2008.
“There was…… a remarkable recent meeting between the heads of the groups in the European Parliament and Václav Klaus, the Czech head of state, in his palace in Hradcany Castle, on a hill overlooking Prague. The aim was to discuss how the Czechs should handle the EU’s rotating six-monthly presidency when they take over from France on January 1.
The EU’s ruling elite view President Klaus…. with a mixture of bewilderment, hatred and contempt. As his country’s prime minister, he applied to join the EU in the days after the fall of Communism in the 1990s. But now Klaus is alone among European leaders in expressing openly Eurosceptic views, not least about the Lisbon Treaty, which the Czech parliament has yet to ratify.
Klaus was an outspoken dissident under the Communist regime, and he has come to regard the EU as dangerously anti-democratic. But he compounds this sin with highly sceptical views on global warming, on which he recently published a book, Blue Planet in Green Shackles…….
So when Klaus was due to meet the MEPs, one of them decided this was a moment to display the Euro-elite’s hostility to him. Daniel Cohn-Bendit, who is German born but lives in France, first came to prominence in Paris in 1968 as a student agitator. He is now leader of the Green MEPs. Talking loudly in the plane to Prague, he made no secret of his intentions, and briefed French journalists on how to get maximum publicity for his planned insults.
As Cohn-Bendit was aware, the only flag that flies over the castle is the presidential standard (though the “ring of stars” is much in evidence elsewhere in Prague, flown outside every government ministry).
As described to me by someone present, President Klaus greeted the MEPs with his usual genial courtesy. Whatever his own views, he assured them, his countrymen would conduct their presidency in fully “communautaire” fashion. (Communautaire: supporter of the principles of the European Community.)
Cohn-Bendit then staged his ambush. Brusquely plonking down his EU flag, which he observed sarcastically was so much in evidence around the palace. (Le Patron: News reports from many sources said that Cohn-Bendit went on to say that the European Flag should have been flying from the Presidential palace.)
(Cohn-Bendit) warned that the Czechs would be expected to put through the EU’s “climate change package” without interference. “You can believe what you want,” he scornfully told the president, “but I don’t believe, I know that global warming is a reality.” He added, “my view is based on scientific views and the majority approval of the EU Parliament”.
He then moved on to the Lisbon Treaty. “I don’t care about your opinions on it,” he said. If the Czech Parliament approves the treaty in February, he demanded, “Will you respect the will of the representatives of the people?”
He then reprimanded the president for his recent meeting in Ireland with Declan Ganley, the millionaire leader of the “No” campaign in the Irish referendum, claiming that it was improper for Klaus to have talked to someone whose “finances come from problematic sources”.
Visibly taken aback by this onslaught, Klaus observed: “I must say that no one has talked to me in such a style and tone in the past six years. You are not on the barricades in Paris here. I thought that such manners ended for us 19 years ago” (i.e when Communism fell). When Klaus suggested to Hans-Gert Pöttering, the president of the EU Parliament, who was present, that perhaps it was time for someone else to take the floor, Pöttering replied that “anyone from the members of the Parliament can ask you what he likes”, and invited Cohn-Bendit to continue.
“This is incredible, said Klaus. “I have never experienced anything like this before.”
After a further exchange, in which Cohn-Bendit compared Klaus unfavourably with his predecessor, President Hável, he gave way to an Irish MEP, Brian Crowley, who began by saying “all his life my father fought against the British domination [of Ireland]… That is why I dare to say that the Irish wish for the Lisbon Treaty. It was an insult, Mr President, to me and the Irish people what you said during your state visit to Ireland.” Klaus repeated that he had not experienced anything like this for 19 years and that it seemed we were no longer living in a democracy, but that it was “post-democracy which rules the EU”.
On the EU constitution, Klaus recalled that three countries had voted against it, and that if Mr Crowley wanted to talk about insults to the Irish people, “the biggest insult to the Irish people is not to accept the result of the Irish referendum”…..
Everntually Pöttering closed the meeting by saying that he wanted to leave the room “in good terms”, but it was quite unacceptable to compare himself and his colleagues with the Soviet Union. Klaus replied that he had not mentioned the Soviet Union: “I only said that I had not experienced such an atmosphere, such a style of debate, in the Czech Republic in the last 19 years.”
Czech Communist Secret Service (StB) surveillance files on future Czech President Váklav Klaus. Source Radio Praha. (Radio Prague.)
The hectoring nature of the meeting was reported in Czech media, and was a news item throughout the former Communist Eastern Bloc countries. It is reported that across all political sentiments in the Czech republic the reaction was similar: that the comments of Cohn-Bendit and the other MEPs was an “undue interference in Czech affairs”. The MEP and the leader of the United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP) Nigel Farage went further and compared Cohn-Bendit’s actions to a “German official from seventy years ago or a Soviet official from twenty years ago.”
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Cohn-Bendit’s contempt for democratic processes continues.
French Greens’ Cohn-Bendit quits party in fiscal Pact row.
European lawmaker Daniel Cohn-Bendit revoked his membership of the French Greens on Sunday (23 September) in protest at the party’s decision to oppose the ratification of the European Union’s budget discipline pact.
The move threatens to rob the Europe-Écologie Party of one of its most recognisable deputies – known for his rabble-rousing during 1968 student riots in Paris – and may exacerbate tensions within the group, which supports France’s Socialist-led government and has two ministerial posts.
The French Greens voted overwhelmingly against the terms of the pact at a grassroots assembly on Saturday, concluding that it would not provide long-term answers to the EU crisis nor help foster environmentally friendly policies.
France is expected to ratify the pact early next month, though a major revolt within the coalition could force the Socialists into an embarrassing reliance on the conservative opposition.
“Yesterday’s federal council was dramatic. Dramatically pathetic,” Cohn-Bendit told French television station i-Tele.
“I’ve decided to suspend my participation in this movement. It’s clear to me that deep down, things are finished between me and Europe-Ecologie.”
Cohn-Bendit said the French Green party’s position on the fiscal treaty was “completely inconsistent” arguing that the party should pull out of the French government and vote against the budget.
“I don’t want to endorse this leftist policy drift,” the Franco-German MEP further went on.
Cohn-Bendit, nicknamed “Danny the Red” for his student activism, has served as deputy for French Green parties since 1999 and is co-president of the European Parliament’s Greens group.
– Reuters, 24 September, 2012.
Just in case you missed it: it was a collective decision taken by a meeting of grassroots members. Paris, ’68 anyone?
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And, oh yes, that Disappearing Cigar.
It’s marvellous what you can do with Photoshop. Not only remove the cigar, but reposition the fingers. In France 2010 it was not permitted for advertising posters in public places to even inadvertently include cigarettes, cigars – (and goodness knows what has happened to Maigret’s pipe). Cohn-Bendit the Green politician would not have a problem with the Photoshopping out of his pal’s cigar. And Godard, like Cohn-Bendit is happy to comply with the distortion. He is, after all, promoting the product: himself. Anyway, as a Marxist who probably knows his Russian Revolution history, he will know that anything that offends the ruling elite gets removed. Long live the Revolution, Comrades.
Before: Lenin left, Trotsky circled right. After: Trotsky removed.
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Sources and Notes
All photographs used in this Post: Copyright the respective owners.
Li Zhansheng is a photojournalist. He was a photographer with the Heilonjiang Newspaper, and photographed the Mao Cultural Revolution as part of his work with the newspaper. However, besides allowed ‘positive’ images of peasant meetings, etc, he managed to secretly take photographs of the realities behind the Cultural revolution, including those forcibly sent to the countryside to help the ‘revolution’ (hard labour camps), and executions without trial. These latter negatives he hid underneath the floorboards in his family one room flat in Harbin. He and his wife, Yingxia, were themselves sent to a hard labour camp for two years, in 1969.
Li Zhansheng with his wife Yingxia and children in their Harbin flat, September 1972. Taken with a self-timer.
The photographs he took during the Cultural revolution are published as Red-Colour News Soldier by Phaidon, 2003. It is still in print.
2. The photographs that Josef Koudelka took during the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia are published as Invasion 68: Prague, Aperture, 2008. It is still in print.
3. Jiri Menzell’sLarks on a String and Closely Observed Trains are currently available DVDs, with English sub-titles, and an English Menu. Vesničko Má Stredisková (My Sweet Little Village) and Na Samoteu Lesa (Seclusion Near a Wood) are Czech DVDs, with English sub-titles and a Czech Menu. It is not too difficult to figure out from the Menu how to switch on the English sub-titles. subtitlescafedalston.co.uk sell by post or in person Na Samote u Lesa (Seclusion Near a Wood) which is how Le Patron got his copy. They also sell online a small selection of other Czech films, film posters and items. All the DVDs are otherwise available from amazon.co.uk
4 The photographs taken by Victor Kolár in Ostrava, during the period of Czech ‘Normalisation’ are in Viktor Kolár, Torst, Prague, 2002.
Viktor Kolár, published by Torst, Prague, 2002.
Unfortunately only very expensive second hand copies of this soft back are presently available, although a search through ebay might yield copies cheaper than the current asking price on abebooks, which varies between £111 to £207, at the time of writing (January, 2016). Fortunately Viktor Kolár does have a website where some of his work can be seen. victorkolar.com
George Orwell, writing in the left of centre British weekly Tribune, October 1945, thirteen weeks after the atom bomb was dropped on Hiroshima speculated that it was likely the world would be blown to bits by atom bombs within five years. (1)
Five years on from writing that, the war between communist North Korea and non-communist South Korea was into its fourth month, at a time that the USSR had already exploded its own atomic bomb, on 29 August, 1949. George Orwell died from tuberculosis on 21 January 1950, before the period of his prophecy had expired.
The dread of an apocalyptic end to human life was tangible for many people – with the images of Hiroshima and Nagasaki as much a visual horror of where “Mankind” had arrived at in the mid twentieth century, as the photos of the piles of concentration camp corpses, semi-burnt human remains in ovens, and skeletal humans staring out from barbed wire fencing.
The fear of nuclear destruction affected a school boy acquaintance of Le Patron in the early 1950’s, who repeatedly would run away from school to be with his mother in London in case the Bomb dropped. A police car would always bring him back. The school Le Patron attended boarded many London boys from the likes of Bermondsey, from what in those days were called “troubled backgrounds”. They were sent out by the London County Council to the Essex countryside on the perennially unproven belief that plenty of fresh country air was therapeutically beneficial for such children.
Such was the fear and concern about the possibility of a devastating nuclear war that in Britain the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament was formed in 1958 with the hope of persuading the British Government of unilaterally disarming its nuclear weapons. Historically it was the largest such campaign against nuclear weapons of any nation where protest and opposition was allowed.
The newsworthy manifestation of CND’s campaign was the annual Aldermaston to London March over the Easter weekend. Aldermaston was a small village in the Berkshire countryside. In 1962 the former 2nd World War aerodrome RAF Aldermaston housed the Government Atomic Weapons Research Establishment. The march, besides highlighting opposition to the British atomic weapons, also gave those walking along the A4 a sense of solidarity with others from all over Great Britain campaigning for the same objective. It was also a good opportunity, too, for various campaign and pressure groups to distribute their leaflets to the thousands walking the 45 miles to London. The number of people marching peaked at around 150,000 in both 1962 and 1963.
Aldermaston March, 1962 Photo: Pete Grafton
The Aldermaston March was newsworthy for the News of the World who would titillate their readers in their Easter Sunday edition with stories of alleged sexual shenanigans in the overnight accommodation of the marchers.
Aldermaston March, 1962. Photo: Pete GraftonAldermaston March, 1962. Photo: Pete Grafton
Less newsworthy, seemingly, were the threats of attacks by British Union of Fascists on overnight accommodation venues.
Aldermaston March conclusion: London Hyde Park, 1962. Photo: Pete Grafton
Frustration within some of the nuclear disarmament movement with the polite, and as they saw it, ineffective approach of CND led to the formation of the Committee of 100, who promoted mass non-violent sit down protests, which led to hundreds being arrested and six of their number prosecuted under the Official Secrets Act. In turn, there were those within the Committee of 100 who came to feel that mass sit-downs and passive resistance was also ineffective, and some argued their case in the pamphlet with the memorable title Beyond Counting Arses. Some, calling themselves Spies for Peace took direct action to encompass blowing the lid off the State’s secret preparation for military and civil control over what bits of the United kingdom would be left after a nuclear attack – presumably contaminated bits of the Highlands, the Pennines, central Wales and bits of the moors of the Bodmin, Dart and Ex. They did this in their Good Friday, 1963 released pamphlet Danger! Official Secret RSG-6, and by simultaneously staging a protest during the 1963 Aldermaston march at the bunker RSG-6, just off the A4.
Extract from “Danger! Official Secret RSG-6”
Others bravely took their opposition to Moscow with an unauthorised sit-down protest in Red Square against the Soviet ‘Workers’ Bomb (hurriedly suppressed of course).
The brilliant 1960 Beyond the Fringe sketch Civil War summed up the lunacy of atomic weapons and notions of survival following an atomic attack. A member of the public, Dudley Moore, in a pre ‘Pete and Dud’ voice asks the Government Civil Defence panel “Following the nuclear holocaust can you tell me when normal services would be resumed?” Jonathan Miller responds with a plum voice ” Very fair question. Following Armageddon we do hope to have normal public services working fairly smoothly… I think in all fairness I ought to point out… it will be something in the nature of a skeleton service.” Meanwhile, and not a satirical sketch, a Church of England Bishop was seen on newsreel blessing a new formation of atomic bomb equipped “V” bombers at a RAF base in East Anglia. The gruesome surrealness didn’t stop there either. It was said that the pilots of these V bombers wore an eyepatch, so that when they got blinded in their good eye by the brightness of the atomic burst from the bomb they had dropped over Minsk they could whip off the patch and pilot the crate back to Blighty with the remaining good eye. That’s assuming their handlebar mustaches hadn’t caught on fire, or that their fuel tanks hadn’t run dry. (There were question marks, it was said, about the flying range of these planes). Incidentally, they were latterly used to immobilise the landing strip at Port Stanley using conventional bombs, during the Falklands War, and seemingly cocked it up by poor bomb aiming, but did instantly create an adjacent golf course with plenty of bunkers.
History of The British bomb
Although many local CND group office bearers were largely drawn from the local ward Labour Party membership, and although there had been a transitory moment of triumph in the campaign for unilateral disarmament at the 1960 Labour Party conference at Scarborough, when a motion favouring unilateral atomic disarmament was narrowly carried, (tactical rather than ethical Trade Union block votes, to destabilise New Labour fore-runner Hugh Gaitskell, was why it scraped through, and it was never adopted as policy) the fact is that not only has the Labour Party always supported the British Bomb, but it was the Labour Party that secretly started the British Bomb.
Labour Party Bomb, Montebello Islands, Western Australia, October, 1952
Unknown to the post-Second World War British Parliament, or to all members of the Labour Government Cabinet, Major Clement Attlee had started the programme to build an independent British nuclear bomb in January 1947. The estimated costs were around £40 million, at a time when Britain was close to being bankrupt, and was already committed to repaying the United States for war loans, including the Lend-Lease loan. Rationing of food had become brutal. Bread, never rationed during the war, was rationed in post-war peacetime. The German Nazi slogan ‘Guns before Butter’ would have had an interesting resonance in Britain, if Parliament and the public had known. As it was, the final cost up until 1950, was closer to £100 million.
In October 1946 Hugh Dalton, Chancellor of the Exchequer and Stafford Cripps, President of the Board of Trade, told Major Attlee and fellow Cabinet Members within GEN75 – the committee secretly set up to look at nuclear energy – that the costs of developing an independent nuclear weapon were not sustainable. They were excluded from the select group that Major Attlee chaired three months later when the decision was taken to go ahead. (2) Mr Winston Churchill and his Conservative Party were delighted to discover the covert development of the British atomic bomb by their Labour colleagues, when they came to power in the 1951 General Election. The first British atomic bomb was finally exploded on October, 1952. It exploded on Montebello Islands, 80 miles off the coast of Western Australia. Not reported at the time, the radio-active fall-0ut drifted to several Queensland towns a hundred miles away.
George Orwell would have been 58 in 1962, and would have supported CND at its formation, and then, given his left libertarian politics would have moved on to support of the Committee of 100. He would also have been a supporter of organisations such as Anti-Apartheid and also the Movement for Colonial Freedom (MCF had its right wing opposite in the League of Empire Loyalists, many of whose members were also members of the British Union of Fascists). Although he had written a regular weekly column – As I Please – for the independent left of centre, democratic socialist weekly Tribune between 1943 and to 1945, and then occasionally until 1947, he had been critical of the Labour Party since the 1930’s. His critical attitude continued when they were in Government -between 1945 – 1950 – for not being radical enough in their legislation. Orwell’s desire to abolish the undemocratic House of Lords was one example. (3)
As a former divisional police office in British occupied Burma he was one of the few commentators on the British Left in the 1930s to highlight aspects of ignorance and hypocrisy within the British Labour Party and some other British Left groupings in their views about the ‘dependencies’, and pointed out that when talking about dependencies of the democratic British State what was really meant was ‘subject races’, adding that the combined Empires of Britain and France had six hundred million disenfranchised ‘subject races’. (4)
Although Anthony Eden, as foreign sectary in the wartime coalition argued with his American counter-part against including British colonies in any declarations of Freedom and Independence in the 1942 Atlantic Charter of Human Rights, on the grounds that most in the colonies were unable to govern themselves, his views had also been shared by Socialists such as Sydney and Beatrice Webb. They had written in the New Statesman in 1913 ‘It would be idle to pretend that anything like effective self-government, even as regards strictly local affairs, can be introduced for many generations to come – in some cases, conceivably never’ (5)
One of the last things George Orwell wrote, in a manuscript notebook in March 1949 was:
“People in Britain very high-minded abt American treatment of Negroes, but cf. conditions in South Africa. Certainly, we in Britain, have no control over S.Africa, but neither have the people in the Northern States much control over what happens in Alabama. Meanwhile we profit indirectly from what happens in S.Africa, in Jamaica, in Malaya etc. But these places are separated from us by water. (Emphasis Orwell’s) On this last fact the essential hypocrisy of the British labour movement is based.” (6)
Labour Government and Colonies and Malaya
Although there was no way Labour could duck independence for the Indian sub-continent they hung on to British Empire colonies, using peace-time conscripted men to fight “insurgency” in, for instance, rubber and tin rich Malaya. It was also the Labour Government that formalised peacetime conscription in Britain in 1948 (7), and the Conservative government continued to use these conscripted men in “insurgencies” in other British colonies, and in what they regarded as their spheres of interest: Egypt, for instance. But it was a Conservative government that also scrapped peacetime conscription with legislation brought in, in 1957 to phase it out. It was the Conservative Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, too, who acknowledged the “Wind of Change” (an expression he coined) blowing over the British Empire colonies.
Meanwhile, on 3 July, 1962 Algeria became an independent state, following a decade of terrorist/military struggle between the nationalist Algerian FLN and the French occupiers. Geneva Conventions about warfare had been thrown out the window by elements within the French army, using tactics often similar to those of the Nazi Gestapo. By 1960 public support for a continued occupation of Algeria had waned significantly in mainland France and General De Gaulle was in negotiations with the FLN, with the objective or arriving at a peace settlement. A terrorist rearguard action was mounted by a group of ex-French army and currently serving officers, known as the OAS, many sympathetic to the pre-war Action Française, often pro-monarchist and Catholic reactionary in nature. Besides indiscriminate bombings and shootings in Algeria the OAS mounted four mainland assassination attempts on De Gaulle, the last on 22 August, 1962, outside Paris. The curiosity about the “Help for the Algerian Refugees” flyer is: which refugees? Le Patron remembers the The Algerian Question Penguin Special, but the refugees? In 1962 the refugees from Algeria were the pieds-noirs, Europeans long settled in Algeria; Sephardic Jews and the harkis. The harkis were Algerian moslems who had not supported the FLN, many of whom fought with, or supported the French administration in Algeria. Some were drawn from tribes from the Sahara. These refugees, including the harkis, were accepted into mainland France.
One of the agreements between De Gaulle and the FLN in a post Algerian independence set-up was the right of the French Army to use land in the Algerian Sahara, land that had already been used by the French Government in 1960 to explode their first atom bomb. (7)
The intensity of the Cold War, and the attendant fear of nuclear war, had not receded with the end of the Korean war in 1953. 1956 had seen the United Soviet Socialist Republics crush the workers of Hungry; Gary Powers in a high altitude U-2 spy plane was shot down in 1960 and the East German the Workers’ Paradise built a wall in Berlin to stop their own people from crossing into West Berlin. Anyone who attempted to scale the barbed wired topped wall was shot by the “proletarian advanced guard” security services. In a well publicised early incident in August 1962 Peter Fechter, an 18 year old bricklayer was machine gunned in the back by the border guards as he attempted to escape from the East Germany. He bled to death, crying for help, whilst the border guards looked on. (The Cuban Missile Crisis was to follow in October,1962.)
With the exception of most anarchists and left libertarians (who usually took a ‘Neither East or West’ position) , many of those in Britain with a liberal humanitarian outlook, and the radical element in the Labour Party rank and file membership, perceived the enemy in the Cold War to essentially be the United States of America. For the members of the Communist Party and the small Trotskyists groupings America was unequivocally the enemy.
The case of American Morton Sobell was taken up by campaigners from largely within this milieu. Morton Sobell had been imprisoned in 1951 for a term of thirty years for allegedly passing secrets to the USSR, and his name had been linked to U.S. atomic spies such as Julius Rosenberg. Belief in his innocence and outrage at his imprisonment led his supporters to term his trial “the outstanding political trial of this generation”.
The campaign to establish his innocence, and the believed gross miscarriage of justice, continued well beyond 1969, when he was released from Alcatraz after serving 17 years of the 30 years prison sentence. However, in a New York Times interview, 11 September 2008, he ended up admitting passing on classified material to the USSR, and also implicated Julius Rosenberg.
Morton Sobell, visit to East Germany, 1976Morton Sobell at 91, 2008. Image of the Rosenbergs behind him.
There is still a discussion about the importance to the USSR of the information they received about the development of the American atom bomb. Some views claim it accelerated the USSR’s own programme that was already progressing well, others that the claim is unproven. The Workers’ Bomb, as it was sometimes jokingly referred to within left-wing circles, was a cunning device, that when dropped on its target spared the proletariat, whilst killing well known class enemies such as the bourgeoisie, the petite-bougeoise, peasants, kulaks, the intelligentsia (cleverly sparing those elements within the intelligentsia who supported and defended the Stalinist and post-Stalinist USSR, i.e. Jean Paul Sartre, Berthold Brecht, Eric Hobsbawm, et al.)
The British Communist Party had a declining membership in 1962 although the Party was still significant in several Trade Unions, with Party members as important office holders and leaders. Many Communist Party members had resigned in disgust or bewilderment in 1956 over the military intervention of the USSR to quash the Hungarian Uprising. Most still believed in Marxist-Leninism and most found a home in the small Trotskyist groupings, although some joined the Labour Party.
The Trotskyists were a squabbling group of followers of Leon Trotsky – squabbling mostly amongst themselves, each claiming to be the true and legitimate ideological torch-bearer of the Master. Like Stalin, who ordered his assassination, Trotsky believed in the elimination of class enemies, and the control of power by a small ‘enlightened’ elite (who also, of course controlled the secret police). Roger Protz in 1962 was editor of the Trotskyist Keep Left, a paper of the youth section of the Socialist Labour League. The Socialist Labour League had infiltrated the Labour Party Young Socialists, had been found out, and removed. Roger Protz, his cover blown, was expelled from the Labour Party. He then went on to edit the newspaper of another Trotskyist organisation, Miltant, and then moved on again to edit the newspaper of the International Socialists, The Socialist Worker. He resigned from Socialist Worker in 1974, and as a result had more time to prop up bars, sampling various brews, without feeling guilty about not rushing down to the factory gates to hand out leaflets urging the working class to rise up. A renowned member of the British Campaign for Real Ale, he is now an international expert on beer. His The Complete Guide to World Beer (2004) is one of three authoritative books he has written on the beverage.
Solidarity was an interesting political group that made a journey from Marxist-Leninism, to Marxism to left libertarianism. The founding group left the Communist Party after Hungary, and then found the autocratic nature of the Trotskyist Socialist Labour League too much to swallow, and in spitting it out started to question Leninism and elitist left ‘revolutionary’ parties. Besides a healthy dose of original thinking, their magazine had a good element of humour, very rare in the hectoring and deadly earnest world of the hardbore left. By a curious coincidence Solidarity wound down in the same year the British Communist Party closed shop: 1991.
And today, 2014?
2014: Faslane Naval Base, HMNB Clyde, Scotland. Home of the Vanguard class submarines which carry the UK’s current nuclear arsenal
Despite the collapse of the Soviet Union in late 1991, Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair told the House of Commons in 2006 that it would be “unwise and foolish” for the United Kingdom to give up nuclear weapons, when he outlined Government plans for building a new generation of nuclear warhead equipped Trident submarines, plans that have been supported and continued by the present Conservative/Liberal Democratic coalition government.
The number of British nuclear warheads is, in 2014, estimated to be 225, that is: 225 potential Hiroshima’s. Labour, Conservative and Conservative/Liberal Democrat coalition governments have successively refused to give exact numbers of the nuclear warheads. The Trident Missiles which deliver the atomic warheads are manufactured at Aldermaston, and Aldermaston continues to be the centre for research and development of a new generation of atomic warheads.
The Trident missiles are fitted to Vanguard class submarines – up to 16 missiles per submarine (again: 16 potential Hiroshimas). The base for these submarines is at Faslane, near Helensburgh, twenty-two miles down the Clyde from Glasgow. Holy Loch, across the Clyde from Helensburgh was between 1961 and 1992 a base for U.S. Polaris nuclear submarines.
Following the collapse of the Soviet Union the base was vacated in 1992.
USAF Greenham Common, a Cruise missile base in the 1980’s, was also closed for the same reason in 1993. However, the British Government “permits the U.S. to deploy nuclear weapons from its territory”. (8)
But meanwhile, north of the Border….
After September 2014, the former Kingdom of Scotland may no longer be part of British Government “territory”. It would have been a far-seeing crystal ball gazer to have predicted in 1962 that because of the growth of the Scottish National Party the mainstream Unionist political parties would have set-up a devolved Scottish Government with a proportional representation bias, it is claimed, they hoped would prevent an outright Nationalist majority government from ever being formed. (Whilst proportional representation was and is denied to those voting for political parties into the House of Commons.) In a landslide victory in the Scottish General Election of 2011 the Scottish Nationalist Party formed a majority government, and with that mandate brought in legislation so that on 18 September 18, 2014 voters in Scotland will have the opportunity to vote for an independent Scottish state.
Although George Orwell thankfully was wrong in his predictions about the chances of nuclear weapons blowing the world to smithereens by 1951, he was interestingly on the ball about the possibilities of the development Scottish nationalism in a post-war Britain. Writing in February, 1947 he said “Up to date the Scottish Nationalist movement seems to have gone almost unnoticed in England… It is true that it is a small movement, but it could grow, because there is a basis for it. In this country I don’t think it is enough realised – I myself had no idea of it until a few years ago – that Scotland has a case against England.” (9) In January 2014 the Scottish National Party was the largest political party in Scotland, in terms of membership, number of MSPs and local councillors.
When George Orwell moved in 1947 to the Isle of Jura from London, and started work on his next novel after Animal Farm: Nineteen Eight Four, the SNP did not even have one MP in the House of Commons. And, as far as can be discerned, not one single councillor in local Scottish government in 1947.
Although the Scottish National Party has changed its policy of withdrawing from Nato, it remains committed, in its referendum manifesto, to outlawing all nuclear weapons from Scotland, a commitment it says will be written into the post-independent Scottish constitution.
Meanwhile, in 2014, it is a curious fact that any small town in England can muster significant numbers of Spiritualists, Jehovah’s Witnesses, evangelical Christians and imminent spiritual Armageddonists to regular congregations during the week whilst the same small (and large) towns can hardly muster a dozen dedicated supporters of unilateral disarmament, or manage, for instance, a significant protest about the recent banking scandals.
The significant protest in England in 2014 is – and no-one saw this coming, either – is from the fastest growing political party in England, a party that has the mainstream parties rattled: the Nigel Farage galvanised United Kingdom Independence Party, which correctly highlights the strikingly undemocratic nature that goes with membership of the European Union. That Farage is a right-wing free market libertarian (who also wants to keep a British bomb) does not invalidate his analysis of a dictatorial Brussels, run by unelected Commissioners who dismiss and over-rule the desires of national electorates when they don’t suit their own monolithic agenda, creating an unstable political situation in Europe. It is something that a left libertarian such as George Orwell would have been high-lighting too.
He would have found politics in Britain in 2014 as potentially revolutionary as he felt they were in wartime Britain between 1940 and 1942. Revolutionary in the sense of significant potential changes afoot. The revolutionary sentiment he detected in 1940 was, by implication, a left libertarian questioning of the power structures within the British Isles. Some expression of this was the forming of the wartime Common Wealth Party. In 2014 the revolutionary sentiment is nationalistic, a nationalism mostly based not on racial antagonism but on a sense of democratic injustice. Margaret Thatcher’s Poll Tax roll-out in Scotland, before England, was one of several ‘injustices’ felt keenly north of the Border. If one didn’t know better, one might have assumed that Thatcher was an agent-provocateur, secretly working for the SNP. It took Alex Salmond’s return from Westminster to focus and galvanise the sense of injustice felt, and pilot the SNP to where it is now.
The same sense of injustice in England has been felt about undemocratic edicts from Brussels. Although a loose analogy, the commissioners of the European Union are similar to a situation where it would be an unelected House of Lords formulating legislation for England, with the elected House of Commons only occasionally able to modify, or tinker around the edges of it. It is not surprising that UKIP, with Farage playing the same role as Salmond in Scotland, is making the English mainstream parties nervous. He correctly calls them the political classes, and the political classes have historically sent their redundant politicians to Brussels, where they draw very large EU salaries and EU retirement pensions, whilst telling us, and the rest of the European electorate what we can and can’t do: Leon Britten, Neil Kinnock, Peter Mandelson, Paddy Ashdown, along with all their other high-handed European Commissioners pals.
Crystal ball gazing or having a London School of Economics PHD in Political Science, will not help foresee what will happen in the next ten years in Britain. Le Patron guesses that voters in Scotland will not vote for “independence”. They already have the best of both worlds, with a devolved government, and the unionist parties promising even more devolvement. But if “independent”, will an independent Scotland find themselves trapped in the financial and political dictatorship of the Euro and EU fishing stock quotas not to their liking? (10) Will they find being part of Nato comes with the obligation to allow nuclear warheads, even occasionally, on their land, or berthed at Rosyth? Will Nigel Farage’s UKIP continue to be a rising star in the English political ferment? And as an economist and pragmatist, will Farage decide that keeping an expensive English nuclear deterrent makes no sense?
And what has any of this got to do with real democracy? Social, political and economic? All is not lost comrades! Obligatory classes in the Swiss model is a starting point. Recommended reading would be Why Switzerland, Jonathan Steinberg, Cambridge University Press. Meanwhile, closing time is in twenty minutes. Whoops! Sorry, comrades, the Revolution will have to wait. I’m down the boozer. Mine’s a…..
1. You and the Atom Bomb, Tribune, 19 October, 1945. In Collected Essays, Journalism and Letters of George Orwell, Volume 4. Penguin.
2. See Cabinets and the Bomb, Peter Hennessy, Oxford University Press.
3. See, amongst his other writing on the Labour Party, London Letter to Partisan Revue, August, 1945, in Collected Essays, Journalism and Letters of George Orwell, Volume 3. Penguin.
4. Not Counting Niggers, a review of a then much discussed book Union Now, by Clarence K. Streit, published in the Adelphi magazine in July 1939, Collected Essays, Journalism and Letters of George Orwell, Volume 1. Penguin.
5. See The Lost Literature of Socialism, George Watson. Lutterworth Press.
6. Extracts from a Manuscript Note-book, Collected Essays, Journalism and Letters of George Orwell, Volume 4. Penguin.
7. Strictly speaking, the first example of peace-time conscription in British history was April, 1939 by the National Government. This was an insurance against a probable war.
8. The first French bomb exploded in the Sahara was three times as powerful as the bomb dropped on Hiromshima, and recently released papers show the fall-out spread far further than acknowledge at the time.
9. See Wikipedia Nuclear Weapons and the United Kingdom.
10. As I Please, 14 February, 1947, Collected Essays, Journalism and Letters of George Orwell, Volume 4. Penguin.
11. The SNP’s proposed use of British sterling is not feasible, given that a condition of becoming a member of the European Union means signing up to the Euro.