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Fallout from the
Madrid Attacks
Derrick Hill
“Events, dear boy, events,” British Statesman Harold
Macmillan famously replied when asked what governments
most fear. He meant, of course, those real life
happenings that can appear out of seemingly clear blue
skies – events such as the Spanish people’s brutal
dismissal from power of Jose Maria Aznar’s ruling
Partido Popular (PP) .
This
wholly unexpected ending of conservative rule in Spain
surely had the lights burning late at the White House
and Foggy Bottom last week. The sensational result of
Spain’s general election on March 14 not only robs
President Bush and America of a staunch and politically
courageous ally in the war against terror, but it could
also ignominiously undermine the whole enterprise.
Nor is
that all. Within Europe, Spain’s new socialist
government will be an eager participant in moves that
further the agenda of those determined to thwart or
constrain what they see as American ‘unilateralism’.
Prime
Minister-elect José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero has already
confirmed the implacable opposition of his party – the
Partido Socialista Obrero Español (PSOE) – to the war in
Iraq and the continuing occupation. In his first press
conference after his victory, he reaffirmed that he will
withdraw Spain’s 1,300-strong military force in Iraq by
the end of June if the scheduled transfer of sovereignty
does not take place.
The new
occupant of the
Moncloa
Palace
(home of Spanish Prime Ministers) is indeed a totally
different animal from the man he succeeds.
The
44-year-old Zapatero, a lawyer, has the full set of
European left-wing, politically-correct attitudes,
including – it hardly needs saying – visceral contempt
for
America
– a Republican-led America above all. This is the party
leader who, last October, refused to join King Juan
Carlos and government ministers in standing and
applauding the U.S. flag as it was marched past the
reviewing stand during a military parade in Madrid to
mark Spain’s national day.
This is
the prime minister-elect who, within hours of his
victory at the polls – a triumph that came almost
certainly courtesy of the Islamic terrorists who
slaughtered 200 people in bomb attacks on crowded early
morning commuter trains in Madrid only three days before
– sees fit to instruct President Bush and British Prime
Minister Tony Blair to ‘engage in some self-criticism”
over the decision to invade Iraq.
And
this is the statesman who airily proclaims that “wars
such as those which have occurred in Iraq only allow
hatred, violence and terror to proliferate” – seemingly
oblivious of the fact that this is exactly what Saddam
Hussein inflicted on his hapless people for decades.
Meanwhile, Zapatero cannot wait to begin ingratiating
himself with Jacques Chirac and Gerhard Shroeder and
ending the froideur caused by Aznar’s refusal to fall
in with their ruthless determination to ensure that the
EU develops in line with Franco-German self-interest.
The possibility of Zapatero even thinking of defying the
EU’s Big Two in any difference of opinion with the U.S.
is zero.
But
though the thought of
Spain’s
abrupt departure from the ‘coalition of the willing’ is
worrying enough for U.S. policymakers, the reason for
it is cause for even greater concern.
Four
days before the election, Aznar’s party, under his
designated successor Mariano Rajoy (Aznar had earlier
announced he was stepping down as leader after his two
terms in office), was coasting to a third consecutive
win.
Against
the backdrop of a booming economy, enjoying falling
inflation and rising employment, the polls were
unanimous in showing that Spaniards had little interest
in a socialist mix of policies that were economically
risky and socially liberal.
Then
came the Madrid bombings on March 11.
At
first it was assumed, justifiably, that this barbarism
was the work of the Basque terrorist group ETA, whose
recent attempts to carry out atrocities in Madrid had
been thwarted by the security services. Had it been the
work of ETA, the PP would doubtless have won the
election with even greater ease than seemed likely up to
the 24 hours before.
But it
turns out that the perpetrators were almost certainly
Islamic terrorists, who seem, as of this writing, to
have links with Al-Qaeda.
This
revelation changed everything. To shocked and angry
Spaniards, the slaughter no longer seemed an assault on
democracy demanding a show of solidarity. Rather it
became – with the artful assistance or at the very least
tacit agreement of Zapatero’s socialist and their
political and media allies – a savage blow struck solely
as a result of Aznar’s decision to involve Spain in an
enterprise overwhelmingly opposed by the its people.
Mobs
‘spontaneously’ demonstrating outside PP offices in
major cities on the day before the election carried
placards saying “Aznar assassin,” “Thanks Aznar for the
war in
Iraq:
consequence – 200 dead” and “You fascists are the
terrorists.”
The
next day, in a turnout almost 10 per cent higher than in
the election four years ago, the voters did indeed act
as though they wished to punish the PP for what had
been inflicted upon them because of Spain’s involvement
in Iraq.
So much
for the massed demonstrations, the day after the
bombings, at which the Spanish people, in their
millions, declared their refusal to be cowed by
terrorism.
Attempting to take some comfort from the events of a
traumatic and tumultuous four days, politicians and
commentators have claimed that the trouble-free election
and the high voter participation were a ‘victory for
democracy.’
The
brutal truth, of course, is that the election was not a
victory for democracy but for terrorists, who have got
the very result that they intended. The land of the
conquistadors has chosen appeasement rather than
defiance.
President Bush and his advisors must be aware that, in a
Europe increasingly appeasing and pacifistic, this
terrible lesson will not be lost on other governments
supposedly enlisted in the war against international
terrorism. (Zapatero’s secret weapon for fighting
terrorism in Spain is an anti-terrorist pact with the
other parties!)
More
chillingly still, the message from Spain’s political
earthquake will not be lost on the terror masters.
Derrick
Hill has been a staff editorial writer on the London
Daily Express and Daily Mail and now lives in
Spain.
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