Anti-Trump protest in Brussels. Photo: Wikimedia Commons Anti-Trump protest in Brussels. Photo: Wikimedia Commons

After yet another disastrous intervention into UK politics over the NHS protest John Rees asks what will be the effect of the Trump visit?

President Donald Trump’s on-off plan to visit the UK seems to be definitely on again. But as the President steps off Air Force One will he be helping to refurbish, or giving the kiss of death to, the much talked of but little understood special relationship?

The special relationship between the United States and the United Kingdom has always been as much myth as reality. But it is a myth that has served both sides well.

As British imperial power waned and American imperial power waxed during and after the Second World War it became convenient for political establishments on both sides of the Atlantic to claim a unique affinity. This was especially true during the Cold War.

In 1945 the recent alliance against Hitler and what Oscar Wilde called ‘the barrier of a common language’ added lustre to the story, but important elements of the real history were always distorted.

Consider only these moments in our ‘common history’: unlike any other major ally the Americans fought an anti-colonial war against Britain in order to become an independent state in the first place; the British government backed the South in the Civil War that defined the US as a nation; the US had been a reluctant and late-arriving ally in the two world wars of the 20th century; and even at the height of the Cold War the US had unceremoniously pulled the plug on the UK’s Suez adventure, making it absolutely clear who was top neo-colonial dog in the Middle East.

But, despite all this, in the British Foreign Office to this day the view prevails that the British are to the Americans what the Greeks were to the Romans: the wise former great power advising the new and more brutal Empire on the ways of global governance.

This massively self-flattering description disguises the fact that the real reason why the British establishment needed a special relationship with the US was that its own imperial past had bequeathed it an economy far more international than most of its European post-war competitors. It needed a global military umbrella capable of protecting this internationalised (and increasingly financialised) economic profile. The US was the only state able to provide it.

For the US the British provided a platform from which to influence Europe politically, militarily through NATO, and as a base for investment.

The post-Cold War world has tested both the myth and the reality of the special relationship to breaking point.

Once the collapse its East European empire reduced Russia from a global challenger to a regional threat one main purpose of the special relationship was significantly reduced in importance. As far as the new emerging challenge from China was concerned the UK had virtually nothing to offer the US, although that has not prevented the current UK government from opening a base for east of Suez operations for the first time in two generations.

By the time of the Iraq War in 2003 the British were so incidental to the US military operation that, as we now know, both President George W Bush and his Secretary of State, Colin Powell, told the Blair government that they could bail out of the invasion if domestic pressures were too great for them. It was Blair’s hubris that kept Britain in the operation, although the political cover was no doubt welcome in Washington.

In the wake of the failures in Afghanistan and Iraq the special relationship has suffered further deterioration. The Libya intervention, urged on a reluctant Obama by then Prime Minister David Cameron and other European leaders, turned to dust. Obama made clear his regret at ever having signed it off. Cameron was then defeated by the Ed Miliband led Labour Party in his first attempt to get parliamentary approval for bombing in Syria, thus giving a risk-averse Obama the occasion to limit US involvement.

Where Obama substituted drone strikes, targeted assassinations, and proxy wars for the Bush era shock-and-awe, full-scale military intervention, Trump has preferred the rhetoric of isolationism.

Trump’s campaign statements were critical of NATO, the lynchpin of the special relationship, even though the US foreign policy establishment has hauled him back to a more traditional stance once he gained office.

More generally Theresa May’s ill-judged rush across the Atlantic to be the first European leader to hold hands with the new President has only served to underline how broken the special relationship has become.

May’s visit was hugely unpopular in the UK, even though a hundred-and-one other May disaster moments have now overshadowed it. More seriously, Trump’s recent retweet of post by the fascists of Britain First elicited two public rebukes from May, followed by a tweeted response from Trump to her criticism.

Trump’s decision to recognise Jerusalem as capital of Israel produced another statement from May re-iterating that the UK’s position had not changed.

And in the last week Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt, with full backing for No. 10, was the first leading politician to take Trump to task for his ludicrous claim that the People’s Assembly NHS march was actually a protest against the NHS.

The speed of reaction from Hunt was no doubt in part because he realised that when Trump attacked the NHS he was simply building the scale of the protests that will meet him when he visits the UK.

And then there is the sorry story of the state visit itself, offered to Trump by May on that first meeting in the White House. That met with a chorus of disapproval in the UK so great that the visit was soon downgraded from a full coach and horses, room at Buckingham Palace, state occasion to a mere working visit. The status of the visit is still in the balance.

Trump let it be known that he wouldn’t come anyway if he was to be greeted by protests. That impossible condition now seems to have been dropped by the White House.

It is very difficult to see how the weakened-to-breaking-point May government can emerge well from this. The visit is, and will increasingly be, unpopular. There will be protests, quite possibly very big protests.

How will a discredited May government police those protests? When George W Bush visited the UK in the wake of the invasion of Iraq the CIA initially attempted to insist that every tube station in central London be closed, that snipers be positioned on roof tops and protesters kept away from Downing Street. Neither protestors, nor ultimately the British authorities, were willing to allow that to happen. But how will May police protests when Trump comes? Lightly, and risk renewed outbursts from President Trump while he is on UK soil? Heavily, and risk a backlash that could be the straw that disables the Tory government camel?

How will a Trump visit be treated by a Labour opposition, many of whose leading members are not only deeply opposed to him but whose Leader and Mayor of London have been personally insulted by him?

This and a thousand other problems loom as the most unpopular US President ever heads toward these islands. One thing is certain: the already threadbare special relationship will be in an even worse state by the time Donald Trump mounts the steps to Air Force One and leaves the UK.

 

John Rees

John Rees is a writer, broadcaster and activist, and is one of the organisers of the People’s Assembly. His books include ‘The Algebra of Revolution’, ‘Imperialism and Resistance’, ‘Timelines, A Political History of the Modern World’, ‘The People Demand, A Short History of the Arab Revolutions’ (with Joseph Daher), ‘A People’s History of London’ (with Lindsey German) and The Leveller Revolution. He is co-founder of the Stop the War Coalition.

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