Jonathan Freedland is right to call the media out in his column today on their shameful silence over the Conservatives’ sinister European alliance. The mainstream media, most notably the BBC, have consistently failed to scrutinise Michal Kaminski’s disturbing political record. It is hard to avoid the suspicion that journalists are putting their Tory sources before their ethical responsibilities.
As he writes:
[W]here is the outrage? Where is the revulsion at David Cameron becoming partners with men who cheer those who fought for Hitler and against Churchill? The Guardian, the Observer, the New Statesman and now the Jewish Chronicle have been shining a light in this dark corner, but from the rest of the media there has been little more than silence.
Despite the attempts of Kaminski’s apologists, including Iain Dale and Stephen Pollard, to present the head of the Tories’ Eurosceptic group as a moderate Atlanticist, it is clear he is nothing of the sort. This is a man who first denied and then admitted to wearing the Chrobry Sword, a notorious fascist symbol. This is a man who still defends his past membership of the far-right National Revival of Poland. This is a man who not only believes his country should not have apologised for a 1941 massacre of at least 300 Jews but suggests that Jewish involvement with the Communist Party is morally equivalent to this crime.
That the Obama administration should be troubled by this state of affairs is no surprise. Obama is the most pro-European US president for decades and, like his predecessors, wants to deal with a Europe that is united and strong. So the question remains, why has Cameron taken this bizarre risk?
It’s important to remember that Cameron’s pledge to withdraw from the European People’s Party was first and foremost a political move, designed to outflank his right-wing leadership rival Liam Fox. But beyond this, his Eurosceptic alliance reflects the revival of the debased realist belief that “the enemy of my enemy is my friend”.
Just as Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan were prepared to support General Pinochet and the Contras as bulwarks against communism, so Conservatives today are willing to align themselves with the far right in opposition to a united Europe.
The US is clearly troubled by the geopolitical implications of Cameron’s decision, but there is unlikely to be a moral reckoning. In any case, it is not one we should outsource to the Obama administration. As a political issue Europe has never detained either the electorate or the media for long. In response, the Conservatives believe they can masquerade as progressives at home while supporting reactionaries abroad.
The challenge for all Europeans is to destroy this moral complacency — and soon.