Skip to content

Fear of impotence

President Bush has rallied his troops for what he calls “The first warof the 21st century”. What is your view of this crisis, where, briefly, do you stand? This is the question we are putting to people around the world, especially those with their own public reputation and following. Our aim, to h

Published:

Fear is in the air.  It is being manipulated to ratchet up the fever of  war.  And yet this time around it is not quite clear exactly where or to  whom the fear belongs.  This alone, together with all the other reasons  for opposing this war, should make us suspicious. We are being told we  should be very frightened indeed of Saddam Hussein, although the threat  from his regime to Britain and the US is clearly negligible.  So we are  told we should be frightened of him at some unspecified future date when  terrorists will access the weapons he will develop if he is not  disarmed.

We are being asked to enter into a state of infinite war.  It is in fact  far more likely that such weapons are being accessed in Russia right  now; it is also far more likely that we will become the object of such  attacks as a consequence of this war.  In his preface to last  September’s  National Security Strategy of the USA , President Bush  states `The war against terrorists of global reach is a global  enterprise of uncertain duration.’ The task is interminable.

One of the most disturbing things about 11 September 2001, was that the  attack was so visible in the skies, while its agents were a multiplicity  of potentially proliferating invisible cells (the exact reverse of  Kosovo where it was not the agent - the strutting boastful Milosevic –  but his crimes, the mass graves, that had to be found).  So let us take  out a villain whom the whole world knows to be a villain – nobody  against the war denies this - and whom all the world can see.  It is  meant to make ‘us’ feel better.

There is, therefore, another fear at play – the fear of impotence -  which no one is talking about.  In government rhetoric, you only name a  fear if you can blast it.  When Bush talks of securing a new world  order, when supporters of the war speak of liberating the people of  Iraq, we should not just be questioning whether this, rather than oil or  control of the Middle East, is the true motive.  We should also be  asking what fantasy we are being required to sustain.  America’s aim of  `full spectral dominance’, to which Tony Blair and Geoff Hoon seems to  be signing Britain in perpetuity, is like the rage of a child when she  hits the limits of her powers.   Except that unlike the raging child,  the US, as the strongest military might in the globe, has the capacity  to unleash forces a child can only dream about.

Against the official credo, it is this, I believe, that we – not to  speak of the 80,000 Iraqis whose possible deaths we are meant to be able  to contemplate with impunity - should be most frightened of.

©Jacqueline Rose 2003

Originally published as part of a debate on 6th February 2003 Writers, artists and civic leaders on the War: Pt. II

See also Writers, artists and civic leaders on the War: Pt. 1.

Jacqueline Rose

Jacqueline Rose is a writer who teaches at the school of English and Drama, <a href=http://www.english.qmul.ac.uk/staff/rose.html target=_blank>Queen Mary</a>, University of London.

All articles

More in Conflict & security

See all

More from Jacqueline Rose

See all