Friday 28 December 2018

The Race To Save The Romanovs by Helen Rappaport


THE RACE TO SAVE THE ROMANOVS: The Truth Behind the Secret Plans to Rescue Russia’s Imperial Family

HELEN RAPPAPORT

Hutchinson, 2018, 372 pages

Review by Phil Shannon

 

Who would be the first to save the Romanovs (Tsar Nicholas and family) from the newly triumphant Reds in Russia?  Would salvation come from extreme right groups such as the ‘Union of the Russian People’ with their thirty Tsarist military officers armed with poisoned darts to pick off the guards before hurling diversionary grenades as they made their escape via getaway cars, engines gunning? 

 

Or perhaps the British army officer had the right plan by getting his Nicholas-look-a-like manservant to enter the Romanov’s palace of detention as the Tsar’s barber, shave off the emperor’s beard, stick some false whiskers on himself, swap uniforms (the Tsar usually wore military officer duds, even under house arrest) and escape in a waiting field-ambulance?

 

As the historian, Romanov-buff and all-round royalty nut, Dr. Helen Rappaport, writes in The Race to Save the Romanovs, all such rescue plots were naïve, hare-brained, B-grade movie fantasies.  None were credible logistically: the armed guards were plentiful, their machine-guns deadly, the distances to evacuation through Russia’s ports were vast, and the Russian populace were hostile to any attempt to flee by autocrats who were “widely reviled” for the economic distresses, military miseries and political indignities they had endured for decades under Tsarism.

 

The Tsar’s would-be Russian rescuers did not help their own cause – they were all boastful talk, much of it loose and therefore easy to nip in the bud.  They were riven with rivalries and infested with glory-seeking adventurers and opportunists “intent on siphoning off money from the rescue funds”.  The plotters had no leadership, organisational skills nor aptitude for the technical details of rescue.  If implemented, their schemes would have risked the lives of the Romanovs in deadly shootouts.

 

That left only diplomatic intervention as the means of deliverance.  This was the aim of Alexander Kerensky, the Prime Minister of the moderate, pro-war, pro-capitalist Provisional Government of landowners and industrialists that had assumed formal political power in the February revolution of 1917 after the Tsar was forced to abdicate by mass protests and crippling strikes.

 

To placate the real power in the land - the makers of the revolution, the Russian people as represented through the Soviets of Workers’ and Soldiers’ deputies – Kerensky had assured the Soviets that his government was not about to let the Romanovs scarper.  He was, at the same time, however, “talking with England about precisely that”.

 

Kerensky wanted to transport the Romanovs 846 miles by train to the northern city of Murmansk where they would be spirited to refuge by a British Navy cruiser.  This idea, however, was dead in the water, as would have been the royal passengers, from German submarines and mines but it was Russian political reality that effectively sunk the proposition.  Because the unions, soviets and Red Guards controlled the railways, there would, conceded Kerensky later, ‘have been a strike the moment the Tsar was entrained for Murmansk and the train would never have left the station’.

 

British political reality was also against offering safe haven in England for the Romanovs.  The natural class instincts of the British political elite had initially kicked in with an offer of asylum but it came with the caveats that the Romanovs must not become a ‘public charge’ (Russia must pay for their upkeep in Britain), and that there was a shortage in the royals housing market.

 

These were, however, excuses, not reasons - the British government had no in-principle objection to supporting a large, expensive, taxpayer-funded royal family (they willingly stumped up for their own) whilst there were more than enough royal palaces available (Sandringham, Windsor, Buckingham and Balmoral) for both monarchies.

 

The real reason the conservative Liberal government and the British King (George V – Nicholas’ cousin) did not want to receive ‘Nicholas the bloody’, ‘Nicholas the hangman’, Nicholas the ‘bloodstained vampire’, as a house-guest was for fear of the ‘undesirable agitation’ that the Tsar’s presence may trigger in England where Romanov asylum was being discussed ‘not only in [gentlemen’s] clubs’ but (gasped an alarmed King’s Private Secretary) ‘by working men’.

 

Political pragmatism won the day, with Whitehall withdrawing its offer of asylum.  Supping from the poisoned chalice of the Romanov cup wasn’t worth the opportunity cost of opening up the Russian market, even under the dreaded Bolsheviks, to “British commercial, financial and industrial objectives”.

 

The rest of Europe’s elites were of a similar view.  As much as Kaiser Wilhelm, for example, detested the Bolshevik ‘swine’ and ‘Jew boys’, he ruled out including the Romanovs’ release in the Brest-Litovsk treaty negotiations with Soviet Russia to end the war on the eastern front, preferring to consolidate the considerable “German industrial and economic interests” in the Russian territory the Germans had extracted under the treaty.

 

Nevertheless, the British government kept a watching brief on the Romanovs but although its spies pitched various rescue schemes, all of them were impractical and thus stillborn, especially after the Bolshevik-led Soviets took full power from the grandly disappointing Provisional Government in the October revolution and moved the Romanovs to detention in the Bolshevik stronghold of Ekaterinburg in the Urals.

Two final rescue prospects did open up, however, in July 1918.  Seventy monarchist officers planned a night raid to spring the Romanovs just ahead of the advance of the counter-revolutionary White Army consisting of former Czech prisoners-of-war who had declared they were ‘fighting for and in the name of the Czar’.  The Bolshevik leadership had favoured a public trial of the Romanovs but extreme military urgency forced the local Bolsheviks’ hand and the “magnets for counter-revolution” were executed prior to the Bolsheviks’ hurried retreat from Ekaterinburg.

The Romanovs’ extended family throughout Europe was distraught at this outcome but, as the US ambassador in Russia noted, the Romanovs’ deaths ‘aroused no resentment whatever’ amongst the Russian people.

Europe’s antique monarchies were all now on notice in the wake of the Romanovs’ demise - “socialism and democracy were the new watchwords everywhere”, writes Rappaport, as Sweden’s King Gustav led a monarchist retreat, capitulating to a centre-left government, followed by the Kings of Denmark, Belgium and Norway ceding their constitutional powers to civilian governments (the latter declaring with faux democratic sensibility that ‘I am also King of the Communists’ now).  After a Republican and socialist landslide in the Spanish municipal elections in 1931, Spain’s Catholic King Alfonso was chased from his Madrid palace to refuge in Rome.

As an obsessively fervent anti-Bolshevik and awe-struck royalist, Dr. Rappaport pines for “the last of the Tsars” but all those working people who want to see an end to a society divided inequitably into Royals and Commoners, into rulers and subjects, should be glad that the ‘race’ to save the Romanovs never really left the starting blocks.

Friday 30 November 2018

WHEN FOOTBALLERS WERE SKINT by JON HENDERSON


WHEN FOOTBALLERS WERE SKINT: A Journey in Search of the Soul of Football

JON HENDERSON

Biteback Publishing, 2018, 308 pages

 
Review by Phil Shannon


Bill Leivers (Manchester City, 1953-1964) wryly recalls to the British journalist, Jon Henderson, in When Footballers Were Skint, how the football club owner once rewarded the players on the train home from a successful away game, not with a fistful of sterling for a few drinks all round, but with a packet of Polo Mints.

 

His contemporary, Tom Finney (England regular and Preston North End), reflects tartly on the £50,000 gate-takings which the English Football Association received from one international fixture at Wembley Stadium – of which the eleven England players shared just £550.

 

The chasm between the earnings of football’s bosses and players was at its widest in the wage cap.  Instituted in 1901 at the urging of the smaller, poorer clubs who feared being unable to compete for high quality players against the bigger, richer clubs, the maximum wage had crawled from a modest £4 a week to a still-middling £20 by 1961, not much more than the national average male worker’s weekly wage.

 

Tight-fisted employers and modest wages were the norm for England’s professional footballers as they were for the working class from which the players came.  On humble wages, the machinists, sheet metal workers, plumbers, joiners, stonemasons, builders labourers and coal miners who found new careers on the football pitch shared the humble lives of their fans, using the same public transport to get to matches, and living in nondescript terraced housing right next door to their fans.

 

Trolley-bus conductors might waive the occasional fare but that was the extent of their perks, except for the bigger names who could eke out a little more from extra-curricular activities such as (ghosted) newspaper columns, advertising and endorsements.

 

The businessmen who owned the clubs were only too ready to exploit the players’ love of the game and their club bonds.  They airily dismissed wages gripes as unworthy compared to the ‘big honour’ of signing for a First Division club, or the ‘priceless honour’ of national team selection, or remaining a loyal one-club player by sacrificially turning down attractive offers from overseas clubs.

 

The footballers, however, had one traditional working class value they could call on to shake loose from the wage cap – withdrawal of their labour.  The players had carried their trade union principles into their new workplace, as members of the Professional Footballers’ Association.  Under the aggressive leadership of Fulham’s Jimmy Hill, the footballers’ union members voted to strike on Saturday, 21st January 1961 against the maximum wage.

 

The Trades Union Congress, Britain’s peak labour body, backed the strike by calling on the public (then largely unionised workers) to boycott any games that went ahead, and letting it be known that any footballer contemplating strike-breaking might find i hard (under no-ticket, no-start union principles) to find work once their playing days were over.

 

Just a few hours before the scheduled Saturday afternoon kick-off, the Football League caved and the clubs all agreed to abolish the wage cap.  This workers’ victory was, says Henderson, on a par with other labour struggles in Britain for fairer wages. 

 

Since then, adds Henderson however, “things have gone awry” in the descent of English football “towards the bloated monument to Mammon it would grow into by the close of the century”.  Henderson’s interviewees, all veterans from the wage-cap era, are unanimous that present day footballers’ wages are ‘immoral’, ‘barmy’, ‘ridiculous’, ‘outrageous’.  The average salary of an English Premier League (EPL) footballer has just topped £50,000 per week (with the superstars coining north of a quarter million each week), whilst transfer fees have reached obscene levels (Neymar’s record-breaking sale from Barcelona to Paris St-Germain for £198 million in 2017 is now an aspiration not an aberration).
 

Supersonic wage inflation was turbo-charged by the billion pound deluge of media money for television broadcasting rights for the EPL, following the revamping of the old competition structure in 1992.  TV money has made large financial rewards possible for all twenty EPL clubs, much of which goes to purchasing the most talented players from all corners of the globe to ensure top flight survival and it continuing monetary rewards. 


What the clubs have lost in this mad march of money, say Henderson’s interviewees, are the community bonds between the players and their working class supporters.  The EPL’s “plutocrats of today” are footballers who are “not close to the fans at all”.  They are an elite stratum of international round-ball mercenaries with more regard for their tax-dodging, off-shore accounts and luxurious lifestyles than for any economic egalitarianism or wealth-levelling that might benefit their fans.  In hindsight, the few dissenters in the players’ union in 1961 who argued for significantly raising, but not abolishing, the wage cap in 1961 were on to something.


The entire class of ’61, however, were on to something bigger, and still politically relevant – the power of trade union combination against the tiny few who profit from football, whether they did so in the past by keeping wages shackled or by overpaying today’s super-rich players to keep the TV-rights revenue in the stratosphere.  The 1961 wage cap struggle is the necessary reminder that it is only the skills of the working footballer which make the football industry possible. 


Henderson’s book, despite its page-padding self-indulgent nostalgia, shows that it is the remorseless logic of capitalism which drives the contest for the soul of football between working class community and the profit-seeking forces of commercialism, between those who truly love the game and those off (and increasingly on) the pitch who see it as just another path to get rich.  Football is a class game in more ways than one.

 

Sunday 12 August 2018

OPERATION CHAOS: The Vietnam Deserters Who Fought the CIA, the Brainwashers, and Each Other MATTHEW SWEET


OPERATION CHAOS: The Vietnam Deserters Who Fought the CIA, the Brainwashers, and Each Other

MATTHEW SWEET

Picador, 2018, 351 pages

Review by Phil Shannon

 

When a number of American GIs in Vietnam deserted in 1968 and “joined a movement that wanted to bring that conflict to an end and build a more just and equitable world”, only to “then meet Lyndon LaRouche and kiss reality goodbye”, their idealistic revolt descended into the “batshit crazy” politics of one of the weirdest cults of all time, says Matthew Sweet, writer and BBC broadcaster, in Operation Chaos.

 

The soldiers’ individual acts of rebellion became collective and political when, having found asylum in Sweden, they joined the American Deserters Committee (ADC), an anti-war movement which organised the thousand or so military refuseniks and draft resisters exiled in Stockholm.  One undercover CIA operative who infiltrated the ADC reported on the political threat they posed - ‘they found it impossible to kill; were pacifists; believed that war in general was immoral and that American participation in the war in Vietnam was illegal’ and, alarmingly, they were forging links with European revolutionary groups.

 

The more politically-minded leaders gave the ADC its radical heft, including gatecrashing a dinner party at the US embassy in Stockholm, producing the Second Front newspaper for enlisted men stationed in US military bases in West Germany, doing radio broadcasts for troops in Vietnam encouraging them to desert, and giving lively press interviews (including charging fees to newspapers “which were not sufficiently radical”).

 

The CIA’s appropriately named Operation Chaos sought to disrupt the ADC through agents provocateurs, and through cajoling and intimidating deserters to desert from the ADC itself and become informers in return for avoiding court-martial, hard-labour jail-time and career-destroying dishonourable discharge.  The mere knowledge that CIA surveillance was present was enough to sow corrosive suspicion and discord amongst the deserters.

 

The CIA exacerbated the latent internal stresses of the ADC as it split into sectarian grouplets over political differences.  This dissolution gained momentum as the broader revolutionary tide, powered by opposition to a winding down Vietnam War, began to recede.  As it did so, some bizarre, mutant political life-forms were left in its wake.

 

None was weirder than the innocuously-sounding National Caucus of Labor Committees, better known as the pejorative ‘LaRouchites’, after their leader, Lyndon LaRouche, an intelligent psychopath, a one-time (and highly peculiar) member of the US Trotskyist Socialist Workers Party, eight-time US Presidential candidate and purveyor of magnificently eccentric conspiracy theories.

 

LaRouche’s nutty concoctions about secret global cabals seeking genocidal world domination have inducted many actors, including the KGB - and the CIA.  The Beatles, orchestrated by the philosopher, Bertrand Russell, were a British tool of psychological warfare despatched to the US to ruin American youth.  Noam Chomsky is in on it, too (he is a NATO agent, in case you’re wondering).  Former centre-left Prime Minister of Sweden, Olof Palme, was an axe-murderer ripe for assassination.  The current mastermind of the whole conspiracy is Queen Elizabeth 11 who controls the world’s illegal drug trade and has mustered an army of zombie assassins, brainwashed by the CIA (or KGB – it’s hard to keep up) to launch World War 111.

 

The LaRouchites’ political interventions have notoriously included their 1973 ‘Operation Mop-Up’, in which the LaRouchites would achieve political dominance by neutralising the left competition, starting by “literally pulverising” the US Communist Party.  To counter the CP’s alleged Stalinism, LaRouchite goons used martial arts, knuckledusters and clubs in a “carnival of violence and disruption” against party members (irony was not the ‘anti-Stalinist’ LaRouchites’ strong suit).

 

Another of the LaRouchites’ targets were its members who had joined from the ADC, which a paranoiac LaRouche had come to see as a CIA front.  The ADC recruits were the focus for LaRouche’s rule-by-terror which ‘deprogrammed’ the CIA-brainwashed deserters through sadistic behaviour modification techniques, including non-stop Beethoven turned up to the max.  Fear also drove the LaRouchites’ fund-raising in which members defrauded the public through cold-calling - failure to meet their daily target would result in the psychological and physical abuse of all-night ‘ego-stripping’ sessions, a technique LaRouche adopted from one Maoist strand of the ADC. 

 

Despite the unsavoury political history of the LaRouchites and their barmy leader, they continue to find an audience by hiding their kookier side behind a bastardised quasi-Marxist jargon and a radical conservatism.  Their likes (Putin, all things nuclear, Trump) and dislikes (an unhinged anti-Russian fever, finance capital, environmentalism, Trump) are all over the ideological shop but tilt to the Right.  Their origins remain cloudy - the ex-CIA renegade, Philip Agee, regarded the LaRouchites as a CIA operation from the start, masquerading as leftist in order to divide and discredit the left.

 

What the LaRouchites do offer to an eccentric but sometimes influential few is a magic circle of LaRouchite wisdom and its entrance ticket to a select élite of LaRouchite philosopher-kings-in-waiting.  Fear of expulsion from the group helps to keep its members faithful.

 

This factor was particularly pronounced amongst the handful of deserters whose “persistent presence” throughout LaRouchite history was born of the loyalty of some young, ill-educated men, who went into a monstrous war, or came out of it, with behavioural or psychological problems and found themselves, as deserters, stranded from their families, their country and its institutions, and were given a new home in the LaRouchite fold.

 

It is a mournful tale but Matthew Sweet’s narrative angle turns a sad little LaRouchian postscript of a small number of deserters into a major chapter of sixties political radicalism.  Sweet’s focus on the LaRouchites and their deserter members foregrounds a noisy but aberrant and marginal political fringe, greying out the broader anti-war and revolutionary movements of the era.  The US military deserters deserve to be remembered, not for their exotic and lamentable LaRouchian end, but for their heroic role in helping to stop a grotesque war.

Wednesday 11 July 2018

ONE LAST SPIN: The Power and Peril of the Pokies by DREW ROOKE


ONE LAST SPIN: The Power and Peril of the Pokies

DREW ROOKE

Scribe, 2018, 325 pages

Review by Phil Shannon

 

Ever wondered if it possible to win against the pokies?  Why not ask someone who should know, like a poker machine technician - ‘I make these machines in order to grab your money.  I would not be so stupid to play myself’, said one such techo when asked by freelance Sydney journalist, Drew Rooke.  In his book, One Last Spin, Rooke expands on the simple truth that pokies machines are rigged to make you lose. 

The ‘one-armed bandits’ are deliberately engineered to hoover up the loose change from the pockets of casual punters and to deep-mine the bank accounts of the addicts, concentrated in the poorer suburbs, from whom the real pokies profits (40% of them) are to be made.  These jackpot junkies, the ‘problem gamblers’, have their lives shattered in the process. 

A typical pokies machine can chew through $600 to $1,200 of a person’s hard-earned every hour by dangling the shiny lure of the big payout, with just enough tinier wins and frequent near misses engineered into the machine’s program to keep the desperate glued to their seat.  

The machines lie in wait in massed battalions – there are 193,000 pokies in Australia, which (excluding the casino jurisdictions of Macau and Monaco) is the highest per capita rate in the world.  Australia has achieved global leadership by allowing the pokies to colonise much of the pubs and clubs scene. 

The pokies are highly profitable for these community venues.  In 2014-15, pokies accounted for $76 million of NSW rugby league club, Canterbury-Bankstown’s, total revenue of $87 million.  They anchored $52 million of Rooty Hill RSL club’s $84 million revenue.  With the exception of only the North Melbourne Kangaroos, nine of the ten AFL football clubs based in Victoria run pokies, taking in $90 million in revenue.  Across the whole sector, pokies generate 28% of total revenue for pubs and 61% for clubs. 

The upper reaches of the pokies industry also profit handsomely.  Pokies machines creamed $40 million in profit in 2016 for the Sydney-based corporation, Aristocrat Leisure, the second largest pokies manufacturer in the world.  Australia’s two supermarket giants know a solid income-stream when they see one.  Woolworths is the majority owner of Australian Leisure and Hospitality Group which owns 12,000 machines in 400 hotels and clubs.  Coles, through its parent company, Wesfarmers, owns 3,000 pokies in 89 hotels. 

To ensure the House always wins, pokies manufacturers employ vast teams of “mathematicians, software engineers, sound engineers, musicians, artists, graphic designers, industrial designers and animators” to keep their human cash cows engaged in upwards wealth transfer.  All the bells and whistles of the machines augment the activation-by-gambling of the reward centres in the brain in the same way that substance addiction does, with pokies addicts chasing the next high from the ‘feel-good neurotransmitter’, dopamine.  

The pokies industry covers its drug-pushing tracks with PR spin every bit as cynical and loaded as the spin of the machines’ reels.  They acknowledge the issue of problem gamblers but lay the blame on the individual addict as a matter of personal psychological flaws whilst touting the confection that the industry is an altruistic, community-minded provider of harmless entertainment and an essential financer of community sports, charities, schools and hospitals, despite their donations being miniscule as proportion of their total expenditure. 

The industry’s camouflage of public beneficence is embroidered by two main auxiliaries – the anti-nanny-state ninnies and the usual academics-for-hire, at a loose end now that partnership opportunities with Big Tobacco have been stubbed out, who produce the industry-friendly research that attempts to lend some intellectual gloss to the corporate self-interest and social harm of the pokies. 

The industry has its powerful state enablers, too.  Despite strong public opposition to pokies (70-80% of those polled want restrictions on their use), state and federal governments adopt feather-touch regulation, unable even to broach a one-dollar maximum bet per spin.  Governments are content to merely require limp-as-lettuce sloganising to ‘gamble responsibly’ - a term devised by the gambling industry and adopted wholesale by governments precisely because it combines apparent concern with thoroughly innocuous, status-quo-preserving policy. 

The reason for government inaction is not hard to discern.  Between 2000 and 2014, state governments received $45 billion in gambling taxes, a not insignificant average of 6% of total state government revenue.  Cross the industry by crimping their profits and the political costs will be huge, including electoral campaigns against pokies-constraining candidates, and ending the flow of political donations to the big parties. 

Rooke lays out a compelling case against the pokies but there is an even more damning writ to be served against the very institution of gambling.  For what each poker machine, or lottery, or sports wager, is demonstrating is that capitalism can not provide an adequate income for all.  If not born to wealth, your only hope for financial security is dumb luck, with a fortunate few ‘Have-Nots’ getting to join the ‘Haves’, and accelerating wealth inequality whilst stoking envy and resentment in their neighbours.  As with the pokies, so with capitalism – the few win, the many lose.  The only way to beat the pokies is not to play them.  The only way to beat capitalism is to reject it.

Wednesday 27 June 2018

A SPY NAMED ORPHAN: The Enigma of Donald MacLean by ROLAND PHILIPPS


A SPY NAMED ORPHAN: The Enigma of Donald MacLean
ROLAND PHILIPPS
Bodley Head, 2018, 440 pages

Review by Phil Shannon
 
At Cambridge University in the 1930s, Donald MacLean was popularly known as Donald MacLenin because he was a Red-hot undergraduate, a Communist Party member who railed against “the economic situation, the unemployment, vulgarity in the cinema, rubbish on the bookstalls, the public [private] school, snobbery in the suburbs, more battleships, lower wages”.
 
None of his radicalism, however, stopped MacLean from being hired by the Foreign Office, as Roland Philipps recounts in his biography of the famous Soviet spy (one of the famous Cambridge five - Burgess, Philby, MacLean, Blunt, Cairncross).  As the FO boffins saw it, MacLean’s campus political fervour could be dismissed as the ‘passing fancy of youth’ (in the words of one of MacLean’s ‘handlers’) especially amongst such ‘scions of the bourgeoisie’ as MacLean, son of a senior anti-communist politician, and a graduate, with blue-ribbon academic and sporting honours, of prestigious private school and elite university.
 
Besides, despite their (presumably) temporary Marx crush, the FO valued the Cambridge (presumably ex) communists who formed a rich talent pool of analytically sharp intellects with the added benefit that they, as former Reds, would be invaluable because they knew how the political enemy thought.
 
The FO knew its target demographic well (rich, upper class students, half of whom had, after all, acted as ‘volunteer’ strike-breakers during the 1926 General Strike) but MacLean, however, was made of stouter political stuff, having fallen permanently out of love with, in his handler’s words, the ‘intellectual emptiness and aimlessness of the bourgeois class to which he belonged’.
 
Britain’s diplomatic and intelligence services, however, were not the only ones fishing for recruits in the radicalised universities of the Thirties.  Stalin’s regime, facing capitalist and fascist hostility, was also on the lookout for covert assistance from abroad.
 
As most socialists of the time mistakenly saw Stalin as the almost apostolic embodiment of Marxism, those Western communists tapped on the shoulder to clandestinely help Moscow were predisposed to assist, especially (in the words of Kim Philby) through their ‘enrolment in an elite force’ of revolutionaries.
 
Although he rated the actual business of espionage as ‘like being a lavatory attendant – distasteful but necessary’, MacLean passed UK and US diplomatic state secrets to Moscow for a decade with a WikiLeaks intensity (but a much narrower audience) in the firm belief that he was assisting world peace and socialism.
 
The psychological toll from continually denying his true self in public, however, became a debilitating strain that was only relieved by chronic alcoholism.  MacLean’s loose lips during his booze binges risked blowing his cover - at a dinner-party with a Minister from the newly-elected Labour government, for example, MacLean stormed out, saying that ‘this government is just as bad as any other British government – suppressing coloured people’, prompting the observation by another guest that evening that MacLean ‘looks like a Tory and talks like a Communist’.
 
In her report to Moscow, another of Maclean’s handlers noted the personal tensions arising from MacLean’s unsustainable double life, appending to her praise for the ‘good and brave comrade’ the caveat that ‘he’s been totally detached from party work where he might have grown and learned’.  Gone, for MacLean, was the opportunity for uninhibited debate and discussion amongst a wide range of comrades, replaced by his stunting confinement to the hated world of “stuffy formal dinners and receptions”, his colleagues’ incessant chatter about the ‘communist menace’, their hyperbolic exaggeration of the Soviet threat, and their casual class loathing of the lives and potential political power of the non-Oxbridge lower orders.
 
Clandestinity had forced the separation of MacLean from class and ideological struggle, and from the lifeblood of comradeship.  MacLean could have been a superb radical intellectual grounded by active membership in a working class Marxist party but his political world had, instead, shrunk to the humdrum office drudgery of document copying.
 
When MacLean was eventually about to be tumbled, with a long spell in Wormwood Scrubs awaiting him, he was exfiltrated to Russia in 1951, where he found job satisfaction as a researcher on foreign policy and as an advocate for peaceful detente between East and West.  With Stalin still in power, however, official Moscow was still paranoid about double agents, so MacLean was not entirely safe - as a Russian friend put it, ‘MacLean was decorated with the Order of the Red Banner.  He might equally well have been shot’.
 
MacLean was relieved when Stalin died in 1953 and although he initially supported the Soviet crushing of the 1956 Hungary revolt, MacLean opposed the 1968 Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia, fraternised with Solzhenitsyn and other dissidents, and wrote on his ballot paper for the Supreme Soviet that whilst dissidents are held in prison ‘I can not participate in elections’.
 
It was a calmer but somewhat anti-climactic end to a high, but ultimately faux-climactic, life of espionage.  Much of the Cambridge spies’ efforts yielded little return – Stalin famously dismissed as ‘disinformation’ the covert intelligence that signalled the devastating invasion by Nazi Germany of the Soviet Union, whilst high-level espionage material also failed to add substantively to anything which was not already discernible through intelligent observation and objective interpretation (assets which MacLean possessed in abundance).
 
Philipps’ biography of MacLean, with its focus on espionage tradecraft, spy psychology and adventure narrative, has all the political depth of a Boys Own Bumper Book of Spies, and lazily rests in an ‘our spies good, their spies bad’ framework.  It only lightly intersects with the bigger political dimension of the spy drama.  Whilst the book automatically associates, with Pavlovian predictability, the ‘t’ words (treason, treachery) with MacLean, the real betrayal going on was the corruption of socialist values and revolutionaries’ lives by Stalinism, which in turn had its roots in the capitalist military and economic war waged against the fledgling Bolshevik state, a war which created the material scarcity and isolation that nurtured the rise of a privileged, undemocratic, bureaucratic class.
 
The Stalinist casualty roll was gigantic and it included MacLean amongst its number.  Donald MacLean, socialist, was more betrayed than betrayer.

Stardust & Golden DOUG McEACHERN


STARDUST & GOLDEN
DOUG McEACHERN

UWA Publishing, 2018, 208 pages

Review by Phil Shannon

 

Two Adelaide University students from opposite ends of the social scale - Mark (solid proletarian stock) and Stephen (from the leafier postcodes) – discover something in common.  There is a war in Vietnam to stop and a hide-and-seek game of conscription to navigate.  They both register for the call-up ballot in full anti-war (T-shirt and leaflet) mode, outside the offices of the Department of Labour and National Service, trusting to luck that their number won’t come up or hoping to string out student deferral of the khaki crunch point.

 

Doug McEachern’s novel follows the progress and regress of the two friends as “endless acrimonious debates over militancy” pepper their student group house in inner-city North Adelaide.  Mark, the most militant, although not a patch on the unruly Maoists and anarchists, makes a tactical error whilst leading an anti-war march through the city, taking the protesters too close to police, flicking the spring that unleashes the coiled fury of the state, primed for any pretext to exercise physical and judicial muscle.

 

Arrests, farcical trials, and convictions made and overturned, are followed by the two young men’s looming decisions about whether to go underground as draft resisters after receiving the fateful letter announcing their ‘success’ in the conscription lottery.  Their choice of response will, it turns out, carry great human cost.

 

Four decades on, and Mark, a “fed-up” oil industry consultant, chucks in his job and revisits those days and their legacy of  “unwanted memories” and “unfinished business”, not just to do with the war but also with an unwanted pregnancy, that afflicted the household.

 

At times, the characters’ relationships teeter on the Melrose Place edge (Mary - the Christian non-violent direct actionist - sums it up in “I love Angela and she doesn’t love me.  She loves Stephen and Stephen doesn’t love her.  Jane and Edward pretend to live together but they’re always falling apart”) but, like the 1990s cult American TV soap, it is oddly compelling.  Unlike the shallow B-grade Hollywood dross, however, there are large matters of political and social import at stake in the personal travails.

 

McEachern (a sixties’ anti-war campaigner, then university academic and now novelist in south coast retirement in South Australia) writes what he knows about first-hand which gives his novel authenticity.  There is also a bit of preliminary throat-clearing, scene-setting and character development that takes a while to move up through the gears before the story takes on an independent life of its own and motors towards a climax that avoids neat conclusion, is never quite predictable and carries some emotional power.

 

So, there are some ‘first novel nerves’, then, but the book turns out all right on the night.  McEachern has the makings of a fine novelist and we should look forward to more to come from him.

Sunday 27 May 2018

REBEL PRINCE (Tom Bower) & MEGHAN (Andrew Morton)


REBEL PRINCE: The Power, Passion and Defiance of Prince Charles

TOM BOWER, William Collins, 2018
MEGHAN: A Hollywood Princess
ANDREW MORTON, Michael O’Mara Books, 2018
Review by Phil Shannon

 

‘Nobody knows what utter hell it is to be Prince of Wales’, whined Charles, the heir to the British throne.  All that handshaking and small talk is ‘an intolerable burden’, his never-right office temperature ‘makes my life so unbearable’, first-class seats on commercial airflights are ‘so uncomfortable’.  The prince’s self-pitying outbursts reveal his lack of understanding of the lives of his ‘subjects’ who would be delighted if their only complaints about life included living in multiple palaces, owning a fleet of luxury cars, taking skiing holidays to Aspen, and being allowed to treat taxpaying as purely voluntary on an annual income of £20 million. 

The royalty-obsessive Tom Bower, in Rebel Prince, takes us inside the bubble of Charles and the other mediaeval relics.  Amongst the tedious palace intrigues, eyelid-shuttering family squabbles and tiresome protocol ‘controversies’ are some you-wouldn’t-read-about-it (except that you are) insights into princely privilege and elitist entitlement. 

Take, for example, Charles’ 146 staff of butlers, cooks, secretaries, chauffeurs, gardeners (including a dozen retired Indian soldiers to pick snails from his flowerbed by torchlight) and valets (to run his bath, lay out his daily five clothes changes, replenish the royal lavatory paper, rake the gravel and plump the cushions). 

To these employees, the petulant autocrat is typically capricious.  Should any luckless royal worker displease him in any way (being two minutes late with his breakfast eggs, for example, or cutting his sandwiches into squares rather than triangles) it was goodbye without so much as a thankyou. 

If real work was a foreign concept to Charles, so was the cost of transport.  The tab for the prince’s unlimited access to private jets, trains and helicopters is picked up by the taxpayer, such as his £18,916 trip on the royal train to visit a pub.  Public transport is a total mystery to Charles - when he once breathlessly announced that he’d ‘been on the Tube, you know’, a friend’s reply was quick: ‘yes, but only to open a line’. 

The pampered toff’s extravagance saw Charles’ popularity perpetually in the doldrums, even plunging to just 4% approval after what was seen, because of his adulterous affair with Camilla Parker-Bowles, as his betrayal of (Saint) Diana (an active adulterer herself). 

Charles unsuccessfully attempted to ameliorate his reputation for material indulgence by setting up two dozen royal-brand charities.  He didn’t shake a tin on a street corner, however, but rather he would hit up rich corporates, celebrities and foreign royals (entry price £50,000) in return for royal photo-ops (fourth spot behind the Queen at Ascot, perhaps, or an invite to a royal wedding) for those hoping some regal fairy dust might settle on them and their brand. 

Being green was another plank in the Charles refurbishment project.  The prince opposes genetically-modified crops, fossil-fuelled global warming, plastic pollution, tropical deforestation and species extinction (although foxes do not make the cut - they were made for being torn apart by the hounds of the ‘Tally-Ho’ set).  His environmental image was  undone, however, by his frequent travel to international environment events by private jet, trailing massive quantities of CO2 emissions, or by taking a 250 mile helicopter trip straight after exhorting people to fight climate change by turning off their lights. 

As with his environmentalism (which is more New Age hokum than science-based), even when Charles gets something right, he does so for the wrong reasons.  He opposed the 2003 Iraq War, for example, not on anti-war or anti-imperialist principle but because of his Arabism (a creed which also allows him to shill for British military sales to Middle East despotisms).  

As a philosopher, Charles also shows a certain lack of rigour and realism.  He adheres to a theory of mystical harmony, based on the ‘sacred geometry of the body’ (related, somehow, to the Fibonacci number sequence) and which, if upset, results in a ‘disturbed flow of blood’, for which he recommends Bach Flower Remedies, coffee enemas, carrot juice and homeopathy. 

Alas, for Charles It is all so different now from the good old pre-industrial, pre-Enlightenment days, which also had the added bonus of political rule by absolute monarchy, the days before ‘scientists, planners and socialists upset the old order’, as he once lamented. 

 

If not through the pre-modern, scandal-dogged Charles, then perhaps there can be a Markle-led return of the monarchy to its full, magical glory by adding some Hollywood sparkle?  Andrew Morton, a Royalty enthusiast and purple-prose specialist, certainly hopes so.  In MEGHAN, he pulls out all stops for the latest ‘Commoner’ bridal acquisition to the royal household who could “make the monarchy seem more inclusive and relevant in an ever-changing world”. 

Markle is a bi-racial divorcee, a liberal foe of Trump and Brexit, and a television star whose roles have seen her snorting cocaine, doing striptease, performing oral sex and generally displaying flesh.  Her Tinsel Town fame and income was duly balanced, however, by the requisite good works (soup kitchen volunteer for the homeless) of toiling amongst the needy. 

Markle is no Hollywood airhead – she has a degree in international relations, during which she became a fan of Noam Chomsky, the left-libertarian, anti-imperialist intellectual.  The feminist child prodigy (she had written letters of complaint about sexist advertising) went on to become a United Nations gender-equality advocate. 

Markle’s common, even radical, attire, though, has its fraying edges.  She clearly didn’t pack Chomsky’s selected works for her visit to the troops on her United Service Organisation entertainment tour of US military bases and Navy destroyers - on the contrary, she felt ‘very, very blessed’ to support the US war machine. 

Markle does not explain how her television persona, which traded off her looks, helped to advance the cause of female emancipation, or how, as the voice of World Vision, a global evangelical Christian charity which refuses to employ same-sex couples, advances equality. 

Nor can Markle square her love of multi-thousand-dollar dresses and fashion accessories with her outreach to ordinary people and their rather more down-market sartorial prospects.  True, she does flaunt her ‘ethical brand’ handbags, ‘conflict-free’ diamonds and ‘cruelty-free’ coats but the moral gloss wears thin when Markle retires with the Royal women-folk on Boxing Day whilst the men engage in the jolly Christmas past-time of slaughtering hundreds of pheasants on the Queen’s estate, including top shooting by Charles and Diana’s two sons, ‘the killer Wales’, Princes William and Harry of Wales. 

The ordinary-titled Ms Markle is now Her Royal Highness, Duchess of Sussex, Princess, and the once feminist equality campaigner who bent the knee to no man now gives, and receives, the curtsy by rank.  Markle’s social ascension is meant to show that economic class is so much old conceptual hat - it is all about being ‘aspirational’ now.  All you have to do is marry a prince. 

The royals are not, as their PR flaks like to proclaim, ‘Just Like You and Me’.  Every Royal Birth, Death and Marriage, every syrupy episode in The House of Windsor, this week and every week until the end of time, carries the message that hierarchy and inequality are inevitable. 

In Trotsky’s choice phrase, however, the ‘dustbin of history’ still has an opening for the archaic, expensive, undemocratic institution of monarchy with its foul waste of dividing society into Royals and Commoners, rulers and subjects, upstairs and downstairs, stars and extras.  Time to take out the rubbish.

Friday 6 April 2018

DISSENT: The Student Press in 1960s Australia by SALLY WOOD


DISSENT: The Student Press in 1960s Australia

SALLY PERCIVAL WOOD

Scribe, 2017, 310 pages

Review by Phil Shannon

 

Dissent didn’t obey strict decade-demarcation lines on Australian campuses in the radical 1960s, writes Dr Sally Wood (historian, Deakin University) in DISSENT: The Student Press in 1960s Australia.  In 1961, for example, university students were still mostly from a privileged background and a largely conservative lot in their attire (“jacket-and-tie and short-back-and-sides” for the young men and “stiffly coiffured hair, twin-sets and skirts below the knee” for the women), in their music (classical and jazz rather than rock ‘n’ roll) and in their politics as they placidly read their rather anodyne student newspapers which mirrored rather than challenged the establishment press.

 

This non-threatening stasis was impolitely disturbed by the rapid government expansion of higher education to meet the intellectual-worker needs of a modernising Australian economy.  The consequent infusion of new, working class, student blood recharged a student body that was much less deferential to the mystique of the ivory tower and more ready to challenge the social and political orthodoxies of the age.  A more subversive uni rag was at the forefront of this campus transformation.

 

Wood opens colourful time-capsules of the opinionated articles, heated editorials, energised letters and crazy cartoons from the revitalised student press, covering censorship, sexual liberation, homosexuality, abortion, Aboriginal rights, the Cold War, an anti-Stalinist socialism, poverty and housing, education reform and the environment.  The slaughter and lies of the Vietnam War, and conscription (which took one-fifth of twenty-year-old Australian men in a ‘Lottery of Death’), in particular, signalled the high-water-mark of student publishing dissent. 

 

Some issues were slower to take flight.  It wasn’t until 1971 that Adelaide University’s On Dit ‘Bird of the Week’ page became extinct as female students threw off their ‘Miss University’ sashes and took control of their bodies.  One year later, purged by the Women’s Liberation Movement, On Dit had became the only Australian student newspaper admitted as a member of the Underground Press Syndicate, a global alternative-media collective.

 

In sixties Australia, each student newspaper issue was keenly awaited and savoured in depth, and the uni rag could wield an influence beyond the campus, being seen as a “credible participant in shaping political discourse and challenging pubic policy”.  A decline of the student newspaper followed, however, and Wood dates its demise from the election of a reforming Whitlam Labor government in 1972 which signalled not only a significant achievement of much of the student agenda but also quelled most of the ferment.   

 

The retrenchment of dissent was accelerated by the market-based restructuring of higher education in which the university increasingly became a business, Vice-Chancellors overpaid CEOs, education a commodity, students consumers and a degree purely an instrumental means to a vocational end.

 

Whilst the university culture, including the student newspaper, has been profoundly and negatively effected by this external economic context, there have been some own goals, too, says Wood.  Her prime culprit is a post-Marxist ‘identity politics’ where race, ethnicity, sex, gender and sexuality have sidelined a socialist class politics that had given a coherence and solidarity to the disparate struggles of the oppressed.

 

“The preponderance of stories about identity”, says Wood, would make the student newspaper of today “incomprehensible” to an earlier generation of baby-boomer undergraduates.  Whilst the economic and political foundations of capitalism are not only now met with more assent than dissent, gone, too, is “the university tradition of debate and the contest of ideas” in a world of eggshell-vulnerable ‘identity’.

Whilst the uni rag of the sixties took vigorous sides on issues, it also retained a robust commitment to free speech, and free-wheeling intellectual exploration and debate, carrying articles presenting all shades of opinion.  Now, however, in a student world of No Platforming, Monash University’s Lot’s Wife, for example, has a policy against publishing ‘any material that is objectionable or discriminatory’, an “eerie reminder”, says Wood, of the 1950s censorship of ‘objectionable’ literature.

Form, too, has deteriorated along with content, adds Wood.  The “bland magazine” format of the current crop of student newspapers with their emphasis on brevity and visuals rather than textual substance resembles an undisciplined blog in tone and structure.

 

The student newspaper has not only lost its capacity to épater le bourgeois (to shock and outrage respectable opinion) but also its ability, and desire, to dissect the bourgeoisie’s economic and political power.  Wood’s call to “reinvigorate the student magazines” of today with a healthy dose of sixties passion and politics deserves to be answered.

Tuesday 27 February 2018

RED REBELS: The Glazers and the FC Revolution by JOHN-PAUL O'NEILL


RED REBELS: The Glazers and the FC Revolution
John-Paul O’Neill
Yellow Jersey Press/Vintage, 2017, 270 pages

Review by Phil Shannon

Sir Alex Ferguson was deeply affronted by the Manchester United Football Club supporters who got stroppy about the proposed takeover of the club by the US corporate raider, Malcolm Glazer, in 2004 - ‘they carried on to the degree where they actually thought they should have a say in the running of the football club’, exclaimed the outraged coach.

Ferguson had, however, gotten to the core of things by starkly asking just whose club it is.  Did it belong to moneyed managers like Ferguson?  To capitalist owners like Glazer or his profiteering predecessors (ever since 1902 when local brewers bought out and renamed the distinctly proletarian but near-bankrupt railwaymen’s team of Newton Heath as a vehicle to sell beer)?  To the foreign mercenaries (the players) who, without a drop of Mancunian blood in them, simply follow the transfer money?  Or, as John-Paul O’Neill, former passionate MU supporter and author of Red Rebels, believes, the fans who give their club its true local heart?

O’Neill saw MU as a football club not a business, a community not a commercial brand – unlike the view of the corporate pirate, Glazer, who eyed off MU for pecuniary reasons and bought a majority shareholding in the world’s richest club through a massive, debt-fuelled loan which was to be repaid by more profit-chasing corporate boxes, expensive seated areas, higher ticket prices and in-your-face sponsorship.

Whilst hoovering millions of pounds out of the club to keep its new owner in dividend heaven, and to keep pace with large interest repayments, Glazer has made the club itself the ultimate collateral against the loans, threatening the 126 year old institution with death from crippling debt should interest rates rise.

Fan resistance to the Glazer takeover looked doomed, however.  Glazer’s grip on MU was not to be prised loose by protests, pitch invasions, match disruption by tossing beach balls onto the field, boycotts of MU’s corporate sponsors, pulling the plug (literally) on TV coverage to sabotage the broadcasting revenue stream, the wearing of mourning black instead of MU’s trademark red, or a quixotic Shareholders’ United plan to buy back ownership (Glazer’s controlling stake was bought for £780 million, while most of MU’s 30,000 ordinary members owned a fiver’s worth of shares each).

O’Neill, editor of Red Issue, the independent fanzine famed for its caustic but literate criticism of the MU elite, floated one last ditch option – because Glazer’s financiers were banking on MU fans’ continued loyalty, why not seriously dent MU’s fan and revenue base by setting up, from scratch, an alternative Manchester team, one based on community ownership and control, one that would be obedient to democracy not the Dollar.

Thus was Football Club United of Manchester (FCUM) born as a protest tactic to pressure MU to abandon Glazer and return the club to its supporters.  O’Neill took his cue from rank and file AFC Wimbledon fans who had set up a supporter-owned replacement club when theirs was torn up by its London roots and transplanted north to become Milton Keynes Dons.

To work as an effective protest, FCUM would have to be viable but, only seven weeks out from the start of the 2005-06 season, the rebel movement had no club, no structure, no money, no ground, no coach, no players.  They also faced opposition from the doom-merchants and naysayers, the nervous nellies and cynics, the big talkers and empty promisers, hostile journalists (‘does anyone seriously believe people will stop watching MU because of who’s running the club?’, snarked one), logistical setbacks, the fading fires of enthusiasm, MU’s former hooligans who got physical, and devoted MU fans who taunted FCUM followers with cries of ‘Judas’ and ‘traitor’.

Nevertheless, all obstacles were overcome as the audacious football revolutionaries won the commitment of thousands of MU fans on the basis of the club’s founding principle of democratic ownership and control - each paid-up member would be a co-owner;  election of the governing board and all major club policy decisions would be decided on a one-member-one-vote basis;  ticket prices would be affordable;  local youth development would be prioritised for the playing ranks;  the club would be a non-profit organisation that avoided “outright commercialism” (including on-shirt sponsorship); any profits would be re-invested in the club.
 
Neither would the football revolution stop outside the club premises.  FCUM was dubbed the ‘Red Rebels’ by the local press not just because they were rebelling against MU’s traditional jersey colour but also because the club’s founders envisaged a club with a left-leaning “social conscience“.  Players and management, for example, banned interviews with the BBC in solidarity with the Beeb’s striking journalists.
 
The FCUM revolution, however, went a bit Animal Farm after its heady early days as the club’s philosophy was betrayed by a bureaucratic clique which developed around chief executive Andy Walsh, who appointed his former comrades from ‘Militant Tendency’ (the highly sectarian Trotskyoid entryists who had tried to take over the Labour Party from within during the 1980s) to “nice, cushy roles” and robust salaries within the administration whilst manoeuvring his allies onto the board.  The ‘Walshocracy’ recklessly pursued revenue and completely stuffed up the club’s finances with debt, ironically replicating the Glazer debt debacle at MU.

At times, O’Neill got a bit down in the dumps with a touch of the Orwells, wondering if it was worth keeping the FCUM dream alive, but, together with his “small band of idealists”, he mobilised members behind FCUM’s original banner of “protest and rebellion” and, defying Orwell’s anti-revolutionary defeatist pessimism, there was a second, successful, revolution with the undemocratic, nepotistic, dissent-crushing board of betrayers routed in 2016.

On the field, after starting football life in the very bottom tier of English football, nine whole Divisions below MU in the Premier League, FCUM had stunning early success, winning promotion season by season until their part-time players met stiffer competition further up football’s professional pyramid where mid-table mediocrity and relegation scares awaited them.  But they have survived.

So has MU, however, where Glazer appears to have been accepted.  A trophy cabinet of silverware has lulled fans into passivity on ownership issues whilst a monetary era of record low interest rates has kept, for now, a lid on the debt time-bomb of £400  million bequeathed by Glazer even as the American tycoon has shovelled out £1 billion in money-for-nothing dividends.

Not just in terms of footballing glamour, but on fundamentally political issues of democracy, ownership and control, the member-run, community team of FCUM and the make-a-buck commercial team of MU are truly in different leagues.   Although the book’s regurgative, blow-by-blow, email-by-email account of the internal FCUM power struggle could have done with some cruel-to-be-kind editing, O’Neill has, with Red Rebels, played a blinder.