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Monty
Python on "Bombing for Peace"
by
Terry Jones
The
Observer, Sunday February 17, 2002
To
prevent terrorism by dropping bombs on Iraq is such an obvious idea
that I can't think why no one has thought of it before. It's so
simple. If only the UK had done something similar in Northern Ireland,
we wouldn't be in the mess we are in today.
The
moment the IRA blew up the Horseguardsâ bandstand, the Government
should have declared its own War on Terrorism. It should have immediately
demanded that the Irish government hand over Gerry Adams. If they
refused to do so - or quibbled about needing proof of his guilt
- we could have told them that this was no time for prevarication
and that they must hand over not only Adams but all IRA terrorists
in the Republic. If they tried to stall by claiming that it was
hard to tell who were IRA terrorists and who werenât, because they
donât go around wearing identity badges, we would have been free
to send in the bombers.
It
is well known that the best way of picking out terrorists is to
fly 30,000 ft above the capital city of any state that harbours
them and drop bombs - preferably cluster bombs. It is conceivable
that the bombing of Dublin might have provoked some sort of protest,
even if just from James Joyce fans, and there's at least some likelihood
of increased anti-British sentiment in what remained of the city
and thus a rise in the numbers of potential terrorists. But this,
in itself, would have justified the tactic of bombing them in the
first place. We would have nipped them in the bud, so to speak.
I hope you follow the argument.
Having
bombed Dublin and, perhaps, a few IRA training bogs in Tipperary,
we could not have afforded to be complacent. We would have had to
turn our attention to those states which had supported and funded
the IRA terrorists through all these years. The main provider of
funds was, of course, the USA, and this would have oosed us with
a bit of a problem. Where to bomb in America? It's a big place and
it's by no means certain that a small country like the UK could
afford enough bombs to do the whole job. It's going to cost the
US billions to bomb Iraq and a lot of that is empty countryside.
America, on the other hand, provides a bewildering number of targets.
Should
we have bombed Washington, where the policies were formed? Or should
we have concentrated on places where Irishmen are known to lurk,
like New York, Boston and Philadelphia? We could have bombed any
police station and fire station in most major urban centres, secure
in the knowledge that we would be taking out significant numbers
of IRA sympathisers. On St Patrick's Day, we could have bombed Fifth
Avenue and scored a bull's-eye.
In
those American cities we couldn't afford to bomb, we could have
rounded up American citizens with Irish names, put bags over their
heads and flown them in chains to Guernsey or Rockall, where we
could have given them food packets marked - My Kind of Mealâ and
exposed them to the elements with a clear conscience.
The
same goes for Australia. There are thousands of people in Sydney
and Melbourne alone who have actively supported Irish republicanism
by sending money and good wishes back to people in the Republic,
many of whom are known to be IRA members and sympathisers. A well-placed
bomb or two Down Under could have taken out the ringleaders and
left the world a safer place. Of course, it goes without saying
that we would also have had to bomb various parts of London such
as Camden Town, Lewisham and bits of Hammersmith and we should certainly
have had to obliterate, if not the whole of Liverpool, at least
the Scotland Road area.
And
that would be it really, as far as exterminating the IRA and its
supporters. Easy. The War on Terrorism provides a solution so uncomplicated,
so straightforward and so gloriously simple that it baffles me why
it has taken a man with the brains of George W. Bush to think of
it. So, sock it to Iraq, Mr. President. Let's make the world a safer
place.
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