Playwright Pinter blasts 'Nazi America'
and 'deluded idiot' Blair
Angelique Chrisafis
and Imogen Tilden,
The
Guardian, June 11, 2003
The playwright Harold Pinter last night likened George W Bush's administration
to Adolf Hitler's Nazi Germany, saying the US was charging towards world
domination while the American public and Britain's "mass-murdering"
prime minister sat back and watched.
Pinter, 72, was at the National Theatre in London to read from War,
a new collection of his anti-war poetry that had been published in the
press in response to events in Iraq.
In conversation on stage with Michael Billington, the Guardian's theatre
critic, Pinter said the US government was the most dangerous power that
had ever existed.
The American detention centre in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where al-Qaida
and Taliban suspects were being held, was a concentration camp.
The US population had to accept responsibility for allowing an unelected
president to take power and the British were exhausted from protesting
and being ignored by Tony Blair, a "deluded idiot" Pinter
hoped would resign.
After a big operation for cancer, Pinter returned to public life last
year to speak out against American belligerence. He called it a return
from a "personal nightmare" to an "infinitely more pervasive
public nightmare".
The playwright said: "The US is really beyond reason now. It is
beyond our imagining to know what they are going to do next and what
they are prepared to do. There is only one comparison: Nazi Germany.
"Nazi Germany wanted total domination of Europe and they nearly
did it. The US wants total domination of the world and is about to consolidate
that.
"In a policy document, the US has used the term 'full-spectrum
domination', that means control of land, sea, air and space, and that
is exactly what's intended and what the US wants to fulfil. They are
quite blatant about it."
Pinter blamed "millions of totally deluded American people"
for not staging a mass revolt.
He said that because of propaganda and control of the media, millions
of Americans believed that every word Mr Bush said was "accurate
and moral".
The US population could not be let off scot-free for putting the country
under the control of an "illegally elected president - in other
words, a fake".
He asked: "What objections have there been in the US to Guantanamo
Bay? At this very moment there are 700 people chained, padlocked, handcuffed,
hooded and treated like animals. It is actually a concentration camp.
"I haven't heard anything about the US population saying: 'We can't
do this, we are Americans.' Nobody gives a damn. And nor does Tony Blair."
Pinter added: "Blair sees himself as a representative of moral
rectitude. He is actually a mass murderer. But we forget that - we are
as much victims of delusions as Americans are."
In a British society where people were increasingly encouraged not to
use their brains, the only way to protest was by "thought, intelligence
and solidarity".
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,3604,975048,00.html