Huw_Dawson
Member
I'm sorry, but speaking as an LD supporter you are not doing yourself any favours.
It's fine for you to think that, but I'm simply unpicking Corbyn's viewpoint. His view is that the War on Terror is a failure. His view is that talking to terrorists is the route to peace. He has, in his speech, obfuscated those two basic principles of his beliefs by talking about "almost always" and "I'll still be strong". But that is still the core of his beliefs, which you can read from this speech and his entire history in British politics.
People in this thread talk about how terrorist groups want to provoke us. True, they do. They talk about how the people who feed into those terrorist attacks are furious at ineffective Western foreign policy. That's true.
Unfortunately we live in a world where we can't roll back the clock to the 1970s and re-do everything from about the fall of the Shah onwards with the benefit of hindsight.
We live in a nasty world with an anarchic international situation. You have to be willing to use your armed forces to advance British objectives. You have to be willing to press the Red Button. You have to be tough on terrorism.
But here's my actual point - it's not party political, this. I don't disagree with a lot of that speech. But because we're in a general election everyone assumes that I'm banging on about Corbyn's views on this "because I'm a Lib Dem, so naturally all I want to do is hurt Corbyn."
Anything but. I think he's wrong, regardless of what party he represents. But the problem is because we're four days gone from a terrorist attack and in the middle of a nasty general election campaign, the debate is both oversimplified and ad hominem. And Corbyn has brought it on himself.
And by throwing out messages like "Huw's only saying this because he's a Lib Dem", or "the only reason the media are disagreeing because it's Corbyn" you're directly fueling the politicisation of this debate, and therefore a terrorist attack that happened four days ago.
And under no circumstances could I ever regard that as right.
Nobody should not be using a terrorist attack as an excuse to promote the views and purity of a party leader in the middle of a general election campaign. That is what Corbyn has done, and that is wrong.