Paul Johnson

From Wikispooks
Revision as of 15:19, 18 July 2015 by Robin (talk | contribs) (Stub)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Person.png Paul Johnson  Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(author)
Member ofCommittee for the Free World, Königswinter/Speakers
Interests“terrorism”

War on Terror

Johnson has been an ardent support of the "war on terror". He spoke at the seminal 1979 Jerusalem Conference on International Terrorism on "The Seven Deadly Sins of Terrorism."

A month after 9/11, he wrote an article entitled The Answer to Terrorism? Colonialism. It began with the claim that "America has no alternative but to wage war against states that habitually aid terrorists" and went on to suggest that "America and her allies may find themselves, temporarily at least, not just occupying with troops but administering obdurate terrorist states".[1]

{{"They [the terrorists] reject democracy really. The notion that violence is a technique of last resort, to be adopted only when all other attempts to attain justice have failed, is rejected by them. In doing so, they reject the mainstream of Western thinking, based, like most of our political grammar, on the social-contract theorists of the seventeenth century. Hobbes and Locke rightly treated violence as the antithesis of politics, a form of action characteristic of the archaic realm of the state of nature. They saw politics as an attempt to create a tool to avoid barbarism and make civilisation possible: politics renders violence not only unnecessary but unnatural to civilised man. Politics is an essential part of the basic machinery of civilisation, and in rejecting politics terrorism seeks to make civilisation unworkable."
The Recovery of Freedom[2]}}

==Extradition of Pinochet Johnson was active in the campaign, led by Norman Lamont, to prevent General Pinochet's extradition to Spain, following the General's arrest in London. "There have been countless attempts to link him to human rights atrocities, but nobody has provided a single scrap of evidence," Johnson was reported as saying in 1999.[3] In Heroes (2008),[4] Johnson returned to his longstanding claim that criticism of Pinochet's regime on human rights grounds came from "the Soviet Union, whose propaganda machine successfully demonised [Pinochet] among the chattering classes all over the world. It was the last triumph of the KGB before it vanished into history's dustbin."[5]

References

  1. http://tanakanews.com/b1112wsj.htm
  2. http://rjgeib.com/thoughts/terrorist/terrorist.html
  3. Nick Hopkins "Rightwing fan club tinkers with Chile history", The Guardian, 20 January 1999
  4. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Lourie
  5. Paul Johnson "She crucified her enemies and burnt London to the ground. Meet Britain's first feminist, Boadicea", Daily Mail, 6 February 2008 [extracts from Heroes (2008)]


57px-Notepad icon.png This is a page stub. Please add to it.