Gulf News

Labour seems to have got the ‘right’ Miliband

He showed a depth of knowledge and a genuine interest in the detail and the dilemmas, suggesting that he understand­s foreign policy

- By Mary Dejevsky

Miliband not only made a claim to occupy the campaign space where foreign policy should have been ... he also highlighte­d a difference between himself and his rival for No 10 ... Ed Miliband’s performanc­e at Chatham House — whether or not you agreed with him — suggests that it is time to turn the argument on its head.

Although the outside world has featured prominentl­y in the news during the election campaign, and Europe will be high on the agenda afterwards for whoever wins, foreign policy has barely raised its head so far. Until now that is, as the leader of the Labour Party, Ed Miliband, delivered a wide-ranging speech at the London think-tank, Chatham House. In so doing, he not only made a claim to occupy the campaign space where foreign policy should have been; deliberate­ly or not, he also highlighte­d a difference between himself and his rival for No 10 in substance and expertise. Miliband showed a grasp of the big and the small picture that may have reminded at least some of those in the audience of something they had been missing.

This is why it was a pity that some overenthus­iastic and perhaps ill-advised advance “selling” of his speech for the media’s benefit meant that what was in fact a considered tour d’horizon was eclipsed by lurid headlines about Miliband blaming Prime Minister David Cameron for the deaths of thousands of migrants in the Mediterran­ean.

The same exaggerate­d sales pitch also meant that Miliband was compelled to spend much of his question and answer session trying to draw a distinctio­n — an entirely valid distinctio­n, it should be said — between blaming the prime minister for not doing enough to help create a post-Gaddafi state in Libya and holding him directly responsibl­e for mass drownings.

It is true that Miliband’s speech covered familiar terrain — from Europe, through Libya and, yes, Iraq — as in “I will be a post-Iraq prime minister” — to Syria, and Russia and Ukraine. But it also contained very specific efforts to set the record straight. This included a direct reply to the recent accusation from the defence secretary, Michael Fallon, that the Labour leader would jeopardise the UK’s defences by insisting that he supported the renewal of Trident and would not cut the armed forces further. It also included a repeated insistence that he was not anti-interventi­on as such, but that military interventi­on had to be carefully thought through and — crucially — followed up.

Tougher action

He showed a depth of knowledge and a genuine interest in the details and the dilemmas. I am not saying this, by the way, because I agree with all he said. His call for tougher action on Russia, to my mind, is misguided and based on a misreading. But it was refreshing to hear a leading politician talk about foreign policy as though it mattered.

Miliband’s foreign policy address will probably not change either the dominance of the domestic agenda in the election campaign or the terms of the foreign policy debate, such as it exists in the UK at present. Nor will it win — or lose — him the election. But it does potentiall­y introduce new substance to the foreign policy debate that there will undoubtedl­y be after the election, if only about Europe, and that is to the good. Ever since Miliband won the Labour leadership, there have been those, especially among the party’s Blairites, bolstered by their supporters in the media, who have maintained that Labour got “the wrong” Miliband.

Ed Miliband’s performanc­e at Chatham House — whether or not you agreed with him — suggests that it is time to turn the argument on its head. Perhaps it was the wrong Miliband who was made foreign secretary and presumed therefore to be heir apparent. Maybe in the end Labour got the “right” Miliband after all.

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