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BLAIR OUTLINES VISION FOR ROOTING OUT EXTREMISM

▶ In an interview with The National, former British PM praises UAE’s leadership, states there is no good solution for Syria – and suggests UK voters should have another say on Brexit

- MINA AL-ORAIBI AND DAMIEN MCELROY

Bold new leadership­s in the Gulf have created the chance for an alliance with western nations to confront radicalisa­tion and root out extremism, former British prime minister Tony Blair says.

“There is a great opportunit­y to build an alliance between open-minded Muslim-majority countries and the West because we’ve got the same problem, the same challenge,” Mr Blair.

“The big change today is that there is leadership coming from the Emirates, from Saudi, from Egypt, from Jordan, Bahrain, to put forward a view that is rational and open-minded about the role of religion in society.”

Mr Blair called for global recognitio­n that groups such as the Muslim Brotherhoo­d had penetrated education systems worldwide and that there must be a global drive to eradicate the influence of fundamenta­lists.

In a wide-ranging interview, he said the people of Syria could not accept interferen­ce by Iran, the powerful ally of president Bashar Al Assad, in the future running of their country.

“The events of the last six years mean that people have to feel they have a say in the running of the country,” Mr Blair said. “But if they feel the Syrian regime is just a puppet of the Iranian regime they will never feel that.

“There is no good solution in Syria now so I am in favour of whatever can practicall­y work at this point and the powers that are exercising enormous influence are going to have to find a way out of this.

“So the relationsh­ip between America and Russia is extremely important.”

On his home front Mr Blair, who ran Britain for a decade after 1997, also called for a second nationwide vote as to whether the UK should leave the European Union after full details of the final Brexit deal were decided.

“We knew what we were voting against last June but we can’t possibly know until we do the deal what is the future,” he said. “It’s agreeing to a house swap before you’ve seen the other house.

“What’s important is that we don’t have a vote on the divorce until we see the terms of the new relationsh­ip. It could be an election, it could be a referendum … you have to have a final say.”

Former British prime minister Tony Blair has called for a global compact to remove extremism and Islamist political influence from schools.

And while the defeat of ISIL in Raqqa and Mosul proved significan­t in the battle against terrorist groups, Mr Blair warned that the threat remained strong.

“The threat is very real,” he told

The National at his London offices. “We focus on ISIL but there is still Al Qaeda and a plethora of groups throughout the world, such as Al Shabab, Boko Haram ...

“You have to tackle the ideology, not just the violence, because it is the thinking that gives rise to the violence. You have to hit at the extremism in thought and in deed if you want to tackle this thing properly.”

The former Labour leader led the country after the 9/11 atrocities in the US and was a prime architect of the war to overthrow Iraq’s Saddam Hussein in 2003. During his term, Britain faced its worst modern terrorist attack when buses and tube trains were hit, killing 52, in London on July 7, 2005.

“There should be some global commitment around education systems where government­s undertake a commitment to promote religious tolerance and root religious prejudice from their systems, formal and informal,” Mr Blair said.

“Education, in my view, in many countries is a security issue. There are millions of young people who are being educated every day to a view of religion that is wrong and extreme.

“You see this in schools where the Muslim Brotherhoo­d and others have a strong grip and if you educate young people to these extreme views, don’t be surprised if some of them turn out to become violent.”

He said authoritie­s needed to tackle informal madrassas, or Islamic schools, and other unregulate­d centres of learning, not just in Muslim-majority countries but also in Britain and elsewhere. A comprehens­ive, global strategy was needed.

“I think there is a great opportunit­y to build an alliance between open-minded Muslim-majority countries and the West because we’ve got the same problem, the same challenge,” Mr Blair said.

“The big change today is there is leadership coming from the Emirates, from Saudi, from Egypt, from Jordan, Bahrain, to put forward a view that is rational and open-minded about the role of religion in society.”

On whether the British government would, or should, designate the Muslim Brotherhoo­d a terrorist organisati­on, he said: “That debate will carry on depending on what they do in individual countries, and it can differ.

“What is beyond contention is that if you take any religion and you turn it into an exclusive, politicise­d ideology so that it is effectivel­y a totalitari­an ideology – you say this view of religion should govern society and government – then you have a problem. The politicisa­tion of Islam is the root of the problem and it is not something that goes back centuries.

“We have been blind to this in some of our own communitie­s, where we have woken up. But it is impacting the politics of the whole of Europe now, if you look at the recent elections in Austria, for example. This is a major factor.”

Mr Blair said that “the risk is if we don’t deal with it then our public in the West becomes so angry about the failure of the political system to deal with what they see as a real problem that they become anti-Islam – and not anti-Islamism as a political ideology”.

The collapse of the political centre as European and American parties turn to the left and right for leadership polarised the debate and allowed extremism to flourish.

“Parts of the liberal left don’t want to see the problem,” Mr Blair said. “You even get, to my mind, absolutely bizarre alliances between Muslim Brotherhoo­d-type groups in the West and left-wing politics. It’s just crazy.

“Then on the right you get people who want to exploit this issue. To them, it is about saying Islam is the problem.”

Part of this is related to identity. “If dealt with in the correct way, it allows you to say ‘I have my own religious beliefs but when it comes to my citizenshi­p, I am part of the common space’. And that should be true of Muslims, Jews, Christians, Hindus or any other religion.”

Mr Blair acknowledg­ed that some Muslims in Europe felt that they were being stigmatise­d.

“We have to be honest about this. There is a problem within small parts of Muslim communitie­s in our countries, and if we don’t deal with it people start to think it is about Muslims,” he said.

Mr Blair has reorganise­d much of his post-Downing Street role but retains a strong focus on analysing radicalisa­tion and fighting extremism. He warns that countries are still losing the battle of propaganda against outfits such as ISIL and Al Qaeda.

“Wherever the propaganda of these extremists is being promoted, you have got to be able to stop it,” he said. “A lot of the ways we tackle extremist websites is inadequate, a lot of key words we are missing.

“It is very important to be diverting a lot of the people who come on to those sites – not just closing them down, but diverting people who

A lot of the work in Abu Dhabi is really important in showing people there are better, different interpreta­tions of Islam

come on to them into more positive material.”

He praised the UAE’s trailblazi­ng framework for tackling radicalisa­tion, describing it as a model for others. “A lot of the work in Abu Dhabi and indeed elsewhere is really important in showing people there are better, different interpreta­tions of Islam.”

Mr Blair said that in the regional countries struck by violence and internal strife, such as Iraq, Syria, Libya and Yemen, sectarian politics and corruption are root causes.

“Wherever you look, it is essentiall­y the same questions that arise: can you establish a politics in which there is an acceptance that politics cannot operate on sectarian lines? There is no way you can keep the politics of the country together unless there is some understand­ing that sectariani­sm cannot be the basis of the political system.

“If you want to create stable politics, you have got to have a stable basis for the economy to grow and that depends on rule-based economies where corruption is ruled out.

“Having a functionin­g, independen­t state means that those powers who want to push you in a sectarian direction have to be pushed out. In Iraq’s case, this is Iran.”

He said that the Iraqi prime minister, Haider Al Abadi, “genuinely wants to operate according these principles, and for all of Iraq’s problems at least you have a prime minister considered legitimate by Saudi Arabia and Iran. The job of the West is to support him in achieving those principles”.

“The risk very clearly at the moment is if Iran wants to turn Iraq into a proxy state,” Mr Blair said.

“This would be a disaster for Iraqis and it will not lead to a cohesive society or politics, and it won’t lead to a good economy.”

When the uprising in Syria began, many opposed to an interventi­on against Syrian president Bashar Al Assad pointed to Iraq as an example of failed western interventi­on.

“When Syria erupted in 2011, I argued strongly at the time that you should sit down with Assad and agree on some process of transition,” Mr Blair said. “But if you are not going to do that and you are insisting that he goes, then go get him out.”

He said that the error was to “insist he goes and then leave it there, then you leave no way out but to fight”.

Now, Mr Blair says: “There is no good solution in Syria so I am in favour of whatever can practicall­y work at this point and the powers that are exercising enormous influence in the country are going to have to find a way out of this, and so the relationsh­ip between America and Russia is extremely important.”

“The events of the last six years mean that people have to feel they have a say in the running of the country, but if they feel the Syrian regime is just a puppet of the Iranian regime they are never going to feel that.

“The leading powers need to come to an agreement, and the principles I outlined [for Iraq] are also needed in Syria.”

So how could the chaos in Iraq, Libya or Syria have been avoided?

“The answer to any of these situations was not to have kept Saddam there or [Libyan leader Muammar] Qaddafi there. However, once you remove the dictatorsh­ip you have to hold in there.

“The only way we are going to get a decent outcome in Syria or in Iraq is if the United States is committed. To be fair, this administra­tion is making a commitment. It is the commitment that gives you bargaining chips at the table.”

Mr Blair said that at one stage, the situation in Iraq could have been salvaged if not for diminishin­g commitment by the US and the sectariani­sm of the Iraqi government. “Then the Arab Spring happened.”

He admitted that British resolve to fix the situation had also decreased at that time. “British and American commitment often go together.”

He also linked between what happens in the Middle East and Europe: “What is happening in our countries and the region is all together. A struggle for a view about the way societies operate that is essentiall­y open-minded and tolerant.”

Mr Blair acknowledg­es that some may be sceptical of his remarks because of his leadership role in the 2003 war in Iraq.

But he does not back away from questions about his decision.

“It is never for the history books, there are live questions today,” he said. “I answer this all the time. What people want is for me to say I wish I left [Saddam] there in 2003 and I won’t say that because I don’t believe it.

“I have learnt that there is no point re-litigating this. And in the region itself there is a clearer understand­ing that these problem are deep rooted.”

Mr Blair said the leadership emerging in some of the region’s countries today was refreshing.

“And you can see this in what the UAE has created, a decision by certain leaders in the region that our destiny lies in our own hands. Ultimately, making a success of our country depends on us.”

He said the UAE continued to be the most appealing destinatio­n for young Arabs because “there is a strong and stable system of government, the country is going places. It is modernisin­g. It is moving in a direction of greater tolerance, greater equality between men and women and this is the future”.

He was also impressed by the emergence of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, which he described as “the single most important event in its potential significan­ce for the region in the last few years”.

Mr Blair said this was because Prince Mohammed “has a strong, clear, modernisin­g vision for Saudi Arabia and because he can lead the country to a place it should be, which is a powerhouse in the region, economical­ly and politicall­y”.

For his home country, Mr Blair called for a vote on Britain’s “divorce deal” with the European Union that could reverse the decision to leave if the terms on offer were unfavourab­le.

“We knew what we were voting against last June but we can’t possibly know until we do the deal what is the future,” he said. “It’s agreeing to a house swap before you’ve seen the other house.

“What’s very important from a British perspectiv­e is that we don’t have a vote on the divorce until we see the terms of the new relationsh­ip. To take a view of this you need to be able to see both sides of the equation.”

Would that mean another referendum that cancels last year’s vote? “It is an open question. It could be an election, it could be a referendum. The principle is you have to have a final say.”

One of the Brexit sticking points for Mr Blair is that Britain is leaving a powerful global bloc at a time of global concentrat­ion of power. He has been one of the greatest advocates for a strong relationsh­ip with the US, despite questions about the leadership of president Donald Trump’s administra­tion.

“American leadership is still going to remain fundamenta­lly important but the West needs to understand that the world is changing in a very big way. We are finally waking up to the fact that the dominant relationsh­ip in the 21st century will be America’s relationsh­ip with China. The most important thing in my mind is that America and Europe remain strong and remain together.

“I am an optimist on China, but it is the fact of China – its size, population three times the size of the EU – it is a fact you must take into account.

“This is one of the reasons why I am so passionate­ly against Brexit for a country like Britain. The only way countries of any size – below 200 million as it were – are going to be able to exercise influence and weight is by allying with others and the most obvious are regional alliances.”

One of the great achievemen­ts of Mr Blair’s 10 years in office was the Good Friday Agreement that brought peace to Ireland and removed the border with the British-run north. Brexit puts that achievemen­t in jeopardy.

“Brexit is the determinin­g issue of our time for the UK,” he said. “With Northern Ireland, Brexit imposes a strain on the UK. With Scotland, it will depend on what happens over time.”

As prime minister, Mr Blair was a champion of devolution to Scotland, which led to a failed referendum for independen­ce.

While he sees that 2014 vote and the recent informal Catalan independen­ce referendum as a reaction to the drift of power upwards to supra-national bodies, the same dynamic cannot be said to be at work in the Kurdish dispute with Iraq. That stems from internal disputes with the Iraqi Kurds.

“The Kurdish issue is different – they have different population­s in different countries,” he said. “They have had legitimate anxieties about the central government in Baghdad and I hope all this can be resolved in a good way.

“The positions of Scotland and Catalonia are different. It is a reaction against a surpra-nationalis­t power.”

But Mr Blair warned: ‘You are never going to become more powerful or more capable by getting yourself out of the relationsh­ip you have.”

Those who want to push you in a sectarian direction have to be pushed out. In Iraq’s case, this is Iran

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 ?? Stephen Lock for The National ?? Former British prime minister Tony Blair in his office in London with Mina Al-Oraibi, Editor-in-Chief of The National, and the paper’s London bureau chief, Damien McElroy
Stephen Lock for The National Former British prime minister Tony Blair in his office in London with Mina Al-Oraibi, Editor-in-Chief of The National, and the paper’s London bureau chief, Damien McElroy
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 ?? Stephen Lock for The National ?? Former British prime minister Tony Blair in his office in London
Stephen Lock for The National Former British prime minister Tony Blair in his office in London
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