The Scotsman

Lord Carrington

Conservati­ve statesman and Nato secretary-general

- 0 Lord Carrington at the Ministry of Defence in 1956 and, opposite, in his time as secretary-general of Nato, around 1985 CHRIS MONCRIEFF

Peter Alexander Rupert Carington, 6th Baron Carrington, KG, GCMG, CH, MC, PC, DL, politician. Born: 6 June 1919 in Chelsea, London. Died: 10 July 2018, aged 99.

Lord Carrington, one of the mo still ustrio us post-war states men and diplomats, resigned as foreign secretary over the Argentine invasion of the Falklands – despite Margaret Thatcher’s plea that he should remain in office – and later became a highly effective secretary-general of Nato.

And after that, although well into his seventies, he served as the European Union peace negotiator in the bloody civil war in the former Yugoslavia.

In more than three decades of intensive, high-level public service, Lord Carrington was Mrs Thatcher’s first foreign secretary.

Early in that office, he played a crucial role in ending 14 years of deadlock by persuading the warring factions in the former British colony of Rhodesia, to agree to a ceasefire, a new constituti­on, elections and a return to legality as the independen­t country of Zimbabwe.

Right until the last minute, few people thought such a settlement was possible, after previous Labour and Conservati­ve government­s had spent years in fruitless attempts to end Ian Smith’s illegal inde - pendence.

It was universall­y agreed that the successful outcome on this occasion was due almost entirely to Lord Carrington’s charm, patience and tenacity around the negotiatin­g table – where before him others had failed.

And in the early 1990s, when John Major’s administra­tion was disfigured by an outbreak of ministeria­l sleaze and scandals, Lord Car ring ton was held out as an impeccable gentleman, a stickler for protocol and an insistence – which he applied to himself as much as to others – of the highest possible standards in government and public life generally.

His resignatio­n after the Falklands invasion was a classic example of this. Years later, he was to say: “You have to get things into perspectiv­e. I lost my job. Others lost their lives.”

Peter Alexander Rupert Carington was born on 6 June 1919, the only son of the fifth Lord Carrington. He was educated at Eton and the Royal Military College, Sandhurst.

He was then commission­ed in the Grenadier Guards and served during the Second World War, reaching the rank of major and winning the Military Cross in the North-western Europe campaign.

He was a tank commander in the Guards Armoured Division in 1944 and distinguis­hed himself at Nijmegen Bridge in an action which some felt deserved a Victoria Cross.

Lord Carrington, who succeeded to the title in 1938, took his seat in the House of Lords in 1946 after being demobilise­d, and delivered his maiden speech in an agricultur­al debate. He had already taken up farming a this Buckingham­shire home, specialisi­ng in rearing cross-bred Here - fords as beef store cattle.

During the early post-war years, Lord Carrington was a Conservati­ve whip and on the return of the Tories to power in 1951, he became parliament­ary secretary, agricultur­e and fisheries, at 32, one of the youngest members of the Government.

From October 1954 until the autumn of 1957, he served as a junior defence minister. He then left the Government to take up a three-year appointmen­t as British High Commission­er in Australia. He was popular in Australia, delighting Australian­s with his absence of stuffiness. “My real name is Smith,” he would say, “and my ancestors were

drapers from Nottingham .” On his return in 1959, he was appointed first Lord of the Admiral ty, and three years later assistant deputy leader of the House of Lords. Some 15 months later he became Leader of the House of Lords and during the Tories’ period of Opposition from 1964 to 1970 he was Opposition leader in the House of Lords.

His modest manner and relaxed style was of immense value to the Tories, not least when he took charge of the party’s fundraisin­g appeal in 1967. The £2 million target was soon exceeded.

When Edward Heath became Prime Minister in 1970, Car ring ton was appointed defence secretary. In 1972 he acted as party chairman as well, before becoming energy secretary in 1974. He was one of Edward Heath’s closest advisers. Five years later, on Mrs Thatcher’ selection victory, Lord Carrington won the prized post of foreign secretary.

Not long after he secured the spectacula­r Rhodesia settlement, the Falklands crisis emerged. It was a bleak day for him in April 1982 when he honourably resigned on the Argentine capture of the Falklands.

This was one of the few occasions when he grieved publicly, allowing himself as head of the Foreign Office to take some of the blame for failing to foresee the invasion and not to act upon the threat in time to prevent it.

“It takes time to get over that sort of thing ,” he admitted sometime later .“I wasn’t dead, you know. One of the worst things that can happen to you is to be unemployed and have nothing to do.

“It doesn’t take very long for you to realise that you have to get on with your life and if you are offered a job, do it to the best of your ability.”

Lord Car ring ton freely admitted an uncomforta­ble relationsh­ip with Margaret Thatcher, but he bore her no malice – malice was foreign to his nature.

He once said: “We had our difference­s. But I never found that she resented those who disagreed with her. What she disliked were people who disagreed with her who had not done their homework.”

It was then that he was offered the post of non- executive chairman of thee lectronics giant, GEC. The offer was accepted. But he had not been there long before he was offered a stint as Nato secre - tary-general. He was popular and effective, arriving at a time when “there was virtually no East-west communicat­ion”.

Lord Carrington said: “I was discourage­d, to put it mildly, from seeing anyone from the Warsaw Pact. There was the occasion when a Hungarian diplomat, who came to deliver a Warsaw Pact communique, was stopped at the gate and had to hand it over through the grille. I always thought that was rather ridiculous.”

During his four-year term there, Nato was buffetted by several traumatic events, including the Reykjavik Summit, at which President Gorb ac he val most persuaded President Reagan to scrap all nuclear weapons; the US bombing of Tripoli without any advance Nato knowledge, let alone consultati­on.

There was also the long, lingering Nato quarrel over intermedia­te range nuclear forces (INF). Later, Lord Carrington said: “My greatest regret is that I left Nato in 1988 before the Berlin Wall came down, and everything changed. I think we did a good job, the 15 countries of Nato acted robustly to prevent the INF debate from causing a real rift in Nato and in the countries themselves.

Carrington was an advocate of detente, but he was no dove, and always believed that the West had to maintain credible defences and negotiate with the Soviet Union from a position of strength. And he believed that the collapse

of Communism was directly related to the Soviet economy bankruptin­g itself by trying to keep up in the arms race with the West.

Probably his greatest achievemen­t at Nato was to prevent nuclear war. “We did it. We survived, and we helped pave the way for Gorbachev’s perestroik­a ,” he said. As he memorably said in 1986: “If you are at the summit, you are trying to climb a mountain.”

On his departure from Nato, Lord Carrington was appointed chairman of Christie’s Internatio­nal.

Lord Carr ingtonwa slater brought in as European Community negotiator in the former Yugoslavia in September 1991. He was gloomy about the prospects for a settlement when he was first appointed, and his gloom grew more intense as he under took the thankless, seemingly impossible task, of bringing the warring factions together.

But the hatred and the greed for territory was no new phenomenon. It was centuries old and had merely been kept in check by the onset of Communism in Eastern Europe. That, however, proved intractabl­e, even for such a seasoned campaigner as Lord Carrington.

Early in 1994, his services as a peacemaker were called on again: to lead a commission to mediate in the crisis between South Africa’s transition­al government and chief Buthelezi’s Kwazulu homeland.

In November 1999 he took up a life peerage after the Labour government axed hereditary peers. He became the oldest member of the House of Lords and also its longest serving member, last speaking in Parliament’s Second Chamber in March 2010.

During the EU referendum of 2016, he was one of five former secretarie­s general of Nato who put their names to a letter which said pulling out of Europe would “give succour to the West’s enemies”.

Lord Carrington’s wife, Iona M cC lean, whom he wed in 1942, died in 2009. He is survived by their two daughters, Alexandra and Virginia, and son, Rupert.

“It doesn’t take very long for you to realise that you have to get on with your life and if you are offered a job, do it to the best of your ability”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom