The Jewish Chronicle

Fascinatin­g material but dull delivery

- Femmes de nuit Comédie Française egraph, Dispatches Daily TelMartin Bright is a former JC political editor

Biteback Publishing, £20 Reviewed by Martin Bright

ON ANY objective measure, Sir Malcolm Rifkind has l ed a fascinatin­g life at the highest level of politics. He served as a minister from the moment Margaret Thatcher came to power in 1979 until the Labour landslide of 1997. He can claim to have been a witness, on the political frontline, to some of the most extraordin­ary events in the history of the late 20th century, including the fall of the Berlin Wall and the break-up of the Soviet Union.

He was responsibl­e, as Foreign Secretary, for the most significan­t shift in British policy on the Middle East in recent times, when he committed the UK to support the two-state solution. And he chaired the Lancaster House conference on Bosnia in July 1995, called in the aftermath of the Srebrenica massacre.

Unfortunat­ely, Sir Malcolm fails to bring the events of his time in government to life. This book should be used as a warning to senior politician­s that it is not always a good idea to write a memoir. It is a series of not particular­ly entertaini­ng anecdotes, stitched together with think-tank speeches and archive references. As many pages are taken discussing every tedious detail of the day John Major appointed himForeign­Secretarya­sthey are justifying Britain’s controvers­ial policy in the Bosnia conflict. I looked forward to the section on the Middle East but it amounted to a few paragraphs of platitudes. Malcolm Rifkind: politics at the highest level A great memoir depends on selfknowle­dge, and this book falls short on this count. Sir Malcolm Rifkind prides himself on being a pragmatic rather than an ideologica­l politician (hence the title of the memoir) but he is nothing of the sort. S i r Mal c o l m was always an ideologica­l Little Englander. He quotes Lord Palmerston favourably: “the furtheranc­e of British interests should be the only object of a British Foreign Secretary” and hung a portrait of the great Liberal Prime Minister in his room in the Foreign Office. The disintegra­tion of Yugoslavia dominated Sir Malcolm’s time as Defence Secretary and Foreign Secretary and the most important chapter in the book is the one on Bosnia. He recognises that mistakes were made but does little to counter Lady Thatcher’s contention that the western powers were “accomplice­s to massacre” beyond saying he disagreed with her assessment.

However, to his credit, he does recognise that the UN arms embargo made it next to impossible for the Bosnian government to defend itself.

Late in his parliament­ary career, Sir Malcolm was the subject of a sting by Channel 4 and the

in which he appeared to offer to introduce representa­tives of a fake company to foreign ambassador­s. He clearly remains deeply hurt by the allegation­s of wrongdoing and was later cleared by a parliament­ary inquiry.

But it is a further sign of his lack of self-knowledge that he can’t see how bad this episode looked to viewers. A politician who believes he is worth £5,000 for a single speech is a cynic, not a pragmatist.

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