Here are some things that the Henry Jackson Society are interested
in: A strong military, the “promotion” of liberal democracy if necessary by the
use of said military, “two cheers” for capitalism. And here are some things they aren't: radical feminism, punk rock, grass-roots
anarchism, Judith Butler, conceptual art. But the world of politics can
sometimes resemble an especially tipsy game of spin-the-bottle and tonight the
HJS pay host to Pussy Riot.
To enter Portcullis House you have to put your belt and
wallet in a tray and walk through a metal detecting doorway. The airport mood
continues once you’re in. With its pot plants, beige walls and the air of bored
expectancy that comes with being an adjunct to the action, it is a little like
a duty free lounge with the ads for wristwatches replaced by portraits of
Margaret Beckett. Up the stairs and inside one of the meeting rooms, the HJS
event on Russia is about to begin. By now it is standing room only –it may be
that this is always the way with the Society’s events but it might just be celebrity
exerting its gravitational drag. Three chairs at the front have “reserved for
Pussy Riot” notices placed on them. The audience do not, at first glance, look
very punk rock. The floor is unspeckled with gob, faces are unpierced and no
one seems to be taking amphetamine sulphate. Tweets from the event mention a
coalition of leftists, dissidents, capitalists and MPs but if you had to guess
you’d put the latter two in the majority. There are an awful lot of men in
suits here, sleekly barbered, comfortable with proximity to power. Women wear unshowily
expensive looking dresses. Scarily fresh faced HJS members welcome us with
leaflets and smiles. They look like adolescent cult members except with realistic
hopes of one day running cults of their very own. It is hard to imagine joining
such a group at 22, but then some people save their infantile leftism for their
actual infancy and hit ambitious maturity at sixteen. One day they will write
op-eds calling for transformative violence –they may even order the violence
themselves- but for now they smile winningly, usher and take photographs. Several
people look like how you imagine a spad to look. You see someone you think you
recognise but then realise you’re recalling a character from the Thick of It.
The host for the event is Chris Bryant MP, a man whose every
movement screams that he was once a left-leaning vicar. He has the body
language of someone perpetually accepting another cup of tea. It feels a little
odd, even now, to see a Labour MP in this company, although not as odd as
seeing Pussy Riot. From early bipartisanship HJS has, if wonderfully
named ex-member Dr. Marco Attila Hoare is to be believed, declined into a very right
wing sect indeed. The chief controversy –and the comings and goings of HJS members rival
Pussy Riots’ for complexity- is the appointment of Douglas Murray as Associate
Director. Mr. Murray began his career very young, as the author of a biography
that sympathetically charted Lord Alfred Douglas’ descent from lovely and
promising boy to froth-chopped reactionary. (I mention this without comment).
Since this interesting start he has given qualified praise to the English
Defence League and called for a total end to Muslim immigration into Europe. Dr.
Hoare is a defender of the Muslims of Bosnia and a sympathiser with the Arab
Spring. A church broad enough to comfortably fit his views and Mr. Murray’s
would be about the size of the Pantheon. But if Chris Bryant feels tainted he
doesn’t show it.
The first set of speakers comprises a journalist, an
opposition mayoral candidate and environmentalist, a European politician, an
anti-Putin businessman and the former Russian Prime Minister. Together they
make an eloquent case for a Magnitsky law, named for the murdered oppositionist
the event commemorates. This would prohibit Russians suspected of crimes
from entering the EU, banking within the EU or sending their offspring for
European private schools. About the semi-clad thug who runs Russia the room
seems in agreement. At the front, meanwhile, are Nadya and Masha. They are
tweeting or texting or, for all I know, playing Angry Birds. With their hair (green
rimmed and platinum respectively) and lipstick (deepest red) they are the
brightest things in the room, parakeets among pigeons. From the front we hear
of Putin’s expansionism, his convenient social bigotry, his environmental
destruction, his (successful as a glance at a typical Facebook wall shows)
propaganda outfits, his crimes up to and including murder. People begin
photographing the backs of Pussy Riot’s heads. Happily, someone mentions
Chechnya. Everyone agrees on Putin, if not, perhaps, on what on earth can or
should be done about him. Someone asks if he can be made to leave peacefully
and seems slightly saddened when told he maybe can.
When the initial talk is over, Geoffrey Robertson QC stands up. He has been attached to good
causes since the Oz trial, has an actorly manner and a face the same shade as the contents of a decent cellar. He is also, as you’d expect, a tremendous speaker. He summarises
the need for a Magnitsky law in about a minute of florid hand-sawing and gags.
“We should punish them through their children,” he says, biblically. “Stop them
going to our schools.” He sits back down- you feel he could have done this for
hours- and the two members of Pussy Riot head to the front desk, together with
Nadya’s husband.
“Do we sit behind the desk or on it? Or do we stand on it?” asks Masha. But they sit behind the desk.
“Do we sit behind the desk or on it? Or do we stand on it?” asks Masha. But they sit behind the desk.
It’s been possible to wonder if, in the days since their
imprisonment, Pussy Riot have been declawed. What Putin couldn’t do to
them –shut them up, quell their commitment- looked like it might be done instead
by celebrity group hugs and the sudden love of Western figures not known to be
fans of, say, Crass. When Russian dissident artists come to the attention of
the Reader’s Digest mentality it can be at the expense of everything awkward in
their art. If there’s going to be a new Cold War, or, god help us, a hot one,
then we’re going to need a Pasternak (we might also need a Pollock, the better
to showcase our thriving and enviable weirdness). But in picking a dissident, one must always be cautious. When Solzhenitsyn was invited to
the US he promptly alienated his hosts with a rambling denunciation of the very
freedoms he was supposed to symbolise.
Pussy Riot don’t quite do this: they
seem exhausted and slightly bewildered. They complain about the microphones,
they fidget punkishly. Nadya decides to do an impression of Ali G. She has the
look of an overcoated nihilist student, the sort who spent the 1890s lobbing
bombs at as many crowned heads as she could. She is by a long way the most
charismatic person in this room and probably every other room too. Masha looks like
someone about to tell a very good joke. At the far end, next to Masha, Pyotr acts as translator. He looks like a smaller Ed Snowden,
only with a beard halfway between Lenin and Lennon. Chris Bryant does not know
who he is. The presence of Pussy Riot seems to have sent him straight back into
vicarhood. He makes bad jokes, he blusters. He asks them, inexplicably, if
Bunga Bunga parties are punk rock. For a moment we’re back on the Bill Grundy
show. But will Pussy Riot say something outrageous? Over the last few days
they’ve been hosted by Amnesty and the Guardian and taken a St. Petersburg
Hermitage’s worth of selfies. And now Masha and Pyotr seem to be getting on
each other’s nerves. She questions his translation, grabs the microphone off
him. They are possibly bemused. It must be odd to step out of prison and enter
this world instead. Still they are pleased at how anti-Putin we are.
“We should say, we know a bit about American prisons,” says
Nadya. She speaks with the confident seriousness of someone utterly unhampered
by cowardice or doubt. “It’s good that you have these values but you know in
America someone from Occupy, Cecily McMillan, she was jailed. And you are right
to complain about what Putin does in Ukraine but he can point to what you did
in Iraq.” The applause that greets this statement fails to sweep the room.
“We also don’t think you should have the European
Extradition treaty,” adds Masha, clutching the microphone. “We met Julian
Assange today and we want him to continue his work.” It is fair to say not many
present are admirers of Mr. Assange. Geoffrey Robertson lets out a solitary
whoop. A glance at Twitter shows Nadya and Masha flanking the former Russia
Today mainstay in his strange semi-exile. Next to them he looks even paler, his
skin the colour of unbaked pastry.
“Putin knows the West won’t go to war with him,” says an
audience member.
Right now they have flesh to press. Nadya stands,
upright and tiny in a scrum of looming middle aged men in suits while Masha
leans into a Dictaphone, talking softly about prisons.
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