ANTI-AMERICANISM BY NOBEL
            by Amir Taheri
            Benador Associates 
            October 21, 2005
          
          
           
          
          Who do you think chooses the winner of the Nobel Prize 
            for literature? You might say: the Swedish Academy or, at least, a 
            group of literary experts in Stockholm.
          
          Well, although you are technically right, the truth 
            is that the winner for the past two years has been chosen by the man 
            whose trial opened in Baghdad last Wednesday. Surprised? Don't be. 
            Saddam Hussein al-Takriti, the man who bullied and butchered the people 
            of Iraq for three decades, is emerging as an undeclared hero of some 
            self-styled liberals in the West who continue to oppose the liberation 
            of Iraq because of their hatred of the United States.
          Last year's winner, the Austrian writer Elfriede Jelinek, 
            was praised for her opposition to "illegal use of force in international 
            affairs", a code word for the liberation of Iraq in 2004. A similar 
            phrase is now used to justify the choice of this year's winner, the 
            British playwright Harold Pinter.
          Jelinek, a Stalinist on the payroll of the Austrian 
            Communist Party for years, first distinguished herself by claiming 
            that the explosion at the Chernobyl nuclear plant in the Ukraine had 
            been the work of saboteurs sent by the US to undermine the Soviet 
            Union. More recently she has added her voice to those who insist that 
            it was "a crime" to drive the Taliban out of Kabul and dislodge 
            Saddam Hussein in Baghdad.
          "I have no idea why they gave me the award," 
            Pinter said with mock self-deprecation. But the literary Swedes knew 
            why they had chosen him: his presence at virtually every demonstration 
            opposed to the liberation of Afghanistan and Iraq. 
            Pinter had already won himself a special place in the history of "useful 
            idiots" by describing the 9/11 attacks as "a justified retaliation" 
            by Islamist militants. After the NATO intervention that stopped the 
            Serbian genocide against Muslims in Kosovo, Pinter described US and 
            Britain as Tony Bair as "terrorist powers" . He then proceeded 
            to form a committee to defend Slobodan Milosevic, aka "the Butcher 
            of Belgrade", now being tried at the International War Tribunal 
            at The Hague for crimes against humanity.
          People are, of course, free to think and do whatever 
            they like as long as they respect the law in a democratic state. A 
            writer's work should be judged independently of his other activities, 
            including in the political field. Charles Baudelaire was at times 
            on the borderline of criminality. Balzac was something of a rogue 
            and Stendhal would fail the test of ethics in aspects of private life. 
            In his politics, T.S Eliot was a reactionary while Ezra Pound was 
            a member of the Italian Fascist Party. In the case of all those poets 
            and writers, however, what mattered was the quality of their work.
          The problem with the Nobel committee's recent choices, 
            especially those of Jelinek and Pinter, is that their work is as mediocre 
            as their political beliefs are weird.
          Jelinek has tried every trick, including pornography, 
            to make her work interesting, and failed. As for Pinter, he made his 
            name by riding the wave of "the theatre of the absurd" when 
            it was still fashionable four decades ago. Imitating Samuel Becket 
            who had imitated the Dadaists, Pinter wrote a couple of plays distinguished 
            by the use of banal prattle as pseudo- sophisticated dialogue. Since 
            then he has been a fixture of the British art scene, directing pseudo-intellectual 
            television plays, writing screenplays for forgettable arty-farty films, 
            and, above all, taking part in "struggles for causes". In 
            other words he has been a political activist on the fringes of champagne-and-caviar-socialism. 
            But a writer of merit, he has not been. 
          Even as political activists Jelinek and Pinter are selective. 
            
            For example, they supported Kurdish demands for freedom in Turkey 
            but opposed the same when it came to Kurds in Iran and Iraq. The reason 
            was simple: Turkey is an ally of the US in NATO and thus should be 
            attacked on every opportunity. Iraq under Saddam Hussein and Iran 
            under the mullahs, on the other hand, claimed to be enemies of the 
            US and thus deserved to be treated with kid gloves. When Saddam invaded 
            Kuwait in 1990, neither Jelinek nor Pinter protested. But when he 
            was expelled from Kuwait both denounced" Imperialist intervention". 
          
          
            The steady politicisation of the Nobel Prize is too obvious to dismiss 
            as a freak. 
          
            Of the 10 laureates named since 1996 eight are Europeans. Of those 
            eight three are members of the Communist Party in their respective 
            countries: Jelinek in Austria, Jose Saramago (the 1998 winner) in 
            Portugal, and Dario Fo (the 1997 winner) in Italy. Of the three only 
            Saramago could be regarded as worth reading. Two other winners, Polish 
            poetess Wislawa Szymborska (winner in 1996) and Hungarian writer, 
            Imre Kertesz (winner in 2002) had also been members of the Communist 
            Party in their countries, although by expediency rather than belief.
          
            Of the remaining five winners, two, the German novelist Gunther Grass 
            (winner in 1999) and, of course, Pinter are firmly on the left. Grass, 
            for example, regretted the fall of the Berlin Wall and the reunification 
            of Germany in 1989.
            Of the 10 winners one, the South African novelist J.M. Coetzee (winner 
            in 2003), has no distinct political line while his literary work could 
            be described as "tolerable" at best. The sole Chinese on 
            the list is Gao Xingjiang (winner in 2000) who could also be regarded 
            as a European because he has lived in France for decades. Gao, also 
            a painter, is largely apolitical and his magnum opus "The Soul 
            Mountain" is an almost annoying attempt at experimental writing. 
            
            That leaves V.S Naipul, the British novelist of Trinidadian origin, 
            who won in 2001, as the only right-winger in the list. Naipul, whose 
            politics could be as obnoxious on the right as that of Pinter on the 
            left, is, nevertheless, a great writer. It is that fact that distinguishes 
            him from the rest of the crowd on the list.
          
            Assuming that The Committee was looking for a British author opposed 
            to the liberation of Iraq, there was still no need to cheapen the 
            prize further by giving it to Pinter. A better choice would have been 
            Alain Bennet who is as anti-Bush and anti-Blair as Pinter but who, 
            unlike Pinter, is also an interesting writer.
          
            Come to think of it the committee could have made a more logical choice: 
            Saddam Hussein himself. After all, the fallen despot has published 
            two novels and is committing another one in prison. He is also as 
            opposed to the liberation of Iraq as Pinter. 
          
            What is the Nobel committee telling the world? 
            Its first message is that literature is produced largely, if not only, 
            in Europe. The committee is not interested in writers and poets from 
            other places, including the Arab world and Iran, for example. The 
            US is out because it is " The Great Satan" while Russia 
            and China are no longer interesting because they have adopted capitalism. 
            Secondly, the committee is saying that to win a writer has to be leftist, 
            even if only champagne-and-caviar left. He or she must certainly be 
            anti-American as a minimum.
          
            Almost 50 years ago Jean-Paul Sartre said that anyone not on the left 
            was not human. Sartre won the Nobel, which he refused to collect. 
            The Stockholm committee seems to have adopted Sartre's disgusting 
            phrase as its devise.