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McTernan - on Politics

Posted: 06 March 2003 | Subscribe Online


Sometimes the most chilling things that you hear are the most calmly spoken. Recently, I heard Dame Pauline Neville-Jones, former chairperson of Whitehall's joint intelligence committee, on Radio 4's Sunday morning Broadcasting House programme. She and other experts agreed that the appearance of tanks at Heathrow Airport was no PR stunt, before proceeding to sum up the meaning of this visible and symbolic turning point.

She said: "We are quite likely to be in this for a generation. The war against terror could be just as long as the Cold War." What though, you may wonder, does this mean for social services? Quite a lot, in my view. If Neville-Jones is right, and no one who heard her would doubt her thoughtfulness, accuracy or sincerity, we face 30 years of something new to most of us - conducting normal life against the backdrop of a daily threat of the abnormal eruption of violence.
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This is not the "Hot War" of the Blitz nor the Cold War of mutually assured destruction but something closer to the Troubles in Northern Ireland. Again though, you might wonder what the relevance is for you as a social care professional.

Three things, I think. First, the role of public servants in disaster planning is already expanding dramatically. The reality of the conflict against al-Qaeda is that the role of public servants in disaster recovery is likely to be tested in at least one of the West's major cities. And that could be death and destruction on the scale of 9/11. If there were to be a dirty bomb or a nerve agent attack many of the skills we associate with social care will be at a premium immediately after.

Second, we have some sense from Northern Ireland of the impact on mental health of growing up and living against a background of random acts of senseless violence. I cannot believe that, at least in the short term, there will be no signs of strain in our cities. Already, I detect among my friends and colleagues in London a grim fatalism about the inevitability of some "spectacular". And the fear seems greatest among parents.
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Finally, if there is a continuing war against terrorism, government will need to find some better and more trusted means of communicating with its population. It is a savage irony that the government's reputation for spin has rebounded on it. As Neville-Jones put it: "There is a problem about the credibility of some of the things government is sayingÉ there is a really vital job of honest, straightforward, timely, relevant communication with the citizenry". Again the skills of advocacy, listening, building trust and communicating which are core to social care at its best will be needed and they are scarce. Grim thoughts, but these are grim times.

John McTernan is a political analyst.


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