Editor’s Note:
Gary Armstrong spent the spring semester teaching at
Harlaxton College in Grantham, England, as part of William
Jewell’s cooperative overseas study program with
the University of Evansville. In the pages that follow,
he offers his perspectives on what it was like to be
an American overseas during a time of international
turmoil.
The
largest parliamentary revolt in British history. Fury
at the French when The Times poll showed only 1 in 3
wanted Saddam to lose. Angry arguments over whether
the BBC had skewed its war coverage. Taking students
to Nottingham to hear a debate featuring a neo-Marxist
political philosopher denouncing America for submitting
to a “neo-fascist junta” led by a “know-nothing
fundamentalist.”
Being in Harlaxton with 12 Jewell students and my
young family for the spring semester was quite a time.
For those of us at Harlaxton, life began to change before
the war began. We had mandatory security briefings,
complete with sensible advice about traveling during
the crisis; the best advice was to remember that most
of the world thinks Americans just are too loud and
to soften our voices. In other changes, a promising
new internship with the British Parliament fell apart
when Parliament went on “code black” alert
and foreigners were prohibited in the building. Students
attended the huge anti-war demonstrations and came away
with quite an education.
Most of the demonstrations were very peaceful, and
during the “2 million person march” the
BBC regularly interviewed young British families who
were participating in demonstrations for the first time
in their lives. But particular images left some students
quite disturbed. Seing a crowd rip apart the Stars &
Stripes in Dublin, while a man dressed like an Iraqi
Republican Guard covered with fake blood pretended to
machine-gun the crowd that roared its approval, really
shook one American student. Though she was herself left-wing
and anti-war, she wondered aloud who that crowd actually
wanted to win.
On the eve of war, as the American ultimatum expired,
Harlaxton’s new principal, former Jewell President
Gordon Kingsley, gave a “what you need to know”
speech, borrowing from Everything I Need to Know I Learned
in Kindergarten, that left no eye dry. Once the war
began, most of us got a lot of worried email and phone
calls from family and friends.

Jewell students at Harlaxton during the spring
semester of 2003. |
Especially popular were emails that portrayed the whole
of Europe as now anti-American, with most Americans
enduring utter rudeness, waiters refusing to serve them,
taxi cab drivers putting Americans on the street, etc.
My wife and I had a short discussion about whether to
cancel our family´s trip to Paris and the D-Day
beaches, scheduled for the second week of the war. We
decided to go ahead, carefully explaining to our young
children that the U.S. gov-ernment was not popular,
that many thoughtful people opposed getting rid of Saddam
(we also explained they were wrong), and how we as a
family would deal with any questions or rudeness. And
not a thing happened. The French were marvelous –
and especially worthy of commendation were the restaurant
waiters of Paris and Bayeux, who joked with our kids,
helped us translate menu French, and never once were
anything but gracious. At the end of the day, I thought
the fear was completely over-blown and that Americans
needed to chill out.
Of course, the first week of war was rough on everyone
´s nerves at Harlaxton. One colleague later told
me she regularly couldn´t sleep those first few
days. Reading and watching the British media was fascinating.
Huge debates erupted about analyzing the war. To some,
the fedayeen fighting in the rear heralded a political-military
disaster. As the Brits always love historical parallels,
we began to see regular features on Britain’s
ill-starred 1956 “Suez intervention” into
Egypt. To others, who turned out to be right, the real
dynamic of the war was never the harassment of a few
Saddam die-hards in the rear, but the remarkable drive
of the American Army’s Third Division and the
US Marines towards Baghdad. I did note that Britain’s
pre-eminent military historian, John Keegan (author
of Face of Battle and Six Armies in Normandy), was one
of the few to get things consistently right: He saw
early on that Saddam’s regime didn’t have
a coherent battle plan, that it appeared that much of
the Iraqi Army was going home, and that the Republican
Guard was simply falling apart.

Linda and Gary Armstrong with their children Katherine,Michael,
and Paul |
Government and parliamentary politics in the war were
a marvel. Some feared a real constitutional crisis because
it wasn’t clear that the House of Commons would
vote on war. I enjoyed teasing British friends that
Britons had always said that the British political system
was superior because the prime minister had so much
more power than the American president and now it wasn’t
clear they wanted it that way.
Then came April 9, the liberation of Baghdad, and
all its surprises. The images were stunning. So was
the fact that until the very end the BBC and anti-war
papers like The Guardian did not show any, any, pictures
of Iraqis welcoming British or American forces. That
was not all. Generally, the British media, including
pro-war papers, developed real anger over “lack
of fire discipline” by American troops. Every
ill-advised American moment, from shooting whole families
at roadstops to poorly timed displays of Old Glory,
was pictured as the “American way of war,”
some version of shoot first, and don’t bother
with questions. The rather deliberate, if now downright
slow, British operation in Basra generally was discussed
as showing a much superior British concern for “the
hearts and minds” and reflecting a superior British
military culture that learned the lessons of long patrols
in the old empire or Northern Ireland. The scenes of
rioting and looting in Baghdad after the war were normally
talked about as the result of decisions by dumb Americans
who just didn’t understand the importance of political
and historical continuity. The general feeling was that
British forces, had they been in Baghdad, would have
done the job right. That, of course, sets aside how
things went in Basra. Everyone talks of the “special
relationship” between Washington and London. Perhaps
that makes us assume that the Brits will always be with
us to the bitter end. (Setting aside Suez and Vietnam,
of course.) Having been there, watching the seesaw of
opinion and hearing the not infrequently shrill debates,
I can’t help thinking of what the Duke of Wellington
supposedly said about the Battle of Waterloo: It was
a very near run thing.
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