Read Margaret Thatcher: The Authorized Biography Online
Authors: Charles Moore
Tags: #Non-Fiction, #Biography, #Politics
Lord Boyd’s report, whose substance she knew by 14 May, declared that the elections in Rhodesia had been, allowing for the difficult conditions of civil war, as free and fair as possible. ‘There was an election,’ she told
Time
magazine, even before Boyd reported, ‘one person, one vote for four different parties. Where else would you get that in Africa?’
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‘The main question-mark at the moment’, Brzezinski warned Carter shortly after her election victory, ‘remains the extent to which Mrs. Thatcher may be serious in her expressed intention to recognize the Muzorewa government.’
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Recognizing Muzorewa would, at a stroke, end Rhodesia’s international isolation and rubberstamp Smith’s internal settlement. Carter’s people held their breath. ‘I thought probably that the game was up,’ said one.
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Yet Mrs Thatcher held back. In her first political speech in Parliament as prime minister, in the debate on the Queen’s Speech on 15 May, she spoke of the developments within Rhodesia as good, but added that she wanted ‘a return to legality in conditions that secure wide international recognition’.
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It was this which was not forthcoming.
Visiting London on 21 May, the American Secretary of State, Cyrus Vance, told Lord Carrington that Carter did not think the elections had been free and fair, and that US sanctions against Rhodesia (which the Senate had voted to lift) would stay. The United States administration wanted an all-party conference, an amended constitution and fresh elections. Carrington asked the Americans not to go public with their specific demands, to give him room for manoeuvre; and manoeuvre he did, sending Lord Harlech, the former British Ambassador to Washington, off to tour the ‘front-line’ African states and get their views. He succeeded in deflecting Mrs Thatcher from acceding to the internal settlement: ‘The thing that really persuaded her was that no one was going to support her. No member of the Commonwealth. The Americans were against it and all the members of the EEC were against it. And there might have been sanctions against us. These were the things which persuaded her. Not love of black majority rule. Lord Harlech came back reporting all this. Which of course is why I sent him. She respected his conclusions.’
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Although she listened, however, Mrs Thatcher was not going to revert to the policy of the previous government either. She had to be convinced of a new course. Robin Renwick,
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head of the Rhodesia department at the Foreign
Office, devised a plan which he hoped would appeal to her: ‘I managed … to give her something really radical: we should seek to intervene directly ourselves in Rhodesia. This was point number one. Point number two was that instead of trying to reach agreement with Nkomo and Mugabe … we should build on the internal settlement … and try and turn [it] into something that was internationally respectable. Then we should offer everyone the chance to participate in elections that we would have to supervise … Since it wasn’t what she was expecting, she was impressed by it.’
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But Mrs Thatcher did not hurry to make up her mind. She knew that she had to have a position in time for the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Lusaka, the capital of Zambia, in August, but until then she veered back and forth. Visiting Australia after the Tokyo summit, she made what Carrington remembered as a ‘ghastly speech’
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in which she pushed for international recognition of the new government in Salisbury.
On 12 July 1979, in London, Mrs Thatcher met Kurt Waldheim, the United Nations Secretary-General. She told Waldheim that ‘Rhodesia was closer to democracy than any other country in Africa,’ that Muzorewa was ‘a very wise man’, and that the Western world should support him. ‘Mrs Thatcher opined’, said the UN minutes, ‘that if the West were to follow a policy which preferred bullets to ballots, there was no hope … When Lord Carrington interjected that some changes like a reduction of the white presence in parliament and Government should be achieved, the Prime Minister said: “Poor Peter always has to pick up the pieces when I have made my statements.” ’
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This report vividly conveys Mrs Thatcher’s perennial hostility to dealing with anyone she considered a terrorist
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and her habit of expressing herself with what, for diplomats, was almost unbearable directness. But it also contains a hint of another of her characteristics – a readiness to give in, protesting, to people who knew more than she about a particular subject. She worried that she was ‘being conned by aristos’,
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but she almost enjoyed the process. ‘The critics were quite right,’ remembered Carrington, ‘it
was
devious,’
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but it suited Mrs Thatcher to go along with a policy from which she kept a personal distance. ‘She wasn’t the only person who could say “There is no alternative,” ’ recalled Carrington – she accepted the argument of inevitability, but at the same time she gave herself a let-out. ‘If it had gone wrong, she would have ratted.’
On 25 July, Mrs Thatcher finally made a statement to the House of Commons which contained, in slightly wrapped-up language, what the Foreign Office wanted. She promised that Britain would take charge and make firm proposals for broadly acceptable constitutional arrangements for Rhodesian independence. The key sentences were: ‘We shall aim to make the proposals comparable to the basis on which we granted independence to other former British territories in Africa. They will be addressed to all the parties to the conflict.’
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In other words, the internal settlement, as it stood, would not be enough, and the Patriotic Front would, if possible, be part of any agreement.
Then it was on to Lusaka, arriving on 30 July. Although it was not true, as Lord Carrington believed, that she had never been to sub-Saharan Africa before (she had visited South Africa when Education Secretary), Mrs Thatcher certainly knew little about the place. Cartledge believed that she had ‘no strong personal views’ on the issue of Rhodesia, but her general approach was strongly coloured by those of Denis, who had kin in South Africa and had travelled widely in the continent on business. He had an unreconstructed belief in the political and economic incompetence of black regimes, and a natural sympathy, based on ethnicity and sport, for the whites of southern Africa. One US official was present at a small dinner at the Ambassador’s residence during Mrs Thatcher’s period as leader of the Opposition: ‘The Thatchers wanted to watch a BBC programme on South Africa, so we adjourned upstairs. The programme began, and I realized for the first time, from the conversation between Margaret and Denis, that she had no use at all for blacks.’
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This is not a fair characterization of Mrs Thatcher’s attitudes – she usually avoided racial generalizations, except about the Germans and (more jocular) the Irish and the French – but it does indicate something of the atmosphere at home. She was also ‘physically frightened’
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of what would happen to her in Lusaka. Carrington recorded that she carried dark glasses on the aeroplane there. He asked her why: ‘Margaret answered very clearly, “I am absolutely certain that when I land at Lusaka they are going to throw acid in my face.” There had been some reported hysterical outburst, using that sort of violent language. I laughed. “You totally misunderstand Africans! … They’re more likely to cheer you.” Margaret stared at me, “I don’t believe you.” ’
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It was on that flight that Cartledge particularly noticed, with pleasure and some surprise, how well Mrs Thatcher got on with Carrington. The Foreign Secretary had successfully developed the ability to tease her. He could ‘make her throw her head right back with laughter’.
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Since virtually everyone else was too terrified of Mrs Thatcher to attempt such a thing, Carrington gained a particular standing in her eyes, and a particular freedom to do what he wanted. Denis, who certainly did not agree with
Carrington about Rhodesia, was nevertheless a keen admirer, always referring to him as ‘a mighty man’.
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As well as her anxiety about her reception in Zambia, Mrs Thatcher was worried by something else – the presence of the Queen, in her capacity as the head of the Commonwealth. The Queen’s duty towards and affection for the Commonwealth meant, at least in principle, that she might find herself at odds with her own, British government. Mrs Thatcher’s attitude to the monarch was one compounded of constitutional correctness, old-fashioned deference and a certain unease, probably related to the fact that both were women, and neither had much experience of working with women at a high level.
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Mrs Thatcher was ‘nervous about how to comport herself with the Queen’ and worried by a series of occasions in which she would either upstage the Queen by mistake or be overshadowed by her. There was a problem, though Mrs Thatcher would never have put it like this, of ‘Who’s the star?’ Besides, ‘The two’, Clive Whitmore noted, ‘were not exactly natural social partners.’
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Caroline Stephens, who knew Mrs Thatcher as well as anyone at this time, used to remind new private secretaries, ‘The first thing you have got to bear in mind is that Mrs Thatcher is a very ordinary woman.’ It was a strange thing to say about someone so clearly
extra
ordinary, but it was also true. Mrs Thatcher was anxious about meeting the Queen in the way that most ordinary citizens would be, worrying about what to wear, when to curtsey and how to avoid being late.
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She needed frequent reassurance.
In fact, the problem of proximity was overcome by the fact that the Queen left Lusaka after two days, the opening formalities having been completed. And her initial presence actually made life easier for Mrs Thatcher since the respect felt for the Queen by the Commonwealth leaders rubbed off on her. Once her individual meetings with African leaders began, matters improved sharply. Cartledge had discovered that the Zambian President, Kenneth Kaunda, was, like Mrs Thatcher, the parent of twins. It is auspicious, in African culture, to have twins. This helped. Mrs
Thatcher was charmed by Kaunda, and also had a successful meeting with Julius Nyerere, the left-wing President of Tanzania. She told the conference, in closed session, that the white blocking mechanism in the new constitution was not acceptable, and that the rules about some armed service appointments (which favoured whites) were also wrong, but she insisted as well that Rhodesia was a problem which it was Britain’s responsibility to sort out through a constitutional conference. The Commonwealth gave its support. ‘When she went to Lusaka,’ Robin Renwick remembered, ‘they were all expecting her to say, “Let’s recognize Muzorewa,” but she came up with a “Britain will take over” plan, which she loved, because it threw them all completely off balance.’
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On the morning of Sunday 5 August, after agreement had been reached, Mrs Thatcher, despite suffering from a severe stomach upset, ‘embarked on a perfectly dreadful evening presenting the Zambian press awards … I thought she was going to faint at one moment, particularly as she had had nothing to eat for 24 hours, but she got through it OK and even started the dancing with Kaunda.’
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Carrington was delighted by Mrs Thatcher’s achievements: ‘She did terribly well at Lusaka. She really was brilliant. She had never been to Africa [not true: see above] and I think she thought they were a lot of savages. When they turned up and Kaunda was a smooth old guy and they were all very agreeable, I think she thawed a bit.’
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Mrs Thatcher had a clear understanding of the nature of her success at Lusaka. Sir Anthony Parsons, the British Ambassador to the United Nations, congratulated her afterwards: ‘I said to her, “Prime Minister, I don’t want to sound like a sycophant, but you did very, very well in Lusaka.” And she laughed and said, “Well, Tony you know how it is, you people convinced me, but when it came to doing it in public, I think I did it a great deal better than you could have done.” ’
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A conference was called at Lancaster House in London for September. Although it included Joshua Nkomo and Robert Mugabe, whom she regarded as terrorists, Mrs Thatcher had achieved, in terms of diplomacy and reputation, an undoubted success. Worried about possible attacks within her own party, she had made sure to take her PPS, Ian Gow, with her to Lusaka, to have him be part of the deal and in a position to sell it to the party’s right, with which he was sympathetic.
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There were rumblings on the right at the party conference in October, but nothing unmanageable. For the first but by no means the last time, Mrs Thatcher was able to force something upon her party which they would have found unpalatable coming from almost anyone else.
On her first day in office, Mrs Thatcher saw briefs from the Cabinet Secretary and the Think Tank (CPRS) about the state of the British economy. She also read a copy of the Treasury’s briefing to the Chancellor on the same subject. These documents were relentlessly gloomy.
The Treasury predicted that the Retail Price Index (RPI) would rise to an annual rate of 10–11 per cent in the course of 1979 and that the Public Sector Borrowing Requirement (PSBR) would rise from £8.5 billion to £10 billion. This increase would result chiefly from the public sector pay settlements proposed by Professor Clegg’s Comparability Commission which, during the campaign, she had promised to implement. John Hunt reminded her of the vast range of public employees – including the armed services, doctors and dentists, ‘top people’, local government non-manual workers, postmen and teachers – whose pay she would shortly have to settle. In a separate note on timing, Hunt told her that the priority was the Budget. Second, ‘close behind in terms of time, and ahead in terms both of intrinsic importance and inherent difficulty, is the development … of a strategy for public expenditure.’ The outgoing Labour government had been putting up spending by 3 per cent per year in real terms since the austerity of 1977–8, and had left plans in train for more of the same. Summarizing, Hunt wrote: ‘the overall picture in the short term on present policies is a rising rate of inflation and slow growth, leading to continued uncertainty and instability.’
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