<iframe src="//www.googletagmanager.com/ns.html?id=GTM-K3L4M3" height="0" width="0" style="display:none;visibility:hidden">

High life

High life

22 July 2023

9:00 AM

22 July 2023

9:00 AM

Now that Wimbledon is over, a few thoughts about youthful brains showing traces of horse tranquillisers, angel dust and cannabis, the ingredients that spell ‘moron’. I mean those sporting idiots who booed Victoria Azarenka after she lost the tiebreak 11 to 9 in the third set to the charming Ukrainian Elina Svitolina. Here’s Vica – a woman, a mother, a wonderful player and, through no fault of her own, a Belarusian – being booed for going along with the decision of Ukrainian players not to shake hands with Russian or Belarusian opponents. When a Ukrainian player refused to shake hands during the French Open last month, the public booed her, not her Russian opponent. The frogs were right. Since when does the accident of birth make one a pariah? I’ll tell you: since it became unacceptable for anyone to hold different opinions from the mob, that is to say, today.

The Soviet Union invaded Czechoslovakia in 1968, yet a Soviet player, Alex Metreveli, was a cheered finalist against a Czech winner, Jan Kodes, 50 years ago (1973) at Wimbledon. Back then a player was not held in contempt for his or her country’s policies. The greatest sporting gentleman ever to compete was Baron Gottfried von Cramm, who represented Hitler’s Germany but was cheered to the rafters by Wimbledon crowds – he was a three-time finalist – for his fair play and courtesy on the court. But I suppose there were fewer idiots back then among the Brits.

Cramm, whom I got to know well in the Sudan and hit balls with every morning, angered Hitler in 1935 when, at match point in Germany’s favour against the US in the Davis Cup, he told the referee that the ball that went out winning the tie for Germany had tipped his racket, leading to the point being awarded to the Americans and an eventual victory. Today he’d be called a loser, a sucker, and many other adjectives for his impeccable sportsmanship.


History is being rewritten daily by those who hate our past and our achievements, and that includes sportsmanship. Applauding a double fault was never on at Wimbledon, but it was done in America even as far back as 50 years ago, so the Brits have finally caught on. And how many times have we heard bores telling us that sport and politics don’t mix? They sure mixed last year when accidents of birth disqualified a hell of a lot of good players from playing on grass. Which brings me to that other contest, the mano a mano between Putin and Zelensky, one that I fear will escalate and might put Putin in a corner that will leave him only one route out, the N-way.

Mind you, this is high life, a column that stands above politics and cheap political predictions. And a good after-dinner party game would be the one that has people guessing who is making lotsa moolah from the war. It’s a tricky one, I know, libel laws being what they are, and with a free press under attack everywhere, especially in the UK after the Huw Edwards story, but the facts are that the usual suspects are making a killing – pun intended – as the war goes on. Who are these suspects? The military-industrial complex in the States, whose lobby is the second most powerful after the Israeli one in DC, has to be among the biggest winners, as $1.6 trillion a year is spent on war and the ordinance needed to wage it. There are also rewards for those who schedule wars and conflicts and defend wars in the media.

I cannot name these people because they live in the shadows, and like spies they operate in secret. But there is an international war-creation cabal in the US, Britain, France and Germany, and of course their Ukrainian counterparts. Ukraine seems to be provided with enough arms and ammo to keep the game going, with Zelensky demanding more and more weapons. What I would like to see is serious people such as Ben Wallace demand that Zelensky sit down and talk peace or else.

Let’s face it. Putin wants to talk but cannot lose face by asking for it. When one takes into account that the developing world is neutral at best in the war between Russia and Ukraine, why is it so difficult for Ukraine’s supplier, Uncle Sam, to order the ex-comedian and present hero to everyone but me to sit and talk and instantly stop the slaughter?

Writing in last week’s Spectator, Colin Freeman got it as right as anyone has up to now about the war. If Russia implodes, Crimea will not matter. Putin, however, is still in power and will stay there, according to Taki, the world’s greatest military authority. And what does the greatest military strategist expert think? That’s an easy one: this war could have been the shortest in history were the usual suspects not making a killing. Only last week, a journalist who had been in Ukraine recently told me how controversial Zelensky has now become with those deeply involved in the war, heroes we never read about. Zelensky is hogging the headlines, demanding weapons and aid non-stop, depleting the West’s supply of ammo, while thousands of those unmentionables I mentioned above get richer. Churchill said it’s better to jaw than to fight, and that’s what the West should be insisting on. But that’s like whistling Dixie up in Harlem, a no-go.

Got something to add? Join the discussion and comment below.

You might disagree with half of it, but you’ll enjoy reading all of it. Try your first month for free, then just $2 a week for the remainder of your first year.


Comments

Don't miss out

Join the conversation with other Spectator Australia readers. Subscribe to leave a comment.

Already a subscriber? Log in

Close