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Jeremy Paxman blasts David Cameron over WWI centenary comments

'What on earth is he talking about?' asks the Newsnight presenter

Heather Saul
Tuesday 08 October 2013 09:59 EDT
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Jeremy Paxman has criticised the Prime Minister for comments made about wanting to “commemorate” the First World War, where he drew comparison to the celebrations during the Diamond Jubilee.

Speaking from the Imperial War Museum, David Cameron had said last year that he wanted to see “a commemoration that, like the Diamond Jubilee celebrations this year, says something about who we are as a people. Remembrance must be the hallmark of our commemorations."

The Prime Minister had promised a “truly national commemoration” to mark 100 years since the outbreak of war in 2014, Armistice Day in 2018, and the dates of major battles in between.

However, the Newsnight presenter was less than impressed with these comments, arguing that “only a moron would 'celebrate' war.”

In an interview with the Radio Times, Mr Paxman said: “In announcing plans for events to mark the centenary, our Prime Minister promised that the First World War commemoration would be 'like the Diamond Jubilee celebrations'.”

“What on earth was he talking about?” he asked. “These occasions, when the Prime Minister escapes from his speech-writers, are hazardous.

“His address also included the cloth-eared ambition to spend lots of public money to make the Imperial War Museum 'even more incredible'. The whole point of the place is its awful credibility.”

The broadcaster asserted that any war commemorations should have ”almost nothing“ in common with the Diamond Jubilee, which he described as an ”excuse for a knees-up in the rain to celebrate the happy fact that our national identity is expressed through a family rather than some politician who wants the job to gratify his vanity“.

He said Queen Elizabeth ”has played a blinder as queen“, but her "dull and dutiful grandfather, George V, recognised that the person who should be commemorated at the end of the First World War wasn't him, but the Unknown Soldier.”

Mr Paxman said that “not to acknowledge the war's significance would be wilful myopia”, but that “the whole catastrophe has been overlain with myth and legend”.

He criticised the use of TV comedy Blackadder Goes Forth “as a prop in history lessons”, adding: “It's great - and moving - comedy. But it's not fact.”

The BBC is set to announce how it plans to mark the anniversary.

The presenter, whose great uncle died in the war, said: “A number of distinguished fellow citizens, like the poet laureate Carol Ann Duffy and the thoughtful musician Brian Eno, are worried that the events will turn into a 'celebration' of war.

Mr Paxman added: “We shouldn't 'celebrate' the outbreak of the First World War. But not to recognise that it was one of the most consequential events in our history would just be perverse.”

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