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Alex Salmond: The spirit of Scottish nationalism (credit: John Paul)
 
Last summer, when I was checking the proofs for my book about the Habsburg Empire, Danubia, I found myself reflecting on the way that across Central Europe over the past century and a half different forms of nationalism have done almost untold damage. Wherever I travelled there were entire towns whose populations had been killed or expelled at the command of one form of nationalist zealot or another. My conclusion (which I am sure is an uncontentious one) was that anyone who makes exclusive claims based around flags, songs or mystical and immemorial borders was at some base level evil — that to believe in such things, which have more in common with magic than rationality, puts the believer and his disciples en route to catastrophe. And then I thought about Alex Salmond.

The Habsburg Empire, which was destroyed during the course of the First World War, joined together part or whole of 12 modern European countries and stretched from the Alps to western Ukraine. It was hardly a model of rationality and could often be cynical or incompetent but it seems like a vision of paradise compared to the nihilistic disaster that unfolded for its inhabitants from 1914 to the end of the Cold War. Several generations found themselves savaged by all the most horrible elements in Europe's formidable armoury of creepy prejudices sprinkled with a dusting of intellectualism what language you spoke, your religion, your political views had you herded into different camps at different times. In the end nobody won. Whatever terrible crimes the Communists carried out they at least had a salutary attitude towards the nationalists scattered across Central Europe who had done so much to support the Nazis and to poison community after community that had until then generally lived cheek-by-jowl for centuries, if not in harmony then in grudging indifference.

The lesson of the Habsburg Empire's demise is probably that multinational states are extremely valuable. They define themselves by some measure of tolerance and the heir to the throne, Franz Ferdinand, had until his assassination, planned for his accession all manner of schemes to federalise the Empire. Before the catastrophe of the First World War very few of the Empire's inhabitants imagined that independence was even a rational option. Even Tomáš Masaryk, later to found Czechoslovakia, could only imagine a federal solution the lands of Bohemia and Moravia which he wished to have autonomy were simply filled with too many people who could never be reconciled to rule by Czech-speakers, as turned out to be the case.

This is when I started to think about Salmond. The United Kingdom is Europe's last big multinational state and in that sense vulnerable to what nationalists love to think of as "the tide of history". But the disasters of the 20th century have perhaps taught us that there are many problems with nationalist ideas on sovereignty. Indeed the European Union was created specifically in order to neuter these problems. One hardly discussed reason why the EU might be antagonistic towards Scottish independence is that Salmond's rhetoric and reality swim in exactly the opposite direction to all the most positive European trends since 1945. While most of Europe pools its sovereignty, here is someone yet again making mystical claims for the greater virtue that would emerge from drawing a ring around a particular chunk of land.

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cymrugel
March 28th, 2014
2:03 PM
Absolute nonsense from start to finish - and dangerous nonsense at that. You have stopped little short of suggesting that Salmond be arrested for the crime of leading a legitimate political party in a constitutional campaign for Scottish Independence. You are either wicked, mad or both.

Hamish
March 28th, 2014
10:03 AM
Of all the inane scaremongering articles written about Scottish Independence this one takes the biscuit for me. Simon Winder's entire argument is based on the falsehood that Alex Salmond is a fuehrer type figure blindly leading us poor innocent and ignorant Scots into a dark future. The reality is that the SNP have won the last two elections in Scotland (the last one by a landslide) and have used their 7 years or so in government to show people just how much better we can be when our policies are made and implemented by Scots. Even ardent labour supporters have had to admit that the SNP has managed to consistently deliver and maintain socially just policies like free prescriptions, free education, lower class sizes, the abolition of tolls and not a single rise in council tax bills in over 5 years. All of this has been achieved within budget by simply prioritising what's best for Scotland. Simon Winder's argument that an independent Scotland would be abandoning cities like Newcastle is possibly the most idiotic but also most offensive one used by the no campaign. Westminster governments have been abandoning Scottish towns and cities for centuries (if you don't believe that then look at life expectancy in Glasgow which happens to be the UK's third largest city). On a more general note, this article teeters on the brink of being illegal in my opinion. It clearly tries to establish a link between Alex Salmond and extremist Nationalist Socialists (the Nazis), a common tactic used by morons who cannot cope with the fact that independence for Scotland may actually become a reality and their little tartan playground isn't going to be there for them anymore.

Cameron Edwards
March 28th, 2014
7:03 AM
Rarely have I read such misinformed, inaccurate nonsense - Mr.Winder has very little grasp of reality here, let alone an idea of modern Scotland, Independence and the SNP.

Davyb
March 28th, 2014
2:03 AM
What a weird pseudo-intellectual wank you are.....

Gemma
March 27th, 2014
8:03 PM
You mentioned Czechoslovakia, now Czech Republic and Slovakia, two independent countries who get along perfectly well post separation. I would suggest reading one of Salmond's actual speeches. Independence is not about being anti English. You'll note that voting eligibility is based on location not nationality, and plenty of English people in Scotland are voting for independence.

PMechan
March 27th, 2014
7:03 PM
I think the author has comprehensively lost it and I really find it amazing that any editor would think such patent drivel worth publishing. The author needs to splash out on a train ticket and spend just 2 or 3 days in Scotland to see how outrageous and inaccurate his writing is. He MAY be an expert on the Habsburgs but he knows exactly NOTHING about the independence debate in Scotland!

Martin Ross
March 27th, 2014
7:03 PM
Very strange opinion piece filled with ridiculous notions from a man espousing his own brand of British, Unionist and anti-Scottish fascism - and appears utterly blind to it. A full and reasoned response is found written by Alex Massie in the Spectator dated 27/03/14.

Charles P.O'Brien
March 27th, 2014
6:03 PM
British nationalism with colonial mindset is a much bigger danger than we Scots deciding for ourselves if we want all of the UK,s nuclear bombs in close proximity to our largest city.We want independence because its natural,the scribe of the above article knows far less than he thinks he does.

WJW
March 27th, 2014
2:03 PM
This is just complete garbage. So there is no difference between Indian or Irish nationalism and Nazi Germany? Infantile thinking. http://wallacewylie.blogspot.com/2014/02/nationalism-braveheart-and-scot...

J. R. Tomlin
March 27th, 2014
2:03 PM
Pretty good lies you have going there and I suggest giving a look at Godwin's Law. The SNP are the democratically elected government of Scotland, but it is obvious you have no belief yourself in democracy. Calling Mr. Salmond and the SNP Nazis is as absurd a lie and gives away the truth of your own pathetic position

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