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When, in 1980, Cardinal Laszlo Lekai of Hungary visited England, the Foreign Office, Church of England and the Catholic Church all went out of their way to make him feel welcome. Lekai was an important figure within Eastern European Catholicism who was credited
with preserving the Catholic Church in his native land (his predecessor had had to run his ministry from the US embassy after the 1956 Hungarian uprising); but many considered that Lekai had gone too far in supporting the state. Within Hungary, he was satirically known as the ‘peace priest’. On his visit to London, Lekai was treated to some of the finer things in the ‘free world’; a lunch at the Athenaeum Club, tea at St Paul’s, a day at the Henley Regatta and, finally, a pilgrimage to Thomas à Becket’s tomb at Canterbury. (Perhaps it was hoped that Cardinal Lekai might be inspired by Becket’s example.)

Runcie was always mindful to tread a fine line between cordiality and criticism with the Russian patriarchs. When he publicly came out in support of the government’s proposed boycott the Moscow Olympics in 1980, it was misconstrued in Russia: ‘What you said was no doubt seen in Moscow as support for the Conservative line, just as the Patriarch has to voice support for Soviet foreign policy,’ noted one of his staff.
74
The concept of an Established Church that was openly critical of the state was not something that made much sense to the subservient patriarchs of the Russian Orthodox Church.

As the Archbishop of Canterbury’s diplomatic envoy, Terry Waite’s chief responsibility was as ambassador to the Anglican Communion, but it was not long before he veered off his official job description and became consumed by the more dangerous and exciting world of hostage negotiation. In the days when hostage crises in the Middle East were not a media show and negotiators had not yet realised the power of domestic public pressure, Terry Waite was to prove himself an extremely able man behind the scenes.

Since the 1979 Revolution, all clergy in the Anglican diocese of Iran had been either killed, imprisoned or exiled. The bishop had had his house broken into and his son had been murdered. His secretary, Miss Waddell, had failed to get an exit visa and had been ambushed in a hotel where she had been gagged, blindfolded and detained along with two missionaries and one English businessman. Tehran radio had reported that the
government had unmasked a plot to overthrow the revolution, involving the Church of England, with Miss Waddell allegedly a spy backed by the CIA. After weeks of silence, Tehran agreed to enter negotiations about the prisoners, but only in exchange for two Iranian students then imprisoned in Britain. The Foreign Office, though, was in no position to respond. Anglo-Iranian relations, which had weakened since the revolution, had completely frozen in the wake of the Iranian embassy siege in May 1980, which Tehran claimed had been deliberately staged by the UK and US governments. Unable to call on the Foreign Office for help, Terry Waite turned to Archbishop Capucci, the Vatican’s negotiator in the Middle East who was then playing a key role in the ongoing US-Iranian hostage crisis and was known to have the sympathetic ear of Ayatollah Khomeini. Capucci was a hero in the Middle East after serving twelve years in prison for smuggling arms to the PLO (they had been found in the back of his Mercedes limousine), with the governments of Egypt, Iraq, Libya and Syria all issuing stamps celebrating the archbishop. Capucci arrived in London in October 1980, where he was hosted by the Bishop of London, given full use of the Archbishop of Canterbury’s car and, with the agreement of the Foreign Office, allowed to visit the Iranian students being detained in Wormwood Scrubs. Runcie also handed Capucci documents refuting any conspiracy claims and a personal letter from himself to Ayatollah Khomeini reassuring him of the Anglican prisoners’ innocence. Four months later, to the Foreign Office’s surprise, the Iranian captives were released in a move that demonstrated not only the diplomatic skills of the archbishop’s envoy but also the level of trust and cooperation that existed between the Vatican and Lambeth Palace.
75

Waite’s next success came in negotiating the release of British citizens being held in Libya. Foreign Office relations with Libya at this point were as bad if not worse than they had been with Iran especially following the Libyan embassy siege in 1984, in which policewoman Yvonne Fletcher had been killed. So when it came to the capturing of four British nationals by the Libyan government, the Foreign Office
turned to Terry Waite for help. In what must have been a bizarre scene, Waite spent the Christmas of 1984 in a Bedouin tent with Colonel Gaddafi. Waite’s first smart move was to greet Gaddafiin Arabic; his second was to present the leader, who had a high regard of his own intellectual capabilities, with a book on the relationship between Greek and Arabic thought. Gaddafi treated his guest and the prisoners to a carol service and later insisted on phoning the Archbishop of Canterbury to wish him a Merry Christmas. Waite’s combination of flattery and ‘soft’ diplomacy had worked; months later the prisoners were released.

It was not long before Waite’s negotiating skills became of great interest to the Americans, who contacted him, via the Presbyterian Church of America, to help with the release of American captives in the Middle East. Robert Runcie, conscious of the need to rein in Waite, urged him to return to prepare for the forthcoming Lambeth Conference. Runcie had been warned by Cabinet Secretary Sir Robert Armstrong not to get too involved with the Americans, but Waite was adamant that he could do some good.

Waite was later to become implicated in selling arms for hostages as part of the US Iran-Contra affair. He always insisted that he did not know about the arms to Iran and that the Americans had double-crossed him by negotiating with Hezbollah. Waite was captured in Beirut and held in chains for five years with no word from his captors as to whether he was alive or dead. The only way that Lambeth Palace knew anything of his situation was through a Kurdish man whom Runcie’s PA used to meet at Victoria Station for information. Runcie kept a vigil and candle burning continually in the years that Waite was held in captivity.

Theories and rumours are still rife as to why Waite was released when he was, with some even suggesting that it had been Iran rather than the Libyans who had been responsible for the Lockerbie bombing of Pan Am Flight 103, but that the American and British were content to allow Libyans to be blamed to ease tensions with Iran. Days after
Libyan intelligence officers were charged with the Lockerbie bombing, Waite and his fellow prisoners were released.
76
Reflecting on Waite’s role, Runcie later said: ‘Of course it was totally absorbing to him, but if he was going to be an international negotiator, he oughtn’t [have been] on my staff.’
77

• • •

IN
1990,
AS
the Iron Curtain was being ripped down across Europe, Thatcher used the occasion of what would be her final party conference speech to declare that the ‘secular creed’ of socialism had ‘utterly failed’ and that the moral case for a free capitalist society reigned supreme: ‘Ours is a creed which travels and endures. Its truths are written in the human heart. It is the faith which once more has given life to Britain and offers hope to the world.’
78
According to Thatcher the victory of capitalism over communism was not an economic, or even diplomatic, success but a moral victory. Capitalism was presented as the natural order, one from which both Britain and Eastern Europe had temporarily diverted, but had been steered back onto the right path once more. Thatcher seemed to present the outcome of the Cold War as an act of divine providence, with herself as a victorious Christian warrior; a portrayal which her subsequent memoirs and lecture tour did much to cement. Delivering a speech to the Polish Senate in 1991, Margaret Thatcher declared: ‘it is not just that capitalism works. It is not just that capitalism is morally right. What we have to recognise and proclaim with the most intense conviction is that capitalism works because it is morally right.’
79

NOTES

1
Mervyn Stockwood,
The Cross and the Sickle
(London: Foreign Affairs Publishing Co., 1978), p. 80

2
Urban,
Diplomacy and Disillusion
, p. 38

3
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, ‘Godlessness, the First Step to the Gulag’ (The Templeton Address, Guildhall, London, 11 May 1983), p. 1

4
Urban,
Diplomacy and Disillusion
, p. 3

5
Dianne Kirby (ed.),
Religion and the Cold War
(London: Palgrave, 2002), p. 1

6
The Economist
, 15 October 2010
http://www.economist.com/blogs/democracyinamerica/2010/10/
religion_and_politics

7
Dianne Kirby, ‘The Church of England and the Cold War’ in Stephen G. Parker & Tom Lawson (eds.)
God and War: The Church of England and Armed Conflict in the Twentieth
Century
(London: Ashgate, 2012) p. 128

8
Ibid., pp. 121–145

9
Matthew Grimley, ‘The Church and the Bomb: Anglicans and the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, c.1958–1984’, in Parker & Lawson (eds.),
God and War
, p. 158

10
Owen Chadwick,
The Christian Church in the Cold War
(London: Penguin, 1993), Chapters 1–5; Dianne Kirby, ‘The Churches and Christianity in Cold War Europe’, in Klaus Larres (ed.),
A Companion to Europe Since 1945
(London: Wiley-Blackwell, 2009), pp. 203–30

11
Stockwood,
The Cross and the Sickle
, p. 81

12
Ibid.

13
John O’Sullivan,
The President, the Pope and the Prime Minister
(Washington: Regnery Publishing, 2006)

14
Richard Aldrous,
Reagan and Thatcher: The Difficult Relationship
(New York: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., 2012), Chapter 1

15
Paul Kengor,
God and Ronald Reagan: A Spiritual Life
(New York: HarperCollins, 2004), Chapter 1

16
Ibid., p. 141

17
O’Sullivan,
The President, the Pope and the Prime Minister
, Chapter 1

18
New Year Message, 29 December 1950,
http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/100896

19
Speech to Chelsea Conservative Association, 26 July 1975
http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/102750

20
Speech to Pilgrims of the United States, 16 September 1975
http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/102462

21
Speech at Kensington Town Hall, 19 January 1976
http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/102939

22
Urban,
Diplomacy and Disillusion
, p. 3

23
Ibid., p. 39

24
Speech at the Winston Churchill Foundation Award dinner, 29 December 1983,
http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/105450

25
Aldous,
Reagan and Thatcher
, p. 146

26
Urban,
Diplomacy and Disillusion
, pp. 53, 51

27
James Mann,
A History of the End of the Cold War: The Rebellion of the Ronald Reagan
(London: Penguin, 2009), Chapter 5

28
Bernard Ingham, private interview with author

29
O’Sullivan,
The President, the Pope and the Prime Minister
, p. 298

30
Carpenter,
Reluctant Archbishop
, p. 234–7

31
PREM 10/0609, Fols. 69–72, 85. The fear was that the event was becoming too political rather than pastoral. This was complicated by the fact that the British government had just upgraded its diplomatic missions with the Vatican. Fols. 107–8

32
Ibid., Fol. 59.

33
Ibid., Fol. 43

34
Ibid., Fol. 85

35
Ibid., Fol. 90

36
Ibid., Fol. 36

37
Ibid., Fol. 16

38
Ibid., Fol. 129

39
Ibid., Fol. 126

40
Carpenter,
Reluctant Archbishop
, p. 236

41
PREM 19/0609, Fols. 21–6

42
Ibid., Fols. 39–42

43
Ibid., Fols. 12, 28. MPs and junior ministers were allowed to attend the service given that they were not part of the government

44
Aldous,
Reagan and Thatcher
, p. 58

45
James Hinton,
Protest and Visions: Peace and Politics in Twentieth Century Britain
(London: Radius, 1989) p. 63

46
Lord President’s Office record of conversation, 24 November 1982
http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/122828

47
Shipley minute to Parkinson, 7 June 1982,
http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/122776

48
Grimley, ‘The Church and the Bomb’ in Parker & Lawson (eds.),
God and War
, p. 161

49
Lord President’s Office record of conversation, 24 November 1982
http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/122828

50
Roger Fieldhouse,
Anti-Apartheid Movement: A History of the Movement in Britain
(London: Merlin, 2005), p. 358

51
Runcie also personally intervened in 1980 when the South African government withdrew Tutu’s passport

52
Carpenter,
Reluctant Archbishop
, p. 229

53
Speech at the National Press Club, 1 July 1979
http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/103888

54
Prime Minister PW Botha of South Africa letter to MT, 5 February 1980
http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/119634

55
David Sheppard,
Steps Along Hope Street: My Life in Cricket, the Church and the Inner City
(London: Hodder & Stoughton, 2002), p. 281

56
The Guardian
, 8 July 1986
http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/106265

57
Gummer, in Gummer, Heffer & Beith,
Which Way Should Christians Vote?
(London: SPCK, 1987), p. 7

58
Margaret Thatcher to President P. W. Botha, 31 October 1985
http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/111650

59
President P. W. Botha to Margaret Thatcher, 12 November 1985
http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/111651

60
Margaret Thatcher did admit this in her memoirs: Thatcher,
Downing Street Years
, p. 259

61
Andrew Chandler,
The Church of England in the Twentieth Century: The Church
Commissioners and the Politics of Reform, 1948–1998
(Woodbridge: Boydell, 2006) p. 304. These investments, however, were small. It was estimated that only 1 percent of Church investments were in South Africa

62
Monica Furlong,
The C of E: The State It’s In: The Past and the Present
(London: SPCK, 2nd edition, 2006), p. 171

63
Interview with the
Catholic Herald
, 22 December 1978
http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/103793

64
Letter to the Lord Bishop Suffragen of Warrington, 11 June 1979
http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/119118

65
Remarks at
Daily Star
Gold Star Awards, 27 February 1985
http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/105977

66
Brian Griffiths,
Morality and the Market Place: Christian Alternatives to Capitalism and
Socialism
(London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1982), p. 147

67
Letter from Ted Heath (North/South Summit, Mexico City, 1981), 20 May 1981
http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/128032

68
Anthony Parsons, ‘Britain at the United Nations: A Valedictory Despatch’, 2 July 1982,
http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/123110

69
Gummer, in Gummer, Heffer & Beith,
Which Way Should Christians Vote?
, p. 33

70
Live Aid – Against All Odds
(BBC 4 documentary)

71
The Times
, 15 July 1985

72
LPL, RP, Runcie ACP/1980/10, Visit to Eastern Europe by Anglican Clergy, Fol. 26

73
Ibid., Fol. 28

74
LPL, RP, Runcie Main/1980/136, Russian Orthodox Church, Fol. 16

75
LPL, RP, Runcie ACP/1980/12, Iran

76
Daily Telegraph
, 15 December 2013
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/10518045/Was-Terry-Waite-freed-as-part-of-secret-Lockerbie-deal-with-Iran.html

77
Carpenter,
Reluctant Archbishop
, p. 313

78
Speech to the Conservative Party Conference, 12 October 1990
http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/108217

79
Speech to the Polish Senate, 3 October 1991
http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/108285

BOOK: God and Mrs Thatcher
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