"Coercive Diplomacy" in David Hare's Stuff Happens (2004)

Document Type : Original Article

Author

Dept of English, Faculty of Arts, Kafreshikh University

Abstract

This paper addresses George Bush the junior's decision to invade Iraq in 2003 on the plea of its weapons of mass destructions (WMD's), as delineated in David Hare's Stuff Happens (2004), a docudrama depicting the lead-up to the Iraq war. The paper explains how Bush deals with the opponents (Colin Powell, Tony Blair, and Hans Blix) opposing a decision based on "fabricated" evidence by employing his father's strategy of coercive diplomacy against them, depending on both his faith and his position as President. Drawing on a postcolonial approach, the analysis of Hare's piece has demonstrated two significant aspects: 1) Bush has succeeded in achieving his private agenda in invading Iraq by implementing such a strategy of coercive diplomacy; 2) Hare is possessed of the dramatic dexterity of mixing fiction (the nameless fictional characters as well as the unnamed narrator-actors) with facts (the main figures of politics) for supporting play’s different conflicts. The present paper has reached a number of findings. First, the US attacked Iraq, for Bush had to show his people some reaction to the 9/11 attacks. Second, Bush chose Iraq in particular for his personal motives. Third, the US's double standard is stressed through the unresolved Israeli/Palestinian conflict negotiated throughout. Fourth, the coercive-diplomacy strategy has always been the US’s means for (il-)legal ends and, thus, this strategy can be considered a postcolonial construct in Hare’s Stuff Happens.   

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