Threats to democracy In 2017, le Carré expressed concerns over the future of
liberal democracy, saying: "I think of all things that were happening across Europe in the 1930s, in Spain, in Japan, obviously in Germany. To me, these are absolutely comparable signs of the rise of
fascism and it's contagious, it's infectious. Fascism is up and running in Poland and Hungary. There's an encouragement about." He later wrote that the end of the Cold War had left the West without a coherent ideology, in contrast to the "notion of
individual freedom, of inclusiveness, of tolerance – all of that we called
anti-communism" prevailing during that time. Le Carré opposed both U.S. President
Donald Trump and Russian President
Vladimir Putin, arguing that their desire to seek or maintain their countries' superpower status caused an impulse "for
oligarchy, the dismissal of the truth, the contempt, actually, for the electorate and for the
democratic system". Le Carré compared Trump's tendency to dismiss the media as "
fake news" to the
Nazi book burnings, and wrote that the United States is "heading straight down the road to
institutional racism and
neo-fascism". In le Carré's 2019 novel
Agent Running in the Field, one of the novel's characters refers to Trump as "Putin's shithouse cleaner" who "does everything for little Vladi that little Vladi can't do for himself". The novel's narrator describes
Boris Johnson as "a pig-ignorant foreign secretary". He says Russia is moving "backwards into her dark, delusional past", with Britain following a short way behind. Le Carré later said that he believed the novel's plotline, involving the U.S. and British intelligence services
colluding to subvert the
European Union, to be "horribly possible". He criticised Brexit advocates such as
Boris Johnson (whom he referred to as a "mob orator"),
Dominic Cummings and
Nigel Farage in interviews, claiming that their "task is to fire up the people with nostalgia [and] with anger". Le Carré further opined that: "What really scares me about nostalgia is that it's become a political weapon. Politicians are creating a nostalgia for an England that never existed, and selling it, really, as something we could return to", adding that with "the demise of the working class we saw also the demise of an established social order, based on the stability of ancient class structures". On the other hand, he claimed that the UK
Labour Party has "this
Leninist element and they have this huge appetite to level society." Le Carré once compared Brexit to the 1956
Suez Crisis, stating that it was "without doubt the greatest catastrophe and the greatest idiocy that Britain has perpetrated since the invasion of
Suez... The idea, to me, that at the moment we should imagine we can substitute access to the biggest trade union in the world with access to the American market is terrifying", he said. Le Carré participated in the London
protests against the Iraq War. He said the war resulted from the "politicisation of intelligence to fit the political intentions" of governments and "How Bush and his junta succeeded in deflecting America's anger from bin Laden to
Saddam Hussein is one of the great public relations conjuring tricks of history". He was critical of
Tony Blair's role in taking Britain into the Iraq War, saying: "I can't understand that Blair has an afterlife at all. It seems to me that any politician who takes his country to war under false pretences has committed the ultimate sin. I think that a war in which we refuse to accept the body count of those that we kill is also a war of which we should be ashamed."
Israel and Palestine While researching
The Little Drummer Girl, le Carré travelled through the region – including Lebanon – where he met
Yasser Arafat. He recounts:“I have come … to put my hand on the Palestinian heart.” Arafat then seized le Carré’s hand, placing it on his chest. This experience enabled him to see the Palestinians as victims with legitimate claims, and not as merely terrorists.In a 1998 interview with Douglas Davis, Le Carré described Israel as "the most extraordinary carnival of human variety that I have ever set eyes on, a nation in the process of re-assembling itself from the shards of its past, now Oriental, now Western, now secular, now religious, but always anxiously moralizing about itself, criticizing itself with Maoist ferocity, a nation crackling with debate, rediscovering its past while it fought for its future." He declared: "No nation on earth was more deserving of peace—or more condemned to fight for it." In 2003, Le Carré criticised how
neo-conservative influences and the
Israel lobby shaped U.S. Middle East policy, implying that such manipulation fed continuous conflict. He said the novel (
Absolute Friends) was intended to show:"… neo-conservative group which is commanding the political high ground, calling the shots and appointing the State of Israel as the purpose of all Middle Eastern and practically all global policy." This frames Israel – not necessarily the nation, but its political positioning – as central to escalatory foreign policy trends fuelling instability. ==Personal life==