Britain celebrated one of its greatest naval victories on Tuesday but a descendant of Admiral Horatio Nelson said the Battle of Trafalgar was trying too hard not to offend historical enemies.
After Queen Elizabeth presides over the world’s biggest navy review, two fleets will enact a 19th century sea battle.
But they will be known -- neutrally -- as the red and the blue fleet rather than by country names, which has sparked an angry shot across the bows from the great great great granddaughter of the British naval hero.
“I am anti-political correctness. Very much against it. It makes fools of us,” said 75-year-old Anna Tribe.
“I think the idea of the blue team fighting the red team is pretty stupid. I am sure the French and Spanish are adult enough to appreciate we did win that battle,” she added.
The historian playing Nelson in the mock battle is equally annoyed.
“If you obliterate history for the sake of political correctness, you can’t learn from the past. Nelson thought politicians were cowards. I tend to agree,” Alex Naylor said.
Nelson sent the famous signal “England expects that every man will do his duty” before the 1805 battle off the Spanish coast that spelt the beginning of the end for Napoleon Bonaparte’s French Empire.
Nelson, already missing an eye and an arm from previous battles, was killed by a French sniper in the epic battle. He was 47.
Effort to avoid show of triumphalism
Organizers of the bicentennial celebrations were anxious to avoid accusations of triumphalism, especially at a time when London and Paris are locked in a bitter dispute over the future of the European Union.
Britain’s navy chief Admiral Alan West admitted: “The French had to think quite hard about if they wanted to be involved (in the review). But in the final analysis, this is a celebration of maritime nations.”
He rejected criticism of the bicentennial, insisting Nelson would have backed the plans.
“Nelson would have approved of that, to get the maritime back in the public eye,” The First Sea Lord said.
More than 160 warships from 35 navies -- including those of France and Spain who were beaten at Trafalgar -- have assembled in front of the naval base at Portsmouth on England’s south coast.
The queen, aboard the Royal Navy’s Antarctic survey vessel Endurance, is sailing up and down the lines of assembled ships in the first naval review since her Silver Jubilee celebrations in 1977.
“It is the biggest ever international naval assembly in terms of the number of fleets involved,” said a spokeswoman for the Trafalgar 200 organizers.
